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By Jamal Kanj

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My friend and I were on a cross-country flight from San Diego to Washington, DC on Saturday 18 September 1982.

We arrived at our friend’s home with gleaming smiles, but were received with dejected expressions.

“Haven’t you heard the news?” they asked. “What news?” we replied.

“The massacre of Palestinian and Lebanese civilians in and around Sabra and Shatila camps,” was their wretched response.

Needless to say, we were glued to the TV, listening to trickling reports from inside the camps and watching bloated bodies of women and children paraded on TV screens.

Starting at 6pm on 16 September until 8am on 18 September, the Israeli-armed-Lebanese Phalange militia went on a killing spree while the Israeli army besieged the camps – stopping anyone from fleeing the massacre.

American reporter Janet Lee Stevens, who was one of the first foreign journalists to enter the camps, described the scene.

“Children with their throats slit, a pregnant woman with her stomach chopped open, her eyes still wide open, her blackened face silently screaming in horror; countless babies and toddlers who had been stabbed or ripped apart and who had been thrown into garbage piles,” she documented.

I didn’t realize at the time that my cousin Saleh and his children were among those murdered in the 36-hour killing orgy.

A 1983 United Nations team investigating the massacre concluded that “Israel bore responsibility” for the killing of civilians.

In the same year, Israel’s own Kahane Commission reached a similar conclusion, accusing Ariel Sharon of bearing “personal responsibility” for the slaughtering of women and children.

Despite being held accountable for killing more than 3,000 civilians, Sharon refused to resign his Defence Minister post and his patron, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, snubbed requests to fire him.

Following strong pressure from the international community and violent civilian protests in the streets of Tel Aviv, Sharon finally agreed to quit the military post, but was retained in the cabinet as a minister without portfolio.

Less than two decades after the massacre, the former Ariel Scheinerman – born to a Belarusian couple before changing his family name to Sharon – was elected to Israel’s highest office, serving as prime minister from 2001 until he suffered a brain haemorrhage in 2006 which rendered him comatose.

He followed in the footsteps of two other Israelis: Yitzhak Shamir and Begin, who decorated Britain’s most wanted terrorist list in the 1940s.

They too were recognized for their murderous contributions to Zionism, reaching the highest political office in the Israeli government.

The Sabra and Shatilla massacre was just one of Sharon’s terrorist achievements on behalf of the state of Israel. He first gained notoriety in the 1950s, serving as a leader in the special, brutal Israeli army Unit 101.

Sharon’s first decorated massacre was in the autumn of 1953 when his unit attacked the village of Qibya and dynamited houses, killing 69 civilians, including children, sleeping peacefully in their homes.

While human rights organizations, along with relatives of murdered civilians, lament Sharon’s escape from justice on earth, morally corrupt leaders of so-called world democracies are absurdly calling this same person – who massacred women and children – a “man of peace”.

In memory of my cousin Saleh and for all those people he [Sharon] massacred throughout his murderous career, I will forever remember Sharon as a decorated butcher.

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