Narratives Under Siege
(6): Abed Rabbo St, East Jabaliya

Old Photos for Jaqueline and Iyad
Abu Shebak
“I heard shooting, then
screaming. I rushed upstairs to see what had happened, and they were
both on the floor. Jaqueline was already dead, but Iyad was still
alive. The neighbours called an ambulance and we ran to the hospital
with him, but he died as soon as we arrived.”
East Jabaliya in the
northern Gaza Strip bore the brunt of Israel’s latest military
incursion into Gaza. The incursion, which was launched in the early
hours of Thursday February 28, lasted four days and nights. In that
time Israeli troops killed 108 Palestinians, including 54 unarmed
civilians, 26 of whom were children. The Palestinians who live in
and around Abed Rabbo Street in east Jabaliya suffered intense air
strikes by F16 planes and helicopters, tank shelling, snipers, and
having their houses invaded and vandalised by Israeli soldiers, who
tied adults up with ropes, or else locked whole families into single
rooms in order to use their homes as sniper towers to target local
Palestinian fighters. Sixteen year old Jaqueline Abu Shebak and her
fourteen year old brother, Iyad both lived on Abed Rabbo Street with
their mother and three other young brothers and sisters. The
children's uncle, Hatem Hosni Abu shebak, who lives next door, found
the bodies of Jaqueline and Iyad in the early hours of Saturday
March 1st, when he rushed upstairs after hearing intense shooting
and then screaming.
“I hear shooting and
Iyad was screaming. As I ran upstairs the shooting continued, and
both children were on the living room floor “he says, as we sit in
the blood-stained living room where Jaqueline died and Iyad was
critically injured. “I tried to revive them, but Jaqueline was
dead, and even though Iyad was alive and making sounds we could not
save him. We had to wait for an ambulance because my car had been
shelled by an Israeli tank." Hattim Abu Shebak shows us the mirrors
and windows shattered by bullets, the bullet holes in the walls, and
the children’s blood on the furniture.
The Israeli soldiers who
killed Jaqueline and Iyad had occupied the house opposite, and were
holding Ramez Etbail and his family hostage so they could use the
house to shoot at local Hamas fighters. The Israelis fired straight
through the kitchen window of the Abu- Shebak house, striking
Jaqueline and Iyad who were both cowering in the corner. Their
mother was in her own bedroom trying protecting her youngest child
from the onslaught of bullets.
The children’s father,
Mohammed Hosni Abu Shebak, works as a security guard in Ramallah, in
the West Bank. He has been in Ramallah since Hamas’ takeover of the
Gaza Strip in June 2007.
As soon as the Israeli
military withdrew from northern Gaza, at around 6 am on Monday 3
March, people came out onto the streets of Jabaliya in order to
start to bury their dead. As we drove through Jabaliya just hours
later, funerals were being held in street after street.
Israel has described its
incursion into Gaza as a “routine” military operation. However, the
Israeli military's intentions were made clear prior to the
incursion, when Internal Security Minister Avi Dichter stated that
unlawful rocket fire by armed Palestinians must be stopped
“Irrespective of the cost to the Palestinians.”
The use of excessive
lethal force, and the targeting of civilians during a military
operation are both illegal under international human rights law
including the Fourth Geneva Convention. Jabaliya is one of the most
densely populated places on earth, which makes it impossible for
Israeli troops to distinguish between military targets and
civilians. Israel’s deliberate and continual use of excessive lethal
force in densely populated areas of the Gaza Strip has killed 237
Palestinians, including 128 civilians in the Gaza Strip this year.
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Majid Abu
Jelhum lives in a small quiet street about a kilometre
from Abed Rabbo Street. On Saturday morning Majid and
his wife were inside their house whilst four of their
young children were playing in the garden. The area was
quiet – Majid says there had been no fighting near his
home and he though his children would be safe in their
own garden. At around 8.30 am he heard an explosion, and
his young son cried out for help. |

Bereaved Majid Abu Jelhum |
“I ran to the garden,
and Selsabil was on unconscious the ground; she’d been hit by a
small rocket.” Selsabil’s two young sisters, and her brother who had
cried out for help were also injured by the rocket strike. The four
children were rushed to Shifa Hospital in the Gaza city, which has
been overwhelmed with deaths and injuries throughout the Israeli
incursion. Selsabil died half an hour after arriving at Shifa
hospital. She was two year old.
There are many other
equally horrific cases of children having been killed during this
supposed routine military operation. On February 28, four young
cousins were struck by Israeli rockets whilst playing football in an
open area near their home in El-Qerem Street, East Jabaliya. The
four children, nine year old Mohammad Na’im Hammouda, eight year old
Ali Munir Dardouna, twelve year old Dardouna Deeb Dardouna and
fourteen year old Omar Hussein Dardouna were dismembered by the
rockets. Mohammed's father, Naim Hamouda, told Ibrahim Sourani, a
human rights lawyer at the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights that,
when he found the four dead children, he could not identify which
one of them was his son, because the bodies had been completely torn
apart.
The Israeli Prime
Minister, Ehud Olmert has threatened that the military operation is
not over, but has merely been suspended and will be resumed. The
civilian population of the Gaza Strip, including the stunned
residents of Abed Rabbo St, are waiting to see whether Israel will
launch more attacks against them – and hoping the outside world will
meanwhile finally speak out on their behalf.