IOF beat peaceful demonstrators in Bil’in

by the ISM media team



UPDATE, Saturday 13th
: Emilio, the Spanish AP journalist injured by a concussion grende in Bil’in yesterday, is still in hospital in Ramallah where his injuries have been identified as more serious than at first assumed in that he has a broken leg. In a further development, Ashraf from Bil’in, who has lived at the outpost for the past year, was detained today for three hours at the Wall on his way to the outpost as a punishment, according to the soldiers, for participating in yesterday’s demo. Access to their land on the other side of the Wall is becoming increasingly difficult for Bil’in villagers and their supporters.

Today in Bil’in one hundred internationals and local villagers gathered to protest the apartheid wall running through the village. The theme of today’s demo was solidarity with Maan News Agency photographer Fadi Arouri who was shot in the stomach with live ammo during a recent IOF invasion into Ramallah.

As soon as the march reached the gate in the Wall the IOF fired tear gas at the peaceful demonstrators. After about ten minutes of chanting slogans opposing military violence, some of the local children started throwing stones but were quickly stopped by village adults. This was met quickly with tear gas and concussion grenades by the IOF. Some activists tried to dismantle the razor wire.

As the IOF began to open the gate in the wall and move forward, many internationals and locals attempted to block the entrance of IOF jeeps. They were beaten with clubs, shoved, tripped and generally roughed up by the IOF.

At least five people were injured including one old man, who needed treatment from a medic, and an AP journalist who was injured in the leg with shrapnel from a concussion grenade. Villager Wael Nasser was hospitalised after being beaten in the head with a baton. The jeeps invaded the village firing rubber bullets and tear gas at children and returning groups of protesters.

Press coverage of Hebron settler violence

YNet: Police official: Hebron incident reflects reality

(VIDEO) Senior official in West Bank Police responds to video clip revealed in Ynet showing settler cursing Palestinian family. Settler summoned for police investigation, but doesn’t show. B’Tselem, of all groups, asks not to turn her into scapegoat


by Efrat Weiss, January 11th

VIDEO – A senior official in the West Bank Police said Thursday to Ynet, “The event in which a woman settler is seen cursing a Palestinian family in Hebron reflects the reality in the city, and is being taken care of.”

The senior official added, however, that “there has been a recent decline in the number of incidents between Palestinian and Jewish residents in the city.”

Defense Minister Amir Peretz responded to the settler harassment of Arabs in Hebron during a strategic assessment in his office. According to him, these images are “disgraceful and are turning into material for incitement against Israel all over the world.”

A video clip was published in Ynet Tuesday showing Ifat Elkobi, a West Bank resident in Hebron, cursing her Palestinian neighbor. She was slated to report to the police station in Hebron for investigation Thursday, but didn’t show up.

A senior police officer told Ynet: “Our attention has been turned to this issue. After we saw the material, suspicions arose that the woman has committed criminal offenses related to threats, trespassing, and assault. Thus, the police have opened an investigation.”

According to him, the investigators watched the video clip and decided to summon the suspect for an investigation Thursday morning, but she didn’t show.

“If she doesn’t show up by this evening, we will send her another summons to be investigated. Examining the video through professional eyes shows that there are children there who are under the age of legal responsibility, and legal measure can’t be taken against them. Unfortunately, we see time and again a cynical use of children for carrying out crimes because they are minors.”

Despite recent publications that drew outraged reactions, the official actually indicated that there has been a decline in violent incidents in Hebron.

According to him, “We have noticed a moderate decline in violence in the city. There is still no small amount of events in which Jewish residents attack Palestinian residents and international left-wing activists, but there has been a decline.

“In our estimation, this derives from an array of factors. First and foremost, this is linked to our increased enforcement, and indictments, which create deterrence for the residents. In addition, it is related to police attempts to create dialogue with the Jewish settlement, and a decrease in the number of terror attacks, which subsequently results in less acts of vengeance,” said the official.

The official added that the in addition to the aforementioned reasons, the decline in violent incidents is affected by media coverage, which has brought settlers to understand that these types of events damage their image.

B’Tselem: Don’t turn settler into scapegoat

The human rights group B’Tselem, which published the video Wednesday, said in a statement that Elkobi must not be turned into a scapegoat with regards to the failure to enforce the law on settlers in the territories.

“As serious as the incident may be, it is just the tip of the iceberg of the daily violence Hebron settlers subject their Palestinian neighbors to on a daily basis, under the army’s auspices.”

“The attacks in Hebron are carried out before the eyes of the soldiers, who are not instructed to stop them, and who are sometimes even ordered to avoid from protecting the victims. The Israel police have also refrained from providing an appropriate response to the settlers’ violence,” the statement read.

B’Tselem claimed that hundreds of complaints regarding violent incidents involving settlers have been filed with the police throughout the years, and criticized the defense minister and the defense establishment for failing to address the issue before its publication in the media.

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel also claimed that it had notified the security forces regarding settlers’ violence in the past, but that nothing had been done in the matter.

In June, the association sent a letter to Defense Minister Amir Peretz stating that, “As a result of Israel’s policy and the idleness of the security forces in the matter of settler violence, the Palestinian population in Hebron has been doomed to a life of humiliation and oppression, and economic and social destruction.”

Haaretz: Police investigate Hebron settler filmed attacking Arabs


by Nir Hasson, January 11th

The Hebron police opened an investigation Thursday into Jewish Quarter resident Yifat Alkobi’s assault of her Arab Neighbors. Alkobi was documented on video cursing and attacking the Abu-Aisha family in the city.

Alkobi is well known to Hebron police for her alleged attack of a 10-year-old Palestinian child in March 2005, for which she is to be tried on February 1.

The boy, Yusuf Aza, told investigators from the human rights organization Yesh Din that he was walking the path between his home and Alkobi’s with two friends, when she began pelting him with stones. Aza, whose two friends fled the scene, said, “I tried to run away but I couldn’t because she blocked the way.”

Aza added that Alkobi “grabbed me by the shirt and pushed me up against the wall. A soldier named Ofer tried to help, but she pushed him away, and he fell down. She held me with one hand and with the other pushed a rock into my mouth and forced my mouth closed. I felt my teeth breaking.” Aza said the soldier got up and called for help on his radio.

Yesh Din has protested the fact that, nearly two years after the attack, Alkobi is not under arrest.

The spokesperson for the Hebron settlers, Orit Struk, responded that the latest incident and others should be seen as “part of the whole picture and the harassment of Jews by Arabs in the city.”

Apartheid Road on Bil’in Land Laundered by High Court

by the ISM media team, December 9th

The Israeli High Court of ‘Justice’ today gave its decision concerning the request of construction companies “Heftsiba” and the Canadian-registered Green Park to overturn the temporary injunction forbidding building in the Matityahu East colony, and to legitimize a planning process that would launder an illegal road built by the construction companies. The case was heard at a hearing on January 7th.

Judges Prokachya, Rivlin and Na’or decided to allow “Heftsiba” to retrospectively change the new scheme for the colony (scheme 210/8/1) and to mark the road already built as a temporary road. At the same time, the judges decided to order Green Park and Heftsiba to pay expenses of 100,000 shekels for contempt and violating the temporary injunction issued by Court.

This is yet another example of the theft of Palestinian land being sanctioned at the highest level by Israeli authorities. The whole of the Matityahu East colonist block was built on Bil’in village land and the whole of the colony of Mod’in Ilit was built on the land of Bil’in and neighbouring villages. Mod’in Ilit is now the largest colony in the West Bank with a population of 35,000 after 4,000 new colonists moved there in 2006.

Click here for YNet coverage.

YNet: On tape: Palestinians harassed in Hebron ‘cage’

by Ali Waked, January 1oth

(VIDEO) Tape obtained by B’Tselem shows heated argument between Palestinian family in Hebron and woman Jewish settler; quarrel just one example of suffering we endure on daily basis, head of Palestinian family tells Ynet. Settlers’ spokesman: Claims exaggerated

VIDEO – The Abu- Aisha family in Hebron has been suffering at the hands of their neighbors from the nearby Jewish settler community of Tel-Rumeda for a along time now. A video filmed by 16-year-old Raja Abu Aisha and obtained by B’Tselem depicts a confrontation with a woman resident of the “Ramat Yishai” neighborhood in Tel-Rumeda.

Members of the Abu Aisha family claimed that the quarrel was just one example of the suffering they endure on a daily basis.

Taiseer Abu- Aisha, 43, told Ynet that he had filed between 200 and 300 complaints in recent years, but police did nothing to stop the harassing.

Abu-Aisha and his extended family live in a two-storey house. “The cage you see in the video is where we live. Not once do we open the door and not hear curse words or get stones and eggs thrown at us,” he said. “The latest fashion during this cold winter – the settlers spray us with cold water using a big fire hose located near the house.”

Abu- Aisha said “hell” is not a strong enough word to describe what his family is going through.

“To prevent confrontations with the settlers – we coordinate the time we leave the cage we live in with the settlers’ schedule,” he said. “We leave for work and school only after they do – and this results in tardiness.”

According to Abu Aisha, during the Eid al-Adha holiday a week ago he was forced to obtain special permits for his family to visit his home.

“My wife’s family has not visited us for the past five years because there are no permits and for fear of settler harassments,” he said.

Every once in a while, like today, Civil Administration officials visit the Abu Aisha house to make certain that no strangers reside there with the family members. Recently they have been required to obtain permits to bring their sheep into the property.

“The charity organizations wanted to give my father three sheep so he may raise them and earn a living, and we the Red Cross to coordinate their entrance (to the property), he said. “This is how life is in hell.”

Noam Arnon, spokesperson for the Jewish settlement in Hebron, told Ynet in response to the Abu Aisha family’s claims that “I am not saying there weren’t any incidents in which the family was attacked, but I thin it is being exaggerated. The claim regarding the hose sounds very odd to me, because as far as I know, the fire hose is municipal property, and people can’t use it at their own will.”

He added that “I know that the family once claimed that it is being harassed and that is why they built these bars, I believe with the funding of European organizations. Even if there was a certain need (for the bars), I believe they were placed here mainly for show; to display their misery. This description of daily abuse sounds unfounded.

Yishai District Police officials denied the Palestinian family’s claims, saying in a statement that, “We treat every complaint regardless of race, religion or sex, and evidence of this is the rise in the number of files opened after we received complaint of disorder.

“Police know how to differentiate between protecting the Jews of Hebron and dealing with complaints and disorderly conduct,” the statement said.

IOF block access to Shuhada Street, defying court order

by ISM Hebron, January 9th

Local Palestinian residents were yesterday prevented from walking down Shuhada Street, which cuts through the centre of Hebron. This is despite a recent High Court Order ruling that the closure of Shuhada Street to Palestinians for the past six years was a ‘mistake’ and their recent access to this street.

At 10am four local Palestinians accompanied by Israeli activists and an Israeli Channel 1 TV crew walked down Shuhada Street with copies of the High Court Order. They were stopped outside the Beit Hadassah colony by a large group of soldiers and some border police officers. An IOF Commander claimed the existence of a new military order forbidding access to Shuhada Street for Palestinians, but refused to show the new order. On Channel 1 later, an IOF spokesperson denied the existence of this new order and said it would be ‘investigated’. The Commander threatened to arrest the Palestinians if they didn’t leave within five minutes but failed to carry out this threat as the local residents negotiated unsuccessfully for over half an hour for access to Shuhada Street.

During this time settler colonists came out of Beit Hadassah and started to call the Palestinians names. A settler representative rejected the pleas of the Palestinians for them to live in peace and walk together down Shuhada Street, claiming that Shuhada Street was exclusively for Jews.

International observers from different groups had gathered on the path that leads to the Palestinian Qurtuba girls school overlooking Shuhada Street to document the events. Three soldiers approached them and asked them to move on but failed to take action when they stayed.