CAIRO — Thousands of Palestinians marched between the wreckage of a heavily destroyed town in northern Gaza on Wednesday in the second day of anti-war protests, with many chanting against Hamas in a rare display of public anger against the militant group.
The protests, which centered mainly on Gaza’s north, appeared to be aimed generally against the war, with protesters calling for an end to 17 months of deadly fighting with Israel that has made life in Gaza insufferable.
But protesters also leveled unusually direct and public criticism of Hamas, which has quashed dissent violently in the past in Gaza, a territory it still rules months into the war with Israel.
In the town of Beit Lahiya, where a similar protest took place Tuesday, about 3,000 people demonstrated, with many chanting ‘’the people want the fall of Hamas.‘’ In the hard-hit Shijaiyah neighborhood of Gaza City, dozens of men chanted ‘’Out, out out! Hamas get out!‘’
‘‘Our children have been killed. Our houses have been destroyed,‘’ said Abed Radwan, who said he joined the protest in Beit Lahiya ‘’against the war, against Hamas, and the (Palestinian political) factions, against Israel and against the world’s silence.‘’
Ammar Hassan, who took part in a protest Tuesday, said it started as an anti-war protest with a few dozen people but swelled to more than 2,000, with people chanting against Hamas.
‘‘It’s the only party we can affect,‘’ he said by phone. ‘’Protests won’t stop the (Israeli) occupation, but it can affect Hamas."
The militant group has violently cracked down on previous protests. This time no outright intervention was apparent, perhaps because Hamas is keeping a lower profile since Israel resumed its war against it.