Scribes protest against attack on lensman - GulfToday

Scribes protest against attack on lensman

Scribe-Protest

Mays Amarneh, the daughter of Palestinian cameraman Mu’ath Amarneh, takes part in a demonstration in Bethlehem on Sunday. Agence France-Presse

“The eyes of truth will never be blinded,” protesters’ placards read, as Palestinian journalists wore eye patches to decry the wounding of a colleague in the occupied West Bank.

Muath Amarneh has been in an Israeli hospital since he was hit in the eye on Friday during clashes between Israeli border police and Palestinian demonstrators in the village of Surif, close to Hebron in the southern West Bank.

Dozens of Palestinian journalists rallied on Sunday − protesting with one eye covered in solidarity.

Amarneh, who is being treated in Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem, said he was some way from the protesters when he was hit by what he believes was Israeli fire.

“After the clashes started, I was standing to the side wearing a flak jacket with press markings and a helmet,” the freelance cameraman said on Sunday.

“Suddenly I felt something hit my eye, I thought it was a rubber bullet or a stone. I put my hand to my eye and found nothing.” “I couldn’t see and my eye was completely gone.”

He said doctors at the hospital told him a fragment of metal, about 2 centimetres long, pierced the eye and settled behind it near the brain.

Amarneh’s cousin Tareq, accompanying him in hospital, said doctors planned to extract the metal but changed their minds after discovering they could also damage the right eye or even trigger bleeding in the brain.

A spokesman for the Israeli police denied that the photographer was targeted, saying fire was “not directed at all” toward him.

“The security forces operated in the area in front of dozens of rioters, some of them masked, who threw stones at officers and burned tires,” police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

“The response by the forces was using non-lethal means in order to disperse the rioters.” Amarneh, who comes from the Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem, claimed he was targeted as a journalist.

“There is an unnatural and ugly targeting of journalists,” the father-of-two said.

Since the incident Palestinian journalists have launched a campaign, with protests in several cities in the West Bank.

In Bethlehem Sunday, border police dispersed a sit-in by journalists at the checkpoint north of the city, a journalist said. Demonstrators wore eye patches and held signs aloft.

Agence France-Presse

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