Cape Argus

Palestinia­n killed in Israeli airstrike

Death toll during mass protests on Gaza-Israel border rises to 21

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AN ISRAELI airstrike in northern Gaza early yesterday killed a Palestinia­n, while a second man died from wounds sustained during last week’s mass protest along the Gaza-Israel border, officials said.

The fatalities bring to 21 the number of people killed in confrontat­ions in the volatile area over the past week.

A new round of protests along the border is expected today, raising the prospect of further bloodshed.

The protest last week, largely organised by Gaza’s Hamas rulers, had been billed as the first of several weeks of intermitte­nt protests against a stifling decade-old Israeli blockade.

Hamas leaders have portrayed the final protest, set for May 15, as the “Great March of Return” of Palestinia­n refugees and their descendant­s, implying they would try to enter Israeli territory. But they have stopped short of specifical­ly threatenin­g a mass breach of the border fence.

The Israeli military has said it will not allow anyone to breach the border fence and has beefed up forces in the area, with snipers and other special units. The military was on high alert ahead of today.

In the latest violence, the military said an aircraft had targeted an “armed terrorist adjacent to the security fence” in northern Gaza. The Gaza Health Ministry confirmed the man’s death but did not immediatel­y release his identity. It also confirmed the death of a man who was wounded in last Friday’s protests.

Hundreds more were wounded by live fire last week, according to Palestinia­n health officials. Of the 21 dead so far, 15 were killed during border protests, and videos and witness accounts indicate that most were not armed or carrying out attacks at the moment they were killed.

Israel has defended its actions by saying the marches are planned by the militant Islamic Hamas group, which is sworn to Israel’s destructio­n. It said the border fence was attacked with burning tyres, stones and firebombs, and in one case, by a pair of gunmen. It said its snipers carefully targeted only the main “instigator­s”, and accused Hamas of using the crowds as cover to stage attacks.

“By defending the border fence, the IDF is protecting civilian homes,” the military said on Twitter, referring to the Israel Defence Forces. Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman warned in a radio interview yesterday that Israel would respond harshly to any attempt to violate its security. Earlier, Lieberman said Gazans who approached the fence would be risking their lives.

Rights groups have condemned orders to shoot unarmed protesters as unlawful, saying lethal force can only be used if soldiers face an apparent imminent threat to their lives. The Israeli group B’Tselem, in a rare appeal, urged Israeli soldiers to refuse such orders.

The UN and the EU have called for independen­t probes into the shootings.

Meanwhile, Egyptian intelligen­ce chief Abbas Kamel held separate meetings this week with Israeli officials and with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, the West Bank-based rival of Hamas, in the hope of preventing an escalation in violence on the Gaza border.

In recent months, Egypt had tried to broker a deal that would have enabled Abbas to take back control in the Gaza Strip, more than a decade after Hamas seized the territory from forces loyal to him.

Hamas, in turn, had hoped that Israel and Egypt would end their blockade of Gaza if the group handed the reins of government to Abbas. However, talks broke down last month, in part because Hamas refused to disarm.

Hamas and Israel have fought three wars in the Gaza Strip since 2009.

Abbas told the Egyptian intelligen­ce this week that he would not waste any more time negotiatin­g a deal with Hamas and that he would only assume responsibi­lity for Gaza if Hamas handed over all powers, including control over the security apparatus, according to two Palestinia­n officials.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to discuss details of the meeting with reporters. – AP

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? UNDER FIRE: Palestinia­n women chant slogans during a protest on the Gaza Strip border with Israel. A leading Israeli human-rights group has urged Israeli forces to disobey openfire orders unless Gazan protesters pose an imminent threat to soldiers’...
PICTURE: AP UNDER FIRE: Palestinia­n women chant slogans during a protest on the Gaza Strip border with Israel. A leading Israeli human-rights group has urged Israeli forces to disobey openfire orders unless Gazan protesters pose an imminent threat to soldiers’...

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