TULKAREM:
A WEEK OF EXTREME VIOLENCE
By
Rebecca
August
14, 2002
I have just spent
the past week in Tulkarem.
Tulkarem straddles
the line of the West Bank and Israel, where
you can see the
lights of Netanya and the sea in the distance. But the city is completely isolated,
and this imprisonment heavily enforced by
the surrounding
Israeli military.
This is a city
where extreme violence carried out by the Israeli
military on all
Palestinian citizens is hushed up. Journalists are strictly
forbidden from
this 'military zone'.
Apaches this past
week have been flying low over the city day
and night, firing
into Tulkarem camp and city with routine frequency. Tanks have occupied the
center and outskirts of the city, also firing often.
And the soldiers
in jeeps, many of them Druze, drive around constantly,
shouting that if
they see anyone on the street they will shoot.
The military is
very busy arresting and shooting at civilians, on
many occasions
children as young as seven years old. Journalists
have been threatened
with arrest unless they get out of town immediately,
their film confiscated
on site. This week Ha'aretz reporter Gideon Levy's
car was fired upon
with no provacation (a bullet straight in the center of the
windshield), the
only thing saving his life being the bullet proof glass.
COLD BLOODED EXECUTIONS
On Tuesday, August
7th, the military executed one of the men on
their "wanted
list", Ziad D'ayas, 28 years old, in cold blood. They also
murdered two Palestinian
civilians in the vicinity, afterwards claiming they too were "wanted".
This official military statement is an absolute untruth.
One, Mahair Jesmawi,
17 years old, was a student who had just
learnt moments
before he had just passed his end of the year school
examinations.
Elated, he stepped out briefly onto the street and was killed. The other was
Mohammed Saidz, 24 years old, a mechanic working in his shop who had the bad luck
to be happened upon by soldiers going after Ziad. He was shot and died a slow
death after ambulances were prevented from retrieving him.
This military action
was conducted in a particulary gruesome
way.
According to eyewitnesses in neighbouring buildings, it started around 9 am that
morning. Snipers, and soldiers, many in plain clothers
surrounded the
area of the mechanic's roof where Ziad was sleeping. They proceeded to aim
and shoot, hitting Ziad in his leg and neck. Ziad fell off the roof into the
shop, breaking his limbs but still alive. They then proceeded to bash him all
over his body with their guns, before firing 9 dum dum bullets directly into his
head, killing him instantly. Their dogs were set on the body, and acid was
poured on his arms, legs, and stomach.
Ambulances were
prevented from moving for five hours that morning. One tried to retrieve the
three bodies that the military held in a small field outside the mechanic's house,
but the ambulance was fired upon and had to turn back. Finally, a civilian
car rushed the bodies to the government hospital as soon as the soldiers left
the the vicinity.
I viewed the bodies
as they came in. Ziad's body was
grotesquely tortured,
limbs broken, and his skin peeled off in huge sections from the acid. His head
was half blown off. Mahair, the 17 year old student, was shot in the head.
And Mohammed, the mechanic, had a bullet in his torso.
Meanwhile, the
houses in the area of the murders were emptied
of families, as
the soldiers went through each one, damaging furniture, stealing money on two occasions.
A group of roughly thirty men were arrested and taken to Israel, including two wounded
by live ammunition.
THE HOSPITAL AND
AMBULANCES UNDER SIEGE
The ambulance dispatch
center is next to Tulkarem's
government hospital.
On three occasions this past week both the hospital and ambulance entrance have been
blocked by tanks and jeeps. Apparently this is quite normal.
On these occasions,
soldiers scream at the hospital gate
keepers to close
the gates. Once, to punctuate their point, the soldiers fired live ammunition
through the gaps in the gate, towards the emergency room entrance, hitting a car
in the process. Thankfully, the car had no occupants at the time.
On these three
occasions the Red Cross has been informed by
the military that
the ambulances cannot move AT ALL. Shooting at moving
ambulances is unfortunately
not uncommon in Tulkarem.
A DECIMATED AMBULANCE
Three days ago,
the ambulance center wanted to deliver an
ambulance that
had been decimated by tank fire on March 7th, to the main
ambulance center
in Ramallah.
The attack on this
particular ambulance resulted in the death of
the driver, Ibrahim.
The vehicle was shot upon without warning by a tank
as Ibrahim was
heading back to the hospital after delivering a patient. He was killed by numerous
bullets to the head. His passenger, a medic called Sophia, was pushed down
onto the floor of the ambulance by Ibrahim moments before he was killed, so luckily
escaped with only shrapnel all over her body.
The ambulance center
had to negotiate with the soldiers at
Tulkerem's checkpoint
to transport this badly damaged ambulance through. When a soldier saw the 30
odd bullet holes in the windshield and body of the vehicle, as well as Ibrahim's
blood and hair smeared on the inside of the driver's door, he asked me what happened.
When the story was told, the soldier's response was, "they must have been fired
upon by their own people". "No, it was definitly an Israeli tank,"
I said. [caught on film, eyewitness accounts, as well as the medic's account]
"Well... then they must have been terrorists," the soldier adamantly replied.
SUMMER CAMP FOR
KIDS CONTINUES UNDER FIRE
The summer camp
for children is popular, but often caught up in
the violence.
The kids have been in the downtown camp on numerous
occasions when
the tanks come in to the downtown area and start firing.
The kids who attend
(roughly 7 - 10 years old) are from both the
city and the camp.
Every morning the kids, escourted by the teachers run
single file along
the sides of buildings to reach the summer camp. The
same routine happens
upon their return home.
Running to the
homes of the kids one afternoon we came
across a tank and
had to duck into a nearby house. The kids were terrified, one 8 year old girl
sobbing with fear uncontrollaby. The tank opened fire outside the house as
we cowered on the floor.
Thankfully, there
was a small kitten lounging on the floor. We
used it to divert
the kid's attention from the blasts outside, playfully pulling
the kitten's tail
and saying "look,look." They focused on the kitten
and the small girl
stopped crying. We left when when the street fell silent
again, and ran
to their houses.
TO SUM UP
It is hard to conclude
this essay of what was witnessed this
bloody week in
Tulkarem. The violence was so strong, and details brutal. For more information
please call:
Rebecca @ 055-558-954
------------------
Rebecca is part
of the International Solidarity Movement's Palestine Freedom Summer campaign.
For more information, please see the ISM website at www.palsolidarity.org ,
or the local bostontopalestine support group at www.bcpr.org (click "freedomsummer")