Read the Caterpillar: The Alternative Report
From Louise Richards, War on Want
Caterpillar Demolishes
Homes, Violates International Law
See also the B'tselem report here:
http://alawda.rso.wisc.edu/btselemreport.htm
Further, see the links to D-9 in
Action,
http://prozny.com/_photo/_dozer/index.html,
and a B’Tselem Video
http://80.179.108.02/betzelem/heb/movie_eng.html
Also check out the web site for
CAT destroys homes:
www.catdestroyshomes.org
UN to Caterpillar: Don't sell bulldozers to Israel
Jerusalem Post/AP, June 16th, 2004
UN-appointed expert said
Wednesday that he has warned Caterpillar Inc. that Israel's use of bulldozers
to destroy West Bank orchards could make the company an accomplice in what he
called the violation of basic human rights of the Palestinians.
Jean Ziegler, the United
Nations' special expert on the right to food, said he sent a letter to
Caterpillar chief executive James Owen expressing concern "about the actions
of the Israeli occupation forces in Rafah and in other locations in Gaza and
the West Bank."
Ziegler said his letter was the
first under a new resolution passed this year by the 53-nation UN Human Rights
Commission extending responsibility for protecting rights beyond governments
to "non-state actors." He wrote Owen under the letterhead of the UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the overall UN watchdog, and sent his letter on
his own as he is entitled to do, a spokesman said. The Israelis are "using
armored bulldozers supplied by your company to destroy agricultural farms,
greenhouses, ancient olive groves and agricultural fields planted with crops,"
the May 28th letter said. Ziegler, a Swiss university professor who has
previously criticized Israeli treatment of the Palestinians, told The
Associated Press that he had yet to receive a response from the company. No
comment was immediately available from Caterpillar headquarters in Peoria,
Illinois.
"Allowing the delivery of your
D-9 and D-10 Caterpillar bulldozers to the Israeli army through the government
of the United States in the certain knowledge that they are being used for
such actions might involve complicity or acceptance on the part of your
company to actual and potential violations of human rights, including the
right to food," Ziegler said in the letter.
The Israelis have also used the
bulldozers to destroy "numerous Palestinian homes and sometimes human lives,
including that of the American peace activist Rachel Corrie," he said. The
23-year-old college student from Olympia, Washington, was in Gaza as a
volunteer with the pro-Palestinian International Solidarity Movement in March
2003. The group claims that the IDF bulldozer driver saw Corrie and drove over
her as she and a small group of ISM activists tried to stop him from razing a
home.
The IDF, however, said that
Corrie had died from injuries sustained by debris that fell on top of her as a
result of the bulldozer's movements, rather than from direct contact with the
bulldozer itself. Ziegler, appointed by the UN Human Rights Commission, said
after a 10-day visit to Gaza and the West Bank last year that Israel was
confiscating fertile Palestinian land for military zones or Jewish
settlements. Ziegler and other so-called "special rapporteurs" are assigned by
the commission to look for abuses. Each is appointed to concentrate on a
specific country or right. They are unsalaried, but their expenses are paid.
1948 - 2005 Copyright Al-Awda (The Palestine
Right to Return Coalition) at the University of Wisconsin - Madison.
All Rights Reserved.