What happened at Jenin

Under the rubble of the refugee camp

Apr 18th 2002 | JENIN REFUGEE CAMP
>From The Economist print edition

MANY facts are known, others are still contested. On April 2nd
the Israeli army invaded Jenin as part of its military operations
to root out the Palestinian "terrorist infrastructure" which, in
Israel's mind, now includes the Palestinian Authority. The
conquest took three days. Then the army laid siege to the refugee
camp just outside the town.

The camp had been among the prime targets of Israel's assault on
the West Bank, along with the casbah in Nablus and the
Palestinian gunmen sheltering in churches in Bethlehem's old
city. Huddled on a northern mountain-side lush with cypress
trees, it has long been a bastion of Yasser Arafat's Fatah
movement and, recently, of Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Of the 100
Palestinian suicide bombers in the 18 months of the intifada, 23
were bred in its warren of poverty, breezeblock shelters, sloping
lanes and a militant brew of Palestinian nationalism and radical
Islam. "The Palestinian Authority doesn't really exist here. It's
the fighters who run things," said a camp resident, before the
invasion.

For five days Israeli helicopters and tanks relentlessly rocketed
the square kilometre of the camp to soften the resolve of the 160
Palestinian militiamen holed up within it. Men aged 15 to 45 were
ordered by loudspeaker to surrender. Hundreds did so. They were
stripped to their underwear, manacled, hooded, beaten and finally
dumped in neighbouring villages. Some were used as human shields
in front of the army as it pushed its way into people's houses.
Women and children were told to flee to Jenin town.

By April 8th a UN official estimated that perhaps half of the
camp's 13,000 refugees had gone. The army then tried to breach
the camp's interior with infantry. "We figured it would be a
breeze," one reservist told Haaretz newspaper. It wasn't.
Instead, 23 Israeli soldiers were killed, including 13 on April
9th from an elaborate ambush involving a suicide bomber, a
booby-trapped house and a hail of gunfire.

It was then that the army took the decision to crush the
resistance once and for all. There was an intensive blitz of
shelling into the camp's heart, followed by an invasion of tanks
and bulldozers, tearing down everything that stood in their way.
The army insists civilians were given fair warning that the
thrust was coming. Palestinians say it was a massacre, with
anywhere between 100 and 500 Palestinians killed, most of them
buried beneath the razed buildings.

Neither claim can be proved or refuted. What is beyond doubt is
that the camp one week on from the invasion is a scene of
devastation that has had no equal throughout Israel's 34-year
conquest and occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.

There is literally no house without bullet marks. Some have had
lower floors sheared away by the blades of bulldozers or tracks
of tanks. From one three-storey house all that is left is a
stairwell, hanging in the ether, descending into nothing.

This is the lesser destruction. The camp's residential core—the
last redoubt of the fighters—resembles an earthquake. Vast
craters have been ploughed, girdled by shored-up mountains of
earth, topped by concrete avalanches of houses, offices, a
restaurant. It is a massive furrow the size of three football
pitches.

There is a mass grave beneath it, insist Palestinians. Or,
rather, say many, there was before the Israelis collected the
corpses and sped them away while keeping the Red Cross, the UN
and other independent witnesses firmly at bay. "I saw the
soldiers dumping the dead in trucks...I saw this with my own
eyes," says a woman from the camp.

Less disputable acounts of horror are legion. A man describes
what happened to his neighbours, the Fayed family. "We heard the
bulldozers coming. Jamal told the soldiers they couldn't evacuate
so quickly because of his disabled son. The soldiers suspected he
was a wounded fighter. They pulled down the house with the son
inside. That's where he's buried." He points to a mound of earth.

Other Palestinians describe how, in the chaos of the assault,
they had no idea whether they were supposed to stay in their
homes or flee. "The orders were confused," says one. "Some
soldiers told us to get out, others told us there was a curfew.
We decided to run and were immediately fired upon by the army. I
have a wife, four daughters and three sons. I haven't seen them
since that moment. I don't know if they're alive or dead."

Whether there was a warning or not, the evidence of the Israeli
army's absolute negligence in trying to protect civilian life is
everywhere. One man describes how his elderly father was shot in
the head while getting water from his kitchen, six metres from
the room in which his family was sheltering. The son could not
reach his father for six days because of the intensity of the
shelling.

Nearby is the shell of another family home. Flies hover. There is
the sweet, acrid stench of human decomposition. Three corpses lie
inside. They might have been fighters or civilians. It is
impossible to tell. Flesh, skulls and clothes have been burnt to
a blackened pulp.

The army says the dead were left for so long because Palestinians
refused to gather them, "for propaganda purposes", a brigadier
told Haaretz. A Palestinian doctor seethes with rage. "We could
not leave our homes and the army refused to let any medic,
Palestinian or foreign, into the camp for five days. How on earth
could we remove them?"

On April 16th refugees in the camp picked through the detritus of
their lives. A woman trips over a house reduced to a petrified
mess of glass, crushed stone and tangled wire. Others are frantic
for news about sons, daughters, husbands and wives missing in
battle or in flight. Hundreds gather in a mosque used by the army
as an observation post: there are torn Korans on the floor, piles
of cigarette butts and empty vodka bottles.

"My husband was a fighter from Hamas," yells a woman at a gaggle
of journalists. "And I am proud he was a martyr...Where were you
when the Jews were killing us?" Alone, she mellows a little. She
looks out from a home without walls above a lake of sewage that
was once the camp's main street. Two of her sons are missing. Her
daughter's eyes are blank. "I know I will see him again in
heaven," she says. "But I would have liked to have his wedding
ring...it's under the rubble."


Copyright © 2002 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group.
All rights reserved.


Full at:
http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID=1087359

Reply via email to