Gaza government: WikiLeaks exposé confirms our claims

My report for Ma’an today on Hamas’ reaction to the WikiLeaks documents:

GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — Hamas authorities in the Gaza Strip said Tuesday that they were already aware of the explosive information on Palestinian affairs exposed this week by the whistleblower group WikiLeaks.

WikiLeaks on Sunday released a trove of US diplomatic cables, one of which included the revelation of plans for extensive US espionage on Hamas and Palestinian Authority officials.

Among the documents was a claim by Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak that Israel consulted Egypt and the PA in the lead-up to the winter war. Barak is quoted in the cable saying both Egyptian and PA officials rejected offers to assume control of Gaza after a defeat of Hamas.

Hamas Interior Ministry spokesman Ihab Al-Ghusain told Ma’an that “All the information that came from WikiLeaks [is] not new for us. We said that before, actually, even about the war on Gaza and the information we got that the Palestinian Authority and Egypt knew before about the war.”

“It’s not new, it’s just confirming what we said in the past, actually. So we’re not surprised with it,” he said at his Gaza office.

Asked about the revelation of America’s plans to gather meticulous intelligence on Hamas and PA officials and institutions, Ghussain said, “Sure, we know that America is a part of what is going on.”

He said Israel and the US were “both cooperating against the resistance. Sadly we say that always the US is going on the side of Israel and is helping Israel without being objective. The US should have a more balanced situation.”

He added: “Everybody knows that Hamas came through elections and through democracy, and always the US was singing about democracy. What about what happened in Palestine with the election?”

In Ramallah, President Mahmoud Abbas denied Monday that Israel approached him prior to the 3-week assault, which left some 1,400 Palestinians dead.

Saeb Erekat, the chief PLO negotiator, also disputed Barak’s account. “We knew about the war because the Israelis were saying there was going to be a war,” Erekat told The Associated Press. But “there were never any actual consultations between us and the Israelis before the war.”

WikiLeaks obtained an archive of more than a quarter-million secret US diplomatic cables, and released some of them to news organizations for publication Sunday.

Barak’s statement claiming PA and Egyptian foreknowledge was perhaps the most consequential revealed in the documents as far as the Israeli-Palestinian question is concerned.

The document is a report on a conversation between US Sen. Bob Casey, Rep. Gary Ackerman, and Barak in June 2009.

In the report, US officials quoted Barak as saying the “GOI [Government Of Israel] had consulted with Egypt and Fatah prior to Operation Cast Lead, asking if they were willing to assume control of Gaza once Israel defeated Hamas.

“Not surprisingly, Barak said, the GOI received negative answers from both,” the document states.

A separate cable lays out a “national human intelligence collection directive” asking US personnel to obtain “Details of travel plans such as routes and vehicles used by Palestinian Authority leaders and HAMAS members.”

The cable demands “[b]iographical, financial and biometric information on key PA and HAMAS leaders and representatives, to include the young guard inside Gaza, the West Bank and outside.”

On the Gaza human shield case


Majid Rabah, 11, right, with his mother, in their home in Gaza City’s Tel Al-Hawwa neighborhood. Two Israeli soldiers used Majid as a human shield during the 2009 invasion of Gaza. Last Sunday, an Israeli military court let the two soldiers walk free with a suspended sentence.

My report for Ma’an on the case, published on Tuesday 23 November 2010, is posted below.

Amira Hass also wrote this excellent article on the case, arguing that Israeli generals, not lowly soldiers, should be held accountable for alleged war crimes. Human Rights Watch also released a statement on the matter, calling the suspended sentence a “slap in the face for the victims of violations during Operation Cast Lead.”

Gaza boy used as human shield: I’ll always remember

GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — Majid Rabah, 11, says he will always remember the “black day” that Israeli soldiers ordered him to open bags they thought were rigged with explosives.

“Every moment I remember what happened,” he said in his home in Gaza City’s Tel Al-Hawwa neighborhood Tuesday.

An Israeli military court gave a suspended sentence and a demotion Sunday to the two soldiers who used Majid as a human shield, in a ruling he and his family said did not do justice to the trauma.

“When will the child forget what happened? This cannot be compared to three month’s [suspended] sentence,” said Majid’s mother, Fatima Rabah, 49. She added that she didn’t expect justice from the Israeli court system, and would prefer that an international court take up the matter.

“This will give Israeli soldiers a license to do whatever they like to Palestinian children. Many Palestinian children have died from Israeli guns and no one punished them,” she said. Majid himself said he was neither surprised nor satisfied by the Israeli court’s ruling.

Human rights advocates also said Sunday’s ruling sent the message that Israeli soldiers could violate Palestinian’s rights without consequences.

“This ruling implies that it is allowed for Israeli soldiers to use Palestinians, including children, as human shields, without being punished,” said Ayed Abu Eqtash of the organization Defense for Children International.

He said the case against the two soldiers was nothing more than an exercise in “Israeli PR” in the wake of judge Richard Goldstone’s UN-mandated report on alleged war crimes in Gaza.

“Israel wants to show the international community that it is abiding by Goldstone’s recommendations, but these procedures do not lead to accountability.”

Eqtash said the Israeli Supreme Court issued a ruling in 2005 barring the military from using Palestinians as human shields, but DCI has documented 15 cases in which children were used as such since then.

In the most recent documented case, on 19 August, a DCI investigation found that a 13-year-old boy from a village near the West Bank city of Nablus was beaten then forced at gunpoint to open doors in a house where the army suspected a wanted Palestinian was hiding.

Majid was used as a human shield on 15 January 2009, just as Israel’s 3-week offensive on Gaza appeared to be peaking. Israeli ground forces were smashing their way through Tel Al-Hawwa, a neighborhood of tower blocks south of Gaza City.

According to Majid and his mother, when Israeli soldiers began storming buildings in their area, families, nearly 40 people in all, in the building took shelter in the dirt-floor basement. While the others cowered in one corner, soldiers from the Givati Brigade arrived and ordered Majid, in Hebrew, to open two Samsonite duffle bags they found in a bathroom in the other corner.

In an affidavit provided to DCI, Majid gave more details: “The soldier approached me and grabbed my shirt from my neck and dragged me away. ‘He’s a child,’ my mother began shouting. I thought they would kill me.”

“I became very scared and wet my pants,” he recalled, “I could not shout or say anything because I was too afraid. The soldier dragged me 20 meters away. He pointed his weapon at me. He was shouting at me and I did not understand him, so he grabbed me and pushed me against the wall.”

Trembling with fear, he managed to open the first bag, which contained money and personal possessions brought to the basement by another resident in his building. When he was unable to open the other, one of the soldiers grabbed him by the hair, slapped him in the face, then shot the bag with his rifle, he said.

Later that day, Majid’s mother said, soldiers came to the basement to separate men from women and children, who were told to leave the building. Fearing that the men were being arrested, the women and children fled to Al-Quds Hospital, a Red Crescent installation nearby.

That same day, Israeli warplanes bombed the hospital with white phosphorus, forcing patients, hospital workers and hundreds of sheltering civilians to flee amid gunfire and shelling. Majid, his two sisters, and mother left in an ambulance to the Red Cross center in Gaza.

Air raid shatters holiday for Gaza family


A Palestinian man surveys the ruins of a house bombed by the Israeli airforce in the Gaza Strip town of Deir Al-Balah, on Saturday 20 November 2010. Photo: Jared Malsin

Israel launched a series of airstrikes on Gaza last weekend. Here’s my report about how the bombings affected one family, published by Ma’an on Monday 22 November 2010:

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (Ma’an) — The most intense Israeli airstrikes in months disrupted what had been a quiet holiday for one Gaza family.

Sulaiman Abu Mustafa, an olive and eggplant grower with a small farm near the border with Israel outside of Deir Al-Balah, was celebrating the Eid Al-Adha holiday with his family in his yard when the strike took place. Abu Mustafa’s uncle and aunt were visiting — there were around 20 people outside the house.

At 3 p.m. an Israeli F-16 fired a missile at an empty house across the street, blasting chunks of concrete into the air, which came hurtling down on Abu Mustafa’s house. He said the family scrambled to take shelter behind their house, but had no time to react.

The concrete chunks injured four people, including Abu Mustafa’s mother, who was wounded in the abdomen, and his brother who was struck in the head. His two year old son who was also hurt, he said.

Abu Mustafa’s home and yard was strewn with debris from his neighbor’s house that came crashing through his roof, leaving perforations in the ceiling. One of the walls was also cracked by the force of the explosion.

Abu Mustafa said he called an ambulance, but the family was forced to wait a half hour for help to arrive. Because their house is only 400 meters from the Green Line, emergency responders have to request permission from the Israeli army, via the Red Cross, to enter the area.

The Israeli military said it launched four separate airstrikes on Gaza on Friday—three in the afternoon and one late at night—in response to a series of rockets fired into Israel from Gaza. According to Israeli news reports, the shelling included homemade projectiles, mortars, and one Grad missile, and caused no injuries. This barrage in turn, was in response to an Israeli airstrike that killed a member of the Army of Islam militia, and his brother, in the middle of Gaza City at sundown on Wednesday.

In a statement announcing the airstrikes on Friday, the Israeli military said it was bombing “terror-linked sites” in Deir Al-Balah and Khan Younis.

Abu Mustafa emphatically denied that there was any activity by Palestinian armed groups in the area. “This area is very calm, the people here are peace-loving. This land is farmland, and the people here subsist off of what they grow on their farms, like olives.”

He told Ma’an: “I heard on the news that Israel said it was targeting terrorists who fired rockets, resistance or terrorists or I don’t know what, and the Army of Islam. There is no truth in these words.”

He added that, unlike many other areas directly along Gaza’s border with Israel, there have been very few incidents of soldiers firing on farmers. Abu Mustafa’s farm lies adjacent to an Israeli military position, including a remotely-operated gun turret, and a gate in the border fence used by military forces to enter the Strip.

Abu Mustafa said that the house that was the target of the missile was owned by the Sharufa family, who live primarily in Gaza City, and only visit the farmhouse once or twice a month. When Ma’an visited, all that remained of the two-story house was a crater.

Identities of those injured in the Deir Al-Balah bombing:

1. Roqaya Abu Mustafa, 53
2. Wijdan Abu Mustafa, 29
3. Abdel Aziz Abu Mustafa, 20
4. Ibrahim Abu Mustafa, 2

‘Intent to kill’

Walid Abu Oda holds flachettes, metal darts, from a shell that killed his son Ismail, 16. In addition, his son’s friend Hussam Abu Sayed, 17, and Ibrahim Abu Sayed, 91, died in the attack in the northern Gaza Strip on 12 September 2010.

My latest for Ma’an:

BEIT HANOUN, Gaza Strip (Ma’an) — On 13 September, a day after Israeli tank shells decapitated his 16-year-old son, Walid Abu Oda went back to his family’s northern Gaza farm in a vain search for the head.

Asked how he was coping with the loss, he said, “How do you think it feels to lose a son, to see your son without his head?”

The killing of Walid’s son, Ismail Abu Oda, along with his friend Hussam Abu Sayed, 17, and his grandfather Ibrahim Abu Sayed, 91, is raising questions about whether Israel has taken sufficient strides to bring it’s army into compliance with international humanitarian law.

The incident was similar to previous incidents, such as those described in judge Richard Goldstone’s UN-mandated report on Israel’s winter war on Gaza. Human rights groups say the September killings and others only underscore the importance of implementing the report’s call for investigations and accountability.

A lack of credible investigations, by Israel or international bodies, into these and other allegations makes it likely that Israeli soldiers will continue to violate the laws of war in Gaza. The dearth of probes “makes it very easy for the soldiers and the commanders first to shoot and second to get away with it,” said Mahmoud Abu Rahmah, a spokesman for the Gaza-based Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights.

Immediately following the shelling, the Israeli military announced it was merely “returning fire” at “suspects” who, they claimed, fired rocket-propelled grenades at Israeli forces.

Initial reports in the Israeli media repeated the military’s claims verbatim. “Shells kill three as IDF targets militant on Gaza Strip border,” declared the headline that ran in the next day’s edition of Haaretz.

“1 terrorist dead, 4 wounded in IDF response to Gaza attack,” reported The Jerusalem Post. Ynet: “IDF on Gaza incident: Suspects tried to fire anti-tank rockets.” Not to be outdone, the settler-run Arutz Sheva announced: “IDF Kills Two in Firefight with Gaza Terror Infiltrators.”

While Haaretz identified the three victims as a grandfather and two teenagers, the other news portals simply reported, as fact, that the three were “suspects,” “militants,” “terrorists.”

Two days later the military backtracked, admitting what Palestinian witnesses had said all along: the three were civilians.

Brig. Gen. Eyal Eisenberg would later clarify in a statement sent to journalists that “we understand from a re-creation that we undertook that the three casualties were not involved in act of terror.” The statement insisted, however, that one of the Palestinians had picked up an RPG launcher and aimed it at Israeli forces stationed along the border.

The case yielded a number of questions: Why did the army initially declare the three to be militants? Why did the Israeli soldiers decide to shoot in the first place?

The Israeli military did not respond to repeated requests for answers to these and other questions.

In Gaza, witnesses, relatives of the victims, and human rights experts told Ma’an that there was no basis for Israel’s claims that the three appeared to pose a threat to military forces.

All these sources stressed that the three victims visited the border area nearly every day, and were known to the soldiers stationed there. They also point out that the area where the shelling took place is in plain view of army installations on the northern border, a fact that Ma’an verified in a visit to the site. Ma’an found no evidence that anyone in the area was holding an RPG-launcher.

Eid killings

Ismail Abu Oda had been a quiet kid who attended prayers at the local mosque, and while he had only a ninth-grade education, was a talented mechanic: “He could spend 10 days in a [mechanic’s] shop and gain 10 years’ worth of knowledge,” his father says. He was saving money to buy a motorcycle.

Walid Abu Oda recounted the day, the third day of the Eid Al-Fitr holiday that marks the end of Ramadan.

The day of the shelling, Ismail and Hussam decided to accompany the elderly shepherd to his land, bringing chicken with them to make a barbeque to mark the holiday. “As I had promised my son, I bought them chicken,” he said. Walid did not join the three because he was attending a religious festival in Gaza City.

He said the two teens arrived around 10 a.m., sitting and talking while the elderly man, Ibrahim Abu Sayed, the owner of the land, watched over the sheep. They lit a fire and grilled the chicken.

Late in the afternoon, Walid Abu Oda said, the first tank shell fell, still some distance from the three. (The Al-Mezan Center said this first shell landed some 200 meters away.)

“My son called and said the rockets were coming,” Abu Oda said. He left the festival, in Gaza City, and rushed to return to Beit Hanoun. After the first call, he said, “I had a feeling that I had lost my son.”

When a second shell exploded closer to the group, the three began herding the flock of 30 sheep into a barn, in order to evacuate.

A third shell then exploded, hitting the wall of the barn.

“When I was near Jabaliya I got another call.” It was a relative calling to say his son had been killed.

“I saw my son in the hospital morgue, without a head,” Abu Oda said. Ismail had been decapitated by flachettes, small metal darts contained in certain tank shells used by Israel. He showed Ma’an some of the flachettes that had been found near the bodies, along with a fragment of the tank shell.

The two boys and the grandfather were dead. All but one of the 30 sheep were slaughtered.

Investigations carried out by Al-Mezan confirmed Abu Oda’s account. Abu Rahmah, the Al-Mezan spokesman, recently conducted a field visit in connection with the probe that found Israeli forces fired two shells toward the three Palestinians before the deadly shot.

The third shot was a shell containing flachettes, he confirmed, that hit the brick wall of a sheep barn where one of the teens was attempting to bring the sheep to shelter.

“The young man got the sheep and put them in the barn. He was closing the door when the shell hit him.”

“The shell hit a brick wall. This helped the splinters [flachettes] go back in the opposite direction and hit the two men,” Abu Rahmah said. The other two were standing 12 to 15 meters northeast of the barn when the shell exploded.

“The selection of the weapon and the way it was used gives us some info about the intent,” he added. “There is evidence that the intent was to kill the three persons with three shells.”

Photos taken that day by a Belgian photojournalist show the bodies laying in the morgue wrapped in white cloth. Hussam Abu Sayed, wearing an orange shirt, dried blood coming from his mouth and ears, a chunk of the skull missing above his right eye. Ibrahim Abu Sayed’s head was apparently intact except for a deep puncture in the right cheek.

Victims’ ‘familiar faces’

Muhammad Abdel Aziz Abu Oda operates a farm adjacent to the area where the three were killed. His farm, where he grows olive and lemon trees, is the last human encampment on the edge of the “buffer zone” where anyone who enters is shot on sight by the Israeli army.

Abu Oda told Ma’an he comes to his land every day in coordination with the Israeli military. He also said that the three victims of the 12 September shelling visited the area every day. “The soldiers knew them,” he said in an interview on his land bordering the buffer zone.

Al-Mezan’s Abu Rahmah also confirmed this impression, saying the three would have been “familiar faces” for the soldiers stationed on the border.

He claimed Palestinian guerillas never came to the area because it lies in plain sight of the watchtowers along the border.

Ismail Abu Oda’s father also said that he had never known of fighters visiting the area where the killings took place. “If my son had worked with the resistance, I would not be sad; I would be proud,” he said.

More assassinations

A Palestinian police officer stands in front of the car destroyed in Wednesday’s airtstrike. (Photo: Jared Malsin)

Just before sundown today I went for a short run along the Gaza shoreline. Passing families relaxing on the beach, I was reflecting on what a remarkably calm holiday Gaza was enjoying this Eid Al-Adha.

I had thought too soon. When I returned to my apartment there was a missed call on my phone from minutes earlier. Emad, the director of Ma’an’s Gaza office, was calling to inform me that there was a deadly Israeli airstrike in Gaza City’s downtown.

Still sweating, I pulled on my jeans and grabbed a taxi to the scene of the strike, just off Al-Wehda street, not more than 500 meters from the Ma’an office. A missile fired from an Israeli drone had ripped a white Subaru in half. The front doors were butterflied out on either side of the car. The front seats, the upholstery burned off. In addition to bits of metal, rubber, and plastic lying everywhere in the street, there were flowers, as if someone’s bouquet had also been blown apart.

Standing there in the dark, the police shooing teenage boys from the scene, I was realized it was shocking that no passersby were injured in the strike. The street was packed with people, families with children, cars and motorcycles. The strike occurred at sundown on a holiday, one of the busiest evenings of the year in Gaza.

The Israeli military announced later that it assassinated the two men (brothers) because at least one of them was a member of the Army of Islam faction, which the military claimed, based on secret evidence, was planning to attack Israelis in the Sinai Peninsula.

I am going to report on the political-security side of this issue later. For now I want to flag a few things:

1. This strike was the second Israeli extrajudicial assassination in Gaza in as many weeks, marking the resumption of what Israel calls “targeted killings”

2. Whatever Israel claims these men were planning to do in the future, at the moment they were killed, they were not engaged in combat. They were in a calm situation, in their own country, driving in a car in a civilian area.

3. These attacks have a terrorizing effect. When bombs or missiles explode on busy streets, killing people, it terrorizes the population, no matter who is doing the bombing, and who are the victims. When you get a look at the bombing up close, you get a sense of the sense of the fragility, the insecurity of daily life here.

Layers of colonial history in Gaza

A headstone of an Australian air force member in Gaza. [Photo: Jared Malsin]

My latest story is a feature for Ma’an about the British War Cemetery in Gaza. I was actually in the area for an unrelated reason: I was interviewing Palestinians whose houses were destroyed during Israel’s winter offensive, and was actually leaving when I stumbled across the cemetery. Here’s an excerpt:

ZAWAYDA, Gaza (Ma’an) — The Gaza War Cemetery is a slightly parched but still green oasis in an otherwise run-down neighborhood on the eastern edge of Gaza City.

Inside a leafy compound, underneath rows of white marble gravestones, lie more than 3,500 mainly British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in two world wars. Aside from the British there are Australians, Poles, Canadians, Greeks, two dozen Indian Muslim soldiers, and some 700 Turks.

Some anonymous headstones bear the inscription, “A soldier of the great war.”

As one of few green spaces in crowded, dusty Gaza the cemetery is known locally as a destination for family picnics. The graveyard is cared for by a team of six Palestinians employed by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

In addition to the thousands of headstones engraved with crosses, there are also a handful which are instead carved with the Star of David, marking the graves of Jewish soldiers in the British army.

One of these is the last resting place of Wilfred Gordon Aron Joseph, who, according to records kept by the Graves Commission, lived at 28 Heber Road, Cricklewood, London and was married to Winifred L. Joseph.

2nd Lt. Joseph was 21 when he died in the Second Battle of Gaza, a vain and disastrous attempt by the British army to capture the enclave from Ottoman forces on 19 April 1917. Of the 800 men who set out on the attack that day, only 92 returned to British lines.

Joseph’s tombstone reads: “In the mighty march of progress / He thought to do his best.”

Britain’s first and second attempts to conquer Gaza failed. It wasn’t until November 1917 when British forces under Gen. Edmund Allenby broke the Gaza-Beersheba Line and entered Palestine, beginning the British Mandate and paving the way for the creation of Israel, and the expulsion of 750,000 Palestinians, three decades later.

The cemetery also contains the graves of Western soldiers killed during World War II, when Gaza was home to an Australian hospital base and a British airfield. There are Canadians who died while deployed as members of the UN Emergency Force tasked with ending the 1956 Suez Crisis.

The cemetery is now a strange artifact of imperial history, a reminder of the Western military interventions that shaped the modern Middle East.

The effects of these historical forces are still playing themselves out in Gaza, and the cemetery itself has not been safe from this. Instead of witnessing the “mighty march of progress,” the cemetery has been battered by yet another occupying army.

Click here to read the full story.

Daylight assassination

Israel assassinated a member of the salafist faction Jaysh Al-Islam (literally “Army of Islam”) in an apparent car-bombing in downtown Gaza City just before noon on Wednesday.

The man, Muhammad Al-Nimnim was killed by an explosion that totally destroyed the car he was driving, outside a Palestinian security compound. It was an assassination in broad daylight.

I went to the scene of the blast, and was able to snap a few photos before the police asked me to leave. The overturned frame of the car was a skeleton of twisted metal.

Police at the scene initially said the blast was caused by a bomb planted in the car. Here’s Ma’an’s report:

The military, which initially declined to comment, said Muhammad Jamal Nimnim was a senior leader in the Salafist military group Jaish Al-Islam (Army of Islam) and had been “personally involved in directing several terror attacks against Israeli targets in recent years.”

Nimnim was killed in his car in Gaza City, and one other man, who witnesses said was a passenger in the vehicle, was injured and taken to hospital. Several bystanders were also injured.

Palestinian witnesses and security officials told the German news agency DPA that the explosion in the car was caused by a bomb planted under the driver’s seat.

Lieutenant Colonel Avital Leibovich of the Israeli military told DPA, “I don’t want to tell you exactly how this happened, but he was targeted with a bomb.”

Earlier witnesses told Ma’an the explosion was the result of a bomb dropped by an unmanned Israeli drone. The Interior Ministry in Gaza also reported earlier in the day that the explosion was the result of a drone strike.

In its statement claiming the assassination, Israel’s army said Nimnim had recently assisted in “directing a terror attack against American and Israeli targets in the Sinai Peninsula, in cooperation with Hamas elements in the Gaza Strip.”

In the second photo below you can see a hole under where the driver’s seat of the car would have been.

Jaysh Al-Islam is the group that was responsible for the kidnapping of Alan Johnston. Their profile is sort of gangster-salafist.

Regardless, this was an extrajudicial killing, plain and simple. It was yet another reminder that even during moments of “calm” in Gaza, the situation can change instantaneously.

A Palestinian police offer walks past the remains of a car destroyed in an Israeli “targeted killing.”

The burned-out skeleton of the car.