city:nablus

  • Unconnected to Israel’s water grid, Palestinians go thirsty | The Economist

    IYAD QASSEM is trying to run a coffee shop without water. He reuses the stuff in his sink, which quickly fills with muck, and in the shishas that Palestinians puff on his patio. It would be a difficult task, if he had many customers: but it seems people who haven’t showered in a week lose interest in sipping tea in 35°C heat. “The café is empty because everyone is worried about the situation. It’s getting impossible to run a business,” he says.

    Tens of thousands of Palestinians in Salfit and the surrounding villages are suffering through a months-long drought. Summer shortages are nothing new on the parched hills outside Nablus, in the northern West Bank. But this season is particularly bad. Taps slowed to a trickle before the Ramadan holiday; and few expect relief before the winter rains.
    Related topics

    West Bank
    Israel

    Israelis once obsessed over the level of their largest natural reservoir, the Sea of Galilee. This week it was just 11cm above its “red line,” the point at which Israel stops pumping water to avoid ecological damage. Yet this no longer causes public concern, for most of Israel’s water is artificially produced. About a third comes from desalination plants that are among the world’s most advanced. Farmers rely on reclaimed water for irrigation. Israel recycles 86% of its wastewater, the highest level anywhere; Spain, the next best, reuses around 20%.

    None of these high-tech solutions helps the Palestinians, though, because they are not connected to Israel’s water grid. They rely on the so-called “mountain aquifer”, which sits beneath land Israel occupied in 1967. The 1995 Oslo Accords stipulated that 80% of the water from the aquifer would go to Israel, with the rest allocated to the Palestinians. The agreement, meant to be a five-year interim measure, will soon celebrate its 23rd birthday. During that time the Palestinian population in the West Bank has nearly doubled, to almost 3m. The allocation has not kept pace.

    The settler population has doubled too, and they face their own shortages. In Ariel, a city of 19,000 adjacent to Salfit, residents experienced several brief outages this month. Smaller settlements in the area, which are not hooked up to the national grid, have dealt with longer droughts. Palestinians have suffered far more, however. On average they get 73 litres per day, less than the 100-liter minimum recommended by the World Health Organisation.

    Walid Habib spends 300 shekels ($75) each week to fill the tanks on top of his house in Salfit—a huge sum in the West Bank, where the average monthly wage is about $500. The water, drawn from wells drilled by the Palestinian Authority, is trucked in each morning on the winding mountain road. Supplies are limited, and residents do not always get their weekly deliveries. “We have a sea underneath us in Salfit, but we can’t even take a shower,” he says. “It’s pathetic.”

    Down the hill at a taxi company, workers have no water to brew tea. A more urgent problem is the office bathroom—dry toilets do not flush. “We’ve probably spent more on Dettol this summer than on gasoline,” jokes a dispatcher.

    The situation is worse in #Gaza, which relies almost entirely on a fast-shrinking coastal aquifer; what little remains is polluted from years of untreated sewage and agricultural run-off. The stuff that comes out of Gazan taps is already brackish and salty. UN experts think that aquifer will be irreversibly damaged by 2020.

    Israel’s water authority sells the Palestinians 64m cubic metres of water each year. It says they cause their own shortages, because up to a third of the #West_Bank’s water supply leaks out of rusting Palestinian pipes. A joint water committee is supposed to resolve these issues, but it has not met for five years. Predictably, each side accuses the other of causing the deadlock. Palestinians also find their own government neglectful: the administrative capital #Ramallah is well-supplied as the hinterlands go thirsty. Blame is never in short supply, even if water is. “When you don’t have water, it destroys everything,” says Mr Habib, sipping on a cup of the stuff—bottled, of course.

    http://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21702716-palestinians-go-thirsty-despite-sitting-over-underground-ocean-nor-yet-drop?fsrc=scn/tw/te/bl/ed/unconnectedtoisraelswatergridpalestiniansgothirsty

    #eau #Palestine #Israël #

  • Cisjordanie : l’ONU s’inquiète d’un nouvel incendie criminel contre les Dawabshas à Duma
    http://www.un.org/apps/newsFr/storyF.asp?NewsID=37696

    20 juillet 2016 – Le Coordonnateur spécial des Nations Unies pour le processus de paix au Moyen-Orient, Nickolay Mladenov, s’est dit préoccupé mercredi par les rapports faisant état d’un nouvel incendie criminel contre la famille Dawabsha, en Cisjordanie, près d’un an après la mort de plusieurs membres de cette même famille dans un incident similaire.

    « Je suis préoccupé par les rapports concernant un nouvel incendie criminel contre la maison de la famille Dawabsha, la nuit dernière, à Duma, en Cisjordanie occupée », a déclaré M. Mladenov dans un communiqué de presse. « S’il est confirmé, cet acte ignoble serait le troisième incident du même type an un an dans ce village », a-t-il dit.

    Le Coordonnateur spécial a rappelé l’attaque terroriste perpétrée le 31 juillet 2015 par des extrémistes juifs, durant laquelle ils avaient incendié la maison de la famille Dawabsha à Duma. Seul survivant, le petit Ahmed, âgé de quatre ans à l’époque, avait perdu son père, sa mère et son petit frère d’à peine 18 mois dans l’incendie. Cette attaque avait alors provoqué l’émoi et la condamnation unanime de la communauté internationale.

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    Israeli police investigating suspected arson attack in Palestinian village of Duma
    July 20, 2016 12:16 P.M. (Updated: July 20, 2016 6:38 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=772310

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — Investigations by Israeli police were underway Wednesday morning after a house fire in the village of Duma in the northern occupied West Bank that locals suspected was an arson attack carried out by Israeli settlers.

    The fire broke out around 3 a.m. Wednesday in a bedroom on the second floor of a house owned by Muhammad Fayiq Dawabsha. No injuries were reported.

    Muhammad Dawabsha, alongside a large number of residents in Duma, is a member of the Dawabsha family, three members of which died in an arson attack in July 2015, when Israeli settlers set ablaze their home, burning an infant child alive. Both the baby’s parents later died from their wounds. The couple’s four-year-old son is the only remaining survivor of the attack.

    The Palestinian civil defense service said in a statement on Wednesday morning that investigations confirmed that a “very highly flammable material” had started the fire, and Dawabsha told them he heard a blast.

    The statement said civil defense investigators ruled out “all other possible causes of house fire.”

    After checking the electricity network, no evidence was discovered that the fire was caused by electricity short circuit, the statement added.

  • Palestinian dies of tear gas inhalation, 40 others wounded in clashes at Qalandiya
    July 1, 2016 1:48 P.M. (Updated: July 1, 2016 5:50 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=772079

    RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — A Palestinian man was pronounced dead on Friday after suffering from excessive tear gas inhalation after Israeli forces heavily fired tear gas at crowds, reportedly wounding some 40 others, as Palestinians attempted to cross the Qalandiya checkpoint from Ramallah in the central occupied West Bank into Jerusalem to attend prayers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque.

    The man, identified by medical sources as Muhammad Mustafa Habash, 63, from the Asira al-Shamaliya village in the northern occupied West Bank district of Nablus, was one of at least 40 Palestinians who suffered from severe tear gas inhalation during clashes that broke out at the Qalandiya checkpoint.

    Witnesses told Ma’an that Palestinian Red Crescent paramedics were prevented by Israeli forces from treating the man at the start of the incident. However, they eventually were able to reach him.

    A paramedic gave the man CPR before he was transported to the Ramallah Governmental Hospital for treatment and put in intensive care.

    The Ministry of Health later pronounced the man dead.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Palestinian youth shot in the head by Israeli forces Friday succumbs to wounds
    June 6, 2016 2:56 P.M. (Updated: June 6, 2016 4:38 P.M.)
    http://maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=771776

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — A Palestinian youth died on Monday after succumbing to critical wounds sustained after he was shot in the head by Israeli forces with live fire on Friday when clashes broke out at Joseph’s Tomb in the eastern outskirts of the northern occupied West Bank district of Nablus.

    The Palestinian Ministry of Health confirmed in a statement that 20-year-old Jamal Muhammad Dweikat from Nablus died on Monday at an unnamed Israeli hospital.

    Dweikat had been in a critical condition after he was shot with a live bullet to the head when clashes broke out between Israeli forces and local youth near Joseph’s Tomb on Friday after a group of some 4,000 right-wing Israelis entered Nablus though the eastern side of the city escorted by Israeli forces, reportedly arriving after midnight and leaving at dawn Saturday morning.

    At least 10 Palestinians were reportedly wounded in the clashes. In addition to live fire, Israeli forces reportedly also fired tear gas canisters and rubber-coated steel bullets at the protesters.

    According to local Palestinian media, dozens of Israeli soldiers had cordoned off Joseph’s Tomb in preparation before several buses transporting the Israelis who entered the site and began praying and performing religious rituals.

    Hebrew-language news sites said that a number of Knesset members from right-wing parties and illegal Israeli settlement leaders were among the visitors.

    Israeli media added that the Nablus-area settlement council in cooperation with the municipality council of Bnei Brak near the Israeli city of Tel Aviv organized the visit.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Un jeune Palestinien touché par des tirs israéliens succombe à ses blessures
      Jamal Douikat , 20 ans, est décédé lundi après avoir été touché à la tête, vendredi, par les tirs de l’armée israélienne, affirme une source médicale
      06.06.2016
      http://aa.com.tr/fr/monde/un-jeune-palestinien-touch%C3%A9-par-des-tirs-isra%C3%A9liens-succombe-%C3%A0-ses-blessures/585169

      Un jeune Palestinien, Jamal Douikat , 20 ans, originaire du village de Balata, à l’est de Naplouse (Cisjordanie), a succombé, lundi à midi, à ses blessures. Le jeune homme avait été blessé à la tête, vendredi dernier, par des tirs de soldats israéliens, selon des sources médicales.

      Le ministère palestinien de la Santé, a indiqué, dans un communiqué dont Anadolu a eu copie, que Douikat a succombé à ses blessures dans un hôpital israélien, après avoir été touché par les tirs de l’armée israélienne lors d’affrontements près du "Tombeau de Joseph", vendredi, à l’est de Naplouse.

      De violents affrontements avaient éclaté, vendredi dernier, entre des dizaines de jeunes palestiniens et les forces israéliennes qui œuvraient à sécuriser l’entrée de centaines de colons au "Tombeau de Joseph", à l’est de Naplouse.

      Le "Tombeau de Joseph" est situé à l’est de la ville de Naplouse, sous contrôle palestinien. Il est considéré par les Juifs, comme un lieu sacré depuis l’occupation de la Cisjordanie en 1967.

      Selon les croyances juives, les ossements du prophète, « Joseph, fils de Jacob », ont été rapportés d’Egypte, et enterrés en ce lieu.

      Mais les archéologues palestiniens réfutent la version israélienne, et affirment que l’histoire du tombeau ne remonte pas à plus de 250 ans, soulignant qu’il s’agit plutôt de la tombe d’un cheikh musulman, dénommé « Youssef al-Douikat ».

  • Shooting the Holy Land

    http://aperture.org/blog/shooting-holy-land/?redirect_log_mongo_id=5704c14461336413e9490900&redirect_mongo_id=57042ee5

    The genre of documentary films about documentary photographers has grown considerably and admirably over the last twenty-five years, including The Salt of the Earth (2014), about Sebastião Salgado, by Wim Wenders and Juliano Ribeiro Salgado; What Remains (2008) about Sally Mann, by Steven Cantor; War Photographer (2001), about James Nachtwey, by Christian Frei; and Pictures from a Revolution (1991), about Susan Meiselas, by Meiselas and Alfred Guzzetti, to name a few of the best.

    To this list we can now add Koudelka Shooting Holy Land (2015), by the young Israeli photographer and filmmaker Gilad Baram. Baram was hired to assist Koudelka in Israel and the Palestinian territories by making travel arrangements and providing security, logistical support, and captions as the photographer worked on his epic project to document the building of the wall in Israel, culminating in the book Wall: Israeli & Palestinian Landscape, 2008–2012, published by Aperture in 2013.

    Josef Koudelka, Rachel’s Tomb, 2009 © Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos

    Josef Koudelka, born in 1938, is arguably one of the greatest living photographers. He burst onto the international stage in 1968, when he photographed the Russian invasion of his native Prague. His photographs were smuggled out of Prague to Magnum and published anonymously, but they were so distinctive that they refused to remain anonymous. His later books Gypsies (Aperture, 1975) and Exiles (Aperture, 1988) changed how people view documentary photography. More recently, his work has focused on panoramic landscapes.

    Koudelka is part of a generation of documentary photographers who believe fervently that if you show people what is actually happening in the world, they will understand and be moved to demand change. Social documentary photography has always been defined by this passionate subjective belief in democracy and action. Without it, the practice devolves into self-involved sensationalistic pandering.
    Josef Koudelka, A crusader map mural, Kalya Junction, Near the Dead Sea, 2009 © Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos

    Josef Koudelka, A crusader map mural, Kalya Junction, Near the Dead Sea, 2009 © Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos

    This makes the filmic documenting of documentarians a rather precarious process. If you shift the focus of your inquiry too completely to the photographer, and away from his or her subject, you risk the diminution of the subject and obscure the motive force of the work.

    At first viewing, one might think that Gilad Baram has made a nature film, perhaps about a particular species of bird. Everything this creature does has one purpose: to make better images. Everything else is peripheral. So Baram lets the peripheral in. What is happening around the photographer becomes the filmmaker’s subject, and this periphery is loaded with meaning, because the social landscape impinging on the wall is an especially complex one: the enforced borders between the State of Israel and its Other within, the Palestinians of the occupied territories.
    Josef Koudelka, Shu’fat Refugee camp, overlooking Al ’Isawiya, East Jerusalem, 2009 © Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos

    Josef Koudelka, Shu’fat Refugee camp, overlooking Al ‘Isawiya, East Jerusalem, 2009 © Josef Koudelka/Magnum Photos

    Koudelka continuously and relentlessly points his formidable and precise beak, a Fuji GX617 panoramic camera, into the crevices and fissures of this fraught border, and the official enforcers react with increasingly menacing warnings. As we watch Koudelka repeatedly violate these boundaries as he attempts to get into position to make the best photographs, we recall Magnum cofounder Robert Capa’s famous injunction: “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you aren’t close enough.” When Koudelka gets close, a disembodied voice from a loudspeaker barks, “Photographer, move away from the fence! Go back, photographer. Move back!”

    Koudelka is not photographing war here, but the visible wounds of war in the form of walls built to control the movements of the enemy within. His movements reflect the preemptive violence of these walls that shatters lives on both sides of the divide. “One wall. Two jails.”

    At one point, seventy-five-year-old Koudelka painstakingly slides on his back under and inside a mass of razor wire, trying to get into position to compose a shot, as the barbs tear his clothes. All that matters is the photographs, because they’re the only thing that will last. The characteristically laconic photographer says little about the situation, directly. “I hate the Wall. But, at the same time, it is pretty spectacular, this Wall.” He speaks at one point about the necessity “to keep the healthy anger; to keep it as long as possible.”
    Josef Koudelka in Israel/Palestine. Still from Koudelka: Shooting Holy Land, 2015 © Gilad Baram

    #Josef_Koudelka in Israel/Palestine. Still from Koudelka: #Shooting_Holy_Land, 2015 © Gilad Baram

    But mostly, he only talks about the pictures: “In this place there is a picture waiting for me.” There is a lot of waiting. Waiting for the picture, waiting for the weather to break, waiting to get into position. Watching, looking, moving, waiting. “Sometimes it happens. Sometimes not.”

    Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem; Qalandiya Checkpoint in Ramallah; “Detroit” (Al Baladiya) Urban Warfare Training Facility near Tze’elim; Shab Al Dar in East Jerusalem; the Judean Desert; the memorial site for the Israeli Army’s 679th Armored Brigade in the Golan Heights; Mount Gerizim in Nablus. Four frames on a roll of 120mm film. One day = 20 rolls. Focus to infinity.

    David Levi Strauss is a writer and critic based in New York and the author, most recently, of Words Not Spent Today Buy Smaller Images Tomorrow: Essays on the Present and Future of Photography (2014).

    Koudelka: Shooting Holy Land will be screened at Finale Plzen, April 15–21, 2016 and DOK.fest Munich, May 5–15, 2016.

    #Israël #Palestine #photographie #paysage

  • Appeal against Administrative Detention of Circus Performer and Trainer Mohammad Abu Sakha Rejected | Addameer
    http://www.addameer.org/news/appeal-against-administrative-detention-circus-performer-and-trainer-moham
    http://www.addameer.org/sites/default/files/styles/inner-page/public/upload/news/convers/abusakha_0.jpg?itok=sj99UOk7

    31 March 2016

    Appeal against the administrative detention of Palestinian circus trainer and performer Mohammad Abu Sakha has been rejected. The appeal was based on the fact that Abu Sakha is being held without charge and trial, which amounts to arbitrary detention. Mohammad Abu Sakha was arrested on 14/12/2015 at around 4:00 pm while he was crossing Zaatara military checkpoint near Nablus to go to his work in Birzeit village, near Ramallah. Abu Sakha works as a trainer and performer at the Palestinian Circus School since 2007. He was a school student at the time. He became a performer and a trainer in the circus in 2011. He participated in many performances in Europe and the United States. He also participates in many tours in Palestine. He was supposed to participate in trainings outside Palestine in March and June 2016.

    #Mohammad_Abu_Sakha

  • Army Shuts Down “Palestine Today TV” In Ramallah, Kidnaps Three Journalists - International Middle East Media Center
    Friday March 11, 2016 08:08
    http://www.imemc.org/article/75235

    Dozens of Israeli soldiers invaded, on Friday at dawn, the main headquarters of Palestine Today TV, in the al-Biereh city, in the Ramallah and al-Biereh District in the occupied West Bank, and shut it down. The army also kidnapped its director, a cameraman and a Technician.

    • Israeli forces order closure of Palestinian news outlet in Ramallah
      March 11, 2016 9:45 A.M.
      http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770647

      RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — Israeli forces during predawn raids on Friday ordered the closure of Falastin al-Yawm (Palestine Today) and TransMedia Production Company in the occupied West Bank hub of Ramallah.

      Locals told Ma’an that forces stormed the media outlets’ headquarters in al-Bireh and detained two journalists, confiscated property, and delivered military orders for the offices to be shut down.

      The journalists were identified as Muhammad Amro from Hebron and Shbeib Shbeib from Burqa near Nablus. Both were taken to the Israeli miltiary base in the nearby illegal settlement of Beit El.

      Israeli forces also detained head of the Falastin al-Yawm Faruq Elayyat from his home in Birzeit, a town near Ramallah.

      An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an the closure order was issued against the media outlets owner for “incitement,” adding that the station was “associated with Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement, an illegal terror organization.”

    • L’armée israélienne ferme les bureaux d’une TV palestinienne
      Par Sarah BENHAIDA | AFP | 11 mars 2016
      https://fr.news.yahoo.com/larm%C3%A9e-isra%C3%A9lienne-ferme-bureaux-dune-tv-palestinienne-1354

      L’armée israélienne a mené une descente vendredi avant l’aube dans les locaux d’une télévision à Ramallah, fermé ses bureaux et arrêté son directeur, après l’annonce d’un nouveau tour de vis face à la persistance des violences.

      Israël accuse Falestine al-Yom (la Palestine aujourd’hui) d’être le porte-voix du mouvement radical islamiste Jihad islamique et d’inciter à la haine dans ses programmes.

      Le raid mené à Ramallah, centre de décision politique et économique palestinien en Cisjordanie occupée, est la première manifestation d’un nouveau tour de vis annoncé cette semaine par le gouvernement de Benjamin Netanyahu contre les médias palestiniens qui contribueraient, selon lui, à exciter les passions.

  • Hamas drags feet on choosing between Iran, Saudi Arabia - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/03/hamas-silence-gulf-decision-hezbollah-terrorist.html

    “Hamas is in a difficult situation and it cannot express a position," Abdel Sattar Qassem, a political science professor at An-Najah University in Nablus, told Al-Monitor. "It is puzzled and cannot take a stance regarding the Arab decisions against Hezbollah, although around 100 Hezbollah members have died while trying to smuggle weapons to Hamas in the past 10 years, and this is why it should support Hezbollah.

    "Of course, the party did not ask Hamas to take a position that would harm it regionally, but it will keep observing Hamas’ positions. Should it side with Saudi Arabia, Iran could take a firm stance to completely stop providing support for the movement.”

    On March 6, some media outlets reported that Hamas quietly sent a message of support to Hezbollah, refusing to consider it a terrorist organization. However, a senior Hamas leader based in Qatar told Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity that the reports were not true, saying, “Hamas expresses its positions through official statements and spokespersons, and those positions are published on the movement’s official website and distributed to the media by conventional means.”

    Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/03/hamas-silence-gulf-decision-hezbollah-terrorist.html#ixzz42YImKWlj

  • 2 Palestinian teens shot dead after allegedly attacking settler
    March 2, 2016 9:47 A.M. (Updated: March 2, 2016 9:47 A.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770516

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Israeli forces shot dead two Palestinian teenagers on Wednesday morning after they allegedly attacked an Israeli settler in the illegal settlement of Eli south of Nablus.

    The Palestinian Ministry of Health identified the Palestinians as Labib Khaldoon Anwar Azzam and Muhammad Hisham Ali Zaghlawan , both 17 years old, from the nearby village of Qaryut.

    An Israeli army spokesperson said they “infiltrated” the settlement early on Wednesday and attacked the Israeli settler as he was leaving his home.

    She said Israeli forces arrived on the scene and responded to the “significant threat” by opening fire on the two teenagers, killing both of them.

    The settler was evacuated to Shaare Zedek Hospital in Jerusalem with light injuries.

    Israeli media reported that he had left his home in military uniform, en route to an Israeli army reserve unit he serves in.

    The Israeli army spokesperson said the Palestinians were armed with “knives and clubs,” and that a gun was also found “in the vicinity.” She said “initial reports” suggested it belonged to them.

    Local sources in Qaryut village told Ma’an that the two teenagers had “disappeared after they performed evening prayers, and their family was searching for them.” Both are secondary school students.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Cisjordanie : deux Palestiniens blessent un colon, sont abattus
      AFP / 02 mars 2016 20h48
      http://www.romandie.com/news/Cisjordanie-deux-Palestiniens-blessent-un-colon-sont-abattus/681841.rom

      Naplouse (Territoires palestiniens) - Deux jeunes Palestiniens se sont infiltrés mercredi matin dans une colonie de Cisjordanie occupée et ont blessé un colon avant d’être tués par des soldats, ont indiqué l’armée israélienne et la police palestinienne.

      Deux assaillants se sont infiltrés dans la communauté d’Eli, au sud de Naplouse, et ont attaqué un homme qui se trouvait près de sa maison. Les soldats sont arrivés (...) et ont tiré sur les attaquants, les tuant, a dit l’armée israélienne dans un communiqué.

      Roï Harel, l’habitant de la colonie qui a été attaqué par les deux Palestiniens alors qu’il sortait de sa maison, a été légèrement blessé à coups de couteau et évacué vers l’hôpital de Shaare Tzedek, à Jérusalem, a affirmé une porte-parole de l’hôpital.

      Il a déclaré au site d’informations en ligne israélien Ynet qu’il avait réussi à repousser ses agresseurs et à s’enfermer à clé dans sa maison où se trouvaient son épouse et leurs cinq enfants.

      Les deux Palestiniens tués ont été identifiés par la police palestinienne comme Labib Azem et Mohammed Zaghlaouane , âgés de 18 ans et originaires du village de Qariout, tout proche de la colonie d’Eli.

      Des habitants de Qariout ont rapporté qu’ils n’étaient pas rentrés chez eux depuis hier soir.

      Dans la journée, deux soldats israéliens gardant la colonie Har Bracha, près de Naplouse en Cisjordanie, ont été poignardés par deux assaillants qui ont pris la fuite, a indiqué l’armée.

      Un de soldats a été blessé modérément et l’autre légèrement, selon les secours israéliens.

      D’après des sources palestiniennes, les soldats israéliens recherchaient les deux assaillants dans le village palestinien tout proche de Burin.

      Les deux attaques ont eu lieu en Cisjordanie, un territoire palestinien occupé par Israël depuis 1967. Les colonies construites par Israël en Cisjordanie sont illégales au regard du droit international.

      Les territoires palestiniens, Jérusalem et Israël sont en proie depuis début octobre à des violences qui ont coûté la vie à 180 Palestiniens, 28 Israéliens, un Américain, un Erythréen et un Soudanais, selon un décompte de l’AFP.

      La plupart des Palestiniens tués sont des auteurs ou auteurs présumés d’attentats.

  • Weekly Report On Israeli Human Rights Violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (18- 24 February 2016) | Palestinian Center for Human Rights
    http://pchrgaza.org/en/?p=7885

    (...) Killings committed by Israeli forces in the West Bank were as follows:

    On 19 February 2016, in employment of lethal force, Israeli forces killed Mohammed Abu Khalaf (20), from Kufor Aqeb village, north of occupied Jerusalem. The aforementioned person was killed at al-Amoud Gate, the northern entrance to the Old City, when Israeli Border Guard officers fired over 50 bullets at him. Even according to the Israeli story, Israeli forces could have used less force and arrested him. The Israeli police stated that a Palestinian young man hurried towards a police officer and stabbed him in the head, but to the wound was minor. While the young man was fighting with another police officer, Israeli soldiers shot him dead.

    On the same day, Israeli forces killed Khaled Taqatqah (21) while participating in a protest in solidarity with journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq, who is on a hunger strike. The protest was organized at the western entrance to Beit Fajjar village, south of Bethlehem. Taqatqah was hit with 2 live bullets to the chest, after which Israeli forces beat him up, dragged and handcuffed him. In addition, they prevented the Palestinian medical crews from offering him first aid. The aforementioned person was left like that for half an hour until a Magen David Adom’s (MDA) ambulance arrived and took him to Hadassa-Ein Karem Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 17:30.

    Also on the same day, Israeli forces killed Abed Hamed (19), from Silwad village, northeast of Ramallah. They opened fire at him after he ran over a number of Israeli soldiers, who were opening fire at Palestinian protestors at the western entrance to the village. An eyewitness said to PCHR’s fieldworker that Israeli MDA crew arrived at the scene and offered medical assistance to the soldiers, but left the Palestinian wounded person bleeding for about an hour, after which he passed away.

    On 21 February 2016, in employment of lethal force, Israeli forces stationed in their military site at the intersection of Beita village, south of Nablus, killed Qusai Abu al-Rub (16), from Qabatya village, southeast of Jenin. They claimed that he was holding a knife and heading towards Israeli soldiers that shot him dead even before he approached them. PCHR’s investigations highlights that Israeli forces could have used less force and arrested him, especially as the military site is fortified with cement cubes.

    In the Gaza Strip, Israeli forces wounded 3 Palestinian civilians, including a child, during their participation in protests organized adjacent to the border fence between the Gaza Strip and Israel, northwest of Beit Hanoun, north of the Gaza Strip.

    In the context of targeting border areas along the Gaza Strip, on 20 February 2016, Israeli forces stationed at the said fence, east of al-Maghazi refugee camp, in the central Gaza Strip, opened fire at Palestinian farmers on their lands. Similar attack recurred on 23 February 2016, but no casualties were reported among farmers.(...)

  • Israeli soldiers kill 15-year-old Palestinian near Beita checkpoint
    Feb. 21, 2016 12:26 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 21, 2016 8:13 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770383

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Israeli forces on Sunday killed a 15-year-old Palestinian after he allegedly attempted to stab an Israeli soldier near Nablus in the occupied West Bank.

    An Israeli army spokeswoman told Ma’an that a Palestinian attempted to stab a soldier near the Beita checkpoint in the northern West Bank, and that Israeli forces then fired at the man.

    The Palestinian was declared dead on the scene, she added, saying that no Israelis were wounded.

    An eyewitness told Ma’an that Israeli soldiers stationed at the Beita checkpoint fired more than 10 rounds at a young Palestinian who was carrying a knife and walking towards them.

    The teenager was identified to Ma’an as Qusay Diab Abu al-Rub , 15, from the village of Qabatiya near Jenin.


    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Palestinian shot dead, 3 Israeli soldiers injured in shooting attack
    Jan. 31, 2016
    https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770056

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — A Palestinian was shot dead after shooting and injuring three Israeli soldiers at an Israeli military checkpoint around the illegal Israeli settlement of Beit El in the central occupied West Bank district of Ramallah, witnesses told Ma’an.

    Witnesses said a Palestinian vehicle approached the Israeli checkpoint and stopped for inspection. When an Israeli soldier approached the driver’s window, the driver opened fire, immediately shooting the soldier.

    The driver then shot another two Israeli soldiers, one of which witnesses believed was hit in his flak jacket.

    Israeli forces then opened fire, shooting the Palestinian driver dead.

    Of the three injured, two are in severe condition, while one was mildly injured, a spokesperson with Israel’s emergency medical service, Magen David Adom, said.

    The Palestinian driver was latter identified as Amjad Jaser Sukkar , 34 and a Palestinian Authority staff sergeant from Nablus. Hours after the shooting, his body was returned to PA forces and is expected to be buried later that day.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Palestinian shot dead near Nablus after alleged attempted attack
    Jan. 17, 2016 2:25 P.M. (Updated: Jan. 17, 2016 3:13 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769848

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — Israeli forces shot and killed a Palestinian man on Sunday following an alleged attempted stabbing attack in the northern occupied West Bank district of Nablus, an Israeli army spokesperson said.

    The spokesperson said the “assailant” was shot and killed after attempting to attack and stab Israeli soldiers “securing the area,” adding that no Israelis were injured during the incident.

    The Palestinian man was identified as Wissam Marwan Qasrawa , 21, from the village of Masliya south of Nablus.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Palestinian killed in day’s 2nd alleged attack on Israeli forces
    Jan. 14, 2016 2:10 P.M. (Updated: Jan. 14, 2016 2:33 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769805

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — A Palestinian was shot and killed on Thursday after a stabbing attack at an Israeli military checkpoint north of the occupied West Bank city of Nablus, Israel’s army and media said.

    An Israeli army spokesperson said that an assailant attacked a military vehicle before stabbing and injuring an officer when the forces exited the vehicle.

    Israeli forces then opened fire on the assailant in response, killing him on site, according to Israeli media, which reported that a soldier was “very lightly injured."

    The attack took place at a flying checkpoint set up by Israeli forces nearby the Palestinian village of Asira ash-Shamaliya, hometown of the alleged attacker who was identified by locals as Haitham Mahmoud Abd al-Jalil , 31.

    Hours before, Israeli forces shot and killed a Palestinian near the Beit Einun junction northeast of Hebron after an alleged stab attempt.

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that a Palestinian attempted to stab Israeli soldiers stationed near the junction, who responded by opening fire on the alleged assailant.

    Witnesses told Ma’an that Israeli military forces prevented Palestinian Red Crescent medics from accessing the shot Palestinian for medical treatment. The man was identified as Muayyad Awni Jabbarin, 20, by his father, who arrived to the scene following his death.

    Thursday’s deaths bring the total number of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces over the last week to 12.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • 2 Palestinians killed at checkpoint after alleged stab attempt
    Jan. 9, 2016 10:38 A.M. (Updated: Jan. 9, 2016 6:27 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769720

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Israeli forces on Saturday shot and killed two Palestinian men at the al-Hamra military checkpoint in the northern Jordan Valley, witnesses said.

    Witnesses told Ma’an that the two men were stopped at the checkpoint — also known as Beqaot — and asked by military forces to exit their vehicle, at which point the forces shot them dead.

    The witnesses said they did not see the men wielding knives, and told Ma’an the two were “killed in cold blood.” The men sold wholesale goods and were reportedly on their way to distribute merchandise to grocery shops, witnesses added.

    An Israeli army spokeswoman told Ma’an that two assailants attempted to stab Israeli soldiers stationed at the security crossing who opened fire in response to the attack.

    The two Palestinians received medical treatment on site but were pronounced dead, the spokeswoman said.

    No Israelis were injured in the incident.

    The men were identified as as 26-year-old Ali Abu Maryam from the village of al-Jadida and 38-year-old Said Abu al-Wafa from the village of al-Zawiya, both southwest of Jenin in the northern West Bank.

    The al-Hamra military checkpoint is located in the eastern outskirts of the Nablus district, south of the illegal Israeli settlements of Beqaot and Roi.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Who receives more foreign funds: The Left or the Occupation? | +972 Magazine

    http://972mag.com/who-receives-more-foreign-funds-the-left-or-the-occupation/115579/?can_id=c04bd6c1866a7591ea05420e1dd77aec&source=email-what-were-reading-is-t

    The road between the Nablus-area villages of Bazaariya and Deir Sharaf was once narrow and in a state of disrepair. Not anymore. Also the road that historically connected Ramallah and Nablus was pretty dilapidated, until several sections of it were widened and repaved. Today they are wide, modern roads like those leading to and within Israeli settlements. These roads are not just anecdotes — dozens of roads have been upgraded, repaved and widened throughout the West Bank.

    #palestine #colonisation #occupation

  • Palestinian killed after suspected car attack near Huwwara
    Dec. 31, 2015 1:02 P.M. (Updated: Dec. 31, 2015 2:38 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769593

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — A Palestinian was shot dead after a suspected vehicular attack near the Huwwara military checkpoint in the northern occupied West Bank district of Nablus, Israel’s army said.

    A spokesperson for the Israeli army told Ma’an that an assailant ran his car into Israeli forces who were stationed on highway 60 near the Huwwara checkpoint for security purposes.

    The forces opened fire on the man, killing him on scene, the spokesperson said.

    The Palestinian was identified as Hassan Ali Hassan Bozor , 22 from the town of Arraba east of Jenin

    One soldier was moderately wounded in the suspected attack and was taken to Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva, Israeli media reported.

    Highway 60 is a major thoroughfare for Palestinians as well as Israelis living in illegal settlements, and the Huwwara area that lies on the route has been site to frequent confrontation between local Palestinians and Israeli military and settlers in recent months.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • 2 Palestinians killed after stabbing Israeli soldier in Huwwara
    Dec. 27, 2015 2:28 P.M. (Updated: Dec. 27, 2015 3:35 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769533

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — Two Palestinians were shot dead after stabbing an Israeli soldier in the village of Huwwara south of Nablus in the occupied West Bank, locals and Israel’s army said.

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that two Palestinians stabbed and wounded a soldier before Israeli forces on site opened fire, resulting in the death of both attackers.

    The spokesperson said that initial reports suggested that an additional soldier was injured as a result of fire directed towards the attackers.

    One Israeli soldier received stab wounds to the face, while the other was injured by a gunshot wound to the leg, according to Israeli media. Both soldiers were evacuated to a hospital for medical treatment.

    Locals identified the Palestinians as Muhammad Rafiq Hussien Sabana ,17, and Noor al-Deen Muhammad Abdul-Qadir Sabana , 23.

    The Huwwara area — particularly the military checkpoint next to the village — has been site to frequent confrontation between local Palestinians and Israeli military and settlers in recent months.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Palestinian killed after vehicular attack at military checkpoint
    Dec. 26, 2015 4:45 P.M. (Updated: Dec. 26, 2015 8:33 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769522

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — Israeli soldiers opened fire on and killed a Palestinian at a military checkpoint near Nablus after he rammed his vehicle into forces on site, locals and Israel’s army said

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that a Palestinian approached the Huwwara military checkpoint and “rammed his car into security forces manning the position,” injuring one soldier.

    Locals in the area at the time said that the driver — identified as Maher al-Jabi , 56 — had sped past several vehicles at the checkpoint before forces opened fire.

    Al-Jabi was critically injured and evacuated by Palestinian medics to the Rafidiya hospital in Nablus where he died shortly after from gunshot wounds to the jaw and neck.

    The soldier injured in the car-ramming was 20 years of age and sustained light wounds before being taken to Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva, according to Israeli media.

    Israeli military reinforcements were deployed at the checkpoint and closed the road in both directions following the car-ramming.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • The Face of Collateral Damage: Palestinian Student Killed by Israeli Forces - Gideon Levy and Alex Levac Dec 25, 2015 7:00 PM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.693675

    After Israel Defense Forces soldiers killed Samah Abdallah , the Israeli media did not even bother to mention that the 18-year-old was shot in the head while she was riding, along with other family members, in her father’s car.

    Samah Abdallah was a beautician and cosmetology student from a little-known Palestinian village, who was shot to death either on purpose or by accident – but most assuredly without any legitimate reason. Five or six bullets were fired at the car, fired by a soldier from a fortified watchtower nearby; one hit her directly in the head. Samah sustained mortal injuries, and died a few weeks later in an Israeli hospital.

    It all began on November 23, with a concerned and anxious father: Abed Abdallah, 42, worked in construction in Israel until recently. He did not want his daughter to use public transportation to get home from the Nablus school where she was studying with her younger sister Hanin, 17. Samah had been thinking of enrolling in university next year, in order to get a teaching degree.

    It has been an extremely tense few months on the roads of the West Bank, for Palestinian residents too, and Abed decided to pick up his two daughters that day, lest they run into trouble on the way home. He does this every so often, primarily when tensions run high.

    The family lives in one of the tiniest of villages – a hilly, remote place called Amoriya, with breathtaking scenery, southeast of Salfit and the settlement of Ariel.

    That morning, Samah and Hanin set out at 7:30 for school in a shared taxi. At noon, Abed left Amoriya together with his wife, Hala, and their son Ahmed, 15, to pick them up. The drive went without mishap, and took less than half an hour. The daughters got into the back seat, with Samah in the middle; their parents were in front.

    After passing the Hawara checkpoint, which was not manned at the time by IDF soldiers, they approached a bus stop. Abed noticed a teenage boy and a few soldiers there; he says now that he was certain the boy was a Jew. Worried that stones would be thrown at the car, Abed continued to drive and had gone a few meters when he heard gunfire.

    No one had ordered him to stop. In the rearview mirror, Abed saw the boy fall to the ground, bleeding profusely. He says he did not see a knife or any other weapon in the boy’s hands. Subsequently, it developed that the youth, Alaa al-Hashash, 16, from the nearby Balata refugee camp, had been shot dead by one of the soldiers at the bus stop. The death of Hashash was reported by the Israeli media in a single sentence, “Another attempted terrorist attack was thwarted today near the Hawara checkpoint.” That same day, there were two other such attempts at other sites, so perhaps the killing of the teenager was of no special interest.

    Soon after Abed saw the youth collapse, a hail of bullets hit his car. Abed shouted to his wife and children to get down, but the rear seat was crowded and Samah was unable to crouch low enough. The bullets came from the rear, fired by soldiers standing near the bus stop, but also from the front – from an army watchtower. The lethal bullet was fired by a soldier in the tower, penetrating the windshield and hitting Samah in the middle of her forehead before exiting through the back of her neck. Her face was covered in blood.

    “Father – there’s blood!” yelled Ahmed. Abed thought it was his son who had been hit. Getting out of the car, he discovered that his daughter had been shot. The terrified family pulled Samah out and lay her on the road. Abed says now that he was certain she was already dead. A Palestinian ambulance quickly arrived, and evacuated her to Rafidia Hospital in Nablus.

    The Abdallah family’s car. Alex Levac

    “Why did you do that?” Ahmed says he screamed at the soldiers who began to approach. “The soldier told me: You had a knife. I told him: There’s no knife. He said: There is. I said: There isn’t. I said: Where’s the officer? He said: There is no officer.”

    Abed says that a few minutes later, the same soldier admitted about the shots fired at Samah that, “It was a mistake.”

    Samah was rushed to Rafidia. When her parents arrived, they were informed that she was in critical condition. A few hours later, it was decided to transfer her to an Israeli hospital. After initial admission to to Schneider Children’s Medical Center, she was transferred to the neurosurgery department at nearby Beilinson Hospital.

    In her report, Dr. Gili Kadmon, a specialist in pediatric intensive care, wrote: “Patient was shot yesterday in the Nablus area, at a range of 10-20 meters. Entry hole in the frontal lobe and exit hole in the occipitoparietal lobe. Extensive cranial injury. Upon admission, patient was unconscious and artificially ventilated; opens her eyes at moments of pain and coughs in response to suction …”

    Samah’s mother accompanied her to the hospital in Israel and didn’t leave her for a moment. Abed joined them the following day, once he received an entry permit. Samah was hospitalized for over three weeks, during which she underwent two operations. Last Wednesday, she passed away, her parents at her bedside. She never reopened her eyes.

    Asked for comment by Haaretz, the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit released the following statement: “During the incident, in which a terrorist was running while brandishing a knife toward civilians standing at a bus stop, IDF forces opened fire to neutralize the threat and protect the civilians. From the shooting, injuries were apparently incurred by passengers in the car behind the terrorist. The IDF regrets any injury to uninvolved bystanders and acts to avoid this as much as possible. The incident has been investigated and the results are being examined by the military prosecutor’s office.”

    Note the evasive wording: “From the shooting, injuries were apparently incurred by passengers in the car behind the terrorist.” As if the dying Samah had not been transferred to Israel for medical care with the army’s approval, as if there was any doubt she was killed by IDF soldiers.

    Abed says that the soldiers didn’t only kill Samah: “They killed our entire family. The soldiers didn’t have to shoot. Why did they shoot? They also could have shot Alaa al-Hashash in his legs, without killing him. Salah happened to be there, without having done anything. Nothing justifies this shooting. She died for no reason.”

    ANo government or army official thought to telephone the family following Samah’s death. Now Abed is preparing to submit a claim for compensation from Israel. For that purpose, he approached attorney Ghaslan Mahajna from Umm al-Fahm.

    Posted on the outskirts of her village are photos of Samah, who was buried in the little cemetery across from the family’s home. Mourners are served the customary dates and bitter coffee.

    Parked outside is the rundown Opal Ascona. Pictures of Abed’s daughter are taped to the windows, and a single memorial poster has been placed in the middle of the backseat, the exact place where Samah Abdallah was sitting before being shot to death.

    Gideon Levy
    Haaretz Correspondent

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • After Israel Defense Forces soldiers killed Samah Abdallah , the Israeli media did not even bother to mention that the 18-year-old was shot in the head while she was riding, along with other family members, in her father’s car.

      “Why did you do that?” Ahmed says he screamed at the soldiers who began to approach. “The soldier told me: You had a knife. I told him: There’s no knife. He said: There is. I said: There isn’t. I said: Where’s the officer? He said: There is no officer.”

      Abed says that a few minutes later, the same soldier admitted about the shots fired at Samah that, “It was a mistake.”

  • Palestinian shot dead in Nablus after alleged attempted attack
    Dec. 17, 2015 11:16 A.M. (Updated: Dec. 17, 2015 3:43 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769379

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Israeli forces shot and killed a Palestinian teen near the Huwwara military checkpoint in the northern occupied West Bank district of Nablus on Thursday, locals and Israel’s army said.

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that “during routine security activity” at the checkpoint Israeli forces approached a suspect for questioning, when the suspect “charged the forces while armed with a knife.”

    The forces “responded to the immediate threat” and shot the teen, killing him, the spokesperson said.

    Palestinian ambulance driver Kamal Badran identified the Palestinian as 15-year-old Abdullah Hussein Nasasra , from the Nablus-area village of Beit Furik.

    Badran told Ma’an that Israeli soldiers gathered around the teen preventing medical teams from treating him after he fell.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Palestinian lives matter!
      Vijay Prashad | Date of publication: 27 December, 2015
      http://www.alaraby.co.uk/english/comment/2015/12/28/palestinian-lives-matter

      On December 17, Naseer was driving from Nablus to Ramallah. Light rain fell as he approached the Israeli military’s checkpoint at Huwwara. In front of him was another car, moving cautiously. About fifty meters before that car was an Israeli military vehicle. Caution is the order of the day in the vicinity of the Israeli military. No sense in provoking their ire. Naseer kept some distance between the cars. They were moving slowly.

      Beside the road, on the grass off the sidewalk, a young boy walked in the same direction of the cars. Naseer observed that the boy seemed to be on the grass to avoid the puddles on the sidewalk.

      The Israeli military vehicle braked. An order must have come from the soldiers. The boy put his hands up. Naseer did not hear them but saw him obey. The car in front of his began to go around the military vehicle. Naseer followed. He saw the boy with his hands up. The next minute, in his rear view mirror, Naseer saw the boy on the ground. All this happened in a split second. One minute the boy was standing with his hands up, and the next minute he was dead on the ground.

      Naseer stopped his car, as did the driver of the car in front of him. The two men exchanged information. They had both witnessed an execution. There was no opportunity to approach the Israeli soldiers, who had already cordoned off the area.

      Not long after, Israeli state media announced that their military had killed Abdullah Hussein Nasasra (age 15) from Beit Furik (near Nablus). The Israeli military said that Nasasra had “charged the forces while armed with a knife.”

      Naseer said that he saw no knife. Nor did he see Nasasra charge the military men. They had guns trained on him. Why would he try to attack them with a knife?

      Over the course of the past few weeks, Israeli military and security forces have used deadly force against a number of children whom they accuse of knife attacks. Israeli political leaders have given carte blanche to their military to kill anyone they see as a threat. Interior Security Minister Gilad Arden said, “Every terrorist should know that he will not survive the attack he is about to commit.” Yair Lapid, former Minister of Finance in the Israeli government, concurred, “You have to shoot to kill anyone who pulls out a knife or a screwdriver.” Since the Israeli military is the Judge, Executioner and Investigator of these incidents, there is no accountability for them.

      When Kamal Badran Qabalan drove his ambulance to the scene, the Israelis blocked him from access to the body. There will be no independent investigation of this death. The miasma of Israeli propaganda – terrorist, knife – has already covered over the facts. Naseer says he is ready to testify against the Israeli military. But how does he do it? There will be no trial. The case will close quietly. Naseer is a distinguished man. His eyes are kind and honest. His voice is defiant as he tells me the story – “I saw them kill a boy,” he says. But what can Naseer do? His body language bespeaks the Occupation. There is futility here beside the defiance.

      https://twitter.com/vijayprashad/status/682935295730409474

  • 18-year-old dies weeks after being hit by Israeli crossfire in Nablus
    Dec. 16, 2015 2:16 P.M. (Updated: Dec. 16, 2015 2:16 P.M.)
    https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769365

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — A 18-year-old Palestinian died on Wednesday after succumbing to wounds sustained from Israeli forces at a military checkpoint in Nablus in October, her family told Ma’an.

    Samah Abd al-Mumen was shot at the Huwwara checkpoint on Oct. 23 when Israeli forces opened fire on and killed Alaa Khalil Sabah Hashah, 16, after he attempted to stab a soldier.

    Her father told Ma’an that she died in Benlson Medical Center in Israel after being transferred from Rafidiya hospital in Nablus due to her critical injuries.

    Palestinian security sources told Ma’an at the time of her injury that Samah was shot in the head while sitting inside her car near where the incident occurred at Huwwara.

    The teen was apparently hit in the crossfire after the Israeli army said that 16-year-old Hashah “drew a knife and attempted to attack a soldier."

    Hashah was shot over ten times after the attempted stabbing, according to witnesses.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Does Destroying the Homes of Palestinian Attackers Deter Others?
    That’s what Israeli leaders say. What about the facts?
    Amira Hass Dec 09, 2015 3:24 PM
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.690917

    A Palestinian woman inspects a house that was razed by the Israeli army, in the Qalandiya refugee camp on Nov. 16. It was home to a Palestinian who allegedly shot and killed an Israeli. AP

    Young Palestinians attending the funerals of those who have been killed can be heard chanting the following: “Oh mother of the martyr, how lucky you are. If only my mother were in your place.” They are lying. They know full well that the mother of the shahid, the martyr, is grief-stricken and that their own mothers are not prepared to trade places with her. All you need to do is witness the sobbing of relatives and friends over other young people who have been killed to understand the extent to which the chant is detached from reality.

    It’s hard to gauge the true extent of the chant’s effect on all the young people who in recent weeks have decided to seek death by attacking Israelis. What is clear, however, is that they are in no way influenced by official Israeli statements, the most recent of which came from State Prosecutor Shai Nitzan, to the effect that Israel’s demolition of the homes of terrorists is a means of deterrence. In other words, the learned claim that the way to stop additional attacks is by demolishing more Palestinian homes is a lie.

    On October 6, security forces in Jerusalem destroyed two homes and sealed another house of Palestinians who murdered Israelis in the city and were killed in the incidents. Those who suffer the consequences are the Palestinians’ families. The demolitions, with the stamp of approval of the Israeli High Court of Justice, were carried out hastily in the wake of two fatal attacks the week before, in which four Israelis were murdered and another was wounded in a stabbing.

    And what happened the week after the High Court’s act of deterrence? The start of a trend in which about three stabbings or attempted stabbings took place every day. On October 7, there were three knife attacks in three cities inside Israel. On October 8, there were four stabbings, followed the next day by a stabbing in Jerusalem and another in the West Bank settlement of Kiryat Arba. (And in Dimona, a Jew stabbed a Palestinian, while in Afula police riled by public hysteria shot a young female resident of Nazareth who hadn’t hurt anyone.)

    On October 10, there were two knifings in Jerusalem. The following day there was a car ramming and stabbing attack in Gan Shmuel (and an Israeli report, denied by the Palestinians, of an attempted attack involving gas canisters in Ma’aleh Adumim). On October 12, there was one stabbing, two foiled stabbings and an attempt to steal a weapon in Jerusalem, followed the next day by two stabbing attacks in Ra’anana in which several people were wounded and two attacks in Jerusalem in which four Israelis were murdered. The two fatal attacks were committed by three residents of the Jerusalem neighborhood of Jabal Mukkaber, the Jerusalem neighborhood in which the two homes were demolished on October 6 as a deterrent step.

    The daily pace of the attacks and attempted attacks continued until October 19. In the meantime, the hub of the attacks in this lone-wolf uprising has shifted from Jerusalem to Hebron. And because the deterrent tactic has so proven itself, on October 20, on instructions from Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, our forces destroyed the Hebron home of an individual who murdered an Israeli woman last year. And what happened just hours after the demolition? There were three stabbing attacks and one attack involving a truck (although the Palestinian driver claimed it was an accident).

    Between November 14 and December 3, the justices and army commanders sent in forces to demolish another seven Palestinian homes: five in Nablus, one in Qalandiyah and one in the Shoafat refugee camp. Have you heard about any halt in the stabbing attempts? It’s impossible to know whether the most recent Israeli fatalities are due directly to the High Court’s approval of the home demolitions. All we do know for sure is that the justices’ ruling didn’t prevent the deaths of those Israelis.

    In an effort to cover up the failure of the deterrence tactic, Israel has been harping on “Palestinian incitement.” That’s what’s responsible. In that regard, Israeli spokespeople, first and foremost Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, are like the corporate oil lobby denying the connection between global warming and human activity. They deny any connection between the uprising by desperate and angry individuals and the vicious rule that we have imposed on them. But the Israeli leaders do excel at demolishing more and more homes as a deterrent measure, which again and again fails to prove itself.

    #Amira_Hass #Palestine #Colonisation #destruction

  • The Illusion of Palestinian Sovereignty - Opinion - Israel News - Amira Hass Dec 01, 2015
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.689502

    PA President Mahmoud Abbas (5th from left in front) with ministers at the unity government’s swearing-in ceremony, Ramallah, West Bank, June 2, 2014.Reuters

    Israeli military incursions into the West Bank’s Area A and even Area B – the districts where only Palestinians live and the Palestinian Authority operates – have one positive aspect. Yes, even when they include the destruction of radio stations or raids on hospitals. Despite all the shock and the denunciations, these raids are a lesson in reality. For a few hours, they destroy the illusion of Palestinian sovereignty. It’s a virtual sovereignty, fragmented and curtailed. Therefore, it’s an illusion – but an illusion that works.

    Broadcasters in Hebron think they can tell their listeners where soldiers are located, as if they lived in an independent state. Palestinian Facebook users inhabit a virtual reality twice over: They see the real world in cyberspace and are convinced that it protects them from raids and arrests. Doctors treat people with bullet wounds and forget that the sovereign is the settlement defense forces, which don’t recognize the immunity of medical institutions.

    Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas receives ambassadors with great pomp, but is dependent on exit permits from the army. And professors from abroad are shocked when Israeli security services raid the campus of Al-Quds University in Abu Dis; their political geography classes evidently ended in 1993. That is when Zionism achieved one of its greatest military and diplomatic successes.

    Short of expelling every Palestinian or “causing them to flee,” this is the outcome most closely resembling transfer that was possible to achieve. The international political circumstances didn’t allow the territory to be emptied (again) of its Palestinian inhabitants. So reservations were set up (Areas A and B). They were supposed to be temporary, but meanwhile they’ve become permanent.

    It’s not important for now whether this is exactly what Zionist leaders intended when they concocted the Oslo Accords’ interim agreements. The result is the same either way: Palestinian pseudo-sovereignty in territorial capsules, which is one of the main reasons why the current uprising hasn’t taken off.

    The checkpoints that surround these enclaves block any mass demonstration that might, for instance, seek to march toward another water-sucking, land-swallowing settlement or a shepherds’ village that’s about to be demolished. But what’s most effective of all, from the standpoint of Israeli interests, is that people have gotten used to the illusion. Within these population enclosures, life is lived in a way that closely resembles normalcy.

    In Tel Rumeida, the silence is blood-curdling. But beyond the concrete that isolates the neighborhood, one hears the enticing municipal clamor of Hebron. Cars honk, vendors in the market sell their wares, pedestrians chat. A multitude of seminars takes place in the hotels of cozy Jericho and Ramallah, while half an hour’s drive to the north, Israel’s Civil Administration is demolishing the houses of the tiny village of Hadidiyeh and the army is once again expelling 13 families from their tents in Khirbet Khumsa. Studies at An-Najah National University in Nablus take place as normal, but a few kilometers southward, settlers burst into the villages of Madama and Burin and sow fear.

    Just how strong the delusion of sovereignty is can be seen in the way East Jerusalem residents, and even Palestinian citizens of Israel, often travel to these West Bank enclaves and feel a sense of relief. In these enclosures, which are free of any army presence, they get a break from routine Israeli racism and vulgarity. This temporary feeling of rest and relief is only strengthened by the necessary return to Israel via an intimidating path of walls, barbed-wire fences, pointed rifles, threatening policemen and soldiers, and deluxe, verdant suburbs for Jews only.

    The foreign ruler and his permanent aggression are divided into fractions and experienced differently in every Palestinian “territorial cell,” as they are called in army jargon. The more numerous, smaller and fragmented these territorial cells are, the harder it is for the Palestinians to develop a uniform response to Israeli aggression and violence.

    That is how the phenomenon of the lone-wolf stabbers emerged – for lack of any other choice. This is a privatizing of the natural and general urge to rebel, a response to Israeli violence that breaks up into dozens of supposedly unconnected little incidents.

    This privatization of the struggle is the opposite of an intifada, which is a mass uprising. But because it has become such a widespread phenomenon, it constitutes an internal message: that the normalcy of the enclaves isn’t normal.

  • Palestinian teen shot dead after alleged attack near Tulkarem
    Dec. 1, 2015 10:38 A.M. (Updated: Dec. 1, 2015 12:30 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769111

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — An Israeli military officer shot and killed a 19-year-old Palestinian woman at a checkpoint east of Tulkarem on Tuesday, saying that she had attempted to stab him, Israel’s army said.

    An Israeli army spokesperson said that the officer killed the young woman at a checkpoint near the illegal settlement of Enav east of Tulkarem because she posed an “immediate danger” to him.

    The Israeli officer was not injured during the encounter.

    A spokesperson for the Palestinian Red Crescent said that one of their emergency teams arrived on the scene shortly afterward. She confirmed that the young woman had no vital signs.

    The team was prevented from taking away her body, which was instead taken away in an Israeli army medical jeep.

    The Red Crescent initially estimated the woman to be around 15 years old. However, a Palestinian family later identified her from photos circulating social meda as their 19-year-old daughter, Maram Ramiz Hassouna , from Rafidia in Nablus.

    The family told Ma’an that she had spent a year in Israeli custody after she was charged with attempting to stab an Israeli soldier at the same checkpoint near Enav settlement two years ago.

    #Palestine_assassinée