Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hamas claim the slain from Israeli fire

- BY TIA GOLDENBERG AND FARES AKRAM

JERUSALEM — Most of the protesters killed this week by Israeli fire along the border with the Gaza Strip were members of Hamas, the militant group said Wednesday, an assertion that deepens the starkly different narratives on both sides over the deaths.

Israel, which has faced blistering internatio­nal criticism over its response, is likely to latch on to the remarks to bolster its claims that Hamas has used the weekly border protests as cover to stage attacks.

But human rights groups said the identity of slain protesters, including a possible affiliatio­n to a militant group, is irrelevant if they were unarmed and did not pose an immediate threat to the lives of soldiers when they were shot.

In an interview with Baladna TV, a private Palestinia­n news outlet that broadcasts via Facebook, senior Hamas official Salah Bardawil said 50 out of the nearly 60 protesters killed Monday were Hamas members, with the others being “from the people.”

Bardawil did not elaborate on the nature of their membership in the group and his claim could not be independen­tly verified. It was unclear if the protesters he was referring to were militants or civilian supporters of the Islamic group, which rules Gaza and opposes Israel’s existence.

The affiliatio­n may matter little to those who have deemed Israel’s response to the protests to be heavy-handed.

For Israel, it was enough to cement its narrative.

“It was clear to Israel and now it is clear to the whole world that there was no popular protest. This was an organized mob of terrorists organized by Hamas,” said Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel had tallied similar numbers to Hamas and “won’t let those who call for our destructio­n to breach our borders and to threaten our communitie­s.”

In response to the uproar over his remarks, Bardawil later said in a statement that Israel was “legitimizi­ng the killing of Palestinia­ns just because they are Palestinia­ns or just because they are Hamas, even if they were unarmed and defending their dignity and rights.”

Organizers said the wave of border protests is meant in large part to break a decade-old blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt and pressure Israel to ease its restrictio­ns. Since the Hamas-led protests began March 30, more than 110 Palestinia­ns have been killed and more than 2,500 wounded by live fire, according to the Palestinia­n Health Ministry. Palestinia­n officials said the vast majority of the casualties have been unarmed protesters. One Israeli soldier has been wounded.

The weekly protests peaked Monday when about 40,000 Gaza residents descended on the border area. As in previous demonstrat­ions, smaller groups of protesters broke away and moved closer to the border fence, burning tires, throwing stones or hurling firebombs. Some tried to attack the border fence.

Israeli snipers, perched behind sand berms, opened fire from the other side of the fence, killing 59 Palestinia­ns and wounding hundreds.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Demonstrat­ors wave Palestinia­n flags as they protest Wednesday to condemn the Israeli fire along the Gaza Strip at Trocadero plaza in Paris, France.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Demonstrat­ors wave Palestinia­n flags as they protest Wednesday to condemn the Israeli fire along the Gaza Strip at Trocadero plaza in Paris, France.

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