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20 May 2004 Thursday 29 Rabi-ul-Awwal 1425



Israel kills 10 Palestinian protesters in Rafah


RAFAH, May 19: Israeli tanks and helicopters fired on protesters in a refugee camp on Wednesday, killing 10 Palestinians and raising a two-day death toll to 33 in the bloodiest Gaza Strip raid in years.

Medics said more than 50 people were wounded in the besieged Rafah camp and that the casualties included children and teenagers dismembered by the blasts. The Israeli defence minister dismissed international appeals to discontinue the operation.

"This is a necessary and vital operation for the security of the state of Israel...This operation is vital and will continue as long as needed," Mr Mofaz told reporters after the Rafah killings.

The barrage of Israeli fire sent a marching crowd fleeing in terror, some dragging bloodied comrades and others carrying wounded children in their arms. One witness described a "sea of blood with body parts flying all over".

Expressing "deep sorrow over the loss of civilian lives", the army said it did not fire deliberately at the procession but that tank fire designed to drive back the protesters may have caused casualties. It alleged gunmen were among the crowd.

In a rare but gently worded rebuke to Israel, US President George Bush told reporters: "I continue to urge restraint. It is essential that people respect innocent life in order for us to achieve peace."

Palestinian President Yasser Arafat called the strike a war crime against peaceful demonstrators, demanded punishment for those responsible and appealed for international intervention.

The bloodshed also brought renewed international pressure on Israel to end its assault, which began on Tuesday with the stated goal of rooting out militants and uncovering suspected tunnels used to smuggle weapons across the border from Egypt.

A U.N. human rights envoy accused Israel of war crimes and a violation of humanitarian law, and European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana said he was "deeply distressed" by the high civilian casualties in Gaza.

BODIES PILE UP: Bodies carried on piling up in a flower freezer converted into a makeshift morgue after staff at the refugee camp's main hospital strained to cope with the dead along with dozens of wounded in two days of Israeli military assaults.

The firing began as marchers surged toward the Tel Sultan neighbourhood, focal point of Israel's sweep into Rafah, to demand that humanitarian aid be allowed in.

Brig Ruth Yaron, Israel's chief military spokeswoman, said a helicopter fired a missile into an open area trying to scare away the demonstrators and then shelled an abandoned building when they kept moving toward Israeli forces.

"It is possible that the casualties were the result of the tank fire on the abandoned structure. The details of the incident continue to be investigated," the statement said.

The army further alleged Palestinians had rigged the road used by the marchers with explosives against Israeli forces. Palestinians said the incident evoked bitter memories of the army's 2002 assault on the Jenin refugee camp, in the West Bank, where forces flattened an entire neighbourhood during pitched battles with militants following suicide bombings in Israel.

Earlier in the day Wednesday, Israeli forces killed four Palestinians in Rafah and demanded the surrender of militants. Troops rounded up some 2,000 men before releasing most and taking 150 away to a border post, witnesses said. An international outcry was sparked by Israeli threats to flatten hundreds of Rafah homes to widen an army-controlled security corridor along the border with Egypt.

Amid the bloodletting, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon worked to revive his Gaza withdrawal plan, which aides said may be presented for cabinet approval as early as next week.

Violence has worsened in Gaza since Mr Sharon proposed evacuating troops and Jewish settlers in a plan backed by most Israelis and the United States, but rejected by his right-wing Likud party in a referendum earlier this month.

Palestinian militants want to claim as a victory any pullout by Israel from territories it captured in the 1967 war, but the army is determined to smash them first. -Reuters




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