Gazans shocked by Israeli 'war crimes' as bulldozer mutilates Palestinian's body


  • English
  • Arabic

At around 6am on Sunday morning, Palestinian journalist Muthana Al Najjar rushed to the perimeter fence that separates Gaza from Israel to document a gruesome incident that was unfolding.

The 36-year-old said he’s never seen anything like it in his years covering the blockaded strip. In front of him was the lifeless body of Mohammed Al Naem hanging from the blades of an Israeli bulldozer.

"In more than a decade covering Gaza, this is the first time I see an event of this nature," Mr Al Najjar told The National.

A crowd of Palestinians had gathered in a bid to retrieve Al Naem’s body after he was shot by Israeli troops. Mr Al Najjar described the heavy Israeli troop presence preventing the crowd from moving forward, including soldiers supported by Merkava tanks atop sandbanks on the far Sadie of the fence. As people moved forward, the Israeli soldiers opened fire.

  • Mirvat, Mohammed Al-Na'em's mother, at her son's funeral
    Mirvat, Mohammed Al-Na'em's mother, at her son's funeral
  • Mirvat, Mohammed Al-Na'em's mother surrounded by women at son's funeral
    Mirvat, Mohammed Al-Na'em's mother surrounded by women at son's funeral
  • Hamza, Mohammed Al-Na'em's son
    Hamza, Mohammed Al-Na'em's son
  • Hiba, Mohammed Al-Na'em's wife at their home
    Hiba, Mohammed Al-Na'em's wife at their home
  • Muthana Al-Najjar with the phone he used to record the video of Israel bulldozer
    Muthana Al-Najjar with the phone he used to record the video of Israel bulldozer
  • Men attend the funeral of Mohammed Al-Na'em
    Men attend the funeral of Mohammed Al-Na'em
  • Men trying to collect a body as bulldozer approaches them, along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
    Men trying to collect a body as bulldozer approaches them, along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
  • An Israeli bulldozer carrying a body of a Palestinian, shot dead by Israeli forces after he was suspected of placing a bomb, along the Gaza-Israel border in Gaza strip. AFP
    An Israeli bulldozer carrying a body of a Palestinian, shot dead by Israeli forces after he was suspected of placing a bomb, along the Gaza-Israel border in Gaza strip. AFP
  • Men trying to collect a body as bulldozer approaches them, along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
    Men trying to collect a body as bulldozer approaches them, along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
  • Israeli soldiers walk behind a tank along the Israel-Gaza border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
    Israeli soldiers walk behind a tank along the Israel-Gaza border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
  • A Palestinian man sets fire to tyres along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian before extracting his body with a bulldozer. AFP
    A Palestinian man sets fire to tyres along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian before extracting his body with a bulldozer. AFP
  • Palestinians set fire to tyres along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian before extracting his body with a bulldozer. AFP
    Palestinians set fire to tyres along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian before extracting his body with a bulldozer. AFP
  • Palestinians demonstrate along along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip as an Israeli tank is seen across the other side. AFP
    Palestinians demonstrate along along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip as an Israeli tank is seen across the other side. AFP
  • Palestinians demonstrate along along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
    Palestinians demonstrate along along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
  • A Palestinian man sets fire to tyres along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip after Israeli army extracted a body with a bulldozer.
    A Palestinian man sets fire to tyres along the Gaza-Israel border east of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip after Israeli army extracted a body with a bulldozer.

Israel said soldiers opened fire on two men planting explosives next to the border fence of the Hamas-run enclave. Al Naem was later identified as an affiliate of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group that is second to Hamas.

The Israeli military confirmed one of the men was killed and a military bulldozer removed his body.

But the image of Al Naem’s body dangling from the bulldozer’s mechanical arm sparked uproar in the besieged enclave. Islamic Jihad responded with a wave of rocket fire and Al Naem’s family decried his killing.

Israel responded with several airstrikes on Gaza and Syria, which led to the injury of four Palestinians, according to Gaza's Ministry of Health, and the death of two Islamic Jihad members in Damascus, according to the group’s spokesman Abu Hamza.

"Undoubtedly, this incident will unleash the latent potentials of the Palestinian fight against the occupation. We won't accept the killing of our people in cold blood," Islamic Jihad leader, Ahmed Al Modalal, told The National.

But Al Naem's family say they don't believe he was planting explosives or that he thought he would die that day. His mother, 56-year-old Mirvat Al Naem, told The National from her Gaza home that her son had insisted on inviting her for lunch the day he was killed. She said it would not make sense for him to endanger his life on the morning of the same day. "The Israelis were the ones to assault him on our ground and our land," she said.

Al Naem's wife, 25-year-old Hiba, told The National that her late husband was "a decent engineer, contracting for different companies and working hard to make a living."

She pointed out that they have been married for a year and a half and have a baby, Hamza, who's less than a year old.

  • Light in the sky is seen in Damascus, Syria. Reuters
    Light in the sky is seen in Damascus, Syria. Reuters
  • Light in the sky is seen in Damascus, Syria. Reuters
    Light in the sky is seen in Damascus, Syria. Reuters
  • The smoke trail of a rocket, fired by Palestinian militants, flying over the Gaza Strip. AFP
    The smoke trail of a rocket, fired by Palestinian militants, flying over the Gaza Strip. AFP
  • Iron Dome anti-missile system fires interception missiles as rockets are launched from Gaza towards Israel, as seen from the city of Ashqelon. Reuters
    Iron Dome anti-missile system fires interception missiles as rockets are launched from Gaza towards Israel, as seen from the city of Ashqelon. Reuters
  • A ball of fire is seen following an Israel airstrike at Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
    A ball of fire is seen following an Israel airstrike at Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
  • A ball of fire is seen following an Israel airstrike at Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
    A ball of fire is seen following an Israel airstrike at Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. AFP
  • Flame and smoke are seen during Israeli air strikes in the southern Gaza Strip. REUTERS
    Flame and smoke are seen during Israeli air strikes in the southern Gaza Strip. REUTERS
  • A ball of fire is seen after an Israeli air strike in the southern Gaza Strip. EPA
    A ball of fire is seen after an Israeli air strike in the southern Gaza Strip. EPA
  • Flame and smoke are seen during an Israeli air strike in Gaza. Reuters
    Flame and smoke are seen during an Israeli air strike in Gaza. Reuters
  • Israeli interception missiles from the Iron Dome defence system, intercepting rockets fired by Palestinian militants over Gaza City. AFP
    Israeli interception missiles from the Iron Dome defence system, intercepting rockets fired by Palestinian militants over Gaza City. AFP
  • A view of Syrian air defenses intercepting missiles before they reach their targets, in Damascus, Syria. EPA
    A view of Syrian air defenses intercepting missiles before they reach their targets, in Damascus, Syria. EPA

"Why does our baby deserve to grow up without his father?" she asked.

After Al Naem was killed, Mr Al Najjar said that loudspeakers in the enclave crackled to life and called on people to rush to the scene to collect his remains before Israeli soldiers “arrive to steal it as has usually been the case in recent months.”

He said that local farmers and residents of neighbouring areas rushed forward and tried three times to collect Al Naem’s body. Each time they were forced back by live Israeli fire without prior warning. Two civilians were injured in the process.

As the people made the final attempt, a military bulldozer crossed 70 metres into Gaza, followed by an Israeli Merkava tank. Mr Al Najjar said this is a rare occurrence in daytime.

He described how the bulldozer rushed forward to cover the body of Al Naem with its scoop to prevent him being taken back into the enclave while soldiers shot at the crowd, hitting one rescuer in the leg.

Then, the bulldozer tried to pick up the body.

"The bulldozer made several failed attempts to violently snatch his body with its blade only, until it mutilated the body and dismembered parts of it," Mr Al Najjar said. “People managed to retrieve parts of his legs, which the family buried."

Israel's Defence Minister, Naftali Bennett, took to twitter to praise the military’s handling of the incident and the conduct of taking the bodies of Palestinians as a bargaining chip to negotiate the return of the bodies of two Israelis killed by Hamas in the strip during the 2014 war.

"This is how it should be done and this is how it will be done,” Mr Bennett said.

In Israel, the incident also drew criticism from rights groups. Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel sent a letter to the military head calling for a criminal investigation and said that the “actions depicted in the video [are] war crimes and blatant violations of international criminal law, and international human rights and humanitarian law.”

With eyes filled with tears, Mirvat begged for the return of her son.

"What's their purpose in mutilating his body after they killed him,” she asked with a shaking voice. “I want them to bring my son back, now before tomorrow. I have a right to see him one last time before we bury him here where I can visit him."

Mr Al Najjar’s footage of the last rescue attempt went viral but Al Naem's wife Hiba said she "would never watch the video".