Sunday, January 2, 2011

JERUSALEM (AP) -- The Israeli military said Sunday it was investigating the death of a Palestinian woman overcome by tear gas fired by soldiers at a West Bank protest.

In an unrelated incident Sunday, a Palestinian man was killed in the West Bank after trying to attack Israeli troops at a checkpoint, Palestinian and Israeli security officials said.

Contradictory accounts were given of the circumstances surrounding the death Saturday of the 36-year-old protester, Jawaher Abu Rahmeh, a day after she inhaled the gas at the weekly demonstration against Israel's West Bank separation barrier in the village of Bilin.

Tear gas is meant to be a non-lethal crowd control method and is used routinely by Israeli troops at protests. But doctors say the gas can kill on rare occasions if a victim has a pre-existing condition.

Dr. Mohammed Eideh, who treated Abu Rahmeh in the Palestinian city of Ramallah, said she had asthma. Her parents said she did not.



Another doctor said she was initially released from hospital, later collapsed, was readmitted and then died. Eideh said she had not been released.

Michael Sfard, the Israeli lawyer representing the woman's family, said troops used "incredible quantities of gas" at the protest, a weekly event that often deteriorates into violent clashes between protesters and soldiers.

Abu Rahmeh's brother, Bassem Abu Rahmeh, was killed at a similar demonstration in 2009 after being hit by an Israeli tear gas canister, becoming the seventeenth Palestinian to die at barrier protests since 2004.

The military described Friday's protest as a "violent and illegal riot" and released photographs it identified as being from the demonstration showing Palestinian youths using slingshots and a firebomb against troops. The military said it is investigating Abu Rahmeh's death but has not been allowed to see the Palestinian medical reports.

Several hundred Israelis demonstrated against the military in Tel Aviv on Saturday to protest the woman's death, the Haaretz daily said.

Israel began building the separation barrier last decade during a wave of suicide attacks carried out by Palestinians who crossed into Israel from the West Bank. But Palestinians call it a land grab because the barrier encloses sections of the West Bank on the "Israeli" side.

It is expected to stretch about 450 miles (720 kilometers), when finished, and it is about two-thirds completed, with construction stalled in many places because of legal battles.

The village of Bilin, where Israel expropriated land to build the barrier, has become a flashpoint for protests, attracting Palestinians and supporters from Israel and abroad.

In the incident at the West Bank checkpoint Sunday, a Palestinian worker in his twenties attacked soldiers with a glass bottle after he was denied permission to cross, Palestinian security officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because no official statement had been released.

The Israeli military said the man approached troops with a broken bottle and ignored calls to stop before he was shot.

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