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Israel accused of silencing political protest

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Israel accused of silencing political protest

By BEN HUBBARD, The Associated Press
Tuesday, January 19, 2010; 2:13 PM

JERUSALEM -- Israel is arresting a growing number of prominent opponents to its policies toward the Palestinians, say critics who are accusing the government of trying to crush legitimate dissent.


In the most high-profile case yet, Jerusalem police detained the leader of a leading Israeli human rights group during a vigil against the eviction of Palestinian families whose homes were taken by Jewish settlers.

Since the summer, dozens of Palestinian and Israeli activists have been picked up, including those organizing weekly protests against Israel's West Bank separation barrier as well as others advocating international boycotts of Israeli goods.

Some of the Palestinians were released without charge only after weeks and months of questioning.

The arrests come at a time of shifting tactics in the protests against Israel's occupation of the West Bank and annexation of east Jerusalem, territories the Palestinians want for their future state. Israel captured both from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war.

The violence of the second Palestinian uprising, with mass marches and violent attacks, has given way to carefully calibrated protests and legal action in which Israeli and Palestinian activists now often work together.

The main protest efforts are Friday demonstrations against the West Bank barrier in the Palestinian villages of Bilin and Naalin and vigils in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheik Jarrah, where Palestinians have been evicted.

There appears to be an increased police crackdown on the protests with greater numbers of activists being arrested.

In the West Bank, troops fire tear gas, stun grenades, and live rounds - even midnight arrest raids - to disperse anti-barrier protesters. Israel says the protests are illegal, and the harsh tactics are a response to stone-throwing and violent rioting.

In east Jerusalem, police have arrested some 70 demonstrators during marches in recent months, according to Israeli rights groups. At Friday's protest, police arrested 17 Israelis, including Hagai Elad, head of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel.

They were released 36 hours later by a Jerusalem court, which found the gathering to be illegal, but the arrests unnecessary.

Elad said the arrests represent a "dramatic increase in attempts to silence dissent" that he believes began during last year's offensive in Gaza, when Israel arrested hundreds of anti-war protesters, mostly Arab citizens of Israel.

Israeli police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld dismissed allegations of an arrest campaign and said recent protests in east Jerusalem did not have the required permits.

"There's no campaign whatsoever," he said. "When there's a right wing or left wing, or Jewish or non-Jewish or Christian or Muslim demonstration ... they have to be fully coordinated with the police."

The residents of Bilin have marched every Friday since 2005 toward the barrier that separates villagers from 60 percent of their land. Last year, Nobel Peace Prize laureates Jimmy Carter and Desmond Tutu dropped by for a visit. Nearby Naalin started similar marches two years ago.

Israel says the barrier seeks to keep out Palestinian attackers, including suicide bombers. Palestinians call it a land grab because parts of it jut far into the West Bank.

The Bilin marchers, joined by Israeli sympathizers and international activists, chant and wave Palestinian flags. Some youths throw stones at Israeli soldiers. A Bilin man and five in Naalin have been killed and hundreds wounded over the years by soldiers. Israeli troops also have been injured, including one who lost an eye.

Since June, Israel has arrested almost three dozen villagers, mostly during night raids on the village, organizers say. More than 100 have been arrested in Naalin, including 16 in the past month.

Schoolteacher Abdullah Abu Rahmeh, a leader of the Bilin protests, has been held since last month on charges of incitement and weapons possession - the latter stemming from spent Israeli tear gas canisters, stun grenades and other munitions he collected to show visitors.

Two high-profile Palestinian activists were recently released without being charged.

Jamal Juma, coordinator of the Stop The Wall campaign, was held for 17 days. Mohammed Othman, who encourages a boycott against Israel, was released after nearly four months.

Othman, who was arrested upon his return from an advocacy trip to Norway, said he was interrogated almost daily. "The questions focused on the boycott movement, 'How do you work on this and who are your contacts?'" said Othman, 33.

Interrogators searched his computer, his cell phone and e-mail accounts, he said. He had to pay a $2,700 bond.

Othman said he would continue with his activism. "I don't do anything illegal," he said. "All my work was out in the open."

washingtonpost.com
 
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where are these S2 and other Indians, how come, they are so short of words when it comes to Israel or thery only talk when it comes to talking against Pakistan, I am not surprised.

My hats off to those who stand for truth no matter wherever, to bring it out using their Democratic rights peacefully.

And strange for those who claim to be the biggest Democratic entities.
 
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Israel is certainly wrong if this is true.
This resembles to the act of SS IN
GERMANY.
 
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Israel is certainly wrong if this is true.
This resembles to the act of SS IN
GERMANY.
Indian government should condemn this.
 
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XiNiX.

There is no doubt in this report as it is the work of internationally recognized human rights groups. and you are still doubtfull as If it is true or not.

What a way to go Indians, only one answers and he is so doubtfull.
 
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It is a myth that Israel is a Western democracy in the same sense of European nations, Canada or the USA. A large portion of the population, the non-Jews, have limited, "dhimmi-like", rights and another significant portion, ultra Orthodox Jews, have extraordinary rights, i.e. no requirement to serve in the armed forces. The foreign press is consistently co-opted by the Israeli government with special trips, briefings and fawning attention. The local press is collaborative with the GoI in the shameful treatment of the non-Jewish population. Bravo! to brave human rights groups who try to get the true story told.
 
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Israel is a country like Pakistan where military is the real power.Only difference is that in Pakistan military can openly express what it wants and in Israel this happens behind closed doors.
 
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Israel is certainly wrong if this is true.
This resembles to the act of SS IN
GERMANY.
Indian government should condemn this.

we have no right to say this.

We did this in Srilanka, Nepal, Bangladesh.

our list is long.

its only in nations intrest.
 
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Israel removes American employed by Palestinian news agency

By Howard Schneider and Samuel Sockol
Thursday, January 21, 2010

JERUSALEM -- The American editor of a Palestinian news agency was removed from Israel on Wednesday after being questioned by authorities about his "anti-Israeli" views.

The case highlights what some nonprofit organizations say is a tightened Israeli policy toward foreign nationals who live or work in the occupied West Bank. It comes amid an intensifying feud over foreign government funding for organizations seen to promote Palestinian interests even as Israeli politicians and nongovernmental organizations try to curb the flow of money from outside.

Jared Malsin, chief English editor of the Maan News Agency, based in the West Bank town of Bethlehem, was detained a week ago at Israel's Ben Gurion International Airport and denied entry into the country.

Malsin has worked for the news agency -- a nonprofit organization supported by grants from the U.S. and European governments and the United Nations -- for 2 1/2 years, relying on a series of three-month tourist visas to extend his stay without a work permit. The technique is used by some foreign employees and volunteers at organizations based in Palestinian areas, who say they face difficulty acquiring work visas from the Israeli government.

Malsin was returning from a trip to Prague when he was detained. On Tuesday, he dropped his request for a court hearing after a week in custody; on Wednesday morning, he was put on a flight to New York.

"They judged me to have anti-Israeli politics," Malsin, 24, said from a cellphone as he boarded the El Al plane. "It's outrageous that would even appear in a legal argument, that a person's politics would be a relevant issue."

An official with the Israeli Interior Ministry said Malsin had refused to answer questions about his presence in Israel and had "exploited" the fact that he is Jewish to say he wanted to explore immigrating to Israel.

"He was asked, why would he want to make aliya and become an Israeli citizen, as his opinions are clearly anti-Israeli," Interior Ministry official Mietal Rochman wrote in an account of Malsin's interrogation at the airport, which included a check of numbers stored in his cellphone and a review of his writings on the Internet. "The passenger chose to remain silent." Malsin's attorney provided a copy of Rochman's report.

When asked about whom he planned to stay with and other questions, "he refused to cooperate," said Sabine Haddad, a spokeswoman for the Interior Ministry. "It's the minimal right of the country to ask questions. We don't mind who he is. If he does not want to answer, he should know he could be sent back"

Malsin's girlfriend, Faith Rowold, a U.S. volunteer for a Lutheran Church group in Jerusalem, also was denied entry when the couple arrived last week. She has been sent out of Israel.

Maan, founded five years ago to focus on news from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, publishes in Arabic, English and Hebrew, and it is considered among the more balanced Palestinian news organizations.

Its staff members have access to U.S. Embassy and other diplomatic officials, and its tone -- while highlighting issues such as violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinians -- is regarded as more tempered than Web sites or publications affiliated with Palestinian or Islamist political parties.

"There is no incitement. There is no hate in our work," said Raed Othman, Maan's general director. "This is punishment for internationals who come to help the Palestinians."

washingtonpost.com
 
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Israel arrests son of Palestinian peace activist in West Bank raid

By Avi Issacharoff, 18:44 23/01/2010

Israel security forces arrested three West Bank Palestinians suspected of involvement with terrorist activity late Friday night, including the son of a prominent peace activist.

The three residents of Beit Ommar, north of Hebron, were detained in a joint operation led by members of both Israel Defense Forces and Shin Bet units.

One of those arrested is the son of Khaled Abu-Awwad, the General Manager of the Israeli-Palestinian Bereaved Families Forum. Abu-Awwad has been known in recent years as a prominent peace activist, who advocates dialogue between Palestinians and Israelis despite the fact hat he had lost a brother to IDF fire.

On Thursday it was reported that Israeli immigration police were involved in the arrest and deportation earlier this month of a Czech pro-Palestinian activist living in Ramallah.

Lawyers for Czech activist Eva Novakova accused the immigration police, a unit of the Interior Ministry, of illegally violating Palestinian sovereignty and deporting his client for political purposes.

"The Oz [immigration] unit's entrance into Ramallah violates the Palestinian Authority's sovereignty on its territory and the Oslo Accords," said Yiftach Cohen. "When a terrorist comes out of Ramallah, Israel says it's the PA's responsibility, so how come the Interior Ministry enters the city to arrest and deport a foreign national?" Novakova is also represented by Omer Shatz, who said Israel does not have the authority to carry out a raid in Ramallah.

Speaking from Prague, Novakova said she was arrested by Israeli soldiers and uniformed men who identified themselves as the immigration police.

"At 3 A.M. I heard loud voices," she told Haaretz yesterday. "The door was broken down and 20 armed soldiers burst in."

"Three men in black uniforms, who said they were immigration police, also entered," she said. "They checked my papers and when they saw my passport, they ordered me to come with them."

Czech officials said Novakova was expelled for overstaying her visa, but she said the Israeli immigration police asked her mainly about her political activity.

"They asked me about [demonstrations at] Bil'in and my activity in the West Bank," she said.

However, the Interior Ministry said the Israel Defense Forces, not the immigration police, carried out the arrest and that politics were not a consideration

Israel arrests son of Palestinian peace activist in West Bank raid - Haaretz - Israel News
 
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Google! Its your time to threat to get out of Israel! Don't keep blind!
:rofl:
 
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20 arrested as MKs, leading left-wing activists staged 'biggest-ever' Sheikh Jarrah protest

By BEN HARTMAN, Jan 23, 2010 23:53

Demonstrators numbered well over three hundred and included Arabs, Jews, tourists, and a multitude of foreign press, in addition to a virtual who's who of Israel's left-wing, including former lawmakers Yossi Sarid and Avram Burg.

Sarid, a former minister and one-time Meretz party leader, told The Jerusalem Post the rally was the first protest he'd attended since retiring from politics in 2006, saying he came after reading about "what is happening to the [Arab] families in Sheikh Jarrah" and that it was his duty as a citizen to attend the rally.

Israeli Arab MK and Hadash party chairman Mohammed Barakeh also attended the protest and said the issue of Sheikh Jarrah "is not about a house or family, it's about the peace process."

Barakeh added that the move to "purge" East Jerusalem of its Arab residents saddens him not only on a personal level but also because he feels "there is no peace process, no two-state solution without east Jerusalem as the Palestinian capital."

Hagai El-Ad, the director of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel and one of 17 arrested in last week's demonstration called the Sheikh Jarrah protests "the defining free speech issue in Israel in recent years," adding that it represents an issue where "the suffering of Palestinian families and the persecution of Israeli citizens exercising their democratic right to protest converge."

El-Ad added that he sees police actions against the protestors as "nothing more than political theater." El-Ad was released last Saturday after 36 hours in custody, when the Jerusalem District Court ruled the arrest of activists was unlawful, even though they were demonstrating without a permit.

Early on, the protest had a rather festive air, with demonstrators blowing whistles, waving signs, and chanting songs, including one with the refrain "Sheikh Jarrah, Jarrah" sung to the tune of "Que Sera Sera".

Police were heavily outnumbered by protestors and the cadence and atmosphere of the event seemed to be largely dictated by the demonstrators, many of whom came to Sheikh Jarrah for the first time following last Friday's arrests.

Protestors began to move towards the barricaded entrance to the street in Sheikh Jarrah where two Palestinian families were evicted from their homes in August 2009 before Jewish settlers moved in. At this point, police began the first of their arrests, dragging off at least four protestors, including Didi Remez, a human rights activist who was also arrested at last week's protest.

Activists remained crowded outside the barricade as police continued to bar their entry. On repeated occasions, the police cleared the way to allow ultra-Orthodox Jews, most carrying young children, to pass through to the contested area, as protestors crowded in their faces yelling "thieves!," "shame!," and "Thou shalt not steal!"

As the sun went down and the arrests continued, police brought in reinforcements of riot police and border patrolmen, with dozens forming a line in front of protestors and intermittently pushing them across the street to the traffic island. Within an hour, police had dispersed the remaining protestors and journalists out of the neighborhood.

Nassir Ghawe, a Palestinian man who has been living in a tent since his family was evicted from their home in August, watched the rally and the police intervention as he sat atop a wall on the margins of the protest.

Ghawe told the Post that as he watched the protest, what he called the largest he'd ever seen in Sheikh Jarrah, he "sees that there is justice among some Israelis, the left-wing," adding "I hope it [the protests] grows and puts pressure on the government to return us to our homes."

On Saturday night, a Jerusalem court released the 20 protesters on bail until a hearing on Tuesday.

Leading left-wing activists stage Sheikh Jarrah protest | Israel | Jerusalem Post
 
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Top peace activist arrested by Israel

Mohammad Mar’i | Arab News

RAMALLAH: Israeli forces on Thursday arrested 10 Palestinians including the leader of the Palestinian Peaceful Protest Against the Separation Wall.

Ratib Abu Rahmeh, member of the Bil’in Popular Committee Against the Wall, told Arab News that the Israeli forces arrested Mohammad Abdulkarim Al-Khatib from his home in Bil’in.

Abu Rahmeh added that “Israeli troops arrived at Khatib’s Bil’in home at 1:45 a.m. and arrested him following a thorough search of the residence. They said the soldiers did not present a search warrant, and confiscated a cell phone and documents the troops claimed were possibly inciting.”

Khatib, considered one of the spearheads of the protest movement in Bil’in, was arrested a few months ago and was released by an Israeli military judge two weeks later. The Israeli prosecution claimed he was photographed throwing stones at security forces. However, Khatib’s Israeli attorney Gabi Lasky proved he was abroad when the rally in question was staged.

Khatib predicted in an interview with the Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot on Wednesday that the national struggle taking place in the West Bank would spread and reach the level of a popular intifada similar to the one that took place in 1987. “We’re positive 2010 will see us beat the occupation. We see it in the fact that the Israeli military is nervous about the fact that it can’t curb (the protest),” he said.

This Bil’in resistance style is taking place in other villages also in the West Bank, but Bil’in has become a symbol: Since 2005 residents of Bil’in responded in fact with peaceful resistance to the separation wall, that far from the Green line, snakes deeply inside the West Bank annexing 1,968 of 4,040 dunums of Bil’in lands.

Top peace activist arrested by Israel
 
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Israel Signals Tougher Line on West Bank Protests

By ISABEL KERSHNER, January 28, 2010

NILIN, West Bank — For more than a year, this village has been a focus of weekly protests against the Israeli security barrier, which cuts through its lands. Now, the village appears to be at the center of an intensifying Israeli arrest campaign.

Apparently concerned that the protests could spread, the Israeli Army and security forces have recently begun clamping down, arresting scores of local organizers and activists here and conducting nighttime raids on the homes of others.

Muhammad Amira, a schoolteacher and a member of Nilin’s popular committee, the group that organizes the protests, said his home was raided by the army in the early hours of Jan. 10. The soldiers checked his identity papers, poked around the house and looked in on his sleeping children, Mr. Amira said.

He added, “They came to say, ‘We know who you are.’ ”

Each Friday for the last five years, Palestinians have demonstrated against the barrier, bolstered by Israeli sympathizers and foreign volunteers who document the ensuing clashes with video cameras, often posting the most dramatic footage on YouTube.

Israel says the barrier, under construction since 2002, is essential to prevent suicide bombers from reaching its cities; the Palestinians oppose it on grounds that much of it runs through the territory of the West Bank.

While the weekly protests are billed as nonviolent resistance, they usually end in violent confrontations between the Israeli security forces and masked, stone-throwing Palestinian youths. “These are not sit-ins with people singing ‘We Shall Overcome,’ ” said Maj. Peter Lerner, a spokesman for the Israeli Army’s Central Command, which controls the West Bank. “These are violent, illegal, dangerous riots.”

Other Palestinians are “jumping on the bandwagon,” he said, and the protests “could slip out of control.”

The protests first took hold in the nearby village of Bilin, which became a symbol of Palestinian defiance after winning a ruling in the Israeli Supreme Court stipulating that the barrier must be rerouted to take in less agricultural land. According to military officials, work to move the barrier will start next month.

Like a creeping, part-time intifada, the Friday protests have been gaining ground. Nabi Saleh, another village near Ramallah, has become the newest focus of clashes, after Jewish settlers took over a natural spring on village land.

One recent Friday, a group of older villagers marched toward the spring. They were met with tear gas and stun grenades, and scuffled with soldiers on the road. Other villagers spilled down the hillsides swinging slingshots and pelted the Israelis with stones.

“Israel recognizes the threat of the popular movement and its potential for expanding,” said Jonathan Pollak, an Israeli anarchist and spokesman of the Popular Struggle Coordination Committee, which is based in Ramallah. “I think the goal is to quash it before it gets out of hand.”

In recent months the Palestinian Authority president, Mahmoud Abbas, and other leaders of the mainstream Fatah Party have adopted Bilin as a model of legitimate resistance.

The movement has also begun to attract international support. The Popular Struggle Coordination Committee receives financing from a Spanish governmental agency, according to the committee’s coordinator, Mohammed Khatib of Bilin.

“Bilin is no longer about the struggle for Bilin,” said Mr. Khatib, who was arrested in August and has been awaiting trial on an incitement charge. “This is part of a national struggle,” he said, adding that ending the Israeli occupation was the ultimate goal. Before dawn on Thursday soldiers came to Mr. Khatib’s home in Bilin and took him away again.

Israel security officials vehemently deny that they are acting to suppress civil disobedience, saying that security is their only concern. Among other things, they argue that the popular committees encourage demonstrators to sabotage the barrier, which Israel sees as a vital security tool.

The Israeli authorities have also turned their attention to the foreign activists, deporting those who have overstayed visas or violated their terms. In one case soldiers conducted a raid in the center of Ramallah, where the Palestinian Authority has its headquarters, to remove a Czech woman who had been working for the International Solidarity Movement, a pro-Palestinian group.

Israeli human rights groups like B’Tselem and Yesh Din have long complained of harsh measures used to quell the protests, including rubber bullets and .22-caliber live ammunition. The Israeli authorities say the live fire is meant to be used only in dangerous situations, and not for crowd control. But the human rights groups say that weapons are sometimes misused, apparently with impunity, with members of the security forces rarely held to account.

About a hundred soldiers and border police officers have been wounded in the clashes since 2008, according to the military. But the protesters are unarmed, their advocates argue, while the Israelis sometimes respond with potentially lethal force.

Tristan Anderson, 38, an American activist from Oakland, Calif., was severely wounded when he was struck in the forehead by a high-velocity tear-gas canister during a confrontation in Nilin last March.

So far, the activists seem undeterred. Salah Muhammad Khawajeh, a Nilin popular committee member and another local witness in the Anderson case, related that when he was summoned for questioning two months ago, he was warned that he could end up like Mr. Srur.

Mr. Khawajeh’s son, 9, was wounded in the back of the head by a rubber bullet at a protest this month.

But as Mr. Khawajeh put it, “We still come.”

Israel Signals Tougher Line on West Bank Protests - NYTimes.com
 
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'2010 Will See Us Beat the Occupation'

29/01/2010 08:29:34 AM GMT

The fight, said Muhammad Khatib – who is considered by many the protests' leader – "has proven itself in Bilin and Naalin and has become a model that goes beyond the boundaries of the West Bank. Thousands arrive (at the villages) to take part in our demonstrations."

Khatib, a senior Bilin councilman, added that much of the effort "is geared towards turning international pressure on Israel. Our activists have beaten Israeli propaganda with photos of them beaten and injured while being arrested during demonstrations."

Khatib believes that "the fight will soon spread further, partially because of frustration over the political standstill, but mostly because of the settlers' badgering and the fact that the Israeli army does nothing to stop it."

Khatib told Ynet he believes that his people will be able to stir the entire area by the end of the year. "We are on the eve of an intifada," he predicted. "The resistance will spread, like it did in the (1987) Intifada, but this one will be much more creative.

"We're positive 2010 will see us beat the occupation. We see it in the fact that the Israeli military is nervous about the fact that it can't curb (the protest)."

Khatib and the anti-separation fence committee, with the help of some international groups, are also trying to promote various worldwide bans against Israel. "International groups that support us help fund detainees' legal fees. It's a prominent tool in the fight against the occupation," he said.

Israel, he continued, has hardened its policies against rioters arrested in the West Bank, and Israeli troops have become more violent. "There are nightly raids and arrests," he said, adding that 34 people have been arrested since last June and that since December, the Israeli occupation army has carried out 16 nightly raids in Naalin alone.

alJazeera Magazine - '2010 Will See Us Beat the Occupation'
 
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