Gazans brave Israeli bombardment to watch World Cup

Published July 14, 2014
Palestinians stand looking at a building hit by an Israeli air strike in Gaza City on July 13. -Photo by AFP
Palestinians stand looking at a building hit by an Israeli air strike in Gaza City on July 13. -Photo by AFP

GAZA CITY: Hundreds of millions of football fans watched Sunday's World Cup final by simply getting comfortable in front of their TV sets.

In the Gaza Strip, under Israeli bombardment for more than six days, fans needed ingenuity and courage to witness Germany's 1-0 win over Argentina. Since the Israeli offensive in Gaza began, the streets of the territory have been deserted after nightfall, with the loud thuds of intermittent bombings heard across wide areas.

Compounding the hardships, rolling power cuts have plagued Gaza for several years, leaving hundreds of thousands at a given time without electricity.

Salah Yousef, a 19-year-old Argentina supporter, said he walked to his uncle's house, about 20 minutes away, to watch the game because his own home didn't have electricity. “I was scared when I walked,” Yousef said.

“My mother was on the phone talking to me until I reached their home.“

Yousef said doing something normal, such as watching football, is a show of defiance.

“This means we don't fear the Israeli threats and fire, “ he said, speaking by phone from his uncle's house where he and seven relatives watched the game.

Close to 170 Palestinians have been killed and more than 1,100 have been wounded in more than 1,300 Israeli airstrikes since the start of the bombardment, some of them allegedly targeting homes of senior Hamas activists in crowded residential neighborhoods.

In Gaza, many watched games in outdoor coffee shops and seaside hotels during the last World Cup. In contrast, an Israeli missile hit a beachside cafe last week as patrons watched the Argentina-Netherlands semifinal, killing nine people aged from 15 to 28. Raed Lafi, a local journalist, watched the game on his cell phone with his six children crowding around him because the power in his home was out. He said he watched the last World Cup on a large screen in an outdoor cafe, but preferred to stay at home this time. “I live in a very dangerous area, surrounded by (Hamas) security compounds “' that might be targeted by Israel, he said.

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