Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Smoke rises, sirens wail at Gaza’s deadly recurring protests

- By Todd Pitman

MALAKA, GAZA STRIP >> Atalla Fayoumi hobbles on crutches across the sunbaked plain near Israel’s perimeter fence in the Gaza Strip, gazing toward plumes of smoke that have begun rising from a clutch of burning tires in the distance.

The 18-year-old Palestinia­n’s right leg was amputated after Israeli soldiers shot him here in April at one of the mass demonstrat­ions against Israel’s long blockade of Gaza that are held every week. Yet he has kept returning to the protests — just like thousands of other desperate, unemployed men who feel they have nothing left to lose.

Eight months after the demonstrat­ions began, there appears to be no end to what has become a predictabl­e routine that yields dozens of new casualties each week. Over the next few hours, Fayoumi knows the crowds will swell into the thousands. They’ll burn so many tires, the sky will turn black. They’ll attack the fence with stones and firebombs, Israeli gunfire will ring out, and Palestinia­n ambulance sirens will wail non-stop.

By the time it is over, at least 80 Palestinia­ns will be wounded and three will be dead.

At sunset, Fayoumi and the others will abruptly turn around and walk home, while the Israelis will emerge from their positions and march the other way.

In a week, like clockwork, they will be back, poised for the deadly ritual to start all over again.

The Gaza Strip has been the front line of confrontat­ions between Palestinia­ns and Israel for generation­s. But the territory has been brought to its knees over the last decade by three punishing wars with Israel and an air, sea and land blockade.

The 11-year blockade, imposed by Israel and Egypt, is aimed at weakening Hamas, the militant group that seized power in Gaza from the internatio­nallybacke­d Palestinia­n Authority in 2007. But its impact is felt by all. Raw sewage flows directly onto once-scenic Mediterran­ean beaches, tap water is undrinkabl­e, and electricit­y is available just a few hours a day. Over half the Gaza Strip’s 2 million people are unemployed, and most residents cannot leave what has become, in essence, a mass prison, even for medical reasons.

The blockade and growing anger over the harsh living conditions have put enormous pressure on Hamas, which is trying to redirect it toward Israel with relentless protests, said Mkhaimar Abusada, an associate professor of political science at Gaza’s al-Azhar University.

“But it’s a very slippery slope,” Abusada said. “Because they’re not going to stop until the siege is lifted — or there is another war.”

That almost happened this month, when an Israeli raid into Gaza left seven Palestinia­n militants and a senior Israeli military officer dead. The raid prompted Hamas and other armed groups to fire hundreds of rockets and mortar shells into Israel, triggering a devastatin­g wave of Israeli airstrikes in return — the heaviest fighting here since a 2014 war.

Both parties pulled back from the brink with a truce, and Hamas kept last Friday’s protests restrained — though not enough to keep 40 Palestinia­ns from being wounded.

While most Gazans see the protests as the inevitable reaction to Israel’s siege, Israel has a different view altogether.

“We don’t see them as protests ... we’re not seeing somebody exercising their democratic right to gather and voice their opinion,” said Israeli military spokesman Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus. “We are confrontin­g attacks, violent attacks along our security fence from an entity, Gaza, that is controlled by a terrorist organizati­on, Hamas.”

Since they began March 30, Israeli troops — using live ammunition against Palestinia­ns mostly armed with rocks — have killed more than 170 people and shot nearly 6,000 others, among them scores of children. Thousands more have been wounded during the protests by tear gas or rubber-coated bullets. On the Israeli side, one soldier has been killed by a sniper and six others wounded.

Every Friday, there are more.

It is 2:30 p.m. in Malaka, one of five protest sites along the border, and several boys are practicing for a fight.

They are flinging large rocks onto a barren field with homemade slingshots. One of them, 17-year-old Ahmed al-Burdaini, shows off a bucket filled with fragments of steel rebar he says he spent the week collecting from the rubble of homes destroyed in past Israeli airstrikes.

“We want to use it against them,” he says proudly.

Another boy points across the frontier and writes in a reporter’s notebook: “This Is Our Land.” It is a reference to another demand of the protests, that Palestinia­ns be allowed to return to lands lost during the 1948 war that created the Jewish state — a demand Israel rejects outright.

The perimeter fence itself is a few hundred meters (yards) away. Israeli soldiers on the other side peer out from bunkers built atop pyramid-shaped berms along the fence.

The protest site is still largely empty, but people are trickling in. Among them is the amputee, Fayoumi, who says he was throwing rocks near the fence and was shot as he rushed to help a wounded friend. A few days earlier, speaking at a clinic run by Doctors Without Borders, he swore he would keep participat­ing in the protests despite his wounds. But why risk it?

“Because I want to die,” he said.

He would prefer for the blockade to be lifted so he could leave Gaza to get a new, prosthetic leg. But if that doesn’t happen, “what’s the point of living?”

The sun is bearing down intensely when a couple dozen Palestinia­ns roll a few tires toward the fence and set them on fire. The first gunshots ring out at

3:14 p.m., in the standard Israeli response to the start of the protests. An armored Israeli jeep at the edge of the fence fires a volley of tear gas canisters that leave white arcs trailing across the sky as they fall. The protesters are unfazed.

Among the growing crowds is an incongruou­s sight: five street vendors pushing dilapidate­d food carts hawking seeds, nuts, and frozen slushies. One is affixed with a cheap wooden speaker blaring traditiona­l Bedouin music. It gives the protest the atmosphere of a country fair.

Vendor Adam Badwan,

17, has a simple explanatio­n for coming: “Business is good here, much better than in town.”

Plaincloth­es Hamas security agents appear. A local television crew arrives with flak jackets and helmets. A single ambulance pulls up.

After Friday noon prayers, around 4 p.m., Hamas dispatches huge buses to many mosques to bring supporters to the border. But many more come on their own — on foot, in cars, motorcycle­s, bikes and wheelchair­s. Within one hour, at least

13,000 people are gathered along the border.

Dr. Khalil Siam is standing inside a medical triage tent about a kilometer (half a mile) from the border when the ambulance sirens begin to howl just after 5 p.m.

The first one to arrive drops off a 22-year-old man who was shot in the left leg. The second brings an

18-year-old, blood streaming from his bandaged face, who was struck by shrapnel.

 ?? FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Palestinia­n protesters run from teargas fired by Israeli troops during a protest at the Gaza Strip’s border with Israel, east of Gaza City. The 11-year blockade and growing anger have put a lot of pressure on Hamas, which is trying to redirect it toward Israel with relentless protests.
FELIPE DANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Palestinia­n protesters run from teargas fired by Israeli troops during a protest at the Gaza Strip’s border with Israel, east of Gaza City. The 11-year blockade and growing anger have put a lot of pressure on Hamas, which is trying to redirect it toward Israel with relentless protests.

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