24 July 2011 | The Guardian, Harriet Sherwood
Hani al-Asi, a fisherman since the age of 11 and a father with 12  mouths to feed, had just begun throwing his lines into the Mediterranean  when an Israeli gunboat sped towards his traditional hasaka.
With a machine gun mounted at the rear and half a  dozen armed soldiers on the bridge, the navy vessel repeatedly circled  the small fishing boat. The rolling waves caused by the backwash  threatened to swamp it.
Asi had stopped his boat over an artificial reef created by dumped  cars to attract the dwindling fish population. He was just beyond the  limit of three nautical miles from the Gaza shoreline set by the Israeli  military for Palestinian fishermen, beyond which they are forbidden to  fish for “security reasons”.
“We see them every day,” he said, shrugging at the gunboat’s  presence. “I got used to this. Every day they are around us – shooting,  damaging the boat, sometimes people are injured. If we were scared, we  wouldn’t fish. But we have nothing else to do.”
With the boat rocking forcefully, the gunboat’s crew addressed Asi in  Arabic through its loudspeaker. “You are in a forbidden area. Go back.”  Asi pulled in the lines and headed back to port.
“The best place to fish is more than 10 miles out,” he said. “But  every time we exceed three miles, they shoot at us, use the water  [cannon], take the nets. Even today when foreigners are with us, they  were trying to tip the boat over.”
Under the 1993 Oslo accords, Palestinian fishermen were permitted to  fish up to 20 nautical miles off the coast of Gaza. Over the past 18  years, the fishing area has been successively eroded, most recently in  2007 when Israel imposed a limit of three nautical miles as part of its  land and sea blockade of Gaza after Hamas took control of the territory.
But fishermen and human rights groups say that, since the war in Gaza  in 2008-09, the Israeli military regularly enforces a limit even closer  to the shore.
The restriction has devastated Gaza’s fishing industry. “It is a  catastrophic situation,” said Khalil Shaheen of the Palestinian Centre  for Human Rights. “Sixty thousand people are dependent on [the fishing  industry], and 85% of daily income has been lost.”
Fishermen on both sides of the three-mile limit, he said, were  subjected to harassment, live fire, confiscation of boats and nets, and  water cannon, sometimes impregnated with foul-smelling chemicals.
Since early June, a coalition of Palestinian and international  organisations under the umbrella of Civil Peace Service Gaza has been  monitoring encounters between fishermen and the Israeli military from  its own boat, the Oliva.
But in the past fortnight, the Oliva itself has become a target for  the Israeli navy, with repeated assaults on it by military vessels. Last  Wednesday, the Guardian hired a boat to accompany the monitors plus a  handful of hasakas out to sea.
At around the three-mile limit, the small flotilla was approached and  repeatedly circled by two Israeli gunboats. The engines of the hasakas  were cut as the waves caused by the gunboats’ backwash rose and fell.  After about 20 minutes, the gunboats withdrew as a third military  vessel, deploying water cannon, arrived.
A powerful jet of water was targeted at the Oliva, causing the boat  to rock dangerously and drenching those aboard. After repeated dousings,  the Oliva’s captain ordered the four passengers to clamber on to an  adjacent hasaka, fearing his boat was about to sink. As the Oliva’s  engine was hit by the military vessel, he too was forced to abandon  ship.
From a distance it seemed impossible that the Oliva would not go  under. But its captain and other fishermen managed to secure a rope to  try to tow it back to port. The military boat followed the Oliva and the  other boats at some speed, still firing its water cannon, for several  minutes.
According to Salah Ammar, the Oliva’s captain, the boats were within  the three-mile limit. “We don’t even reach two miles before they chase  us with guns and water [cannon],” he said.
However, GPS co-ordinates taken by the Guardian during Wednesday’s  encounter showed the position of the boats to be outside the permitted  zone.
In a statement, the Israeli Defence Force said: “The ongoing  hostilities between Israel and Palestinian terror organisations create  significant security risks along the coast of the Gaza Strip. Due to  these risks, fishing along the coasts has been restricted to a distance  of three nautical miles from shore. Fishermen in Gaza are aware of these  restrictions as they have been notified of them on numerous occasions.  The restrictions and their enforcement by the Israel navy are in  complete accordance with international law.”
The United Nations and human rights organisations say the fishing  restriction is collective punishment in violation of international law.
Shaheen rejects Israel’s justification. “The Israeli navy has never  found evidence that fishermen involved in violations have been involved  weapons smuggling,” he said. The “environment of daily harassment” was  part of Israel’s “illegal collective punishment and closure of Gaza”.
The Oliva’s engine was damaged in Wednesday’s encounter but Ammar was  planning to go out to sea again the next day if he could locate the  parts he needed to fix it. “Every time I know what will happen. They  will shoot water on me, fire bullets. But I get hundreds of calls  asking, ‘When will you go out?’” The fishermen, he says, want the  protection they believe is afforded by the presence of international  monitors on board the boat.
Asi, back at the port after his aborted fishing trip, was puzzled by  the military’s aggression towards fisherman whose faces, he says, the  soldiers must recognise after repeated encounters. “The point is not  security for the Israelis. They know everything. They arrested many of  us and searched many boats and never found anything.”
His morning’s haul consisted of one large sea bass, sold for 150  shekels, and three smaller, worthless fish. After deducting 50 shekels  for fuel, 50 shekels for bait, and 10 shekels to put aside for his  boat’s maintenance, he and his assistant pocketed 20 shekels (£3.60)  each for their day’s work.
Would he be going out again the next day? “Inshallah [if God wills it]. This is the only source I have to feed my family.”
Updated on July 26, 2011
 
