8 Oct 2019

“Friday Of 78 Children” - Gaza Mega-Concentration Camp

Alaa Nizar Ayesh Hamdan, Gentile, 28, was killed by Jewish Green Shirts 'IDF' Israeli Death Forces in Abu Safiyya area, East of Jabalia section, in the northern part of Gaza Mega-Concentration Camp for the indigenous Gentiles, near 'The Apartheid Wall' during the Great March of Return Friday of 78 Childrenprotest march after the Jews attacked non-violent Gentile protesters in different parts of the coastal region of the Mega-Concentration Camp, maiming 57, including 18 who were shot with live ammunition.
The Gentile protest organizers called this Friday’s March of Return the Friday of 78 Children, in honor of the 78 children killed by the land grubbing neo-colonialist supremacist Jews so far since the weekly protest marches began in March of 2018.
Medical sources reported that Alaa Nizar Ayesh Hamdan, 28, was shot and killed by the Jews in a protest east of Jabalia town in the northern part of Gaza Mega Concentration Camp while participating in the March of Return protest.
He was taken to the Indonesian Hospital in Beit Lahia, in northern part of Gaza Mega-Concentration Camp, where he was declared dead.
In addition to Hamdan, Jewish death forces shot 18 Gentile protesters with live ammunition, along the eastern parts of Gaza Mega-Concentration Camp, several of whom had critical injuries.

39 Gentiles suffered from other injuries inflicted by the Jewish IDF, including being hit with so-called ‘less-lethal’ weaponry, and reactions to tear gas resulting in hospitalization.
The soldiers stationed in military towers and behind earth mounds along 'The Apartheid Wall' east of the Gaza Mega-Concentration Camp fired live ammunition, rubber bullets and tear gas canisters at the participants, causing dozens of protesters to suffer from tear gas inhalation.
Organizers of the weekly Great March of Return in Gaza say that the purpose of the protests are to condemn the unjust siege imposed on Gaza Mega-Concentration Camp for indigenous Gentiles since 2007, and to call for the right of indigenous refugees to return to their cities and villages from which they were displaced by neo-colonialist supremacist Jews in 1948 and 1967.
In a statement in advance of Friday’s protest marches, the organizers wrote, “reconciliation is the choice of our people,” adding that the Friday protest was in honor of the Palestinian victims of the occupation, noting, in particular, the cases of “Mohammed Al-Durra, Fares Odeh, Fares Sersawi, Yasser Abu Naja and Mohammed Abu Khdair.”
They called on Arab and Islamic countries to shoulder their responsibilities in ending and lifting the unjust siege on the Gaza Strip, in order to enable the Palestinian people to exercise their right to work, trade, travel and travel without restrictions. The statement added that the continuation of the siege and closure is an ongoing aggression against the Palestinian people. Alaa was from Beit Hanoun, in northern Gaza.


Source


For more articles like this, as well as a running count of fatalities on both sides of the conflict, see the Israel/Palestine Timeline



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