Israeli Occupation Forces Attack Peace
Activists with Gas During a Protest Against the Land-Grab Wall in Bil'in
IOF troops, settlers escalate attacks on Palestinian
civilians
[ 17/09/2009 - 04:55 PM ]
NABLUS, (PIC)--
A 20-year-old Palestinian youth in the village of Orta, south of
Nablus, was hospitalized on Thursday after a group of illegal Israeli
Jewish settlers ganged up on him in the village's main street.
Local sources said that Ashraf Awad was taken to a hospital in Nablus
with bruises all over his body as a result of the assault.
Israeli occupation forces (IOF) late on Wednesday night beat up four
Palestinians in Beit Fujjar village, Bethlehem district, and all were
taken to hospital.
IOF soldiers in Al-Khalil beat up a 16-year-old Palestinian near the
Ibrahimi Mosque late on Wednesday. He was treated in hospital for
painful bruises.
IOF troops stormed the village of Qabatia, east of Jenin city, at
dawn Thursday for the third week running and combed the town's suburbs.
They used flare bombs in their search but no arrests were made.
Israeli occupation forces kidnap five Palestinians in West
Bank cities
Published today (updated) 18/09/2009 15:40
Bethlehem – Ma’an –
Israeli occupation forces kidnapped five locals from the Nablus,
Tubas and Jericho regions, taking all to unknown locations for
questioning following the dawn detentions.
Palestinian police
said Israeli occupation forces overran Qabalan village southeast of
Nablus and raided the house of Salim Salameh Az’ar and detained his
18-year-old son Salameh, then took 33-year-old Jihad Salah Hamad from a
second home.
Troops stationed at the Huwara checkpoint detained
18-year-old Adham Omar Sheirif Hamdan from Asira village, accusing him
of possessing a knife.
In Jericho, the troops overran the city
center detaining Gaza-born Shafiq Saleh Al-Rawagh after raiding his
house. Palestinians with Gazan identity cards are often targeted by
Israeli occupation soldiers.
In Tubas, soldiers detained
22-year-old Samer Izzat Hamed Abu Arrah from Aqaba village, he is a
student at An-Najah University in Nablus.
Dozens suffer effects of tear gas inhalation at the weekly
Bil’in protest
Friday September 18, 2009 15:17 by Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC News
Dozens effects of tear gas inhalation on Friday during the weekly
protest in the village of Bil’in central West Bank.
Villagers
along with international and Israeli peace activists marched from the
village after the midday prayers. When the demonstrators approached the
closed gate in the barrier, they tried to open it and access to their
land, but Israeli occupation soldiers who were hiding behind concrete
blocks, started throwing gas and sound bombs on them, causing tens of
cases of suffocation. Israeli military attacks continued this week
to target the organizers of the weekly nonviolent protests.
On Tuesday, Israeli occupation forces attacked and searched the house
of Abdullah Abu Rahmah Coordinator of the popular committee in the
village. During the attack troops attacked Imad Burnat, a local
journalist and destroyed his camera. Bil’in has been the scene of weekly
nonviolent demonstrations against the Israeli wall for four years.
Dozens suffer tear gas inhalation at anti-wall protest in
Bil'in
Published today (updated) 18/09/2009 16:34
Ramallah – Ma’an –
Dozens suffered tear gas inhalation during the weekly protest against
the illegal Israeli Land-Grab, Apartheid Wall, in the village of Bil'in
north of Ramallah on Friday, as locals joined international activists
following prayers.
Commemorating the 27th anniversary of the
massacre of thousands of Palestinian refugees at the Sabra and Shatila
Refugee Camps in Lebanon, protesters rallied against the continued
construction of the Israeli separation wall and West Bank settlements,
as well as the continued night raids regularly conducted in the village.
The group marched toward the gate separating the villagers from
their lands, ready to demand permission to cross. The rally was met with
teargas and sound bombs, several were treated for the effects of the
noxious fumes.
The Israelis of Bil’in: joining Palestinians against the wall
Published today (updated) 18/09/2009 16:34
Bil'in - Ma'an -
For over four years the international media has reported on the
weekly protests in the small West Bank village of Bil’in. They report
that Israel has moved the separation wall so it annexes over 60% of the
village, that the residents of Bil’in once worked the confiscated land
as a source of livelihood and that after every Friday prayer there is a
non-violent protest that gets dispersed by tear gas. What is left out
from such accounts is that many who attend these West Bank protests are
Israelis Jews.
So what are these Israelis doing? They are
breaking Israeli law by entering the West Bank, not to mention the newly
relabeled “closed military zone” of Bil’in.” And perhaps even more
daring, these Jewish protesters are breaking from the Zionist glue that
professes that Israel can do-no-wrong—especially when it comes to the
treatment of Palestinians.
A wall within
“You first have
to cross a wall within yourself,” says Inbar, a 22 year-old student at
Tel Aviv University referring metaphorically to the separation wall
Israel has constructed around half of the West Bank.
“I lost
friends the first time I came... I was an outcast. And when the solders
saw me they pushed me and called me a whore. I only tell a few people
[Israelis] what I do on my Fridays now. Not everyone is, how shall we
say, open?”
Many Israelis who to attend the anti-wall protests in
Bil’in, or those in the villages of Ni’lin or Al-Ma’asara, say they come
on a regular basis. Some say they have been attending these rallies for
over four years.
Inbar continues, “Just because I was born Jewish
does not make me different. I consider us all people who work this land…
as our ancestors did together for so many years before. You cannot
change history.”
“But you also can’t push facts on people if they
don’t want to hear it. They will reject it outright. Still, I am willing
to have that argument.”
Inbar studies agriculture and says that
despite her unpopular views, she still has an active social life in
Israel.
“The Israeli government has a lot invested in this wall.
I think eventually it will move. Not come down, but move… which is a
still bad because nothing has done more to separate Israelis from
Palestinians… than this,” she said pointing at the wall.
“I come
to show my solidarity. If protesting this wall is something we can do
together, then so be it.”
Some in regular attendance of these
West Bank protests estimate that up to half of the international
participates are Israelis Jews. Many come with an organization, or
car-pool from hubs like Tel Aviv or Jerusalem.
The refuseniks
“We are not the left-wing,” says Dany, a 29-year-old artist and
activist from Netanya. “They hate us because people confuse us with
them. I refused to serve in the army.
“I come out [to Bil’in] for
many reasons—land-theft, basic human rights and injustice in my own
name. For 18-months I have been getting tear gassed by my own people.”
“That speaks loudly to Palestinians. They know our history. And I
will be back next Friday.”
All Israelis must serve in the Israeli
army; postings include everything from checkpoint duty to organizing
social events for troops on their off days. While most assignments do
not require combat, they do require being part of an occupational force.
That is unacceptable for some Israelis. Such are called refuseniks.
Commonly, there are two categories of Israeli who refuse army
service. The first kind is an already enlisted reserve solder that signs
a letter refusing to serve in the occupied territories. The second is an
Israeli that simply does not want to be part of the occupation force and
refuses to serve in any post mandated by the army.
Refusing the
Israeli army is punishable by imprisonment.
Two sides to every
wall
Meet Assaf. He is a 24-year-old Israeli, a self-proclaimed
“lover of peace” and a former medic for the Israeli army who served in
the West Bank. “I have seen violence and I hate it,” he says. “I hate it
more than anything. It is a disease of humanity.
“When I was a
medic in the IDF [Israeli army forces] I was on the other side of these
protests. The other side of this wall.”
Assaf went on to suggest
that the Palestinians should get giant posters of Gandhi and read Marin
Luther King speeches over a loud speaker at the next Friday protest.
“They [the protests] are in the right direction, but they need more
organization. More structure.
“I didn’t like it [throwing rocks
at the solders] when I was in the IDF and I don’t like it now. It
encourages the solders to react.” Violence breeds more violence, he
said.
“As [Israeli] solders we are told by our commanders that
‘the world hates us’ and that ‘if it was up to these people the
holocaust would be nothing.’ Our IDF commanders used the Jewish
narrative to put fear in us.
“It is just crazy to think that
beyond the gas, beyond the wall and beyond the armor, they [the Israeli
soldiers] are actually terrified of the 50 unarmed people here. Simply
crazy.”
The gassing at Bil’in
When Bil’in’s Imam concludes
the weekly Friday prayer, a group forms outside the main mosque. They
begin to beat their chests and chant anti-occupation slogans. “One, two,
three, four, occupation no more,” is a normal cry. And the protest comes
to life.
Palestinians, internationals (Israelis included) and a
small army of press cross the sunken wadi, or valley in Arabic, and
approach the wall that has annexed over half of the land of the village.
Israeli soldiers pour out of their armored barracks in anticipation. The
protesters continue to shout and take pictures; a daring few opt to
abuse the barbwire fence. Many of the Israeli civilians look through the
crowd to their nation’s solders, with Bil’in’s occupied land as a
painful background.
Out of nowhere, rocks start to fly from the
hands of teenage Palestinians who crouch behind ancient boulders and
olive trees. The Israeli soldiers on the other side of the fence watch,
occasionally flinching in their expensive armor.
And then, like
a monsoon, tear gas comes raining from the sky. The crowd falls back
through the wadi and back into the village of Bil’in.
On the
pavement is a young Israeli protester. He is faint from the gas and red
in the face. His tear ducts are in overdrive, tying to rid his eyes from
his own country’s gas. The Israeli is alone.
An elder from the
village calmly approaches him. Recognizing the situation, the elder says
in an Arabic-accented Hebrew, “shalom aleichem,” or peace be upon you,
and he extends his hand.
The young Israeli is slow, but he gets
up. The Palestinian elder waits. And the Jew and the Arab walk back to
the village. Together.
And so is the Friday drama in the West
Bank village of Bil’in.
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