Thursday, November 09, 2006

Palestinians vow revenge at Gaza funeral for 18

This very well may have been a mistake but more robust status quos than this one have been shattered by lesser incidents. You can explain strategies to ordinary folk, but when they see their neighbors blown up like this by people they're already looking for an excuse to hate, it brings back the violence-first mentality. To my mind, one of the least talked about issues by both the Dems and Republicans is the need to resolve the Israeli/ Palestinian conflict, once and for all. The root of most of the aggression in the world today can be traced back to that. More so than even Al Qaeda.


BEIT HANOUN, Gaza (AP) -- Tens of thousands of grieving Gazans, weeping in anguish and screaming for revenge, crammed into a cemetery on Thursday to bury 18 civilians killed by an errant Israeli artillery barrage that hit a crowded neighborhood.

The emotional throngs reached toward the sky or collapsed in grief as a despondent father carried the lifeless body of his 1-year-old baby in his arms. About 20 gunmen fired sporadically into the air, and many mourners waved the yellow flags of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah party.

The cemetery, which had been under construction, was hastily opened to accommodate the victims because no other cemetery in town had enough land to allow the victims to be buried together. All of the dead belonged to a single extended family.

The bodies arrived in a convoy of 18 ambulances, which brought them from hospital morgues through the artillery-scarred cluster of apartment buildings. Cries of "God is greater than Israel and America," punctuated by gunshots, rang out as the bodies were brought out on stretchers.

"I will avenge, I will avenge!" screamed one of the victims' relatives as he fired his weapon, voicing a common sentiment among the mourners.

"The Zionist enemy understands only the language of force and therefore I say, 'an eye for an eye, a nose for a nose,"' chanted Abdel al-Hakim Awad, a Fatah spokesman. "The residents of Sderot, the residents of Ashkelon, even the residents of Tel Aviv, are not going to enjoy security or peace as long as you are suffering, our beloved people in Beit Hanoun."

The freshly dug graves were lined up in a single row, each marked by a concrete block. A Palestinian flag fluttered over each grave. Two Israeli unmanned aircraft buzzed overhead.

Beit Hanoun has been the focus of a week-long Israeli offensive meant to halt rocket attacks on southern Israel. Wednesday's deadly shelling came 24 hours after Israeli ground forces pulled out of Beit Hanoun. The bloodshed, and calls for revenge by militant groups, have raised fears of a new wave of fighting with Israel.

The shells landed as residents were still asleep, and witnesses said many were killed as they fled their homes in panic. The bombardment was the deadliest on Palestinian civilians in the past six years of fighting, and undermined Abbas's attempts to form a more moderate government and renew peace talks with Israel. (Watch how Israeli shells devastate Gaza town -- 2:40)

All of the dead belonged to the al-Athamnas, a prominent family in town that includes several doctors and professionals. Family members said they had fled during the recent Israeli offensive, returning home after Tuesday's pullout.

Israeli military officials said the artillery was aimed at a target about 500 meters (yards) away. A top commander said artillery aiming devices had malfunctioned, though a formal investigation was still under way.

The funeral procession set out from two sites, because none of the area hospitals -- taxed by casualties from the Israeli offensive -- was able alone to keep that number of dead in their morgues. Thirteen ambulances set out from Kamal Adwan hospital in Beit Lahiya and five from Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.

The convoys met at the entrance to Beit Hanoun and entered together. Sirens screamed, and people standing on both sides of the street cried, "God is Great," and "God, we want to avenge," as gunmen fired in the air.

The bloodshed provoked Palestinian threats of a new wave of violence. Khaled Mashaal, the exiled leader of the Palestinians' ruling Hamas group, canceled a cease-fire with Israel that has largely held since February 2005, raising the specter of renewed suicide bombings.

Hamas' military wing also called for attacks against American targets -- an appeal that Hamas political leaders in Gaza did not endorse. President Bush called for restraint on all sides Wednesday.

Abbas condemned the "terrible, despicable crime," and the international community harshly criticized the deaths. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert expressed regret for harming civilians.

The U.N. Security Council was to meet in special session later Thursday. Palestinians hoped for a condemnation of Israel, on top of the denunciations Israel absorbed from governments worldwide after the attack.

Israeli police, fearing revenge attacks, stepped up their alert level, mobilizing forces across the country.

The 18 dead was the highest Palestinian civilian toll in a single incident since the current conflict erupted in September 2000. The highest toll of Israelis was 29 killed in a Palestinian suicide bombing at a Passover gathering in March 2002.

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