OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, 2 July — The hawkish Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon faced growing pressure yesterday over a 1982 massacre of Palestinians, following efforts to bring him to trial and Slobodan Milosevic’s handover to the UN war crimes tribunal. A Belgian newspaper said on Saturday the Brussels Public Prosecutor’s office had ruled that a complaint against Sharon accusing him of crimes against humanity was admissible.
A magistrate could now launch an investigation into the events surrounding the massacre of hundreds of Palestinian men, women and children at the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps during Israel’s invasion of Lebanon, Le Soir newspaper said.
A 1983 Israeli state inquiry found Sharon, then the defense minister, indirectly responsible for the massacre by Israeli-backed Christian Phalangist militiamen. The Israeli Army had allowed the militiamen to enter the camp.
Pressure is also mounting on Sharon over the events of nearly 20 years ago because of the precedent set by the transfer of Milosevic, the former Yugoslav president, to The Hague to face charges of crimes against humanity.
A lawyer for Sharon dismissed the moves in Brussels as a political stunt. “We are very, very far from a court case,” the lawyer, Dov Weisglas, told Israel’s Army Radio. The Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth said yesterday that Israel’s political and judicial establishments were anxiously monitoring developments in the case in Belgium. Sharon is expected to visit Europe later this week, after postponing a trip to Belgium, Germany and France last month at short notice.
The controversy over the massacre has resurfaced at a difficult time for Sharon. He presides over a broad coalition government which is trying to quell a nine-month-old Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Controversy over the 1982 massacre was revived by a BBC program broadcast on June 17 which asked whether Sharon should be brought to trial.
A legal expert told the BBC that he had “no doubt whatsoever” Sharon was indictable as a war criminal. Israeli officials said the program was scandalous and anti-Semitic.
The day after the program was shown, the complaint against Sharon was filed in Belgium by Chibli Mallat, a Lebanese lawyer representing 23 Palestinian and Lebanese plaintiffs.
The complaint was filed under a 1993 law allowing Belgian courts to prosecute foreign officials for human rights violations committed outside Belgium. Human Rights Watch, a leading US-based human right group, increased pressure on Sharon by calling days later for a criminal investigation.