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Palestinian pray and have a last look at some of the 12 men killed by Israel before their funeral in the big mosque
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Additional
reporting by Adel Zoghrab, IOL Palestine correspondent
RAFAH,
GAZA, January 26 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A six-year-old
Palestinian boy was killed by Israeli tank fire Sunday, January 26, in
the southern Gaza Strip town of Rafah while he was playing with his
brother near the border with Egypt, as Gazans buried the 13
Palestinian killed by Israel a day before.
Ali
Talab Ghreiz, six, was killed and his five-year-old brother injured
when the tank opened fire with a heavy machine-gun, Palestinian
hospital sources said.
“The
kids were playing in the yard when an Israeli tanks approached them
and intentionally fired in their direction, Yasser Alhour, an eye
witness whose house oversees the area the children were playing in
told IslamOnline.
“This
is not the first time the Israeli occupation army fires at
children,” said the boy’s grandchild, Ali Ghreiz, adding that his
eight-year- old granddaughter Tesnim, cousin of the killed child, was
seriously injured last month after the Israeli army shot her in the
stomach.
Rafah
is frequently raided by the Israeli army especially during nights
resulting in the death of many children, the last of whom was Alaa Al
Sedoudi.
“This
is a horrifying crime,” said Dr. Ali Mussa, head of the Abou Youssef
Al Naggar hospital, adding that (Israeli Prime Minister Ariel)
“Sharon’s terrorist government continue to deliberately kill
Palestinian children in Rafah.”
He
added that Alaa, the younger brother who was injured, is in a stable
condition describing his state as moderate.
540
Palestinian child killed
Palestinian
children below the age of 18 who were killed during the Palestinian
uprising against the Israeli occupation reached 540, according to the
information center of the Palestinian Health Ministry.
The
boy's death brought to 2,898 the number of people killed since the
outbreak of the Palestinian Intifada, or uprising against Israeli
occupation, in September 2000, including 2,155 Palestinians and 687
Israelis.
Earlier
Sunday, Israeli occupation troops pushed deep into Al-Zayton district
south of Gaza City, leaving 13 Palestinians dead and over 64 other
wounded some seriously.
Up
to 60 Israeli tanks and armored vehicles thrust into the district
backed by U.S.-made Apache helicopters, which shelled the houses of
Palestinian citizens, eyewitnesses told IslamOnline, adding that the
Israeli troops took used the houses as military barricades and used
dozens of citizens as human shields.
Gaza
City in shock
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The brother of Khaled Shalof, 17, one of the 12 Palestinians killed by Israel |
Meanwhile,
Gazans buried their dead among feelings of anger and shock.
shocked
and disbelieving, dozens of shop-keepers and workshop owners sifted
Sunday through the rubble of their businesses after the Israeli army
made its deepest incursion into Gaza City, for the first time
penetrating the heart of the city since the start of the current
uprising, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
In
addition to 12 people killed and 64 wounded, more than 50 metal
workshops, 80 small stores and three houses were smashed in the
blistering overnight attack that exploded in the city's largest
residential district of Zeitoun.
Still
shaken from eight hours of pitched fighting and the detonations of
helicopter rockets and tanks shells in the night, Fuad Simna looked at
the ruins of his metal factory, before Sunday's raid one of the
largest in Gaza.
"I
can't believe my eyes. They destroyed my workshop, everything is
destroyed," he said.
The
Israeli army claimed his lathes and other machinery turned out
homemade Katyusha-style rockets, more than 10 of which have been fired
by militants across the Gaza border into southern Israel in recent
days.
"How
are we going to build mortars and rockets when we are working on our
heavy iron industry?" he asking, staring at the wreckage of a
building where 50 of his workers used to build pre-fab houses,
caravans and girders.
"This
kind of destruction of factories prevents hundreds of Palestinians
from working. The 50 here will be added to the list of unemployed,
when there are already more than 70 percent of people jobless in the
Gaza Strip because of the Israeli closure," Simna said.
Nearby
Bashir Aqel stood at his smashed doors, saying not a single part of
his four-storey house was left unscathed by the battle. The facades of
most of his neighbors' buildings were also scarred by bullets or
shrapnel.
Along
Saladin Street, the main thoroughfare leading into the city center,
hardly a metal workshop was left intact after Sunday's fighting and
the raids which pushed deep into the heart of the sprawling coastal
metropolis.
Not
far from the industrial area of workshop and mechanics' garages,
Mohammed Dahdur, 60, stared at the remains of his dynamited house and
tried to understand what happened to him.
Muttering
in shock, he blamed Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, accusing him
of using the show of strength to bolster his image ahead of Tuesday's
general elections in the Jewish state.
"Sharon
wanted success in the election to be written in our blood our
children's blood, with the stone from our houses," he said.
Workshop
owner Mussa Abu Shaaban, who used to employ dozens of workers, agreed.
"This
is a cowardly operation, Sharon is trying to justify his failure to
provide peace and security for the Israelis. We are not giving up and
not leaving our land whatever the Israeli war going to be," he
said.
Beside
him children picked through the rubble trying to salvage what they
could.
One
15-year-old boy, Wassim, said the destruction made him more determined
to study hard and become a lawyer, to "defend my people who are
oppressed by the Israeli occupation."
But
a member of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's Fatah faction promised
a more immediate response.
"We
will gather our pain today, but tomorrow we'll strike back," he
said.