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willcome
Israeli Heroes Kill Ten-year-old Bird Terrorist Mark Unseen   Nov 8 04:16 UTC 2003

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=461648

Mahmud, 10, went looking for songbirds ... and died in hail of bullets
By Justin Huggler in Shajiyeh, Gaza Strip
08 November 2003


Mahmud al-Qayed was out doing what he did every Friday - catching 
songbirds in cages to sell in the markets of Gaza. But yesterday the 
remote olive groves where the birds nest led him close to the fence 
separating the Gaza Strip from Israel. Too close for the soldiers 
guarding the fence.

They shot Mahmud, 10, four times, killing him as he tried to run.

The boy's father, Mohammed, was with him, and, at the funeral, he told 
how he took the bloodstained sweater from his son's dead body, and 
buried his face in it.

Mahmud was one of a group of about 20 - the rest were adults - who 
ventured out to the fence to catch the songbirds, which can fetch good 
money in the markets. There are plenty of witnesses who saw the group 
on their way to the fence, and confirm that they were there to catch 
birds.

But the Israeli army said that it had spotted three people laying what 
it says were electric wires and tubes used in explosives, and that is 
why it opened fire. According to the witnesses, what the group were 
laying were the cages that trap the birds.

This was not the first time a birdcatcher has been killed next to the 
fence here. Mahmud was the fifth to die here since the intifada began 
in 2000. He was the youngest, but before him a 15-year-old and a 13-
year-old had also been killed.

It is a beautiful spot, narrow lanes fringed by tall cactus lead to 
the largely undisturbed olive groves that are home to the songbirds. 
In these autumn nights, the air is full of the smoke of the woodfires 
that warm the locals.

But on the other side of the fence may be seen a completely different 
landscape of vast, open modern fields and the Israeli farm town of 
Nakhal Oz, which in the past has been a target for attacks by 
Palestinian militants.

The Israeli army has declared the olive groves in this area off-limits 
to Palestinians, to protect Nakhal Oz.

But, in spite of the danger, the birdcatchers still come. Money and 
work are desperately scarce, and what was once a hobby has become, for 
many, a living.

Last week, said Mahmud's father, the boy managed to catch two song-
sparrows and a rare songbird, a khudr. In normal times, this rare bird 
alone could fetch almost  100. In the current economic collapse, the 
boy sold all three for less than  10. But it was still enough to buy 
himself a new bicycle, and not many children can afford those in Gaza 
these days.

A witness, who would give his name only as Abu Subhi, who lives near 
the olive groves and saw the birdcatchers on their way to plant their 
traps, says the Israeli soldiers should be well aware that the 
birdcatchers still come and are no threat. He says some visit the 
groves almost every day.

Last night the Israeli army insisted that the only reason for 
Palestinians to move close to the fence was to attack Nakhal Oz.

Surrounded by mourners at the funeral, Mahmud's father, Mohammed, told 
how his son had been killed. "We left home at around 5am. My 
neighbour, my son and I," he said.

"I was driving the donkey-cart. We got to Shajiyeh at around 6am. We 
put out our traps and waited for the birds. We were about 700 metres 
from the border. They [Israeli forces] fired two shells, that landed 
near the electricity pylon, about 200 metres from us. We stayed on the 
ground because we were waiting for the birds. Then we saw five 
soldiers approaching with helmets and everything. I ran. My son could 
not get away."

Nimur abu 'As'us, a 26-year-old who was with the group, was wounded 
and witnessed Mahmud's death.

Speaking from a hospital bed, he said: "The soldiers chased us. I was 
running, the boy was running too. They shot at both of us. I was hit 
in the leg. They hit him with four bullets. They shouted to stop and 
he stopped. I kept running, I looked back and I saw him stop. I saw 
the bullets hit him. If he hadn't stopped perhaps they would have 
killed both of us."

His face grew dark. "Perhaps the fact he stopped saved my life."

After that, he said, a crowd of Palestinians came running to see what 
was happening and the soldiers gave up the chase. At first, Mr 'As'us 
said, the soldiers took Mahmud's body away, then later returned it.

Mohammed said: "I took his sweater. I hugged it, then I buried my face 
in his blood. It was wrong to kill him. He was young, he was no 
threat, he just wanted to catch a bird. Where are the human rights? 
Where are the children's rights?

"They kill children. That is wrong."
92 responses total.
other
response 1 of 92: Mark Unseen   Nov 8 05:50 UTC 2003

Peace will come only when the Palestinians love their children more 
than they hate Israel.
eprom
response 2 of 92: Mark Unseen   Nov 8 06:28 UTC 2003

wow....that's sad.
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