The Methodical Shooting Of Boys At Work In Gaza
Published by MAC on 2011-02-14Source: Countercurrents.org
As we go to press, the Egyptian army is reported to have almost cleared Cairo’s Tahrir square of thousands of citizens who occupied it during the past three weeks. The armed forces council has suspended the bogus Parliament and abolished Mubarak’s much-hated pretence of a constitution.
Thus far, it seems, thus good – except that this precipitate take-over of the “peoples square” doesn’t augur well for the immediate future. Another six months may elapse before there is any semblance of free elections in the most-populated Arab state.
Many citizens must fear that last week’s military actions will prove to have been a coup d'etat in all but name.
Among the various demands, long made by a cross-section of Egyptian civil society, only two seem to have dominated recent western media reporting: the resignation of the blood-spattered president and the installation of a democratic government.
Arguably, such narrow – at times almost monosyllabic reportage – has suited those governments (notably the US) which have backed Mubarak's regime over many years.
Above all, these governments chose to ignore two core concerns of Egypt’s citizenry, which pose a threat to their own economic and “security” designs in the Middle East.
Injustices
The first of these concerns is the prevalence of an unquestioning neo-liberal, pro-capitalist form of “development” from which the military itself has reaped considerable profits.
As a consequence of this trope, Egyptians have suffered more than some other impoverished countries, both from exploitation of cheapened labour and the egregious rise in the cost of wheat. The latter has at least partially been caused by market manipulation, for which banks and commodities’ conglomerates (such as Glencore) are responsible.
The peoples' second major concern deives from to the virtually unqualified support provided by Mubarak and his military henchmen for the now-derelict Camp David Agreements of 1978-79, between Egypt, Israel and the USA.
These paved the way for Mubarak to adopt an "anti terrorism" stance, specifically against Hamas, and staunch the supply of equipment from Egypt to Palestinians in Israel's illegally-occupied Gaza strip. This policy reached its apogee with Israel's murderous invasion of Gaza in late 2008-early 2009.
Tunnel visions
One of the worst consequences of the Israeli siege was the bombing of supply tunnels between Egypt and Gaza, which continued through last year.
The Arab Organization for Human Rights (AOHR) reported on 7 January 2010 that Egyptian authorities were every week “hunt[ing] and kill the Palestinian workmen inside Gaza tunnels through spraying poison gas, flooding the tunnels with water or exploding them in collaboration with the Israeli air force”.
Among the most egregious, if indirect, victims of such criminal activity have been boys and young men who resorted to collecting building materials from the detritus left behind by Israel’s blitzkrieg, in order to eke some wages for re-construction of their devastated homeland.
As reported on this website, a significant number of these have have been shot and wounded by Israel’s border guards. See: Israel's bloody response to young men collecting gravel
In a recent follow-up report, a UK doctor has graphically described the human consequences of these attacks on 23 boys and young men between March and December 2010.
We publish it now as a reminder of one of the less-publicised consequences of Mubarak's recent reign of terror.
It surely deserves as much attention as the heroism exhibited by other young people, and their older supporters, in Tahrir Square.
[Comment by Nostromo Research, 14 February 2011]
The Methodical Shooting Of Boys At Work In Gaza By snipers Of The Israeli Occupation Force
By David S Halpin
Countercurrents.org
22 January, 2011
Introduction
The deliberate injury of the limbs of 23 boys by high velocity weapons has been logged and described by Defence for Children International - Palestine Branch (DCI-P) since March 2010. (1) Some of the facts have been published in national newspapers. These barbarous acts contravene international and national law but there are no judicial responses.
The caring professions see the physical and mental pain of those who suffer and they should be in the vanguard in calling for this great cruelty to cease forthwith. Political leaders have failed to act. The Geneva Conventions Act 1957, which is of central importance in holding war criminals to account in the jurisdiction of the UK, is being emasculated.
Context
Most of the 1.5 million population of the Gaza strip is impoverished. Half are refugees from Mandate Palestine or their children. About 50% of the male population is without work. It has been isolated and occupied for decades. A commercial port was being built in 2000 but that was bombed by Israel. The isolation and the hobbling of its commerce was increased by a siege which was started in March 2006 in response to the election of a majority of Hamas members to the legislature. It was further tightened in June 2007 after the Hamas government pre-empted a coup by the Fatah faction that was led in Gaza by Mohammad Dahlan.
The misery was further deepened with 'Operation Cast Lead' that was unleashed 27/12/08. This was promised 29/02/08 (2). "The more Qassam fire intensifies and the rockets reach a longer range, [the Palestinians] will bring upon themselves a bigger shoah (holocaust) because we will use all our might to defend ourselves." - Matan Vilnai Deputy Defence Minister to Israeli Army Radio.
There was a massive bombardment which killed 220 adults and children in the first 15 minutes. This was followed by a full scale invasion. 1400 humans were killed and approximately 5000 injured physically. The minds of very many more were injured too. 4000 homes were totally destroyed, almost all the factories and 40 mosques.
The two gleaming science blocks of the Islamic University of Gaza were flattened by very powerful thermobaric bombs, the blasts being heard throughout the 360 square kilometres of the Gaza 'Strip'. The siege has been even more draconian since. Cement, ballast and steel rods are only let in at about 5% of the rate needed for rebuilding, the pretext being that 'bunkers' could be constructed. At the present rate it will take 78 years to rebuild Gaza. (3) Chocolate, writing paper and all manner of things have been blocked. The 1000 tunnels at Rafah have provided a way in for goods but in the face of bombing and roof falls.
The lack of any work and the extreme poverty of the large extended families has drawn the boys and men to scavenge for broken concrete ('gravel') in the evacuated Eli Sinai 'settlement' and in the industrial zone by the Erez border control post at the northern limit of the 'Strip'. The factories of the industrial zone have been progressively demolished by Israeli shelling etc. They are seen to the west as one enters Gaza through Erez. A donkey and cart, shovel, pick, sieve, muscles and courage are the tools. The rubble is used to make cement blocks and poured concrete with the cement that is imported largely through the tunnels. Many dozens of men and boys do this work for precious shekels in the shadow of manned watch towers and under 'drones' above.
The 23 boys who have been shot between 26/03/10 (Said H) and 23/12/10 (Hatem S) are listed in the table below with skeletal facts. These points are made:-
- In 18 there were single shots and not automatic fire
- The reported range in most cases confirms that the weapon was a sniper's rifle in the hands of a sniper
- Almost always there were many dozens of other men and boys at work; these victims were picked off
- A leg was the target in most cases. Where the leg was not the target it is likely the sniper was 'aiming up' so the flank, elbow etc was hit instead.
- No weapons were being borne by the gravel workers so they posed no threat to the Israeli Occupation Force personnel. Instead they were bending their backs to their menial work within their internment camp
- The histories refer often to the recovery of the injured boy by friends and relatives under fire. This was a feature during 'Cast Lead' or instead the paramedics were barred from getting to the victims so they died without care.
The history of the injury and sequel for each boy are linked to in (1). It has been done meticulously and the translation into English is perfect. The pain, and often the terror, felt by the boy as the bullet struck home are vividly recorded. No bullets have been recovered yet so the calibre/type is unknown.
- How many boys will regain full, or nearly full function is difficult to judge without the radiographs being present. Cases 3,4, 5,7,13 and 15 are likely to have joint involvement and thus some lifelong disability.
- In cases 1 and 3 there is nerve injury. If that proves to be an axonotmesis in either, it is possible that a first class repair will not be available in Gaza.
- The fractures are open by definition and no doubt comminuted. Delayed or non-union is possible. Deep infection is a real risk, antibiotic therapy not withstanding. The risk of deep infection relates to a. the possible inclusion of fabric b. the high energy injury causing irregular and wide devitalisation of the tissues c. the probability that these difficult bullet wounds were not laid open and a complete wound toilet performed. One or two of these boys might end with an amputation.
- Almost all the boys have been frightened off or forbidden from gravel work. There are few, if any, other means of earning shekels.
The shooting to wound and kill Palestinians is relentless. DCI-P notes that according to a UN study, between January 2009 and August 2010, at least 22 Palestinian civilians in Gaza have been killed and 146 injured in the arbitrary live fire zone adjacent to the border with Israel and imposed at sea. At least 27 of these civilians were children. It also notes that the targeting of civilians is absolutely prohibited under international law, regardless of circumstances.
These quotations from the available stories convey a little of the poverty, the suffering and the courage:-
- 'The three of us would wake up every day at around 5:30am and leave to collect gravel. We were not the only ones doing this type of work. Hundreds of youngsters aged between 13 and 22 used to work with us, despite the danger we faced because we were close to the Israeli border.' Awad W- 3
- The work was exhausting and dangerous. ‘Israeli soldiers would sometimes shoot at us, and sometimes shoot in the air to intimidate us,' recalls Ibrahim . 'Sometimes they would shoot at the carts, horses and donkeys we used to move the gravel. But we had to do the work despite the dangers, because we didn't have any other job to do.' Ibrahim K- 4
- Mohammad was taught by his neighbours to watch for birds flying away from the watch towers, as this was a sign to start running, as it meant soldiers were climbing into the towers and the shooting would soon begin. Mohammad M - 6
- 'They killed our three horses and one donkey in four months, and we had to spend the money we earned on replacing them.' ..... ‘They were down on their stomachs pointing their rifles towards us, but they didn't shoot. We got used to such things.' Mohammad S - 11
Silence is complicity
References
1. http://www.dcipal.org/english/doc/press/UA_4_10_Children_of_the_Gravel_UPDATE_29_DEC_%202010(b).pdf
2. http://www.haaretz.com/news/barak-hamas-will-pay-for-its-escalation-in-the-south-1.240417
3. http://www.amnesty.org.uk/uploads/documents/doc_21083.pdf
I thank Gerard Horton and DCI-P for the availability and excellence of this information, and for supporting publication in a medical forum. I also thank Dr Khamis Elessi in Gaza for information.
Conflict of interest: I founded the Dove and Dolphin Charity with a voyage to Palestine 8 years ago and chair its trustees. It attends to the welfare of children in Gaza in the main. No pecuniary benefit is derived from this charity.
David S Halpin FRCS Formerly, orthopaedic and trauma surgeon at the Torbay and Exeter Hospitals Devon UK. David Halpin can be contacted via david@infoaction.org.uk His web site is http://dhalpin.infoaction.org.uk