Israeli settlers continue their rampage in the occupied territories, attack a Palestinian family, commuters

Israeli settlers continued today their unruly rampage in the occupied territories, attacking Palestinian civilians and commuters.

Sebastia mayor Mohammad Azzem told WAFA that a horde of settlers attacked the home of a resident of this northern West Bank town, spraying pepper on the face of the family members causing them injuries and burns.

He said the settlers have been attacking Palestinian vehicles driving on the roads nearby, mainly near a checkpoint manned by Israeli soldiers who do not intervene to stop the settlers from throwing stones at the Palestinian vehicles.

The checkpoint, near the illegal Shavi Shomron settlement, has been closed by the army since mid-December following the killing of a settler nearby disrupting movement on a vital road that links the West Bank cities of Jenin and Nablus.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Euro-Med Monitor: MEPs demand Israel ensure Palestinian journalists’ freedom of movement

A cross-party group of 20 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) co-signed a petition jointly organized by Euro-Med Monitor and Reporters Without Borders (RSF), demanding that Israel ensures the freedom of movement of Palestinian journalists.

The petition follows a report that Euro-Med Monitor released in November last year, entitled “Punishing Journalists: Israel’s Restrictions on Freedom of Movement.”. The report documented the claims of multiple Palestinian journalists that Israeli authorities heavily restricted their freedom of movement in, out and between Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem as a form of punishment or bargaining chip.

The report reveals how Israeli security services have used travel bans to coerce Palestinian journalists into collaborating against fellow Palestinians or to refrain from working with certain media outlets or reporting on certain topics. Some journalists further claim that after refusing Israeli authorities’ demands, they have been subject to different forms of intimidation and harassment including home raids, arbitrary detention and harsh interrogations.

The petition expressed serious concern regarding Israeli authorities’ use of arbitrary restrictions, such as travel bans, detentions, or home break-ins against Palestinian journalists. “Such measures pose a serious threat to the independence of Palestinian journalism and to freedom of speech and expression in the occupied Palestinian territories,” the petition read.

The co-signing MEPs called on Israel to lift all arbitrary travel bans against Palestinian journalists in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and “cease any other forms of harassment, intimidation, or blackmail against them.”

In addition, the petition demanded that Israel carries out “a transparent and independent investigation into the incidents in which Israeli officers threatened to deny Palestinian journalists their right to travel unless they work with the Israeli public security and intelligence services and provide security information.”

In a webinar co-organized by Euro-Med Monitor and RSF on Tuesday, Member of the European Parliament Margrete Auken said “it is very clear that journalists are being punished for doing their work. This is one of Israel’s brutal violations against media and journalists, and these practices are part of the broader violations of apartheid and occupation against Palestinians in general. It is clear that the EU countries are not shouldering their responsibilities towards Israeli violations,”

In December, Euro-Med Monitor and RSF launched the campaign #LetMajdoleenOut on social media. The two organizations called for an immediate end to the Israeli travel bans that prevent dozens of Palestinian journalists, including Majdoleen Hassona, winner of RSF Press Freedom Prize for Independence, from leaving the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The travel ban placed on Majdoleen Hassona two years ago by the Israeli authorities, who control the external borders of the Palestinian territories, have prevented her from returning from the West Bank to her base in Istanbul, where she works for the Turkish public broadcaster TRT. They have also prevented her from collecting her RSF award.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Weather: Very cold conditions with polar front entering Palestine bringing rain and snow

Very cold conditions are expected today in Palestine as a low-pressure polar front is expected to hit the country bringing heavy rain and thunderstorms, starting in the north and spreading to the rest of the country, and snow accumulating first on mountains 800 meters above sea level and then later at night on mountainous areas 700 meters above sea level, according to the Palestinian Meteorological Department (PMD).

Temperature is expected to drop to 7°C below the seasonal average.

Winds are southwesterly to westerly, active and gusty reaching 70km/h, while sea waves are high.

Temperature in the capital, Jerusalem, and Bethlehem is expected to reach a high of 7°C and a low of 1°C and in Ramallah and Hebron a high of 6°C and a low of 0°C. In Jericho, the Dead Sea, and the Jordan Valley temperature is expected to reach a high of 15°C and a low of 8°C, while it is expected to reach a high of 12°C and a low of 7°C in Gaza and the coastal areas.

The low-pressure cold front is expected to continue to affect the country tomorrow, Thursday, with temperature expected to drop and become 9°C below the seasonal average. Rain, occasional hail, and thunderstorms are also expected during the day.

Snow is expected to fall on mountainous areas 700 meters above sea level and later in the day changes to snow flurries falling mainly on areas 1000 meters above sea level as the wind continues to be 70km/h and high sea waves.

The cold front is expected to continue on Friday while the temperature is expected to rise by one degree Celsius, and again on Saturday but the temperature remains five degrees Celsius below the seasonal average. Rain, thunderstorms, and hail are expected during these two days to become light on Saturday.

The PMD warned against strong winds, low visibility, slippery roads, formation of floods in low areas and snow accumulation on high areas starting tonight and through Thursday.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Israeli settlement activities in and around Jerusalem, weather highlight of dailies

Israeli settlement activities in and around occupied Jerusalem as well as the weather condition and snow falling were highlighted on the front page of today’s Palestinian Arabic dailies.

Al-Quds said while Israel demolished two apartments in al-Tur neighborhood of occupied Jerusalem and settlers attacked Palestinian civilians in Hebron and nearby Masafer Yatta in the south of the West Bank, the government is planning new settlement projects on occupied land south of Jerusalem as well as legalizing dozens of illegal settlement outposts spread throughout the West Bank.

Al-Ayyam reported on the above and said that the Israeli government intends to connect all settlement outposts with the electricity grid thus legalizing them. It also said that the Israeli government has plans to evacuate al-Khan al-Ahmar community, east of Jerusalem, in order to build a new settlement in that area.

The third Palestinian daily, al-Hayat al-Jadida, reported on the demolition of the two apartments in al-Tur and Israeli violations but made the weather condition its main top front-page story.

It said that the Palestinian Authority is preparing contingency plans to confront the snow that will arrive with the polar cold front expected to affect Palestine today and tomorrow, and as a result of this the government decided to end schools and work today at noon while shutting down all schools and government offices all day tomorrow, Thursday.

The paper also said that the Israeli occupation authorities moved the cancer-stricken and critically ill Palestinian prisoner, Nasser Abu Hmeid, from hospital to the Ramla prison clinic despite his critical health condition.

Al-Quds said Washington is asking Israel, once again, to explain the circumstances for the death of the elderly Palestinian-American Omar Assad after detaining him near Ramallah three weeks ago.

The three dailies also reported on the Covid-19 pandemic in Palestine and around the world with al-Quds saying that more than 170 Palestinian prisoners in Israel have been diagnosed as infected with coronavirus in the last 72 hours causing concern for the life and health of all Palestinian prisoners in Israel.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

President Abbas extends the state of emergency for 30 days to combat the coronavirus pandemic

President Mahmoud Abbas today issued a decree extending for 30 more days the state of emergency in Palestine to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.

The state of emergency was first declared in March 2020 after the discovery of the first cases of coronavirus in the Palestinian territories and has been either extended or re-instated every 30 days since then.

The Palestinian basic law allows a one-time extension of the state of emergency, and if it has to be extended for a longer time, a new declaration should be issued.

The state of emergency gives the government the power to act in any way it deems necessary to combat the pandemic.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

The curve of new coronavirus cases continues to rise in Palestine

The curve of new coronavirus cases continued to rise in Palestine with data showing 7750 cases confirmed in the last 24 hours, according to the Minister of Health Mai Alkaila.

She said in her daily report on the pandemic in Palestine that East Jerusalem recorded 2802 new cases, the West Bank 3698 cases and two deaths, and the Gaza Strip 1250 cases.

In addition, 445 corona patients recovered in Jerusalem, 630 in the West Bank and 100 in the Gaza Strip.

Alkaila said 100 people infected with coronavirus are in hospitals and 59 are in intensive care, while 21 patients are on ventilators.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Palestinians discussing with Israel issues related to workers – official

The Palestinian Authority and Israel are discussing several issues related to Palestinian workers in Israel, today revealed the secretary-general of the Palestinian Federation of Trade Unions Shaher Saad.

He told the official Voice of Palestine that Hussein al-Sheikh, head of the Civil Affair Authority, told him when they met yesterday that his office is working with the Israeli side on a number of issues regarding the situation of workers in Israel, most notably transferring workers’ salaries to Palestinian banks, changing the classification of Gaza workers’ permits from commercial to work permits, transferring the deductions from workers’ salaries accumulated since the early 1970s to a special fund, and fighting permit dealers.

Saad said he expects that transfer of workers’ salaries to Palestinian banks will start in six months.

“This will fully guarantee workers’ rights as it would prevent the Israeli employers from manipulating wages for purposes of retirement and end-of-service benefits, and ensures that the employer will not try to cheat on the duration of the work,” he said.

With regard to work permits for Gazans, Saad said that there are about 20,000 permits for workers from the Gaza Strip classified as “commercial permits”, and work is being done to convert them into normal work permits, similar to workers in the West Bank. He said he expects this to be done within a month.

“This will ensure that the Palestinian worker receives the minimum wage (6000 shekels), as well as various insurances such as health insurance, work injuries, and other rights,” he said.

As for the Palestinian workers’ entitlements accumulated since the early 1970s, estimated at about 60 billion shekels, Saad explained that there are many deductions made from the wages of Palestinian workers in Israel, such as retirement deductions, end-of-service gratuity, and various types of taxes and insurances.

“These deductions are supposed to be transferred to a fund for the benefit of these workers, in accordance with the Paris Economic Protocol, and in accordance with a special law,” he said.

The secretary of the trade unions said he also received assurances from al-Sheikh regarding fighting permit dealers.

“Combating permit dealers is an ongoing process, and it needs laws and procedures to stop the theft of workers’ money,” he said, noting that this matter cost workers about 120 million shekels in 2020.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency