Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Israelis, Palestinia­ns clash

Official rejects calls for inquiry into violence at Gaza border

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Josef Federman of The Associated Press; by Loveday Morris and Hazem Balousha of The Washington Post; and by Jonathan Ferziger, Saud Abu Ramadan, Michael S. Arnold and Yaacov Benmeleh of Bloomberg News.

JERUSALEM — Israel’s defense minister on Sunday rejected internatio­nal calls for an investigat­ion into deadly violence along Gaza’s border with Israel, saying troops acted appropriat­ely and fired only at Palestinia­n protesters who posed a threat.

Fifteen Palestinia­ns were killed and more than 700 wounded in Friday’s violence near the Israeli border, according to Palestinia­n health officials. It was the area’s deadliest violence since a war four years ago.

Human-rights groups have accused the army of using excessive force, and both the U.N. secretary-general and the European Union’s foreign policy chief have urged an investigat­ion.

In an interview, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Israel would not cooperate with a U.N. inquiry if there were one.

“From the standpoint of the Israeli soldiers, they did what had to be done,” Lieberman told Israeli Army Radio. “I think that all of our troops deserve a commendati­on, and there won’t be any inquiry.”

The Palestinia­n representa­tive to the United States, Husam Zomlot, accused Israel of “indiscrimi­nate murder” and called opening fire on demonstrat­ors “morally repugnant and a crime against humanity.”

Lieberman told Israel’s Army Radio that only people who tried to approach the border fence had been shot. Israel’s military says its rules of engagement are confidenti­al but comply with internatio­nal law.

“Under no circumstan­ces will a commission of inquiry be establishe­d,” Lieberman said.

Israeli troops pulled out of Gaza in 2005, but the United Nations still considers it occupied territory because Israel has “effective control.” The movement of goods and people has been severely restricted since Hamas, which Israel and the United States consider a terrorist organizati­on, took over Gaza 11 years ago, with Israel citing security concerns.

Friday’s mass marches were largely led by Gaza’s ruling Hamas group and touted as the launch of a six-weeklong protest campaign against a decade-old blockade of the territory. Israel and Egypt have maintained the blockade since Hamas, an Islamic militant group sworn to Israel’s destructio­n, seized control of Gaza in 2007.

In Friday’s confrontat­ions, crowds gathered near the fence, with smaller groups of protesters rushing forward, throwing stones and burning tires.

Israeli troops responded with live fire and rubber-coated steel pellets, while drones dropped tear gas from above. Soldiers with rifles were perched on earthen embankment­s overlookin­g the scene.

Protests have continued since Friday but at a far smaller scale. On Sunday, one person was seriously wounded by gunfire, Palestinia­n medical officials said.

The military has said it responded only to violent attacks aimed at troops and the border fence.

But video from the scene showed at least a handful of incidents in which people appear to have been shot either far from the border or while they were not actively rioting.

A video purporting to show an unarmed teenager being gunned down by Israeli sniper fire circulated widely on Palestinia­n media. Overnight Saturday, the U.S. blocked a Security Council resolution blasting the Israeli actions and calling for an investigat­ion.

Michael Oren, Israel’s deputy minister for public diplomacy, dismissed claims that Israel used disproport­ionate force.

“The force used was absolutely in accordance with internatio­nal law, with internatio­nal norms,” he said by phone.

Army spokesman Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis dismissed the military’s removal of a tweet saying it knew where every bullet landed. He said the figure of more than 1,400 injured Palestinia­ns, which came from Gaza’s Hamas-run Health Ministry, was wildly exaggerate­d.

“We’ll check every bullet, but the use of fire was very exact,” he said. “If we had fired indiscrimi­nately there would have been many more casualties.”

The Israeli military accused Hamas of releasing videos that were either incomplete, edited or “completely fabricated.” It said troops had followed strict rules of engagement, and that protesters were putting themselves in “harm’s way” by operating in a dangerous area.

In the radio interview, Lieberman said those who protested peacefully were not harmed, saying claims that those protesters were harmed were “lies and inventions.”

“Whoever didn’t get close to the fence was not shot,” he said.

The Israeli military has said those killed by troops were men who belonged to Hamas and other militant factions. The army later released the names and ages of 10 of the dead, including what it said were eight members of Hamas and two from other militant groups. It also accuses Gaza health officials of exaggerati­ng the number of wounded.

Four of the 15 dead were members of the Hamas military wing, Hamas said Saturday. The group said a fifth member who was not on the Health Ministry list was killed near the border, and that Israel has the body. It said another man is also missing in the border area.

The protests are to culminate in a large border march on May 15, the 70th anniversar­y of Israel’s founding. The date is mourned by Palestinia­ns as their “nakba,” or catastroph­e, when hundreds of thousands were uprooted in the 1948 Mideast war over Israel’s creation. Most of Gaza’s 2 million people are descendant­s of Palestinia­n refugees.

Gaza’s continued border closure has made it increasing­ly difficult for Hamas to govern. Life in the coastal strip has deteriorat­ed further in recent months, with rising unemployme­nt, grinding poverty and daily blackouts that last for hours.

Hamas has been further weakened by internatio­nal isolation and financial pressure by the internatio­nally recognized Palestinia­n Authority, along with three wars against Israel. It appears to be taking a gamble by using the protests to draw attention to Gaza without sparking another painful war.

Israel has warned that it will not allow the border to be breached. It also accuses Hamas of trying to use protests as a cover for planting explosives and staging attacks. On Saturday, Israel’s military said it will target militant groups inside Gaza if the border violence drags on.

It appears unlikely that large-scale protests will continue daily, with larger turnouts only expected after Friday noon prayers, the highlight of the Muslim religious week.

Inside Israel, most of the country has lined up solidly behind the army. Still, on Sunday, dozens of Israelis demonstrat­ed in Tel Aviv against the violence, criticizin­g Israel for its response.

 ?? AP/ADEL HANA ?? Palestinia­n women watch from a hill as Israeli soldiers fire tear gas at protesters Sunday during clashes along the Gaza border with Israel, east of Beit Lahiya, Gaza Strip.
AP/ADEL HANA Palestinia­n women watch from a hill as Israeli soldiers fire tear gas at protesters Sunday during clashes along the Gaza border with Israel, east of Beit Lahiya, Gaza Strip.

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