Rights of the protection of Medical Professionals during armed conflict in the era of automated weapons: A case study of Gaza

Authors

  • Nasir Ali PhD Law scholar, School of law, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China.
  • SUN Liyan Professor, School of Law Xiamen university China

Keywords:

International Humanitarian Law, Geneva Conventions, Additional Protocols, Protection of Medical Professionals, Armed Conflict.

Abstract

The rights and protections of medical professionals during armed conflict are examined in this study, with particular attention paid to the persistent abuses that occurred in Gaza during Israeli military operations in 2008, 2012, and 2014 as well as the current conflicts in 2023–2024. Utilizing the Geneva Conventions and its Additional Protocols as well as the framework of International Humanitarian Law (IHL), the study emphasizes the legal duties to safeguard medical workers and facilities during times of conflict. The humanitarian crisis in the area is made worse by documented occurrences that show concerning trends, such as targeted attacks on medical personnel and hospitals, despite these safeguards. This study examines the effects of automated weapons systems, including drones, which make it more difficult to identify medical professionals and facilities and raise the possibility of collateral harm. This paper highlights the urgent need for improved accountability procedures and more robust enforcement of IHL by looking at certain infractions and how they affect the provision of healthcare, and highlights the necessity for enhanced technology and more sophisticated legal frameworks to protect medical professionals in armed conflict within the limitations of automated warfare. In order to protect civilian health during armed conflicts, the findings support international action to defend medical professional rights and guarantee their ability to practice without fear in combat areas.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Aldrich, G. H. (1991). Prospects for united states ratification of additional protocol I to the 1949 Geneva conventions. American Journal of International Law, 85(1), 1-20.

Assembly, G. (2018). Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories Occupied since 1967, UN Doc. A/HRC/37/75 (June 14, 2018). Human Rights.

Azarov, V., & Weill, S. (2012). Israel’s unwillingness? The follow-up investigations to the UN Gaza Conflict Report and international criminal justice. International criminal law review, 12(5), 905-935.

Bookmiller, K. N. (2015). Professional standards and legal standard setting: INSARAG, FMTs, and international disaster relief volunteers. Vand. J. Transnat'l L., 48, 957.

Chan, M. (2018). Ten years in public health 2007-2017: report by dr margaret chan director-general world health organization. World Health Organization.

Clapham, A., Gaeta, P., Sassòli, M., & van der Heijden, I. (Eds.). (2015). The 1949 Geneva conventions: a commentary. Oxford University Press.

Culverwell, S. M. (2017). Israel and Palestine-An analysis of the 2014 Israel-Gaza war from a genocidal perspective. Unpublished manuscript]. James Madison University.

de Chazournes, L. B., & Condorelli, L. (2000). Common Article 1 of the Geneva Conventions revisited: Protecting collective interests. International Review of the Red Cross, 82(837), 67-87.

Falk, R., Dugard, J., & Lynk, M. (2023). Protecting Human Rights in Occupied Palestine: Workng Through the United Nations. SCB Distributors.

Goldstone, R. (2011). Reconsidering the Goldstone Report on Israel and war crimes. Washington Post, 1.

Gutteridge, J. A. (1949). The Geneva Conventions of 1949. Brit. YB Int'l L., 26, 294.

Heszlein-Lossius, H. E. (2019). Life after war-related extremity amputations. A retrospective, descriptive clinical follow-up study from Gaza, occupied Palestine.

Imseis, A. (2003). On the Fourth Geneva Convention and the occupied Palestinian territory. Harv. Int'l LJ, 44, 65.

Imtihani, H., & Nasser, M. (2024). THE UNJUSTIFIABLE TARGETING OF HEALTHCARE IN PALESTINE: A VIOLATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL LAW. International Journal of Islamic Education, Research and Multiculturalism (IJIERM), 6(3), 763-783.

Innocent-Franklyn, E. (2024). Israeli/Palestinian Debacle: Western Posturing and Israeli Disproportionality in the 21st Century, A Sword of Damocles?. MULTIDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL OF LAW, EDUCATION AND HUMANITY, 1(1).

Khan, A. (2018). Autonomous Weapons and Their Compliance with International Humanitarian Law (LLM Thesis). Traditional Journal of Law.

Khan, A. S. I. F., Amjad, S. O. H. A. I. L., & Usman, M. U. H. A. M. M. A. D. (2020). The Evolution of Human Rights Law in the Age of Globalization. Pakistan journal of law, analysis and wisdom.

Khan, A. S., Bibi, A., Khan, A., & Ahmad, I. (2023). Responsibility of Sexual Violence Under International Law. Journal of Social Sciences Review, 3(1), 29-41.

Khan, A., & Hussain Shah Jillani, M. A. (2019). Killer robots and their compliance with the principles of law of war. JL & Soc'y, 50, 55.

Khan, A., Amjad, S., & Usman, M. (2020). The Role of Customary International Law in Contemporary International Relations. International Review of Social Sciences, 8(08), 259-265.

Khan, A., Bhatti, S. H., & Shah, A. (2021). An overview on individual criminal liability for crime of aggression. Liberal Arts and Social Sciences International Journal (LASSIJ), 5(1), 432-442.

Khan, A., Javed, K., Khan, A. S., & Rizwi, A. (2022). Aggression and individual criminal responsibility in the perspective of Islamic law. Competitive Social Science Research Journal, 3(1), 35-48.

KHAN, A., USMAN, M., & RIAZ, N. (2021). The Intersectionality of Human Rights: Addressing Multiple Discrimination. Asian Social Studies and Applied Research (ASSAR), 2(03), 498-502.

Lin, S., & Song, Y. (2024). Upholding human rights in mega sports: A study of governance practices within the IOC and FIFA through the lens of the Ruggie Principle. Heliyon, 10(16).

Lysaght, C. (1983). The Scope for Protocol II and Its Relation to Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and Other Human Rights Instruments. Am. UL Rev., 33, 9.

Mehring, S. (2014). First do no harm: medical ethics in international humanitarian law (Vol. 44). Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.

Mohammed Asqool, A., Ismail, S. M., & Nordin, R. (2023). The Protection of Children during Armed Conflicts: Israeli Violations of International Humanitarian Law in Three Wars in Gaza. UUM Journal of Legal Studies (UUMJLS), 14(2), 535-556.

Sterio, M. (2010). The Gaza strip: Israel, its foreign policy, and the Goldstone Report. Case W. Res. J. Int'l L., 43, 229.

Talbot, R. (2020). Automating occupation: International humanitarian and human rights law implications of the deployment of facial recognition technologies in the occupied Palestinian territory. International Review of the Red Cross, 102(914), 823-849.

Usman, M. U. H. A. M. M. A. D., Khan, A. S. I. F., & Amjad, S. O. H. A. I. L. (2021). State Responsibility and International Law: Bridging the Gap.

Vincent-Daviss, D. (1988). The Occupied Territories and International Law: A Research Guide. NYUJ Int'l L. & Pol., 21, 575.

World Health Organization. (2017). Country cooperation strategy for WHO and the Occupied Palestinian Territory: 2017–2020 (No. WHO-EM/PME/008/E). World Health Organization. Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean.

Yingling, R. T., & Ginnane, R. W. (1952). The Geneva Conventions of 1949. American Journal of International Law, 46(3), 393-427.

Downloads

Published

04-11-2024

Issue

Section

Articles

Categories

How to Cite

Rights of the protection of Medical Professionals during armed conflict in the era of automated weapons: A case study of Gaza. (2024). Traditional Journal of Law and Social Sciences, 3(02), 42-55. https://ojs.traditionaljournaloflaw.com/index.php/TJLSS/article/view/166

Similar Articles

21-28 of 28

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.