Re Dr. Khalil Shikaki 3/3
投稿者: r911911911 投稿日時: 2003/07/15 00:48 投稿番号: [6234 / 20008]
During the attack, Dr. Shikaki locked himself in his office. After trying to break down the door and wall, some in the crowd smashed a window onto the balcony, then broke through the window into his office. But he said that while some attacked him, others tried to restrain them. No one was armed, he said.
In the Amari refugee camp here, two young men said they had joined the mob because they had heard that Dr. Shikaki had found that 70 percent of refugees rejected a right of return. "Our message to Shikaki was that he was not going to decide the right of return," said Ashraf Abu Ghadab, 18. "I thought if the people managed to reach Shikaki, they would kill him."
Mr. Abu Ghadab spoke outside the camp's youth center. Inside, one wall displayed a poster of 31 people from the camp who have died in the conflict, some from Israeli fire and others from blowing themselves up in attacks. Another wall was covered by a picture of an alpine stream running among pines and maples.
A new poster was going up today, decorated with knotted ropes that seemed to imply a political message. But its Arabic titles proved to be more literal than that ヘ(nstructions for local scouts on how to tie bowlines, clove hitches and other knots.
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/14/international/middleeast/14MIDE.html?hp=&pagewanted=print&position=
In the Amari refugee camp here, two young men said they had joined the mob because they had heard that Dr. Shikaki had found that 70 percent of refugees rejected a right of return. "Our message to Shikaki was that he was not going to decide the right of return," said Ashraf Abu Ghadab, 18. "I thought if the people managed to reach Shikaki, they would kill him."
Mr. Abu Ghadab spoke outside the camp's youth center. Inside, one wall displayed a poster of 31 people from the camp who have died in the conflict, some from Israeli fire and others from blowing themselves up in attacks. Another wall was covered by a picture of an alpine stream running among pines and maples.
A new poster was going up today, decorated with knotted ropes that seemed to imply a political message. But its Arabic titles proved to be more literal than that ヘ(nstructions for local scouts on how to tie bowlines, clove hitches and other knots.
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/14/international/middleeast/14MIDE.html?hp=&pagewanted=print&position=
これは メッセージ 6233 (r911911911 さん)への返信です.
固定リンク:https://yarchive.emmanuelc.dix.asia/1143582/a5a4a59a5ia5a8a5ka1bfa5qa5la59a5aa5jobjbf_1/6234.html