Gazans Blast Hamas for ‘Trading Children for Fish’
h/t UnitedwithIsrael.org
Hamas’ use of children as human shields and as bait during the so-called March of Return weekly riots is facing mounting criticism in Gaza.
A Gaza-based reporter with connections to Hamas leadership described to TPS how the terror group lures children to approach the border with Israel and puts them in life-endangering situations, a tactic that is now causing locals to accuse the terror group of needlessly sacrificing their children for paltry “accomplishments.”
Hamas’ strategy involves sending buses to mosques, where children go for activities. The children are then sent out by buses to the border fence. Each cluster of mosques is assigned to a designated zone on the fence.
Hamas provides refreshments, food and entertainment to entice the children to join them. Hamas has recently added free Wi-Fi to the experience, which enables the children to surf the net while Hamas broadcasts live footage from the violence.
Hamas has complete control of the level of violence on the fence, and orders the number of buses each week in accordance with its leadership’s decision on how large and violent the demonstrations will be. The plans are finalized by Wednesday, and one can assess the size of the pending Friday demonstration based on the number of buses Hamas has ordered that week.
Hamas has control of the hostilities to the extent that it has issued a religious decree that anyone who approaches the fence on his own volition and is killed will not be considered a “shahid,” a martyr killed fighting infidels.
The reporter noted that Hamas is losing its support in Gaza, and therefore has added new ways to entice children to come to the border, including cash gifts.
He added that public criticism of Hamas’ usage of children is growing, and the phrase “trading children for fish” has spread, mocking Hamas for Israel’s recent decision to expand fishing zones off the coast of Gaza in exchange for modulating the weekly border violence.
Gazans say that even though several children have died during the riots on the fence, Hamas’ meager achievement a year later is broader fishing areas.
Finally, the reporter noted the irony in expanded fishing rights. The situation in Gaza is so bad that even though fishermen can bring in more fish, no one is buying them because they have no money, and the stalls remain loaded with their catch, due to the dire economic situation Hamas has created in the strip by diverting resources to its massive terror campaign.