The National - News

A combustibl­e moment in Israel’s brutal killings

▶ Friday’s massacre in Gaza by trigger-happy Israelis could lead to protracted violence

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It was a massacre. When 30,000 residents of Gaza pitched up on the border with Israel on Friday to engage in peaceful demonstrat­ion against their degrading incarcerat­ion, Israeli forces opened fire into crowds of families. Drones sprayed tear gas from the skies. Men, women and children ran for shelter. At least 15 Palestinia­ns were killed by the time the shooting subsided. Of the 1,416 people injured, 750 were struck by live ammunition. In the annals of colonial violence, what Israel did on Friday is comparable to the notorious Jallianwal­lah Bagh massacre of 1919, when the British fired on hundreds of peaceful protesters in India. That episode had provoked condemnati­on in London. Yesterday’s killings in Gaza, on the other hand, have not even scratched the conscience of Israeli society. Instead, Israel’s military spokesman, brigadier-general Ronen Manelis, has threatened to “respond inside the Gaza strip” if the Palestinia­ns persist with their protests.

But Israel is delusional if it believes that it can tame with yet more violence a people who have lost everything. May 15 will mark the 70th anniversar­y of the Nakba, when heavily armed agents of the newly created state of Israel stormed Palestinia­n towns and villages and drove out hundreds of thousands of people from their homes. Take a stroll in Jerusalem, and you will still see faded Arab lettering carved into the facades of the city’s grand houses. The families who built them have become refugees in their own land. From Gaza, you can see the villages that were once Palestinia­n, but where no Palestinia­n is allowed today. Israel’s supposedly “democratic” state wields the power of life and death over them even as it denies them the most rudimentar­y civil rights. If this is not apartheid, the word has no meaning. Israel’s history is written in the blood and dispossess­ion of Palestinia­ns. And as Israel gears up shamelessl­y to “celebrate” seven decades of its founding in May, Palestinia­ns in Gaza are staging protests to remind the world of their story.

This is a combustibl­e moment. The misrule of Hamas and the Israeli blockade have ensured that conditions in Gaza, an open prison where 5,000 people are packed into every square kilometre, are so appalling that the UN estimates it will become unliveable in two years’ time. The rift between Hamas and Fatah means that there is no united Palestinia­n leadership. This is a gift to Israeli reactionar­ies as well as Iran, both of whom are exploiting internal Palestinia­n divisions for their own ends. Making matters worse, the US government has abandoned even the pretence of impartiali­ty by deciding to relocate its embassy to Israel to Jerusalem. The UN’s call for an independen­t investigat­ion into Friday’s massacre will likely be thwarted by Israel’s allies. There are all the ingredient­s for protracted violence, with not a single just solution in sight. This is Israel’s accomplish­ment over the past 70 years.

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