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Third Palestinian Uprising: Updates and Discussions

Are the only humans with inherent rights to exist Muslims and "saints?"

"where the media is not bought or censored"? Really?
True..But when it comes to Israel killing spree , it a complete blackout...that is the reality and the entire world doesn't care. But a little innocent jewish girl get caught in the feud and the whole world cry foul!
 
True..But when it comes to Israel killing spree , it a complete blackout...that is the reality and the entire world doesn't care. But a little innocent jewish girl get caught in the feud and the whole world cry foul!

During the last Israeli genocide in Gaza, Fox news gave the details of a 5 year old Israeli boy killed by a Hamas rocket. The name, pictures of his funeral, grieving mother etc.

It didn't name , nor mentioned, the 1500 Palestinians killed by the Israelis. The Zionists control the US media.
 
Living under Israel chopping block.Arrested, handcuffed and shot in cold blood, completely ignored and accepted by the world media



And a little Palestinien infant defending herself with a rock from an Israeli policeman aiming at her with an AR 15 is seen outrageous by the same media.
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Hamas decries accusations by Saudi royal, Iran adviser
"...
In a Sunday statement, Hamas denounced al-Faisal's assertions as "offensive to the Palestinian people and the Palestinian cause".

"Everyone knows Hamas is a Palestinian resistance group with an entirely Palestinian agenda aimed at serving the interests of the Palestinian people and their cause," the group said.
...
In a separate statement issued Sunday, Hamas described Iran's accusations as "groundless and devoid of truth".

"Hamas will remain at the forefront of the resistance in Palestine until the liberation [of all of historical Palestine from Israeli occupation] and the return of the [Palestinian refugees]," the statement read."


 
‘Suicide by soldier’ Palestinian girl freed by military court
Army finds no evidence teenager who approached checkpoint and was shot in leg had planned an attack; she told investigators ‘I came to die’
BY TIMES OF ISRAEL STAFF September 22, 2016, 5:34 pm


Security guards shoot a 13-year-old Palestinian girl in the leg as she refused to halt at the Eliyahu Crossing in the West Bank, on September 21, 2016. (Defense Ministry)

A teenage girl who was shot by Israeli security guards at a West Bank checkpoint, in an apparent suicide attempt, was released from custody on Thursday.

Thirteen-year-old Bara’a Ramadan Owaisi from Qalqilya was freed by an Israeli military court, according to the Palestinian Ma’an news agency. The court found there was no evidence that she had attempted any attack; nor had she been in possession of a weapon.

On Wednesday morning she had approached the guards at the checkpoint, in the northern West Bank. When she ignored their calls for her to halt, one of them shot her in the leg, the Defense Ministry said.

“The girl approached the vehicle crossing by foot, holding a bag,” arousing the suspicion of the security guards, the statement said.

They “ordered her to stop and even fired warning shots into the air,” the ministry said, but when the teenager continued approaching despite the calls to halt, the guards “shot her in the legs in order to stop her.” She was lightly injured.

During an initial investigation of the incident, the teenager said, “I came to die,” according to the ministry.

A video circulating online appeared to depict the moment of Wednesday’s shooting.


The past year of Palestinian attacks has seen several instances in which teenagers appeared to provoke gunfire from Israeli security forces in order to commit suicide.

According to sources within the Israel Defense Forces, often terrorist attacks are a form of “suicide by cop,” or “suicide by soldier.”

“Most of the people have personal problems with their families or they themselves are unbalanced,” a senior IDF officer in the Central Command told The Times of Israel.

Owaisi’s aunt, Rasha Owaisi, 23, was shot dead at the same checkpoint last November when she brandished a knife and approached the guards there. The aunt had left a suicide note for her family.

Ma’an note that Owaisi is still being treated in Kfar Saba’s Meir Hospital, and will be visited there by a lawyer from the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society.
 
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Armed Palestinian Eight-Year-Olds Say They Were Sent to Attack Israelis
by TheTower.org Staff | 10.27.16 1:47 pm

Two eight-year-old Palestinian children who were apprehended with knives near Migdal Oz in the West Bank on Wednesday told authorities that they were sent to carry out a terrorist attack, The Times of Israel reported.

“A short while ago forces identified and apprehended two Palestinian children under the age of ten near the community of Migdal Oz,” the Israeli military said in a statement. “During the initial questioning the children admitted to have been sent, armed with knives, in order to carry out a terror attack.”

“When two, eight-year-old children are sent on a mission to attack Israeli civilians it is clear that the hateful rhetoric that echoes within Palestinian society abuses the most vulnerable of mind,” IDF Spokesperson Peter Lerner said.

The children were initially spotted near the security fence around Migdal Oz. A video of them approaching the town was tweeted by Lerner.


The wave of Palestinian terrorism that began in September of last year, in which 42 people were killed and more than 570 injured, has featured a number of Palestinian youths as attackers. The Palestinian Authority, which pays salaries to terrorists and recently named a school after the terrorist mastermind behind the 1972 Munich massacre, has frequently been criticized for encouraging children to kill Israelis.

In July, the PA’s official newspaper praised Palestinian youth who died after carrying out or attempting to carry out stabbing attacks against Israelis, claiming they followed “the path of excellence and superiority.” In April, the PA organized a high school reading program that praised a terrorist who murdered three people, including American peace activist Richard Lakin. The same terrorist was separately honored at three Palestinian universities.

Such incitement has long been tied to acts of terrorism by Israeli authorities and experts. A 15-year-old Palestinian who stabbed an Israeli mother of six to death in January was motivated by the incitement broadcast on Palestinian television, according to an investigation by Israel’s internal security agency. Similarly, the families of two 13-year-old Israeli-Arab girls who stabbed a security guard in Ramle said the kids were incited by watching inflammatory videos on social media.

Multiple surveys of Palestinian public opinion have found widespread support for terror attacks against Israeli civilians, as well as negative perceptions of Jews. Apoll published by a Ramallah-based firm in April found that more than 60 percent of Palestinians approve of “armed attacks against Israeli civilians inside Israel.” Of all age groups, youths between the ages of 18 and 22 were “the least supportive of the two-state solution” and “the most supportive of stabbing attacks,” according to the poll.

Dan Polisar, the provost of Shalem College, explained in Mosaic Magazine in November that these polls reveal the extent to which “Palestinian perpetrators of violence reflect and are acting on the basis of views widely held in their society.”

[IDF Spokesperson’s Office ]
 
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Hannah Bladon, British student victim of Palestinian terrorist knifing, laid to rest


Posted by William A. Jacobson Thursday, May 18, 2017 at 2:30pm
Remember Hannah Bladon

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In mid-April we wrote about the terrorist murder of Hannah Bladon, Palestinian terrorist stabs British student to death on Jerusalem Light Rail.

Hannah was in the wrong place at the wrong time. She gave up her seat to a woman holding a baby, and thus put herself standing next to the Palestinian man who would stab her to death.

As is all too common now, this appears to be another case of a Palestinian engaging in terrorism due to personal problems, rather than ideology, in an attempt (failed this time) to get themselves shot to death in the act, what is described as “suicide by Israeli cop”:

Since October 2015, more and more attackers are choosing to commit terror attacks and suicide missions for various reasons. Among these reasons include but are not limited to various levels of domestic violence within the household (with family members such as siblings, spouses, fiance, etc.); social criticism for an immoral act, such as adultery, lack of respect for the family, matriculation failure and more; and serious psychological issues stemming from depression, despair, and mental illness. In the absence of an appropriate response to these problems, both by the family household or the authorities, young people feel trapped in a dead end and that their only way to escape is by dying.

Committing suicide is not option or a normative behavior, therefore, young people choose to commit acts of terror in order to die to become “martyrs”. These youth assume that the execution of a terror attack will allow the young person to escape their bitter fate and get the recognition of “the martyr” for which will absolve them of all wrongdoing or unusual behaviors, and death will possibly provide their family with financial benefits—receiving compensation from the Palestinian Authority and therefore, not subjecting the family to burdens.​

The killer was recently formally charged:

Israeli authorities on Thursday charged a Palestinian with murder over the fatal stabbing of a young British woman on a Jerusalem tramway last month, the justice ministry said.

Jamil Tamimi, 57, from east Jerusalem, was charged with premeditated murder, the ministry said in a statement.

The ministry said Tamimi had entered the tramway with the intention of committing a murder and stabbed 20-year-old Hannah Bladon seven times.

It said he chose her as a victim because she seemed incapable of defending herself.​


After the murder, there were numerous tributes to Hannah, including by local football (soccer) fans:

Thousands of football fans are to remember tragic Birmingham student Hannah Bladon, who was stabbed to death in Jerusalem on Good Friday.

The 20-year-old theology undergraduate was murdered on a tram as she took part in an exchange programme with the Rothberg International School at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Her death sparked a massive outpouring of grief with tutors at the University of Birmingham among those paying tribute.

A minute’s silence was due to be observed before Derby County’s match against Huddersfield Town at 5pm on Monday.

Hannah, from Burton-on-Trent, was a supporter of the home side.

A statement on Derby’s Facebook page said: ”Everybody at Derby County would like to express our sincerest sympathies to the Bladon family.”
Hannah was recently laid to rest in her home town in Britain, as the Derby Telegraph reported:

Hundreds of people gathered to say farewell to an “extraordinary young woman” who was killed when she was stabbed during an exchange programme in Jerusalem.

Friends, family, classmates and teachers attended the funeral service to pay tribute to Derby County fan and former Abbot Beyne School pupil Hannah Bladon, who died on April 14 after being attacked on a tram.

… Rev Stanley Monkhouse led the tributes at Hannah’s funeral on Thursday – and looked back on the first time he met “bright and fearless” 20-year-old back in 2014.

He said she was a woman who “packed such a lot of life into a very short time”, while those who had their lives touched by her shared memories and kind words about her during a service at the Church of Saint John the Divine, in Rolleston Road, Burton.

Mr Monkhouse told the congregation: “I knew straight away from Hannah’s spark and excitement within the church that she was an unusual young lady. She was kind, not prejudiced in any way, and full of excitement about life….

Rev Michael Freeman, who had known Hannah since she was four years old, also spoke as her vicar and her friend.

He spoke of her colourful character and said that Hannah’s parents lives were “changed forever” when she came into the world, having a “good and positive impact on everyone she met”.​

Her family and friends put together this photo montage:

A fundraising page raised over £5000 to cover funeral expenses.

Hannah’s stabbing murder is part the so-called “Knife Intifada,” which since 2015 has consisted of a large number of high profile stabbings and attempted stabbings by Palestinian terrorists, along with car rammings and shootings.

We have covered many of these attacks:

These attacks, even when motivated by personal problems, are a direct result of Palestinian media and political incitement, even of children, such as these recent examples:

Hannah Bladon should not be forgotten.
 
Eilat Hotel bombing by two 'palestinian' animals foiled

Two Arab residents of Jerusalem indicted Thursday on charges of plotting a bomb attack in one of the coastal resort's hotels.

Prosecutors filed indictments with the Be'er Sheva District Court on Thursday against two Arabs originally frm Jerusalem accused of planning a bomb attack on a hotel in Eilat.

The pair, identified as Halil Nimri and Ashraf Salaimma, had been residing and working in Eilat for several years when they plotted to plant explosives inside one of the southern resort's many hotels.

The attack was apparently foiled thanks to the vigilance of the hotel staff who reported the suspicious-looking men to management, who in turn called in security forces.


The terrorists have been charged with conspiracy to commit an offense to aid the enemy in wartime.
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E. J'lem resident acquitted despite confessing to hotel bomb plot
Judges in Be'er Sheva District Court provide no explanation for letting Khalil Nimri, 23, off the hook despite an incitement filed in 2015 against him which included a confession that he, together with a fellow worker at a hotel in Eilat, planned to bomb group of religious Jews; confession appears to have conflicted with other objective evidence.
Ilana Curiel|Last update: 09.11.17 , 21:08


A resident of eastern Jerusalem was acquitted Thursday despite being indicted for conspiracy to assist an enemy in times of war and confessing two years ago to planning to plant a bomb in a hotel in the southern holiday resort of Eilat. The State Attorney's Office has already filed an appeal to the Supreme Court over the decision to the acquittal.

Khalil Nimri, 23, was charged by the Southern District Attorney's Office, along with Ashraf Salameh, 25—both of whom lived and worked in Eilat at the time—in 2015 for allegedly planning the attack with the intention of killing a group of Ashkenazi religious tourists staying in the Hotel Be Center, formerly called the Rio hotel.


Khalil Nimri (Photo: Haim Horenstein)

The two were arrested at the end of November 2015 and later confessed their involvement in the plot following the conclusion of an intensive and protracted Shin Bet investigation.

According to the indictment, Nimri and Salameh did not know each other before planning the details of their plot and met while working in Eilat.

The two were arrested after a receptionist in the hotel reported suspicions stemming from Nimri asking a series of unusual questions. A few days later, the receptionist said that he had made a mistake in identifying Nimri after an encounter with Salameh, who was subsequently arrested.

The two met in one of their homes where they decided to carry out an attack against Jews to take revenge during the height of what became know as the ‘wave of terror’ in which Israel experienced daily shootings, stabbing and car-ramming attacks.

Nimri “sought to avenge the death of a childhood friend who was killed in October 2015 during a stabbing attack in Jerusalem, and Ashraf Salameh also felt the need take revenge on the State of Israel and carry out a terror attack,” the indictment states.



Khalil Nimri's mother in court (Photo: Haim Horenstein)

The panel of judges in the Be'er Sheva District Court did not provide a reason for their decision to let Nimri off the hook. However questions were raised over the veracity of the confession, which was ultimately not accepted.

The bulk of the case was predicated on Nimri’s confession, as is common in many security-related trials. However, the confession did not entirely correspond with objective evidence presented during the legal proceedings.

Despite the fact that the judges determined that the confession was admissible in court, objective evidence did not indicate that Nimri was guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

Nevertheless, the judges were not able to state unequivocally that the confession was false due to the precedent it could set in future security-related trials.




(Photo: Meir Ohayon)

“In many cases, The Shin Bet succeeds in uncovering and thwarting terrorist incidents,” said Nimri’s Lawyer after the acquittal. “However, it is clear throughout the entire interrogation ... (they refused) to look at the reality staring them in the faces, gathering evidence and interrogating witnesses, in the unshakable belief that the truth is revealed by the interrogation procedures, and that "they will not let the facts confuse them."

Later, Nimri would claim that he confessed under pressure during the 11-hour Shin Bet grilling.

During the investigation, it emerged that Nimri never even stepped foot even in the targeted hotel.

“The defendant’s confession was false,” the attorney wrote, pointing out that the Shin Bet investigator presented details to Nirmi that only people who were actually in the hotel could have been familiar with.

The receptionist recognized Nimri, who she believed was the person working in the hotel. A few days later, the mistaken identity was acknowledged.

Salameh, on the other hand, was in the hotel and confessed to the plan during his investigation.

“We came to the conclusion that even if his confession was admissible, there is no evidence proving the defendant's responsibility beyond reasonable doubt,” the judges wrote. “We will not be providing our reasons at the moment but we will endeavor to do so within 30 days.”

Speaking after the court decision, Nimri said: “You don’t know how happy I am to be released, to see my family but I am angry.”

His mother also added “I prayed for two years. I told them I didn't raise my boy like that.”

First published: 09.11.17, 12:34
 
Two injured, one seriously, in West Bank car ramming; terrorist shot
Driver, 17, hits 70-year-old man, then 35-year-old, before getting out of his vehicle and attempting to stab soldiers near Efrat
By JUDAH ARI GROSS Today, 7:09 am 4


  • A car that a Palestinian terrorist rammed into two Israelis in the central West Bank on November 17, 2017. (Israel Defense Forces)


    A Palestinian terrorist rammed his car into two people, seriously injuring one of them, before getting shot while trying to stab soldiers in the central West Bank on Friday morning, the army said.

    The driver of the vehicle, a 17-year-old who was not immediately named, rammed his car into the first victim, a 70-year-old man, who sustained a light head wound, at the Efrat South junction, medics said.

    He continued down the road to the nearby Gush Etzion Junction where he hit another Israeli man, 35, according to the Magen David Adom ambulance service.

    The second victim was initially said to have been lightly-to-moderately wounded, but the hospital later said his condition was serious, with a brain injury.

    The army said the driver then got out of his car with a knife and tried to stab soldiers.

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    A knife with which a Palestinian car-rammer allegedly tried to stab soldiers in the central West Bank on November 17, 2017. (Israel Defense Forces)
    “The soldiers responded by firing towards the attacker, resulting in his injury,” the Israel Defense Forces said in a statement.

    According to the hospital, the terrorist was in critical condition.

    There were no reports of wounded Israeli soldiers, the army said.


  • The 70-year-old victim was taken to Jerusalem’s Shaare Zedek Medical Center, while the 35-year-old was taken to Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem, MDA said.

    The seriously injured victim was to undergo surgery shortly, a Hadassah spokesperson said Friday morning.

    “He suffered a head wound. He has an intracranial hemorrhage and will require brain surgery,” his doctor said. “He’s in serious condition, but he is stable.”

    Army medics treated the wounded terrorist and also brought him to Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem for further treatment.

    Palestinian media reported he was from the nearby village of Halhoul.

    The Gush Etzion Junction in the central West Bank has been a common site for terror attacks due to its close proximity to both Israeli settlements and Palestinian villages.
Also: Palestinian Terrorist Had ‘Big Smile on His Face,’ Israeli Wounded in Gush Etzion Ramming Attack Recalls
Wife of seriously wounded terror victim urges prayers for his life
 
Palestinian convicted of attempt to bomb Jerusalem light rail
Court rules 20-year-old Ali Abu Hassan 'planned to carry out a mass terror attack' with pipe bombs filled with nails dipped in rat poison

By MICHAEL BACHNER Today, 4:04 pm
Ali Abu Hassan, a Palestinian student from a village outside of Hebron, walks through a Jerusalem court on August 2, 2016, before being indicted for attempting to carry out a terror attack on the Jerusalem light rail in July. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

A Hebron University student who was caught trying to board the Jerusalem light rail while carrying three pipe bombs, explosives and knives was convicted on Thursday of attempted murder, manufacturing weapons and entering Israel illegally.

In its ruling, the Jerusalem District Court said that 20-year-old Ali Abu Hassan “planned to carry out a mass terror attack.”

In July 2016, Abu Hassan entered West Jerusalem through a valley outside the eastern Sur Baher neighborhood, with the intention of carrying out an attack in the capital as a form of “revenge for visits by tourists and Israeli Jews to the Temple Mount,”
police said in a statement at the time.

On July 17, he took a bus to the center of the capital and walked along Jerusalem’s bustling Jaffa Road to find a target for his bombing, armed with three pipe bombs he had linked together into one large explosive and covered with nails and screws he had dipped in rat poison. In his bag police also found two knives and a cellphone.

He originally intended to attack a restaurant on Jaffa Road and scoped out the area to prepare for his assault. However, when he noticed the large number of passengers boarding the light rail that runs through downtown, he changed his target.


During his attempt to board the tram, he aroused the suspicion of a security guard and was stopped. When the guard asked to examine the contents of the bag, he noticed the bomb and called police.

The court praised the security guard for stopping Abu Hassan right before he boarded the tram, saying it was only due to his alertness that a large-scale attack was prevented. Judges also ruled that the remorse he displayed in court wasn’t genuine, since he didn’t voice it during his interrogations.

Hassan had researched how to make a pipe bomb that would “cause the most, and most effective, damage” on the internet and “even carried out test explosions with a number of bombs in order to check them before entering Israel,” according to the joint Shin Bet-Israel Police investigation into the attempted attack.



A pipe bomb allegedly built by Ali Abu Hassan, who has been accused of attempting to attack the Jerusalem light rail on July 17, 2016. (Israel Police)

He worked alone, without any “organizational infrastructure,” police said.

The civil engineering student came from Bayt Ula, a village northwest of Hebron, and hid out in an olive grove near the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Jabel Mukaber, police said.

The judges convicted Abu Hassan of attempted murder, manufacturing weapons, carrying weapons, carrying a knife, and four counts of entering Israel illegally.

Judah Ari Gross and Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
 
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Female terrorist who mistakenly stabbed Arab sentenced
31-year-old Jerusalem Arab woman attacked haredi man near Old City, then stabbed Arab man she mistook for a Jew.

David Rosenberg, 10/07/18 12:03


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תיעוד: המחבלת מנסה לדקור


A Jerusalem court sentenced a female Arab terrorist to 10 years in prison on Monday, after she was found guilty of a stabbing attack near the Old City of Jerusalem last summer.

The terrorist, 31-year-old Fadwa Nazih Hamadeh, attacked a haredi man returning from morning prayers in the Old City of Jerusalem on Saturday, August 12th.

As the haredi man left the Old City via the Damascus Gate, Hamadeh lunged at him with a knife. In video footage taken from a security camera in the area, Hamadeh’s would-be victim can be seen dodging the attack and fleeing the scene.

After she failed to injure her first target, Hamadeh turned her sights on another man, stabbing him in the shoulder.

The victim was a 31-year-old Arab man Hamadeh had mistakenly thought was an Israeli Jew.

A resident of Jerusalem’s Sur Baher neighborhood, Hamadeh is married and has five children, ranging in age from 8 to one-and-a-half.

According to a report by the Palestinian Authority’s WAFA media outlet, the Jerusalem District Court imposed a fine of $9,000 on Hamadeh in addition to the 10-year prison sentence.
 

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