Israel Destroys Nature Reserve

“Moataz Bisharat, who is responsible for monitoring Israeli settlement activity in the Jordan Valley, told Anadolu Agency that the occupation army pushed military vehicles and dozens of soldiers into the Ainun area in Tubas city in the morning and destroyed a nature reserve built on an area of about 400 dunums (98 acres).”

Israel destroys nature reserve, uproots 10,000 trees

Palestinian man shows trees after they were destroyed by Israeli forces in Tubas, West Bank, January 27, 2012. [Nedal Eshtayah-Anadolu Agency]

Palestinian man shows trees after they were destroyed by Israeli forces in Tubas, West Bank, January 27, 2012. [Nedal Eshtayah-Anadolu Agency]

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Bi-Weekly Brief for January 25, 2021

Bi-Weekly Brief for January 25, 2021

Israelis get vaccinated while Palestinians still await vaccines and Covid cases soar

Israel has been lauded for its vaccination drive reaching a quarter of its citizens. Its Covid-19 numbers are approaching 600,000 cases, with 4,419 deaths.  On Jan. 18, it surpassed 10,000 new daily infections for the first time since the pandemic began.  After the variant was detected in Israel, new restrictions were imposed, with the airport being shut for 6 days from Jan. 26.  Ultra-Orthodox have fought pitched battles with police trying to enforce restrictions, injuring several of them.  Israel continues to face criticism – recently from US Reps. Joaquin Castro and Jamaal Bowman - for denying vaccines to Palestinians.  It reportedly gave 100 doses to the PA (which PA officials denied receiving) and belatedly vaccinated some  Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.  The oldest Palestinian political prisoner, 82-year-old Fouad Al-Shobak, and hundreds of other jailed Palestinians have been infected with Covid-19 and 45-year-old Deeb Saasa died shortly after being vaccinated.  The PA reported an anticipated shipment of 5,000 Russian Sputnik V doseswill be delayed until mid Feb. because of ‘technical issues.’   Cases in Palestine have topped 155,000 (50,000 of them in Gaza) with 1,925 deaths. 

What can Palestinians expect from the Biden administration? 

On Jan. 19, days after the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem issued a report declaring Israel to be an ‘apartheid regime’ from ‘the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea,’ there was a Senate confirmation hearing for Antony Blinken, Biden’s Secretary of State.  He applauded ‘normalization,’ said that the US embassy would remain in Jerusalem which the US considered Israel’s capital, confirmed the US commitment to Israel as ‘sacrosanct’ and declared that both he and the president were ‘resolutely opposed’ to BDS and in favor of ‘2 states’ in order to secure Israel’s future as a ‘Jewish, democratic state.’  It remains to be seen whether the appointment of Rima Dudin, an attorney of Palestinian descent, as deputy chief of staff for the White House office of legislative affairs will have any impact on its pro-Israel policy.

Hours before Biden’s inauguration Israel announces building of 2,500 new settler units

On Jan. 20, tenders were issued for a further 2,112 settler units in the West Bank and 460 in East Jerusalem.  The Israeli group Peace Now called the government’s action a “mad scramble to promote as much settlement activity as possible” before Biden takes over. It reported that 12,000 settlement homes were approved or constructed in 2020, the highest number since it started keeping statistics in 2012.  27,000 were approved during Trump’s term in office. 

Netanyahu courts Arab voters as Palestinians strive again to form a unity government

Fresh from mourning the Jan. 11th death of his patron Sheldon Adelson who will be buried in Israel, the prime minister was met with protests when he went to Nazareth to invoke a ‘new era in relations between Jews and Arabs’ as part of his effort to get enough votes to win Parliamentary immunity from prosecution.  Seeking a new era in his relationship with Washington, Mahmoud Abbas announced that there would be elections for the legislative council in May and for president in July.  One source reported on Jan. 23 that Fatah and Hamas have reached a draft agreement for a national unity government. 

Palestinians continue to live – and die – under conditions of relentless brutality

The Gaza Strip was subjected to artillery fire and missile strikes on Jan. 13, 14, 18, 19 and 20, with Israel claiming it was either retaliating for gunshots fired at army bulldozers that were inside Gaza ‘combing’ Israel’s self-declared ‘buffer zone,’ or retaliating for projectiles fired from Gaza that fell into the sea.  On Jan. 12 and 16, Israel’s navy fired on Gazan fishing boats.   The army conducted 17 raids across the West Bank in the single night of Jan. 13, arresting dozens.  Some were later released by being dumped at an intersection still handcuffed and blindfolded.  Demolition orders have been issued and demolitions carried out on nearly a daily basis.  Settlers continued to stone Palestinian cars, homes and uproot olive trees – UNWRA reported that 4,164 Palestinian olive trees were destroyed during 2020 alone. On Jan. 17, settlers attacked and injured 10-year-old Hala Alkut as she was crossing the street in Adama, near Nablus.  Four days later, some 20 settlers forced a car to stop near the village of Burqa, and then kicked and smashed it with stones, injuring a child who was going to a family celebration of his 3rd birthday.  On Jan. 23, settlers and soldiers used dogs, sound grenades and tear gas to attack journalists and Palestinian activists protesting settlements in the Yatta area.  On Jan 24, 48-year-old Fouad Sebti Joudeh died after suffocating from tear gas fired at workers as they tried to cross Israel’s apartheid wall without a permit.

  

Water Fact

On Jan. 21, without prior notice, Israeli forces opened water dams and pumped large quantities of rainwater onto Palestinian farmland along the eastern side of the Gaza Strip, submerging vegetables and causing thousands of dollars of damage.  A year ago, on January 13, 2020, Israel destroyed crops worth $500,000 and drowned chickens and beehives when they flooded 4 square kilometers of Gaza’s farmland.  70% of Gaza’s residents are food insecure.  

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice 

Banner designed by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press

Banner designed by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press

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Bi-Weekly Brief for January 11, 2021

Bi-Weekly Brief for January 11, 2021

 

Israel practices ‘medical apartheid’ as virus rages and Palestinians are denied vaccines 

On Jan. 7, the day Israel entered its 3rd lockdown, it received 6 million doses of the Moderna vaccine, with more Pfizer doses arriving on Jan. 10.  Some 2 million Israelis have been vaccinated, and Netanyahu has received his second dose.  Israel has had at least 491,000 cases and 3,671 deaths, and thousands of Israelis have been fined for breaking lockdown rules.  On Jan. 4, newly-elected Rep. Marie Newman (D-IL) tweeted that Israel had “a moral and humanitarian obligation to ensure that both Israelis and Palestinians have access to vaccines” and human rights organizations reiterated that Israel’s duty as occupier required it to supply vaccines to Palestine, with over 165,000 cases (45,674 in Gaza) and 1,707 deaths.  Speaking on Democracy Now! as he himself was suffering from Covid-19, Palestinian physician Mustafa Barghouti called the current state of affairs  ‘medical apartheid.’ On Jan. 10, human rights groups in Israel asked the Supreme Court to revoke a government decision not to vaccinate some 4,400 Palestinian political prisoners held in Israeli jails where the virus is surging.  

 

Netanyahu condemns invasion of US Capitol while praising Trump

On Jan. 7, after a long delay, Netanyahu called the invasion of the US Capitol ‘disgraceful’ without mentioning Trump.  Speaking in Jerusalem alongside US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, he praised Trump as a ‘regional peacemaker’ and warned the US against rejoining the Iran nuclear deal.  On Jan. 8, the press reported that Netanyahu had to be rushed to a secure room during a Jan. 2 demonstration outside his house demanding that he resign.  His opponents say he is trying to equate Israeli protestors with the mob that stormed the Capitol.  With his trial postponed until Feb. 8, he got electioneering mileage out of the spy Jonathan Pollard’s return to Israel in a private jet provided by Sheldon Adelson. Pollard, a hero in Israel, served 30 years in prison for spying on the US for Israel when he was a US Navy analyst.  

 

Israeli state, army, settlers tighten coordination of ethnic cleansing efforts

On Dec. 31, as part of a “campaign against the hostile takeover of Area C,” the Ministry of Settlement Affairs announced it was devoting $6 million to detect ‘illegal construction’ in 62% of the West Bank lived in by up to 300,000 Palestinians.  It has set up a telephone hotline for this purpose.  Settlers, including the particularly violent ‘hilltop youth’ from at least 70 ‘wildcat’ outposts who have also attacked Israeli forces, have been using drones to surveil Palestinian activities.  In the last 2 weeks, rampaging settlers and army home invaders and demolition squads have taken a heavy toll of destruction around the West Bank and left Palestinians feeling ‘defenseless.’ Soldiers stood by as settlers stoned Palestinian cars, physically attacked farmers and destroyed their land, while military suppression of anti-settlement protests has caused dozens of injuries.   On Jan. 3, the army using concussion grenades stormed a Palestinian hospital in Tulkarem, its third attack on a hospital in less than a month.  “Silence in the Face of Demolition and Pogroms” was the headline of a Haaretz op ed decrying politicians’ silence as settlers work to achieve de facto annexation.  On Jan. 7, a 4-year-long legal battle culminated in Issa Amro’s conviction for his nonviolent resistance in Hebron.  Amro was recognized by the UN as ‘Human Rights Defender of the Year’ in 2010 and Amnesty has called the charges against him ‘baseless.’  Meanwhile, in Gaza, Israeli forces have fired on farmers and fishing boats on nearly a daily basis.  

  

Water Fact

On Jan. 1, after the area underwent drone surveillance, soldiers tasked to deal with ‘illegal construction’ descended on the village of Khirbet al Rakiz in the South Hebron Hills.  In an episode captured on video they seized a small generator found in a cave where Ashraf Amour lived with his family. While attempting to stop the confiscation of the generator, a neighbor, 24-year-old Harun Abu Aram, was shot in the neck from a few feet away, and left paralyzed.  The army then fired on the car taking him to hospital and punctured its tire.  Before leaving the village, soldiers issued the Amour family with demolition orders in connection with the kitchen water cistern where they store rainwater and the water they buy from tanker trucks.  Last November, the house that Harun Abu Aram’s family had finished two weeks earlier was destroyed by the army, forcing them to live in a leaky cave.  According to Israeli journalist Amira Hass, “the forces sent in to carry out the demolitions also dismantled the water connection that had been installed by the village’s council,” forcing families to buy water from tankers at a cost of $124 a month “which is well beyond their means.”

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice 

See this short Alliance-produced video for why US aid to Israel should be conditioned on its human rights record.

Banner design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press.

Banner design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press.

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