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Politics : DON'T START THE WAR

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To: PartyTime who started this subject3/16/2003 5:25:39 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (2) of 25898
 
Israeli Bulldozer Kills U.S. Woman, 23

By IBRAHIM BARZAK
The Associated Press
Sunday, March 16, 2003; 12:26 PM

An American woman in Gaza to protest Israeli operations
was killed Sunday when she was run over by an Israeli
bulldozer, witnesses and hospital officials said.

Rachel Corrie, 23, a college student from Olympia, Wash.,
had been trying to stop the bulldozer from tearing down a
building in the Rafah refugee camp, witnesses said. She was
taken to Najar hospital in Rafah, where she died, said Dr. Ali
Moussa, a hospital administrator.

Greg Schnabel, 28, of Chicago, said the protesters were in
the house of Dr. Samir Masri. Israeli almost daily has been
tearing down houses of Palestinians it suspects in connection
with Islamic militant groups, saying such operations deter
attacks on Israel such as suicide bombings.

"Rachel was alone in front of the house as we were trying to
get them to stop," Schnabel said. "She waved for the
bulldozer to stop and waved. She fell down and the bulldozer
kept going. We yelled, 'Stop, stop,' and the bulldozer didn't
stop at all. It had completely run over her and then it reversed
and ran back over her."

Witnesses said Corrie was wearing a brightly colored jacket
when the bulldozer hit her. She had been a student at The
Evergreen State College in Olympia and would have
graduated this year, Schnabel said.

The Israeli military and the U.S. State Department had no
immediate comment.

Groups of international protesters have gathered in several locations in the West Bank and Gaza during two years of Palestinian
violence, setting themselves up as "human shields" to try to stop Israeli operations.

Corrie was the first member of the groups, called "International Solidarity Movement" and backed by Palestinian groups, to be killed
in the conflict. Several activists have been arrested in clashes with Israeli forces, and some have been deported by Israeli authorities.

Schnabel said there were eight protesters at the site in Rafah, four from the United States and four from Great Britain. "We stay with
families whose house is to be demolished," he told the Associated Press by telephone after the incident.

Mansour Abed Allah, 29, a Palestinian human rights worker in Rafah, witnessed the incident. He said the killing should be a
message to President Bush, who is "providing Israel with tanks and bulldozers, and now they killed one of his own people."

Israel sends tanks and bulldozers into the area almost every day, destroying buildings near the Gaza-Egypt border. The Israelis say
Palestinian gunmen use the buildings as cover, and arms-smuggling tunnels dug under the border terminate in the buildings.

According to interim peace accords, Israel controls the border area, where there are clashes almost daily between Palestinian gunmen
and Israeli soldiers.
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