Please forward this story widely...
Acting in character, the Israeli military
has chosen to honor the
dead not with flowers but with more violence. Scores have died
during funerals just like this one in the West Bank and Gaza.
bostontopalestine
Activist's memorial service disrupted
Chris McGreal in Jerusalem
Wednesday March 19, 2003
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,2763,917178,00.html
Israeli forces fired teargas and stun grenades
yesterday in an
attempt to break up a memorial service for Rachel Corrie, the
American peace activist killed by an army bulldozer in Gaza on
Sunday.
Witnesses including several dozen foreigners
and Palestinian
supporters say Israeli armoured vehicles tried to disperse the
gathering at the spot in Rafah refugee camp where Ms Corrie was
crushed to death.
The 23 year-old activist with the International
Solidarity Movement
(ISM) was trying to prevent the destruction of Palestinian homes
by
the Israelis when she was hit by the bulldozer.
Joe Smith, a young activist from Kansas City,
said about 100 people
were gathered to lay carnations and erect a small memorial when
the
first armoured personnel carrier appeared.
"They started firing teargas and blowing
smoke, then they fired sound
grenades. After a while it got hectic so we sat down. Then the
tank
came over and shot in the air," he said. "It scared
a lot of
Palestinians, especially the shooting made a lot of them run
and the
teargas freaked people out. But most of us stayed."
Another witness said the army failed to break
up the service.
"People were laying carnations at the
spot where Rachel was killed
when a tank came and fired teargas right on them. Then a core
group
of the peace activists took an ISM cloth banner to the fence
and
pinned it up.
"The tank chased after them trying to
stop them with teargas but the
wind was against the army," she said.
Tensions rose further when a convoy of vehicles,
including the
bulldozer that killed Ms Corrie, passed the area.
"I don't think it was deliberate but
it was pretty insensitive," said
Mr Smith.
"I think they had been destroying some
buildings elsewhere and had to
pass by to get back to their base."
The army said it was investigating the incident.