organization:israeli military

  • Palestinian killed after alleged attack attempt north of Jenin
    Oct. 31, 2015 10:16 A.M. (Updated: Oct. 31, 2015 1:38 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=768577

    JENIN (Ma’an) — A Palestinian was shot dead Saturday after an alleged attack attempt on an Israeli security guard at the al-Jalama military checkpoint north of Jenin in the occupied West Bank, the Israeli army and media said.

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that "the Palestinian attempted to stab security personnel at the crossing” when “forces responded to the imminent danger and shot the perpetrator.”

    Hebrew language news sites and the army confirmed there were no Israeli injuries.

    Local sources identified the Palestinian as Mahmoud Talal Mahmoud Nazzal , 18, from the town of Qabatiya south of Jenin.

    His body was delivered to the Palestinian Red Crescent before being transferred to Talal Suleiman Public Hospital.

    Nearly 70 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces this month during demonstrations and after attempted, alleged, and actual attacks on Israeli military or civilians.

    At least nine Israelis have been killed in attacks by Palestinians during the same time period.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Palestinian shot dead after alleged Jenin attack, no injuries reported
    Oct. 24, 2015 12:16 P.M. (Updated: Oct. 24, 2015 6:32 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=768453

    JENIN (Ma’an) — A Palestinian youth was shot dead Saturday near al-Jalama military checkpoint north of Jenin in the occupied West Bank after he allegedly attempted to stab an Israeli security guard, eyewitnesses and the Israeli army said.

    Eyewitnesses told Ma’an that “there were no stabbing attempts” at the time that Israeli forces opened fire at a 16-year-old Palestinian at the crossing.

    The forces then dragged the injured youth inside of the checkpoint preventing Palestinian Red Crescent ambulances from reaching him for treatment, eyewitnesses added.

    The teen was identified as Ahmad Muhammad Said Kamil from Jenin.

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that “an attempted stabbing was thwarted at the Gilboa crossing,” using an alternate name for the checkpoint, where “security personnel” shot and killed the suspect to prevent an attack.

    The spokesperson was unable to confirm any injuries and said the Israeli military was currently investigating the incident. The crossing has since been closed.

    The teen’s death at the northern border of the occupied West Bank marks at least 55 Palestinians killed since the beginning of the month.

    • Ahmed Mohammed Sa’id Kmail 17 ans
      http://www.pchrgaza.org/portal/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=11340:israeli-forces-continue

      On Friday, 23 October 2015, in another crime of excessive use of force, private security guards serving the interests of the Israeli forces killed a Palestinian child while running towards the first barrier at al-Jalama crossing, northeast of Jenin. According to PCHR’s investigations and statements of eyewitnesses, on the abovementioned day, Ahmed Mohammed Sa’id Kmail (17) was present along with other peddlers in the place where they used to stay. At approximately 11:00, Kmail suddenly ran towards the first barrier at al-Jalama crossing. The security guards noticed him, so some of them escaped but others opened fire at him. Kmail fell to the ground, however, the Israeli forces denied the Palestine Red Crescent Society’s (PRCS) paramedics access to the area. Soon after, Kmail’s corpse was pulled inside the crossing and the security guards stopped the traffic. It should be noted that the victim was present at the checkpoint in the early morning along with other peddlers, as a number of eyewitnesses said to PCHR’s fieldworker that they saw him selling chocolate-coated marshmallow treats.

  • Quatre roquettes tirées de Syrie s’abattent sur le nord d’Israël - L’Orient-Le Jour
    http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/940120/deux-roquettes-sabattent-sur-le-nord-disrael.html

    Leur portée ainsi que l’envoi de quatre roquettes diminuent la probabilité qu’il s’agisse de projectiles échangés dans le conflit syrien et passant par inadvertance côté israélien, comme cela arrive fréquemment.

    Ben voyons, l’Etat israélien est tout-à-fait le genre à laisser passer une petite roquette par-ci, un obus par-là !!!

    (Inadvertance = défaut d’attention, étourderie !)

  • Israeli forces chase 5-year-old with ’skunk water’
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=765453

    The foul-smelling liquid has been used by the Israeli military as a form of non-lethal crowd control since at least 2008 and can leave individuals and homes smelling like feces and garbage for weeks.

    Skunk water was developed by Israeli company Odortec Ltd. in conjunction with the Israel police and is generally sprayed from specially designed trucks up to a range of 30-40 meters, according to Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem.

    Israeli army spokesperson has reported that skunk contains “organic material and has been approved for use by the Israeli Ministry of the Environment and the Chief IDF Medical Officer,” although the exact contents of the rancid liquid have been contested, B’Tselem says.

  • Israel’s secret weapon in the war against Hezbollah: The New York Times -
    Israel is turning to the media and diplomacy to head off an almost inevitable new round of confrontation with Hezbollah. Its message: Israel won’t be able to avoid attacks on Lebanon’s civilians so long as the Shi’ite militias use them as human shields.
    By Amos Harel | May 15, 2015 | | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.656516

    In a prominent article on Wednesday, The New York Times reported detailed Israeli allegations about Hezbollah’s military deployment in Shi’ite villages in southern Lebanon. The paper cited a briefing by Israeli military officials as its source, added an evasive response from “a Hezbollah sympathizer in Lebanon,” and noted that the Israeli claims “could not be independently verified.”

    The Times cited data, maps and aerial photographs provided by the Israel Defense Forces in regard to two neighboring villages, Muhaybib and Shaqra, in the central sector of southern Lebanon. The former, according to Israeli military intelligence, houses “nine arms depots, five rocket-launching sites, four infantry positions, signs of three underground tunnels, three antitank positions and, in the very center of the village, a Hezbollah command post” – all in a village of no more than 90 homes. In the latter village, with a population of 4,000, the IDF claims to have identified no fewer than 400 Hezbollah-related military sites.

    Throughout southern Lebanon, Israel has identified thousands of Hezbollah facilities that could be targeted by Israel, according to the report by Isabel Kershner.

    Israel, Kershner writes, is preparing for what it views as “an almost inevitable next battle with Hezbollah.” According to the IDF, Hezbollah has significantly built up its firepower and destructive capability, and has put in place extensive operational infrastructure in the Shi’ite villages of southern Lebanon – a move which, Israel says, “amounts to using the civilians as a human shield.”

    Although Kershner’s Israeli interlocutors don’t claim to know when or under what specific circumstances war will erupt, they pull no punches about its likely consequences. In such a war, the Times report says, the IDF will not hesitate to attack targets in a civilian setting, with the result that many Lebanese noncombatants will be killed. That will not be Israel’s fault, an unnamed “senior Israeli military official” says, because “the civilians are living in a military compound.” Israel “will hit Hezbollah hard,” and make “every effort to limit civilian casualties,” the military official said. However, Israel does “not intend to stand by helplessly in the face of rocket attacks.”

    The Times reports that Hezbollah, as part of the lessons it drew in the Second Lebanon War, in 2006, moved its “nature reserves” – its military outposts in the south – from open farmland into the heart of the Shi’ite villages that lie close to the border with Israel. That in itself is old news; Hezbollah began redeploying along these lines immediately after the 2006 war (as reported in Haaretz in July 2007.

    In July 2010, Israel presented similar data to the local and foreign media, which revealed in great detail Hezbollah’s military infrastructure in southern Lebanon. The village that was singled out then was Al-Hiyam.

    On all these occasions, Israel made it clear that in the event of a war it would have to operate in the villages, and that civilians would inevitably be harmed. In the current incarnation of warnings, as conveyed in this week’s Times report, the potential consequences of the situation are noted by two former senior officials of the defense establishment.

    Maj. Gen. (res.) Amos Yadlin, a former director of Military Intelligence, is quoted as saying that the residents of villages in southern Lebanon do not have full immunity if they live close to military targets. Maj. Gen. (res.) Yaakov Amidror, formerly head of the National Security Council, asks why the international community is doing nothing to prevent Hezbollah’s arms buildup. A few years ago, at the instruction of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Amidror, as head of the NSC, presented similar aerial photographs and maps from Lebanon to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

    Why again now?

    The question is: Why again now? The IDF says that the briefing by the senior officer, together with the information provided to the Times, is intended to reinforce the ongoing Israeli messages to Hezbollah and to the international community. The essence of those messages is that Hezbollah is continuing to violate UN Security Council Resolution 1701 by smuggling increasing quantities of arms into Lebanese territory and by deploying its forces south of the Litani River; that Hezbollah’s military infrastructure is an open book to Israeli intelligence and that the IDF can inflict serious damage on it when needed; and that, because Hezbollah chooses to shelter among a civilian population, strikes at its military targets will entail the non-deliberate killing of innocent persons.

    An additional explanation for why these points were emphasized in the briefing to the Times lies in the spirit being dictated to the IDF by the new chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot. In his view, the army’s mission, under his leadership, is “to distance war.” This involves preparing the IDF as thoroughly as possible for the next possible confrontation – alongside an active effort, in the sphere of public diplomacy and to a degree even in the state-policy realm, to prevent war. This is the reason for the frequent emphasis on training as the IDF’s first priority, following a lengthy period of compromises and budget cuts in that sphere. Recent weeks have seen a fairly extensive series of training exercises by the ground forces, a trend that is slated to continue in the months ahead.

    Proper management of the daily risks to Israel, most of which stem from possible indirect consequences of the region’s chronic instability, could reduce the danger of an all-out war. At the same time, a higher level of fitness and readiness displayed by the IDF could help deter Hezbollah – at present, the most dangerous and best-trained enemy Israel faces – from setting in motion a deterioration of the situation that would lead to war.

    Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon also hinted at this, in a talk he gave at a meeting of officials from regional councils on Tuesday. Ya’alon warned that “Israel could unite all the forces in the region against it, if it acts incorrectly.” Israel’s approach, he said, consists of “surgical behavior based on red lines, and those who cross them know we will act.” Those lines include “violation of sovereignty on the Golan Heights, the transfer of certain weapons.”

    Israel is apparently deeply concerned by Hezbollah’s effort to improve the accuracy of its rockets. The organization has in its possession vast numbers of missiles and rockets – 130,000, according to the latest estimates – but upgrading its capability is dependent on improving the weapons’ accuracy, which would enable Hezbollah to strike effectively at specific targets, including air force-base runways and power stations.

    “There are some things for which we take responsibility and others for which we don’t, but we do not intervene in internal conflicts unless our red lines are crossed,” Ya’alon reiterated. In other words: Israel is upset at the smuggling of weapons by the Assad regime in Syria to Hezbollah, but understands that launching a lengthy, systematic series of attacks is liable to affect the delicate balance in the north, generate a confrontation between Israel and Hezbollah, and, as a consequence, foment a change in the civil war in Syria. Israel does not wish to see any such change, preferring a continuation of the status quo.

    Ratcheting up the risk

    In recent weeks, the Arab media have been flooded with reports and conjectures about the imminent fall of Syrian President Bashar Assad. Israeli intelligence is voicing more cautious appraisals, to the effect that the war in Syria has not yet been decided. If the regime does fall, it’s likely that Hezbollah will greatly step up its efforts to smuggle out from Syria the advanced weapons systems that remain in its hands there. That scenario would ratchet up immensely the risk of a confrontation with Israel, as the latter is likely to launch a broad effort to disrupt the smuggling efforts, while Syrian rebel organizations intensify their pressure on Hezbollah and the Assad camp.

    In any event, even without the war in Syria being decided, it’s clear that a confrontation of tremendous intensity is under way, in which all the parties involved are making immense efforts, and that the clash of the blocs in the Arab world over Syria, Lebanon and also in Yemen is overshadowing other issues, such as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, that appeared so central in the past.

    Israel is not alone in having to walk a thin line in the north. Hezbollah, too, is obliged to preserve a deterrent image: outwardly, in order to ensure that Israel does not act as it pleases in its backyard (which is apparently how Hezbollah perceived several assassinations and attacks on convoys that it attributed to Israel); and inwardly, to rebuff criticism within Lebanon that it is an emissary of Iran and is involving Lebanon needlessly in the war in Syria.

    An occasional terrorist attack of limited scope, on the Golan Heights or in the Har Dov area near the Lebanese border, could serve its purposes. Nor is it certain that, from Hezbollah’s point of view, accounts have been settled regarding the events on the Golan Heights in January, when six Hezbollah personnel and an Iranian general were killed in an attack on a convoy that was attributed to Israel. Ten days later, an officer and a soldier from the IDF’s Givati infantry brigade were killed in the Har Dov area when their vehicle was struck by antitank missiles during a Hezbollah ambush.

    Nevertheless, Israel is now a secondary front for Hezbollah. The organization’s main force is deployed in Syria, particularly in the fighting in the Kalamun Hills, on the border with Lebanon. Dozens of combatants from both sides are being killed there every day in battles being fought by the Syrian army and Hezbollah against the organizations of Sunni rebels. Even though Hezbollah tried to conceal its losses in Syria (the IDF estimates that more than 600 of its personnel have been killed), the casualty rate is now probably too high to keep secret.

    Last week, a mass funeral was held in Beirut for Hezbollah fighters who have been killed in the Kalamun battles, among them, according to reports, a colonel. The Arab media are describing the campaign there as “battles of retreat and advance”: one step forward, two steps back. The two sides are deployed on adjacent ridges, and at this stage, neither is apparently able to gain a significant advantage.

    The fighting at Kalamun, an important area because it is a corridor for the transfer of reinforcements and arms between the Assad regime and Hezbollah, is only a small part of the overall picture in Syria. Most of the attention lately has been devoted to the decline in Assad’s status and to speculation that he will ultimately have to flee Damascus under rebel pressure, and focus on defending the Alawite region in the north of the country. Concurrently, however, another important process is taking place. Iran is now the salient master of the Assad camp and is dictating the military strategy of the gradually collapsing regime.

    Together with thousands of fighters from the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and from Hezbollah, tens of thousands of members of Shi’ite militias are pouring into Syria to take part in the religious war against the Sunnis. Those combatants are more likely to heed the Iranian Guards than the Assad regime, which is rapidly losing its reserves of potential soldiers from among the Syrian population.

    There’s an extra benefit here for Iran: Its involvement in the fighting affords it a presence in the northern Golan Heights, creating a type of border with Israel by means of which it can take action against Israeli targets.

    In the civil war in Syria, Hezbollah is the spearhead of the Shi’ite armies, and Iran’s behavior is disturbing to all the Sunni Arab states. So much so that even U.S. President Barack Obama, when opening the conference of leaders of Persian Gulf states that he convened this week at Camp David, lashed out at Iran for the negative role it is playing in the wars in the Middle East.

    #propagande #hasbara

  • Latest leak exposes Israeli Military Intelligence’s Achilles’ heel - Diplomacy and Defense - Israel News | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.651339

    The affair of the soldier to be indicted on Sunday in military court over alleged intelligence leaks to right-wing friends reflects the difficulty the Israel Defense Forces Military Intelligence has, as opposed to smaller agencies like the Shin Bet security service or the Mossad, in protecting classified information.

    MI is more vulnerable to leaks because of its broader contact with the outside world. Civilians, new draftees, reserve soldiers – every year more and more people are added to the circle of those exposed to its secrets.

    It seems that the case of the soldier, Ya’akov Sela, shows weaknesses in the system that might be quite common. Relatively rapid initial security vetting, which is not always sufficient to uncover potential security risks; too loose supervision of those already in the intelligence system and who are considered “one of us”; and a lack of strict compartmentalization in day to day work.

    Sela was inducted into the army’s program for ultra-Orthodox soldiers, in which great efforts are made to satisfy the needs of the draftees. He was relatively old, 25, married and a father, had medical problems, and was stationed at a base a few minutes away from his home in the settlement of Bat Ayin. (The fact that a settler from an ultra-Orthodox, nationalistic background was drafted into a program designed for ultra-Orthodox full-time yeshiva students shows the broad interpretation the IDF gives to the term “ultra-Orthodox,” and the possibility that the number of “authentic” ultra-Orthodox serving in the army may be lower than the army claims.)

    Ideal location for leaker

    The Bat Ayin soldier’s convenient assignment to brigade headquarters placed him in an ideal location to collect intelligence information relevant to his friends, who belong to the extreme wing of settlers.

    Sela was in charge of collecting intelligence about the Palestinians, but the Shin Bet and police say he spent a significant amount of time looking into investigations involving so-called “price tag” attacks – violent attacks by settlers against Palestinian, Christian, left-wing Jewish and occasionally army targets – and preparations for the dismantling of illegal settlement construction.

    Because of weaknesses in compartmentalization, it seems Sela was able to obtain a good deal of information without his commanders noticing it in time. Only when police in the Judea and Samaria district became suspicious was the leak discovered and the soldier arrested.

    There have been a few cases in the past of operations and intelligence sergeants in West Bank brigades who were suspected of leaking information, mainly about the evacuation of outposts. About four years ago, when the commander of the IDF forces in the West Bank, Maj. Gen. Nitzan Alon, dared hint that greater care was needed in the sharing of sensitive information of this type, a campaign was launched against him in the settlements that ended only toward the end of his term as general in charge of Central Command.

    The number of settler-soldiers involved in such leaks is apparently very small, but the system is not built to find them ahead of time or monitor them during their service – just as the system had difficulty discovering the leak of documents by the soldier Anat Kam from the office of Yair Naveh, the general in charge of Central Command at the time.

    Clearly the arrest of one suspect should not disqualify soldiers who live in settlements from serving in sensitive posts. But the Sela affair should certainly alert the army that convenient postings close to home should not be the only consideration in intelligence assignments. Moreover, the affair should also lead to improved monitoring so that curiosity, or worse, ideological tendencies, do not expose soldiers to information to which they are not meant to have access.

  • There’s no nice way of building settlements in occupied territory | +972 Magazine

    http://972mag.com/theres-no-nice-way-of-building-settlements-in-occupied-territory/103560/?can_id=c04bd6c1866a7591ea05420e1dd77aec

    There’s no nice way of building settlements in occupied territory

    Those familiar with the system know that as long as settlement construction continues, the abuse and intimidation of the Palestinian civilian population will be maintained.

    By Gerard Horton

    Illustrative photo: An activist puts a Palestinan flag on the Separation Wall facing the Modi’in Illit settlement (Photo: Anne Paq/ Activestills.org)

    Illustrative photo: An activist puts a Palestinan flag on the Separation Wall facing the Modi’in Illit settlement (Photo: Anne Paq/ Activestills.org)

    UNICEF, the UN body tasked with providing humanitarian aid to children in developing countries, recently issued an update on the progress made regarding the treatment of minors held in Israeli military detention. In its 2013 report, Children in Israeli Military Detention, UNICEF reviewed over 400 sworn testimonies collected from minors who came in contact with Israel’s military system, and concluded that ill-treatment “appears to be widespread, systematic and institutionalized throughout the process,” and made 38 recommendations for improvement. Two years on, UNICEF is now warning that “reports of alleged ill-treatment of children during arrest, transfer, interrogation and detention have not significantly decreased in 2013 and 2014.”

    #palestine #israël #occupation #colonisation

  • Eight Israeli Rockets Hit Lebanon after Missile Hits IOF Vehicle (à suivre : développements en ce moment même)
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/missile-hits-israeli-army-vehicle-near-lebanon-border

    Israel hit Lebanon with at least eight rockets after an anti-tank missile was fired at an Israeli military vehicle near the Lebanon border on Wednesday, Al-Mayadeen news channel reported.

    Israel’s Channel 2 television said the vehicle was hit by the projectile. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

    The attack came hours after Israeli aircraft struck alleged Syrian army artillery positions early on Wednesday, and one day after rockets were launched at the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

  • Leading Israeli human rights group (Btselem) stops cooperating with IDF | +972 Magazine

    http://972mag.com/leading-israeli-human-rights-group-to-stop-cooperating-with-idf/96440

    Citing “severe structural flaws” in the Israeli military’s internal investigation mechanisms and a history of dismissing criminal allegations against military personnel, leading Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem announced on Sunday that it would not comply with a military request to share details of its independent investigations into alleged Israeli abuses in Gaza.

    In its investigations into crimes committed by Israeli soldiers during Cast Lead in 2009, the Israeli military partially relied on evidence and testimonies collected by B’Tselem field workers.

    #gaza #btselem

  • Israeli Troops Shoot 10-Year-Old Palestinian in Neck for ‘Loitering’
    Military Insists Shooting Was Consistent With ’Protocol’
    by Jason Ditz, November 16, 2014
    http://news.antiwar.com/2014/11/16/israeli-troops-shoot-10-year-old-palestinian-in-neck-for-loitering

    The Israeli military continued to refer to him as a “suspect” in all statements, and suggested he might have been working for terrorists.

    The boy, as yet unnamed, was confirmed to be unarmed, and was described as “gravely wounded” by Israeli sources. The incident is the second time Israeli forces have shot a young Palestinian child in the past few days, and will doubtless escalate tensions in both Gaza and the West Bank.

    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4592597,00.html
    http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/10-year-old-Palestinian-boy-shot-in-the-neck-near-a-military-checkpoint-38195

    #assassins #Israel #Israël

  • Israel to confiscate 3,200 acres of Palestinian land near Jerusalem | Maan News Agency
    http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=738438

    JERUSALEM (Ma’an) — Israeli authorities have delivered orders to the village of Beit Iksa north of Jerusalem ordering the confiscation of 12,852 dunums (3,176 acres) of Palestinian land, locals said on Saturday.

    Locals told Ma’an that soldiers deployed at the military checkpoint at the entrance to the village delivered confiscation orders signed by the Israeli military commander in the West Bank Nitzan Alon that gave them until Dec. 31, 2017 to remain on their land.

    Villagers said that soldiers informed them that an official from the Israeli military liaison would arrive on Monday to specify which lands that would be confiscated, adding that the lands confiscated would be used for “military purposes.”

    ““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    Rapport : Israël aurait prévu de confisquer 3.176 acres à Beit Iksa
    http://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/international/moyen-orient/50300-141109-rapport-israel-aurait-prevu-de-confisquer-3-176-acres-de-terre-

    Selon le média palestinien Ma’an samedi, l’armée israélienne aurait informé des Palestiniens dans le secteur de Beit Iksa, au nord de Jérusalem, de la confiscation de 3.176 acres (12,852 dunams) de terres palestiniennes pour des « raisons militaires ».

    Des résidents auraient confié à Ma’an que des soldats se sont déployés au point de passage de l’entrée du village, et ont distribué des tracts signés par le commandant israélien en Cisjordanie Nitzan Galon, leur ordonnant d’avoir quitté leurs terres avant le 31 décembre 2017, « une déclaration officielle devant être publiée lundi », rapporte le média.

    A quelques kilomètres de Jérusalem, le village, entouré du mur de sécurité, a par ailleurs été drastiquement réduit depuis plusieurs années, des implantations juives s’étant installées tout autour.

    Selon le maire de la localité Saada al-Khatib, qui s’inquiète de la « judaïsation » du village, l’ordre de confiscation est prévu depuis 2012.

    En 2009, Beit Iksa a perdu 5 acres (20 dunams) pour la construction du train à grande vitesse qui devrait relier Jérusalem à Tel Aviv d’ici deux ans.

    Non loin du village, 244 nouveaux logements ont été prévus à Ramot, un quartier de Jérusalem, quelque peu excentré de la capitale.

  • L’armée israélienne accusée d’avoir tué un nouvel adolescent, Bahaa Bader 13 ans, près de Ramallah - NYTimes.com

    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/17/world/middleeast/israeli-troops-are-suspected-in-shooting-of-a-teenager-.html?_r=0

    The Israeli military said it would immediately investigate reports that soldiers killed a 13-year-old Palestinian on Thursday night during a confrontation in a village near the West Bank city of Ramallah.

    The boy, Bahaa Sameer Mousa Bader, was shot once in the chest and died 20 minutes after arriving at the hospital, said Dr. Sameer Saliba of the Palestine Medical Complex in Ramallah.

    An Israeli military spokeswoman said the soldiers had entered Beit Liqya, a village of 8,000 near the barrier that separates most of the West Bank from Israel, to stop people from hurling rocks at the barrier. The spokeswoman, speaking on the condition of anonymity under military protocol, said the troops had responded with live ammunition when residents threw firebombs at them as they were leaving the area.

    Ehab Bessaiso, a spokesman for the Palestinian Authority, condemned the killing “with all means,” saying in an interview that “the accumulation of incidents like this is undermining all efforts towards achieving a political solution, and in fact is contributing to instability in the region.”

    The Palestine Liberation Organization said Bahaa was the 53rd Palestinian killed by Israeli forces or settlers in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem this year, including several teenagers whose deaths set off protests in the streets and outcries abroad.
    Last month, Mohamed Sinokrot, 15, was killed by what a Palestinian doctor determined in an autopsy to have been a sponge-covered police bullet that hit his head during a clash in East Jerusalem. In May, Nadeem Siam Nawara, 17, and Mohammad Mahmoud Odeh Salameh, 16, were shot during a protest on Nakba Day, which commemorates the Palestinian expulsion from the land that became Israel in 1948.

    The Israeli military has not released results of a promised investigation into the Nakba Day shootings. A Palestinian doctor said the youths had been killed by live ammunition, though soldiers supposedly did not fire any.

    “We have never seen a serious investigation by the Israeli Army into incidents like this,” Mr. Bessaiso said. Of Thursday’s fatal encounter, he added, “There would have been different alternative methods in order to prevent such a tragic incident, but I think that Israeli soldiers, they show carelessness about Palestinian lives.”

    The military spokeswoman said events unfolded between 8 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Israel time. (Clocks in the West Bank are currently set an hour behind Israel time.) She would not say how large a crowd the soldiers had faced in Beit Liqya, or how many had thrown stones or firebombs.

    Palestinian news and social media sites reported that firebombs had hit an army vehicle and set it aflame.

    “There was a violent riot in Beit Liqya,” the military spokeswoman said. “They responded to the threat with live fire.”

    Dr. Saliba said Bahaa arrived around 7:25 p.m. Palestinian time in critical condition, a bullet having entered his chest on the left side and exited on the right. “The heart muscle wasn’t operating,” he said. “The bleeding never stopped.”

  • Netanyahu dénonce auprès de Ban l’enquête de l’ONU
    http://www.journaldemontreal.com/2014/10/01/netanyahu-denonce-aupres-de-ban-lenquete-de-lonu

    Netanyahu & UN Head Clash Over Inquiry Into Israeli Military Actions in Gaza
    http://jpupdates.com/2014/10/02/netanyahu-un-head-clash-inquiry-israeli-military-actions-gaza

    Both United Nations diplomats and Israeli officials reported that a major portion of the meeting focused on the situation in Gaza and the coordination of a UN inquiry board. The discussion rapidly turned into an argument between Netanyahu and Ban, as each flatly rejected the other’s position and the tension rose.

    As reported exclusively by Haaretz, an Israeli official stated that Ban spoke quite emotionally about the civilian casualties in Gaza and the crucial nature of devising a solution to the conflict with the Palestinians. The UN leader contended that Israel had acted disproportionately toward the Palestinians in Gaza.

    Netanyahu urges Ban to postpone probe into shelling of UN facilities in Gaza
    UN chief and Israeli PM clash over issue civilian casualties in Gaza and investigative committee, an Israeli official said.
    http://www.haaretz.com/misc/article-print-page/.premium-1.618747

  • Israel’s Video Justifying Destruction of a Hospital Was From 2009
    Saturday, 06 September 2014 09:29
    By Gareth Porter, Truthout | Report
    http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/25999-israels-video-justifying-destruction-of-a-hospital-was-from-2009

    A video distributed by the Israeli military in July suggesting that Palestinian fighters had fired from the Al Wafa Rehabilitation and Geriatric Hospital in #Gaza City was not shot during the recent Israeli attack on Gaza, and both audio and video clips were manipulated to cover up the fact that they were from entirely different incidents, a Truthout investigation has revealed.

    The video, released by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on July 23, the same day Israeli airstrikes destroyed Al Wafa, was widely reported by pro-Israeli publications and websites as proving that the hospital was destroyed because Hamas had turned the hospital into a military facility. But the video clip showing apparent firing from an annex to the hospital was actually shot during Israel’s 2008-09 “Operation Cast Lead,” and the audio clip accompanying it was from an incident unrelated to Al Wafa.

    The misleading video was only the last in a series of IDF dissimulations about Al Wafa hospital that included false claims that Hamas rockets had been launched from the hospital grounds, or very near it, and that the hospital had been damaged by an attack on the launching site.

    The IDF began to prepare the ground for the destruction of Al Wafa hospital well before Israeli ground troops entered Gaza on July 17. On July 11, the IDF fired four warning rockets on the fourth floor of Al Wafa, making a large hole in the ceiling - the standard IDF signal that a building was going to be destroyed by an airstrike.

    (...)

    The IDF real reason for the destruction of Al Wafa hospital appears to be related to the determination to raise the cost to the civilian population of Gaza for Palestinian resistance, in line with the approach represented by its “Dahiya doctrine,” named after the Beirut suburb dominated by Hezbollah, much of which the Israeli Air Force reduced to rubble in the 2006 war.

    That strategy, recognized as a violation of the international laws of war, was pursued most obviously in the complete destruction of every house in several square blocks in three separate areas of the Shujaiya district of Gaza City July 19-20. But it was also evident in IDF attacks on Al Wafa and in the series of mortar and artillery attacks on six different UN shelters from July 21 though August 3. Those attacks killed a total of 47 civilians and wounded 341, according to a survey of the incidents by The Guardian.

    In none of the six cases where UN shelters were hit by IDF mortar shells was the military able to offer a plausible explanation, and in three cases, it offered no explanation whatever.

    #doctrine_dahiya #crimes #Israel #Israël #laideur

  • Palestinians to UN, Western states: Try citizens who served in the IDF for war crimes
    Palestinian FM sends letter calling for foreign volunteers in Israeli army who served in Gaza to be investigated under Geneva Convention.
    By Barak Ravid | Aug. 27, 2014
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.612642

    Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad Malki has sent a letter to UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon and a number of Western foreign ministers asking them to bring to trial their citizens who serve in the Israeli army or volunteer with the military for alleged war crimes commited in Gaza. 

    Haaretz received a copy of the letter Maliki sent Tuesday to his U.S., British, French, Australian, Canadian and South African counterparts. In the letter, he emphasized that UN member states bear the responsibility of investigating and putting on trial people in their jurisdictions who have violated international law. 

    “The Israeli military currently has approximately thousands in its ranks. This total includes both Israeli dual nationals and non-Israeli volunteers enlisted through so-called “Mahal” programs,” Maliki wrote. “These dual nationals and foreign nationals participate in Israeli combat operations within the territory of the occupied State of Palestine, including the current offensive in the Gaza Strip. Additionally, foreign nationals volunteering with the so-called “Sar-El” program provide non-combat maintenance and logistics support to the Israeli occupation forces.”

    The Mahal program enables young Jews aged 18 to 24 years from around the world who don’t have Israeli citizenship to volunteer for the Israeli military. They serve in combat units for one-and-a-half years, and volunteers get temporary residency status. The Sar-El program, a joint initiative of the Jewish Agency and the Israel Defense Forces, brings Jewish volunteers from around the world to Israel for a period of one week to one year during which time they volunteer with bases around the country.

    In the letter, Maliki says that IDF forces have carried out a long line of war crimes in the Gaza Strip, in the past and in the current round of fighting, which has caused the deaths of many innocent civilians and the destruction of key infrastructure. Under the Geneva Convention, which all the recipients of the letter are signatories of, “States are obligated to take all measures necessary to suppress violations of international humanitarian law, including grave breaches, i.e. war crimes,” he added. 

    “Palestine hereby calls upon all member States of the United Nations to meet these legal obligations with regard to the potential involvement of its nationals in international crimes relating to Israel’s occupation of Palestine, including the ongoing Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip,” he wrote.

    Maliki then identified a number of steps the Palestinians want the recipients of the letter to take:

    1. Identifying all of its nationals who are serving in or otherwise aiding Israeli occupation forces, including participants in the so-called “Mahal” volunteer brigade and the so-called “Sar-El” volunteer program;

    2. Notifying all such persons of alleged violations and war crimes committed by Israel during the current offensive in the Gaza Strip, the potential criminal liability for committing or contributing to the commission of war crimes, and each State’s obligation under international humanitarian law to investigate potential war crimes within its jurisdiction and prosecute where appropriate; and

    3. Investigating any allegations that its nationals were involved in the commission and/or the aiding and abetting of war crimes during the Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip, and prosecuting these individuals where appropriate. 

    It remains to be seen how practical the Palestinian request from Western countries to investigate their citizens who served in the IDF is. There is reason to believe that most of the countries that received the letter will be reluctant to do anything about it. And even if they wanted to advance the issue, it would prove extremely difficult for them to identify and locate those individuals.

    However, Maliki’s letter is another attempt to increase the diplomatic and legal pressure internationally after the Gaza operation. It was only a few weeks ago that the Palestinian Authority pushed for the establishment of a Gaza war crimes commission in the UN Human Rights Council to investigate alleged Israeli crimes during the fighting in Gaza.

    In addition, the PA is holding discussions and consultations with Hamas about the possibility of signing the Rome Statute and applying to the International Criminal Court in the Hague. But despite the surge in Palestinian statements on this topic, it seems that Abbas, fearing an Israeli response and harsh international criticism, is not interested, at this time, to move further along that path.

  • The Death Zone | geographical imaginations
    http://geographicalimaginations.com/2014/08/02/the-death-zone

    Gaza has been systematically turned not only into a prison, then, but also into a camp: and the lives of those within have been have been subjected to a ruthless bio-political programme that, at the limit, has become a calculated exercise in necro-politics. This confirms Paul Di Stefano‘s claim that that, for the Israeli military, Gaza has been transformed into ‘a state of exception where normal rights do not apply. Within this liminal space, Palestinian bodies are viewed as obstacles to be destroyed or controlled in the maintenance of the colonial order.’

  • Israel-Gaza conflict: Ban ki-Moon declares Israeli attack on UN school ‘a criminal act’ - Middle East - World - The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israelgaza-conflict-ban-kimoon-declares-israeli-attack-on-un-school-a

    An Israeli attack on a UN school in Gaza which killed 10 people today was “a moral outrage and a criminal act”, according to the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who called for those responsible for the “gross violation of international law” to be brought to account.

    It was the seventh time a UN shelter has been hit in the 27 days of the Gaza conflict. The victims had all taken shelter in the schools after being instructed by the Israeli military to leave their homes.

    The latest deaths took place in Rafah, which has been subjected to a ferocious assault after Israel accused Hamas of kidnapping a soldier and killing two others in an ambush. The dead were among 118 reported killed today by the Palestinian ministry of health, bring the number of Palestinians killed to more than 1,800.

    On Saturday evening, the Israeli military confirmed that Lieutenant Hadar Goldin was killed in action. But there was no respite in the attacks and this morning’s blast, at the entrance of the Rafah Preparatory A Boys School, came as a group of boys and girls were gathered around a stall selling sweets and crisps.

    Of the 10 dead, four were children aged between five and 12. Their bodies, wrapped in blankets, were laid on the pavement outside before being moved to a local hospital. Some of the adults were in a food queue just inside when the blast took place. The missile had left a shallow indentation where it had hit the road, spraying shrapnel.
    .......

    http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid753144093001?bckey=AQ~~,AAAAkVf4sTE~,ZHihQoc0Mak3KW61gTbGinrWz

    #UN
    #Ban_ki-Moon
    #UN_school
    #Gaza
    #israël

  • Israeli #assault on Palestinians: Live Coverage
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/20496

    At least 103 Palestinians — the vast majority of whom are civilians — have been killed and over 700 injured so far since a massive Israeli air and naval assault against the besieged #Gaza Strip was launched on July 8. Homes, markets, and vital infrastructure have been targeted by the Israeli military, causing destruction and over 1,000 displaced people.

    #Articles #deaths #illegal_settlements #Israel #Palestine #Protests #raids #west_bank

  • حماس تتهم اسرائيل بخرق التهدئة الانسانية : أسر الضابط وقتل الجنديين قبل سريان التهدئة
    http://www.alquds.co.uk/?p=200600

    حماس تتهم اسرائيل بخرق التهدئة الانسانية: أسر الضابط وقتل الجنديين قبل سريان التهدئة

    Annonce - incertaine, comme la première fois - de la capture d’un soldat israélien (un officier). Hamas affirme que c’est plus d’une heure avant la trève, Israël dit le contraire.

    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/three-day-ceasefire-begins-gaza

    • Hamas claims responsibility for capture of Israeli soldier in Rafah
      Published today (updated) 01/08/2014 15:41

      (...) An Israeli military spokeswoman told Ma’an that she could confirm a “suspected abduction” of an Israeli soldier in the area, while a Hamas political leader took responsibility for the move.

      The military said in a statement that at around 9:30 a.m., “an attack was executed against (Israeli) forces operating to decommission a tunnel.”

      “Initial indication suggests that an (Israeli) soldier has been abducted by terrorists during the incident.”

      The military named the captured soldier as Hadar Goldin, 23. It said that two other soldiers were killed in the attack.

      Hamas confirmed that their forces had carried out the capture, but strongly contested the version of events put forward by Israel.

      The Hamas-affiliated Al-Qassam Brigades said that “there has not been any Israeli soldier in eastern Rafah for the past 20 days. But as soon as the ceasefire was announced, Israeli movement in the area began at around 2:00 a.m. (They moved) 2.5 kilometers into eastern Rafah.”

      “In response to that, our fighters clashed with Israeli soldiers in Rafah at 7:00 a.m., killing and injuring many.”

      “Israel is committing crimes against our people,” the statement continued. “The latest are the random shelling and airstrikes at people in eastern Rafah, violating the ceasefire, and disregarding the international efforts put into this deal,” al-Qassam said in a statement.

      “It is the occupation which violated the ceasefire. The Palestinian resistance acted based on ... the right to self defense (and) to stop the massacres of our people,” spokesman Fawzi Barhum said in a statement.

      The operation reportedly began after a Palestinian blew himself up near an Israeli military post east of Rafah, causing a large number of soldier to move to the area to defend the post.

      Following the explosion, fighters emerged from tunnels nearby and captured an Israeli soldier.

      In response to the attack, Israeli forces launched a massive artillery attack on eastern Rafah, with at least 35 dead and more than 200 injured so far.

      The Israeli army, security services, and Shabak were currently said to be searching for the captured soldier, as intense shelling continued to rain down on Rafah.

    • Israel says soldier captured, but confusion over responsibility
      Published today (updated) 01/08/2014 17:16
      http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=717375

      GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — The Israeli military on Friday said that an Israeli soldier had been captured earlier in the day, confirming hours of speculation amid intense clashes and shelling near Rafah.

      An Israeli military spokeswoman told Ma’an that she could confirm a “suspected abduction” of an Israeli soldier in the area, while a Hamas political leader took responsibility for attacking the soldiers but not for capturing any.

      The military said in a statement that at around 9:30 a.m., “an attack was executed against (Israeli) forces operating to decommission a tunnel.”

      “Initial indication suggests that an (Israeli) soldier has been abducted by terrorists during the incident.”

      The military named the captured soldier as Hadar Goldin, 23. It said that two other soldiers were killed in the attack.

      Hamas confirmed that their forces had carried out the attack, but denied any connection to the capture itself and strongly contested the chronology of events put forward by Israel.

      Senior Hamas leader Osama Hamdan said Friday that Israel is “claiming” that a soldier is missing to “cover up it’s crimes.”

      Hamdan said in a statement to France 24 channel that “Israel claims that a soldier was captured to hide their crimes and to divert the public opinion to speak of the captured soldier instead.”

      “We do not have any information about a captured soldier,” he added, highlighting that no soldier was captured by any Palestinian faction.

      His statements of denial come after an earlier al-Qassam statement which claimed responsibility for an operation targeting Israeli soldiers.

      The Hamas-affiliated al-Qassam Brigades said earlier that the attack had occurred before the ceasefire began, explaining: “There had not been any Israeli soldiers in eastern Rafah for the past 20 days. But as soon as the ceasefire was announced, Israeli movement in the area began at around 2:00 a.m. (They moved) 2.5 kilometers into eastern Rafah.(...)”

  • US resupplies Israel with weapons as Gaza death toll hits 1,395 | Maan News Agency / Published today (updated) 31/07/2014 16:58
    http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=717105

    GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — The United States confirmed it had restocked Israel’s supplies of ammunition, hours after finally sharpening its tone to condemn an attack on a United Nations school in Gaza that killed 16 people sheltering there.

    Israeli airstrikes and shelling continued overnight and into the morning leaving 27 Gazans dead and dozens injured, bringing the 24-day death toll to 1,395 with 8,100 injured, according to the Ministry of Health. The Israeli military confirmed that 20 “sites” had been hit overnight.

    The dead included six people, including Majdi Fseifis, 22, Hani Abduallah Abu Mustafa, 44, Naji Abdullah Abu Mustafa, 31, Hanan Youssef Abu Tiema, Maher Najjar, and Mahmoud Fuad Najjar killed in a bombing that hit a crowd of people near a mosque in the Abasan area east of Khan Younis.

    Two were killed in an Israeli strike on a car, identified as Hamza al-Haddad and Ibrahim al-Haddad .

    Abudallah Abu Shabab, 20, and Alaa Alwah, 22 , succumbed to wounds they sustained in Gaza City attacks.

    Also in Khan Younis, one Palestinian was killed and four were wounded in a strike that hit a motorcycle in the Ma’an area south of the city.

    Mahdiya Suleiman Omar Abu Luli, 58 , was killed in an Israeli strike on Khan Younis as well.

    Maha Abd al-Nabi Salim Abu Hilal was killed in a strike on her home that also “seriously” injured her husband and three children. She was brought to Abu Yousef al-Najjar Hospital.

    Suleiman Baraka, 31, and Aref Baraka, 58 , were also killed in a strike, and their bodies were both brought to the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Hospital in Deir al-Balah.

    At least 55 were wounded after the al-Hamoud house in Beit Lahiya was hit at dawn. Injuries were also reported during an Israeli strike on the home of the al-Haw family as well as against Block 7 in Jabaliya.

    Israeli aircraft also targeted a house east of al-Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip belonging to Abu Abdullah Abu Huwayshal, destroying it completely.

    Violent clashes broke out between Palestinian fighters and Israelis forces in the Nabahin field east of al-Bureij.

    The dead overnight included Yusuf Ibrahim, 19 , son of the Undersecretary of the Ministry of Social Affairs who died of wounds sustained in an Israeli attack on Nuseirat refugee camp the day before. Ahmad al-Luh died early Thursday in al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Hospital as a result of injuries as well.

    The deaths in the besieged Gaza Strip come on the 24th day of an Israeli assault which has nearly topped the death toll from the 2008-9 Cast Lead, the bloodiest attack on the area in memory when Israel killed 1,400 in 22 days.

    • Killed Thursday, July 31
      http://imemc.org/article/68429

      1.Suleiman Baraka, 31, Gaza.
      2.Aref Baraka, 58, Gaza.
      3.Ahmed al-Loah, 22, Gaza.
      4.Baraa’ Yousef, 19. Gaza.
      5.Maha Abdul-Nabi Salim Abu Hilal, Rafah.
      6.Majdi Mohammad Ahmad Fseifis, 34, Khan Younis.
      7.Mohammad Juma’ an-Najjar, 32, Khan Younis.
      8.Hani Abdullah Abu Mustafa, Khan Younis.
      9.Hanan Yusef Abu T’aima, Khan Younis.
      10.Mahar an-Najjar, Khan Younis.
      11.Mahmoud Fouad an-Najjar, Khan Younis.
      12.Mohammad Daher, Gaza.
      13.Fadel Nader Almeghari, 27, Rafah.
      14.Mahdiyya Suleiman Omar Abu Louly, 58, Khan Younis.
      15.Tha’er Naji al-Amour, 22, Khan Younis.
      16.Mohammed Yousef Al-Abadla, 21, Khan Younis.
      17.Abdullah abu Shabab 20, Khan Younis.
      18.Alaa’ ’Alweh 22, Khan Younis.
      19.Ahmed Salim Abdin , Khan Younis.
      20.Mohamed Ahmed Hamad, Khan Younis.
      21.Atiyyeh Salameh al-Hashash, 68, Rafah.
      22.Hamza Fa’ek Ahmad al-Haddad, 20, , eastern Gaza City.
      23.Ibrahim Asa’ad Ahmad al-Haddad, 21, eastern Gaza City.
      24.Mohammad Ammar Sharaf, 10, Gaza City.
      25.Mohammed Ra’fat Na’eem, Gaza Old City.
      26.Husam Ra’fat Na’eem, Gaza Old City.
      27.Kamal Abdul-karim al-Louh, 32, Deir al-Bala.
      28.Ibrahim Abdul-karim al-Louh, 29, Deir al-Bala.
      29.Khaled Nasr al-Louh, 46, Deir al-Bala.
      30.Amaal Abdul-karim al-Masri, 48, Deir al-Bala.
      31.Ilham Yahya al-Louh, 27, Deir al-Bala.
      32.Samih Kamal Abu al-Kheir, 63, Khan Younis.
      33.Othman Fawzi ‘Abdeen, 17, Khan Younis.
      34.Siham al-Ham, Khan Younis, Nusseirat.
      35.Mohammad Adel Ashour, Nusseirat.
      36.Renad Ashraf Ashour, Nusseirat.
      37.Abeer Nahed al-‘Ata, Nusseirat.
      38.Naima Darwish Abu Shouq, Nusseirat.
      39.Zaher Tawfiq Abu Maktoum, Nusseirat.
      40.Ama’ Rafat al-‘Asa, Nusseirat.
      41.Hasan Nassr Zaqqout, Nusseirat.
      42.Labibeh Abu Shouqa, 23, Nusseirat.

      #IMENC

  • @France24_fr TV poursuit son inlassable propagande mensongère en faveur des assassins d’Israël en affirmant que ce sont 4 civils israéliens qui ont été tués alors qu’il s’agissait de 4 militaires.

    Israeli PM warns of prolonged campaign in Gaza war
    http://bigstory.ap.org/article/relative-lull-gaza-un-calls-cease-fire

    Also Monday, the Israeli military said that a mortar attack on southern Israel killing four soldiers.

    #france_24

  • Israeli assault on #Gaza resumes as #Hamas rejects truce without withdrawal
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israel-resumes-assault-gaza-after-hamas-rejects-truce-without-tro

    Three Palestinians were killed in shelling on Sunday as the Israeli military resumed its assault on Gaza after Hamas shunned an extended lull so long as Israeli troops remained in the besieged enclave, medics said. Emergency services spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra said two men were killed in shelling near the border in central Gaza, while a third was killed near Khan Younis in the south. Both sides observed a 12-hour truce since it came into force on 8:00 am Saturday. read more

    #Israel #Palestine

  • Israeli military falsifies photograph to justify bombing el-Wafa hospital
    http://palsolidarity.org/2014/07/israeli-military-falsifies-photograph-to-justify-bombing-el-wafa-hosp

    On the 21st July at 2:17 PM, the IDF spokesperson released an image on twitter showing an aerial picture of a building marked as ‘Al-Wafa’ hospital. In the image there is a red circle, which they designated as the location from which a M75 rocket was launched.

    The building in the picture marked ‘Al-Wafa’ hospital is in fact not the el-Wafa hospital but the Right to Life Society.