Bethlehem - Ma'an -
Live ammunition killed two 16-year-old
Palestinian boys in the northern West Bank over the weekend, despite
the Israeli military's denials, medical officials and human rights
advocates said Sunday.
Ussaid Qadus died of a gunshot wound
to the head, medics at Nablus' Rafidiya Hospital told Ma'an, after a
military incursion into his village as the army attempted to
suppress a demonstration. Muhammad Qadus died of chest wounds
sustained in the same incident.
According to eyewitnesses,
Qadus was shot with live ammunition as soldiers invaded Iraq Burin,
a village south of Nablus, after residents demonstrated to protest
settler harassment and restrictions of access to their lands.
The Israeli occupation army has maintained that its forces used
rubber-coated bullets to disperse a violent riot,
following a Ma'an inquiry into allegations
that both boys sustained injuries consistent with live ammunition.
"Contrary to what was published, live fire was not used. The
Palestinians were hurt by rubber bullets used during the incident,"
an Israeli military spokesman told Ma'an on Saturday and reiterated
on Sunday, citing an initial inquiry.
But medical findings
appeared to corroborate testimony by witnesses, a senior Palestinian
Authority official, and emergency responders that regardless of the
circumstances, rubber-coated bullets could not have caused the
injuries in question.
An X-ray of Useid's head, taken as
doctors in Nablus prepared for what would be a futile emergency
surgery at Rafidiya Hospital, appears to show a live bullet lodged
in his skull, rather than the roundish rubber-coated bullets used by
the army.
"It's very clear this isn't a rubber bullet," said
Jonathan Pollak, an Israeli rights advocate who co-founded
Anarchists Against the Wall.
"The IDF uses two types of
rubber bullets; one is shaped like a ball and the other is
cylindrical," Pollak told Ma'an. "The object lodged in Useid's skull
is shaped like a prism, pointed at the end. It's a bullet."
In any case, Pollak said postmortem photographs of Muhammad offered
even more damning evidence of the use of live ammunition.
Pollak said the body had an entry wound in the chest and an exit
wound in the back. Such an injury could not have possibly been cause
by anything but live fire, he said.
"Less lethal ammunition,
rubber-coated bullets included, can, under no circumstances, cause
such injuries, even if shot from point blank," he said. "No rubber
bullet in the world would move through a 16-year-old's torso like
that."
The Israeli human rights group B'Tselem, which first
obtained the X-ray late Saturday night, concurred.
"Rubber-coated steel bullets will not enter and exit the body in
that way. It's very clear these injuries would not have been caused
by any kind of crowd-control measure," said B'Tselem spokeswoman
Sarit Michaeli.
"The army's explanation is simply impossible
and not consistent with the evidence," Michaeli told Ma'an.
B'Tselem plans to issue a formal request that the army's military
advocate general conduct a criminal investigation into the incident,
both the alleged use of live fire and the apparent distribution of
false information to the relevant investigative bodies.
For
its part, the Israeli military has vowed to open an internal
investigation. The commander of the Shomron regional brigade, Itzik
Yar, will head the effort, an army spokesman said.
In the
meantime, the military is sticking to its original explanation.
"IDF soldiers arrived at the scene to prevent a clash between
the Palestinian rioters and Jewish civilians, and were violently
attacked by the the Palestinians, who violently hurled rocks at the
force," the spokesman said.
(The Israeli racist occupiers refer to the
Israeli occupation forces as IDF, i.e. Israeli defense forces, which
is a misnomer reference to the army of the Apartheid, Zionist state,
which kills Palestinian civilians on daily basis).
Two Palestinian Children Killed in
Nablus
Sunday March 21, 2010 10:24 by Saed Bannoura -
IMEMC & Agencies
Palestinian medical sources in Nablus, in the
northern part of the West Bank, reported that two Palestinian
children were killed by Israeli occupation forces fire in Iraq-Burin
village, south of Nablus.
The two children were identified
as Ussaid Abdul-Nasser Qadous, 16, and Ibrahim Abdul-Qader Qadous,
16.
Ussaid
was shot in his abdomen during Saturday clashes with invading Israeli
forces. He was admitted to surgery but died of his wounds on Sunday
morning.
He bled to death despite extensive efforts to save
his life and despite receiving several units of bloods.
Meanwhile, Mohammad, 16, was shot in his heart and died instantly.
Local sources reported that the clashes took place near the
Bracha illegal Israeli settlement, and that both Israeli soldiers
and settlers opened fire at the protestors.
A group of
fundamentalist armed settlers from Yitzhar and Bracha illegal
settlements attacked the village under the protection of the Israeli
troops, local sources reported.
Child detained amid clashes in Jerusalem refugee camp
Published yesterday (updated) 21/03/2010 12:22
Masked Israeli policemen detain two
Palestinians during clashes near Damascus
Gate in the Old
City of Jerusalem on 9 February 2007.
[MaanImages/Magnus
Johansson]
Jerusalem – Ma'an –
A child was detained by Israeli forces
during ongoing clashes on Saturday in the Shu'fat refugee camp,
northern occupied East Jerusalem.
Ma'an's Jerusalem
correspondent said undercover forces detained the child, as
violence erupted between Israeli forces and young Palestinians
inside the refugee camp.
Earlier on Saturday, Israeli
forces detained a Palestinian woman at the entrance of the
Shu'fat refugee camp, after preventing her from passing through
a military checkpoint.
Locals said an argument ensued
between Ibtesam Mustafa Khalil Abu Deiyah, 42, and Israeli
forces who blocked her from entering.
Abu Deiyah was
reportedly assaulted before being detained by Israeli forces
manning the checkpoint, which serves as an entrance.
A
spokesman for the Jerusalem police did not immediately return a
call seeking comment.