city:ramallah

  • Still too ‘tough on Arabs’ - Haaretz Editorial - Israel News | Haaretz.com
    Police violence against the Arab community in Israel appears part of a racist policy led by Benjamin Netanyahu’s government

    Haaretz Editorial May 21, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/still-too-tough-on-arabs-1.6098764

    Over the weekend there was a demonstration in Haifa protesting the killings along the Gaza border fence. The violent suppression of this protest and the detention of 21 demonstrators, including Jafar Farah, the director of the Mossawa Center that advocates for Israeli Arabs’ rights, are a further sign of the growing restrictions on the democratic space available to this community.
    The harsh events in Gaza should have brought multitudes out onto the streets, particularly in light of the complexities plaguing relations between Arab citizens and the state. In practice, the protest in Arab society was minor and measured: a partial strike lasting only a day and local protest gatherings. Despite this, the police failed to contain the demonstrations.
    True, the protest in Haifa on Friday evening had no permit, but these are precisely the times when the police must use their discretion and show restraint. They should have used the presence of Farah, a veteran activist who once headed the Arab student union and who for years has been a partner to civic initiatives for Arab civil rights and against racism. A wise police force would have seen his presence as a channel for dialogue and an opportunity for calming tensions. Instead, the police used him to quell the protest.
    In footage taken at the demonstration one sees that the police did not suffice with arresting him but marched him handcuffed through Haifa’s streets as a warning to others. Even though Farah was seen walking, he was hospitalized the next day; relatives said one of his knees had been broken in detention.
    The Arab community is calling for an investigation into the police’s conduct in the demonstration, and the police are expected to carry out an internal probe into the Farah case. But this doesn’t suffice; the violence by the police against Arab protesters appears not random but intentional, part of an inflammatory and racist policy against the Arab community in Israel that Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is leading.
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    Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan and Police Commissioner Roni Alsheich talk a lot about the importance of making police services more accessible to the Arab community, using every public platform to announce the opening of new police stations and the recruitment of Arab police officers. But the conduct in Haifa shows yet again that the police showed unwarranted “resolve” while ignoring the ramifications on the Arab community’s faith in law enforcement.
    The Public Security Ministry and police brass must understand that the delegitimization of elected Arab officials and prominent Arab activists, as well as the suppression of any political protest by brutal arrests, won’t contribute to a sense of trust. On the contrary, police violence against Arab citizens widens the circle of mutual suspicion and deepens this community’s alienation.

    • By +972 Blog |Published May 21, 2018
      ’Police broke my knee, threatened my doctors,’ Arab civil society leader tells court
      By Oren Ziv, Yael Marom, and Meron Rapaport
      https://972mag.com/police-broke-my-knee-threatened-my-doctors-arab-civil-society-leader-tells-court/135621

      Seven require medical treatment for injuries sustained during their arrests or while in custody, including Jafar Farah, who says an officer broke his knee inside the police station. Police file criminal complaint against Arab MK Ayman Odeh for calling the officers who refused to let him visit a hospitalized protester ‘losers’.
      (...)
      “But we shouldn’t be surprised by police violence and this isn’t that big a story,” Atrash continued. “What are a few punches compared to the murder of children in Gaza? What’s important is that all of us in Haifa, Gaza, Ramallah or Beirut — we are one. We don’t want nicer police officers, we want the apartheid regime to end.”
      (...)
      ”The demonstration on Friday was the third to take place in Haifa last week, and police had already employed aggressive tactics to try to shut them down. In addition to several arrests at the protests themselves, police arrested and detained a number of Palestinian and Jewish activists in Haifa to deter them from participating in and organizing protests.

      #Jafar_Farah

  • ’We die anyway, so let it be in front of the cameras’: Conversations with Gazans - Israel News - Haaretz.com

    My friends in Gaza are outraged by Israel’s claim that Hamas rules everything. ’You people always looked down at us, so it’s hard for you to understand that no one demonstrates in anyone else’s name’

    Amira Hass May 20, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-we-die-anyway-so-let-it-be-in-front-of-the-camera-talking-to-gazan

    “Our ability, the Palestinians, to be killed is greater than your ability, the Israelis, to kill,” a resident of the Deheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem told me at the beginning of the second intifada. Ever an optimist, he meant that because of this difference, in the end the two sides would reach a fair agreement.
    On Tuesday this week, alongside the border fence and across from Beit Hanun in the northern Gaza Strip, his mistake once again became clear. There’s a limit to the Palestinians’ ability to be killed. In the morning after the Monday of bloodshed, the protesters took a break. Sixty fresh mourning tents and hundreds of newly wounded justified the lull they asked for. The next day, Nakba Day, which was supposed to be the peak, was actually the day they gave up on the symbolic mass March of Return to the border fence.
    >> Israel’s Gaza Killings: War Crimes or Self-defense? Experts Weigh In ■ The bloodstained first act of the Trump Intifada || Opinion ■ If you call the Gaza death toll ’disproportionate,’ how many Israelis have to die for the sake of symmetry? || Opinion

    Between the sunflower and potato fields of the kibbutzim, I was jealous of my colleagues who were forwarding the statements by the army and Israeli politicians with such great self-persuasion. According to Israeli spokespeople, both military and civilian, the respite along the border fence is unequivocal proof that Hamas’ leaders control everything, and everyone is under their authority; they’re the ones who sent the people to their deaths a day earlier, they’re the ones who prevented that scenario the next day. So simple.

    According to those reports, Egypt handed down instructions to stop the process – after receiving an Israeli request – and Hamas obeyed. Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was humiliated, and it worked. All this is received in Israel as established facts, investigative journalism and another Israeli victory. There’s no need to be in Gaza to know, and it doesn’t matter that the army forbids Israeli journalists to enter the Strip.

    All our bionic powers do the work: balloons for taking photographs, drones, eavesdropping, collaborators, an off-the-record statement by a senior Fatah official in Ramallah. All this appears to provide what we interpret as the gospel truth. In comparison, an abundance of details, explanations, assumptions, denials, hesitations and contradictions that we receive from the Palestinian side are considered failed journalism that doesn’t provide a bottom line. 

    Near the sprinklers blithely spraying water in the Israeli fields, I wondered: If you knew that Hamas planned to cynically send people to their deaths so as to once again gain attention and portray Israel as evil, why do you do what they wanted? Why do you, who didn’t use nonlethal means, obey Hamas too? 

    There’s an interior fence, a security fence, and a berm that was built with earth removed from the digging of Israel’s new underground barrier. And there’s a security road and then another one. And then the fields. Around it all are lookout posts and above are surveillance balloons and drones. And all you could do was prove Israel’s ability to kill and maim?

  • ’We die anyway, so let it be in front of the cameras’: Conversations with Gazans
    Haaretz.com | Amira Hass May 19, 2018 11:45 AM
    My friends in Gaza are outraged by Israel’s claim that Hamas rules everything. ’You people always looked down at us, so it’s hard for you to understand that no one demonstrates in anyone else’s name’
    Amira Hass May 19, 2018 11:45 AM
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/we-die-anyway-so-let-it-be-in-front-of-the-camera-talking-to-gazans-1.60980

    “Our ability, the Palestinians, to be killed is greater than your ability, the Israelis, to kill,” a resident of the Deheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem told me at the beginning of the second intifada. Ever an optimist, he meant that because of this difference, in the end the two sides would reach a fair agreement.

    On Tuesday this week, alongside the border fence and across from Beit Hanun in the northern Gaza Strip, his mistake once again became clear. There’s a limit to the Palestinians’ ability to be killed. In the morning after the Monday of bloodshed, the protesters took a break. Sixty fresh mourning tents and hundreds of newly wounded justified the lull they asked for. The next day, Nakba Day, which was supposed to be the peak, was actually the day they gave up on the symbolic mass March of Return to the border fence.

    Between the sunflower and potato fields of the kibbutzim, I was jealous of my colleagues who were forwarding the statements by the army and Israeli politicians with such great self-persuasion. According to Israeli spokespeople, both military and civilian, the respite along the border fence is unequivocal proof that Hamas’ leaders control everything, and everyone is under their authority; they’re the ones who sent the people to their deaths a day earlier, they’re the ones who prevented that scenario the next day. So simple.

    According to those reports, Egypt handed down instructions to stop the process – after receiving an Israeli request – and Hamas obeyed. Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was humiliated, and it worked. All this is received in Israel as established facts, investigative journalism and another Israeli victory. There’s no need to be in Gaza to know, and it doesn’t matter that the army forbids Israeli journalists to enter the Strip.

    All our bionic powers do the work: balloons for taking photographs, drones, eavesdropping, collaborators, an off-the-record statement by a senior Fatah official in Ramallah. All this appears to provide what we interpret as the gospel truth. In comparison, an abundance of details, explanations, assumptions, denials, hesitations and contradictions that we receive from the Palestinian side are considered failed journalism that doesn’t provide a bottom line.

    Near the sprinklers blithely spraying water in the Israeli fields, I wondered: If you knew that Hamas planned to cynically send people to their deaths so as to once again gain attention and portray Israel as evil, why do you do what they wanted? Why do you, who didn’t use nonlethal means, obey Hamas too?

    There’s an interior fence, a security fence, and a berm that was built with earth removed from the digging of Israel’s new underground barrier. And there’s a security road and then another one. And then the fields. Around it all are lookout posts and above are surveillance balloons and drones. And all you could do was prove Israel’s ability to kill and maim?

    Silent proximity

    From a hill in the fields of Kibbutz Nir Am, you could clearly see Beit Hanun, Izbet Abed Rabo and the edges of Shujaiyeh in northern Gaza. The tall apartment blocks too, rising high. The continuous built-up area from Beit Lahia to the southern end of Gaza City seems very close. A single white pickup truck drove along the seam line between the farmed Palestinian fields and the wide strip of land where Israel forbids farming, and to the north a horse-drawn cart set off.

    This silent proximity, without any contact, demonstrated the state of imprisonment – from the opposite side. After all, I once lived there, I went to all those places that I now see through binoculars and remember the events I covered and the people I wrote about, between the wars, during the wars, during the uprisings and so-to-speak lulls.

    Now these places are a film, to see and not touch. A kilometer or two away are my friends, dear to me, and we’re not allowed to see each other anymore. One of them joked that he’d come to the March of Return camp and wave a large Palestinian flag to say hello to me. But WhatsApp is more convenient.

    On the phone my friends are outraged and everyone says it in their own way: To say Hamas controls all this is to take from every Palestinian in Gaza not only their right to freedom of movement and a respectable livelihood but also the right to deep frustration and despair – and their right to express it.

    “The Israelis look look down on us and have always looked down on us. In your eyes, a good Arab is a collaborator or dead,” one said. “Therefore it’s hard for you to understand that no one demonstrates in the name of someone else’s. Everyone goes there for themselves. We’re a people without resources and now without a vision and without a plan, and at the lowest point in terms of international support and internal organization. But we went out to demonstrate in order to disrupt something in the celebrations of the transfer of the embassy. Jerusalem is dear to us. We go so as not to die in silence. Because we’re sick and tired of dying quietly, in our homes,” he added.

    “If you die, be in front of the cameras. Loudly. I’m going to the mosque. There hasn’t been any order from above to go to the demonstration. I hear young people saying that tomorrow they’ll go die at the fence, like someone who’s talking about a picnic or candy. I went to the [March of] Return camp two or three times, and I didn’t like it. Too much confusion. If Hamas was controlling the entire event there wouldn’t be a mess there. After all, you know how Hamas events are always orderly, organized, disciplined.”

    True, there were Hamas security people in civilian clothes; they weren’t there as Hamas but as law and order for the acting government, as at every mass event – to prevent armed people from approaching the fence, provocations by collaborators, to intervene if there was a dispute or sexual harassment.

    Hamas has lost its popularity in Gaza because of the failures and disasters of the past 10 years, a friend promised me after he reminded me that he “doesn’t like them at all.” At the beginning, they weren’t enthused by the idea of the March of Return, after young activists brought the idea to all political factions’ leaders, he says.

    After that Hamas adopted the idea too. As an organization, Hamas is capable of offering what other groups can’t: rides to the March of Return camps, maybe a sandwich and a bottle of cola and tents. “But they can’t force us to come and endanger ourselves. After all, it’s dangerous to be even 300 or 400 meters away, because the soldiers shoot at us.”

    A foreigner in Gaza had the impression: “Hamas can’t order people to go to demonstrations and endanger their lives, but they can stop them from nearing the fence.” One of the ways is statements in the media.

    The many non-Hamas dead

    On Wednesday, a uniform report landed at a number of Israeli media outlets, that a Hamas leader, Salah al-Bardawil, “admitted in an interview with Palestinian television that 50 of the 60 killed in the past two days were Hamas members.” A great sigh of relief was heard in Israel. Hamas? In other words, terrorists by definition, in other words, you’re allowed to kill them. There’s even a commandment to do so.

    The source of the report was an Arabic-language tweet by Avichay Adraee of the IDF Spokesman’s Office. He attached to the tweet, a short fragment from the hour-long-plus interview with Bardawil on the Facebook-transmitted news channel Baladna.

    The interviewer, Ahmed Sa’id, asked difficult questions he was hearing on the street, mostly from Fatah supporters: What about the humiliation you suffered in Egypt, and why is Hamas sending people to the fence to die – and you are reaping the (political) fruit?

    Bardawil had to defend his organization and say this wasn’t true, there was no humiliation and Hamas members were demonstrating like anybody else, with everybody else.

    “Unfortunately, this is the organization today that nurtures the motivation and awareness among young people the most,” one of my friends explained to me earlier.

    Let’s return to Bardawil. So he said that 50 of the 60 killed were Hamas members. I checked and was told that the official figure Hamas has is that from the beginning of the March of Return on March 30, 42 people linked to Hamas were among the 120 people killed: members of the movement, well-known activists, members of Hamas families.

    It seems that about 20 members of Hamas’ military wing were killed, and they were killed not near the protests but under circumstances that still must be clarified. But the rest were unarmed rank-and-file protesters. And they demonstrated because they were Gazans. But once Bardawil said what he said it’s hard to deny his words in public. “This (figure of 50) is another typical exaggeration of ours,” said my friend who didn’t come to wave his flag to me to say hello.

    As for exaggerations, “the idea of the March of Return to break the standstill and stop Gaza’s slow descent – we all liked that, me too,” said someone else. “But the details I don’t like. What’s this foolishness of the March of Return and lifting the blockade?’ They haven’t even thought through the slogans properly. Because if the goal is to return to the villages, the blockade is an irrelevant issue.”

    Between the sunflowers and the few fires that broke out Tuesday, soldiers were at their posts on alert. They moved on the continuum between hyperactive self-importance and the idleness of a picnic. They were posted within the perimeters of the kibbutzim, a very short distance from the houses. The armored personnel carriers were also within the distance of a morning walk.

    This is what’s called a military presence in the heart of a civilian population. I remembered the reverse circumstance, of Hamas positions in the Gaza Strip, which served as justification for Israel to besmirch the group as hiding behind civilians, and for the IDF to bomb anyone near them.

  • Commémoration pour les 70 ans de la Nakba (très belle vidéo de 7 minutes)
    Université de Genève, le 15 mai 2018
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vOS-LGGl-U

    La musique utilisée est Mawtini, l’hymne palestinien, mais chanté de façon triste par un chanteur de Ramallah, #Murad_Swaity :
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QES53TRxafI

    Voici une autre version par la section de Gaza du Edward Said National Conservatory of Music. La vidéo date de 2015 : combien d’enfants de cette vidéo sont morts assassinés entre temps ? :
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9plTVf-go6M

    #Palestine #Gaza #Nakba #vidéo #Musique #Musique_et_politique

  • 60 dead in Gaza and the end of Israeli conscience - Opinion - Israel News | Haaretz.com
    On the night of the Palestinians’ slaughter, Zion exulted an embassy and a Eurovision. It’s difficult to think of a more atrocious moral eclipse
    Gideon Levy May 17, 2018 12:16 AM
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-60-dead-in-gaza-and-the-end-of-israeli-conscience-1.6095178

    A Palestinian protester reacts to teargas fired by Israeli troops during a protest at the Gaza Strip’s border with Israel, east of Khan Younis on May 15, 2018. Credit : Adel Hana/AP

    When will the moment come in which the mass killing of Palestinians matters anything to the right? When will the moment come in which the massacre of civilians shocks at least the left-center? If 60 people slain don’t do it, perhaps 600? Will 6,000 jolt them?

    When will the moment come in which a pinch of human feeling arises, if only for a moment, toward the Palestinians? Sympathy? At what moment will someone call a halt, and suggest compassion, without being branded an eccentric or an Israel hater?

    When will there be a moment in which someone admits that the slaughterer has, after all, some responsibility for the slaughter, not only the slaughtered, who are of course responsible for their own slaughter?

    Sixty people killed didn’t matter to anyone – perhaps 600 would? How about 6,000? Will Israel find all the excuses and justifications then also? Will the blame be laid on the slain people and their “dispatchers” even then, and not a word of criticism, mea culpa, sorrow, pity or guilt will be heard?

    On Monday, when the death count spiked alarmingly, Jerusalem celebrated the embassy and Tel Aviv rejoiced over Eurovision, it seemed that such a moment will never come again. The Israeli brain has been washed irrevocably, the heart sealed for good. The life of a Palestinian is no longer deemed to be worth anything.

    If 60 stray dogs were shot to death in one day by IDF soldiers, the whole country would raise an outcry. The dog slaughterers would be put on trial, the nation of Israel would have devoted prayers to the victims, a Yizkor service would be said for the dogs slaughtered by Israel.

    But on the night of the Palestinians’ slaughter, Zion rejoiced and was jubilant: We have an embassy and a Eurovision. It’s difficult to think of a more atrocious moral eclipse. Neither is it difficult to imagine the reverse scenario: 60 Israelis are killed in one day and the crowds celebrate the embassy in Ramallah and rejoice over a concert in El Bireh to cheer the winning of the Arab “A Star is Born,” while television hosts and interviewees giggle during the live broadcasts. Oh, those Palestinian animals, oh, the monsters.

    On the eve of this black Monday I found myself sitting in one of the television studios beside a giggling right-winger. Giggling isn’t the right term, he was bursting with laughter. It made him laugh so hard, the mass killing, and he found it even funnier that someone was appalled by it. Israel Hayom opened with the “Shehecheyanu” blessing in its main headline about another matter, unaware of the dark irony. Yedioth Ahronoth held a learned discussion over whether Hamas leaders should be eliminated now or not, who’s in favor of the murder and who’s against it. Imagine a discussion in a Palestinian newspaper: for and against murdering Gadi Eizenkot.

    The truth is that Israel is well prepared to massacre hundreds and thousands, and to expel tens of thousands. Nothing will stop it. This is the end of conscience, the show of morality is over. The last few days’ events have proved it decisively. The tracks have been laid, the infrastructure for the horror has been cast. Dozens of years of brainwashing, demonization and dehumanization have borne fruit. The alliance between the politicians and the media to suppress reality and deny it has succeeded. Israel is set to commit horrors. Nobody will stand in its way any longer. Not from within or from without.

    Apart from the usual lip service, the Trump-era world won’t lift a finger, even when Gaza becomes, heaven forbid, Rwanda. Even then our observers and analysts will recite that the IDF has accomplished its goals, that the IDF displayed restraint, that it’s the most moral and “what would you suggest doing instead?”

    The chief of staff would be crowned man of the year, the moderate, good man, the opposition would tweet their applause. In the town square the “leftist” singer’s victory will be celebrated, nobody would even think of canceling the party going on, or at least set aside a moment for the dead.

    We’re already there. That moment is here. Rwanda is coming to Gaza and Israel is celebrating. Two million human beings we’ve imprisoned already, and their fate matters to no one. The pictures that occasionally flicker of children without electricity and parents without water, of crippled people being shot to death and of leg amputees, all children of refugees from the 1948 disaster we landed on their heads.

    What has that to do with us? It’s Hamas’ fault. Sixty individuals killed in one day, and not a shred of sorrow has been sighted in Israel. From now on, it never will be.

  • Hamas in message to Israel: Willing to negotiate long-term truce -

    According to intelligence assessments, the organization is still in dire distress and is currently more open to discussing options it rejected in the past

    Amos Harel May 07, 2018

    Israel News - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-hamas-in-message-to-israel-willing-to-negotiate-long-term-truce-1.

    Hamas leaders in the Gaza Strip have recently conveyed messages to Israel indicating their willingness to negotiate a long term cease-fire in the enclave. These messages were passed through different channels on several occasions over the last few months. Hamas wants to tie the cease-fire with an easing of the siege on Gaza, permission to embark on large-scale infrastructure projects and a prisoner and body exchange deal.
    As far as is known, Israel has not responded clearly to the messages.
    Reports presented to senior defense establishment officials and the political echelons say that tensions in Gaza will remain high even after the massive Nakba Day demonstration Hamas has planned for May 15, when Palestinians mark the expulsion of Arabs from their homes during the 1947-49 Israeli War of Independence. According to intelligence assessments, Hamas is still in dire and unprecedented strategic distress and is currently more open to discussing options it rejected in the past.
    The Hamas leadership is engaged in a lively debate regarding the negotiation of a cease-fire and the exchange of prisoners and bodies. The daily Israel Hayom reported two weeks ago that Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’ leader in Gaza, is in favor, while the overall Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh is opposed. The paper claimed that Sinwar accused Haniyeh of yielding to Iranian pressure in forming his positions.
    At the same time, reconciliation efforts between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas are still on hold after the assassination attempt on the PA’s Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah during his visit to Gaza in March. The PA blamed Hamas for detonating explosives close to Hamdallah’s convoy while Hamas blamed internal rivalry within the PA and attributed the attempt to the head of the General Intelligence Service in Ramallah, Majid Faraj, who was also in the convoy.

  • Le Premier ministre du Japon contre un tranfert d’ambassade à Jérusalem
    AFP | 01/05/2018
    https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1113315/le-premier-ministre-du-japon-contre-un-tranfert-dambassade-a-jerusale

    Le Premier ministre japonais Shinzo Abe a rejeté mardi un transfert de l’ambassade de son pays à Jérusalem, comme l’ont annoncé les Etats-Unis, lors d’une rencontre avec le président palestinien Mahmoud Abbas à Ramallah en Cisjordanie occupée, a indiqué l’agence palestinienne Wafa.

    M. Abe, qui effectue une tournée au Moyen Orient, a assuré au président Abbas que son pays n’avait pas l’intention de suivre l’exemple des Etats-Unis, qui ont décidé de transférer le 14 mai leur ambassade de Tel Aviv à Jérusalem, ce qui a provoqué la colère des Palestiniens, a ajouté Wafa. M. Abe a réaffirmé le soutien de son pays à la création d’un Etat palestinien indépendant dans le cadre d’une solution de deux Etats, a également indiqué Wafa.

  • Gaza : Abbas appelle à éloigner les enfants de la frontière avec Israël
    https://www.romandie.com/news/ZOOM-Gaza-Abbas-appelle-a-eloigner-les-enfants-de-la-frontiere-avec-Israel/913582.rom

    Le président palestinien Mahmoud Abbas a appelé lundi soir à éloigner les enfants de la frontière entre la bande de Gaza et Israël, théâtre d’affrontements entre manifestants palestiniens et forces israéliennes depuis le 30 mars.

    « Gardez les jeunes loin de la frontière, éloignez-les, nous ne voulons pas qu’ils finissent handicapés », a-t-il déclaré à Ramallah (Cisjordanie occupée) dans un discours devant le Conseil national palestinien (CNP), Parlement de l’Organisation de libération de la Palestine (OLP), réuni en session régulière pour la première fois depuis 1996.

    #Misère

  • Gaza
    Once again: Stop shooting
    – Haaretz Editorial - Israel News | Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/once-again-stop-shooting-1.6032762

    This Friday the “March of Return” demonstrators in the Gaza Strip will once again face off with Israel Defense Forces soldiers. But this Friday must not, for the fifth time in a row, become the last day in the lives of yet more desperate but unarmed young men who aren’t endangering anyone, or the day on which more and more young demonstrators become disabled for the rest of their lives.
    Whether this happens is in the hands of the IDF and its officers. This fifth Friday in the ongoing series of demonstrations must finally bring the cessation of the IDF’s use of potentially lethal fire at unarmed demonstrators. It must end without casualties.
    >> Hamas hijacked the Gaza protests ■ Killing of Gaza protesters undermines Israel’s claims of self-defense >>
    On Wednesday, the 40th victim of this shooting at demonstrators died of his wounds. The victim was press photographer Ahmed Abu Hussein, who was severely wounded in the stomach two weeks ago by a sniper’s bullet.
    Abu Hussein was one of only four casualties, including an 11-year-old boy who lost his leg, whom Israel allowed to be sent to a hospital in Ramallah. And even those four were allowed to be transferred only after a petition to the High Court of Justice. Of the 5,511 people who have so far been wounded in the demonstrations along the Gaza-Israel border fence, some 1,700 were wounded by live bullets.

    According to doctors in Gaza, the wounds during these demonstrations have been especially severe. Thousands of wounded is a frightening statistic considering that the demonstrators whom the army is confronting are unarmed and, as a rule, nonviolent. Given the collapse of Gaza’s health system, the fact that the defense establishment, on orders from Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, isn’t letting more of the casualties receive treatment in Ramallah or Israel adds insult to injury. Abu Hussein ultimately died in an Israeli hospital, after his condition deteriorated.

    The 40 people who have been killed in the demonstrations were all young, and two were children. Their deaths could have been avoided had restrictions been imposed on the IDF’s use of live fire against the protesters.
    The consistent, ongoing decline in the number of casualties from week to week isn’t only due to the decline in the number of demonstrators from week to week. It also attests to relative restraint in the conduct of IDF soldiers. But this isn’t enough. Starting on Friday, the IDF must set itself a clear goal – zero Palestinian casualties as long as they aren’t endangering anyone’s life.

  • » Journalist Shot by Israeli Forces During Gaza Border Protest Dies of Wounds
    IMEMC News - April 25, 2018 7:11 PM
    http://imemc.org/article/journalist-shot-by-israeli-forces-during-gaza-border-protest-dies-of-wounds

    Photojournalist Ahmed Abu Hussin , who was gravely injured last Friday while documenting the March of Return, succumbed to his wounds Wednesday afternoon, the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate said.

    25-year-old Abu Hussin was working as a photojournalist for a local news agency upon graduation from high school.

    Abu Hussin was shot in the stomach by an Israeli sniper, despite the fact that he was stationed at a permissible distance from the border fence. On Sunday, two days after he was shot, Israel gave Abu Hussin permission to get to a hospital in Ramallah, where he could receive medical treatment.

    The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate said, in a statement PNN received, that Israeli occupation authorities and their leaders are fully responsible for this ongoing crime against journalists.

    #Palestine_assassinée #marcheduretour

    • Un journaliste palestinien blessé par des tirs israéliens succombe (famille)
      AFP / 25 avril 2018 13h59
      https://www.romandie.com/news/Un-journaliste-palestinien-blesse-par-des-tirs-israeliens-succombe-famille/912031.rom

      Gaza (Territoires palestiniens) - Un journaliste palestinien touché par des tirs de soldats israéliens lors de manifestations dans la bande de Gaza a succombé à ses blessures, ont indiqué sa famille et les autorités locales mercredi.

      Ahmed Abou Hussein , 25 ans, atteint par balle le 13 avril, est le deuxième journaliste palestinien tué depuis le début le 30 mars d’un vaste mouvement de protestation appelé « la marche du retour ».

      L’hôpital israélien vers lequel il avait été transféré a confirmé son décès sans plus de précision.

      La famille a été informée de sa mort par les services palestiniens coordonnant les affaires civiles et humanitaires avec les autorités israéliennes, et prépare le retour de sa dépouille pour ses funérailles, a dit son frère Diaa à l’AFP.

      Ahmed Abou Hussein travaillait pour la station palestinienne Radio Shaab et comme photographe pour un autre organe de presse.

      Sa mort porte à 41 le nombre de Palestiniens tués par des tirs israéliens dans la bande de Gaza depuis le 30 mars, la grande majorité par des tirs de soldats postés sur la barrière de sécurité entre Israël et le territoire.

    • 26 avril 2018 - Mis à jour le 27 avril 2018
      Un deuxième journaliste palestinien succombe à ses blessures à Gaza
      https://rsf.org/fr/actualites/un-deuxieme-journaliste-palestinien-succombe-ses-blessures-gaza

      La mort d’Ahmed Abu Hussein porte à deux le nombre de journalistes palestiniens tués depuis le début d’un vaste mouvement de protestation dans la bande de Gaza. RSF réclame de toute urgence une enquête indépendante.

      Blessé par balle lors d’une manifestation le 13 avril à la lisière de la bande de Gaza et de la frontière israélienne, le journaliste palestinien Ahmed Abu Hussein, âgé de 25 ans, a succombé à ses blessures mercredi 25 avril. D’après l’un de ses confrères de la radio Sout al Shaab, Rami el Sharafi, le reporter se trouvait à 700 mètres de la frontière, à un endroit calme, près d’un groupe de manifestants statiques, quand il s’est soudainement effondré, après avoir été touché par un tir manifestement délibéré. Au moment des faits, le journaliste qui travaillait également pour le site d’information Bisann news, portait un casque bleu roi avec les lettres TV écrites sur un autocollant jaune fluo. Il était aussi équipé d’un gilet pare-balles sur lequel était marqué le mot “Press”. Des images vidéo amateur confirment ces informations. (...)

  • ’Israeli fire at Gaza border protests causing wounds not seen since 2014 war’

    Some 1,700 wounded within month ■ Doctors say wounds ’devastating,’ most will result in disabilities ■ WHO: Lack of medical equipment endangering wounded

    Amira Hass Apr 22, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/palestinians/.premium-gaza-doctors-injuries-in-border-protests-worst-since-2014-war-1.60

    The live-fire wounds suffered by more than 1,700 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip over the past month have been unusually severe, Palestinian and foreign doctors say.
    To really understand Israel and the Palestinians - subscribe to Haaretz
    Since the series of demonstrations known as the March of Return began on March 30, Israeli soldiers have killed 37 Palestinians and wounded about 5,000, of whom 36 percent were wounded by live bullets.

    Haaretz
    Doctors at Gaza’s Shifa Hospital said they haven’t seen such severe wounds since Israel’s Operation Protective Edge in Gaza in 2014. The aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres said its medical teams have given postoperative care to people “with devastating injuries of an unusual severity, which are extremely complex to treat. The injuries sustained by patients will leave most with serious, long-term physical disabilities.”
    Since April 1, MSF has given postoperative care to 500 people with bullet wounds, mostly in the lower extremities. Most were young men, but some were women or children.
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    “MSF medical teams note the injuries include an extreme level of destruction to bones and soft tissue, and large exit wounds that can be the size of a fist,” the group said in a report on April 19.
    It quoted Marie-Elisabeth Ingres, MSF’s head of mission in Palestine, as saying, “Half of the more than 500 patients we have admitted in our clinics have injuries where the bullet has literally destroyed tissue after having pulverized the bone. These patients will need to have very complex surgical operations and most of them will have disabilities for life.”
    The report concluded: “Apart from regular nursing care, patients will often need additional surgery, and undergo a very long process of physiotherapy and rehabilitation. A lot of patients will keep functional deficiencies for the rest of their life. Some patients may yet need amputation if not provided with sufficient care in Gaza and if they don’t manage to get the necessary authorization to be treated outside of the strip.”

    The London-based group Medical Aid for Palestinians echoed MSF’s findings. It quoted a Shifa surgeon as saying, “The bullets used are causing injuries local medics say they have not seen since 2014. The entrance wound is small. The exit wound is devastating, causing gross comminution of bone and destruction of soft tissue.”
    The group’s April 20 report also said that Gaza surgeons had performed 17 amputations – 13 legs and four arms. In addition, a boy shot by Israeli soldiers on April 17 had his left leg amputated in Ramallah. His parents said he was playing soccer near the Israel-Gaza border fence east of the Al-Bureij refugee camp.
    Both aid groups repeatedly used the same word to describe the bullet wounds – “destruction.”
    To cope with the flood of patients, both official and private medical institutions in Gaza have beefed up their presence near the demonstrations that are taking place along the Gaza-Israel border.
    The Palestinian Health Ministry set up five field clinics near the protests in order to stabilize patients before they reach the hospital. Each clinic has three beds plus several mattresses, and is staffed by up to 10 doctors and 15 nurses, plus volunteers.
    In addition, the Palestinian Red Crescent has set up five emergency treatment stations. MSF has brought in surgical teams that work alongside Gazan teams at the Shifa and Al-Aqsa hospitals.
    Yet the World Health Organization says the lack of medication and nonreusable medical supplies like bandages is undermining the ability to give patients proper care. The Palestinian Health Ministry urgently needs stocks of 75 essential drugs and 190 types of nonreusable medical supplies.
    The WHO also criticized Israel for harming medical personnel, saying 48 medical staffers have been wounded by Israeli fire while trying to evacuate the wounded. At least three were hit live bullets. In addition, 13 ambulances were hit by live bullets or tear gas grenades.
    Between March 30 and Thursday, 1,539 Gazans were wounded by live bullets and around 500 by sponge-tipped bullets, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry. Of the victims, 62.3 percent were hit in the lower body, 16 percent in the upper body, 8.2 percent in the head or neck, 4.8 percent in the stomach and four percent in the chest. In addition, 4.7 percent had multiple injuries.
    On Friday, the ministry said 729 Palestinians were wounded by Israeli bullets or riot-control equipment, of whom 305 required hospital treatment. Of the latter, 156 were hit by live bullets.
    Fifteen of the 305 hospitalized patients were women, it added, while 45 were children. Altogether, 500 minors have been wounded by Israeli fire since March 30.

  • Une vidéo prouve que l’adolescente mineure palestinienne Ahed #Tamimi détenue au mépris du droit et en toute #impunité par #Israël a été maltraitée,
    https://www.rtbf.be/info/societe/detail_la-palestinienne-ahed-tamimi-detenue-par-israel-maltraitee-selon-sa-fami

    S’appuyant sur une loi israélienne leur permettant d’avoir accès à une partie du dossier d’un mineur, les avocats de la jeune fille ont réussi à se procurer une vidéo de deux heures, où Ahed Tamimi âgée de 16 ans à l’époque, est interrogée sans la présence d’un avocat ou d’un membre de sa famille.

    « Les séances d’interrogatoires ont eu lieu après différents types de pressions physiques et psychologiques », a accusé son père, Bassem Tamimi, lors d’une conférence de presse à Ramallah. Selon lui, sa fille a été maintenue en isolement, changée de cellule régulièrement et privée de sommeil.

  • A Ramallah, Jean-Yves Le Drian réaffirme la position française mais sans plus
    RFI - Publié le 27-03-2018
    Avec notre correspondante à Ramallah, Marine Vlahovic
    http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20180327-ramallah-jean-yves-le-drian-reaffirme-position-francaise-palestine-isra

    (...) Réaffirmer la position française sur le conflit israélo-palestinien, c’était l’objectif de la visite de Jean-Yves Le Drian à Ramallah. Mais le principe de base d’une solution à deux Etats dans les frontières de 1967, avec pour chacun, Jérusalem comme capitale, est aujourd’hui menacé, selon le ministre français des Affaires étrangères : « Nous avons eu avec le président Abbas des discussions approfondies sur la situation sur le terrain, et en particulier sur les menaces qui pèsent aujourd’hui sur la solution à deux Etats. Je suis venu ici aussi pour adresser un message de solidarité au peuple palestinien, et la France continuera de se tenir à ses côtés, de même qu’elle continuera d’accompagner l’autorité palestinienne dans la voie de l’établissement d’un futur Etat palestinien. »

    Un accompagnement mais pas de reconnaissance formelle d’un Etat palestinien qui interviendra le moment venu a dit Jean-Yves Le Drian. Le chef de la diplomatie a aussi promis un accompagnement de toutes les initiatives crédibles de relance des négociations de paix. Mais pas question toutefois de porter une alternative au « deal du siècle » présenté prochainement par les Américains et déjà refusé par les Palestiniens.

  • Palestine occupée : Communiqués de CIREPAL : Marche du retour,
    http://www.ism-france.org/communiques/Communiques-de-CIREPAL-Marche-du-retour-village-Umm-al-Hiran-menace-arre

    22.03.2018 - L’institution sioniste panique : elle craint la marche du retour prévue le 30 mars dans la bande de Gaza en direction de l’entité coloniale, et entend préparer l’opinion publique internationale contre la marche, en faisant croire qu’il s’agit d’une manœuvre du mouvement Hamas, dans le conflit qui l’oppose au gouvernement de Ramallah.

    Une étude parue récemment du « Centre de recherches de la sécurité nationale » sioniste propose de lancer une campagne publicitaire précédant la marche en association avec les Etats-Unis et ses amis arabes, pour réduire l’impact de la marche du retour, qui serait catastrophique pour l’image de l’entité sioniste si celle-ci utilisait les armes pour la stopper.

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    Army on High Alert ahead of Great Return March
    March 26, 2018
    http://imemc.org/article/army-on-high-alert-ahead-of-great-return-march

    Israeli newspaper Maariv published, on Monday morning, a report on the preparation of the Israeli army and the security establishment to confront the Great March of Return, which is slated to be held on March 30, along the eastern border with Gaza.

    The newspaper reported that the army will be on high alert and will deploy several battalions with groups of snipers along the border fence, so as to prevent any breakthrough in the Israeli sovereignty and to curb Palestinian protesters from approaching the fence.

    The situation in the Gaza Strip is worsening ahead of this march, while the military wing of Hamas movement, Izz al Din al-Qassam Brigades, has carried out large-scale military maneuvers, which might be connected with the march, according to the newspaper.

    #marcheduretour

  • Israël : Ahed Tamimi accepte de plaider coupable et écope de 8 mois de prison
    Par RFI Publié le 22-03-2018
    http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20180322-ahed-tamimi-prison-plaide-coupable-jeune-palestinienne

    Jugée à huis clos par un tribunal militaire, Ahed Tamimi a été condamnée ce mercredi 21 mars au soir à 8 mois de prison. L’adolescente filmée en train de frapper et de donner des coups de pieds à des soldats israéliens est devenue l’icône de la cause palestinienne. La vidéo, tournée avec un smartphone le 15 décembre devant la maison de la jeune fille à Nabi Saleh, en Cisjordanie occupée, est devenue virale. (...)
    #Ahed_Tamimi

    Les juges du tribunal militaire ont accepté un accord trouvé un peu plus tôt entre Ahed Tamimi et le procureur. L’adolescente a accepté de plaider coupable contre une peine raccourcie 8 mois de prison.

    Elle sera donc libre cet été, car la cour prend en compte le temps qu’elle a déjà passé en détention provisoire. Cette peine est assortie d’une amende de 5 000 shekels, soit environ 1 200 euros.

    Huit charges ont été abandonnées, Ahed Tamimi n’a plaidé que pour 4 sur les 12 charges retenues à l’origine contre elle, notamment agression, incitation et obstruction à la mission des soldats.

    • Ahed et Nariman Tamimi condamnées par l’occupant à huit mois de prison
      22 mars 2018
      http://www.chroniquepalestine.com/ahed-tamimi-condamnee-huit-mois-prison

      Jaclynn Ashly – La jeune militante palestinienne avait été arrêtée après qu’une vidéo où on la voit gifler et frapper deux soldats israéliens soit devenue virale. Sa mère Nariman avait été également arrêtée.

      Ahed Tamimi et sa mère Nariman ont accepté de plaider coupable devant les procureurs de l’armée israélienne et devront rester huit mois en prison.

      L’adolescente de 17 ans a été arrêtée en décembre 2017 après qu’une vidéo où on la voit gifler et frapper deux soldats israéliens soit devenue virale.

      La sentence, prononcée mercredi lors d’une audience à huis clos devant le tribunal militaire israélien d’Ofer près de Ramallah, a conclu un procès qui a attiré l’attention du monde entier.

      Tamimi a accepté de plaider coupable pour quatre des 12 accusations initialement portées contre elle, selon Gaby Lasky, l’avocate de l’adolescente.

  • Israël : un employé du consulat de France à Jérusalem emprisonné depuis un mois
    RFI - Publié le 18-03-2018 - Avec notre correspondante à Ramallah, Marine Vlahovic
    http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20180318-israel-employe-consulat-france-jerusalem-emprisonne-depuis-mois

    L’agent consulaire, un Français d’une vingtaine d’années et chauffeur pour le consulat de France à Jérusalem, a été arrêté par les autorités israéliennes mi-février. Il est suspecté d’avoir convoyé des armes depuis la bande de Gaza. Il sera présenté lundi 19 mars devant un tribunal israélien qui doit l’inculper, a confirmé le ministère de la Justice de l’Etat hébreu.

    Le chauffeur en question, un ressortissant français de 24 ans, travaille pour le consulat de France à Jérusalem depuis plus d’un an. Détenteur d’un passeport de service, c’est-à-dire qu’il ne bénéficie pas d’immunité diplomatique, le jeune homme a été arrêté par les autorités israéliennes il y a un mois et placé depuis en détention administrative dans le plus grand secret.

  • Israël utilise un drone pour réprimer une manifestation de Palestiniens
    Publié le 12 mars 2018
    http://www.pourlapalestine.be/israel-utilise-un-drone-pour-reprimer-une-manifestation

    Pour la première fois, l’armée israélienne a utilisé un drone pour réprimer une manifestations de Palestiniens à proximité de la “frontière” de la Bande de Gaza, au cours du week-end dernier.

    Vendredi dernier, quelque 200 résidents de la Bande de Gaza s’étaient rassemblés à proximité de la “frontière” avec Israël. L’armée israélienne a utilisé un drone pour les arroser de gaz lacrymogène et les obliger à se disperser.

    Selon une source militaire citée par Haaretz, il s’agit d’une “méthode expérimentale” utilisée pour la première fois. Le but pour les militaires israéliens et de contrôler les rassemblements de foules hostiles tout en restant à distance.(...)

    • Pour la première fois, Israël lance des gaz lacrymogènes à partir de drones
      16 03 2018 • 17 h 56 min
      Source : Middle East Monitor - Traduction : JPB pour l’Agence Media Palestine
      http://www.agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2018/03/16/pour-la-premiere-fois-israel-lance-des-gaz-lacrymogenes-a-parti

      (...) Gaza fait face à une urgence humanitaire croissante depuis de nombreux mois, confrontée à une crise de l’énergie, de l’eau et des soins de santé. Les résidents sont également empêchés de quitter la Bande, forçant une jeune fille de Gaza à se rendre sans aucun de ses parents à Ramallah en Cisjordanie occupée pour avoir une greffe de rein le mois dernier.

      Un rapport récent a également révélé que plus de 1 000 Palestiniens sont morts à la suite du siège israélien de 11 ans imposé à l’enclave assiégée.

      Le Coordinateur des organisations caritatives, Ahmed Al-Kurd, a déclaré que « 450 des victimes sont mortes à cause du déclin du système de santé et du manque de médicaments, de matériel médical et de transferts de traitements ».

      « Aujourd’hui, nous lançons un cri retentissant au monde : sauvez Gaza de ces conditions désastreuses », a déclaré Al-Kurd, demandant : « Combien de temps allez-vous attendre et combien de victimes vous faut-il en plus avant d’agir ? »

  • Dans le camp Al-Amari, avec les réfugiés palestiniens
    REPORTAGE. À douze kilomètres de Jérusalem vivent plus de 5 000 Palestiniens dont les parents ont été contraints de quitter leur terre à la création d’Israël.
    De notre envoyé spécial dans le camp Al-Amari, Armin Arefi
    Modifié le 11/03/2018
    http://www.lepoint.fr/monde/dans-le-camp-al-amari-avec-les-refugies-palestiniens-11-03-2018-2201450_24.p

    Seuls seize kilomètres séparent Ramallah de Jérusalem. Entre les deux villes, la route Al-Bireh Al-Qods mène du siège de l’Autorité palestinienne au checkpoint de Qalandia, à huit kilomètres de là. Tenu par l’armée israélienne, ce poste-frontière permet aux seuls résidents palestiniens de Jérusalem, Arabes israéliens ou détenteurs d’un permis spécial délivré au compte-gouttes de pénétrer de l’autre côté du « mur de sécurité » dressé par les Israéliens et de rejoindre la partie orientale de la ville sainte, occupée et annexée par Israël.

  • Une délégation de New York accueillie par des jets d’oeufs en Cisjordanie occupée
    Par AFP , publié le 22/02/2018
    https://www.lexpress.fr/actualites/1/monde/une-delegation-de-new-york-accueillie-par-des-jets-d-oeufs-en-cisjordanie-o

    Ramallah (Territoires palestiniens) - Des Palestiniens ont lancé jeudi des oeufs en direction des membres d’une délégation municipale de New York à Ramallah en Cisjordanie occupée pour dénoncer la récente décision américaine sur Jérusalem, selon un journaliste de l’AFP.

  • Vendredi 16 février en #Palestine

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    Israeli Army Injures Many Palestinians In al-Biereh
    February 17, 2018

    Israeli soldiers shot, Friday, three Palestinians with the Toto expanding bullets, and caused dozens to suffer the severe effects of teargas inhalation, after the army attacked dozens of protesters, in al-Biereh city, in the central West Bank governorate of Ramallah and al-Biereh.

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    Israeli Army Injures Many Palestinians In Qalqilia
    February 17, 2018
    http://imemc.org/article/israeli-soldiers-injure-many-palestinians-in-qalqilia

    Israeli soldiers injured, Friday, eight Palestinians in Kufur Qaddoum town, east of the northern West Bank city of Qalqilia, and one child in the northern part of Qalqilia city, after the army assaulted dozens of Palestinian nonviolent protesters.

    Morad Eshteiwi, the media coordinator of the Popular Committee against the Annexation Wall and Colonies in Kufur Qaddoum, said dozens of Palestinians and international peace activists held the weekly procession before the soldiers assaulted them with rubber-coated steel bullets and gas bombs.

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    Israeli Soldiers Injure 23 Palestinians In Gaza
    February 16, 2018
    http://imemc.org/article/israeli-soldiers-injure-many-palestinians-in-gaza
    Israel soldiers injured, Friday, twenty-three Palestinians, including some who were shot with live rounds, after the army, stationed across the border fence, attacked protesters, who marched in several parts of the Gaza Strip.

    The soldiers, stationed on military towers and behind sand hills near Nahal Oz base across the border fence, east of Gaza city, fired many live rounds at Palestinian protesters, moderately wounding a two man, in addition to causing many others to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation.(...)

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    Soldiers Attack The Weekly Nonviolent Procession In Bil’in
    February 16, 2018
    http://imemc.org/article/soldiers-attack-the-weekly-nonviolent-procession-in-bilin

    Israeli soldiers attacked, Friday, the weekly nonviolent protest against the Annexation Wall and Colonies, in Bil’in village west of the central West Bank city of Ramallah.

    The procession started from the center of the village, heading towards the illegal Annexation Wall near Abu Lemon area.

    Dozens of Palestinians, accompanied by Israeli and international peace activists marched while chanting against the ongoing Israeli occupation, illegal colonies and constant violations against the Palestinian people. (...)

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    » Soldiers Injure Many Palestinians Near Nablus – IMEMC News
    http://imemc.org/article/soldiers-injure-many-palestinians-near-nablus

    Israeli soldiers attacked, Friday, dozens of Palestinian nonviolent protesters in Beita village, south of the northern West Bank city of Nablus, and injured many, including one child.

    The Palestinians nonviolently marched in Sbeih Mountain, south of the city, protesting a new illegal colonialist outpost, which was recently installed by Israeli colonizers on Palestinian lands.

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    Army Injures Twenty-Five Palestinians, Abducts One, Near Nablus
    February 16, 2018
    http://imemc.org/article/army-injures-twenty-five-palestinians-abducts-one-near-nablus

    Israeli soldiers shot, on Friday at dawn, seven Palestinians, including one with live fire, caused at least eighteen others to suffer the severe effects of teargas inhalation, and abducted one in Nablus, in northern West Bank.

    Several armored military vehicles invaded the city from many directions, and fired dozens of live rounds, rubber-coated steel bullets and gas bombs at Palestinians, who protested the invasion, and hurled stones at the soldiers.

    Several gas bombs also stuck homes in the invaded neighborhoods, causing many Palestinians, to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation.

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    Army Attacks Nonviolent Protesters, Abduct A Teen, In Hebron
    February 16, 2018
    http://imemc.org/article/army-attacks-nonviolent-protesters-abduct-a-teen-in-hebron

    Israeli soldiers attacked, Friday, dozens of nonviolent Palestinian protesters, and abducted a teenage boy, in the Old City of Hebron, in the southern part of the West Bank.

    The procession, which was organized by “Dismantle the Hebron Ghetto” campaign, was carried out demanding the removal of Israeli colonizers, living in illegal colonies and outposts in Hebron.

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    Israeli Soldiers Injure Many Palestinians Near Ramallah
    February 16, 2018
    http://imemc.org/article/israeli-soldiers-injure-many-palestinians-near-ramallah-2

    Israeli soldiers shot, Friday, one Palestinian with live fire, and another with a gas bomb in his face, in addition causing dozens to suffer the severe effects of teargas inhalation, after the army resorted to the excessive use of force against dozens of residents who marched in the al-Mazra’a al-Gharbiyya village, northwest of Ramallah, protesting the illicit confiscation of Palestinian lands to pave a new road for illegal colonies.

  • MADA reports 117 Israeli violations of Palestinian media freedoms since December
    Feb. 10, 2018
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=779845

    RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — The Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms (MADA) released a report on Saturday saying that between December 2017 and the end of January 2018, the group recorded 117 violations against Palestinian media freedoms at the hands of Israeli forces.

    MADA reported that there was a decrease in violations against media freedoms was recorded in January compared to December 2017, during which 89 violations by Israeli forces were reported against journalists (84 of which were assaults) during their coverage of protests against US President Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

    In January, MADA recorded a total of 31 violations against media freedoms in Palestine, mostly by Israel, as 28 violations were committed by Israeli forces while three violations were committed by Palestinian forces.

    Despite recording a decrease between December 2017 and January 2018, MADA said that violations for January were high compared to January 2017.

  • #Jérusalem : des diplomates européens accablent Trump et #Netanyahou
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/080218/jerusalem-des-diplomates-europeens-accablent-trump-et-netanyahou

    Donald Trump avec Benjamin Netanyahou à Jérusalem, en mai 2017. © Reuters Dans leur douzième rapport confidentiel – que publie en intégralité Mediapart –, les chefs de mission diplomatique de l’UE à Jérusalem et Ramallah dressent un réquisitoire documenté contre la politique israélienne. Et lancent une double mise en garde. Contre la reconnaissance de Jérusalem comme capitale d’Israël. Et contre le projet israélien d’annexer une partie de la Cisjordanie pour créer le « Grand Jérusalem ».

    #International #palestiniens #union_européenne

  • Despite US aid cuts, Palestine president gets $50mn jet – Middle East Monitor
    https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20180125-despite-us-aid-cuts-palestine-president-gets-50mn-jet

    January 25, 2018 at 6:30 pm

    The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority (PA) has just bought a private jet for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Israeli media reported on Thursday.

    “The PA has purchased a luxurious $50-million private jet to be used by Abbas,” Israel’s Channel 12 reported.

    According to the broadcaster, the aircraft — set to be delivered “within weeks” — will be stationed in the Jordanian capital, Amman, for the Palestinian president’s personal use.

    Funding for the plane was reportedly provided by the PA ($20 million) and the Palestinian National Fund ($30 million).

    source israélienne sur la #palestine