Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts

Monday, 12 October 2015

Jerusalem attacks: Israelis wounded in fresh stabbings

Israeli emergency services personnel at the scene of a stabbing attack in Jerusalem's Ammunition Hill district (12 October 2015)


Image copyrightAFP
Image captionThe second attack took place near Israeli police headquarters in the Ammunition Hill district
Five Israelis have been stabbed in Jerusalem - the latest in a series of recent stabbings by Palestinians.
In the latest attack, an Israeli soldier was wounded after being stabbed on board a bus. The attacker was shot dead and one civilian was injured.
Two youths were stabbed earlier at a settlement in East Jerusalem, leaving one of the victims, a 13-year-old boy, in a critical condition.
Two Israeli policemen were also wounded in separate attacks.
Four Israelis and dozens of Palestinians, including several assailants, have been killed in the recent upsurge of violence.
In the fifth attack on Monday, a man described by Israeli police as Arab stabbed an Israeli soldier on board a bus after trying to seize his gun. A civilian was also injured before the attacker was shot dead.


The day's attacks began when an Arab man stabbed a policeman in the Old City after being stopped when he was seen acting suspiciously, police said. The officer was saved from injury because he was wearing a protective vest. His attacker was shot dead by police.
It occurred near the Lions' Gate, the scene of several other previous stabbings.
Later, an Arab woman stabbed a policeman near police headquarters in the Ammunition Hill area of East Jerusalem, police said. The policeman, who was lightly wounded, managed to shoot and injure the attacker.

Injured suspected attacker wheeled away by Israeli medics in Jerusalem (12/10/15)Image copyrightAFP
Image captionPolice said the officer managed to shoot the female attacker after she stabbed him
Scene of stabbing at Lions' Gate in Jerusalem's Old City (12/10/15)Image copyrightEPA
Image captionLions' Gate has been the scene of several stabbings in recent days

One of the Palestinian attackers of the two youths in the Pisgat Zeev settlement was shot and killed by police. His 13-year-old accomplice was shot and seriously injured.
Israeli police spokeswoman Luba Samri identified the two assailants as 13- and 17-year-old Palestinians from nearby Beit Hanina.
Tensions between Israelis and Palestinians have soared recently, fuelled by clashes at a flashpoint holy site in Jerusalem, in the West Bank, and across the Gaza border, as well as the wave of stabbings.
At the weekend several Palestinians were killed in clashes with Israeli troops and by an Israeli air strike on a militant site in Gaza in response to rocket fire on Israel.

What is happening between Israelis and Palestinians?

There has been a spate of stabbings of Israelis by Palestinians since early October, and one apparent revenge stabbing by an Israeli. The attacks, in which some Israelis have died, have struck in Jerusalem and elsewhere, and in the occupied West Bank. Israel has tightened security and clashed with rioting Palestinians, leading to deaths on the Palestinian side. The violence has also spread to the border with Gaza.

What's behind the latest unrest?

After a period of relative quiet, violence between the two communities has spiralled since clashes erupted at a flashpoint Jerusalem holy site in mid-September. It was fuelled by rumours among Palestinians that Israel was attempting to alter a long-standing religious arrangement governing the site. Israel repeatedly dismissed the rumours as incitement. Soon afterwards, two Israelis were shot dead by Palestinians in the West Bank and the stabbing attacks began. Both Israel and the Palestinian authorities have accused one another of doing nothing to protect each other's communities.

Is this a new Palestinian intifada, or uprising?

There have been two organised armed uprisings by Palestinians against Israeli occupation, in the 1980s and early 2000s. With peace talks moribund, some observers have questioned whether we are now seeing a third. The stabbing attacks seem to be opportunistic and although they have been praised by militant groups, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has said Palestinians are not interested in a further escalation.

Israeli Airstrikes Kill Pregnant Mother and Her Daughter

A masked Palestinian hurls rocks towards Israeli soldiers during clashes following the funeral of Mohammed Fares al-Jaabari on October 10, 2015, in the West Bank town of Hebron
A masked Palestinian hurls rocks towards Israeli soldiers during clashes following the funeral of Mohammed Fares al-Jaabari on October 10, 2015, in the West Bank town of Hebron | Photo: AFP

This content was originally published by teleSUR at the following address: 
 "http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Israeli-Airstrikes-Kill-Pregnant-Mother-and-Her-Daughter-20151010-0020.html". If you intend to use it, please cite the source and provide a link to the original article. www.teleSURtv.net/english

The Palestinian death toll rose to 22 on Sunday after Israel launched airstikes on Gaza that demolished a home.
Israeli airstrikes on Gaza killed a woman who was five months pregnant and her three-year-old daughter. The strikes, which took place early Sunday morning, bring the number of Palestinians killed by Israel since the start of the month to 22.
Noor Hassan, 30, and her daughter died when their house collapsed following an Israeli airstrike. A spokesman for the Gaza Health Ministry said four other people were injured in the collapse, including a 5-year-old boy.
Witnesses said an explosion at a nearby Hamas camp caused the building to collapse as the family slept, the Associated Press reported.
Israel said it was responding to rockets fired from the Gaza Strip. No groups have claimed responsibility.
In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces said it “will continue to respond with severity to any attempts to disturb the calm in southern Israel.”
On Saturday, Israeli soldiers shot and killed two Palestinian teenagers in the Gaza Strip less than 24 hours after six other Palestinians were shot dead while protesting along the border with Israel.
Eleven Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Friday. Four Israelis have also died.
Palestine's Permanent Observer to the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, called on the UN Security Council to take action to diffuse the situation.

In a letter addressed to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Mansour said the international community should take action “to ensure immediate protection to the defenseless Palestinian civilian population, consistent with the provisions and obligations of international humanitarian law.” Israeli airstrikes on Gaza killed a woman who was five months pregnant and her three-year-old daughter. The strikes, which took place early Sunday morning, bring the number of Palestinians killed by Israel since the start of the month to 22.

Noor Hassan, 30, and her daughter died when their house collapsed following an Israeli airstrike. A spokesman for the Gaza Health Ministry said four other people were injured in the collapse, including a 5-year-old boy.

Witnesses said an explosion at a nearby Hamas camp caused the building to collapse as the family slept, the Associated Press reported.

Israel said it was responding to rockets fired from the Gaza Strip. No groups have claimed responsibility.

In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces said it “will continue to respond with severity to any attempts to disturb the calm in southern Israel.”

On Saturday, Israeli soldiers shot and killed two Palestinian teenagers in the Gaza Strip less than 24 hours after six other Palestinians were shot dead while protesting along the border with Israel.

Eleven Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Friday. Four Israelis have also died.

Palestine's Permanent Observer to the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, called on the UN Security Council to take action to diffuse the situation.

In a letter addressed to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Mansour said the international community should take action “to ensure immediate protection to the defenseless Palestinian civilian population, consistent with the provisions and obligations of international humanitarian law.”

 

This content was originally published by teleSUR at the following address: 
 "http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Israeli-Airstrikes-Kill-Pregnant-Mother-and-Her-Daughter-20151010-0020.html". If you intend to use it, please cite the source and provide a link to the original article. www.teleSURtv.net/english

Sunday, 11 October 2015

Rally in Paris urges France to recognize Palestine state


Rally in Paris urges France to recognize Palestine state


People march to Place de la Republique raising Palestinian flags and chanting slogans

World Bulletin / News Desk
A huge crowd of people rallied on Sunday in the French capital Paris to call on their government to recognize the state of Palestine.
Demonstrators marched from Chatelet to the Place de la Republique square in Paris, raising Palestinian flags and singing slogans "Free, Free Palestine", "Boycott Israel" and "We are all Palestinians”.
The rally, dubbed "Time has come, It is now" was called by a group of NGOs and pro-Palestine associations such as the France Palestine Solidarity.
"Not a day goes by without young Palestinians losing their lives. We cannot let this aggression continue against the right of Palestinians to exist on their own land," said the association in a statement 
"France must firmly condemn Israel... require immediate sanctions against it. France has to assume its responsibilities and recognize the state of Palestine," added the association.
"I'm here to call for peace. I'm Jewish and I want my country France to impose on Israel the recognition of the State of Palestine," Yohan, 43, told Anadolu Agency, holding a sign that said "Yes For Palestine, Yes for the Peace".
"I came to show my solidarity with the Palestinian people against the Israeli occupation and call on my country to recognize Palestine as a state,” Madjid Measaoudene, member of the city council of Seine-Saint-Denis, told Anadolu Agency.
Both the French Assembly and Senate adopted in December 2014 resolutions calling their government to recognize Palestine' statehood. The French foreign minister Laurent Fabius has said that France would do so in "the appropriate time".
In the past 24 hours alone, nine Palestinians were killed and around 200 were injured by live ammunition and rubber bullets across Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

Palestine clashes: Netanyahu and Abbas are losing their grip



 Signs that protests are appealing to young, educated women reveal how far the crisis is escalating beyond politicians’ control
Palestinian protesters during clashes with Israeli security forces near Gaza City on Saturday
Palestinian protesters during clashes with Israeli security forces near Gaza City on Saturday. Photograph: Mahmud Hams/AFP/Getty Images

At the edge of Ramallah, the city runs into an area of brown fields and trees close to a roundabout overlooked by an ugly monument.
A well-known clash point where young men come to throw stones at Israeli soldiers and police,it has seen some of the most intense battles in a week of escalating violence between Israelis and Palestinians.
On Thursday there were new faces in the crowd: a group of schoolgirls and female students, some coming to the clash point for the first time, their faces wrapped in keffiyehs to hide their identities both from the Israelis and Palestinians who might recognise them and tell their parents.
The girls walk past burning tyres to a tree that screens them as the first few plastic-coated rounds are fired. They pick up stones to throw before the teargas drives everyone beyond the monument and in to the cover of the city streets.
It is not only in Ramallah that young women have been visible. A few days before in Bethlehem, at clashes outside the Intercontinental hotel near Rachel’s Tombthat followed the funeral of 13-year-old Abdul Rahman Shadi – shot by an Israeli sniper the day before – dozens of girls and young women were visible among the crowd.
In Ramallah the girls don’t want to speak or be photographed. Eventually they are persuaded to identify themselves with just a first name. Shahad, 20, is a student at al-Quds university. “This is my second time,” she says. “I came yesterday for the first time because it was forbidden before.”
A friend adds: “Now we feel encouraged to do this, so more girls are participating.” Yasmin, 15, still in her green-and-white striped school shirt, is with her friends from her school. “We want to protect our country,” she says. “We are here for one another and to look after each other. This is the first time for us. Everyone has to help and we are here to help the boys – it’s our duty to participate.”
“He [Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas] promised a bombshell during his last speech, but we still haven’t seen anything,” a young woman told Agence France-Presse in another interview.
“The intifada continues because we stopped listening to the president a long time ago,” said a first-year literature undergraduate.
Amid the efforts to define what is happening in Jerusalem, in the occupied Palestinian territories and in Israeli towns with a significant number of Israeli citizens of Palestinian origin, it is easier to say what is different from the first and second intifadas so far.
What is happening now – despite the intervention of Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas leader in Gaza, on Friday – is not organised in any meaningful sense. Unlike the first intifada, which began in 1987, no decision has been made to fund what is happening as it has emerged. Mahmoud Abbas has also asked the Palestinian security forces and Fatah’s armed wing to desist from joining in the violence, as the message he has delivered has largely been about avoiding any further escalation while supporting popular protest.


The attacks on Israelis that have occurred both in recent weeks and in the last year have been different from the second intifada and its suicide bombers from different Palestinian factions. Attacks have been limited to low-tech assaults using knives and screwdrivers, and assaults involving cars, most often in what Israel’s security forces call “lone-wolf attacks”.
The presence of the girls, many well dressed, suggests another difference – one that has been noticed by Palestinian officials. “Half the people going to clashes I would say are affiliated to Fatah. But it is a very interesting process. Even the young people affiliated to Fatah are not tied to the Palestinian Authority. They are educated. They are reading history.
“They are coming not because of a particular ideology – like that of Hamas or the PFLP [Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine] – but out of a romantic notion of a national movement. They see the possibility of an intifada and they want an intifada, and in the end it is possible they will have one, and they think that the Palestinian Authority will have no choice but to start funding one.”
What is happening – and on both sides – is more subtle and potentially profound than simply a wave of violence, whatever the definition that is applied to it and regardless how long the current cycle lasts.
It is – as both Israeli and Palestinian commentators noted last week – a reflection of deeper shifts in both Palestinian and Israeli society. In the midst of a failure of political leadership on both sides as well as in the international community, it threatens to change the decade-long dynamics that have governed Israeli-Palestinian relations.
“At this point, it is clear we are standing on a slippery slope,” he said, adding that fresh lethal attacks could “release violent energies that the two sides have generally managed to keep on a low flame over the past decade”. In the past week, evidence of the potential for the new “violent energies” cited by Harel have become more and more apparent.
A call by Jerusalem’s mayor, Nir Barkat, for all Israeli citizens with gun licences to carry their arms – following footage of Barkat himself touring east Jerusalem neighbourhoods carrying an assault rifle – has seen more weapons on show in the city. The febrile atmosphere has seen assaults by Jews on Arabs, including a stabbing attack in Dimona, and far-right Jewish demonstrators taking to the streets chanting “Death to Arabs”. It is a continuing increase in Jewish extremist violence that has been blamed by some Israeli security sources for escalating the problems.
“The violence of Jews against Arabs this time has reached a scale the likes of which we cannot remember,” one unnamed officer told the Israeli columnist Nahum Barnea in Yedioth Ahronoth last week. “Israelis uprooted hundreds of the Arabs’ olive trees, demolished houses, vandalised cars. Violence spurs counter-violence.”
And while the proximate and much cited causes have been well rehearsed – including the recent tensions at Jerusalem’s most holy site known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and Jews as the Temple Mount; a moribund peace process and the steady drip of violence – a combination of two other factors is driving the escalation. On the one hand is the sense that the current situation – which has seen the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, attempt to “manage the conflict” while frustrating peace negotiations by continuing settlement and occupation – is no longer tenable.
On the other is the increasing impression that both Netanyahu and Abbas have boxed themselves into respective corners, worn out their strategies, and been left with increasingly little space for manoeuvre.
On Abbas’s side, that has meant a long-term policy of avoiding conflict, including via security cooperation with Israel, in the hope that the result will be international pressure on Israel towards a Palestinian state, a policy that many now believe has failed.A recent report by the Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research found that two thirds of the Palestinian public want Abbas to resign, while a growing number of Palestinians also said they supported “armed resistance” against Israel. His perceived failure has seen many Palestinians compare Abbas unfavourably with his predecessor, Yassir Arafat, with an increasing nostalgia that is reflected in the many T-shirts at clashes bearing Arafat’s face.
“Abu Mazen [Abbas] does not want a third intifada,” Hasan Qureishi, deputy speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council, told the Observer last week at the funeral in Tulkarem of a Palestinian youth killed in a clash. “You hear the comparison with Yassir Arafat. Arafat made things happen. Abu Mazen reads the news.”
“He doesn’t believe in mobilisation,” said another official. “And he doesn’t want to see Palestinian children dying. But his formula has failed. His speech last month to the UN general assembly reflected that.”
If Netanyahu’s problems are different, the dynamic is the same. He dissolved his previous government last December, declaring it too unruly and choosing to court a national religious and pro-settlement right during the election campaign to form a “natural” rightwing government in which he felt he would be more comfortable.
But the blank cheques he wrote during that campaign – including the warning about Arab voters coming out in “droves”; the appeal to settlement building and the promise that no Palestinian state would emerge on his watch (later disavowed) – have come back to haunt him. Netanyahu has vacillated between trying to please rightwing hardliners and opposing them as the frictions have escalated dangerously.
Now it is his “natural” rightwing allies who seem unruly – not least the visitors to a pro-settlement protest camp outside his house that included cabinet ministers from his coalition allies and members of his own Likud party – as he called last week for a “national unity” government. Indeed, it was Netanyahu who allowed the construction minister, Uri Ariel, to resume his visits to the Temple Mount after a nine-month gap – one of the sparks of the recent conflict. Only last week did Netanyahu move to ban MPs and ministers from the site.
What the past week has also dramatised in the starkest terms is how the new reality of low-tech and unorganised attacks by individuals, including residents of east Jerusalem and now Israeli towns, has imposed itself beyond an Israeli separation wall which was built at huge cost to stop suicide bombers.
Instead the latest wave of confrontation has redefined the notion of asymmetry in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The individually motivated nature of the attacks have both blindsided Israel’s domestic intelligence agency and police, and left politicians with no obvious enemy to pursue. Lacking formal backing and support, the current escalation on the Palestinian side could very well subside, although the conditions that have prompted it will inevitably remain.
Both sides of the divide are acutely aware that under the present set of circumstances, another serious incident perpetrated by either side could yet again dangerously change the dynamics. There is the that risk factions such as Hamas, whose leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, endorsed an intifada on Friday – could enter the clashes. That fear was heightened the morning after it was announced that a 25-year-old member of the group in Shuafat refugee camp in east Jerusalem died after he was shot during an exchange of gunfire with the Israeli security forces.
As two more Israelis were stabbed and their assailant shot, there is little sign that the current violence will abate. Read also Al-aqsa tension dawabsheh murder behind


Saturday, 10 October 2015

Al-Aqsa tension, Dawabsheh murder behind Palestine anger


B


A Palestinian protestor aims with his sling shot during a protest in the West Bank [file photo]















Tensions around Jerusalem’s revered Al-Aqsa Mosque and anger over the killing of a Palestinian baby in July are behind the current outburst of hostility in Palestine and Israel, according to Palestinian officials and analysts.
In the past week, four Israelis and 14 Palestinians have been killed in a wave of violence that has involved public stabbings and widespread clashes between Palestinian protesters and Israeli security forces.
While the violence began with the barring of Palestinian men under 50 from Al-Aqsa, Islam’s third holiest site, many Palestinians are also angered that there have been no arrests after Israeli settlers burned to death 18-month-old Ali Dawabsheh and his parents in the West Bank town of Duma in July.
Senior Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) official Mustafa Barghouti said Palestinians were reacting to “insults to Al-Aqsa Mosque and to Jerusalem and the Israeli settlement activities.”
“What made people very angry was the handling of the murder of the Dawabsheh family and the fact the Israeli army did not bring anything to court yet from those who committed this terrible crime,” Barhgouti told Anadolu Agency.
He said the protesters, who have taken to the streets in almost every Palestinian city and town as well as in Jaffa, which adjoins the Israeli city of Tel Aviv, come from across the political spectrum and are disillusioned by a lack of hope or opportunity.
Despite the PLO leader and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas saying he did not want any further violence, Barghouti said the current situation signalled the end of negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis.
He said the result of negotiations started with the 1993 Oslo Accords had been “a big fat zero, nothing. So people are turning back to what they know; struggle against occupation, struggle against the system of apartheid.”
“I think what’s happening today is nothing but another intifada, an uprising with merely the participation of young people,” said Barghouti. “They realize that we are now in a new stage, that a whole period, 22 years of useless negotiations is over, that we have to change the balance of power.”
Two other popular uprisings, known as intifadas, gripped Palestine and Israel from 1987 to 1991 and 2000 to 2005 and many observers have been questioning whether the current wave of violence constitutes a third intifada.
Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post on Friday quoted several Arab academics at Israeli universities saying an intifada was “inevitable”, but had not yet broken out.
Said Zeedani, professor of Philosophy at Al-Quds University, told Anadolu Agency that “it’s [a] wave of events and counter events... it has been building for weeks.”
“The wave is going to continue for a few days but I don’t see it as a third intifada," Zeedani said.
“Palestinians have the same complaints [as during the intifada], but the situation is different. Abu Mazen [Mahmoud Abbas] is against the escalation and is continuing the security co-operation [with Israel]. There is also Gaza and the special situation there,” he said, referring to the withdrawal of any active Israeli presence in Gaza after the second intifada ended in 2005.
The stabbings of around 15 Israelis, two of whom were killed, has led to heavy security measures by the Israeli government, especially in Jerusalem’s historic old city where regular checkpoints and metal detectors have been installed.
But Israel has recognized neither Al-Aqsa nor the Dawabsheh murder as the cause of the violence.
Instead it has accused Abbas and other Palestinian factions of encouraging it by criticizing hardline Jewish groups for forcing their way onto the site, despite what Israel says were limitations imposed on the number of Jews allowed at one time.
Reflecting statements by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Jerusalem Post columnist Caroline Glick wrote Thursday: “Abbas and his lieutenants not only incited attacks, they incentivized would be perpetrators to kill Jews.”
Zeedani said however that Abbas has made it clear he wants to avoid violence and that Netanyahu's decision to ban Israeli lawmakers from Al-Aqsa could also help avoid further violence.
“But it depends on how the two parties behave on the ground,” he said.
Barghouti, on the other hand, said the Palestinian leadership should unite behind the young protesters gathering across Palestine and support their movement.
“That would contribute dramatically to changing the balance of power,” he said. “They [the youth] are all with the spirit of resistance and I think what Netanyahu should understand is those who plant oppression eventually will harvest rage.”