12-Year-Old Palestinian Child,
Muhammed Al-Khawajah, Speaks of his Kidnapping and Mistreatment By
Israeli Occupation Soldiers
Palestinian child speaks of his arrest, ill-treatment at hands of
Israelis
Date: 01 / 11 / 2008 Time: 15:47
Ni’lin – B'Tselem
Report –
Twelve-year-old Palestinian child, Muhammed Salah Al-Khawajah is a
student and a resident of Ni'lin, a village in the Ramallah district of
the West Bank. His testimony about the night his home was invaded by
Israeli occupation soldiers was given to Iyad Hadad on 18 September 2008
at the witness's home.
Muhammed: I live with my
family in Ni’lin. We live on the ground floor of the house, my two
uncles and their families live on the first floor, and my grandmother
lives on the second floor.
Last Thursday [11 September], around
3:00 am I woke up from my mother’s shouts. She was shouting, “Get up!
Get up! The (Israeli occupation) army is here!” My father wasn’t home
that night. I got up and went out with her to the inner courtyard of the
house. There were about 12 (Israeli occupation) soldiers there and their
faces were painted black. One soldier wore a black [balaclava] that
covered his face. He sat on the stairs outside the house and didn’t take
part. I think he was a collaborator who led them to houses.
The (Israeli occupation) soldiers were on the first floor. I heard
them tell my Uncle Sami to direct them to our floor. One of the soldiers
asked, “Where is Muhammad?” and I realized he was asking about me. The
soldier told my uncle to call me, so he did. I started walking towards
them. Two soldiers grabbed me and took me outside. I realized they
wanted to kidnap me. I was afraid, and began to cry, and called my uncle
to come with me.
The (Israeli occupation) soldiers cuffed my
hands tight with plastic handcuffs, which hurt a lot. A soldier grabbed
me by the shirt from behind and started walking and pushing me forward.
The shirt was up against my neck and I couldn’t breathe properly. I
tried to free myself, and he punched me in the back and pulled the shirt
tighter, choking me even more. Another soldier also punched me and
pulled my hair as we walked. I cried and called out for my uncle and my
father. The soldiers hit me and said, “Quiet! Quiet!”
They led
me to an alleyway between the houses, where there are cactuses. We were
walking by some cactuses and then one of the soldiers pushed me into
them. The thorns pricked me in the hands and legs. The soldiers kept on
pushing me forward and hitting me along the way.
While we were
walking, children from the village began to throw stones at the
soldiers. It felt like it was raining stones.
The (Israeli
occupation) soldiers were confused. Some of them ran off, and the others
pushed me to move faster, and I fell down. One soldier started dragging
me along the ground, on my stomach, with my hands tied. The ground was
full of stones, gravel, and dirt. He pulled me by my hands and I cried
and shouted. He told me to shut up. He wanted to pull me faster, to get
away from the stones. He dragged me a few meters, until we were behind a
wall. It felt like my right knee and the palms of my hands were injured.
My knee was bleeding.
Some (Israeli occupation) soldiers fired
tear gas in the direction of the stone throwers. The grenade fell not
far from me and I started coughing and crying. My eyes were burning. We
started walking again, the soldiers pushing me from behind.
We
got to a house in the village about 400 meters away and they broke in.
It was the house of 14-year-old Abdul Rahman Lu’ai Abdul Halim who goes
to school with me. They arrested him and his cousin, 18-year-old Sufian
Nawaf al-Khawajah.
They took the three of us to the village
center, about 400 meters from my house, and made us stand facing a shop
with our hands raised. Abdul Rahman and Sufian were handcuffed as well.
The soldiers beat us and knocked us to the ground. We lay there and they
stepped on us, on our heads and stomach, for a few minutes. Then they
stood us on our feet and pushed us toward the entrance to the village. A
soldier was behind each of us holding each one by the shirt.
Every now and then the (Israeli occupation) soldiers punched and kicked
us. One soldier was angry at me in particular. He beat and strangled me,
as if he wanted to kill me. I think some of the soldiers had been hit by
the stones thrown by the children. I shouted and cried, I was so scared.
It was still dark out. They led us about one kilometer, to the junction
that leads to the Nili settlement. There were lots of army jeeps at the
junction. The soldiers blindfolded me and put me into a jeep. It was
about an hour after they had arrested me. The jeep began to move. I
didn't know where it was going.
I sat on the floor of the jeep,
without any soldiers next to me. After about half an hour, maybe an
hour, of driving, the jeep stopped, and the soldiers took me out of it.
I could see a bit through the blindfold. I didn't know where I was, but
it was an army base. I saw another two jeeps pull up. They took Abdul
Rahman out of one and Sufian out of the other.
Then they drove us
somewhere else. There they sat us down on benches, and after ten minutes
they called us in for questioning, one after the other.
Abdul
Rahman went first and his questioning lasted for about twenty minutes.
Then I went into the room and they took off my blindfold. I saw a man in
civilian clothes. He was stout, with a round face and fair skin. He was
wearing a skullcap. He said his name was Captain Sasson and I also heard
other people call him that. He sat me down next to his table and asked
me questions about children from the village.
He showed me
pictures from a thick photo album, which had more than 200 photos. He
asked me about some children again and again, and I told him I didn't
know them. Then he stopped asking me about them and showed me three
pictures of myself, holding a slingshot in a demonstration against the
separation fence. I admitted that it was me, but I kept on saying that I
didn't know the other children. Then he hit me in the back with a
plastic stool. I cried and shouted, and he hit me twice in the leg with
a wooden stick.
An (Israeli occupation) soldier who had a pistol
on his hip ordered me to get up and face the window or the closet. There
was a camera fixed in place in front of me. He took my picture, and then
the interrogator told me to sign, with my fingerprint, a page with
Hebrew writing. I don’t know what it said. The soldier didn’t read it to
me. I assume it was a confession. I had to sign because I was afraid he
would beat me.
The interrogator took prints of all my fingers,
and then told the soldier to blindfold me again. He took me out of the
room and sat me down on the bench outside. The interrogation had taken
about half an hour. Then they took Sufian in, also for about half an
hour.
Then they put the three of us in a big patrol van, and
after driving for about quarter of an hour, they took us out and removed
the blindfolds. I saw a sign that said “Ofer,” and I realized we were in
Ofer Prison. They took us into a room where they search people. They
took off our clothes and a doctor examined us. They gave us bags with
pants, a shirt, and flip-flops. They arrested Sufian and put him in a
detention room. A policeman in a blue uniform [of the regular, rather
than border police] spoke with the soldiers. I understood that he was
telling them to release us. He said to us, in Arabic, “You are small
children and should be released.”
They kept Abdul Rahman and me
outside the detention room and then returned us to the van. Our hands
were still cuffed. After about twenty minutes, they brought each one of
us a container of jello. They removed the cuffs and let us eat. About
half an hour later, they put the cuffs back on.
Two (Israeli
occupation) soldiers were guarding us in the van. We weren’t allowed to
talk to each other. Whenever we said something, a soldier told us to
shut up. It was very hot in the van, and we were sweating a lot. They
didn't give us anything to eat or drink. They did let us go to the
bathroom, removing the handcuffs and putting them back on when we
returned.
We stayed like that until after the muezzin called
worshipers to evening prayers around 8:00pm. Then they took us to
another camp. I think it was the Beit Sira camp.
At the camp,
they gave us a chocolate drink and put us in a small room with green
army mattresses. There weren’t any beds. The cuffs were loose now, so we
took them off, drank the chocolate drink and went to sleep.
The
next morning at 10:00 they put us in a patrol van and cuffed our hands
again, but this time they didn’t blindfold us. They took us back to Ofer
Prison and put us in the tent section, Department 2, which had
eighty-three detainees, of all ages. Each department had four tents,
with about twenty detainees in each.
The detainees treated us
well. They gave us candy, chocolate and potato chips. I felt
comfortable. I fasted during the day [since it was Ramadan] and played
soccer and tennis. The Department had TVs, one in each tent. I saw kids’
programs during the day and a Syrian soap opera, “Bab Al-Hara,” at
night. A detainee helped me ask for the doctor to treat my leg. They
took me to the clinic and the doctor put iodine on my knee wound and
bandaged it.
At first, I was afraid and cried sometimes, because
my family was far away. I’ve never been detained before. It was a new
experience for me. I didn't know anything about detention before then. I
don’t know why they detained me – the whole village and all the children
took part in the demonstrations, so why did they pick me?
The
adult detainees took care of me because I was the youngest detainee in
the Department, and they decided to make me assistant to the sergeant of
the Department.
I would wake up every morning at 6:00 and call
to the detainees: “Let’s go! Time for the count!” They would get up and
then the soldiers would come in and count them. I stood next to the
soldiers as they counted. The soldiers treated me with respect and asked
the older detainees to take care of me. The Department sergeant always
helped me. He was older than most of the other detainees and spoke
Hebrew. We worked together, helping the detainees and submitting their
requests to the prison officials and to the guards.
On Sunday
morning [14 September] at 6:00am I was taken to court together with
Abdul Rahman. Before we left for court, they shackled our hands and legs
with handcuffs and iron chains. When we got there, they put us in a
small room to wait until the hearing began, at 2:00pm. We didn't ask for
food or drink because we were fasting.
When the time for the
hearing came, they took us into the courtroom, the two of us handcuffed.
My father was there and so was a man from B'Tselem. Later, I learned
that his name was Iyad Hadad. Other people also came to the hearing, and
it made me feel good to see them. I was very happy to see my father, but
the soldiers didn’t let me hug him or even touch his hand.
An
Israeli lawyer defended me. I don’t know her name. She asked that I be
released on bond and the judge granted the request, but set bond at
3,000 shekels. My father didn't have the money, so we couldn’t pay.
After the hearing, they took me back into detention. The next day,
my father managed to borrow the money for the bond and I was released on
condition that I return to a hearing on Tuesday [16 September]. I went
home to my parents and family. I was very happy. I went to the medical
clinic in the village because my neck and shoulder hurt, and also
because of the scratches and wound to my knee. They examined me and
treated me. They told me to rest for a week and to come back for
follow-up.
My father went with me to the hearing on Tuesday. The
hearing was postponed until 21 October 2008.
Since I got
released, I’ve had problems. I wake up at night in fear and I can hardly
sleep. I went to a psychologist called Khaled Shahwan and he gave me
medicine and sedatives. I feel that it’s hard to concentrate in school.
Last year my grade average was 94.
***B'Tselem is a human rights
organization based in Israel whose mission it is to “to change Israeli
policy in the Occupied Territories and ensure that its government, which
rules the Occupied Territories, protects the human rights of residents
there and complies with its obligations under international law.” The
report was first published on 30 October.
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