NPK-info 28-07-2005 - Nederlands
Palestina Komitee / www.palestina-komitee.nl
______________________________________________________________________
De muur
- One year on: The illegality of the Wall
Correct link: http://electronicintifada.net/bytopic/384.shtml
- One year after the ICJ – The G8 and World Bank Cementing
Israeli Apartheid and Occupation
Analysis, The Grassroots Palestinian Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign,
July 7th, 2005
http://stopthewall.org/analysisandfeatures/960.shtml
- Vandaag actie
SOS – Stop the Wall! / zie hierna
http://www.palsolidarity.org/main/2005/07/27/sos-%e2%80%93-stop-the-wall/
RIGHTS-MIDEAST: Israeli Soldiers "Getting Away With Murder"
- HRW
Katherine Stapp
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=29188
Palestina-Karavaan
- Update http://www.vredessite.nl/nieuws/2005/
- TV zondag: http://nmo.omroep.nl/cgi/nmo/?s=4&id=10&e=496
- Naast het NOS-journaal attendeerde het NPK Netwerk en NOVA op
"de muur", zie hierna.
Onderin actueel nieuws [van ISM] over geweldloos verzet tegen de
bezetting.
Europese Sanctie-campagne vanwege Israel’s bezettingspolitiek
http://www.against-the-wall.org/rubrique.php3?id_rubrique=5
Op de site van deze vanwege 1 jaar genegeerd ICJ-advies gestarte
campagne komt z.s.m. meer toelichting.
NPK/WL, 28-7-2005
______________________________________________________________________
SOS – Stop the Wall!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
RAMALLAH, Occupied West Bank — Black smoke will be seen
rising at 10 a.m. on Thursday July 28 along the path of the Apartheid
Wall in the central West Bank region from Marda to Qalandia as
an SOS to the world to take action to stop Israel’s annexation
of land, and imprisonment of the Palestinian people.
In an era that witnessed the forces
of freedom and world peace bring an end to the ideology and policies
of racial segregation in South Africa and the United States, where
the international community is focused on the defense of human
rights, the Israeli Occupying Power continues building a of racial
segregation which threatens the development of civilized humanity
and violates international human rights law.
The International Court of Justice
on July 9, 2004 issued an advisory opinion on the legality of
the wall Israel is building in the Occupied Palestinian Territories,
declaring it illegal, stating it “must come down. “To
date, Israel continues to confiscate Palestinian land, demolish
trees and erect a wall that locks Palestinians into ghettos, cutting
them off from their source of livelihood and from each other.
Behind the smokescreen of the Gaza
disengagement, the very foundations of peace are destroyed as
the Apartheid continues to be constructed to the deafening silence
of the international community. On Thursday, July 28 the people
of the Salfit, Ramallah and northwest Jerusalem villages who have
been using nonviolent resistance to combat the Wall from Marda
(Salfit) to Budrus (Ramallah), Biddu (NW Jerusalem) to Bil’in
(Ramallah), will light rubber tires on fire along the path of
the Wall sending up an SOS to the world — STOP THE WALL!
We will also be placing black ribbons
on our cars to symbolize the oppression, sadness and death caused
by this Apartheid Wall. We call on those who see and hear us around
the world to use this black ribbon to spread the word about the
destruction and new Apartheid created with this Black Wall and
to join the efforts of the Palestinian people, along with Israeli
peace activists and people from around the world who seek true
peace in this region.
For more information please contact:
054-792-4952 or 0599-57-52-57.
______________________________________________________________________
[*] Bijgaande attendering is ook Netwerk toegezonden.
----- Original Message -----
From: Wim Lankamp
To: Redactie/TV NOVA
Cc: NPK
Sent: Sunday, July 24, 2005 1:16 PM
Subject: Internationaal Gerechtshof en VN over "de muur"
2004-2005
Beste NOVA-redactie
Deze al bijna voorbije julimaand
valt te bedenken dat een jaar geleden "de muur" werd
veroordeeld door het Internationaal Gerechtshof te Den Haag [9-7-2004]
en door de Algemene Vergadering van de VN [21-7-2004].
Uitgesproken werd toen wat gedaan moest worden door de VN-lidstaten
en met name door Israel [afbreken muur, nederzettingen, ...].
Inmiddels weten we dat ook deze
volkenrechtelijk geldende uitspraken worden genegeerd met daarbij
gedoogsteun van de nederlandse regering, "gastvrouw/heer"
van het Internationaal Gerechtshof.
We hopen dat u aan dit feit aandacht kan en wil geven; voor het
volkenrecht is het immers nooit komkommertijd.
Het zou goed zijn daarbij dan ook aandacht te geven aan de al
vele vele maanden durende dagelijkse geweldloze demonstraties
tegen "de muur" [*] en de doorgaande bouw daarvan [inclusief
verwoestingen en geweld].
Het gaat daarbij om demonstraties door Palestijnen, anti-kolonistische
Israeli's en mensen van velerlei nationaliteiten. Die laatsten
voor zover ze worden toegelaten; zie http://www.vredessite.nl/nieuws/2005/
[Vredeskaravaan naar Palestina] over het niet toelaten van Europese
vredesactivisten.
En zie vooral http://www.stopthewall.org/ en http://www.palsolidarity.org/.
We constateren dat Israel sanctieloos kan doorgaan met de bouw
van de muur en uitbouw van nederzettingen in de bezette West-Bank
en bezet Oost-Jeruzalem terwijl alle camera's bijna uitsluitend
zijn gericht op de Gazastrook.
Wellicht herkent u iets van 't beeld van dat konijn in het duister
en die lamp?
Vriendelijke groeten
Wim Lankamp, Nederlands Palestina Komitee
www.palestina-komitee.nl
[*] zoals http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article4027.shtml
P.S. Zie ook o.a. http://www.miftah.org/
______________________________________________________________________
----- Original Message -----
From: "International Solidarity Movement" <neta_golan@yahoo.com>
To: <palsolidarity@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2005 3:38 PM
Subject: [palsolidarity] ISM DIGEST: Israeli military targets
leaders of nonviolent resisistance
1. Israeli military targeting Palestinian leaders of non-violent
resistance: update on three such leaders.
2. Crackdown on peace activists in West Bank
3. SWEDISH ACTIVIST APPREHENDED AT TEL AVIV AIRPORT
4. A West Bank village opts for peaceful protest to broach the
Wall
5. Agricultural buildings in West Bank village demolished for
Israel's illegal wall
6. SOS - Stop the Wall!
7. Trio of protests against the wall set for communities across
the
West Bank
8. SWEDISH ACTIVIST APPREHENDED AT TEL AVIV AIRPORT
**************************************************
1. Israeli military targeting Palestinian
leaders of non-violent
resistance: update on three such leaders.
ACTION ALERT
27 July 2005
Abdullah Abu-Rahme
Abu-Rhame was arrested in a nonviolent protest on July 15,
2005. A Judge at Ofer military base on Tuesday, July 26, ruled
that
Abu-Rhame was "too dangerous" to be released on bail
and that he will
be held until the end of the proceeding against him.
Abdullah is a prominent leader
in the Bil'in Popular Committee Against the Wall and Settlements
which organizes regular non-violent
demonstrations. When he was arrested, he was inside a large prop
constructed to look like a bridge along with Israeli and foreign
peace activists that carried a banner which read "peace needs
bridges not walls." According to the evidence provided by
the prosecution, he was arrested shortly after making the statement
"I'm not leaving, this is my home. You go back to Tel Aviv."
He has been charged with assaulting a police officer, incitement,
and disrupting public order.
In his initial statement, arresting
Officer Yitzchaki claimed Abu-Rhame, hit him in the throat with
his elbow and tried to grab his
weapon. However, during his third questioning when asked if he
was sure that Abu-Rhame tried to take his gun "on purpose."
He replied
that he was not. The charge of trying to grab the weapon was subsequently
dropped but surprisingly the rest of the testimony by
Officer Yitzchaki was not brought into question. The other two
charges remain vague.
Video footage clearly illustrating
Abdullaha's innocence had no effect on the judge. What becomes
obvious is that Abu-Rhame was actually arrested for organizing
non violent resistance to Israel's annexation barrier in a peaceful
manner that clearly illustrated the structure's illegality. His
Attorney Tamar Peleg will appeal the decision.
Tamer Al-Khatib:
Arrested in a nonviolent action against the wall on July 20, 2005.
Al-Khatib was released on 2,000 shekels bail July 26. He was also
ordered to stay at least 300 meters from the wall's route for
the next 30 days by a military judge at Ofer military base.
Tamer was arrested after being
beaten out of a metal cylinder that he locked himself into on
the route of the wall in the West Bank village
of Bil'in along with a group of foreign activists including Israelis.
They were all charged with attacking Israeli soldiers.
Video footage taken at the protest
absolved Israeli and international activists. Although given a
chance to be released the same day, they
declined. They chose to stay in jail in solidarity with Tamer
who was transferred to a military detention center. He was not
expected to see a judge for eight days.
Upon viewing the video footage,
the civil judge who dealt with the three foreign peace activists
said "it was apparent that it was the
soldiers who had beaten the demonstrators and not the other way
around".
Rateb Abu-Rahme:
40-year-old Abu-Rahme was arrested with his younger brother, Abdullah
Abu-Rahme, also at a nonviolent demonstaration. Charges of throwing
stones at soldiers were subsequently dropped for "lack of
public
interest". A military judge this week dropped the case against
Rateb
without acknowledging the fact that the military police officer
who
accused Rateb of throwing stones had confessed to giving false
testimony.
After viewing video footage of
the Bil'in demonstration, the military
judge Captain Daniel Zamir, stated: "there was no reason
for the
defendants arrest; there was no reason for the shooting that wounded
him or the blows he received from the soldier", adding that
"the
reality was strangely different, to put it mildly, from the testimony
of the prosecution witnesses".
Please call and fax:
Tzipi Livni
Minister of Justice
29 Salah al-Din Street
Jerusalem 91010, Israel
Fax: +972 2 628 7757
E-mail: sar@justice.gov.il
Menahem Mazuz
Attorney-General/Legal
Advisor to the Government
Ministry of Justice
29 Salah al-Din Street
Jerusalem 91010, Israel
Fax: +972 2 628 5438
+972 2 627 4481
Brigadier General Avihai Mandelblit
Chief Military Attorney
6 David Elazar Street
Hakirya
Tel Aviv
Israel
Fax: +972 3 569 4370
E-mail: c/o arbel@mail.idf.il
**************************************************
2. Crackdown on peace activists
in West Bank
Israeli forces employed an increased
level of brutality against
nonviolent Palestinian, Israeli and foreign activists Friday during
demonstrations in the West Bank villages of Asira and Bil'in.
ASIRA
Over 250 villagers of Asira, in Nablus district, gathered at 10
a.m.
Friday to begin the demonstration for free movement and against
military closures that have effected their community since the
start
of the Al-Aqsa Intifada.
Israeli Armed Personnel Vehicles,
deployed since dawn, surrounded the
villagers before they could take Sabaatash road, which leads to
Nablus, and reach the roadblock.
The army confiscated accompanying
cars, an ambulance and keys, cameras and film, and immediately
blocked the entry to several Arab and International journalists.
An officer told Khannan Aljamen, a community leader, that the
demonstration was illegal and that he would shoot straight to
the head if anyone tried to continue on.
Without warning, a soldier shot
a young man in the hip to prove his
point. Medical volunteers have reported that the injury is not
critical.
Khannan, with some knowledge of
Hebrew, also overheard a soldier point out two other young men
on top of a car. He said " Make sure you hit them."
Khannan placed himself in front
of the guns and yelled that they stop the shooting. The soldiers
spat on him.
A high-ranking officer reiterated,
"I promise you, if anyone moves, we will put a bullet through
his head!"
The Israeli army also detained
and arrested the 10 Israeli peace
activists before they could reach the demonstrators. Nine
internationals from Canada, Sweden, the United States, and one
Palestinian resident of the Balata refugee camp were detained
by
soldiers at the Sabaatash roadblock as they headed toward Asira
from
Nablus to join the demonstration. They demanded passports and
refused
to allow anyone to pass under the pretext that it was a closed
military zone.
The villagers were left alone to
deal with the violent repression of
their protest against the roadblock.
When Khannan asked the officer
"why do you allow the settlers to freely move on these lands,
and not the Palestinians? What about those sheep over there...
are they allowed to move?" They officer replied, "I
would like to keep it closed forever, you have no right to move.
The sheep can move, they are animals."
After an hour and half, the most
the soldiers left the village. When
the foreign activists arrived two hours later from another route,
soldiers were still roaming among the trees in the surrounding
hills.
The Israeli activists were released one hour after there detention
and returned to israel.
BIL'IN
Residents of the West Bank village of Bil'in - along with Israeli
and foreign peace activists - were chased by Israeli soldiers
Friday afternoon during the protest against construction of the
illegal barrier being built in the village. As the area was filled
with tear gas from canisters shot into various points around the
community, at least two Israeli activists were kicked by soldiers
as they lay on the ground. Six people were arrested. About 200
people took part.
Bil'in protesters, known for making
costumes for their demonstrations
against the Annexation Wall, wore masks Friday depicting the faces
of
U.S. President Bush and National Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice
as
they marched toward the wall route.
Before the action, as people in
Bil'in donned white caps and T-shirts
- reading in Arabic and English, "We oppose the wall"
- several
Israelis traveling from Tel Aviv to join the protest were stopped
by soldiers and detained en route. Another 20 Israelis managed
to
arrive in the village and participate.
Starting just after 1 p.m., men,
women and children from the village
donned masks of either Bush or Rice and covered their eyes with
orange ribbons, the symbol used by supporters of the settlements
in Gaza. Several carried a large sign reading "Gaza Disengagement
== West Bank expansion." The orange blindfolds were meant
to symbolize U.S. leader's being blinded from the addition to
settlements in the West Bank by the removal of settlers in Gaza.
The action ended with about 15
people being temporarily detained by
soldiers who had bolted at them to break up the protest. Six people
were arrested in all. They were: Jawad Asi, a Palestinian from
the
village of Beit liqya; Noga Alui and Uri Ayalon, Israelis from
Tel
Aviv; Marcy Newman and Ted Auerbach of the United States; and
Natalia
Nuñez of Sweden. Asi was kept apart from the others at
a police
station at the Givat Ze'ev settlement.
The arrestees were charged with
being in a "closed military area" and
of assaulting soldiers. Video footage taken by activists led to
the
immediate drop of assault charges against all of those arrested.
The
Israelis and internationals were issued 15-day bans from entering
Bil'in.
"It's ridiculous, because
they only call it a 'closed military area'
after we're already there. It's not declared one before that,"
Newman said. "The other irony is that we were accused of
assaulting soldiers. We were the ones being assaulted." While
two Israelis were kicked, Nueez reported that one of the
soldiers began spanking her once the tear gas had been
fired and solders began running at the activists.
Meanwhile, as Palestinians, Israelis
and internationals in villages
across the occupied territories protested the wall, planned settlement
expansion and the closure of much needed roads, Prime Minister
Arial Sharon visited the West Bank settlement of Ariel - just
after a chat with Condoleezza Rice at his ranch in the Negev Desert
about the upcoming Gaza disengagement - making promises to "expand"
and "strengthen" the settlement in the near future.
CAMERA CONFISCATION
At least one person in Bil'in on
Friday reported soldiers had tried to take his camera while he
recorded footage of Israeli activists being kicked. In Nablus,
several cameras and film were seized. Being that no physical harm
can come to a person by having a lens pointed at them, it's a
logical assumption that the goal is to limit publicity about the
harsh treatment soldiers inflict on Palestinian civilians and
peace activists. Video footage proved Friday that the charges
of assault lodged by soldiers were false. Video footage of a Wednesday
protest in Bil'in also showed that it was soldiers who had attacked
activists when they tried to accuse a group of internationals
of assault. It's interesting that those who allegedly work to
protect a democratic state are so eager to limit free speech by
confiscating the tools of free speech.
**************************************************
3. SWEDISH ACTIVIST APPREHENDED
AT TEL AVIV AIRPORT
Swedish peace activist Shora Esmailian
is currently being held at Ben
Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv. She arrived 15.00 yesterday and was
interrogated for ten consecutive hours. A representative from
the
Israeli Defence Departement in charge of the interrogation demanded
information from Esmailian about certain Palestinians. We do not
know
if Esmailian even has any information. Israeli authoroties appear
to
be blackmailing her for entry into the country. Apparently thousands
of blackmailed Palestinian collaborators are not enough.
The Israeli government would now
like to destroy the relationship
between foreigners and Palestinians by creating suspicion. However,
they cannot jail foreigners forever, nor can they torture them.
So
this policy will fail. Shora has refused to collaborate and was
denied entry - without any stated reason. In spite of repeated
requests, neither the Swedish General Consulate in Jerusalem nor
the lawyer has been informed about the reasons for the apprehension.
**************************************************
4. A West Bank village opts for
peaceful protest to broach the Wall
MOHAMMED KHATIB
The Seattle Post Intelligencer
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/233676_arab24.html
Sunday, July 24, 2005
Israel's planned evacuation of
its illegal Gaza settlements is a
positive step but it should not be mistaken for the end of Israel's
military occupation. While the world's media focuses on Gaza,
the
Israeli government is using the opportunity to expand settlements
in
the West Bank. Throughout the current Intifada, while international
attention was on killings by the Israeli military, invasions of
Palestinian areas and suicide bombings, Israeli settlement expansion
has continued at an accelerated rate.
In my village of Bil'in, near the
West Bank city of Ramallah, Israel
is building one new settlement and expanding five others on our
land
and the land of neighboring villages. Our village has launched
a
campaign of peaceful protest because Israel is building its wall
on
our land in order to annex the six settlements and take roughly
60
percent of our village's 1,000 acres of land. These settlements
already consume most of our area's water. These settlements will
form
a city called Modi'in Illit with tens of thousands of settlers,
many
times the number to be evacuated from Gaza.
Even in Gaza, it is not clear that
the evacuation of settlements will
mean the end of Israel's occupation. For occupation to end in
Gaza,
all the infrastructure of Israel's occupation must be removed
and the
Palestinian Authority must be given control over everything --
the
borders, the air and the sea. Otherwise, Gaza will just be a big,
open-air prison.
Nevertheless, the evacuation of
the Israeli settlements from Gaza is
an historic opportunity for Palestinians. We must seize this
opportunity to free a small piece of Palestine. All the Palestinian
parties should remain united, maintain the cease-fire and stop
fighting one another. If we fight amongst ourselves for control
of our land, none of us will control it. We must unite to take
back our land.
While the spotlight is on Gaza,
throughout the West Bank Israeli
military occupation continues, through settlement and Wall
construction, arrests and killing. For people who do not live
under
occupation, occupation is just a word. But for us it means much
more.
The Israeli occupation has taken
away our freedom of movement. I am 31 years old and I have only
visited Jerusalem twice in my life, though it lies only 20 miles
away. Jerusalem is the third holiest place for Muslims and the
capital of our historical Palestinian state. I went there once
as a child with my parents, and a second time when my son went
for medical care. When my friend Ramzi was shot in the head in
July by soldiers with a rubber-coated steel bullet during one
of our peaceful demonstrations against the wall, even his mother
was not allowed by Israeli authorities to visit him in an East
Jerusalem hospital. I have also only seen the Mediterranean Sea
in photos, even though it borders Palestine and sits 12 miles
from my home.
Since I was a child all I've seen
around me is the violence of
occupation. Two of my best friends have been killed, one at the
age of 13. He was holding a stick and an Israeli soldier shot
him. They said they thought he was armed. My other friend was
shot dead while simply standing in his yard at his home during
the second Intifada when Israeli soldiers invaded Ramallah.
Occupation also means simple things
like not being able to see my
children play on the same land I played on as a child. When I
was
young, while my parents worked their farmland, I would often play
under the olive trees near where my mother gave birth to me. Now
that
land has been stolen and the trees uprooted to build illegal Israeli
settlements. Instead of seeing my children play under those trees,
I
will watch a child who is a stranger play there -- a child whose
family just recently came to live on our land, without any right
to do so, simply because of the power of the occupation.
Because we are victims of the occupation,
in my village we don't want
to continue the cycle of victimizing other children, this time
Israeli children. After what the Jewish community endured during
World War II, they have continued the cycle of oppression here
in Palestine. In Bil'in, we have chosen to break this cycle by
using nonviolent resistance to fight the occupation. We want to
pass this peaceful way of resisting, which I strongly believe
in, on to other villages. We want to increase the chance of peace
and also reclaim our rights.
One year ago, the International
Court of Justice at The Hague, the
world's highest legal body, ruled that Israel's construction of
the
Wall on Palestinian land violated international law and must be
stopped. Today, Palestinians in villages like ours are struggling
to
implement the ICJ decision and stop construction using nonviolence,
but the world has done little to support us.
Bil'in is being strangled by the
Wall. Though our village sits 2 1/2
miles east of the Green Line, Israel's Wall and settlements will
take
more than 60 percent of our land. This land is also money to us;
we
work it. Bil'in's 1,600 residents depend on farming and harvesting
our olive trees for our livelihood. The Wall will turn Bil'in
into an
open-air prison.
After Israeli courts refused our
appeals to prevent Wall construction, we, along with Israelis
and people from around the world, began peacefully protesting
the confiscation of our land. We have opened our homes to the
Israelis who have joined us. They have become our partners in
struggle. Together we send a strong message -- that we can coexist
in peace and security. We welcome anyone who comes to us as a
guest and who works for peace and justice for both peoples, but
we will resist anyone who comes as an occupier.
We have held more than 50 peaceful
demonstrations since February. We
learned from the experience and advice of villages like Budrus
and
Biddu that resisted the Wall non-violently. Palestinians from
other
areas now call people from Bil'in "Palestinian Gandhis."
Our demonstrations aim to stop
the bulldozers destroying our land, and to send a message about
the Wall's impacts. We've chained ourselves to olive trees that
were being bulldozed for the Wall to show that taking trees' lives
takes the village's life. We've distributed letters asking the
soldiers to think before they shoot at us, explaining that we
are not against the Israeli people, but against building the Wall
on our land.
We refuse to be strangled by the
Wall in silence. In a famous
Palestinian short story "Men in the Sun," Palestinian
workers
suffocate inside a tanker truck. Upon discovering them, the driver
screams, "Why didn't you bang on the sides of the tank?"
We are
banging; we are screaming.
Israeli soldiers act against our
peaceful resistance with terror. They attack our peaceful protests
with teargas, clubs, rubber-coated steel bullets and live ammunition,
and have injured more than 100 villagers. They invade the village
at night, entering homes, pulling families out and arresting people.
They collectively punish the entire village for protesting, as
the local military commander told the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz.
At a peaceful protest in June,
soldiers arrested brothers Abdullah and Rateb Abu Rahme, two village
leaders. Soldiers testified that Rateb was throwing stones. A
few weeks ago, an Israeli military judge
ordered Rateb's release because videotapes showed the soldiers'
claims were false.
Shortly after Abdallah and Rateb's
release, Israeli soldiers came to
Abdallah's house at 3 a.m. and ordered him to come for interrogation
the next day. During the interrogation, an Israeli intelligence
agent
threatened Abdallah and hinted that people in Bil'in would be
killed
if we continued our demonstrations. Days later, Ramzi was shot
in the
head and seriously wounded.
During our demonstration on July
15, the marchers attempted to
physically represent a bridge. We wanted to illustrate the idea
that
peace needs bridges, not walls, and that instead of building walls
the Israeli government should invest in creating understanding
and
coexistence between Israelis and Palestinians. On the outskirts
of the village, more than 200 soldiers awaited us in full battle
gear. They again attacked our peaceful march. Abdallah and my
brother Akram were violently arrested with no justification. Akram
was released Thursday and Abdallah has a second hearing today.
The Palestinian people sent a message
of peace through our newly
elected leadership, and we implemented a cease-fire from February
through early July. Still, a year after the ICJ decision, Wall
and
settlement construction on Palestinian land continues.
Behind the smokescreen of Israel's
Gaza withdrawal, the real story is
Israel's attempt to take control of the West Bank by building
the
illegal Wall and settlements that threaten to destroy dozens of
villages like Bil'in and any hope for peace.
Bil'in is banging, Bil'in is screaming.
Please stand with us so that
we can end Israel's occupation and achieve our freedom by peaceful
means.
Mohammed Khatib is a leading member
of Bil'in's Popular Committee
Against the Wall and the secretary of its village council.
**************************************************
5. Agricultural buildings in West Bank village demolished for
Israel's illegal wall
June 26 2005
Residents in the West Bank village
of Fundook awoke at 7 a.m. Tuesday to the sound of their livelihood
being demolished as heavy
equipment sent there by the Israeli military began demolishing
agricultural structures to make way for Israel's illegal Annexation
Barrier.
Fundook is a small village in the
West Bank that is located near the
illegal settlements of Ariel and Kedumin. The wall is being built
through a huge swath of the villager's farmland, denying them
of basic rights to food and to earn an income from their agricultural
work.
****************************************************
6. SOS - Stop the Wall!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday July 27, 2005
RAMALLAH, Occupied West Bank -
Black smoke will be seen rising
at 10 a.m. on Thursday July 28 along the path of the Apartheid
Wall in the central West Bank region from Marda to Qalandia as
an
SOS to the world to take action to stop Israel's annexation of
land,
and imprisonment of the Palestinian people.
In an era that witnessed the forces
of freedom and world peace bring
an end to the ideology and policies of racial segregation in
South Africa and the United States, where the international
community is focused on the defense of human rights, the
Israeli Occupying Power continues building a of racial segregation
which threatens the development of civilized humanity and violates
international human rights law.
The International Court of Justice
on July 9, 2004 issued an advisory
opinion on the legality of the wall Israel is building in the
Occupied Palestinian Territories, declaring it illegal, stating
it "must come down. "To date, Israel continues to confiscate
Palestinian land, demolish trees and erect a wall that locks Palestinians
into ghettos, cutting them off from their source of livelihood
and from each other.
Behind the smokescreen of the Gaza
disengagement, the very
foundations of peace are destroyed as the Apartheid continues
to be constructed to the deafening silence of the international
community. On Thursday, July 28 the people of the Salfit,
Ramallah and northwest Jerusalem villages who have been
using nonviolent resistance to combat the Wall from Marda
(Salfit) to Budrus (Ramallah), Biddu (NW Jerusalem) to
Bil'in (Ramallah), will light rubber tires on fire along the path
of the Wall sending up an SOS to the world - STOP THE WALL!
We will also be placing black ribbons
on our cars to symbolize the
oppression, sadness and death caused by this Apartheid Wall. We
call
on those who see and hear us around the world to use this black
ribbon to spread the word about the destruction and new Apartheid
created with this Black Wall and to join the efforts of the Palestinian
people, along with Israeli peace activists and people from around
the world who seek true peace in this region.
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7. Trio of protests against the
wall set for communities across the
West Bank
A trio of demonstrations are planned
for Friday in villages and cities around the West Bank. If the
Israeli military's history is any
indicator, violent response to the peaceful protests is expected.
PROTESTING THE "BARRIER" IN JENIN:
Israel's illegal barrier near the northern West Bank town of Jenin
consists of a patrolled labyrinth of chain fences. At noon Friday,
residents of the town will be joined by several organizations
and
foreign activists as they head toward the barrier which cuts across
agricultural land to protest the lack of access to their own
territory.
People will gather at the city
center of Jenin at 10 a.m. to travel to the nearby village of
Zububa, which is close to the green line, the Israeli/Palestinian
border that was stipulated in 1967. At noon, the demonstration
will begin with a prayer in the agricultural fields near the fence.
Following that, participants will march toward the fence to display
banners and Palestinian flags. In the past, protesters approaching
the fence have met with a violent response from Israeli soldiers.
REMOVING ROADBLOCKS ON THE ROAD
TO ASIRA:
Peace activists are planning to remove roadblocks from the road
directly connecting Nablus to the small farming village of Asira
on
Friday. The road has been blocked since the start of the Palestinian
uprising against the occupation. The Popular Committee of Asira
has
requested the presence of Israeli peace activists.
The Israeli military has been paying
close attention to the roadway,
and anyone venturing near is immediately subjected to response
from
Israeli soldiers.
The people of Asira are prevented
from farming even their land that
has not been confiscated by Israel. The road from the village
to the
land has been blocked with an earth mound by the Israeli army.
Five
families live outside of this block and are unable to reach their
homes by vehicle. Israeli army jeeps regularly patrol the area
and
prevent people from accessing their land. Students, workers and
the
sick are all adversely affected. Even ambulances are not allowed
a
quick passage to the village.
Last Friday, as villagers demonstrated
to demand their freedom of
movement, the army cracked down on the protest with an assault
that
progressed from concussion grenades and teargas, to rubber bullets
and live ammunition. The Army also invaded the village and confiscated
cameras and film from demonstrators.
Seven Israeli activists were arrested
on the way to the village, and
international activists and the press were detained on their way
from
Nablus.
SURPRISE THEME FOR BIL'IN PROTEST
AGAINST THE "BARRIER":
A nonviolent protest against the building of the illegal separation
barrier near Bil'in is set for Friday at 1 p.m.
Residents of Bil'in will be joined
by Israeli and International peace
activists in the latest of a series of creative protests against
the
building of the illegal barrier that has occurred near Bil'in.
The protests are known for their
nonviolence and dramatic themes. Last Friday, a group of villagers
wore masks of U.S. President George W. Bush and Condoleeza Rice.
This Friday's theme has not been announced.
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