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Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses. |
We could hear their bodies burning:
Testimonies of victims raise fears over
Israeli use of chemical weapons
Israel's new bombs from the eyes of their victims
Date: 13 / 01 / 2009 Time: 12:23 Gaza – Ma’an –
Everything was on fire; houses, sheds, trees.
Bombs, too,
were everywhere, and with them came the white clouds or the Israeli
white phosphorous bombs, the doctors are now saying.
But for
sure it was a night of terror. We were terrified. We thought we were
going to burn to death.
Bombs were everywhere. That's what
27-year-old Fadia Al-Najjar kept saying. She's from Khuza'a; she was
telling us what kind of horrific night she and her family had just gone
through.
While explaining what had happened, Fadia stood next to
her paramedic husband Ghanem, now surrounded by other medics,
desperately struggling to save his life after he was caught in an
airstrike unlike he had ever seen before.
Ghanem was
incapacitated while on duty trying to bring injured Palestinians to the
hospital. There had been calls reporting mysterious white smoke in the
latest airstrike, and Ghanem was dispatched to attend to the wounded. He
was on duty when he inhaled some of the smoke.
"The shelling
with phosphorous bombs started in Khuza'a. Two of the bombs hit the area
around our house,” Fadia explained. She recalled how the fire spread
quickly throughout the home, and white smoke billowed out the windows.
"Neighbors were screaming, asking for help; the fire was
changing," she remembers. "I woke up my kids, got them to my parents’
house, hoping to find a safer place."
"But the real catastrophe
was two hours after we had moved to my parents’ house; bombs hit their
home too and the fire spread everywhere. The top floor was burnt
completely.”
It's not just her husband Fadia keeps watch over. In
fact, the young mother has to split her time among the hospital's many
wards. Her children have also been hospitalized.
"They wanted to
burn us alive inside the house. There were 40 of us in there. Men,
women, children,” she recalls of the second bombing. "We could hear
their bodies burning."
"We didn't know where to go. Our house,
my parents' house, my in-laws' house? All were burnt, damaged,
destroyed. But where can we go in this weather? It's very cold."
Zakaya
Another relative, 51-year-old Zakaya, said she struggled
to make sense of the chaos and confusion of trying to find her injured
family members at Naser Hospital in the northwest of Gaza City.
Zakaya told Ma'an that she barely remembers what happened, "but at about
10:00pm we heard explosions in several areas of Khaza'a, coming closer
and closer."
"We live so close to the border wall (targeted by
Israel), so we were just so afraid; our fear reached a maximum level."
"The children were asleep, so I tried to wake some of them
because I felt our home was no longer safe," she says. "And all of the
sudden bombs fell all over our two-story house."
"White smoke
filled the house, and suddenly fires were spreading inside," Zakaya
explained while checking on her children at the hospital's intensive
care unit.
"We started screaming; we were so scared. I started
to get the kids outside but the bombing went on and six more bombs fell
on our house."
After the sixth bomb hit the home Zakaya and
those her family was able to get out of the home were forced to abandon
those left in the building. The fire was too hot and the smoke too
intense and no one could get back inside.
"The smoke was
spreading so fast; we couldn't see through it. We couldn't see, but we
could hear.” From the windows of the burning home the cries of her
children and cousins filled the streets. “The cries were not just from
my home, but from the neighbors' house too."
Paramedics arrived
and evacuated some of the last who were rescued from the building. They
braved the smoke and were able to rescue a few others before the entire
building was engulfed in flames.
Adel
According to
48-year-old Adel Kudaih, the night was calm before the bombs hit. Now
that he knows what it was, that it was phosphorous, "it just makes the
situation that more horrible."
Kudaih came hurrying to the
hospital to check up on his children injured by the phosphorous, but he
also remembers how tired he was. He was in great shock, numb, when he
told Ma'an how the "dozens of incendiary bombs fell on civilian houses."
"We could hear women and children screaming in fear," he says.
Many of the bombs fell on the courtyard of his house. "I hurried
inside the house to wake up my twelve children. I was able to evacuate
the house with the help of paramedics and others from the [Hamas-run]
civil-defense team."
"When I was evacuating the house I saw a lot
of houses and fields being burnt, too,” he recalls.
The doctor
Dr Yousuf Abu Al-Reesh, the medical director at Nasser Medical
Center, said more than 90 patients were brought in for burn treatments
Sunday night.
"Most of them were skin burns, lacerations and
deep wounds. A lot of them came in choking, unable to breathe," he
explains.
He explained that as far as he can tell the Israeli
army is using two kinds of bombs, "The first causes severe skin burns
and leads to death, as with 41-year-old Hanan Al-Najjar here, and
others."
"The second kind leads to suffocation, congestion, the
inability to breathe.”
Dr Al-Reesh said that he cannot
confirm that the bombs are white phosphorus, since there are no
specialized laboratories in Gaza. The eyewitness reports and the type of
injuries he has seen in the hospital, however, worry him.
"What
is certain” he said, “is that the Israeli government is using a new kind
of bomb and explosives that Palestinian medics have never even heard
of."
"Not even the Arab medical teams who just arrived can give
us any support," he says.
The doctor pointed out that the wounds
and burns are "terrible and horrific."
"And they can lead to
death, as with Hanan Al-Najjar, who burned to death when a shell
directly hit her body.”
When asked if Israel is deliberately
using weapons that are illegal under international law for use against
civilians, Dr Al-Reesh chooses his words carefully: "I can't rule that
out."
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