2017-02-10

Land, property theft & destruction / Ethnic cleansing / Settlements

100-year-old Bedouin woman left homeless as Israel continues Negev demolitions

NEGEV (Ma‘an) 8 Feb — In the latest instance of Israel’s demolition campaign in the Negev region of southern Israel, homes were demolished in two unrecognized Bedouin villages on Wednesday, while Israeli police surrounded the village of Umm al-Hiran. Israeli bulldozers, escorted by Israeli police, demolished a house in the village of Wadi al-Na‘am in the western part of the Negev in southern Israel.  Locals told Ma‘an that the demolished house was owned by an elderly woman and her daughter. A member of the local committee, Yousif Ziyadin, said that an emergency session would be held to discuss the Israeli demolition. A relative of the elderly homeowner, Ahmad Zanoun, told Ma‘an that 100-year-old Ghaytha Zanoun and her 60-year-old daughter Hilala were living in the house, both of whom suffer from various health issues.  Zanoun said that both Ghaytha and Hilala were unable to walk, and noted that the family had renovated the home in accordance with their doctor’s suggestions due to their health conditions. He added that Ghaytha and her daughter now were homeless following the demolition….
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775366

Israeli forces demolish Bedouin village of al-Araqib for 109th time

NEGEV (Ma‘an) 8 Feb — Israeli bulldozers demolished the unrecognized Bedouin village of al-Araqib in the Negev region of southern Israel on Wednesday for the 109th time. Israeli forces raided the village early Wednesday, surrounding the residents’ makeshift tents, and proceeded to raze them to the ground. Israeli forces also demanded that the residents pay 2 million shekels (approximately $532,750) for the cumulative cost of Israeli-enforced demolitions carried out against the village since the first time it was destroyed in 2010 … Local committee member Aziz Sayyah told Ma‘an that they “demolished the village without considering the weather and the impact this will have on residents now made homeless.” The weather in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory remains cold, particularly during night hours. “No matter how many times they demolish and destroy our village, they will not break our spirits,” Sayyah added. “Al-Araqib is ours and we are here to stay.” Demolitions targeting Palestinians with full Israeli citizenship have been the target of widespread protests in recent weeks, after an Israeli police raid to evacuate the unrecognized Bedouin village of Umm al-Hiran left two people killed. While Bedouins of the Negev are Israeli citizens, the villages unrecognized by the government have faced relentless efforts by Israeli authorities to expel them from their lands in order to make room for Jewish Israeli homes….

http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775360

Analysis: The real housing crisis in Israeli is in its Arab towns

Haaretz 10 Feb by Hagai Amit — Little available land, not enough builders, a low-rise housing culture and red tape are among the culprits — We’re riding in the car of Imran Kanana, the mayor of Yafi‘a, trying to reach the highest point in this town of 20,000 to see the view. It’s not easy. The streets of this community near Nazareth, whose official name is Yafa an-Nasseriyeh, are barely wide enough for a single vehicle. Yet all the streets are two-way and also used for parking and by pedestrians, as there are no sidewalks. So over and over again, Kanana has to stop, often to back up and maneuver in order to facing traffic. In addition, children in their uniforms are pouring into the streets at the end of the school day. Kanana doesn’t get aggravated. He’s used to it. The traffic situation in Yafi‘a is typical of Arab towns in Israel, and of villages throughout the world that were laid out when all transportation was two- or four-legged. But the crowding here is much worse than in a typical Greek or Italian village, say. The main cause is the housing shortage in Israel’s Arab communities. That shortage was also the underlying cause of the uproar that followed the demolitions in January of 11 unauthorized buildings in Kalansua [Qalansuwa], and the tragedy a week later in Umm al-Hiran, in the Negev, where the demolition of illegally built homes sparked riots and ended in the deaths of an Israeli police officer and a Bedouin resident … Kanana believes the housing crisis is the main reason for the economic gap between Israeli Arab society and the majority Jewish community: The lack of available land makes it harder to establish industrial zones and sometimes limits the construction of new schools. “Why don’t they see that investing in housing and education in the Arab sector should be a top Israeli priority? If you invest in these things, people won’t turn to extremism, and their participation in the economy will grow,” says Kanana….
http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/business/1.770947

Army demolishes an under-construction building in Jerusalem

IMEMC 7 Feb — On Tuesday, several Israeli military vehicles and bulldozers invaded Beit Hanina neighborhood, north of occupied East Jerusalem, and demolished an under-construction building. Media sources in Jerusalem said dozens of soldiers surrounded and invaded the area, after declaring it a “closed military zone.” The soldiers then proceeded to demolish the building, in addition to detaining and interrogating several Palestinians. In related news, the army invaded Kardala village, in the West Bank’s Northern Plains, and demolished several barns owned by a few shepherds.
http://imemc.org/article/army-demolishes-an-under-construction-building-in-jerusalem/

Hebron activists launch campaign to get rid of settlers in old city

HEBRON (WAFA) 9 Feb – Palestinian activists in the southern West Bank city of Hebron launched on Thursday a campaign to get rid of several hundred fanatic Israeli settlers who live in the old city under heavy army protection and who have turned the life of Palestinians living there into hell. The campaign, launched from a school inside the old city to mark the 23rd anniversary of the Ibrahimi mosque massacre when a Jewish settler gunned down [29] Palestinians while performing dawn prayers at the mosque, aims to end the military siege imposed on the old city, according to Mufeed Sharabati, one of the activists. He said the military checkpoints around the old city, which is under full Israeli military control and referred to as H2 where several hundred settlers live among 15,000 Palestinians, “have turned the old city into a ghetto prison.” Under the campaign title “Dismantle the Ghetto off Hebron,” the activists said many people have left the old city fearing for the life of their children from Israeli army and settlers and after life has become very difficult for them. Another activist, Muhannad Jaabari, said the campaign aims to end the misery of the people who live in the old city and who cannot have their families to visit them. He said efforts will be exerted to help them remain steadfast in their homes. The campaign includes Tel Rumeida, Shuhada Street and all the old city and surrounding areas.
http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=TkpiYZa52345463247aTkpiYZ

Palestinians plant olive trees near settlement industrial zones

SALFIT (Palestine Monitor) 4 Feb by Sarah Bedson — In mid-January, over 100 people, including Palestinian officials, farmers and international activists, convened on the top of a hill to plant olive saplings in Khirbet Kurkush, in the northern occupied West Bank district of Salfit. Salfit’s district governor, Ibrahim Al-Balawi, explained that this action was part of an annual project to boost crops across the West Bank, the primary or secondary source of income for between 80,000 and 100,000 Palestinian families. The location of the action was particularly pertinent due to its proximity to an illegal Israeli settlement industrial zone, Ariel West, as well as on-going threats by Israeli authorities to confiscate land in the area. “This is our land; we live here, as is recognized by international law. We will continue to live and build on our land here despite the occupation,” Al-Balawi said. Mayor of Bruqin, Said Allan, told Palestine Monitor that the local municipality had begun work at the beginning of the month to resurface a road that goes from Khirbet Jalal al-Din to Khirbet Kurkush with the intention of allowing easier access to both farmers working their land and Palestinians visiting the Roman ruins found there. The road, first opened about five years ago, marks the border between Area B (under Palestinian civil control and shared Palestinian and Israeli security control), and C (under full Israeli jurisdiction). On January 15, the mayor reported, Israeli authorities issued a stop-work order for the approximately 4-kilometre stretch of road in Khirbet Kurkush, claiming that the so-called “state land”, in Area C, was being used without permission. The order included a court date. Just a few days earlier, two Israeli soldiers and two civilians had approached the man working on the road, taken the keys to his truck and threatened to arrest him and confiscate his road roller if he did not stop working. Israel has undergone a campaign of remapping in the West Bank in order to requisition areas as “state land”, with 62,000 dunums (15,320 acres) being remapped in 2015 alone….
http://www.palestinemonitor.org/details.php?id=l2d28oa14957ycrwb2fwi9

Palestinian historical city of Sebastia besieged by settlements

Al-Monitor 6 Feb by Zuheir Dolah — Palestinian officials have been attempting to add the West Bank’s historical city of Sebastia on UNESCO’s World Heritage List to protect it from alleged Israeli violations — At the intersection between Nablus and Jenin in the West Bank, specifically between the fields of corn and cypress and almond trees, different civilizations intermingle in a town that took on importance in 876 B.C. In Sebastia, Canaanites settled, and statues like Rhodes Andreas line the tunnels. The Roman, Greek, Farsi, Assyrian and Ottoman empires left their mark on the cathedral in the city center through columns, palaces, towers and antiquities. The cathedral was built during the Byzantine days in the 12th century B.C., and French engineers rebuilt it to breathe life into it. It still stands to this day. Sebastia, which is located on a hilltop that is 440 meters high (one-quarter of a mile), north of Nablus city, is known as the Palestinian capital of Romans, as it is famous for Greek and Roman antiquities dating back to the days of the Roman era. Although Sebastia is a melting pot for civilizations and enjoys historical value dating back 3,000 years, it is besieged by settlements and threatened with disappearance due to Israeli violations such as attempts to move the antiquities to Israeli museums. Sebastia, the gateway of historical civilizations, is facing a future of invaders different from those in previous eras. These invaders are committing serious violations to eliminate the city’s history and impose the Jewish story on it. One of the most dangerous violations is the Israeli decision to ban the entry of foreign tourists to the land of Palestinian antiquities. To tighten the noose on Sebastia, Israel established the Shavei Shomron settlement after confiscating and controlling most of the city’s lands. Sebastia mayor Nael al-Shaer told Al-Monitor, “Israel’s violations against Sebastia affected all archaeological sites and entailed the theft of antiquities from the Ottoman Mosque and their transfer to Israeli museums, as well as the attempt to move some pieces from the Royal Roman Cemetery in the town center. But after failing to lift the large stone graves, they left everything, and the town kept the wooden cranes to stand witness to the Israeli destruction.” Shaer revealed the danger of the new Judaization project in Sebastia, which aims at confiscating all of its lands through the increased attacks of settlers with security coverage from the Israeli army….
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2017/02/west-bank-historic-sebastia-israel-settlements.htm

West Bank roads to receive NIS 5 billion upgrade

Ynet 7 Feb by Ofer Petersburg — Five-year plan expected to help ease traffic congestion in the area, especially at entrances to Jerusalem, and make the roads safer; Transportation Minister Katz says massive upgrade to infrastructure will help the Jewish settlements further expand and develop — The Israeli government has launched a new five-year plan to upgrade the transportation infrastructure in the West Bank to the tune of NIS 5 billion ($1.3 billion). The massive project, led by Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz, will include excavating new tunnels, expending main highways, road resurfacing, paving interchanges, new access roads and bypasses, and creating easier access to the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem metropolitan areas via light rail and special public transit lanes. The new public transit lanes are meant to help reduce the traffic congestion on the roads leading into the metropolitan areas …  Several roads will be paved to bypass roads that pass through Arab villages. A road to bypass Nabi Ilyas is being paved as part of Route 55 to the tune of NIS 54 million, while a road to bypass Al-Arroub, which will connect the Judea region to Kiryat Arba-Hebron and Jerusalem, is in the planning stages. In addition, a road to bypass Huwara is being planned to better connect the northern Samaria region to Ariel and to central Israel….
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4918936,00.html

Reports: Israel approves 1,162 settlement units in West Bank

BETHLEHEM (Ma‘an) 9 Feb — Israel reportedly approved the construction of 1,162 settlement units on Wednesday, to be built in the occupied West Bank, according to Hebrew news website Walla. Walla reported that Israel’s higher planning council on settlement activity, which is affiliated to the Israeli civil administration, approved the new 1,162 settlement units, including units in a new settlement near the existing Shvut Rachel settlement in the northern West Bank district of Nablus. The new settlement adjacent to Shvut Rachel was initially planned to be built to house residents of the now evacuated illegal Amona outpost — an offer refused by the Amona setters. A spokesperson for the Israeli civil administration was not immediately available for comment.  It remained unclear as of Thursday whether or not the 1,162 units were part of the more than 6,000 housing units to have been approved for construction in East Jerusalem and the West Bank by the Israeli government since the beginning of 2017.
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775382

Israel’s top court petitioned to strike down settler law

AFP 8 Feb — Israeli and Palestinian rights groups petitioned the Supreme Court on Wednesday asking it to strike down a new law allowing expropriation of private Palestinian land for Jewish settlers. The law has sparked an outpouring of condemnation from around the world since it was passed in the Israeli parliament late Monday, although the United States has remained tight-lipped. The act, which legalises dozens of wildcat outposts and thousands of settler homes in the occupied West Bank, now faces a legal challenge, however. Israeli group Adalah said that it and the Palestinian NGO, Jerusalem Legal Aid and Human Rights Center (JLAC), sought to overturn the “dangerous” law. “We have very strong arguments against the law,” Adalah’s lawyer Suhad Bishara said outside the court. “We definitely hope that the Supreme Court will declare that the law is unconstitutional and thus cancel it.” The law is seen by critics as promoting at least partial annexation of the West Bank, a key demand for parts of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government. Its backers want to prevent a repeat of last week’s traumatic forcible eviction of the wildcat settlement outpost of Amona, in the northern West Bank … Israeli Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit has himself warned the government that the law may be unconstitutional and risks exposing Israel to international prosecution for war crimes. He has said he will not be able to defend it before the Supreme Court, and Israeli newspaper Maariv said on Wednesday that he may even testify against it. The United Nations, the European Union and the Arab League strongly criticised the legislation on Tuesday, although the new administration of US President Donald Trump remained silent….
http://al-monitor.com/pulse/afp/2017/02/israel-palestinians-conflict-settler-court.html

Germany says trust in Israel ‘shaken’ by legalization of West Bank settlements on Palestinian land

JERUSALEM (JTA) 8 Feb — Germany condemned a controversial new Israeli law that retroactively legalizes settler homes built on private Palestinian land. Berlin said Wednesday that the “regulations law” undermines trust in Israel’s seriousness about reaching a compromise with the Palestinians. “Many in Germany who stand by Israel and feel great commitment toward it find themselves deeply disappointed by this move,” a German Foreign Ministry spokesman said in a statement. “Our trust in the Israeli government’s commitment to the two-state solution has been fundamentally shaken.” The law, which the Knesset passed in a raucous late-night session Monday, allows the state to seize private Palestinian land on which settlements or outposts were built, as long as the settlers were not aware of the status of the land. In cases where the landowners are known, they are entitled to compensation. Censure of the law has come from governments around the world, including the United Nations, the European Union, France, Britain, Turkey, Jordan and the Palestinians….
http://www.jta.org/2017/02/08/news-opinion/israel-middle-east/germany-says-lost-confidence-in-israel-after-outpost-law

Violence / Detentions — West Bank / Jerusalem / Israel

Elderly Palestinian dies after being run over by Israeli settler

BETHLEHEM (Ma‘an) 8 Feb — An elderly Palestinian [riding on a donkey acc. to Times of Israel] died after being run over by an Israeli settler on Wednesday near the illegal Israeli settlement of Neve Daniel in the occupied West Bank district of Bethlehem. Suleiman Hamad Salah, an 85-year-old resident of the village of al-Khader, was killed after being run over on Route 60, an Israeli bypass road that cuts through the occupied Palestinian territory and connects illegal settlements to Israel. The Israeli settler reportedly left his car in the area, and “escaped” before a Palestinian ambulance reached the scene, according to medical sources. Muhammad Awwad, the head of the ambulance services of the Palestinian Red Crescent, said that Salah sustaining serious injuries from the incident, and succumbed to his wounds after arriving to a hospital. An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma‘an she would look into reports. It was unclear whether the incident was being investigated as a deliberate ramming attack. [IMEMC has photos here]
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775373

18-year-old Palestinian beaten, arrested in Petah Tikva after allegedly injuring 3 Israelis

IMEMC 10 Feb by Celine Hagbard — Israeli media sources reported Friday that an 18-year old Palestinian [Sadiq Nasser Aweida]  was in custody after having been beaten unconscious with rocks and clubs by a crowd that suspected him of shooting and injuring two Israelis, then stabbing another with a screwdriver after his gun jammed. In addition to the three people injured by the attacker, two people were admitted to the hospital for bruises sustained falling down while running, and three other people were treated for shock by Israeli medics. The 18-year old Palestinian man from Nablus who is currently in Israeli police custody is suspected of carrying out the attack, but it is unclear from local reports whether he was actually witnessed attacking anyone. Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz reported that the 40-year old Israeli who was stabbed by the screwdriver told them, “I stood on Salor Street and I heard shots and shouts of ‘terrorist, terrorist.’ I saw the terrorist running. He entered a sewing shop and tried to stab me. He somehow stabbed me with a screwdriver and then all the rest entered. We were four to five people who beat him into submission because he did not want to give up. They beat him with a club and a stone.” The attack took place Friday morning at the open-air market of Petah Tikva, in central Israel. According to Israeli sources, the suspect opened fire toward the crowd, lightly injuring two people with gunshot shrapnel wound, then ran down Baron Hirsch Street and into a sewing shop. In the shop, police say that he grabbed a screwdriver and stabbed an Israeli man in the neck, moderately wounding him. But the wounded man remained conscious, and was able to give media reporters the full statement quoted above.
http://imemc.org/article/18-year-old-palestinian-beaten-arrested-in-petah-tikva-after-allegedly-injuring-3-israelis/

Israeli Arab beaten by passers-by who mistook him for a terrorist

Ynet 9 Feb by Hassan Shaalan — An Israeli Arab was beaten by passersby who mistook him for a terrorist after he yelled in Arabic on the scene of the terror attack in Petah Tikva on Thursday.  Maed Amar, 35, from Kafr Qasim, was just finishing his shopping in the Petah Tikva market, when he heard gunshots. “I yelled in Arabic — ‘watch out, take cover,’ and then people started pummeling me, yelling ‘there’s another terrorist here.’ I wanted to warn people, and they nearly killed me,” he recounted. Amar suffered head and leg injuries and was evacuated to Beilinson Hospital at the Rabin Medical Center in the city, where he was hospitalized. His condition is considered light. A video filmed at the scene depicts Amar lying wounded on the ground, surrounded by security personnel. Passersby are heard shouting: “Kill him.” … Osama Amar, Maed’s brother, added that his brother “is a quiet man, who would never hurt anyone. He always liked to help others. Now, he is shocked, and he still can’t comprehend what happened to him. I hope this event doesn’t recur.” Another Kfar Qasim resident, who was also nearby, said that “Maed Amar didn’t do anything. They attacked him simply because he is an Arab. He was unarmed and posed no threat to anyone, but there are racist people who attack Arabs because of hatred. It’s good they didn’t shoot him to death.”
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4920445,00.html

Arrests as IOF storms home of Petah Tikva anti-occupation attacker

NABLUS (PIC) 10 Feb — The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) at dawn Friday stormed the home of the Palestinian activist who carried out an anti-occupation attack in Petah Tikva on Thursday. The IOF rolled into Beita and ‘Ousrin [or ‘Usarin] towns, in southern Nablus, just a few hours following the Petah Tikva anti-occupation attack, carried out by 19-year-old Sadiq Nasser Aweida, a native of Beita.  According to local sources, the IOF broke into Aweida’s family home at daybreak and subjected all the family members to exhaustive interrogation.  The occupation troops further wreaked havoc on civilian homes in the town and kidnapped two friends of Aweida — Radi al-Jaghoub, 19, and Adham Eili, 19.  24-year-old Samer Adeili was also kidnapped by the IOF from the nearby ‘Ousrin town and got his car seized on claims of transferring Aweida from Beita to ‘Azzoun town [in Qalqiliya governorate] before he headed to Petah Tikva and carried out the attack. Aweida’s father, working in the 1948 occupied territories, was reportedly kidnapped by the Israeli forces just a few minutes after the attack.

At the same time, the IOF claimed responsibility for the abduction of ten Palestinians from the West Bank at predawn time including eight from Qalqilya province and another from Fahma village, in Jenin. The assault culminated in the abduction of two Palestinian youths from ‘Askar al-Jadeed Camp, in eastern Nablus.

https://english.palinfo.com/news/2017/2/10/Arrests-as-IOF-storms-home-of-Petah-Tikva-anti-occupation-attacker

Israeli soldiers invade an orphanage school in Jerusalem

IMEMC 7 Feb — Israeli soldiers invaded, Tuesday, “Dar al-Aytaam” Industrial Orphanage School, in the al-Waad street area, leading to the Al-Aqsa Mosque, in occupied East Jerusalem. The soldiers violently searched the school, and interrogated many orphans, after alleging that some hurled stones on army vehicles. After conducting the searches and interrogations, the soldiers left the school without conducting any arrests. It is worth mentioning that the orphanage school has recently been subject to various military invasions, under similar allegations, and the soldiers also abducted and imprisoned the headmaster and several students.

http://imemc.org/article/israeli-soldiers-invade-an-orphanage-school-in-jerusalem/

Israeli soldiers clash with youth in ‘Aida refugee camp, 2 arrested

BETHLEHEM (Ma‘an) 10 Feb — Israeli forces clashed with Palestinian youth late Thursday afternoon in the ‘Aida refugee camp in the southern occupied West Bank district of Bethlehem. Locals told Ma‘an that Israeli forces fired tear gas, while Palestinian Authority (PA)-owned news agency Wafa reported that Israeli forces also used live fire. According to Wafa, clashes erupted when a Palestinian youth threw a locally made explosive device at the Israeli military base near the Bilal Ibn Rabah mosque, also known as Rachel’s Tomb. Wafa added that witnesses said soldiers fired at water tanks on the rooftops of two homes to destroy them, and arrested two young men identified as Rani Abu Aker and Saeb Amarneh. Locals told Ma‘an that at least one of the two was released.
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775397

Settlers attack Palestinian journalist on a West Bank road

RAMALLAH (WAFA) 7 Feb  – Jewish settlers attacked on Tuesday a Palestinian journalist on a road near the settlement of Ofra, east of Ramallah. The journalist, Zaher Abu Hussein, who works in the media department of a Palestinian non-governmental organization, told WAFA that five settlers blocked a road he was driving on and then threw rocks at him when he got out of the car. He said he was hit in the back and on the limbs. He was taken to hospital in Ramallah for treatment. The settlers also caused damage to his car. The Israeli government recently passed a law that imposes heavy prison sentence on stone throwers because it could endanger lives. However, the law seems to apply only to Palestinians throwing rocks at Israelis but not Jewish settlers attacking Palestinians.
http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=wieWeja52314055398awieWej

Settlers creep into Palestinian land, steal 400 olive seedlings

BETHLEHEM (PIC) 9 Feb — Israeli settlers on Thursday uprooted 400 olive seedlings grown in Bethlehem’s southern town of al-Khader. Coordinator for the popular anti-settlement committee Ahmad Salah said Israelis residing in the illegal Sidi Boez outpost stole 400 newly planted olive trees from al-Shaaf area, in al-Khader town. The Palestinian land owner, Ali Ahmad Issa, was reportedly shocked as he caught sight of the theft. According to Salah, Palestinian lands in al-Khader town have increasingly come under the threat of such Israeli assaults and theft attempts. A couple of weeks earlier, Israeli settlers uprooted 450 olive and grape seedlings owned by the Palestinian farmer Mohamed Abdul Salam Saleh.
https://english.palinfo.com/news/2017/2/9/Settlers-creep-into-Palestinian-land-steal-400-olive-seedlings

Israeli soldiers abduct fifteen Palestinians in the West Bank

IMEMC 8 Feb — Israeli soldiers abducted, overnight and at dawn Wednesday, fifteen Palestinians in different parts of the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, after invading their homes and violently searching them. The Palestinian Prisoners’ Society (PPS) said the soldiers abducted five young men in Um Tuba and al-Mokabber towns, in occupied Jerusalem, after searching their homes … In Bethlehem, the soldiers invaded and searched homes in various parts of the district, and abducted four Palestinians … In Hebron district, in the southern part of the West Bank, the soldiers abducted Saed and his brother Hasan Jibreel, from their home in Yatta town, in addition to Waseem Taha Abu Mariya, from Beit Ummar town, north of the city. In the northern West Bank district of Tulkarem, the soldiers abducted Mohannad Sufian Matar, 32, from his home in Thannaba town. In Qabatia, in the northern West Bank district of Jenin, the soldiers abducted Haitham Ahmad Assaf, from his home. One Palestinian, identified as Eyad Dweikat, from the northern West Bank district of Nablus, was abducted while heading to the border terminal, on his way to Jordan.

http://imemc.org/article/israeli-soldiers-abduct-fifteen-palestinians-in-the-west-bank/

VIDEO: Israeli forces violently detain Palestinian boy in broad daylight, 16 others in night raids

RAMALLAH (Ma‘an) 8 Feb — Israeli forces violently detained a Palestinian minor off the street in broad daylight on Wednesday afternoon, while at least 16 other Palestinians were detained earlier from across the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem in predawn raids. According to locals in ‘Aida refugee camp in the southern occupied West Bank district of Bethlehem, Israeli forces raided the camp Wednesday afternoon and violently detained a boy in the street as he was walking home from school. A video shared on social media shows Israel soldiers aggressively throwing the boy into the back of a military vehicle. Witnesses said they saw the military jeep suddenly careen into the camp before soldiers emerged and grabbed him, asserting that there were no clashes or stone throwing in the area at the time, and that the boy was walking home from school by himself. Locals later identified the boy as 14-year-old Ali Jawarish. Bethlehem-based NGO BADIL said that he was beaten by soldiers inside the vehicle. In a predawn raid on Wednesday in ‘Aida, Israeli forces had also delivered a notice to an unidentified Palestinian youth to meet with Israeli intelligence for interrogation, according to locals, which followed a raid in the camp Tuesday evening. Locals in ‘Aida have reported escalated military procedures over the past several months, creating what some residents have called a perpetual “atmosphere of fear.”
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775358

Israeli forces detain 16 Palestinians across West Bank

RAMALLAH (Ma‘an) 9 Feb — Israeli forces detained at least 16 Palestinians, including two minors, across the occupied West Bank between Wednesday and Thursday, Palestinian and Israeli sources said. The Palestinian Prisoner’s Society (PPS) reported that two Palestinians were detained in the northern West Bank, identifying them as Abd al-Salam Badawi in the Tulkarem district and Ahmad Fayez Saadi in the Jenin refugee camp. In the central West Bank, PPS reported the detention of Odeh Ahmad al-Qadi, 50, and his son Mustafa in the village of Mazaria‘a al-Nubani in the Ramallah district. An Israeli army spokesperson did not inform Ma‘an of detentions in the northern West Bank or Mazaria‘a al-Nubani, but said that four Palestinians were detained in the Ramallah-area village of al-Mazra‘a al-Qibliya. In the Jerusalem district, PPS stated that Israeli forces detained Samer al-Dibsi in the village of Kafr ‘Aqab, while Yaqoub Sidawi, 14, was detained in al-Ram. In the Bethlehem district, PPS stated that Ahmad al-Umour, 24, was detained in the village of Tuqu‘. The detention was confirmed by the army …  PPS added that Nafith al-Shawamra and Muhammad Kamil Iqtiel in the Hebron district, as local sources told Ma‘an that the two were detained during a raid in the village of Deir al-‘Asal. The army spokesperson confirmed the detention of one “Hamas operative” in Deir al-‘Asal, and of two other Palestinians in the villages of Hijra and al-Tabaqa. Israeli forces carry out detention raids across the occupied territory on a near-nightly basis, with the UN recording an average of 95 weekly raids in the West Bank in 2016, and 100 weekly raids on average thus far in 2017. A joint report by Palestinian prisoners’ organizations said that over the course of January alone, 590 Palestinians were detained across the occupied territory, including 128 children, 14 women, and one journalist.
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775385

Prisoners / Court actions

Israeli torture of Palestinian children ‘institutional’

Al Jazeera 7 Feb by Ben White — Confessions by Palestinians who have been tortured are regularly accepted by Israeli judges, rights groups say — A recent article published by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz has confirmed the extent to which Shin Bet interrogators subject their prisoners to torture. Methods include slapping the head “to hurt sensitive organs like the nose, ears, brow and lips”, forcing a handcuffed individual to squat against a wall for long periods of time, and placing the suspect bent backwards over a chair with his arms and legs cuffed. The interrogators’ accounts echo what Palestinians and Israeli human rights groups have long documented. Prisoners’ rights NGO Addameer said that such practices “are known to be routinely and systematically used against Palestinian detainees”. Other torture methods used against Palestinians include sleep deprivation and threats against family members, an Addameer spokesperson told Al Jazeera. Rachel Stroumsa, the executive director of the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI), said that her NGO was aware of hundreds of complaints and allegations along these lines. In addition to interrogation being used to gain information about future acts, “our experience is that torture is also used to obtain confessions regarding past acts”, Stroumsa told Al Jazeera. In its annual report last year, Amnesty International found that Israeli forces and Shin Bet personnel had “tortured and otherwise ill-treated Palestinian detainees, including children, particularly during arrest and interrogation”, with methods including “beating with batons, slapping, throttling, prolonged shackling, stress positions, sleep deprivation and threats”. A representative of Defence for Children International – Palestine told Al Jazeera that the group’s research had shown that almost two-thirds of Palestinian children detained in the occupied West Bank by Israeli forces had endured physical violence after their arrest….

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2017/01/coercion-violence-threats-torture-israeli-style-170129092739964.html

Israeli court sentences Palestinian mother to year in prison

JERUSALEM (Ma‘an) 9 Feb – An Israeli magistrate court in Jerusalem sentenced a Palestinian mother of six on Thursday to a year in prison and a fine of 12,000 shekels ($3,203) for depositing funds into a prison commissary belonging to a Hamas-affiliated Palestinian prisoner held in Israeli custody. Lawyer Muhammad Mahmoud from prisoners’ rights group Addameer told Ma‘an that Dalal Abu al-Hawa from Jerusalem’s Old City was sentenced for depositing the funds. Israel Prison Service (IPS) allows families of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli custody to deposit a fixed amount of money each month into a prisoner’s commissary, which they can then use to purchase items from the prison’s canteen. However, since Israel considers Hamas to be a “terrorist organization,” families of Hamas-affiliated Palestinian prisoners are extremely vulnerable to being detained and charged by Israeli authorities when interacting with imprisoned family members. A spokesman for the Jerusalem Committee for Families of Prisoners, Amjad Abu Asab, noted that Abu al-Hawa was detained on Aug. 28 from her home, before Israeli police forces stormed the house and searched it, while confiscating mobile phones and other properties. Abu al-Hawa, he added, is a mother of six. One of her sons, 17-year-old Omar Khalil Abu al-Hawa, is also serving two years in Israeli prison.
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775396

Israeli court sentences 3 Palestinian minors to prison

RAMALLAH (PIC) 10 Feb — Israeli Central Court in occupied Jerusalem sentenced Thursday four Jerusalemites, including three minors, to prison. Head of the Jerusalem Committee for Families of Prisoners Amjad Abu Assab affirmed that the young man Yasser Basti, 21, was sentenced to three years imprisonment for stone-throwing charges. Basti was detained on Oct. 12, 2015 and is currently held in Ohalei Kedar Detention Center in the south of Israel, he added. Meanwhile, the 17-year-old boy Youssef Abu Shukheidim was sentenced to nine months plus a fine of 800 $US. The two children Mohamed Khatib, 15, and Ahmed Fawaqa, 14, were also sentenced to ten months in prison after being convicted of throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. Both boys were detained on Dec. 13, 2016 and are currently held in Megiddo prison.
https://english.palinfo.com/news/2017/2/10/Israeli-court-sentences-3-Palestinian-minors-to-prison

52,000 NIS in fines imposed on imprisoned Palestinian children in Ofer Prison in January

IMEMC 7 Feb — The Palestinian Detainees’ Committee has reported, Monday, that Israel has collected at least 52.000 Shekels in fines and bail from families of Palestinian children imprisoned in Ofer prison alone, in January. The committee stated that eight of the imprisoned children were shot and injured prior to their abduction. It added that one of the children, identified as Ahmad Hanatsha, 16, is currently held under an arbitrary Administrative Detention order, without charges or trial. The committee also said that 64 children were sent to Ofer in January, and that 28 of them were abducted after the soldiers stormed and searched their families’ homes during early dawn hours. Six other children were abducted after the soldiers stopped them at military roadblocks, and two others were held prisoner after being summoned for interrogation. 28 of the detained children have been sentenced by different military courts to imprisonment periods that vary between one and twelve months, while the rest are still held under interrogation.

http://imemc.org/article/52-000-nis-in-fines-imposed-on-imprisoned-palestinian-children-in-ofer-prison-in-january/

Gaza

2 Palestinians killed, 5 injured in reported airstrike on southern Gaza tunnel

GAZA (Ma‘an) 9 Feb — Two Palestinians were killed and five were injured during a reported airstrike on a smuggling tunnel between Egypt and Gaza on Wednesday night, official Palestinian sources said. Gaza Ministry of Health spokesman Ashraf al-Qidra said on Thursday that Hussam Hamid al-Sufi, 24, from the town of Rafah, and Muhammad Anwar al-Aqraa, a 38-year-old resident of Gaza City, were killed in an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, while five other Palestinians were injured. An Israeli army spokesperson however denied to Ma‘an that the army was involved in the reported strike. However, Israeli media stated that the alleged tunnel attack came in the wake of four rockets being fired from Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula towards the southern Israeli city of Eilat, which were later claimed by the so-called Islamic State group. No casualties were reported in the incident.

The casualties came in the wake of multiple airstrikes launched by the Israeli army inside the Gaza Strip on Monday which injured two Palestinians, after a rocket that landed in an open area in the Ashkelon region of southern Israel. The Gaza-based al-Mezan Center for Human Rights expressed concern on Tuesday that Israel could be leading up to a wide-scale military offensive….
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775384

Israeli navy attacks fishing boats in Gaza, army attacks homes and lands

IMEMC 9 Feb — Israeli navy ships opened fire, on Wednesday evening, targeting several Palestinian fishing boats, in Gaza territorial waters, in the northern part of the besieged coastal region. Israeli soldiers also fired live rounds at homes and lands. Eyewitnesses said the soldiers, stationed across the border fence, in northern Gaza, fired dozens of live rounds at homes, and agricultural lands, causing property damage. They added that the soldiers also fired many flares over the area, but did not conduct a military invasion. In addition, Israeli navy ships opened fire on several Palestinian fishing boats, close to the shore, also in the northern part of the Gaza Strip, forcing the fishers back. On Tuesday evening, the navy opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats, close to the shore in Rafah and Khan Younis, in the southern part of the besieged Gaza Strip. On Tuesday morning, the navy fired several live rounds at Palestinian fishing boats, in Gaza territorial waters, close to the shore in the northern part of the coastal region.
http://imemc.org/article/israeli-navy-attacks-fishing-boats-in-gaza-army-attacks-homes-and-lands/

Egypt to open Rafah crossing for three days

GAZA (PIC) 10 Feb — The Egyptian authorities decided to open the Rafah border crossing on Saturday for the travel of passengers for three days. The interior ministry’s crossing and border authority in Gaza said on Thursday that it was officially informed of Egypt’s intention to open the crossing in both directions from Saturday to Monday. Some lists of passengers were published on the website of the interior ministry and others will be available later, according to the border authority. About 30,000 passengers have already registered for travel through the crossing. This will be the second time the Egyptian authorities has opened the Rafah crossing since the beginning of the current year. Two weeks ago, they opened the crossing for three days and extended it for a fourth day.
https://english.palinfo.com/news/2017/2/10/Egypt-to-open-Rafah-crossing-for-three-days

Egyptian exports to Gaza signal better ties with Hamas

GAZA (Reuters) 8 Feb by Nidal al-Mughrabi — Egypt has eased restrictions at a tightly-controlled border with the Gaza Strip in a sign of improved relations with the Palestinian territory’s Islamist rulers. Truckloads of goods ranging from steel to fish have rolled into the enclave in the past several weeks. Egypt had insisted for years that the Rafah crossing – which it opens for a three-to-five day period about once every 40 days – would handle the passage of only people, not goods. Long at odds with Gaza’s governing Hamas group, Egypt had destroyed nearly 2,000 smuggling tunnels that provided its two million people with a steady flow of consumer products. That left Israel’s Kerem Shalom border crossing as the only conduit for Gaza imports, although some items are banned and the Israeli navy maintains a maritime blockade. Last month, however, commercial material moved through the crossing along with travelers on the few days it was operational. Officials and economists listed some 20,000 tonnes of products include cement, wheat, steel, lumber, paint, tar and fish, as having moved from Egypt into Gaza. The bulk of Egyptian imports for Gaza continues to enter through Israel, where the goods are inspected, and then sent to the territory via Kerem Shalom. Last year, Cairo began allowing cement into Gaza via Rafah to help rebuild homes damaged or destroyed in four wars between Israel and Palestinian militants since 2006. Cement shipments for projects sponsored by the United Nations already move through the Israeli crossing. EGYPT-HAMAS TALKS Ashraf Abouelhoul, an Egyptian expert on Palestinian affairs, said recent talks in Cairo between Egyptian officials and a Hamas delegation may have led to the decision to move goods through Rafah. “Everyone knows Hamas has improved to some extent the security situation along the Gaza border with Egypt and has to some extent hardened control on smuggling tunnels of people and goods,” he said. Mohammad Abu Jayyab, a Gaza economist, said Egypt might have been motivated by hopes that in return for more imports, Hamas would further bolster security along the border with the Sinai peninsula, where Cairo is battling Islamist militants … Egyptian officials had no immediate comment on commercial ties with Gaza. Israeli authorities also declined to speak about goods moving through Rafah.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-palestinians-egypt-gaza-idUKKBN15N1NX

Egypt destroyed 6 Gaza smuggling tunnels in the span of 2 weeks

CAIRO (Ma‘an) 9 Feb — The Egyptian army claimed on Wednesday to have destroyed six tunnels between Egypt and the besieged Gaza Strip in the span of two weeks earlier this year.   Egyptian army spokesman Tamer al-Rifai said that six tunnels were uncovered and destroyed at the border between Gaza and the North Sinai between Jan. 17 and Feb. 4. The announcement came a day before an alleged airstrike killed two Palestinians and injured five others in a smuggling tunnel between Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip on Thursday. While Palestinian officials said that the tunnel had been targeted by Israel, the Israeli army denied involvement in the strike. Earlier this year, al-Rifai stated that Egyptian forces had destroyed 12 tunnels during an unspecified time period at the end of 2016. Four Palestinians from the besieged Gaza Strip were left dead in December when Egyptian authorities deliberately flooded a tunnel with seawater.
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775383

Israel to allow nitrous oxide into Gaza for hospital use

GAZA (Ma‘an) 9 Feb — Israel allowed the entry of nitrous oxide, a gas used as an anesthetic for patients during surgery, into Gaza Strip hospitals on Thursday morning, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health. Spokesperson for the ministry Ashraf al-Qidra told Ma‘an that Israeli authorities had allowed the entry of nitrous oxide as an import, noting that hospitals in Gaza would not be allowed to have their own reserves of the critical gas. Al-Qidra said that the entry of nitrous oxide was allowed under certain conditions imposed by Israeli authorities, who determined the quantity of cylinders of gas as well as the type of gas. It remained unclear how much of the gas would be allowed in on Thursday. Al-Qidra added that the besieged Gaza Strip — which has suffered under an Israeli blockade for nearly a decade — needed around 400,000 liters of nitrous oxide gas yearly. He expressed appreciation to international organizations for supporting Gaza’s health sector, “especially the efforts to apply pressure on Israel to allow entry of quantities of nitrous oxide for Gaza Strip hospitals.” Thursday’s announcement came a day after reports citing al-Qidra surfaced saying that Israel had “banned” the entry of the gas, resulting in a number of “urgent medical procedures” being halted. Reports added that according to al-Qidra, there were 200 patients awaiting urgent medical treatment in Gaza’s hospitals.
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775386

Hundreds of chickens killed in Israeli airstrike on Gaza

MEMO 7 Feb — Poultry farmer Khalid Al-Haya expressed his anger after the occupation forces targeted his farm during the military attack on the Gaza Strip yesterday [Mon 6 Feb]. Khalid told MEMO that he was surprised that his farm was targeted, as it has never been targeted, not even during the last war on Gaza. A missile from an F-16 plane caused great damage to the farm and resulted in a seven-metre hole in the ground. This caused 80 per cent damage to the farm and killed hundreds of chickens. Four families earn their living from the farm, he said, and the losses as a result of the airstrike are estimated to be between $60,000 and $70,000. Workers tried to save as many chickens as possible and lift the tin roofs that fell on them and the cages that were broken. The entire area was subject to over 15 artillery missiles in the context of the occupation’s escalation that took place in neighbouring agricultural areas and open spaces.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20170207-hundreds-of-chickens-killed-in-israeli-airstrike-on-gaza/

The vision project for blind and visually impaired children in Gaza successfully concluded

UNRWA 7 Feb — The Vision Project for over two hundred blind and visually impaired children in Gaza has come to a successful conclusion, with teachers and children affirming the transformative impact of the project. The education initiative for 217 children uses cutting-edge “Voice Dream Reader” technology, which allows digital information imported onto mobile devices to be read in a human voice. UNRWA is grateful to project funder, the UK-registered charity Interpal, for their generous support. “This project has had a tangible impact in the lives of children whose education prospects had been severely curtailed. Thanks to the Vision Project they have been given hope and a sense of optimism for a better future.”, said Commissioner-General Pierre Krähenbühl. The project saw 33 UNRWA teachers trained to use Voice Dream Reader technology in the classroom. The Voice Dream Reader app was generously donated by its inventor and CEO of Voice Dream Reader, Winston Chen….

http://reliefweb.int/report/occupied-palestinian-territory/vision-project-blind-and-visually-impaired-children-gaza

Qatar delegations arrive in Gaza to inaugurate new projects

[with photos] MEMO 9 Feb — The Head of the Qatari Committee for Rebuilding Gaza, Ambassador Mohamed Al-Emadi, arrived in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday accompanied by several delegations to inaugurate new projects, Quds Press has reported. Apart from touring Qatar-funded projects in Gaza — including residential buildings and healthcare facilities — the delegations will also take part in inaugural events for some of the projects. Notable amongst them will be the handing over of an apartment block in the south of the Gaza Strip and the opening of the audiology department in Shaikh Hamad Hospital in the north of the enclave. In addition, the groups will lay the foundation stone of a new emergency healthcare centre. One of the delegations with the ambassador is made up of specialists in cochlear implants. Operations on 22 deaf children are planned. Local doctors will receive training on such operations during the Qataris’ stay in Gaza, which is expected to last for a week

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20170209-qatar-delegations-arrive-in-gaza-to-inaugurate-new-projects/

Israel uncovers West Bank-Gaza terror cash pipeline

Times of Israel 8 Feb by Jacob Magid — The Shin Bet security service said Wednesday that it had uncovered a Hamas and Islamic Jihad operation to transfer cash from the Gaza Strip to operatives in the West Bank. The Gaza-based terror organizations would send debit cards loaded with funds, either via the mail or smuggled by couriers through the Erez Crossing from Gaza into Israel. West Bank members then withdrew the money from ATMs for use to fund terror attacks, the Shin Bet said. Two suspects from Gaza and the West Bank were detained by Israeli security forces for questioning during November and December, according to a Shin Bet statement. Gaza City resident Salim Tutah, 26, received a permit to enter Israel to work as a tractor driver for a Palestinian contractor doing projects for the American government aid agency USAID in the West Bank. Tutah confessed during interrogation to handing over a debit card loaded with thousands of shekels designated for the Islamic Jihad group. He had received the card from Hamas operatives on the Palestinian side of the Erez Crossing. Ismail Huamda, 26, a Hamas member from the village of al-Samu near Hebron, received another debit card through a courier and was ordered to withdraw funds, the agency said.

http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-uncovers-west-bank-gaza-terror-cash-pipeline/

VIDEO: Where the Arab world goes to find the dankest memes

Daily Dot 6 Feb by Matt Silverman — Some parts of the Gaza Strip only have electricity for eight hours a day. Unemployment is a whopping 25 percent. There are shortages of clean water and concrete. But there’s one resource to which it has nearly unlimited access: the internet. At the Gaza Sky Geeks incubator, one startup is building a social network for viral humor, memes, and user-generated content. It’s a self-described 9GAG for the Arab world called 5QHQH, which translates to “5haha.”  “Arab people love to laugh

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