• Évadés de Jénine. Zakaria Zubeidi, « J’ai cru à la paix »
    Gwenaëlle Lenoir > 12 septembre 2021
    https://orientxxi.info/Evades-de-Jenine-Zakaria-Zubeidi-J-ai-cru-a-la-paix


    Camp de réfugiés de Jénine, 17 janvier 2008. Zakaria Zubeidi — 31 ans à l’époque — dans le Théâtre de la liberté nouvellement créé.
    Saif Dahlah/AFP

    Pendant quelques jours, les six évadés d’une prison israélienne ont fait vibrer les Palestiniens. Leur défi lancé aux autorités d’occupation a provoqué émotion et fierté, même si quatre d’entre eux ont été repris. Parmi eux, le plus connu : Zakaria Zubeidi.

    #Résistants_évadés

    • Zakaria Zubeidi was an intifada symbol. This week, he became Israel’s most wanted fugitive
      David B. Green | Sep. 10, 2021 | Haaretz.com
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-he-was-an-intifada-symbol-now-he-s-israel-s-most-wanted-fugitive-1

      Zakaria Zubeidi was an intifada symbol. This week, he became Israel’s most wanted fugitive
      As a child, Zakaria Zubeidi took part in a theater established by an Israeli peace activist. Years later, as Israel planned to put him on trial for several terror attacks, he became one of six prison-breakers on the run

      Escaped Palestinian security prisoner Zakaria Zubeidi, who was apprehended on Saturday morning, has been a source of fascination for Israelis for more than two decades. This can be attributed to his swings between advocating peaceful reconciliation with Israel and working in a Palestinian community theater, and his extensive experience as a militant involved in terror attacks against Israel, particularly during the second intifada two decades ago. His boyish good looks, ability and readiness to speak with journalists, and repeated escapes from death have only added to his enigmatic mystique.

      Zakaria Mohammed Abdelrahman Zubeidi was born in 1976, and for his entire life, when not in prison or on the run, his home has been in the Jenin refugee camp in the northern West Bank. He is one of the eight children of Mohammed and Samira Zubeidi. The father was a teacher turned foundry worker who was arrested by the Israelis for membership in Fatah, the Palestinian liberation movement led by Yasser Arafat. Mohammed died when Zakaria was 17.

      Zakaria attended an UNRWA school in the camp, and had his first run-in with Israeli forces at age 13, when he was shot in the leg by soldiers while throwing stones during the first intifada (1987-1991), leaving him with a permanent limp. Before that, however, he became involved in the theater program that Arna Mer-Khamis established in the Jenin camp.

      Arna Mer was an Israeli Jew – a communist and human-rights activist – married to Saliba Khamis, an Arab Israeli and a leader of Israel’s Communist Party. She took part in a variety of educational and human-rights projects in the West Bank, and during the first intifada organized a theater workshop in the refugee camp intended to bring together Israeli and Palestinian youth. Zakaria and his older brother Daoud were among the group’s core members, and their mother offered part of the family home to serve as a rehearsal space.

      Zakaria’s first arrest came when he was 14, again for stone throwing, and this time it led to a six-month sentence in an Israeli prison. Upon his release, he did not return to school. Within less than a year came his next arrest, this time for trying to throw a Molotov cocktail. He later told an interviewer that he learned to assemble the weapon in prison, although in this case, he set his sleeve on fire when he reached back to toss the bottle.

      He began a cycle of arrests and increasingly longer imprisonments – his next one was for four and a half years – and with each incarceration his identity as a militant and leader seems to have grown. He also learned Hebrew during his time inside, allowing him to serve as a prisoner representative.

      Stealing cars and driving trucks

      Zubeidi’s release coincided with the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, after which he volunteered for the Palestinian police force. But he quit after a year, later complaining that he was put off by the corruption and nepotism in the service.

      Zubeidi spent the remainder of the 1990s working, both in Israel and Jenin, sometimes legally and other times without a permit. When he didn’t have a job, he stole cars, which led to his arrest by Palestinian authorities. In September 2000, with the start of the second intifada, Zubeidi lost his legitimate job as a truck driver and was drawn into militant activities, including learning how to build bombs.

      In March 2002, Zubeidi’s mother was killed when an Israeli army sniper shot her while she was standing inside a friend’s home during an operation in the Jenin camp. A short time later, one of his brothers, Taha, was also shot and killed by soldiers. The following month, after a Hamas suicide bombing at a Netanya hotel during a Passover seder killed 29 Israelis, the army launched Operation Defensive Shield in the West Bank. One of the main targets was the Jenin camp, which Israel had identified as the origin of a number of terror attacks.

      Among the hundreds of homes in the camp demolished by Israeli bulldozers was that of the Zubeidi family. It was in the wake of these dramatic losses that Zubeidi joined and then emerged as a leader of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, in the Jenin camp.

      Some years later, Zubeidi complained to a journalist about how hurt he was not to have heard from any of his Israeli friends after the deaths of his mother and brother. “We opened our home and [Israel] demolished it,” he said. “Every week, 20-30 Israelis would come there to do theater. We fed them. And afterward, not one of them picked up the phone. That is when we saw the real face of the left in Israel.”

      By the end of the intifada, Zubeidi was on the short list of Israel’s most-wanted terrorists. Israeli authorities consider him directly responsible for an attack on a Likud party office in Beit She’an in 2002 in which six Israelis were killed, as well as one suicide bombing in Tel Aviv in 2004. In 2003, a bomb he was preparing exploded prematurely, scarring his face, but despite that and an apparent four attempts by Israel to assassinate him, Zubeidi continually outwitted death. He also became the effective political boss of the Jenin camp.

      During the period when he was in Israel’s crosshairs, Zubeidi gained an unlikely ally in Tali Fahima, an Israeli Jew in her late 20s, a legal secretary who offered him translation assistance but also came to Jenin to serve as a “human shield” to prevent the Israeli army from attacking Zubeidi. Fahima was eventually arrested and tried on charges related to contact with an enemy, and served time in prison. The Israeli media speculated that she and Zubeidi had a romantic relationship, something they both denied. (Zubeidi is married and the father of two children.)

      Reaching out

      By the end of the intifada, Zubeidi acknowledged to a number of interviewers his belief that the armed struggle had been a failure and only worsened the Palestinians’ situation. He also expressed an interest in working with Israeli peace activists.

      This led to a meeting in 2007 between him and Juliano Mer-Khamis, the son of Arna, and their reestablishing of a theater company in Jenin, which they called the Freedom Theater. Juliano made a documentary about the group in which Zubeidi features. Around the same time, amid renewed negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority (after the split between Fatah and Hamas, which took control of Gaza), Zubeidi was one of thousands of Palestinian militants who received amnesty from prosecution by Israel.

      In the Hollywood version of this story, maybe Zubeidi would have developed into one of the founders of a Palestinian state, following a peace accord with Israel, or perhaps a theater director. Instead, he has spent a decade and a half in and out of Israeli and Palestinian prisons, his fate affected as much by political conditions in both Israel and the West Bank as by his own swings between peaceful activity and militancy, optimism and despondency. He also managed to work on a master’s degree in cultural studies at Birzeit University, writing a thesis based on his own life that he called “The Dragon and the Hunter.”

      In 2019, Zubeidi was arrested by the Shin Bet security service and indicted on suspicions of carrying out shooting attacks on two Israeli buses filled with civilians in the West Bank. To those charges were added several more serious ones dating back to the second intifada, as the amnesty he received in 2007 was rescinded. His trial began in 2019, but at the time of his prison break Monday – together with five Palestinian prisoners from Islamic Jihad – it was still ongoing. He was captured by Israeli forces on Saturday morning.

    • Vivent les évadés - [Les amis du théâtre de la liberté de Jénine]
      http://atljenine.net/spip.php?article205&lang=fr


      Parmi les six prisonniers évadés se trouve Zakaria Zubeidi, le plus connu et que nous connaissons bien comme cofondateur du Freedom Theatre (Théâtre de la Liberté) du camp de réfugiés de Jénine.
      Zakaria est présenté partout comme le leader des Brigades des Martyrs d’Al-Aqsa, ce qu’il a effectivement été pendant toute une période de résistance armée à l’occupation militaire illégale de la Cisjordanie par Israël. Ce qui se dit moins, c’est qu’à un moment, il a déposé les armes et décidé de passer à une autre forme de résistance, la résistance culturelle.

    • La Plateforme des ONG françaises pour la Palestine nous propose les informations qu’elle a recueillies sur les conditions de détention des palestiniens détenus par Israël sous régime militaire.
      https://www.prison-insider.com/fichepays/prisonsisraelpalestine

      Ils sont incarcérés dans les #prisons_israéliennes situées pour la plupart hors des territoires occupés, en contradiction avec le droit international. Les mineurs sont les principales cibles des arrestations. Arrêtés pour des motifs politiques, ils sont particulièrement exposés à la détention arbitraire, à la torture et aux mauvais traitements.

      L’organisation palestinienne SHAMS nous met également à disposition son rapport de janvier 2017 sur la peine de mort appliquée par la Palestine. Quatre palestiniens sont exécutés, en 2016, par le Hamas sans l’accord du président de l’Autorité palestinienne, Mahmoud Abbas.

      https://plateforme-palestine.org

  • Monsieur le Président, protégez la Flottille des Femmes pour Gaza
    http://www.plateforme-palestine.org/Monsieur-le-President-protegez-la-Flottille-des-Femmes-pour-Ga

    Monsieur le Président, protégez la Flottille des Femmes pour Gaza
    3 octobre 2016

    Le Bateau des Femmes pour Gaza approche de sa destination ; les autorités israéliennes ont déjà prévu d’empêcher le voilier et les 15 femmes à son bord d’accoster sur les rives de la bande de Gaza. Demandez au Président français d’intervenir afin de protéger la Flottile !

  • « Palestine : la case prison » en libre accès
    http://plateforme-palestine.org/Palestine-la-case-prison-en-libre-acces


    18 avril 2016

    A l’occasion de la journée internationale des prisonniers palestiniens, Palestine : la case prison est en libre accès pour une semaine !

    7000 prisonniers ; hommes, femmes et enfants. Pour tout comprendre sur les prisonniers palestiniens, « Palestine : la case prison », un documentaire produit par la Plateforme Palestine, l’ACAT, la Ligue des Droits de l’Homme et l’Association France Palestine Solidarité, avec le soutien d’Amnesty International.

  • Jérusalem-Est : exploiter l’instabilité pour renforcer l’occupation
    7 décembre 2015 - Rapport de Al-Haq
    http://www.plateforme-palestine.org/Jerusalem-Est-exploiter-l-instabilite-pour-renforcer-l-occupat

    Depuis le début de l’occupation illégale de Jérusalem-Est par Israël en 1967, Israël a mis en œuvre une politique globale de contrôle sur Jérusalem, en affaiblissant la présence palestinienne et ses liens à la ville.
    Cette politique comprend le déplacement de la population palestinienne, à travers des révocations fréquentes de résidence et des droits de propriété, ou en créant des conditions forçant les Palestiniens à quitter Jérusalem-Est, notamment via la supression de toute vie politique, économique, sociale et culturelle.
    Parallèlement, Israël cherche à augmenter et renforcer la population juive israélienne à Jérusalem-Est par l’expansion des colonies illégales.
    Alors que la violence s’est intensifiée ces derniers mois, Israël prend des mesures de plus en plus sévères, qui sont symptomatiques de la politique dirigée envers Jérusalem-Est et ses résidents palestiniens depuis des décennies.
    Dans son rapport, Al-Haq examine le renforcement du contrôle israélien sur la ville depuis septembre 2015, et évalue les mesures prises par le gouvernement israélien vis-à-vis de ses obligations en tant que Puissance occupante, selon le droit international humanitaire.

  • La Plateforme des ONG françaises pour la Palestine a compilé plus de 200 chiffres, issus de dizaines de rapports d’ONG ou organisations internationales, couvrant l’essentiel de la situation en Palestine. L’agriculture, l’enfance, l’économie, Jérusalem, la liberté de circulation, la bande de Gaza…16 catégories répertoriées permettant de comprendre l’évolution de l’occupation.

    On apprend par exemple que le taux de pauvreté dans Jérusalem-Est est plus important que celui de la bande de Gaza, que si les Palestiniens avaient seulement accès libre à 5 000 hectares de terre non contrôlée par Israël, cela pourrait générer 764 millions d’euros de revenu par an, que l’UE importe 230 millions d’euros par an en provenance des colonies ou que l’occupation coûte aux Palestiniens 4,93 milliards d’euros par an...

    http://plateforme-palestine.org/spip.php?article3700

  • Trois Palestiniens tués lors de raids aériens israéliens à Gaza
    http://www.romandie.com/news/n/_Trois_Palestiniens_tues_lors_de_raids_aeriens_israeliens_a_Gaza_352210201 ?

    GAZA (Territoires palestiniens) - Trois Palestiniens ont été tués lundi lors de raids aériens israéliens menés dans le nord de la bande de Gaza à la veille d’une visite historique de l’émir du Qatar, a-t-on appris de sources médicales palestiniennes.

    Les frappes ont visé des combattants palestiniens qui tiraient des obus de mortier sur un char et des véhicules militaires israéliens effectuant une incursion dans la bande de Gaza près de la localité de Beit Hanoun, ont précisé des témoins et des responsables des services de sécurité palestiniens.

    Au cours du premier raid, quatre Palestiniens des Brigades Ezzedine al-Qassam, la branche armée du Hamas, au pouvoir à Gaza, ont été blessés. L’un d’entre eux, Abderrahmane Abou Jalaleh , 25 ans, est ensuite décédé, selon des sources hospitalières.

    L’aviation israélienne a par la suite lancé un deuxième raid à l’est de Beit Hanoun, tuant Yasser al-Tarabine , un militant des Comités de résistance populaire, tandis qu’un deuxième Palestinien était grièvement blessé, a-t-on ajouté de mêmes sources.

    Une porte-parole de l’armée israélienne a confirmé que l’aviation avait effectué deux raids dans la matinée sur le nord de l’enclave palestinienne.

    et demain le Parlement européen doit se prononcer sur l’accord dit « ACAA ».
    http://plateforme-palestine.org/spip.php?rubrique648