Al Jazeera: Gazans wounded in border protest

At least 15 Palestinians have been wounded after Israeli troops used gunfire to stop about 3,000 Hamas supporters from approaching one of the Gaza Strip’s main border crossings with Israel, witnesses say.

Palestinian medical workers said on Friday that at least two of the wounded are in a critical condition.

“The IDF [Israeli army] will operate with all its strength to prevent the demonstrators from approaching the security fence or the crossing … and from entering the state of Israel,” an Israeli military official said.

During the standoff, Israeli forces shot into the crowd to “make the rioters back off”, the official said.

Before the protest, the Israeli army posted signs telling Palestinians that they faced “Danger of Death” if they tried to approach the Sufa crossing.

The demonstrators, who marched from the cities of Rafah and Khan Younis in southern Gaza, burnt tyres, waved green Hamas flags and chanted “Dismantle the siege”.

In June, Hamas took control of the Gaza Strip from forces loyal to Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president.

Israel has since closed all crossings, allowing only humanitarian aid and Palestinians with urgent medical needs to cross.

In recent months Hamas has mounted several protests demanding an end to an Israeli-led economic blockade.

Separately, Palestinian medical workers said a 65-year-old woman died on Friday from wounds suffered a day earlier during an Israeli army raid in the southern Gaza Strip.

Dr Moaiya Hassanain said the woman was near her home around 275m from the border fence when she was shot on Thursday evening.

The Israeli military says it has no record of any shooting in the area at the time.

Mahsanmilim: Murder at Huwwara

To view original article, published in www.mahsanmilim.com, click here

This time we came to the checkpoint especially in order to gather testimony about the murder of 15.5-year old Fahmi Abd al Jawaad al Darduk (فهمي عبد الجواد الدردوك), who was shot by the soldiers at this checkpoint on Monday, May 19th 2008.

After he was shot, the army claimed that pipe bombs had been detected in his belt. That wires had been seen hanging from under his clothing. That three pipe bombs had been observed. Later it was said there were five. One of the perpetrators of this crime was cited for excellence.

A Palestinian ambulance arriving from Nablus twenty minutes later at the most was not permitted access to the bleeding boy until 11:30 PM. For two and a half hours he lay on the concrete floor of the checkpoint and no one was allowed to approach him, but the occupation forces. During this time all Palestinians in the area were violently pushed away and the blood washed away with water jets.

In its habitual knee-jerk reaction, Israel immediately publicized the announcement of the Occupation Forces’ PR office, aka the army spokesperson, that a twenty-year old had reached the Huwara checkpoint with three pipe bombs and was legally shot. After a while the reports spoke of a sixteen-year old carrying five pipe bombs. Then again just three. And lots of visible wires.

None of the four to six bullets hitting his body in various places and fired at a very short distance caused any kind of explosives to blow up.

We spoke with people there and they told us:

“We were here around the stall (one of the several vendors’ stalls in the taxi-park adjacent to the checkpoint), about twenty-thirty of us, I went to the stall closest to the checkpoint to get a cup of coffee. Just then I heard shouting inside the checkpoint. First, the soldiers yelling something like ‘he’s got explosives on him!’ and people were yelling at the soldiers that this was not true, that he had a cell phone on him, and then there were shots. Six or seven shots.”

“I went up to get a look, me and some others, and the soldiers yelled at us to get back. But people did not go back. And people inside yelled “He’s dead! He’s dead! The boy is dead!”. And they shouted that he must be taken to the hospital. Then the soldiers threw teargas at us. And they closed down the whole checkpoint. And made us leave the stalls and go to the Awarta checkpoint.”

“So we left the stalls open, just like that. Taxi drivers had to get out of their cars, everybody. Around 100-120 people. The whole crowd at the checkpoint. And the drivers. We were chased away.”

“They came to us running and ordered us to get out of there, quick. Lots of soldiers. They continued to chase us, running, and threw concussion grenades and teargas. Four-five grenades.”

“We ran off. They chased us away like goats. To Awarta CP, across from the army base nearby. And they held us there until 1:30 AM.”

“From there we could see everything going on at the Huwwara checkpoint.”

“When we were being pushed off on the road towards Awarta, there were settlers standing by at the bus-stop there, and they started throwing stones at us.”

“The soldiers watched… The soldiers watched.”

“We were held at Awarta until 1:30 AM. And we lost all our goods at the unattended stalls. I had to spend 50 NIS just to take a taxi. How else would I get home in the middle of the night. Everything I had at my stall I had to throw away. Lost all the money.”

“Why did they not let the ambulance approach, save his life. The ambulance got there very quickly, within 10-20 minutes. One of ours, from Nablus. But they wouldn’t let him through. A Jews’ ambulance came too, and the medics were told he’s dead.”

“The boy was inside the checkpoint, we didn’t see him. People standing in line with him told us what the soldiers did. Someone who had stood right behind him told us how he was killed. How the soldiers killed him.”

“He had just left his home. It happened at about 19:30-19:40. He had just got to the checkpoint, stood waiting for the inspection, nothing special, and he has two cell phones. And an earphone. The earphone wire passing under his shirt, not over it. Inside, not out.”

“When he went through the turnstile he was ordered to “lift your shirt, show your belly.” He lifted his shirt. When they saw the earphone wire, and the cell phone, they shot his head, immediately. Before he even passed through, he was shot in the head. The woman-soldier shot him. Yes, the woman-soldier. But she was not the only one. Not one shot. Six shots. That’s what people said who saw it. The man who was waiting next in line.”

“Until 23:30, the boy lay on the ground. No one was allowed to get close. From where we stood in the Awarta CP, we could see the checkpoint. We saw that the ambulance from Nablus was not allowed to approach. Nor doctors, no one. Everything was shut down. Only around 11:30 PM. Perhaps around midnight, then their IDs were checked and they were allowed to get near him.”

“But before that, the blood was washed away. With water. They brought a fire-truck with water jets.
We know the driver of the fire-truck and he told us that the next morning they had to come there and wash the spot again. To wash away the blood.”

“They killed the boy and his family. The whole family burnt out.”

“His parents didn’t know it was him, he was not carrying an ID. Perhaps the soldiers took it from him, or because he was too young to possess an ID. He was held, dead, at the hospital. Only the next day his parents found out it was him.”

“That day when it happened was absolutely horrific. Totally horrific.”

The boy’s father, interviewed on various Palestinian news channels, said Fahmi was a ninth-grade student at the Abd al Hamid al Saeh School, single brother to his seven sisters, and he had been on his way to pay a family visit in Ramallah. He never used to leave home without permission, and on his way to the checkpoint he was keeping in touch by telephone, because parents tend to worry, that’s how it is. The father said, painfully that the boy told him he had already gone through the checkpoint even though this was not true, probably to calm his father. He said the boy had a cell phone with an earphone, like most of the youngsters these days. And that everything the army reported is false accusation.

On the morrow of the murder, the soldiers came to the vendors who had witnessed what had happened, and asked them things like “Are you missing anything from your stalls?” As if trying to do-good with people. “What have you found missing? A coke bottle? That’s what the Occupations soldiers asked someone, caringly.
If anything had been stolen from you, just tell us, the officer said to someone else.

How unsurprising that the same policy that normally trashes their goods and scatters vendors’ food on the ground and chases them away in order to deny them their livelihood again and again, following the same law and norms, suddenly sends emissaries to inquire ‘caringly’ whether they’re missing some Coke.
And right on the day after they had witnessed the murder of a boy by the soldiers at the checkpoint.

“I heard from people who heard on an Israeli channel that the shooting was accidental… That’s what they say.”
No, we corrected the speaker. That’s not what they said. In Israel they said the boy was carrying explosives. And that’s why they killed him.
“Really, that’s what they told? They didn’t say it was a mistake?”

Witness after witness tell us similar renditions of the shooting, the shouts, the Palestinians’ pleas not to shoot, the ambulance prevented access, how the boy lay alone on the concrete for hours before anyone was allowed close, that he had merely been wearing a wired earphone, that this was just a boy, and that the family had been crushed.

“You want to know what happened, but even if you knew, what can you do with these soldiers? You cannot do anything. They killed him. He’s already dead. What could anyone do for his parents? Nothing can help them now. Nothing.”

“I mean… A human being is dead. A child.”

“Everyone says something about what happened, but that guy who was standing behind him, he told. We heard. He was shot and he died.”

“You cannot do a thing. I’ve seen you, poor women. Seen you being pushed once by the soldiers, and I said to you then I wonder what kind of garbage dump these soldiers came from, remember?”

“I’m telling you the truth.”

“And if a soldier will come, I’ll tell him there was nothing on this boy.”

“Why? listen: They fired at him, right? Why didn’t it blow up? I want to speak to television. If he had something on him, how come it didn’t blow up?”

“And if he wants to kill soldiers, would he also want to kill all the Palestinian people standing there? If he had wanted to kill anyone, it would be just the soldiers, anyway if he had had anything on him, it would blast when he was shot.”

“We wouldn’t want anyone to come kill anyone either. We want peace. We don’t want guys coming and making trouble. But if he did have explosives and was fired at, why didn’t the boy blow up? That’s what I say.”

“We don’t want blood, I want to repeat this. No blood. That’s what I want to say. Neither Jewish nor Arab. We want peace. First the Jews and Arabs lived together. There is enough land. Why not live in peace together. That’s what we want.”

“You know whose land this is here? The village of Burin. This guy who’s a vendor here, it’s his. Our land. But don’t think we don’t want to live together. We don’t want anything happening to any soldier. And to no Arab here.”

“But I ask you, if I had arms on me and I would want to pass through this checkpoint, I mean I know I would be inspected. I know that. So this is where I wouldn’t come. Who would come here like this?
I’m not afraid of anyone. I don’t want Arabs to die nor Jews to die. I want your children and all the Arabs and all the Jews to be one.”

“And if missiles were fired at us, we’d stand together.”

Fahmi’s body, so it turned out, was hit in various places. No one knows if he expired on the spot or slowly bled to his death. If he was conscious before dying. And whether he asked for help or talked.
Only the soldiers who murdered him, and those who came to conceal what had happened – they know the answer.

The army spokesperson announcement, Monday May 19th, 2008, 21:58
“An attempted attack against the Huwara checkpoint was thwarted”

A short while ago, a suspect Palestinian reached the Huwara checkpoint south of Nablus. His pacing to and fro aroused the suspicions of IDF soldiers on the spot. They called to him and noticed he was fidgeting with a belt he carried on his body. The belt was suspected as am explosive device.
As he did not stop moving, and suddenly dropped his hands towards the belt, he was shot by the force. On the Palestinian’s dead body three pipe bombs were found.

PACBI: Urgent appeal to all academics

CONDEMN U.S. GOVERNMENT COMPLICITY IN BLOCKING PALESTINIAN RIGHT TO MOVEMENT AND ADVOCATE MEASURES TO PRESSURE ISRAEL

To view original appeal click here

May 30, 2008

The news that the US State Department has decided to cancel all previously approved Fulbright grants to Palestinian students in Gaza is deeply shocking. In yet another clear demonstration of US complicity with the Israeli occupation regime, the State Department has decided to withdraw the grants for graduate studies in the US because Israel has not given permission for the students to leave Gaza. The US Consulate in Jerusalem is reported to have stated that the grant money had been “redirected” because of concern that if the students were forced to remain in Gaza the grant money would go to waste. Is it credible for the US government, principal supporter and financier of Israel, to claim impotence in the face of Israeli measures restricting the movement of Palestinians into and out of the Gaza Strip?

This US government measure comes only days after Amnesty International termed the siege and imprisonment of a million and a half Palestinians in the Gaza Strip collective punishment that is causing the gravest humanitarian crisis to date; the decision was announced scarcely a few weeks after former US President Carter called the imprisonment of the entire Gaza population a terrible human rights crime and a brutal punishment and called for strong voices in Europe, the US, Israel and elsewhere to speak out and condemn this human rights tragedy. Only yesterday, Nobel laureate and head of the UN human rights observer team visiting the Gaza Strip, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, denounced the international community for its “silence and complicity” on Israel’s “abominable” 11-month blockade of Gaza.

What should be the response of the international academic community to this travesty of the most basic of human rights, the right to move freely, especially when students and academics are involved? We recall that one of the strongest arguments against the academic boycott of Israel put forth by some associations of academics in the United States and Europe is that boycotts violate the free exchange and circulation of ideas among academics. How can there be a free exchange of ideas when a whole people are denied their basic human right of movement? Are the human rights—let alone academic freedom—of Palestinian students and scholars of no concern to academics the world over?

We urge all associations of academics, as well as individual academics, particularly in the United States, to protest in the strongest terms possible this latest instance of US government complicity in the criminal Israeli policy of siege and imprisonment. We also appeal to academics to advocate and adopt effective measures to counter US complicity and, most crucially, Israel’s violation of Palestinian rights and international humanitarian law. The Israeli academy in particular cannot be allowed to carry on its business as usual in the face of the deepening oppression of the Palestinian people. Its deafening silence is a certain sign of its complicity in the structures of oppression, including the criminal siege upon the Gaza Strip and the collective punishment of its people. Measures such as academic boycotts, divestment initiatives, and any other form of pressure on the Israeli academy are among the few avenues left for academic activism today.

www.PACBI.org
info@boycottisrael.ps

Demonstrations in al-Ma’sara, Bi’lin and al-Khader

Al-Ma’sara

By Mahmoud Zwahre

Date 30 May 2008

On the 30th May, around 150 people from the village of Al-Ma’sara demonstrated against the building of the apartheid wall on their land. As usual the demo started from the middle of the village ad continued towards the construction site where the Israeli army are building the wall. The majority of the participators were from the village and were joined by a group from the Anarchists Against the Wall and members of the Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT).

As the demonstration reached the entrance of the village, Israeli soldiers closed the entrance of the village with razor-wire. Protesters tried to remove the wire in order to continue to reach the land of the village, but the soldiers attacked them. Two of them were injured and moved to a near clinic to be treated. After that the Israeli soldiers arrested two people, one from the Israelis and the other from the USA.

Then Mahmoud Zwahre, director of the Popular Committee Against the Wall in Al-Ma’sara village, made a speech about the Palestinian Justice Day. He pointed to all of the faces of the occupation in Palestine, especially in Al-Ma’sara village, making clear that the occupation has developed a policy of apartheid and declaring a ‘Summer Against Apartheid’, that will start next week. Then another speaker from the village Popular Committee talked about the behaviour of the Israeli solders against civilians, made clear when the soldiers fire sound bombs at the protesters. He also focused on the future situation of the village after the wall and the effects of the wall on the area. He then asked all of the internationals and local people to participate in the next demo which will take place on the 6th of June on the anniversary of Naksa .

After that a group of the participators a Christian group conducted a special prayer in front of the wire and soldiers asking for peace.
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Bi’lin:

By Ghassan Bannoura, published by IMEMC on the 30th May 2008.
To view original article click here

Villagers from Bil’in, located near the central West Bank city of Ramallah, supported by international and Israeli peace activists conducted their weekly nonviolent protest against the illegal Israeli wall built on the village’s land on Friday.

The villagers called for the removal of the of the Israeli wall, settlements. Like every week the protests started after the mid-day Friday prayers were finished in the local mosque.

Protesters marched towards the location of the Wall which is separating the village from its land. Immediately after the protest reached the gate of the Wall, soldiers showered the protesters with tear gas and rubber-coated steel bullets. Scores of protesters were treated for gas inhalation, and three were injured by rubber-steal coated bullets.

One local activist was kidnapped by the Israeli army during the protest

Iyad Burnat of the local committee against the Wall and Settlements said that the soldiers used a new army vehicle that fires tear gas at protesters. “It can fire 30 gas bombs in one go.” Burnat told IMEMC.

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Al-Khader

Around 200 villagers from Al Khader village near Bethlehem, in the southern part of the West Bank protest on Friday the Israeli wall and settlements constructed on the village land.

Supported by 50 international and Israeli peace activist the villager held the midday prayers on the settlers road near the village then marched towards the nearby Israeli road block. Several hours later the action was finished peacefully.

A number of the village activists today took a group of internationals who took part of today’s action for a tour on the village land that is annexed for the wall and the Israeli settlements.

Haaretz: Housing Ministry to issue tender for building 120 homes in Har Homa

To view original article, published in Haaretz on the 30th May 2008, click here

Days before Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s departure for Washington, Housing Minister Ze’ev Boim announced Friday that his ministry will issue a tender on Sunday for the construction of hundreds of housing units in two controversial East Jerusalem neighborhoods: 120 units in Har Homa and 700 units in Pisgat Ze’ev.

Both Har Homa and Pisgat Ze’ev are under the jurisdiction of the Jerusalem municipality, but are situated beyond the green line. Tens of thousands of people currently reside in each of them.

In an interview with “Kol Hai” radio Friday, Boim said that he was waiting for the authorization of the defense minister before issuing an additional tender for the construction of 600 apartments in the settlement of Beitar Ilit, south of East Jerusalem, which is not under the jurisdiction of the Jerusalem municipality. Boim said that “the decision to issue tenders was meant as a gift to the city on the 41st anniversary of its emancipation.”

The prime minister has frozen construction plans in both Har Homa and Pisgat Ze’ev, largely at the request of the United States over concerns that construction in these disputed areas could derail peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.

Last year, a tender was issued by Israel for the construction of 300 housing units in Har Homa, sparking harsh international criticism. Consequently, Olmert instructed that all future construction plans beyond the green line must be personally approved by him. He wrote at the time “construction, new building, expansion, preparation of plans, publication of residency tenders and confiscation of land stemming from other settlement activities in the (West Bank) area will not go forward and will not be implemented without requesting and receiving in advance approval by the defense minister and the prime minister.”

Earlier Friday, Palestinian sources confirmed that Olmert will hold a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas before he leaves for Washington Monday. The meeting will be closed, according to reports, without the negotiation teams headed by Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Palestinian negotiator Ahmed Qureia. The two leaders will reportedly discuss the issues that Olmert will later bring up before U.S. President George W. Bush and U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Palestinian negotiator and Abbas aide Saeb Erekat said Friday that the meeting between the two leaders would include all final-status issues as well as Egyptian efforts to broker an unofficial truce between Israel and militants in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.