JSIL The Terrorist Jewish State Of Israel In The Levant Regime - The Month In Pictures: February 2016
A
Palestinian child stands in a home raided by the Israeli army during a
search-and-arrest operation in the West Bank city of Hebron on 29
February.
Wisam HashlamounAPA images
At
least 17 Palestinianswere killed, including seven children, during the
month of February and three Israeliswere slain as an unprecedented
phase of violence in the occupied West Bank that began last October
showed no signs of ebbing. Most Palestinians were slain during what Israel alleges were attacks
or attempted attacks, mainly targeting occupation forces. But in several
cases, no Israelis were injured during the alleged attacks in whichPalestinians-including childrenQusay Abu al-Rub, Nihad Waqed, Fuad Waqed, Naim Ahmad Yousif SafiandMahmoud Shaalan-were shot dead.
Six Palestinians were slain at the Damascus Gate to Jerusalem’s Old
City during February, five of them during two separate armed attacks on
Israeli Border Police, during which one officer was fatally wounded. Another man was killed by Border Police in a third incident; his apparent execution after an alleged stabbing was caught on video by an Al Jazeera camera crew who were filming in the area. An off-duty Israeli soldier was killed by friendly fire
during an alleged stabbing at the entrance to the Gush Etzion
settlement bloc – the site of several other attacks in recent months.
Another off-duty Israeli soldier who held US citizenship was fatally stabbed
in a supermarket in a West Bank settlement; the alleged attackers, both
14, were shot and seriously wounded. They are the youngest Palestinians
to have killed an Israeli since October. Two Palestinians, including a 16-year-old boy, were shot dead when Israeli soldiers opened fire on demonstrators during February.
Gaza Strip
Israeli forces fired at Palestinians on Gaza’s coast and along the boundary with Israel throughout the month. A 5-year-old boy was killed
and his brother, 6, seriously injured by unexploded ordnance that
detonated in the Jabaliya area of northern Gaza. There are more than
7,000 explosive weapons across the territory left over from Israel’s
military assault on Gaza in summer 2014. An 11-year-old Palestinian boy in Gaza died of wounds he sustained in an Israeli air strike in 2011. Egypt opened Rafah crossing — the sole point of exit and entry for
the vast majority of the 1.8 million Palestinians in Gaza — for three days
during February, allowing more than 1,000 Palestinians into Gaza, and
nearly 2,500 Palestinians, mainly patients and students, to exit the
territory. “The crossing has been closed, including for humanitarian assistance,
since 24 October 2014, except for 42 days of partial openings,”
according to OCHA. “Authorities in Gaza indicated that over 25,000
people with urgent needs, including around 3,500 medical cases, are
registered and waiting to cross.”
Home demolitions, arrests
In the West Bank, Israel demolished the highest number of Palestinian
structures in a single month since 2009, according to the United
Nations monitoring group OCHA, which reported 235 such demolitions. More than 500 Palestinians have been displaced by home demolitions this year, as of 22 February. “The number of structures demolished and people displaced since the
start of 2016 is equivalent to more than half of the demolitions and
displacement in the entire 2015,” OCHA stated during the middle of February. “More than a third of the structures targeted since the beginning of
the year were provided as humanitarian assistance to families in need,”
OCHA added. Israel meanwhile arrested more than 600 Palestinians, including 140 children, in the West Bank and Gaza during the month of February, according to Palestinian rights groups. More than 4,000 Palestinians have been arrested since October.
Syria bombings
Seven children were among dozens of Palestinians killed in a bombing in Damascus on 21 February. More than 140 people were killed that day during explosions in the capital and the city of Homs; the Islamic State claimed responsibility. Workers were able to distribute humanitarian aid to Palestinian refugees in the southern suburbs of Damascus for the first time in seven months during February. But UNRWA, the United Nations agency for Palestine refugees, has been
unable to access Yarmouk camp on the outskirts of the capital since
late March; fighters with the Islamic State infiltrated the camp at the
beginning of April 2015. UNRWA meanwhile stated its concern for 20,000 “inaccessible”
Palestinians in southern Syria which its staff is unable to reach to
distribute humanitarian aid. Palestinians living in several areas of active hostilities risk being
shot and must navigate checkpoints operated by government forces and
various armed groups to seek out assistance. “In the course of the war in Syria, several Palestine refugee camps
have been engulfed by the armed conflict, as armed groups have
approached or entered the camps, triggering armed responses from
government forces,” UNRWA spokesperson Chris Gunness told The Electronic
Intifada. “The affected camps include Ein al-Tal in northern Syria, Yarmouk,
Khan Eshieh, Khan Dannoun in rural Damascus, and Deraa camp, Muzeirib
and Jilin in southern Syria. All sides have deployed in and around
Palestine refugee camps heavy weapons with indiscriminate effect,” he
added. Of the approximately 450,000 Palestinians believed to remain in
Syria, 95 percent are in need of sustained humanitarian assistance, according to UNRWA.
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