| GAZA: ONE YEAR ON | ||||||||||||||
| December 29: 'My children are dead' | ||||||||||||||
For each day of Israel's war on Gaza, the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights reports on how one family is coping with the war's aftermath. In its third report from the Gaza Strip, Al Mezan talks to the Al-Absi family who lost three of their children when their home in a Gaza refugee camp was bombed on December 29, 2008 At about 1am on December 29, 2008, the Al-Absi family home in Yebna refugee camp, south of Gaza's southern town of Rafah, was bombed and completely destroyed by an Israeli aircraft. All 10 family members were sleeping at the time.
Their parents and four sisters were injured, some of them very seriously. 'Afaf, the children's mother, was in a coma for two months, and her daughter, 16-year-old Zakiya requires two further surgeries to her arm. The force of the blast threw Ne'meh, who is now three years old, onto the roof of the adjacent house. Only one of the children, Mahmoud, who is now 18 years old, escaped uninjured. Al Mezan spoke to 'Afaf's sister, Samira, about how the family is coping one year after the attack. 'I feel my children are dead' "We thought 'Afaf was dead," Samira explains. "She stayed in intensive care in Gaza for 10 days because she was too weak to travel, then she was transferred to Egypt. I accompanied her and slept in a room next door. But Samira could not keep hiding the truth from her sister. 'Afaf and her family are now living in cramped conditions with relatives not far from their old neighbourhood.
Samira believes that the continued displacement is hindering 'Afaf's chances of psychological recovery. "Afaf doesn't do anything now. Her nervous system is damaged. She can't pick anything up. She can't cook. She hardly eats. She says to me, 'What is the point of me eating? It is a waste of food to feed me. I can't even look after my children anymore.' "She is still so weak. If you were to just tap her, she'd fall over. She used to be a perfect mother. There was always food on the table when the children got home. Now she sleeps all the time. I think if she had her own house ... a home to look after, she might start to get better." Changed lives The lives of 'Afaf's surviving children have also been permanently affected. | ||||||||||||||
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Thursday, 31 December 2009
GAZA: ONE YEAR ON
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