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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. |  
       
        Simultaneous Solidarity Marches Held On Northern And 
		Southern Borders Of Gaza Strip Friday January 01, 2010 17:07 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News  As a group of Israeli peace activists gathered near the Erez crossing 
		on the northern border of the Gaza Strip, 1200 international activists 
		with the 'Gaza Freedom March' held a rally in Cairo to commemorate the 
		one-year anniversary of the Israeli invasion of Gaza. The Cairo march 
		was attacked by Egyptian police, injuring several demonstrators.
 Cairo Protest - Gaza Freedom March
 
 After over 1200 
		international delegates with the 'Gaza Freedom March' were denied entry 
		into the Gaza Strip on Wednesday (100 members of the delegation were 
		allowed to enter), the group organized a protest march and rally in 
		Cairo Thursday, which was attacked by Egyptian riot police.
 
 The 
		Egyptian police an security forces used excessive against members of the 
		Gaza Freedom March, while some activists were forcibly detained in 
		hotels around the town of Liala, while other marchers were forced into 
		pens in Tahir square.
 
 There were several reports of Egyptian 
		police brutality as the legal hotline of the March was flooded with 
		calls pertaining kicking women and forcing them to the ground, and 
		dragging them.
 
 Several international activists were injured after 
		being violently attacked by the Egyptian police, and at least one person 
		suffered a broken rib.
 
 The Gaza Freedom March was organized to 
		focus attention on the one-year mark since Israel’s 22-day assault, 
		which killed more than 1,400 Palestinians, injured more than 5,000. 
		Although the invasion technically ended, the effects on the ground have 
		only worsened in the past 12 months. No re-building materials have been 
		allowed in and more than 80 percent of Gazans are now dependent on 
		handouts for food.
 
 The marchers had planned to enter Gaza through 
		Egypt’s Rafah Crossing on Dec. 27, then to join with an estimated 50,000 
		Palestinian residents to march to Erez Crossing into Israel to 
		peacefully demand an end to the siege. However, the government of 
		Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak announced just days before the hundreds 
		of delegates began arriving in Cairo that the march would not be allowed 
		to
 go forward.
 
 It cited ongoing tensions at the border. When 
		marchers demonstrated against the decision, the government cracked down, 
		often using heavily armed riot police to encircle and intimidate the 
		nonviolent marchers.
 
 Ali Abunimah,co-founder of the electronic 
		Intifada website,and a participant in the March, said that the pressure 
		should be kept up and protests should continue in order to build 
		international support to end the unjust siege of the Gaza Strip.
 
 
 
 
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