March 13, 2010
		Israeli settlers tear up olive grove, uprooting 40 trees near 
		Nablus
		Saturday March 13, 2010 10:21 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News 
		Local municipal officials in the Palestinian Authority reported 
		Friday morning that overnight, a group of Israeli settlers had ambushed 
		a Palestinian olive grove in the town of Qaryut, uprooting and 
		completely destroying 40 trees.
		
		
Palestinian woman among her uprooted olive trees (photo life.com)
		
These olive trees are, in most cases, the only source of income for 
		the Palestinian villagers who own them. Over one million Palestinian 
		olive trees, including some aged over 1,000 years old, have been 
		destroyed by Israeli troops and settlers in the last ten years. 
		Palestinians say the destruction of the olive trees is a direct assault 
		on their livelihood, meant to force them from their native land. In 
		nearly every case, the trees destroyed have been located on land that 
		the Israeli settlers hope to acquire and absorb into the state of 
		Israel.
In the latest incident, a local mayor told the 
		Palestinian News Agency Ma'an that the trees destroyed Thursday night by 
		the settlers belonged to Muhammad Jaber Abdullah, Ahmad Jaber Abdullah 
		and Yasser Hassan.
The area around Nablus has been subject to 
		numerous violent attacks by Israeli settlers in recent weeks, including 
		the shooting of a young boy by settler security guards, and the smashing 
		of windshields of Palestinian cars.
The Israeli settlers near 
		Nablus have even taken to attacking Israeli military jeeps and convoys 
		recently, apparently in response to threats that they would be forcibly 
		removed by the military from the Palestinian land they have illegally 
		seized and occupied. The military, however, has taken no action 
		whatsoever to remove the settlers. 
		Israeli Police Crackdown On Protesters In East Jerusalem, 
		Eleven Civilians Arrested
		Friday March 12, 2010 16:45 by Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC News 
		Eleven protesters were arrested by Israeli officers are they 
		crackdown of a protest organized by Palestinians in East Jerusalem.
		
Residents along with Israeli and international supporters marched at 
		the Shikh Jarah, a Palestinian neighborhood of East Jerusalem, 
		protesting homes demolition and evections of local families. 
		Israeli wants to evict Shikh Jarah and replace it with an Israeli 
		stelment. Today police officers attacked the crowed using batons and 
		tried to stop the protest from happing, witnsses told IMEMC. 
		Situation remains tense in Jerusalem. Clashes erupted, on Friday 
		afternoon, at Jerusalem’s old city between local youths and Israeli 
		soldiers after the later prevented people for praying.
Local 
		sources said that troops station at the entrance of the al-Aqsa Mosque 
		prevented local youth from entering to pray. Soldiers used batons to 
		move people away, sparking clashes.
A number of youths were 
		mildly injured when soldiers used rubber-coated steel bullets to 
		suppress the crowd, medical sources reported. Al-Aqsa Mosque is the 
		third holiest site for Muslims.
		Protesters Carry Photos of ISM Activist During Weekly Nil'in 
		Protest One Year On From Injury
		Friday March 12, 2010 15:27 by Circare Parrhessia - IMEMC News & 
		Agencies 
		Dozens of protesters were treated for the effects of tear gas 
		inhalation, this Friday, following the weekly demonstration in the 
		central West Bank village of Nil’in, near Ramallah.
Nil’in’s 
		weekly protest continued, this week, with ongoing support from members 
		from the international and Israeli communities. After midday prayers at 
		lands slated for confiscation, the protesters moved forward to the 
		already confiscated lands, where owners attempted to plough.
When 
		the protesters arrived at the gate of the wall, the Israeli military 
		responded to their presence with a volley of tear gas canisters and stun 
		grenades. Following the storming of the protesters, one farmer was 
		detained by the troops.
During the protest March banners and 
		flags were displayed, along with photos of Tristan Anderson. Tomorrow 
		marks the anniversary of Mr. Anderson’s serious injury during an 
		anti-wall protest in Ni’lin.
Mr. Anderson was shot in the head by 
		a tear gas canister by a member of the Israeli military, requiring the 
		removal of part of his frontal lobe, initially, and further surgeries in 
		an attempt to correct ongoing fluid leakage in his brain. Mr. Anderson 
		remains in a critical condition at Sheba Medical Center one year on from 
		his near-fatal wounding, and Israeli daily, Haaretz revealed, this week, 
		that the state of Israel would reopen investigations into the incident.
		
Mr. Anderson’s attorney, Michael Sfard, complained that the 
		discontinuation of the investigation was “negligent” and revealed major 
		discrepancies between the state’s work and his own shadow investigation, 
		including Israel’s failure to interview the border police that were 
		alleged to have been involved in the incident.
It should be noted 
		that the canister can be fired over 400 meters and weighs 130 grams. Eye 
		witness reports stated that the canister was shot at Mr. Anderson from a 
		distance of approximately 60 meters, and that the firing of gas 
		continued despite the obvious severity of his injuries. 
		Two Injured, Dozens Suffer Effects Of Tear Gas Inhalation At 
		The Bil’in Weekly
		Friday March 12, 2010 15:13 by Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC News 
		Two civilians were injured as dozens suffered from the effects of 
		tear gas inhalation when Israeli troops attacked the weekly anti wall 
		protest at the village of Bil’in, central West Bank.
		As has been the case for the past five years, villagers were joined 
		by Israeli and international supporters and marched, after the midday 
		prayers, towards the lands Israeli took to built the wall.
As 
		soon as the protesters reached the gate of the wall separating farmers 
		from their lands troops stationed their fired tear gas and rubber coated 
		steel bullets at them. 
Two local youths, Mohamed Hamad, 18 years 
		old, and 15 year old Mohamed Abu Rahmah, were lightly wounded by rubber 
		coated steel bullets, dozens were treated for tear gas inhalation.
		
The Palestinian Minister of Culture, Siham al-Barghouthi, joined the 
		protest on Friday at the village of Bil’in.
Two year ago, a 
		combination of the villagers continued protest and legal proceedings 
		managed to get the Israeli Supreme Court of Justice to order a halt to 
		the wall 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 of the 600 acres Israel was going to use to build the wall.
		
In February, after two years of stalling, the Israeli military 
		started to re-route the wall as ordered by the court. Still the army 
		refuses villagers free access to their lands.
Clashes 
		Erupt At Jerusalem’s Old City
		Friday March 12, 2010 14:57 by Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC News & 
		Agencies 
		Clashes erupted, on Friday afternoon, at Jerusalem’s old city between 
		local youths and Israeli soldiers after the later prevented people for 
		praying.
		
		
Israeli troops at Jerusalem old city - file photo 2009
		Local sources said that troops station at the entrance of the al-Aqsa 
		Mosque prevented local youth from entering to pray. Soldiers used batons 
		to move people away, sparking clashes.
A number of youths were 
		mildly injured when soldiers used rubber-coated steel bullets to 
		suppress the crowd, medical sources reported. Al-Aqsa Mosque is the 
		third holiest site for Muslims.
		Al-Ma’sara Village, Southern West Bank, Protest The Israeli 
		Built Wall
		Friday March 12, 2010 14:41 by Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC News 
		Villagers of al-Ma’sara, near the southern West Bank city of 
		Bethlehem, protested on Friday the Israeli built wall on villagers’ 
		lands.
The people were joined by Israeli and international 
		supporters. The protest kicked off from the village center and headed 
		towards the wall construction site. 
Israeli troops erected a 
		military checkpoint at the village entrance and did not allow people to 
		move any further, troops also took positions at nearby rooftops.
		The protest today was organized in honor of International Women's Day. 
		At the checkpoint organizers delivered speeches in Arabic, Hebrew and 
		English. In the speech delivered in Hebrew, an Israeli activist called 
		for the soldiers to put down their weapons.
Later, the protesters 
		moved the military checkpoint and moved towards their lands. Troops 
		stopped them, announced that the area was a closed military zone, and 
		asked people to move back. 
The villagers and their supporters 
		refused and staged a sit in at the road. Soldiers tried to stop the 
		chanting of the people by using loud speakers. After a short period of 
		shouting back and forth between soldiers and protestors, organizers 
		ended the protest and promised to come back next week.