Masked Palestinian ‘night confusion units’ step up anti-Israel unrest at Gaza border with fire balloons and sound bombs
Young men attach flaming devices to balloons as others hurl primitively built sound grenades across the border

It’s nearly 10pm when young Palestinian men begin banging drums and chanting songs, while others attach incendiary devices to balloons – all closely watched by Israeli snipers on the border.
For six months, Palestinians have gathered regularly along the fence between the Gaza Strip and Israel for often violent daylight demonstrations against Israeli policies.
But in recent weeks they have deployed a new tactic: “night confusion units”.
Protests can go on until the early hours.
Organisers say they aim to force the Jewish state to ease its crippling decade-long blockade of Gaza, but residents in nearby Israeli communities say their lives are being destroyed.
Israel accuses Gaza’s rulers Hamas of controlling the protests.
Hamas says it backs the demonstrations but is not commanding them and that the idea for nocturnal activity came from protesters themselves.
