Friday, January 1, 2010

Israeli Occupation Forces Disperse Nil'in Protest With Tear Gas, Concussion Grenades, Flash Bombs

Israeli Occupation Forces dispersed hundreds of Palestinian protesters in the occupied West Bank village of Nil'in near Ramallah Friday with so-called "less than lethal" weapons during an anti-Apartheid Wall demonstration that also marked the 45th annivesary of the founding of the Fatah political party.

The village of Nil'in and her 5,000 residents are located outside of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, near the neighboring village of Bil'in. Like Bil'in, Nil'in is a symbol of nonviolent popular Palestinian resistance. The Apartheid Wall has choked off more than 40 percent of the village land since construction began in Nil'in in 2008. The town is also surrounded by illegal Israeli Jewish settlements that are visible just over the Apartheid Wall.

The Israeli Army set up a checkpoint at the main entrance to Nil'in, so the taxi I took from Ramallah dropped myself and another international off several hundred yards down the highway from the checkpoint and the driver told us to cut through the village land until we were inside city limits. After 45 minutes of walking through groves of olive trees, cacti, and jumping over barb-wired fences, we managed to stumble into the village without being spotted by the apartheid state security forces.

After the noon prayer the gathered crowd began marching down to the Apartheid Wall. Just beyond it was the Israeli Jewish settlement that was built on Nil'in land illegally annexed by Israel.

As soon as we reached the wall the Israeli Occupation Forces responded by firing tear gas, concussion grenades, and flash bombs, slowly driving the demonstrators back across the rugged terrain. Scattered skirmishes continued for nearly an hour, but things began to heat up again after Israeli soldiers crossed the barrier and began advancing on the demonstrators on foot.

Village youth began firing stones at the soldiers from home-made slingshots and a real back and forth running battle between the soldiers, with their high-tech weaponry, and the village Shabab, with their slingshots and stones, took place. In the end, of course, the Palestinians retreated without any serious injuries on either side. Several Palestinians were treated for tear-gas inhalation by the International Committee of the Red Crescent.

I hitched a ride back to Jerusalem with three members of Anarchists Against the Wall.

"Without protective accompaniment from Israelis, internationals, and journalists, these demonstrations could never take place," one anarchist from Tel Aviv said. "Every week there would be fifty arrested and ten dead and pretty soon, no more protests."




















Thursday, December 31, 2009

Video Of Thurday's Gaza Solidarity Demonstration in Ramallah

Thousands Protest Gaza Siege as Egypt, Palestinian Authority Repress Demonstrations

Hundreds of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah rally in solidarity with the Gaza Freedom March on New Year's Eve Day

Ramallah -- Thousands of people in Egypt, the besieged Gaza Strip, Israel, and the occupied West Bank rallied on New Year's Eve Day to call for an end to the international blockade and siege of Gaza, but the protests were marred by police brutality in Cairo and the cancellation of a solidarity action in the occupied West Bank town of Tulkarm at the behest of the Palestinian Authority.

In Cairo, Egyptian riot police brutally beat Gaza Freedom March demonstrators who were unable to enter the Gaza Strip after the Egyptian government permitted less than 100 of the 1,350 participants from crossing the Rafah border into Gaza.

"Members of the Gaza Freedom March are being forcibly detained in hotels around town, in Lotus and Liala, as well as violently forced into pens in Tahrir Square by Egyptian police and additional security forces," Codepink said in a released statement.

"Reports of police brutality are flooding a delegate legal hotline faster than the legal support team can answer the calls. The reports span from women being kicked, beaten to the ground and dragged into pens, at least one confirmed account of broken ribs, and many left bloody."

Lara Elborno, a Palestinian-American, University of Iowa alumni, and law student at Loyola University in Chicago confirmed the reports.

"They broke a guy's rib," Elborno said from Cairo. "They beat people with walkie talkies. My sister Dana got her camera taken and they stole the card with her pictures on it. Five security forces surrounded her and threw her to the ground. They pulled her hair and punched and kicked her. This is only one of many stories."



In the Gaza Strip, about 100 international solidarity activists joined 500 Palestinians living in Gaza for a rally and march denouncing the blockade. About 1,000 Israeli Arabs and Israeli Jews demonstrated on the Israeli side of the Erez border crossing, according to Haaretz.

In the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, more than 250 Palestinians rallied in solidarity with the Free Gaza March during an event organized by the Palestinian Popular Committees of the West Bank.

“We are calling on the people of Palestine to work together to end the occupation,” said Iyad Burnat, a community organizer with the Bil'in Committee for Popular Resistance Against the Wall and Settlements. “Only by uniting the resistance can we succeed."

But the demonstration in Ramallah was curtailed after the Palestinian Authority prohibited the rally from marching through the city. And a similar solidarity action in the West Bank city of Turkarm, near the Northwest border with Israel, was cancelled after the Palestinian Authority prohibited the demonstration from taking place.

"As you know, this rally and march was supposed to be held today in solidarity with other demonstrations to protest the siege in Gaza," said Abdul Kareem, a community organizer with the Turkarm Popular Committee. "Unfortunately the Palestinian Authority has forbidden this demonstration."

"The P.A. has their own point of view and it is wrong," Kareem continued. "They say this demonstration is supporting Hamas, and they say they don't want to add more tension with Israel after the attacks in Nablus last week. They support Gaza in behind closed-door meetings and in public speeches, but they will not support Gaza on the streets."

Some organizers say that the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority is actually attempting to co-opt the Gaza Freedom March movement by holding celebrations marking the 45th anniversary of its founding on the same day as the solidarity demonstrations. Although the Free Gaza protest in Ramallah was attended by most of Palestine's largest political parties, Fatah banners were noticeably absent. Fatah held a seperate rally at a different time and location.

About 100 Palestinian Christians also attended a candle-light vigil for Gaza in Manger Square in Bethlehem.

The Gaza Freedom March and the Palestinian Popular Committees of the West Bank are demanding an immediate end to the blockade of Gaza, a form of collective punishment which has essentially turned the Gaza Strip into an open-air prison for its 1.5 million inhabitants.

The New Year's Eve Day protests were scheduled to mark the one-year anniversary of Israel's Operation: Cast Lead massacre in Gaza that killed more than 1,300 people and wounded more than 5,000.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Palestinian Popular Committees Call For Solidarity Actions With The Gaza Freedom March

The Palestinian Popular Committees of the West Bank are calling for non-violent popular demonstrations throughout the West Bank tomorrow, Thursday, December 31 to mark the one-year anniversary of Israel’s Operation Cast Lead massacre against the people of the Gaza Strip, when more than 1300 people were killed and over 5000 injured during the 23-day assault.

The demonstrations are organized as solidarity actions with the Gaza Freedom March.

“We are calling on the people of Palestine to work together to end the occupation,” says Iyad Burnat, a community organizer with the Bil'in Committee for Popular Resistance Against the Wall and Settlements. “Only by uniting the resistance can we succeed."

The Palestinian Popular Committees of the West Bank are demanding an immediate end to the blockade of Gaza, a form of collective punishment which has essentially turned the Gaza Strip into an open-air prison for its 1.5 million inhabitants, over half to two-thirds of whom are listed as "food insecure" by the United Nations.

For more information about the effect of the siege on the people of Gaza, go here.

Solidarity demonstrations with the Gaza Freedom March will be held in the West Bank cities of Ramallah, Tulkarm, Jenin, and Bethlehem. I'll be attending the actions in both Tulkarm and Ramallah tomorrow and will post a report-back with photos and video as soon as I can.

Video of night raid in Bil'in. 12.29.2009

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Israeli Occupation Forces Arrest Two Village Youth During Night Raid In Bil'in Early Tuesday Morning

Israeli Occupation Forces arrested two village youth from the small West Bank village of Bil'in early Tuesday morning during a night raid operation there around 2:30 am.

Lookouts with the Bil'in Committee for Popular Resistance Against the Wall and Settlements spotted Israeli soldiers near the Southwest gates of the town as well as in the Western groves of olive trees around 1am Tuesday morning and quickly mobilized the rest of the night patrol team.

"We do not have enough people to try and stop them tonight, David," Haitham Al-Katib, the Media Coordinator for Friends of Freedom and Justice Bil'in, told me. "Tonight you are not an activist, ok? Tonight you are a photographer. We will show the world the truth about what is happening here."

Hamoda Iymad Yassen and Khalil Abraham Yassen, 16, were arrested at their homes around 2:30am Tuesday morning.

More than 30 Bil'in residents have been arrested since June during a night-raid campaign conducted by apartheid state security forces in an apparent attempt to disrupt the nonviolent resistance activities of the Bil'in Committee for Popular Resistance Against the Wall and Settlements.

The Bil'in Popular Committee organizes weekly demonstrations at the Apartheid Wall near their village to protest the annexation of more than 60 percent of their land to Israel.









Monday, December 28, 2009

U.S. Official Criticizes Israeli Construction In Occupied East Jerusalem

Haaretz has a good article in today's paper titled Israel plan to build in East Jerusalem harms peace process, says U.S. official.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plan to construct an additional 700 apartments in East Jerusalem is another blow to already stalled peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, a U.S. official said on Monday.

"We feel that unilateral actions make it harder for people to get back together at the table, and that's what our goals are," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity pending a formal reaction from Washington.

Read the whole thing here.

Related: Young Left mobilizes around Sheikh Jarrah protests