Yus

The Israeli government is not allowing any press at all so they can cover up yesterday's massacre of ordinary civilians summarily shot by reserve  Israeli firing squads of the IDF with the war criminal  Sharon's direct orders.He is real blood thirsty and sick . It is still going on toady also and with the intent to cover up this holocaust by the Jews  themselves by taking the bodies to the Negev desert in the south to burry them up .The bones will come up one fine  and they will be exposed

 

I end by quoting the poet  Khalil Gibran intended for Israeli PM and War Criminal Sharon

"You may house their bodies but not their souls,for their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow which you cannot visit ,not even in your dreams"'



 




HDG 
>From: "Yusupha C. Jow" <[log in to unmask]>
>Reply-To: The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Jenin: 'My mother ran for help
>Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2002 14:19:43 EDT
>
>Jenin: 'My mother ran for help. A soldier shot her in the head'
>
>By Justin Huggler in the West Bank
>
>11 April 2002 Middle East
>
>Abdullah Washai had to watch his 17-year-old brother, Munir, slowly bleed to
>death. He took several hours to die. A hole had been ripped in his shoulder
>by a round from an Israeli helicopter.
>
>When the boy's mother, Mariam, ran into the street screaming for help, Mr
>Washai says, Israeli soldiers shot her dead.
>
>These are typical of the claims of those who have managed to escape the
>carnage of Jenin refugee camp, the scene of the worst fighting of Israel's
>onslaught in the West Bank.
>
>The question that was facing Israel yesterday was: what will happen when the
>full story of what Israel has wreaked in the Jenin camp is revealed?
>
>As the Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv said in an editorial: "We can begin thinking
>today about the war after the war: the public relations war in the media in
>which Israel can be expected to be placed in the international defendant's
>seat, when the television screens around the world become filled with the
>spectacle of bodies lined up, destroyed houses and crying, distraught
>relatives."
>
>The Israeli army was claiming last night it had finally taken control of all
>but a tiny section of Jenin camp. But the stories that have been coming out
>of Jenin for several days have been horrifying, although it is impossible to
>verify them because of censorship by the Israeli authorities, who have denied
>journalists access to the camp.
>
>To reach Mr Washai and his grieving brothers, we had to scramble down a
>steep, wooded hillside, with the Israeli helicopters clattering overhead. As
>friends shuffled past to pay their respects, Mr Washai told his story, which
>cannot be confirmed, in the home of a friend who had taken the family in.
>
>"My brother was shot on Saturday afternoon," he said. "A helicopter round
>came through the wall. It went into his chest and out through the back of his
>shoulder. We called for an ambulance, but when it came outside the Israeli
>soldiers shot at it. It had to go."
>
>The International Red Cross has said Israeli authorities have been refusing
>to allow ambulances to treat the wounded all over the West Bank, which is a
>war crime under the Geneva Conventions.
>
>"Munir bled until 10 o'clock that night," Mr Washai continued. "My mother
>went out into the street screaming for help for him. An Israeli soldier shot
>her in the head."
>
>At one point he buried his head in his hands and appeared to have difficulty
>going on. He spent two days in the house with the bodies.
>
>"Then we heard people gathering outside. We went out to try to get an
>ambulance, and the soldiers took us. They separated my brothers and me from
>my father. We haven't seen him since. As far as we know, the bodies of my
>brother and mother are still lying in the camp."
>
>The soldiers held them for some days at a military camp and interrogated
>them. When they released them, they ordered them to go to Ramani, a
>Palestinian village near Jenin.
>
>Yesterday afternoon, an ugly rumour was going around the village, where Mr
>Washai and others who have left the camp were told to go. There is no
>evidence but the Palestinians were saying bodies were being taken out of
>Jenin refugee camp in trucks.
>
>Nahum Barnea, a well-known Israeli commentator, wrote in Yedioth Ahronoth
>yesterday: "A number of discussions were held on this disturbing issue by
>military officials. The general conclusion was that some way has to be found
>to move the bodies into Israel. If Israel does not find some way to give them
>a dignified burial, the bodies will bury Israel."
>
>There were other disturbing claims from those in Ramani. Mohammed al-Sadi
>told us he was used as a human shield by Israeli soldiers as they advanced
>through the camp.
>
>"The soldiers smashed their way in through my door and started smashing a
>hole in the wall of my house so they could get from house to house without
>going in the street," Mr al-Sadi told us in the mosque, filled with refugees.
>
>"The soldiers made four of us walk in front of their tank as it advanced.
>There were two of my cousins and another man. Then they took us to a house
>where the soldiers were inside. They put us outside the front door so if
>anyone shot we would be shot first."
>
>Ariel Sharon toured an army base near Jenin refugee camp yesterday. "Our
>wonderful soldiers have to be able to continue this struggle," he said.
>
>However, his Defence Ministry announced late yesterday that troops have
>pulled out of the West Bank villages of Yatta and Samua, near Jenin, and
>Qabatya, near Hebron.
>
>*A United Nations agency said yesterday it had protested to Israel about the
>arrest of a member of staff and 104 students at a technical training centre
>it runs in Ramallah. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
>Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) said: "Incursions into UNRWA installations
>by Israeli forces and detention of UNRWA trainees and staff is completely
>unacceptable and contrary to Israel's obligations to guarantee the security
>of UN staff."
>


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