2014-01-25

Land, property theft & destruction / Ethnic cleansing

Last mass held in Beit Jala as court to rule on land seizure

BETHLEHEM (Ma‘an) 24 Jan by Charlie Hoyle — Residents of Beit Jala held their last weekly mass Friday in an area threatened by Israel’s separation wall as locals awaited a decision from Israel’s Supreme Court on an appeal to halt the land seizure. Around 60 Palestinians, internationals and representatives of the Catholic, Orthodox and Lutheran churches gathered on an olive tree-covered hilltop in the Cremisan Valley to pray for a halt to Israel’s separation wall, which is set to annex the entire lush green area north of Beit Jala. The weekly mass, which has been held since 2011, is the last action by the largely Christian community before Israel’s Supreme Court issues a final ruling on Jan. 29 regarding the route of the wall. Rev. Ibrahim Shomali, a Catholic priest who led the mass, thanked the crowd for its support over the years and said it was now up to the Israeli court to decide on the “future of our presence in the Holy Land.” Issa Kassissieh, Palestine’s ambassador to the Vatican, which owns the land threatened with confiscation, told Ma’an that the seizure was unacceptable. “The pope is coming as a peace pilgrimage to the Holy Land to build bridges and here we are seeing that a wall is being erected.” …

Israel is constructing some of the last segments of its wall on lands west of Bethlehem, including the Cremisan monastery area, and al-Walaja village. In 2006, Israel issued a military order to build the separation wall around Beit Jala and Har Gilo. After a seven-year legal battle, 58 local landowners, and nuns from the Salesian convent who joined their legal action, lost an appeal against the route of the separation wall in April 2013. The ruling last year proposed that the convent, and adjacent school, remain on the Palestinian side of the wall, but the nuns would lose access to 75 percent of their land and the school would be situated in a military zone surrounded by the separation wall. The Cremisan monastery and winery would be on the Israeli side on the wall, splitting the religious community, and residents would no longer be able to participate in the annual religious event of the Holy Spirit Procession, which sees local Christians walk from Cremisan to the Annunciation church in Beit Jala. After a lengthy legal battle, residents have little faith that justice will prevail through Israeli courts.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667741

Settler-driven archaeology plan threatens to push Hebron family off farmland

HEBRON (Electronic Intifada) 23 Jan by Patrick O. Strickland – Israeli settlers recently began an alleged archaeological excavation on two plots of land surrounding a Palestinian family’s homes in the Tel Rumeida neighborhood of Hebron. Feryal Abu Haikal, 68, is a retired school principal and mother of 11. She told The Electronic Intifada that settlers and soldiers arrived on 5 January and razed the orchards her family had farmed for decades. “They ripped out 50 of our almond trees. Some of [the trees] were over 60 years old.” The Abu Haikal family owns the land, on which its four homes are located. Yet the family has also been renting and farming the neighboring two plots of land — six dunams, or almost an acre and a half — for more than 65 years (a dunam is equal to 1,000 square meters) … Israeli settlers claim the two plots of land are home to the burial site of Yishai and Ruth the Moabite, figures present in Islamic, Christian and Jewish traditions. Similar to plans in several other areas in occupied East Jerusalem and the broader West Bank, they plan to build an archaeological park. The Israeli government is financing the project to the tune of an estimated seven million shekels (around two million dollars), according to the Israeli daily Haaretz (“Israeli government funding dig in Palestinian Hebron, near Jewish enclave,” 9 January 2014). Abu Haikal fears that the settlers have larger plans than what they have publicly declared. “Seven million shekels … it’s not possible they will stop [the excavation project] after just two pieces of land,” she said.
http://electronicintifada.net/content/settler-driven-archaeology-plan-threatens-push-hebron-family-farmland/13104

Police order man to remove tent after home demolished

IMEMC 23 Jan by Chris Carlson — Israeli police have ordered Khalid al-Zir, a resident of Silwan neighborhood in East Jerusalem, to remove a tent which he and other Jerusalem residents had set up the night before in front of the Red Cross headquarters, in Sheikh Jarrah, to protest Israeli demolition of homes in the city … The municipality demolished Zir’s small Silwan home in August and, when he attempted to set up a structure with a metal roof on his land, to house his seven-member family, it was also demolished. Zir then moved with his family, to live in a cave, but the Israeli antiquities authority ordered him not to change anything in the cave, after he attempted to add to it in order to shelter his family from cold and rain. Israeli police raided the tent Thursday morning and ordered the people holding a vigil inside to remove it within 30 minutes or be fined.
http://www.imemc.org/article/66819

Israel uproots hundreds of olive trees near Salfit

SALFIT (WAFA) 23 Jan — The Israeli military authority uprooted Thursday hundreds of newly planted olive trees in the Wadi Qana area, near Salfit, said residents. They said the Israeli forces sealed off the area and prevented residents and farmers access to their land while the bulldozers were uprooting the olive trees. Issam Abu Baker, governor of Salfit, said the Israeli military uprooted around 1000 trees out of 2483 planted in that area. He said the Israeli decision to uproot the trees was made in May when they marked the trees to be uprooted under the pretext that the area was a natural reserve. Former mayor of the nearby village of Deir Istiya, Nathmi Salman, said confrontations broke out between the residents and the Israeli forces, which fired stun grenades at them. [Wadi Qana is a special place. A bit of description from the International Women's Peace Service: "Wadi Qana is a fertile valley that is part of the village of Deir Istiya in the West Bank ... The Wadi Qana stream runs through it as well as 15 natural springs. Orange and lemon trees line the river, and olive trees have grown on the land for thousands of years." Wadi Qana has been badly damaged by the surrounding settlements that have emptied their sewage into it, contaminated all the springs, and released wild pigs there.]
http://english.wafa.ps/index.php?action=detail&id=24150

Restriction of movement

Watch: Nabi Samuel – a village in a cage

Israeli Social TV (1:12 minutes) 23 Jan — Residents of the village of Nabi Samuel live in a place where they do not have authorization to be. Relatives and friends cannot visit because of checkpoints and walls, residents must to spend hours at checkpoints to go to work, they need permission from the courts to plant a tree, not to mention building rights. The village of Nabi Samuel was occupied by Israel in 1967. Four years later residents were deported to an area nearby and their homes destroyed. The village area was declared a national park and last year the Civil Administration began to promote a plan to establish an archaeological site around the mosque and cemetery. This is their story.
http://972mag.com/watch-nabi-samuel-a-village-in-a-cage/86163/

Israeli report reveals demographic policy in Gaza

Al-Monitor 24 Jan by Daoud Kuttab — A report by two Israeli human rights organizations reveals that Israeli policy regarding the movement of Palestinians is motivated by political, not security, concerns — One of the key obstacles to permanent Israeli control of the West Bank is the presence of Palestinians in it. Unable to physically move them or have them leave voluntarily, Israel has over the years deployed an administrative process that is called “transfer.” The basic foundation of this racist policy is to have administrative policies that “encourage” Palestinians to voluntarily leave and make it very difficult for them to return … This joint report takes the Israeli court to task for facilitating the Israeli policy that is based on this demographic policy aimed at gradually empting the West Bank of its Palestinian residents. How does Israel use demographics in its Gaza policy?  The residency address on the Palestinian ID card is a determinant factor. Even though the Oslo Accord considered the Gaza Strip and the West Bank to be one single political unit, Israel does not honor this. If one’s address is in the Gaza Strip, one is not allowed to live in the West Bank and vice versa. However, the report shows that Israel allows West Bank residents to change their address to one in the Gaza Strip, but makes it next to impossible for Gazans to change their address to one in the West Bank. Under external pressure from the world soccer body FIFA, in 2008, Israel allowed Gaza soccer player Suleiman Obeid to move to the West Bank for training with the Palestinian national team. However, his wife and two children were not allowed to join him. Five years later, Obeid quit soccer to be reunited with his family. Obeid was not only barred from visiting his wife and children, but when his mother became ill he was not allowed to visit her. She later died without him having a chance to see her. Obeid, one of 27 cases mentioned in the report, spoke emotionally about his ordeal. “Wanting to hug your baby and play with him, or thinking about sleeping with your wife or having more kids … these are basic needs,” Obeid said, “[but] you can’t do that because Israel doesn’t want you to do that.” This Israeli policy has been regularly supported by Israeli high court decisions in which it accepted without challenge the Israeli government’s justification for keeping Palestinian families divided.
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/01/israel-demographic-policy-gaza-revealed.html

Israel bars Gaza student from travel to US for coexistence program

Haaretz 23 Jan by Yarden Skop — Israel has rejected the request of a Palestinian living in Gaza to travel to the United States to attend a coexistence program at New York University.  A civil rights group that advocates on behalf of Palestinians says the refusal to issue a permit to the 21-year-old is indicative of a policy shift that is making it more difficult for Palestinian students to study abroad. Israel’s Coordination and Liaison Administration for Gaza said it would not approve the Palestinian student’s travel request because he had failed to secure an official request from the U.S. consulate and had not arranged to be chaperoned to by a consulate official during transit through Israel. But Gisha: Legal Center for Freedom of Movement said such requirements were not enforced in recent years. “It’s not clear why Israel decided to toughen the restrictions on the freedom of movement of Palestinian academics in general, and in particular that of an outstanding student who received academic recognition from an institution as respectable as NYU,” said Gisha: Legal Center for Freedom of Movement. “Especially in light of the fact that he was chosen to participate in a program that includes Israeli and Palestinian students who aspire to promote coexistence and reconciliation among the nations.”
http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.570281

Violence / Raids / Attacks / Clashes / Suppression of protests / Illegal arrests

Settlers assault man, woman near Yatta

HEBRON (Ma‘an) 24 Jan — Israeli settlers early Friday assaulted a woman and a man from Khirbet Umm al-Khair east of Yatta in the southern West Bank. The head of the local council of the nearby village of Susiya Jihad al-Nawaja told Ma’an that around 20 settlers attacked Bilal al-Hathaleen, 27, and Maliha al-Hathaleen, 57, while they were on their way to an agricultural area near their home. They were beaten by the settlers and suffered multiple cuts as a result of the attack, he added.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667840

Jewish settler runs over pregnant woman

NABLUS (PIC) 23 Jan — A Jewish settler ran over a pregnant woman on the main street in Hawara village, south of Nablus, on Wednesday. Abdulkarim Abu Shehada, the husband of the woman, said that his wife Wijdan, 39, who is in her 8th month of pregnancy, was run over while trying to cross the main street in the village. He charged the settler with over speeding in a street that was not designed for such high speed. He said that his wife suffered bruises and cuts all over her body and was transferred to a hospital in Nablus where her condition was described as moderate.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk/En/

Israeli forces injure infant, man in Kafr Qaddum

QALQILIYA (Ma‘an) 24 Jan — One man was struck in the shoulder by a tear-gas canister and dozens suffered from excessive tear-gas inhalation after Israeli forces raided the village of Kafr Qaddum following a protest. Witnesses said Israeli forces fired tear gas into residential areas in the village as clashes broke out following the village’s weekly protest, hitting one man and injuring dozens, including a 2-month-old infant. Photographer Jafar Shtayyah, meanwhile, was struck with a tear-gas canister fired by Israeli forces in the shoulder. Coordinator for the local popular resistance committee Murad Shtewi said that Israeli forces fired over 10 tear-gas canisters toward his house, causing his family to suffer from the tear-gas inhalation. Among those affected by the use of excessive tear gas was his 2-month-old daughter, Bisan. Protests are held every Friday in Kafr Qaddum against Israel’s closure of a main road linking the village to its nearest city, Nablus. The road has been closed since 2000.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667868

2 injured in Bil‘in clashes

RAMALLAH (Ma‘an) 24 Jan — Two Palestinians were injured and dozens suffered from excessive tear gas inhalation on Friday after Israeli forces dispersed a protest in the northern West Bank village of Bil‘in. Israeli forces fired tear gas, rubber-coated steel bullets, stun grenades, and live 0.22 inch caliber bullets at protesters as they neared their lands close to the wall during the weekly protest. Nimer Atta, 19, was shot with a 0.22 bullet in the foot and taken to Palestine Medical Complex in Ramallah, while Wael Burnat, 35, was shot in the hand. Protesters raised Palestinian flags and chanted songs for unity, and slogans in resistance against the Israeli occupation … Since 2005, Bil‘in villagers have protested on a weekly basis against the Israeli separation wall that runs through their village on land confiscated from local farmers. Previous protests by Bil‘in activists have forced the Israeli authorities to re-route the wall, but large chunks of the village lands remain inaccessible to residents because of the route.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667885

Israeli forces clash with Palestinians in Beit Ummar, arrest 1

HEBRON (Ma‘an) 24 Jan — Dozens of Palestinians suffered from excessive tear gas inhalation after Israeli forces raided a village in the southern West Bank late Thursday, a popular committee spokesman said. After entering Beit Ummar, Israeli forces fired rubber-coated steel bullets, stun grenades, and tear gas during clashes with Palestinians, Muhammad Ayyad told Ma‘an. He said the clashes lasted two hours. Additionally, 22-year-old Ahmad Ali Ayyad Awad was detained by Israeli soldiers on his way to work, Ayyad said.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667820

Remembering Saleh: a life cut short

[with photos] BETHLEHEM (Ma‘an) 24 Jan by Graham Liddell — Hundreds of Palestinians gathered across Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank to mourn the anniversary of the death of a boy killed during protests a year earlier.  Fifteen-year-old Saleh al-Amarin from ‘Azza camp died Jan. 23, 2013 after being shot in the head during clashes with Israeli forces days before. Around noon Jan. 18, 2013, Saleh attended a protest at the nearby ‘Aida refugee camp. As tensions grew, he and his friends threw stones toward the Israeli separation wall, while soldiers fired tear-gas canisters back at the boys. Then the protest came to an abrupt end. Saleh was hit in the head with a live bullet. His friends and the Palestinian Red Crescent carried him to a nearby hospital, and he died five days later.

A year later, locals held memorial services and military parades in Saleh’s honor. On Thursday, hundreds from the Bethlehem area attended a memorial service in Dheisheh camp’s Phoenix Center … On Wednesday, a group of teenagers from Dheisheh and ‘Azza organized a march on a main street in Bethlehem, temporarily blocking traffic … On Saturday, ‘Azza camp held another memorial service commemorating the day Saleh was shot … In separate interviews with Ma‘an, Saleh’s friends from Azza said he was beloved by everybody in the camp. “Everyone loved him,” said 16-year-old Muhannad. “He would always joke around with us. … He’d always make us laugh.” Muhannad said Saleh loved to wrestle with other kids. “Not ‘kill, kill,’ but just joking around,” Muhannad said, smiling. Saleh was respected by everyone, he said …

According to a Palestinian-led activist group, doctors speculated that the bullet that killed Saleh was an expanding dumdum bullet, due to the fragmentation of shrapnel within his skull. One doctor said he was sure a dumdum bullet was used, the International Solidarity Movement reported on the day of Saleh’s death. Expanding bullets have been illegal under international law since the Hague convention of 1899. Their use by Israeli forces has been documented in various news reports throughout the past decade.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667736

Israeli forces arrest PA police officer near Kafr Qaddum

QALQILIYA (Ma‘an) 24 Jan — Israeli forces late Thursday arrested a Palestinian police officer at a checkpoint in a northern West Bank city, witnesses said. Witnesses told Ma‘an that Muhammad Shaker Ishtawi, 23, was arrested at a flying checkpoint at the entrance of Kafr Qaddum near Qalqiliya. Ishtawi is an officer for the Palestinian Authority police force.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667823

Eight Palestinians kidnapped in Hebron, Bethlehem

IMEMC Thursday, 23 Jan by Saed Bannoura –  Israeli soldiers invaded the West Bank districts of Hebron and Bethlehem, kidnapping eight Palestinians after breaking into their homes and violently searching them. Local sources in Hebron, in the southern part of the occupied West Bank, said that dozens of soldiers invaded Beit Awwa town, nearby, searched several homes and kidnapped Wajdan Reziq Masalma, 18. The soldiers also invaded Hebron city, and kidnapped Amer Mohammad Al-Oweiwy, 27. Furthermore, dozens of soldiers also invaded the Tabaqa village, and the communities of Namous and ‘Arqan Awad in Doura, near Hebron, and violently searched several homes. In addition, soldiers invaded the West Bank district of Bethlehem, kidnapping five Palestinians in Beit Fajjar town, and one in Doha city …  In Doha town, south of Bethlehem, the soldiers broke into the home of Firas Odeh, searched the property, and kidnapped him. The invasion led to clashes between dozens of youth and the invading soldiers.
http://www.imemc.org/article/66812

Residents: Israeli forces arrest 2 in Hebron area

HEBRON (Ma‘an) 23 Jan — Israeli forces on Thursday arrested two men and seized a truck in Hebron, locals said.  They said Amir Mohammad Abd al-Kadir Abu Eisha was arrested from his home in the city … A Mercedes truck belonging to Fadi Ali Abu Atwan was seized from the al-Tabaqa area in Dura after Israeli forces raided his home.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667584

Ministry of Higher Education condemns Israeli attack on university

IMEMC Thursday, 23 Jan by Chris Carlson — In a Wednesday press release, the Ministry of Higher Education denounced the Israeli army attack against Al-Quds University, for desecrating the sanctity of the institution, obstructing the educational process, and for intentionally horrifying thousands of students and staff members by utilizing all terrorist means, including random heavy firing. Israeli forces raided, on Wednesday, Al-Quds University in Abu Dis, east of Jerusalem, where clashes erupted between the students and Israeli forces, who fired tear gas and rubber-coated bullets inside and outside of the campus. A dozen students and faculty members suffocated due to tear gas inhalation, while others were injured from rubber-coated metal bullets.
http://www.imemc.org/article/66818

PCHR Weekly Report: ‘Two Palestinians killed; Israeli escalation continues’

IMEMC 24 Jan — The Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) issued its weekly report on Israeli violations in the occupied territories, for the period between January 16-22, 2014, and said that the army assassinated two Palestinians, conducted 73 invasions, and continued to target the civilian population … The PCHR added that on January 17, two Palestinian civilians were wounded near the eastern border area of the Gaza Strip. On the same day, soldiers stationed across the border east of Jabalia, in northern Gaza, fired rounds of live ammunition and gas bombs, into an area close to the Shuhada Graveyard after alleging some young Palestinians tried to throw stones at them. Soldiers also fired rounds of live ammunition and several gas bombs into Bouret Abu Samra area, in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza, also after alleging that Palestinians approached the border fence. Furthermore, the Israeli air force carried out more than four air strikes targeting different areas in the coastal region …  In The West Bank, the soldiers carried out 73 invasions targeting different districts, kidnapping 44 Palestinians, including 10 minors and 3 women….  Full Report
http://www.imemc.org/article/66824

Settler violence: it comes with the territory

[extensive analysis, with map, videos] 972mag 21 Jan by Larry Derfner — Unlike any other aspect of the occupation, settler violence is something nobody outside the radical fringe in Israel will defend. This, alone, they’ll denounce. And yet, nobody — in Israel or internationally — has found the political will to put a stop to the decades-long phenomenon, even when the victims are U.S. citizens — Kamal Shaban, a farmer in the West Bank village of Sinjil, is watching workmen repair a local family’s house that had recently been firebombed by settlers in the middle of the night, forcing the parents and five children asleep inside to flee to the rooftop. As for himself, Shaban tells me that during the autumn olive harvests, settlers have stoned the laborers in his fields, turned over a tractor, stolen sacks of olives and once broke a worker’s arm with a big rock — all under the eye of Israeli soldiers required by the Supreme Court to protect the farmers. He asks: “Why do the United States, the European Union and the United Nations call Hamas terrorists and Hezbollah terrorists, but they don’t call these people terrorists?” … Rowaida spoke to me in English with an Americanized accent. The 38-year-old woman said she lived in Springfield, Massachusetts for many years before and after her marriage, and, like her husband and children, is a U.S. citizen. “People from the American consulate came here after the fire,” she said. “They’ve called me a couple of times since to see how we’re doing.” All American citizens, the family of seven, including five children, were the victims of a murder attempt because they are Palestinian, their house was firebombed in the middle of the night by Israel’s lords of the land. It was the third time the family had been targeted with Molotov cocktails by these people in two years — and not a word of protest was heard from the United States. I wanted to ask the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv about it, but my request for an interview was denied.
http://972mag.com/settler-violence-it-comes-with-the-territory/85996/

PA forces arrest three Palestinians, including ex-detainee

AL-KHALIL (PIC) 24 Jan — Political detainee Mohamad Asfour, from al-Khalil city, started Thursday an open-ended hunger strike shortly after his arrest by the PA preventive security forces … Asfour, a student at al-Khalil University, was arrested on Thursday after being summoned to Preventive Security Headquarters. The political detainee had earlier informed his family of his decision to go on hunger strike in case of his arrest. Two university students have also declared hunger strike in PA jails protesting their arrest.

Meanwhile, Hamas movement charged PA Preventive Security Service of arresting the liberated prisoner Raed Aldrabia, 40, on Thursday after being summoned to its headquarters. Aldrabia has spent 15 years in Israeli jails on charges of being affiliated with al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s armed wing. He was then re-arrested, where he served 3 years in administrative detention.

In another incident, PA court in the West Bank has extended Thursday the arrest of Mohamad Bahjat Abu Ahallil, 22, for 15 additional days. He was arrested since 22nd of December on charges of social media activity, according to the movement’s statement.

For its part, the family of university student Abdel-Rahman Abu Arqub confirmed that their son continued his hunger strike for 11 days in Jericho prison, adding that his arrest has been extended for 15 more days for further investigation.

Late on Thursday, a student at Palestine Polytechnic University named Seif al-Islam Taha was arrested by the PA preventive security apparatus.  Taha’s family said that the preventive security forces ransacked their house and confiscated its son’s computer before arresting him.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk/En/

Palestinian man arrested for naming baby after Morsi

Jerusalem Post 23 Jan by Khaled Abu Toameh — Abdel Halim Ghannam, 37, of the Jalazoun refugee camp north of Ramallah, was summoned for interrogation; man’s wife says baby name behind arrest — A Palestinian man who named his son after deposed Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi was arrested on Wednesday by the Palestinian Authority General Intelligence Service in Ramallah. Abdel Halim Ghannam, 37, of the Jalazoun refugee camp north of Ramallah, was summoned for interrogation, his wife said. He was released from detention on Thursday afternoon following protests by his family and human rights organizations. The wife said that PA intelligence officers told the family that Ghannam was arrested for naming his son after Morsi.
http://www.jpost.com/Middle-East/Palestinian-man-arrested-for-naming-baby-after-Morsi-339190

Gaza under blockade

Gaza protester killed, several injured

IMEMC Friday 24 Jan by Chris Carlson — Israeli forces shot dead one Palestinian and injured another, on Friday, during a protest east of Jabaliya, in the northern Gaza Strip. Spokesman for the Gaza Ministry of Health, Ashraf al-Qidra, said that 20-year-old Bilal Samer Oweidah died after being shot in the chest by Israeli forces near the border, Ma‘an News Agency has reported. Owiedah was among a group of Palestinians who had gathered near the border to protest the buffer zone imposed by Israel, al-Qidra said. According to locals, Oweidah was taken to Kamal Adwan Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. It has been reported that seven other young men were wounded, three by live bullets.
http://www.imemc.org/article/66827

Army opens fire into southern Gaza

IMEMC Thursday evening, 23 Jan — A number of Israeli military vehicles, stationed across the border fence with Gaza, fired dozens of rounds of live ammunition into Palestinian agricultural lands and homes east of Abasan As-Sagheera town, southeast of the southern Gaza Strip district of Khan Younis. Eyewitnesses said several military vehicles advanced towards the Sreij Gate, east of Abasan As-Sagheera, opening fire at random; no injuries were reported.  The soldiers also fired rounds of live ammunition into the Faraheen neighborhood and the Al-Qarara, east of Khan Younis; damage was reported but no injuries. Israeli war jets and drones were seen flying over several areas in the besieged and impoverished coastal region
http://www.imemc.org/article/66823

Islamic Jihad blames Israel for Gaza escalation

GAZA CITY (Al-Monitor) 24 Jan by Asmaa al-Ghoul — …Islamic Jihad came under a lot of political and military pressure last week, after its military wing was accused of rapid escalation, through firing sophisticated rockets at Israeli towns. This escalation reached its peak when Israeli bomber planes targeted two members of the Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of Islamic Jihad. One of those targeted was Ahmed Saad, who was struck on the morning of Jan. 19, while riding a motorcycle in the center of Gaza City. He was seriously injured in the attack. The other member targeted was Ahmed Zaanin. On the morning of Jan. 22, Zaanin was getting into a car with a relative when the planes carried out the strike, killing them both. Israeli aircraft carried out six raids on Jan. 16 and Jan. 19, targeting several resistance sites in the Gaza Strip. Moreover, they fired a number of artillery shells targeting agricultural land east of Gaza City … During a meeting in his office on Jan. 23, [Islamic Jihad spokesman Daoud] Shihab told Al-Monitor, “We in Islamic Jihad do not know who is behind the launch of these rockets. Israel insists on accusing us, and says that Hamas is responsible since they [lead] the government. This is aimed at creating a state of disagreement between Hamas and Islamic Jihad, given that they are the two primary resistance factions.” Shihab cautioned that, in light of the political circumstances and the regional situation, the Palestinian factions have no intention to escalate matters. According to him, there is a consensus among these factions to commit to the truce, despite the large number of violations and attacks carried out by Israel.
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/01/escalation-gaza-israel-islamic-jihad-hamas.html

Abu Zuhri denies allegations on presence of Iranian experts in Gaza

GAZA (PIC) 23 Jan — Hamas spokesman, Sami Abu Zuhri, has denied press allegations reported by Al-Watan Egyptian newspaper about Iranian experts’ arrival to Gaza for the production of explosive devices then transporting them to Sinai. “We totally deny Iranian experts’ presence in Gaza”, he said, adding that such allegations harm the reputation of Egyptian army and security services because they mean that they have failed to carry out their responsibilities. Abu Zuhri denied claims reporting the Egyptian arrest of persons while trying to transport explosives to Sinai. He warned that his movement might be forced to publish documents that expose the ongoing fabrications and allegations targeting Palestinian people and resistance in case the incitement continued.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk/En/

As power cuts continue, Gaza turns to solar energy

Al-Monitor 22 Jan by Hazem Balousha — …Abir al-Hurqali is one of Gaza’s many physically disabled residents. She uses her electric wheelchair on a daily basis to go to university, where she is majoring in multimedia studies. Her movement, however, is often restrained by electricity outages. Every time she wants to go somewhere, she has to check whether the battery will last long enough to get her to her destination and then back home. “I have struggled a lot with the continuous electricity outages,” Hurqali told Al-Monitor. “Frequently, I can’t leave the house because the wheelchair battery is dead or doesn’t have enough power for me to reach my destination.” … As part of a project implemented by the Salam Club for the disabled in Gaza, a few months ago Hurqali received a solar panel to recharge her wheelchair battery when electricity is unavailable from the grid. It has been a great help to her … Ali Hussein, an engineer and owner of a company involved in solar energy, told Al-Monitor that the demand for solar energy systems has been increasing among Gazans. The high price of the systems, however, limit the purchasing power of many residents. According to Hussein, the cheapest system for home use costs around $1,350, an extremely high price for the majority of Palestinians in Gaza. The system can provide lighting for hours and operate television sets and other light electrical appliances. Some public institutions recently began to rely on solar systems in some of their facilities. At the Nasr Children’s Hospital, the nursery for premature children relies completely on such a system. In addition, the water-pumping station in Khan Yunis is currently functioning on solar power as are some schools in the Gaza Strip.
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/01/solar-energy-gaza-electricity-outages.html

Video: Entrepreneur cleans up in Gaza

Reuters 22 Jan – A businessman in the blockaded Gaza Strip is building up a head of steam with his mobile car-wash, a service that’s making the most of limited water supplies. Rob Muir reports. (Transcript)
http://uk.reuters.com/video/2014/01/22/entrepreneur-cleans-up-in-gaza?videoId=276529895&videoChannel=4000

Source: Hamas resorts to tobacco taxes to pay state employee

Al-Monitor 20 Jan by Asmaa al-Ghoul — The government in the Gaza Strip, which has been led by Hamas since 2006, has stressed multiple times that the taxes imposed on cigarettes and shisha tobacco since 2010 are aimed at reducing smoking, and that they are used to fund infrastructure projects and not to pay government salaries — given that tobacco is forbidden in Islam. However, Al-Monitor has learned from a government source that the Hamas government, in light of its financial crisis, has begun using cigarette taxes to pay part of employee salaries.
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/01/gaza-government-hamas-cigarette-taxes-pay-state-employees.html

Detainees / Court actions

Seven detainees currently on hunger strike

IMEMC Thursday, 23 Jan by Saed Bannoura — The Palestinian Ministry of Detainees has reported that seven Palestinian detainees are currently holding open-ended hunger strikes in Israeli detention facilities, and that some of them are facing very serious health issues and complications. The Palestinian Ministry of Detainees said that detainees Akram Al-Faseesy, Waheed Abu Maria, legislator Yasser Mansour, and Bilal Abdul-Aziz are striking to protest their arbitrary illegitimate Administrative Detention without charges or trial. The Ministry added that detainee Abdul-Majid Khdeirat is striking to protest being arrested after his release under the Shalit prisoner swap deal, and detainee Yousef Nawaj’a is striking to demand urgently needed medical attention. Detainee Moammar Banat, along with detainee Al-Faseesy, started their hunger strike on January 9, 2014, after being forced into solitary confinement at the Ofer Israeli military detention center. They are being held under very difficult conditions; their clothes were confiscated, and each cold cell only includes one mattress and two blankets. Abu Maria said that the detainees are frequently harassed, repeatedly searched and assaulted in an attempt to force them to quit their strikes
http://www.imemc.org/article/66814

Imprisoned Palestinian lawmaker suspends hunger strike

NABLUS (Ma‘an) 23 Jan — An imprisoned Palestinian lawmaker on Thursday suspended his hunger strike and was removed from solitary confinement, the prisoner’s wife said. Yasser Mansour, a lawmaker from Nablus who is currently held in an Israeli prison in the Negev, decided to end his hunger strike in order to allow the prison administration to respond to his demands, his wife Samar Adnan said. Mansour’s decision was made in coordination with other prisoners, Adnan added, without providing further details. Mansour began his hunger strike on Friday in protest against his ongoing administrative detention without trial. He is affiliated with the Hamas movement.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667636

IOA extends administrative detention of Sheikh Abdul-Khaliq Natsheh

AL-KHALIL (PIC) 24 Jan — The Israeli occupation authority (IOA) on Thursday renewed for the third time the administrative detention of Sheikh Abdul Khaliq Natsheh, a senior Hamas official and member of the higher committee of the movement’s prisoners. Palestinian prisoners’ center for studies stated that the Negev court extended for the third time running the arrest of Sheikh Jamal Natsheh, aged 59, for four months. The Israeli occupation forces arrested Natsheh on March 27 last year and jailed him administratively without any charge. Sheikh Natsheh had been arrested 10 times before and served a total of 17 years in Israeli jails.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk/En/

IOA court sentences school student to 9 months imprisonment

NABLUS (PIC) 23 Jan — The Israeli occupation authority (IOA) sentenced a Palestinian teenage school student, Ali Al-Houtari, to nine months imprisonment. Ahrar center for prisoner studies quoted parents of the teen from Qalqilia as saying that they were shocked with the Salem military court sentence. They said that Ali was held along with his 16-year-old brother Mahmoud since June 2013. Fuad Al-Khafsh, the director of Ahrar center, said that the verdict against a child who barely reached 18 years of age was meant to deprive Palestinian children from completing their studies. He said that Ali was at the final year of the secondary school stage when he was arrested and with this verdict he is now deprived of studying for the second year running.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk/En/

Released Palestinian detainees struggle with life outside prison

Al-Monitor 23 Jan by Asmaa al-Ghoul — Although Palestinian prisoners are given much attention and press when released, they face many challenges alone when it comes to re-entering everyday life — Liberated prisoner Oweida Kalab, 50, closed all the windows and turned on the radio to listen to Hebrew-language stations. He locked himself inside his room and refused to see visitors or go outside, except for the rarest of occasions, as he relived his 25 years in prison. For 18 of these years he was in solitary confinement, unable to hear anything but the voices of his Israeli jailers … Oweida is not the only detainee who has continued suffering after his release pursuant to the Shalit deal. Liberated prisoner Mohammad Karim, 31, who was incarcerated for nine years and released in the same deal, expressed his frustration to Al-Monitor. He said, “I feel that everyone is better than me. They all can plan for their futures, but I cannot. Despite my smile, this freedom pains me. I would rather remain alone and away from people.” The same holds true for liberated prisoner Hanaa Shalabi, who famously went on hunger strike while in Israeli custody and was released on condition that she be deported to the Gaza Strip. She told Al-Monitor that anxiety and stress caused her to lose her unborn child. She said, “I lost my baby when I was seven months pregnant. The doctor told me that my constant nervousness and stressed condition were to blame.” Shalabi affirmed that all the prisoners needed psychological rehabilitation … After the joy of freedom ebbs and the raucous receptions by families and political parties are over, liberated prisoners are shocked by the discrimination they are subjected to, depending on their affiliations.
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/01/palestine-released-prisoners-challenges.html

Palestinian refugees in Syria

NGO: 63 dead from hunger, medical shortages in Yarmouk

BEIRUT (AFP) 24 Jan — A Syrian monitoring group said Friday it has documented the deaths of 63 people, including women and children, in the besieged Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus because of food and medical shortages. Yarmouk in southern Damascus has been under a choking army siege since June, along with several other opposition-held areas across Syria, mostly around the capital and in the central city of Homs. “Sixty-one of the dead lost their lives in the past three months,” said the Observatory, which relies on a network of activists and doctors inside the country for its reports. [A little] food aid entered Yarmouk last week for the first time in four months. UN rights chief Navi Pillay has warned blocking assistance to civilians “in desperate need may amount to a war crime.”

Activists in other besieged areas have also complained of dismal conditions. In Homs, activists say hundreds of families have been holed up for nearly 600 days in a handful of districts still held by rebels. They come under near-daily shelling and activists there say they have run out of most food supplies, and that residents now have little more than olives to survive on. In a bid to shed light on their circumstances, activists in Homs launched a campaign this week, putting up yellow signposts inscribed with slogans describing life in the rebel areas. “For two years, 300 children have had no schooling,” reads one, according to photographs shared by Homs-based activist Yazan. “One hundred people need urgent surgery,” reads another, held up by a young man on one of Homs’ heavily damaged streets. In the Eastern Ghouta area east of Damascus, conditions of life are also dire, said activist Tareq al-Dimashqi, who spoke to AFP via Skype.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667890

Two Palestinians die after days of torture in Syrian jail

DAMASCUS (PIC) 23 Jan — The action group for the Palestinians in Syria said that two Palestinian refugees died on Wednesday in a Syrian detention center after they were exposed to excruciating torture at the hands of interrogators. The action group stated on Thursday that the brothers Mahmoud and Mohamed Abdul-Hafiz, Palestinian refugees living in Tadmur town died of torture in a Syrian jail. It added that a Syrian security apparatus kidnapped another Palestinian young man, a resident of Al-Aydoun refugee camp in Hama city and took him to an unknown place.

The group also said that the humanitarian situation in Al-Yarmouk refugee camp is still very difficult, and the relief efforts have stopped. It explained that the UNRWA stopped the distribution of food parcels after its relief workers claimed their exposure to maltreatment by the Palestinian refugees in Al-Yarmouk camp. However, the group affirmed that the refugees in the camp were exposed to humiliation by the UNRWA relief workers. It said that many Yarmouk families complained about a delay in the delivery of humanitarian aid and making them wait in lines for very long hours without getting anything, adding that the UNRWA  workers also refuse to give anything without writing numbers on wrists or hands of everyone who receives aid.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk/En/

Israel, save the Palestinians in Syria’s Yarmouk camp

Haaretz 22 Jan by Gideon Levy — Israel should declare that its gates are open for the 20,000 besieged residents to reunite with their families — This article will surely fall on deaf ears, even more than others of mine. Still, it must be written. I can’t forget the images from the Yarmouk camp for Palestinian refugees. Among all the victims of Syria’s horrors, these people should touch Israelis’ hearts. Israel is morally responsible for what happens in this camp, albeit indirectly. First, it bears historical responsibility for the fate of the camp’s residents – Palestinian natives of Israel who were forced to flee and their descendants. Second, many Israeli Arabs and Palestinians in the territory of the Palestinian Authority have relatives in Yarmouk, sometimes even of the first degree. Siblings, grandparents and cousins are starving to death, and dozens have already died. We could draw a parallel. An atrocity takes place dozens of kilometers from the country’s borders, and relatives of Jewish Israelis are starving to death and dying for lack of medicine and supplies, wandering around emaciated and being shot like stray animals. Would Israel remain complacent? Wouldn’t it take action to save them? It’s easy to dump responsibility for Yarmouk on the Arabs … And yet the moral responsibility still lies with Israel, whose establishment led to the existence of these refugees and exiles. … A few days ago my colleague Zvi Bar’el described the situation in the camp … Bar’el was restrained as he referred to Yarmouk as resembling a World War II ghetto, and even this description fell on deaf ears.
http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.570006

Activism / Solidarity / BDS

Planting 113 trees named after displaced villages, on the 113th anniversary of the establishment of the Jewish National Fund

Palestinian Grassroots Anti-apartheid Wall Campaign 20 Jan — The anti-apartheid Wall Campaign and the Union of Palestinian Farmers planted 113 trees in Al Hamma and Ain Al Beida areas and in the northern Jordan Valley, coinciding with the 113 anniversary of the establishment of the Jewish National Fund. This event was carried out by about 70 participants and comes within the “Million Tree II” provided by the Arab Society for the Protection of Nature, in cooperation and partnership with the Association of anti-Jewish National Fund, a group of “Palestinians” and Save the Jordan Valley campaign. Suheil Salman, the coordinator of the people’s committees in Stop the Wall campaign said that this event comes in conjunction with the 113 anniversary of the establishment of the Jewish National Fund, which is one of the first and most important Zionist institutions that contributed to the displacement of Palestinians in 1948 and the destruction of more than 530 Palestinian villages, and raising funds for the Occupation Government, presenting itself to the world as a charity.
http://stopthewall.org/2014/01/20/planting-113-trees-named-after-displaced-villages-113-anniversary-establishment-jewish-na

British Muslims walk for Gaza

LONDON (OnIslam) 24 Jan by Catherine Shakdam — Thousands of British Muslims and non-Muslims answered the call of a British-based international relief and development NGO to walk for Gaza, demonstrating their support to the Palestinian cause and raising funds to help the war-stricken strip. Saving Gaza children is essentially saving Gaza,” one of Walk for Gaza’s organizers told OnIslam.net. Wrapped up warm with maps and refreshments, thousands of British people will take on the 5 miles of chilly terrain to raise funds for the children of Gaza on Saturday, January 25. The Winter Walk for Gaza, held for the sixth year, has been organized by Muslim Hands in London, Manchester, Birmingham and Leicester to finance its charitable programs in eastern Gaza. Focused on bringing relief to the children of Gaza, the organization has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars throughout the past years, determined to make a difference in the lives of Palestine’s forgotten children.
http://www.onislam.net/english/news/europe/468429-muslim-hands-walks-for-gaza-.html

Germany toughens stance over Israel research deal

JERUSALEM (AFP) 24 Jan — Germany is insisting that research support and cooperation with Israel exclude Jewish settlements built on Palestinian land, Israeli media said Thursday, weeks ahead of a visit by German Chancellor Angela Merkel. According to the report in Haaretz daily, Berlin’s decision “represents a significant escalation in European measures against the settlements” in east Jerusalem and the West Bank. Haaretz notes that a 1986 treaty of the German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development states that the foundation will only sponsor projects “within the geographic areas under the jurisdiction of the State of Israel” prior to the 1967 Middle East war. The Germans want to apply that clause to the “German-Israeli funding program (DIP)”, an agreement signed in 1970 that is renewed annually on March 31, as well as to an agreement between the states providing “German funding for industrial and applied research and development,” Haaretz said. Merkel is due in Israel at the end of next month. Germany’s steadfast support of Israel has been a constant since World War II in atonement for its Nazi past, and Berlin is widely seen as Israel’s closest ally in Europe. [Haaretz: A senior Foreign Ministry official said that given the “special relationship” between Israel and Germany and the fact that Germany is considered Israel’s best friend in Europe, any Israeli consent to Germany’s demands is liable to set a precedent for all of Europe. “Germany will set an example for the rest of the world,” he said.]
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=667821

[California] public radio KQED pulls SodaStream from gifts to donors

Electronic Intifada 24 Jan by Ali Abunimah — KQED’s publicist Evren Odcikin sent this statement to The Electronic Intifada on Friday afternoon: After careful consideration, KQED is pulling SodaStream from its pledge thank you gift offer. The decision to provide SodaStream to our members was based on the product’s positive impact on the environment, an issue near and dear to the hearts of our members and part of KQED’s commitment to sustainability. However, the controversy surrounding SodaStream would undermine the spirit of our impartiality and unbiased mission, therefore the product will no longer be offered as a thank you gift to our members.
http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/public-radio-kqed-pulls-sodastream-gifts-donors

Oxfam tells SodaStream spokesmodel Scarlett Johansson that settlements harm Palestinians

Electronic Intifada 23 Jan by Ali Abunimah — The international development charity Oxfam has publicly admonished Hollywood actress Scarlett Johansson over her new and highly controversial role as spokesperson for the Israeli occupation profiteering firm SodaStream</

Show more