INA- SOURCES
"Paris is a historic, and a great moment to go there and to tell the world that it's the time to say stop, enough is enough," Rajoub said at a press conference in Ramallah.
"Therefore, we will also try to have athletes coming from Gaza, or originally from Gaza."
Rajoub added that "the Israelis lost their legal right and moral right to attend as long as they continue their crimes" in Gaza.
Among those, he cited the death of 300 athletes and sports staff in the coastal Palestinian territory, the destruction of sports infrastructure and the use of stadiums as detention centres by Israeli troops.
Israeli media footage showed scores of stripped Palestinians, including children, detained in Gaza City's Yarmouk stadium in December.
Rajoub, who was recently denied a visa to Australia, also leads the Palestinian Football Association, which called for Israel to be immediately suspended from FIFA at the highest football body's congress in May.
He decried movement restrictions and travel difficulties that make it challenging for Palestinian athletes to travel for international sporting events, or to train abroad.
"In spite of all the difficulties and the challenges and the general atmosphere, someone was qualified" for the Olympics, he said, referring to Palestinian taekwondo athlete Omar Ismail.
"I believe that in the end we will have between six to eight" athletes in Paris, he said, adding that he hoped they could compete under the wildcard system.
The system allows a limited number of athletes to take part even if they have not met the necessary criteria.
International Olympic Committee head Thomas Bach said in April that "even if no (Palestinian) athlete would qualify on the field of play... then the NOC (National Olympic Committee) of Palestine would benefit from invitations, like other national Olympic Committees who do not have a qualified athlete".
Bach said he expected the delegation to number "six to eight" athletes.
He added that his committee "from day one of the conflict" in Gaza had "supported in many different ways the athletes to allow them to take part in qualifications and to continue their training."
Rajoub said he viewed European protests against the war in Gaza positively, describing them as a "message of hope to the Palestinians".
Israel's military retaliation has killed at least 37,202 people, also mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza.
SOURCE: AHRAM ONLINE
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