AP, Tira
 In this Friday, March 30, 2012, file photo, Arab Israeli protesters wave Palestinian flags as they gather to mark the annual Land Day event in the Arab Village of Dir Hana, northern Israel. Photo: AP
In this Friday, March 30, 2012, file photo, Arab Israeli protesters wave Palestinian flags as they gather to mark the annual Land Day event in the Arab Village of Dir Hana, northern Israel. Photo: AP
Facing the threat of rocket fire along with the rest of Israel, residents in this central Israeli Arab town have found themselves caught in the middle between Jewish neighbors and their fellow Palestinians who are dying in growing numbers in the Gaza Strip.
The people of Tira, a town of some 25,000 people known for their warm relations with nearby Jewish communities, have Jewish friends, speak Hebrew fluently and are largely integrated into Israeli society. But with relatives in Gaza and the West Bank, they also empathize with the Palestinians.
That internal strain becomes especially hard during times of violence, and tensions have risen since the latest round of fighting between Israel and Hamas militants began on July 8.
"The Jews look at us like Arabs and the Arabs look at us like Jews," said Ahmad Nasser, 21. "We are in the middle."
The markets in Tira are usually packed on the weekend with Israeli shoppers. But business has slowed down to a trickle in the weeks since the conflict began, perhaps because Israeli-Arab relations have soured or simply because no one feels like going out in such times, said Mohammed Abdulchai, 52. He said the war has been bad for business, with the fear of rockets shared by everyone.
"The rocket doesn't know if you are a Jew or an Arab," he said.
Arab towns are just as vulnerable as those of Jews, perhaps even more so because they have less means of protection. Of the three civilians killed by rocket fire since the war began, one has been a Jew, one has been an Arab and one has been a Thai 
Arabs make up about 20 percent of Israel's 8 million residents and, unlike their Palestinian brethren in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, hold citizenship rights. But they often complain of being treated as second-class citizens. Most don't serve in the military, which is mandatory for Jews, and many Jews consider them disloyal for sympathizing with the country's enemies.
The fighting in Gaza has brought the tensions out in the open. Israelis have been outraged by some Israeli Arabs staging pro-Palestinian protests in which they have thrown rocks and blocked streets. Arabs say they have encountered increasing racism and violence from hawkish Israelis as well as calls for Arab businesses to be boycotted and for those who have posted support for Gaza on Facebook to be fired.
In this Thursday, Jan. 9, 2014, file photo, Israeli Arab girls look for passing cars to hand out Muslim prayer books to in the main street in the Arab town of Taybeh, central Israel. Photo: AP
In this Thursday, Jan. 9, 2014, file photo, Israeli Arab girls look for passing cars to hand out Muslim prayer books to in the main street in the Arab town of Taybeh, central Israel. Photo: AP
More than 1,000 Palestinians, mainly civilians, have been killed and more than 6,000 wounded over the past 19 days, Palestinian health official Ashraf al-Kidra said. Israeli strikes have destroyed hundreds of homes and forced tens of thousands of people to flee, according to Palestinian rights groups.
Israel says it started the military operation and sent ground forces into Gaza to stop the relentless rocket fire and to destroy a sophisticated network of Hamas tunnels that could be used to infiltrate into Israel.
It says it is doing its utmost to prevent civilian casualties, including by sending evacuation warnings to residents in targeted areas, and blames Hamas for putting civilians in harm's way. Israel has lost 43 soldiers. Israel's Iron Dome missile defense system has kept the number of casualties from rocket fire low, but air raid sirens are a constant reminder of the threat to Israeli communities.
"What's happening in Gaza is just pushing us apart and adding fuel to the fire," said Ahmad Daas, a 27-year-old from Tira. "We don't want to ruin our good relations with Jews, but on the other hand, emotionally, we are Arabs. It's only human that we hurt when we see the images from Gaza of people getting killed ... war is not the solution."
He and a group of friends were watching coverage of the fighting on Al-Jazeera, they said, to get a better sense of the carnage in Gaza than they would on Israeli TV.
Mohammed Hamed Abed said he worries both about the safety of an Israeli friend called up to the reserves and Palestinians living in Gaza. He feels a part of Israel and equally targeted by the rocket fire from Gaza. But the 27-year-old said that unlike some Arabs who identified more closely with the Israeli position, he couldn't accept the alarmingly high number of children being killed and placed the blame on Israel.
"At the end of the day we are Arabs and we are sensitive to this. Those are our brothers in Gaza," he said. "If they are firing rockets from there it is self-defense."
Jafar Farah, director of Mossawa, the advocacy center for Arab citizens in Israel, said Israeli Arabs had a particularly hard time because they could see the suffering and growing extremism on both sides.
"What the army is doing in Gaza is just creating more enemies," he said. "Our identification is not with Hamas, it is with the Palestinian people."
He said Israelis and Palestinians had to learn to live together and that after all the killing was over they would still come back to the only real formula that could work: an end to occupation and two states living side by side in peace and prosperity.
"I don't want my Jewish neighbors to live in fear, in sadness and in war," he said. "I don't want Hamas to fire rockets and I don't want to see people killed in Gaza."
"We are the normal ones here and our message is just stop all of this," he said.
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 GAZA CITY: The world has reacted in disgust to pictures of the indiscriminate slaughter of civilians in Gaza, including women and children, since Israel launched an offensive against Hamas 20 days ago.

In France, several hundred people also flouted a ban to protest after an attempt to halt yesterday’s demonstration following an attack on a synagogue and Jewish-owned shops in a Paris suburb. The demonstrators ignored calls from Bernard Cazeneuve, the interior minister, for the ban to be observed, after he claimed chatter on social networks had indicated a risk it could become a “cortège of violence”.

Other pro-Gaza demonstrations were also mounted in cities around the globe, including Dublin, Singapore, Washington DC, San Francisco, Auckland and Melbourne.

Israel launched its offensive almost three weeks ago in an effort to stop Hamas from firing rockets from Gaza. The Israeli army, which has sophisticated military equipment purchased from the West, is also seeking to destroy tunnels dug by militants to infiltrate Israel. In London, the protesters caused traffic jams around Hyde Park and the West End as they marched from the Israeli embassy to Whitehall, berating David Cameron and chanting: “This is not a war. This is not a demonstration. This is a massacre.”

The mood was staunchly pro-Palestinian. Placards included slogans such as “Stop the killing” and “Free Palestine”, while the protesters chanted “Israel is a terror state”, “Gaza don’t you cry, we will never let you die”, and “Allahu Akbar”.

Christina Stead, 48, from Kensington, said: “Israel is trying to exterminate the people of Palestine. That makes me feel quite helpless. I think everyone should participate.”

Lesley Hoskins, a historian from north London, was in the crowd with her children and grandchildren. “The situation is appalling. We are here because people need to know it’s important so that the British and Israeli government can’t just go on thinking this is OK,” she said. “I’m not particularly political, but children and families have been affected by this so we are not going to sit by and ignore it.” —Independent.co.uk
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Ashfaqur Rahman
The Gaza Strip, or simply Gaza, is a Palestinian region on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea. For 11 km, it borders Egypt in the south west. There is Israel on its east and north along a 51 km border. This small sliver of land of 360 sq km has 1.8 million people, of whom 98 % are Sunni Muslims. It generates a GDP of $ 6.6 billion and a per capita GDP of $ 6,000. Gaza has a 4,000 year history when various dynasties, empires and peoples ruled it.
Gaza expanded in the first half of the 20th century under mandatory Palestine. But after the 1948 Arab Israeli war, the population of the enclave exploded with Palestinian refugees. Israel occupied it in the Six Day war. But under the Oslo Accords Gaza was given over to the newly established Palestinian National Authority. In 2007, Hamas, a militant organisation seeking full independence from Israel, became the sole governing authority there. Israel could not tolerate existence of such an organisation so close to its territory and imposed many curbs on the movement of the people of Gaza. In 2008-9, Israel militarily attacked Gaza, killed 3,000 people and destroyed 4,000 buildings. Ever since then, Gaza has been periodically attacked by Israel to terrorise the people there.
Gaza is, therefore like, a major prison camp. The 1.8 million people who are crammed into 360 sq km are unable to move from Gaza to the West Bank or other areas and are subject to great harassment and abuse. Israel controls its airspace, territorial water and border crossings. Only Gaza's border with Egypt is open.
There is asymmetrical killing in Gaza too. More Palestinians are killed by Israeli rocket fire than the number killed by Hamas missiles. Thirty or more Israelis have been killed this time round against 800 or more Gazans killed till yesterday.
Since 2006, Israel has been 'collectively punishing' the people of Gaza for electing a Hamas government. It considers Hamas a 'terrorist organisation' bent on doing away with illegal Israeli settlements along Gaza border. These settlements remain a direct threat to the security of the Gaza people. Israel has stopped supply of all daily essentials to the Gazans; simple things like coriander, ginger and even daily newspapers are not allowed in.
Due to this lack of supply of fresh food the children in Gaza are the most malnourished in the world. Together with this, the unemployment rate in Gaza is over 50% of the population. How can Israel claim to be a democratic country when it oppresses children and young men and women by denying them basic opportunities? Today, 30% of the people of Gaza are below the poverty line. The world has silently tolerated Israeli aggression on the people of Gaza with bated breath. The only crime that the people had committed was to elect a government of their choice.
So what is likely to take place in the coming weeks in Gaza? There is no doubt that more Gazans are likely to be killed by Israeli bombs, ground assault and deadly projectiles. More blood will be spilt and more humanitarian suffering for the people of Gaza is in store. Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal has clearly said that in spite of the great odds, the Palestinian and Hamas fighters have made gains against Israel. He now seeks a humanitarian truce but is not willing to agree to a ceasefire until the plight of the Gazans is eased. Hamas clearly wants the Israeli forces to lift the blockade they have around Gaza. It is willing to suffer unless the humanitarian aspects of the plight of the Gazans are mitigated.

All this puts the Israelis and the US in a serious bind. They want a quick end to the war as it is causing too much bad publicity for them. US Secretary of State John Kerry is shuttling between various Arab countries asking them to put pressure on Hamas. The US and Israel both consider Hamas a terrorist organisation and therefore do not talk directly to them. Hamas rejects any proposal that does not come to it directly from Israel or the US. The cease fire brokered by Egypt recently, therefore, failed in a few hours. Hamas was not consulted. Hamas also remains in a dilemma. There is much blood letting and loss of lives of civilians. How long it can bear the brunt of this oppression is also matter of serious concern to Hamas.
An interesting development has been that Hamas has been able to inflict increasing losses on the Israeli military. Already, over 40 military men have been killed. This is making the military realise that the hostility cannot be allowed to persist. Another development is the banning of flights to Tel Aviv airport by the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). This is a body blow to the Israeli economy as tourism to Israel has already dropped and the economy has started to suffer. Hamas, by use of its missiles, has been able to threaten the air space of Israel and close it down. However, the FAA ban is likely to be lifted, if it has not already been. But Hamas has shown that it has the deadly capability to cripple the Israeli economy if it needs to.
Israel has also discovered that Hamas has dug many more underground tunnels between its borders and Egypt, and is able to smuggle sophisticated arms and ammunition into Gaza. The tunnels are also much more undetectable. This has sent fear through the spine of the Israelis. Finally, Hamas missiles are now long distance and getting increasingly accurate. This is keeping the entire Israeli population at bay.
For the first time in many decades the people of Gaza are seeing some hope for their future. If they are able to force the Israeli to agree to more humanitarian terms to a cease fire, and also if effective steps can be ensured to stop attacks on Gaza, there is every reason for the Gazans to stop crying and face the Israeli attacks a little longer to break the back of the camel. So don't cry Gaza, let us see the end of the conflict. This could be the silver lining that had eluded the Gazans for so long
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