- 1 Jan 2004
Muhammad Jaber Hassan Adili Said, 15,
of Osreen, near Nablus, killed by IDF gunfire to his chest.
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Mutasem Muhammad Jamil Abul-Hasan 16
Mutasem of Khan Younis, Gaza, killed by IDF gunfire near the Ganei Tal settlement wall.
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Amjad Bilal Nabil al-Masri, 15
Muhammad Qeys Isma'il al-Masri, 19
4 killed in West Bank clashes
Israeli soldiers patrolling the West Bank city of Nablus shot and killed three Palestinians during fighting Saturday that spilled over into the funeral procession later in the day, when troops killed a fourth Palestinian.
The killings threatened to undermine a renewed Egyptian initiative to negotiate a cease-fire after 39 months of Mideast violence.
The cause of the violence in Nablus was disputed. The Israeli military said troops opened fire after being attacked with rocks, firebombs and a concrete block dropped from a roof.
Palestinian witnesses said Israelis killed an attacker and two bystanders, including a 15-year-old boy on a rooftop watching troops pass.
Hours later, Israeli soldiers shot at Palestinians during the funeral procession for the three dead, killing one man and lightly wounding three others. The army said troops shot two armed men who walked in their direction during the gathering.
Witnesses claimed the shooting was unprovoked.
Israeli soldiers usually give a wide berth to funeral processions, where mourners with rifles often shoot into the air. Witnesses said there were no gunmen at the funeral Saturday.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat criticized the killings, saying "we hold the Israeli government fully responsible for its consequences."
Over the past two weeks, Israel has conducted a series of raids in Nablus in an effort to weaken Palestinian militant groups operating in the area.
Late Friday, a roadside bomb blew up next to an Israeli army jeep in the West Bank city. The militant Islamic Jihad group took responsibility for the attack, which caused no casualties.
In other violence, Israeli forces shot and killed a Palestinian planting an explosive device near a Jewish settlement in the Gaza Strip late Friday, the military said.
Nablus was quiet Saturday morning when the military said a patrol was ambushed from several different directions and heavy rocks were dropped on troops from the roof. The soldiers shot an attacker on the roof, the military said.
The soldiers also shot a Palestinian who was running toward them with a pistol and another who had just lit a firebomb and was preparing to throw it, the military said. Military sources could not confirm whether they had been killed.
Palestinian witnesses said Saturday's clashes began when troops shot Amjad al Masri, 15, as he sat on his roof watching the troops pass. As news spread of his killing, Palestinians began throwing stones and other objects at soldiers, witnesses said.
Troops later killed Amar Arafat, 19, who was attacking them, and Rohi Hazam Shoman, a 25-year-old bystander, witnesses said.
About two hours later at the funeral procession, troops shot at a crowd of about 2,000 Palestinians from about 200 yards away, hitting Amjad's relative Mohammed al Masri in the head and killing him, witnesses said. Three other men were lightly injured, they said.
Military sources said troops opened fire when two men came out of the crowd, one wielding a pistol and the other a fire bomb.
The violence came amid reports Egypt will send intelligence chief Gen. Omar Suleiman -- a key Mideast mediator -- to meet with Palestinians next week in a renewed effort to forge an agreement with militant groups to end attacks on Israel, Palestinian officials said Friday.
Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia has hoped such an agreement would help spur renewed efforts to implement the U.S.-backed "road map" peace plan, which envisions a Palestinian state by 2005.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said last month that if there is no progress on the road map, he would unilaterally redraw the lines between Israel and the Palestinians.
While Sharon said his plan would include the removal of some Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza, he said the Palestinians would receive far more land under a negotiated settlement.
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
'Amer Qathem Kamel 'Arafat, 17
Rawhi Hazem Rohi Schumann, 21
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Taj a-Din 'Abd al-Karim Muhammad - Sa'id Seif,17
resident of 'Ein Beit al-Maa R.C., Nablus district, killed in 'Ein Beit al-Maa R.C., Nablus district. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed while throwing stones during a demonstration against the army.
(Tajaldeen Abdul-Karim Muhammad Said Seif) 6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Heysham Ahmad 'Abd al-Fatah Haryush, 22
'Abd al-'Afo Nobuh Qassam, 27
Ibrahim Radwan 'Atari, 32
Heysham resident of Tulkarm R.C., killed in Tulkarm R.C.. Killed during an IDF incursion into the refugee camp. He was shot by soldiers who had taken up a position in one of the houses.
‘Abd resident of Nablus, killed in Nablus. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed during an IDF action to arrest a wanted person who was hiding in his house. Signs of severe violence were found on the body.
Ibrahim resident of Nablus, killed in Nablus. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed in an IDF operation to arrest him. His body was found badly damaged and carried signs of great violence.
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Ass'ad Saleh Ass'ad Khaliliya, 32
resident of Jaba', Jenin district, killed in Jenin, by live ammunition. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed during his arrest by an undercover unit.
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Fuad Kamel 'Omar Jarwan, 17
resident of Beita, Nablus district, killed in Beita, Nablus district, by live ammunition. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed in a demonstration during an IDF incursion into the village.
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Tom Hurndall 22
28th November 2003 Tom Hurndall aged 22, British peace activist shot in the head by the IDF and in a coma ever since.
Yesterday, Thursday 27 November, a young British man marked his 22nd birthday.
He did not get a celebration or a present and he did not even know it was his birthday.
His family visited him and talked to him, but no one celebrated.
The sad ceremony will be repeated on his 23rd birthday. Tom Hurndall will never celebrate and will actually not do anything until the day he dies.
He is lying in a hospital in London in a coma he will never wake from, after a single bullet hit his head causing him irreversible brain damage.
[Tom died in a London hospital, January 13, 2004]
Hurndall, young, talented and cheerful, clings to life only by means of medical equipment. In fact he already died on 11 April on a grey street in Rafah.
Hunrndall might have become a highly talented photographer or a brilliant writer, but he became another victim of the intifada, one among thousands of others whom no one, apart from family and friends, remembers, and few are shocked by their deaths.
His parents, Jocelyn a special needs teacher, and Anthony a lawyer, his big sister Sophie, and his younger brothers Billie and Freddie have gathered around his bed in a West London hospital with a handful of friends for a birthday which is likely to be the last of Tom’s life.
The British media have recently reported that the family have requested that the life support machines be turned off. “For me Tom is already dead,” Sophie told the Guardian newspaper. “But it is incredibly difficult to watch the suffering he is going through. It’s a natural step to help him bring his pain to an end.”
Hurndall was shot in Rafah while trying to rescue children under fire. He believed as a foreigner, a volunteer with the International Solidarity Movement, wearing an orange fluorescent jacket that clearly distinguished him from the Palestinians, that the man who had him in his sights would hesitate and not shoot.
(4:01) Tom Hurndall - Murdered by IDF - Related Footage
But Hurndall was wrong; he did not understand that the lives of Israelis, Palestinians and anyone caught up in the war between them are incredibly cheap. His family, however, refuse to accept the ease with which their son was shot in the head, or the fact that no one has been required to take responsibility for his injury, or the cheapness of life in Israel. From North London they are leading a struggle for their son’s dignity and in fact for the quality of life in Israel.
Day by day, diaries from the inferno
“Tom was intelligent, very talented. He looked into everything. It was impossible just to tell him, ‘It’s like this’. He always questioned, raised doubts and looked for convincing answers,” his mother says.
“He embodied the need and desire to identify with people. When someone was mugged in the street, he came forward to help the victim and was ready to put himself in danger. He did that twice. He could not accept human suffering.”
At the end of February Hurndall travelled to Baghdad to see the situation there for himself. He did not go to act as a human shield or to defend the regime of Saddam Hussein, but rather to learn for himself about the conflict in the Middle East.
From Iraq he went to a refugee camp in Jordan where he volunteered for a few weeks. Because returning to Iraq on the eve of the war had become impossible Tom entered Israel. Initially he tried to maintain an objective position regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and to form his own opinion on the supposition that the English media had an anti-Israeli bias.
After a few hours in Rafah, where he arrived in early April, he understood that the situation there was more terrible than he had dared to imagine.
“It was hard for him to remain balanced after everything he saw,” says his father Anthony. “He saw terrible things and it was difficult to digest them.
He wrote that he was still examining his attitudes, but there comes a point when you have to draw a line. That point was the pain being caused to the population.
He was there for five days and had already seen enough to reach some conclusions. He wrote:
‘The things I’ve seen were really hard. The situation is deteriorating in Palestine, people are dying all the time; life is cheap. But why? The line is crossed for me when I see the Israeli forces causing unnecessary pain, destroying houses and injuring children.’”
Jocelyn, the mother: “The whole tone of his emails and diaries changed once he got to Rafah. He loved Jerusalem and wrote in almost biblical style:
‘It’s my time to leave, but I have a feeling that things won’t work out.’
I have thought about that a great deal. Why did he speak in that fashion? Did he foresee something? I think he became aware of the terrible mess between the Israelis and Palestinians.
“He told how he slept at a doctor’s who lived on the first floor of a house that had still escaped demolition. He asked the doctor if his children slept well with a tank so close. The doctor replied:
‘The first two nights they cried. But now they’re okay. They got used to it. I wish I could take them away from here for a week so they could hear children laughing in the rest of the world, but I cannot. My children show courage before the Israelis. They don’t shed tears. I laugh but in my heart I am crying.’”
Hurndall sent darker emails to his friends. He knew his family would be shocked to get them and realise the extent of the danger he was in. This was especially the case when he wrote about Rushdi, a 15 year-old boy shot in the throat in the bathroom of his house, or the daily gunfights and suffering in Rafah.
“This isn’t something that just happened on one afternoon. Samir’s family are an exception; they refuse to leave their home. The IDF hopes people will abandon their homes, and there are many ways to cause fear.
In the last few weeks soldiers have attacked their house four times. The soldiers combed the place without any authorization or finding anything. They riddled the house with bullets, hit the water tank, and in one of the raids forced all the men onto the ground floor and made a seven year-old girl led them round the house at gunpoint.
They broke windows to make shooting positions and left the family’s prayer mats in the toilet. Doctor Samir is still not convinced and the army is losing patience.
Outside, the scene is almost comic: everywhere there are ruins, as far as the border. Only this house remains standing. This is surely as embarrassment to the IDF.”
Beyond the chronicle of violence, Tom detailed in his diaries the meaning of life in an area where it could be ended at any moment.
“I am writing now sitting exposed outside a house,” he wrote from Rafah.
“On one side is a street, empty, on the other darkness. I just know that curfew is imposed at 18:00 and it’s now 23:10. Our job is to confirm that the pumps continue to pump water. Palestinian engineers put themselves in danger of being shot when they come to do this themselves. We’ve got a better chance.
Still, it’s a strange idea that every evening people are shot and killed for ignoring the curfew, while in the dark to the north west there are Israeli settlements. A few hundred meters away there are army snipers, and each one of us can appear in a sniper’s telescopic sight.
It is possible to say with certainty that they are watching us, and my life is in the hands of an Israeli marksman or settler. I know that I will probably never know what hit me, but that is part of my role — to be as exposed as possible.”
Anthony Hurndall: “Talking of murder”
On 11th April, Hurndall came into an IDF telescopic sight from a watch tower in Rafah. The last thought to cross his mind was the way to a safe place for a girl with shots being fired around her.
He removed one boy from an exposed area to a side street, approached to grab the other girl and was then shot in the head.
“I was at home when I received a phone call from the Daily Mirror,” relates Sophie his sister. “I thought it was another interview because they had talked with him more than once.
After 20 minutes the reporter said he had to go and asked to end the conversation and get back to me later. After five minutes he called me and said, ‘I’m not sure if you know, but your brother has been shot.’ I asked, ‘Where? What do you mean? Is he alive? What’s his condition?’ But he said he didn’t have any more information.
I tried to find out as much detail as I could but he couldn’t help me. I called Mum at school, and we understood that we had to get in touch with the Foreign Office. I went out for a quarter of an hour to calm down.
When I came home I saw Billy sitting in the kitchen and his hands were shaking. The Mirror reporter had told him what had happened. He looked at me and said, “Sophie, Tom wasn’t wounded in the leg. It’s the head.’
When I finally succeeded in catching the Foreign Office and said who I was, they knew all the details about me and about Tom, and I realised the situation was really serious. The police came round and told us what had happened.”
The father Anthony arrived the following day from Russia and continued straight to Israel.
He travelled directly to the Siroka hospital in Beersheva, to no hope.
The family knew just how critical the injury was, as the doctors had tried to prepare them for the possibility that Tom would not make it till their arrival in Israel.
In the course of the coming weeks the family organised Tom’s transport to London and began the effort to understand the circumstances which had led to the shooting of their son.
In their house in North London they are all facing up to the loss in their own way: the two younger brothers were not present at the interview, but their mother says they are finding it difficult to function.
Sophie is the more resolute, more political, more confident. Her anger is palpable and sometimes overtakes her.
Her responses always rooted in the general political context.
Jocelyn puts the emphasis on the humanitarian catastrophe, her own, the Israelis’ and the Palestinians’. She has stopped working and nowadays keeps hold of Tom’s writings and photographs with the aim of publishing them. “That’s the only thing which gives me strength,” she says.
Anthony is the analytical one, who covers his face with his hands for minutes at a time. He was responsible for investigating the circumstances around the shooting.
“I came to Israel to investigate what happened without preconceptions, without knowing if he was shot by the IDF, by Palestinians or by accident,” he says in a professional tone.
“After a months-long investigation I learnt that a group of International Solidarity Movement members had decided to pitch a tent at the end of a street in front of an IDF position in a tower in Rafah.
They wanted to stop the tanks entering via that street.
They arrived in the afternoon to pitch the tent, but shots were fired at them and they decided not to erect the tent.
At that stage shots were fired towards an earth mound where a number of children were playing.
Most of the children ran away, but three small children were frozen to the spot in fear.”
To our sorrow, exchanges of fire are a matter of routine in Rafah.
“It must be stressed that we’re not talking about shots being exchanged between the IDF and Palestinians. Absolutely not.
I collected testimonies from foreign journalists and volunteers, and all of them stated that there were no exchanges of fire.
The policy of the volunteers is not to be involved in any way in a situation where shots are being exchanged.
I asked time and again: there was no Palestinian fire.
Tom approached the three children in broad daylight and turned to grab another girl.
There had been about 15 shots in the space of two minutes, and then came the final shot which hit him.
He fell when he was wearing his orange jacket.
That was unmistakeable.
I checked whether he had been hidden by buildings so that only his head was exposed.
But from photographs and calculations it is clear that they could see the upper part of Tom’s body.
He was a very tall young man. They saw him for several minutes.
I wanted to check if it had been an accident, warning shots designed to drive the children and volunteers away.
That was a possibility I had to check and could not rule out, but the IDF issued a report where they admitted that they shot at Tom.
They claim that an armed Palestinian appeared in the area and fired a revolver into the air and towards the tower. This claim is not valid.”
Why?
“First, they point to two different positions for the gunman, which do not correspond to the photographs taken immediately after Tom’s shooting.
Second, no Palestinian gunman would have approached this area in broad daylight and fired a gun. It would have been suicide.
Third, there are a number of facts which do not conform to the soldiers’ testimonies: Tom was wearing an orange jacket, not military fatigues as the soldiers say; the location according to the soldiers’ testimonies is not accurate; Tom was not carrying a weapon — there are pictures of him lying on the ground without any weapon.
That version is a complete fabrication.
But the key point is that the commander of the position admits that a man was shot at and hit. That man was Tom.
The IDF have admitted that they fired using telescopic sights, in the absence of any visible danger to themselves in broad daylight. They fired at a civilian.”
That is to say we’re talking of murder.
“Without any doubt. I wanted to believe it was a question of a mistake, and it took me a long time to come to the conclusion, but that is the only possible conclusion.
They saw Tom wearing orange a few times, collecting scared children.
The soldier knew the meaning of the orange jacket and deliberately shot Tom, in the knowledge that he was a volunteer.”
Anthony explains well how it happened, but he also has a firm opinion concerning why.
“Tom was a photographer. He has pictures of the whole border wall. He photographed the watch towers, and I imagine that the IDF did not want there to be evidence of what they were doing.
I am not saying that this is the only explanation, but it is a possibility.
It’s clear that the soldiers hate the volunteers, and it is possible that it was the decision of the army or a particular soldier, who knew he could shoot and not be punished.”
Sophie is more direct:
“Someone aimed his rifle at his head and shot him in cold blood, and now there is no intention of bringing anyone to justice.
For seven and a half weeks the representatives of the army refused to meet my parents.
It was only once they knew when they were going back to London that they agreed to meet, on the assumption that they wouldn’t be able to make it and they would have an excuse.
This is not an isolated event; the American photographer [sic] Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli bulldozer two weeks before.
Two weeks later, a cameraman by the name of James Miller was shot in his neck.
Something is happening there.
Perhaps they do not want witnesses.
There’s a policy and there’s the evidence of other journalists being shot.”
Israelis in Rafah, Britons in Iraq
After a painful attack of the representatives of the army authorities, even if only via the media, and of the Israeli position, the question is if the Hurndall family, or any other foreigner, cares about the Israeli children also caught up in a war.
Sophie:
“Absolutely.
Tom knew the Israeli position and had Jewish friends.
Emails have been sent to our site (www.tomhurndall.co.uk) asking why Tom didn’t use his body to defend Israeli children.
I was in Israel for three weeks and only spent a few hours in Palestine, yet I preferred the life in Israel a million times to that in Palestine.
The living conditions are not comparable.
Atrocities are committed on both sides, but in Palestine the number and frequency of atrocities goes unperceived.
Every day and hour something happens: homes demolished, curfew, checkpoints.
Suicide attacks in Israel are terrible, and I can’t express my disgust for them, but things in Palestine are 100 times worse under complete Israeli control.
The Palestinian voice is not heard in the world, and people do not understand how bad the situation there is.”
http://fwd4.me/0wCV
the shooting of thomas hurndall trailer
(2:20) the shooting of thomas hurndall trailer
The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall (2008)
(8:37) The Shooting of Thomas Hurndall (2008)
Tom Hurndall was in a coma for nine months after being shot in the head by an Israeli sniper.
He died January 13, 2004.
It is with great sadness that If Americans Knew shares with you the news of the passing away of Tom Hurndall.
Tom, 22, died Tuesday night in a London hospital due to complications with pneumonia. He had spent the past nine months in a vegetative state after being shot in the head by an Israeli sniper on April 11, 2003, while trying to escort children to safety in Rafah, Gaza Strip, Occupied Palestine.
Tom was a member of the International Solidarity Movement, a Palestinian-led effort to bring internationals to the Occupied Palestinian Territories to aid the civilian population in non-violent resistance to the occupation.
Tom Hurndalls murderer Wahid Taysir (Real name)
At a hearing on Monday, a soldier arrested last week in connection with the shooting of Tom Hurndall, has finally been indicted on six charges :
-- Aggravated Assault;
-- two counts of Obstruction of Justice;
-- Incitement to False Testimony;
-- False Testimony; and
-- Improper Conduct.
A second soldier has been detained and is expected to be indicted on charges of Obstructing Justice and False Testimony.
As we grieve the death of Tom, let us not forget the ongoing catastrophic situation in Palestine that he was working to end. In fact, since he was shot, 407 Palestinians have been murdered and 1,990 have been injured. As Tom’s mother, Jocelyn, wrote recently in the UK Guardian, “It seems that life is cheap in the occupied territories. Different value attached to life depends on whether the victim happens to be Israeli, international or Palestinian.”
We ask that you write letters to the editor of your local newspaper regarding this incident. If your paper covered it, please thank them and ask them to report more on the plight of the Palestinian people. If your paper did not cover it, admonish them for it and demand to know why they consider Tom’s life, like so many in Palestine, unworthy of mention in their pages. Remember, as always, polite, concise, and to-the-point letters are more likely to be published.
For more information regarding Tom, please visit http://www.tomhurndall.co.uk/.
http://fwd4.me/0xtY
11 apr 2006
British jury: Peace activist was 'intentionally killed' by Israeli sharpshooter
6 apr 2012, 22:36 , Respect -
Muhsin Haidar Muhammad al-Daour, 11
of Jabalya refugee camp, Gaza, killed by IDF gunfire to his head while hunting birds near the Gaza perimeter fence.
6 apr 2012, 22:37 , Respect -
Samir Muhammad Saleh Badawi, 15
Samih Kamal Mahmoud Tawtah, 16
Samir of Gaza City, killed by IDF gunfire to his chest during an incursion.
Samih of Gaza City, killed by IDF gunfire to his chest and abdomen during an incursion.
6 apr 2012, 22:37 , Respect -
13 Palestinians killed in Gaza after truce talks in Ramallah
6 apr 2012, 22:37 , Respect -
Ali Munir Youssef Khalil Jaara 24
30 jan 2004
Jihad Muhammad Isma'il a-Sawity 39
resident of Beit 'Awwa, Hebron district, killed in Beit 'Awwa, Hebron district. Killed in an exchange of gunfire when IDF soldiers came to arrest him.
6 apr 2012, 22:37 , Respect -
Shadi Riad Mahmoud Malham, 23
resident of Kafr Ra'i, Jenin district, killed in Jericho. Killed in an exchange of gunfire with soldiers and Border Police who had come to arrest him and another wanted person. After killing the two men, the army demolished the six-story building in which they were hiding.
6 apr 2012, 22:38 , Respect -
Naail Ziad Husseini Husnin, 22
Hashem Dawad a-Shtiwi Abu Hamdan, 23
Muhammad Husnin Mustafa Abu Hamdan, 24
Nader Mahmoud 'Abd al-Hafiz Abu Lil, 24
residents of Balata R.C., Nablus district, killed in Nablus, by a missile fired from a helicopter. He was the object of a targeted killing. Killed while they were riding in a car. - 2 febr 2004
Baha Hatem Joda
Muhammad Mahmoud 'Abd al-Fatah Abu 'Odeh, 27
resident of A'yda R.C., Bethlehem district, killed in A'yda R.C., Bethlehem district. Killed in an exchange of gunfire after IDF soldiers who had come to arrest him in his house. After killing him, the IDF demolished his house.
2 febr 2004 - 27 sept 2005
Mohammad Abu Odeh, 27
Died 18 months ago, Palestinian buried in Bethlehem
6 apr 2012, 22:38 , Respect -
Maria 5 febr 2004
Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim HammadAbed Al Nasser Abu Showqa
6 apr 2012, 22:38 , Respect -
Maria 7 Febr 2004
Tariq Majdi Abdul-Muati al-Sousi, 12
of Gaza, "collaterally" killed in the course of an Israeli assassination while leaving school for home.
In a three-story house deep inside a crowded neighborhood in Gaza City lives the Al Sousi family. Majdi Al Sousi, the father, works as a butcher and used to support a family of nine children, now eight after the loss of his 12-year old child Tareq.
Tareq Al Sousi was leaving his school on February 7, 2004 when an Israeli combat helicopter fired two missiles at a car traveling down the street near him, killing the three passengers of the car and seriously wounding him. Tareq died of his wounds before reaching the hospital. Nearly 20 other Palestinians were wounded in the same air strike.
Israelis have often targeted Palestinian militants and prominent figures of the resistance groups, killing 340 (sic; should be 140?), of them 90 were just passersby. Israelis consider those civilians killed in the attacks as "collateral damage", and refuse to pay any compensation to the bereaved families.
"I don't want any compensation from the murderous Israelis. I just want one thing; to bring back my Tareq to me. If they could bring him back to life again, I will forgive them. All the money in the world cannot replace one smile or one hug Tareq gave me," says Mr. Al Sousi, as he folds his son's clothes and put them back into his closet.
6 apr 2012, 22:38 , Respect -
Maria 9 febr 2004
Ahmad Mahdi 'Awad 'Amru 26
Ahmad resident of Jenin, killed in Kadim, Jenin district, by live ammunition. Killed in an exchange of gunfire with IDF soldiers.
10 febr 2004
Ismail Abu Ata 22
6 apr 2012, 22:39 , Respect -
Maria 11 Febr 2004
Muhammad Ahmad Muhammad Hals, 16 Hani Mahmoud Abu SkheilaMahmoud Jihad Al Hayek 19Ayman Nasr el-Sheikh Khalil 21
Mehdi Zaidi Jacob 22Amer Othman Ghemari 23Haitham Abed 28
Muhammad of Gaza City, killed by IDF gunfire to his head and abdomen during an incursion.
6 apr 2012, 22:39 , Respect -
Maria 12 Febr 2004
Bashir Khalil Muhammad abu-Armaneh, 14,
of Rafah, Gaza, killed by IDF gunfire to his neck near the Egyptian border.
6 apr 2012, 22:39 , Respect -
Maria 12 Febr 2004
Samer Jasser Fawzi 'Arrar 28
Muhammad 'Issa Ahmad Jalita 32
Samer resident of Qarawat Bani Zeid, Ramallah and al-Bira district, killed in Qarawat Bani Zeid, Ramallah and al-Bira district. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed while trying to flee from soldiers who had come to his house to arrest him.
Muhammad: resident of Jericho, injured on 01.02.2004 in Jericho, by live ammunition, and died on 12.02.2004. Wounded in a gunfight with soldiers and Border Police who had come to arrest him and another wanted person, and later died from his wounds. After the action, the army demolished the six-story building in which they were hiding.
6 apr 2012, 22:39 , Respect -
Maria 13 febr 2004
Ahmad 'Abd al-hadi Ahmad Nazzal, 27
resident of Qabatiya, Jenin district, killed next to Jenin, by live ammunition. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed on his way home from the gas station near his house by gunfire aimed at his car on the Jenin-Nablus road.
6 apr 2012, 22:39 , Respect -
Maria 19 febr 2004
Jaffar Muhammad 'Eid hubal, 20
resident of Nablus, injured on 09.11.2004 in Nablus, and died on 19.02.2005. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Additional information: Killed by IDF gunfire after he and others threw stones at an army jeep.
19 febr 2004
PCPJ: 33 Palestinians killed in January 2004
6 apr 2012, 22:39 , Respect -
Maria 22 febr 2004
Mohammed Issa Zaaol 23
6 apr 2012, 22:39 , Respect -
Maria 26 febr 2004
Muhammad Fadel Hashem Rian, 25
Zakaria Mahmoud 'Eid Salem, 28
Abdal Rahman Abu 'Eid, age 65
Muhammad and Zakaria residents of Beit Duqu, al-Quds district, killed near the Separation Barrier in the area of Beit Ijza, al-Quds district, by live ammunition. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed by Border Police gunfire during a demonstration against the Separation Barrier.
Abdal Died of a heart attack after teargas projectiles were shot into his home during a demonstration against the Wall in Biddu.
6 apr 2012, 22:44 , Respect -
Maria 29 febr 2004
Riad Sa'id 'Ali Shalal, 19
Muhammad Zuheir Mahmoud 'Awis, 23
Riad resident of Balata R.C., Nablus district, killed in Balata R.C., Nablus district. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed during an IDF invasion into the refugee camp during the funeral of Muhammad Awis, when the soldiers opened fired at demonstrators.
Muhammad resident of Balata R.C., Nablus district, killed in Balata R.C., Nablus district. Killed aiding the wounded during an IDF incursion into the Balata refugee camp.