city:jerusalem

  • Israeli navy sprays Palestinian fishermen with ’skunk water’
    April 2, 2019 11:59 A.M. (Updated: April 2, 2019 3:44 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=783077

    GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — Israeli naval boats sprayed ‘skunk water’ at Palestinian fishermen working off the coast of the central besieged Gaza Strip, on Tuesday noon.

    Head of the Palestinian Fishermen Union in Gaza, Zakariya Bakr, reported that Israeli naval boats sprayed Palestinian fishermen with “skunk water” at 12 nautical miles off coast of the central Gaza Strip.

    This is the first Israeli assault against Palestinian fishermen since the the expansion of the permitted fishing zone off Gaza’s coast a day earlier.

    The permitted fishing zone was extended from 12 nautical miles to 15 nautical miles.

    Known as “skunk,” the Israeli military has been using the chemical since at least 2008 as a form of non-lethal crowd control. Palestinians, however, simply call the liquid “shit,” after the smell that can stay for weeks on clothes, body, walls and furniture.

    • Gaza : l’armée israélienne annonce l’élargissement de la zone de pêche
      Par RFI Publié le 01-04-2019 - Avec notre correspondant à Jérusalem, Guilhem Delteil
      http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20190401-gaza-elargissement-zone-peche-large

      L’armée israélienne a annoncé ce lundi 1er avril un élargissement de la zone de pêche au large de Gaza, passant à 15 milles nautiques sur une partie du littoral gazaoui. La décision confirme l’avancée de négociations en cours entre le Hamas et Israël.

      Alors que le Hamas répète depuis quelques jours qu’un accord est en cours de négociation, Israël se refuse à tout commentaire. Mais après avoir jugé que le mouvement islamiste a fait preuve de « retenue » samedi lors des rassemblements marquant le premier anniversaire de la Grande marche du retour, l’armée a annoncé successivement la réouverture des points de passage entre l’enclave palestinienne et le territoire israélien ainsi que l’élargissement de la zone de pêche.

      Désormais, les marins gazaouis pourront aller pêcher jusqu’à 15 milles nautiques au large des côtes, selon l’armée israélienne. Une distance nettement supérieure aux 6 milles nautiques habituellement autorisés et qui n’avait pas été accordée depuis de nombreuses années.

      Mais le syndicat des marins pêcheurs de Gaza précise que cette distance n’est autorisée que dans le sud de l’enclave, près de la frontière égyptienne, alors qu’au nord, près des côtes israéliennes, la zone de pêche ne s’étend toujours que sur 6 milles. Et les 15 milles restent inférieurs aux 20 prévus par les accords d’Oslo, relève l’ONG Gisha, qui milite pour la liberté de circulation des Palestiniens.

  •  » Palestinian Killed By Israeli Forces In Qalandia
    IMEMC News - April 2, 2019 11:24 AM
    https://imemc.org/article/palestinian-killed-by-israeli-forces-during-protest-at-qalandia

    A young Palestinian man, identified as Mohammad Ali Dar Adwan , 23, was shot and killed by Israeli forces who invaded Qalandia refugee camp, north of occupied Jerusalem, on Monday, and attacked local protesters, wounding at least two other young men.

    The Palestinians gathered in the streets and alleys of the refugee camp, and protesteed the invasion, while several protesters hurled stones at armored military jeeps.

    The soldiers fired many live rounds, rubber-coated steel bullets, gas bombs and concussion grenades at the protesters.

    Medical sources said the soldiers shot three young men in the refugee camp and the al-Matar adjascent neighborhood.

    Adwan was near his home when he was shot and killed – it was unclear if he was participating in the protest or not.

    “““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““

    Israeli forces shoot dead Palestinian youth in Qalandiya
    April 2, 2019 9:39 A.M. (Updated : April 2, 2019 11:03 A.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=783068

    Sources confirmed that Israeli forces fired at close range at Muhammad Ali Dar Adwan , 23, as he was getting into his vehicle near his home, killing him immediately.

    The body of Adwan was transferred by a Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) ambulance to the Ramallah Medical Complex, where he was pronounced dead.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Even to the most enlightened Zionist leftists, the Palestinians are invisible
    Gideon Levy | Mar 31, 2019
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-even-to-the-most-enlightened-zionist-leftists-the-palestinians-are

    FILE Photo: Oshrat Kotler during a conference on education in Jerusalem, April 1, 2014. Olivier Fitoussi

    Oshrat Kotler is an editor and anchor of the Channel 13 news magazine. She is considered principled, assertive and courageous. She comes by this description honestly, especially in comparison to most of her colleagues on television. On Thursday, she participated in a panel on the silencing of free speech at the Haaretz Democracy Conference.

    What happened on stage was like a Hollywood movie. As she praised her editors and bosses for their strong position against silencing free speech, it was reported that she had been put on extended leave. Kotler squirmed and tried to deny it, but by the time she left the stage it turned out the report was true. We may assume that there was a direct connection between her leave and her remark: “We send the kids to the army, to the territories, and we get back ‘animals.’ This is the result of the occupation.”

    Kotler has drawn the boundaries of Zionist leftist protest in Israel. They are despairingly narrow and selfish. The bad old expression “we shoot and weep” has turned into the even worse “We shoot and weep only for ourselves.” Even protest that exacts the type of heavy personal price that Kotler is paying has always remained in the comfort zone and is no less ultranationalist and racist than the right’s positions. Even to the most enlightened, the Palestinians are invisible, they don’t exist, they are subhuman. The fact that even this protest is silenced only shows what is left of freedom of expression, scraps of liberty, on television as in the state itself.

    Kotler was shocked by the video of soldiers in the Netzah Yehuda Battalion abusing two Palestinian detainees, father and son. The first feeling it should have evoked was empathy for the pain of these ill-fated people. But not in Kotler, nor in the vast majority of Israelis. Kotler said she ached for the soldiers’ parents, who did not raise them for this; and she saw the soldiers’ eyes, which were blurred on TV, and her heart went out to them.

    There was just one thing Kotler didn’t see: the real victims. Soldiers abuse a man and his son who are blindfolded and in restraints, and the opinionated anchor, the voice of courageous protest, is shocked. At what? At the fate of the abusers. Their parents, their eyes. We send children and we get animals back. How unfortunate we are. We’ll never forgive the Palestinians for forcing us to abuse their fathers and sons. Once again, the abuser as victim, his parents as a pedagogic poem that was destroyed. Who else was in the jeep? No one.

    We’ll say it: Ziad and Mahmoud Shalaldeh were on the floor of the jeep. They are the only victims in this story. The father is a garbage collector, the son is a shepherd, 13 people living in a tent. Anjud, 17, lives on the floor of the tent. She has cerebral palsy. Ziad and Mahmoud ran into a man from their village who is wanted for murder, and are suspected of hiding him. They will spend years in prison. The solders beat them in revenge and forced the son to watch his father being kicked and punched. Both were hospitalized in serious condition. They couldn’t stand, they couldn’t speak. The father suffers from internal bleeding. Their family is prohibited from visiting them and knows very little about their condition.

    And after all that, the soldiers’ doleful eyes are what we cherish most. The only thing. Their parents are the ones who touch us. Only they. And Kotler is still the best of the best. She at least cares about someone. She isn’t an automaton and hasn’t become inured like almost all of them. On YouTube her clips appear, titled: “Oshrat Kotler Weeps,” Oshrat Kotler Shouts,” “Oshrat Kotler Goes Crazy,” Oshrat Kotler Apologizes.”

    At the Haaretz conference she choked back tears over her dying father. He is a Likudnik, an Israel Air Force veteran who weeps whenever IAF planes fly overhead. Thanks to him, she said, she is a journalist. Because of him she’s brave. In his honor she came to the Haaretz conference and didn’t heed her loved ones who told her not to come and to “keep quiet for a change.” And once again she spoke of the soldiers and their parents. And the real victim? He is once again an orphan, mute, cast into darkness on the floor of the jeep, helpless, bleeding, without arousing any compassion, any human feeling. He is a Palestinian.

    #agresseurvictimisé #victimeinvibilisée

  • L’appel surprise du pape François et du roi du Maroc Mohamed VI pour Jérusalem
    De notre envoyé spécial au Maroc Jean-Marie Guénois Publié le 30/03/2019
    http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2019/03/30/01003-20190330ARTFIG00052-l-appel-surprise-du-pape-francois-et-du-roi-du-ma

    DOCUMENT - Le souverain pontife est arrivé samedi au Maroc. Les deux chefs d’État appellent à « conserver » et « promouvoir le caractère spécifique multi-religieux, la dimension spirituelle et l’identité culturelle particulière de Jérusalem ».

    Le secret a été bien gardé. Comme Le Figaro l’avait annoncé ce samedi, le pape François, en visite de deux jours au Maroc, s’est entretenu dès son arrivée de la question de Jérusalem avec le roi du Maroc Mohammed VI. La publication en revanche, samedi après-midi, juste après leur rencontre à Rabat d’un appel commun sur le statut de la ville de Jérusalem, est une surprise. Elle ne sera pas du goût des autorités israéliennes.

    Voici ce que dit ce court appel solennel :

    « Nous pensons important de préserver la Ville sainte de Jérusalem / Al Qods Acharif comme patrimoine commun de l’humanité et, par-dessus tout pour les fidèles des trois religions monothéistes, comme lieu de rencontre et symbole de coexistence pacifique, où se cultivent le respect réciproque et le dialogue.

    Dans ce but, doivent être conservés et promus le caractère spécifique multi-religieux, la dimension spirituelle et l’identité culturelle particulière de Jérusalem / Al Qods Acharif.

    Nous souhaitons, par conséquent, que dans la Ville sainte soient pleinement garantis la pleine liberté d’accès aux fidèles des trois religions monothéistes et le droit de chacune d’y exercer son propre culte, de sorte qu’à Jérusalem / Al Qods Acharif s’élève, de la part de leurs fidèles, la prière à Dieu, Créateur de tous, pour un avenir de paix et de fraternité sur la terre ».

    #Jérusalem #Al_Qods. #Maroc #Vatican

  • La Roumanie veut transférer son ambassade en Israël à Jérusalem - Europe
    RFI - Publié le 24-03-2019 Modifié le 24-03-2019 à 23:30
    Avec notre correspondant à Bucarest, Benjamin Ribout
    http://www.rfi.fr/europe/20190324-roumanie-ambassade-jerusalem-israel-Viorica-Dancila

    Le gouvernement roumain emboîte le pas des Etats-Unis et annonce vouloir déménager son ambassade à Jérusalem. Une décision pas du goût du président roumain et de l’Union européenne.

    La Première ministre roumaine, Viorica Dancila, a acté le transfert de son ambassade à Jérusalem. Problème : le président roumain, Klaus Iohannis, à qui appartient de valider ou non la décision selon la Constitution, n’est pas d’accord.

    Viorica Dancila en a pourtant fait l’annonce ce dimanche 24 mars à Washington dans le cadre d’une conférence du lobby américain pro-Israël Aipac à laquelle participait également le Premier ministre israélien Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Actuellement en campagne, celui-ci avait à plusieurs reprises invité Viorica Dancila à annoncer le transfert de l’ambassade roumaine à Jérusalem.

    La Première ministre s’est exprimée sans l’accord du président Iohannis qui a immédiatement déclaré ne pas valider la décision.

  • The Golan Heights first

    Trump gave Syria and its allies a renewed pretext for possible military action
    Haaretz Editorial
    Mar 24, 2019

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/the-golan-heights-first-1.7046251

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s statement that “it is time for the United States to fully recognize Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights” received an enthusiastic welcome in Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who got a shot in the arm from Trump at a low point in his election campaign, welcomed this “Purim miracle.” His rival Benny Gantz, whose party’s leading lights helped push for American recognition of the Golan’s annexation, said in a statement that Trump was cementing his place in history as a true friend of Israel.

    That Netanyahu and Gantz were both delighted is no surprise; the annexation of the Golan and the settlements established there enjoy widespread support in Israel. Since the Yom Kippur War of 1973, Syria has refrained from any attempt to recover the Golan by force, preferring to maintain the quiet and conduct peace talks that achieved nothing. The Druze residents of the northern Golan have also accepted Israeli rule without rebelling.

    The settlements on the Golan were established by the Labor Party, rather than the messianic Gush Emunim movement that settled the West Bank, and the Israelis who live there are termed “residents” rather than “settlers.” The beautiful vistas, the empty spaces and the snow on Mount Hermon are especially beloved by Israeli tourists.

    >> Read more: Trump’s Golan tweet brings U.S. to Syria through the back door | Analysis ■ Trump’s declaration: What does it mean and what happens now | Explained ■ How Secret Netanyahu-Assad backchannel gave way to Israeli demand for recognition of Golan sovereignty

    Nevertheless, despite the quiet and the internal consensus that sees the Golan as an inseparable part of Israel, this is occupied territory that Israel retains in violation of both international law and the principle at the basis of United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 — that the acquisition of territory by war is unacceptable. Israel accepted this principle, and six prime ministers, including Netanyahu, have held talks with the Syrians on returning the Golan in exchange for peace.

    The most recent talks were cut short by the outbreak of Syria’s civil war eight years ago, and the implosion on the other side of the border spurred appetites here for perpetuating the occupation with U.S. backing. During President Barack Obama’s tenure, that idea seemed hopeless. But Trump, no great fan of international laws and agreements, acceded happily to the Israeli request.

    Trump’s announcement and the applause that greeted it in Jerusalem send the troubling message that Israel is no longer interested in a peace agreement. It’s true that Syria, having fallen apart, is now weak and will settle for diplomatic censure, and in any case the chance of resuming negotiations in the north is near zero. But Trump gave Syria and its allies a renewed pretext for possible military action.
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    In the near term, the U.S. green light to annexing the Golan will deepen the Israeli delusion that U.S. approval is sufficient to revise the world map and contribute to erasing the 1967 lines as the relevant reference points for solving the Israeli-Arab conflict. The U.S. recognition will inevitably increase pressure from the right to annex Area C of the West Bank (which is under full Israeli control), intensifying the occupation and the bloody conflict with the Palestinians.

  • Le Centre Wiesenthal à l’école de formation d’enseignants de Lausanne : « Annulez cette session haineuse qui enseigne la délégitimation d’Israël. » - Centre Simon Wiesenthal | CSW Europe

    Il s’agit d’un cours où je suis invité à animer une conférence et un atelier carto.

    Dans une lettre adressée à Guillaume Vanhulst, recteur de la Haute école pédagogique du canton de Vaud (HEP) de Lausanne, Shimon Samuels, directeur des Relations internationales du Centre Simon Wiesenthal, s’est dit scandalisépar une campagne haineuse en trois étapes, intrinsèquement anti-juive, orchestrée les 29 et 30 avril prochain sur le campus de la HEP :

    Et comme le ridicule ne tue pas, vous savourez ce passage inouï qui m’aurait fait exploser de rire s’il n’était pas aussi pitoyable :

    Le Centre demandait instamment à la HEP « de ne pas accueillir cette initiative éminemment politique, composée d’activistes – en lieu et place d’universitaires de renom – déterminés à mener une campagne regorgeant d’antisémitisme ».

    La lettre remarquait en outre que, « ironie du sort, ‘‘Hep-Hep’’ était au XIXe siècle le cri de ralliement des émeutiers allemands qui lançaient des pogroms meurtriers contre les Juifs. Ces émeutes ont commencé à Wurzbourg en 1819 et se sont propagées dans les villes de Rhénanie et de Bavière. ‘‘Hep’’ serait l’acronyme du latin Hierosolyma est perdita(« Jérusalem est perdue »), utilisé auparavant par les Croisés ».

    http://www.wiesenthal-europe.com/fr/news-releases-2019/485-le-centre-wiesenthal-a-l-ecole-de-formation-d-enseignants-de-

    Le Centre Wiesenthal à l’école de formation d’enseignants de Lausanne : « Annulez cette session haineuse qui enseigne la délégitimation d’Israël. »

  • Le Hezbollah, menace pour la stabilité du Moyen-Orient, selon Pompeo 21 mars 2019 Par Agence Reuters
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/210319/le-hezbollah-menace-pour-la-stabilite-du-moyen-orient-selon-pompeo?onglet=

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Le secrétaire d’Etat américain Mike Pompeo a estimé jeudi en Israël, avant de poursuivre sa tournée régionale par Beyrouth, que le Hezbollah chiite libanais était une menace pour la stabilité du Moyen-Orient.

    Reçu par le président israélien Reuven Rivlin à Jérusalem, le chef de la diplomatie américaine a dit considérer le Hezbollah, le mouvement palestinien Hamas et la milice yéménite des Houthis - qui bénéficient tous du soutien de Téhéran - comme « des entités représentant des risques pour la stabilité du Moyen-Orient et pour Israël ».

    « Ils sont résolus à rayer ce pays de la carte et nous avons l’obligation morale et politique d’empêcher que cela advienne. Vous devez savoir que les Etats-Unis s’y tiennent prêts », a dit Mike Pompeo lors de son entretien avec le président israélien.

    La visite de Mike Pompeo à Jérusalem passe pour un coup de pouce à Benjamin Netanyahu, à trois semaines d’élections législatives qui s’annoncent serrées, le 9 avril. (...)

    #IsraelUsa #Hezbollah

    • Trump’s Golan Heights Diplomatic Bombshell Was Bound to Drop. But Why Now?
      Anshel Pfeffer | Mar 21, 2019 9:18 PM
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/elections/.premium-trump-s-golan-heights-diplomatic-bombshell-was-bound-to-drop-but-w?

      Trump couldn’t wait until Netanyahu joined him in Washington on Monday, and his calculated move right before the election could cause Israel damage

      Since no one is any longer even trying to pretend that Donald Trump isn’t intervening in Israel’s elections on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s behalf, the only question left to ask following the U.S. president’s announcement on Twitter that “it is time for the United States to fully recognize Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights,” is on the timing.

      Why now? Since Netanyahu is flying to Washington next week anyway, surely it would have made more sense for Trump to make the announcement standing by his side in the White House.

      You don’t need to be a conspiracy theorist to speculate, that given the extremely intimate level of coordination between Trump and Netanyahu’s teams, the timing is no coincidence. For a possible reason why Trump didn’t wait for Netanyahu to arrive in Washington before lobbing his diplomatic bombshell, check out Netanyahu’s pale and worried features at the press conference on Wednesday where he stated that Iran has obtained embarrassing material from Benny Gantz’s phone.

      Netanyahu is petrified that the new revelations on his trading in shares in his cousin’s company, which netted him $4.3 million and may have a connection with the company’s dealings with the German shipyard from which Israel purchases it submarines, could dominate the last stage of the election campaign. That’s why he so blatantly abused his position as the minister in charge of Israel’s intelligence services, to claim he knew what Iran had on Gantz. He desperately needs to grab back the news agenda.

      But the Gantz phone-hacking story, which leaked to the media last Thursday evening, has proven a damp squib. There is no credible evidence, except for the word of a panicking prime minister, that whoever hacked his phone, even assuming it was the Iranians, have anything to blackmail Gantz with. So the next best thing is to get a friend with 59 million followers on Twitter to create a distraction. Conveniently, this happened just before the agenda-setting primetime news shows on Israeli television.

      And how useful that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is currently in Israel anyway and has just visited the Western Wall, accompanied by Netanyahu – another diplomatic first as previously senior U.S. officials, including Trump during his visit in 2017, refrained from doing so together with Israeli politicians, to avoid the impression that they were prejudging the final status of eastern Jerusalem.

      A recognition of Israeli sovereignty on the Golan is also the perfect political gesture as far as Netanyahu is concerned. The Golan isn’t the West Bank, and certainly not Gaza. There is near-complete consensus among Israelis today that under no circumstances should Israel relinquish its control over the strategic Heights. Certainly not following eight years of war within Syria, during which Iran and Hezbollah have entrenched their presence on Israel’s northern border. Netanyahu’s political rivals have absolutely no choice but to praise Trump for helping the Likud campaign, anything else would be unpatriotic.

      They can’t even point out the basic fact that Trump’s gesture is empty. Just as his recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital was. It won’t change the status of the Golan in international law and with the exception of a few client-states in Latin America, no other country is going to follow suit. It could actually cause Israel diplomatic damage by focusing international attention on the Golan, when there was absolutely no pressure on Israel to end its 51-year presence there anyway. Trump’s tweet does no obligate the next president and a reversal by a future U.S. administration would do more damage to Israel than the good that would come from Trump’s recognition.

      But none of that matters when all Netanyahu is fighting for is his political survival and possibly his very freedom, and he will use every possible advantage he can muster.

      In 1981, Israel passed the Golan Law, unilaterally extending its sovereignty over the Golan. A furious President Ronald Reagan responded by suspending the strategic alliance memorandum that had just been signed between the U.S. and Israel. The no less furious Prime Minister Menachem Begin hit back, shouting at the U.S. Ambassador Sam Lewis, “are we a vassal state? Are we a banana republic? Are we fourteen-year-old boys that have to have our knuckles slapped if we misbehave?”

      In 2019, the U.S. is treating Israel as a vassal state and a banana republic by flagrantly interfering in its election. This time the Israeli prime minister won’t be complaining.

    • Israël demande la reconnaissance de l’annexion du Golan suite à la découverte de pétrole | Jonathan…
      https://seenthis.net/messages/430645

      Israel steps up oil drilling in Golan | The Electronic Intifada
      https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/charlotte-silver/israel-steps-oil-drilling-golan

      The members of the strategic advisory board of Afek’s parent company include Dick Cheney, the former US vice-president, the media tycoon Rupert Murdoch and Larry Summers, the former secretary of the US treasury.

    • Plateau du Golan-Damas condamne les propos « irresponsables » de Trump
      22 mars 2019 Par Agence Reuters
      https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/220319/plateau-du-golan-damas-condamne-les-propos-irresponsables-de-trump
      Le gouvernement syrien a condamné vendredi les propos du président américain Donald Trump, lequel a déclaré que l’heure était venue pour les Etats-Unis de reconnaître la souveraineté d’Israël sur le plateau du Golan.

      BEYROUTH (Reuters) - Le gouvernement syrien a condamné vendredi les propos du président américain Donald Trump, lequel a déclaré que l’heure était venue pour les Etats-Unis de reconnaître la souveraineté d’Israël sur le plateau du Golan.

      Dans un communiqué publié par l’agence de presse officielle Sana, une source au ministère syrien des Affaires étrangères estime que la déclaration de Trump illustre le « soutien aveugle des Etats-Unis » à Israël et ajoute que Damas est déterminé à récupérer le plateau du Golan par « tous les moyens possibles ».

      Les déclarations de Donald Trump ne changent rien à « la réalité que le Golan est et restera syrien », ajoute cette source, estimant qu’elles reflètent une violation flagrante de résolutions du Conseil de sécurité de l’Onu.

      A Moscou, également, la porte-parole du ministère russe des Affaires étrangères, citée par l’agence de presse RIA, a déclaré que tout changement de statut du Golan représenterait une violation flagrante des décisions des Nations unies sur cette question.

    • Point de presse du 22 mars 2019
      https://basedoc.diplomatie.gouv.fr/vues/Kiosque/FranceDiplomatie/kiosque.php?type=ppfr
      1. Golan
      Q - Sur le Golan, le président américain Donald Trump vient d’annoncer que le temps est venu de reconnaître la souveraineté israélienne sur les Hauteurs du Golan, « qui est d’une importance stratégique et sécuritaire décisive pour l’Etat d’Israël et pour la stabilité régionale ». Cette analyse a-t-elle un sens, et une telle reconnaissance, venant après la négation américaine d’une paix négociée concernant le statut de Jérusalem, va-t-elle déclencher une réaction diplomatique française au nom de la seule France, de la France à l’UE, et de la France à l’ONU ?

      R - Le Golan est un territoire occupé par Israël depuis 1967. La France ne reconnaît pas l’annexion israélienne de 1981. Cette situation a été reconnue comme nulle et non avenue par plusieurs résolutions du Conseil de sécurité, en particulier la résolution 497 du Conseil de sécurité des Nations Unies.

      La reconnaissance de la souveraineté israélienne sur le Golan, territoire occupé, serait contraire au droit international, en particulier l’obligation pour les Etats de ne pas reconnaître une situation illégale.

  • Palestinian youth killed by Israeli forces near Bethlehem
    March 21, 2019 11:15 A.M.
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=782937

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — A 22-year-old Palestinian succumbed to wounds he had sustained after Israeli forces opened heavy fire towards a vehicle that he was riding in, near the al-Nashash checkpoint in the southern occupied West Bank district of Bethlehem, on late Wednesday.

    The Palestinian Ministry of Health confirmed that Ahmad Jamal Mahmoud Munasra, 22, a resident from Wadi Fukin village, in the Bethlehem district, was shot with Israeli live fire in the chest, shoulder, and hand.

    The ministry said that Munasra was transferred to the Beit Jala Governmental Hospital, where he succumbed to his wounds.

    The ministry mentioned that another Palestinian was shot and injured in the stomach.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Gideon Levy // Even for the Wild West Bank, This Is a Shocking Story

      A young Palestinian’s attempt to help a stranger shot by Israeli troops costs him his life
      Gideon Levy and Alex Levac Mar 28, 2019
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-even-for-the-wild-west-bank-this-is-a-shocking-story-1.7066087

      Jamal, Ahmad Manasra’s father. A mourning poster for Ahmad is in the background. Credit : Alex Levac

      It was appallingly cold, rainy and foggy on Monday of this week at the southern entrance to Bethlehem. A group of young people stood on the side of the road, gazing at something. Gloomy and toughened, they formed a circle around the concrete cube in which are sunken the spikes of a large billboard – an ad for Kia cars that stretches across the road. They were looking for signs of blood, as though they were volunteers in Zaka, the Israeli emergency response organization. They were looking for bloodstains of their friend, who was killed there five days earlier. Behind the concrete cube they found what they were looking for, a large bloodstain, now congealed. The stain held fast despite the heavy rain, as though refusing to be washed away, determined to remain there, a silent monument.

      This is where their friend tried, in his last moments, to find protection from the soldiers who were shooting at him, probably from the armored concrete tower that looms over the intersection a few dozen meters away. It was to here that he fled, already wounded, attempting to take cover behind the concrete cube. But it was too late. His fate was sealed by the soldiers. Six bullets slashed into his body and killed him. He collapsed and died next to the concrete cube by the side of the road.

      Even in a situation in which anything is possible, this is an unbelievable story. It’s 9 P.M. Wednesday March 20. A family is returning from an outing. Their car breaks down. The father of the family, Ala Raida, 38, from the village of Nahalin, who is legally employed paving roads in Israel, steps out of his Volkswagen Golf to see what has happened. His wife, Maisa, 34, and their two daughters, Sirin, 8, and Lin, 5, wait in the car. Suddenly the mother hears a single shot and sees her husband lean back onto the car. Emerging from the car, she discovers to her astonishment that he’s wounded in the stomach. She shouts hysterically for help, the girls in the car are crying and screaming.

      Another car, a Kia Sportage, arrives at the intersection. Its occupants are four young people from the nearby village of Wadi Fukin. They’re on the way home from the wedding of their friend Mahmoud Lahruv, held that evening in the Hall of Dreams in Bethlehem. At the sight of the woman next to the traffic light appealing for help, they stop the car and get out to see what they can do. Three of them quickly carry the wounded man to their car and rush him to the nearest hospital, Al-Yamamah, in the town of Al-Khader. The fourth young man, Ahmad Manasra, 23, stays behind to calm the woman and the frightened girls. Manasra tries to start the stalled car in order to move it away from the dangerous intersection, but the vehicle doesn’t respond. He then gets back out of the car. The soldiers start firing at him. He tries to get to the concrete cube but is struck by the bullets as he runs. Three rounds hit him in the back and chest, the others slam into his lower body. He dies on the spot.

      The army says that stones were thrown. All the eyewitnesses deny that outright. Nor is it clear what the target of the stones might have been. The armored concrete tower? And even if stones were thrown at cars heading for the settlement of Efrat, is that a reason to open fire with live ammunition on a driver whose car broke down, with his wife and young daughters on board? Or on a young man who tried to get the car moving and to calm the mother and her daughters? Shooting with no restraint? With no pity? With no law?

      We visit the skeleton of an unfinished apartment on the second floor of a house in Wadi Fukin. It’s an impoverished West Bank village just over the Green Line, whose residents fled in 1949 and were allowed to return in 1972, and which is now imprisoned between the giant ultra-Orthodox settlement of Betar Ilit and the town of Tzur Hadassah, which is just inside the Green Line. A wood stove tries to rebuff the bitter cold in the broad space between the unplastered walls and the untiled floor. A grim-looking group of men are sitting around the fire, trying to warm themselves. They are the mourners for Manasra; this was going to be his apartment one day, when he got married. That will never happen now.

      Only the memorial posters remain in the unbuilt space. A relative and fellow villager, Adel Atiyah, an ambassador in the Palestinian delegation to the European Union, calls from Brussels to offer his shocked condolences. One of the mourners, Fahmi Manasra, lives in Toronto and is here on a visit to his native land. The atmosphere is dark and pained.

      The bereaved father, Jamal, 50, is resting in his apartment on the ground floor. When he comes upstairs, it’s clear he’s a person deeply immersed in his grief though impressive in his restraint. He’s a tiler who works in Israel with a permit. He last saw his son as he drove along the main street in Bethlehem as his son was going to his friend’s wedding. Jamal was driving his wife, Wafa, home from another wedding. That was about two hours before Ahmad was killed. In the last two days of his life they worked together, Jamal and his son, in the family vineyard, clearing away cuttings and spraying. Now he wistfully remembers those precious moments. Ahmad asked to borrow his father’s car to drive to the wedding, but Jamal needed it to visit the doctor, and Ahmad joined the group in Wahib Manasra’s SUV.

      Wahib Manasra, who witnessed the gunfire. Credit: Alex Levac

      Quiet prevails in the shell of the unfinished apartment. Someone says that Manasra was already planning the layout of his future home – the living room would be here, the kitchen there. Maisa Raida, the wife of the wounded driver, is at her husband’s bedside at Hadassah Medical Center, Ein Karem, Jerusalem, where he’s recovering from his severe stomach wound. He was brought there from Al-Khader because of the seriousness of his condition. Major damage was done to internal organs in his abdomen and he needed complicated surgery, but he seems to be on the mend.

      Maisa told a local field investigator from a human rights group that at first she didn’t realize that her husband was wounded. Only after she stepped out of the car did she see that he was leaning on the vehicle because of the wound. She yelled for help, and after the young men stopped and took her husband to the hospital, she got back into the car with Manasra, whom she didn’t know. While they were in the car with her daughters, and he was trying get it started, she heard another burst of gunfire aimed at their car from the side, but which didn’t hit them.

      She had no idea that Manasra was shot and killed when he got out of the car, moments later. She stayed inside, trying to calm the girls. It wasn’t until she called her father and her brother-in-law and they arrived and took her to Al-Yamamah Hospital that she heard that someone had been killed. Appalled, she thought they meant her husband but was told that the dead person had been taken to Al-Hussein Hospital in Beit Jala.

      Eventually, she realized that the man who was killed was the same young man who tried to help her and her daughters; he was dead on arrival. Before Maisa and her daughters were taken from the scene, an officer and soldiers from the Israel Defense Forces came to the stalled car and tried to calm them.

      Manasra was dead by then, sprawled next to the concrete cube. He was a Real Madrid fan and liked cars. Until recently he worked in the settlement of Hadar Betar, inside Betar Ilit. His little brother, 8-year-old Abdel Rahman, wanders among the mourners in a daze.

      After Jamal Manasra returned home, his phone began ringing nonstop. He decided not to answer. He says he was afraid to answer, he had forebodings from God. He and his wife drove to the hospital in Beit Jala. He has no rational explanation for why they went to the hospital. From God. “I was the last to know,” he says in Hebrew. At the hospital, he was asked whether he was Ahmad’s father. Then he understood. He and his wife have two more sons and a daughter. Ahmad was their firstborn.

      We asked the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit a number of questions. Why did the soldiers shoot Ala Raida and Ahmad Manasra with live ammunition? Why did they go on shooting at Manasra even after he tried to flee? Did the soldiers fire from the armored watchtower? Do the security cameras show that stones were indeed thrown? Were the soldiers in mortal danger?

      This was the IDF’s response to all these questions: “On March 21, a debriefing was held headed by the commander of the Judea and Samaria Division, Brig. Gen. Eran Niv, and the commander of the Etzion territorial brigade, Col. David Shapira, in the area of the event that took place on Thursday [actually, it was a Wednesday] at the Efrat junction and at the entrance to Bethlehem. From the debriefing it emerges that an IDF fighter who was on guard at a military position near the intersection spotted a suspect who was throwing stones at vehicles in the area and carried out the procedure for arresting a suspect, which ended in shooting. As a result of the shooting, the suspect was killed and another Palestinian was wounded.

      T he West Bank settlement of Betar Ilit is seen from the rooftop of Wadi Fukin, a Palestinian village. Credit : \ Alex Levac

      “The possibility is being examined that there was friction between Palestinians, which included stone-throwing.

      “The inquiry into the event continues, parallel to the opening of an investigation by the Military Police.”

      After the group of young people found what they were looking for – bloodstains of their friend, Ahmad – they reconstructed for us the events of that horrific evening. It was important for them to talk to an Israeli journalist. They’re the three who came out alive from the drive home after the wedding. One of them, Ahmad Manasra – he has the same name as the young man who was killed – wouldn’t get out of the car when we were there. He’s still traumatized. Wahib Manasra, the driver of the SUV, showed us where the stalled VW had been, and where they stopped when they saw a woman shouting for help.

      Soldiers and security cameras viewed us even now, from the watchtower, which is no more than 30 meters from the site. Wahib says that if there was stone-throwing, or if they had noticed soldiers, they wouldn’t have stopped and gotten out of the car. Raida, the wounded man, kept mumbling, “My daughters, my daughters,” when they approached him. He leaned on them and they put him in their car. By the time they reached the gas station down the road, he had lost consciousness. Before that, he again mumbled, “My daughters.”

      Wahib and the other Ahmad, the one who was alive, returned quickly from the hospital, which is just a few minutes from the site. But they could no longer get close to the scene, as a great many cars were congregated there. They got out of the car and proceeded on foot. A Palestinian ambulance went by. Looking through the window, Wahib saw to his horror his friend, Ahmad Manasra, whom they had left on the road with the woman and her girls, lying inside. He saw at once that Ahmad was dead.

    • Israeli army seeks three months community service for soldier who killed innocent Palestinian
      Hagar Shezaf | Aug. 16, 2020 | 1:25 PM- Haaretz.com
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-israeli-army-seeks-community-service-for-soldier-who-killed-innoce

      The Military Advocate General is to seek a sentence of three months’ community service for an Israeli soldier who shot and killed an innocent Palestinian, as part of a plea bargain signed with the solider.

      The 23-year-old victim, Ahmad Manasra, was helping a man who had been shot by the same soldier and seriously wounded. The soldier who killed Manasra was charged with negligent homicide, but was not charged for wounding the other man, although the first shooting is mentioned in the indictment.

      According to an eyewitness, the soldier fired six bullets at Manasra.

      The soldier has since been released from the Israel Defense Forces. The army did not respond to Haaretz’s query as to whether the soldier had continued in his combat role after the shooting.

      The plea bargain, which states that the soldier will be given a three-month prison sentence that he will serve as community service, will be brought before the military court in Jaffa on Monday. The deal also states that the soldier will be given a suspended sentence and will be demoted to the rank of private.

      This is the first time an indictment has been served against a soldier following the killing of a Palestinian since the case of Elor Azaria, who shot and killed a wounded and incapacitated assailant in Hebron in 2016.

      According to the July indictment, in March of 2019 Alaa Raayda, the 38-year-old Palestinian who was shot in the stomach and seriously wounded, was driving his car together with his wife and two daughters when another car crashed into them at a junction near the village of El-Hadar in the southern West Bank. The other car fled the scene, and Raayda left his vehicle and waved his hands at the other car. The indictment states that the solider thought that Raayda was throwing stones at Israeli vehicles and proceeded to shout warnings and fire into the air before shooting at him.

      However, in Raayda’s affidavit, he states that he was shot outside his vehicle without warning, which is an infraction of the rules of engagement.

      The indictment then states that Manasra came to Raayda’s aid, with three friends who had been on their way home with him after a wedding in Bethlehem. The three helped evacuate the wounded man to the hospital, while Manasra remained at the scene with Raayda’s wife and daughters to help them start their car. According to the indictment, Manasra was shot when he exited the car, and then shot again when he tried to flee the scene.

      The indictment also states that the soldier started shooting when he “mistakenly thought" that Manasra “was the stone-thrower he has seen earlier… although in fact the man who was killed had not thrown stones.”

      In response to the plea bargain, Manasra’s father, Jamal, told Haaretz: “In our religion it says you have to help everyone. Look what happened to my son when he tried to help – they shot him dead. It doesn’t matter how much I talked to Israeli television and newspapers, nothing helped.”

      Attorney Shlomo Lecker, who is representing the families of Raayda and Manasra, asked to appeal the plea bargain when it was issued last month. To this end, he asked for a letter summarizing the investigation, the reason the soldier had not been charged for shooting and wounding Raayda, and that the case had been closed. However, Lecker said the prosecutor in the case and the head of litigation, Major Matan Forsht, refused to give him the document. On Thursday, Lecker submitted his appeal against the plea bargain based on the facts in the indictment, but his request to postpone the hearing until after a decision on his petition was rejected.

      According to Lecker: “The higher echelons of the army convey a message to soldiers in the occupied territories that if they shoot Palestinians for no reason, killing and wounding them, the punishment will be three months of raking leaves” at the Kirya military base in Tel Aviv.

      The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said that on the day of the shooting, “a warning had been received shortly before the shooting of a possible terror attack in the area,” adding that “the indictment was filed in the context of a plea bargain after a hearing. In the framework of the plea bargain the soldier is expected to take responsibility and admit to the facts of the indictment before the court."

      The plea agreement is subject to the approval of the military court and will be presented to it in the near future. In coming to a decision regarding the charges and the sentence, complex evidentiary and legal elements were taken into consideration, as well as the clear operational circumstances of the event, and the willingness of the soldier to take responsibility, the IDF said.

      The statement said that “contrary to the claims of the representative of the families of the killed and wounded men,” there has been an ongoing dialogue with him for a long time … thus the representative was informed of the negotiations and he was given the opportunity to respond. He also received a copy of the indictment and it was explained that he could convey any information he saw fit with regard to his clients, which would be brought before the military court when the plea bargain was presented. The hearing was also put off for a week at the request of the parties, which was filed at [Lecker’s] request.”

  • School Building Demolished in Shu’fat Refugee Camp

    Israeli bulldozers, today, demolished an under-construction building belonging to a Palestinian school in the Shu’fat refugee camp of occupied East Jerusalem, on Tuesday.

    Dozens of Israeli soldiers escorted bulldozers into the refugee camp, surrounded the al-Razi School and went up rooftops of nearby buildings as drones flew overhead; Israeli bulldozers then began to demolish the school’s building.

    Israeli forces fired rubber-coated steel bullets towards locals in the refugee camp.

    Muhammad Alqam, owner of the school building, told Ma’an News Agency that Israeli authorities had issued a demolition order against the building last November, pointing out that he had headed to the Israeli Jerusalem Municipality, before the construction of the building, to issue necessary permits. However, he was told that the area belongs to the United Nations Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA.)

    Principal of the school, Saleh Alqam, pointed out that the demolition was carried out without prior notice.

    He added that 400 Palestinian students had registered for the 2019/2020 school year in the new building, which was supposed to serve kindergarten and elementary students. However, after the demolition, these students now have no place to go.

    School was suspended, for Tuesday, for 1500 students of all stages who attend the al-Razi School.

    Israel uses the pretext of building without a permit to carry out demolitions of Palestinian-owned homes on a regular basis.

    Israel rarely grants Palestinians permits to build in East Jerusalem, though the Jerusalem municipality has claimed that compared to the Jewish population, they receive a disproportionately low number of permit applications from Palestinian communities, which also see high approval ratings.

    For Jewish Israelis in occupied East Jerusalem’s illegal settlements, the planning, marketing, development, and infrastructure are funded and executed by the Israeli government. By contrast, in Palestinian neighborhoods, all the burden falls on individual families to contend with a lengthy permit application that can last several years and cost tens of thousands of dollars.

    According to Daniel Seidemann of the NGO Terrestrial Jerusalem, “Since 1967, the government of Israel has directly engaged in the construction of 55,000 units for Israelis in East Jerusalem; in contrast, fewer than 600 units have been built for Palestinians in East Jerusalem, the last of which were built 40 years ago. So much for (Jerusalem Mayor Nir) Barkat’s claim ‘we build for everyone.’”


    https://imemc.org/article/school-building-demolished-in-shufat-refugee-camp
    #Israël #Palestine #réfugiés_palestiniens #école #destruction #réfugiés #Shu'fat #Jérusalem
    ping @reka @nepthys

  • Palestine. Business France prise la main dans le sac colonial
    L’Humanité | Mercredi, 20 Mars, 2019 | Pierre Barbancey
    https://www.humanite.fr/palestine-business-france-prise-la-main-dans-le-sac-colonial-669582

    (...) Schneider Electric, Thales, Egis Rail, Systra, Artelia, Sixense…

    Les organisations qui avaient publié le rapport du mois de juin ont soulevé un nouveau lièvre. Du 11 au 14 mars, s’est déroulé, à Tel-Aviv et Jérusalem, un événement organisé par Business France intitulé « Israël : Rencontres acheteurs dans le secteur du ferroviaire ». Business France est une agence publique (structure née de la fusion d’Ubifrance et de l’Agence française pour les investissements internationaux) sous tutelle des ministères des Affaires étrangères et de l’Économie et des Finances chargée, comme l’indique son site, « du développement international des entreprises françaises, des investissements internationaux en France et de la promotion économique de la France ». Dans l’invitation lancée le 30 janvier de cette année, Business France indiquait que, « pour rattraper un retard manifeste dans les infrastructures, de nombreux projets dans les infrastructures de transport, en particulier ferroviaire, ont été budgétisés ces dernières années par le gouvernement israélien ». Et de souligner : « Plusieurs entreprises françaises sont déjà présentes : Alstom, Schneider Electric, Thales, Egis Rail, Systra, Artelia, Sixense Soldata (…) Ils (sic) interviennent auprès des contractants Israel Railways, JTMT (Jerusalem Mass Transportation Plan), de NTA (Tel Aviv Metropolitan Mass Transit System) ou en partenariat avec des constructeurs et membres de consortiums. » Au programme, des « rendez-vous avec la JTMT (maître d’œuvre du projet de tramway de Jérusalem – NDLR), et Egis (assistant à maître d’œuvre) » ainsi qu’une « visite du consortium CityPass avec Alstom », ligne de tramway de Jérusalem, dans cette même ville. (...)

  • A British Palestinian MP seeks recognition for Palestine in the home of the Balfour Declaration – Middle East Monitor
    https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20190318-a-british-palestinian-mp-seeks-recognition-for-palestine

    Britain’s first Member of Parliament of Palestinian descent is preparing for a historic debate on Friday to have the government give official recognition to the state of Palestine in what she says is probably the “most personal and poignant” piece of legislation she has submitted since arriving in Westminster.

    Rising political star Layla Moran, a Liberal Democrat, sent shock waves through the ranks of the Conservative Party when she overturned a 10,000 majority at the 2017 General Election to take Oxford West and Abingdon which was previously regarded as a safe Tory seat. Now she’s making more waves with the second reading of her Private Members Bill this week to have Palestine recognised by Britain as a state.

    (...)

    Moran’s mother, Randa, is a Palestinian Christian from Jerusalem and the MP still has family living in the West Bank city of Ramallah. Her British father’s diplomatic career took the family all over the world. She speaks four languages as well as English — French, Arabic, Spanish and Greek — and is not the only one in her family to enjoy a high profile. Her great-grandfather, Wasif Jawhariyyeh, was a celebrated writer who wrote extensive memoirs about Palestinian life under Ottoman and British rule, before fleeing Palestine after the State of Israel was created.

  • En Israël, un parfum de « fascisme » sur la campagne électorale - L’Orient-Le Jour
    https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1162466/en-israel-un-parfum-de-fascisme-sur-la-campagne-electorale.html

    (La suite de ça... https://seenthis.net/messages/768330)

    Dans une vidéo, la ministre de la Justice détourne les images convenues des pubs pour les produits de luxe. A la fin du clip, elle se saisit d’un flacon sur lequel il est écrit « fascisme » en anglais et le vaporise voluptueusement sur elle. « Pour moi, ça a le parfum de la démocratie », dit-elle.

    Une nouvelle vidéo de campagne montrant une ministre en tailleur élégant se parfumer avec une fragrance « fasciste » fait le buzz sur les réseaux sociaux en Israël, dernier épisode de la bataille des clips que se livrent les candidats aux élections parlementaires. Les publicités politiques à la télévision n’étant autorisées que deux semaines avant le scrutin du 9 avril, les partis s’en remettent plus que jamais aux réseaux sociaux.

    Dans l’esprit d’une campagne qui ne fait guère de place à la subtilité, le clip de la ministre de la Justice, Ayelet Shaked, a atteint son objectif, s’il s’agissait de faire parler d’elle et de la liste Nouvelle droite (droite nationaliste) où elle figure en deuxième position. Il a été vu des centaines de milliers de fois sur internet.

    La vidéo tourne en dérision les accusations de fascisme de ses détracteurs contre celle dont le nom, à 42 ans, est cité comme premier-ministrable, un jour.

    Noir et blanc et clair-obscur, ralenti, regards par en dessous et descente d’escalier cossu main sur la rampe au son du piano.... La photogénique Mme Shaked détourne les images convenues des pubs pour les produits de luxe. A la fin du clip, elle se saisit d’un flacon sur lequel il est écrit « fascisme » en anglais et le vaporise voluptueusement sur elle. « Pour moi, ça a le parfum de la démocratie », dit-elle.

    Le message : n’en déplaise à ses adversaires, la politique qu’elle défend depuis quatre ans comme ministre de la Justice et son programme de « révolution » judiciaire si elle est reconduite dans son poste après les législatives, sont la quintessence de la démocratie.

    Grande pourfendeuse de la Cour suprême qui s’est signalée ces dernières années par des décisions défavorables à la droite sur la colonisation ou l’immigration, Mme Shaked montait encore au créneau dimanche contre la disqualification, par cette même cour, du chef de file d’un parti d’extrême droite largement accusé de racisme, et la validation au contraire d’une liste arabe.

    « Le far-west »

    Pas sûr cependant que tout le monde ait compris.

    « Tous ceux qui ne savent pas que la gauche accuse souvent Shaked de fascisme comprendront qu’elle soutient le fascisme en le présentant comme la démocratie », affirme sur Twitter Eylon Levy, journaliste de la chaîne i24. « J’ai eu honte, comment avez-vous pu laisser faire une chose pareille », a tweeté Yehoudit Shilat, figure du parti nationaliste religieux Foyer juif.

    Mme Shaked a aussi été critiquée pour alimenter les clichés sexistes.

    Pour Haim Har Zahav au contraire, journaliste à la radio publique, « ce clip est l’un des moments les plus honnêtes de la campagne, enfin une personne qui affiche ses idées, bravo ».

    Les sondages suggèrent que la Nouvelle droite pourrait ne pas s’en tirer aussi bien qu’anticipé aux élections.

    D’autres partis se font entendre comme ils peuvent dans une campagne tapageuse. « C’est le far-west », dit Tehilla Shwartz Altshuler, du think-tank Institut d’Israël pour la démocratie, « il n’y a pas de réglementation »

    (...)

    Face aux critiques, M. Netanyahu a déclaré que ce clip était une erreur et ses concepteurs ont été remerciés.

  • Il est temps pour moi de faire une #recension sur #appropriation_culturelle et #Palestine, qui recouvre des sujets aussi larges que : #Houmous #Hummus #rrroumous #Chakchouka #falafel #couscous #Shawarma #zaatar #Nourriture #Cuisine #Danse #dabke #vêtements #langage #arabe #Art #Cinéma #Photos #Littérature #Poésie #Photographie #Documentaire ...

    Le Rrrizbollah aime le rrroumous
    @nidal, Loubnan ya Loubnan, le 10 octobre 2008
    https://seenthis.net/messages/97763

    Israel’s cuisine not always kosher but travelling well
    Stephen Cauchi, The Age, le 22 mai 2011
    http://seenthis.net/messages/493046

    Make Hummus Not War
    Trevor Graham, 2012
    https://seenthis.net/messages/718124

    NYC Dabke Dancers respond to ZviDance "Israeli Dabke"
    Dabke Stomp, Youtube, le 3 août 2013
    http://seenthis.net/messages/493046
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JM9-2Vmq524

    La Chakchouka, nouveau plat tendance (PHOTOS)
    Rebecca Chaouch, HuffPost Maghreb, le 15 avril 2014
    http://seenthis.net/messages/493046

    Exploring Israel’s ‘ethnic’ cuisine
    Amy Klein, JTA, le 28 janvier 2015
    http://seenthis.net/messages/493046

    International Hummus Day : Israeli Entrepreneur’s Middle Eastern Food Celebration Is Still Political For Some
    Lora Moftah, IB Times, le 13 mai 2015
    http://seenthis.net/messages/493046

    Israel’s obsession with hummus is about more than stealing Palestine’s food
    Ben White, The National, le 23 mai 2015
    http://seenthis.net/messages/493046

    Palestine : étude d’un vol historique et culturel
    Roger Sheety, Middle East Eye, le 15 juillet 2015
    https://seenthis.net/messages/646413

    La « guerre du houmous »
    Akram Belkaïd, Le Monde Diplomatique, septembre 2015
    https://seenthis.net/messages/718124

    L’appropriation culturelle : y voir plus clair
    LAETITIA KOMBO, Le Journal En Couleur, le 31 août 2016
    https://seenthis.net/messages/527510

    Hummus restaurant
    The Angry Arab News Service, le 5 novembre 2016
    https://seenthis.net/messages/539732

    Le Houmous israélien est un vol et non une appropriation
    Steven Salaita, Al Araby, 4 September 2017
    https://seenthis.net/messages/632441

    Looted and Hidden – Palestinian Archives in Israel (46 minutes)
    Rona Sela, 2017
    https://seenthis.net/messages/702565
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tBP-63unME


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVTlLsXQ5mk

    Avec Cyril Lignac, Israël fait découvrir son patrimoine et sa gastronomie
    Myriam Abergel, Le Quotidien du Tourisme, le 27 janvier 2018
    http://seenthis.net/messages/493046

    Why does Virgin find “Palestinian couscous” offensive ?
    Gawan Mac Greigair, The Electronic Intifada, le 10 février 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/668039

    Maghreb : une labellisation du couscous moins anodine qu’il n’y paraît
    Le Point, le 13 février 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/764021

    Medieval Arabic recipes and the history of hummus
    Anny Gaul, Recipes, le 27 mars 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/744327

    Que font de vieilles photos et de vieux films de Palestiniens dans les archives de l’armée israélienne ?
    Ofer Aderet, Haaretz, le 2 juillet 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/612498

    En Israël, une exposition montre des œuvres arabes sans le consentement des artistes
    Mustafa Abu Sneineh, Middle East Eye, le 17 juillet 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/708368

    Yalla
    https://seenthis.net/messages/716429

    Houmous, cuisine et diplomatie
    Zazie Tavitian, France Inter, le 21 août 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/718124

    Pourquoi un éditeur israélien a-t-il publié sans agrément un livre traduit d’essais en arabe ?
    Hakim Bishara, Hyperallergic, le 13 septembre 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/723466

    La nouvelle cuisine israélienne fait un carton à Paris
    Alice Boslo, Colette Monsat, Hugo de Saint-Phalle, Le Figaro, le 26 septembre 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/725555

    Cuisine, art et littérature : comment Israël vole la culture arabe
    Nada Elia, Middle East Eye, le 3 octobre 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/726570

    Pins Daddy - Israel Costume
    https://seenthis.net/messages/726570

    Shawarma, the Iconic Israeli Street Food, Is Slowly Making a Comeback in Tel Aviv
    Eran Laor, Haaretz, le 8 janvier 2019
    https://seenthis.net/messages/493046

    What is Za’atar, the Israeli Spice You Will Want to Sprinkle on Everything
    Shannon Sarna, My Jewish Learning, le 7 mars 2019
    https://seenthis.net/messages/767162

    #Vol #appropriation_culinaire #racisme #colonialisme #Invisibilisation #Histoire #Falsification #Mythologie #Musique #Musique_et_Politique #Boycott_Culturel #BDS

    ========================================

    En parallèle, un peu de pub pour la vraie cuisine palestinienne ou moyen-orientale :

    Rudolf el-Kareh - Le Mezzé libanais : l’art de la table festive
    https://seenthis.net/messages/41187

    Marlène Matar - Ma’idat Marlene min Halab
    https://seenthis.net/messages/537468

    La cuisine palestinienne, c’est plus que ce qu’on a dans l’assiette
    Laila El-Haddad, Electronic Intifada, le 15 Juin 2017
    https://seenthis.net/messages/612651

    Palestine : la cuisine de Jerusalem et de la diaspora
    Alain Kruger, France Culture, le 25 février 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/671981

    La Palestine, ce n’est pas seulement de la géographie, c’est notre façon à nous de faire la cuisine, de manger, de bavarder
    Shira Rubin, Eater, le 9 novembre 2018
    https://seenthis.net/messages/737305

    Une écrivaine décrit la cuisine palestinienne et le monde qui l’entoure
    Mayukh Sen, The New-York Times, le 4 février 2019
    https://seenthis.net/messages/760255

    La Troika Libanaise
    https://www.facebook.com/LaTroikaLibanaise

    Les Ptits Plats Palestiniens de Rania
    https://lesptitsplatspalestiniensderania.wordpress.com

    Une Palestinienne à Paris
    https://unepalestinienneaparis.wordpress.com

    Hind Tahboub - Bandora
    https://www.bandoracuisine.com/bandora-cuisine

    Askini
    195 rue Saint-Maur
    75010 Paris
    https://www.facebook.com/askiniparis

    Ardi
    10 rue Lydia Becker
    75018 Paris
    https://www.facebook.com/ardiconceptstore

    Sharqi’s
    24 rue de l’Université
    34000 Montpellier
    https://www.facebook.com/Sharqis-1837468433036940

    La Palestine
    24 Rue Mazenod
    13002 Marseille
    https://www.lapalestine.fr

    #Livres_de_recettes #Restaurants #Traiteurs #Cheffes

  • ’Endless trip to hell’: Israel jails hundreds of Palestinian boys a year. These are their testimonies - Israel News - Haaretz.com

    (C’est sous paywall)

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.MAGAZINE--1.7021978

    They’re seized in the dead of night, blindfolded and cuffed, abused and manipulated to confess to crimes they didn’t commit. Every year Israel arrests almost 1,000 Palestinian youngsters, some of them not yet 13

    #palestine #israel #enfants #violence

    • ’Endless trip to hell’: Israel jails hundreds of Palestinian boys a year. These are their testimonies
      They’re seized in the dead of night, blindfolded and cuffed, abused and manipulated to confess to crimes they didn’t commit. Every year Israel arrests almost 1,000 Palestinian youngsters, some of them not yet 13
      Netta Ahituv | Mar. 14, 2019 | 9:14 PM | 2

      It was a gloomy, typically chilly late-February afternoon in the West Bank village of Beit Ummar, between Bethlehem and Hebron. The weather didn’t deter the children of the Abu-Ayyash family from playing and frolicking outside. One of them, in a Spiderman costume, acted the part by jumping lithely from place to place. Suddenly they noticed a group of Israeli soldiers trudging along the dirt trail across the way. Instantly their expressions turned from joy to dread, and they rushed into the house. It’s not the first time they reacted like that, says their father. In fact, it’s become a pattern ever since 10-year-old Omar was arrested by troops this past December.

      The 10-year-old is one of many hundreds of Palestinian children whom Israel arrests every year: The estimates range between 800 and 1,000. Some are under the age of 15; some are even preteens. A mapping of the locales where these detentions take place reveals a certain pattern: The closer a Palestinian village is to a settlement, the more likely it is that the minors residing there will find themselves in Israeli custody. For example, in the town of Azzun, west of the Karnei Shomron settlement, there’s hardly a household that hasn’t experienced an arrest. Residents say that in the past five years, more than 150 pupils from the town’s only high school have been arrested.

      At any given moment, there are about 270 Palestinian teens in Israeli prisons. The most widespread reason for their arrest – throwing stones – does not tell the full story. Conversations with many of the youths, as well as with lawyers and human rights activists, including those from the B’Tselem human-rights organization, reveal a certain pattern, even as they leave many questions open: For example, why does the occupation require that arrests be violent and why is it necessary to threaten young people.

      A number of Israelis, whose sensibilities are offended by the arrests of Palestinian children, have decided to mobilize and fight the phenomenon. Within the framework of an organization called Parents Against Child Detention, its approximately 100 members are active in the social networks and hold public events “in order to heighten awareness about the scale of the phenomenon and the violation of the rights of Palestinian minors, and in order to create a pressure group that will work for its cessation,” as they explain. Their target audience is other parents, whom they hope will respond with empathy to the stories of these children.

      In general, there seems to be no lack of criticism of the phenomenon. In addition to B’Tselem, which monitors the subject on a regular basis, there’s been a protest from overseas, too. In 2013, UNICEF, the United Nations agency for children, assailed “the ill treatment of children who come in contact with the military detention system, [which] appears to be widespread, systematic and institutionalized.” A report a year earlier from British legal experts concluded that the conditions the Palestinian children are subjected to amount to torture, and just five months ago the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe deplored Israel’s policy of arresting underage children, declaring, “An end must be put to all forms of physical or psychological abuse of children during arrest, transit and waiting periods, and during interrogations.”

      Arrest

      About half of the arrests of Palestinian adolescents are made in their homes. According to the testimonies, Israel Defense Forces soldiers typically burst into the house in the middle of the night, seize the wanted youth and whisk him away (very few girls are detained), leaving the family with a document stating where he’s being taken and on what charge. The printed document is in Arabic and Hebrew, but the commander of the force typically fills out the details in Hebrew only, then hands it to parents who may not be able to read it and don’t know why their son was taken.

      Attorney Farah Bayadsi asks why it’s necessary to arrest children in this manner, instead of summoning them for questioning in an orderly way. (The data show that only 12 percent of the youths receive a summons to be interrogated.)

      “I know from experience that whenever someone is asked to come in for questioning, he goes,” Bayadsi notes. She’s active in the Israeli branch of Defense for Children International, a global NGO that deals with the detention of minors and promotion of their rights.

      “The answer we generally get,” she says, “is that, ‘It’s done this way for security reasons.’ That means it’s a deliberate method, which isn’t intended to meet the underage youth halfway, but to cause him a lifelong trauma.”

      Indeed, as the IDF Spokesman’s Unit stated to Haaretz, in response, “The majority of the arrests, of both adults and minors, are carried out at night for operational reasons and due to the desire to preserve an orderly fabric of life and execute point-specific actions wherever possible.”

      About 40 percent of the minors are detained in the public sphere – usually in the area of incidents involving throwing stones at soldiers. That was the case with Adham Ahsoun, from Azzun. At the time, he was 15 and on his way home from a local grocery store. Not far away, a group of children had started throwing stones at soldiers, before running off. Ahsoun, who didn’t flee, was detained and taken to a military vehicle; once inside, he was hit by a soldier. A few children who saw what happened ran to his house to tell his mother. Grabbing her son’s birth certificate, she rushed to the entrance to the town to prove to the soldiers that he was only a child. But it was too late; the vehicle had already departed, headed to an army base nearby, where he would wait to be interrogated.

      By law, soldiers are supposed to handcuff children with their hands in front, but in many cases it’s done with their hands behind them. Additionally, sometimes the minor’s hands are too small for handcuffing, as a soldier from the Nahal infantry brigade told the NGO Breaking the Silence. On one occasion, he related, his unit arrested a boy “of about 11,” but the handcuffs were too big to bind his small hands.

      The next stage is the journey: The youths are taken to an army base or a police station in a nearby settlement, their eyes covered with flannelette. “When your eyes are covered, your imagination takes you to the most frightening places,” says a lawyer who represents young Palestinians. Many of those arrested don’t understand Hebrew, so that once pushed into the army vehicle they are completely cut off from what’s going on around them.

      In most cases, the handcuffed, blindfolded youth will be moved from place to place before actually being interrogated. Sometimes he’s left outside, in the open, for a time. In addition to the discomfort and the bewilderment, the frequent moving around presents another problem: In the meantime many acts of violence, in which soldiers beat the detainees, take place and go undocumented.

      Once at the army base or police station, the minor is placed, still handcuffed and blindfolded, on a chair or on the floor for a few hours, generally without being given anything to eat. The “endless trip to hell” is how Bayadsi describes this process. Memory of the incident, she adds, “is still there even years after the boy’s release. It implants in him an ongoing feeling of a lack of security, which will stay with him for his whole life.”

      Testimony provided to Breaking the Silence by an IDF staff sergeant about one incident in the West Bank illustrates the situation from the other side: “It was the first night of Hanukkah in 2017. Two children were throwing stones on Highway 60, on the road. So we grabbed them and took them to the base. Their eyes were covered with flannelette, and they were handcuffed in front with plastic cuffs. They looked young, between 12 and 16 years old.”

      When the soldiers gathered to light the first candle of the Hanukkah holiday, the detainees remained outside. “We’re shouting and making noise and using drums, which is a kind of company thing,” the soldier recalled, noting that he assumed the kids didn’t know Hebrew, although maybe they did understand the curses they heard. “Let’s say sharmuta [slut] and other words they might know from Arabic. How could they know we aren’t talking about them? They’ll probably thought that in another minute we were going to cook them.”

      Interrogation

      The nightmare can be of differing duration, the former detainees relate. Three to eight hours after the arrest, by which time the youth is tired and hungry – and sometimes in pain after being hit, frightened by threats and not even knowing why he’s there – he’s taken in for interrogation. This may be the first time the blindfold is removed and his hands freed. The process usually starts with a general question, such as, “Why do you throw stones at soldiers?” The rest is more intense – a barrage of questions and threats, aimed at getting the teen to sign a confession. In some cases, he’s promised that if he signs he’ll be given something to eat.

      According to the testimonies, the interrogators’ threats are directed squarely at the boy (“You’ll spend your whole life in jail”), or at his family (“I’ll bring your mother here and kill her before your eyes”), or at the family’s livelihood (“If you don’t confess, we’ll take away your father’s permit to work in Israel – because of you, he’ll be out of work and the whole family will go hungry”).

      “The system shows that the intention here is more to demonstrate control than to engage in enforcement,” suggests Bayadsi. “If the boy confesses, there’s a file; if he doesn’t confess, he enters the criminal circle anyway and is seriously intimidated.”

      Imprisonment

      Whether the young detainee has signed a confession or not, the next stop is prison. Either Megiddo, in Lower Galilee, or Ofer, north of Jerusalem. Khaled Mahmoud Selvi was 15 when he was brought to prison in October 2017 and was told to disrobe for a body search (as in 55 percent of the cases). For 10 minutes he was made to stand naked, along with another boy, and in winter.

      The months in detention, waiting for trial, and later, if they are sentenced, are spent in the youth wing of the facilities for security prisoners. “They don’t speak with their families for months and are allowed one visit a month, through glass,” Bayadsi relates.

      Far fewer Palestinian girls are arrested than boys. But there is no facility specially for them, so they are held in the Sharon prison for women, together with the adults.

      The trial

      The courtroom is usually the place where parents have their first sight of their child, sometimes several weeks after the arrest. Tears are the most common reaction to the sight of the young detainee, who will be wearing a prison uniform and handcuffs, and with a cloud of uncertainty hovering over everything. Israel Prisons Service guards don’t allow the parents to approach the youth, and direct them to sit on the visitors’ bench. Defense counsel is paid for either by the family or by the Palestinian Authority.

      At a recent remand hearing for several detainees, one boy didn’t stop smiling at the sight of his mother, while another lowered his eyes, perhaps to conceal tears. Another detainee whispered to his grandmother, who had come to visit him, “Don’t worry, tell everyone I’m fine.” The next boy remained silent and watched as his mother mouthed to him, “Omari, I love you.”

      While the children and their family try to exchange a few words and looks, the proceedings move along. As though in a parallel universe.

      The deal

      The vast majority of trials for juveniles ends in a plea bargain – safka in Arabic, a word Palestinian children know well. Even if there is no hard evidence to implicate the boy in stone-throwing, a plea is often the preferred option. If the detainee doesn’t agree to it, the trial could last a long time and he will be held in custody until the proceedings end.

      Conviction depends almost entirely on evidence from a confession, says lawyer Gerard Horton, from the British-Palestinian Military Court Watch, whose brief, according to its website, involves “monitoring the treatment of children in Israeli military detention.” According to Horton, who is based in Jerusalem, the minors will be more prone to confess if they don’t know their rights, are frightened and get no support or relief until they confess. Sometimes a detainee who does not confess will be told that he can expect to face a series of court appearances. At some stage, even the toughest youth will despair, the lawyer explains.

      The IDF Spokesman’s Unit stated in response: “The minors are entitled to be represented by an attorney, like any other accused, and they have the right to conduct their defense in any way they choose. Sometimes they choose to admit to guilt within the framework of a plea bargain but if they plead not guilty, a procedure involving hearing evidence is conducted, like the proceedings conducted in [civilian courts in] Israel, at the conclusion of which a legal decision will be handed down on the basis of the evidence presented to the court. The deliberations are set within a short time and are conducted efficiently and with the rights of the accused upheld.”

      Managing the community

      According to data of collected by the British-Palestinian NGO, 97 percent of the youths arrested by the IDF live in relatively small locales that are no more than two kilometers away from a settlement. There are a number of reasons for this. One involves the constant friction – physical and geographical – between Palestinians, on the one hand, and soldiers and settlers. However, according to Horton, there is another, no less interesting way to interpret this figure: namely, from the perspective of an IDF commander, whose mission is to protect the settlers.

      In the case of reported stone-throwing incidents, he says, the commander’s assumption is that the Palestinians involved are young, between the ages of 12 and 30, and that they come from the nearest village. Often the officer will turn to the resident collaborator in the village, who provides him with the names of a few boys.

      The next move is “to enter the village at night and arrest them,” Horton continues. “And whether these youths are the ones who threw the stones or not, you have already put a scare into the whole village” – which he says is an “effective tool” for managing a community.

      “When so many minors are being arrested like this, it’s clear that some of them will be innocent,” he observes. “The point is that this has to be happening all the time, because the boys grow up and new children appear on the scene. Each generation must feel the strong arm of the IDF.”

      According to the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit: “In recent years, many minors, some of them very young, have been involved in violent incidents, incitement and even terrorism. In these cases, there is no alternative but to institute measures, including interrogation, detention and trial, within the limits of and according to what is stipulated by law. As part of these procedures, the IDF operates to uphold and preserve the rights of the minors. In enforcing the law against them, their age is taken into account.

      “Thus, since 2014, among other measures, in certain instances, the minors are invited to the police station and are not arrested at home. In addition, proceedings relating to minors take place in the military court for juveniles, which examines the seriousness of the offense that’s attributed to the minor and the danger it poses, while taking into consideration his young age and his particular circumstances. Every allegation of violence on the part of IDF soldiers is examined, and cases in which the soldiers’ actions are found to be flawed are treated sternly.”

      The Shin Bet security service stated in response: “The Shin Bet, together with the IDF and the Israel Police, operates against every element that threatens to harm Israel’s security and the country’s citizenry. The terrorist organizations make extensive use of minors and recruit them to carry out terrorist activity, and there is a general tendency to involve minors in terrorist activity as part of local initiatives.

      “Interrogations of suspected terrorists are conducted by the Shin Bet under the law, and are subject to supervision and to internal and external review, including by all levels of the court system. The interrogations of minors are carried out with extra sensitivity and with consideration of their young age.”

      Khaled Mahmoud Selvi, arrested at 14 (October 2017)

      “I was arrested when I was 14, all the boys in the family were arrested that night. A year later, I was arrested again, with my cousin. They said I burned tires. It happened when I was sleeping. My mother woke me up. I thought it was time for school, but when I opened my eyes I saw soldiers above me. They told me to get dressed, handcuffed me and took me outside. I was wearing a short-sleeved shirt and it was cold that night. My mother begged them to let me put on a jacket, but they didn’t agree. Finally, she threw the jacket on me, but they didn’t let me put my arms in the sleeves.

      “They took me to the Karmei Tzur settlement with my eyes covered, and I had the feeling that they were just driving in circles. When I walked, there was a pit in the road and they pushed me into it, and I fell. From there they took me to Etzion [police station]. There they put me in a room, and soldiers kept coming in all the time and kicking me. Someone passed by and said that if I didn’t confess, they would leave me in jail for the rest of my life.

      “At 7 A.M., they told me the interrogation was starting. I asked to go to the toilet before. My eyes were covered and a soldier put a chair in front of me. I tripped. The interrogation went on for an hour. They told me that they saw me burning tires and that it interfered with air traffic. I told them it wasn’t me. I didn’t see a lawyer until the afternoon, and he asked the soldiers to bring us food. It was the first time I had eaten since being arrested the night before.

      “At 7 P.M., I was sent to Ofer Prison, and I remained there for six months. In that period, I was in court more than 10 times. And there was also another interrogation, because a friend of mine was told while being questioned that if he didn’t confess and inform on me, they would bring his mother and shoot her before his eyes. So he confessed and informed. I’m not angry at him. It was his first arrest, he was scared.”

      Khaled Shtaiwi, arrested at 13 (November 2018)

      Khaled’s story is told by his father, Murad Shatawi: “On the night he was arrested, a phone call from my nephew woke me up. He said the house was surrounded by soldiers. I got up and got dressed, because I expected them to arrest me, on account of the nonviolent demonstrations I organize on Fridays. I never imagined they’d take Khaled. They asked me for the names of my sons. I told them Mumen and Khaled. When I said Khaled, they said, ‘Yes, him. We’re here to take him.’ I was in shock, so many soldiers showed up to arrest a boy of 13.

      “They handcuffed and blindfolded him and led him east on foot, toward the settlement of Kedumim, all the while cursing and hitting him a little. I saw it all from the window. They gave me a document showing that it was a legal arrest and I could come to the police station. When I got there, I saw him through a small hole in the door. He was handcuffed and blindfolded.

      “He stayed like that from the moment they arrested him until 3 P.M. the next day. That’s a picture that doesn’t leave me; I don’t know how I’ll go on living with that picture in my head. He was accused of throwing stones, but after four days they released him, because he didn’t confess and there was no other evidence against him. During the trial, when the judge wanted to speak to Khaled, he had to lean forward in order to see him, because Khaled was so small.

      “What was it like to see him like that? I am the father. That says it all. He hasn’t talked about it since getting out, three months ago. That’s a problem. I’m now organizing a ‘psychology day’ in the village, to help all the children here who have been arrested. Out of 4,500 people in the village, 11 children under the age of 18 have been arrested; five were under the age of 15.”

      Omar Rabua Abu Ayyash, arrested at age 10 (December 2018)

      Omar looks small for his age. He’s shy and quiet, and it’s hard to talk to him about the arrest, so members of his family recount the events in his place.

      Omar’s mother: “It happened at 10 A.M. on Friday, when there is no school. Omar was playing in the area in front of the house, he threw pebbles at birds that were chirping in the tree. The soldiers, who were in the watchtower across the way here, picked up on what he was doing and ran toward him. He ran, but they caught him and knocked him down. He started to cry, and he wet his pants. They kicked him a few times.

      “His grandmother, who lives here below, immediately went out and tried to take him from the soldiers, which caused a struggle and shouts. In the end, they left him alone and he went home and changed into dry pants. A quarter of an hour later, the soldiers came back, this time with their commander, who said he had to arrest the boy for throwing stones. When the other children in the family saw the soldiers in the house, they also wet their pants.”

      Omar’s father takes up the story: “I told the commander that he was under 12 and that I had to accompany him, so I rode with him in the jeep to the Karmei Tzur settlement. There the soldiers told him not to throw stones anymore, and that if he saw other children doing it, he should tell them. From there they took him the offices of the Palestinian Authority in Hebron. The whole story took about 12 hours. They gave him a few bananas to eat during those hours. Now, whenever the children see a military jeep or soldiers, they go inside. They’ve stopped playing outside since then. Before the incident, soldiers used to come here to play soccer with the children. Now they’ve stopped coming, too.”

      Tareq Shtaiwi, arrested at 14 (January 2019)

      “It was around 2 P.M. I had a fever that day, so Dad sent me to my cousin next door, because that’s almost the only place in the village with a heating unit. Suddenly soldiers showed up. They saw me watching them from the window, so they fired shots at the door of the building, knocked it down and started to come upstairs. I got scared, so I ran from the second floor to the third, but they stopped me on the way and took me outside. The soldiers wouldn’t let me take my coat, even though it was cold and I was sick. They took me on foot to Kedumim, handcuffed and blindfolded. They sat me on a chair. I heard doors and windows being slammed hard, I think they were trying to scare me.

      “After a while, they took me from Kedumim to Ariel, and I was there for five-six hours. They accused me of throwing stones a few days earlier with my friend. I told them I hadn’t thrown any stones. In the evening they moved me to the Hawara detention building; one of the soldiers told me I would never leave there. In the morning I was moved to Megiddo Prison. They didn’t have prisoners uniforms in my size, so they gave me clothes of Palestinian children who had been there before and left them for the next in line. I was the youngest person in the prison.

      “I had three court hearings, and after 12 days, at the last hearing, they told me that it was enough, that my father would pay a fine of 2,000 shekels [$525] and I was getting a three-year suspended sentence. The judge asked me what I intended to do after getting out, I told him I would go back to school and I wouldn’t go up to the third floor again. Since my arrest, my younger brother, who’s 7, has been afraid to sleep in the kids’ room and goes to sleep with our parents.”

      Adham Ahsoun, arrested in October 2018, on his 15th birthday

      “On my 15th birthday, I went to the store in the village center to buy a few things. Around 7:30 in the evening, soldiers entered the village and children started to throw stones at them. On the way home with my bag, they caught me. They took me to the entrance of the village and put me in a jeep. One of the soldiers started to hit me. Then they put plastic handcuffs on me and covered my eyes and took me like that to the military base in Karnei Shomron. I was there for about an hour. I couldn’t see a thing, but I had the feeling that a dog was sniffing me. I was afraid. From there they took me to another military base and left me there for the night. They didn’t give me anything to eat or drink.

      “In the morning, they moved me to the interrogation facility in Ariel. The interrogator told me that the soldiers caught me throwing stones. I told him that I hadn’t thrown stones, that I was on my way home from the store. So he called the soldiers into the interrogation room. They said, ‘He’s lying, we saw him, he was throwing stones.’ I told him that I really hadn’t thrown stones, but he threatened to arrest my mother and father. I panicked. I asked him, ‘What do you want from me?’ He said he wanted me to sign that I threw stones at soldiers, so I signed. The whole time I didn’t see or talk to a lawyer.

      “My plea bargain was that I would confess and get a five-month jail sentence. Afterward, they gave me one-third off for good behavior. I got out after three months and a fine of 2,000 shekels. In jail I tried to catch up with the material I missed in school. The teachers told me they would only take into account the grades of the second semester, so it wouldn’t hurt my chances of being accepted for engineering studies in university.”

      Muhmen Teet, arrested at 13 (November 2017)

      “At 3 A.M., I heard knocking on the door. Dad came into the room and said there were soldiers in the living room and wanted us to show ID cards. The commanding officer told my father that they were taking me to Etzion for questioning. Outside, they handcuffed and blindfolded me and put me in a military vehicle. We went to my cousin’s house; they also arrested him. From there we went to Karmei Tzur and waited, handcuffed and blindfolded, until the morning.

      “In the morning, they only took my cousin for interrogation, not me. After his interrogation, they took us to Ofer Prison. After a day there, they took us back to Etzion and said they were going to interrogate me. Before the interrogation, they took me into a room, where there was a soldier who slapped me. After he hit me in one room, he took me to the interrogation room. The interrogator said I was responsible for burning tires, and because of that the grove near the house caught fire. I said it wasn’t me, and I signed a document that the interrogator gave me. The document was also printed in Arabic, but the interrogator filled it out in Hebrew. I was taken back to Ofer Prison.

      “I had seven hearings in court, because at the first hearing I said I hadn’t intended to confess, I just didn’t understand what I signed and it wasn’t true. So they sent me back for another interrogation. Again I didn’t confess. Then they sent me to interrogation another time and again I didn’t confess. That’s what it was like in three interrogations. In the end, my lawyer did a deal with the prosecutor that if I confessed in court – which I did – and my family would pay 4,000 shekels, they would release me.

      “I’m a good student, I like soccer, both playing and watching it. Since the arrest I hardly wander around outside.”

      Khalil Zaakiq, arrested at age 13 (January 2019)

      “Around 2 A.M. someone knocked on the door. I woke up and saw a lot of soldiers in the house. They said we should all sit in the living room sofa and not move. The commander called Uday, my big brother, told him to get dressed and informed him that he was under arrest. It was the third time they arrested him. My father was also once under arrest. Suddenly they told me to put my shoes on too and go with them.

      “They took us out of the house and tied our hands and covered our eyes. We went like that on foot to the base in Karmei Tzur. There they sat me on the floor with hands tied and eyes covered for around three hours. At about 5 A.M., they moved us to Etzion. On the way there in the jeep they hit us, they slapped me. In Etzion, I was sent to be checked by a doctor. He asked if I had been beaten and I said yes. He didn’t do anything, only checked my blood pressure and said I could stand up to an interrogation.

      “My interrogation started at 8 A.M.. They asked me to tell them which children throw stones. I said I didn’t know, so the interrogator gave me a slap. The interrogation went on for four hours. Afterward, they put me into a dark room for 10 minutes and then took me back to the interrogation room, but now they only fingerprinted me and put me into a detention cell for an hour. After an hour, Uday and I were moved to Ofer Prison. I didn’t sign a confession, neither about myself nor about others.

      “I got out after nine days, because I wasn’t guilty of anything. My parents had to pay 1,000 shekels for bail. My little brother, who is 10, has been really afraid ever since. Whenever someone knocks at the door, he wets his pants.”

  • Washington abandonne les termes d’"occupation israélienne" pour le Golan
    13 mars 2019 Par Agence Reuters
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/130319/washington-abandonne-les-termes-doccupation-israelienne-pour-le-golan?ongl

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Les termes « d’occupation israélienne », employés jusqu’ici par les Etats-Unis pour le plateau du Golan syrien, ont été remplacés par « sous contrôle israélien », dans le rapport annuel du département d’Etat sur les droits de l’homme dans le monde, publié mercredi.

    Les mots « occupé » ou « sous occupation » ne sont par ailleurs plus utilisés pour la Cisjordanie et la bande de Gaza, dont Israël s’est également emparées lors de la guerre des Six Jours, en 1967.

    L’Etat hébreu a annexé le plateau du Golan en 1981, ce que le Conseil de sécurité de l’Onu a jugé nul et non avenu.

    #IsraelUSA

  • Pour en finir avec la résistance palestinienne et effacer les crimes israéliens, Trump allonge la monnaie
    Robert Fisk - 8 mars 2019 – The Independent – Traduction : Chronique de Palestine – Traduction : Lalla Fadhma N’Soumer
    http://www.chroniquepalestine.com/pour-en-finir-avec-la-resistance-palestinienne-et-effacer-les-cr

    (...)Les deux dernières semaines en sont un exemple. Le gendre de Trump – une fée sans baguette magique – Jared Kushner, partisan de l’expansion coloniale israélienne sur les terres arabes, s’est attelé avec le « représentant spécial pour le processus de paix » choisi par Trump, Jason Greenblatt (l’homme qui dit que « les colonies de Cisjordanie ne sont pas un obstacle à la paix » ) à mettre en place le fondement économique de « l’accord du siècle » de Trump, afin de résoudre le Conflit israélo-palestinien.

    Kushner est allé rendre visite à quelques États musulmans criminels, certains dirigés par des leaders épouvantables et tyranniques – avec parmi eux l’Arabie Saoudite et la Turquie – pour parler du « volet économique » de cet accord mythique.

    Les dirigeants du Moyen-Orient sont peut-être des meurtriers qui se maintiennent au pouvoir avec l’aide de tortionnaires, mais ils ne sont pas complètement stupides. Il est clair que Kushner et Greenblatt ont besoin de beaucoup d’argent pour soutenir leurs plans pour la destruction finale de l’État palestinien – nous parlons de milliards de dollars – et les dirigeants arabes qu’ils ont rencontrés n’ont rien vu de la « dimension » politique de « l’accord » de Trump. Parce que, vraisemblablement, il n’en existe aucune. Après tout, Trump croit qu’en déplaçant son ambassade vers Jérusalem et en déclarant la ville capitale israélienne, il a retiré de la table des négociations la plus sacrée des villes.

    Nos titans du journalisme sont restés silencieux – peut-être sont-ils, eux aussi, tombés dans le Triangle des Bermudes – et n’ont eu absolument rien à dire, que dalle, à propos de la tournée délirante de Kushner au Moyen-Orient. Ils l’ont appelée, inévitablement, une « tournée éclair », durant laquelle ce stupide jeune homme – les lecteurs reconnaîtront les clichés tout aussi inévitables de CNN – « a mobilisé des alliés pour un déploiement printanier » de « l’accord ».

    Ce flou extrême est étonnant, car le fandango Kushner-Greenblatt était en réalité un événement très historique. C’était une situation sans précédent en plus d’être étrange, inégalée dans l’histoire arabe récente pour sa témérité et ses scandaleuses prétentions.

    Car, c’était la première fois dans l’histoire arabe moderne – et d’ailleurs, l’histoire musulmane moderne – que les États-Unis conçoivent et préparent un pot-de-vin AVANT le consentement de ceux qui sont supposés prendre l’argent ; en réalité avant même de dire aux Palestiniens et aux autres arabes ce qu’ils sont censés faire pour pouvoir récupérer le magot. (...)

    #Dealdusiècle

  • How the Israeli army takes Palestinian land and hands it to settlers -

    45 settlements have been built on Palestinian land requisitioned for military purposes. A new study explains how
    Amira Hass

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-how-palestinian-land-goes-from-the-army-to-the-settlers-1.7004514

    In the end, the result is the same: More Palestinian land stolen and transferred to Jews because they are Jews (born in Israel or the Diaspora) and for their benefit. But the Jewish brain invents tricks of the trade, and the means and methods that the military bureaucracy has created and is still creating to reach this result are many and varied, until confusion and fear take over at the sheer multitude of details.

    Dror Etkes, a researcher of Israel’s settlement policy, wants, as usual, to put things in order. In a new study he will be publishing this week, he focuses on the history of orders to seize Palestinian land, issued by generations of army commanders in the West Bank (not including the part that was annexed to Jerusalem). More than 1,150 seizure orders have been issued from 1969 to the present. After subtracting those that were revoked or that overlap, it turns out that this particular trick enabled Israel to take over more than 100,000 dunams (25,000 acres) of Palestinian land. More millions of dunams of Palestinian land have been stolen in other ways, which Etkes has been researching too.

    The declared purpose for such seizure is security and military needs. On the website of the Military Advocate General, the body that advises the army on legal issues, this goal is stressed. Etkes quotes at length from this source in his study: In accordance with the laws of belligerent occupation detailed in customary international law, an occupying power is prohibited from confiscating the private property of a local population in an area under its belligerent occupation. [But] the commander of the area has the authority to take possession of private land if there is a military need. … Exercising this authority does not invalidate landowners’ rights of possession, although they are temporarily prevented from holding and using the land. ... The word temporary is used, because the occupation is meant to be temporary, and because military needs may change.

    Surprise surprise. Some 40 percent of the area officially seized for military and security needs have been allocated over the years to settlements (a quarter of the total area is indeed used for military purposes and another quarter is occupied by the separation barrier). The governments of the Alignment, the Labor Party’s predecessor, started this tradition. They allocated 6,280 dunams to settlements – 28 percent of the approximately 22,000 dunams that have been seized for military use in those years. As expected, the rise of Likud to power has seen a huge spike in allocation to settlements of land that was originally seized for military use. From Likud’s victory in May 1977 to the end of 1979, more than 31,000 dunams were seized. Out of this total, 23,000 were allocated to settlements – that is, 73 percent.

    If we thought this method was quashed by the High Court of Justice ruling in the case of the settlement of Elon Moreh – which was handed down in October 1979 and placed restrictions on the authority of an Israeli military commander in the West Bank to seize land for settlement construction – it turns out we were wrong. Because for three years, commanders continued under Likud to issue seizure orders for security needs that benefited the settlements: Out of some 11,000 dunams seized, 7,040 dunams were given to 12 new settlements. (The dates on some of the orders are unclear; therefore they are not included in the breakdown above that Etkes produced at Haaretz’s request. But the goal of those orders, too, is clear: settlement. And they apply to areas amounting to about 2,000 dunams).

    Following the High Court ruling on Elon Moreh, Israel found a surer method of robbery: declaring Palestinian land to be state land (that is, for Jews), in a very lenient interpretation of an Ottoman law on the matter. The raw material from Etkes’ research is digital maps and layers of data given to him by the Civil Administration (through gritted teeth) by dint of the Freedom of Information Law. According to this information, Etkes estimates that since the 1980s, Israel has declared some 750,000 dunams as state land, out of approximately 5.7 million dunams in the West Bank. (Reminder: This column does not recognize the legality of the Israeli definition of Palestinian land as state land, and even less the legality of their transfer to Jews).

  • Un quatrième tome pour #Ernaut de Jérusalem
    https://framablog.org/2019/03/08/un-quatrieme-tome-pour-ernaut-de-jerusalem

    Fin connaisseur du monde médiéval, Yann Kervran propose un nouveau volume des aventures d’Ernaut de Jérusalem. Son héros, qui a gagné en maturité, va affronter un nouveau mystère : un corps entièrement brûlé tandis que sa demeure est intacte autour de … Lire la suite­­

    #Framabook #Interview #Libres_Cultures #Hexagora #Livre

  • Sous la pression, l’Institut du monde arabe déprogramme une chanteuse sahraouie - RFI
    http://www.rfi.fr/afrique/20190304-chanteuse-sahraouie-deprogrammee-institut-monde-arabe-aziza-brahim-maro

    Selon une source bien informée, tout est parti d’un article paru le 29 janvier dernier sur un site marocain réputé proche du palais, le 360. Il s’émouvait de la programmation à l’Institut du monde arabe (IMA) d’#Aziza_Brahim, la qualifiant d’activiste du Front Polisario.

    Dans la foulée, l’ambassade du Maroc à Paris appelle l’Institut pour demander des explications. L’IMA se justifie en expliquant que la chanteuse a toute sa place dans le cadre du festival Les Arabofolies, qui a pour thématiques les femmes et les résistances. Des explications qui ne convainquent pas les diplomates marocains en poste à Paris.

    Ces derniers font alors pression sur les mécènes marocains qui financent régulièrement les projets de l’Institut, et qui finissent par menacer l’IMA de se désengager si le concert prévu initialement le 10 mars était maintenu.

    Son président, Jack Lang, tente bien d’intervenir, en expliquant que la chanteuse n’est nullement une activiste du #Polisario mais seulement une artiste qui chante l’histoire de son peuple. Rien n’y fait : le président de l’institution cède finalement sous la pression. Résultat, le 7 février, l’Institut annonce que « pour une raison indépendante de la volonté de l’artiste », le concert est annulé.

    Aziza Brahim - Lagi
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kG4OX8uQpI0

    #musique #chanson #pression #diplomatie #Maroc #Sahara_occidental

    • #notre_ami_le_roi

      https://www.humanite.fr/editorial-notre-ami-le-roi-638595

      Éditorial. Notre ami le roi
      Vendredi, 7 Juillet, 2017
      Maurice Ulrich

      Une trentaine d’années après un livre de Gilles Perrault qui fit date, Notre ami le roi, révélant les sinistres réalités du pouvoir d’Hassan II au Maroc, le roi Mohammed VI est toujours « notre ami ». La visite à sa majesté d’Emmanuel Macron, il y a trois semaines, en témoigne. Il eut l’honneur selon le mot d’un diplomate de dîner en famille dans sa résidence privée. Le président de la République s’est dit « touché par cette marque d’amitié ». On ne sait pas si l’ampleur du mouvement social qui soulève le Maroc depuis plusieurs mois fut évoquée au dessert. D’ailleurs, soulignait ironiquement (on l’espère) le Figaro au lendemain de cette visite, « Emmanuel Macron n’en aura eu qu’un écho très lointain, puisque son séjour au Maroc s’est concentré sur la rencontre avec Mohammed VI et sa famille, sans entretien avec des représentants de la société civile ». Décidément, Emmanuel Macron pourrait écrire dans ses carnets intimes ce mot de Louis XVI qu’il affectionne : « Rien. »

      Rien, depuis que le 28 octobre dernier le jeune poissonnier Mouhcine Fikri a été broyé par une benne à ordures alors qu’il tentait désespérément de récupérer le matériel qui venait de lui être arraché par les policiers. Depuis, les manifestations populaires n’ont fait que prendre de l’ampleur, dans une région du Rif où le drame a remis à vif les blessures historiques de l’oppression du pouvoir central et a été vécu comme un révélateur d’une situation sociale où 40 % de la population est au chômage, où l’industrie est redevenue, après une courte embellie, quasiment inexistante, et où la corruption financière aussi bien que politique ronge la société. Les témoignages recueillis par notre envoyée spéciale Rosa Moussaoui sont sans ambiguïté. Les seules réponses du pouvoir, face à ce soulèvement du Rif qui n’a cessé de s’amplifier et de se structurer depuis octobre, ont été la répression, l’arrestation des militants les plus en vue, la volonté de faire taire la presse. 135 Rifains sont détenus à ce jour, dont 7 journalistes. Le silence de la France officielle est assourdissant. Il est des « amitiés » qui sont une chape de plomb.
      Par Maurice Ulrich

    • Géométrie variable, l’histoire tranchera...

      L’artiste Aziza Brahim annule son concert à Jérusalem occupée
      Campagne BDS France, le 29 juillet 2015
      https://www.bdsfrance.org/lartiste-aziza-brahim-annule-son-concert-a-jerusalem-occupee

      Appel au boycott du concert d’Enrico Macias au Maroc : « Je me fous éperdument de cette menace »
      Nadir Dendoune, Le Courrier de l’Atlas, le 4 février 2019
      https://www.lecourrierdelatlas.com/maroc-appel-au-boycott-du-concert-d-enrico-macias-au-maroc-je-me

      #boycott

    • « Je suis une activiste sociale » : les chants sahraouis d’Aziza Brahim déprogrammés de l’IMA
      https://www.lemonde.fr/culture/article/2019/04/26/musiques-du-monde-les-chants-sahraouis-de-resistance-d-aziza-brahim_5455127_


      La chanteuse Aziza Brahim à Barcelone, en décembre 2018.
      NINA PETRE

      A l’approche de son passage, vendredi 26 avril, au Pan Piper, à Paris, elle se dit consternée mais pas étonnée. Jointe par téléphone à Barcelone, où elle vit depuis dix ans et finalise le mixage d’un cinquième album dont la parution est prévue à l’automne, la chanteuse sahraouie Aziza Brahim revient sur l’annulation du concert qu’elle devait donner le 10 mars à l’Institut du monde arabe (IMA) : « –Ce n’est un secret pour personne. Le concert a été annulé suite à la pression de l’ambassade du Maroc et des mécènes marocains. Je ne comprends pas qu’une institution publique, en France, qui sait à quel point la liberté d’expression n’est pas respectée au Maroc, cède à ce chantage. »

      La chanteuse était programmée en clôture de la première édition du festival Les Arabofolies, sous-titrée « _Résistances ». Selon Greg Connan (Dérapage Productions), agent en France de l’artiste, un site marocain d’information, Le360, a alerté l’ambassade, qui a contacté Jack Lang, président de l’IMA. « La programmatrice m’a informé qu’ils avaient reçu un coup de fil insistant sur le fait qu’Aziza Brahim était une activiste du Front Polisario [mouvement de libération des populations sahraouies], ce qui est totalement faux, détaille M. Connan. Je leur ai raconté son parcours, ses idées. Les responsables de la programmation ont ensuite tenté de sauver ce concert, sans résultat. »

      #paywall

  • Les USA ferment leur mission palestinienne à Jérusalem
    4 mars 2019 Par Agence Reuters
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/040319/les-usa-ferment-leur-mission-palestinienne-jerusalem?onglet=full

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Les Etats-Unis ont amené lundi le drapeau du consulat général américain à Jérusalem, qui servait de représentation diplomatique pour les Palestiniens.

    Les employés de la mission palestinienne seront intégrés à l’ambassade que les Etats-Unis ont inaugurée à Jérusalem en mai 2018, sous le nom d’"unité des affaires palestiniennes" et sous la responsabilité de l’ambassadeur David Friedman.

    « C’est le dernier clou dans le cercueil » des pourparlers de paix israélo-palestiniens, a réagi sur Twitter le négociateur palestinien Saeb Erekat.

    Les négociations sont au point mort depuis 2014 et l’administration de Donald Trump est boycottée par les Palestiniens depuis l’annonce, en décembre 2017, du transfert de l’ambassade américaine de Tel Aviv à Jérusalem.

    La décision de fusionner consulat et ambassade avait été annoncée en octobre par le secrétaire d’Etat Mike Pompeo.

  • Netanyahu recevra Bolsonaro juste avant le scrutin du 9 avril
    28 février 2019 Par Agence Reuters
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/280219/netanyahu-recevra-bolsonaro-juste-avant-le-scrutin-du-9-avril?onglet=full

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Le président brésilien Jair Bolsonaro se rendra en Israël peu avant les élections législatives israéliennes du 9 avril qui verront le Premier ministre Benjamin Netanyahu briguer un cinquième mandat, a annoncé jeudi le gouvernement israélien.

    La visite du président d’extrême droite brésilien est susceptible de constituer un soutien pour le chef du gouvernement israélien.

    Jair Bolsonaro, qui a pris ses fonctions en janvier et avait auparavant reçu Benjamin Netanyahu, a affiché sa proximité avec la droite israélienne. A l’instar des Etats-Unis, il a évoqué un déplacement de l’ambassade brésilienne à Jérusalem, mais n’a pas pour autant fixé de date.

    La perspective d’un transfert de l’ambassade de Tel Aviv à Jérusalem inquiète les exportateurs brésiliens qui craignent de perdre l’accès à de grands marchés dans les pays arabes, notamment pour la viande halal.

    La visite du chef de l’Etat brésilien est prévue du 31 mars au 4 avril, précise le ministère israélien des Affaires étrangères sans autres détails.

    Ancien capitaine de l’armée, Jair Bolsonaro a accédé au pouvoir en promettant de s’attaquer au crime et la corruption, mais il a du mal à stabiliser son gouvernement de coalition sur fond d’affaires de corruption et des luttes intestines qui ont entaché son premier mois de mandat.

    #IsraelBresil