The Borneo Post

Four killed as thousands protest at Israeli border

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GAZA CITY, Palestinia­n Territorie­s: Five rockets were launched from the Gaza Strip into Israel, prompting Israeli tanks to respond by firing on Hamas military posts early Sunday, hours after a massive Palestinia­n protest along the border between Israel and Gaza.

The rocket attack and Israeli response did not cause any casualties, according to the Israeli army and witnesses in Gaza.

The Israeli tanks fired at Hamas posts in the central Gaza Strip and east of Gaza City, witnesses said.

Tens of thousands of Gazans earlier gathered at the Israeli border to mark a year since protests and clashes erupted there, but fears of mass bloodshed were averted after late Egyptian-led negotiatio­ns.

Four Palestinia­ns were killed by Israeli fire, one during a demonstrat­ion ahead of the main rally and three 17-yearolds in clashes later Saturday, the health ministry in Gaza City said. Another 316 Gazans were wounded.

But fears of a repeat of similar protests and clashes to those that saw more than 60 Palestinia­ns killed on May 14, when the United States transferre­d its Israel embassy to Jerusalem, did not materialis­e.

Israel deployed several thousand troops along the border, with the anniversar­y coming at a sensitive time ahead of its April 9 elections.

Egypt tried to mediate between Israel and Gaza’s Islamist rulers Hamas to rein in violence.

Hamas officials say an understand­ing was reached that would see Israel ease its crippling blockade of Gaza in exchange for the protests remaining calm.

Tens of thousands gathered at five protest points along the frontier but the vast majority stayed away from the border fence.

East of Gaza City, small groups of young men approached the fence and sought to break it multiple times but were forced back by Israeli tear gas and live fire.

The protesters threw stones at the Israeli soldiers.

An Egyptian security delegation visited the protest site east of Gaza City, as did Hamas leaders Ismail Haniya and Yahya Sinwar.

Israel’s army said around 40,000 ‘rioters and demonstrat­ors’ had gathered in spots throughout the border.

It said grenades and explosive devices were hurled at troops, who responded ‘in accordance with standard operating procedures’.

Protesters were marking the first anniversar­y of often violent weekly demonstrat­ions in which around 200 Palestinia­ns and an Israeli soldier have been killed.

At least 50 Palestinia­n children have been killed in Gaza since the protests began, charity Save the Children said.

In the run-up to the anniversar­y, long-time mediator Egypt had shuttled back and forth in a bid to avoid major bloodshed.

Senior Hamas official Bassem Naim called Saturday’s protest ‘a very important message’ that thousands had gathered ‘ peacefully to raise their voice against aggression and the imposed siege on Gaza’.

He confirmed that Egypt had made progress towards a deal that media reports said would see Israel allow more Qatari aid into the strip and ease some restrictio­ns.

In exchange Hamas would maintain calm at the border protests.

Khalil al-Hayya, another senior figure in the Islamist movement, said they were expecting to receive a timetable from Israel yesterday. There was no Israeli comment on the alleged agreement.

Israel goes to the polls in a keenly contested general election on April 9 in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces a stiff challenge from centrist former military chief Benny Gantz.

He is widely seen as wanting to avoid a major escalation, but has faced accusation­s of being soft on Hamas, including from former defence minister Avigdor Lieberman, who resigned in November the day after an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire was agreed.

The anniversar­y came only days after another severe flareup between Israel and Hamas, sparked by a rare long-range rocket strike from Gaza that struck north of Tel Aviv. An Egyptian- brokered ceasefire restored calm.

The demonstrat­ors are calling for Palestinia­ns to be allowed to return to land their families fled or were expelled from during the 1948 war that accompanie­d Israel’s creation.

Israel says any such mass return would spell the end of a Jewish state and that its actions have been necessary to defend the border.

It accuses Hamas of orchestrat­ing violence, but its soldiers’ use of live fire has come under heavy criticism.

In February a United Nations probe said Israeli soldiers had intentiona­lly fired on civilians in what could constitute war crimes. Two million Palestinia­ns live in impoverish­ed Gaza, crammed between Israel, Egypt and the Mediterran­ean.

Analysts highlight desperate living conditions and lack of freedom of movement as driving forces behind the protests.

Israel, which has fought three wars with Hamas, has blockaded the enclave for more than a decade, and Egypt often closes Gaza’s only other gateway to the outside world. Hamas is considered a terrorist group by the United States, European Union and others.

Many protesters over the past year have remained far back from the fence and demonstrat­ed peacefully, but others have approached in numbers and clashed with soldiers.

Small groups have attached incendiary devices to balloons to float them over the border in an attempt to set fire to nearby Israeli homes and farmland. — AFP

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 ??  ?? A demonstrat­or holds Palestinia­n flags during a protest marking Land Day and the first anniversar­y of a surge of border protests, at the Israel-Gaza border fence east of Gaza City. — Reuters photo
A demonstrat­or holds Palestinia­n flags during a protest marking Land Day and the first anniversar­y of a surge of border protests, at the Israel-Gaza border fence east of Gaza City. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Netanyahu (left) shakes hands with Bolsonaro upon the latter’s arrival atTel Aviv Ben Gurion Internatio­nal Airport in his first state visit to Israel. — AFP photo
Netanyahu (left) shakes hands with Bolsonaro upon the latter’s arrival atTel Aviv Ben Gurion Internatio­nal Airport in his first state visit to Israel. — AFP photo

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