Mohammed Omer: Operation Cast Lead Is Over, But the Nightmare Continues


Abdullah (in red shirt) and his little brother (r) play “Arabs and Israelis” with their friends in the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah. (Photo M. Omer)


The Sept. 6, 2010 issue of the leading German newspaper Der Spiegel included the article "Studies Show Nurture at Least as Important as Nature" by Joerge Blech on the findings of a groundbreaking study on intelligence. Researchers found that prolonged poverty, stress and other environmental factors—including war and the deprivation of basic needs—directly affect a child's intelligence and, therefore, his or her life prospects.
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Dr. David Halpin: Silence is Complicity: The methodical shooting of boys at work in Gaza by snipers of the Israeli Occupation Force






 http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=22879

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 stock.  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

 

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.

 

 

 

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:-

 

  •  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

 

Silence is complicity

 

References

1.    http://www.dci-pal.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 110119

<http://www.doveanddolphin.co.uk/>   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 is an author, human rights activist and a former, 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/> )

 

FOOTNOTE

 

This paper was submitted to the Lancet and the British Medical Journal 4 January 2011 under the title 'Ethical'.  The refusal from the latter is here:- 

 

BMJ/2011/850099

 

The methodical shooting of boys at work in Gaza by snipers of the Israeli Occupation Force

by David Sydney Halpin

 

Dear Mr. Halpin

 

Thank you for sending us your paper. We read it with interest but I regret to say that we have decided not to publish it in the BMJ.

 

Clearly soldiers shooting at children is awful, but we didn't think your article gave a clear reason why we should be publishing it now. The information comes from the Defence for Children International (palestine section) website, there isn't much context, there's no description of the Israeli soldiers' explanation for these events, and the article just sort of ends.

 

We receive over 8000 submissions a year and accept less than 10%. We do therefore have to make hard decisions on just how interesting an article will be to our general clinical readers, how much it adds, and how much practical value it will be.

 

I am sorry to disappoint you on this occasion.

 

An editor at the British Medical Journal

 

 


 

 

 

The methodical shooting of boys at work in Gaza by snipers of the Israeli Occupation Force

 

 

Number

Name

Age

Date of injury

 

Distance

from

border

metres

Injury

Activity

Single shot heard?

Hospital

 Rx

Outcome

?Work again near Erez

or other

Date report made - Arabic to English

1   Said H

15 yrs

26/03/10

100

Deep and tranverse, lower L thigh

Searching for brother

   Y

3 days

'Toe will not work' Persisting pain

Nerve injury

Lost 2 months training as plumber and car sprayer

27/10/10

2  Hasan W

17 yrs

22/05/10

 

300

Below R knee. 'Shattered'

2 months in plaster

Gravel

(G)

Y then

repeated

shooting

Home same day

(HSD)

Cannot walk. Pain on movement.

 

'.. not be able to collect gravel though family needs money'

01/09/10

3  Awad W

17 yrs

 

07/06/10

350

Shot in R knee

G

Y

HSD

Numbness  Cannot walk as he used to.

Therapy from Doctors without Borders.  Cannot work.

06/09/10

4  Ibrahim K  16 yrs

16/06/10

400

Shot in R knee

G

Y after

shooting

2 days

Pain in R leg

Forbidden by father to return to same work

16/09/10

5  Abdullah

16 yrs

22/06/10

60

Shot in R ankle

G

Y

HSD

Painful.  ?Will be able to walk normally again

'I will never collect gravel again.' 

08/09/10

6  Mohammad

M   16 yrs

23/06/10

500

Shot in R flank

G

 

3 days

Very tired when he runs

Cannot work or play

30/09/10

7  Arafat S

16 yrs

10/07/10

50

Shot in R ankle

G

Y

HSD

Still some pain and a little limp

 

18/09/10

8  N'uman A

14 yrs

10/07/10

300

Shot R lower leg – not deep

G

Y

HSD

 

Forbidden by grandfather to return

20/09/10

9  Hameed O

13 yrs

14/07/10

50

L arm – not deep

G

Y

HSD

Occasional pain

No work.  Forbidden by father to return

26/09/10

10  Khaled I

16 yrs

31/07/10

 

600

L thigh.  'Cut artery and vein

G

Y

?Heavy machine gun

15 days

 

'Considering what happened, not going to collect gravel again

27/09/10

11 Mohammad S

17 yrs

25/08/10

800

L thigh

G

 

HSD

Pain   'I have nightmares about being shot by Israeli soldiers'

‘I don’t think of going to the dangerous places anymore'

30/09/10

12  Mahmoud J

16 yrs

07/10/10

450

R thigh.  Bled profusely.  Exit wound diameter 5 cms.

G

Y

?From tank or jeep

 

 

'I wanted to buy two pigeons and raise them on the rooftop of my house. I will never go back to that place.'

27/10/10

13  Ahmad H

17 yrs

13/10/10

600 -

700

R foot/sankle  'Big hole in my foot – 4 cms with small hole other side

G

     Y

 

 

 

16/10/10

14  Yahia Z

16 yrs

14/10/10

450

R lower leg

G

     Y

HSD

 

‘I will never go back to the industrial zone even if I starve to death.'

16/10/10

15  Shamekh D

15 yrs

27/11/10

150

L foot

G

     Y

Operated

BK cast

Awaited

 

02/12/10

16  Mokhles M

15 yrs

28/11/10

500

L lower leg

G

     Y

?Op

BK cast

 

‘I’ll wait for my wound to heal before I go back to collect gravel.’

02/12/10

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

17  Belal L

16 yrs

 

04/12/10

600

L leg

G

     Y

plus a second shot into the L leg of his 22 yr old cousin

Fractured in two places.  External fixation above and below knee

 ‘I still feel pain in my leg,’ says Belal, ‘and I don’t know whether I will walk again or

not.’

 ‘I have come under fire several times from Israeli soldiers guarding the border. Once they shot and killed our horse.’’ Belal’s older brother Nedal (24) has been shot four times whilst collecting gravel,

‘three times in the left leg and once in the right leg,’ says Belal.

08/12/10

18  Suhaib M

16 yrs

10/12/10

250

Through and through,

just below L knee.  Exit wound 5 cms diameter

Wood

    Y

'Bullet exploded in leg.'

Long cast.

 

 'I don’t know if I

will be able to walk again,’ says Suhaib, ‘but certainly I will never go back to collecting gravel.’

18/12/10

19  Rasmi G

15 yrs

10/12/10

200

R lower leg. Fractured tibia

 

G

    Y

External fixation

In Kamal Udwan hospital

‘I still feel great pain in my leg and don’t know whether I will walk again or not.'

15/12/10

20  Fadi H

17 yrs

13/12/10

500

Below L knee

Goatherd

4 shots

HSD

Moving about at 2 days

 

28/12/10

21  Rami

17 yrs

 

21/12/10

400

R lower leg

G

    Y

HSD

 

Will collect G again. 'What can I do?'  Disabled

father.  Large family

28/12/10

22  Mahmoud S

17 yrs

23/12/10

400

R elbow

G

Gun-shots

HSD

 

'For the record, I will never go back to collecting gravel for it's a death profession.'

29/12/10

23  Hatem S

17 yrs

23/12/10

800

Head – back of.

Embedded 'shrapnel' from bullet

Collect

'straws'

Gun-shots

HSD

Headache plus nausea

 

29/12/10

 


 Global Research Articles by David Halpin



They Listen to our criticism after all

A few days ago I published an expose of Captain Israel, a new Jewish racist comic magazine. I also mentioned the names of the Jewish organisations and sponsors as listed by the Jewish magazine publisher.

Earlier on today, the Foundation For Jewish Culture contacted me. They wanted to disassociate themselves from the new Jewish comic magazine.  Someone out there starts to feel the heat. I guess that our criticism may fall on some attentive ears after all,

Here is the letter from Ester Bloom@ Foundation for Jewish Culture:

 

 

Dear Gilad,

I saw your piece on OnlineJournal and wanted to correct a misunderstanding. Although the Foundation for Jewish Culture was a nominal supporter of a project several years ago called "Team SuperJews," through the UJC and the Federation/Alliance, that project ended in 2008.

This new Captain Israel comic book is a product of StandWithUs, a completely separate and different organization with no ties to us at all. The confusion seems to stem from the fact that "Team SuperJews" had, and the new StandWithUs comic book have, main characters called "Captain Israel." But we have no relationship to the comic book or to StandWithUs.

Let me know if you have any further questions.

Thanks,

Ester

Ester Bloom

Program Associate

Foundation for Jewish Culture

www.jewishculture.org

 

 

 



Melanie Philips: “Israeli Hasbara is a joke”

It is almost amusing to hear Philips dismissing Hasbara (Israeli propaganda) in Britain.

It is also very cheering to learn from rabid Zionist Philips that in spite of the Israeli Lobby, David Aaronovitch, Nick Cohen and herself, the Palestinians are winning the hearts and minds of British public. 

I guess that it is about time Philips gathers the fact that humanism may win after all. 



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Vera Macht Reports From Gaza: Amjad – The Next Victim in Gaza Buffer Zone

It took eight days. Eight days since the last innocent was killed. You watch people die here one after another, getting killed one by one, without consequences, without justice, without an outcry in the media. Innocent people who have never done anything wrong in their lives other than try to make a living from something amidst the stifling four year siege. Civilians. Palestinian civilians, whose life doesn’t seem to be worth more than an entry in the statistics. And you feel like your hands are tied. “So that’s what I can do: register it in my notebook. It is registered, and there is an empty line after Shaban’s name. That is for those who they kill tomorrow”, wrote the American writer Max Ajl after the farmer Shaban Karmout was killed. It took eight days, and the place was filled. Amjad ElZaaneen, was 17 years when he was killed today. Too young, too early, too meaningless, too many names in all of our laptops.
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Cvetkovic, 42, was arrested at the request of the Bosnia-Herzegovina government. He is suspected of participating in the murder of between 1,000 and 1,200 Bosnian Muslims at the Branjevo farm near the city of Zvornik. This was one of a series of mass murders over a 10-day period of the Bosnian War that are collectively known as the Srebrenica Massacre. In 2006, Cvetkovic immigrated to Israel with his Jewish wife and received citizenship.

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But despite all that, the 65-year-old Shaban Karmout probably had something like hope when he woke up on that winter morning. His house is in exactly this 300 meter wide strip of land in the so-called buffer zone.  He has built his house 40 years ago, in 1971, when Gaza was already occupied by Israel, and yet he had thought to have a future there for himself and his family. Shaban began to plant fruits, his land was full of palms and trees, lemon, orange, clementine and almond trees were growing there. He had a good life.
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Gilad Atzmon: Captain Israel- A Sickening Hasbara Magazine For Jewish Diaspora Youngsters

Look at this new Jewish -cartoon magazine. PDF vesion

It has become pretty obvious that that Israelis and Zionists do not try to disguise their morbidity anymore.  Zionism is clearly a threat to humanity and humanism.

Airplanes and tanks, decorated with Jewish symbols, are consigned to spread death and carnage in the name of the Jewish people.
Captain Israel, a kosher superman, is holding a Menorah torch. He is there to set the entire region on fire.

 

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Vera Macht: MEETING WITH THE FOUNDERS OF GYBO (Gaza Youth Breaks Out)


Abu Yazen is nervous, he hasn’t slept for a while. That everything would become so big, go so fast, that he had no idea of. His name also isn’t Abu Yazen, but giving his real name, is no longer an option. Too great is the danger you face when you put your frustration into words at a place like Gaza, your anger at everything and everyone, the governments and the world, which seems to have forgotten young people like him. He is just one of 800,000 young people in Gaza, over half of the population in the small sealed-off coastal strip is under 18. He is one of those born during the first intifada, spending their childhood under Israeli occupation, in the midst of a second intifada, a civil war, and finally the Israeli attack on Gaza in winter 2008 / 9, in which over 1400 people were killed, about 400 of them children. And since 2007 he lives like all adults and children here under a total siege, imposed by Israel, tacitly accepted by the world. His home is a prison in the middle of the daily terror of a now 60-year old conflict. "I'm young, I want to live my life, but where is my freedom," says Abu Yazen quietly. "Above me is the noise of the F16, a few kilometers in each direction I meet borders guarded by snipers, and on the sea I see the Israeli warships." But usually Abu Yazen doesn’t speak quietly. Now, perhaps, now he is tired and exhausted, and you never know who is listening, at the next table. But generally Abu Yazen speaks very loud, about what it is that frustrates him here so much, and makes him so desperate. He is a member of Gaza Youth Breaks Out, a group of five young men and three young women who have written a sensational Manifesto. Their Facebook page accumulated 15,000 members within a few days, and the press of the world is standing in line to get an interview with them. But Abu Yazen and his group are cautious, their Facebook page has been temporarily closed for comments, and these days you’d better not criticize those in power in Gaza so openly.
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The result? Much gets left out, covered up or distorted to suit special interests like those of Rupert Murdoch.

In a subsequent article, I suggested reading writers in the alternative media, a facility that has grown significantly on the internet.

As might be expected, a few knowledgeable commentators suggested that they had better choices of both websites and authors than those I offered. No doubt.

My pick of both writers and venues is based on several criteria: (1) they're honest and reliable, (2) they often provide information unavailable in the mainstream media and (3) they focus on political, social, environmental, aesthetic or educational issues that concern me.

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Vera Macht Reports from Gaza

The air is filled with the noise of the Israeli F-16s, which are flying so low that it's almost like the air is trembling. You can positively feel the bombs before they fall, before they explode with a horrendous bang, that is unmistakable, with a pressure wave that breaks the windows of the houses in the whole surrounding area, and makes the walls shake miles away.

And even if you know rationally that you are not in an immediate danger, this bang triggers a primal fear, the feeling of vulnerability, of being absolutely exposed. "We people of Gaza die hundreds of times", a young Palestinian woman said. "In our thoughts, we are buried every night under the rubble of our crumbling house, we are shot every morning by a sniper on a carelessly chosen path, we may starve to death every day, because no more food is coming in."

This night four bombs fall, three in the middle area of Gaza Strip, one in Khan Younis. All places have been declared "terrorist targets" in the official statement of the Israeli military, including a Navy police building.

They fly overhead for about an hour, and you try to ignore the noise by focusing on something else, on your laptop, the text before you. The people of Gaza might watch TV, but the images are constantly disturbed by dozens of drones in the sky above. Their pervasive, never-ending buzz can drive you crazy, not to mention the prospect of how they record every single detail of each house, each car and each movement of the people, of yourself. Always aware of how they can transform into a deadly weapon at any moment. And perhaps their bombs aren’t aimed at yourself, but at the car next to you, the person behind you, or at the friend on the motorcycle seat in front of you. This happened yesterday afternoon in Khan Younis, as a resistance fighter was executed in broad daylight as he rode his motorcycle with a friend.
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The Jewish state has decided; we let you be a Jew as long as you are willing to kill for us.

The Knesset recently passed a bill allowing the State to approve IDF conversions without the permission of the Chief Rabbinate.

Apparently this law has been approved today by Shas' spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, who has decided to legitimize all conversions performed in the Israel Defense Forces in recent years.

I guess that for some, it is much easier to become a Jew riding a Merkava Tank over a Palestinian village than learning Halakha law for seven years. 

Yet I am slightly confused. I also learned this week that  ‪‪Rabbi Dov Lior, another genius Talmud scholar,  announced that Jewish Law prohibits sterile couples from conceiving using non-Jew's sperm, as it causes adverse traits. According to Rabbi  Lior, a baby born through such an insemination will have the "negative genetic traits that characterize non-Jews.

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http://www.paltelegraph.com

 Although I'm not a fervent advocate of using technology in every aspect of our lives, I have chosen to open my laptop and type this piece instead of writing it in  my notebook first, just for a change, and may be to please my ears with the clicking sound of my fingers striking the keyboard. I guess this shows that I'm in continuous pursuit for change even in the tiny aspects of life. Change; something referred to as being healthy nowadays is, by all means, a vital part of life for all those living in the tremendously stressful life of the 21st Century. 

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Palestinian Memorial Week for Palestine to begin in London

 

The Palestinian Return Centre (PRC) is putting the final touches on its 2nd memorial week and International conference. PRC’s Palestinian Memorial Week will commence on Saturday 15th Jan till 22nd of Jan 2011. Workshops, Galleries, Film screening, discussions and awareness sessions will take place.

 To read more:

http://www.paltelegraph.com/palestine/palestinian-refugees/8191-memorial-week-for-palestine-to-begin-in-london.html

Muhannad Othman Alazzeh

 
Muhannad is a Palestinian artist who resides in Alazzeh refugee camp in occupied Palestine. However, he originates from the southern Palestinian village of Biet Jibrin, which has been ethnically cleansed by the Israeli Zionist troops in 1948. “Don’t beautify the Apartheid wall”, a quote by Alazzeh for an interview on the role of Palestinian and international artists and his views on the segregation wall built around the West Bank. Al Azzeh was born in September of 1981 to Othman Alazzeh, an Arabic literature teacher and Amal Alazzeh.

Since he’s shown an interest in Art and painting at the age of 10, his parents got him to participate in ‘Alwan’ (meaning colours in Arabic) workshop in Jerusalem, where he learnt and developed his talent at a young age and then published some of his work at the workshop’s magazine.

Watch video: http://www.metacafe.com/watch/bg-6003896/bomb_it_2_muhnned_alazzh_the_west_bank/

In year 2003 Muhannad started his studies at Abu Dis University in occupied Palestine doing a BA in fine Art. However, before completing his first year, Alazzeh was arrested from his home by Israeli Occupation Forces for allegations of in-campus ‘student activism’.  Although this period of his life remains a tough one, yet the experience has not put him down but enriched his artistic talent and made him more determent to express and utilise his ability for the benefit of the people of Palestine.

His most recent participation in an exhibition entitled “Not Politics” was about his 3-year time in Israeli jails. The work, which he referred to as “April the 15th” (the day he was arrested) included some abstract paintings representing life outside the jail as seen from the inside. “A cell’s window was the only hope left, through its bars you could glimpse the ray

 

A UK  exhibition is due in March  (5th- 13th, Israeli Apartheid Week) at the  Duke of York Picture House, Brighton.

You can contact Muhannad on: muhannad194@gmail.com