Assailants vandalize UN summer camp in Gaza in second such attack in 2 months

By AP
Monday, June 28, 2010

UN summer camp in Gaza vandalized

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Two dozen masked men vandalized a U.N. summer camp for children in Gaza early Monday, burning and slashing tents, toys and a plastic swimming pool. It was the second such attack in a month.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, but Islamic extremists have accused the main U.N. aid agency here of corrupting Gaza’s youth with its summer program of games, sports and human rights lessons for 250,000 children.

The U.N.’s main competitor in running summer camps is the ruling Islamic militant Hamas movement, which says it reaches some 100,000 children. The Hamas camps teach Islam and military-style marching, along with swimming and horseback riding.

In Monday’s attack, about two dozen armed and masked men targeted a seaside camp in central Gaza, one of dozens of U.N. sites across the Palestinian territory.

The assailants tied up an unarmed guard, then tried to set fire to two tents and a perimeter fence made from tarp-like material. Wielding knives, they slashed a plastic swimming pool, blow-up slide and toys.

John Ging, the local U.N. chief, called it a “cowardly and despicable” attack and said the site would be rebuilt quickly.

He said the attack is the latest sign of growing levels of extremism in Gaza. He said it provides further evidence “of the urgency to change the circumstances on the ground that are generating such extremism.”

Ging has repeatedly called for lifting of the 3-year-old border blockade of Gaza by Israel and Egypt, arguing the sanctions have mostly hurt ordinary Gazans, not Hamas. The blockade was imposed after the violent Hamas takeover of Gaza in 2007.

Last week, Israel said it would significantly ease the blockade, responding to international pressure following its deadly raid on a blockade-busting flotilla last month.

U.N. camps have been targeted by suspected Islamic extremists since their launch in 2007. Last month, assailants vandalized one of the main camp sites, and last year a Hamas legislator waged a public campaign against the U.N. summer program.

Hamas government officials were not immediately available for comment Monday.

In recent months, Hamas has become increasingly assertive in trying to impose its strict version of Islam on everyday life in Gaza.

However, the Islamists have also avoided open confrontation with the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, which provides services for two-thirds of Gaza’s 1.5 million people.

The U.N. avoids contact with Hamas, which is internationally shunned as a terror group.

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