Gazans form human chain along Israeli border in protest at blockade
Palestinians on Feb. 25 formed a human chain in protest at Israel's blockade of Gaza as Israel deployed thousands of troops and police officers along the border.
About 5,000 people, many of them women, schoolchildren and university students, joined the chain outside the town of Beit Hanoun, about four miles from the border.
The crowd hoisted banners in English and Arabic, saying "End the siege of Gaza now," and "Your siege will not break our will."
One of the organizers, an independent member of Parliament, Jamal al-Khoudary, said the protesters did not plan violent action. "This is a peaceful event aimed to send a message to the world that the people of Gaza want to live in freedom," he said.
Organizers had hoped to form a chain running the length of the 25-mile Gaza strip, but turnout was well below expectations.
After the protest some 2,000 Hamas loyalists marched to a checkpoint several kilometers away from Erez. However, Hamas police blocked the main road leading to the Erez checkpoint and called on loyalists to obey the law.
Hamas organized the event to protest at chronic shortages of vital supplies in Gaza because of Israeli restrictions. The group said the event would be peaceful and marchers would not reach the border.
Israel took no chances and deployed troops and police to prevent any repeat of scenes that occurred recently at the Gaza-Egypt border.
Israeli radio and TV stations devoted their morning news coverage to the event, warning of a mass exodus of Gazans.
"It's absolutely clear that among them will be people with explosive charges, there will be those among them who will be ready at any moment to blow up the border fense," an ultra-nationalist member of Israel's parliament, Effie Eitam, told Israel Radio, reflecting a widespread sense of alarm.
"Suddenly there will be a big hole in the fense somewhere, there will be explosions, injured soldiers and the mob will stream into our territory. If that happens it will be the end of the state of Israel."
Last month, Israel tightened the blockade on Gaza, home to 1.5 million Palestinians, limiting supplies of fuel and other goods in response to cross-border rocket fire by militants.
Militants say the attacks are in response to Israeli raids and would stop if Israel lifted Gaza's blockade. Hamas is treated as a political pariah by Israel and the west for not recognizing Israel. It has, however, offered Israel a conditional, long-term ceasefire.
Some Palestinians have advocated a strategy of non-violent resistance to Israel similar to the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa, and the worldwide impact of Gazans rushing into Egypt appears to have prompted Hamas to try and replicate such tactics on Gaza's border with Israel.