Gulf News

Israeli sniper kills life saver

Al Najjar was killed as she tried to assist injured protester; UN says murder was ‘reprehensi­ble’

- BY EYAD ABU HUWEILA ISABEL KERSHNER

Medic Al Najjar hit as she rushed to help Gaza protester |

She had become a fixture at the weekly protests along the fence dividing the Gaza Strip from Israel, a young woman in a white paramedic’s uniform rushing into harm’s way to help treat the wounded.

As a volunteer emergency medical worker, she said she wanted to prove that women had a role to play in the conservati­ve Palestinia­n society of Gaza.

“Being a medic is not only a job for a man,” Razan Al Najjar, 20, said in an interview at a Gaza protest camp in May.

An hour before dusk on Friday, the 10th week of the Palestinia­n protest campaign, she ran forward to aid a demonstrat­or for the last time.

Israeli occupation soldiers fired two or three bullets from across the fence, according to a witness, hitting Al Najjar in the upper body.

She was pronounced dead soon after.

Al Najjar was the 119th Palestinia­n killed since the protests began in March, according to Gaza health officials.

On Saturday, a group of United Nations agencies issued a statement expressing outrage over the killing of “a clearly identified medical staffer,” calling it “particular­ly reprehensi­ble.”

No explanatio­n

The Israeli military has provided no explanatio­n for the shooting but said Saturday that the case would be examined.

The weeks of protests, called the Great Return March, aim to draw attention to the 11-year blockade by Israel and Egypt of the coastal territory and to press refugee claims to lands taken by Israel when it was establishe­d in 1948.

Most of those killed during the protests have been shot by Israeli snipers, half in a single day, May 14, the peak of the campaign.

The United Nations and human rights groups have accused Israel of using excessive force against the unarmed protesters.

On Friday, a UN Security Council resolution condemning Israel for using “excessive, disproport­ionate and indiscrimi­nate force” against Palestinia­ns failed when it was vetoed by the United States, a chief ally of Israel.

On Friday thousands of Palestinia­ns took part in demonstrat­ions at five locations along the border fence.

This was the scene that Al Najjar dashed into in her white coat to tend to an elderly man who had been hit in the head by a tear-gas canister, according to a witness, Ebrahim Al Najjar,

We have one goal, to save lives and evacuate people. And to send a message to the world: Without weapons, we can do anything.”

Razan Al Najjar | Slain paramedic

30, a relative of hers.

Other witnesses and the Gaza Health Ministry offered a slightly different version of events, saying that Al Najjar and other paramedics were walking toward the fence with their arms raised on their way to evacuate injured protesters there when she was shot in the chest.

Al Najjar was a resident of Khuzaa, a farming village near the border with Israel, east of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.

Her father, Ashraf Al Najjar, had a shop that sold motorcycle parts, which was destroyed in an Israeli air strike during the 2014 war between Israel and the militant group, he said.

He has since been unemployed.

The eldest of six children, Al Najjar trained for two years as a paramedic at the Nasser hospi- tal in Khan Younis and became a volunteer of the Palestinia­n Medical Relief Society, a nongovernm­ental health organisati­on.

Al Najjar, 44, said his daughter rose before dawn on Friday to eat and pray before the start of the daily, sunrise-to-sunset Ramadan fast.

That was the last time he saw her.

When we met her at a protest camp in Khan Younis last month, she said her father was proud of what she did.

Single-minded devotion

“We have one goal,” she said, “to save lives and evacuate people. And to send a message to the world: Without weapons, we can do anything.”

“Razan was not shooting.

She was saving souls and treating the wounded,” Ebrahim said.

After being shot, she arrived at a field hospital in serious condition, the hospital manager, Dr. Salah Al Rantisi, said.

She was then transferre­d to the European Gaza Hospital in Khan Younis, where she died in the operating room.

In a video interview on Saturday, a woman identified as Al Najjar’s mother held up a blood-soaked vest and said, “This is my daughter’s weapon with which she was fighting the Zionists.” The woman also held up two unopened bandage rolls she said she had found in the vest and said, “These were her ammunition.”

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 ??  ?? ■ Razan Al Najjar wanted to prove that women had a role to play in the conservati­ve Palestinia­n society of Gaza.
■ Razan Al Najjar wanted to prove that women had a role to play in the conservati­ve Palestinia­n society of Gaza.
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