Israel-Palestinian violence erupts on three borders

JERUSALEM, (Reuters) – Israeli troops shot  Palestinian protesters who surged towards its frontiers with  Syria, Lebanon and Gaza yesterday, killing at least 13 people on  the day Palestinians mourn the establishment of Israel in 1948.

In the deadliest such confrontation in years of anniversary  clashes usually confined to the West Bank and Gaza, Israeli  forces opened fire in three separate border locations to prevent  crowds of demonstrators from crossing frontier lines.

The new challenge to Israel came from the borders of  Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Gaza — all home to hundreds of  thousands of Palestinians who fled or were driven out in 1948.

Combined with a public relations disaster last year over the  killing of pro-Palestinian activists in a Gaza aid flotilla and  a determined Palestinian diplomatic drive to win U.N.  recognition of statehood in September this year, the bloody  border protests raised the stakes further for Israel.

Israel’s leaders condemned the incidents as provocations  inspired by Iran, to exploit Palestinian nationalist feeling  fuelled by the popular revolts of the “Arab Spring”, and to draw  attention from major internal unrest in Syria, Iran’s ally.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he hoped the  confrontations would not escalate.

“We hope the calm and quiet will quickly return. But let  nobody be misled: we are determined to defend our borders and  sovereignty,” Netanyahu said.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Fatah movement  holds sway in the Israeli occupied West Bank and is ready to  negotiate peace with Israel, said in a televised address that  those killed were martyrs to the Palestinian cause.

“Their precious blood will not be wasted. It was spilt for  the sake of our nation’s freedom,” Abbas said.

HAMAS PRAISES CLASHES

But Islamist Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip and which  last month sealed a surprise reconciliation pact with its bitter  rival Fatah, issued a warning that Palestinians would accept  nothing less than return to all lands lost in 1948.

Spokesman Taher Al-Nono praised the “crowds we have seen in  Palestine, Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon” as evidence of “imminent  victory and return to the original homes as promised by God”.

In an apparent contradiction of suggestions that Hamas might  ditch its rejection of Israel’s right to exist, he said there  was no alternative to recovering all land lost in 1948.

Israeli security forces had been on alert for violence on  Sunday, the day Palestinians mourn 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.

Lebanon’s army said 10 Palestinians died as Israeli forces  shot at rock-throwing protesters to prevent them from entering  the Jewish State from Lebanese territory.

They said 112 people had been wounded in the shooting  incident in the Lebanese border village of Maroun al-Ras.   “The protesters overcame the Lebanese army and marched  towards the security fence and started throwing stones,” Reuters  cameraman Ezzat Baltaji said, from Maroun al-Ras village.

Syrian media reports said Israeli gunfire killed two people  after dozens of Palestinians infiltrated the Israeli-occupied  Golan Heights from Syria, along a front line that has been  largely tranquil for decades.

Syria condemned Israel’s “criminal activities”.

“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.”

Yesterday, 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.

To the southeast, on Jordan’s desert border with Israel,  Jordanian police fired teargas to disperse hundreds of  pro-Palestinian activists gathered at a border village.

Israeli forces did not fire over the Jordanian border.

On Israel’s tense border with Gaza, Israeli gunfire wounded  82 demonstrators nearing the fence, medics said. Israeli forces  said they shot a man trying to plant a bomb near the border.

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 that incident was an  accident or an attack. Witnesses said the driver, who was  arrested, deliberately ran amok with his truck in traffic.

In the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Palestinian youths and  Israeli forces clashed for hours at the main checkpoint dividing  the Ramallah from Jerusalem, a constant flashpoint.

Palestinians threw rocks and soldiers fired rubber bullets  and teargas to drive them away from the Qalandia checkpoint.