Israeli forces kidnap two teenagers fishing off Gaza
by aletho(Photo by Charlie Andreasson)
By Rosa Schiano | International Solidarity Movement | January 27, 2014
Gaza, Occupied Palestine - On Monday, 20th January, at about 6:00 am,
Yousef Amin Abo Warda (age 18) and his cousin Ahmad Kamal Abo Warda
(age 16) left their house to go fishing in a small boat without an
engine.
Around 7:30 am
they were fishing in front of the al-Waha area, in the northern Gaza
Strip, and sank their fishing nets about three kilometers, or 1.6
nautical miles, offshore.
The arrest
Yousef
said two large Israeli gunboats approached the fishing boats. While
other fishermen were able to escape, for Yousef and Ahmad it was
impossible, as their boat had no engine and was made heavy seawater
seeping through a hole.
“Soldiers
from one of the gunboats began shooting into the water, while the
second gunboat quickly turned around us to create waves,” Yousef said.
The
soldiers, as they usually do when they want to arrest fishermen, asked
the two young Palestinians to undress, dive into the water and swim to
the Israeli ship.
“I
tried to get closer to their ship by swimming, but the ship moved away,
so it became hard for me,” Yousef said. ”I cried that I was tired
moving my arms. I could no longer swim. The ship stopped. I went
directly to the ladder that they putdown and I climbed on board the
ship.”
“They
made me kneel down and handcuffed my hands behind my back,” Yousef
added. ”They gave me some clothes and helped me put them on. They yelled
to my cousin Ahmad to swim toward the ship. After about half hour Ahmad
was sitting behind me. Our hands and feet were tied.” Moreover, the
soldiers kicked the two fishermen on their back.
The arrival at the port of Ashdod
After
about half an hour the ship reached the Israeli port of Ashdod. The
soldiers removed the bandages from the fishermen’s eyes, as well as
their cuffs, to allow them to get off the ship. On shore, the fishermen
were again handcuffed and blindfolded. They were asked personal
information: their names, place of residence, dates of birth, phone
numbers. Some soldiers wrote this information in Hebrew on a paper. They
asked Yousef to hold the paper in his hands and took a picture of him.
Yousef and Ahmad were held in two separate rooms for about three hours.
Then some soldiers took Yousef into the room where Ahmad was detained.
They left them handcuffed in a room for another three hours. Then some
soldiers made the fishermen get in a Jeep and brought them to Erez.
Erez and the interrogation
At Erez, the two fishermen were brought into a room and interrogated separately.
The
investigator asked Yousef about his name, his family, his brothers, the
age of his relatives, his work and other personal information. “The
detective showed me on a computer a map of the city of Jabalia, he told
me the name of the streets with specific details,” he said. “He asked me
to select my house. He showed me a house in which some people working
for Hamas and the al-Qassam brigades are living, and he asked me if I
know them. I said no. Then he showed me other houses belonging to people
connected with Hamas. He indicated more than two houses. He was trying
to get information from me. I said I don’t know anything. He told me
‘Are you afraid? You are in a safe place and you can tell us everything.
These people are trying to destroy your life, they are terrorists.’ He
indicated about six families that live in my neighborhood”.
The
investigator showed him also the beach and asked him on which part of
the beach he usually works and where he keeps his boat. The investigator
also asked him about a police site in the area and how many people work
there. Yousef replied that he knows only two policemen, to whom the
fishermen show their permits on the beach, and that he doesn’t go to the
governmental site. The investigator asked Yousef about a training site
of the al-Qassam brigades. Yousef replied that he doesn’t know anything
about it. “The investigator then showed me photos of some hasakat [small
fishing boats] and asked me to whom they belong, and he asked me about
some cafes on the beach and about the harbor. I told him that I don’t
know anything about the harbor and I don’t go there. The investigator
asked me ‘In Jabalia refugee camp there is a site that belongs to
Hamas?’ I told him that I don’t know.”
“The
investigator asked me what I thought of al-Sisi [commander of the
Egyptian armed forces] and how the relation are between Hamas and
al-Sisi. I told him that I do not follow the news or politics. I said,‘I
go to fish and I go home’.
“The
detective told me ‘If you are near the border and you get shot by the
army, who will you blame and would you consider responsible?’ ‘You are
responsible,’ I said. He replied ‘Hamas should be blamed, not us.’”
“The
investigator then asked me, ‘What do you think of the Hamas government
and what is your opinion of it in comparison with Fatah? Do you feel
comfortable? Why did you elect them? You were happy under the Israeli
government. Many Palestinians came here to work and had money. Can you
compare your current life to the life in which Israel controlled Gaza?’ I
told him that I’m only 18 years old. I can’t know and I have never gone
to Israel.”
The
investigator then asked Yousef about the tunnels , Yousef replied that
he’s just a fisherman and has never seen one. Finally, the investigator
asked him if he was feeling hungry. Yousef said yes. The soldiers
brought him a shawarma sandwich and a Coke.
Yousef
was then taken to another room and remained there for an hour.
Meanwhile, investigators had questioned his cousin Ahmad. The soldiers
then accompanied the two young fishermen to the Erez gate and told them
to return to the Gaza Strip.
“They closed the door behind us,” he said.
Their
relatives, frightened by the lack of news, had tried to contact the
International Committee of the Red Cross and other organizations. They
also asked some fishermen to look for them in the sea. But only around 11:00 pm did the ICRC inform them that the two had been arrested.
Escalation
The
fishermen told us that since the beginning of 2014, there has been an
increase in Israeli attacks on Gaza fishermen and the situation is
worsening day by day. According to the fishermen, Israeli attacks
increase during fishing seasons.
Loss and hope
The
large family Abo Warda, whose name is also used to denote the area
where it lives, includes about 35 fishermen, of whom about half have
been arrested.
In
November, two other young men from the same family, Saddam and Mahmoud
Abo Warda, were also arrested. One of them suffered a light injury in
the abdomen caused by Israeli gunfire. Both were attacked while fishing
on a boat without an engine, and were therefore unable to escape.
Several of the family’s boats have been confiscated and are currently in the Israeli port of Ashdod.
Yousef and Ahmad have lost their fishing nets.
“Before,
we had three boats with nets,” Yousef said. ”Now my family has only one
boat and no nets. I ask the international community to stop these
Israeli attacks.”
“Eight
persons in this house are fishermen,” another fisherman said. “One of
our boats was damaged during Israel’s ‘Operation Pillar of Defense’ in
November 2012. We can’t fix it and need to buy new nets.”
Background
Israel
has progressively imposed restrictions on Palestinian fishermen’s
access to the sea. The 20 nautical miles established under the Jericho
agreements, between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) in 1994, were reduced to 12 miles in the Bertini Agreement of
2002. In 2006, the area Israel allowed for fishing was reduced to six
nautical miles from the coast. After its military offensive “Operation
Cast Lead” (December 2008 – January 2009) Israel imposed a limit of
three nautical miles from the coast, preventing Palestinians from
accessing 85% of the water to which they are entitled under the Jericho
agreements of 1994.
Under
the ceasefire agreement reached by Israel and the Palestinian
resistance after the Israeli military offensive “Operation Pillar of
Defense” (November 2012), Israel agreed that Palestinian fishermen could
again sail six nautical miles from the coast. Despite these agreements,
the Israeli navy has not stopped its attacks on fishermen, even within
this limit. In March 2013, Israel once again imposed a limit of three
nautical miles from the coast. On 22 May, Israeli military authorities announced a decision to extend the limit to six nautical miles again.
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