So far, dozens of people, including a reporter, have been killed and hundreds have been injured in clashes on the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel. Nineteen people died on March 30, when a standoff at the border grew into clashes with the Israeli forces, making that Friday the deadliest single day in the territory since a 2014 war with the Jewish state.
Violence Point Zero
On March 30 tens of thousands of Palestinians including women and children gathered in camps down the fence. The rallies, inspired by the Palestinian Islamic fundamentalist organization Hamas, commemorate “Land Day” when Arabs honor the six Palestinian protesters who were shot and killed by the IDF in 1976 and are planned to last till mid-May.
What was meant to be a peaceful standoff has grown into violent clashes; the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), which doubled its military personnel in the area and deployed snipers, opened fire, used tear gas and other anti-riot means to prevent the protesters from crossing the border.
The IDF claimed the protesters were not peaceful, threw Molotov cocktails, stones and set tires on fire, while terrorists tried to infiltrate the Israeli territory.
About 40,000 Palestinians were reported to protest; 19 people have been killed, with more than a thousand injured.
Second Day of Unrest
On March 31 hundreds of protesters returned to several areas while others buried their dead.
While Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas blamed the violence on Israel, having declared March 31 a national day of mourning, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the soldiers for “protecting” Israel’s “sovereignty and the security of its citizens.” Tel Aviv has, in turn, accused Hamas for the brutal protests, saying that “the IDF would not allow the security fence to be turned into an area of terror.”
The UN Security Council after an emergency meeting accused Israel of disproportionate and violent reactions against the demonstrators, while a statement urging restraint and calling for an investigation was blocked by the US.
The Israeli Defense Minister rejected the accusations, as well as excluded the possibility of such an inquiry, praising his military.
New Deaths After Friday’s Violence
The IDF head warned demonstrators that those who approach the fence between Gaza and Israel put "their life in danger."
Later that week a Palestinian died from shot in the chest by Israeli forces. On April 5, another man was killed by an Israeli airstrike.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres said in his own April 5 statement that he "particularly" urges "Israel to exercise extreme caution with the use of force in order to avoid casualties. Civilians must be able to exercise their right to demonstrate peacefully."
New Friday, New Victims
On April 6 the protests resumed with more violent clashes. Some of the protesters set tires on fire to protect themselves from Israeli snipers.
Israeli soldiers deployed tear gas again and opened fire to disperse demonstrators, marching towards the border.
An estimated 20,000 demonstrators rallied at the border that day. Ten Palestinians, including a reporter, were killed, a Palestinian health ministry spokesman told Sputnik. Hundreds were wounded.
Weeks of Protests to Come
The protest, dubbed “The Great March of Return,” marked the so-called Land Day, an annual commemoration of the deaths of six Arab citizens killed by Israeli forces during demonstrations over 1976 government land confiscations. At the same time, the march focused on the forthcoming Nakba (disaster in Arabic), when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced after Israel announced its independence in 1948.
Currently, the protesters are pressing for the return of Palestinian refugees to the territories they claim were illegally seized by Israel, while Israeli authorities demand that Palestinians settle only in Gaza and the West Bank.
In December 2017, US President Donald Trump announced his decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and instructed the US State Department to launch the process of relocating the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
The move prompted worldwide condemnation, sparking unrest across the Middle East, with thousands of people taking to the streets to protest the decision throughout the Arab world. As a response to the recognition, Palestinian Islamic fundamentalist organization Hamas announced the beginning of the third "intifada" against Israel.