Robert Fisk, artikler fra Gaza

From: Per I. Mathisen (Per.Inge.Mathisen@idi.ntnu.no)
Date: Sun Apr 15 2001 - 14:31:17 MET DST

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    INDEPENDENT (London)12 April 2001
    By Robert Fisk in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip

    Guns and bulldozers raze homes in Gaza

    Sharon steps up 'security' measures with soldiers and helicopter gunships
    backing up the destruction of houses of 200 Palestinians.

    In any other place, it would be a scandal, an outrage. If Palestinians had
    wilfully destroyed the homes of 200 Israelis, there would be talk of
    barbarism, of "terrorism", grave warnings from George Bush to Mr Arafat to
    "curb violence". But it was the Israelis who destroyed the homes of at
    least 200 Palestinians early yesterday morning, bulldozing their
    furniture, clothes, cookers, carpets and mattresses into the powdered
    concrete of their hovels until one end of Khan Younis looked as though it
    had been hit by an earthquake.

    So of course, it was not "terrorism". It was "security". The old sat like
    statues amid the garbage tip that the Israelis had made of their houses.
    Many of them, like 75-year old Ahmed Hassan Abu Radwan, had been driven
    from their homes in Palestine in his case from Beersheba in 1948; now they
    were dispossessed by the same people for the second time in 53 years,
    courtesy this time of Ariel Sharon.

    Maybe it is possible to shame history. But what happened in Khan Younis
    yesterday, however the Israelis dress up their vandalism with talk of
    "security", was a disgrace.

    It wasn't the first time Israel had destroyed Palestinian homes in Gaza.
    They learned the principle, if such a word can be used, of collective
    civilian punishment from the British. In 1993, they blew apart the
    apartments of more than 100 people because a Hamas gunman had taken cover
    among the buildings. They were at it again last week.

    But yesterday was on a new and unprecedented scale as a battery of
    bulldozers was sent to pulverise the houses above the sea from where,
    according to the Israeli army, shots had previously been directed at their
    occupation soldiers. As the machines careered up the road from the coast
    just after midnight, thousands of people ran screaming from their huts and
    concrete shelters.

    Many of them fled to the nearest mosque where they seized the loudspeakers
    and appealed to their neighbours "to take arms and resist". To the
    apparent surprise of the Israeli army, that is just what their neighbours
    did.

    As Palestinian rifles were turned on the bulldozers, at least two Israeli
    tanks raced up the same road and began firing shells into the nearest
    apartment blocks. An Apache helicopter gunship appeared out of the
    darkness, launching missiles into the same buildings. And as old Ahmed
    Hassan Abu Radwan and his family remember all too clearly, a crane
    suddenly moved out of the darkness, a clutch of Israeli soldiers in the
    bucket from where, once the crane's chain had hauled the container to its
    highest point, the troops opened fire.

    The firefight lasted for four hours and left two Palestinians dead and 30
    wounded, 12 of them critically, among them a Reuters camera crew hit when
    a shell shattered the wall behind which they were standing.

    Ariel Sharon, the biggest bulldozer of them all, had taught the
    Palestinians another lesson. But picking one's way through the muck and
    dust of 35 houses, it didn't take long to realise that the lesson they had
    grasped was not quite the one Israel had intended.

    Mariam abu Radwan, a cousin of old Ahmed, put it very eloquently yesterday
    afternoon. "We have no life anymore," she said. "This is the destruction
    of our life. Let them shoot us please let them shoot us and we can die
    here. And let the Israelis die too. No-one is looking after, no Arab
    countries, no foreign countries also."

    One of the dead was Riad Elias, a Palestinian security forces officer, who
    was presumably fighting the Israelis when he died, but the second, Hani
    Rizk, was identified to me as a cleaner at the local Naser hospital, the
    same hospital to which his body was taken before his funeral yesterday
    afternoon.

    Ibrahim Amer, a 35-year old agricultural worker who says he was hit in the
    back and side by machine-gun bullets from a helicopter as he ran (he lay
    in bloodsoaked pain in the Naser hospital yesterday afternoon) saw Rizk
    running in the street "when a spray of bullets from the helicopter
    ricocheted against a wall and hit him. He had at least 12 bullets in his
    body." A Jewish settlers' road, forbidden to Arabs, runs along the
    sea-coast below this end of Khan Younis.

    At least one family told me they did not always stay in their home
    "because of the shooting". Ask anyone amid the rubble yesterday if shots
    had, in the past, been fired at the Israelis from here and the answer was
    invariably the same: "I never saw anyone." Which is not quite the same as
    saying that no-one ever fired. But like the nightly shelling of Beit Jalla
    village, the Israeli onslaught on Khan Younis was more than
    disproportionate; it was a deliberate attack on civilians. The only record
    of the event was made by a Palestinian Reuters camera-crew who were
    filming one of the Israeli tanks from 50 metres away.

    "We were on the second floor of a building and some bullets from a
    helicopter came into our room," Mohamed Shenaa, the Reuters sound-man,
    told me from his bed in the Naser Hospital. "We tried to look after the
    camera and were standing with our backs to a wall when the wall was
    destroyed and I was thrown six feet into the air." He has wounds in his
    back, thigh and left arm.

    As usual, shots were fired into the air at the two funerals yesterday
    afternoon. Just three hours earlier, Wail Hawatir, a Palestinian military
    doctor was buried, the victim of the previous night's helicopter attack on
    what the Israelis called a "Palestinian naval base" (in fact, the
    Palestinians have "navy" personnel but no navy) so the day began and ended
    in usual Gaza fashion: with funerals. Needless to say, Mr Bush was silent.

    ==================
    INDEPENDENT (London)13 April 2001
    By Robert Fisk in Gaza

    Death by remote control as hit squads return

    When the Israelis came for Abu Jihad exactly 13 years ago, they employed
    up to 4,000 men for his assassination. There was an Awacs plane over
    Tunis, a squadron of jets to protect the Awacs, two warships in the
    Mediterranean, a submarine to guard the warships, a 707 refuelling
    aircraft, 40 men to go ashore and surround the home of Yasser Arafat's PLO
    deputy commander, and four men and an officer to murder their victim.

    Abu Jihad's son Jihad al-Wazzir recalls: "First they killed the bodyguard
    who was asleep in the car outside. Then they killed the gardener and the
    second bodyguard ... My dad was writing in his office and went into the
    hall with a pistol. He got off one shot before he was hit. My mother
    remembers how each of the four men would step forward and empty an entire
    clip of bullets from an automatic weapon into my dad like it was a kind of
    ritual. Then an officer in a black mask stepped forward and shot him in
    the head, just to make sure."

    Today, Israel's murder squads come cheaper: a computer chip that activates
    a bomb in a mobile telephone, a family collaborator, or even a splash of
    ultra-violet paint on the roof of a car to alert an Israeli Apache
    helicopter pilot to fire a Hellfire missile into the Palestinian's
    vehicle.

    It's long-range assassination. But some things don't change. Palestinians
    have long believed and Jihad al-Wazzir Jnr is convinced that the Israeli
    who delivered the coup de grce to his father on 16 April 1988 was an
    intelligence officer called Moshe Yalon. And today, one of the principal
    instigators behind the policy of murdering Israel's Palestinian military
    opponents is the deputy chief of staff, a certain major general called
    Moshe Yalon.

    It's a cruel, vicious, internationally illegal war in which the
    Palestinians have themselves been guilty in the past. Back in the
    Seventies, Israeli and PLO agents murdered each other in Europe in a
    policy of retaliation and counter-retaliation that drove European security
    forces insane with anger. "In the end, these murders led to a ceasefire,"
    Mr al-Wazzir explains. "The whole thing ended."

    It continued, however, in Beirut where two of the men involved in
    murdering PLO leaders were called Ehud Barak and Amnon Shahak. Shahak
    would later become the Israeli military commander in Lebanon in 1982. And
    it was Mr Barak who as Prime Minister last year relaunched Israel's murder
    squads.

    Historians will one day debate the worth of such killings. Hamas and
    Islamic Jihad, after all, have their own murderers though their suicide
    bombs slaughter civilians as well as soldiers, hitherto unknown victims
    rather than individual Israeli intelligence officers.

    But Israel's killers take innocent lives too. An Apache helicopter attack
    on a Palestinian militant tore two middle-aged Palestinian women to
    pieces; the Israelis did not apologise. The nephew of a man murdered by
    the Israelis in Nablus later admitted to the Palestinian Authority that he
    had given his uncle's location to the Israelis. He told his interrogators:
    "They said they were only going to arrest him. Then they killed him."

    If it's a dirty war which it is it's also a developing one. Mr al-Wazzir,
    now an economic analyst in Gaza, explains: "It's small-scale now and in
    known locations. People who did not think of themselves as targets are
    killed. There's a network of Israeli army intelligence and air force
    intelligence, and Mossad and Shin Bet that works together, feeding each
    other information.

    "They can cross the lines between Area C [under Israeli control] and Area
    B [shared control] in the occupied territories. They can penetrate these
    borders. Usually, they carry out operations when the IDF [Israeli Defence
    Force] morale is low. When they killed my father, the IDF was in very low
    spirits because of the first intifada. So they go for a 'spectacular' to
    show what great warriors they are. Now the IDF morale is low again because
    of the second intifada."

    Palestinian security officers in Gaza have been intrigued at the logic
    behind the Israeli killings. One of the Palestinian officials says:"Our
    guys meet their guys and we know their officers and operatives. I tell you
    this frankly they are as corrupt and indisciplined as we are. And as
    ruthless.

    "After they [the Israelis] targeted Mohamed Dahlan's convoy when he was
    coming back from security talks, Dahlan [the head of Palestinian
    'preventive security' in Gaza] talked to [the Israeli Foreign Minister
    Shimon] Peres. 'Look what you guys are doing to us,' Dahlan told Peres.
    'Don't you realise it was me who took Sharon's son to meet Arafat?'"

    Was this a threat? Mr al-Wazzir understands some of the death squad logic.
    "It has some effect because we Palestinians are a paternalistic society,"
    he says. "We believe in the idea of a father figure. But when they
    assassinated my dad, the intifada didn't stop. It was affected but all the
    political objectives failed; rather than demoralising the Palestinians,
    the assassination fuelled the intifada.

    "They say there's a list now of 100 Palestinians on the murder list. No, I
    don't think the Palestinians will adopt the same type of killings against
    Israeli intelligence. An army is an institution, a system. Murdering an
    officer just results in him being replaced."

    The Israelis have murdered up to 20 Palestinians they claim to be
    "terrorists" with no concrete evidence and no court hearings. It's a
    practice they honed in Lebanon where guerrilla leaders were blown up by
    hidden bombs or shot in the back by Shin Bet execution squads, often as in
    the case of an Amal leader in the village of Bidias after interrogation.
    All this was, and still is, in the name of "security". And that is
    something the murders have clearly not produced.

    ================
    INDEPENDENT (London)14 April 2001
    By Robert Fisk in Gaza

    How pointless checkpoints humiliate the lions of Palestine, sending them
    on the road to vengeance

    "If we can get past the Israeli checkpoint at Kfar Darom, they'll let us
    through the checkpoint at Gush Katif," Khalil announced to me. I was on my
    way to Khan Younis from Gaza City, from one end of Yasser Arafat's little
    garbage tip to the other. And when we joined the end of a mile-long queue
    of shimmering cars and trucks and buses in the midday heat, Khalil whose
    yellow Mercedes taxi turned into an oven every time he stopped slapped his
    right fist into his left hand and uttered a familiar Arab curse. It
    involves the desire to do something obscene to the sister of one's
    antagonist.

    It is always the same. In an Arab society, man is all-powerful, his
    potential humiliation not far from death itself. And at an Israeli
    checkpoint, his gradual descent from potentate to grovelling serf is a
    terrible thing to observe.

    At the back of the queue north of the Jewish settlement of Kfar Darom,
    Khalil was still a "pasha". But thanks to Mr Arafat's acceptance of the
    now-dead Oslo agreement, Israeli troops have the right to "control" the
    lateral roads in the Gaza Strip at three separate locations. By means of
    designated Area A (Palestinian- controlled), Area B (jointly controlled)
    and Area C (Israeli-controlled), the Israelis can keep the roads open or
    if someone has fired home-made mortars at their illegal Jewish settlements
    (built, of course, on land belonging to Khalil and his
    fellow-Palestinians) they can throttle the roads. Today was a throttling
    day.

    At the back of the queue, Khalil was a nisr, an eagle, threatening eternal
    damnation on his Israeli tormentors. A few hundred metres later, he was an
    assad, a lion, demanding to know why the Israelis were ever given the
    right to occupy his land.

    Around us, in taxis and clapped-out family cars, babies screamed and old
    women sighed and young men glowered and older men the wise and the revered
    in the Arab family called down the curses of God upon their enemies. It
    grew warmer. Flies moved slowly through the taxi, sunning themselves on
    the boiling plastic seats, bathing in our perspiration.

    In a fog of exhaust, we crept another hundred metres towards the Israeli
    checkpoint. "Don't look at the Israelis or they might stop us and ask who
    you are," Khalil said carefully. Europeans are outnumbered 5,000 to one on
    the road to Khan Younis. Khalil was no longer an assad. Now he was a
    hissan, a horse, noble but potentially obedient, ready to be someone
    else's servant. This is what occupation is about.

    I've sat through this outside Ramallah, Jenin, Bethlehem, and through 22
    years along all the roads of southern Lebanon, between Beirut and Sidon
    and Sidon and Tyre and Tyre and Nabatea and between Moukh-tara and
    Jezzine. Miles and miles and miles of little mobile human bakeries, filled
    with the smell of hot plastic, sweat and cigrarette smoke, while the
    occupiers, an Israeli sergeant or corporal or captain, turn a whole
    male-oriented society on its head.

    At a place called Bater Bridge in Lebanon, civilians were kept for two
    days and nights in the miles of queues, Israel's grotesque proxy Lebanese
    militiamen sometimes propositioning lone females in return for a quicker
    transit through Israel's checkpoints, as they tried to return to their
    homes.

    Far away through the heat haze, I could see an Israeli armoured personnel
    carrier. The red roofs of Kfar Darom hid behind watchtowers and the stumps
    of palm trees cut down by the Israelis. Khalil lit a cigarette, moved in
    his seat, repeatedly cut the engine and restarted it. He was no longer a
    hissan. Now he was a pseini, a pussy-cat, a quiet, frightened creature
    awaiting his fate.

    Man's indignity is a theme throughout the Middle East. That great Polish
    journalist Risteard Kapucinski described in his book on the Shah of Iran
    how Iranian men were dictators in their homes, masters of all they
    surveyed, treated with unquestioned obedience by wife, sons and daughters
    but grovelling servants the moment they encountered the Shah's brutal
    policemen.

    The Israelis were now only 50 metres from us. Khalil threw his half-smoked
    cigarette out the window, then lit another. "Remember what I told you," he
    said. "Don't look at them." I slid my Arab press card from my shirt pocket
    and gently replaced it with an Israeli press card, the hannaka candle
    gleaming at the top left.

    Now Khalil was turning we were all turning into those most despised
    creatures of the Arab world, hamir, donkeys, obedient, ready to be whipped
    and to obey. Please, please, please, let us through, let us go.

    Two bored Israeli soldiers slid up to the left windows, the car bouncing
    in the dust-bowls of the road. One of them told the truck-driver in front
    to open the back doors of his lorry. There were large cardboard cartons
    inside. Crisp packets or rocket-propelled grenades? The Israeli stared,
    then told the driver to close the doors. Khalil looked straight ahead,
    unblinking, foot hovering over the gas. Now it was our turn, sarasir,
    cockroaches, ready to be crushed. The soldiers paid no interest. Khalil
    gunned the taxi. "Mish mishkl, habibi," he shouted. No problem, my friend.
    And he reverted to his original curses about the sister of his enemies. He
    had become a nisr again, an eagle.

    So what are these checkpoints for? Why did the people of southern Lebanon
    have to wait two days in such conditions? A few weeks ago, I was stopped
    by an Israeli army checkpoint north of Nablus, en route to Jenin. I was
    the only motorist on the road, driving myself. "You'll have to wait," the
    sergeant said on that occasion. So like the refugees in Casablanca, I had
    to wait. And wait. And wait. Palestinian cars queued behind me. After an
    hour and a half, I played an old Lebanon trick.

    The Palestinians stayed where they were but I drove back down the road,
    found a farm track to an old village and within 10 minutes returned to the
    highway on the other side of the checkpoint. The Israelis must have known
    I could do this. So why did they stop me? For "security" reasons? Or
    because their checkpoints are not about security at all, but about
    humiliation?

    On the way back from Khan Younis, we were pulled up before the Israeli
    checkpoint at the Gush Katif settlement. It was the end of the day and now
    the Palestinian men cut each other off to reach the checkpoint, jumping
    the queue, swerving on to the dust and hedgerows to pass their fellow
    citizens, cursing not the Israelis now but each other.

    That wonderful Israeli journalist Amira Haas may she receive a thousand
    press awards for her eloquence and moral courage has described this
    process, the embitterment of a whole people, the humiliation of the Arabs
    as they watch impotently while ambulances are turned back, expectant
    mothers ignored or allowed to die, decent people treated like animals.

    Khalil stopped for a minute while car-loads of Jewish settler men, kippahs
    on their heads, rifles poking from the open windows, raced across in front
    of us to one of their exclusive settlers' roads. Then we growled through.
    Khalil was not cursing now. He was tight-lipped, aware that his impotence
    had been made manifest, his patriotism turned to self-loathing, no longer
    an animal but a thing. And around me, young Palestinian men sat in cars
    with equal loathing cast like a mask over their faces, humiliated in front
    of their fathers and mothers and sisters and wives. And it occurred to me
    that one or two of them would be just angry enough to retrieve their
    dignity in self-immolation against their tormentors, without discrimin-
    ation between soldiers and civilians to leave the world of animals to
    become what the Palestinians call "martyrs". And what the Israelis call
    "terrorists". That is what occupation is all about.

    ====================
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