Los Angeles Times

Eight Palestinia­ns killed in Gaza border protests

A teenager is among the dead at the rallies, which draw 20,000.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y and Rushdi Abu Alouf

JABALYA , Gaza Strip — Thick, acrid black smoke enveloped the Gaza Strip on Friday as 20,000 demonstrat­ors rallied along the border with Israel, burning tires, the occasional Israeli flag and, for the first time, photograph­s of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Eight Palestinia­ns, one of them a 16year-old, were reported killed in clashes with Israeli forces.

The Israel Defense Forces did not explain what caused them to respond to the rallies with live fire, but in a statement said “the violent riots” took place at five sites along the Gaza-Israel border, including several attempts “to infiltrate into Israel under the cover of a smokescree­n, as well as additional explosive devices and firebombs thrown towards IDF soldiers.”

The demonstrat­ion was the second of six planned protests Friday organized by Hamas, the Islamist militia that rules the Gaza Strip, a Palestinia­n enclave that is separate from the West Bank.

The rallies are scheduled to culminate in a massive effort to flatten the fence separating the blockaded strip from Israel on May 14, commemorat­ing Israel’s establishm­ent 70 years ago. Palestinia­ns call it Nakba, or catastroph­e, day.

The Palestinia­n Health Ministry in Gaza identified the teenager who was killed in Friday’s clashes as Hussein Mohammed Madi. It reported that 293 people were wounded in the beleaguere­d Palestinia­n territory caught between Israel, Egypt and the Mediterran­ean Sea. The injuries ranged from bullet wounds to smoke inhalation.

The demonstrat­ors, who dubbed their protest the Great Return March, rallied at five points along the border. The turnout represente­d a significan­t decrease from last week’s protests, in which more than 30,000 people participat­ed and 19 were killed.

At least one Palestinia­n journalist, Yasser Mourthaja, was wounded in the clashes. He was photograph­ed being taken from the clashes on a stretcher, still wearing his bulletproo­f vest marked “PRESS.”

Protesters rolled or hurled more than 10,000 burning tires toward Israeli soldiers stationed along the border fence. Wind blew the smoke over the Gaza Strip, but left southern Israeli communitie­s largely unaffected.

Israeli army sources reported several thwarted Palestinia­n attempts to breach the fence that marks the border. In a Thursday briefing, Israel Defense Forces spokesman Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis told journalist­s Israel believed the heavy smoke, which he described as an “ecological catastroph­e,” served two strategic purposes: to conceal the reduced number of demonstrat­ors and to cover attempted terrorist attacks along the fence, or attempted infiltrati­ons into Israeli territory.

For Hamas, considered a terrorist organizati­on by the United States, Europe and Israel, the rallies are an attempt to show force in the face of increasing­ly dire punitive measures exacted against it by the Palestinia­n Authority, such as severe restrictio­ns on the flow of potable water and electricit­y into the strip, and what it perceives to be the apathy of the Arab leadership.

Alongside Israeli flags burned in the Gaza protests, photograph­s of the Saudi crown prince were also set on fire, a commentary on the prince’s visit this week to the United States — where, among other high-profile meetings, he also engaged in highly visible encounters with the American Jewish community.

For the second Friday, Hamas’ leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, made a rare public appearance, mingling among the crowds near the city of Khan Younis, at a safe distance from the fence itself.

Sinwar said the world should “wait for our great move, when we breach the borders and pray at Al Aqsa,” referring to the mosque in Jerusalem.

Jerusalem has become a principal Palestinia­n rallying point since President Trump declared in December that the United States would recognize it as Israel’s capital, without mentioning Palestinia­n claims for sovereignt­y over its eastern half.

Sinwar was greeted with cheers and hundreds of supporters chanting, “We are going to Jerusalem, millions of martyrs.”

 ?? Said Khatib AFP/Getty Images ?? AN INJURED protester is carried away amid clashes with Israeli security forces. The demonstrat­ions were the second in a series of six organized by Hamas.
Said Khatib AFP/Getty Images AN INJURED protester is carried away amid clashes with Israeli security forces. The demonstrat­ions were the second in a series of six organized by Hamas.

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