Israel/Palestine
Related: About this forumFor the Israeli media, Gazan lives are little more than expendable
By Haggai Matar
|Published October 22, 2014
Nearly two months after the end of Operation Protective Edge, the Israeli media refuses to ask the difficult questions. Who decided that killing entire families is now allowed? What is the justification for doing so? And why wont the army explain why it killed five members of the Joudah family?
Why doesnt anyone care about the Joudah family? Nearly two months have passed since Israeli Air Force pilots bombed their yard in Gaza, killing the mother of the family and four of her children. Until today, the IDF has not published an explanation of the incident. Actually, almost no one has bothered to ask. A mother and four of her children were sitting in their yard and were killed with no prior notice, and the Israeli media doesnt deem this worthy of a story. Why?
It happened on August 24. According to Issam Joudahs testimony, the family was sitting in the shade of their yard in order to get some fresh air during the hot summer months. Issam was making coffee in the house when the missile exploded in the yard, killing his wife and four of his children. Only two children survived one of them was badly wounded and is undergoing rehabilitation in Germany.
Why was the home bombed? The IDF Spokespersons Unit had this to say: We do not respond to specific events, the updates on investigations that have been opened can be accessed via the Military Advocate Generals website. Scanning the website, one cannot find the Joudah familys name, but rather a list of seven incidents that took place during Operation Protective Edge that the Military Advocate General decided to investigate. Thats it. Any further questions were not answered by the IDF Spokesperson.
http://972mag.com/for-the-israeli-media-gaza-lives-are-expendable/97927/
Rawan Sabah sits next to where her friend, Raghed Joudah, used to sit in class. Joudah was killed by an Israeli airstrike along with five of her family members. (photo: Awni Farhat)
oberliner
(58,724 posts)Absolutely inexcusable.
Scootaloo
(25,699 posts)Apparently to a good number of people, it is completely excusable. Go back-read some of the stuff from June-July-August.