- 3 mrt 2006
Amr Hasan Hasan Basiouni 16
of Ayn Beit al-Ma refugee camp, killed by IDF gunfire to his face while on the roof of his home during an incursion.
'Amer Hassan Hassan Basuni 12 apr 2012, 16:46 , Respect -
Issa Mohammed Al Naoq 12 apr 2012, 16:46 , Respect -
Raad Al-Batash, 8
Mahmoud Al-Batash, 15
Ahmad a-Sweisi, 14
12 apr 2012, 16:46 , Respect -
Allam Abu Saud, 14
Nidal Abu Saud, 15
Five children killed by Israeli violence in a single day on Monday
An Israeli air strike killed Raad Al-Batash, 8, Mahmoud Al-Batash, 15, and Ahmad a-Sweisi, 14, on Monday. Sumiyya Al-Batch, the mother of Raad and Mahmoud, was also wounded. And in a separate incident, two brothers, Allam and Nidal Abu Saud, 14 and 15, were blown to pieces when an undetonated explosive left by the Israeli military in their neighborhood suddenly exploded near them.
Eight other passers-by were wounded in the air strike, most of them children, and Sukar's aunt, who lives nearby, died of a heart attack when she was told the news of the boys' deaths.
According to the Israeli military, the missile fired by the Israeli Airforce was targeting a car driven by two Palestinian resistance fighters, who were also killed by the attack. Military sources said that by the time the crowd was identified, it was already too late to divert the two missiles from their courses.
But a report by Israeli human rights group B'tselem called the attack a war crime, for the fact that it violated the principle of proportionality, a central tenet of international law. "Given the time and place chosen for the attack, the planners should have known that it was liable to injure many innocent civilians. Despite the extensive harm to civilians resulting from yesterday's attack, Israel has once again failed to provide any evidence regarding the necessity of the action or the lack of alternates that would entail lesser harm to civilians. These facts create a grave suspicion that yesterday's attack was disproportionate and thus constitutes a war crime", said a report by the group released Tuesday morning.
Over 800 Palestinian and 123 Israeli children under the age of 18 have been killed in Israel and the occupied territories since the current open conflict erupted in September of 2000, according to human rights groups.
Most of the Palestinian children killed by Israeli forces died of multiple gunshot wounds. But at least 40 were killed by explosives left behind by Israeli forces that did not explode on impact, like the Abu Saud brothers killed on Monday.
Children in occupied Palestine are prone to playing with bullet casings, artillery shells and other military paraphenalia left behind by Israeli forces when the troops withdraw from the neighborhoods. Sometimes the devices turn out to be live, and explode, killing or wounding the children.
A report by the Gaza City Palestinian Police Department in July 2005 showed that in 2003, 36 explosion incidents were recorded, claiming the lives of five children, and wounding 135. In 2004, police records documented 105 explosion incidents, in which two children were killed and 88 wounded. In 2005 until late June, the police statistics showed 35 explosion incidents, causing two deaths and 21 injuries, mostly children. Abu Azoum appealed to residents to make their children fully aware of the dangers of the remnants of explosives, not to pick them up or come near them, as they may contains unexploded parts.
The Palestinian police handles incidents of the explosion of the suspected devices and unexploded bombs. Saleh Abu Azoum, director of explosives engineering of the police, said, "We have a well-trained team equipped with the most modern equipment; they are capable of handling any kind of suspected object even if it is extremely dangerous."
However, Azoum noted that much of the necessary equipment was denied entry into Gaza by Israeli forces, saying, "The European Union (EU) provided the Palestinian police with four advanced automated explosive-detection devices but the Israeli occupation forces hindered the arrival of the rest of the EU-donated equipment." The Police Report also accused Israeli occupation forces of deliberately leaving behind explosives and landmines when retreating from Palestinian neighborhoods, causing deaths among innocent residents, in particular children who played with the objects.
Israeli Commander Eliezer Shakedi said on Tuesday morning that the Israeli Airforce makes "super-human efforts in order to reduce the number of innocent casualties in aerial strikes", and said that the number of civilian casualties has decreased dramatically over the last two years. Human rights groups, however, dispute that claim, saying that over 2/3 of the 3,829 Palestinians killed in the last five years have been civilians.
In February, the Resalah Center for Human Rights in Gaza issued a report condemning the killing of children by Israeli Occupation Forces. According to the report, Israeli Occupation Forces killed 797 children under the age of 18 between 28 September 2000 and 30 December 2005, approximately the time period of the Al Aqsa Intifada. The center pointed out that many children who weren't killed have been left with physical and psychological damage.
The center confirmed that those children were killed without any reason and that they hadn't committed any illegal or violent activities against the Israelis. The Center pointed out that many children were killed in aerial strikes. Other children were killed by random shooting and others as bystanders during targeted assassinations.
The Center criticized myths perpetuated in the Israeli and international media that Palestinian mothers send their children to die in order to receive more international sympathy, noting the high number of children killed at home or at school, or between home and school.
The report also stated that Israeli soldiers treat peaceful protests and marches as if they are battlefields, and shoot randomly into crowds, suggesting, "They should follow police methods of crowd dispersal to reduce danger to children in the area."
Resalah Center lawyer Ramzy Abu Jalhoum called on the international community and all human rights organizations to intervene immediately to protect the Palestinian children and to stop the Israeli killing of children.
After Monday's attack, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said that it represents a dangerous escalation against the Palestinian people, adding that such escalations do not serve to push the peace process forward.
Hamas leaders called the air strike a "massacre". Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, said that "if the international community remains quiet the situation will explode."
http://www.imemc.org/article/17187 12 apr 2012, 16:46 , Respect -
Ashraf 'Ali Hassan Shluf 25
Munir Muhammad Muhammad Sukar 30
8 mrt 2006
British Government Condemns Israeli Air Force Attack in Gaza
12 apr 2012, 16:46 , Respect -
Israeli report: When Palestinians are killed, no questions are asked
Full reliance on Israeli military accounts, selective word choice, taking sides – that’s what the media does when it comes to Palestinians being killed; academic study finds fault with Israeli media.
The five “W’s” that every first year communications student can recite in his sleep – what happened, when, who was involved, why and where – evidently don’t apply when Palestinians are killed. A new study examining media coverage of the Intifada finds that in incidents when Palestinians are killed, the Israeli media relies almost exclusively on the security establishment’s official version of the story.
IDF spokespeople, usually dubbed “senior security officials,” are quoted with finality, and only rarely are their versions measured up against Palestinian’s accounts or is any independent investigation done to verify their accuracy.
Over 3,300 Palestinians were killed by Israeli military gunfire since the outbreak of the Intifada in September 2000. The Keshev Association (president - writer David Grossman, chairman – Dr. Daniel Dor of Tel Aviv University’s Communications Department) examined the reporting methods in 22 such cases in December 2005. They studied news reports on Israel's three leading television channels (1, 2 and 10) and three leading newspapers (Yedioth Ahronoth, Ma’ariv and Haaretz). Altogether, they scrutinized 135 such news reports.
Of 48 reports of Palestinians killed as result of IDF gunfire, only eight reports provided an account other than the army’s, and only once did a report give an alternate version of a targeted assassination. As a rule, the media reported twice as much on targeted assassinations – which are planned in advance and aimed at a particular person – than on Palestinian deaths in other army operations.
In some of the incidents defined as “assassinations,” the fact that Palestinians were killed was mentioned as an afterthought later in the article. For example, the headline in one television broadcast ran: "Ocean encounter in Gaza. IDF fears boat bombs.”
The fact that a Palestinian was killed in the “ocean encounter” was mentioned only later in the report when a Palestinian witness was interviewed in Arabic. “The ocean is closed from our perspective. Coast Guard ships are always chasing us and shooting at us; one chased us now and killed him on the sea,” the witness said. Thus, only one subtitled word informed the Israeli viewer of the killing.
In another case, the report ran: “In the entire region where the settlements Eli-Sinai and Dugit had been, from where Palestinians fired towards Ashkelon - the IDF told Palestinians that anyone entering the area would be shot. The IDF fired there continuously, and one Palestinian was even killed there today….This is the IDF’s response. The cannon battery fired dozens of shells towards rocket launch sites throughout the day. Palestinians reported one killed, but Ashkelon area residents aren’t impressed by this gunfire, which is aimed, they claim, at open areas.”
On December 10, IDF forces killed 2 Palestinian swimmers. The Channel 2 newscaster said: “Two Palestinians were killed by the Gaza beach by Navy gunfire, after they were suspected of attempting to smuggle weapons from Egypt. The two swam from Egyptian waters, dragging an unidentified object into Palestinian territory.
The two didn’t respond to the Navy’s calls to stop. When they fired at the swimmers, fire was aimed at them from the Palestinian beach.” In Channel 1’s parallel report, the Ashdod base commander described the incident differently: “The swimmers were dragging weapons behind them. Forces entered in order to arrest them. During the attempted arrest, the swimmers refused to stop and tried to escape. Then shots were fired at the forces from the beach. The soldiers shot at the swimmers to prevent their escape.”
So what were the swimmers dragging? Who were they? Who opened fire first? What is the source of the disparity between the two accounts? These questions were never answered or explored further.
“What am I? An Arab in Gaza?” The reality is not so simple and one-sided, but the media, evidently, is. Not so, however, when the matter of danger to Israelis is at hand. “This event seemed like it was taken from an action movie, or at least from a targeted assassination in Gaza…But it’s not Gaza we’re talking about here, but the strip of beach between Palmahim and Ashdod and two Israeli fishermen who came to fish,” a Channel 10 reporter describes an event that almost ended in tragedy.
Later in the report, the newscaster asks the fisherman, “How did you feel? Real fear? That you were a moving target?” One of them replied: “First of all fear, humiliation. What am I? An Arab in Gaza?! What is this? I’m here next to my home, two meters from my house, and a chopper comes down on me like this? Who is this pilot? How could he have the nerve to do such a thing?” The reporter crosschecked stories, asked piercing questions, and checked how the fishermen could have entered the closed and dangerous area – all of which was missing from the reports in which Palestinians were killed.
“Over the time period examined,” the researchers said, “critical discussion on the policy of 'assassinations' was limited, and only 33 reports raised doubts as to its effectiveness, morality, legality and influence on diplomacy. When it was brought up, it was usually only hinted at or found in the margins of reports, as commentary or supplements. This goes along with headlines proclaiming 'assassinations' or Israeli demands to increase targeted killings. One must conclude that the media actively agrees with the policy and its official presentation, or at least gave up its critical duty in such matters.”
The study also criticized the word choices of news editors. “The favored phrase ‘targeted thwarting’ (sikul memukad) has positive connotations, which present the action as 'chirurgical' – harming only the intended target. This can be seen as a sort of legitimization of the act. This term is used over alternate terms with negative connotations, such as ‘assassination’ or ‘extermination.’”
The study quotes former Shin Bet head Ami Ayalon: “The annihilation of whole neighborhoods is not a targeted war. Razing dozens of acres of groves is not a targeted war. Killing one terrorist along with half a neighborhood definitely isn’t. Words create behavior patterns and behavior patterns expand the hatred and nourish terrorism. One can’t talk about a ‘targeted thwarting’ when innocent children are killed too.”
Keshev Director-General Yizhar Peer told Ynet that the most recent assassination in Gaza, in which two Islamic Jihad operatives and three adolescents were killed, reinforced the findings of the academic study. “But this time, public discussion did come up here and there, and the term ‘targeted thwarting’ wasn’t used in the reports,” Peer said.
http://www.imemc.org/article/17240 12 apr 2012, 16:46 , Respect -
Ibrahim Muhammad Hamad Abu Na'im, 23
resident of Bitunya, Ramallah and al-Bira district, killed in Jericho. A prisoner in Jericho prison. Killed during an IDF incursion into the prison.
12 apr 2012, 16:46 , Respect -
Khaled 'Issa Khaled 'Attiyah, 18
resident of Kharbatha al-Misbah, Ramallah and al-Bira district, killed in Kharbatha al-Misbah, Ramallah and al-Bira district. Did not participate in hostilities when killed. Killed while hiding with three friends, waiting to throw stones at passing army jeeps.
12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Israeli Army invades Jenin, one soldier killed, air Strike in Gaza
An Israeli soldier was killed on Thursday morning during a military invasion to the West Bank city of Jenin and its refugee camp, Israeli media sources reported.
The sources said the soldier was killed in a gun battle erupted between Palestinian resistance fighters and the invading paratroopers, supported by 22 military vehicles, who entered the camp and searched scores of houses and arrested several civilians.
The army claims the operation intends to arrest claimed wanted Palestinians from Islamic Jihad and Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades.
Troops surrounded a house where the fighters were hiding and exchanged fire with them. The five men were arrested by the army.
In a separate incident, Israeli newspaper Haaretz said in its online edition that two Israeli security guards were wounded in a shoot out near the settlement of Tapuah near Nablus.
Troops imposed curfew in the nearby town of Huwwara after the shooting.
The two from Ariel and Petah Tikva, sustained light-to-moderate wounds and were taken to Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva to be treated for their wounds.
No Palestinian faction claimed responsibility for the attack.
In the Gaza Strip, Israeli air force gun ships launched an air strike at targeting access roads after the resistance fired some home-made Qassam shells at the Western Negev. No injuries or damage were reported.
Qassam shells were fired in response to the latest Israeli military operation in Jericho which targeted the prison were Ahmed Sa'adaat, the secretary general of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and four of his comrades were held.
The five are allegedly accused of assassinating the Israeli cabinet minister Rehavaam Ze'vi in October 2001.
The PFLP claimed responsibility for the assassination of Ze'vi as a retaliation to the assassination of its secretary General Abu Ali Mustafa in August 2001.
http://www.imemc.org/article/17376
17 mrt 2006
Israeli military confirms that soldier killed in Jenin raid Thursday was shot by fellow soldier
12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Khaled Ateyya, 12
12-year old child killed by Israeli forces near Ramallah
Khaled Ateyya, 12, a resident of Kherbet Al Mesbah Village, near Ramallah, was killed when the so-called Israeli "border guard" opened fire at him Wednesday night near the construction of the Israeli annexation wall in the village.
Eyewitnesses reported that Israeli troops fired at Ateyya while he was near the site where the Israeli Wall is being constructed in the village. Doctors at Ramallah Public Hospital said the boy died before arriving at the hospital.
Early Thursday morning, Israeli forces arrested 15 Palestinians, after invading several cities and villages in the West Bank, while pounding the Gaza Strip with airstrikes.
updated from:
Palestinian killed by military fire in Ramallah, three injured
2006-03-16 01:16:08
A Palestinian security source in the West Bank city of Ramallah reported, on Wednesday at night, that one resident was killed, two were injured by Israeli military fire.
The source stated that Israeli soldiers invaded Khirbit Al Misbah area, in Rammallah, and opened fire at a group of youth who were gathering there.
One youth, identified as Khaled Ateyya, was killed, and three others were injured in the attack.
Israeli Soldiers closed the area and barred the ambulances and medical teams, from entering.
An Israeli army source claimed that the residents hurled Molotov cocktails at border guard policemen operating in Ramallah. No injuries among the Israeli soldiers were reported.
http://www.imemc.org/article/17373 12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Akaber Zaed 7
IDF soldiers shoot 7 year-old to death in al-Yamun, Jenin district
Kamal Zaid, victim's uncle
I work in farming for the most part, but also own a taxi that I operate. Last Friday [17 March], around 7:15 P.M., my brother 'Abd a-Rahman called me and asked me to go to his place and take his daughter Akaber [
Akaber 'Abd a-Rahman 'Izzat Zaid]
to the doctor. She was injured a few days previously and needed to go back to the doctor so he could take out the stitches in her chin. Right away, I went to my brother's house and took Akaber, who was ready when I got there. When I got to Dr. Iyad's clinic, I saw young men running and shouting and motioning that the [Israeli] army was in the area. I parked my taxi about thirty meters from the clinic, turned off the engine, and before I could turn off the lights, I heard the sound of intense gunfire. I saw two soldiers, one on each side of the car, about 5-10 meters away, shooting. I felt the bullets hit me in the arm. Akaber, who was sitting next to me, fell over onto my arms. I looked at her and saw that she had been wounded, and that her head was bleeding from behind her ear.
Other soldiers were standing behind the fence alongside the road. A soldier also stood on the roof of a room, at a height about two meters higher than the road, about 5-6 meters from my taxi. I opened the door, picked up Akaber, and shouted at the soldiers. I cried out, "The child is dead. I have a child and I want to take her to the doctor." One of the soldiers began to shout at me in Hebrew, and another spoke in Arabic, telling me, "Throw the child onto the ground and lie down [on the ground]." I put the child down and did as the soldier requested. After a minute or so passed, a soldier shouted at me, "Get up. Lift up your clothes and turn around." All the time, I told them that the child was dead, but they continued to shout at me. I got up and lifted up my clothes, and the soldiers saw that I didn't have anything on me.
Akaber ZaidPeople were still moving about in the area, and I shouted at them to come and take the child. One woman approached along with a few young men. Because of the gunfire and the shouts of the soldiers, they stayed back. Two or three minutes later, the young men managed to take Akaber to the clinic. I joined them after the soldiers spread out on the road. I think there were about eight soldiers on the road.
When I was next to the clinic's door, I heard the sound of cars. I saw three jeeps arriving from the village center. They stopped on the road.
I was bleeding when I entered the clinic. I asked Dr. Iyad about Akaber's condition. He said that her heart was still beating, but that she doesn't move. He summoned an ambulance. The young men who were in the clinic called my brothers, 'Abd al-Qader and 'Abd a-Rahman, and they came to the clinic. The ambulance had not yet arrived. The doctor bandaged my arm and wiped away the blood. He wiped away the blood that covered the child's face. He tried to resuscitate her, but then stopped and waited for the ambulance. A few minutes later, the ambulance arrived and we tried to take Akaber outside, but the soldiers shouted at us. The soldiers opened fire, which scared us, and we went back into the clinic. My brother 'Abd al-Qader picked up Akaber and went toward the soldiers, and they let him move forward. I joined him and went to the ambulance, which was parked next to my taxi.
On the way to the ambulance, I saw three jeeps parked in the middle of the road, blocking the ambulance. When I got into the ambulance, the soldiers refused to clear the roadway. The ambulance driver asked them to clear the way. He motioned with his hand and spoke with them on the loudspeaker, but the soldiers demanded that he get out. They told him that they would not let him leave the area if I didn't get out and go over to the soldiers. I got out and the soldiers took me to one of the jeeps and put me in the back of it. One soldier was in the back and two were sitting in the front. The soldier in the back tied my hands with white plastic cuffs and blindfolded me with a piece of dark cloth, green or black, I am not sure which. The soldier took my ID card. Another soldier came over and asked me about people who were with me in the taxi. When I said that nobody was in the taxi with me other than the small child, he slapped my face and punched me. He also hit me in the face with the butt of his rifle, causing my nose to bleed. I felt my lips swelling up. The soldier questioned me for about fifteen minutes, during which he did not mention any specific name. He asked general questions about the people who were with me.
One of the soldiers who were sitting in the front of the jeep told me they would take me to the Palestinian ambulance. They put me into another jeep, my eyes blindfolded and my hands bound. I sensed that there was a dog in the vehicle. The cuffs began to hurt me. I heard one of the soldiers speak on the radio transmitter, and I heard that he was called Raslan. I asked the soldiers to remove the handcuffs. Raslan asked the other soldiers to cut the cuffs, and they cut them. Then I lifted up the blindfold and saw three soldiers and a dog in the back of the jeep, and two soldiers up front. My arm hurt from the wound. I asked the soldiers to take off the bandage. One of the soldiers hit me on the wound, grabbed my head and slammed it into the wall of the jeep. I remained in the jeep for more than two hours. They beat me and the dog licked the blood. The soldiers hit me each time that I lowered the blindfold. They threatened to bring the "Kushi" [the "black man"]. That is how they called the soldier who had beaten me in the other jeep. From what I heard, I realized that he was the one who had fired at the taxi and killed Akaber.
Around 11:30 P.M., one of the soldiers told me, "The Jenin ambulance has arrived," and order me to get ready. The soldiers took me out of the jeep and one of the guys from the ambulance led me by hand, my eyes still covered. One of the soldiers pushed me from behind. The soldiers gave me back my ID card, having checked it a few times. When I got to the hospital, I was told that Akaber was dead. At the hospital, I was told that I had been hit by three bullets, two in the arm and the third in my right thigh. The injury to my arm was the most severe.
Kamal 'Izzat Taher Zaid, 26, married with three children, is a farmer and a taxi driver, resident of al-Yamun in Jeniin district. His testimony was given to 'Atef Abu a-Rob in al-Yamun on 20 March 2006.
[b]Israeli Troops kill 8-year old child near Jenin[/b]
Friday evening, Israeli soldiers shot and killed an eight-year old child in the village of Al Yamoun, near the West Bank city of Jenin; another resident was moderately injured.
A Palestinian medical source in Jenin reported that Akaber Abdul-Rahman Zedan, 8, was shot dead after the soldiers fired with live ammunition at dozens of homes in the village; her body of the child was transferred to Khaleel Suleiman Hospital in Jenin.
The child who was killed by military fire was leaving her home adjacent to the surrounded home. She died of her wounds after the soldiers delayed an ambulance trying to evacuate her.
Also, an Israeli military spokesperson claimed that soldiers fired at a taxi after its driver failed to stop when ordered, and that the child was one of the passengers.
The family of the child, and eyewitnesses denied the military allegations and confirmed that the child was shot near her house.
Also, one resident identified as Kamal Taher Zayid, 27, was moderately injured by Israeli Special-Forces fire while they were surrounding a house in the town.
Soldiers fired at the surrounded house and around it; the injured resident was not in the house the force targeted.
An Israeli military source claimed that soldiers operated in Al Yamoun after receiving information that resistance fighters are hiding in one of the village's houses.
http://www.imemc.org/article/17429
20 mrt 2006
Preliminary investigation of killing of eight-year old reveals Israeli misconduct
Akaber Abdul-Rahman Izzat Zayd
Akaber 'Abd a-Rahman 'Izzat Zaid 12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Israeli leader calls for assassinating Israeli Left-wing activist Uri Avnery
12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Ramadan Mtair 22
Army kills an Islamic Jihad man inside his house in Jericho
Ramadan Muhammad Ramadan Mteir 12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Mohammad Ayyad
Sufian Abu Gharaba
Two Palestinian Resistance men killed in Gaza Airstrike
12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Hamad Hamdan Mahmoud Musleh 16
Hamad Hamdan 16
Israeli Troops kill Palestinian youth in the Gaza Strip - 26 mrt 2006
Nidal Mohammed Majzoub 37Mahmoud Mohamed Majzoub 41
Killed by Israeli carbomb 12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Maria 27 mrt 2006
Husam Abu Eyada 24
Islamic Jihad fighter assassinated in Gaza, Aqsa Brigades fighter survives a separate attack
12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Maria 28 mrt 2006
Israeli source: Four Bedouins, age 13 to 16, killed in two blasts in the Negev
An Israeli military source reported that four Bedouins were killed, on Tuesday, in two separate explosions that took place when when unexploded shells detonated near them.
Two Bedouin children were killed and a third was severely injured when an undetonated shells exploded near them as they were tending sheep in an area used as an Israeli Air Force as a training zone, south of Kiryat Gat settlement.
An Israeli police source reported that initial investigation revealed that three youths, aged 13 to 16, were playing with a bomb shell they found in the army firing range, two died of their wounds and the third was rushed to Soroka Medical Center in Be'er Sheva.
Paramedics of the Israeli Magen David Adom found the victims unconsciousness after having suffered severe wounds on all parts of their bodies.
Earlier on Tuesday morning, a Bedouin father and his 16-year old son were killed when an unexploded shell detonated in an open field where the two were pasturing their sheep.
Salam Jadeen and his son Khaled were killed by a blast caused by an unexploded homemade shell, Israeli army source reported.
Earlier Tuesday three Qassam rockets were fired at Israeli territory from the northern Gaza Strip, no injuries were reported.
12 apr 2012, 16:47 , Respect -
Maria 28 mrt 2005
Salam Jadeen and his son
Khaled Jadeen 16
12 apr 2012, 16:48 , Respect -
Maria 29 mrt 2006
Samir Fraihat 21
While Israelis voted Tuesday, Israeli forces killed one, wounded 4, and arrested 27 Palestinians
Samer Subhi Ahmad Frihat 12 apr 2012, 16:48 , Respect -
Maria 31 mrt 2006
Abu Yousef Al Qouqa 44
Leader of the Popular Resistance Committees assassinated in Gaza