Yearning and camaraderie at Gaza camps

Published April 3, 2018
GAZA CITY: Palestinians prepare coffee outside their tents along the border with Israel during a protest in support of Palestinian refugees’ right of return to lands they were expelled from during the 1948 war surrounding Israel’s creation.—AFP
GAZA CITY: Palestinians prepare coffee outside their tents along the border with Israel during a protest in support of Palestinian refugees’ right of return to lands they were expelled from during the 1948 war surrounding Israel’s creation.—AFP

GAZA BORDER: Several thousand Palestinians remained in tent camps along the Gaza border on Monday, continuing their protest for a right of return for refugees and their descendents to what is now Israel even after 16 demonstrators were killed by Israeli troops.

The numbers were far smaller than at the peak of the demonstration over the weekend, which saw the worst violence in Gaza since the 2014 war between Israel and Hamas, the armed Islamist group that controls the sealed-off coastal enclave.

Many protesters on Monday stayed back a safe distance, wary of Israeli soldiers who remained in position on the other side of the barrier.

The Israeli military said some of those who were shot on Friday, the first day of the protest, had fired at soldiers, rolled burning tyres and hurled rocks and fire bombs toward the border.

Hamas said five of the dead were members of its armed wing. Israel said eight of the 15 killed on Friday belonged to Hamas, and two to other militant factions. However, it denied that its fighters had fired on Israeli forces, using the crowds as cover.

Editorial: More bloodshed in Palestine

On Monday, the Palestinian death toll rose to 16, after Palestinian medical officials said that a 29-year-old man died of wounds he suffered on Friday. The armed wing of Islamic Jihad claimed him as a member.

Those who have stayed in the camps seemed to have divided into three groups. One, mostly youths, sometimes pushed to within a few dozen metres of the fence to hurl rocks at Israeli soldiers, who fired live and rubber bullets, and teargas canisters.

Others watched the stone-throwers from a distance. A third group stayed further back, sitting in and around the tents about 700 metres from the frontier. The mood there was calmer, with people snapping selfies and sharing stories about the protest while vendors sell ice cream, cigarettes and sandwiches.

Hilltop view

Gaza is home to two million Palestinians, the majority of them refugees. The protest, known as the “Great March of Return”, is intended to culminate on May 15.

That is the day that Palestinians mark the 70th anniversary of the “Nakba” or “Catastrophe” when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were driven out of their homes amid violence culminating in war between the newly created State of Israel and its Arab neighbours in May 1948.

At one protest site on Monday, Medhat Basal brought seven of his grandchildren to a hilltop to look out over the border toward the town where his parents lived before 1948.

In pictures: Thousands gather for sit-in along Israel-Gaza border

Basal, 69, said his mother gave birth to him while she was fleeing to Gaza from the family home in Beersheba, which is today an Israeli city which lies 25 miles from the Gaza border.

“If I don’t make it to Beersheba, one of my grandchildren may do,” Basal said.

Israel has long ruled out any right of return for the refugees, fearing that it would lose its Jewish majority.

Last week’s deaths prompted UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and the European Union’s top diplomat, Federica Mogherini, to call for an independent investigation. In his Easter address, Pope Francis also referred to “the wounds of ongoing conflict that do not spare the defenceless”.

But Israel’s government has rejected the criticism, saying it had to prevent infiltration from Gaza. A spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netan­yahu accused Hamas, the armed Islamist group which controls Gaza, of sending “children to war zones”.

Hamas rejected Israeli accusations as “lies aimed to justify Friday’s massacre”.

Avigdor Lieberman, the Israeli defence minister, said its soldiers did what was necessary to protect Israel’s border.

Published in Dawn, April 3rd, 2018

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