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Monday 6 June 2011

Israeli occupation anniversary marked with bloodshed


Syria says 23 protestors killed by Israel in occupied Golan but Tel Aviv puts 'Naksa' dead and wounded at 10.

Middle East Online


44 years of Israeli occupation of Syrian and Palestinian land

MAJDAL SHAMS - Israeli troops opened fire on Sunday as protesters from Syria stormed a ceasefire line in the occupied Golan Heights, with Damascus saying 23 demonstrators were killed.

Hundreds of protesters rushed the ceasefire line, cutting through barbed wire as they tried to enter the Golan Heights in a repeat of demonstrations last month that saw thousands mass along Israel's north.

Similar protests were held in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip.

In Majdal Shams, on the occupied Golan, Israeli troops opened fire as demonstrators sought to push through the mined ceasefire line, which had been reinforced with several rows of barbed wire blocking access to a fence.

"Despite numerous warnings, both verbal and later warning shots in the air, dozens of Syrians continue to approach the border and IDF (Israel Defence Forces) forces were left with no choice but to open fire towards the feet of protesters in efforts to deter further actions," an army spokesman said.

Updating an earlier toll, Syrian state media reported that 23 people were killed, including a woman and child, and 350 were wounded. The Israeli military said it was aware of 12 casualties.

The United States called for calm.

"We are deeply troubled by events that took place earlier today in the Golan Heights resulting in injuries and the loss of life," the State Department said in a statement.

"We call for all sides to exercise restraint. Provocative actions like this should be avoided."

The US statement emphasised that "Israel, like any sovereign nation, has a right to defend itself."

The Israeli military also said that one person was wounded when at least one landmine exploded on Syria's side of the border.

"A Syrian mine exploded, seemingly because molotov cocktails thrown at (Israeli) forces started a bush fire which caused the explosion of the mine, a number of mines even," an army spokeswoman said. "Apparently there is one person wounded on the Syrian side."

Israeli public radio said "many" people were hurt in the explosion near Quneitra, which lies in no-man's land. There was no immediate confirmation from Syria.

In Majdal Shams, locals pleaded with soldiers to stop firing as troops used loudspeakers to warn demonstrators in Arabic that "anyone who comes close to the fence will be responsible for their own blood."

Israeli forces were on high alert after activists in the West Bank and Gaza, and in Arab nations bordering the Jewish state, called for protesters to march on Israeli checkpoints and border areas.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the Golan demonstrators "extremist elements" who "are trying to break through our borders and threaten our communities and our citizens."

Protests were also staged in Gaza and the West Bank, where 16 demonstrators were taken to hospital with light wounds from rubber bullets, and another 20 were treated for tear gas inhalation.

Around 100 people demonstrated in central Hebron in the southern West Bank, while dozens of protesters tried to march from the northern West Bank village of Deir al-Hatab to the nearby Elon Moreh settlement.

In Gaza, Hamas police arrested around a dozen protesters who broke away from a rally at the northern town of Beit Hanun, and tried to march to the Erez border crossing with Israel.

Sunday's protests, timed to coincide with the 44th anniversary of the Six-Day War when Israel captured the Golan from Syria as well as the West Bank and Gaza Strip, were planned as a repeat of massive demonstrations last month.

On May 15, thousands of protesters massed on Israel's borders with Syria, Lebanon and Gaza, trying to force their way across on the anniversary of Israel's creation.

Israeli fire left six demonstrators dead on the Lebanese side of the border and four dead on Syria's side.

In Lebanon, Palestinian refugees on Sunday staged a day of mourning but the Lebanese army banned any gatherings at the border to avoid a repeat of the violence.

The Israeli army on Monday said that 10 people had been killed or wounded during the mass protests, all of them by landmines near Quneitra.

"Ten of yesterday's casualties were caused by the rioters who hurled firebombs at IDF troops, leading to explosion of landmines," the Israeli military said in a Twitter post, without giving an overall toll.

Asked to clarify, an army spokeswoman said "casualties" referred to both dead and injured, all of whom were caused by the explosion of landmines in no-mans land near Quneitra, which were detonated by Molotov cocktails thrown by the protesters.

"Ten of the casualties -- including dead and injured -- were caused by firebombs thrown by rioters which set off landmines in Quneitra," a spokeswoman said, without remarking on figures cited by Syrian TV which reported 23 people had been killed and 350 injured.

Troops also opened fire at protesters near Majdal Shams, but the spokeswoman did not give any other figures indicating anyone else had been injured or killed in that area.

The bloodshed occurred as hundreds of Palestinian refugees from Syria tried to breach the frontier at two locations in order to enter Israeli-controlled territory as they marked the 44th anniversary of losses sustained during the 1967 Six Day War, known in Arabic as the "Naksa" or "setback."

The mass protests along the border came three weeks after thousands of Palestinian refugees and their supporters tried to break through from Syria and Lebanon, leaving 10 dead when troops opened fire in similar circumstances.

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