Ni’lin demonstrates against construction of the Apartheid Wall

29 May 2009

Palestinian residents, alongside international and Israeli solidarity activists, gathered to protest construction of the Apartheid Wall in Ni’lin on Friday, 29 May 2009 at 12:30pm. After a prayer on their land, residents and activists marched towards the construction site chanting slogans against the Occupation. Demonstrators were able to reach the Wall and spent most of the demonstration in their olive groves.

Upon reaching the barbed wire that separates Ni’lin from much of their remaining farmland, Palestinian demonstrators cut the wire. In both a symbolic and practical manner, Ni’lin residents sought to reclaim the land that was stolen from them for construction of the Apartheid Wall. According to the 2004 ruling given by the International Court of Justice, the Apartheid Wall is illegal.

After protesters arrived at the site of the Apartheid Wall, Israeli forces began to throw and shoot tear-gas canisters. For several hours, demonstrators remained near the barbed wire despite ongoing shooting from Israeli forces. The army fired tear-gas grenades from a gun, tear-gas canisters and used a machine that discharges 36 tear-gas canisters at once. In response to the army’s violence, some demonstrators threw stones at the army’s jeeps. Several demonstrators required medical attention after being heavily bombarded by tear-gas. Additionally, Israeli forces used 0.22 caliber live ammunition against the protesters.

After leaving the olive groves, demonstrators marched towards the entrance of the village where soldiers are often stationed on Fridays. Several demonstrators threw stones towards the soldiers. Israeli forces fired tear-gas canisters and rubber coated steel bullets into the main street at protesters, hitting one demonstrator with a rubber coated steel bullet just below his eye. The demonstration finished around 4:30pm.

Israeli occupation forces have murdered four Ni’lin residents during demonstrations against the confiscation of their land and critically injured one international solidarity activist.

Ahmed Mousa (10) was shot in the forehead with live ammunition on 29 July 2008. The following day, Yousef Amira (17) was shot twice with rubber-coated steel bullets, leaving him brain dead. He died a week later on 4 August 2008. Arafat Rateb Khawaje (22), was the third Ni’lin resident to be killed by Israeli forces. He was shot in the back with live ammunition on 28 December 2008. That same day, Mohammed Khawaje (20), was shot in the head with live ammunition, leaving him brain dead. He died three days in a Ramallah hospital. Tristan Anderson (37), an American citizen, was shot with a high velocity tear gas projectile on 13 March 2009 and is currently in critical condition. In total, 30 persons have been shot by Israeli forces with live ammunition.

Since May 2008, residents of Ni’lin village have been demonstrating against construction of the Apartheid Wall. Despite being deemed illegal by the International Court of Justice in 2004, the occupation continues to build a Wall, further annexing Palestinian land.

Ni’lin will lose approximately 2500 dunums of agricultural land when the construction of the Wall is completed. Ni’lin consisted of 57,000 dunums in 1948, reduced to 33,000 dunums in 1967, currently is 10,000 dunums and will be 7,500 dunums after construction of the Wall.

Bil’in demonstration commemorates Basem Abu Rahme

Bil’in Popular Committee

29 May 2009

After Friday prayers, the people began the weekly demonstration at Bil ‘in, in which a group of international, Palestinian and Israelis from peace and anti-occupation movements gather to resist the building of the wall around the village in order to regain land that was taken in 2004. This Friday, demonstrators marched through the village towards the wall waving Palestinian flags, chanting anti-Zionist slogans demanding the cessation of the occupation and return of their land, and refusing the Israeli racist policy against our People in the occupied Palestine. The protesters commemorated the martyr Bassem Abu Rahma and they were carrying metal shields, with his pictures, in order to protect themselves and others from Israeli fire. They also wear masks designed specially for Bassem, expressing his existence in all the demonstrations , and they are all Bassem.

A delegation from the general union of the women’s committees with the presence of the Parliament member Al-Rafiq Qais Abu Laila , and the minister of the social affairs Ms. Majida Al-Masri participated in the demonstration , and they received a detailed explanation from Bi’l’in popular committee on the experience of the village in the last years in resisting the apartheid wall.

As the protestors arrived at the wall, they were greeted with a barrage of sound bombs, tear gas and rubber-coated bullets from the Israeli soldiers. The protestors demanded that the soldiers stop this strategy since the demonstration, involving internationals, was peaceful and nonviolent. The soldiers, however, continued to fire upon the protestors, injuring three Palestinians: minester of social affair Majeda el Masri and AP camera man Abed Khabesa and Rani Burnat.

In response, Palestinian demonstrators threw balloons filled with animal dung to counter the Israeli military’s use of poisonous gas.

The village is still commemorating the martyr Bassem Abu Rahma through the a series of events and festivals and also popular demonstrations.

Two days ago a big festival organized by Fatah was held in the village in cooperation with the village institutions, and today Friday we started the sports festival early in the morning under the title “The tournament of the martyr Bassem Abu Rahma” organized by Bil’in sports club, many sports teams from the villages around are participating in this football tournament as the martyr was a member in the administration committee of Bil’in sports club.

Farmers under fire

ISM Gaza | Farming Under Fire

29 May 2009

A compilation video from real incidents when Palestinian farmers came under fire from Israeli soldiers shooting with live ammunition from jeeps and towers along the border to Gaza.

All of the incidents occurred in the south-eastern border region east of Khan Younis, within the months since the ‘cease-fire’ following Israel’s war on Gaza. All the attacks have been against unarmed Palestinian farmers, including women and children, and internationals accompanying them. The practise of firing at farmers and civilians in the area up to 1km from the border has been a consistent occurrence, with attacks increasing after Israel’s 3 weeks of massacring Gaza.

The farmers working the land are all either dependent on the food they produce or very poor labourers dependent on the meagre salary they receive.

Most have no other options for work or farming.

These attacks come hand in hand with Israel’s declaring the 300 m to the border as ‘off limits’, Israel’s policy of razing agricultural land and destroying farms, farm equipment, greenhouses, and crops, and the siege on Gaza which has crippled all sectors of life within the Strip.

Never Before Campaign: Palestine, what it’s all about

Never Before Campaign

The Never Before Campaign has created videos as part of a larger communications campaign which was launched during the Gaza war.

The campaign is based in Beirut and is expected to grow to encompass interested people and groups all over the world.

The campaign is a promotion of the ideas that:

  • Never before has an injustice been committed against a people for such an extent
  • The Palestinian people have maintained their resistance and resilience
  • The Palestinian people should not promote an apologetic attitude to garner international sympathy, it is the world who should apologize to the Palestinians
  • The Palestinian cause is not about humanitarian aid but about justice and rights
  • The multi-faceted resistance of the Palestinian people should be supported

Israeli forces shoot at Gazan farmers and international accompaniers

ISM Gaza | Farming Under Fire

24 May 2009

Israeli forces shot live ammunition at 5 international human rights workers and 10 farmers from Khoza’a as they harvested crops several hundred metres from the Green Line.

In the morning, human rights workers joined Palestinian farmers in Khoza’a village, located east of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, to farm land 300-350 meters from the ‘Green Line’.

Israeli forces opened fire on the workers and they were forced to leave the area.

Several farmers have been shot by Israeli forces while farming their lands.