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A Mother's Warning, and a Fatal Shot 
Though Combat in Ramallah Is Over, Army Killing of Civilians Has 
Continued 
 
By Daniel Williams
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, April 12, 2002; Page A26 


RAMALLAH, West Bank, April 11 -- The Palestinian most recently killed by 
Israeli soldiers in Ramallah was Manal Sofran. She was a housewife shot 
in the head on Wednesday, neighbors said, while calling her husband Sami 
and their four children to come in from the garden of their three-story 
apartment building near Chicken Street.

She leaned out from the glass-enclosed sunroom, a common feature of 
Palestinian houses from the 1950s and '60s. She spied five soldiers by a 
nearby wall, the neighbors recalled, and feared they might shoot at 
moving objects.

"She was right," said Tom Kay, one of the neighbors. "But she was the 
object, and it was clear the soldiers could see her."

Her last words were "Oh, Sami," said grieving relatives who received 
visitors at a wake today.

The death toll in Ramallah has climbed slowly since Prime Minister Ariel 
Sharon of Israel sent the army into the West Bank on March 29 to uproot 
what he called a Palestinian terrorist infrastructure. In the first 
week, 27 Palestinians died, among them at least seven civilians. The 
toll has climbed to 37 in the past week. At least two of those recently 
added to the count were decomposed bodies of victims shot in the first 
hours of combat. One was a cook at the besieged headquarters building of 
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, doctors at Ramallah Hospital said.

Ramallah's toll is not at the level of carnage in Nablus or Jenin, 
Palestinian cities farther north in the West Bank where armor and 
helicopter assaults battered residential areas defended by armed 
militias. But it is striking nonetheless because it is continuing to 
climb. Combat is over, but shooting, death and destruction persist. 
Israeli soldiers strictly enforce a curfew, to the point that someone 
who sticks his or her head out a window risks losing it.

Israeli patrols still appear to be pursuing armed stragglers, although 
there have been no recent reports of roundups of militia members or 
other Palestinians whom the army labels as terrorists. In neighborhoods 
near Arafat's blackened and scarred headquarters, house-to-house 
searches have been frequent. On the other hand, large areas of Ramallah 
have been free of searches.

The duration of Israel's operation here raises the question of when -- 
or whether -- Sharon's government will be able to declare the city 
cleansed of terrorist infrastructure. Every so often, troop carriers and 
tanks scurry about Ramallah's winding streets on noisy manhunts. 
Sometimes, they shoot up vacant buildings.

Sofran's death and incidents like it raise a different question. How 
abundantly has this operation fed a lust for revenge -- not merely among 
armed fighters' relatives and associates, but also among Palestinians 
related to civilian victims? In Ramallah, civilians speak most heatedly 
not about militia losses but about such killings: shooting a woman in 
her home on a clear, quiet day, and hitting the mark with two bullets.

Palestinians complain that the United States has written off Palestinian 
civilian casualties as incidental, even in the early days of the 
uprising when Palestinians were shot down by the dozens while throwing 
stones at Israeli troops. "You foreigners make much of Israeli civilian 
deaths," said Bashir Abu Walid, a neighbor of the dead woman. "Every 
Israeli death is a big event. But we are just statistics. Because a 
soldier does it, it is not terrorism. Why not?"

Palestinians cite three examples of the kind of attacks Ramallah 
residents believe exemplify wanton killing of civilians. Three men, they 
say, were shot during an easing of the curfew the other day, which the 
Israelis lift every three days for as long as four hours. One died in a 
taxi after delivering a female relative to Ramallah Hospital to give 
birth. Soldiers shot another in the chest as he stood in front of his 
home, they recount, and a third was killed trying to drive relatives out 
of Ramallah to their home villages.

To the Palestinians, some killings become parables, stories repeated and 
repeated like fragments of an epic poem. News the other day of the 
wounding of a paraplegic in a wheelchair spread like wildfire through 
the city. Tuesday, a mentally retarded young man named Atef Moussa 
Kandil was shot near central Manara Square. He was hospitalized with a 
chest wound.

"He was a fixture around Manara. People knew him. You know, Palestinian 
towns are like villages really, and he was a fixture, like the 
traditional village idiot. Anyway, he wandered out during curfew and 
panicked. He ran, and the Israelis shot him," said Mohammed Batrawi, a 
physician at Ramallah Hospital.

The curfew means that Ramallah residents are unable to begin repairs or 
open businesses. Hospitals and their ambulances, which have to run 
gantlets of bullets, and garbage collection, which races into operation 
during curfew-free hours, are the only functioning municipal services.

Inspections of government buildings have begun to reveal how much of the 
Palestinian Authority, Arafat's bureaucracy, has been gutted. The other 
day, Deputy Education Minister Naim Abu Hanous inspected the ransacked 
offices of his ministry and tried to figure out what the Israeli 
soldiers had carried off. Numerous computer hard drives were ripped out, 
files scattered about and documents looted. He said that high school 
graduation test results dating from the 1950s were taken.

"They were kept up to date when Jordan ruled here, when the Israelis 
occupied here and with the Palestinian Authority," said Abu Hanous. "Now 
they are gone."

About $10,000 was stolen from a safe in the ministry's finance 
department, he added.

Ramallah city hall was ransacked and its second floor burned. Deeds, tax 
receipts, building permits and other documents important to governing a 
city disappeared. The possibility that deeds were destroyed is 
particularly important in an area where successive Israeli governments 
have confiscated property on the grounds that the owner possessed no 
documents.

"We can't tell you yet what has been destroyed or taken," said Mayor 
Ayoub Rabah. "We will have to put things in order first and figure it 
out later."

With the curfew lifted for four hours, Palestinian women gathered today 
at Manara Square. Standing in a group, they chanted curses at Israeli 
troops who have reoccupied the city. 

The soldiers stood in their own group, behind barbed wire on a street 
radiating from the roundabout. Later, Palestinian boys threw stones and 
the soldiers shot tear gas back at them.

The little confrontation was mild by the standards of the last two 
weeks. But it provided another reminder that the West Bank campaign has 
done little to tame anti-Israeli passions that have fueled the 
Palestinian uprising and sent people out to blow themselves up in 
suicide bombings aimed at Israeli civilians and soldiers alike.

The protesters gathered at the square under a billboard-size portrait of 
Arafat, which the Israeli soldiers had defaced with a swastika. 
Sometimes in groups, sometimes individually, the demonstrators shouted 
long denunciations of Israel's 35-year occupation in the Gaza Strip and 
West Bank, of "massacres," of robbery of Palestinian land. They vowed to 
bring such treatment to an end despite the offensive that has devastated 
six main West Bank cities, several refugee camps and numerous hamlets.

"You will have to kill every one of us," shouted Umm Khaled Yahya, an 
old woman in a scarf who shouted at the soldiers for 10 minutes without 
letup.


© 2002 The Washington Post Company

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