1 june 2018
Razan Ashraf Najjar, 21
The Palestinian Health Ministry has reported that Israeli soldiers killed, Friday, a young Palestinian woman, a volunteer medic identified as Razan Ashraf Najjar, 22, and injured 100 Palestinians, including 40 with live fire.
The Health Ministry said the soldiers resorted to the excessive use of force against Palestinian protesters, participating in the Great Return March, and marching for breaking the ongoing deadly Israeli siege on the Gaza Strip.
Dr. Ashraf al-Qedra, the spokesperson of the Health Ministry in Gaza, stated that the Razan was killed by live Israeli army fire after the soldiers targeted five medics providing treatment to wounded Palestinians in the “Return Camp,” east of Khan Younis, in the southern part of the Gaza Strip.
He added that the soldiers also injured more than 100 Palestinians, including 40 with live fire, while the rest suffered various cuts and bruises, in addition to the effects of teargas inhalation.
Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi, the head of the Palestinian Medical Relief Society (PMRS), said Razan was a volunteer with the PMRS, and was killed after the soldiers fired live rounds at a filed clinic, hundreds of meters away from the border fence.
Dr. Barghouthi said the killing of the volunteer medic is another crime committed by Israel against innocent civilians, including medics and journalists, and added that the medical teams will continue their humanitarian duties despite the Israeli violations, and constant escalation.
Palestinian girl killed by Israeli gunfire at Gaza border
A Palestinian girl was killed and more than 100 protesters were left injured on Friday as Israeli forces continued to attack the ongoing Great March of Return protests at the eastern border of the blockaded Gaza Strip.
Razan Ashraf Najjar, 21, was shot and killed by Israeli snipers at the border fence east of Khan Younes, in southern Gaza Strip.
More than 100 protesters were also injured by Israeli fire, including 40 by live gunfire.
Several wounded protesters have been rushed to local hospitals for urgent treatment.
Right before evening prayers, the occupation army targeted the protesters with randomly-fired spates of teargas canisters east of Gaza city, resulting in dozens of suffocation cases.
At the same time, thousands of protesters have flocked to the “return camps” set up along Gaza’s eastern borders to take part in the so-called “From Gaza to Haifa” march.
Over 120 Palestinians have been killed since the launch of the Great March of Return protests at Gaza-Israel border on March 30. Nearly 13,000 others have been left injured.
The Palestinian Health Ministry has reported that Israeli soldiers killed, Friday, a young Palestinian woman, a volunteer medic identified as Razan Ashraf Najjar, 22, and injured 100 Palestinians, including 40 with live fire.
The Health Ministry said the soldiers resorted to the excessive use of force against Palestinian protesters, participating in the Great Return March, and marching for breaking the ongoing deadly Israeli siege on the Gaza Strip.
Dr. Ashraf al-Qedra, the spokesperson of the Health Ministry in Gaza, stated that the Razan was killed by live Israeli army fire after the soldiers targeted five medics providing treatment to wounded Palestinians in the “Return Camp,” east of Khan Younis, in the southern part of the Gaza Strip.
He added that the soldiers also injured more than 100 Palestinians, including 40 with live fire, while the rest suffered various cuts and bruises, in addition to the effects of teargas inhalation.
Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi, the head of the Palestinian Medical Relief Society (PMRS), said Razan was a volunteer with the PMRS, and was killed after the soldiers fired live rounds at a filed clinic, hundreds of meters away from the border fence.
Dr. Barghouthi said the killing of the volunteer medic is another crime committed by Israel against innocent civilians, including medics and journalists, and added that the medical teams will continue their humanitarian duties despite the Israeli violations, and constant escalation.
Palestinian girl killed by Israeli gunfire at Gaza border
A Palestinian girl was killed and more than 100 protesters were left injured on Friday as Israeli forces continued to attack the ongoing Great March of Return protests at the eastern border of the blockaded Gaza Strip.
Razan Ashraf Najjar, 21, was shot and killed by Israeli snipers at the border fence east of Khan Younes, in southern Gaza Strip.
More than 100 protesters were also injured by Israeli fire, including 40 by live gunfire.
Several wounded protesters have been rushed to local hospitals for urgent treatment.
Right before evening prayers, the occupation army targeted the protesters with randomly-fired spates of teargas canisters east of Gaza city, resulting in dozens of suffocation cases.
At the same time, thousands of protesters have flocked to the “return camps” set up along Gaza’s eastern borders to take part in the so-called “From Gaza to Haifa” march.
Over 120 Palestinians have been killed since the launch of the Great March of Return protests at Gaza-Israel border on March 30. Nearly 13,000 others have been left injured.
A Palestinian youth was injured Friday afternoon during clashes with the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) in the weekly demonstration of Kafr Qaddum town in Qalqilya.
Popular resistance coordinator in Kafr Qaddum Murad Shtewi reported that the IOF soldiers violently attacked the demonstration which was organized in protest at Israel's settlement activity and the recent US decisions concerning Jerusalem.
Shtewi said that the IOF heavily fired rubber-coated metal bullets at the protesters injuring a Palestinian youth with a bullet to the abdomen.
Popular resistance coordinator in Kafr Qaddum Murad Shtewi reported that the IOF soldiers violently attacked the demonstration which was organized in protest at Israel's settlement activity and the recent US decisions concerning Jerusalem.
Shtewi said that the IOF heavily fired rubber-coated metal bullets at the protesters injuring a Palestinian youth with a bullet to the abdomen.
Dozens of Palestinians choked on tear gas after Israeli occupation forces on Friday afternoon violently attacked the weekly march staged in Ni’lin town, west of Ramallah, to protest Israel’s apartheid wall and illegal settlement activities.
The occupation soldiers targeted the marchers with tear gas and stun grenades, resulting in several suffocation cases.
The march came to mark the 17th anniversary of the death of the member of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, Faysal al-Husaini, and to speak out against Israel’s incessant crimes against the Palestinians.
The occupation soldiers targeted the marchers with tear gas and stun grenades, resulting in several suffocation cases.
The march came to mark the 17th anniversary of the death of the member of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, Faysal al-Husaini, and to speak out against Israel’s incessant crimes against the Palestinians.
Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel and Physicians for Human Rights – Israel (PHRI) filed a complaint on 23 May 2018 calling on the Israeli Health Ministry and the director of a Haifa hospital to open investigations into suspicions that police illegally intervened in medical decisions and pressured medical staff to violate ethical norms during the treatment of Mossawa Director Jafar Farah.
Farah was arrested by Israeli police during the 18 May protest in Haifa and subsequently admitted to Bnai Zion Medical Center after officers broke his left knee while he was in custody.
The Adalah-PHRI complaint, based on testimony from Farah and Bnai Zion medical staff on duty at the time of the incident, includes four primary claims:
Israeli police pressure on doctors to release Farah;
the concealing of medical information from Farah;
the handcuffing of Farah to his bed during treatment, in contravention of medical ethics;
verbal police attacks on medical staff.
Farah was handcuffed to his bed by an arm and, periodically also his leg, for the majority of his stay in the emergency room in direct contravention of medical ethics which explicitly forbid this practice.
In addition, testimony revealed that police officers who stayed with Farah during the period of his hospitalization mocked and verbally abused medical staff.
One police officer said to a nurse wearing a Muslim headscarf: “We can see you are inciting everyone.”
Another officer told an intern who sought to issue a medical order to remove the Farah’s handcuffs: “Your decision will be taken to the court and if it was found to have been lacking medical grounds, you will pay for it.”
Israeli police also prevented Jafar’s lawyer from meeting with him at the time of his release from hospital.
Additional testimony also revealed a string of failures in the medical care Farah received during his hospitalization. Against doctors’ recommendations and due to pressure police on medical staff, Farah was released from the orthopedic unit just a short time after his admittance.
Police also prevented Farah’s own doctor from visiting him during the period of his hospitalization and even refused to provide him with a copy of the discharge letter, as obligated by hospital regulations.
Testimony also revealed that police subjected Farah to verbal abuse and threats upon his release from Bnai Zion Medical Center: when one officer wanted to handcuff Farah inside a police ambulance, the driver said: “If he flees, we’ll shoot him. We don’t need handcuffs.”
Regarding the decision to release Farah early, Adalah and PHRI wrote in their letter of complaint:
“This is an apparent violation of the basic ethical considerations and duties of the hospital staff… The fact that Farah did not receive a discharge letter is a violation of the patients’ rights law, of medical ethics, and of the duties imposed upon police administrators.”
Regarding Farah’s handcuffing during his medical treatment, Adalah and PHRI wrote: The detainee never resisted arrest and was arrested as a result of legitimate political activity and, because of the fracture of his knee, in any case he was unable to escape at all. His handcuffing was intended to achieve one purpose: humiliating Farah and harming his morale.”
Adalah and PHRI said Israeli police officers’ verbal abuse of medical staff was an attack on the independence of the health care system.
Adalah and PHRI demand that Bnai Zion Medical Center immediately provide Farah with a copy of his medical file and investigate the circumstances of his discharge, and that the Health Ministry call for an investigation of police behavior during the series of incidents.
Farah was arrested by Israeli police during the 18 May protest in Haifa and subsequently admitted to Bnai Zion Medical Center after officers broke his left knee while he was in custody.
The Adalah-PHRI complaint, based on testimony from Farah and Bnai Zion medical staff on duty at the time of the incident, includes four primary claims:
Israeli police pressure on doctors to release Farah;
the concealing of medical information from Farah;
the handcuffing of Farah to his bed during treatment, in contravention of medical ethics;
verbal police attacks on medical staff.
Farah was handcuffed to his bed by an arm and, periodically also his leg, for the majority of his stay in the emergency room in direct contravention of medical ethics which explicitly forbid this practice.
In addition, testimony revealed that police officers who stayed with Farah during the period of his hospitalization mocked and verbally abused medical staff.
One police officer said to a nurse wearing a Muslim headscarf: “We can see you are inciting everyone.”
Another officer told an intern who sought to issue a medical order to remove the Farah’s handcuffs: “Your decision will be taken to the court and if it was found to have been lacking medical grounds, you will pay for it.”
Israeli police also prevented Jafar’s lawyer from meeting with him at the time of his release from hospital.
Additional testimony also revealed a string of failures in the medical care Farah received during his hospitalization. Against doctors’ recommendations and due to pressure police on medical staff, Farah was released from the orthopedic unit just a short time after his admittance.
Police also prevented Farah’s own doctor from visiting him during the period of his hospitalization and even refused to provide him with a copy of the discharge letter, as obligated by hospital regulations.
Testimony also revealed that police subjected Farah to verbal abuse and threats upon his release from Bnai Zion Medical Center: when one officer wanted to handcuff Farah inside a police ambulance, the driver said: “If he flees, we’ll shoot him. We don’t need handcuffs.”
Regarding the decision to release Farah early, Adalah and PHRI wrote in their letter of complaint:
“This is an apparent violation of the basic ethical considerations and duties of the hospital staff… The fact that Farah did not receive a discharge letter is a violation of the patients’ rights law, of medical ethics, and of the duties imposed upon police administrators.”
Regarding Farah’s handcuffing during his medical treatment, Adalah and PHRI wrote: The detainee never resisted arrest and was arrested as a result of legitimate political activity and, because of the fracture of his knee, in any case he was unable to escape at all. His handcuffing was intended to achieve one purpose: humiliating Farah and harming his morale.”
Adalah and PHRI said Israeli police officers’ verbal abuse of medical staff was an attack on the independence of the health care system.
Adalah and PHRI demand that Bnai Zion Medical Center immediately provide Farah with a copy of his medical file and investigate the circumstances of his discharge, and that the Health Ministry call for an investigation of police behavior during the series of incidents.
A Palestinian was reportedly run over by an Israeli military vehicle on Wednesday night, in the occupied West Bank city of Hebron.
Locals told Ma’an News Agency that Muhammad al-Zaru, who they said was a teenager, was ran over by an Israeli military patrol vehicle near the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the Old City.
Al-Zaru was transferred to the Hebron Government Hospital to receive medical treatment.
His injuries were reported as light.
Locals told Ma’an News Agency that Muhammad al-Zaru, who they said was a teenager, was ran over by an Israeli military patrol vehicle near the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the Old City.
Al-Zaru was transferred to the Hebron Government Hospital to receive medical treatment.
His injuries were reported as light.
The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) at dawn Friday kidnapped nine Palestinian citizens, including a lawmaker, during raids on homes in the West Bank.
Local sources told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that an Israeli military force broke into and ransacked the house of MP Ibrahim Abu Salem (the parliamentary bloc of Hamas) in Bir Nabala town, northwest of Occupied Jerusalem, and rounded him up.
MP Abu Salem already spent about 10 years in Israeli jails after his exposure to arrest 11 times. His current arrest rose the number of Palestinian lawmakers in Israeli prisons to seven, four of them from the Change and Reform Bloc of Hamas.
Meanwhile, al-Khalil city and its villages reportedly saw a heated night of confrontations between local young men and Israeli soldiers during an arrest campaign that targeted ex-detainees and Hamas figures and members.
In the southern neighborhoods of al-Khalil, violent clashes between youths and soldiers took place after a horde of Jewish settlers physically assaulted a Palestinian young man as he was going back home from the Ibrahimi Mosque in the city.
Several citizens reportedly suffered from their exposure to tear gas fumes during the clashes.
The IOF also stormed and pillaged several homes in the areas of Ras al-Jura, Ayn Sara and Wadi al-Jawz, where four young men from al-Qawasmeh family were taken prisoners, including two brothers.
Another Palestinian citizen called Saleh Awad was kidnapped from his home during an IOF campaign in Yatta city, south of al-Khalil.
Soldiers also clashed with young men after raiding homes in al-Zeitun suburb and Kurbet Zaheda area in al-Khalil.
Similar skirmishes with troops also took place during IOF raids in Yatta city, and the towns of Beit Ula and Nuba in al-Khalil.
The PIC was told that the IOF kidnapped Sheikh Anwar Harb, a senior Hamas official, and teacher Mahmoud al-Sharif from their homes in Nuba town.
In Salfit, the IOF detained a young man called Muhanad al-Zeir after summoning him for interrogation.
Local sources told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that an Israeli military force broke into and ransacked the house of MP Ibrahim Abu Salem (the parliamentary bloc of Hamas) in Bir Nabala town, northwest of Occupied Jerusalem, and rounded him up.
MP Abu Salem already spent about 10 years in Israeli jails after his exposure to arrest 11 times. His current arrest rose the number of Palestinian lawmakers in Israeli prisons to seven, four of them from the Change and Reform Bloc of Hamas.
Meanwhile, al-Khalil city and its villages reportedly saw a heated night of confrontations between local young men and Israeli soldiers during an arrest campaign that targeted ex-detainees and Hamas figures and members.
In the southern neighborhoods of al-Khalil, violent clashes between youths and soldiers took place after a horde of Jewish settlers physically assaulted a Palestinian young man as he was going back home from the Ibrahimi Mosque in the city.
Several citizens reportedly suffered from their exposure to tear gas fumes during the clashes.
The IOF also stormed and pillaged several homes in the areas of Ras al-Jura, Ayn Sara and Wadi al-Jawz, where four young men from al-Qawasmeh family were taken prisoners, including two brothers.
Another Palestinian citizen called Saleh Awad was kidnapped from his home during an IOF campaign in Yatta city, south of al-Khalil.
Soldiers also clashed with young men after raiding homes in al-Zeitun suburb and Kurbet Zaheda area in al-Khalil.
Similar skirmishes with troops also took place during IOF raids in Yatta city, and the towns of Beit Ula and Nuba in al-Khalil.
The PIC was told that the IOF kidnapped Sheikh Anwar Harb, a senior Hamas official, and teacher Mahmoud al-Sharif from their homes in Nuba town.
In Salfit, the IOF detained a young man called Muhanad al-Zeir after summoning him for interrogation.
Dozens of Israeli soldiers invaded, shortly after midnight , Hebron city in southern West Bank, and the surrounding towns of Doura, Nuba, ath-Thaheriyya and Yatta, before storming and violently searching homes.
Media sources in Hebron said the soldiers invaded the southern part of the city and fired many gas bombs and concussion grenades at locals, who protested the invasion, and added that several gas bombs struck homes in the area.
The soldiers also invaded Nuda village, and fired gas bombs and concussion grenades at protesters, in addition to breaking into and searching homes.
In addition, the soldiers invaded and searched homes in Beit Ula town, northwest of Hebron, and ath-Thaheriyya town, south of the city.
Media sources in Hebron said the soldiers invaded the southern part of the city and fired many gas bombs and concussion grenades at locals, who protested the invasion, and added that several gas bombs struck homes in the area.
The soldiers also invaded Nuda village, and fired gas bombs and concussion grenades at protesters, in addition to breaking into and searching homes.
In addition, the soldiers invaded and searched homes in Beit Ula town, northwest of Hebron, and ath-Thaheriyya town, south of the city.
Israeli soldiers attacked, Friday, many Palestinians, who were trying to enter Jerusalem for Friday prayers in the Al-Aqsa Mosque, in occupied Jerusalem, and injured many of them, including a journalist. The soldiers also abducted a young man near Jenin, in northern West bank.
The soldiers attacked the Palestinians in Wad Abu al-Hummus area, near al-Khass and an-No’man villages, east of Bethlehem, and prevented them from entering Jerusalem.
Media sources in Bethlehem said the soldiers fired many gas bombs and concussion grenades, causing many Palestinians to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation.
They added that the soldiers also shot a journalist, identified as Safiyya Omar, with a concussion grenade in her back.
The journalist, who works for Baladna Radio, and the Palestinians who suffered the effects of teargas inhalation, received treatment by local medics.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded Kafr Dan town, west of the northern West Bank city of Jenin, searched homes and abducted a young man, identified as Mohammad Marwan Mer’ey.
The soldiers attacked the Palestinians in Wad Abu al-Hummus area, near al-Khass and an-No’man villages, east of Bethlehem, and prevented them from entering Jerusalem.
Media sources in Bethlehem said the soldiers fired many gas bombs and concussion grenades, causing many Palestinians to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation.
They added that the soldiers also shot a journalist, identified as Safiyya Omar, with a concussion grenade in her back.
The journalist, who works for Baladna Radio, and the Palestinians who suffered the effects of teargas inhalation, received treatment by local medics.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded Kafr Dan town, west of the northern West Bank city of Jenin, searched homes and abducted a young man, identified as Mohammad Marwan Mer’ey.
An Israeli army spokesperson, on Thursday, published aerial photographs of some of the sites targeted by the Israeli air force on Wednesday, including alleged “Hamas weapon manufacturing sites” and “kite storage units”.
According to the spokesperson, Israeli warplanes destroyed sites affiliated with the Hamas movement, in order to weaken the its investment needed to develop weapons.
One of the targets was a “kites storage unit for Hamas,” which the army said “is used to carry out terrorist operations.”
The army spokesperson also said that they targeted a Hamas naval forces site, destroying a large portion of its accessories and manufacturing machines.
“In addition, most of the Islamic Jihad’s naval force sites were destroyed. These sites are used for training on advanced weapons to carry out terrorist acts against Israel.”
Israel claims that Gazans are using kite planes to burn farms and fields in the Gaza enclave since the start of the Great March of Return on 30 March, 2018. Since then, over 115 peaceful protesters in Gaza have been killed by Israeli fire.
According to the spokesperson, Israeli warplanes destroyed sites affiliated with the Hamas movement, in order to weaken the its investment needed to develop weapons.
One of the targets was a “kites storage unit for Hamas,” which the army said “is used to carry out terrorist operations.”
The army spokesperson also said that they targeted a Hamas naval forces site, destroying a large portion of its accessories and manufacturing machines.
“In addition, most of the Islamic Jihad’s naval force sites were destroyed. These sites are used for training on advanced weapons to carry out terrorist acts against Israel.”
Israel claims that Gazans are using kite planes to burn farms and fields in the Gaza enclave since the start of the Great March of Return on 30 March, 2018. Since then, over 115 peaceful protesters in Gaza have been killed by Israeli fire.
31 may 2018
Ahmad Jamal Ghanayem
Dozens of Israeli soldiers invaded, early on Friday morning, the Deheishe refugee camp, south of the West Bank city of Bethlehem, injured five Palestinians and abducted one.
The soldiers invaded the refugee camp through its main entrance, and fired many live rounds, including expanding bullets, and gas bombs, at many youngsters, who hurled stones the armored military jeeps.
Medical sources said the soldiers shot five Palestinians with live fire and the Toto expanding bullets, before they were rushed to a local hospital.
The Deheishe News said undercover soldiers also infiltrated into the refugee camp, using a car with Palestinian license plates, especially in Martyr Saed Eid neighborhood, before storming and searching homes, and abducted Ahmad Jamal Ghanayem.
Regular army units then invaded many other areas in the refugee camp, and attacked protesters, especially in al-Basha area, and the al-‘Asleeni neighborhood. video
Dozens of Israeli soldiers invaded, early on Friday morning, the Deheishe refugee camp, south of the West Bank city of Bethlehem, injured five Palestinians and abducted one.
The soldiers invaded the refugee camp through its main entrance, and fired many live rounds, including expanding bullets, and gas bombs, at many youngsters, who hurled stones the armored military jeeps.
Medical sources said the soldiers shot five Palestinians with live fire and the Toto expanding bullets, before they were rushed to a local hospital.
The Deheishe News said undercover soldiers also infiltrated into the refugee camp, using a car with Palestinian license plates, especially in Martyr Saed Eid neighborhood, before storming and searching homes, and abducted Ahmad Jamal Ghanayem.
Regular army units then invaded many other areas in the refugee camp, and attacked protesters, especially in al-Basha area, and the al-‘Asleeni neighborhood. video
Several Palestinians, among them ex-prisoners, were kidnapped by the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) in a predawn sweep rocking West Bank provinces.
Reporting from al-Khalil province, a PIC news correspondent said the Israeli military rolled into al-Seir area and kidnapped the two ex-prisoners Zaid al-Qawasmi and Malek Abu Eisheh.
Ex-prisoner and political analyst Hesham al-Sharbati was kidnapped by the IOF from his family home in Qarn al-Thawr, in al-Khalil.
The occupation forces further stormed residential neighborhoods in al-Khalil before they kidnapped at least nine Palestinian ex-prisoners, among them the head of the Palestine Prisoners Center for Studies, Osama Shaheen.
Journalist Mus’ab Qufeisheh was kidnapped by the IOF from his family home southwest of al-Khalil province.
Overnight, a flock of Israeli warplanes kept hovering over al-Khalil’s eastern villages, sparking panic in the area.
At the same time, clashes burst out in Nablus province after the IOF broke into the “popular housing” neighborhood and ravaged a Palestinian’s family home.
The campaign culminated in the abduction of two Palestinians from Jenin, where civilians have also had their homes ransacked by the Israeli military.
Reporting from al-Khalil province, a PIC news correspondent said the Israeli military rolled into al-Seir area and kidnapped the two ex-prisoners Zaid al-Qawasmi and Malek Abu Eisheh.
Ex-prisoner and political analyst Hesham al-Sharbati was kidnapped by the IOF from his family home in Qarn al-Thawr, in al-Khalil.
The occupation forces further stormed residential neighborhoods in al-Khalil before they kidnapped at least nine Palestinian ex-prisoners, among them the head of the Palestine Prisoners Center for Studies, Osama Shaheen.
Journalist Mus’ab Qufeisheh was kidnapped by the IOF from his family home southwest of al-Khalil province.
Overnight, a flock of Israeli warplanes kept hovering over al-Khalil’s eastern villages, sparking panic in the area.
At the same time, clashes burst out in Nablus province after the IOF broke into the “popular housing” neighborhood and ravaged a Palestinian’s family home.
The campaign culminated in the abduction of two Palestinians from Jenin, where civilians have also had their homes ransacked by the Israeli military.
A Palestinian child was on Wednesday evening shot and injured by the Israeli military east of the Bureij refugee camp, in central Gaza Strip.
A PIC news correspondent said a bullet fire by Israeli soldiers penetrated a 15-year-old child’s back. He was rushed to the Shuhadaa al-Aqsa Hospital, in Deir Balah, so as to be treated for his wounds, reported critical.
According to the Gaza-based Palestinian Health Ministry, 118 Palestinians were killed and 13,3000 others injured by Israeli gunfire unleashed toward Palestinian protesters as they joined the Great March of Return, launched on March 30.
A PIC news correspondent said a bullet fire by Israeli soldiers penetrated a 15-year-old child’s back. He was rushed to the Shuhadaa al-Aqsa Hospital, in Deir Balah, so as to be treated for his wounds, reported critical.
According to the Gaza-based Palestinian Health Ministry, 118 Palestinians were killed and 13,3000 others injured by Israeli gunfire unleashed toward Palestinian protesters as they joined the Great March of Return, launched on March 30.