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Targeted eliminations

   



 
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MK Dani Yatom says members of Hamas cabinet are legitimate targets
Mofaz: Hamas leaders not necessarily immune from targeted eliminations
U.N. secretary-general expresses concern over Israel's targeted killings in recent days
Air Force eliminates two Jihad terrorists
3 terrorists killed in Israeli military operation in Nablus
Four Gaza terrorists killed in IAF strike as PA election chaos continues
US-filed lawsuit blames ex-Israeli security chief for bomb deaths in Gaza
Two Fatah terrorists killed in Gaza airstrike as violent surge continues
Air Force eliminates senior terror leader in Gaza missile strike

 
High Court: No blanket ban on targeted elimination of terror leaders
By Associated Press  December 14, 2006
 
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The Israeli Supreme Court decided Thursday not to issue a blanket ban against the targeted killing of Palestinian militants, ruling that some of the killings were legal under international law.

The ruling gave legal legitimacy to a practice Israeli forces have routinely used against militants during the past six years of violence. The Israeli human rights organization B'tselem estimates that 339 Palestinians were killed in the targeted operations over the past six years.

The three-judge panel unanimously ruled that "it cannot be determined in advance that every targeted killing is prohibited according to customary international law," while also noting that the tactic was not necessarily legal in every case.

Two human rights groups, the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel and the Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights and the Environment petitioned the court to ban the policy in 2002, but the court repeatedly delayed issuing a decision on the case.

The Israeli military began carrying out targeted killings of Palestinian militants after the breakdown of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process and the subsequent outbreak of violence in the fall of 2000, saying the tactic was the most effective way to stop Palestinian bombers targeting Israeli population centers.

The operations are typically carried out from the air, with helicopter gunships or unmanned drones firing missiles at cars in Palestinian cities, acting on intelligence information from agents and informers on the ground. The tactic has since been adopted by the U.S. and its allies in Afghanistan and Iraq.


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