Uppdatering: 14:21 09Jan09 RTRS-
Gaza boy recounts house of deathBy Nidal al-Mughrabi
GAZA, Jan 9 (Reuters) - "Abu Salah died, his wife died. Abu
Tawfiq died, his son died, his wife also died. Mohammed Ibrahim
died, and his mother died. Ishaq died and Nasar died. The wife
of Nael Samouni died. Many people died."
"There were maybe more than 25 people killed," said Ahmed
Ibrahim Samouni, a 13-year-old Palestinian boy who was wounded in the leg and chest but survived the Israeli shelling of a house in north Gaza on Jan. 4.
A report by the U.N.'s Office for the Coordinator of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said at least 30 people were killed
in the incident. Most were members of Samouni's family.
OCHA deputy chief Allegre Pacheco quoted eyewitness in the
Zeitun district as saying Israeli troops had ordered about 100
civilians to get into the house and stay there, out of their
way. But the following day the house was hit by Israeli shells.
"There are no bomb shelters in Gaza," she said.
The Israeli army said it was investigating the incident.
Speaking to Reuters from his hospital bed in Gaza, the boy
recounted how his family came to be herded into the building
that was later targeted.
"We were asleep when the tanks and the planes struck, we all
slept in one room," Samouni said in a weak voice. "One shell hit
our house. Thank God we were not hit."
"We ran out of the house and saw 15 men ... they landed from
helicopters on rooftops of buildings." Soldiers beat residents
and forced them all into one house.
After it was hit the next day and his mother was among those
killed, Samouni kept his three younger brothers alive and tried
to help injured adults lying among the dead.
"There was no water, no bread, nothing to eat," he said.
Local Red Cresent rescue workers and a team from the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) managed to reach the house on Jan.7 after being denied access by the Israeli military for what the Red Cross called an "unacceptable" period. The children were starving when help finally reached the
place, the Geneva-based ICRC said.
"They were too weak to stand up on their own. One man was
also found alive, too weak to stand up. In all there were at
least 12 corpses lying on mattresses," it said.
Earth redoubts built by Israeli bulldozers blocked the
streets so the ambulances could not get close. "The wounded had
to be brought out on donkey carts," Pacheco told Reuters.
"This is a shocking incident," said Pierre Wettach, ICRC
chief for Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories.
The ICRC accused Israel of delaying ambulance access to the
area and demanded it grant safe access for Palestinian Red
Crescent ambulances to return to evacuate more wounded.
"The Israeli military must have been aware of the situation
but did not assist the wounded. Neither did they make it
possible for us or the Palestinian Red Crescent to assist the
wounded," he said.
In a written response, the Israeli army said it works in
coordination with international aid bodies "so that civilians
can be provided with assistance" and that it "in no way
intentionally targets civilians".
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