•  » Israeli Military Invades Nabi Saleh, Abducts Child from Tamimi Family
    April 8, 2019 2:30 AM - IMEMC News
    https://imemc.org/article/israeli-military-invades-nabi-saleh-abducts-child-from-tamimi-family

    Israeli soldiers invaded, on Monday before dawn, Nabi Saleh village, near the central West Bank city of Ramallah, and abducted a child, identified as Mohammad Bassem Tamimi, 15, after breaking into the property and searching it.

    As the child was getting dressed to go with the soldiers, his mother Nariman Tamimi was talking to him, telling him to remain silent, not to talk with the interrogators without legal representation, and not to sign anything they try to get him to sign.

    The soldiers violently searched the property, removing and displacing furniture and belongings, and after briefly allowing him to hug his family members. Then the child was taken away by the soldiers.

    It is worth mentioning that the soldiers also invaded the home of Mahmoud Tamimi, a member of the Popular Committee against The Wall and Colonies, in the village, and violently searched it.

    The soldiers also abducted another Palestinian, identified as Moayyad Hamza Tamimi, after invading his home and searching it.

    #Nabi_Saleh #Tamimi

    • Israel arrests Ahed Tamimi’s brother
      April 8, 2019 at 8:08 am
      https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20190408-israel-arrests-ahed-tamimis-brother-2

      Israeli forces detained the brother of Palestinian resistance icon Ahed Tamimi in a raid in the occupied West Bank early Monday, according to his mother, Anadolu reports.

      “An Israeli force raided our home in the village of Nabi Sali near Ramallah and arrested my son Mohamed,” Nariman Tamimi told Anadolu Agency.

      “By arresting my son, the Israeli army is trying to break the will of our family,” she said.

      A video footage posted on the mother’s Facebook page showed Israeli forces surrounding the son as his sister Ahed was shouting at soldiers. (...)

  • i24NEWS - Cisjordanie : Ahed #Tamimi et sa famille ont l’interdiction de voyager à l’étranger
    https://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/international/moyen-orient/183765-180908-cisjordanie-ahed-tamimi-et-sa-famille-interdits-de-voyager-a-l

    « #villa_dans_la_jungle »

    La famille devait quitter la Cisjordanie vendredi pour un voyage de 20 jours en Belgique, en France et en Espagne afin de prendre part à des réunions avec divers groupes de défense des droits de l’Homme.

    #Palestine #sionisme

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

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

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

  • Une Israélienne et une Palestinienne giflent un soldat. Devinez qui est toujours en prison ?
    Edo Konrad, +972 Mag | Traduit de l’anglais par Yves Jardin, membre du GT de l’AFPS sur les prisonniers
    http://www.france-palestine.org/Une-Israelienne-et-une-Palestinienne-giflent-un-soldat-Devinez-qui

    (...) C’était à la fin de l’audience de détermination de la peine de Nariman Tamimi, la mère de Ahed qui a été arrêtée en même temps que celle-ci, que la militante israélienne Yifat Doron s’est levé et a giflé le procureur militaire en uniforme — un soldat. Juste comme l’a fait Ahed.

    Elle a été rapidement arrêtée.

    Le lendemain, la police a amené Doron devant un juge civil, dans un tribunal civil, et a demandé qu’elle soit mise en détention provisoire pendant cinq autres jours, en argumentant du fait qu’elle avait besoin de davantage de temps pour terminer l’enquête.

    Doron, qui a insisté sur le fait qu’elle voulait assurer sa propre défense, a dit au juge qu’elle ne s’opposait pas à son maintien en prison et qu’elle était réellement d’accord avec la police. “Quiconque ne se conforme pas à votre régime d’apartheid ou ose penser de façon indépendante représente effectivement une menace pour la police,” a-t-elle déclaré. (...)

    traduction de cet article : https://seenthis.net/messages/680556

    • Why Yifat Doron slapped the prosecutor at the Tamimi trial– and only spent two days in jail
      Yoav Haifawi on March 29, 2018
      http://mondoweiss.net/2018/03/slapped-prosecutor-tamimi

      (...) The motive

      Mainstream media will, as always, attempt to fit news events into well recognized patterns, thus it mentioned an incident which took place during Ahed Tamimi’s trial. It spoke of an Israeli-Jewish supporter who got up and slapped an officer. By meeting Yifat and reading the court papers for her remand, I learned that both the facts and the political perspective behind her actions differ from those first offered by the media.

      Yifat Doron in court, by Iris Bar

      First, as mentioned, Ahed’s trial took place in camera, so the incident could not happen within the trial. The same Wednesday, March 21, 2018, another trial was held at Ofer, that of Ahed’s mother, Nariman, and her cousin, Nur Tamimi. Due to the decision to hold them in remand until the end of the proceedings, faced with the possibility of being held in prison for a longer term until the trial concludes, both Ahed and Nariman were forced to accept a plea bargain which includes eight months jail time for each. The court was in session to formally sanction these pleas, including that of Nur, who had been previously released and whose punishment did not include further jail time. Although obviously a mere formality, the military judge took her time during the hearings to contemplate whether or not to sanction the agreed upon terms. Finally, just before 7 pm, the judge rose and left the hall after sending Nariman to eight months in prison. That was the moment when Yifat approached the prosecutor, a high ranking officer, and expressed her protest.

      Yifat explains that not only did her protest technically take place at the end of Nariman’s trial; it was in fact motivated by the distress caused to her by Nariman’s arrest. She kept close contact with Nariman throughout years of political struggle and feels strong friendship and deep appreciation toward her.

      She speaks of a sense of kinship brought about by difficult experiences. She remembers the time when Rushdi Tamimi, Nariman’s brother, was shot by Israeli soldiers just behind the family home. When news came that Rushdi’s physical state was deteriorating, she, along with other people from the village, went to the hospital and were gathering there when the news came out that he “istashhad” – became another martyr of the struggle. She sat by the hospital bed of another family member, Mustafa Tamimi, whom she describes as “kind hearted and a true gentleman”. The soldiers shot a tear gas grenade directly to Mustafa’s head; he was fatally wounded and died the following day.

      She accompanied Nariman when her husband, Bassem, was arrested and consequently tried for organizing protests in their village of Nabi Saleh. She recalls how Nariman was shot in the leg by a live bullet during a protest, an injury which shattered her bone and took her down a long road of recovery. She was with her and felt her pain when her children were beaten by soldiers and at times arrested. For years Nariman and Bassem’s home has been a safe haven for her.

      Now, with Nariman herself in prison, Yifat felt that she could not just pretend that matters were business as usual. She felt the need to act, to protect her friend, to cry out against what seemed to her to be so utterly unjust, an additional pain inflicted on the least deserving of all women. For her this is not about solidarity in its abstract form, or a mere political statement, it is rather a more personal involvement, the politics of non-separation, of being connected organically. In this sense she was no stranger to the thought of spending some time in prison, as she has seen many of her friends do throughout the years. (...)
      In retrospect, and although it was not Yifat’s intention, the court’s decision gave good service to the struggle which she acted to support. As the eyes of the world turn to Ahed Tamimi, a girl imprisoned for slapping a soldier, Yifat’s swift release supplied the utmost proof for the real reason behind Ahed’s arrest. Ahed, like thousands of other Palestinians, is under arrest for the worst crime in Israeli law books: that of being Arab.

      Yifat is frustrated by the fact that not only the courts but other well-meaning folk relate to her as that “Jewish Israeli activist”. “If what they want is to label us according to sectors and not based on our humanity, they might as well write that a woman protested on behalf of another woman, her friend”, she says. “That would be much more relevant to the case at hand.”

      “The differentiation made by the police and the court system classifying us as Jews and Arabs and treating us accordingly is not only part and parcel of its apartheid regime but also serves to strengthen and maintain the status quo”, she explains. Judaism to her is a religion and as she is not religious, she finds the description irrelevant. She does not define herself as Israeli either, at most, she can be described as a blue ID holder (as opposed to the green ID issued to Palestinians in the West Bank by Israel, which is a symbol of their rights deprived). Her message is the steadfast resistance of all those fighting for freedom and justice in taking apart the divisions forced on us by government.

  • Sous l’occupation, gifler un soldat est pire que tuer un Palestinien
    Jonathan Ofir, Mondoweiss, le 21 mars 2018
    http://www.agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2018/03/26/sous-loccupation-gifler-un-soldat-est-pire-que-tuer-un-palestin

    C’est aussi ce que disait le twitter de l’Agence Média Palestine ici :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/678548

    Ahed #Tamimi vient d’être condamnée à 8 mois de prison par un tribunal militaire & arbitraire israélien. A 1 mois près, c’est la peine qu’effectuera le soldat franco-israélien Elor Azria qui avait assassiné un Palestinien gisant à terre #FreeAhedTamimi

    #Palestine #Tamimis #prison #criminalisation_des_militants #prisonniers_politiques #enfants #Ahed_Tamimi #Elor_Azarya
    #Apartheid #Justice #Injustice #deux_poids_deux_mesures

  • AgenceMediaPalestine on Twitter : « Ahed #Tamimi vient d’être condamnée à 8 mois de prison par un tribunal militaire & arbitraire israélien. A 1 mois près, c’est la peine qu’effectuera le soldat franco-israélien Elor Azria qui avait assassiné un Palestinien gisant à terre #FreeAhedTamim »
    https://mobile.twitter.com/AgenceMediaPal/status/976500803321163777

  • #Israël : la famille d’Ahed #Tamimi victime d’une campagne de dénigrement - Moyen-Orient - RFI
    http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20180310-israel-famille-ahed-tamimi-victime-vaste-campagne-denigrement

    .... Ahed Tamimi est aussi considérée comme une actrice par certains responsables politiques israéliens. Ces derniers n’hésitent pas à affirmer que la famille Tamimi n’est pas réelle, mais a été créée à des fins de propagande palestinienne.

    Et cette théorie du complot rencontre un large écho dans la société israélienne, au grand regret d’Oren Persico, cofondateur du 7e œil, un observatoire des médias.

    « Le public israélien veut croire à cette version, donc les médias, les politiciens et l’armée font tout pour faire croire que les membres de cette famille sont des menteurs, ou laisser planer le doute sur l’existence réelle de cette famille, peut-être composée d’acteurs. C’est juste une autre manière pour les Israéliens de nier l’#occupation et ce que l’armée israélienne fait tous les jours au nom des Israéliens », souligne-t-il.

    Et aussi une manière de nier que la #résistance à cette occupation n’est pas morte

  • Ben White on Twitter: “I need to tell you a story – and even by normal standards for Israeli PR, this is particularly disturbing. As you read this thread, remember how many still hail Israel as an outstanding liberal democracy. The story begins with 15-year-old Palestinian child, Mohammad #Tamimi...”
    https://mobile.twitter.com/benabyad/status/968501292384604161

    Une histoire assez extraordinaire en effet, où #Israel #état_criminel affirme (triomphalement !) que le jeune Tamimi a eu la moitié de son crâne fracassé suite à une... chute de vélo.

    #sans_vergogne

  • OHCHR | UN rights experts alarmed by detention of Palestinian girl for slapping Israeli soldier
    http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22654&LangID=E

    “The Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Israel has ratified, clearly states that children are to be deprived of their liberty only as a last resort, and only for the shortest appropriate period of time,” said Michael Lynk, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967.

    None of the facts of this case would appear to justify her ongoing detention prior to her trial, particularly given the concerns expressed by the Committee on the Rights of the Child about the use of pre-trial detention and detention on remand.”

    [...]

    They noted that Tamimi was arrested in the middle of the night by well-armed soldiers, and then questioned by Israeli security officials without a lawyer or family members present. “This violates the fundamental legal guarantee to have access to counsel during interrogation,” said José Guevara, Chair of the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention.

    The experts also expressed concern about her place of detention - Hasharon prison in Israel - in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention which states that the deportation of protected persons from occupied territory to the territory of the occupying power, or to that of any other country, is prohibited, regardless of the motive.

    “Sadly, this is not an isolated case,” said Lynk. “Figures from Palestine show that Israel detains and prosecutes between 500 to 700 Palestinian children in military courts annually.

    “We have received reports that these children are commonly mistreated while in detention, subjected to both physical and psychological abuse , deprived of access to lawyers or family members during interrogation, and tried under a military court system in which there are significant concerns regarding independence and impartiality, and which has a worryingly high conviction rate.” In this respect, the experts referred to various opinions on Israel adopted by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention which have emphasized the right of children to be tried by a juvenile justice system rather than before military tribunals, in accordance with relevant international human rights law.

    #Crimes #Israel #impunité #Tamimi #enfants

  • Israel will not release Palestinian teen who slapped soldier until trial’s end - Israel News
    Haaretz.com _ Yotam Berger Jan 17, 2018 2:59 PM
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/palestinian-teen-who-slapped-soldier-until-trial-1.5743924

    An Israeli military appeals court ruled Wednesday that Ahed Tamimi, the Palestinian teen who appeared in a video slapping an IDF soldier, will not be released until the end of legal proceedings against her.

    #Nabi_Saleh #Tamimi

    • La militante palestinienne Ahed Tamimi maintenue en prison jusqu’à son procès
      Le Monde.fr avec AFP | 17.01.2018 à 14h59
      http://www.lemonde.fr/proche-orient/article/2018/01/17/la-militante-palestinienne-ahed-tamimi-maintenue-en-prison-jusqu-a-son-proce

      Agée de 16 ans et arrêtée en décembre à la suite d’une vidéo devenue virale la montrant frapper des soldats israéliens, elle pourrait rester en détention pendant des mois.

      Ahed Tamimi, l’adolescente qui est devenue pour les Palestiniens une icône de l’engagement contre l’occupation israélienne restera en prison jusqu’à son procès.

      « Je ne vois pas d’autre alternative que d’ordonner qu’elle reste en détention jusqu’à la fin de la procédure », a décidé un juge militaire israélien. « La gravité des faits dont elle est accusée n’offre pas d’alternative à la détention », a-t-il ajouté.

      La décision rendue par un juge militaire à la prison d’Ofer en Cisjordanie signifie potentiellement qu’Ahed Tamimi pourrait rester en détention pendant des mois.

      Agée de 16 ans, Ahed Tamimi est l’une des protagonistes d’une vidéo qui la montre, avec sa cousine Nour, 20 ans, bousculer deux soldats israéliens, puis leur donner des coups de pied et de poing le 15 décembre en Cisjordanie, territoire occupé par l’armée israélienne depuis plus de cinquante ans.

  • La jeune palestinienne qui a frappé un soldat israélien maintenue en détention
    RFI l Publié le 15-01-2018 | Avec notre correspondante à Ramallah, Marine Vlahovic
    http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20180115-jeune-palestinienne-frappe-soldat-israelien-maintenue-detention-ahed-ta

    Ahed Tamimi, 16 ans, lors de sa comparution ce lundi 15 janvier 2018 devant un tribunal militaire israélien.

    Elle est devenue une icône de la cause palestinienne. Ahed Tamimi, a été arrêtée il y a bientôt un mois pour avoir bousculé un soldat israélien dans son village de Nabi Saleh en Cisjordanie. Ce lundi 15 janvier, elle était de nouveau entendue par un tribunal militaire israélien. L’enjeu est son maintien en détention provisoire ou sa remise en liberté. Le juge prendra sa décision mercredi prochain.
    (...)
    Assis, carnet de notes à la main dans la salle bondée du tribunal militaire israélien d’Ofer, une dizaine de diplomates assistent à l’audience d’Ahed Tamimi. Ils sont originaires de plusieurs pays européens, dont la France, particulièrement bien représentée.

    Même s’ils ne sont là qu’en tant qu’observateurs, c’est un signe que le sort de l’adolescente palestinienne inquiète la communauté internationale.

    La représentation diplomatique de l’Union européenne avait d’ailleurs publié un communiqué en ce sens, il y a quelques jours. Les organisations de défense des droits de l’homme comme Amnesty International ou Human Rights Watch, elles, demandent sa libération immédiate.

    #Nabi_Saleh #Tamimi

  • ’I’m not sorry’: Nur Tamimi explains why she slapped an Israeli soldier
    By Gideon Levy and Alex Levac | Jan. 12, 2018 | 9:59 AM
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.834446

    A not-unexpected guest arrived at Nur Tamimi’s house last weekend: Mohammed Tamimi, the 15-year-old cousin and neighbor, who was shot in the head. He came over to congratulate Nur on her release on bail from an Israeli prison. She was delighted to see him standing there, despite his serious head wound. Last week, when we visited Mohammed, he hadn’t yet been told that Nur, 21, and their 16-year-old cousin Ahed, had been detained. Nor did he know that it was the bullet fired into his head from short range that had prompted the two cousins to go outside and attack two trespassing soldiers.

    Now, at home, surrounded by television cameras, Nur confirms that the assault on the two soldiers was partly motivated by the fact that they invaded Ahed’s yard on December 15 – but the main reason was that they had just then read on Facebook that Mohammed had suffered an apparently mortal wound. He was shot a few dozen meters from Nur’s home. Ahed’s home is also a few steps away – all of the cousins live close to the entrance of the village of Nabi Saleh, near Ramallah.

    Ahed and her mother, Nariman, have now been in prison for three weeks, Mohammed is recovering from his wound and Nur is back home after 16 days in detention – an ordeal she would never have had to endure if she weren’t a Palestinian. Nur was involved in the incident with the soldiers, but the video of it shows clearly that she was far less aggressive than Ahed: She barely touched the soldiers.

    Monday evening in Nabi Saleh. A personable, bespectacled young woman in skinny pants and a jacket strides in confidently, apologizes for being late and is not taken aback by the battery of cameras awaiting her in her parents’ living room. Since being released she has been interviewed nonstop by the world’s media. She’s less iconic than Ahed, but she’s free.

    Nur, who is now awaiting trial, has just come back from Al-Quds University, the school she attends outside Jerusalem – she’s a second-year journalism student – where she had gone to explain her absence from a recent exam. Reason: prior commitments in the Sharon Prison. But she was late getting home, and her parents, Bushra and Naji, were worried. She wasn’t answering her phone.

    In fact, people here seemed to be more upset by her lateness than they had been by her arrest. Her parents and siblings have plenty of experience with Israeli lockups. This is the village of civil revolt, Nabi Saleh, and this is the Tamimi family. They’re used to being taken into custody. While we waited for Nur, her father told us about the family.

    Naji is 55 and speaks Hebrew quite well, having picked up the language in the 1980s when he worked in Israel polishing floor tiles. You have to spend time with Naji and Bushra – and also Ahed’s parents, Bassem and Nariman – to grasp how degrading, inflammatory and ignorant the Israeli right-wing propaganda is that has labeled these impressive people a “family of murderers.”

    Naji works in the Palestinian Authority’s Coordination and Liaison Office, but stresses that has no direct contact with Israelis. A pleasant, sociable individual and a veteran member of Fatah, he’s the father of three daughters and two sons. The text on the newly coined poster above his head in the spacious living room states: “No one will turn off the light [nur, in Arabic]. #FreeNur.”

    Naji is an uncle of Nariman and a cousin of Bassem – Ahed’s parents. The two families are very close; the children grew up in these adjacent houses.

    Nur had never been arrested, but her father spent five years in Israeli jails. He was brought to trial four times for various offenses, most of them minor or political in nature. Naji’s brother was killed in 1973, in an Israel Air Force attack on Tripoli, in Lebanon, and the dead brother’s son spent more than 20 years in Israeli prisons. Bushra has been arrested three times for short periods. Their son Anan has been arrested four times, including one seven-month stint in prison.

    About half a year ago, the regular demonstrations in Nabi Saleh protesting both the taking of land for the building of the settlement of Halamish and the plundering of a local spring plundered by settlers, when the army started to use live fire to disperse them. This is a small village, of 500 or 600 residents who weren’t able to cope with the resulting injuries and, in a few cases, fatalities. But U.S. President Donald Trump’s speech last month about Jerusalem reignited the protest.

    A few days ago, a young villager, Abdel Karim Ayyub, was arrested (for unknown reasons), and has been in the Shin Bet security service’s interrogations facility in Petah Tikva since. The locals are certain that in the wake of his detention, there will be another large-scale army raid and extensive arrests.

    On that Friday, December 15, Nur and Ahed were going back and forth between their two houses as usual. They were at Ahed’s house in the afternoon when they heard that Mohammed had been shot. In the yard, an officer and a soldier were, she recounts, acting as if this were their own house. These daily incursions drive the villagers crazy. It’s not just the brazen invasion of privacy, it’s also the fact that sometimes local young people throw stones at the soldiers. Sometimes, the stones hit the houses, and sometimes the soldiers open fire from the yards of the homes. “We aren’t going to accept a situation in which our homes become Israeli army posts,” says Naji.

    His daughter holds the same opinion. She and Ahed, distraught at the news of Mohammed’s shooting, went out that day and started to taunt the two soldiers, so they would leave. According to Naji, the incident was quite routine and none of the soldiers got upset over it. He’s also convinced that the soldiers reacted with such restraint because they realized the scene was being filmed.

    “This is only a small part of the overall picture,” he explains. “For the soldiers it was also something completely ordinary. They didn’t think they were in danger, either.”

    Nur then went home and barely mentioned the incident; both for her and Ahed, it was indeed routine. Before dawn on Tuesday, four days after the incident and two days after the video clip had been posted online and stirred members of the Israeli right to assail the soldiers’ passivity – the army arrested Ahed. This took place in the dead of night and involved a large force; that’s the usual MO for arrests, even of minors such as Ahed. Twenty-four hours later, also at 3:30 A.M., the troops raided Nur’s house. Nariman was arrested when she arrived at the police station that day, for her involvement in the assault on the soldiers.

    In the case of Nur, the soldiers burst into the house, went upstairs and demanded to see the IDs of all the sisters. Naji says that, once Ahed had been arrested, the family knew the soldiers would come for Nur, too. No one, including Nur, was afraid; no one tried to resist. About 15 soldiers entered the house, and seven or eight vehicles waited outside. Nur got dressed, was handcuffed and went out into the cold, dark night.

    “It’s impossible to stand up to the army,” Naji says now, “and because this was Nur’s first time, we didn’t want violence.” In the jeep, she was blindfolded. She got no sleep for the next 22 hours, between the interrogations and the brusque transfers between detention facilities and interrogation rooms.

    Two days later, soldiers again came to the family’s home, to carry out a search. They took nothing. Of this procedure, too, Naji says drily, “We’re used to it.” Meanwhile, in Ahed’s house, all the computers and cellular phones had been confiscated.

    Two days after Nur’s arrest, her parents saw her in the military court in Ofer Prison, near Ramallah. She looked resilient, in terms of her state of mind, but physically exhausted, they say.

    Ahed is in the minors’ section of Sharon Prison, in the center of the country; Nur was held in the wing for female security prisoners, where Nariman is, too. The three of them sometimes met in the courtyard during exercise periods.

    Nur says she was appalled by her first encounter with an Israeli prison. The fates of the other prisoners – the suffering they endure and the physical conditions – are giving her sleepless nights. She now wants to serve as the voice for female Palestinian prisoners. She’s a bit tense and inhibited during our conversation, maybe because of the language (she doesn’t speak Hebrew, and her English is limited), maybe because we’re Israelis. What she found hardest, she tells us, was being deprived of sleep during all the interrogations, which went on for 22 hours straight, during which she wasn’t permitted to close her eyes. The aim of her captors, she says, was to pressure her to confess and to name village activists.

    What did you want to achieve in the attack on the soldiers?

    “We want to drive them out.”

    Were you surprised that they didn’t react?

    “There was something strange about their behavior. Something suspicious. They put on an act for the camera.”

    Did you deserve to be punished?

    “No, and I’m not sorry for what I did. They invaded our home. This is our home, not theirs.”

    Would you do it again?

    “I will react in the same way if they behave like that – if they invade the house and hurt my family.”

    Ahed is strong, her cousin says. She knows she’s become a heroine from the Palestinian television broadcasts she sees in prison. Dozens of songs have already been written about her, says Nur, adding that it’s not because of Ahed that she is so upset now – what appalls Nur most is the lot of the other prisoners, above all the condition of Israa Jaabis, whose car, according to the record of her conviction, caught fire during an attempted terrorist attack in 2015, when she was 31. Jaabis was sentenced to 11 years prison, and suffers terribly from her burns, especially at night, according to Nur.

    Other than the mission she has undertaken of speaking out for the prisoners, the arrest did not change her life, Nur says. She was released by the military appeals court last Thursday, pending trial, on four relatively lenient conditions, despite the prosecution’s insistence to the contrary. The judge ordered her to be freed that same day, and the prison authorities complied, but held off until just before midnight, as though in spite. Her father waited for her at the Jabara checkpoint. It was the eve of the huge storm that lashed the country, and the two hurried home.

    No celebration awaited them there. Nur is still awaiting trial on assault charges, and last week, in the neighboring village of Deir Nizam, most of whose population is related to the Tamimi family, a 16-year-old boy was killed. During the funeral a friend of the victim was shot in the head and critically wounded.

    This is not a time for celebrations.

    #Nabi_Saleh #Tamimi

    • « Je ne regrette pas » : Nour Tamimi explique pourquoi elle a giflé un soldat israélien
      Gideon Levy | Publié le 12/1/2017 sur Haaretz
      Traduction : Jean-Marie Flémal et Alex Levac
      http://www.pourlapalestine.be/je-ne-regrette-pas-nour-tamimi-explique-pourquoi-elle-a-gifle-un-sol

      Nour Tamimi est sortie de prison après avoir été arrêtée en compagnie de sa cousine, Ahed, qui avait giflé des soldats israéliens – lesquels avaient abattu leur cousin Mohammed. « Si la même chose devait se reproduire », explique Nour aujourd’hui, « elle réagirait de la même façon. »

      Un hôte inattendu est arrivé au domicile de Nour Tamimi, le week-end dernier : Mohammed Tamimi, le cousin et voisin de 15 ans, qui avait reçu une balle dans la tête. Il est venu pour féliciter Nour de sa libération sous caution d’une prison israélienne. Elle était contente de le voir là, en dépit de sa grave blessure à la tête. La semaine dernière, lorsque nous avions rendu visite à Mohammed, on ne lui avait pas dit que Nour, 21 ans, et leur cousine Ahed, 16 ans, avaient été arrêtées. Il ne savait pas non plus que c’était la balle qu’on lui avait tirée dans la tête à très courte distance qui avait incité les deux cousines à sortir et à s’en prendre à deux soldats qui violaient leur propriété. (...)

  • » Mohammed Tamimi, 19, Seized by Occupation Forces as Global Solidarity Escalates (VIDEO)
    IMEMC News | January 12, 2018 7:06 PM
    http://imemc.org/article/mohammed-tamimi-19-seized-by-occupation-forces-as-global-solidarity-escalates

    The ongoing Israeli harassment and targeted oppression of the Tamimi family, organizers in the anti-colonial land defense and popular resistance in the Palestinian village of Nabi Saleh, continued in the pre-dawn hours of 11 January. While 16-year-old activist Ahed Tamimi and her mother Nariman remain in Israeli prison, facing a series of charges before an Israeli military court, Israeli occupation forces raided the family home of Manal and Bilal Tamimi, seizing their 19-year-old son Mohammed. Manal, Mohammed’s mother, was released one week ago after nearly a week in Israeli prison.

    #Nabi_Saleh #Tamimi

  • Israeli court releases Nour al-Tamimi on bail
    Jan. 5, 2018 9:30 P.M. (Updated : Jan. 6, 2018 5:14 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=779723

    RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — An Israeli court on Thursday evening decided to release 21-year-old Nour al-Tamimi on a bail, rejecting an appeal presented by the Israeli military prosecution against her release.

    The court rejected the Israeli military prosecutions appeal and decided to release al-Tamimi on a 5,000 shekel ($1,455) bail.

    Al-Tamimi was held in Israeli prison for two weeks. She was arrested in mid-December after her cousin, 16-year-old Ahed was detained for slapping and kicking an Israeli soldier during a raid on her hometown of Nabi Saleh in the central occupied West Bank district of Ramallah.

    Nour was featured in the video next to her cousin Ahed, and was detained seemingly for involvement in the incident, though no charges were brought against her.

    Ahed has been indicted on 12 charges, including assaulting an officer and previous accusations of stone throwing. The military court she is being prosecuted in has a 99% conviction rate.

    #Tamimi

  • abushalom on Twitter: “According to Ha’aretz the slingshot charge was included in the prosecutor’s indictment against Ahed #Tamimi today. She is a #David fighting the #Goliath of #occupation.”
    https://mobile.twitter.com/abushalom/status/947871880018579456

    Ahed Tamimi, Palestinian teen who slapped Israeli soldier in video, charged with assault - Israel News - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.832424

    She is further charged with throwing rocks using a slingshot and with her hands during another disturbance in early April 2016 “with the intention of injuring them. The accused was a dominant factor in the riot and persuaded those around her to throw rocks,” states the indictment

    #israel #inconscience

  • Twitter account of imprisoned Palestinian teenage girl Ahed #Tamimi deleted — RT World News
    https://www.rt.com/usa/414396-twitter-delete-ahed-tamimi

    Another account has been created, calling for #Twitter to reinstate Tamimi’s original account.

    While it is unclear if Twitter itself deleted the account, Manal Tamimi, a relative of Ahed, suggested Twitter did indeed ban the account.

  • La jeune activiste palestinienne Ahed #Tamimi arrêtée par l’armée israélienne à la suite d’une vidéo virale
    http://www.lemonde.fr/big-browser/article/2017/12/20/la-jeune-activiste-palestinienne-ahed-tamimi-arretee-par-l-armee-israelienne

    « Peu importe que les images aient été diffusées sur des chaînes internationales, et que le public international ait vu une jeune femme défiante être réprimée par des occupants cruels. Peu importe que c’est sûrement ce que voulait Ahed Tamimi elle-même. La seule chose qui importe à l’armée était de satisfaire le désir atavique que nos braves soldats ne soient pas humiliés en public. »

    #israel