Soldiers shamed by checkpoint

By Harry Palestine Pal

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Yesterday there was a demonstration against the wall and checkpoints in Tulkarem. We were at a checkpoint called Jebara where the wall has cut off the village of Jebara and its 500 residents. Obviously 500 people aren’t a self sufficient economy and they desperately need free access to the town of Tulkarem and surrounding villages for basic supplies and things like school. When we got there the army was hardly pleased to see us. They had already fired shots in the air and unlike most demonstrations where the army keeps their fire arms by their side, here they kept them raised upwards. They were rather annoyed by the fact that there were so many press and activists with cameras.

The Army kept threatening to have peoples camera’s confiscated and they even threatened to “break” me if I proceeded to take pictures. But there was nothing they could do as we continued to take photo’s whilst chanting and gathering around the checkpoint. ‘

The people of Tulkarem are planning on making this a weekly Saturday demonstration, which is great especially given that there are already so many Saturday rallies. There was also a very healthy number of women at this rally, which I think was in no small part due to an active Women’s Union in Tulkarem.

One thing which hit home for me just how this Apartheid system works was a sign at the checkpoint with the words “Dear Citizen: Entrance to this village is forbidden for Israeli Citizens by order of the IDF commander of the region.
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I couldn’t get a look at the second half of the sign but just as the South African Apartheid regime didn’t want White South Africans to see how the Black population lived, Israel also wants to deny its citizens from seeing how the Palestinian people live.

Tulkarem Protesting Jebara Chekpoint

For Immediate Release

A series of nonviolent actions will take place in Tulkarem this week against the dehumanizing checkpoints surrounding Tul Karem as well as the separation barrier that have destroyed the areas economy.

The first action will occur at Jebara checkpoint Saturday, March 4 at 10:30 a.m. People in Tulkarem will mobilize from the bus station to meet activists from outside the city at 11:00. The action will address the occupation’s devastating effects on the Palestinian economy.

Thousands of students, employers, teachers, patients, worker, and traders use the checkpoints each day to move between surrounding villages and cities. They are often subjected to unnecessary humiliation tactics in addition to long waiting periods and frequent denial of access.

for more information call:

Shareef 0599370445 Tulkarem

Over 200 Palestinian Children Arrested in Two Months

March 2, 2006 – Defence for Children International – Palestine Section
(DCI/ PS@dci-pal.org)

Israeli occupation forces are arresting scores of Palestinian children each week, bringing the number of juveniles currently held in appalling conditions in Israeli detention centres and prisons to new record levels.

Information gathered by the DCI/PS Research & Information and Legal Units shows that since the start of 2006 over 230 Palestinian children have been arrested, with the Israeli army appearing to target in particular youths from the Bethlehem Nablus and Jenin areas of the West Bank. The scale of arrests over the past two months brings the number of Palestinian children in Israeli custody to almost 400. T! his represents a significant increase on the already inexcusably high numbers of recent years and marks a further indication of the scant regard Israeli pays to Palestinian children’s rights and to international legal instruments.

In interviews with DCI/PS lawyers, children have told how upon their arrest they are handcuffed and blindfolded before being bundled into a military jeep and taken to interrogation centres in nearby settlements or military camps. Still dazed and confused from the arrest, and often having been beaten by soldiers inside the jeep, the children are taken
immediately for interrogation in which police and soldiers hurl abuse, threats and sometimes kicks and punches to extract some form of admission from the terrified child. Confessions obtained from this brutalising procedure, which contravenes every legal and moral guideline regarding the questioning of suspects, are deemed sufficient evidence by the Israeli military authorities not only to charge the child, but to charge others implicated in the confession.

Following interrogation, child detainees are incarcerated in cramped and squalid conditions in detention centres across the West Bank to await trial – only a handful of cases are granted bail despite clear and universally-accepted international laws stating that the detention of juveniles should “be used only as a measure of last resort and for the
shortest appropriate period of time”. Although such centres are classified as temporary holding facilities, DCI/PS lawyers note that increasingly children sentenced for six months are serving the entire prison term in these detention centres, lacking even the most basic needs such as access to adequate food and washing facilities, and deprived of contact with family and healthcare professionals.

DCI/PS deplores the systematic abuse of the basic human rights o! f these detainees, first as children and secondly as prisoners. We call on Israel to cease at once its policy of targeting, arresting, abusing and imprisoning Palestinian children and to release immediately all Palestinian children held illegally in Israeli prisons and detention centres.

We urge you, members of the international community, to take a stand on this urgent humanitarian issue. We call on you and your governments to intervene immediately and demand Israel’s compliance with international human rights and humanitarian law and to ensure these violations of Palestinian children’s rights cease at once. Please address letters of protest to the following individuals:

UN Human Rights Committee
Fax : + 41 22 917 9022
E-mail: tb-petitions@ohchr.org

UN Committee ! on the Rights of the Child
Fax : + 41 22 917 9022
E-mail: mandrijasevic-boko@ohchr.org

Acting Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert
Office of the Prime Minister
Fax: ++972 2 670 5475
Email: pm@gov.il; pm_eng@pmo.gov.il

Israeli Minister of Justice (Ms) Tzipi Livni
Fax: + 972 2 646 6357
E-mail: sar@justice.gov.il

Menahem Mazuz,
Attorney-General/Legal Advisor to the Israeli Government
Fax: + 972 2 628 5438

Avichi Mendelblit
Military Attorney General
Israel Defence Forces
Fax: + 972 3 5694370
info@mail.idf.il

COPIES TO: Diplomatic representatives of Israel/Occupied Territories
accredited to your country

Three Anti-Annexation barrier protests Friday 3rd of March

All the protests will begin at 12:00

Villagers of Beit Sira will hold the Friday prayers on their land being annexed along with the Makabim settlement to Israel. Last Friday Israeli Matan Cohn was shot in the eye and Hussni Rayan had a rubber coated bullet enter 8cm into his body when border police opened fired rubber coated bullets indiscriminately at the crowd of protestors.

Villagers of Bil’in who’s land is being annexed together with the Modi’in Elite settlement and the illegal Metityahu Mizrah to Israel will hold it’s weekly demonstration.

Christian and Muslim residents of Abud who’s land’s are being annexed to the Ofarim and Beit Ariyhe settlements will march to the construction site of a secondary fence, in addition to the one built on the green line that is being built on their land.

For more information call:
Beit Sira-Mansur 0545420464
Bil’in- Abdullah 0547-258-210
Abud–0599311344
ISM media office at 02-2971824

Take a Virtual Tour of the 2006 Balata Invasion


Inside a home that was first set on fire, then exploded to kill three fighters hiding inside.


A Palestinian-built roadblock on Balata Camp’s main street obstructs the movement of military vehicles.


Breaking curfew, a woman escorts four children past army vehicles.


A 17-year-old is carried through the streets in a funeral procession to honor him and another boy the same age. The two martyrs were unarmed, watching the invasion from a rooftop when an Israeli sniper shot them in the neck and face.


After two of their friends are buried, a group of boys decorate the grave and pay their respects.


A Palestinian medical volunteer bleeds from a gunshot to the the head he received during an attack on a group of international and local medics, press, and civilians.


A medic grips his friend’s vest, showing that he was visibly a volunteer.


A wounded medic lays in an ambulance.


Military vehicles stop an ambulance from carrying a medical volunteer to the hospital to treat a bullet wound to his head. When media cameras arrived several minutes later, the vehicles finally allowed the ambulance through. Shortly afterward soldiers stopped the ambulance again, removed the unconscious man and placed him under arrest, taking him to a nearby military base.


Shrapnel is removed from a Dutch woman’s shoulder after she and an American volunteer were injured by an explosive.