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
At 9:30 AM Friday morning, Palestinians and Israelis hung themselves from the annexation barrier being constructed illegally on Bil’in’s land. The protestors wrapped themselves in shrouds symbolizing the death sentence that the barrier represents to the Palestinian people and economy.
Photo By Reuters
Other protestors chained their arms into metal tubes and attached themselves to the wall. Israeli soldiers beat the chained demonstrators with batons and rifle butts and wounded two of the protestors. Mohammad Khatib from the Bil’in popular committee and Yossi Bartal from Israeli Anarchists Against the Wall both sustained injuries from the beatings.
Photo by Reuters
The route of the wall in Bil’in was designed to allow for the further expansion of the illegal outpost of Metityahu Mizrah on Bil’in land. The fence in this will annex the Modi’in Elite settlement block that is currently under construction.
Photo By Reuters
The protest in Bil’in continues and will merge with Villages weekly Anti-Annexation Wall demonstration at noon. Abud and Beit Sira villages will also be protesting at this time.
Last week was a conference on “International Struggle Against the Occupation of Palestine” held in Bil’in. Unfortunately, many of the ISM and IWPS (International Woman’s Peace Service) activists in Palestine including myself, were unable to attend due to an “incursion” taking place in Balata refugee camp. Balata Refugee camp is basically a cramped suburb of Nablus although people here always see the areas as separate. It has a population of about 30,000 crammed into 2 square kilometers. Many refugees from the 1948 Al Nakba (catastrophe), and others displaced from 1967 ended up in Balata.
It doesn’t fit your standard vision of a refugee camp. Unlike those temporary ones that you often see on television with tents etc. The displacement has become permanent for these people and a whole impoverished town has been set up. According to the Palestine monitor one fifth of all civilians and fighters who have died at the hands of the Israeli government, since the second Intifada come from this place. Unlike Ramallah where the majority of posters around were for the elections, here they were martyr posters and memorials.
The entire refugee camp was under curfew when I arrived on the second day of the “incursion”. The Army had instructed people not to leave their homes. All the shops were shut but people roamed the streets in open defiance of the curfew. Many people didn’t feel safe so they stayed at home, peering out of their windows. Before I had even made it to the camp 2 boys had been killed on the roof of their house by a sniper. The Israeli army frequently occupies houses in Balata(even when not involved in a full on “incursion”). They hold families hostage to prevent the houses from being attacked. During the invasion there were 5 occupied houses. Jeeps were driving up and down the street. This is all despite Nablus and Balata being Area A, meaning that after Oslo these areas were supposedly meant to be under the control of the Palestinian Authority.
Still all the Israeli Army need to do is contact the Palestinian Authority and instruct their police to get out and they have to comply. Jeeps moved up and down the streets of Balata whilst tanks surrounded the perimeter. I was working with the Palestinian Medical Relief Committee (UPMRC), an initiative which sees Palestinians working as medics, giving them something constructive to do in a situation that makes you feel really helpless. We were walking around on patrol with the UPMRC, helping them get medicine to sick people and carrying people to Ambulances. During a patrol we bumped into someone who had just been hit in the head with a rubber bullet and was bleeding. Someone else had just been shot with another rubber bullet in the leg. It felt like being in back in St. Johns Ambulance when I was a kid only we weren’t dealing with cricket injuries or some guy who just got a bit too drunk.
The Ambulance’s rather then carrying non-smoking signs, had a no rifles sign. We were waiting for the inevitable casualties. Sometimes we would be out on patrol and at other times we were waiting in the Medical bay. We sat and talked about all sorts of things, joking around and ate a lot of chocolates like I used to do as a first aider waiting for something to happen. Only this sitting around and doing nothing was occurring with the background noise of large explosions and tear gas occasionally filling the room.
We tried to get medicine to one family but the tanks tried to stop us at every road, instructing us to turn back. We had to Indiana Jones style run past a tank on a major road and climb over a stone barrier the army put in place to get back into Balata and deliver the medicine. We lost one of our team in the process who didn’t quite make it. Thankfully he made it around another way.
That night, we were debriefing we heard gun fire across the road. A man was shot by a sniper whilst watching television in his home across the street from the medical centre. The army was hesitant to let the ambulance pass, they did so after much coercion. The man was shot in a major artery and was loosing a lot of blood. At that time we weren’t sure they hadn’t hit him in the heart. The ambulance passed as family members screamed, even a few of the ambulance workers became really angry towards the soldier in the jeep. But it wasn’t useful, we needed to get this person out and so we powerlessly carried the stretcher past an Israeli armored car. They weren’t even after this person. Shortly after a women in the family went into labour and we also had to rush her to an ambulance.
But the story doesn’t end there. The army then forced the family out of their home. The ambulance crews, myself and another international waited with the family outside. After half an hour in the cold, the army tried to instruct us to leave the family there. We refused and they pointed rifles at us from the jeep, placing the laser sight on my fore head. They also constantly gestured that they would throw grenades of some description out of the car.
Despite these threats we didn’t leave, the soldiers threatening to return in one minute. After this threat didn’t eventuate the family returned to their home. The family were so generous that despite just having their son shot they tried to offer us tea. We slept that night in the medical centre and I ended up on the early morning patrol. The narrow entrances to Belata camp were now all closed off. We managed to get out by traveling through a friends house but it wasn’t easy. The army prevented all but one of the ambulances from entering Balata so we would have to carry people to that ambulance or to the edge of the camp.
On the way back from our patrol we bumped into a man who had just had his house searched. Apparently his son was one of the men the army was “interested in.” This search demonstrated no respect for the family or their possessions. Electrical equipment was dismantled and left on the floor, wardrobes were emptied, their clothes and draws scattered across the room. The man inside wanted to spend ages talking to us, he was saying things about Jewish conspiracies and stuff that I find offensive, but how do you criticize a man who has just had his home raided, had everything he owns smashed and is having his son hunted by the “Jewish State” for being racist (let alone the incursion and all the previous problems in Balata).
We responded to distress calls from more people that day some had been shot, an old women who had trouble breathing because of the tear gas. We ended up going into an occupied house because we heard that one of the medical team had been kidnapped. It turned out that he was just giving medicine to a diabetic person. When we were in the occupied house my friend talked to one of the soldiers about where he was from in Israel etc. The soldier was clearly upset and we could tell he didn’t want to be there.
We tried to get into another occupied house where we heard someone was injured. We couldn’t get there because a soldier outside threw a sound bomb at us and threatened to shoot us if we moved closer. We found out later that person was ok. Many people were injured and some were killed, several people were also arrested. According to residents of the camp despite all the Israeli Army’s talk of needing to arrest fighters none of the people they were after had ever been involved in attacking past the green line or even attacking Israeli settlements or checkpoints. They were primarily defensive fighters, who fought back when the army attacked.
Finally the army withdrew from 4 of the 5 houses and all of the jeeps left. One of the boarder police jeeps came back to remove their people from the last house. They came in guns blazing and shot a kid in the head with live ammunition. They drove off Tuesday afternoon, none of us were sure when they would return.
I went back to Ramallah before the second invasion started however I came back later in the week for the funerals.
The people of Balata gathered for the funeral of those that had died in the incursion.. Statements from the various Palestinian factions were passed around those gathered stating what they thought that the deaths meant in terms of the ‘peace process’ about the need to resist the occupation etc. They put these deaths into the broader context of the occupation,
Far from it being taboo to talk politics at the funeral or discussing the details of death the people of Balata are so used to it that they will share what ever information they can at such times.
After the funeral we were taken around to a house where some of the fighters were killed. The army surrounded the house and exploded everything inside killing the fighters who were hiding in the roof. Palestinians are aware that the choice to become a fighter is the reality that they will either die young or face life in prison.
We then proceeded to the hospital where we met many of the people that were injured during the “incursion.” Many of them were just young kids shot with live rounds.
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
We will celebrate the life of Rachel Corrie, a 23-year-old ISM volunteer who was killed by an Israeli soldier while nonviolently resisting the demolition of a Palestinian home in the Gaza Strip in Palestine. The event will also honor victims of violence everywhere and those unjustly imprisoned. Its objective is to raise awareness to and make connections between various global and domestic issues of social justice particularly the issue of Palestine.
Remembering Rachel Corrie
Thursday, March 16th 7:00pm
Malonga Casquelourd Center for the Arts
(formerly the Alice Arts Center) at 1428 Alice Street (cross street 14th), Oakland
(near 12th Street Bart, see Map)
Suggested Donation: $10-$20
See below for speakers and performers.
This event is accessible for disabled persons in wheelchairs.
There will also be ASL interpretation for the hearing impaired.
Speakers: Huwaida Arraf, Dolores Huerta, Maria Labossiere, Todd Chretien,
Kiilu Nyasha, Mary Jean Robertson.
Performers: Dennis Kyne, Stephen Kent, Ras K’ Dee, Lorene Zouzounis, Andrea Prichett, Dave Welsh, Dabke Dance Troup,
Speakers:
Huwaida Arraf
Huwaida is a cofounder of the International Solidarity Movement.
Huwaida Arraf is a first generation Palestinian-American. She was born and raised in Detroit, MI. She received her undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan in 1998 with majors in Political Science, Arabic and Hebrew & Judaic Studies. Huwaida spent her junior year abroad, studying at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem – the only Arab on the program. After graduation, she worked for the Arab American Institute to promote the rights of Arab-Americans. In 2000, Huwaida became a Program Coordinator in Jerusalem with Seeds of Peace – an American-based non-profit organization focused on working with youth from regions of conflict, including the Middle East, Cyprus and the Balkans.
Huwaida left Seeds of Peace after becoming involved in active resistance to the Israeli occupation forces and policies. With other Palestinian and international activists, she co-founded the International Solidarity Movement in April, 2001. Huwaida has been arrested over a dozen times over the past four years by the Israeli military for nonviolent protest in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. In addition, Huwaida co-edited Peace under Fire (2004), a collection of personal accounts of ISM volunteers published by Verso Books.
Huwaida is married to fellow human rights activist, Adam Shapiro.
Dolores Huerta
Dolores C. Huerta is the co-founder and First Vice President Emeritus of the United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO (“UFW”). The mother of 11 children, 14 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, Dolores has played a major roll in the American civil rights movement.
Dolores Huerta is one the century’s most powerful and respected labor movement leaders. Huerta left teaching and co-founded the United Farm Workers with Cesar Chavez in 1962: “I quit because I couldn’t stand seeing kids come to class hungry and needing shoes. I thought I could do more by organizing farm workers than by trying to teach their hungry children.”
The United Farm Workers movement has been an inspiration for millions with their use of creative, active nonviolence in advancing the cause of justice for working people around the world.
See More
Maria Labossiere
Organizer with the Haiti Action Committee
The Haiti Action Committee is a San Francisco Bay Area-based network of activists in the USA who have supported the Haitian struggle for democracy since 1991.
More.
Todd Chretien
Todd helped author and organized Proposition I in San Francisco (the College Not Combat initiative) that passed with 60% of the vote on November 8. He has also been involved in union organizing with the Cesar Chavez Student Center at San Francisco State University for SEUI 790. He is currently running for the U.S. Senate on the Green Party ticket.
Kiilu Nyasha
Black Panther veteran, Kiilu Nyasha has been in the liberation struggle for Blacks and all oppressed people most of her life. She is a long time supporter of political prisoners and a death penalty abolitionist. An revolutionary internationalist, Kiilu has actively supported Palestinians’ right to self-determination for decades, using her oratory and journalistic skills to tell the truth about Palestine and the ongoing Israeli occupation. Kiilu was heard regularly on Pacifica’s KPFA beginning in 1983, when she was a commentator for “Traffic Jam,” and later as a programmer with Freedom Is a Constant Struggle from 1991 through 1995. After “Freedom…” was cancelled on KPFA, Kiilu took it to S.F. Liberation Radio and Free Radio Berkeley, micro radio.
More recently, she hosted the biweekly, “Connecting the Dots on KPOO,” a Black listener-sponsored radio station in San Francisco.
Currently, Kiilu free lances for KPFA and KPOO, and writes for the San Francisco Bay View, a national Black newspaper.
Mary Jean Robertson
Mary Jean Robertson is Cherokee, Choctaw, Hessian, Scottish, and “who knows what else”. Mary hosts Voices of the Native Nation on KPOO 89.5 FM. Over the years she has interviewed the likes of Dennis Banks, Floyd Redcrow Westerman, Bill Wahpepah, Janet McCloud, Mary and Carrie Dann, Phillip Deer, and Leonard Peltier for the show.
Performers:
Dennis Kyne
Dennis Kyne is a military veteran who served for fifteen years in the US Army, and over a year on the front lines of Gulf War I as a battlefield medic. He has seen first-hand the effects of Depleted Uranium weapons and PB Tablets. Dennis is tired of hearing “Support the Troops,” a phrase, he says, has lost all sense of sincerity.
After an honorable discharge in 2003, Dennis devoted his life to Support the Truth. Today Dennis travels the country describing his first-hand military experience, and educating young Americans about the ill effects of Depleted Uranium.
Dennis Kyne advocates for veterans of American wars, and for current military personnel, who are treated as tools and guinea pigs both home and abroad.
He has recently released a Rock CD, I’m not resisting.
“This CD is jam packed with powerful eye opening messages and good music to back it all up. It does not get any more sincere than this. That was the intention of Kyne all along, to carry a message to his fellow man while rocking your soul every step of the way.” -Keith Hannaleck
Stephen Kent
A master didjeridu player, multi-instrumentalist and composer, Stephen Kent has been involved with a number of eclectic musical projects in both Europe and the USA.
“…merging spirituality and the modern world…[Kent is] a true future primitive…doing Worldbeat in the most expansive sense possible.” Brad Balfour – The New Review of Records More….
Ras K’ Dee
Ras K’ Dee is a Native American Hip Hop Artist. He has recently released the album “Street Prison” To hear some of his music, go here.
Lorene Zouzounis
Lorene is a Palestinian poet and committed peacemaker. Zarou-Zouzounis was born in Ramallah Palestine and left her homeland with her family in 1964. She has been writing poetry since the age of 13 and has poems published in many poetry anthologies including Food For Our Grandmothers ;South End Press; The Poetry of Arab Women, Interlink Publishing Group; War After War-Review #5; City Lights ,San Francisco; The Space Between Our Footsteps; Simon & Schuster. She also self-published a book of poems entitled Inquire Within in 1987, and her forthcoming book of poems will be entitled Faces. Zarou-Zouzounis also teaches children’s writing workshops and has been reading her poetry at book stores, libraries, universities and many cultural and political events since the mid 80’s.
Andrea Prichett
Andrea is a folk singer with the folk trio Rebecca Riots. She is also a founding activist with the group Copwatch, and has volunteered with the International Solidarity Movement in Palestine.
Sponsors of the Rachel Corrie Event
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee-San Francisco, Bay Area Women in Black, Breaking the Silence, Christian Peacemaker Teams, Copwatch, Corpwatch, Faculty For Israeli-Palestinian Peace (FFIPP), Friends of Deir Ibzia, Global Exchange, Haiti Action Committee, International Socialist Organizing, Jewish Voice for Peace, Jews for a Free Palestine, KPFA 94.1FM, KPOO 89.5 FM, Labor Committee for Peace & Justice, Middle East Children’s Alliance, Peninsula Peace and Justice Center, Not In Our Name, Palestinian American Congress, Rebuilding Alliance, SUSTAIN, Students for Justice in Palestine, Veterans for Peace.