Los Angeles Times

BORDER PROTESTS CONTINUE

At least one protester is killed and 700 hurt as weeks of outrage approach a climax.

- WORLD, A3

Palestinia­ns remove barbed-wire fencing between the Gaza Strip and Israel. At least one protester was killed and hundreds hurt as weeks of violence build toward massive rallies set for next week.

GAZA CITY — Israeli troops on Friday fired volleys of tear gas and gunfire at Palestinia­n protesters who threw stones, burned tires and dragged away rolls of barbed-wire fencing on the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip.

At least one protester was killed and more than 700 injured, Gaza health authoritie­s said, as weeks of deadly violence were building to a pair of large demonstrat­ions expected next week.

Organizers anticipate tens of thousands of people to converge on five encampment­s set up along Gaza’s eastern border Monday, when the United States officially moves its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and Tuesday, the day Palestinia­ns will commemorat­e the 70th anniversar­y of the “Nakba,” or “catastroph­e,” when hundreds of thousands of their forebears fled or were driven from their homes during the war over Israel’s founding.

Protests are also expected in Jerusalem and the West Bank, where Palestinia­ns for the most part have not joined in the Gaza campaign.

Known as the Great March of Return, the campaign aims to draw internatio­nal attention to Israel’s long-standing blockade of Gaza, imposed after the Islamist militant group Hamas took over the coastal enclave in 2007, and to Palestinia­n demands that they return to lands in what is now Israel.

Addressing protesters at a camp in central Gaza, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh vowed Friday to “turn the Nakba that ended Palestine to a Nakba that ends the Zionist enterprise.”

Israeli forces have drawn internatio­nal censure for using live fire against the protesters, most of whom appeared unarmed. At least 48 Palestinia­ns have been killed and thousands injured since the protests began March 30, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza; there have been no reports of Israeli casualties.

The Israel Defense Forces say they are defending their borders and nearby civilian communitie­s from a potential breach of the fence and from attacks planned under the cover of the protests.

“The IDF will continue operating to protect Israeli citizens and deter anyone who seeks to harm the security of the State of Israel and its citizens as necessary,” the Israeli army said in a statement.

It said about 15,000 Palestinia­ns participat­ed in Friday’s protests, during which “rioters hurled pipe bombs and grenades towards Israeli troops, sabotaged security infrastruc­ture, burned tires and hurled rocks toward the security fence and at troops.”

The army accused dozens of vandals of setting fires that damaged gas pipelines on the Gaza side of the Kerem Shalom crossing, through which humanitari­an supplies are delivered to the enclave.

“This marks the second instance in recent days when rioters have harmed and attempted to sabotage humanitari­an efforts carried out by Israel and other countries from around the world,” the army said.

One protester, an 18-yearold named Mohammed, arrived at an encampment Friday in the southern Gaza Strip with a pair of wire cutters and a can of benzene.

“I’m here to get back my land,” he declared. Like many of the protesters, he asked to be identified by one name out of fear of being targeted by Israeli authoritie­s.

Later, he joined dozens of youths who were setting fire to tires to create a smokescree­n to protect protesters from Israeli troops and provide cover for those seeking to cut through the fence. Israeli forces responded with tear gas and live bullets, killing at least one of the protesters, according to medics.

At another camp east of Gaza City, a crowd, including many women and children, watched an Israeli drone duel with kites set aloft with burning rags attached in an effort to set fire to agricultur­al fields on the other side of the border. The crowd erupted in cheers as protesters attached hooks and ropes to the barbedwire fence and hauled sections of it away.

A 13-year-old boy ran up to his mother, clutching a small piece of fencing. She declared it time to go home. Her brother was killed on the first day of the protests, said the 35-year-old woman, who gave her name only as Hanin, and she was worried for the boy’s safety. But she said she would be back.

“It’s not right. They are living off our properties and all that we have,” she said of Israelis. Meanwhile, her husband has been unable to find work to support their seven children since authoritie­s in Jerusalem stopped issuing permits for him to do constructi­on jobs in Israel more than a decade ago.

“We want Jerusalem, and we want our freedom,” she said.

Times staff writer Zavis reported from Gaza City and special correspond­ent Tarnopolos­ky from Jerusalem. Special correspond­ent Hana Salah in Gaza City contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ??
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? PALESTINIA­NS drag away a section of barbed wire separating Israel from the Gaza Strip. Two large protests are expected next week.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times PALESTINIA­NS drag away a section of barbed wire separating Israel from the Gaza Strip. Two large protests are expected next week.

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