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Israel accused of silencing political protest

Protest efforts such as these are exactly what the non-Jewish Palestinians in both the West Bank and in Israel proper need to do to gain more support in the US and the Western World. As long as they can keep them peaceful, the violent and unjust crackdowns by Israel will expose the true nature of the colonialism inherent in the Israeli subjugation of the now-Jewish residents of Palestine.
 
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Israeli army agrees to relocate Bil'in wall

Tel Aviv, January 28, 2010 (Pal Telegraph) - Two-and-a-half years after a Supreme Court order, Israel's army is preparing to adjust the route of the long security barrier it has constructed on the West Bank at a key flashpoint where a fence cuts off Palestinian villagers from their own land.

For five years, the villagers of Bil'in have staged weekly protests against the barrier's route through their land, together with Israeli and international supporters. The Friday protests against what the residents regard as a land grab by Israel under the guise of shoring up security for Israelis typically attract some 200 to 300 participants - most nonviolent, although some hurl rocks and other projectiles at Israeli soldiers.

The army has routinely declared the gatherings illegal and broken them up using tear gas canisters and rubber bullets. The weekly confrontations, which have attracted increasing international attention and outside supporters, have left one Palestinian dead and scores wounded on both sides. The Israeli army says that more than a hundred soldiers have been hurt, some seriously.

Now, the army's pledge, disclosed to the Jewish Daily Forward on Jan. 26, to finally implement the Supreme Court order may give Palestinians an opportunity to claim a victory for the emergent strategy of "smart resistance," an approach that - in the wake of Israel's successful campaign to minimize suicide bombings and terrorism - stresses flexible civil protest tactics aimed at politically selected targets.

A senior Israel Defense Forces source told the Forward that work will start "in the coming month or two" on a new barrier route, one that will reunite Bil'in villagers with their land. The move was not in response to the weekly protests, he said. He attributed the delay the delay in implementing the court order to: "ongoing legal proceedings, the continuing dialog with the [court] petitioners and the planning process."

Palestinian activists claim that some 56% of the villagers' farmland is unreachable because of the barrier. An agricultural village of some 1,800 residents about seven miles west of Ramallah, Bil'in is 2.5 miles east of the so-called Green Line that marks where Israel's boundary was until the 1967 Six Day War. The Palestinian Authority, along with international mediators, including the United States, has called for a peace settlement based on this line, with minor, mutually agreed upon adjustments. But the Israeli barrier, built for security reasons in response to a wave of Palestinian terror attacks in the early 2000s, diverges at numerous points into the West Bank itself, provoking charges of a land grab.

If Palestinian activists now claim victory in Bil'in, it will mark a success for what some of them present as a new approach in Palestinian politics, one also being deployed now in other locales.

In the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, Palestinian, Israeli and international protesters have been demonstrating each Friday for several months against the eviction of Palestinians from homes in which they or their families have lived for many decades. Orthodox nationalist groups, citing disputed Ottoman Era documents, have challenged the Palestinans' ownership claims, and won court rulings allowing them to move in. Police have routinely broken up the nonviolent demonstrations, declaring them illegal and jailing the demonstrators.

In Bil'in, Mohammad Khatib, secretary of the village council, praised the success of the "experimental" tactic of "nonviolent demonstration" by the "grass roots" - an approach that he said was "changing history."

Khatib told the Forward that the tactics reflect "civilian people asking for justice and looking for peace." When those in attendance approach the barrier and try to open a gate, it is a symbolic act of trying to reach villagers' farmland, he said. He condemned the IOF's response as heavy-handed and unnecessary.

In April 2009, a Bil'in resident was killed when a tear gas canister launched by the IDF hit his chest. Khatib claims that in the past year, several dozen people have been injured by Israeli forces.

Khatib also denounced a series of IOF raids and arrests - often made at night - in Bil'in homes. There have been 34 such arrests since June. Khatib himself was arrested in August, and held for a fortnight on several charges, including incitement to violence and throwing stones. He disputes the accusations but remains under investigation.

Abdullah Abu Rahma, a Bil'in resident and activist on the committee that organizes the protests, was arrested Dec. 10 and is still in custody, charged with incitement, stone-throwing and possession of arms, all of which he denied.

In a Jan. 7 letter to Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu, Amnesty International voiced concern that Abu Rama was actually imprisoned for his role in organizing the protests. The letter noted that the arms possession charge against Abu Rama related to his collecting spent M16 bullets and empty sound and gas grenades used by Israeli forces to disperse Bil'in protesters. Abu Rama, the letter noted, exhibited these artifacts in Bil'in's museum to raise awareness of Israeli practices against the protesters.

The IOF will be the first to dispute any claim of victory by the Bi'lin protesters - and not only because it claims that implementation of the re-routing is unrelated to their protests. The Palestinian claim that the gatherings illustrate a conversion to nonviolent protest is doublespeak, the senior IDF source said, given that every week, stones and metal objects are thrown at soldiers.

He dismissed the widespread use of the word "demonstration" to describe the gatherings, and instead described them as "violent riots that take place on a weekly basis." Over the past two years, he said, more than 100 soldiers have been injured during the gatherings, including several who have been unable to continue their army service, and one whose eye socket was smashed, causing long-term damage.

"These are not sit-ins with people singing ‘We Shall Overcome,'" he said, insisting that the IDF would permit genuinely nonviolent protests that did not endanger Israeli security.

Organizers of the gatherings admit that objects are thrown. "I will not defend them, but the stones are part of the Palestinian political culture that they used in the first intifada, and it's difficult to take that from the minds of the people," Khatib said. He said that the organizers discourage the violence, but that it would be inconsistent for them to stop it with force. "We are using nonviolent methods against the army, so we cannot [physically] stop our colleagues from throwing stones," he said.

The IOF regards the line drawn by organizers between themselves and those acting violently to be artificial. Officials maintain that the gatherings, complete with violent acts, are carefully orchestrated - and strategized among powerful Palestinians, including figures in the P.A. All the individuals arrested, the IOF claims, are wanted in connection with violent acts.

The army argues that the declared aim of the protests - to pass through the barrier - has involved damaging the barrier, which, as part of Israel's security infrastructure, the army is bound to protect. This is its justification for declaring the area near the barrier a closed military zone on Fridays and deeming anybody who enters the area to be acting illegally. The senior IDF source said that minimum force is used to protect the barrier and that the troops needed to guard it from those entering the closed military zone.

But some Israeli nongovernment organizations claim that the IDF's use of force is excessive. Moreover, they say that its conduct reflects a tacit acknowledgment among officers that the gatherings do represent something new in Palestinian society. "The (IOF) understands that there is a lot of [mileage] in this type of struggle," said attorney Michael Sfard, who represents the Bil'in village council on behalf of the human rights group Yesh Din. "They want it to stop at almost any price."

http://www.paltelegraph.com/palestine/west-bank/3862-israeli-army-agrees-to-relocate-bilin-wall
 
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Arab Israelis protest house demolitions

(AFP) – 8 hours ago

LOD, Israel — Hundreds of people on Friday protested against the demolition of Arab-Israeli homes at a demonstration in the Israeli city of Lod, near Tel Aviv.

The protesters held up Palestinian flags and banners which read in Arabic and Hebrew: "Demolishing houses, Demolishing lives," and "Yes to Development, No to Ethnic Cleansing."

Jamal Zahalka, an Arab MP among the protesters, said a total of 40,000 Arab homes in Israel were threatened with demolition.

AFP: Arab Israelis protest house demolitions


Hundreds protest demolition of Arab homes in Lod


01.29.10, 13:53 / Israel News

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Lod on Friday to demonstrate against plans to demolish an entire neighborhood of houses in which Arab residents live.

The demonstrators include members of the Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, Arab public leaders and MKs. "The threat to demolish the houses is part of the policy aimed at ethnically cleansing the mixed cities. Another Goldstone report should be written against the crimes the State of Israel commits against the Arabs living in it," MK Talab El-Sana said.

Hundreds protest demolition of Arab homes in Lod - Israel News, Ynetnews
 
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20 villagers hurt near West Bank protest

30/01/2010 13:40

Over 20 villagers, including 14 children, were hurt in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh on Friday during a demonstration against Israel's wall and the illegal settlement of Hallamish, which cuts into the village.

The villagers, who did not take part in the demonstration, were hurt after the house they were taking refuge in was attacked by Israeli soldiers in a volley of tear-gas projectiles and rubber-coated bullets. One boy was hit in the stomach by a tear-gas projectile. He, along with four others, required medical care, and were evacuated to a hospital.

An Israeli military spokesman said non-lethal means were used to disperse some 100 rioters nearby.

Clashes in the village began after soldiers blocked some 200 demonstrators – Palestinians, Israelis and internationals – from reaching a spring on privately owned Palestinian land, which was recently taken over by Hallamish settlers. "Despite being entirely peaceful, demonstrators were assaulted with tear-gas and rubber-coated bullets," peace advocates claimed in a statement.

Approximately six weeks ago, a group of Halamish settlers took over the spring located in privately owned Palestinian land between the village and the settlement. Since then, and despite the fact that ownership of the land is undisputed, the army began preventing Palestinians from accessing the area, according to the Popular Struggle Coordination Committee.

While demonstrations in recent weeks were triggered by the barring of access to the spring, protesters say their overall motivation is to stop the constant advance of the settlement onto Palestinian land. Since 1977, half of the Nabi Saleh's farmland was lost to the settlement.

http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=257671
 
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Israeli forces arrest two foreigners in West Bank

Sun Feb 7, 2010 8:56am EST

RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - Israeli security forces made an incursion into a Palestinian city Sunday to arrest two foreign women belonging to an organization involved in protests against Israel's West Bank barrier.

Palestinian government spokesman Ghassan Khatib said the arrest of Spaniard Ariadna Jove Marti and Australian Bridgette Chappell in the city of Ramallah violated interim peace accords that gave Palestinians self-rule in parts of the West Bank.

An Israeli army spokesman said the two women "were known to have been involved in illegal riots that interfered with Israeli security operations," apparently in reference to the protests against the barrier.

Both in their 20s, the women were activists with the pro-Palestinian International Solidarity Movement (ISM), established in 2001 to mobilize international support for Palestinian activism against Israeli occupation.

"They were arrested in Ramallah on the grounds of staying in Israel illegally," the military spokesman said, in apparent reference to tourist visas they received on entering Israel, which controls access to the occupied West Bank.

Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad last week urged Israel to end incursions in West Bank areas which according to arrangements established under the Oslo peace process fall under full Palestinian control.

Ryan Olander, an ISM activist who shared an apartment with the two women, said around 12 members of the Israeli security forces had arrested the pair in the early hours of the morning.

Palestinian and international activists say Israel, apparently concerned about plans for wider demonstrations, has stepped up a campaign of arrests against protest organizers in the last two months.

The Israeli authorities deported a leading ISM activist last month, the organization said. Eva Novakova, from the Czech Republic, had also been arrested in Ramallah.

Protesters stage weekly demonstrations in various Palestinian villages against Israel's construction of West Bank walls and fences that have denied them access to their land.

Israel says the barrier, which the World Court has deemed illegal over its construction in occupied land, has stopped suicide bombers in the past and can be removed in the future if the security situation improves.

Israeli forces arrest two foreigners in West Bank | Reuters
 
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Court frees foreign activists, raps West Bank crackdown

By Nir Hasson, Haaretz, 15:35 08/02/2010

The Supreme Court ordered two pro-Palestinian foreign activists released on bail on Monday, saying Israeli immigration officers overstepped their bounds by detaining them in the West Bank.

The activists' lawyer described their arrest as part of a campaign by Israel to choke off weekly demonstrations by Palestinians, left-wing Israelis and foreign activists against Israel's West Bank separation barrier as peace efforts remain at a stalemate.

Israeli soldiers raided the West Bank city of Ramallah on Sunday and detained Spaniard Ariadna Jove Marti and Australian Bridgette Chappell, handing them over to immigration officers overseen by Israel's Interior Ministry for possible deportation.

Both women belong to the International Solidarity Movement, which is at the forefront of anti-barrier demonstrations.

Palestinian authorities and the women's attorney called the entire operation illegal, arguing the military had no right to raid a city within an area designated by interim peace accords as being under Palestinian civil and security jurisdiction.

But the Supreme Court ordered Marti and Chappell released on other grounds, saying immigration officers - authorized only to operate inside Israel - had taken custody of the women from the military at a prison inside the West Bank.

"(The immigration officers) have no authority outside the legitimate borders of Israel," the women's lawyer, Omer Schatz, told reporters before the court ordered his clients freed on bail.

The two activists were banned by the court from returning to the West Bank but told they could file an appeal against deportation from Israel, which controls the territory's borders.

They two were ordered to pay NIS 3,000 bail apiece, instead of the NIS 25,000 originally requested, were told they could not return to the Palestinian territories, but that they could file an official appeal over their deportation.

During a hearing on Monday, state prosecutors said the two should not have been transferred to the Oz immigration unit, which has previously been instructed not to participate in the arrest of activists in the West Bank.

State Prosecutor Ilil Amir said, "A legal problem exists regarding the authority to enforce the laws of entry into Israel."

"At about 2:30 at night soldiers opened the door and came in. There were 15-20 soldiers who aimed their guns at us," Marti described on Sunday from a holding cell in Ramle prison. "They asked for our passports and then asked us to take our things and go with them. They cuffed us and drove us to Ofer Camp."

There they were handed over to the Oz immigration unit of the Defense Ministry.

They said Interior Ministry officials asked them to agree to be expelled immediately from the country.

"They told us that they are taking us to Holon and there we can decide, either we agree to immediate expulsion or that we will be jailed for six months. He told us that we had time until the trip to Holon to decide," Marti added.

The two say that at the Holon headquarters of the unit they were questioned, and that most of the questions dealt with the lack of visas.

They refused to sign documents that would see them willfully expelled.

Israel deported a leading ISM activist last month, the organization said. Eva Novakova, from the Czech Republic, had also been arrested in Ramallah.

Court frees foreign activists, raps West Bank crackdown - Haaretz - Israel News
 
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Palestinians take a cue from Avatar

JERUSALEM
February 17, 2010

Protesters dress in Avatar style to draw attention to their campaign against the Israeli barrier.



THE Israeli military may have begun to reroute its security barrier near the occupied West Bank town of Bilin, but Palestinians have kept their vow to continue non-violent protests at the site.

Dressing up as the bow and arrow-wielding blue natives of the planet Pandora from James Cameron's blockbuster film Avatar, the protesters drew photographers and amused onlookers, but the costumes did not prevent the almost customary Israeli military response, with teargas being fired to disperse the crowd.

The analogy between the forest-dwelling indigenes of Cameron's film and the Palestinians was not lost on Israeli humorists either.

The award-winning satirical program Eretz Nehederet (A Wonderful Land) on Israel's Channel 2 recently ran a sketch in which a comedian impersonating the country's ultra-nationalist Foreign Minister, Avigdor Lieberman, rejected claims that his policies had left Israel friendless in the world.

The spoof Lieberman then introduced the country's new best friend, ''an ally out of this world'' - the prime minister of ''Avatar''.

When the blue alien explains that the movie is about indigenous tribes resisting occupiers who exploit their land, the spoof Lieberman promptly shoots him.

The protests at Bilin have taken place weekly since January 2005. Israel says the barrier is crucial to its security, but Palestinians insist that its construction on occupied territory constitutes a land grab.

Palestinians take a cue from Avatar
 
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Israel makes life very hard for Palestinians, says ICRC

Israeli restrictions make normal life "close to impossible" for many West Bank Palestinians, the International Committee of the Red Cross has said.

Some Palestinians are often unable to reach a hospital or visit relatives, while 50% live in poverty, it said.

They are also frequently harassed by Jewish settlers, the organisation said.

An Israeli foreign ministry spokesman said the ICRC had ignored statements by the Palestinian Authority that West Bank residents lived a "normal life".

Whilst the economy has shown some signs of growth, the ICRC statement said restrictions linked to Israeli settlements had deprived many Palestinian farmers of their land.

We reiterate our call on Israel to do more to protect Palestinians in the West Bank against settler violence, Beatrice Megevand-Roggo
ICRC

Israeli settlers 'still building'

It said attacks and harassment by settlers prevented many farmers from cultivating their own land, and some 10,000 Palestinian olive trees had been cut down or burned in the past three years.

"The ICRC has repeatedly called for action to be taken to allow Palestinians to live their lives in dignity," said ICRC head of operations in the Middle East, Beatrice Megevand-Roggo.

"We reiterate our call on Israel to do more to protect Palestinians in the West Bank against settler violence, to safeguard their land and crops, to allow families to repair their houses and to assure that all Palestinians can get to hospital or to school without delay."

Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said the report ignored official PA figures which showed the economic situation had "improved remarkably" over the past year.

He also referred to comments by PA President Mahmoud Abbas to the Washington Post in May 2009, where he said "in the West Bank, we have a good reality, the people are living a normal life".

In November, the Israeli government of Benjamin Netanyahu ordered a 10-month cessation of building new settlements in the West Bank, a precondition for peace talks demanded by the Palestinians.

But, according to information released by the Israeli government, around 30 settlements are still being developed in defiance of the order.

US attempts to revive peace talks have stalled over the Jewish settlement issue.

Palestinians say they will not return to peace talks unless Israel stops settlement building in the West Bank.

Israel has a long-standing commitment under an existing peace plan to stop settlement growth.

All settlements in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.

BBC News - Israel makes life very hard for Palestinians, says ICRC
 
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Clashes erupt at West Bank protest

Activists want the Israeli wall, which grabs Palestinian land, to be pulled down completely.

Israeli security forces have fired tear gas and munitions at a group of Palestinians staging a protest in the West Bank town of Bi'lin to mark the fifth anniversary of a separation wall built by Israel.

Sherine Tadros, Al Jazeera's correspondent, said Israeli forces reacted strongly after a number of demonstrators managed to cross a fence and threw empty gas cannisters at soldiers.

"The Israeli army fired tear gas and began throwing various munitions over the fence including skunk gas ... which is very harmful," she said.

Television footage showed one person receiving treatment after Israeli forces had fired munitions at the group.

'Act of desperation'

Our correspondent said the situation was "incredibly dangerous".

"In the past five years five Palestinian international activists have been killed because of the tear gas canisters hitting them, the rubber bullets and the live munitions.

"This is something that has been really criticised by rights groups who have said Israel's use of thse kinds of munititions for crowd disperal is against international law and the impunity with which they use them should be held to account."

In a statement the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF), said it would "use means at its disposal" in the case of violence.

Israel says the wall is a "central factor in thwarting terrorists who operate to harm Israeli civilians".

But many Palestinians have viewed the wall as a land grab - with the wall cutting through some towns, such as Bi'lin.

Earlier this month Israel began rerouting a section of its separation barrier near Bi'lin, following a two-and-a-half-year-old court ruling.

The move will return about 700,000 square metres of land to the Palestinian side of the wall.

But our correspondent said activists want Israel to take down the wall altogether.

"The International Court of Justice as well as United Nations has said the wall is illegal. And that is what the protests here are about.

"It's almost an act of desperation by the people here to bring the point home to the international community that they must pressure Israel to get rid of this wall, which separates villages, cuts through Palestinian land and makes life so difficult in the occupied West Bank".

Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Clashes erupt at West Bank protest
 
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Palestinian village known for protests sees cultural rebirth

By Hossam Ezzedine (AFP) – 12 hours ago

NILIN, West Bank — On Fridays they chant slogans and hurl stones at Israeli soldiers, but on Saturdays the youth of this small Palestinian village head into a newly-restored citadel for music practice.

A cultural renaissance of sorts is unfolding in Nilin, led by the same local leaders who have put the farming village on the map in the last two years by spearheading weekly protests against Israel's controversial West Bank barrier.

"Culture in all of its forms is a kind of resistance," says protest organiser Salah al-Khawaja.

"Popular resistance does not only mean daily confrontations with demonstrations and sit-ins. It could mean giving children skills to match their aspirations."

It all started with the decision to renovate a 200-year-old Ottoman-era stronghold in the centre of the village that had been abandoned by a prominent Palestinian family during the 1967 Six Day War in which Israel seized the West Bank.

"We thought about renovating the citadel and making it a place where the young people could do activities, and to teach them things they could use in the future," says Azmi al-Khawaja, 74, who headed the project.

"The houses were old and falling apart. They were filled with dust and grass was growing on them," added Azmi, who is related to Salah.

The 300,000-dollar project was mostly funded by Sweden's international development agency, which since 2002 has spent more than 15 million euros (20 million dollars) on renovating some 100 sites across the West Bank.

Now one of the rooms in the community centre is used for band practice, with musical instruments donated by Palestinians living in the United States.

Another room is used for computer classes, and a third is for local teachers to meet and discuss ways of improving education.

Last spring the village held a festival to celebrate prickly pears, the main cash crop in the region, and more recently the citadel has been used in anti-drug campaigns aimed at local youth.

Salah al-Khawaja argues that all the activities are part of the village's "popular resistance" to the Israeli occupation which, aside from the weekly stone-throwing, is entirely non-violent.

"Reading books at an Israeli checkpoint is a type of resistance," he says. "We feel that many of these young men and women are starting to believe in this."

With peace talks at a standstill and the most recent intifada, or violent uprising, having petered out nearly five years ago, the weekly protests are one of the last remaining expressions of the Palestinian struggle in the West Bank.

The demonstrations are aimed at halting the construction of the separation barrier, which is mostly built inside the occupied territory and cuts off farmers from their land in border communities like Nilin.

Israel credits the barrier with preventing attacks, while the Palestinians view it as a land grab that carves out major Jewish settlements and threatens the creation of a viable future Palestinian state.

The protests in Nilin usually turn violent, with teenagers throwing rocks and Israeli troops firing tear gas and rubber bullets. Five Nilin residents have been killed and scores wounded since the gatherings began in 2008.

On a recent Saturday Loay, 15, who the day before had wrapped a chequered kuffiyeh around his face and used a slingshot to hurl rocks over the wall at Israeli army jeeps, sat hunched over a piano, pecking out chords.

"I want to learn everything, and to be a famous piano player," he says, asking that his real name not be used for fear of arrest.

"Yesterday I took part in the demonstration against the Israeli army, which wants to steal our land. Today I am studying music so that, in the future, I can express my rejection of this occupation with songs."

AFP: Palestinian village known for protests sees cultural rebirth
 
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Anti Wall Protest Continue At Beit Jala Town, Southern West Bank.

March 04, 2010, Ghassan Bannoura - IMEMC News

Residents of Beit Jala town, southern West Bank, along with Israeli and international supporters chained themselves to olive tree in protest of the Israeli built wall on their land.

At around 7:00 am on Thursday people gathered, at the town then marched towered the lands were Israeli planning to build a new section of the wall.

As the new section of the wall will surround a nearby settlers-road to protect it; the wall will destroy around 75 acres of land owned by residents and bring the wall right to their front doors. Metrei Ighneem, from Beit Jala decriped they what it means to cut his olive trees by the army:

“They uprooted 15 olive trees that I own, they also destroyed my land, those trees date back to the Roman Era,. Olive trees for me means life, it give me food and oil.” He added “ which law allows the cutting of trees that is thousands of years old, this is a crime.”

“This house and the land near it is the fruit of my life work, back in 1990 they took land to make the settlers road and now they came and took the rest, I am totally brook.” Ighneem told IMEMC.

The Israeli army and police arrived at the location but today troops did nothing to stop the protesters as soldiers stood and watch while young men chained themselves to the trees army bulldozers did not cut yet.

Another group planted two trees that bulldozers destroyed earlier this week. On Tuesday and Wednesday troops attacked those who came to who support to the local residents, and forced them out using rifle buts and batons. Some hours later people when back from the wall site and before leaving they visited families nearby.

Lamyia al-Arrja, council member at the Beit Jala Municipality told IMEMC that the new wall section will have devastating effect on the residents:

"The Wall will cut through people's homes and lands, destroying trees. Residents will not have the ability to expand their homes anymore. The town of Beit Jala was affected a lot by the settlements and settler's roads, and now we are completely surrounded because of the settlement, their roads, and the wall."

The Municiplity of Biet Jala hired a lawyer this week, today the lawyer mamanged to get the Israeli court to order a halt in construction until a final decision is made. Israeli announced its plans for this section of the wall back in 2006.

Families and the municipality fought the decision in court. So far no rolling had been issued by the court on the matter. In 2004 the International Court of Justice in The Hague announced the Israeli wall built in the West Bank as illegal.

Anti Wall Protest Continue At Beit Jala Town, Southern West Bank. - News - International Middle East Media Center
 
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