Eyewitness Account: Irish UN worker killed, Irish International Activist shot by Israeli military in Palestine
Caoimhe Butterly talks to Annie Higgins in Jenin Refugee Camp, Palestine
22 November 2002
In today's reinvasion of Jenin Refugee Camp, the Israeli Occupation Forces made
the bottom section of the camp into a closed military zone in the morning, using
about twelve tanks, ten jeeps, and at least two Apache helicopter gunships. I
had been trying to get between the unarmed children and the tanks, when I
received a call
from a friend who wanted me to evacuate her sick daughter as the Army would not
let any ambulances through. I went with a friend who is a Palestinian
journalist, and we were immediately arrested, along with another international
volunteer, and taken to a place where about twenty Palestinian men were being
held. They were blindfolded,
handcuffed, stripped to their trousers or underwear, and beaten severely. After
I was detained for two hours and interrogated briefly, the Israeli soldiers said
that I was free to go. I asked permission to remain with the men, hoping to
minimise the violence, but the soldiers refused, saying it was not allowed.
When I refused to leave, I was forcibly dragged away, pulled down the road, and
told that if I returned to the area I would be shot.
I went back the way I had come, past the United Nations compound. There I spoke
briefly with Iain Hook, Project Manager of UNRWA [United Nations Relief Works
Agency] in Jenin, who said he was trying to negotiate with the soldiers
for women and children to go home. He came out of the UN compound waving a blue
UN flag, and
the soldiers' only response was to broadcast with their microphone in
English, "We don't care if you are the United Nations or who you are. F*** off
and go home!" They were trying to go home. Iain said that things were not going
well. He insisted that he wanted to provide safe passage for his forty
Palestinian workers and himself using legal means, i.e., official coordination
with the Army. Some worried parents had begun to knock a hole in the wall at the
back of the compound to evacuate children who were there for a vaccination
programme. We accompanied some of the children home.
After this, I headed again to the sick girl's house. On the way I met a
group of children who told me that a ten-year-old friend of mine, Muhammad
Bilalo, had been killed and three children had been wounded by tank fire, one of
whom sustained brain damage. So I went to where the children were gathered, and
the tanks were firing on them
erratically. I walked down the road between the children and the tanks until I
was fifty meters from the tank, where I tried to dialogue with the soldiers. I
implored them not to shoot live ammunition at unarmed children. At that point,
they stopped their shooting. A few moments later, an APC drove up to the tank
[an armed personnel carrier, like a tank with all the armour except a cannon].
I
could see their faces very clearly and I imagine they could see mine also. I had
seen both of these tanks earlier in the day. A soldier raised his upper body and
his gun out of the hatch of the second vehicle and began shooting. At first he
shot into the air, and most of the children dispersed, running into an alley on
the left side of the street. About three small children remained, however, and I
tried physically to get them to the alley, dragging and pushing them. I looked
back over my shoulder and could see the soldier in the APC pointing his
gun at me from about one hundred meters. Near the entrance to the alley, I was
shot in the thigh. When I fell they continued shooting in my direction. I
crawled part of the way up the alley, and then some of the youngsters dragged me
up the rest of the way. No ambulances were allowed into the camp, so I was
carried on a makeshift stretcher to where a Red Crescent ambulance could reach
me near the entrance of the camp. While I was in the Emergency Room of Jenin
Hospital, Iain Hook of UNRWA was brought in. He died a few minutes later.
We have been told that when he was shot, the Israeli Army prohibited a clearly
marked UN ambulance from evacuating him and transporting him for nearly an hour,
during which time he lost much blood. Finally the ambulance crew evacuated him
by taking him out by the back wall that employees had broken down earlier.
Having been present in the Camp all morning, I can testify that any Palestinian
fighters had stopped shooting a good two hours before either of us was wounded.
When I passed the UN compound in the morning, it was surrounded by Israeli Army
snipers and soldiers who were shooting erratically into the Camp. Two people
were killed and
six wounded. All but one were shot by tank fire outside what the Army deemed a
closed military zone. I was not caught up in any kind of crossfire as the
Israeli Occupation Forces are falsely stating, and I don't believe that Iain was
either.
The massacre has not stopped. Human rights violations and war crimes seen so
blatantly across the world in April of this year continue on a daily basis in
Jenin. Yesterday, with the casual killings that marked it, was not an unusual
day in Jenin. It has become a potentially suicidal act to engage in the most
basic acts of survival. The Israeli Occupation Forces engage again and again in
a shoot-to-kill policy without regard as to whether its targets are civilians or
armed fighters. Israelis have been shown in April that they can get away with a
massacre, and that all the international condemnation in the world cannot get
one ambulance in to evacuate a wounded person.
Thus the lack of accountability on Israel's part has become bolder as the events
witnessed yesterday become almost standard. These are not military campaigns.
They are acts of terror designed to humiliate, brutalise, and bully Palestinians
into subjugation. They are being denied not only the right to resist, but
to exist.
Annie Higgins in Jenin
tel: + 972-67-540-298
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