Amnesty International on Monday condemned the Zionist regime’s atrocities in Gaza, saying they could amount to war crimes.
Attacks by Israeli forces on residential homes in Gaza should be investigated as “war crimes,” Amnesty International said on Monday.
Calling the attacks “crimes against humanity”, the human rights body said that Israel was displaying a “shocking disregard” for the lives of Palestinian civilians.
Amnesty International has appealed to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate the “deadly attacks” by Israel on the residential homes “without prior warning.” The death toll in Gaza is more than 200 now. More than 1200 have been injured in the latest spate of violence. In Israel, 10 people have lost their lives.
The Israeli government has engaged in a pattern of deadly attacks against residential homes in Gaza, carrying out bombing raids without giving the innocent men, women, and children inside any time to escape, Amnesty International charged on Monday.
The strikes, which show a “shocking disregard” for Palestinian civilians, “may amount to war crimes or crimes against humanity,” the human rights group said.
For over a week, Israeli forces have bombarded the Gaza Strip, a densely populated Palestinian territory controlled by the Hamas militant group. Israel has said its strikes are intended to stop indiscriminate rocket fire — itself a war crime — that has killed 10 of its citizens, including two children.
At least 212 Palestinians have been killed, including 61 children and 36 women, according to Gaza health authorities, prompting widespread criticism that the Israeli response has been disproportionate.
In one attack, carried out after 1:00 a.m., Israeli airstrikes leveled two residential buildings, killing 30 people.
“There was no warning, so people were inside their home sitting together, and this is a lively, bustling area,” a medic, Yousef Yassin, told researchers with Amnesty International.
Another strike, just before midnight, hit a three-story residential building that 20 people called home.
“We eventually found my daughter, a mother of three, with her children, one of whom was a baby, under one of the cement pillars of the house; all of them were dead,” Hassan al-Atar, a civil defense officer, told the group.
Saleh Higazi, Amnesty’s deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa, said it was “hard to imagine” how bombing such buildings could be considered a proportionate response under international law.
“By carrying out these brazen deadly attacks on family homes without warning Israel has demonstrated a callous disregard for lives of Palestinian civilians who are already suffering the collective punishment of Israel’s illegal blockade on Gaza since 2007,” Higazi said.
The findings come days after Amnesty warned that Israeli authorities “have an obligation to choose means and methods of attacks that would minimize risks posed to civilians,” and amid increasing calls for and end to the fighting.