Israeli Occupation Forces Break Into Barta'a Homes,
Vandalize Property, Kidnap Residents, Mistreat travelers
Israeli troops invade village near Jenin, break into homes
and vandalise property
Friday July 16, 2010 15:03 by George Rishmawi - IMEMC & Agencies
An Israeli occupation soldiers force consists of at least 20 armored
vehicles invaded the village of Barta'a near Jenin in the northern West
Bank and break into residents homes in the early hours of Friday
morning.
Palestinian sources said that troops stayed for four
hours in the village during which they fired live ammunition. The Ma'an
News Agency reported Tawfiq Qabaha, a member of the village council as
saying that troops encircled the town at 1 am, blocking entrances and
entering the extended family homes of two residents before ransacking
their contents during a search.
As the troops entered the
village, Qabaha said, young men threw stones and were greeted with live
fire, causing no injuries.
Troops broke into the building of
57-year-old Sa’eed Ahmad Qabaha, forcing the entire extended family who
live in the building out, as soldiers thoroughly searched the house
leaving behind a serious damage to the property. According to Qabaha the
soldiers used search as a pretext to vandalize the property.
A
similar event was reported in the home of 35-year-old Mohammad Tawfiq
Qabaha, who said his family's belongings were ransacked.
Soldiers Kidnap Nine Palestinians, Including Two Women In
Nablus
Thursday July 15, 2010 10:55 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC & Agencies
Israeli occupation soldiers conducted an arrest campaign targeting
leaders and members of the leftists Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine (PFLP), and kidnapped nine residents, including two women, in
Beit Forik Village, near the northern West Bank city of Nablus.
Myassar Etyani, a Palestinian woman active in detainees’ affairs, stated
that the soldiers invaded the village around 2 a.m. and broke into
several homes.
The soldiers broke into the home of Abu Ghlamay
and kidnapped Ayman Abu Ghalamy who was released from an Israeli
detention camp a month ago after spending 4.5 years in Israeli prisons.
Soldiers also confiscated the I.D. card of his father.
The
soldiers also kidnapped Laith Mofeed Abu Ghalamy in addition to former
female detainees Linan Yousef Abu Ghalamy and her sister Taghreed.
Etyani added that the army also kidnapped Sajed Abdul-Latif Mleitat,
his brother Mos’ab, Hani Abu Al Saoud, and Hamada Hanani. Soldiers
confiscated laptops and mobile phones.
Etyani said that Linan
was released from an Israeli detention facility on October of 2009 as
part of an agreement that was meant to reach a prisoner-swap deal that
would ensure the release of prisoner-of-war, Gilad Shalit.
Linan
is the widow of Amjad Mleitat who was assassinated by Israel in 2004. He
was a senior member of the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigade, the armed wing of
the PFLP.
Linan and Taghreed are the sisters of Ahed Abu Ghalamy
who is serving life-term in Israeli prisons, while Ayman and Laith are
his nephews.
'No comment' on arbitrary treatment
Published today (updated) 16/07/2010 15:27
Qalqiliya – Ma'an –
A father of five from Azzun Atma village in the northern West Bank
was told by Israeli occupation soldiers manning the single civilian
crossing into the area that on Tuesday, 50kgs of flour was too much and
he could not bring it home.
Hassan Mahmoud Qadus was also told
to leave two kilograms of meat, purchased for his family, at the
checkpoint to rot. The quantity of meat, a soldier told him, was above
what was permitted for personal consumption.
"There are such
regulations in place," a representative for the Israel's Coordinator of
Government Activities in the Territories told Ma'an on Wednesday,
explaining that if residents of the Qalqiliya-area village want to bring
goods into their village to sell, they must get a permit, bring them in
via a crossing linking the village with Israel, and pay taxes on the
goods.
Azzun Atma, with a population of 1,670, is trapped on the
west side of Israel's separation wall, but residents are prohibited from
accessing Israel. Road barriers were constructed to the south of the
village, and the illegal Israeli settlements to the east - Sha'are Tiqwa
- and to the west - Oranit - constructed perimeter fences blocking
movement from all access points except the Azzun Atma checkpoint pierced
into the separation wall to the north of the village.
"You will
have to ask the army," the COGAT representative told Ma'an, when asked
about the decision to prevent Qadus from bringing home the quantities of
flour and meat.
When distributing aid to Palestinian refugees,
who make up 4% of the residents in Azzun Atma, the United Nations Relief
and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East distributes
50-kilogram bags of flour, five kilograms of rice, five kilograms of
sugar, two liters of cooking oil, one kilogram of powdered milk and five
kilograms of lentils. The quantities are distributed to families every
three months for personal consumption.
An Israeli military
source explained that the decision to deny Qadus permission to bring in
the food "could have been the independent decision of a soldier based on
the situation," but directed the question to the military's Central
Command.
On Thursday, a second source said the matter was "more
complicated" than it appeared, and came back with "no comment" on the
situation of Qadus.
Asked if the military could provide the
guidelines set out for villagers delineating amounts of goods for
personal consumption versus for commercial use, the military took
24-hours to return with an official statement of "no comment."
Speaking with Ma'an's reporter in the village, residents of Azzun Attma
appealed for international intervention, asking that they be permitted
to move freely in and out of their village and to transport food
supplies from the city of Qalqiliya and neighboring towns back to their
homes without harassment.