DOWN THeSe QUIET LANEs in
jabalyia refugee camp AN ISRAELI PILOT FLEW FIRING U.S.
MADE F.16s

Only
minutes later a girl screams - A younger boy was lying
motionless on the street. She stepped out towards him. As
she approached the body, an Israeli sniper shot her dead.
She was Jaclyn Abu Shbak, 17, and her brother was Eyad,
14. The carnage continues, in what Israelis call
self-defence.



39 children died like this





firemen continue working during attacks and are fired on
during israeli incursion

a family that managed to escape now have nowhere to live
others suffered losses and sights they will never forget


JABALYIA, Gaza, Mar 5 (IPS) - An ambulance races
through Jabalyia refugee camp to pick up the critically
injured and the body parts strewn across the
street. A normal day's job these days.
Families crouch in makeshift shelters around handheld
radios, listening out for some word that their agony will
end. There is no electricity, clean water is at a
premium.
No sign yet of an end to the 'hot winter' that Israel has
determined for Gaza residents. Israel is determined to
finish the elected Hamas government and leadership.
If there is activity around Jabaliya camp, it is at the
Kamal Adwan hospital. The wounded are brought in one
after another. Frantic family members struggle to grab
the attention of exhausted emergency room orderlies,
doctors and nurses.
An ambulance arrives, but with no injured persons in it.
The staff bring out body parts wrapped in blankets -- the
remains of ten children and three women. Minutes later
another ambulance arrives. A man is brought in, much of
his skin seems to be missing. Mercifully, he arrives
unconscious.
With just two operating rooms to work in, Kamal Adwan's
surgeons struggle to attend to everyone brought in. Blood
stains their uniforms, at times pieces of flesh and brain
matter can be seen stuck to their collars and sleeves.
The doctors are determined to save everyone they can.
An orderly wheels in another victim. A young man in coma
is brought in, bleeding profusely from multiple shrapnel
wounds from an air-to-ground missile.
Suddenly, all eyes are raised towards the ceiling. The
thwop-thwop of a helicopter gunship draws nearer. Moments
later there are sounds of explosion. The Israelis are
bombing again, quite close. Some of those waiting at the
hospital scream. Others sit looking blank.
A young man is lying down for treatment in a shared room.
Both his legs, and one arm, are gone. He is trying to say
something but he cannot.
"He was feeding the sheep at our home when an
Israeli F-16 bombed our house," says his father by
his side. "His legs were blown out from under
him."
"Wake up Samah...please!" a girl is screaming.
The girl she is calling out to is still, her torso burnt
black. So is what is left of the body of another young
woman in the hospital room. They were her sisters Samah
17 and Salwa Asalyia 23.
Her family members remember the moment the ambulance
arrived. "Where is the rest of the body?" the
ambulance driver asked. Out on the street the killings
continue. This IPS correspondent saw a girl, about 17,
screaming. A younger boy was lying motionless on the
street. She stepped out towards him. As she approached
the body, an Israeli sniper shot her dead. She was Jaclyn
Abu Shbak, 17, and her brother was Eyad, 14.
The carnage continues, in what Israelis call
self-defence. On Feb. 29, Israeli deputy defence minister
Matan Vilnai threatened "Shoah" (holocaust) on
Gaza in response to home-made Qassam rocket fire directed
at the Israeli colony Sedrot, which resulted in the death
of three Israelis.
The Israeli siege of Gaza through border closures, and
withholding of food, water, and medical supplies enters
its 25th month this March. But now the attacks on top of
the siege get bloodier by the day.
For the first eight months after Israel removed its
illegal colonies from Gaza in September 2005, Hamas and
the Palestinian resistance observed an eight-month hunda
(ceasefire) despite continued random shelling by Israel,
kidnapping of officials and targeted assassinations.
This ended in June 2006 when an Israeli ship bombed a
beach in Gaza, killing 13 people, 11 of them from one
family. Hamas and the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah
repeatedly approached Israel to negotiate a ceasefire.
Israel has rejected each overture, and intensified its
assaults.
The United Nations defines 'massacre' as the death of 50
or more civilians. Operation Hot Winter claimed 60 lives
on its first day, and so far at least 126 killed, among
them 39 children and babies, and 12 women, and 380
injured. Hundreds of houses have been destroyed.
(END/2008)
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