| http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,676624,00.html
Without mercy: Israelis execute Arafat's elite guards
Observer
Worldview
Peter Beaumont,
foreign affairs editor Ramallah Sunday March 31, 2002 The Observer
The ambulancemen
were carrying the first body out of the Cairo-Amman bank in the centre
of Ramallah when I came across them. His knees were doubled up in rigor
mortis. One of the legs of his green parachute jumpsuit had been burned
through to the skin by a round fired at such close quarters that the muzzle
flash had ignited the fabric. A gaping wound was visible in his chest
- also apparently from a burst of fire from close range. What killed him,
however, was the gunshot to his temple.
A few minutes
later, the paramedics brought the second body, that of a young man, also
in Yasser Arafat's elite guard unit, Force 17.
Someone
had taken off his boots, revealing his blue socks. The wounds that he
had obviously been clutching when he died were also to his upper body.
But what must have killed him, like his colleague, was a shot fired at
close range to his temple that had demolished the back of his head.
The third
body was of an older man, in his forties, grey-haired with a moustache.
Someone had pulled his parachute suit above his head to hide the wound.
When the stretcher-bearers put him down, the covering was pulled back.
The wound was to the head.
What happened
on the third floor of the Cairo-Amman bank at midnight on Friday during
Israel's occupation of the Palestinian city of Ramallah can only be surmised.
But in the few minutes after Israeli soldiers stormed the Palestinian
position, five men were wounded and five men were put to death by the
Israelis, each with a single coup de grace administered to the head or
throat.
Maher Shalabi,
bureau chief of Abu Dhabi television in Ramallah, was in his office in
the same building when he heard several bursts of heavy shooting on the
floors below. 'I heard heavy shooting; maybe it was an exchange of fire.
But I believe this was an execution.'
Hassan Asfour,
a senior Palestinian negotiator, added: 'They were executed in cold blood.
This is a clear example of the collective execution policy adopted by
the Israeli government against the Palestinian people.'
According
to local residents, the dead men were part of a large group of Palestinian
policemen who had taken shelter in the building, which also houses the
offices of the British council, when the Israeli army entered Ramallah.
The men
had taken shelter in the foyer area on the third floor next to a dentist's
surgery. Yesterday bullet holes spattered the walls and the floor was
flecked with blood. On one wall were large splashes of blood. Elsewhere
several bloody trails had been marked along the floor where someone had
pulled the bodies towards the lift.
An Israeli
army spokesman said soldiers entered the building after Palestinians opened
fire from inside and threw a grenade at the force outside.
The coups
des graces administered for these five men are a metaphor for what the
Israeli incursion is hoping to achieve inside Ramallah. By isolating Arafat
within his headquarters, Sharon hopes to decapitate the Palestinian Authority.
Yesterday,
inside Arafat's compound, it was clear that, for all the claims of Ariel
Sharon, Arafat was neither under threat nor under arrest. Arafat, simply,
was surrounded by the Israelis.
As we approached
the compound we could see the tanks and armoured personnel carriers ringing
his sprawl of offices and barracks. On every side were soldiers taking
positions and aiming their weapons.
Approaching
closer the Israeli army tried to prevent us following a delegation from
the Palestinian solidarity movement into the compound, led by José Bové,
the French farmers leader and anti-globalisation protester.
In a surreal
touch Bové and his colleagues had marched through the ruins of the town,
even as fighting continued. With hands above their heads, and carrying
palm fronds as Easter symbols of peace, they approached Arafat's compound
with two columns of heavily armed Israeli infantry jogging the last few
hundred metres behind.
Seeing Bové,
who had marched through the town with a small group of fellow protesters
bearing a tray of medicines for those still injured inside Arafat's compound,
the soldiers relented and let us enter with him and approach the offices
where Arafat was holed up.
Crossing
a large car park we could see a three-storey block, its walls splattered
with tank fire, two windows blackened by fire with sheets hanging where
the occupants had tried to escape the flames.
I followed
Bové to the entrance to the offices where Arafat was hiding but was grabbed
from behind by an Israeli soldier and pulled away. Arafat may not be a
prisoner but it is the Israelis who choose who goes to see the Palestinian
chairman.
On every
corner yesterday stood Israeli tanks. The devastation that these tanks
have wrought inside the Palestinians' most attractive city has to be seen
to be believed.
Roads have
been dynamited or torn up by tanks. Buildings are burned and shattered.
Everywhere there is rubble, spent ammunition and broken glass.
A little
later, I met Hossam Sharkawi and Mohamed Awad, two senior officials in
the Palestinian Red Crescent who I had met before.
Sharkawi,
a co-ordinator for emergency services, told me the Israelis had arrested
five of his drivers.
'They have
them blindfolded and handcuffed. I cannot understand what the Israelis
are thinking. They also used one of our ambulances today as a human shield.
They sandwiched it inside a convoy.'
Sharkawi
was able to reveal something of life inside Arafat's compound. 'We know
there are injured inside,' he said. 'But they have been blocking ambulances
entering to give treatment.' How many injured he could not say.
'All that
we hear is that there may be between 50 and 100 people trapped with Arafat
inside the building, without food, or water or any electricity and no
telephone communication.' He shook his head and walked away.
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