MIFTAH
Friday, 19 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Two Palestinian teenagers shot and critically injured by Israeli soldiers have become the latest totems in a wave of violent protest across the Palestinian territories.

The Israeli army has confirmed that live ammunition was used in Monday's clashes with Palestinian protesters and that two were shot with 0.22 calibre bullets – ammunition known to cause fatalities.

Udi Sirkhan, 16, was shot in the head outside an Israeli military outpost near Bethlehem amid clashes after the burial of Arafat Jaradat, whose death in Israeli custody on Saturday sparked the protests.

As surgeons at Israel's Hadassah hospital worked to remove a bullet from his brain, Sirkhan's grandfather Fathi Ramadan told journalists that the teenager had been walking home from work when he was hit. The Israeli military said Sirkhan was attempting to torch an army post.

The moments leading up to the shooting of 13-year-old Mohammed Khaled Qurd were captured on film. Footage obtained by the Israeli human rights group B'Tselem shows Qurd standing more than 50 metres from a heavily fortified Israeli outpost. At least one Molotov cocktail is seen flying towards the Israeli line but Qurd, standing with a small group of rock-throwers, was some distance from where the firebomb was thrown.

He was rushed to a local Palestinian hospital for emergency surgery to remove two bullets from his torso. His condition has stabilised.

Thousands of mourners had poured on to the streets of the West Bank town of Saeer under hails of celebratory gunfire on Monday to bury Jaradat. The petrol station attendant is widely reported to have been active in the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade – Fatah's military wing – and was buried with military honours.

On Tuesday morning, two M75 Grad rockets were launched into Israel – the first rockets to be fired since November. Al-Aqsa militants in Gaza claimed responsibility for the attack. Israel has closed the Kerem Shalom goods crossing into Gaza in response.

The United Nations has been quick to condemn both the Palestinian casualties and rocket fire.

With less than a month before President Barack Obama's visit to the region, the United States has called for "maximum restraint" on both sides.

While local media has speculated over the inevitability of a third intifada, few Israeli analysts believe there will be a sustained uprising.

Hillel Frisch, an expert on Palestinian politics at Bar-Ilan University, said that while the motivation may be there, Palestinians lacked the capability to stage another armed revolt.

"The people being wounded in these clashes are 13 and 16-year-old kids, not the 17 to 32-year-olds who would form the crucial middle command providing the organisation needed for a mass uprising. These men have been either decimated or incarcerated since the second intifada.

"The Palestinian Authority will try to keep up the heat until Obama comes; that will put pressure on Israel. We will see slightly higher levels of violence until then but I do not see the situation escalating significantly in the short term," Frisch said.

 
 
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