Journalist injured by Israeli gunfire in Al-Bireh

A Palestinian photojournalist was injured by an Israeli rubber-coated round today while covering from the north entrance of Al-Bireh city in the center of the occupied West Bank, according to witnesses.

WAFA correspondent said Mutasem Saqf el-Heit, a freelance photojournalist, was injured in the chest with a rubber-coated round shot at him by Israeli soldiers during clashes between Israeli occupation soldiers and Palestinian protesters at the entrance to Al-Bireh.

The clashes erupted amid reports of deteriorating health conditions of Palestinian prisoner Nasser Abu Hmaid, a patient of cancer who is serving seven life sentences in Israeli jails.

Other protesters also sustained suffocation from gas inhalation as soldiers attacked them with teargas in the scene of the clashes.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

17 Palestinians injured by occupation forces in Beit Dajan, Kafr Qaddum

At least 17 Palestinians were injured today by the Israeli occupation army during the weekly protests against colonial Israeli settlement activities in the village of Kafr Qaddum and Beit Dajan in the occupied West Bank, according to local sources.

In Beit Dajan village, in Nablus province, Israeli occupation soldiers fired rubber-coated rounds and stun grenades at the anti-colonization protesters, injuring at least 12 of them and causing many cases of suffocation from teargas inhalation. All of the wounded were treated at the scene by local medics.

In the village of Kafr Qaddum, in Qalqilia province, five Palestinians were injured from Israeli rubber-coated rounds during clashes with the Israeli occupation army in the village. Other cases of suffocation from teargas inhalation were also reported.

Meantime in Hebron, south of the occupied West Bank, two Palestinians were injured by Israeli occupation soldiers and others sustained suffocation from teargas during clashes in the neighborhood of Bab al-Zawiya in the city. The two wounded were moved to hospital for medical treatment.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Occupation forces injure four Palestinians in Beita

At least four Palestinians were injured today by the Israeli occupation army during the weekly protest against colonial Israeli settlement activities in the village of Beita, in the occupied West Bank province of Nablus, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent (PRC).

Israeli occupation soldiers fired rubber-coated rounds and stun grenades at the anti-colonization protesters in Beita, injuring at least four of them and causing many cases of suffocation from teargas inhalation.

For near nearly eight months, Palestinians from Beita and neighboring villages have been holding almost daily protests against Israel’s construction of an illegal settlement outpost, Evaytar, on Jabal Sabih mount which is adjacent to the village.

Several Palestinian protesters have been killed and dozens wounded by Israeli occupation forces during recurrent clashes over the past five months.

In July, Israeli settlers vacated the illegal outpost under an agreement with the Israeli government that will allow for the outpost to remain intact and under permanent supervision of the Israeli occupation army, despite its unauthorized construction.

Before leaving, the dozens of Zionist families who had settled there erected a 13-meter-high iron Star of David facing the nearby Palestinian village of Beita with the phrase “We will return” inscribed next to it.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Palestinian prisoner Nasser Abu Hmaid suffers acute pneumonia, says his family

The family of Nasser Abu Hamid, a Palestinian serving seven life sentences in Israeli prisons, said today that the doctor supervising their son’s condition told them he had acute pneumonia as a result of a bacterial infection that led to a failure of his lungs and which caused him to fall into a coma.

The Abu Hamid family confirmed today they were able to visit their son, Nasser, who is currently in intensive care in the Barzilai Medical Center. The family told Palestinian Prisoner’s Society (PPS) that as soon as they entered the intensive care unit, the Israeli security officers asked them to stay away from Nasser’s room, and they did not allow them to approach him.

However, the family said refused to obey the order of the Israeli security officers and insisted on visiting their son to identify him while he was lying on the bed, with his stomach and head connected to tubes.

The family appealed to all parties of concern to take urgent and effective action to save the life of their son, as well as on the masses of our people to continue their popular support to press the occupation to release him as he’s facing an imminent risk of death.

Earlier this week, the Palestinian Prisoners Affairs Commission urged all human rights and international institutions to urgently intervene and pressure the Israeli occupation authorities to release the Abu Hamid, who is battling cancer.

The Commission warned in a statement that the prisoner Abu Hamid was battling death as a result of his suffering from the consequences of a surgery to remove a cancerous tumor in the lungs he underwent last October, when the occupation then returned him to the prison before he recovered.

Abu Hamid, 49 years old, from Al-Amari camp in Ramallah, has been detained since 2002 and is serving seven life sentences and an additional 50 years in prison. He has four brothers in jail who are also serving life sentences.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Jordan slams Israeli occupation’s approval of new settlement units

The Jordanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates today condemned the approval of the Israeli occupation authorities to build 3,557 new settlement housing units inside the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

The official spokesperson for the ministry, Ambassador Haitham Abu Al-Ful, confirmed that this step is a grave breach of international law and the resolutions of international legitimacy, foremost of which is Security Council Resolution No. 2334, stressing that the settlement policy is rejected and condemned.

He also said that settlement construction and expansion undermine the foundations of peace and the chances of achieving a comprehensive and just peace on the basis of the two-state solution in accordance with the resolutions of international legitimacy.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

25 Palestinian prisoners test positive for COVID at Naqab prison

Some 25 Palestinian political prisoners at the Israeli prison of Naqab have tested positive for COVID-19, amid a surge of cases linked to the Omicron variant across the occupying state of Israel, the Palestinian Authority’s Detainees Affairs Commission said today.

The Palestinian Prisoner’s Society (PPS), a prisoner advocacy group affiliated with Fatah Movement, said all of the 25 prisoners, all incarcerated at section 25 of the prison, have been isolated from the rest of the prisoners after their tests came out positive.

According to rights groups, at least 388 Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israeli prisons have tested positive for the highly contagious virus since the beginning of the pandemic two years ago.

The Naqab Prison, or Ktzi’ot Prison, is one of the most densely crowed Israeli prisons allocated for the detention of Palestinian political prisoners, with 1,200 prisoners currently incarcerated there. It located in the Naqab desert some 72 km south-west of Beersheba.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Washington Post: Israel must choose: Withdraw from the occupied territories or grant Palestinians full rights

US daily The Washington Post, owned by American entrepreneur and investor Jeff Bezos, has published an article titled “Israel must choose: Withdraw from the occupied territories or grant Palestinians under its control full rights.”

The article was written by senior analyst Mairav Zonszein who reports on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict at the International Crisis Group.

Following is the full text of the article by Mairav Zonszein:

When Israel’s new president, Isaac Herzog, marked the first night of Hannukah in December by lighting candles in the occupied West Bank city of Hebron, where some 850 Israeli settlers live under military protection among over 200,000 Palestinians, he offered yet another insulting reminder of Israel’s brutal occupation. Herzog talked about the need to denounce “all forms of hatred and violence” in a place where systemic violence against Palestinians is blatant.

The hodgepodge Israeli coalition that ended Benjamin Netanyahu’s tenure has tried to turn the page by practicing respectful diplomacy abroad. As foreign minister, centrist politician Yair Lapid has been trying to repair Israel’s relations with Democrats in the U.S. and with European Union governments, whom Netanyahu treated with disdain, in an effort to bolster Israel’s image as a liberal democracy that plays nice. The approach appeals to many Western officials who, understandably, given their experience with Netanyahu, are holding out hope for change. “We will not immediately declare that everyone who doesn’t agree with us is an antisemite and Israel-hater. This is not how you handle a country’s foreign relations,” Lapid said in July.

But that same month, after Ben & Jerry’s announced that it would no longer be selling its ice cream in settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories, where 670,000 Israelis reside illegally, Lapid called the move “anti-Israel and anti-Jewish.”

Presenting a settlement boycott as a boycott of Israel erases the distinction between Israel’s internationally recognized 1948 borders and the land — and people — it has occupied since 1967. Though the Naftali Bennett-Lapid coalition claims it is the antidote to Netanyahu’s rule, it is continuing the same policies of settlement expansion, demolitions and threats of eviction, state repression of Palestinians and refusal to engage in even the semblance of a political process. The new government has also, if anything, doubled down in conflating Israel and the West Bank.

Israel’s education minister recently upheld her predecessor’s decision to withhold the Israel Prize from math professor Oded Goldreich because he endorses a boycott of Ariel University, located in a large West Bank settlement. “I cannot award the Israel Prize for academic achievements, impressive as they are, [to someone] who calls for boycotting Israel,” she said, accusing him of boycotting “academic institutions in Israel,” even though Ariel is not in Israel.

Deputy Foreign Minister Idan Roll cancelled scheduled meetings with Belgian officials after their government announced it would begin labeling products made in the settlements — not a boycott, just consumer transparency. Roll said the decision to label products “strengthens extremists, does not help promote peace in the region and shows Belgium as not contributing to regional stability.” The Foreign Ministry issued a statement calling the move “anti-Israeli” and said “it is inconsistent with the Israeli government policy focused on improving the lives of Palestinians and strengthening the Palestinian Authority, and with improving Israel’s relations with European countries.”

According to this logic, even under a prime minister who claims to “shrink” the conflict, a defense minister who seeks to strengthen the Palestinian economy and a foreign minister who supports a two-state solution, Israeli policy is keeping the West Bank, legitimizing settlements and keeping Palestinians under military rule while professing to be improving their lives.

This continues the de facto annexation of previous governments — and arguably takes it slightly up a notch by creating the appearance of de jure annexation. It’s not merely continued land expropriation (while evading the legal ramifications) but a posturing that expects the rest of the world to accept occupied territory as if it were Israel. It is part of why Israeli human rights group B’Tselem followed Palestinian counterparts by declaring a year ago that Israel is an apartheid regime.

Palestinians and their supporters are rebuked and even punished when they call for a free Palestine “from the river to the sea.” A recent poll shows Palestinians living in the West Bank now favor one state over two. But Israel’s daily policies actually implement one state from the river to the sea, where Jews have freedoms that Palestinians are denied.

The normalization of Israeli settlements and erasure of the Green Line is not new. It has been taking place steadily since Israel began sending citizens over the line after the 1967 war. But this new coalition pursues this agenda while presenting itself as somehow friendlier and more palatable, which it gets away with largely due to international inaction.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency