Bi-Weekly Brief for Feb. 28

Bi-Weekly Brief for February 28, 2022

A one page digest of Israel’s ongoing dispossession of Palestinian land and livelihoods, and Palestinian resistance. 

They may not see eye to eye on major issues but the US-Israel friendship is ‘eternal’ Pelosi says

The US and Israel are not in synch on Iran and Ukraine, and Israel’s Prime Minister Bennett has said the ‘2 states solution’ affirmed by Speaker of the House Pelosi during her Feb. 16th visit to the Knesset would be ‘a terrible mistake.’   Still, Pelosi called US support for Israel ‘iron clad’ and declared the establishment of the State of Israel ‘the greatest political achievement of the 20th century.’  On Feb. 17, Bennett thanked her for pushing for another $1 billion in Iron Dome funding for Israel.  Last year Israel refused to allow the US to sell Ukraine the Iron Dome system and Patriot missiles, fearing Russia’s displeasure.  On Feb. 23, shortly before the invasion, Israel’s Foreign Ministry expressed support for Ukraine’s territorial integrity without mentioning Russia by name and a few hours later, Russia’s UN envoy said it did not recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights.  Bennett did not mention Russia by name during his Feb. 24th public remarks inviting the 100,000-strong Ukrainian Jewish community to come to Israel.  Nor did a report of Bennett’s Feb. 25thphone call with Ukraine’s Jewish President Volodymyr Zelensky mention Russia, perhaps out of fear that “Putin will move to curb Israel’s Syrian operations” such as its Feb. 24th missile attack on Damascus that killed 3 Syrian soldiers.    After refusing the US request that it endorse the Feb. 25 UN Security Council resolution condemning Russia, Israel appeared poised to accept a forthcoming US-backed UN General Assembly resolution.

Sheikh Jarrah family is given a ‘small respite’ in hopes of avoiding another Ramadan uprising

Brutally suppressed protests followed the Feb. 13th erection of an encampment by Kahanist Knesset member Itamar Ben-Gvir outside the Sheikh Jarrah house of the Salem family that is facing expulsion after living there since 1951.  After the US, the EU and the UN all called on Israel to stop settler provocations in Jerusalem, and with the ‘unity uprising’ of last May in mind, the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court agreed to postpone the eviction of the Salem family and other Jerusalem evictions, at least until after Ramadan which begins in early April.  There was no respite for the Abu Sneineh family which, on Feb. 27, was forced to self-demolish their Jerusalem home for the second time since 2015.  

More young people gunned down by trigger-happy soldiers who now have new layer of protection

Late last year the Israel amended its open-fire policy to codify a practice it has frequently used  over the years – unleashing lethal fire against Palestinian stone-throwers even when they pose no direct threat or are fleeing the scene.  On Feb. 14, the army killed 17-year-old Muhammad Akram Abu Salah with a bullet to the head and injured others protesting a house demolition near Jenin.  The next day, soldiers killed Nehad Amin al-Barghouti at the entrance to Nabi Saleh village, reportedly seeing him as a ‘potential threat.’  On Feb. 18, 12-year-old Rayan Yousef Hamayel was shot in the head and seriously wounded during a protest at the Evyatar outpost, despite being 100 meters away from the soldiers.  On the same day, soldiers used live fire against the weekly Kufur Qaddoum procession, shooting a child among others.  On Feb. 22, the army killed14-year-old Mohammed Shehadeh in al-Khader village near Bethlehem, saying he had thrown a Molotov cocktail.  Meanwhile in the Gaza Strip, soldiers in watchtowers fired live ammunition at farmers and shepherds on Feb. 18,  Feb. 26 and Feb. 27. Farmers again came under fire and tanks and armored bulldozers destroyed agricultural lands in Gaza on Feb. 28.

Water Fact

Al Haq and other human rights organizations have submitted a report to the UN  that includes a section on ‘Water-Apartheid’  describing the many methods used by Israel to dispossess Palestinian farmers, among them the declaration of certain areas to be ‘closed military zones’:  “The Israeli military declared 30,000 dunums of the Jordan River Valley – some of the most fertile agricultural land in the West Bank – to be a closed military zone. Those areas were used for the expansion of settlements for which new wells were drilled by Mekorot inside the settlements.”  Israel seized control of West Bank water resources in 1967 and in 1982 transferred the Palestinian water infrastructure to the Israeli National Water Company Mekorot “which practices Jewish-only privilege over the country’s water resources” (pp.14-18).

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine and 1for3.org are organizing a webinar as a lead up to World Water Day.  PARCHED IN PALESTINE: RESISTING WATER APARTHEID will take place on Saturday, March 19, from 1:00 – 2:30 PM Eastern Daylight time.  It will feature speakers from Palestine and visual material highlighting Palestinian struggles to stay on the land.  Register: https://bit.ly/3M69wOo

Banner by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press

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Horrendous Skunk Water & Tear Gas

"If the smells of military occupation make homes insecure and evacuate public spaces, what is left? These smells instantiate the ways that military occupation permeates communities like Aida. What haunts me most these days are the hints of long-term effects from this stressful and toxic atmosphere."

Read about the impact of tear gas and skunk water in a refugee camp in Bethlehem:

Killing Space, Stealing Time: The Stink and Burn of Occupation

The army shoots skunk water at a tree on the main street near Aida Camp. Atop the vehicle on the left, thirty tear gas canisters are in place, ready to be shot. Photo by Mohammad Al-Azza.

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Bi-Weekly Brief for February 14, 2022

Bi-Weekly Brief for February 14, 2022

A one page digest of Israel’s ongoing dispossession of Palestinian land and livelihoods, and Palestinian resistance. 

Powerful Amnesty report on Israeli apartheid called ‘absurd’ by US and ‘antisemitic’ by Israel 

On Feb. 1, after a 4-year study, Amnesty International issued a 278-page report, Israel’s Apartheid against Palestinians: Cruel System of Domination and Crime against Humanity, along with a curriculumvideo and toolkit.  The report states that since its establishment in 1948 Israel has sought to dominate and control Palestinians and that it maintains an apartheid regime in the entirety of the territory between the Mediterranean Sea and Jordan River in violation of international law.  

Heavily criticized by IsraelUS officials, and US mainstream Jewish groups, the report was completely ignored by the New York Times and debunked by the Wall Street Journal, while Newsweek and MSNBC had pieces defending it.  Michael Benyair, a former Israeli Attorney General,  in a Feb. 12 op ed agreed that Israel is an apartheid regime and “it is time for the international community to recognize this reality as well.” But Tom Nides, the new US Ambassador to Israel who had wasted no time in calling the report ‘absurd,’ told the Times of Israel on Feb. 9 that applying the word apartheid to Israel is ‘appalling.’ He said he is ‘100% a Zionist’ who wants to keep alive ‘the vision of two states.’  He claimed his decision to forego visiting settlements is not intended to signal that they are illegitimate, but rather to avoid doing things ‘that agitate people.’  US support for Israel, he said, is strongly bipartisan and ‘rock-solid.’

 

Army unit that killed elderly Palestinian-American terrorizes the West Bank on behalf of settlers

The US has said it is ‘not satisfied’ with the Israeli army’s decision to reprimand the commander and suspend two officers of the Netzah Yehuda army unit involved in the death of an elderly Palestinian-American, Omar Abdalmajeed As’ad.  A Feb. 9 Haaretz piece describes the violence inflicted on Palestinians by the Netzah Yehuda brigade ‘just for laughs’ and the army’s reluctance to dissolve it as this would be “a declaration of war for the settler leadership.  Their view on the ground is that this battalion belongs to them, that it’s a force that works for the settlement enterprise.” Soldiers and/or settlers in Feb. have destroyed Palestinian homescisternswater tanks and pipelinesbulldozed farmlandsuprooted olive trees, attacked West Bank farmers and protestors, and repeatedly fired on farmers and fishermen in Gaza. The army also carried out an extra-judicial killing of 3 Palestinians in Nablus who were allegedly on a ‘wanted’ list and killed a 17-year-old during a protest near Jenin. 

 

Bitterly contested settler outpost of Evyatar is on its way to ‘legalization’ 

Early in February, outgoing Israeli Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit issued an opinion outlining a procedure for legalizing the settler outpost of Evyatar, which was erected on privately-owned Palestinian land near the village of Beita in May 2021.  Since then, Beita’s residents have held weekly protests during which 9 Palestinians have been killed and more than 5,300 injured. There are some 140 settler outpostsestablished without official permission throughout the West Bank, some of which are described by Patrick Kingsley in a rare New York Times  piece about settler violence.

 

Water Fact

Israel’s new 20-foot-high, 40-mile-long wall that penetrates deep into the ground as it encircles the Gaza Strip is severely impacting wildlife, biodiversity and water.  Building the wall has further polluted Gaza’s depleted water supply and undermined the stability of the coastal aquifer.  By stopping the flow of water towards the Strip, the wall prevents the water-starved territory from benefiting from rainfall outside its borders.  In its Apartheid report Amnesty International states: “Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip and other discriminatory policies have created a water and sanitation crisis characterized by an acute shortage of potable water, reduced ability to filter water and water pollution.  The routine power cuts and lack of equipment and resources to treat sewage, wastewater and solid waste puts the population of Gaza at increased risks of waterborne diseases and other health problems in the context of a collapsing health sector” (p.195).

 

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

Banner Design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press

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Good News

“Tens of thousands of donated books have started to arrive at the new location of a Gaza bookshop that was destroyed by Israeli air strikes last year, and owner Samir Mansour now plans to reopen its doors next month. The two-storey Samir Mansour bookshop, which was reduced to rubble last May, had been founded by the Palestinian Mansour 22 years ago and was a beloved part of the local community. Its destruction during the 11-day conflict, which killed more than 250 people in Gaza and 13 in Israel, prompted a campaign that raised $250,000 (£187,000) to help rebuild it, plus donations of 150,000 books.”

More than wonderful’ … Gaza bookshop to reopen after unexpectedly successful global campaign

The ruins of the Samir Mansour bookshop in May 2021. Photograph: Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

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