05.03.08

Israel/Occupied Territories: Israeli settlers wage campaign of intimidation on Palestinians and internationals alike

Posted in Israel-Palestine tagged , , , at 1:07 pm by Mazin

An Amesty International Report

Date: 25 October 2004.

Israeli settlers in the Occupied Territories have stepped up attacks against Palestinians and are waging a campaign of intimidation against international and Israeli human rights activists. Their aim is to eliminate the presence of witnesses to their attacks, thereby depriving the local Palestinian population of this only form of limited protection.

Two US citizens, members of the Christian Peacemaker Team (CPT), were assaulted on 29 September by masked Israeli settlers who beat them with clubs and chains as they accompanied Palestinian children to school near the Tuwani village, South of Hebron. Kim Lamberty sustained a broken arm and knee and bruising to her face, while Chris Brown was left with a punctured lung and multiple bruises. Members of the CPT and other Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs) have been escorting Palestinian children to school to protect them from attacks by Israeli settlers.

A group of hooded Israeli settlers attacked Amnesty International delegates and members of the CPT and the Operation Dove NGO on 9 October as they returned from accompanying Palestinian primary schoolchildren back to their home. The attackers first threw stones at the five internationals and then attacked three of them with wooden clubs. An Amnesty International delegate sustained multiple bruises on her back, arm and leg and the Operation Dove member collapsed and had to be taken to hospital by ambulance. On both occasions, the attackers came from the nearby Israeli settlement of Havat Ma’on and returned there after the attacks.

Rather than taking steps to stop and prevent such attacks and hold Israeli settlers accountable, the Israeli army and security forces have responded by imposing further restrictions on the local Palestinian population.

After the attack, the Israeli army informed the Palestinian villagers that, if the children are accompanied by internationals on their way to and from school, no army patrol will be on site to protect them from Israeli settlers. The Palestinian villagers reluctantly accepted that the schoolchildren have make to the journey without their international escort, but, two days later, on 12 October, the children were again chased by Israeli settlers from the Havat Ma’on settlement while on their way to school. The Israeli army patrol, which was present, did not intervene. Israeli settlers again threw stones as the children passed near the settlement on their way to school on 17 October.

The only alternative is for the schoolchildren to avoid passing near the Israeli settlements by making a long detour that lengthens their walk from 20 minutes to more than two hours each way.

As in previous years around the time of the olive harvest, Israeli settlers have also stepped up attacks on the local Palestinian inhabitants and farmers throughout the West Bank, preventing them from harvesting their crops and destroying or damaging their trees. The Israeli army has done little or nothing to stop the settlers’ attack and has, instead, banned the Palestinian farmers from going to their fields, ultimately helping the settlers to force the Palestinians off their land.

Throughout the West Bank, Palestinian farmers are increasingly worried that their olives, one of their few remaining sources of livelihood, are being stolen, destroyed or wasted as they are prevented from working in their fields.

In the northern West Bank region of Nablus, where Palestinian villages are surrounded by Israeli settlements and settlers’ roads, the Israeli army is only allowing Palestinian farmers between two and six days — on set dates — to go to their fields to harvest their olives. Palestinian farmers who have tried to go to pick their olives on days other than the set dates have been attacked by settlers and turned away by Israeli army patrols. In the meantime, Israeli settlers have been picking olives in Palestinian groves and have destroyed and burned olive trees in various areas.

Palestinian farmers, accompanied by internationals from the Ecumenical Accompaniment Program, were harvesting their olives in Yanun, near Nablus, on 7 October when two settlers and eight soldiers came and told them to leave. The soldiers did not intervene when armed settlers assaulted a Palestinian farmer, fired shots on the ground near him and tied his hands. The farmer was left handcuffed until a member of the Israeli peace group Taayush (Co-existence) arrived at the scene and intervened with the soldiers.

Palestinian villagers in Yanun have been subjected to attacks by Israeli settlers for years and several families have been driven from the village by repeated attacks against them and their property. All remaining inhabitants were forced to flee the village by Israeli settlers in October 2002. They were later able to return with the help of Israeli and international peace activists. Promises by the Israeli army to keep the Israeli settlers in check have produced no results and settlers have continued to attack and intimidate the villagers with impunity.

In the southern Hebron region, on 15 October, after Israeli peace activists from Rabbis for Human Rights had coordinated with the Israeli army that the Palestinian farmers harvest their olives on that day, the farmers were attacked by armed settlers. The Israeli army patrol responded by telling the Palestinian farmers to leave, claiming that they did not have sufficient forces to protect them from the settlers.

Two days later in Yassuf, near Nablus, Palestinian farmers, accompanied by Israeli and international peace activists, were once again evicted from their olive grove when Israeli settlers turned up. The soldiers, whose presence was supposed to ensure that the Palestinians could harvest their olives, told the farmers and their Israeli and International helpers to leave.

On 11 October, a 26-year-old Palestinian farmer, Hani Shadeh, was shot and seriously wounded in the neck by an Israeli settler as he was picking olives with other farmers in Asira al-Qibliya, a village near Nablus and near the Israeli settlement of Yitzhar. The day before, Israeli settlers had set fire to an olive grove near the Israeli settlement of Tapuach.

Israeli settlers responsible for attacks on Palestinians and their properties have not been brought to justice in the vast majority of cases. Such impunity encourages settlers to commit further attacks and abuses. In the rare cases when Israeli settlers have been brought to justice, they have been treated with a degree of leniency uncommon in other cases.

On 27 September, an Israeli settler from the Elon Moreh Settlement near Nablus shot a Palestinian taxi driver dead. Sayyed Jabara, father of eight, was driving his passengers between Nablus and Salem. The settler claimed that he shot Sayyed Jabara because he thought that he intended to attack him, even though Jabara was not armed. He was released on bail less than 24 hours after the murder.

Israeli settlements in the Occupied Territories, established by Israel in violation of international law, are the main reason for the stringent restrictions imposed on the Palestinian population. Some three-and-a-half million Palestinians are prevented from moving between towns and villages; confined to isolated enclaves and cut off from their workplace, their land, health and education facilities and other crucial services.This is done to keep Palestinians away from Israeli settlements and from the network of roads built for the exclusive use of some 380,000 Israeli settlers. Settlements also continue to be expanded and new ones to be set up on expropriated Palestinian land.

Israeli settlers who attack and harass Palestinian villagers frequently come from settlements established without formal government authorization and which the Israeli authorities have publicly pledged to dismantle. However, settlers are increasingly influential in the army, in government and in parliament. The rare attempts by the Israeli army and security forces to dismantle unauthorized settlements have been mostly half-hearted, with settlers simply refusing to leave or allowed to return to the site shortly after having being evacuated.

In recent months, the Israeli government has announced its intention to dismantle all Israeli settlements in the Gaza Strip, one of the most densely populated places in the world where the presence of some 6,000 Israeli settlers has resulted in one-and-a-half million Palestinians being confined to less than 60% percent of the land. However, the Israeli government has no intention to evacuate more than 100 settlements in the West Bank, which take up some of the most fertile Palestinian land and best water resources. On the contrary, Prime Minister Sharon’s bureau chief recently confirmed that the planned pullout from the Gaza Strip is intended to strengthen Israel’s hold of large parts of the West Bank.

Amnesty International has repeatedly called on the Israeli authorities to take measures to evacuate Israeli settlers from the Occupied Territories and, in the meantime, to prevent attacks by Israeli settlers, to investigate the numerous attacks committed by settlers and to bring those responsible to justice. Amnesty International has also repeatedly called on Palestinian armed groups to stop targeting Israeli civilians both inside Israel and in the Occupied Territories.

/END/[Emphasis added mine ]

For further information:

Israel and the Occupied Territories:

The issue of settlements must be addressed according to international law

http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE150852003?open&of=ENG-ISR

Israel and the Occupied Territories

Surviving under siege: The impact of movement restrictions on the right to work

http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE150012003?open&of=ENG-ISR

Israel and The Occupied Territories and The Palestinian Authority

Without distinction – attacks on civilians by Palestinian armed groups

http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE020032002?open&of=ENG-ISR

Distortion of Truth

Posted in Israel-Palestine tagged , , , , , at 12:17 pm by Mazin

Editorial: Distortion of Truth

Khaled Al Maeena , Arab News

3 May 2008

Did we hear it right? Did US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, in London for a major meeting on the Palestinian situation, really attack Arab states for not doing enough to help the Palestinians? Incredibly, yes.

What hypocrisy. What gall. The US has done more to harm and oppress the Palestinians than any other state apart from Israel — and still does so. She herself has been intimately involved in that story of injustice. As secretary of state, she has been in the driving seat of US policy toward Israel for the past three years. During that period, did the US cut its massive bulwark of financial, military and political support for the Israelis, which enables them to withstand international demands for a meaningful and just peace? No. Did it stop using its veto at the UN to block condemnation of Israeli oppression, most recently the devastating blockade of Gaza? No. US policy over which she in part presides has continued to support the Israelis wholeheartedly, permitting them time after time to keep the peace process in limbo.

Arabs are not going to be lectured by the Americans of all people about not doing enough for the Palestinians.

For Rice to suggest that Arab states should concentrate on how much they can do for the Palestinians, not how little, is especially offensive. Arabs have done more than anyone else to keep Palestinian hopes alive, unlike the US. Over the years, Arab states have shouldered the financial and military burden of supporting the Palestinians. Billions upon billions of Arab dollars, dinars, dirhams, riyals and pounds have been spent directly and indirectly helping them. The idea that Arab governments sit down to work out how little they can do for the Palestinians is a downright fabrication, a slander. The fact that a number of Arab states have not paid up financial pledges to the Palestinian Authority for this year is wholly irrelevant. The year is not yet half way through. The money will be paid — and, in the case of Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Algeria, has already been paid.

The implicit suggestion that Arab support for the Palestinians is all words and no action is deliberate distortion of the truth. It is an attempt to divert attention from the reality that the Bush administration’s peace process will not work.

Oxfam, not an Arab body, has this to say about what Rice could have done for the Palestinians: “Words are not enough. They must be followed up with decisive, immediate action by Israel and the international community to reverse the effects of the… blockade of Gaza, which has diminished its 1.5 million people to a drip-feed existence.” One word from Rice will do it.

When Arabs see US putting pressure on Israel to make concessions, when they see US action not words, making a Palestinian state a reality, then they may be inclined to listen to US moralizing about the situation. Till then, less twisting of the facts and a little more honesty would go a long way to recoup American credibility in Arab eyes.
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Khaled Al-Maeena is Editor-in-Chief of Arab News [which was voted recently as the Middle East's leading English language daily ], Senior columnist, Asharq Al-Awsat, Al Madina, Urdu News, Gulf News. Khaled Al-Maeena is a well-known businessman, journalist, editor, PR consultant and media personality in Saudi Arabia. He received his education in several countries including the United States, Britain and Pakistan.
Among many of his media and diplomatic achievements was that he represented Saudi Arabia at several important summit meetings in the Arab World; the Arab summits of Baghdad and Morocco, for example. He was a member of diplomatic delegations to the People’s Republic of China and Russia, after relations with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia were established with them. He led the Arab News team throughout the Gulf crisis and is accredited with being the first person to bring newspapers back into liberated Kuwait.