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13 mars 2017 1 13 /03 /mars /2017 09:22
Richard Gere to Haaretz: Settlements Are an Absurd Provocation, the Occupation Is Indefensible
 


'Norman' star had a hard time deciding whether to come to Israel for local premiere: 'I had people living here who told me, "Look, no good will come of this. The bad guys will use you."'


Allison Kaplan Sommer Mar 12, 2017 2:00 PM
 
 
Richard Gere during a press conference at the Israeli premiere of the 'Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer' movie, in Jerusalem, March 9, 2017.
Dan Balilty/AP
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/culture/1.776584
 
 
 
 
 
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12 mars 2017 7 12 /03 /mars /2017 10:02
Israeli forces detain Palestinian writer over new novel"
 
 
March 11, 2017 1:57 P.M. (Updated: March 12, 2017 10:06 A.M.)
 
 
 
 
JERUSALEM (Ma'an) -- Israeli forces detained Palestinian writer Khalida Ghusheh on Saturday morning after raiding her home in the neighborhood of Beit Hanina in occupied East Jerusalem.

Ghusheh’s manager, Amani Abd al-Karim, said that Israeli police had raided Ghusheh’s home, before detaining her and transporting her to a police station in the illegal Israeli settlement of Neve Yaqoub in the Beit Hanina.

Al-Karim added that Ghusheh called her after arriving to the interrogation center, informing her that she was in need of a lawyer and said that the reason for her detention was related to her novel scheduled to be published in October. The novel, titled “The Jackal’s Trap,” explores Palestinian collaborators with the Israeli occupation.

An Israeli police spokesperson was not immediately available to comment on the case.

 
 
A picture of the novel's cover

Scores of Palestinians have been detained in recent months for expressing their opinions on the Israeli occupation, particularly through social media, in a crackdown that rights groups have said is aimed to stifle Palestinian freedom of speech.

Israeli forces detained Palestinian poet Dareen Tartour, a citizen of Israel, in Oct. 2015 and charged her with “incitement to violence” for posts she made on Facebook and a video clip of her poem “Qawim ya sha’abi, qawimhum” (Resist my people, resist them). She was facing up to eight years in prison and had already spent months in detention and house arrest.

Israeli authorities have claimed that a wave of violence that first erupted in Oct. 2015 was caused largely by “incitement” among Palestinians through social media.

Meanwhile, Palestinians have instead pointed chiefly to the frustration and despair brought on by Israel's nearly 50-year military occupation of the Palestinian territory and the absence of a political horizon as reasons for the outbreak of violence. Many Palestinians have also pointed out that Israeli violence has continued to shape everyday life in the occupied territory, regardless of any recent “upticks” in clashes or attacks.

 
 
 
http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775895
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12 mars 2017 7 12 /03 /mars /2017 09:40
Publish Date: 2017/03/09
Israeli settlers cut dozens of olive trees, spray pesticides on crops in Hebron area
 
 
 

HEBRON, March 9, 2017 (WAFA) – Israeli settlers cut dozens of olive trees and sprayed pesticides on crops in land southeast of Yatta in the south of the West Bank, a local activist said on Thursday.

The activist, Rateb Jbour, from the popular committees against settlements in the south of the West Bank, told WAFA that farmers were surprised when they got to their land to find their two-year old olive trees cut and their crops sprayed with deadly pesticide.

He said settlers from the illegal Maon outpost cut the fence around the farm owned by Fadel Rabee and his brothers, cut dozens of trees the family had planted two years ago and destroyed their crops.

Residents in that area regularly complain that the extremist Maon settlers attack their farms and homes hoping that they would eventually abandon their land.

M.K.

 

http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=RmpWN3a57172754463aRmpW

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11 mars 2017 6 11 /03 /mars /2017 10:23
Israeli forces suppress weekly marches in Bilin, Kafr Qaddum
 
 
March 10, 2017 6:46 P.M. (Updated: March 10, 2017 9:13 P.M.)
 
 
 
 
RAMALLAH (Ma’an) -- Israeli forces suppressed weekly Friday marches in the village of Bilin in the central occupied West Bank district of Ramallah and the village of Kafr Qaddum in Qalqiliya, detaining two Palestinians, including a 14-year-old, and causing many to suffer tear gas inhalation.

In the village of Bilin, Israeli forces detained two Palestinians after installing checkpoints at three roads leading to the village, preventing foreign protesters to enter the village and participate in their weekly march.

Coordinator of the popular committee against the Israeli wall and settlements Abdullah Abu Rahma said that Israeli forces detained Majdi Abu Rahma, 32, and seized his vehicle, while also detaining Issa Khader Abu Rahma, 14.

 
 
 
 
During the march, residents held up Palestinian flags and pictures of Palestinian activist Basil al-Araj who was killed by Israeli forces in Ramallah earlier this week.

Protesters reached the area of the separation wall’s gate, and shouted national slogans demanding the freeing of Palestinian prisoners, particularly Jamal Abu al-Leil, who has been on hunger strike for 22 days, and Muhammad al-Qiq, who ended his 32-day hunger strike on Friday.

Israeli forces shot tear gas canisters at the protesters, causing many to suffer from tear gas inhalation, as clashes broke out between soldiers and Palestinian youth. Protesters gathered at the village’s entrances and succeeded in forcing Israeli soldiers to leave and re-open the entrances to the village following clashes.

 
 
Bilin is one of the most active Palestinian villages in peaceful organized opposition against Israeli policies, as residents have protested every Friday for 12 years, and have often been met with tear gas, rubber-coated steel bullets, and stun grenades from Israeli forces.

 

(Story continues below)
 
 
Meanwhile, in the village of Kafr Qaddum in Qalqiliya, a number of protesters suffered tear gas inhalation as Israeli forces suppressed the village’s weekly march.

Local coordinator of the popular resistance in the village Murad Shteiwi told Ma’an that Israeli forces raided the village and fired tear gas canisters at protesters. The injured were provided with medical care at the scene by Palestinian Red Crescent crews.

Shteiwi said that violent clashes erupted between Palestinian youths and Israeli soldiers who were stationed on rooftops. They fired rubber-coated bullets and sound bombs at protesters. Shteiwi added that Israeli forces were not successful in detaining any Palestinians.

An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an she would look into reports on both villages.

 
 
 
 
Residents of Kafr Qaddum began staging weekly protests in 2011 against land confiscations, as well as the closure of the village's southern road by Israeli forces. The road, which has been closed for 14 years, is the main route to the nearby city of Nablus, the nearest economic center.

The Israeli army blocked off the road after expanding the illegal Israeli settlement of Kedumim in 2003, forcing village residents to take a bypass road in order to travel to Nablus, which has extended the travel time to Nablus from 15 minutes to 40 minutes, according to Israeli rights group B’Tselem.

 
 
 
 
 
Hundreds of Palestinians have been detained during the demonstrations since their start in 2011, and at least 84 protesters have been injured by live fire, including 12 children, Shteiwi told Ma'an during a similar protest last year.

Some 120 others have been detained at demonstrations and were subsequently held in Israeli custody for periods ranging between four and 24 months, Shteiwi said at the time, adding that they had paid fines totaling some 25,000 shekels (approximately $6,488).

Over the course of five years, an elderly protester was killed after suffering from excessive tear gas inhalation, one youth lost his eyesight, and another his ability to speak, he added.

 
 
 
 
In December, Israeli forces became the focus of international condemnation when Israeli soldiers wearing matching plain clothes and black ski masks detained a seven-year-old Palestinian during a weekly protest in the village.

A video of the incident was taken by a volunteer of B’Tselem and quickly went viral. Rights groups and activists pointed out that the video seemed to show the soldiers using the child as a human shield during clashes.

B’Tselem strongly condemned the incident at the time, saying that “it does not take a lawyer to know that the detention of a seven-year-old child by soldiers, keeping him by their side as they shoot at his friends, is deplorable and utterly unacceptable."

 
 
 

 

http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=775886
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11 mars 2017 6 11 /03 /mars /2017 10:12

Conflit israélo-palestinien : Johnson brandit le spectre de "l’apartheid"

 

L’Orient le Jour avec AFP, jeudi 9 mars 2017

Le chef de la diplomatie britannique Boris Johnson estime que l’alternative à une solution à deux Etats dans le conflit israélo-palestinien est un "système d’apartheid", dans une interview publiée jeudi dans le quotidien Jerusalem Post.

Le ministre britannique des Affaires étrangères a bouclé mercredi soir une visite de 24 heures en Israël et dans les Territoires palestiniens au cours de laquelle il a affirmé le ferme soutien britannique à Israël, et critiqué la colonisation israélienne. "Ce que nous disons, c’est que vous devez avoir une solution à deux Etats ou sinon vous aurez un genre de système d’apartheid", a déclaré Boris Johnson au quotidien, interrogé sur la position du président américain à ce sujet.

Rompant avec la politique américaine depuis des décennies, Donald Trump a affirmé le mois dernier que la solution à deux Etats n’était pas la seule voie possible pour résoudre le conflit et qu’un seul Etat était aussi envisageable, l’essentiel étant qu’Israël et les Palestiniens soient "contents".

La solution à deux Etats, c’est-à-dire la création d’un Etat palestinien coexistant en paix avec Israël, est retenue par la plus grande partie de la communauté internationale. Elle paraît toutefois de plus en plus hors de portée, ce qui fait redouter aux Palestiniens la perspective d’un Etat unique dans lequel Israël ne reconnaîtrait pas les mêmes droits aux juifs et aux Arabes, un régime d’"apartheid" donc.

A Ramallah, siège de l’Autorité palestinienne en Cisjordanie occupée, M. Johnson a souligné mercredi que la politique de son gouvernement était "absolument inchangée" : "Nous restons attachés à une solution à deux Etats", a-t-il assuré.

Dans le Jerusalem Post, Boris Johnson a qualifié de "problème chronique" ce qui "se passe dans les Territoires palestiniens occupés", une référence à la poursuite de l’occupation et de la colonisation.

Une grande partie de la communauté internationale et les Palestiniens considèrent que la poursuite de la colonisation en Cisjordanie prônée par le gouvernement israélien actuel, considéré comme le plus à droite de l’histoire du pays, constitue le principal obstacle à un accord de paix.

La frange la plus à droite du gouvernement du Premier ministre israélien Benjamin Netanyahu préconise l’annexion d’au moins une partie de la Cisjordanie occupée

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11 mars 2017 6 11 /03 /mars /2017 09:56
PCBS data reveals growing rate of Palestinian women in workforce despite challenges
March 8, 2017 6:18 P.M. (Updated: March 9, 2017 10:58 A.M.)
 
 
(File)
 
 
BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) -- The Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) marked International Women’s Day with a press release revealing persisting yet improving disparities between Palestinian women and men in the workplace in the occupied territory.

Despite representing roughly half of the total population of 4.88 million in the occupied Palestinian territory, the 2.4 million women in the West Bank and Gaza Strip represented 19.3 percent of the workforce in 2016, however marking a wide improvement from just 10.3 percent in 2001.

Unemployment among Palestinian women was almost exactly twice as high than that off men -- 44.7 percent and 22.2 percent, respectively.

About half of women -- 50.6 percent -- with 13 years of schooling and above were unemployed.

The average daily wage for women was 83.30 shekels ($22.6) compared to 114.10 ($30.96) for men, representing a wage gap of 27 percent.

PCBS statistics also found that the transition for Palestinian graduates aged 15 to 29 into the labor market widely favored males.

Data showed that the rate of females in that age group who successfully moved from school to the labor market was only 6.6 percent compared to 44.8 percent of the males.

Palestinian women also represented a disproportionate low share of public life relative to their share of the population. In 2015, 17.2 percent of judges, 22.5 percent of registered lawyers, 16.7 of members of the public prosecution staff, and 21.1 percent of registered engineers were women.

However, women represented nearly half of the public sector posts at 42.6 percent.

Only 11.7 percents of Palestinian directors general in the civil sector across the occupied territory were women, and 23.2 percent of members of West Bank university student council were women.

Gender disparities in the workplace were also corroborated by higher prevalence of early marriage among women and girls compared to males -- in 2015, 20.3 percent of females married before 18 years old, compared to 1.1 percent of males.

Married women represented 62.3 percent of the total female Palestinian population aged 18 and above in 2016. Some 26.4 percent had never been married, 6.6 percent were widows, 2.7 percent were engaged for the first time, and 2 percent were divorced.

In spite of gender inequalities in the workforce however, literacy rates among Palestinian women have continued to rise over the past decade -- reaching 95.2 percent in 2016, though they were still higher among men at 98.6 percent.

Meanwhile, enrollment rates for Palestinian girls in high schools exceeded those of boys. PCBS data showed that male enrollment in high schools was 58.7 percent, compared to female enrollment which stood at 78.6 percent for the year 2015-2016.

In a written statement issued Wednesday, PLO Executive Committee Member Hanan Ashrawi highlighted the importance of laws and legal systems that demand equality and justice for women.

“We have to ensure that our Palestinians laws are all consistent with our obligations as per international treaties and conventions, including in the UN Convention of the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security (2000). It is incumbent upon the Palestinian leadership to ensure the implementation of these laws in all different spheres, to hold to account all those who violate them and to stand up to the abuse of religion and traditions to justify injustice against women or any attempt to marginalize or deprive them of their right to self-determination.”

Ashrawi went on to stress that “Palestinian women continue to suffer severe psychological, physical and emotional abuse and endure grave acts of oppression, violence and hardship at the hands of Israel and its unbridled violations," and highlighted the struggle of Palestinian women incarcerated by Israel as political prisoners.

 

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11 mars 2017 6 11 /03 /mars /2017 09:51
Tobrouk claque la porte du dialogue interlibyen
La Libye au bord d’une nouvelle guerre pour le pouvoir ?
 

le 09.03.17 | 12h00

La situation est loin d’être simple sur le terrain des combats

La situation est loin d’être simple sur le terrain des...

La situation est loin d’être simple sur le terrain des combats

L’offensive des Brigades de défense de Benghazi contre le Croissant pétrolier libyen intervient dans un contexte où les discussions entre Tripoli et Tobrouk, sur un nouveau partage des rôles au sein du Conseil présidentiel et un amendement de l’accord de Skhirat, étaient pourtant à un stade avancé.

La perspective, à moyen terme, d’une solution politique négociée à la crise libyenne s’éloigne avec le vote, à la majorité, mardi, par la Chambre des représentants, du gel de l’accord interlibyen, signé en janvier 2016, à Skhirat et de la suspension des pourparlers initiés avec le gouvernement d’union nationale (GNA). Le porte-parole de l’institution, Abdallah Blihak, a souligné que les ponts resteront coupés avec Tripoli tant que le GNA et les parties qui le soutiennent ne se seront pas déterminés clairement au sujet de l’attaque, vendredi dernier, par les Brigades de défense de Benghazi (BDB) du Croissant pétrolier libyen, jusque-là contrôlé par l’Armée nationale libyenne (ANL), que commande le maréchal Khalifa Haftar.

La Chambre des représentants aurait décidé également d’organiser des élections législatives et présidentielle avant février 2018 pour, disent ses membres, «tenter de mettre fin à la profonde crise dans laquelle est plongé le pays». Bien que le gouvernement d’union nationale ait assuré qu’il n’avait rien à voir avec l’offensive, le gouvernement de Tobrouk soupçonne fortement Fayez El Serraj, le président du Conseil présidentiel libyen, d’être de connivence avec les BDB auxquelles le maréchal Haftar a déclaré la guerre.

«L’heure n’est plus aux bavardages, mais à la libération des terminaux pétroliers d’Al Sidra et de Ras Lanouf», lance sur une chaîne de télévision de l’Est libyen, un membre de l’entourage du maréchal Khalifa Haftar dont les troupes se préparent d’ailleurs à mener une vaste contre-offensive. De nombreux observateurs soutiennent, toutefois, qu’il ne sera pas facile pour le gouvernement de Tobrouk d’y déloger les BDB. Des brigades que le maréchal Haftar qualifie de «terroristes».

Face à la crainte de voir les combats impliquer, avec le temps, d’autres acteurs de la crise libyenne et s’élargir à d’autres régions (Tripoli est aussi loin d’être stable), la Ligue des Etats arabes vient de prendre l’initiative de convier à une réunion, fin mars, l’ONU, l’Union africaine et l’Union européenne avec l’objectif d’accorder leurs violons, de faire taire les armes et de relancer le dialogue inclusif interlibyen. C’est en gros le même pari que s’est lancé le groupe des pays voisins de la Libye qui prévoient, également, de se retrouver à Alger à la fin du mois.

L’offensive des Brigades de défense de Benghazi intervient dans un contexte où les discussions entre Tripoli et Tobrouk sur un nouveau partage des rôles au sein du Conseil présidentiel et un amendement de l’accord de Skhirat étaient pourtant à un stade avancé. Les derniers événements risquent cependant de convaincre les différents protagonistes de la crise de privilégier, dorénavant, la solution militaire au détriment d’un règlement politique de la crise.

A ce propos, un ancien responsable algérien s’est dit s’attendre à ce que la crise libyenne perdure, regrettant que les discussions interlibyennes aient démarré de la plus mauvaise des manières et n’incluent pas tous les acteurs influents. «En 2016, la situation n’était pas encore mûre pour un accord. Il aurait fallu être plus patient», dit-il.

Un peu comme en Syrie, les parties en présence chercheront probablement à engranger un maximum de victoires sur le terrain avant de reprendre le chemin des négociations. A cet exercice, il n’est pas certain que Khalifa Haftar et son armée en sortent vainqueurs surtout qu’il s’avère qu’ils ne maîtrisent pas la situation sur le terrain autant qu’ils le prétendent. A supposer même que l’ANL parvienne à avoir le dessus sur les BDB, il n’est pas sûr aussi que Khalifa Haftar puisse réaliser son rêve de jouer un rôle politique de premier plan.

Etant issu d’une tribu du centre de la Libye n’ayant que peu de poids, il aura du mal à obtenir le quorum tribal requis pour gouverner. Cela n’empêche pas, toutefois, de nombreux pays, et certains milieux en Algérie, de le considérer encore comme un rempart contre le terrorisme. Mais tout le monde semble, en même temps, conscient que les tribus de l’est du pays qui ont accepté de le prendre sous leur aile peuvent le sacrifier à n’importe quel moment sur l’autel de leur réconciliation avec Tripoli. Il ne faut pas l’oublier, le vrai chef en Cyrénaïque ce n’est pas lui.

Zine Cherfaoui
 
 
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10 mars 2017 5 10 /03 /mars /2017 10:13
Weekly Report On Israeli Human Rights Violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (23 Febreuay – 01 March 2017)
183
 
 

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Israeli forces continue systematic crimes in the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt)

 

(23 February- 01 March 2017)

 

  • A Palestinian civilian was killed by Israeli settlers, south of Hebron.
  • 6 civilians, including 3 children and a young woman, were wounded in the West Bank while a child was wounded in the Gaza Strip.
  • Israeli warplanes carried out 8 airstrikes, launching 23 missiles against civil objects and military sites belonging to the Palestinian armed groups.
  • A civilian and three Palestinian officers in the Gaza Interior Ministry were wounded.
  • Military training sites sustained material damages while 6 other houses and a mosque sustained minor damages.
  • Israeli forces continued to target the border areas in the Gaza Strip, but no casualties were reported.
  • Israeli forces continued to target Palestinian fishermen in the Gaza Sea.
  • Israeli forces conducted 66 incursions into Palestinian communities in the West Bank and two limited ones were conducted in the central and southern Gaza Strip.
  • 47 civilians, including 4 children and 3 young women, were arrested in the West Bank.
  • 6 of them, including 3 young women, were arrested during a protest organized by the Birzeit university students in the vicinity of ‘Ofer Prison, west of Ramallah.
  • Israeli forces continued their efforts to create Jewish majority in occupied East Jerusalem.
  • A residential building in al-‘Issawiyah was demolished, rendering 14 individuals, including 4 children, homeless.
  • Israeli forces turned the West Bank into cantons and continued to impose the illegal closure on the Gaza Strip for the 10th
  • Dozens of temporary checkpoints were established in the West Bank and others were re-established to obstruct the movement of Palestinian civilians.
  • 7 Palestinian civilians, including 3 children and girl, were arrested at military checkpoints.

 

Summary

 

Israeli violations of international law and international humanitarian law in the oPt continued during the reporting period (23 February – 01 March 2017).

 

Shooting:

 

During the reporting period, Israeli settlers killed a Palestinian civilian, south of Hebron. Meanwhile, the Israeli forces wounded 11 Palestinian civilians, including 4 children and a woman. Six of them and a woman were wounded in the West Bank while 5 others, including a child, were wounded in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli forces continued to chase Palestinian fishermen in the Gaza Sea and open fire at farmers in the border areas in addition to carrying out many airstrikes targeting training sites belonging to the Palestinian armed groups and civilian objects.

 

In the West Bank, On 01 March 2017, Sa’di Qaysiyah (25) from al-Thaheriyah village, south of Hebron were killed after an Israeli setter from “Havat Mor” settlement outpost, west of the aforementioned village, opened fire at him. The Israeli media claimed that the Palestinian civilian attempted to stab the settler. However, no local eyewitness was there to confirm or deny the Israeli claims as the crime happened within the outpost borders. The Israeli forces then took his body to an unknown destination and detained it.

 

On 24 February 2017, an 11-year-old child was wounded with a rubber-coated bullet to the neck while a 26-year-old man was wounded with a rubber-coated metal bullet to the left leg when Israeli forces opened fire at the Kafr Qaddoum weekly protest, northeast of Qalqilya.

 

On 24 February 2017, a child from Zowaydin village, southeast of Yata, south of Hebron, sustained severe burns after an object from the Israeli remnants exploded near the abovementioned village school. The child was grazing sheep.

 

On 27 February 2017, Israeli soldiers stationed at Qalendia checkpoint at the northern entrance to occupied Jerusalem opened fire at Manar Mojahed (28) from Kafr ‘Aqab village, north of the city when she was near the aforementioned checkpoint. As a result, she was wounded and then arrested.

 

On the same day, ‘Abdullah ‘Anati (14) from Sho’afat refugee camp, northeast of occupied Jerusalem, was seriously wounded after being hit with a metal bullet when he was on his way back home from school along with his family.

 

On 28 February, Israeli forces stationed at Howarah checkpoint at the southern entrance to Nablus opened fire at a Palestinian civilian, who already suffers from a mental disorder. As a result, he was hit with two bullets to the thighs.

 

In the Gaza Strip, On 24 February 2017, a 16-year-old child from al-Maghazi in the central Gaza Strip was hit with a bullet to the left leg when Israeli forces opened fire at a protest organized in the north-eastern side of al-Maghazi in the central Gaza Strip. his condition was described as moderate.

As part of the aerial bombardment, on 27 February 2017, Israeli warplanes carried out 8 airstrikes. During those airstrikes, 23 missiles were launched at Hiteen military site belonging to al-Quds Brigades; Ajnadin training site for the Palestinian Mujahidin Movement, north of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip; training site in al-Nussairat; observation point for the Interior Ministry officers in al-Shokah village, east of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip and agricultural and vacant lands. As a result, 3 officers were wounded while a civilian was moderately wounded. Moreover, those sites sustained damages while a mosque and six houses sustained minor damages.

 

In the context of targeting Palestinian fishermen in the Gaza Sea, on 26 February 2017, Israeli gunboats stationed offshore, northwest of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, heavily opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats and chased them On 27 February 2017,
Those gunboats heavily opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats off Khan Younis Sea in the southern Gaza Strip. On 01 March 2017, Israeli gunboats heavily opened fire at Paeltinian fishing boats, west of al-Soundiyah, west of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip. Neither casualties nor damages to the boats were reported.

 

In the context of targeting the border areas, on 25 February 2017, Israeli forces stationed along the border fence between the Gaza Strip and Israel, east of Kahn Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, opened fire at the agricultural lands, east of al-Farahin area, west of the abovementioned fence.

 

On 27 February 2017, Israeli forces fired 4 artillery shells at an observation point belonging to the Gaza Military Interior in al-Shokah village, east of Rafah City in the southern Gaza Strip. On the same day, Israeli forces fired two artillery shells at a vacant land, east of al-Zaytoun neighbourhood, east of Gaza City.

 

Incursions:

 

During the reporting period, Israeli forces conducted at least 66 military incursions into Palestinian communities in the West Bank and two limited ones into the central and southern Gaza Strip. During these incursions, Israeli forces arrested at least 40 Palestinian civilians, including 4 children. Six of them, including 3 young women, were students from Birzeit University during a protest organized by them in the vicinity of ‘Ofer Prison, west of Ramallah, to support the Palestinian prisoners in the Israeli jails.

 

In the Gaza Strip, 23 February 2017, Israeli forces moved 150 meters into the western side of the border fence between the Gaza Strip and Israel, southeast of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip and moved 100 meters into east of al-Qararah village, northeast of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. They levelled lands for hours and later redeployed along the border fence in the abovementioned areas.

 

Efforts to create Jewish majority

 

In the context of house demolitions, On 01 March 2017, Israeli municipality bulldozers demolished a residential building in al-Issawiyah village, northeast of Jerusalem, under the pretext of building without a permit. That was the third time during which the two-storey building was demolished, rendering 14 individuals, including 4 children homeless.

 

Restrictions on movement:

 

Israel continued to impose a tight closure of the oPt, imposing severe restrictions on the movement of Palestinian civilians in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including occupied East Jerusalem.

 

The illegal closure of the Gaza Strip, which has been steadily tightened since June 2007 has had a disastrous impact on the humanitarian and economic situation in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli authorities impose measures to undermine the freedom of trade, including the basic needs for the Gaza Strip population and the agricultural and industrial products to be exported. For 9 consecutive years, Israel has tightened the land and naval closure to isolate the Gaza Strip from the West Bank, including occupied Jerusalem, and other countries around the world. This resulted in grave violations of the economic, social and cultural rights and a deterioration of living conditions for 2 million people. The Israeli authorities have established Karm Abu Salem (Kerem Shaloum) as the sole crossing for imports and exports in order to exercise its control over the Gaza Strip’s economy. They also aim at imposing a complete ban on the Gaza Strip’s exports. The Israeli closure raised the rate of poverty to 65%. Moreover, the rate of unemployment increased up to 47% and youth constitutes 65% of the unemployed persons. Moreover, 80% of the Gaza Strip population depends on international aid to secure their minimum daily needs. These rates indicate the unprecedented economic deterioration in the Gaza Strip.

 

In the West Bank, Israeli forces continued to suffocate the Palestinian cities and village by imposing military checkpoints around and/or between them. This created “cantons” isolated from each other that hinders the movement of civilians. Moreover, the Palestinian civilians suffering aggravated because of the annexation wall and checkpoints erected on daily basis to catch Palestinians.

 

Détails

 

....................................(..........).....................................

 

 

Recommendations to the International Community

 

 

PCHR emphasizes the international community’s position that the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are still under Israeli occupation, in spite of Israeli military redeployment outside the Gaza Strip in 2005. PCHR further confirms that Israeli forces continued to impose collective punishment measures on the Gaza Strip, which have escalated since the 2006 Palestinian parliamentary elections, in which Hamas won the majority of seats of the Palestinian Legislative Council. PCHR stresses that there is international recognition of Israel’s obligation to respect international human rights instruments and the international humanitarian law, especially the Hague Regulations concerning the Laws and Customs of War on Land and the Geneva Conventions. Israel is bound to apply the international human rights law and the law of war sometime reciprocally and other times in parallel in a way that achieves the best protection for civilians and remedy for victims.

 

In light of continued arbitrary measures, land confiscation and settlement activities in the West Bank, and the latest 51-day offensive against civilians in the Gaza Strip, PCHR calls upon the international community, especially the United Nations, the High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Convention and the European Union – in the context of their natural obligation to respect and enforce the international law – to cooperate and act according to the following recommendations:

 

  1. PCHR calls upon the international community and the United Nations to use all available means to allow the Palestinian people to enjoy their right to self-determination, through the establishment of the Palestinian State, which was recognized by the UN General Assembly with a vast majority, using all international legal mechanisms, including sanctions to end the occupation of the State of Palestine;
  2. PCHR calls upon the United Nations to provide international protection to Palestinians in the oPt, and to ensure the non-recurrence of aggression against the oPt, especially the Gaza Strip;
  3. PCHR calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions to compel Israel, as a High Contracting Party to the Conventions, to apply the Conventions in the oPt;
  4. PCHR calls upon the Parties to international human rights instruments, especially the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, to pressurize Israel to comply with their provisions in the oPt, and to compel it to incorporate the human rights situation in the oPt in its reports submitted to the concerned committees;
  5. PCHR calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions to fulfil their obligations to ensure the application of the Conventions, including extending the scope of their jurisdiction in order to prosecute suspected war criminals, regardless of the nationality of the perpetrator and the place of a crime, to pave the way for prosecuting suspected Israeli war criminals and end the longstanding impunity they have enjoyed;
  6. PCHR calls upon States that apply the principle of universal jurisdiction not to surrender to Israeli pressure to limit universal jurisdiction to perpetuate the impunity enjoyed by suspected Israeli war criminals;
  7. PCHR calls upon the international community to act in order to stop all Israeli settlement expansion activities in the oPt through imposing sanctions on Israeli settlements and criminalizing trading with them;
  8. PCHR calls upon the United Nations to confirm that holding war criminals accountable in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is a precondition to achieve stability and peace in the regions, and that peace cannot be built on the expense of human rights;
  9. PCHR calls upon the UN General Assembly and Human Rights Council to explicitly declare that the Israeli closure policy in Gaza and the annexation wall in the West Bank are illegal, and accordingly refer the two issues to the UN Security Council to impose sanctions on Israel to compel it to remove them;
  10. PCHR calls upon the international community, particularly the UN, in light of its failure to the stop the aggression on the Palestinian people, to at least fulfil its obligation to reconstruct the Gaza Strip after the series of hostilities launched by Israel which directly targeted the civilian infrastructure;
  11. PCHR calls upon the United Nations and the European Union to express a clear position towards the annexation wall following the international recognition of the State of Palestine on the 1967 borders, as the annexation wall seizes large parts of the State of Palestine;
  12. PCHR calls upon the European Union to activate Article 2 of the EU-Israel Association Agreement, which provides that both sides must respect human rights as a precondition for economic cooperation between the EU states and Israel, and the EU must not ignore Israeli violations and crimes against Palestinian civilians;

 

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10 mars 2017 5 10 /03 /mars /2017 10:07
Weekly Report On Israeli Human Rights Violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (23 Febreuay – 01 March 2017)
183
 
 

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Israeli forces continue systematic crimes in the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt)

 

(23 February- 01 March 2017)

 

  • A Palestinian civilian was killed by Israeli settlers, south of Hebron.

 

  • 6 civilians, including 3 children and a young woman, were wounded in the West Bank while a child was wounded in the Gaza Strip.

 

  • Israeli warplanes carried out 8 airstrikes, launching 23 missiles against civil objects and military sites belonging to the Palestinian armed groups.
  • A civilian and three Palestinian officers in the Gaza Interior Ministry were wounded.
  • Military training sites sustained material damages while 6 other houses and a mosque sustained minor damages.

 

  • Israeli forces continued to target the border areas in the Gaza Strip, but no casualties were reported.

 

  • Israeli forces continued to target Palestinian fishermen in the Gaza Sea.

 

  • Israeli forces conducted 66 incursions into Palestinian communities in the West Bank and two limited ones were conducted in the central and southern Gaza Strip.
  • 47 civilians, including 4 children and 3 young women, were arrested in the West Bank.
  • 6 of them, including 3 young women, were arrested during a protest organized by the Birzeit university students in the vicinity of ‘Ofer Prison, west of Ramallah.

 

  • Israeli forces continued their efforts to create Jewish majority in occupied East Jerusalem.
  • A residential building in al-‘Issawiyah was demolished, rendering 14 individuals, including 4 children, homeless.

 

  • Israeli forces turned the West Bank into cantons and continued to impose the illegal closure on the Gaza Strip for the 10th
  • Dozens of temporary checkpoints were established in the West Bank and others were re-established to obstruct the movement of Palestinian civilians.
  • 7 Palestinian civilians, including 3 children and girl, were arrested at military checkpoints.

 

Summary

 

Israeli violations of international law and international humanitarian law in the oPt continued during the reporting period (23 February – 01 March 2017).

 

Shooting:

 

During the reporting period, Israeli settlers killed a Palestinian civilian, south of Hebron. Meanwhile, the Israeli forces wounded 11 Palestinian civilians, including 4 children and a woman. Six of them and a woman were wounded in the West Bank while 5 others, including a child, were wounded in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli forces continued to chase Palestinian fishermen in the Gaza Sea and open fire at farmers in the border areas in addition to carrying out many airstrikes targeting training sites belonging to the Palestinian armed groups and civilian objects.

In the West Bank, On 01 March 2017, Sa’di Qaysiyah (25) from al-Thaheriyah village, south of Hebron were killed after an Israeli setter from “Havat Mor” settlement outpost, west of the aforementioned village, opened fire at him. The Israeli media claimed that the Palestinian civilian attempted to stab the settler. However, no local eyewitness was there to confirm or deny the Israeli claims as the crime happened within the outpost borders. The Israeli forces then took his body to an unknown destination and detained it.

On 24 February 2017, an 11-year-old child was wounded with a rubber-coated bullet to the neck while a 26-year-old man was wounded with a rubber-coated metal bullet to the left leg when Israeli forces opened fire at the Kafr Qaddoum weekly protest, northeast of Qalqilya.

On 24 February 2017, a child from Zowaydin village, southeast of Yata, south of Hebron, sustained severe burns after an object from the Israeli remnants exploded near the abovementioned village school. The child was grazing sheep.

On 27 February 2017, Israeli soldiers stationed at Qalendia checkpoint at the northern entrance to occupied Jerusalem opened fire at Manar Mojahed (28) from Kafr ‘Aqab village, north of the city when she was near the aforementioned checkpoint. As a result, she was wounded and then arrested.

On the same day, ‘Abdullah ‘Anati (14) from Sho’afat refugee camp, northeast of occupied Jerusalem, was seriously wounded after being hit with a metal bullet when he was on his way back home from school along with his family.

On 28 February, Israeli forces stationed at Howarah checkpoint at the southern entrance to Nablus opened fire at a Palestinian civilian, who already suffers from a mental disorder. As a result, he was hit with two bullets to the thighs.

In the Gaza Strip, On 24 February 2017, a 16-year-old child from al-Maghazi in the central Gaza Strip was hit with a bullet to the left leg when Israeli forces opened fire at a protest organized in the north-eastern side of al-Maghazi in the central Gaza Strip. his condition was described as moderate.

As part of the aerial bombardment, on 27 February 2017, Israeli warplanes carried out 8 airstrikes. During those airstrikes, 23 missiles were launched at Hiteen military site belonging to al-Quds Brigades; Ajnadin training site for the Palestinian Mujahidin Movement, north of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip; training site in al-Nussairat; observation point for the Interior Ministry officers in al-Shokah village, east of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip and agricultural and vacant lands. As a result, 3 officers were wounded while a civilian was moderately wounded. Moreover, those sites sustained damages while a mosque and six houses sustained minor damages.

 

In the context of targeting Palestinian fishermen in the Gaza Sea, on 26 February 2017, Israeli gunboats stationed offshore, northwest of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, heavily opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats and chased them On 27 February 2017,
Those gunboats heavily opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats off Khan Younis Sea in the southern Gaza Strip. On 01 March 2017, Israeli gunboats heavily opened fire at Paeltinian fishing boats, west of al-Soundiyah, west of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip. Neither casualties nor damages to the boats were reported.

 

In the context of targeting the border areas, on 25 February 2017, Israeli forces stationed along the border fence between the Gaza Strip and Israel, east of Kahn Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, opened fire at the agricultural lands, east of al-Farahin area, west of the abovementioned fence.

 

On 27 February 2017, Israeli forces fired 4 artillery shells at an observation point belonging to the Gaza Military Interior in al-Shokah village, east of Rafah City in the southern Gaza Strip. On the same day, Israeli forces fired two artillery shells at a vacant land, east of al-Zaytoun neighbourhood, east of Gaza City.

 

Incursions:

 

During the reporting period, Israeli forces conducted at least 66 military incursions into Palestinian communities in the West Bank and two limited ones into the central and southern Gaza Strip. During these incursions, Israeli forces arrested at least 40 Palestinian civilians, including 4 children. Six of them, including 3 young women, were students from Birzeit University during a protest organized by them in the vicinity of ‘Ofer Prison, west of Ramallah, to support the Palestinian prisoners in the Israeli jails.

In the Gaza Strip, 23 February 2017, Israeli forces moved 150 meters into the western side of the border fence between the Gaza Strip and Israel, southeast of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip and moved 100 meters into east of al-Qararah village, northeast of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. They levelled lands for hours and later redeployed along the border fence in the abovementioned areas.

 

Efforts to create Jewish majority

 

In the context of house demolitions, On 01 March 2017, Israeli municipality bulldozers demolished a residential building in al-Issawiyah village, northeast of Jerusalem, under the pretext of building without a permit. That was the third time during which the two-storey building was demolished, rendering 14 individuals, including 4 children homeless.

 

Restrictions on movement:

 

Israel continued to impose a tight closure of the oPt, imposing severe restrictions on the movement of Palestinian civilians in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including occupied East Jerusalem.

The illegal closure of the Gaza Strip, which has been steadily tightened since June 2007 has had a disastrous impact on the humanitarian and economic situation in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli authorities impose measures to undermine the freedom of trade, including the basic needs for the Gaza Strip population and the agricultural and industrial products to be exported. For 9 consecutive years, Israel has tightened the land and naval closure to isolate the Gaza Strip from the West Bank, including occupied Jerusalem, and other countries around the world. This resulted in grave violations of the economic, social and cultural rights and a deterioration of living conditions for 2 million people. The Israeli authorities have established Karm Abu Salem (Kerem Shaloum) as the sole crossing for imports and exports in order to exercise its control over the Gaza Strip’s economy. They also aim at imposing a complete ban on the Gaza Strip’s exports.

The Israeli closure raised the rate of poverty to 65%. Moreover, the rate of unemployment increased up to 47% and youth constitutes 65% of the unemployed persons. Moreover, 80% of the Gaza Strip population depends on international aid to secure their minimum daily needs.

These rates indicate the unprecedented economic deterioration in the Gaza Strip.

In the West Bank, Israeli forces continued to suffocate the Palestinian cities and village by imposing military checkpoints around and/or between them. This created “cantons” isolated from each other that hinders the movement of civilians. Moreover, the Palestinian civilians suffering aggravated because of the annexation wall and checkpoints erected on daily basis to catch Palestinians.

 

Détails

 

....................................(..........).....................................

 

 

Recommendations to the International Community

 

 

PCHR emphasizes the international community’s position that the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are still under Israeli occupation, in spite of Israeli military redeployment outside the Gaza Strip in 2005. PCHR further confirms that Israeli forces continued to impose collective punishment measures on the Gaza Strip, which have escalated since the 2006 Palestinian parliamentary elections, in which Hamas won the majority of seats of the Palestinian Legislative Council. PCHR stresses that there is international recognition of Israel’s obligation to respect international human rights instruments and the international humanitarian law, especially the Hague Regulations concerning the Laws and Customs of War on Land and the Geneva Conventions. Israel is bound to apply the international human rights law and the law of war sometime reciprocally and other times in parallel in a way that achieves the best protection for civilians and remedy for victims.

 

In light of continued arbitrary measures, land confiscation and settlement activities in the West Bank, and the latest 51-day offensive against civilians in the Gaza Strip, PCHR calls upon the international community, especially the United Nations, the High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Convention and the European Union – in the context of their natural obligation to respect and enforce the international law – to cooperate and act according to the following recommendations:

 

  1. PCHR calls upon the international community and the United Nations to use all available means to allow the Palestinian people to enjoy their right to self-determination, through the establishment of the Palestinian State, which was recognized by the UN General Assembly with a vast majority, using all international legal mechanisms, including sanctions to end the occupation of the State of Palestine;
  2. PCHR calls upon the United Nations to provide international protection to Palestinians in the oPt, and to ensure the non-recurrence of aggression against the oPt, especially the Gaza Strip;
  3. PCHR calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions to compel Israel, as a High Contracting Party to the Conventions, to apply the Conventions in the oPt;
  4. PCHR calls upon the Parties to international human rights instruments, especially the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, to pressurize Israel to comply with their provisions in the oPt, and to compel it to incorporate the human rights situation in the oPt in its reports submitted to the concerned committees;
  5. PCHR calls upon the High Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions to fulfil their obligations to ensure the application of the Conventions, including extending the scope of their jurisdiction in order to prosecute suspected war criminals, regardless of the nationality of the perpetrator and the place of a crime, to pave the way for prosecuting suspected Israeli war criminals and end the longstanding impunity they have enjoyed;
  6. PCHR calls upon States that apply the principle of universal jurisdiction not to surrender to Israeli pressure to limit universal jurisdiction to perpetuate the impunity enjoyed by suspected Israeli war criminals;
  7. PCHR calls upon the international community to act in order to stop all Israeli settlement expansion activities in the oPt through imposing sanctions on Israeli settlements and criminalizing trading with them;
  8. PCHR calls upon the United Nations to confirm that holding war criminals accountable in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is a precondition to achieve stability and peace in the regions, and that peace cannot be built on the expense of human rights;
  9. PCHR calls upon the UN General Assembly and Human Rights Council to explicitly declare that the Israeli closure policy in Gaza and the annexation wall in the West Bank are illegal, and accordingly refer the two issues to the UN Security Council to impose sanctions on Israel to compel it to remove them;
  10. PCHR calls upon the international community, particularly the UN, in light of its failure to the stop the aggression on the Palestinian people, to at least fulfil its obligation to reconstruct the Gaza Strip after the series of hostilities launched by Israel which directly targeted the civilian infrastructure;
  11. PCHR calls upon the United Nations and the European Union to express a clear position towards the annexation wall following the international recognition of the State of Palestine on the 1967 borders, as the annexation wall seizes large parts of the State of Palestine;
  12. PCHR calls upon the European Union to activate Article 2 of the EU-Israel Association Agreement, which provides that both sides must respect human rights as a precondition for economic cooperation between the EU states and Israel, and the EU must not ignore Israeli violations and crimes against Palestinian civilians;

 

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10 mars 2017 5 10 /03 /mars /2017 10:00
Israeli forces demolish Bedouin village of al-Araqib for 110th time
 
 
March 9, 2017 10:56 A.M. (Updated: March 9, 2017 10:56 A.M.)
 
 
(File)
 
 
NEGEV (Ma'an) -- Israeli forces demolished the Bedouin village of al-Araqib in the Negev region of southern Israel for the 110th time since 2010 on Thursday.

Israeli bulldozers escorted by Israeli police raided the village, which is "unrecognized" by Israeli authorities, in the morning and started the demolition, while Israeli police closed all entrances leading to the village.

The last time Israeli forces demolished the village was in early February.

“No matter how many times they demolish and destroy our village, they will not break our spirits,” local committee member Aziz Sayyah told Ma’an during the previous demolition raid. “Al-Araqib is ours and we are here to stay.”

Al-Araqib is one of 35 Bedouin villages considered “unrecognized” by the Israeli state. According to the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), more than half of the approximately 160,000 Negev Bedouins reside in unrecognized villages.

Demolitions targeting Palestinians with Israeli citizenship have sharply increased since the beginning of 2017, including an Israeli police raid to evacuate the unrecognized Bedouin village of Umm al-Hiran which turned deadly in January.

Rights groups have claimed that the demolition of al-Araqib and other unrecognized Bedouin villages is a central Israeli policy aimed at removing the indigenous Palestinian population from the Negev and transferring them to government-zoned townships to make room for the expansion of Jewish Israeli communities.

The classification of their villages as “unrecognized” prevents Bedouins from developing or expanding their communities, as their villages are considered illegal by Israeli authorities.

Israeli authorities have also refused to connect unrecognized Bedouin villages to the national water and electricity grids, while excluding the communities from access to health and educational services, and basic infrastructure.

Moreover, Palestinians who have built without Israeli-issued building permits, both inside and Israel and in the occupied Palestinian territory, have the choice of self-demolishing the unauthorized structures or paying hefty fines that cover the costs of Israeli forces demolishing the structures.

Al-Araqib residents have been ordered to pay more than 2 million shekels (approximately $541,000) for the cumulative cost of Israeli-enforced demolitions carried out against the village since 2010.

Indigenous rights groups have pointed out that the transfer of the Bedouins into densely populated townships also removes them from their traditional semi-nomadic lifestyles which is dependent on access to a wide range of grazing land for their animals.

Former UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples James Anaya released a report on the treatment of the Bedouin in the Negev back in 2011 -- shortly before the Israeli cabinet approved plans to relocate some 30,000 Bedouins from 13 unrecognized villages to government-approved townships -- stating that Bedouins in the permanent townships "rank on the bottom of all social and economic indicators and suffer from the highest unemployment rates and income levels in Israel.

"The unrecognized Bedouin villages were established in the Negev soon after the 1948 Arab-Israeli war following the creation of the state of Israel.

Many of the Bedouins were forcibly transferred to the village sites during the 17-year period when Palestinians inside Israel were governed under Israeli military law, which ended shortly before Israel's military takeover of Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in 1967.

Now more than 60 years later, the villages have yet to be recognized by Israel and live under constant threats of demolition and forcible removal.

Meanwhile, Israeli Jewish communities in the Negev continuously expand, with five new Jewish housing plans approved last year. According to an investigation undertaken by Israeli rights groups ACRI and Bimkom, two of the approved communities are located in areas where unrecognized Bedouin villages already exist.

 
 
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