organization:israeli army

  • Tensions in the West Bank are rising, together with IDF, settler violence - Haaretz, Amira Hass, 31 January
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/.premium-1.571718

    About an hour after Dr. Mustafa Barghouti’s Wednesday afternoon talk on the extreme tension gripping the West Bank, which is liable to erupt at any time and in any place, a group of youngsters from the Jalazun refugee camp clashed with Palestinian police. Angry posts on Facebook suggested they fight those with whom they should be fighting – the Israeli army.

    About three weeks ago, a clash took place near the camp, north of Ramallah. Residents blocked major roads in protest of the public and government’s lack of interest in the rapidly deteriorating situation there, which was set off by a prolonged UNRWA workers’ strike. On Wednesday, there was a confrontation in central Ramallah. This time, the youngsters came out in droves from the hospital in the center of town, demanding that local shops and restaurants close in solidarity with their friend, Mohammad Mubarak, who was killed by IDF troops two hours earlier. Storeowners refused to heed the youths’ calls, and Palestinian police began shooting in the air to chase the youths away.

    Some of them were arrested and beaten by police, a camp resident told Haaretz. Underneath the patriotic, nationalist character of the young protesters’ demands to close the shops hid the matter of economic status, which isn’t often discussed in the open: Ramallah has become a symbol of the huge gaps between wealthy Palestinians and all the others, particularly the refugees. One man willing to speak about this issue openly, with Haaretz as well, is the head of the Jalazun camp’s popular committee, Fatah member Mahmoud Mubarak. On Thursday, he sat in mourning at the Jalazun camp, and staunchly denied the Israeli version of the events surrounding his son’s death.

    According to the IDF Spokespersons’ unit, the younger Mubarak opened fire on troops exiting a guard post, and was killed when the soldiers returned fire. According to the family and Palestinian media, the 21-year-old had been working for three weeks on a Palestinian ministry public works project to repair a local road, funded by USAID. His job was directing traffic.

    Finding a job – even if it’s only for four months, like this one – takes a great deal of luck. The soldiers, according to the Palestinian reports, humiliated Mubarak, beat him, made him take off his road safety vest, made him run back and forth, and then shot him. “Executed in cold blood,” read the newspaper headlines. He wasn’t holding a weapon. Maher Ranim, Palestinian minister of public works and housing, was quick to release a statement casting doubt on the Israeli version of events. The sensitivities here are clear: the contractor and the Palestinian public works ministry are responsible for the political faithfulness of the workers. The American government has become the largest benefactor to the Palestinian Authority (and UNRWA) in recent years, and all ministry workers, contractors, or anyone else who receives aid, must sign a declaration that they do not support terror.

    On Thursday, the soldiers at the post had already been rotated out. One of the new ones relayed what he heard from his friends. “A day earlier they spoke with him [Mubarak] asked him if he wanted water,” said the soldier. “The bullet holes in the concrete aren’t that big, because of the distance he shot from, and the weak weapon he used,” explained the soldier. The soldiers concurred that it wasn’t smart for him to shoot: he was in an open area, completely exposed to the soldiers at the post.

    The irrationality of the shooting from such an exposed place actually backs up the story told by the boy’s father. On Thursday, a seven minutes’ drive away from Jalazun, in a sunny courtyard near Jalazun’s event hall, the family received hundreds of condolers. “He went to work just like any other Wednesday. Where could he have gotten a weapon from?”

    Many find it easy to accept that the soldiers killed Mubarak in cold blood, as they’ve experienced the recent Israeli escalation in oppressing the civilian Palestinian population. There’s data proving that escalation as well. According to date from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), 2013 saw an increase in the amount of structures demolished by Israeli authorities in areas where Palestinians cannot receive building permits. 565 structures were demolished in “Area C,” compared to 540 in 2012. 805 people, including 405 children, lost their homes. In East Jerusalem, house demolitions shot up by 50 percent, from 64 in 2012 to 98 in 2013. 298 East Jerusalemites lost their homes in 2013, compared with 71 a year earlier.

    OCHA also documents settler violence. 2013 saw 399 settler attacks on Palestinians, resulting in 146 injuries. There were 306 attacks on private Palestinian property. 201 Palestinians were harmed by security forces called on to separate Palestinians from settlers. In 2012, there were 369 settler attacks on Palestinians.

    In 2013, IDF soldiers killed 27 Palestinians in the West Bank, the highest figure since 2008, and three times higher than in 2012, when nine Palestinians were killed in the West Bank. Four of those killed in 2013 were minors. Six were armed, but Palestinian sources doubt that the IDF’s intent was to arrest, rather than kill them. One other Palestinian killed by the IDF was said to have attempted to run over soldiers at a base. The others killed were not armed, and were killed during arrests, protests, or while civilians responded to IDF presence in their neighborhoods by throwing rocks or firebombs. Also, IDF soldiers killed a worker trying to cross the separation barrier, as well as a minor that approached the barrier in another village and a woman walking along the fence in the Al Aruv refugee camp.

    According to OCHA data, Israeli security forces injured 3,736 Palestinians in 2013, as opposed to 3,031 in 2012. 64 percent were wounded in popular protests against the occupation (up from 59 percent in 2012). 32 percent of those injured were minors. Use of rubber-coated bullets also rose, along with those injured by them, 40.5 percent as opposed to 23 percent in 2012. One person was killed by a rubber-coated bullet.

    Al Quds University at Abu Dis has become a hotspot for clashes: students say that Israeli Border Patrol officers provocatively take up positions around the campus, and wait for opportunities to pounce. On January 22, hundreds of students were injured by the border patrol over a period of five hours. Border Patrol officers set up near the university gates demanded to see students’ identity cards. Clashes ensued, officers used tear gas, and were hit with stones. Officers responded with rubber-coated bullets, before entering the campus itself, where they used tear gas and stun grenades as well.

    University administration managed to get most of the students and teachers off of the campus, but some people remained, including a delegation of American students from Bard College, which has joint courses with the university, and were injured by rubber-coated bullets and teargas.

    In a letter to Bard College administration, Al Quds professors wrote, “this breach, and others that preceded it, are an intolerable erosion of our students’ and professors’ right to a safe learning environment… the Israeli army’s actions create an atmosphere of violence, abuse, and fear on our campus.”

    A Border Patrol spokesperson stated in response, “during an operation, the officers encountered an unruly mob that threw firebombs and stones before fleeing into the campus. Officers entered the campus in order to arrest them. One suspect was arrested for throwing stones. It is important to note that any attempt to harm security forces will be dealt with severely, and suspects will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. Any attempt to distort the facts and present the situation differently is untruthful.”

    Dr. Barghouti is head of the “Palestinian National Initiative” movement, and participates in various popular activities throughout the West Bank. “At checkpoints within the West Bank, at checkpoints at entrances to Israel, on the Allenby bridge, at the office of the Civil Administration, at military courts: any place where people face great, intolerable humiliation, and anywhere their rage can be felt,” says Barghouti. He is a doctor by trade, and the word “rage” sounds as if it was a medical diagnosis.

  • Abbas seeks further imperialist collaboration
    https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/blogs/politics/9518-abbas-seeks-further-imperialist-collaboration

    Only a few days after Tawfik Tirawi ambiguously called upon Palestinians, including the Palestinian leadership, to embrace resistance, PA President Mahmoud Abbas has once again revealed his allegiance to Israel and imperialism by compromising upon border security, should the hypothetical Palestinian state become a reality.

    In a televised interview with Ma’an which was broadcasted at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) conference, Abbas made contradictory remarks regarding sovereignty, stating that “the borders of the Palestinian state will eventually be in the hands of the Palestinians, not the Israeli army”. He then added that following the three-year transition during which Israel would gradually withdraw from the borders, security would then be entrusted to NATO, “in order to soothe our concerns and Israel’s”.

  • Israeli forces kill Palestinian man in #west_bank
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israeli-forces-kill-palestinian-man-west-bank

    Israeli forces killed a Palestinian man in the northern West Bank on Wednesday, an Israeli army spokeswoman confirmed on social media. In a misspelled tweet, the social media head of Israeli Occupying Forces Avital Leibovich wrote that Israeli soldiers had “eliminated” a Palestinian man near Ramallah. read more

    #Israel #Palestine #Top_News

  • Israeli forces open fire on #Gaza #protesters, two wounded
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israeli-forces-open-fire-gaza-protesters-two-wounded

    The Israeli army fired live ammunition and tear gas at protesters near the border fence in the Gaza Strip on Friday, wounding two Palestinians, medics and an AFP correspondent said. Occupation forces fired at some 300 demonstrators who were protesting against #Israel's destruction of farmland for its 300-meter (yard) buffer zone, the correspondent said. Two protesters were moderately wounded and taken to hospital, Gaza’s Hamas health ministry spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra told AFP. Israel’s army was “unaware of the incident,” a spokeswoman said. read more

    #Palestine #Top_News

  • Palestinians aim to win back right to appeal property confiscations in military court
    Palestinians could appeal confiscations in West Bank military courts until last month, when the Israeli army changed its stance.
    17th of January 2013
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.569059

    Adalah, an advocacy group for Arab minority rights, wants to overturn the military order barring West Bank Palestinians from appealing the confiscation of their property in a military court.

    The order was signed on December 25 by the head of the military’s Central Command, Maj. Gen. Nitzan Alon.

    The order “is designed to harm the Palestinians and restrict their rights, without any legitimate justification,” Adalah wrote to the attorney general, defense minister and Alon. If the order is not revoked, the group will appeal to the Supreme Court, Adalah said.

    The military commander in the West Bank is authorized to confiscate property or money implicated in illegal or security-related activity. This clause lets the military and police seize funds believed to belong to terror groups. The authorities can also confiscate vehicles used to illegally transport laborers and equipment into Israel.

    Until December 25, Palestinians could appeal confiscations in West Bank military courts, which were authorized to consider such issues based on a 2010 decision by the Military Court of Appeals. In that decision, the court ordered the return of a pneumatic drill to a Palestinian after the police had confiscated it.

    Adalah wrote that the order issued last month infringes on property rights and violates international human rights and international humanitarian law.

    It said the order also violates Israeli administrative law and international law, which have been recognized in the occupied territories by several Supreme Court decisions. These principles have also been recognized by the International Court of Justice in The Hague, in its advisory opinion on the separation barrier, Adalah said.

  • Why Doesn’t #Israel Eliminate #Hezbollah Now?
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/why-doesn%E2%80%99t-israel-eliminate-hezbollah-now

    Israeli infantry soldiers from the Kfir Brigade take part in a drill in urban warfare simulating a combat mission with #Lebanon's Hezbollah at the #israeli_army base of Elyakim in northern Israel on July 11, 2013.(Photo: AFP - Jack Guez). Israeli infantry soldiers from the Kfir Brigade take part in a drill in urban warfare simulating a combat mission with Lebanon’s Hezbollah at the Israeli army base of Elyakim in northern Israel on July 11, 2013.(Photo: AFP - Jack Guez).

    Israeli political and military leaders of all levels have been issuing almost daily threats against Hezbollah while claiming that the Israeli army stands fully ready to confront – and even crush – Hezbollah. So, why don’t they destroy Hezbollah now? (...)

    #Articles #israeli_media

  • #Israel Seeks to Tap Arab Markets With Made-in-#Jordan Label
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israel-seeks-tap-arab-markets-made-jordan-label

    Palestinian militants of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s armed wing, flank a model of a Gaza Strip made M75 rocket during an anti-Israel parade as part of the celebrations marking the first anniversary of an Israeli army operation, on November 13, 2013 in Gaza City. (Photo: AFP - Mahmud Hams) Palestinian militants of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s armed wing, flank a model of a Gaza Strip made M75 rocket during an anti-Israel parade (...)

    #Mideast_&_North_Africa #Articles #Boycott #israeli_media

  • Israeli tanks, bulldozers enter #Gaza Strip, are met with mortar fire
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israeli-tanks-bulldozers-enter-gaza-strip-are-met-mortar-fire

    Israeli army vehicles penetrated into the southern Gaza Strip on Thursday morning, witnesses said, with Palestinian militants firing mortar shells in response without causing any casualties. “Six military bulldozers accompanied by several tanks incurred about 200 meters from the border into farmland, as helicopters and spy planes circled above near the village of Khuzaa,” east of the town of Khan Yunis, the witnesses told AFP. "Resistance fighters fired several mortar rounds at the Israeli (...)

    #Israel #Palestine #Top_News

  • Max Blumenthal’s “Goliath” seen as threat at heart of Israel’s propaganda machinery
    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/benjamin-doherty/max-blumenthals-goliath-seen-threat-heart-israels-propaganda-mac

    The pair met a decade earlier in the Israeli army where, the company press release states, “they both were entrusted with revising the Army’s strategic media infrastructure.”

    In 2010, Thunder11 created Iran180, an astroturf operation posing deceptively as a “human rights” group. Its real goal was to demonize and incite confrontation with Iran.

    Iran180’s most notorious activities have included street performances depicting sexual assaults and intended to portray former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as a gay Jew. Other Iran180 productions include bizarre music videos that portray Ahmadinejad defecating and him and Bashar al Assad as misogynistic, married gay men.

  • Israeli #drone crashes in northern #Gaza
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israeli-drone-crashes-northern-gaza

    An Israeli military drone crashed in the northern Gaza Strip on Sunday, with #Israel blaming a technical malfunction. The Israeli army said “a ’Skylark’ tactical mini UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) system crashed earlier today in the Gaza Strip due to a technical malfunction.” A security source from Hamas said they had “captured an Israeli drone that was flying over east Jabalia this morning.” He did not elaborate. (...)

    #News

  • Holiday marred for hundreds of Palestinians outside Jerusalem as Israeli army limits entry into villages
    by Amira Hass
    Haaretz, 16th of October
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.552626

    Hundreds of Palestinians from two villages north-west of Jerusalem will be unable to fully celebrate the Id al-Adha (Feast of the Sacrifice) holiday, as a result of the Civil Aministration’s refusal to coordinate the entry of a slaughterer and relatives into the villages.

    On Tuesday the Civil Administration in Judea and Samaria turned down a request by residents of Nebi Samuel to enable the entry of relatives as well as a slaughterer for the Muslim holiday. According to one resident, a representative of the Israel Defense Forces District Coordination and Liaison Office at the Kalandia checkpoint between Ramallah and Jerusalem told him that there would be no coordination - not for them and not for Khaleila, the other isolated village in the Givat Ze’ev-Givon settlement bloc.

  • Palestinians mourn #Gaza man shot dead by Israeli forces
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/palestinians-mourn-gaza-man-shot-dead-israeli-forces

    Relatives of Palestinian Huwayshel Hawajira, who was shot dead by Israeli soldiers, mourn during his funeral near Gaza City on October 1, 2013. (Photo: AFP - Mahmud Hams)

    Palestinians on Tuesday held the funeral of a Gaza resident killed by the Israeli army the night before, an AFP correspondent said, in an incident human rights groups condemned. Huwayshel Hawajira, 36, was shot dead by Israeli soldiers in the northern Gaza Strip on Monday evening, Palestinian (...)

    #Israel #Palestine #Top_News

  • European diplomats: Israeli army manhandled us, seized Palestinian aid
    Haaretz By Reuters and Gili Cohen | Sep. 20, 2013
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/1.548043

    Israeli soldiers clashed with Palestinians, European diplomats and foreign activists trying to erect an encampment in the West Bank on Friday.

    The diplomats said the Israel Defense Forces manhandled them and stopped them from bringing aid and supplies to Palestinians whose homes in the hamlet of Khirbet Makhoul were demolished on Monday. Meanwhile, the IDF said the attempt to erect the tents was a “provocation,” and that Palestinians attacked the soldiers at the scene.

    The army said dozens of Palestinians, foreign activists and diplomats gathered near the settlement of Hemdat and the base of the IDF’s Kfir Brigade in the northern Jordan Valley on Friday afternoon, and tried to set up tents at the site where the homes were razed.

    Some of those present started throwing stones toward the security forces and hitting soldiers, the IDF said, adding that it used stun grenades to disperse the crowd. Three Palestinians were detained for attacking the security forces and transferred to police, the IDF said. The area was declared a closed military zone, and the army stopped a truck bringing supplies to the site, the IDF said. 

    Reuters reported that the soldiers manhandled European diplomats at the site, and seized the truck, which was full of tents and emergency aid they had been trying to deliver to Palestinians whose homes were demolished. 

    Khirbet Makhoul was home to about 120 people. The army razed their ramshackle houses, stables and a kindergarten on Monday after Israel’s High Court ruled that they did not have proper building permits. Despite losing their property, the inhabitants have refused to leave the land, where, they say, their families have lived for generations along with their flocks of sheep.

    A Reuters reporter saw soldiers throw stun grenades at a group of diplomats, aid workers and locals, and yank a French diplomat out of the truck before driving away with its contents.

    “They dragged me out of the truck and forced me to the ground with no regard for my diplomatic immunity,” French diplomat Marion Castaing told Reuters. “This is how international law is being respected here,” she said, covered with dust.

    ’Shocking and outrageous’

    Israeli soldiers stopped the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) delivering emergency aid on Tuesday and on Wednesday IRCS staff managed to put up some tents but the army forced them to take the shelters down.

    Diplomats from France, Britain, Spain, Ireland, Australia and the European Union’s political office, turned up on Friday with more supplies. As soon as they arrived, about a dozen Israeli army jeeps converged on them, and soldiers told them not to unload their truck.

    “It’s shocking and outrageous. We will report these actions to our governments,” said one EU diplomat, who declined to be named because he did not have authorization to talk to the media.

    “(Our presence here) is a clear matter of international humanitarian law. By the Geneva Convention, an occupying power needs to see to the needs of people under occupation. These people aren’t being protected,” he said.

    In the scuffles between soldiers and locals, an elderly Palestinian man also fainted and was taken for medical treatment to a nearby ambulance.

    The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a statement that Makhoul was the third Bedouin community to be demolished by the Israelis in the West Bank and adjacent Jerusalem municipality since August.

    Palestinians have accused the Israeli authorities of progressively taking their historical grazing lands, either earmarking it for military use or handing it over to the Israelis whose settlements dot the West Bank.

    Israelis and Palestinians resumed direct peace talks last month after a three-year hiatus. Palestinian officials have expressed serious doubts about the prospects of a breakthrough.

    “What the Israelis are doing is not helpful to the negotiations. Under any circumstances, talks or not, they’re obligated to respect international law,” the unnamed EU diplomat said.

    A spokesman at the British Consulate General in Jerusalem said London was “seriously concerned” by the Makhoul demolitions and by the subsequent refusal to let villagers receive aid

    “We have repeatedly made clear to the Israeli authorities our concerns over such demolitions, which we view as causing unnecessary suffering to ordinary Palestinians, as harmful to the peace process, and as contrary to international humanitarian law,” he said.

    • Israeli guns pointed at diplomats in ‘quarrel’
      21 September 2013 par Jonathan Cook
      http://www.jonathan-cook.net/blog/2013-09-21/israeli-guns-pointed-at-diplomats-in-quarrel

      (...) Diplomats from France, the UK, Ireland, Spain Sweden, Greece, Australia, Brazil were present as they were attacked and stun grenades fired at them. Let’s now see how bold the EU really is. Is it going to make an issue of this abuse of its diplomats?

      Most coverage was based on the account of a Reuters reporter who was present. Not surprisingly, the Israeli media sought to play down the abuse of the diplomats. This picture of Castaing was not used by any of them. Instead the papers either used pictures of Palestinians being arrested (they deserve it, of course, because they’re terrorists!) or pictures of Castaing’s “alleged manhandling” obscured by distance.

      Headlines mostly played down the incident too:

      Report: IDF seizes EU diplomats’ West Bank aid supply (Ynet)

      IDF says it blocked EU-Palestinian effort to rebuild demolished homes (Times of Israel)

      European diplomats: Israeli army manhandled us, seized Palestinian aid (Haaretz)

      But at least it got some coverage in Israel. Most international media ignored the event. The few that did cover it, in brief, had even more misleading headlines. Here’s a classic from the NYT: “West Bank: Israeli Soldiers Quarrel With Diplomats“.

  • L’armée israélienne et Tribune Juive prétendent que Gaza nage dans le bonheur avec un centre commercial ultra-chic en utilisant la photo d’un centre commercial de… Kuala Lumpur.
    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/israel-army-publishes-fake-image-huge-gaza-shopping-mall

    Before publishing it on 12 August on its English-language website, the Israeli army published the same post in French on 4 August.

    It was then published by the anti-Palestinian website Tribune Juive the same day.

    But some of the material had already circulated on many other Islamophobic websites long before.

    For example, the same Kuala Lumpur mall photo, purportedly in Gaza, appeared on a virulently Islamophobic blog called “Barenaked Islam” in April 2012, and was disseminated on Facebook by “Geert Wilders supporters,” a page dedicated to the Islamophobic Dutch politician.

    It also appeared on “Religion of Peace,” another anti-Muslim hate site.

    It would appear that the Israeli army gets its information about Gaza from Islamophobic hate sites.

    Le négationnisme sioniste une fois de plus.

  • Video shows Israeli soldier beating Palestinian workers “without mercy”
    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/video-shows-israeli-soldier-beating-palestinian-workers-without-

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GvLkScJPeE

    Video broadcast by Israel’s Channel 10 shows an Israeli soldier launching a brutal, unprovoked attack on several Palestinian workers.

    Michael Gershkowitz of the Israeli army’s Kfir brigade, “attacked a group of Palestinian workers, beating three of them over and over again without mercy using his M-16 rifle,” Channel 10 said in a Hebrew-language report on Tuesday.

    The horrifying incident occurred in April 2009 outside the Israeli Jewish-only settlement of Petzael in the occupied West Bank’s Jordan Valley, where the workers were waiting for their employers, but the shocking footage has only just been made public.

  • Tony Blair hired ex Israeli army intelligence officer despite envoy role - Telegraph
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/tony-blair/10164523/Tony-Blair-hired-ex-Israeli-army-intelligence-officer-despite-envoy-rol

    Tony Blair has hired a former Israeli army intelligence officer to work in his private office, despite his role as Middle East peace envoy.

  • Natan Blanc is currently serving his tenth term in an Israeli military prison for refusing to be drafted into the Israeli Army, for reasons of conscience.

    Amnesty International, War Resisters International, Yesh Gvul, New Profile, Gush Shalom, and Connection e.V. have initiated a petition calling for his release. Presently the petition is in English and German. Please sign and circulate

    English version:
    http://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/immediately-and-unconditionally-release-conscientious-objector-natan-blanc-f

    German version:
    http://www.change.org/de/Petitionen/kriegsdienstverweigerer-natan-blanc-muss-unverz%C3%BCglich-und-bedingungslos


    If you are sending this to other people, here are some more details:

    Background:

    Natan Blanc, a 20-year old from Haifa, is currently serving his tenth term in an Israeli military prison for refusing to be drafted into the Israeli Army, for reasons of conscience. He was due to be inducted into the army on November 19, 2012, and was sentenced to 10 days in prison. Each time he was released from prison, he reported back to the induction center, and was sent back to prison. This has happened ten times, for a total of 178 days in prison. His current term, of 28 days, began on May 12, 2013.

    You can read more about it in the Guardian:
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/may/13/israel-jail-conscientious-objector-natan-blanc

    or on the website: http://freenatanblanc.wordpress.com

    Natan explained that he is refusing to serve because he feels that the current situation, in which millions of Palestinians under occupation are denied elementary democratic rights over many years, is immoral. He believes that the Israel Defence Forces play a major role in preserving this situation, and says that his conscience does not allow him to be part of it.

    As far as we know, Natan is the first conscientious objector in the history of Israel who has been sentenced to ten consecutive terms in prison for the same offence.

  • Colonies dans les territoires palestiniens occupés (suite)

    The Palestinians’ West Bank
    Squeeze them out

    As Jewish settlements expand, the Palestinians are being driven away
    May 4th 2013 | SUSIYA |From the print edition
    Voir aussi la video

    http://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21577111-jewish-settlements-expand-palestinians-are-being-driven-away-squ

    « IT WAS just another day for the Israeli army on the West Bank. Having parked its jeeps in the hills south of Hebron, a unit of soldiers checked the papers of the Palestinians who lived there, confiscated one or two, and then herded the people and their flocks off a hilltop which a nearby Jewish settlement, called Susiya, has been eyeing with a view to taking it over. “Military zone,” tersely explained an Israeli officer, who had just received a warrant declaring it such. “Off you go.” (...)

  • “Oops...one less Arab”: Even more disturbing Instagram images from the Israeli army | The Electronic Intifada
    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/oopsone-less-arab-even-more-disturbing-instagram-images-israeli-

    An Israeli soldier plays a “card game” with confiscated Palestinian identity cards in the occupied West Bank. Posted by “ybaruch” 18 October 2012 (Source).

  • “Oops...one less Arab”: Even more disturbing Instagram images from the Israeli army | The Electronic Intifada
    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/oopsone-less-arab-even-more-disturbing-instagram-images-israeli-


    The t-shirt says “My first bullet, his last breath.” Posted by “ybaruch” (Source).

  • Israel arrests Hamas lawmakers in West Bank
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/02/20132503514380595.html

    Israel arrested 23 Hamas members in the occupied West Bank on Monday, some of them lawmakers, according to the group and the Israeli army.

    Hamas said in a statement that the three lawmakers - Ahmed Attoun, Hatem Qafisha and Mohammed al-Talhad - had been detained in the early hours of the morning, as well as several local Hamas leaders.

    “It is a criminal act that will not succeed in stopping their struggle,” the statement said, “We in the Hamas movement strongly condemn the campaign of arbitrary arrests that took in dozens of Hamas leaders.”

    An Israeli military spokeswoman would not confirm whether Hamas lawmakers had been arrested and did not provide any of the men’s names or say why they had been detained.

    “Twenty-five Palestinians were arrested, 23 of them belonged to Hamas,” she said.

    Hanan Ashrawi, a senior Palestinian official in the West Bank, condemned the arrests, describing them as “deliberate Israeli plans to destabilise the internal situation, interfere in Palestinian institutions... and deal a blow to national reconciliation,” according to the AFP news agency.

  • ALERT | Israel To Displace 1000 Palestinians Next Wednesday | Occupied Palestine | فلسطين
    http://occupiedpalestine.wordpress.com/2012/12/31/alert-israel-to-displace-1000-palestinians-next-wednesd

    ALERT | Israel To Displace 1000 Palestinians Next Wednesday

    December 31, 2012 by occupiedpalestine 0 Comments

    “Settling” constitutes a warcime according to international law and ICC statute. Even under US’ own military legislations’
    Law resources below this article

    Monday December 31, 2012 10:05 by Saed Bannoura – IMEMC & Agencies

    Head of the Wadi Al-Maleh area, in the northern plains of the occupied West Bank, Aref Daraghma, stated that the Israeli army intends to displace around 10000 Palestinian Bedouins in the area in order to conduct military training.

    bedouins_tent[1]
    Image By PNN

    Daraghma said that the Israeli army handed written military orders to the residents stating that they should leave as the soldiers will be using live ammunition in military drills in the area, the Palestine News Network (PNN) reported.

    He added that the grazing area, inhabited by the shepherds, includes Wadi Al-Maleh, Ein Al-Hilwa, Al-Faw Valley, Al-Meeta, Al-Borj, and other villages.

    The army informed the residents that they have until the morning of this coming Wednesday before the army conducts its trainings in the northern plains.

    Israel performed similar military drills in the areas last summer forcing dozens of families to leave their homes seeking shelter in other areas until all drills were concluded.

    Thousands of Palestinians have been displaced and repeatedly removed from the area since Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967. Israel also demolished dozens of entire villages inhabited by Bedouins and shepherds.

    LAW

    “States may not deport or transfer parts of their own civilian population into a territory they occupy.”

    Summary

    State practice establishes this rule as a norm of customary international law applicable in international armed conflicts.
    International armed conflicts

    The prohibition on deporting or transferring parts of a State’s own civilian population into the territory it occupies is set forth in the Fourth Geneva Convention.[1]

    It is a grave breach of Additional Protocol I.[2]

    Under the Statute of the International Criminal Court, “the transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies” constitutes a war crime in international armed conflicts.[3]

    Many military manuals prohibit the deportation or transfer by a party to the conflict of parts of its civilian population into the territory it occupies.[4]

    This rule is included in the legislation of numerous States.[5]

    Official statements and reported practice also support the prohibition on transferring one’s own civilian population into occupied territory.[6]

    Attempts to alter the demographic composition of an occupied territory have been condemned by the UN Security Council.[7]

    In 1992, it called for the cessation of attempts to change the ethnic composition of the population, anywhere in the former Yugoslavia.[8]

    Similarly, the UN General Assembly and UN Commission on Human Rights have condemned settlement practices.[9]

    According to the final report of the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights Dimensions of Population Transfer, including the Implantation of Settlers and Settlements, “the implantation of settlers” is unlawful and engages State responsibility and the criminal responsibility of individuals.[10]

    In 1981, the 24th International Conference of the Red Cross reaffirmed that “settlements in occupied territory are incompatible with article 27 and 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention”.[11]

    In the Case of the Major War Criminals in 1946, the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg found two of the accused guilty of attempting the “Germanization” of occupied territories.[12]

    References

    [1] Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 49, sixth paragraph (cited in Vol. II, Ch. 38, § 334).

    [2] Additional Protocol I, Article 85(4)(a) (adopted by consensus) (ibid., § 335).

    [3] ICC Statute, Article 8(2)(b)(viii) (ibid., § 336).

    [4] See, e.g., the military manuals of Argentina (ibid., §§ 346–347), Australia (ibid., § 348), Canada (ibid., § 349), Croatia (ibid., § 350), Hungary (ibid., § 351), Italy (ibid., § 352), Netherlands (ibid., § 353), New Zealand (ibid., § 354), Spain (ibid., § 355), Sweden (ibid., § 357), Switzerland (ibid., § 357), United Kingdom (ibid., § 358) and United States (ibid., § 359).

    [5] See, e.g., the legislation of Armenia (ibid., § 361), Australia (ibid., §§ 362–363), Azerbaijan (ibid., §§ 364–365), Bangladesh (ibid., § 366), Belarus (ibid., § 367), Belgium (ibid., § 368), Bosnia and Herzegovina (ibid., § 369), Canada (ibid., §§ 371–372), Congo (ibid., § 373), Cook Islands (ibid., § 374), Croatia (ibid., § 375), Cyprus (ibid., § 376), Czech Republic (ibid., § 377), Germany (ibid., § 379), Georgia (ibid., § 380), Ireland (ibid., § 381), Mali (ibid., § 384), Republic of Moldova (ibid., § 385), Netherlands (ibid., § 386), New Zealand (ibid., §§ 387–388), Niger (ibid., § 390), Norway (ibid., § 391), Slovakia (ibid., § 392), Slovenia (ibid., § 393), Spain (ibid., § 394), Tajikistan (ibid., § 395), United Kingdom (ibid., §§ 397–398), Yugoslavia (ibid., § 399) and Zimbabwe (ibid., § 400); see also the draft legislation of Argentina (ibid., § 360), Burundi (ibid., § 370), Jordan (ibid., § 382), Lebanon (ibid., § 383) and Trinidad and Tobago (ibid., § 396).

    [6] See, e.g., the statements of Kuwait (ibid., § 405) and United States (ibid., §§ 406–407) and the reported practice of Egypt (ibid., § 402) and France (ibid., § 403).

    [7] See, e.g., UN Security Council, Res. 446 , 452 and 476 (ibid., § 408), Res. 465 (ibid., § 409) and Res. 677 (ibid., § 410).

    [8] UN Security Council, Res. 752 (ibid., § 411).

    [9] See, e.g., UN General Assembly, Res. 36/147 C, 37/88 C, 38/79 D, 39/95 D and 40/161 D (ibid., § 412) and Res. 54/78 (ibid., § 405); UN Commission on Human Rights, Res. 2001/7 (ibid., § 413).

    [10] UN Sub-Commission on Human Rights, Final report of the Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights Dimensions of Population Transfer, including the Implantation of Settlers and Settlements (ibid., § 415).

    [11] 24th International Conference of the Red Cross, Res. III (ibid., § 419).

    [12] International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, Case of the Major War Criminals, Judgement (ibid., § 421).

  • Inside Israel’s Twitter War Room | Middle East Research and Information Project

    Within hours of the onset of Operation Pillar of Defense, Israel’s latest military campaign in the Gaza Strip, global news outlets had already turned their spotlight on social media. A raft of stories led with the Israeli army’s use of Twitter and Facebook to justify the ongoing aerial bombardment. Lost in this breathless coverage was the history of the army’s social media investment, which long precedes 2012. Over the course of the last few years, the army has gradually built up its presence on social media platforms. The chief aim: to make them deployable in times of war.

    http://www.merip.org/mero/mero112412

    On August 14, 2011 — following months of development work — the first official IDF page was launched in English and within one day boasted 90,000 followers (an Arabic-language page, with far fewer followers, appeared shortly thereafter). Engagement with Facebook, the IDF developers decided, required creative manipulation of platform protocols so that they might serve military priorities. The IDF’s retooling of the “like” button was a case in point: “Click ‘Like’ if you support the IDF’s right to defend the state of Israel from those who attempt to harm Israelis,” in the words of an early post (this clunky formulation has since been abandoned, with the IDF now encouraging Facebook users to “share” the army’s content as a way to affirm solidarity with the military’s position). Military personnel articulated the retooling challenge this way: “This is a problem that I face every day. And I have to be creative. I cannot say: ‘Like’ Israel under attack. So, it’s really complicated, but what I try to do is to create a new language, to interpret the language of the army on Facebook.” [3] That fall, army officials lauded plans to administer the Facebook wall around the clock, noting the need for “specific night shifts” on this platform alone — a change enabled by newly appointed staff.

    #Israël #propagande #réseaux_sociaux #Gaza #Facebook

  • [The Israeli army] sends text message to Gaza mobile phones: ‘The next phase is on the way’
    http://972mag.com/idf-sends-text-message-to-gaza-mobile-phones-the-next-phase-is-on-the-way/60046

    (16 novembre 2012)

    @RanaGaza tweeted a photo of the message on her father’s mobile phone.


    Arabic text message sent by the Israeli army to mobile phones in Gaza

    During the 2008-9 Israeli military assault on Gaza, the army sent thousands of similar messages to mobile phones in Gaza. But according to several friends and acquaintances who were there, the messages were often either false alarms or designed to sow panic.

    #mobile #propagande #psyops #guerre

    • C’est d’ailleurs assez simple à réaliser. Lors du congrès annuel du #CCC c’était le sujet d’une conférence avec présentation du matériel nécessaire. En bref c’est à la portée de chacun qui veut bien investir quelques milliers d’euros. Dans un #contexte_artistique ça peut être rigolo :-)
      #dual_use

  • No safe haven: Civilians under attack in the Gaza Strip
    Nov 16, 2012 05:43 am | International Eyewitnesses in Gaza
    IMG 6054 001
    Salem Waqef (Photo: Lydia De Leeuw)

    Gaza City, 16 November 2012

    The Israeli attacks across the Gaza Strip have entered their third day. We write this report amid the sounds of incessant bombings, which have continued all day yesterday and throughout the night.

    The military escalation carried out by the Israeli Army continues all over the Gaza Strip. From Gaza City, we hear incessant noise of drones and F-16 fighter jets crashing through the sky above our heads. Bombs repeatedly fall in our surroundings, in densely populated civilians areas. At this point, Israeli air forces have conducted nearly 200 airstrikes, bringing the death toll to 19. Among the casualties are ten civilians, including six children and one woman. More than 180 people have been injured by the attacks, the vast majority civilians. The areas targeted included Beit Hanoun, Jabalia refugee camp, Sheikh Radwan and al-Nasser neighbourhoods in Gaza City, Maghazi, Deir El Balah, Khan Younis, and the tunnel area in Rafah.
    IMG 8004
    Haneen Tafesh (Photo: Gisela Schmidt-Martin)

    Yesterday we visited Al Shifa hospital, where most of the injured are brought to. There we spoke with doctors, patients, their relatives, and witnesses about what they are going through in the current escalation in the Gaza Strip. We wish to share some of the stories of the people we met.

    Salem Waqef, a 40 year old man, was severely injured when his home was destroyed in an attack during the early morning of 15 November. His doctors say Salem suffered a brain injury when he was deprived of oxygen. He was brought into the International Care Unit of Al Shifa hospital at 5am where he was placed on a ventilator. He remains in a coma and the doctors said he was in a serious condition.

    At approximately 1.10pm, as we were leaving the ICU, a 10 month old girl, Haneen Tafesh, was brought into the ward. She was unconscious and her tiny body was grey. She had suffered a skull fracture and brain haemorrhage, which resulted from an attack that took place at around 11am yesterday in Gaza’s Sabra neighbourhood. She was in a coma and on mechanical ventilation. Later in the afternoon, we checked how Haneen was doing and doctors said her condition had deteriorated. After returning home in the evening, we learned that she had died.
    IMG 6057 001
    Ahmed Durghmush (Photo: Lydia De Leeuw)

    Ahmed Durghmush is in his early twenties and was brought to Al Shifa ICU at around 9pm Wednesday night, 14 November, after he was injured by an airstrike carried out on the Tel al Hawa neighbourhood in Gaza City. He had suffered a severe brain trauma, caused by shrapnel from an explosion. Dr Fauzi Nablusia, a doctor in the ICU, explained that, when Ahmed arrived, some of his brain matter was protruding from his head wound. He suffered a brain haemorrhage and was operated on. When we asked doctors about Ahmed’s condition later today, they said it had deteriorated. A relative was standing over Ahmed’s bed, expressing his feelings of powerlessness and fear for Ahmed’s fate.
    IMG 6122 001
    Basma Mahmoud el Tourouq (Photo: Lydia De Leeuw)

    The emergency room was dealing with spikes in victim arrivals throughout the day. One of those brought in was 5 year old Basma Mahmoud el Tourouq from Rimal neighbourhood, Gaza City. She was injured in an airstrike near her home around 2.30pm today. The shockwave of the explosion threw her across her bedroom, causing her lower arm to be fractured as she fell on the floor.

    We later listened to the stories of some of the injured children, women and men and their relatives who had been moved up to the different wards of Al Shifa hospital.

    Mohammed Abu Amsha, a two and half year old boy, was injured while he was sitting in front of his grandfather’s house in Beit Hanoun. An F16 fired a missile nearby, and scattering rubble struck him in the head. As we were about to leave, Mohammed’s father mentioned that Mohammed’s uncle had also been injured.
    IMG 8012
    Mohammed Abu Amsha (Photo: Gisela Schmidt-Martin)

    Zuhdiye Samour, a mother and grandmother from Beach refugee camp in western Gaza City, was still visibly shaken by what had happened when she shared her story: “We were sitting together in our house. It was around 8.30 in the evening and we were watching TV, playing films so that the children would be less afraid. Then, we heard the sound of 12 shells being fired from gunboats in the sea.” Zuhdiye and three other civilians were injured as shells dropped in her neighbourhood, a residential area in the north of Gaza City.

    Khalid Hamad, the Director of Public Information for the Ministry of Justice, was one of the other civilians injured in the indiscriminate attack of the residential area. He was at home with his family in Nabarat, Northern Gaza City, when they heard the sound of shelling, targeting a neighbour’s home. A number of people in the neighbourhood rushed outside to help and were targeted by a series of six additional shells. Hamad’s teenage nephew was lightly injured,and another man received shrapnel wounds. “They targeted civilians deliberately”, he said. “The Israeli forces don’t make mistakes.”
    IMG 6152 001
    Duaa Hejazi (Photo: Lydia De Leeuw)

    A 13 year old girl, Duaa Hejazi, was coming back to her home in Gaza’s Sabra neighbourhood, after a walk with her mother and siblings, when an Israeli missile fired on the road in front of their home around 8 o’clock at night. “I was bleeding a lot. My brother was injured too, in his hand. The neighbours brought me to the hospital” Duaa sustained shrapnel injuries throughout her upper body, with some pieces still imbedded in her chest. She would like to pass on a message to other children, living outside of Gaza:

    “I say, we are children. There is nothing that is our fault to have to face this. They are occupying us and I will say, as Abu Omar said, “If you’re a mountain, the wind won’t shake you”. We’re not afraid, we’ll stay strong.”

    During our time al Shifa we also met with Dr Mithad Abbas, the Director General of the hospital. When we asked him about the ways in which Shifa hospital is coping with the incoming patients, he said, “When those cases arrive at our hospital, it is not under normal circumstances. They come on top of the siege, the blockade, which has resulted in a lack of vital medicines and required medical supplies.” The hospital lacks essential basic medicines and supplies, such as antibiotics, IV fluid, anesthesia, gloves, catheters, external fixators, Heparin, sutures, detergents and spare parts for medical equipment.

    The hospital also relies on a store of fuel, which provides power during the daily electricity cuts. If power cuts reach the level of more than 12 hours per day, Dr Abbas estimates that the hospital only has enough fuel in storage to run for approximately one week.

    Hospital staff are encountering chaotic and emotional scenes, as hallways and rooms become overcrowded with people trying to ascertain whether their relatives or friends have been hurt. “People enter the emergency room in panic, looking for their relatives. It is very difficult to deal with,” says Abbas.

    No one knows where the next missile will hit, no one knows where they can be safe. Parents are unable to keep their children safe, let alone provide them a sense of safety.

    These are the names of the martyrs killed in the attacks:

    1- Walid Abadlah, 2 1/2 years

    2- Marwan Abu Al-Qumsan, 52 years

    3- Ramai Hamamd

    4- Khalid Abu Al-Nasser

    5- Habes Mesbeh, 30 years

    6- Wael Al-Ghalban

    7- Hisham Al-Ghalban

    8- Ahmed Al-Jaabari, 52 years

    9- Mohammed Al-Hams

    10- Ranan Arafat, 3 years

    11- Essam Abu El-Mazzah, 20 years

    12- Hani Al-Kaseeh, 18 years

    13- Ahmed Al-Masharawi, 11 months

    14- Hiba Al-Masharawi, 19 years, pregnant woman

    15- Mahmud Sawaween, 65 years old

    16- Hanin Tafish, 10 months

    17- Tareq Jamal Naser, 16 years

    18- Oday Jamal Nasser, 14 years

    19- Fares al-Bassiouni

    – - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    For further information, please contact:

    Adie Mormech (British) +972 (0) 592280943

    Adriana (Italian, Spanish) +972 (0) 597241318

    Gisela Schmidt Martin (Irish) +972 (0) 592778020 blipfoto.com/GiselaClaire

    Joe Catron (United States) +972 (0) 595594326 twitter.com/jncatron

    Lydia de Leeuw (Dutch) +972 (0) 597478455 asecondglance.wordpress.com

    Meri (Italian) +972(0)598563299

    We are a group of internationals living in the Gaza Strip, working in the fields of journalism, human rights, education, and agriculture. We seek to defend and advocate for the rights of Palestinians in the context of the Israeli occupation and military operations. Besides being eyewitnesses ourselves, we gather our information from our personal networks across the Gaza Strip, from local media reports, medical staff, and local and international NGOs in Gaza.

    We verify the information we send out and hope our reports will contribute to accurate media coverage of the situation in Gaza.