MEE Staff
Middle East Eye / May 12, 2021
Raids so far killed 35 Palestinian civilians along with several Hamas intelligence officials, while hundreds of Gaza rockets have been fired at Israeli cities in retaliation, killing five civilians.
Israeli air strikes on Gaza continued on Wednesday for the third day in a row as Hamas fired hundreds of rockets on several Israeli cities in retaliation for the killing of civilians over the past three days, amid UN warning of a “full scale war.”
Meanwhile, tensions have flared up inside Israel, with the government declaring a state of emergency in the city of Lod, which has witnessed violent confrontations between Palestinian protesters and Israeli security forces.
According to Gaza’s health ministry, the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli air strikes on Gaza since Monday has increased to 36 civilians, including 12 children, while a total of 220 people have been wounded.
In Israel, at least five civilians have been killed by missiles fired from Gaza in retaliation for the air strikes, according to Haaretz, including one teenager and her father.
The Israeli army has announced that its air strikes on Gaza have killed senior intelligence officials in the Palestinian movement Hamas – the de facto ruler of the besieged enclave.
“Our fighter jets, with the ISA, neutralized key figures of Hamas’ intelligence: Hassan Kaogi, head of the Hamas military intelligence security department & his deputy Wail Issa, head of the military intelligence counterespionage department,” a Twitter statement by the Israeli army on Wednesday morning read.
The statement added that the operation was in response to “hundreds” of rockets fired from Gaza towards Israel over the past 24 hours.
“In response to HUNDREDS of rockets in the last 24 hours, the IDF has struck a number of significant terror targets and terror operatives across the Gaza Strip, marking our largest strike since 2014,” the statement added.
Hamas said Israeli air strikes destroyed police headquarters in Gaza as well as several interior ministry offices.
The UN Special Envoy to the Middle East Peace Process Tor Wennesland warned on Tuesday that the conflict has the potential to escalate into a “full-scale war.”
“Stop the fire immediately. We’re escalating towards a full-scale war. Leaders on all sides have to take the responsibility of de-escalation,” Wennesland wrote on Twitter.
“The cost of war in Gaza is devastating and is being paid by ordinary people. UN is working with all sides to restore calm. Stop the violence now,” he said.
Meanwhile, Palestinian groups in Gaza said they fired at least two hundred missiles towards the Israeli cities of Beersheba and Tel Aviv in retaliation for the air strikes.
Israel had announced on Monday the launch of a new operation – dubbed “Guardian of the Walls” – on the Gaza Strip following rockets fired by Palestinian groups on Israel in protest against the storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque.
Tensions continued to escalate on Wednesday as Palestinians continue to protest the forced evictions set to take place in East Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood.
On 2 May, Israel’s Supreme Court ordered that 40 residents of Sheikh Jarrah, including 10 children, be removed from their homes, which would subsequently be given to Israeli settlers. The order sparked massive protests in East Jerusalem, which have spread across cities in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories.
Israeli forces have been particularly brutal in their attacks on worshippers inside al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest site for Muslims. Security forces have stormed the mosque complex repeatedly since Monday, wounding hundreds of Palestinians.
State of emergency declared in Lod
Palestinians have come out en mass on Tuesday evening across large parts of Palestinian cities and towns in Israel and in the occupied West Bank to reject recent attacks on Palestinians in Jerusalem and Gaza.
Hundreds of Palestinian citizens of Israel took to the streets of various cities, including Nazareth, Haifa, Jaffa and Lod to denounce the attacks on Gaza and stand in solidarity with residents of the occupied East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah, who face imminent expulsion from their homes.
Demonstrations also took place in the cities of Umm al-Fahm, al-Mashad, Tamra, Arara, amongst others. A heavy Israeli police presence was present on the ground.
Crowds were dispersed using tear gas and rubber-coated bullets in several towns. Local news outlet Arab48 reported two serious injuries among Palestinian demonstrators.
In Umm al-Fahm, Palestinian protesters carried out road blocks and set fire to tyres. Investigations have been launched after a police station was set on fire in Acre.
In Haifa, the violent dispersal of protesters resulted in injuries and a number of arrests of protesters. Israeli police later closed access to the roads in an effort to quell the growing number of people gathering.
On Monday evening, a Palestinian man, identified as Moussa Hassona, was shot dead as protests continued in the city of Lod.
On Tuesday, Israel’s public security minister declared a ‘special state of emergency’ in the restive city of Lod after Palestinian demonstrations were galvanised by the killing of Hassouna and renewed attacks on Al-Aqsa Mosque.
“Everything necessary is done to restore law and order in Lod and throughout the country,” Amir Ohana, Israel’s public security minister, announced on Twitter.
He added that the security services have decided to deploy 16 Border Police reserve units to Lod from the occupied West Bank.
Worldwide protests
As Israeli attacks in Jerusalem and Gaza intensify, thousands of protesters have marched in major cities around the globe to show solidarity with Palestinians.
Solidarity protests have taken place in Ankara, London, Washington, Rabat, Amman, Beirut, Cape Town, Toronto, Munich and Kuwait City, among others.
Protesters are widely calling on their governments to take action and put pressure on Israel to de-escalate its aggressive tactics in Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.
Jordan and Turkey have already taken diplomatic actions, with Amman summoning Israel’s envoy to the country and Ankara withdrawing an invitation previously extended to Israel’s energy minister.
In New Jersey on Tuesday, hundreds of people assembled in Gould Park in Patterson, draped in keffiyahs and waving Palestinian flags, in a show of solidarity with Palestinians.
Speakers chanted “Enough is Enough” and “Free Free Palestine”, urging protesters to pressure their representatives to take action against the Israeli aggression over the past few days that has involved air strikes in Gaza, the crackdown on protesters in Sheikh Jarrah and attacks on worshippers in Al-Aqsa Mosque.
Patterson is home to thousands of Palestinian immigrants, and is sometimes referred to as Little Ramallah.
Addressing the crowd, Salaedin Maksut, the executive director of the New Jersey chapter of the Council of American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) told the crowd that “Israel’s recent actions had proved to the world that they don’t care about justice or peace”.
He also connected the Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests to the Palestinian struggle for self-determination.
“Our struggle is interconnected and we have to work together so that the same people oppressing Black people are oppressing Palestinians,” Maksut said.
Organisers said around 500 people had attended the rally.
In New York, the mounting tensions in Gaza translated on the ground as groups of supporters of Israel confronted hundreds of supporters of Palestine.
Footage shared on social media showed people insulting one another, and reaching over barricades installed by police in an effort to attack one another.
The protests, which have spilled onto the streets of Manhattan, came after the Biden administration voiced its ‘unwavering’ support for Israel.