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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, May 12, 2018
One dead as Gaza heads into last Friday protest before Nakba Day
Palestinians have been demonstrating for a month and a half to denounce the abysmal situation in besieged Gaza

Palestinian
demonstrators hold tyres to burn near the Israeli fence, as well as
pliers to cut through heaps of barbed wire installed by the Israeli army
(MEE/Mohammed Hajjar)

Friday 11 May 2018
GAZA CITY - One
Palestinian was killed in Gaza on Friday as the six-week “Great March of
Return” headed into its last days ahead of Nakba Day on 15 May.
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are joining demonstrations to demand the
right of return sought by the besieged territory’s 1.3 million refugees.
The Gaza Ministry of Health identified the slain Palestinian as Jaber
Salem Abu Mustafa, 40, adding that he was shot in the chest by Israeli
forces east of Khan Younis.
Demonstrators
have been gathering several hundred metres from the fence separating
Israel from Gaza since 30 March to demand the right to return to their
pre-1948 homes, highlighting different issues at stake in the blockaded
strip - such as unemployment and the struggles of Palestinian youth.
Reports emerged on Friday that Israeli forces were heavily firing tear
gas at the crowds in some areas, while at least five protesters were
shot with live bullets east of Gaza City.
Another person was also reportedly shot east of Khan Younis, in the
southern Gaza Strip, where a crew of journalists from Al-Aqsa TV was
allegedly targeted with tear gas.
Several journalists were reported injured by live bullets and tear gas canisters across the Gaza Strip.
A Palestinian protester assembles a makeshift kite in Gaza on 11 May (MEE/Mohammed al-Hajjar)
The ministry of health reported that 448 people had been injured as of
5pm local time, including at least 25 minors and one paramedic.
The
ministry shared a graphic photograph of a 16-year-old boy in critical
condition after having his cheek perforated by unidentified ammunition
east of al-Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip.
Earlier in the day protesters partially removed barbed wire set up by
Israeli forces near the fence to prevent Palestinians from getting
closer.
Friday's demonstration was dubbed "Preparedness and Foreboding Friday",
in anticipation of the final protest of the march early next week.
The
march was initially set to end on 15 May - the 70th anniversary of the
Palestinian Nakba (Catastrophe), in which more than 750,000 Palestinians
were forcibly displaced by Israeli forces during the 1948 Arab-Israeli
war.
However, the final demonstration
has been scheduled for Monday 14 May due to the imminent beginning of
the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
“On 14 and 15 May, we will fly kites with peaceful slogans for our right
of return, we will burn tyres and cut the barbed wire, as we do not
recognise this fence nor the Israeli borders,” Ayman, a member of the
group of protesters who lead the activities closer to the fence, told
MEE while holding large pliers meant to cut through the barbed wire.
Monday also marks the day when the
United States is set to relocate its embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem, a move that has provoked anger among Palestinians.
As the protests approach their climax, Hamas’s leader in Gaza, Yahya
Sinwar, said the group - one of several Palestinian political parties in
Gaza that have come out in support of the Great March of Return - would
not stop protesters from breaching the Israeli security fence along
Gaza’s perimeter.
“What's the problem with hundreds of thousands breaking through a fence
that is not a border?" he said on Thursday, speaking to foreign
journalists for the first time since taking his role in 2017.
'The scent of my village'
A
number of older refugees participated in Friday’s protest, reminiscing
about their childhood memories before and during the Nakba of 1948.
“Today
is the first time in my life I have come near the border. I stand near
the return protest tents, and I turn my sight northeast in the direction
of Bir Saba,” 73-year-old refugee Umm Usama told Middle East Eye on
Friday, referring to her village of origin, now the location of the
Israeli city of Beersheba.
“I keep in my heart all the stories that my father used to tell me about my village. I can still smell the scent of my village.
“I
am relieved to see how this generation is aware of their right of
return, unafraid of Israeli artillery,” she added. “The Israelis should
not kill our right of return the same way they kill our children.”
Umm Usama stands with an injured younger relative (MEE/Mohammed al-Hajjar)
“We know that the Israelis are stronger than us, as they have weapons,”
said Umm Raed, who was only two weeks old when her family was forced to
flee their village of Barbara, only 20 kilometres away from the Gaza
Strip.
“But our rights make us stronger. I will be the first to participate in
the Nakba Day protest, I will come with my relatives and neighbours so
that the whole world witnesses our unified stance for our right of
return.”
According
to the latest Gaza ministry of health tally on Wednesday, Israeli
forces stationed behind the fence had killed 47 Palestinians and wounded
8,536 during demonstrations. AFP has counted an additional five
Palestinian deaths since 30 March, outside the scope of the protests.
Wael,
29, was shot in the leg during a demonstration on 4 May, but
nonetheless returned to protest a week later, despite still being on
crutches.
“I
am unemployed, I have no hope in this life. I protest hoping that we
can change our lives, advocate for our rights and lift the siege imposed
against Gaza. We want to let the whole world know that the humanitarian
crisis in Gaza needs to end,” he told MEE. “Our right of return is our
last hope.”
Palestinian protester Wael swings a slingshot a week after being shot and wounded by Israeli forces (MEE/Mohammed al-Hajjar)
No
Israeli casualties have been reported, although several fires have
erupted along the border after kites carrying improvised incendiary
devices made their way into Israel.
On Friday, Israeli police reported
on social media that three Israelis had been arrested after trying to
fly kites into Gaza to set lands there on fire.
The
Israeli army’s violent response to the demonstrations has sparked
outrage globally, as more than 2,000 Palestinians have been struck by
live bullets, and 24 wounded had to undergo amputations after being
denied Israeli permits to exit Gaza and receive treatment in the
occupied West Bank.
READ MORE ►
International NGO Save the
Children denounced on Friday the army's targeting of Palestinian minors
in Gaza, noting that out of more than 700 wounded children, at least 250
had been hit by live bullets.
"We are deeply concerned by the high number of children who have been
hit by live ammunition and we agree with the high commissioner for human
rights that this could suggest an excessive use of force and may amount
to unlawful killing and maiming,” Jennifer Moorehead, Save the
Children’s country director for the occupied Palestinian territory, said
in a statement.
“The result has been devastating for the children of Gaza - physically
and psychologically. Many have been injured, and many more have seen
their parents or loved ones either hurt at the protests, or suffering
increasing hardship in their daily lives."
The
Israeli army has rejected repeated pleas by the international community
- including the United Nations - to use restraint and to conduct an
independent inquiry into the deaths, maintaining the necessity of its
open-fire policy, which it says targets "terrorists".
UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination issues strongly worded statement (under its early warning and urgent action procedures) condemning Israel’s use of disproportionate force against demonstrators and calling to lift the blockade on #Gaza. #GreatReturnMarch
Meanwhile, Amnesty International has called for a global arms embargo against Israel, accusing its forces of "carrying out a murderous assault" against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
Reporting in Gaza by Amjad Ayman.
