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US Groups Demand that Israel End Crackdown on Palestinian Protesters
Protests and Boycotts Targeting Illegal Israeli Policies Must Not be Criminalized
FROM: Adalah-NY: info at adalahny.org CodePink: Women for Peace: codepinknyc at gmail.com Jewish Voice for Peace: info at jewishvoiceforpeace.org The US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation: media at endtheoccupation.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 19, 2010, New York, NY - Israel must end a wave of
arrests of Palestinian civil society members who are organizing
protests and boycotts opposing Israeli rights violations, Adalah-NY, CodePink: Women for
Peace, Jewish Voice for
Peace and the US Campaign to End the
Israeli Occupation said today. While prominent protest and
boycott organizers from the Palestinian organization Stop the Wall
Jamal Juma’ and
Mohammad Othman
were released last week after nearly one and four months of detention
respectively, nightly arrests continue in the West Bank, with eight
more arrests on January 18th in the village of
Ni’lin.
“International
campaigns
forced Israel to release Jamal Juma’ and Mohammad
Othman,” said Rebecca Vilkomerson, National Director of Jewish Voice
for Peace, “and civil society and governments need to continue to
pressure Israel to end its effort to crush civilian protests and
boycotts targeting Israeli human rights
abuses.”
Israeli settlements built on occupied
Palestinian land violate international law. Israel’s wall, where built
inside the West Bank, was ruled a violation of international law by the
International Court of Justice in 2004. Eighty-seven percent of the
wall has been built on Palestinian land in the West Bank, separating
villages from their farmland and facilitating settlement
expansion.
Thirty-four residents from the village of
Bil’in, which
has conducted a five-year protest, boycott and legal campaign against
the Wall, have been arrested since June 23, 2009. Abdallah Abu
Rahmah, the Coordinator of Bil’in’s Popular Committee against
the Wall and Settlements, was arrested on December 10th. Despite his
outspoken
advocacy
of peaceful protest, Abu Rahmah has been charged by
Israeli authorities with “incitement” for organizing protests that
include stonethrowing, with throwing stones, and with the Orwellian
charge of “weapons possession” for building a peace sign out of spent
Israeli tear-gas canisters and bullet casings fired by soldiers at
Bil’in protesters.
Another leader of Bil’in’s
Popular Committee and advocate
of
nonviolent protest, Mohammad Khatib, was
arrested on charges of stone throwing and incitement on
August 3, 2009. Khatib was released on bail while his case is tried
after proving that a photograph purporting to show him throwing stones
was taken when Khatib was in another country. At a hearing, Khatib’s
teenage nephew stated that Israeli interrogators coerced him into
signing a statement incriminating Khatib by threatening him with
assault. As a bail condition, Khatib must report
to a police station at the time of Bil’in
protests.
Mohammed Khatib and Abdallah Abu
Rahmah are among the founders of the new Popular Struggle Coordination
Committee (PSCC) which aims to coordinate actions of a number
of West Bank towns in demonstrations, as well as supporting boycott,
divestment and sanctions.
Israeli soldiers arrested
Adeeb Abu Rahmah, a
taxi driver from Bil’in, on July 10 on charges of incitement,
disturbing public order, and entering a closed military zone, though
fellow protesters say they have never seen him engage in violence or
urge anyone else to do so. “Incitement” is defined under Israel
military law as “attempting, whether verbally or otherwise, to
influence public opinion in the area in a way that may disturb the
public peace or public order.”
Nancy Kricorian from
CodePink explained, “Israeli settlements and Israel’s wall violate
international law. The route of Israel’s wall has even been ruled
illegal by Israel’s Supreme Court in places like Bil’in. Therefore,
it’s absurd to charge protest organizers with incitement for attempting
to organize peaceful protests to save their land from illegal Israeli
actions.”
Since the start of regular civilian
protests by the village of Ni’lin in May 2008, five residents have been
killed by the Israeli military and 106 arrested. On January 12th, Israeli
soldiers
arrestedIbrahim Amirah and Hassan Mousa, respectively the Coordinator and a
member of Ni’lin’s Popular Committee Against the Wall and Settlements,
and Ni’lin activist Zaydoun
Srour. On January 15th, Israeli soldiers invaded
the
village of Al Ma’asara, a site of weekly peaceful
demonstrations for over three years, surrounded the houses of Popular
Committee members Mohammed
Barjiya and Mahmoud
Zwahre, and threatened them with repercussions if they did
not stop the village’s protests.
On the night of
December 9, 2009, Israeli soldiers arrested Wa’el Al
Faqeeh, a nonviolent organizer from Nablus. Those who know Al
Faqeeh say that he has worked tirelessly in defense of human rights and
to promote the strategy of Palestinian non-violent resistance. Al
Faqeeh has been detained without charge, and will be tried in a
military court on January 28th.
The newly released
Stop the Wall
detainees Othman
and Juma’ were held
without charges, based on secret evidence they were unable to view.
Juma’, the Coordinator of Stop the Wall, and Othman, an employee there,
have both organized protests in the West Bank against Israel’s wall,
and advocated for local and international campaigns for Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions (BDS) against Israel and businesses supporting
Israeli human rights abuses. Othman is from Jayyous, a West Bank
village which has been protesting since 2002, when Israel’s wall cut
off 75% of the village’s farmland in order to facilitate the planned
expansion of the Zufim
settlement
owned by Israeli billionaire Lev
Leviev.
According
to
Amnesty International, the conditions Israel imposed for
Othman’s release “appear intended to prevent or deter him from
continuing to campaign” against Israel’s wall. Othman has been
forbidden from traveling abroad, and must report to police immediately
when summoned. Othman was arrested in September on his return from
Norway, where he had been speaking against Israel’s wall and calling
for BDS against Israel. The Norwegian government had just announced
that it had divested
from
the company Elbit Systems, which provided surveillance
systems for Israel’s wall.
Palestinian civilian
protests are typically met with rubber-coated steel bullets, tear gas,
clubs and sometimes live ammunition by Israeli soldiers, resulting in
injuries and even deaths. Despite protest organizers’ admonitions, some
protesters sometimes throw stones at Israeli soldiers, and some
soldiers have been injured. Many of the arrested Palestinian protesters
have been charged by Israel with
stonethrowing.
"Israel breaks international law by
building settlements and the wall on occupied Palestinian land. Israeli
soldiers use lethal violence against unarmed demonstrators," explained
Riham Barghouti of Adalah-NY. "It is these soldiers who should be
arrested for their human rights violations and not Palestinian youth
who throw stones to protest the theft of their land."
TAKE
ACTION:
Demand that Israel Release Abdallah Abu
Rahmah
* send a letter to President
Obama and the US Consulate via
Jewish
Voice for Peace. * send a letter to Israel’s
Military Advocate General via
Amnesty
International.
Demand that Israel Release Wael Al
Faqeeh - send a letter to the US
Consulate and to the High Representative of the European Union for
Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.
CLICK
HERE for more actions you can take to support Abdallah Abu
Rahmah and the Palestinian Popular Struggle Coordination
Committee.
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