Palestinian political factions have traded accusations of blame over
three siblings who were burned alive after their home was set ablaze by
candles the family was using due to the ongoing electricity crisis in
the besieged Gaza Strip.
Officials in the Gaza-based Hamas movement and the West Bank-based
Palestinian Authority have traded barbs over the deaths, with each
accusing the other of bearing the responsibility.
More than 600 Palestinians came out on Saturday for the funeral of the
three children, whose home was engulfed in flames a day earlier in the al-Shati refugee camp in the north of the coastal
enclave.
With leaders of the Hamas political organization and local armed
factions in attendance, the mourners decried the deaths of Rahaf, Yousra
and Nasser al-Hendi, who were between one and four years old.
Mohammed al-Hendi, the 30-year-old father of the children, recalled his last day with his children.
"We were at the beach and came home to find there was no electricity again," he told Al Jazeera at the funeral.
"They were sleeping, and I went out to bring dinner. When I came home, they told me my children were burned alive."
Dozens of relatives and neighbours came to the Hendi family's charred
home in al-Shati after the funeral to express their condolences.
Standing in the blackened remains of the half-collapsed home, their
grandmother Umm Fadi sobbed heavily as she recollected the last time she
saw the late children at her nearby home a day before they died.
"They were so happy because we bought them clothes for Ramadan, and I cooked for them," she told Al Jazeera.
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"Then they were burned to death in those clothes."
'Tragedy'
With the assistance of Egypt, Israel has imposed a tight siege on Gaza
since Hamas took control of the region in 2007. The blockade severely
restricts residents' access to electricity, fuel, medicine, food and
humanitarian goods.
Since late 2009, Israel has launched three major military offensives in Gaza, leaving much of the region in ruins.
"The whole world is aware of the suffering of Gaza. The Palestinian
Authority is the one who is responsible for this," said Hamas member
Ehab al-Badrasawi in an interview with Al Jazeera at the Hendi family
home.
Many Gaza residents blame the Fatah-led PA for the Blue Tax, a tariff
which significantly increased the price of fuel that makes operations
possible for Gaza's sole power plant. In April, the PA announced a
summer-long exemption from the tax.
Despite grants from the Qatari government, internal Palestinian
political divisions and Israel's ongoing siege of the strip have
rendered any solution to the electricity crisis unlikely.
PA 'complicity'
In March, PA President Mahmoud Abbas spiked a proposal to build
additional electricity lines to support Gaza, where electricity outages
have reached up to 18 to 20 hours a day in some districts.
Alluding to Israeli air strikes in Gaza in recent days, Hamas senior
political leader Ismail Haniyeh said on Saturday that the PA is
complicit in the electricity crisis due to the latter's cooperation with
Israel.
"The enemy's planes burn the land and the homes, and the crippling
siege and its accomplices burn our children… and the lights of our
future," Haniyeh said.
"Who has been taking $70m a month in taxes from Gaza? Who has been
collecting fuel taxes? Who refused to enlarge the power supply from
Egypt to the Gaza Strip and refused to build a pipeline to provide
Gaza's power station with gas to increase its capacity?"
President Abbas telephoned the grieving family on Saturday to express
his condolences, and the PA has offered to rebuild the Hendi family's
home, according to local media reports.
In a statement released on Saturday, PA spokesperson Yousef Mahmoud
decried Hamas for "false accusations", insisting that the deaths were "a
tragedy for the whole Palestinian people".
The PA's press office did not respond to Al Jazeera's requests to comment further.
'Rage and anger'
Talal Abu Zareefa, a representative of the leftist Democratic Front for
the Liberation of Palestine's political bureau, called on the
international community to pressure Israel to end its siege of the strip
and demanded that Palestinian factions unite to solve Gaza's many humanitarian crises.
"The world should apply the necessary pressure on the Israeli
occupation to lift the siege of Gaza and let the Palestinian people live
like any other nation in the world," he told Al Jazeera at the Hendi
home.
Mukhaimer Abu Saada, a political analyst and professor at Gaza's Al Azhar University, explained that the death of the tragic incident
highlights the ongoing political divides between Hamas and the PA, but
it is "not a new type of incident" in Gaza.
"The mood among Palestinians in Gaza is rage and anger at both the
Hamas movement and the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah," he told Al
Jazeera.
"But Palestinians are also very angry at Hamas because they have been
here nine years without being able to alleviate the suffering of
Palestinians here in their daily lives," Abu Saada said.
"The house is being rebuilt, but there is no solution for the two million Palestinians in Gaza in the foreseeable future."
Back in al-Shati, grieving father Mohammed al-Hendi said: "The world
should come to Gaza and see how we are living. Look at what is happening
to the people of Gaza; see our situation here.
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