Gaza’s hospitals have emerged as a focal point in Israel’s war with Hamas, with each side citing how the other has pulled the facilities into the conflict as proof of the enemy’s disregard for the safety of civilians.

In four months of war, Israeli troops have entered several hospitals, including the Qatari Hospital, Kamal Adwan Hospital and Al-Rantisi Specialized Hospital for Children, to search for weapons and fighters. But Al-Shifa Hospital has taken on particular significance because it is Gaza’s largest medical facility, and because of Israel’s high-profile claims that Hamas leaders operated a command-and-control center beneath it. Hamas and the hospital’s staff, meanwhile, insisted it was only a medical center.

  • @Viking_Hippie
    link
    English
    410 months ago

    A hostage site is clearly a valid military target under IHL.

    Not a hospital where there’s no harmful act being committed.

    Earlier taken hostage or not, by no definition is transporting someone to a hospital to receive treatment a harmful act. People not desperately trying to justify war crimes would tend to consider it the exact OPPOSITE of a harmful act.

    • @Arete
      link
      English
      -110 months ago

      This is simply not true when IHL is looked at as a whole.

      Hospitals do receive special protections. As a rule a hospital can never be attacked unless it becomes co-opted for military purposes or represents a legitimate military objective. At that point, the hospital must be notified prior to attack if doing so is at all reasonable. Further, all proportionality calculations must still be made regarding collateral damage.

      The hospital became a legitimate target when Hamas militants, under military orders, brought in hostages.

      Notifying the hospital was clearly unreasonable, as that would allow Hamas to remove the hostages, the recovery of which was the primary military objective.

      Proportionality considerations dictated what was a reasonable attack. Israel didn’t bomb the building into dust - they staged a controlled siege (to prevent the hostages from being moved) followed by a methodical taking of the facility.

      Nothing about this was unreasonable or illegal given the full context.

      • @Viking_Hippie
        link
        English
        -210 months ago

        unless it becomes co-opted for military purposes or represents a legitimate military objective

        That’s the IDF excuse, not the actual law.

        all proportionality calculations must still be made regarding collateral damage.

        You mean the ones the IDF clearly never bother with? Just yesterday, they killed 95 people, most of them civilians, to free 2 hostages.

        The hospital became a legitimate target when Hamas militants, under military orders, brought in hostages.

        First of all, that’s flat out false. Second, it hasn’t even been proven that it was the case. All we have is the word of the notoriously deceptive IDF.

        Notifying the hospital was clearly unreasonable

        Wrong again, genocide denier.

        as that would allow Hamas to remove the hostages

        Hostages who, if they were even there, were there for treatment?

        the recovery of which was the primary military objective.

        If you still believe that one, I have a pristine palace in Gaza to sell you…

        Proportionality considerations dictated what was a reasonable attack

        No. How many times are you going to be just confidently objectively wrong in one reply? Are you going for the record or something?

        they staged a controlled siege (to prevent the hostages from being moved) followed by a methodical taking of the facility.

        Did you get that bullshit verbatim from the IDF press release?

        Nothing about this was unreasonable or illegal given the full context.

        Literally everything about it was. You should be ashamed of yourself.