Uri Avnery
April 14, 2018
Eyeless in Gaza
WRITE DOWN: I, Uri Avnery, soldier number 44410 of the Israel army, hereby dissociate myself from
the army sharpshooters who murder unarmed demonstrators along the Gaza Strip, and from their
commanders, who give them the orders, up to the commander in chief.
We don't belong to the same army, or to the same state. We hardly belong to the same human race.
IS MY government committing "war crimes" along the border of the Gaza Strip?
I don't know. I am not a jurist.
It seems that officials of the International Criminal Court believe that the acts of our soldiers do
constitute war crimes. They demand an international investigation.
To prevent that, our army command proposes an Israeli military investigation. That is manifestly
ridiculous
–
an army investigating itself about acts committed on direct orders of the Chief of Staff.
As was published in advance, sharpshooters were posted along the border fence and ordered to kill
"ringleaders" of the unarmed protesters on the other side of the fence. The Gaza leadership had
announced that these unarmed protests were to take place every week, after Friday prayers, until
Naqba Day.
During the first two Fridays, 29 unarmed people were shot dead and more than a thousand wounded
by sharpshooters.
For me this is not a judicial question. It is a crime, not only against the unarmed protesters. It is also a
crime against the State of Israel, against the people of Israel and against the Israeli army.
Since I was a member of that army on the day of its foundation, I think that it is also a crime against my
comrades and me.
THIS WEEK a short video, recorded by a soldier at the time of such an action, was widely seen in
Israel.
It shows the action from the angle of a soldier who was obviously standing next to a sharpshooter. The
sharpshooter sees the demonstrators from a distance of hundreds of yards. The hairs of his sights
move at random, than settle on an individual. He shoots. The person drops on the spot.
A joyous cry "Yesh" is heard all around from unseen soldiers who have been watching. "Yesh" means
"got him", a jubilant yell, such as would accompany a hunter's success in killing a rabbit.
Many hundreds of thousands of Israelis have seen this film by now, since it was shown for the first time
on TV. Except for a few articles and letters to the editor (in Haaretz), there has been no protest.
This did not happen overseas, in some remote colony. It happened right next to us, 45 minute's drive
from my home.