Showing posts with label Palestinian prisoners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palestinian prisoners. Show all posts

Monday, March 3, 2025

Ken Jones: Slow Motion Ethnic Cleansing In Hebron

Photo from West Bank land theft documentary NO OTHER LAND which won an Oscar last night (if you're in the UK, watch it streaming at Channel 4).

Reposting this piece from Counterpunch by a friend who just returned from the West Bank. 

Slow Motion Ethnic Cleansing in Hebron

Photograph Source: Oren Rozen – Own work – CC BY-SA 4.0

“Tell our story!” the man in the checkpoint cage yelled, in English. He and a crowd of Palestinian Muslim men were jammed together waiting to be checked out, one at a time, by an Israeli soldier in a glass booth so they could go into Hebron’s Ibrahimi Mosque to pray. Such daily and routine humiliation is the hallmark of the Israeli occupation.

I was in Hebron (Al-Khalil) for two weeks recently as part of a Community Peacemaker Team (CPT) delegation. Every day, we accompanied or heard testimony from people living there who were living under the guns of the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) and the aggressive hostility of the 800 settlers who claim that the city of 200,000 was given to them by their god. Every night, I kept a blog trying to capture one of the many stories we heard of the oppression.

Hebron is in the southern part of the West Bank. It hasn’t gotten the genocidal Gaza treatment that Jenin, Tulkarem, and Nur Shams are now getting. But, as someone said to me, “We are waiting our turn.” It may be that the tanks and bombs will come to Hebron too, but at the moment, what is happening there is the decades-long grind of military occupation and settler colonialism.

The stories we heard are gruesome. And everyone has one. Most men have been taken to prison and tortured. It’s common to have your home broken into in the middle of the night by soldiers who yell, beat everyone, and kidnap fathers, sons and daughters, taking them away to unknown locations, with no charges, and for an undetermined time. Entire homes are demolished regularly. Land is stolen. Movement is restricted. Surveillance is constant and pervasive. These stories don’t make the news. They have become too normalized.

Here are a couple of stories that may give a glimpse of what daily life is like in Hebron.

One day, a 20 year old woman told us about her year in prison. She recounted the horribly dirty and crowded conditions, the scarcity and bad quality of the food, the strip searches, the beatings, the constant verbal abuse.

She said the hardest thing that she witnessed was when women from Gaza were brought in. They wore bloody clothes and their hijabs had been stripped away from them. They were given no beds, nothing to clean themselves with. They were given dirty clothes that had been deliberately contaminated with lice. When they went to the bathroom, they were taken by male soldiers.

Then she told us the story of Oct 7, 2024, the one year memorial” of the Gazan attack on Israelis. An officer entered womens rooms and gave them 30 seconds to cover themselves before soldiers came in. When the soldiers came, they put zip ties on the womens hands, blindfolded them, and took them out. They made them lie face down on muddy ground, beat them, cursed hatefully at them, and brought police dogs out to terrorize them. While this was going on, soldiers went into their cells, took all of their clothes, and set off tear gas grenades in their cells. Then they put the women back in their cells.

On another day, an older man who was living in a family home handed down through generations told us of the daily harassment he has been subjected to by settlers living next to his house. Protected by the IOF, they are taking pieces of his land every day. They have poisoned his sheep, stolen his olives, and destroyed over 250 olive trees.

His home is frequently used for family gatherings. During one of these recent gatherings, a large group of settlers burst into the house and started assaulting people. Some of them were dressed as soldiers. There were many injuries, windows were broken, and cars damaged. Then they stopped an ambulance from getting to the house.

Settlers have attacked his family in the fields and farm with stones, have brandished guns, and beaten them with sticks. They have driven jeeps right into the house, dumped bulldozers full of trash at their front door. Soldiers have tear gassed the inside of their home and flown drones overhead frequently.

The story we heard at the village of Um Al-Khair in the South Hebron Hills is emblematic of what is happening  all over the West Bank. The village consists largely of descendants of refugees from the 1948 Nakba.

Immediately next to the village is a settlement of some 500 Israeli families and nearby, a military base. The teens from the settlement act as front-line vigilantes. They roam around with sticks and pepper spray making life miserable and tense for the people of the village. They have broken into homes and beaten women, damaged the village water pump, and even herded sheep right into village homes.

Whenever the villagers complain to the police about such attacks, the police say they have been told by the settlers that the teens are being attacked by the Palestinians. The police threaten to arrest the villagers if they keep making these calls.

We were walked to a recently demolished house where a couple of young Palestinian men were sitting, looking sadly at the ruins. Three rooms and a water tank were all jumbled up in piles. One of the men told us his 60-year old mother, who owned the house, had been thrown to the ground when she yelled about her house being destroyed. There was nothing the son or mother could do about it. Their family is now crowded in with a next door neighbor. In June, Israel had demolished 10 homes in one morning in the village.

We were told that Israeli law forbids people from rebuilding a demolished home in the same site. There is, in fact, a settler organization in Israel named Regavin that flies drones over newly demolished homes to report to the military any Palestinian attempt to rebuild. Still, the son and villagers are planning to rebuild the home.

Our village guide talked about the trauma of it all, especially for the kids. He said, It is very hard for us to live in this condition. These people are not neighbors, they dont care about us at all. They treat their dogs better than they treat us.” He worried about the mental health of his five young daughters and all of his friends living there.

We walked down to the paved road that was put in for the settlement. It was put over a dirt road that had been there since Jordan controlled this territory many years ago. Israel now defined the paved road as the border of the village, beyond which they and their goats and sheep were not allowed to trespass.” Simple as that, their pasture land was stolen. Soldiers also put a gate at the beginning of the road so that they can close off entry and exit into the village whenever they choose.

We walked past some sapling trees, supplied by the Jewish National Fund, that settlers had just planted right next to villagers’ houses. The obvious purpose of planting the trees was to establish a claim to the land.

We saw the electric lines leading to the settlement. The villagers cant use that electricity. They have power only from a small number of solar panels. We also saw the now repaired water pump from which they are allowed to draw from only 2 days a week, for a total of 6 hours. We saw the surveillance camera up on a pole overlooking the village. They are watching us all the time,” our guide said.

We were told about the sounds of gunfire from the military firing range that was put illegally on their land. I imagined how threatening that must be, especially for the children.

All of this pressure in Um Al-Khair is one big systematic slow motion ethnic cleansing campaign, designed to push the villagers off their land. The intention is not just to demolish homes, land rights, and mental health. Its meant to demolish hope.

But from what I could see, Palestinians will never give up hope. Every story of injustice we heard was told with a spirit of determined resilience and resistance – sumud, as it is called there. No Palestinian we met was planning to leave or submit. Everyone appeared to be carrying on with life, with joy and humor, and with healthy relationships, despite the danger and indignities they were suffering. They refuse to live in fear. As one person said, “Thats what they want, for us to be afraid. They want us to leave. We will not fear and we will stay until this occupation is over.”

As has often happened to me when I visit places that are on the receiving side of U.S.-sponsored violence and oppression, I was struck during this visit by the strong and enviable character of the Palestinians we met. They are not defeated, their spirits are not broken. They are warm, generous, dignified. I always felt safe and cared for around them, even though I, as an American, had no right to expect such treatment. The only times I felt fear and coldness were when I was around Israeli soldiers or settlers. That’s telling.

The stories and voices of Palestinians have always been purposefully suppressed by the powers that be in the U.S. and the West. As has the truth about how Palestinians have been treated for over a hundred years. The genocide in Gaza has burst that bubble of shadows and lies and revealed the ugly truth of the Zionist project all over Palestine. It is a cancer.

Hebron is still a vibrant place, bustling with life. May its countless stories be heard, may its occupation end, may its people be free. And the same for all of Palestine.

Saturday, January 25, 2025

Hamas Warns Duplicitous "Israel"

Hamas released four more hostages today, young women who appeared healthy and well-fed. Note that the soldier on the left is holding one of the famous Hamas gift bags. Photo source: Middle East Eye

Amidst a changeover between one set of  Zionists for another set in Washington DC, the ceasefire in Gaza is tenuous (and most of the violence for now seems to have moved to the West Bank). 

Hamas leadership issued a statement on social media yesterday that strikes me as both credible and ominous.


⚡️BREAKING: Hamas statement to the families of "israeli" prisoners in the Gaza Strip:

As preparations are underway for the release of a second batch of "israeli" prisoners from Gaza, we have followed with great astonishment the statements of several occupation leaders from the extremist "israeli" government, who have hinted at the resumption of war and destruction in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas and the resistance have demonstrated a strong commitment to preserving the lives of "israeli" prisoners in our custody and ensuring their basic needs are met, despite the genocide, starvation, and targeting endured by our people.
"Imprisoned Palestinian scholar and leader Khalida Jarrar liberated in Toufan al-Ahrar after over 5 months in solitary confinement." Source: Samidoun
This includes the bombing of some detention sites multiple times over the past 15 months and the killing and torture of Palestinian detainees in occupation prisons, acts that shame humanity itself.

Upon reaching the ceasefire agreement and releasing the first group of female prisoners, we were deeply committed to ensuring their delivery in a civilized and humane manner, unlike the treatment our detainees experienced during their release.

Today, we address this message to you in a time of great complexity and pain for all. We sense a great danger in the recent statements made by "israeli" political leaders. These remarks signal an imminent threat to everyone, including your loved ones still in Gaza.

The recent statements by officials in the "israeli" government, suggesting intentions to resume war and destruction in Gaza, raise serious concerns about the safety of your children and the hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians suffering under siege and war.

Here, we present to you the most prominent of these statements:

1- Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on January 20, 2025, stated that he had received a personal promise from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resume aggression on Gaza after the first phase of the agreement, considering the ceasefire to be merely a temporary stage, to be followed by a new war to eliminate Hamas.
2- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on January 18, 2025, indicated that the ceasefire agreement is temporary, asserting that "israel" would return to fighting "in a new way and with great force" if circumstances necessitate it.
3- Minister Dudi Amsalem on January 22, 2025, claimed that the second phase of the ceasefire agreement would not occur, calling for an inevitable return to war.
4- Knesset Member Tally Gotliv on January 22, 2025, demanded the seizure of land in Gaza and the establishment of military bases on it, describing the truce as "unreal." 

We warn that these statements not only threaten a return to escalation and destruction but also put the safety of your loved ones at direct risk.

We call upon you, as the families of the captives who are most impacted by what may happen, to take a responsible humanitarian stance and raise your voices to the "israeli" government and its leaders. These leaders prioritize their personal and political interests over the public interest, which should focus on ensuring the safety of your sons and everyone in Gaza, and adhering to the agreements.

We believe that your voices can bring about real change, and that your demands can make a difference in pushing back against the recklessness of this far-right government and its leaders. Your voices can pressure them to honor agreements that guarantee the safety of all and the return of your loved ones to you. War will only bring more destruction and loss, putting the lives of the remaining prisoners in real danger and an uncertain fate.

Office of Martyrs, Prisoners, and the Wounded
Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas
11th Rajab 1446 AH
January 23, 2025 CE

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Ceasefire How? A Reading List

Palestinians react to news on a ceasefire deal with Israel, in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip. [Ramadan Abed/Reuters] Source: Aljazeera


Since Israel is, like the U.S. as described by Russia and China "non-agreement capable," it remains to be seen how much fire actually ceases. Yesterday when the ceasefire was announced Zionists went on killing Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.



https://x.com/sahouraxo/status/1879690323779346438


It's early days for an agreement that goes into effect on Sunday, and I can't blame Gaza's survivors for celebrating the end of this particular phase of their torment. Or Hamas for celebrating this as a win. While I myself remain skeptical.

Read the full text of the agreement here.


How many aid trucks will actually be allowed in?

Which Palestinians will be rearrested immediately after being released from Israel's torture prison, as per past practice?

Will the Palestinian Authority go on killing on Israel's behalf in the West Bank?

Will the bombing of Palestine's supporters in Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen cease too?


Perhaps a reading list is in order today as we sift through what is known and unknown about this glimmer of hope.

Aljazeera video: "Netanyahu, a 'war criminal', cannot be trusted with a ceasefire: Marwan Bishara"

Excerpt:

We need to focus on the humanitarian issue that is facing us in Gaza.. 
We need to look at the future in a way clean from the craziness of Israeli politics..

What's important is to end the occupation -- of Gaza, of the West Bank, of East Jerusalem, even of the Syrian Golan Heights.


Caitlin Johnstone: "Thoughts on the ceasefire deal"

Excerpt:

The deal as written is apparently virtually identical to the one Hamas agreed to last May, which Netanyahu then sabotaged with the complicity of the Biden administration.

As usual, Israel appears to be ramping up its aggressions to kill as many people as possible before the fighting comes to an end. These next few days will be an especially terrifying time to be living in Gaza.
 

Simplicius: "Ceasefire deal reportedly reached in Gaza, as both Biden and Trump take credit"

Excerpt:

After much more than a year of fighting, the “pound for pound greatest military force on the planet” was unable to defeat Hamas even after being given a blank cheque for total indiscriminate slaughter and genocide of the civilian population with zero repercussions, a leeway not afforded to any other military force in recent history.

The fact is, the IDF performed dismally and the reason the deal even came about was because the last several weeks saw a significant spike in IDF soldiers’ deaths.


A man waves a Palestinian flag in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip. [Ramadan Abed/Reuters]  Source: Aljazeera


Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network: "The resistance lives, the prison doors open -- on the road to liberation and return"

Excerpt:

Of course, the genocide in Palestine did not begin in October 2023, and it will not end with the implementation of this agreement. Genocide is the nature of Zionism; it is the weapon of imperialism. Since 1948 – and indeed, since the Balfour declaration and British colonialism in Palestine – Palestinians have been resisting genocide. This is, however, a new stage of struggle against the ongoing Zionist genocide, organized, directed and backed by the imperialist powers – as illustrated by their colonial bombardment of Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank as the ceasefire agreement was being announced.


Fiorella Isabel: "Israel and Hamas reach a ceasefire and hostage deal after 15 months of genocide but there's a nefarious catch"

Excerpt:

This is happening now because [Israel] needed Syria out, a weakened Axis, and weakened non-aligned axis, for their required objectives. It’s also no coincidence that we’re seeing this all come with a change of face in the US, while the same long-planned foreign policy will continue. 
Few mention the fact that Israel’s been taking up more and more land in the occupied West Bank with the help of the Palestinian Authority. It’s only a matter of time before they fully control the entire thing, given the state of the region and the incoming logistics, unless there is a miraculous, united push to stop Israel and the US -- which looking at Syria, is unlikely.


I end by reflecting that Hamas' stated purpose of the Oct 7 military operation was to capture hostages that could be swapped for Palestinian prisoners. So this agreement is in the "win" column for them. Israel's stated purpose in responding after Oct 7 was to obliterate Hamas (which outgoing Secretary State Blinken said this week has more members than ever, so that's in the "loss column") and free the hostages. Many hostages did not live to see their freedom, largely because Israel's collective punishment of Gaza fell on them, too. So that's a draw.

As for the U.S. and Israel's international reputation, both are in tatters over genocide in Gaza. Major losses for them with far-reaching consequences, and that they will probably learn nothing from.