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Israeli occupation forces, settlers storm West Bank cities, villages

Palestine Information Center – 20/04/2011

QALQILIA — Israeli occupation forces (IOF) stormed the city of Qalqilia on Wednesday, detained citizens, and questioned them before handing six of them summonses to the intelligence headquarters.

Local sources said that IOF troops in four army vehicles entered the city in the company of an intelligence officer ad picked a number of young men at random and questioned them.

IOF soldiers arrested a Palestinian youth in Bardala village, east of Tubas city, at a roadblock on its entrance on Wednesday. They later burst into the village and stole the car of a 55-year-old Palestinian man before leaving the village. Similar roadblocks were installed east and west of Jenin city but no arrests were reported.

The soldiers in Awarta village installed electricity poles east of the village, its municipal council chairman Qaid Awad said in a radio statement. He added that the electricity poles would be used to supply power to a number of settlers’ caravans in addition to an army base to be pitched on 1000 dunums of village lands that were earlier confiscated. Awad warned that the IOA was planning to confiscate 4000 more dunums of the village land.

Meanwhile, eyewitnesses in Burin village, south of Nablus, said that dozens of Jewish settlers entered the village in buses on Wednesday morning.

Locals warned of possible attacks after the settlers on Tuesday assaulted and wounded a farmer. The head of the municipal council in the village said that the settlers were planning to set up a settlement outpost south of Nablus near the village.

April 20, 2011 Posted by | Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism, Illegal Occupation, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

Israeli army blocks access by car to Palestinian neighborhood with more than 150 residents

B’Tselem | April 14, 2011

The village of Khirbet a-Deir, which lies next to the village of Tuqu’, is built on both sides of Route 356 that connects Bethlehem and Hebron. On 9 February 2011, a bulldozer accompanied by two army jeeps laid dirt piles and boulders at the two entrances to the Abu Ghassan neighborhood, which is the northern section of the village, and at the entrance to the nearby village of al-Halqum, thus blocking access by car through these entrances. The action was taken without informing the residents in advance and without explanation.

Residents of Abu Ghassan carry provisions on foot. Photo: Suha Zeid, B'Tselem, 10 Feb. '11.
Residents of Abu Ghassan carry provisions on foot. Photo: Suha Zeid, B’Tselem, 10 Feb. ’11.

Following firm exchanges between residents and representatives of the Civil Administration, the army opened the entrance to al-Halqum the same day. The entrances to the Abu Ghassan neighborhood remain closed. As a result, 150 people have been left with no ability to access their neighborhood by car.

Taysir Abu Mifrah, who works for the Tuqu’ Municipality, went to the Etzion Coordination and Liaison Office the day after the piles were laid, to find out why the entrances had been blocked. He was told that the action had been taken for security reasons, and also because the access roads are close to a dangerous curve in the main road.

A supply truck blocked from entering the village. 10 Feb. '11.
A supply truck blocked from entering the village. 10 Feb. ’11.

For more than a month now, residents of Abu Ghassan have had to leave their cars on the main road and climb over the dirt piles and boulders to reach home. They have to carry all shopping products, including gas canisters and animal feed, on their backs. As the village has no medical services whatsoever, residents have carry persons needing medical care over the piles and boulders to reach the main road. Children meeting the school bus are in danger, as they now have to walk out to the main road.

The blocking of car access to an entire neighborhood infringes the villagers’ rights to freedom of movement, to earning a livelihood, and to receiving medical treatment. On 14 April 2011, the Association for Civil Rights in Israel wrote to the military commander of Judea and Samaria, demanding that the blocks be removed immediately.

April 19, 2011 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism, Illegal Occupation, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

Israeli army used white phosphorous in latest attack on Gaza

Medical examinations point to the continued use of prohibited weapons by Israel in Gaza

Saleh Naami | Al-Ahram | 18 Apr 2011

The head of the justice department’s medical examiner’s office in the Gaza Strip, Ihab Keheal, has stated that examinations conducted by his office have unveiled evidence indicating that the Israeli army used white phosphorous and other internationally prohibited weapons in its latest operation in Gaza.

Making his comments in a press statement released Monday, Keheal said that the bodies of Palestinians killed in the latest escalations were torn apart and charred to the extent that they were barely recognizable.

Keheal added that his office was conducting delicate tests to discover the instruments used by the occupation army in its operations on civilians, including weapons and chemical munitions forbidden under international law.

The Palestinian Ministry of Justice, according to Keheal, is in contact with committees responsible for documenting war crimes as well as Palestinian and international rights organizations.

He hopes the reports issued by his office could be used to try the Israeli occupation for its crimes in an international court of justice.

In this way, explained Keheal, it is of the utmost importance that the world is aware that the occupation forces persist in using internationally forbidden weaponry against Palestinian civilians. He called on the world to take responsibility and protect civilians especially in light of Israel’s renewed threats of launching military operations on the Gaza Strip.

In the aftermath of Operation Cast Lead, which claimed the lives of 1,400 Palestinians, most of which were civilians, Israel admitted using white phosphorous against civilian targets in the strip.

April 19, 2011 Posted by | Subjugation - Torture, War Crimes | Leave a comment

Palestinian Prisoners’ Day

Tania Kepler for the Alternative Information Center | 17 April 2011

Today, 17 April, is Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. The day commemorates the release of Palestinian prisoner Mahmoud Hijazi in the first prisoners’ exchange between the Palestinians and the Israelis in 1974.

This year Palestinian Prisoners’ Day comes in the midst of a wave of mass and arbitrary arrests by the Israeli military forces in the West Bank village of Awarta, following the murders of 5 family members in the nearby settlement of Itamar.

So far more than 500 men, women and children have been arrested, questioned, detained, and asked to sign statements in Hebrew, a language they do not understand.

While most villagers were released within hours of their arrest, 50 still remain in detention without charges, including two children, according to the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights.

The situation for Palestinians in Israeli prisons is grim. According to ADDAMEER, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Rights NGO, over 6,800 Palestinians, from the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, and 1948 Palestine, are currently imprisoned by the Israeli state. Of those, over 300 are children, 34 are women, 18 are elected Palestinian representatives and almost 300 are ‘Administrative Detainees’ – that is they have been interned without trial not having been charged with any crime or seeing the secret evidence against them.

The prisoners are being detained in 17 prisons and detention centers; such as, Nafha, Ramon, Ashkelon, Beersheba, HaDarom, Gilboa, Shata, Al-Ramla, Damon, Hasharon, Naqab, Ofer and Megiddo.

Over four decades of illegal Israeli military occupation, Palestinians from all walks of life have been illegally detained by Israel. Since the beginning of the occupation in 1967, over 650,000 Palestinians have been detained by Israel, reports ADDAMEER.

An estimated 10,000 Palestinian women have been arrested and detained since 1967 under Israeli military orders, which govern nearly every aspect of life in the occupied Palestinian territory. As of 1 February 2011, 36 Palestinian women remain in Israel’s prisons and detention centers, including 3 women in administrative detention. The two prisons in which Palestinian women are detained are located outside the 1967 occupied territory, in direct contravention of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

Sign this petition to free all Palestinian Women Prisoners in Israeli Jails:

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/6/free-Palestinian-women-political-prisoners/

April 17, 2011 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Solidarity and Activism, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

Army arrests Hebron child after settlers attack home

Ma’an – 16/04/2011

HEBRON — Israeli soldiers detained a child from Hebron’s Old City after settlers attacked the boy’s home Saturday.

Mu’taz Al-Muhtaseb was beaten by soldiers and arrested, locals told Ma’an.

They added that Israeli forces came to the area after settlers from the illegal outpost Beit Hadasa attacked Mu’taz’s home.

An Israeli army spokesman confirmed that soldiers arrested a Palestinian but said that the army was unaware of any beating or unusual incidents since his arrest.

He also told Ma’an that the incident came after several Israeli civilians hurled rocks at a Palestinian house. “When an IDF force arrived at the scene, they dispersed,” the official said.

April 16, 2011 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

Teenage girl released from prison: Awarta

International Solidarity Movement | April 15, 2011

Late on Thursday afternoon sixteen year old Julia Manzen Awwad arrived back to the village of Awarta, following her release from Israeli military prison. She had been detained for five days after being arrested by force during an army raid on her family home in the early hours of Sunday morning. Upon arrest Julia was taken blindfolded and bound by her wrists and ankles to the military base at Huwwara, where she was detained for a night. She was then transferred to a military prison.

During her detention Julia was denied basic human rights and prevented from contacting either her family or a lawyer. Instead she was confined to a dark room and intensively interrogated about the murders of the Fogel family at Itamar, the nearby illegal settlement. Julia described being woken at regular intervals and asked the same questions repeatedly. Confused and frightened she answered that she knew nothing, only to be met with aggressive retorts accusing her of lying.

Ill treatment and abuses included the refusal of her request for a doctor when experiencing stomach pains, being fed food she described as fit for animals, and being handcuffed and marched to the toilet furthest from her cell. At times she was not even allowed to use the toilet. Prior to her release Julia was coerced into signing a document she could not understand and had wires attached to various parts of her body during a lie detector test.

Whilst Julia was welcomed by her mother, Noaf, and extended family members, she spoke of the sorrow she felt returning to her house as her brothers, George (20) and Hakim (17), along with their father, Mazen, still remain in custody. Her mother, who was also detained in the raid last weekend, was released on Monday.

Earlier in the day a demonstration organized by a local Palestinian womens group marched through Awarta in protest at the barbaric treatment of the community at the hands of the Israeli army over the last month. In a show of solidarity it finished outside the homes of other members of the Awwad family, which were ransacked and destroyed by soldiers in a raid last Monday night.

Since the brutal murder of five family members in Itamar settlement at the beginning of March the villagers of Awarta have been subjected to near continuous incursions by the Israeli army. Men and women, some in their 80s, and children, some as young and 14, have been arrested. Whilst many have been released after a few days, others, mainly men, remain in detention. On these early morning raids, the army fire sound grenades through windows prior to forcing their way into homes and brutalizing the occupants – regardless of age.

April 15, 2011 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

UK colonial atrocities in Kenya linked to current torture in Bahrain

Press TV – April 13, 2011

The British government is finally being forced to reveal the atrocities its predecessors committed during the Mau Mau war in Kenya in the 1950s.

The High Court in London launched proceedings to investigate a case brought up by four Kenyans who claimed they are victims of torture and assault at the hands of British colonial authorities during the Mau Mau uprising between 1952 and 1961.

Three men and one woman, in their 70s and 80s have come a distance 4,000 kilometers to give witness in the High Court in a session being held to unveil one of the black chapters in the British colonial history.

They have finally succeeded in forcing the British government to release documents, which reveal the true horror of atrocities which the UK colonial system committed against the revolutionaries during the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya in the 1950s and 60s.

Previously hidden documents contain 2,000 boxes of papers of which 300 are related to Kenya and of those 30 are directly relevant to the Mau Mau war of independence.

The papers show how much British colonial officers have been involved in employing the most cruel torture techniques against the Kenyans including beating and roasting the revolutionaries alive as well as severe sexual assaults and castration which they used as common and routine torture techniques.

Not all the revelations are new. The extensive torture and killing of Mau Mau fighters and detainees was documented by two historians, Caroline Elkins from Harvard and Oxford University’s David Lee Anderson in their 2005 books, Britain’s Gulag and Histories of the Hanged.

Prof Elkins’ book in particular gives a vivid account of the shocking crimes committed by the British, which, ironically, came only seven years after the end of the Second World War in which the British and their allies set out to end the torture and mass killings in Nazi Germany and occupied countries.

Prof Elkins says: “Hundreds of thousands were detained in squalid camps fenced off with barbed wire and subjected to horrific torture.”

The torture of some was as much psychological as it was physical. In one passage, Prof Elkins quotes a witness recalling the result of a colonial soldiers’ sweep through their village.

“At one point the villagers were ordered to remove every article of clothing and remain stark naked. You cannot start to imagine the shame and embarrassment we felt when … we were told to arrange ourselves in two rows, one for the men and the other for the women, old and young alike. To everyone’s horror we were ordered at gunpoint to embrace each other, man with a woman, regardless of whether the man happened to be your father, father-in-law or brother. It was all so humiliating that one woman hanged herself later, as she felt that she could not continue to live with the humiliating experience of having been forced to embrace her son-in-law while both of them were naked. In (Kikuyu) custom that is a curse.”

Now, five decades after these wicked and shameful incidents happened in Kenya, an infamous name from among mountains of documents is catching the eyes of Bahraini revolutionaries whom, themselves, have been victimized by his inhumane and vile measures.

Ian Henderson who served as the British Colonial Officer in Kenya, and was nicknamed “torturer in chief” in the African country moved to Bahrain in the late 1960s and acted as the country’s security chief for some 30 years.

Henderson established one of the most notorious security systems in Bahrain, by which thousands of activists have allegedly been detained and tortured in the most brutal ways.

George Galloway, the former British parliamentarian has described Henderson’s cooperation with al-Khalifa regime in Bahrain as follows.

“Henderson had gathered around him the kind of British dogs of war and mercenaries whose guns and electric shock equipment were for hire to anyone who will pay the price”, he said.

At the same time that the High Court in London investigates the case brought up by the Kenyan victims, Bahraini revolutionaries’ efforts to bring Henderson to justice have so far led to nowhere.

This is while Queen Elizabeth has honored the butcher of Bahrain and the Kenyan torturer-in-chief with the Knight medal as well as the Commander of the Order of the British Empire.

Now, the question remains whether these four old Kenyan nationals will be able to achieve their rights while British politicians “only” claim that they are supporting human rights? The question will be answered in future.

April 13, 2011 Posted by | Subjugation - Torture, Timeless or most popular | Leave a comment

Bahraini Bookshop Owner Dies under Torture while in Police Custody

Al-Manar | April 13, 2011

Abdul Karim Al-FakhrawiAbdul Kareem al-Fakhrawi, a prominent Bahraini businessman, was martyred on Tuesday due to severe torture while in prison, the opposition al-Wefaq group said.

Fakhrawi is the fourth Bahraini, tortured to death, since anti-government protests began in the country in mid-February. The 49-year-old businessman disappeared on or around April 4, when he went to file a police report against policemen who had earlier raided his home, reports said.

Fakhrawi had been a potential parliamentary candidate in Bahrain’s 2006 elections.

The circumstances surrounding his disappearance, detention, and death remain unclear but according to sources his brother identified the body at a local morgue. The Bahrain interior ministry has not commented on the incident.

Fakhrawi owned the Fakhrawi bookshop chain and was an investor in the independent daily al-Wasat.

His death comes just a day after Bahrain buried blogger Zakria Rashid al-Asherri, 40, martyred while in police custody.

Bahraini forces have severely suppressed the anti-regime protests with the help of Saudi, the UAE and Kuwaiti troops.

Signs of abuse on bodies of detained

In recent days Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) among other rights groups had criticized the Bahraini government crackdown.

“Bahrain should investigate the death in police custody of three people,” U.S.-based HRW said on Wednesday, saying one of the bodies bore signs of physical abuse.

The opposition says hundreds have been arrested and four have died in police custody over the past 10 days.

“It’s outrageous and cruel that people are taken off to detention and the families hear nothing until the body shows up with signs of abuse,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director for the New York-based group.

HRW said it had seen the body of Ali Saqer, one of the men who died in police custody, and that it bore signs of severe physical abuse.

Bahrain has accused human rights activist Nabeel Rajab, head of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, of doctoring pictures of the corpse. “We viewed Ali Saqer’s body just prior to his burial and its condition was exactly as shown in the photo that Nabeel Rajab circulated,” Stork said.

April 13, 2011 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Full Spectrum Dominance, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

Displaced indigenous Guatemalans, undaunted by war crimes, re-establish communities

Written by Emma Volonté, Translation by Alex Cachinero-Gorman | Upside Down World | 11 April 2011

Clinica Salvador Fajardo

“The CPRs [Communities of Popular Resistance] exist because the army has forced us to resist. We carry with us the scraps of bombs and bullets that you tried to kill us with. (…)You know very well that we are not guerrillas, but rather peasants, civilians; you know well how you have fired on our huts, which you’ve burned many times before (…) You have bombarded our communities, kidnapped thousands of our brothers; you have also ordered civilian patrols to stop us from setting up businesses (…). The Constitution gives us the right to resist when you place yourself above the reproach of civil society, when you persecute us, when you kidnap us illegally, when you have poisoned our rivers and tried to kill us by starvation.” ~ Message to the Guatemalan Army from the CPRs.

At first sight, CPR-Salvador Farjado (Petén) seems like any other community in Guatemala. A few small shops, a school, and houses made of wooden boards, out of which one can catch always smell that wafting, warm perfume—firewood being burnt in preparation for dinner.

About 400 families—hailing from Cobán, Santa Rosa, Alta Verapaz, Huehuetenango and Chimaltenango—now live in Salvador Fajardo, a meager human community carved out of a small portion of the Petén jungle. There, I got to know Ms. Elvira, who told me of her past and of the community’s history, which reflect the extreme extent of violence that Guatemala had seen until 1996.

The Guatemalan state has always been characterized as authoritarian, militarized, and managed by the ruling classes to serve their own interests. In the ’60s, various guerilla groups began to form as state violence and repression increased. These groups joined together as the URNG (Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity) in 1982.

The tension between guerrillas and the army intensified between ’78 and ’83: but the atrocious “scorched earth politics” advanced by the ‘Kaibiles‘ special operations unit, the PACs (Civilian Self Defense Patrols), and various paramilitary groups, showed clearly that the growing counter-insurgency effort was, without a doubt, disproportionately brutal.

According to the Historical Clarification Commission of Guatemala, the total sum of both dead and ‘disappeared’ during the conflict in Guatemala is over 200,000, 83% of which are indigenous Mayans. In their report, the Commission writes: “The great majority of these human rights violations were carried out viciously and in public. […] Assassinating defenseless boys and girls, on many occasions by throwing them against walls or tossing them into ditches alive, only later to be buried by the corpses of adults; the traumatic amputation or removing of limbs; assassination by being burned alive; disembowelment of still-living victims with others looking on; the internment of victims who had already been fatally tortured, and keeping them alive deliberately in a state of constant agony; the cutting open of pregnant womens’ stomachs. Extreme cruelty was consciously utilized as a technique to create a climate of terror in the population. The vast majority of victims of the State’s actions were not guerrilla combatants, but rather civilians.”

It is estimated that in the early ’80s, between 500,000 and 1 and a half million people were forced to flee from Guatemala because of the violence: of these, around 150,000 took refuge in Mexico, while the rest were condemned to continual, internal displacement within the country. Some of these internally displaced persons [IDPs] formed the CPRs: in Ixcán, in the high plateaus of Quiché (CPR Sierra), and in the Petén jungle. These then became the preferred target of military operations.

The CPR-Petén hid in the impenetrable snare that is the Lacandon Jungle, in a strip of Guatemalan land that borders the Eastern frontier of Chiapas. Ms. Elvira, who was originally displaced from the Santa Rosa District, lived there for 12 years. She gladly recounted her experience there, in what has come to be known as “the mountain” in Salvador Fajardo.

Back then, military incursions were so frequent that every morning the families of the CPR-Petén packed up the few things that they had so that they would be ready to flee at any moment. “We always had lookouts at four different points”, Ms. Elvira told me. “When the army arrived, a shot fired into the air was the signal that it was time to grab your suitcase and go. And the army would make incursions continually: sometimes every four days, at the very least every month. When they came, we had to escape, to go to some other part of the mountains—if we didn’t have enough time to take our things, they would just destroy everything. So we would set up camp somewhere else, because the army already knew where we’d settled and would check to see if we came back—that’s why you would never return to the same encampment.”

Ms. Elvira told me about the difficulties she faced in those years, of the constant fear, of a solidarity of both the community and hunger. One ate what the jungle gave you: roots, plants, and fruits. Some managed to get into Mexico to get food—“a bit limited”, Ms. Elvira emphasizes. “Sometimes when community members walked around they would come across milpas [small crop fields] and they would steal a little bit of corn to feed their children…there were a lot of children in the mountain. We cooked what little bit of corn they took: we would walk around with a mill and a pot, and wherever you came across corn you would grind it right there. We would make little balls of dough out of it and then wrap it in leaves. Then we would go look for a place to eat safely, each person with their own portion tucked away in their bag, but you couldn’t light a fire in the daytime, because there was always a plane hovering over the mountain—if it detected the smoke from a campfire, it would drop bombs on the whole encampment. So we would cook at night.”

After the final offensive in 1992, the displaced families of CPR-Petén realised that the army would no longer be as vigilant of their presence, and that they had the possibility to settle down in the Lacandon Jungle. There they founded four communities: Fajardo, Esmeralda, Virgilio, and Albeño, where they sowed milpa fields and vegetable gardens. They also decided to begin pressuring the government to award them a finca [agricultural plot of land] so that they could leave the jungle and begin life anew.

It was in 1998 that the CPR-Petén founded a community in memory of Salvador Fajardo in Santa Rita, after the “Firm and Lasting Peace Agreement” (1996) was signed. Fajardo was a community member who, in the ’80s, after the umpteenth flight to the jungle, offered to return to the encampment to retrieve their pots and pans. When he arrived, he found that the army had already taken all except one pot, which was sitting in the middle of a campfire. When he lifted it up, it exploded—a mine had been planted beneath the firewood.

“When we came here we didn’t bring anything with us, because we had nothing to bring, but after being here for awhile many organizations supported us”, Ms. Elvira told me. “The only governmental institution that gave us a little bit of support was FONAPAZ [National Peace Fund]: they helped by giving us food, but it wasn’t much. Everything we have was possible because of support from international organizations: the preschool and elementary school, the clinic, the radio station, the store. But the government did not fulfill its promises—the only thing it followed up on was building a mechanical well to secure a water supply. And sure, they bore the well; they even bought a bomb to clear it out but in the end it didn’t serve us well: after three months it was completely dry and we were left without water. The municipality didn’t help us either, instead claiming we were guerrillas—they discriminated against us.”

Many have accused members of the CPRs of being part of the UNRG, but they have always responded that they have only ever served as bases of support for the guerrillas, whom they guaranteed a place to eat and rest. In exchange, the UNRG offered an indispensable service to the CPRs: “the guerrillas defended us, because in reality, if the guerrillas were not around, the army would have annihilated us already. They were with us; they knew that there were people, women and children, elders, defenseless people here. It was when they neglected us, when they retreated from the surrounding area, that the army would come in. But as long as they were with us, nothing would happen to us”, said Ms. Elvira—a very special woman indeed.

April 12, 2011 Posted by | Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism, Subjugation - Torture, Timeless or most popular, War Crimes | Leave a comment

Director of Jerusalem Media Center Detained by Israeli Troops

By Saed Bannoura – IMEMC News – April 12, 2011

After filming an Israeli jeep blocking traffic and driving through pedestrians in Silwan neighborhood, in East Jerusalem, Muhammed Sadeq of the Jerusalem Media Center was detained by Israeli forces, then released soon after.

The neighborhood of Silwan has become a flashpoint for joint Palestinian-Israeli nonviolent protests against home demolitions and settler takeovers of Palestinian homes. The area was designated by the Jerusalem municipality five years ago, in the Jerusalem E1 Plan, as an area where the indigenous Palestinians would be removed, and Israeli Jewish settlers moved in. The municipality also plans to construct a Biblical Theme Park on the site of the historic homes and buildings, after it demolishes many of the homes.

According to local sources, Muhammed Sadeq was detained along with Fakhri Abu Diab, who is the leader of a non-governmental organization in Jerusalem known as the al-Bustan Committee.

They were questioned by an Israeli soldier, who took their IDs and held the men until a crowd gathered demanding their release. After several hours, the two men were released.

A number of people known as ‘leaders’ in the non-violent struggle in Silwan neighborhood have been detained and abducted by Israeli forces in recent days. Last week, Jawad Siyam, the head of the Wadi Hilweh Information Center, was held in Israeli custody until his wife agreed to come in and be interrogated. Such coercion of witnesses is considered illegal under international law.

April 12, 2011 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

14 year old girl taken in the latest wave of Awarta arrests

11 April 2011 | International Solidarity Movement
Halaa aged 6, kicked by soldiers as they raided her home

On Saturday night the Israeli army once again raided Awarta, putting the village under curfew for the fifth time since the murder in the illegal settlement of Itamar on 11th March. Awarta is situated next to Itamar and has endured a constant military presence for a month now.

According to the village mayor Qays Awwad, 23 people were arrested in the latest night raids; 20 males and three females.

One of the females arrested on Saturday night was 14 year old Julia Mazen Awwad, who was taken from her home together with her mother and father; Noaf and Mazen Awwad. Two days earlier, her two brothers; George and Hakeem were arrested, leaving only the smallest children not in Israeli custody. They were left alone after the latest arrests and were taken care of by one of the family’s neighbors until their mother was released Monday morning. Their sister, brothers and father remain in Israeli custody.

One of the families that had their home raided is the family of Muhammad Fawsi Awwad. At 4 am, while Muhammad was sleeping in his brothers home, Israeli soldiers awoke his sleeping wife and six children by throwing sound bombs through every window of the house. After entering the house, the soldiers forced the family to go outside and to sit on the ground while they were still in their pyjamas. One of the daughters, Halaa, who is six years old, was kicked by the soldiers in the process. Her brother, Amjad, 19 years old, was locked inside the bathroom where he had to stay for six hours, while the soldiers completely destroyed his family’s home from the inside. International activists who came to the house after the soldiers had left witnessed the devastation: windows, mirrors and photo frames had been smashed, wardrobes and beds were broken, the washing machine made useless, the bathroom sink was completely demolished, school books were ripped into pieces and oil poured into the sugar supply.

After destroying the family’s home, the soldiers arrested the sons – Majdi Awwad (20), Amjad (19) and Hakam (18) and took them to the Huwwara military base together with their father. The remaining children and their mother have no place to sleep since their beds have been destroyed and the children are too scared to stay in their home.

Windows smashed by sound bombs in the night
Windows smashed by sound bombs in the night

At 5 am, the soldiers arrived to Muhammad’s brother’s home. Hassan Fawsi Awwad and his family were also woken by sound bomb being thrown through their windows before the soldiers entered the house. The soldiers only stayed for 30 minutes, but managed to destroy the family’s washing machine and to pour sand and flour on the floor, before they arrested Hassan and left. This is the second time Hassan has been arrested since the beginning of the curfews. According to his wife Iman, and other eyewitnesses, he was blindfolded and handcuffed before he was forced to walk the road up the center of the village, the soldiers beating and kicking him along the way.

Ayoub Mustafa Daraoshi, 22 years old, was taken from his home at 10 am Sunday morning. According to his mother and his brother, who witnessed the arrest, the soldiers poured petrol on the piece of fabric they used to blindfold Ayoub with. After being blindfolded and handcuffed, he was dragged out on the ground just outside the house where he was beaten and kicked by the soldiers for an hour. At half-past midnight the night before, the soldiers had also arrested his 13- year- old brother Naje. He was forced to walk up to the center of the village where he was put in a military jeep and taken to the police station in the illegal Israeli settlement of Ariel. Naje, who was accused of throwing stones at military jeeps was kept in custody for five hours and questioned without his parents, or any lawyer being present, before he was released, contravening both international and Israeli law.

Since the brutal murder of five member of a settler family in the nearby illegal Israeli settlement of Itamar, hundreds of Awarta residents have been arrested, amongst them elderly, women and children. Some have been released after a couple of hours while others have remained in Israeli custody for almost a month, without being charged with any crime.


Sink torn off the wall

April 11, 2011 Posted by | Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment

Rights group calls for monitoring of mass Awarta arrests

Ma’an – April 11, 2011

RAMALLAH — The Ramallah-based rights group Addameer issued a call Sunday for international observation and intervention over the mass arrest campaigns being carried out in the West Bank village of Awarta by Israeli forces.

Sunday morning another nine men and women were detained, bringing to five the number of arrest raids, which rounded up a combined 600-700 residents since 11 March, when five settlers were murdered in their beds, including two children and an infant.

Israel’s investigation of the killings appears to be centered on Awarta village residents, though no suspects have been identified and the case remains under gag-order.

“These arrests have taken place despite the fact that no evidence has been brought forth to indicate that the murders are related to Awarta, suggesting a campaign of collective punishment against the village,” Addameer said in a statement.

The statement said 55 villagers remain in detention, are being held without charge, and include two under the age of 18.

“The arrest procedures also raised serious concerns,” the organization said, citing reports of detention of the elderly, sick and pregnant, saying they were “unlikely candidates for the brutal murders.”

Addameer said it was concerned that “no female soldiers were present and no arrest warrants were presented during the arrest operation,” adding that home-to-home searches lasted up to three hours, and residents were harassed by masked soldiers who used sniffer dogs to search homes, terrorizing families.

“The women’s treatment at the Huwwara Detention Center fell short of basic requirements of international law,” the center further accused, saying many of were arrested in their night gowns, were held in barracks used as military sleeping quarters, and were interrogated repeatedly.

“They were then asked to sign a 2-page statement in Hebrew, a language they do not understand, and threatened with prolonged detention if they chose not to sign it,” the organization said, adding that no lawyers were present for the duration.

In response to the violations cited by the organization, they asked that international observers be installed in the village to monitor the situation in Awarta.

April 11, 2011 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Subjugation - Torture | Leave a comment