http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WAPO/19990728/V000953-072899-idx.html
By Sam F. Ghattas
Group Criticizes Israel Expulsion
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, July 28,
1999; 7:30 a.m. EDT
Beirut, Lebanon (AP) -- A human rights group today accused Israel and its allies of expelling hundreds of Lebanese from their homes in an "often cruel manner'' and called on Israel's new government to end the practice.
The New York-based Human Rights Watch also urged the United States and the European Union to condemn the expulsions and press Israel to let people return to their homes in the Israel-occupied zone in south Lebanon.
The group said at least 46 Lebanese nationals were expelled last year. According to unofficial reports, some 50 Lebanese have been expelled so far this year.
In Israel, an army spokesman refused comment on the report.
The South Lebanon Army, the 2,500-member militia armed and paid by Israel to help 1,500 Israeli soldiers patrol the border zone, also withheld immediate comment.
Civilians have been expelled following guerrilla attacks on Israeli and SLA forces in what appeared to be collective punishment of the local population, the report said.
Israel and the SLA also have expelled Lebanese citizens for alleged cooperation with the guerrillas or with the Beirut government and for refusal to work with the occupation authorities or for being deemed a security threat.
Human Rights Watch said there is no exact number on the people affected by the Israeli measures. But it estimated "hundreds, if not more'' have been expelled since 1985.
Israel has occupied a border zone in southern Lebanon through its army or local Lebanese allies since its limited invasion of Lebanon in 1978. The current zone was established in 1985 after Israeli forces retreated from Beirut, central and eastern Lebanon, areas occupied following an invasion in 1982.
In addition to those expelled, Lebanon says that 128 Lebanese people are incarcerated in the SLA-run Khiam prison camp in the occupied zone and 42 in prisons in Israel. Some have been held for over 10 years on suspicion of aiding guerrillas.
The Israelis and the SLA also have resorted to razing houses of suspected guerrilla sympathizers or structures suspected of being used by guerrillas as staging points for attacks.
Israel's policy has been that the occupied zone was needed to protect its northern border from guerrilla attack. The Israelis and the SLA have met stiff resistance from Hezbollah guerrillas, who target the occupation forces with almost daily ambushes. Hezbollah has pledged to attack northern Israel in retaliation for civilian casualties in Lebanon.
Israel's new prime minister, Ehud Barak, echoing general sentiment in Israel fueled by mounting casualties in Lebanon, has said he wants to bring the troops home within a year as part of an arrangement that would guarantee security for northern Israel. He also has said he wants to make peace with Syria and Lebanon.
Reversing the expulsion policy "is a test'' for Barak, said Hanny Megally, executive director of the group's Middle East and North Africa division.
"If he succeeds, this will help in other things,'' said Megally, a reference to Barak's recent overtures to revive the Middle East peace process.
(c) Copyright 1999 The Associated Press