Israel-Palestinian violence erupts on three borders

MAJDAL SHAMS, Golan Heights, (Reuters) – Israeli  troops shot at Palestinian protesters on its frontiers with  Syria, Lebanon and Gaza today, killing nine people who were  marking what they term “the catastrophe” of Israel’s founding in  1948.
Troops opened fire in three separate border locations to  prevent crowds of demonstrators, some lobbying rocks, from  crossing Israeli frontier lines, in the deadliest such  confrontation in years.
Israel called it a cynical provocation inspired by Iran, to  exploit Palestinian nationalist feeling fuelled by the popular  revolts of the “Arab Spring” across the Middle East, and to draw  attention from major internal unrest inside Syria, its ally.
The Syrian foreign ministry condemned what it called  Israel’s “criminal activities”, the state news agency SANA said.
Syrian media reports said Israeli gunfire killed two people  after dozens of Palestinian refugees infiltrated the  Israeli-occupied Golan Heights from Syria, along a disputed  border that has been largely tranquil for decades.
Security sources on the nearby Lebanese frontier said six   Palestinians died when Israeli forces shot at rock-throwing  protesters to prevent them from entering the Jewish State.
The Lebanese army had also earlier fired in the air in an  attempt to hold back the crowds.
On Israel’s tense southern border with the Gaza Strip,  Israeli gunfire wounded 82 demonstrators approaching the fence  with the Hamas Islamist-run enclave, medical workers said. In a  separate incident, Israeli forces said they shot a man who was  trying to plant a bomb near the border. A body was later found.
In Tel Aviv, Israel’s commercial hub, a truck driven by an  Arab Israeli slammed into vehicles and pedestrians, killing one  man and injuring 17 people.
Police were trying to determine whether the incident was an  accident or an attack. Witnesses said the driver, who was  arrested, deliberately ran amok with his truck in traffic.

ALERT
A spokesman for the Islamist Hamas movement in the Gaza  Strip, Sami Abu Zuhri, called Sunday “a turning point in the  Israeli-Arab conflict” that proved the Palestinian people and  Arabs were committed to ending Israeli occupation.
Hezbollah condemned the “Israeli aggression on unarmed  civilians in Maroun al-Ras and in the Golan, which constitutes a  dangerous violation of human rights,” said Hezbollah lawmaker  Hassan Fadlallah who was participating at a pro-Palestinian  protest in Maroun al-Ras.
“The resistance movement in Lebanon (Hezbollah) will  continue to be an advocate for Palestinian national rights and  calls on everyone to stand united in confronting Israeli  occupation.”
“What happened today in Maroun al-Ras and in the Golan is an  embodiment of the will of the Palestinian people who are  committed to the right of return.”
Israeli security forces had been on alert for violence on  Sunday, the day Palestinians mark the “Nakba”, or catastrophe,  of Israel’s founding in a 1948 war, when hundreds of thousands  of their brethren fled or were forced to leave their homes.
A call had gone out on Facebook urging Palestinians to  demonstrate on Israel’s borders.
To the south, Egyptian forces arrested six protesters and  blocked hundreds of others from marching to its border with  Israel, but no frontier police appeared to be on hand in Syria.
“This appears to be a cynical and transparent act by the  Syrian leadership to deliberately create a crisis on the border  so as to distract attention from the very real problems that  regime is facing at home,” said a senior Israeli government  official, who declined to be named.   “Syria is a police state. People don’t randomly approach the  border without the approval of the regime.”
The border zones are protected by the 1949 Armistice  Agreement signed by Israel and its Arab neighbours. A spokesman  for the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force, set up on  the Israeli-Syrian border after the 1967 Middle East war, said  he had “no immediate information” about the rush on the border.
In the Druze village of Majdal Shams, on the Golan Heights  captured by Israel from Syria in 1967, Mayor Dolan Abu Salah  said between 40 and 50 Nakba demonstrators from Syria tore  through the flimsy frontier fence.
Hundreds of protesters flooded the lush green valley that  marks the border area, waving Palestinian flags. Israeli troops  attempted to mend the breached fence, firing at what the army  described as infiltrators.
“We are seeing here an Iranian provocation, on both the  Syrian and the Lebanese frontiers, to try to exploit the Nakba  day commemorations,” said the army’s chief spokesman,  Brigadier-General Yoav Mordechai.
Syria is home to 470,000 Palestinian refugees and its  leadership, now facing fierce internal unrest, had in previous  years prevented protesters from reaching the frontier area.