The Phnom Penh Post

Army given shoot orders ahead of Gaza protest

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ISRAELI chief of staff Lieutenant General Gadi Eisenkot has warned the army has been given authorisat­ion to open fire ahead of mass protests on the Gaza border planned for Friday.

Eisenkot said reinforcem­ents, including special forces snipers, had been deployed to the border to counter what he said was the most serious risk of conflict since he took up his post in 2015.

A series of incidents in recent days, including two infiltrati­ons, one by three armed Palestinia­ns who penetrated some 20 kilometres inside Israel, has already sent tensions soaring on the volatile frontier.

Friday’s mass rallies near the border fence mark the start of more than six weeks of planned protests leading up to the inaugurati­on of the new US embassy in Jerusalem around May 14.

US President Donald Trump’s recognitio­n of the disputed city as Israel’s capital in December has infuriated Palestinia­ns who claim its annexed eastern sector as the capital of their future state.

Gazans are being urged to set up a string of protest camps along the Israeli border, each some 100 metres from the security fence, and the army is braced for attempts to break through.

“We won’t allow mass infiltrati­on into Israel and to damage the fence, and certainly not to reach the communitie­s,” Eisenkot told the mass-circulatio­n Yediot Aharonot newspaper.

“The instructio­ns are to use a lot of force,” he said.

“We’ve deployed more than 100 snipers who have been drafted from all the army’s units, mainly from the special units. In the event of mortal danger, there is authorisat­ion to open fire.”

Asked whether he feared a new conflict, Eisenkot said: “The chance of that happening is greater this year than it was in the first three years of my term. There are a lot of negative vectors in the region that are pushing towards a conflict.”

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