Mourning as house fire kills 21 in Gaza Strip

This aerial view shows Palestinians carrying the flag-draped bodies of people who died a day earlier, when fire broke out in an apartment, in the Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza strip, on Friday. (AFP)
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Updated 18 November 2022
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Mourning as house fire kills 21 in Gaza Strip

  • Israel accused of preventing entry of Civil Defense equipment amid blockade

GAZA CITY: Crowds on Friday mourned the deaths of 21 Palestinians who perished in a tragic fire in their apartment in Jabalia refugee camp on Thursday evening.

Tens of thousands on Friday took part in the funeral of the victims — most of whom were women and children — of the house fire that struck the Abu Raya family in the northern Gaza Strip.

The Jabalia camp is the largest of eight camps in the Gaza Strip, with a population of more than 2 million Palestinians living in harsh economic conditions.

A grandfather and grandmother, two sons and two daughters, their wives, husbands and children died in the most tragic accident in the Gaza Strip in 2022.

Civil Defense could not rescue any of the victims before their bodies were consumed by the fire on the third floor of the residential apartment, where the family was gathered.

The family’s neighbors accused firefighters of arriving about 40 minutes late to the scene of the fire, which lasted between 90 minutes and two hours.

One of the eyewitnesses, who took part in the attempt to extinguish the fire before the arrival of rescuers, said: “When we heard a distress call from the family and saw the fire, we went up to the third floor, which was locked with a metal door.

“After opening the door with the help of the police, we were unable to enter because of the thick smoke as a result of the fire.”

The witness added: “Firefighters arrived at the scene no less than 40 minutes after the fire occurred.”

Another eyewitness said: “When the fire trucks arrived, they did not have the necessary equipment to reach the third floor, and a car with a crane arrived after about an hour.”

The witness also told Arab News: “The firefighters were aiming water hoses at the windows from the ground toward the burning apartment, which took a long time to put out the fire.”

Local authorities, led by Hamas, accused Israel of preventing the entry of necessary equipment for the Civil Defense as a result of the blockade of the Gaza Strip, which has lasted for more than 17 years.

The government media office in Gaza called on the international community to press for lifting the blockade in order to aid Civil Defense, “which suffers from a shortage of supplies.”

Initial investigations by the Ministry of Interior showed that the family stored gasoline, which caused the fire to intensify and spread.

A specialized committee was formed to investigate the cause of the fire.

The testimonies of neighbors differed regarding the likely cause of the incident.

Some said that there was a gas leak in the apartment during the family’s celebration of a child’s birthday.

Others said that the family had gathered to celebrate the return of the eldest son from abroad and his receiving of a doctorate.

The Palestinian territories witnessed a general mourning declared by President Mahmoud Abbas and authorities in Gaza for the victims of the accident.

Palestinians expressed their deep sorrow over the death of an entire family in the fire.

Fatima Al-Sinwar, from Jabalia camp, said: “Gaza was doomed to mourn at all times and by various means, whether by fire, war or blockade. Our hearts can no longer bear more than this pain.”

A spokesman for the Ministry of Interior said in a press statement that all those inside the house had died.

The UN, Egypt, Jordan, US and other countries offered their condolences to the victims of the fire.

The Gaza Strip has witnessed similar fire incidents that have claimed the lives of a number of Palestinians, the most prominent of which was caused by a gas leak in a bakery in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip in 2020, leading to 25 deaths.


UN rights chief warns Israeli land-control moves in West Bank amount to unlawful annexation

Jerusalem municipality workers walk past vehicles during demolition by Israeli authorities of structures.
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UN rights chief warns Israeli land-control moves in West Bank amount to unlawful annexation

  • ‘We are witnessing rapid steps to change permanently the demography of the occupied Palestinian territory, stripping its people of their lands and forcing them to leave’
  • Human Rights Office warns of increasing attacks by Israeli settlers and security forces, as well as reports of forced transfers, evictions, demolitions, land seizures and restrictions on movement

NEW YORK CITY: The UN’s high commissioner for human rights, Volker Turk, on Wednesday condemned recent decisions by Israel’s Security Cabinet to expand the expropriation of land in the occupied West Bank.

He described the moves as a step toward unlawful annexation, and a violation of the right of Palestinians to self-determination.

The measures, approved on Sunday, expand Israeli civilian authority in parts of the West Bank, known as “Areas A and B” under the Oslo Accords, in which certain powers are currently exercised by the Palestinian Authority.

“This is yet another step by the Israeli authorities toward rendering a viable Palestinian state impossible, in violation of the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination,” Turk said.

According to the UN Human Rights Office, the package of measures alter existing legal arrangements to allow Israeli authorities and individuals to acquire land in those areas, a move Turk said violates the laws of occupation.

“If these decisions are implemented, they will undoubtedly accelerate the dispossession of Palestinians and their forcible transfer, and lead to the creation of more illegal Israeli settlements,” he said.

“This will also further deprive Palestinians of their natural resources and restrict their enjoyment of other human rights.”

The measures would “further cement Israel’s control and integration of the occupied West Bank into Israel, consolidating unlawful annexation,” Turk added.

The decisions also strip the Palestinian Authority of certain planning and building powers in parts of Hebron, including the area around the Ibrahimi Mosque, known to Jews as the Cave of the Patriarchs, and establish Israeli administrative control over Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem, he said.

“This not only violates the land rights of Palestinians, but also their cultural rights in respect of sites of particular significance,” he added.

Turk’s comments came amid what the Human Rights Office described as a broader pattern of increasing attacks by Israeli settlers and security forces against Palestinians in the West Bank, including reports of forced transfers, evictions, home demolitions, land seizures and restrictions on movement.

“We are witnessing rapid steps to change permanently the demography of the occupied Palestinian territory, stripping its people of their lands and forcing them to leave,” Turk said.

The measures were “supported by rhetoric and actions by senior Israeli officials” that violated Israel’s obligations as an occupying power to preserve the existing legal order, he warned.

“These decisions must be overturned,” Turk added. “The settlements must be evacuated. The occupation must end. Now.”