Showing posts with label attacks from the land. Show all posts
Showing posts with label attacks from the land. Show all posts

Monday, October 29, 2012

Why the mullet, not the Israel Navy, are to blame for the death of a Gaza fisherman

Haaretz

Israel allows fishermen to sail only to a distance of three nautical miles off the Gaza shore, instead of 20, as specified in the Oslo Accords. But the fish have the chutzpah not to take this restriction into account.

By | Oct.29, 2012 | 4:09 AM 

Gazans collecting their catch off the coast. Photo by AP
 


related tags

Once again there was saber-rattling, and the inbox was filled with boasts by armed organizations about their part in last week's escalation. And this is an opening that is meant to lead at least some of the readers to Fahmi Abu Riash.
"The Mujahideen Brigades, the military arm of the Mujahideen movement," reported that they had launched two 107-mm. rockets, "as part of the natural response to the enemy's crimes against our people and its ongoing belligerence against the Gaza Strip."
The National Resistance Brigades of the Democratic Front also boast of two 107-mm. missiles and even call on all the military arms "to establish a joint [operations] room to discuss the nature of the response to the crimes of the occupation."
The spokesman for the Popular Resistance Committees said, according to one of the emails, that the blessed shelling by the committees indicates "the willingness of its heroic fighters to repulse the Zionist enemy and to respond in a painful manner."
And who else is responding? The Israel Defense Forces, of course. "The IDF spokesman says that forces from the armored corps and the Air Force attacked terror targets in the Gaza Strip this morning ... The attacks are a response to the steep-trajectory firing at the territory of the State of Israel."
The firing itself was a response to several short invasions into areas of the Strip, the sweeping away of agricultural land and the killing of armed Palestinians. And some of the attacks came in response to the detonating of an explosive device that was aimed at another group of armed men - this time Israeli soldiers. Even if the IDF spokesman failed to disclose their precise location, the Palestinian reports indicate that the soldiers were inside the area of the Strip. In short, every attack is a response to a previous response/attack by the other side, and vice versa, and so on and so forth.
A summary of last week: Seven armed Palestinians dead, eight Palestinians wounded; a soldier and three civilians (actually migrant workers ) wounded.
OCHA (the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Activities ) reports a ninth Palestinian casualty: a resident of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip who was hit by a Palestinian rocket. These are always the hidden victims, who are underreported.
And not only they. Fahmi Abu Riash is also erased - as though he never existed - from the balance of attack and response and from Israeli reports that have fallen hostage to the IDF.
And this was the reply of the omniscient narrator - the IDF spokesman in this case - to my question about the circumstances of the killing of Abu Riash on September 28: "In the event under discussion a number of suspicious people were identified near the security fence in the northern Gaza Strip. It should be noted that approaching the fence is often exploited for planting explosive devices, gathering intelligence information and attempts to attack Israeli civilians and IDF soldiers. In light of all the circumstances of the incident, an IDF force began to implement the procedure for detaining a suspicious person and called on them to stop. When they didn't do so they were shot in the legs, which led to an injury."
Abu Riash of Beit Lahia was a fisherman, 22 years old, married to Fatma, father of 16-month-old Saleh. From the standard response of the IDF spokesman (in the style of "copy and paste" ) we can conclude that the "suspicious figures" were walking on foot to the border fence. Maybe they were also hiding suspicious objects in their bags. But that is not the case. When he was shot, Abu Riash was standing in the water, about five meters from the beach. That Friday morning he went out with his brother and cousin to fish for mullet, which swim in schools near the beach. That's why "we didn't go out in boats," explained the cousin, Yousef Ziad, adding a few details to the "overall circumstances." "We entered the water almost naked, we cast the nets. We were a few meters from the beach. And it's true, not far from the border, a few dozen meters from the fence that continues into the water. We started out further away (from the fence) and advanced with the movement of the fish."
And additional details omitted from the "overall circumstances": Israel allows the Gaza fisherman to sail only to a distance of three nautical miles (instead of 20, as specified in the Oslo Accords). The fish have the chutzpah not to take into account this restriction, for the most part. That's why the proximity of the mullet to the beach is a welcome opportunity for earning money. Every week, in a routine that the omniscient narrator ignores in his routine reports, the soldiers of the Israeli Navy fire on Palestinian fishermen (still within the three-mile limit) and sometimes detain them and transfer them for a minor interrogation at the Shin Bet security service's offices in Ashdod (only last week four were detained), in an attempt to gather intelligence information.
Due to the shooting, the routine of instilling fear and the restriction of maritime space, the fishing industry has shrunk greatly and many have joined the army of the unemployed (28.4 percent in the Strip, according to the World Bank ) and to families suffering from food uncertainty (52 percent according to the United Nations ).
The omniscient narrator did not reply to Haaretz's question regarding the location of the soldiers who killed Abu Riash. But neither did he deny the evidence that the firing came from inside the area of the Strip. Ziad said that the soldiers who fired spread out on a hill south of the border, a short distance from the fishermen, with their faces painted black and armed with long rifles and communications devices. When armed and unarmed Palestinians cross this fence they are called infiltrators. Their fate - being killed or detained - is considered legitimate and not worthy of monitoring or questioning.
There were eight or nine soldiers there, recalls Ziad. He and his brother got out of the water when they saw them. Did they warn them before shooting, I asked. "What they said was unclear. They shouted something, then immediately fired," said Yousef Ziad in a phone conversation. "The first bullet hit the water or the sand, but there was a very strong explosion and I thought it was a grenade."
Fahmi shouted, wounded. His brother Yousef Abu Riash started to carry him out of the water while shouting to the others to bring help quickly. And then the soldiers fired again, and Yousef was wounded in his hands and feet. He managed to drag Fahmi a few more meters, and then fainted. Yousef suffers from partial paralysis and the shrapnel still has not been removed from his body, as reported by the Palestinian Center for Human Rights. His brother Fahmi died on the operating table: The bullets had destroyed his internal organs.
In the Strip they call such bullets "dum-dum" bullets (whose use is prohibited ). But military sources reassured Haaretz: "The firing was carried out in accordance with the permanent orders for opening fire in the sector, and there was no use of 'dum dum' bullets in this incident."
And an anonymous soldier from an elite commando group, who stands above any criticism and question, can wave his rifle barrel and boast of another hit.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Fisherman Killed and Brother Wounded by Israel’s Forces;PCHR Condemns Continued Israeli Attacks against Palestinian Fishermen in Gaza Sea

PCHR

Sunday, 30 September 2012 00:00

Ref: 103/2012




On Friday, 28 September 2012, Israeli forces shot and killed a Palestinian fisherman and wounded his brother, while they and a group of other fishermen were located a few meters from the shore in the northern Gaza Strip, pulling out their fishing nets. The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) condemns continued attacks by Israel’s forces against Palestinian fishermen in Gaza City, and expresses deep concern about the recent escalation of such attacks, in violation of fishermen’s right to life and work freely in Gaza Sea.



According to investigations conducted by PCHR, at approximately 09:30 on Friday, 28 September 2012, an Israeli infantry unit crossed the northwestern border between the Gaza Strip and Israel, and moved nearly 20 meters into Palestinian territory, along the beach area of the northwestern town of Beit Lahia. Israeli soldiers took position behind a hill at the beach, facing onto a number of Palestinian fishermen who were fishing a few meters offshore. Israeli soldiers fired at the fishermen. The majority of the fishermen were able to flee. However, two fishermen, who were located nearly 15 meters away from the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel, were unable to escape.

According to fishermen present in the area, Israeli soldiers fired directly at the two fishermen, wounding them. The two fishermen were identified as Fahmi Saleh Fahmi Abu Riash (22), who was wounded in the lower abdomen and thigh, and his brother Yousef (19), who was wounded by bullet shrapnel to the left hand. Nearby fishermen were later able to evacuate the two wounded men and carry them to a Palestinian Civil Defense ambulance, which was waiting nearly 350 meters away from the location of the incident. The ambulance transported the two wounded fishermen to Kamal Edwan Hospital in Beit Lahia.

According to the forensic report issued by Kamal Edwan Hospital, the two wounded fishermen were brought to the hospital at 10:55. Fahmi Abu Riash had been wounded by a bullet to the left thigh and another bullet to the left buttock that settled in the pelvis, causing an acute hemorrhage in the lower part of the abdomen. His brother, Yousef, was wounded by bullet shrapnel to the left hand. He received treatment and was released from the hospital in the afternoon. At approximately 15:30 on the same day, Fahmi Abu Riash was taken to the operation room, where he underwent a two-hour surgery. He was then taken to the intensive care unit, where he was pronounced dead at approximately 22:30.

In his testimony to PCHR, Yousef Mohammed Zayed (19), a fisherman from Beit Lahia, stated to PCHR:

“At approximately 05:00 on Friday, 28 September 2012, my brother Haitham, my cousins, Fahmi and Yousef Ahmed Saleh Abu Riash, and I went fishing opposite to Beit Lahia beach in the northern Gaza Strip. We started fishing nearly 70 meters away from the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel. When the sun rose, we got as close as 15 meters to the border because fish was extensively available in the area. At approximately 09:30, I heard intensive shooting in the area. I looked back and saw about 9 Israeli soldiers atop a hill that is nearly 20 meters to the east of the beach. Immediately, Haitham, my cousin Ahmed, and I ran away and took shelter behind a hill, while Fahmi and Yousef remained stuck only 5 meters from the beach. Israeli soldiers shouted at them, and I saw my cousin Fahmi attempting to escape, but an Israeli soldier fired at him. He was wounded by a bullet to the left thigh. His brother Yousef attempted to offer him help, but he was also wounded by bullet shrapnel to the left hand. I saw Fahmi trying to stand up and escape, but an Israeli soldier fired at him again. Soon, some fishermen headed towards the two wounded fishermen and carried them to an ambulance of the Civil Defense, which transported them to Kamal Edwan Hospital. At approximately 22:30, Fahmi Saleh Abu Riash was pronounced dead.”

It should be noted that Israel’s forces have imposed restrictions on fishermen at sea. In 2009, they reduced the area allowed for fishing in Gaza waters from the 20 nautical miles provided for in the Oslo Accords to 3 nautical miles. Israel’s forces also prevent Palestinian fishermen from fishing within 1 nautical mile of the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip, although this area is under the jurisdiction of the Palestinian Authority.

PCHR condemns this latest crime and is concerned that it signifies a new escalation in the systematic human rights violations perpetrated by Israel’s forces against Palestinian fishermen. PCHR believes that these attacks form part of the collective punishment measures imposed on Palestinian civilians, as they deny Palestinian fishermen access to their livelihood, in violation of international humanitarian law and human rights law. PCHR believes that targeting these two civilian fishermen from very close range constitutes a form of excessive use of force; the Israeli soldiers could have taken alternative actions against the fishermen, such as arrest, as they did not pose any threat to the lives of Israeli soldiers.

PCHR calls upon Israel:

1. To put an end to attacks against Palestinian fishermen in violation of their rights to life, safety, and security, and to allow them to fish freely in Gaza Sea;
2. To investigate the facts of this close-range attack against civilian fishermen, publish the results of such an investigation, and prosecute the Israeli soldiers who fired at two civilian fishermen, although the latter did not pose any threat to the lives of those soldiers;
3. To immediately put an end to its policy of chasing and arresting Palestinian fishermen at sea, and to return confiscated fishing boats and equipment;
4. To compensate the victims for the physical and material damage caused their person and property; and
5. To lift the naval blockade, which constitutes a form of collective punishment and is a war crime under international humanitarian law.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

PCHR weekly report 25/11 - 1/12/2010:

extracts from PCHR weekly report 25/11 - 1/12/2010:


Saturday, 27 November 2010


At approximately 12:30, Israeli soldiers stationed on observation towers at the beach to the northwest of Beit Lahia town in the northern Gaza Strip opened fire at a number of Palestinian fishermen who were fishing nearly 350 meters away from the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel. As a result, Ahmed Mahmoud Jarbou', 26, from al-Shati refugee camp in the west of Gaza City.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Israeli forces shoots Gazan fisherman at shore

27 November 2010 | International Solidarity Movement, Gaza


Ahmed Mahmoud Jarboh

At 12:30 pm, Ahmed Mahmoud Jarboh, aged 26, was shot in the back of the left knee by the Israeli Offensive Forces while fishing at the shore of Beit Lahya, in the north of the Gaza Strip. He is currently hospitalized in Kamal Udwan, in the neighboring town Jabalya, where his condition is being monitored.
Beit Lahya borders the Mediterranean Sea to the west and the 1949 Armistice Line with Israel to the north. The village’s economical resources are crippled by Israeli policies that restrict the fishing zone to three nautical miles and impose a 300 meter buffer zone on Palestinian land.
For over a year Ahmed has daily frequented the same area to fish with a small cast net. Today he and two of his colleagues were fishing from the shore at approximately 350 meters from the border fence. This incident again exemplifies a recent UN report conclusion that the danger zone does not halt at 300 meters: it can reach up to 1.5 kilometers.
“For over a year I have come here daily to fish. The soldiers in the watchtower see me every day: they know I am only a fisher! There was no reason for them to be suspicious as this is a normal, daily scene. Nothing special was going on.”
Even though the IOF soldiers should be familiar with Ahmed’s face, he was shot without warning:
“The only shot that was fired was the one that hit my leg”, he states.
When they heard the bullet being fired, the two other fishermen ran away to find shelter. As soon as they considered the situation “safe” again, they realized what had happened. They went to pick up Ahmed from the water and brought him to the hospital. The wound is stitched now, but probably surgery will not be necessary. It is still uncertain how long Ahmed will have to remain in the hospital and how long it will take for him to fully recover from this injury.
“I’m a father of two and I am the sole provider for my family. We have nothing else than what I gain from fishing.”
The 3 nautical mile restriction has resulted in a depletion of revenues which pushes people into the dangerous buffer zone. According to the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, there have been nine people injured this month while working in the buffer zone. Ahmed Mahmoud Jarboh marks the tenth victim of IOF buffer zone aggression in four weeks.

Updated on November 28, 2010