Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses.
19 Palestinians in Gaza Lose One Eye Each, 2 Lose
Both Eyes, by Israeli Occupation Soldiers from Across the Bodrer
February 26, 2020
Editor's Note:
While brutal force has been used to create Zionist Israel and sustain
it thus far, Zionist claims to Palestine are false. Actually, from the
five thousand years of known written history, there has been a
continuous Palestinian-Canaanite presence in the Holy Land. Despite the
Zionist false claims, the ancient Israelites ruled part of the land for
only 85 years (during the reign of David, Solomon, and Solomon's son).
After that, the Egyptians conquered Palestine-Canaan in 925 BC,
followed by Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, and Romans, before
the Arab Muslim rule, starting from 636 AD.
By the Time Jesus started his mission, the three population groups of
Canaanites, Palestinians, and Israelites were melted together in
religion and language. Most of them became Christians when Constantine
converted in 313 AD. Then, most of them became Muslims in the 7th and
8th centuries AD.
So, Palestinian Muslims, Christians, and Jews are the ones who have
the right to claim descent from ancient Israelites, Palestinians, and
Canaanites, not Zionists from other continents.
The following news stories are just examples
of the Israeli occupation government violations of Palestinian human
rights, on daily basis.
More detailed news stories can be found at
the following sources:
B’Tselem: In the last two years, 19 Palestinians lost their
vision in one eye while participating in March of Return protests
near the Gaza perimeter fence. At least two more lost their vision
in both eyes. Each of these personal tragedies adds to the alarming
casualty count in the protests: more than 200 people have been
killed, some 8,000 wounded by live fire, about 2,400 wounded by
rubber-coated metal bullets, and almost 3,000 wounded by tear gas
canisters.
Israel’s nearly 13-year blockade of the Gaza Strip has severely
impaired local health care. As Gaza’s collapsing health care system
is grappling with a shortage of medicine, physicians, equipment and
medical training, it is unable to offer many forms of treatment.
Israel abuses its control over Gaza’s border crossings and denies
residents passage to medical treatment elsewhere, including in the
West Bank and East Jerusalem, other than in exceptional cases it
deems “life-saving”.
Wounded persons have to make do with the limited treatment options
available within Gaza or try to make to another country – assuming
they manage to get a permit to leave via Rafah crossing and shoulder
the high costs. Meanwhile, just several dozen kilometers away, are
hospitals that could provide the critical care they need.
As B’Tselem has previously
reported, the use of crowd control measures as lethal weapons,
which may result in death or serious injury, has been a feature of
Israel’s open-fire policy regarding the demonstrations along the
Gaza perimeter fence for nearly two years. This illegal, immoral
policy conveys disregard for the lives and bodily integrity of
Palestinians. So long as Israel persists in implementing it despite
the horrific outcomes, demonstrators will continue to be killed and
seriously injured. The ordeal suffered by the wounded, who have to
receive treatment and rehabilitation in the Gaza Strip while better
care is available elsewhere, is yet another horrifying facet of
Israel’s callous policy towards the residents of Gaza.
* According to figures published
by the World Health Organization (WHO).
** According to the Protection of Civilians Database maintained by
the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
B’Tselem
field researchers in the Gaza Strip collected testimonies from
demonstrators who were injured in their eyes by Israeli security
forces’ gunfire. Here are three of their stories.
Mai Abu Rawida, 20, 6 December 2019
On Friday, 6 December 2019, at around 2:30 P.M., Mai Abu Rawida, 20,
from al-Maghazi R.C., arrived with her two sisters at the Return
March protest held near the perimeter fence east of al-Bureij R.C.,
in the central Gaza Strip. After attending prayer in the protest
tents, she went with several friends up to a distance of a few dozen
meters from the fence, waving a Palestinian flag. At around 3:30
P.M., Abu Rawida went closer to the fence, and then a member of the
Israeli security forces fired a “rubber” bullet that hit her in the
eye.
In a
testimony she gave Olfat al-Kurd on 10 December 2019, Abu Rawida
said:
I’ve been going to the March of Return protests east of
al-Bureij R.C. since they started. On Friday, 6 December 2019,
at around 3:30 P.M., after I walked away from my friends and
stood several dozen meters away from the fence, one of the
soldiers fired a “rubber” bullet that hit me in the left eye. I
fell to the ground and put my hand over my eye, which was full
of blood. Blood was coming out of my mouth. I was sure I’d lost
my eye. I screamed and my friends rushed over with some guy.
They lifted me up and carried me to the paramedics. The
paramedics took me to an ambulance that drove me to the field
infirmary and there, the doctors cleaned the wound and sent me
to Shuhada al-Aqsa hospital right away.
Mai’s
friend, Shaimaa Abu Yusef, 26, from a-Nuseirat R.C. said in a
testimony she gave B’Tselem field researcher Olfat al-Kurd on 15
December 2019:
I walked towards the fence with Mai and a few other girls. We
waved the Palestinian flag, and then the army fired tear gas
canisters at us and we ran back. After that, we withdrew to
about 100 meters from the fence. A few minutes later, Mai walked
a few dozen meters towards the fence. I was just turning to head
another way when one of the soldiers shot a “rubber” bullet at
Mai and she fell down. I ran over to her with some other
friends. Her face was covered in blood. I said: “They killed
Mai!” Our friends started yelling at the top of their lungs. One
of the guys came over, picked Mai up and said she wasn’t dead. I
looked at her and saw she was hurt in the right eye. We took her
to the paramedics, who were about twenty meters away. They gave
Mai first aid and transferred her to an ambulance that took her
to the field infirmary. From there, Mai was taken to Shuhada
al-Aqsa Hospital.
What did Mai do? She waved the Palestinian flag and didn’t
endanger the soldiers in any way. Why does the Israeli army hurt
us, when all we do is protest quietly?
Abu Rawida was transferred from one hospital to another and finally
underwent surgery at a-Nasr Hospital, where her ocular cavity was
cleaned. Two days later, she was transferred to a-Shifaa Hospital,
where she was treated for a skull fracture.
In her
testimony, she further recounted:
When I came out of surgery, my eye was bandaged. I asked my
father: “What happened to my eye”? He told me, “You’re okay”,
because he didn’t want to shock me. When the doctor examined me,
I asked him and he said I’d lost my eye. I’m very sad. I lost my
eye just like that, for no reason. I wasn’t a threat to the
Israeli army in any way. Sometimes I feel that my face is
disfigured. I look in the mirror and I don’t like it. The army
ruined my life and my future. As a woman, my life has been
ruined. The most important thing for me right now is to get out
of Gaza to access treatment and have a prosthetic eye implanted,
so I can go back to being myself, so there isn’t such a hole in
my face.
Muhammad Abu Raidah, 10, 27 December 2019
On Friday, 27 December 2019, Muhammad Abu Raidah, 10, from the town
of Khuza’ah, arrived at a March of Return protest held near the
fence north of Khuza’ah. He was there to collect metal items and
sell them. Muhammad and his friends collect tear gas cannisters
fired by Israeli security forces at protestors and sometimes even
cut pieces from the concertina wire the military lays be the main
fence, looking to earn a few shekels. At around 4:00 P.M., while he
was near the fence, Abu Raidah was hurt in the right eye. The
hospital found he had been hit by a tear gas canister. In a
testimony he gave B’Tselem researcher Khaled al-’Azayzeh on 6
January 2020, he said:
The
hospital found he had been hit by a tear gas canister. In a
testimony he gave B’Tselem researcher Khaled al-’Azayzeh on 6
January 2020, he said:
When I was hit in the eye, I passed out and fell down. When I
woke up, I was in the European Hospital. I could see only
through my left eye and the right eye was bandaged. My head
really hurt.
For the first four days at the hospital, I was in shock and
couldn’t speak to anyone. A few days later, the swelling around
my eye started going down, but I couldn’t see anything with it.
My bandages were replaced every day.
I was released from hospital after ten days. Now I’m home and
all I do is sleep. I get medicines and all kinds of eye drops
every hour or every few hours.
Muhammad’s mother, Jihan Abu Raidah, 41, a married mother of four,
spoke about her son’s life since the injury in a testimony she gave
B’Tselem field researcher Olfat al-Kurd on 6 January 2020:
On Friday, 27 December 2019, my children and I had lunch
together. I asked Muhammad not to go to the fence, even though
he doesn’t go there to protest but to collect pieces of metal
and used tear gas canisters. Our financial situation is tough,
and he sells the scraps for three shekels and earns some pocket
money that way. He went anyway, and I waited at home for him to
come back and eat the dessert I’d made for him. At about 4:00
P.M., my daughter, Hanan, told me Muhammad had been hurt.
The doctors at the European Hospital told me Muhammad’s eye was
in bad shape and he might lose his eyesight. When I saw him, I
fainted. There was blood on his face, and I was afraid he was
going to die.
Muhammad was bleeding and was in pain, but the doctors couldn’t
do anything except give him antibiotics and pain killers. They
said Muhammad would have to get treatment outside Gaza to save
his eye. When his friends came to visit, all he did was cry. He
didn’t talk to them. His cousin, Ibrahim, who’s also ten years
old, came to visit him every day. He kept asking me: “Why
doesn’t Muhammad want to talk to me? Why does he just keep quiet
all the time? I miss his voice”. My heart ached for both of
them, and I cried a lot too.
At home, after he was released from the hospital, Muhammad grew
very quiet. Before the injury, he was very active, he was the
driving force in the house. He would go out every day to sell
vegetables and pieces of metal and aluminum to bring in some
money. After he came out of the hospital, he kept telling me, “I
want to go out of the house and play with my friends. I want to
play soccer and ride a bike. I feel like I’m suffocating. I’ve
had enough. I’m bored”.
Muhammad still has strong pain in the spot where he was injured,
as well as headaches and dizziness. He can only see through his
left eye. He gets eye drops and antibiotics. I really really
hope he’ll get a referral for surgery in a hospital in East
Jerusalem or the West Bank.
Muhammad is my youngest and most pampered son. I’m always near
him, looking at him, and my heart aches with pain. He’s only a
ten-year-old kid who didn’t threaten the Israeli army. I pray to
God to give him health, that I see him playing and running in
the neighborhood again, that the smile returns to his face.
Muhammad Abu Raidah did not receive a referral for treatment in a
West Bank hospital and in mid-January 2020, went with his parents to
get treatment in Egypt.
Saed Mahani, 28, 27 December 2019
On Friday, 27 December 2019, at around 3:00 P.M., Saed Mahani, 28,
an unmarried resident of Gaza City, arrived at the Return March
protest held near the perimeter fence east of al-Bureij R.C., in the
central Gaza Strip. Mahani approached the fence and threw stones at
soldiers standing on the other side. At around 4:30 P.M., a soldier
fired a “rubber” bullet, hitting him in the eye.
Mahmoud
Abu Musalam, a reporter and photojournalist who attended the
demonstration as part of his work, described the incident in a
testimony he gave B’Tselem field researcher Khaled al-’Azayzeh on 8
January 2020:
There were only a few dozen demonstrators that day because the
March of Return protests had been cancelled. The guys who came
must not have known about it. They stood a few dozen meters from
the fence. At around 4:00-4:30 P.M., a soldier, who got out of a
jeep, started swearing at them and then fired “rubber” bullets
at them. I dropped to the ground and lay flat. I heard about
three shots and when I got up, I heard the guys saying one
hadn’t gotten up and had been killed. They lifted him up and
carried him to an ambulance that was parked on Jakar Road. When
they passed by me, I saw he was bleeding profusely from the left
eye. He wasn’t talking, and we all kept quiet because we were
shocked by the sight of the blood gushing down his entire face.
In a
testimony he gave B’Tselem field researcher Olfat al-Kurd on 2
January 2020, Saed Mahani spoke about what happened:
At around 4:30 P.M., I was close to the fence. One of the
soldiers fired a “rubber” bullet at me and I was hit in the eye.
I fell to the ground. A few protestors came to help me and took
me to an ambulance that took me to Shuhada al-Aqsa Hospital in
Deir al-Balah. From there, I was immediately transferred to Nasr
Eye Hospital in Gaza City. The doctors told me my eye was in
really bad shape and there was no choice but to remove it, even
though my family and I objected.
I was released from hospital after the surgery. Since then, I
haven’t wanted to go outside or see anyone. I’ve been injured in
the protests before, but losing my eye has really affected me.
I’d rather have a hand amputated than lose my eye. I feel
frustrated, hopeless and sorry for myself. I never thought I’d
lose my eye. I feel like I have no future. I’m going to Egypt
with my brother. I’m hoping I’ll be able to get treatment there
and have a prosthetic eye fitted.
As of 2 February 2020, Egyptian border guards have not allowed
Mahani to travel for treatment in Egypt via Rafah Crossing.
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