Tuesday 18 May 2004, 12AM
RAFAH DAILY UPDATE (Volume 1)
At around 1 am on Tuesday, 18 May 2004, Israeli apaches fired
two missiles on Block P in Rafah refugee camp killing three Palestinians
and injuring five others. The three persons killed are: 24-year-old
Muhammad Khalil Al Hindi; 27-year-old Walid Musa Al Jazzar; and
27-year-old Muhammad Abdul Rahman An Nawajha. They died from missiles
shrapnel in different parts of their bodies.
At 4:10 am, IOF tanks and bulldozers entered the Tel Al Sultan
neighborhood and the nearby so-calles Western refugee camp in Rafah.
Israeli apaches fired two missiles on Bilal Ibn Rabah Mosque in
Block Q in Western refugee camp, killing five Palestinians. Eyewitnesses
reported that after the first missile had killed one person, a second
missile was fired on a group of people that had gathered to help.
All of the victims were going to the dawn prayer at the mosque,
which was scheduled at 4:10 am. The five persons killed are: 17-year-old
Hany Muhammad Qufeh; 24-year-old Tariq Ahmad Sheikh Al Eid; 18-year-old
Ibrahim Ismail Bal’awi, 17-year-old Muhammad Jasir Al Shair; and
18-year-old Ahmad Jasir Al Shair. They died from missile shrapnel
in different parts of the body.
At the same time, The IOF entered Tel Al Sultan from the settlements
of Morag and Rafah Yam. They attacked the Badr Camp, which was recently
built to host Palestinians whose homes had been demolished in Rafah,
and took control of all the streets in the neighborhood. IOF snipers
took positions in high buildings and killed three Palestinians:
22-year-old Zyad Hussain Shabana; 34-year-old Imad Fadel Al Mghari;
and 34-year-old Mahmud Ismail Abu Touq.
The director of Rafah’s only hospital Dr. Ali Mousa, reaffirmed
that the hospital is facing serious difficulties to deal with the
current number of injuries and fatalities due to its restrained
capacity. He repeated that the hospital lacks an intensive care
unit to deal with the important number of serious injuries. Of the
twelve bodies currently located in the hospital morgue, eight cannot
be identified by their families who are currently under siege. This
will become problematic in view of the small size of the morgue.
This morning reports were received on a number of problems faced
by emergency medical services in Rafah. Two additional fatalities
in the western refugee camp of Rafah. However, ambulances were not
authorized by the IOF to collect them. In another case, an ambulance
was taking critical medical case to the European Hospital in Khan
Yunis after coordination with the IOF and authorization to pass
through a newly erected checkpoint. However, upon passing IOF soldiers
fired at the ambulance.
Israeli Chief of Staff, Moshe Ya’alon, states that IOF will continue
its ongoing operation in Rafah and that Palestinians “should stop
smuggling tunnels if they want home demolitions to stop”.
Israeli Defense Minister, Shaul Mofaz, announced this morning
that the IOF’s operation in Rafah will continue for as long as is
necessary.
Eyewitnesses reported to Al Mezan that an Israeli tank fired at
the guards of a construction site at 3 am this morning. After one
of them escaped, the tank overturned the office container with two
guards inside. The eyewitness said the two guards are in serious
condition and will not survive if they do not obtain help. However,
it is impossible to approach them while the tank is in the vicinity.
At 8:35 am today, Israeli apaches fired two missiles on the Block
Q neighborhood in the Western refugee camp, east of Tel Al Sulta.
Another four missiles were fired 20 minutes later, killing two Palestinians:
Yousif Zahi Kahwash, aged 25, and Saeed Ibrahim Al Mghaiar, whose
age was not reported. The two victims remained in the street and
were not identified until 11.30 am when residents of the neighborhood
managed to reach one of the bodies and to put it in a fridge. The
other body was reportedly still in the street at 12 pm. Al Mezan’s
fieldworker confirmed that IOF has restricted the movement of ambulances
into the Tel Al Sultan neighborhood. Several ambulances were exposed
to Israeli fire when they tried to approach the area.
Dar Al Kitab wa Al Sunna Society responsible for ambulance services
reported that it lost contact with one of its ambulances near Tel
Al Sultan. After investigation, it appeared that the ambulance staff
had fled it after they were caught under intensive fire by IOF.
One of the same ambulance’s staff confirmed to Al Mezan that the
vehicle had been shelled by IOF when they were trying to collect
injured people in Bader camp north of Tal Al Sultan at 3 am. They
escaped and took refuge in a house in the area and remain stuck
at the time of this report. Al Mezan’s lawyers have contacted the
Israeli Army’s Legal Advisor to let them out of the area safely.
In a press release issued by the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office,
the UK Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, expressed deep concern about
the ‘Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes in Rafah’. ‘While
I understand Israel’s need to defend itself, the demolition of homes
is a form of collective punishment which harms innocent people.
House demolitions fuel anger among Palestinians and in the region.
Such actions are contrary to Israel’s commitment under the Roadmap
and are simply unacceptable”, added Straw.
Israeli organization, Physician for Human Rights, is working on
IOF allowing Palestinian ambulances into the besieged Tel Al Sultan
area.
End