Palestinian teenager killed by Israeli fire during Gaza demonstration

Tens of thousands protest Israeli border to mark anniversary of weekly protests

Palestinian protesters wave national flags during a demonstration marking the first anniversary of the March of Return protests, near the border with Israel east of Gaza City on March 30th. Photograph:  Anas Baba/AFP/Getty
Palestinian protesters wave national flags during a demonstration marking the first anniversary of the March of Return protests, near the border with Israel east of Gaza City on March 30th. Photograph: Anas Baba/AFP/Getty

A Palestinian teenager has been killed by Israeli fire, health officials said, as tens of thousands of protesters gathered near the Israeli border to mark the first anniversary of weekly demos in the Gaza Strip.

The health ministry said Adham Amara (17) was hit in the face and died in a protest camp in east Gaza City. Thirteen Palestinians have been wounded by live fire in the protests.

Gaza’s Hamas rulers pledged to keep the crowds a safe distance from the fence as Egyptian mediators tried to cement a ceasefire agreement.

Dozens of volunteers in fluorescent vests were deployed to restrain demonstrators, while ambulances lined up in front of clinics and police supervised encampments erected far from the fence.

READ SOME MORE

As the crowds swelled throughout the afternoon in response to Hamas’s calls for a large participation, dozens of protesters approached the fence, unfurling Palestinian flags and throwing rocks and explosives towards Israeli troops.

The soldiers responded with tear gas and live fire to disperse the crowds.

Palestinian protesters from Gaza Strip and Israeli soldiers clash as soldiers tae up positions at the security fence  facing the Gaza neighborhood of Shjaaia  on  March 30th. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA
Palestinian protesters from Gaza Strip and Israeli soldiers clash as soldiers tae up positions at the security fence facing the Gaza neighborhood of Shjaaia on March 30th. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA

Policy criticism

The protest came at a sensitive time for Israel and Hamas.

Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu is seeking his fourth consecutive term in April 9th elections, but is facing a serious challenge from a group of ex-army chiefs who have criticised what they say is his failed Gaza policy.

In the final stretch of the campaign, he needs to keep the Israel-Gaza frontier quiet, without seeming to make concessions to Hamas.

He took heavy criticism this week for what was seen as a soft response to renewed rocket fire out of Gaza.

Hamas faces growing unrest in Gaza as a result of worsening conditions after more than a decade of Israeli and Egyptian border closures.

The fence protests, which began exactly a year ago, have been aimed in large part at breaking the Israeli-Egyptian blockade on Gaza, but have not delivered major improvements.

The Israeli military estimated 30,000 Palestinians were gathered at the marches.

“The rioters are hurling rocks and setting tyres on fire. In addition, a number of grenades and explosive devices have been hurled at the Gaza Strip security fence,” it said in a statement.

It added that soldiers were responding with “riot dispersal means” and firing in line with standard procedures.

Gaza health officials said earlier that Israeli troops had shot and killed a Palestinian man near the fence, hours before the rally.

Gaza’s health ministry said Mohammed Saad (21) was hit by shrapnel in the head.

The army said about 200 Palestinians “rioted during the night along the fence” and that the army used riot dispersal means.

A Gaza hospital worker said Mr Saad was a member of the so-called “night disturbance unit”, which routinely burns tyres, flashes laser lights and detonates explosives near the fence at night to distract soldiers and disturb residents of nearby Israeli communities.

Palestinian protesters wave national flags as they demonstrate  on the Gaza Strip. Photograph: Jack Guez/AFP/Getty
Palestinian protesters wave national flags as they demonstrate on the Gaza Strip. Photograph: Jack Guez/AFP/Getty

Hamas lead

The marches near the fence began a year ago, initially organised by grassroots activists calling for a mass return to their ancestors’ homes in what is now Israel.

Two-thirds of Gaza’s two million people are refugees or descendants of refugees who fled or were forced from their homes during the war surrounding Israel’s establishment in 1948.

Hamas quickly took the lead in the protests, using the gatherings to call for an easing of the blockade.

The blockade, imposed after Hamas seized Gaza in 2007, has devastated Gaza’s economy.

Unemployment is over 50 per cent, ground water has become undrinkable and electricity has turned into an intermittent luxury.

The border marches routinely ended in confrontations, with Palestinians burning tyres, hurling fire bombs or setting off explosives and Israeli troops firing live rounds and tear gas.

According to a Gaza rights group, 196 Palestinians were killed in the demonstrations over the past year, including 41 minors, and thousands were wounded by live fire.

An Israeli soldier was also killed in the context of the marches. – AP