Gaza
Sinks In A Sea Of Blood
By Mohammed Omer
writing from occupied Gaza,
19 October 2004
Electronic
Intifada
It
smells unbelievably bad here. To walk down any street, if you dare to,
you skirt, or sometimes unavoidably walk through, pools of blood. There
are shreds of human flesh, some of them unrecognizable as human remains
-- all over, on rooftops, plastered to broken windows, on the street.
The stench of rotting blood mixes with the more acrid odor of flesh
burnt to black char by the rockets fired by the Israeli Army's American-made
Apache helicopters.
The sky is full
of black smoke, some from the rocket explosions, but even more, it sometimes
seems, from the endless fires of tires and other debris that people
keep stoking. The smoke confuses the heat-seeking unmanned drone surveillance
planes, so setting fires in any relatively open area may draw fire and
let a bomb explode somewhat harmlessly.
All this smoke mixed
with plaster and cement dust is a blessing and a curse. The stench of
burning flesh and rotting blood masks to some extent the smell of raw
sewage from broken sewer pipes and the tens of thousands of bodies unwashed
for over a week now. Water to drink is a rare and precious commodity
here, baths and showers have become impossible luxuries.
Your eyes inevitably
tear up from all the smoke but then, that protects you a tiny bit from
some of the more harrowing sights, recognizable body parts, a piece
of a leg, an obvious part of a torso, and fingers -- more scattered,
individual, recognizable fingers than anyone should ever have to see.
Volunteer crews
are gathering these human fragments and bringing them to Jabalya's two
hospitals but the ambulances cannot possibly keep up with the flood
of newly dead and injured.
Funeral processions
are everywhere, and "houses of mourning" the tents bereaved
families set up in which to receive their families and friends. In fact,
though, every house here, those relatively intact and those partly or
wholly destroyed by the IDF tanks and bulldozers, is a house of mourning.
And nothing protects
you from the sounds, the tears and laments of the mothers and fathers,
husbands, wives and children of the dead, the screams of the injured,
the wail of ambulance sirens, sniper fire, the thud of tank shells and
the too-frequent explosions as another Apache shell lands.
Time is distorted
here, hours feel like days, days like weeks or months. This is Jabalya
Refugee Camp in the Northern Gaza Strip, one of the most crowded places
on earth where 106,000 men, women, and children, the overwhelming majority
of them unarmed civilians, have been under an all-out attack for over
a week now.
Israel's official
position is that this carnage is a "response" to Palestinian
militants' firing a homemade Qassam rocket into the Israeli town of
Sderot last week, a rocket which killed two children. In fact, though,
the first tanks rumbled into Jabalya some hours before the rocket attack
on Sderot, and we had all been watching with alarm as the Israeli forces
multiplied in northern Gaza over the last few weeks, 2000 fresh troops,
over a hundred more tanks and bulldozers.
It is only when
I sit down to write up my notes made here in the last few days that
the cruelty of the IDF name for this attack "Days of Penitence"
hits me. They are not just slaughtering unarmed civilians, but language
itself. "Penitence," as I understand it, is voluntary remorse
for wrongdoing. Is this massacre supposed to induce remorse in its victims?
Are they supposed to mourn the deaths of four or five Israeli soldiers,
and two Israeli children and accept the death of more than 60 Palestinian
civilians as some kind of justice? To those of us trapped in Jabalya,
it seems like Days of Revenge. It is unquestionably collective punishment,
and illegal under the Geneva Conventions.
Perhaps we should
not be surprised. Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has announced
this attack will last "as long as necessary," that is, until
there is "no further danger" from the Palestinian resistance's
homemade rockets. Sharon, of course, engineered the massacres of Sabra
and Shatila over twenty years ago. Now, he is doing much the same, but
with vastly improved weaponry.
Of course, the militant
factions exist, and have been striking here and there during this last
week but they are vastly outnumbered, not to mention out-gunned, by
the Israelis. Hamas, on its side, has distributed leaflets in Gaza City
vowing to continue the rocket attacks on the illegal Israeli settlements
in Gaza and any Israeli towns and cities their home-made ordnance can
reach as long as the Israeli incursions continue.
International protests
have been muted, and stymied by United States support for Israel. The
lone, feeble voice from the US State Department urged Israel to keep
its "response" "proportional"~after, of course,
the obligatory mantra, "Israel has a right to defend itself."
A strongly worded resolution condemning the attack brought before the
UN at the beginning of the week was defeated by the US veto.
It is hard to maintain
accurate casualty figures, the most recent count seems to be 80 Palestinians
killed (20 of them militants claimed by Hamas) and over 200 injured.
Unquestionably, by the time this is printed, the figures will be higher.
There is no refuge
anywhere in Jabalya. The hospitals are chaotic, supplies are short and
all medical personnel have been working around the clock for days now.
I saw Abu Nedal,
the father of Nedal Al Madhown a 14 year-old boy, struggle to maintain
his composure as he asked the exhausted doctors and ambulance drivers,
"Was my son killed? Has he been killed?" (In fact, the boy
was dead on arrival..) The majority of the dead and injured have been
teens and children, obvious non-combatants.
I interviewed Dr.
Mahmoud Al Asali, the director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, who told me
he was forced to assume the Israeli Army has been deliberately targeting
civilians. He said most of those injured by gunfire were wounded in
the upper parts of their bodies, indicating the Israeli sharpshooters
must have orders to shoot to kill. Palestinian doctors have removed
many flechettes from the dead and injured, indicating the IDF are using
illegal fragmentation bombs. These release razor sharp flechettes as
they explode. Dr. Al Asali says these illegal fragmentation devices
greatly increase the number of deaths and the number and severity of
injuries. The IDF has refused to comment on this.
The hospital staffs
and ambulance crews are so overextended that they are using volunteers
for the gruesome task of collecting, sorting, and attempting to match
scattered human remains to return as much as possible to bereaved families.
One of these medical workers, Ahmed Abu Saall 26, from Kamal Aswan Hospital,
told me, "One enormous difficulty we face is that these powerful
bombs can scatter the parts of a single victim over a wide area. It
is quite possible parts of a person could end up in Al Awda hospital
in the east of the camp, while other parts of the same person end up
with us here on the western side." Sometimes shreds of clothing
can help with the matching.
The Israeli Army
has frequently shot at the medical teams and journalists. So far, two
ambulance drivers have been injured, and a cameraman from Ramatan News
Agency has been hurt. Of course, the ambulance crews and press all wear
identifying gear.
Israel has closed
all borders into Gaza and has severely restricted all movement within
the Gaza Strip. There are three major "zones" split off by
sealed military checkpoints, but recent days have seen numerous new
checkpoints, and roads closed by cement block and sand obstructions.
People cannot move between cities, not even ambulances bringing patients
to hospitals. Moreover, the main Israel-Gaza crossing is closed, even
to international NGOs, humanitarian relief groups, and foreign journalists.
Intense as the military
attack has been, and continues to be, it is certainly not the only danger
to the people here. Many families now have been without food and water
for days. In Tal Al Zattar, the eastern part of Jabalya, I interviewed
Umm Ramzi, an elderly lady who spoke to me through the gaping hole a
tank shell had left in her house. "We have been appealing to the
Red Cross, to save our lives and the lives of our children, but nobody
has responded."
Most of the NGO
workers and relief organizations have logically enough assumed they
cannot get through the Israeli military lines that completely surround
Jabalya, although they are well aware that the civilians need help.
I managed to reach the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC),
spokesman Simon Schorno by phone and he told me: "I'm in my way
to Gaza now. We have been talking to the IDF to get permission to bring
food and water, but we were not able to get an OK for complete food
distribution".
Concerning the absence
of the Red Cross in the past few days when many families were in urgent
need, Mr. Schorno said, "I feel terrible. We are trying to do our
best to get food and water inside, but the damaged streets also delay
us from reaching the people."
A number of eyewitnesses
among the camp residents told me the Israeli Army has commandeered several
high buildings as sniper posts and basically shoot anything that moves.
One of the most recent victims was Islam Dweidar, 14, who took a chance
during an apparent lull in firing to buy bread for her mother. However,
she was shot in the head by an Israeli sniper.
In the Southern
part of the Gaza Strip, the Israeli Army has increased the number of
tanks and bulldozers in all parts of Khan Younis and Rafah. There has
been shelling every night, with many injured and killed. This morning,
I spoke by phone to Dr. Ali Mussa, director of Abu Yousif Al Najjar
Hospital in Rafah who announced that 13-year-old Eman al Hums had been
killed by Israeli sniper fire. He said, "the child arrived at the
hospital after being riddled by twenty bullets in different parts of
her body, five of them in her head."
Palestinian eyewitnesses
reported that Al Hums was killed while on her way to school with two
other schoolgirls. In early media reports, the IDF said she was planting
a bomb; they later were forced to admit the accusation was false.
These current attacks
are now far worse than the so-called "Operation Rainbow" of
last May, which killed 40 in Rafah and prompted an international outcry.
Now, the silence from America, in particular, seems to condone this
turning the Gaza Strip into a killing field. Sharon has picked his moment
well, when America is preoccupied with its presidential campaign and
its invasion of Iraq, to decimate the children of Gaza. How many more
must die before the world speaks out?