Israel-Gaza conflict: Deadly flechette shells 'used by Israeli military in Gaza Strip’

The tiny arrow-like ammunition, fired in their thousands in a tank shell, have been described as carrying ‘a particularly high danger of harming innocent civilians’

Adam Withnall
Monday 21 July 2014 08:33 BST
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File: A small pointed metal dart known as a flechette, seen in the Gaza Strip in January 2009
File: A small pointed metal dart known as a flechette, seen in the Gaza Strip in January 2009

The Israeli military is reportedly using flechette shells in its offensive in Gaza, weapons described as illegal under “rules of humanitarian law” by an Israeli human rights organisation.

Generally fired by a tank and described as an “imprecise weapon” ill-suited to combat in a built-up area, flechette shells explode in the air above a target, sending out a cone of thousands of tiny steel darts each no more than 4cm (1.57 ins) long.

According to the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR), six such shells were fired towards the village of Khuzaa in the Gaza Strip on 17 July, the Guardian reported.

The PCHR was described as saying that a woman, 37-year-old Nahla Khalil Najjar, suffered injuries to her chest in the flechette shelling, and pictures purporting to show the ammunition were passed on by a PCHR fieldworker.

When approached by the newspaper, the Israeli military did not deny using the shells in the conflict, saying that it only deploys weapons “determined lawful under international law”.

File: A Palestinian looks on as a small pointed metal dart known as a flechette, usually spread over a wide area in large numbers from a shell, is seen sticking out of the wall of a destroyed house in Mughraka, Gaza, on 21 January, 2009 (AP)

Flechette rounds have been used before in Gaza, and were declared legal by the Israeli supreme court in 2002. But a 2011 report by the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem described them as carrying “a particularly high danger of harming innocent civilians”.

“One of the most fundamental principles is the obligation to distinguish between those who are involved and those who are not involved in the fighting, and to avoid to the extent possible injury to those who are not involved.”

The reports came as Gaza today experienced the worst fighting it has seen since the start of the latest conflict, with more than 65 Palestinians and 13 Israeli soldiers killed in clashes since midnight last night.

Gazan health officials said that 425 Palestinians have now been killed in the conflict and about 3,000 wounded, as President Mahmoud Abbas accused Israel of carrying out a massacre with its sustained tank shelling of the densely populated Shijaiyah district.

Israeli health officials say its death toll now stands at 20, including 18 soldiers and two civilians killed in cross-border artillery fire.

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