Sitting on rubble, using his briefcase as a writing table, human rights researcher Yasser Abdel Ghafar interviewed residents of a house shelled by Israel, part of his assignment to compile detailed lists of killed and wounded during Israel’s 23-day war on Gaza’s Hamas rulers.
His group, the Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR), released a final tally on Wednesday, saying 1,284 Gazans were killed and 4,336 wounded, the majority civilians. Yet Israel, insisting that Hamas is inflating civilian casualties, said it has the names of more than 700 Hamas militants killed in fighting.
The wrangling over the final toll, particularly the ratio of combatants and civilians, is part of the rival Israeli and Palestinian narratives of the Gaza war. Israel portrays it as a justified attempt to finally halt years of indiscriminate Hamas rocket attacks on southern Israel. The Palestinians say it was a brutal onslaught in which troops used disproportionate force in one of the world’s most densely populated areas. Some bombings and shellings of homes, even if targeting militants, killed entire families.
PHOTO: AP
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Hamas fighters fired rockets from civilian areas and stored explosives in mosques and schools. Yet he acknowledged that troops “moved forward with fire” to prevent Israeli casualties and that “nobody had any illusions that civilians wouldn’t be harmed as well.”
The growing international outrage over Israel’s offensive has been fueled by the scenes of civilian suffering, including bodies of dead women and children in hospital morgues.
The PCHR said 894 of the dead were civilians, including 280 children and minors, age 17 and under, as well as 111 women. Of the remaining 390 dead, 167 were members of Hamas’ civil police, many of them killed on the job during Israel’s surprise attack on dozens of security compounds.
The civilians not only included innocent bystanders, but also Hamas members killed in non-combat situations, such as Said Siam and Nizar Rayan, two top Hamas leaders assassinated, along with their relatives, in massive bombings of homes, said Ibtissam Zakout, head of the PCHR’s research team.
The rest, or 223, were combatants, she said. That figure is higher than the 158 dead fighters acknowledged by Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other militant groups.
“Maybe they [the militants] were interested to show that they have fewer losses and casualties,” Zakout said.
Others, such as Gaza health ministry official Moawiya Hassanain, have raised the possibility that the militant groups buried some of their fighters in secret, without reporting their deaths.
Zakout said the PCHR count, including the distinction between militants and civilians, is based on cross-checking hospital records and interviews with survivors. The group is affiliated with Geneva-based International Commission of Jurists and has won two European human rights awards.
During the war, 13 Israelis were killed, including three civilians struck by rockets. The other 10 were soldiers.
Israel has not provided its own Palestinian death toll, though Barak said he believed dead militants outnumbered dead civilians.
“Many more than 700 Hamas men were killed, many more,” he told Israel’s Channel 10 TV.
“We know their names,” he said, while noting that civilians were hit as well.
However, Palestinian medics and human rights researchers say they’ve become well-versed in counting casualties during previous conflicts, including two uprisings against Israeli military occupation and internal Palestinian fighting.
A veteran is Hassanain, the health ministry official who has been recording dead and wounded since the start of the second Palestinian uprising in 2000.
Hassanain’s center of operations is a tiny room with furniture he said dates back to pre-1967 Egyptian rule of Gaza. Equipped with just a beeper, a fax, a landline, two mobile phones and a walkie talkie, Hassanain dispatches dozens of ambulances and records the medics’ first reports of dead and wounded on loose sheets of paper.
In between, he accompanies ambulances taking the most seriously wounded to Israel and Egypt.
Hassanain’s handwritten lists, including some stuffed in his jacket pocket, are eventually fed into a clunky old computer by an assistant and transferred to the information center of the health ministry.
The ministry, like most Gaza government agencies, is run by Hamas. Israeli warplanes targeted many Hamas ministries during the war, and the health ministry moved part of its operations to Gaza’s main Shifa Hospital after the start of the offensive.
The ministry’s computer center is fed by faxed reports sent by teams deployed at Gaza’s 20 hospitals and clinics, said statistics chief Samir Radi, who did part of his physician’s training at an Israeli hospital.
The health ministry’s final toll for 23 days of fighting is 1,324 dead and about 5,400 injured — or 40 more dead and about 1,000 more injured than the PCHR.
Radi said names are added to the death toll only after careful consideration, including identification by ID by relatives, particularly if bodies arrive in a dismembered state.
The physician claimed that only about 100 of the dead were combatants, saying he is relying on reports by the militant groups themselves.
MONEY MATTERS: Xi was to highlight projects such as a new high-speed railway between Belgrade and Budapest, as Serbia is entirely open to Chinese trade and investment Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic yesterday said that “Taiwan is China” as he made a speech welcoming Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) to Belgrade, state broadcaster Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) said. “We have a clear and simple position regarding Chinese territorial integrity,” he told a crowd outside the government offices while Xi applauded him. “Yes, Taiwan is China.” Xi landed in Belgrade on Tuesday night on the second leg of his European tour, and was greeted by Vucic and most government ministers. Xi had just completed a two-day trip to France, where he held talks with French President Emmanuel Macron as the
With the midday sun blazing, an experimental orange and white F-16 fighter jet launched with a familiar roar that is a hallmark of US airpower, but the aerial combat that followed was unlike any other: This F-16 was controlled by artificial intelligence (AI), not a human pilot, and riding in the front seat was US Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall. AI marks one of the biggest advances in military aviation since the introduction of stealth in the early 1990s, and the US Air Force has aggressively leaned in. Even though the technology is not fully developed, the service is planning
INTERNATIONAL PROBE: Australian and US authorities were helping coordinate the investigation of the case, which follows the 2015 murder of Australian surfers in Mexico Three bodies were found in Mexico’s Baja California state, the FBI said on Friday, days after two Australians and an American went missing during a surfing trip in an area hit by cartel violence. Authorities used a pulley system to hoist what appeared to be lifeless bodies covered in mud from a shaft on a cliff high above the Pacific. “We confirm there were three individuals found deceased in Santo Tomas, Baja California,” a statement from the FBI’s office in San Diego, California, said without providing the identities of the victims. Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson and their American friend Jack Carter
CUSTOMS DUTIES: France’s cognac industry was closely watching the talks, fearing that an anti-dumping investigation opened by China is retaliation for trade tensions French President Emmanuel Macron yesterday hosted Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) at one of his beloved childhood haunts in the Pyrenees, seeking to press a message to Beijing not to support Russia’s war against Ukraine and to accept fairer trade. The first day of Xi’s state visit to France, his first to Europe since 2019, saw respectful, but sometimes robust exchanges between the two men during a succession of talks on Monday. Macron, joined initially by EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, urged Xi not to allow the export of any technology that could be used by Russia in its invasion