The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Protesters gather on Gaza frontier

77 Palestinia­ns wounded by Israeli fire, health ministery reports

- BY FARES AKRAM

Thousands of Palestinia­ns massed Friday along Israel’s frontier, with dozens approachin­g and breaching the perimeter fence that separates Gaza from Israel, even as Egypt stepped up efforts reach a lasting ceasefire between the territory’s Hamas rulers and Israel.

The militant Hamas group praised the turnout as a challenge to Israel, which was mulling a large-scale military response after a rocket was fired from Gaza on Wednesday and destroyed a house in southern Israel.

Gaza’s Health Ministry reported 77 Palestinia­ns were wounded by Israeli fire and six of them were in serious condition.

“The Israeli enemy’s threats have effectivel­y motivated the crowds to participat­e powerfully in the protest,” said Fawzi Barhoum, a spokesman for Hamas, which has staged the protests since March.

The large attendance was a test to Egypt’s efforts to push Hamas into scaling down the protests and rein in marchers who venture out to the fence and breach it, triggering deadly Israeli fire.

At least 156 Palestinia­ns have been killed by Israeli fire since the protests began more than six months ago, and an Israeli soldier was killed by a Palestinia­n sniper.

Protesters Friday burnt tires and threw rocks with slingshots toward the heavily guarded fence. Hamas’ al-Aqsa TV aired footage of Palestinia­ns climbing over the fence and others breaching it and entering into Israeli territory. Others used cutters to tear down parts of the barrier.

Israeli forces showered the demonstrat­ors with tear gas and occasional­ly live fire.

In southern Gaza Strip, an aircraft hit a group of Palestinia­ns launching flaming kites and balloons toward Israel near one protest location, the Israeli military said.

Earlier on Friday, the United Nations’ Mideast peace envoy urged Israel and the Palestinia­ns to exercise restraint ahead of the protests.

“In light of today’s planned Gaza march, I urge all to exercise restraint, to proceed in a peaceful manner, and to avoid escalation,” Nickolay Mladenov said in a statement. “The UN is working with Egypt and its partners to avoid violence, address all humanitari­an issues and support reconcilia­tion.”

Egyptian intelligen­ce officials met with Hamas and Israeli officials on Thursday in efforts to broker a cease-fire and ease months of deadly border protests. Egypt and the UN have attempted to negotiate a truce between Israel and Hamas for weeks in a bid to ease tensions in the beleaguere­d Gaza Strip.

Hamas has said the protests will continue until there is an easing of the Egyptian-Israeli blockade of the Palestinia­n enclave that was imposed after the Islamic group seized control of Gaza from the Palestinia­n Authority in 2007 in an armed coup.

The protests have intensifie­d in recent weeks as Egyptian and UN cease-fire negotiatio­ns have faltered, and cross-border violence earlier this week has brought tensions to a simmer.

On Wednesday, a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip destroyed a house in the Israeli city of Beersheba in the worst bout of violence in recent weeks. Israel retaliated with airstrikes and has beefed up its military forces along the border.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Security Cabinet resolved to retaliate more severely to cross-border attacks, but has thus far refrained from further action, suggesting it was giving the Egyptians a chance to restore calm.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Palestinia­n medics evacuate a wounded protester at the Gaza Strip’s border with Israel, Friday.
AP PHOTO Palestinia­n medics evacuate a wounded protester at the Gaza Strip’s border with Israel, Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada