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6 min read
15 April, 2024

Four unarmed Palestinian men are walking in the city of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip surrounded by no one except the wreckage from Israeli bombardments. Seemingly searching for their homes or lost relatives, an explosion shatters the men’s brief respite from war.

Two of the men are wiped out. The third man, now hobbling away from the targeted site, is quickly eliminated by another blast. The fourth man falls to his knees and, in an instant, is blown to pieces by yet another airstrike.

This scene, reportedly occurring in February, of heinous brutality depicted in Israeli drone footage, was released by Al Jazeera in March to a firestorm of criticism against Israel’s actions in its war on Gaza.

A few weeks later, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz found the Israeli military had established “kill zones” where anyone who crosses these invisible boundaries is a target - confirming that the Israeli military isn’t distinguishing between combatants and civilians in stark violation of the laws of war.

"Establishing 'kill zones' in Gaza isn't a new idea emerging in the current war, but rather a longstanding military tactic stemming back more than a decade ago"

The day after the report was published, an Israeli airstrike killed seven international aid workers in the Gaza Strip - again unleashing a tsunami of condemnation against Israel.

“International humanitarian law requires combatants to distinguish between civilian and military targets,” Annie Shiel, US advocacy director for the Centre for Civilians in Conflict, told The New Arab. Therefore, Shiel explained, when an individual’s status is in doubt, international law requires combatants to presume that person is a civilian.

“The reporting that we have seen on kill zones suggests that the opposite is happening - that Israel is assuming that everyone is a target rendering nowhere safe for civilians. And that approach absolutely flies in the face of international humanitarian law,” Shiel said.

In the last six months of war, several incidents have emerged of Israeli forces firing at unarmed civilians in the embattled enclave.

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In February, the Israeli military admitted it fired at civilians trying to collect aid packages in northern Gaza - in which 112 Palestinians were killed and hundreds more injured during a horrific incident referred to as the 'Flour Massacre’.

The army said the civilians were shot at because they "posed a threat to [forces]". The incident in February is just one of many ‘Flour Massacres’. According to the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, Israeli soldiers have killed more than 500 Palestinians as they obtain vital humanitarian aid.

In December, Israeli troops allegedly executed 19 Palestinian civilian men just outside their apartment building in what the United Nations described as “a possible war crime”. Another report by the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor found the Israeli army has executed dozens of elderly Palestinians in Gaza in direct shooting operations.

In February, the Israeli military admitted it fired at civilians trying to collect aid packages in northern Gaza, an incident referred to as the 'Flour Massacre'. Over 100 people were killed. [Getty]

Most recently, an Israeli airstrike in northern Gaza killed three sons and four grandchildren of Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh. The Israeli military - while not mentioning the grandchildren - described the three sons as Hamas military operatives and said they were targeted because they were going to “carry out terrorist activities in the central area of the Gaza Strip”.

They were reportedly on their way to a family celebration marking the first day of the Muslim holiday of Eid.

“Unless new information comes to light about some fighting function that they fulfilled and about a direct military advantage anticipated that was sufficiently weighty to somehow render the foreseeable death of children 'proportionate',” Eitan Diamond, a lawyer at Diakonia International Human Law Centre, wrote on social media, then the killing of Haniyeh’s children and grandchildren “seems to fall within the category of intentionally directing attacks against civilians not taking direct part in hostilities, a war crime”.

"The Israeli military traditionally has not observed a distinction between combatants and non-combatants. It's often just as comfortable killing non-combatants as combatants"

Possible war crimes in Gaza

Several Israeli military and legal experts, speaking with TNA, have described Israeli soldiers’ violence against civilians throughout the war on Gaza as violating the laws of war, specifically when it comes to “kill zones”.

“It’s exceptionally illegal to kill every man, woman, and child, irrespective of their combat status, who happens to unknowingly be in a zone where they're marked for death,” Middle East analyst Mouin Rabbani told TNA.

“The laws of war are very clear about these things. You can't just unleash snipers at small children, the elderly, and unarmed men and women who are demonstrably not engaged in hostilities.”

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Speaking to TNA on background, one legal expert cited several definitions of war crimes from the International Committee of the Red Cross, Amnesty International, and Article 8 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, in discussing whether the kill zones could be classified as war crimes.

“If the facts as reported are true then it looks like these are violations of international humanitarian law that have endangered (and killed) civilians, which would probably be a war crime," the source said.

Shir Hever, a political economist and the military embargo coordinator at the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement’s National Committee, identified numerous instances of Israeli soldiers’ actions on the ground in Gaza as constituting war crimes - including ‘kill zones’, the killing of World Central Kitchen staff, bombing Al-Ahli hospital, and striking a Palestinian civilian convoy fleeing southward.

Israel's war has left the majority of the Gaza Strip in ruins. [Getty]

“These are all specific cases of serious war crimes, of atrocities which were the initiative of a soldier or officer on the ground. But none of these criminals was held accountable by the Israeli government,” Hever said.

Beyond opening investigations or firing officers involved in only some of the above acts, Israel hasn’t changed its battleground strategy. Additionally, establishing “kill zones” in Gaza isn’t a new idea emerging in the current war, but rather a longstanding military tactic stemming back more than a decade ago.

According to the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem, Israeli army killings of unarmed civilians - including a child - around the Gaza border in 2006 suggest large swathes of land around the fence have been designated as “kill zones…in which the soldiers are ordered to open fire at any person who enters, regardless of the circumstances”. Military officials denied the existence of such zones.

"When Israel's president [Isaac] Herzog said that 'there are no innocent civilians in Gaza' he has clearly indicated that soldiers are permitted and encouraged to kill all Palestinians"

“The Israeli military traditionally has not observed a distinction between combatants and non-combatants,” Rabbani said. “It's often just as comfortable killing non-combatants as combatants.”

This notion appears even more evidently clear in Israel’s ongoing war on Gaza, as more than 33,000 Palestinians have been killed.

“The Israeli policy is one of dehumanising Palestinians and encouraging the soldiers and the settlers to kill with impunity,” Hever said.

“When Israel's president [Isaac] Herzog said that ‘there are no innocent civilians in Gaza’ he has clearly indicated that soldiers are permitted and encouraged to kill all Palestinians.”

Jessica Buxbaum is a Jerusalem-based journalist covering Palestine and Israel. Her work has been featured in Middle East Eye, The National, and Gulf News.

Follow her on Twitter: @jess_buxbaum