Refugees flee camp with reports of Israeli abuses

From: jonivar skullerud (jonivar@bigfoot.com)
Date: 12-04-02


Refugees flee camp with reports of Israeli abuses
Suzanne Goldenberg in Jenin
Thursday April 11 2002
The Guardian

An exodus was under way yesterday from the refugee camp that endured
the bloodiest battle of Israel's military offensive, with Palestinians
bearing horrifying accounts of a systematic campaign of destruction
and abuse.

Hundreds of Palestinians fled the camp yesterday, an empty, smoking
ruin resounding to bursts of Israeli machine gun fire. They left
behind entire neighbourhoods flattened to make way for Israeli armour.

Some of the wrecking missions were launched while women and children
were inside their homes. The operation began with rocketing from
helicopter gunships and bulldozers moved in to finish the job.

They also told of the use of human shields for Israeli army patrols,
and the random strafing of heavily populated civilian areas, killing
elderly women and young boys and girls.

Those fleeing were dirty, exhausted and desperately hungry. Doctors in
Jenin say 15 babies were sick after their mothers fed them powdered
milk and sewage run-off from streets where bodies were left to rot for
days.

A few also claimed to have witnessed a summary execution and the
dumping of the dead - at least 150 Palestinians were killed in the
camp by the Israeli army count - into mass graves.

The stories of executions and disposal of the dead could not be
verified as the Israeli army has encircled the camp with tanks, and
shot at, or arrested, journalists approaching the area. The Guardian
was among a handful of newspapers whose reporters managed to enter the
town yesterday.

But the accounts of the massive destruction of civilian homes, and of
the firing on civilians, could be confirmed as they also occurred in
the town of Jenin, suggesting a widespread and systematic pattern of
human rights abuses that is only now beginning to emerge.

Ali Mustafa Abu Siria, 43, an Arabic teacher, was carried to hospital
on a ladder - nursing a gunshot wound to the left knee that had gone
untreated for four days. Doctors said it was badly infected.

He was injured while serving as a human shield for an Israeli army
patrol, who led him out of his home handcuffed and at gunpoint on
Friday. He was forced to walk ahead of the troops - and the army
sniffer dogs - as they underwent the perilous business of
house-to-house searches, hunting down Palestinian militants and
weapons caches.

Mr Abu Siria was shot at the 12th house. "As soon as I knocked on the
door, a bullet was fired at me, he said. He believes he was shot by a
second Israeli army patrol, which was on the first floor of a
neighbouring house. "The two groups of soldiers started screaming at
each other," he said. "Then they left me. I started dragging myself on
the ground until I reached the house of a neighbour. The army did not
do anything for me."

A similar picture of a widespread disregard for civilian casualties by
the Israeli army is also emerging in Jenin city. Doctors at al-Razi
hospital said a man bled to death on its doorstep after soldiers
prevented medics from retrieving his body.

A burst of machine-gun fire from a helicopter gunship in a residential
neighbourhood of Jenin on Wednesday killed a young man, who was
outside charging up his mobile phone on a car battery, and injured
Rina Zaid, 15, in the chest.

All but one ambulance driver from Jenin's general hospital has been
arrested by the Israeli army, so her family ripped a door off its
hinges and carried her to hospital on foot.

At dusk last night, the refugee camp was hit by 10 explosions in the
space of an hour - a parting act of destruction as the Israeli army
"mops up" what it calls an infrastructure of terror operating from
inside.

A new wave of refugees streamed out of the camp - including many
children - scavenging for food. A few hours earlier, Riyad Ghalib
Damaj, 28, a produce seller, also smuggled himself out with a group of
women and children fleeing the camp, taking advantage of a brief
lifting of the curfew in Jenin.

"There are no houses left in the refugee camp; there is only a
highway. There are countless numbers of houses destroyed. If you saw
them you would go crazy," he said.

"So many rockets were fired on our house from helicopters because
three soldiers were killed nearby, and there are only two families
left in the neighbourhood."

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

-- 
"the hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist.
McDonalds cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas, the builder of the
F15 warplane. And the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon
Valley's technologies is called the United States Army, Air Force, Navy
and Marine Corps." -- Thomas Friedman, New York Times



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