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News ID: 102518
Publish Date : 13 May 2022 - 22:46

Zionist Troops Assault Palestinian Journalist’s Coffin

OCCUPIED AL-QUDS (Dispatches) -- Israeli forces fired stun grenades and assaulted mourners carrying the coffin of slain journalist Shireen Abu Akleh outside an Al-Quds hospital on Friday, ahead of her funeral service and burial in the Old City.
Palestinian mourners insisted on carrying Abu Akleh’s coffin on their shoulders from the St Joseph French Hospital to the Roman Catholic church in the Old City, before taking her to her final place of rest.
Before they could leave the hospital premises, Zionist forces attacked them, pushing them back, storming the yard and making arrests.
Livestream images captured the moment mourners nearly dropped Abu Akleh’s coffin as Israeli forces beat them.
Givera al-Budeiri, a long-time colleague and close friend of Abu Akleh, described the heavy-handed crackdown on mourners gathered outside the hospital live on air as it unfolded.
“Occupation forces are storming the hospital, they are now firing bullets, we are talking about a hospital here, not an area of conflict,” she said, distressed and holding back tears.
“Even in her death, Shireen has exposed the actions of occupation forces,” another journalist said.
Moments later, Zionist officers forced mourners to place the coffin inside a car and only allowed it to leave the hospital if unaccompanied. People in the hospital who wanted to join the procession were prevented from doing so.
When the casket finally arrived at the Roman Catholic church, more supporters were waiting to attend Abu Akleh’s funeral service.
Thousands of Muslim and Christian Palestinians from Al-Quds and the Palestinian community in Occupied Palestine, including Haifa and Nazareth, came to pay their respects to the veteran journalist at the Old City church on Friday.
“A nation united, raise your hands and raise your voices,” Palestinians chanted ahead of the service. “Muslims and Christians, raise your voice in union.”


Many of Abu Akleh’s colleagues and fellow journalists were also at the funeral.
The renowned journalist was known and highly regarded by viewers across the Arab world, particularly in Palestine, where her murder has resonated with people from across the political and social spectrum.
Her assassination, the attacks on other journalists and the crackdown on her funeral procession have brought Palestinians together in what has been described as a rare moment of national unity. Across the Old City of Al-Quds, church services have been dedicated to Abu Akleh, with Palestinian flags flying.
“I’m watching these scenes of Shireen’s funeral and it’s both a celebration of her life and also a great deal of anger at the way she was killed,” Palestinian lawyer Diana Buttu told Middle East Eye.
“Shireen touched every single Palestinian house. Every Arab house. She brought Palestine to the Arab world and through her the world understood what it means to be a Palestinian,” Buttu added.
“Seeing these thousands of people is such a fitting tribute for Shireen; she was really the person who did her best to make sure that our stories were heard and I can’t tell you how proud I am to say that she was my friend.”
Following the funeral service, large crowds carried Abu Akleh’s coffin 300 meters from the church to cemetery, with heavily-armed officers stationed across the Old City.
Israeli special forces gathered outside the church, arresting and assaulting several people who waved the Palestinian flag.
Still, thousands of Palestinians determined to give Abu Akleh a fitting farewell marched along the narrow road leading to the cemetery.
A cross of flowers, carried in front of the coffin by Muslim and Christian crowds, finally arrived in the graveyard.
There, in an extraordinary moment, representatives from the Christian denominations in Al-Quds rang church bells in tandem, a gesture of unity seldom seen in the city’s history.
Draped in a Palestinian flag, which Zionist authorities had banned supporters from carrying, the coffin of Abu Akleh was finally placed in the ground in a plot alongside her parents.
Ahead of the funeral, Israeli forces had imposed a number of restrictions that Palestinians saw as an attempt to disrupt the service and limit the number of people attending.
They banned Palestinian flags at the funeral and imposed a ban on posters and the chanting of nationalist songs.
Abu Akleh’s brother was called in for questioning on Thursday night, in a move many denounced as an effort to pressure the family and disrupt Friday’s proceedings.
According to local sources, Zionist forces stormed Abu Akleh’s home on Thursday, attempting to tear down a Palestinian flag that was erected in her honor.
Since her assassination, Israeli forces have maintained a heavy military presence in Al-Quds. Despite the restrictions and intense crackdown, thousands of Palestinians vowed to gather for the funeral service and walk alongside her coffin until her burial.
The journalist was fatally shot dead in the flashpoint city of Jenin which was raided by Zionist troops hours before the funeral on Friday.
Palestinian sources said several Israeli military vehicles rolled into the refugee camp, triggering violent confrontations with local residents.
Israeli troops opened live fire and shot rubber-coated bullets at young Palestinians, who were attempting to block their passage.
About a dozen Palestinian youths were injured, Palestinian media outlets said. The invading troops even fired at an ambulance taking injured Palestinians to hospital, they added.