[from thew SUNDAY HERALD @
http://www.sundayherald.com/news/heraldnews/display.var.2446157.0.scottish_activist_films_israeli_navy_shooting_at_gaza_fishermen.php
-- with film.]

Scottish activist films Israeli navy shooting at Gaza fishermen
Claims of 14 deaths in previous incidents

By Billy Briggs

A SCOTTISH human rights activist has filmed the Israeli navy firing
machine guns at unarmed Palestinian fishing boats in the Mediterranean
Sea off the coast of the Gaza Strip.

The footage, taken on September 6 by Andrew Muncie, who is from the
Highlands, shows an Israeli gunboat engaging fishing boats while
international observers hold their arms in the air and scream for them
to stop firing.

No-one was injured in the incident, but Palestinian fishermen claim 14
colleagues have been murdered at sea by the Israeli navy since the
onset of an economic blockade imposed after Hamas took control of the
Gaza Strip in June 2007. Israel says patrolling these waters is a
vital security measure to stop weapons being smuggled into Gaza.
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Muncie, 34, of Dalbreagha, Spean Bridge, is working with the Free Gaza
movement and arrived in Gaza last month as part of a group of 40
activists who sailed on two boats from Cyprus in an attempt to breach
Israel's blockade. He was accompanied by an 81-year-old nun, an
84-year-old holocaust survivor and Cherie Blair's sister, Lauren
Booth.

Most of the activists have since returned to Cyprus, but Muncie and
eight others opted to stay on and assist local people, including
fishermen.

He said the incident with the Israeli navy took place four miles out
to sea at 9.30am. "We had barely left Gaza's coastline behind when the
gunboat's heavy machine gun opened up, spraying the wake around our
hull with bullets. I've been out with the fishermen on several
occasions and seen them the Israeli navy also use explosive shells
fired from a cannon, and explosive charges flung into the water near a
boat," he said.

Muncie claimed that in a separate incident on September 3, two
fishermen were hospitalised and another fishing boat had been rammed
and badly damaged in a separate incident last week.

Muncie's mother, Margaret, said: "You feel horror first of all seeing
the video because you are seeing images of unarmed people being
viciously attacked by military might; anger because there is no
justification ever for this kind of action, and because it is illegal
as well as immoral. Then terror for your own son's safety, and his
friends, and for the brave fishermen who have to face this situation
every day.

"And in that mixture of emotions, there is great pride that our Andrew
is risking his own safety to defend the rights of others. And I know
that John, my husband, feels the same as me, as do our other sons,
David and Christopher."

Last month, the Sunday Herald reported claims by Gaza fishermen that
they had been attacked at sea.

The Gaza Strip's waters have been patrolled by the Israeli navy since
a blockade was imposed after Hamas took control of the Strip. Israel
allows in limited supplies of food, fuel and aid but last year
tightened economic sanctions in response to rocket attacks by
militants on Israeli towns near Gaza.

According to the United Nations, the crisis has left the number of
households in Gaza below the poverty line at an unprecedented 52%.

Gaza's fishing industry has been hit particularly hard. Under the 1993
Oslo accords, Gazan fishermen were to be allowed 20 nautical miles out
to sea. According to Oxfam, fishermen are now only allowed six miles
out to sea - not far enough out to reach the schools of large fish -
and risk being shot or arrested if they breach this limit.

The Israeli Embassy in London declined to comment on Muncie's film.

-- 
Jim Devine /  "Nobody told me there'd be days like these / Strange
days indeed -- most peculiar, mama." -- JL.
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