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'I never thought they would fire live rounds'
Demonstrators pull out after four are injured
Peter Beaumont in Bethlehem and Martin Wainwright
Wednesday April 3, 2002
The Guardian
Forty peace activists from Britain, Europe and the US were holed up in a central Bethlehem hotel last night awaiting evacuation after one member of the group was seriously injured by a ricocheting bullet.
Another 35 volunteers attempting to act as human shields for Palestinian families said that they were determined to stay on in the town's three refugee camps of Aida, Azza and Deheshe.
Shots and passing tanks rattled the windows of the Star hotel, 100 yards from a prolonged gun battle in Manger Square, as international business lawyer Rory Macmillan said that volunteers' personal safety now outweighed their usefulness as international monitors.
"Once General Sharon started talking about a closed military zone, we realised we'd just be pushed aside," he said. "We've lost our value as a deterrent against the Israelis maltreating Palestinians. Their soldiers were prepared to fire on our demonstration on Monday and frankly personal safety is now the priority."
The most seriously injured of four protesters from Britain who were wounded during a peaceful march towards Israeli tanks blocking the road from Bethlehem to Beit Jala on Monday said that she had been doubled-up with pain and had difficulty breathing after she was hit.
Speaking from her hospital bed in the Palestinian Christian town of Beit Jala, Kate Edwards, a community worker from Manchester, said: "We were walking up the hill from Bethlehem when a tank came down the hill towards us. I could see a man in the tank and he was shouting at us to go back. We carried on going, but then heard several bangs. We thought they had fired stun grenades to chase us off.
"We decided to stop for a moment to get used to the sound of the bangs before deciding what to do. I never thought for a moment that they would fire live ammunition at us. Then I heard several more bangs and I realised that I had been hit in the stomach."
'I never thought they would fire live rounds'
Demonstrators pull out after four are injured
Peter Beaumont in Bethlehem and Martin Wainwright
Wednesday April 3, 2002
The Guardian
Forty peace activists from Britain, Europe and the US were holed up in a central Bethlehem hotel last night awaiting evacuation after one member of the group was seriously injured by a ricocheting bullet.
Another 35 volunteers attempting to act as human shields for Palestinian families said that they were determined to stay on in the town's three refugee camps of Aida, Azza and Deheshe.
Shots and passing tanks rattled the windows of the Star hotel, 100 yards from a prolonged gun battle in Manger Square, as international business lawyer Rory Macmillan said that volunteers' personal safety now outweighed their usefulness as international monitors.
"Once General Sharon started talking about a closed military zone, we realised we'd just be pushed aside," he said. "We've lost our value as a deterrent against the Israelis maltreating Palestinians. Their soldiers were prepared to fire on our demonstration on Monday and frankly personal safety is now the priority."
The most seriously injured of four protesters from Britain who were wounded during a peaceful march towards Israeli tanks blocking the road from Bethlehem to Beit Jala on Monday said that she had been doubled-up with pain and had difficulty breathing after she was hit.
Speaking from her hospital bed in the Palestinian Christian town of Beit Jala, Kate Edwards, a community worker from Manchester, said: "We were walking up the hill from Bethlehem when a tank came down the hill towards us. I could see a man in the tank and he was shouting at us to go back. We carried on going, but then heard several bangs. We thought they had fired stun grenades to chase us off.
"We decided to stop for a moment to get used to the sound of the bangs before deciding what to do. I never thought for a moment that they would fire live ammunition at us. Then I heard several more bangs and I realised that I had been hit in the stomach."
