Israeli soldiers tell Palestinians: ‘We will gas you until you die'
OCT. 30, 2015 12:39 P.M. (UPDATED: OCT. 30, 2015 6:38 P.M.)
Israel's separation wall pictured from Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem.(Charlie Hoyle/File)
By: Megan Hanna
Megan Hanna is a freelance photographer and journalist based in Palestine.
On
October 29, Israeli military forces issued a disturbing message to
residents of Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem, telling them that unless
they stopped throwing stones "we will gas you until you die."
Israeli
military forces raided the camp and fired tear gas and flash grenades
indiscriminately at people’s windows, balconies, and down the narrow
streets, allegedly in response to Palestinian youths throwing stones at
the Israeli separation wall that borders the community.
During
the raid, an Israeli soldier in a military vehicle addressed
theprotestersand residents of the camp through a loudspeaker in Arabic. The disturbingincidentwas caught on film. [ click to view on page http://www.maannews.com/ Content.aspx?id=768559 ]
“Inhabitants
of Aida, we are the Israeli occupation forces, if you throw stones we
will hit you with gas until you die. The children, the youth, and the
old people, all of you – we won’t spare any of you”.
During
the assault of theprotesters,Qassan Abu Aker, 25, was arrested. The
speakerphone announcement continued, “We have arrested one of you, he’s
with us now. We took him from his home, and we will kill him while
you’re watching as long as you throw stones.”
The
chilling message concluded: “We will blind your eyes with gas until you
die, your homes, your families, brothers, sons, everyone”.
Subsequently
after the announcement, Israeli forces fired tear gas and rubber-coated
steel bulletsindiscriminatelyin the streets.
The
use of force was so extreme that children from Aida’s two
communitycentersand residents of nearby houses had to be evacuated to
another part of the camp, and at least one youth was taken to hospital
with respiratory problems.
The
clashes are part of a spate of violence that has unfolded across Israel
and the occupied Palestinian territory over the past month, in which at
least 64 Palestinians and 9 Israelis have been killed.
Alongside
the disconcerting language used to inspire terroramongthe residents --
the majority of whom weren’t involved in the stone throwing -- the film
provides evidence of a member of the Israeli army admitting to the
potentially lethal application of tear gas.
Last week, on Oct. 21, Hashem al-Azzeh, 54, died in Hebron due to excessive tear gas inhalation used by Israeli forces to subdueprotesters, and two days earlier an elderly woman in the Batan el-Hawa area of Silwan, East Jerusalem, died from the effects of tear gas fired during clashes.
“In
this statement, we see -- among a range of potential criminal offences
-- a public threat to kill Palestinian civilians, and to execute a
prisoner,"Simon
Reynolds, Legal Advocacy Coordinator at the BADIL Resource Center for
Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights, told Ma'an.
"Though
such threats are appalling, they are not necessarily surprising. In
light of the mounting civilian death toll among Palestinians, such
threats merely add words to the deed.
“What
we are seeing is an apparent policy of lawlessness in which Israeli
forces can wield deadly force with virtual impunity. Especially
troubling is that this is a policy that seems to have, at the very
minimum, the tacit acceptance of the highest levels of government.”
Numerous
rights groups havepubliclycondemned Israel’s disproportionate military
response while policing demonstrations and responding to alleged
attacks.
“Indiscriminate
or deliberate firing on observers and demonstrators who pose no
imminent threat violates the international standards that bind Israeli
security forces,"Kenneth
Roth, executive director of Humans Rights Watch said on Oct. 11, after a
HRW research assistant was shot and injured whileobservinga
demonstration near Ramallah.
Earlier this week, Amnesty International demanded that
Israel stop unlawful killings in occupied Palestinian territory,
stating that Israeli forces appeared to have "ripped up therulebook."
“There
is mounting evidence that, as tensions have risen dramatically, in some
cases Israeli forces appear to have ripped up the rulebook and resorted
to extreme and unlawful measures,"Philip Luther, Director of the Middle
East and North Africa Programme at Amnesty International said.
"Intentional
lethal force should only be used when absolutely necessary to protect
life," he added. "Instead we are increasingly seeing Israeli forces
recklessly flouting international standards by shooting to kill in
situations where it is completely unjustified."
In
February last year, Amnesty released a report entitled 'Trigger-happy',
which found that Israeli forces display a "callous disregard" for human
life, with near total impunity for the killing of Palestinian civilians
in cases examined since 2011.
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