Israeli occupation forces attack the weekly anti-wall
protest at Ni'lin and Bil'in villages central West Bank
Friday February 19, 2010 22:24 by Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC NEWS
At Bil'in and Nil'in villages central West Bank Israeli
occupation forces used tear gas and sound bombs to suppress
anti-wall protests. Today, the people of Bil'in, a small Palestinian
village in the central West Bank marked the 5th year anniversary of
their weekly struggle against the Israeli-built wall on their lands.
Villagers, along with international and Israeli supporters marched
after the midday prayers at the local mosque towards the illegally-built
Israeli Land-Grab Wall. In 2004 the International Court of Justice in
The Hague ruled the Israeli wall illegal. Among the people who came
today to the village of Bil'in were Palestinian Prime Mister Salam
Fayyad and MP Mustafa Al Barghouthi.
In September 2007 the
villagers continued to protest; and through legal proceedings managed to
get the Israeli occupation government so-called Supreme Court of Justice
to order a halt to the wall’s construction. The court ruled for a
re-routing of the wall section built on Bil'in's land. Due to the
ruling, the villagers got back 275 acres of the 600 acres the Wall was
planned to take over.
This week, after two years of stalling, the
Israeli military started to re-route the wall as ordered by the court.
Eyad Burnat, head of the Bil'in committee against the wall and
settlements stated:
"The creative ideas the local Popular
Committee implemented along with Bil'in residents in resisting the Wall
attracted a lot of international supporters and media which help
spreading this experience"
Since the start of the protests five
years ago at the Bil'in village Israeli and international supporters
joined the villagers' struggle. Chai Pollack, an Israeli activist who
comes to Bil'in every week.
"In the beginning the first role of
Israelis was to lower the amount of violence used by the army, because
the army follow different ‘open fire’ orders if it was only Palestinians
- it’s very dangerous; and after many years of working together now we
are building a movement: a joint struggle against the Occupation."
Pollack Told IMEMC.
Villages all over the West Bank followed in
Bil'in’s footsteps in conducting weekly protests against the
Israeli-built wall on their lands. Salah Al-Khawaja from the nearby
Nil'in village where anti-wall protests started three years ago:
There were three key elements that succeeded in Bil'in: continuity,
diversity and self sufficiencyt, which Nil'in, Al- Ma'assra and Soo-Sya
had learned from. Al Khawaja told IMEMC
The Israeli
occupation forces have arrested at least 128 villagers from all
over the West Bank in the past six months in connection to the weekly
anti-wall protests. Currently, the Israeli occupation army is holding at
least six members of the popular committee against the wall and
settlements under charges of incitement against the military.
"They try to stop us by force, by nightly invasions, and arrests. They
even tried to kill people and they did: they killed our friend Bassem in
April of last year, to try to stop this weekly activity. We say to them:
our protest will continue and will not stop until the Wall is gone."
Eyad Burnat, head of the Bil'in committee against the wall and
settlements said.
Every week an Israeli occupation army unit
stops the villagers from going through the gate of the wall by firing
tear gas canisters, causing dozens to suffer gas inhalation. Today at
least 3 residents were injured by rubber-coated steel bullets. Dozens
more were treated for the effects of tear gas inhalation. The army also
used liquid tear gas.
For this Friday the protest ended at the
village of Bil'in, but before dispersing the villagers take a final look
at the tombstone of Bassem Abu Rahma, a local popular resistance
activist killed by the Israeli forces last year. In total the army
injured 1200 people from the village during the weekly protests started
five years ago.
One injured scores suffered tear gas inhalation at an anti
wall protest near Bethlehem
Friday February 19, 2010 22:03 by Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC NEWS
Israeli occupation forces aggressively dispersed a peaceful
demonstration of Palestinians protesting the construction of the Israeli
apartheid wall through their land at Al-Ma'asara village near Bethlehem
city on Friday afternoon.
Approximately 100 Palestinians and 20
internationals and Israelis gathered to protest against the construction
of the illegal barrier. The demonstration took place with the
participation of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine
for their 41st anniversary. The Barrier is built on the land of the
villagers of Al-Ma'asara and will block the residents from their
farmland. They have already lost more than 350 hectares of land to a
nearby Israeli Settlement.
Men and women of all ages gathered
after the Friday prayer and marched through the main road of the village
and this week they decide to march on the road where settlers used.
Where the organizers of The Popular Committee against the Wall in Al-Ma'asara
gave speeches.
The demonstrators then walked toward their land
at which time Israeli occupation soldiers in a jeep approached, exited
and began firing tear gas and throwing concussion grenades into the
group. The group quickly dispersed and the soldiers chased them into the
village and continued firing tear gas at the demonstrators. One of the
participators 18 years injured and scores suffered.