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Israel conducts military offensive in the West Bank and Gaza
By Rick Kelly
2 March 2006
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In the past fortnight, Israeli armed forces have conducted
large-scale raids throughout the West Bank and repeatedly bombed
targets in Gaza. The military operations are the largest since
Israels disengagement from Gaza last year and form part
of a general Israeli offensive against the Palestinian people
following Hamass victory in the January 25 Palestinian legislative
election. A total of 31 Palestinians have been killed since the
vote.
The largest single raid undertaken by the Israeli army was
conducted in the Balata refugee camp in the West Bank. Operation
Northern Lights was launched on February 19. According to
Palestinian reports, hundreds of Israeli soldiers backed by armoured
vehicles, bulldozers and helicopters occupied Balata. The camp
is the largest centre for Palestinian refugees in the West Bank,
with a registered population of 21,000. Israeli forces cut off
Balata from the neighbouring city of Nablus and conducted house-to-house
searches for wanted militants.
At least eight Palestinians have been killed in the ongoing
operation, including four civilians. Local hospital officials
reported that more than 50 Palestinians have been injured, many
of them children who were shot after throwing stones at the Israeli
forces. The Israeli military claims to have arrested 15 militants,
most of whom are alleged members of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades,
which is aligned with Fatah.
On the first day of the raid, two 17-year-olds, Ahmed al-Shiekh
Eissa and Mohammed al-Natour, died after Israeli troops
shot them through the neck as they were standing outside their
homes. The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights reported that the
boys were killed without any apparent reason...[a]ccording
to eye witnesses, the area was completely quiet when the two children
were shot dead.
Five more Palestinians in Balata were killed on February 23.
Three Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades militants died after Israeli forces
surrounded them in a local house. Witnesses reported that two
helicopter gunships and ground forces strafed the house with gunfire.
The same day, two Palestinian civilians were killed by Israeli
snipers. Mohammed Saleh Abu Sreis, 22, was reportedly shot
as he was standing on the roof of his home. Ibrahim Mohammad Ali
Saidi, 19, was killed after Israeli forces shot live rounds
into crowds of youth throwing stones at Israeli military vehicles.
Three medical workers suffered shrapnel and gunshot wounds
as they attended the injured. Due to the interference of Israeli
troops, it took more than 30 minutes to evacuate the wounded personnel.
One of the medical workers, suffering shrapnel wounds that had
severed an artery in his leg, was removed from an ambulance by
Israeli soldiers and held at one of their checkpoints for an hour.
According to the ambulance driver, soldiers looked at the medical
workers wounds and said, Good, let him die, you can
go only after he is dead.
Other medical workers were reportedly forced to act as human
shields by standing between stone throwing youth and Israeli troops.
The Israeli Physicians for Human Rights organisation issued a
statement in which they strongly condemn[ed] this attack
on medical personnel as a flagrant violation of the Fourth Geneva
Convention which clearly stipulates the neutrality of medical
teams and workers.
Israeli soldiers have repeatedly established temporary bases
in structures in civilian areas throughout the Balata refugee
camp, including homes, schools, youth clubs and cultural centres.
Forty-three houses were reported damaged, and at least one was
destroyed by Israeli bulldozers. The United Nations Relief and
Works Agency (UNRWA) condemned the Israeli operation for hindering
its work by occupying two schools it runs. UNRWA officials also
reported that Israeli forces blocked a health clinic and prevented
patients and staff from leaving the building.
The Israeli army has conducted raids in other towns and refugee
camps throughout the West Bank. Alleged militants have been arrested
in Jenin, Qalqilya, Bethlehem, Tulkarm, Hebron and Ramallah.
In Gaza, Israeli forces have launched a number of missile attacks.
On February 19, a missile strike on the southern refugee centre
of Khan Yunis killed two members of the Palestinian Popular Resistance
Committees. Two days later, an artillery shell hit an apartment
building in northern Gaza and seriously wounded a two-year-old
resident. On February 24, another two Palestinian militants were
shot dead, reportedly as they were planting bombs along the Gaza-Israel
border. One of the militants was the son of senior Hamas leader
and recently elected parliamentarian Abdel Fattah Dukhan.
The killings in the West Bank and Gaza sparked angry demonstrations.
Last Friday, thousands of Palestinians, including dozens of gunmen
firing in the air, marched through Nablus for a funeral procession
of four of the men killed in Balata. Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade militants
chanted revenge, revenge on loudspeakers. Rabiya Abu
Liel, a Martyrs Brigade leader, vowed vengeance. What they
did to us we will do to them, he declared. They killed
our leader so we will kill their leaders.
Similar demonstrations led by Hamas were held in Gaza. Ismail
Haniyeh, Hamas leader and nominee for prime minister, denounced
aggression committed against our people and called
on the international community to censure Israel. Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas warned that Israeli military operations
threatened the year-long period of calm adhered to
by most Palestinian militant groups.
The Israeli government has continued to ratchet up the pressure.
Today we have hit Nablus, last week we struck at Gaza and
before that in Jenin and well continue to do so in every
place, with all our forces and without compromise, acting
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert declared on February 24, according
to AFP.
Avi Dichter, senior member of the ruling Kadima party and former
head of the Shin Bet internal security service, threatened the
Hamas leadership with assassination. I see no situation
in which [Ismail] Haniyeh enjoys immunity just because he is prime
minister, he told the Yediot Aharonot newspaper.
If there is a terror attack and Israel decides to reply
with a targeted assassination, Haniyeh will be a legitimate target,
because Hamas cannot carry out an attack without the leaderships
consent.... If Haniyeh turns up at a military checkpoint I believe
that he would be arrested, interrogated, and put on trial for
being involved in terror attacks.
Israeli government officials are free to make such blatantly
provocative declarations because they are assured of the Bush
administrations backing. Washington has remained silent
during Israels latest military offensive; State Department
officials have not even bothered to issue the standard appeals
for restraint. The Bush administrations position
is consistent with its past support for every measure taken by
the Israeli government against the Palestinian people, particularly
since Hamass election victory. Washington has endorsed Israels
uncompromising stance against the incoming Hamas-led Palestinian
Authority, including its confiscation of Palestinian tax and customs
revenue.
See Also:
Israels confiscation
of Palestinian revenues: a brazen violation of international law
[25 February 2006]
Palestinian parliament sworn
in as US and Israel step up destabilisation drive
[21 February 2006]
US and Israel plot overthrow
of Hamas-led Palestinian Authority
[18 February 2006]
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