sexta-feira, 31 de julho de 2015

Rogue IDF: O. Protective Edge 24° Dia

Ajude Gaza concretamente boicotando Israel e contribuindo no site abaixo:

Quinta-feira, dia 31 de julho de 2014
For many years, the U.S. has stored weapons in Israel. While continuing to call for a ceasefire, they transferred part of these munitions to the IDF, including rocket launchers, 40mm grenades and 120mm mortar rounds
While agreeing to a 72-hour humanitarian ceasefire set to begin on 1 August at 8:00, the IDF anounced they would be calling up an additional 18.000 reservists, bringing the toal do 64 soldiers - both Israelis nationals and foreign Jihadists Jews.

Remembering the dead during Israeli offensive on Thursday, July 31. 
Below, only Palestinian identified victims. 
Nome dos mortos palestinos no dia 31 de julho.
Source/Fonte: IMEMC-International Midlle East Media Center. 2015.
  1. Suleiman Baraka, 31, Gaza
  2. Aref Baraka, 58.
  3. Ahmed al-Loah, 22, Gaza.
  4. Baraa' Yousef, 19. Gaza.
  5. Maha Abdul-Nabi Salim Abu Hilal, Rafah.
  6. Majdi Mohammad Ahmad Fseifis, 34, Khan Younis.
  7. Mohammad Juma’ an-Najjar, 32, Khan Younis
  8. Mahar an-Najjar, 
  9. Mahmoud Fouad an-Najjar.
  10. Hani Abdullah Abu Mustafa, Khan Younis.
  11. Hanan Yusef Abu T'aima, Khan Younis.
  12. Mohammad Daher, Gaza.
  13. Fadel Nader Almeghari, 27, Rafah.
  14. Mahdiyya Suleiman Omar Abu Louly, 58, Khan Younis.
  15. Tha'er Naji al-Amour, 22, Khan Younis.
  16. Mohammed Yousef Al-Abadla, 21, Khan Younis.
  17. Abdullah abu Shabab 20, Khan Younis.
  18. Alaa' 'Alweh 22, Khan Younis.
  19. Ahmed Salim Abdin , Khan Younis.
  20. Mohamed Ahmed Hamad, Khan Younis.
  21. Atiyyeh Salameh al-Hashash, 68, Rafah.
  22. Hamza Fa'ek Ahmad al-Haddad, 20, eastern Gaza City
  23. Ibrahim Asa'ad Ahmad al-Haddad, 21.
  24. Mohammad Ammar Sharaf, 10, Gaza City.
  25. Mohammed Ra'fat Na'eem, Gaza Old City.
  26. Husam Ra’fat Na'eem, Gaza Old City.
  27. Kamal Abdul-karim al-Louh, 32, Deir al-Bala
  28. Ibrahim Abdul-karim al-Louh, 29,
  29. Khaled Nasr al-Louh, 46.
  30. Amaal Abdul-karim al-Masri, 48, Deir al-Bala.
  31. Ilham Yahya al-Louh, 27, Deir al-Bala.
  32. Samih Kamal Abu al-Kheir, 63, Khan Younis.
  33. Othman Fawzi ‘Abdeen, 17, Khan Younis.
  34. Siham al-Ham, Khan Younis, Nusseirat.
  35. Mohammad Adel Ashour, Nusseirat.
  36. Renad Ashraf Ashour, Nusseirat.
  37. Abeer Nahed al-‘Ata, Nusseirat.
  38. Naima Darwish Abu Shouq, Nusseirat.
  39. Zaher Tawfiq Abu Maktoum, Nusseirat.
  40. Ama’ Rafat al-‘Asa, Nusseirat.
  41. Hasan Nassr Zaqqout, Nusseirat.
  42. Labibeh Abu Shouqa, 23, Nusseirat.
Reservista da IDF denuncia para a C4 o crime de guerra

Ativista do ISM (http://palsolidarity.org/) relata a execução

 Reservistas da IDF, forças israelenses de ocupação,
Shovrim Shtika - Breaking the Silence
38No one spoke about that at all
Rank: Staff Sergeant.   Unit: Armored Corp:s
In the talk you had with the commander, was the word ‘war’ used?
The word ‘operation’ was used – ‘war’ was not – but I think something in the atmosphere, after that morning in Shuja’iyya for sure, projected war. In the way they told us, “There’s a house and we’ll go in first with the air force, and then with tank shelling, and then you guys go in ‘wet’ (with live fire).” In that situation it’s a bit hard to even consider it an operation. There was something that had ‘war’ written all over it – something really difficult, really serious. 
Did they discuss rules of engagement with you? What’s permitted and what’s forbidden?
During training, in that respect, [they told us] that we only enter houses ‘wet,’ with grenades, and the more of them the better – and [grenade] launchers if you can use them. You’re going to ‘open’ a house? Don’t take any chances, use your grenade launcher, utilize every effective tool you’ve got. Aim, fire and only then go in. You don’t know if there is or isn’t someone in there. Go in ‘wet’ with grenades, with live fire. These were the orders for entering houses.
How does one launch a grenade at a house?
You move back to a distance that’s effective for a grenade launcher. I don’t know – it explodes from about *** meters, more or less. You walk a distance back, and lob it through the window, into the house. These were the scenarios for which we trained. We weren’t presented with scenarios of ‘terrorist, not terrorist.’ [We were told] “This is the house, first thing – aim.” Instructors from the GOC (Ground Arms Command) would tell us, “Aim your weapon, fire the grenade, and then after that enter the house ‘wet.’” And this is after the commander says, “To ‘open’ a house, we start with two tank shells, and then if it’s necessary we call in the air force.” They tell you, “There is aerial assistance up there at all times. If you need something, speak up. Just say the word.” Eager for battle, in a crazy way. 
Did they discuss [dealing with] uninvolved civilians with you?
No one spoke about that at all. From their point of view, no one should be there at all. If there is [any Palestinian] there – they shouldn’t be. I think there was something very frightening, and also a bit paralyzing in the atmosphere. And I think that the feeling among [the soldiers] too, was that we really need to give it to them.  
39. “When the ‘target list’ is exhausted
Do you know how high-ranking a [Hamas] militant needs to be in order for his residence be incriminated as the ‘house of an activist?’
No, and it depends on the stage of combat.
When the ‘target list’ is exhausted, is the threshold of the rank of militants whose residences get struck lowered? 
Absolutely. See, you start the fighting with a very orderly ‘target list’ that has been assembled over a long period of time, and there are also units whose objective is to mark new targets in real-time. And when we start running out [of targets], then we begin hitting targets that are higher on collateral damage levels, and pay less and less attention to that –but there are also all sorts of efforts aimed at gathering intelligence that’s specifically for establishing new targets –which means, for example, which areas are being used to launch [missiles or mortars toward Israel], statistics on where rockets are being fired from, where mortars are being fired from. [The coordinates] are calculated in a pretty precise way, and are used to try and figure out where it’s likely that there is rocket-launching infrastructure. And you say, “OK, I’ll strike that piece of land, because every morning at 7:00 AM, 10 mortar shells are fired from there.”
But there’s no information that there are people there carrying out launches – the fact that they go there doesn’t mean anything about that piece of land?
That’s correct.
And yet it would still be considered a launching site?
Possibly, yes.  
Back to school, Sabrine?
Ask Gaza 5: How do you describe Gaza?
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