Nearly 100 injured in Gaza border protests

Since the Gaza rallies began in March last year, nearly 270 protesters were martyred, with thousands of others injured.

Medics are affected by tear gas smoke launched by Israeli security forces as they intervene in a demonstration within the "Great March of Return" at Israel-Gaza border in east of Khan Yunis, Gaza on July 5, 2019.
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Medics are affected by tear gas smoke launched by Israeli security forces as they intervene in a demonstration within the "Great March of Return" at Israel-Gaza border in east of Khan Yunis, Gaza on July 5, 2019.

Ninety-seven Palestinians were injured during protests along the Gaza border on Friday, according to the health ministry.

The protesters converged near a security fence that separates Gaza Strip from Israel to demonstrate against Israel’s decades-long occupation of Palestinian territories.

Of those injured, 47 were harmed by live ammunition, said the ministry. Among the injured are two medical staff and two journalists.

No further information has been given about the state of the injured protesters.

Gaza’s National Authority for Return and Breaking the Siege (NARBS), which organizes weekly rallies, called on Palestinians to attend demonstrations and affirm on their right to return to their villages in historical Palestine.

Earlier on Friday, the NARBS warned Israel against any "escalation" against the Palestinian peaceful protestors.

Since the Gaza rallies began in March last year, nearly 270 protesters have been martyred — and thousands more wounded — by Israeli troops deployed near the buffer zone.

Demonstrators demand an end to Israel’s 12-year blockade of the Gaza Strip, which has shattered the coastal enclave’s economy and deprived its two million inhabitants of many basic amenities.

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