Israeli forces detain 32 Palestinians from West Bank

Israeli forces Tuesday overnight detained 32 Palestinians in large-scale raids cross the West Bank, according to local and security sources.

They said that heavily-armed Israeli soldiers rounded up 21 Palestinians after breaking into and ransacking their houses in al-Am‘ari refugee camp, south of the central West Bank city of Ramallah.

While in the camp, the soldiers assaulted a young man with dogs, inflicting injuries across his body.

In the northern West Bank, the sources confirmed a raid in Qalqiliya city, resulting in the detention of another.

In Jerusalem, gun-toting soldiers rounded up a resident of Qatanna town, northwest of the city, and thoroughly searched his house, turning it topsy-turvy.

In the southern West Bank, military vehicles stormed Tuqu‘ town, east of Bethlehem, where the soldiers rounded up eight others after muscling in and searching their houses.

In Hebron district, the soldiers conducted a similar raid in Sa‘ir town, north of the city, resulting in the detention of another.

Israeli forces frequently raid Palestinian houses almost on a daily basis across the West Bank on the pretext of searching for “wanted” Palestinians, triggering clashes with residents.

These raids, which take place also in areas under the full control of the Palestinian Authority, are conducted with no need for a search warrant, whenever and wherever the military chooses in keeping with its sweeping arbitrary powers.

Under Israeli military law army commanders have full executive, legislative and judicial authority over 3 million Palestinians living in the West Bank. Palestinians have no say in how this authority is exercised.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

BDS welcomes Amnesty International’s report condemning Israel’s apartheid regime

The Palestinian BDS National Committee, (BNC), the broadest Palestinian civil society coalition, today warmly welcomed Amnesty International’s report, published today, condemning Israel’s apartheid regime.

“Amnesty’s rigorously researched report outlines a brutal and intentional system of fragmentation, dispossession, segregation and oppression against Indigenous Palestinians, residing both across historic Palestine and around the world as refugees,” said BNC in a statement. “This system, Amnesty concludes, meets the definition of apartheid under both the Rome Statute and the UN’s Apartheid Convention.”

The report is the latest in a series of studies confirming what Palestinian and international human rights experts and advocates have been saying for decades: Israel is responsible for the crime against humanity of apartheid.

The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement particularly welcomed Amnesty’s support for the demands on the UN to investigate Apartheid, military embargo and sanctions on Israel, International Criminal Court investigation of Israel, and for states and institutions to ban business with Israel’s illegal settlements

“Our South Africa moment is nearing. We shall dismantle Apartheid so our people can live in freedom, justice and equality,” said the BDS National Committee.

In its comprehensive report, Israel’s Apartheid against Palestinians: Cruel System of Domination and Crime against Humanity, Amnesty International details how Israel enforces a system of oppression and domination against the Palestinian people wherever it has control over their rights. This includes Palestinians living in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, as well as displaced refugees in other countries.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Israeli navy targets fishermen offshore Gaza

Israeli navy Tuesday morning targeted Palestinian fishermen offshore As-Sudaniya area, northwest of Gaza city, according to WAFA correspondent.

He said that the fishermen were sailing within three nautical miles offshore the area when Israeli naval boats opened gunfire and water hoses toward them, forcing the fishermen to flee for their safety.

Meanwhile, military tanks and bulldozers stationed at Gaza’s eastern frontier, advanced several dozens of meters into and razed a tract of borderline farmlands, northeast of Khan Younes and north of Beit Lahia.

Two million Palestinians live the Gaza Strip, which has been subjected to a punishing and crippling Israeli blockade for 12 years and repeated onslaughts that have heavily damaged much of the enclave’s infrastructure.

Gaza’s 2-million population remains under “remote control” occupation and a strict siege, which has destroyed the local economy, strangled Palestinian livelihoods, plunged them into unprecedented rates of unemployment and poverty, and cut off from the rest of the occupied Palestinian territories and the wider world.

Gaza remains occupied territory, having no control over its borders, territorial waters or airspace. Meanwhile, Israel upholds very few of its responsibilities as the occupying power, failing to provide for the basic needs of Palestinian civilians living in the territory.

Every two in three Palestinians in Gaza is a refugee from lands inside what is now Israel. That government forbids them from exercising their right to return as enshrined in international law because they are not Jews.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Israeli forces seal off access to stone-cutting factories in Bethlehem-district town

Israeli forces today sealed off access to the stone-cutting factories in Beit Fajjar town, south of Bethlehem, according to eyewitnesses.

They said that a sizable military force deployed in Khallit Hajja area in the town, widely renowned for its stone and marble production, and closed the road leading to the stone-cutting factories with earth mounds.

Owners of the stone-cutting factories expressed their concerns that the Israeli forces may attempt to seize stone-cutting equipment and excavators.

Located 14 kilometers south of Bethlehem with a population of some 15,000, Beit Fajjar mainly depends on the stone and marble industry, which absorbs 80% of the town workforce, because of its proximity to the major quarries in the West Bank and its easy access to Israel through Gush Etzion checkpoint on Route 60.

Before the intifada, Beit Fajjar had more than 150 stone-cutting outlets, employing 10 to 50 workers per outlet, many of them refugees. The stone produced – known as meleke – is used widely in the construction of buildings in Israel and Palestine.

The stone and marble industry is strategically significant to the Palestinian economy and is considered the biggest industry in terms of number of firms, sales volume and employment rates. However, stone and marble workers are identified as the most vulnerable social groups in the village due to Israeli actions.

The activities of the town quarries and stone-cutting factories have been frequently interrupted by the Israeli occupation forces, which have seized numerous pieces of equipment and imposed fines on Palestinian owners, under the pretext that they operate without permission and being located in C Area.

According to the Union of Stone and Marble Industry in Palestine, this sector contributes about 25% of the revenues of the industrial sector and 405% of the Palestinian gross national product. The industry absorbs the largest percentage of the Palestinian labor force, employing more than 13,500 workers. The annual revenue of this industry is estimated at $450 million, with 56% of the total annual income through exports to Israel and 15% coming from direct exports to world markets and 20% from the domestic market. A high proportion of products exported to Israel are re-exported to other markets.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Israeli forces demolish vegetables stands near Jenin

Israeli forces Tuesday demolished a number of vegetables stands near the military checkpoint of al-Jalama, north of the occupied West Bank city of Jenin, local sources said.

Amjad Abu Farha, head of the village council in al-Jalama, along with security sources, confirmed to WAFA that the Israeli forces demolished and damaged more than 25 fruits and vegetables stands under the pretext that they were set up without a permit.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Israeli forces punitively seal slain Palestinian’s house near Jerusalem

Israeli police Tuesday morning punitively sealed the house of a slain Palestinian in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Shuafat, according to WAFA correspondent.

She said that some 150 heavily-armed police officers barged their way into the refugee camp, and closed off the house of 42-year-old Fadi Abu Shkhaydam, who was gunned down by Israeli police after killing an officer and injuring three others near the Chain Gate in the Old City of Jerusalem on November 20.

While in the building, police destroyed a garage and the doors of several apartments.

Considering that Abu Shkhaydam lives in an apartment complex, the occupation authorities decided to seal his apartment instead of demolishing it, so as to maintain the structure of the complex.

The apartment was sealed in line with a ruling passed by the Israeli Supreme Court, which previously rejected an appeal lodged by the family against the demolition order.

In early January, the occupation authorities planned to demolish the apartment and rejected the family’s objection to the demolition order. In the aftermath, police broke into and took measurements and photos of the apartment in preparation of the intended demolition.

Following his killing, members of Abu Shkhaydam’s family were subjected to punitive measures, including detention, interrogation and raids.

Israel usually resorts to punitively demolish the family homes of Palestinians accused of being involved in attacks against Israelis as a mean of deterrence, a policy that Israel does not apply to Israeli settlers who were involved in fatal attacks against Palestinians.

The policy was widely condemned by human rights groups as “a collective punishment” and “a war crime and crime against humanity”.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Weather: Rise in temperature, partially cloudy conditions

Palestine’s weather today is partially cloudy to cold and very cold, especially at night, with a rise in temperature, which remains below the seasonal average, according to the Palestinian Meteorological Department (PMD).

Winds are southwesterly and moderate, while sea waves are low.

A chance of sporadic rainfall expected in some districts is expected.

Temperature in the capital, Jerusalem, and Bethlehem is expected to reach a high of 11°C and a low of 5°C, while in Ramallah and Hebron a high of 10°C and a low of 4°C are expected. In Jericho, the Dead Sea, and the Jordan Valley temperature is expected to reach a high of 18°C and a low of 10°C, while it is expected to reach a high of 16°C and a low of 10°C in Gaza and the coastal areas.

Temperature rises on Wednesday and Thursday but generally remains below the seasonal average by 2°C.

A low pressure is expected to affect the country on Friday, thus weather is expected to be partially cloudy to cloudy, windy and cold to very cold. Temperature is expected to significantly drop, becoming 6°C below the annual average. Rain, along with thunderstorm, is expected on most district.

The PMD warned people against low visibility and slippery roads.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

The phone call between President Abbas and US Secretary of State Blinken focus of dailies

News about the phone call between President Mahmoud Abbas and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, which discussed the bilateral relations between the Palestinian and US sides, hit the front pages of the three Arabic Palestinian dailies on Tuesday.

Al-Hayat al-Jadida, al-Ayyam and al-Quds said that President Abbas reiterated to the US Secretary of State that the current situation is not sustainable and the need to end the Israeli occupation of the land of the State of Palestine, stop settlement activities, stop the attacks and terror of settlers, and the importance of respecting the historical status in Al-Haram Al-Sharif (the Noble Sanctuary that includes Al-Aqsa Mosque), stopping the expulsion of Palestinians from the Jerusalem neighborhoods, and stopping the abuse of the prisoners, withholding corpses, stopping deduction from the tax funds, and stifling the Palestinian economy.

The dailies said that for his part, Secretary Blinken conveyed President Biden’s greetings to President Abbas and his affirmation of the US commitment to the two-state solution and the importance of creating a political horizon.

The papers also said that an Israeli court ordered the Salem family in Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of occupied East Jerusalem to leave their home where they lived for decades and hand it over to Jewish settlers in March.

Additionally, Israeli occupation authorities forced two brothers to demolish their own houses in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Jabal al-Mukaber.

According to the papers, Amnesty International (AI), in a report that will be published on Tuesday, is charging Israel of committing crimes of apartheid against the Palestinian people. AI described the report, Israel’s cruel system of domination and oppression against Palestinians, as a “landmark” with “new research and analysis detailing violations by Israel against the Palestinian people.”

It said the report “will focus on the policies and practices of the Israeli government towards Palestinians across all territories under its control and sets out Israel’s obligations under international law.”

Al-Ayyam said that Israeli settlers cut down more than 100 olive trees in the Rashaydeh village, east of the southern West Bank city of Bethlehem, and let their cattle loose in the farmlands.

Al-Hayat al-Jadida reported that Israeli forces issued notices including demolition orders against two houses and two rooms in Masafer Yatta, south of the occupied West Bank city of Hebron.

The papers said that daily Covid-19 cases in Palestine continued to rise and reached 10,444 in the last 24 hours with six deaths reported.

The dailies also added that the government called on citizens to get vaccinated against Covid-19.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Amnesty International’s report ground for the ICC to investigate Israel’s apartheid regime – justice minister

The Amnesty International report accusing Israel of committing apartheid was welcomed by the Palestinians because of its legal value and gives the International Criminal Court (ICC) the ground to investigate Israel’s apartheid regime as a crime against humanity.

In an interview with WAFA, Minister of Justice Mohammad Shalaldeh said that the report issued by Amnesty International has legal value in international law because it gives the ICC the authority to consider the crime of apartheid, as a crime against humanity committed against the Palestinian people in a systematic way for acts committed by Israel against Palestinian civilians.

He added that the State of Palestine welcomes the report, highly values its legal significance, and stresses that it should be used to hold the occupying power the legal responsibility for its acts, calling on Arab parliaments to take action to classify Israel as an apartheid state.

Shalaldeh explained that the report, which discusses a set of Israeli laws enacted in its parliament, the Knesset, such as the Jewish Nation-State Law, and other racist laws, is based on demographic considerations to deprive Palestinians of their land and their social, political, civil, economic and cultural rights, in addition to the crime of the denial of the right of return, compensation and recovery of property through procedures that expresses the Jewish identity and Jewish nationalism while denying the right of self-determination for the Palestinian people.

He called on Amnesty International to send missions, investigators, and a fact-finding campaign to learn about human rights violations against civilians and prisoners, specifically the sick prisoners and administrative detainees.

Regarding the importance of the report, the Justice Minister said: “It lies in the fact that it is evidence of the grave Israeli violations in the occupied territory, and it can be employed and used by the ICC, International Court of Justice (ICJ) and any other international judiciary, and could be used as a report to be presented to the United Nations convention on human rights such as the Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Human Rights Committee, the Committee on Economic and Social Rights, the Committee against Torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of Palestinians.

The Minister of Justice pointed out that, based on what came in the report, the United Nations could be asked to send an international commission of inquiry to investigate racial discrimination and identify the crime of apartheid as a crime against humanity, based on the statute of the International Criminal Court, with the aim of ensuring accountability for the perpetrators of grave violations in Israel. In addition, individual complaints could be filed against the policies practiced by Israel and the violations it commits as an apartheid state discriminating against Palestinian civilians, as is the case in Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan neighborhoods of East Jerusalem, and file complaints before the bodies of the United Nations Convention on Human Rights and provide evidence of that.

He stressed that the report calls for the trial and accountability of Israeli officials, based on the apartheid agreement and the Rome Statute, which consider apartheid an international crime and a crime against humanity in which an Israeli-Zionist ethnic group dominates Palestine, and during which systematic repression is practiced against the Palestinians and has consequences, including forced displacement, as the case in Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan, in addition to the expropriation of land and the commitment of the most heinous crimes against civilians.

Shalaldeh said the report is an affirmation of reports issued by Human Rights Watch, which confirmed that Israel practices a policy of apartheid, discrimination and persecution against the Palestinians, as well as the report of the Israeli B’Tselem organization, which also confirmed that Israel practices apartheid, explaining that all of them are an extension of the resolution passed by the United Nations General Assembly in 1975, which considered Zionism a form of racism, which was later repealed after the Madrid Conference.

On the legal implications of the report, Shalaldeh said, “There are important legal implications for the Palestinian cause, including the establishment of international responsibility against Israel in a form of international law by its classification as an apartheid state, and the individual and personal criminal responsibility of all Israeli war criminals who committed war crimes against the Palestinian people. It will be a basis and criminal evidence for convicting Israel and the perpetrators of crimes before the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice, and it also opens the door for the United Nations General Assembly, the European Union, and the non-aligned countries to propose a bill that considers Israel a state of apartheid and racial discrimination.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Amnesty International: Israel must be held accountable for committing the crime of apartheid against Palestinians

Israeli authorities must be held accountable for committing the crime of apartheid against Palestinians, Amnesty International said today in what it described as a “damning” new report.

The investigation details how Israel enforces a system of oppression and domination against the Palestinian people wherever it has control over their rights. This includes Palestinians living in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), as well as displaced refugees in other countries.

The comprehensive report, Israel’s Apartheid against Palestinians: Cruel System of Domination and Crime against Humanity, sets out how massive seizures of Palestinian land and property, unlawful killings, forcible transfer, drastic movement restrictions, and the denial of nationality and citizenship to Palestinians are all components of a system which amounts to apartheid under international law. This system is maintained by violations which Amnesty International found to constitute apartheid as a crime against humanity, as defined in the Rome Statute and Apartheid Convention.

Amnesty International is calling on the International Criminal Court (ICC) to consider the crime of apartheid in its current investigation in the OPT and calls on all states to exercise universal jurisdiction to bring perpetrators of apartheid crimes to justice.

“There is no possible justification for a system built around the institutionalized and prolonged racist oppression of millions of people. Apartheid has no place in our world, and states which choose to make allowances for Israel will find themselves on the wrong side of history. Governments who continue to supply Israel with arms and shield it from accountability at the UN are supporting a system of apartheid, undermining the international legal order, and exacerbating the suffering of the Palestinian people. The international community must face up to the reality of Israel’s apartheid, and pursue the many avenues to justice which remain shamefully unexplored.”

Amnesty International’s findings build on a growing body of work by Palestinian, Israeli and international NGOs, who have increasingly applied the apartheid framework to the situation in Israel and/or the OPT.

Amnesty International documented acts proscribed in the Apartheid Convention and Rome Statute in all the areas Israel controls, although they occur more frequently and violently in the OPT than in Israel. Israeli authorities enact multiple measures to deliberately deny Palestinians their basic rights and freedoms, including draconian movement restrictions in the OPT, chronic discriminatory underinvestment in Palestinian communities in Israel, and the denial of refugees’ right to return. The report also documents forcible transfer, administrative detention, torture, and unlawful killings, in both Israel and the OPT.

Amnesty International found that these acts form part of a systematic and widespread attack directed against the Palestinian population, and are committed with the intent to maintain the system of oppression and domination. They therefore constitute the crime against humanity of apartheid.

The unlawful killing of Palestinian protesters is perhaps the clearest illustration of how Israeli authorities use proscribed acts to maintain the status quo. In 2018, Palestinians in Gaza began to hold weekly protests along the border with Israel, calling for the right of return for refugees and an end to the blockade. Before protests even began, senior Israeli officials warned that Palestinians approaching the wall would be shot. By the end of 2019, Israeli forces had killed 214 civilians, including 46 children.

Amnesty International’s report shows that successive Israeli governments have considered Palestinians a demographic threat, and imposed measures to control and decrease their presence and access to land in Israel and the OPT. These demographic aims are well illustrated by official plans to “Judaize” areas of Israel and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, which continue to put thousands of Palestinians at risk of forcible transfer.

Amnesty International demonstrates that Israeli authorities treat Palestinians as an inferior racial group who are defined by their non-Jewish, Arab status. This racial discrimination is cemented in laws which affect Palestinians across Israel and the OPT.

For example, Palestinian citizens of Israel are denied a nationality, establishing a legal differentiation from Jewish Israelis. In the West Bank and Gaza, where Israel has controlled the population registry since 1967, Palestinians have no citizenship and most are considered stateless, requiring ID cards from the Israeli military to live and work in the territories.

Palestinian refugees and their descendants, who were displaced in the 1947-49 and 1967 conflicts, continue to be denied the right to return to their former places of residence. Israel’s exclusion of refugees is a flagrant violation of international law which has left millions in a perpetual limbo of forced displacement.

Palestinians in annexed East Jerusalem are granted permanent residence instead of citizenship – though this status is permanent in name only. Since 1967, more than 14,000 Palestinians have had their residency revoked at the discretion of the Ministry of the Interior, resulting in their forcible transfer outside the city.

The report documents how Palestinians are effectively blocked from leasing on 80% of Israel’s state land, as a result of racist land seizures and a web of discriminatory laws on land allocation, planning and zoning.

The situation in the Negev/Naqab region of southern Israel is a prime example of how Israel’s planning and building policies intentionally exclude Palestinians. Since 1948 Israeli authorities have adopted various policies to “Judaize” the Negev/Naqab, including designating large areas as nature reserves or military firing zones, and setting targets for increasing the Jewish population. This has had devastating consequences for the tens of thousands of Palestinian Bedouins who live in the region.

As in the Negev/Naqab, Palestinians in East Jerusalem and Area C of the OPT live under full Israeli control. The authorities deny building permits to Palestinians in these areas, forcing them to build illegal structures which are demolished again and again.

Palestinian neighbourhoods in East Jerusalem are frequently targeted by settler organizations which, with the full backing of the Israeli government, work to displace Palestinian families and hand their homes to settlers. One such neighbourhood, Sheikh Jarrah, has been the site of frequent protests since May 2021 as families battle to keep their homes under the threat of a settler lawsuit.

Since the mid-1990s Israeli authorities have imposed increasingly stringent movement restrictions on Palestinians in the OPT. A web of military checkpoints, roadblocks, fences and other structures controls the movement of Palestinians within the OPT, and restricts their travel into Israel or abroad.

Amnesty International examined each of the security justifications which Israel cites as the basis for its treatment of Palestinians. The report shows that, while some of Israel’s policies may have been designed to fulfil legitimate security objectives, they have been implemented in a grossly disproportionate and discriminatory way which fails to comply with international law. Other policies have absolutely no reasonable basis in security, and are clearly shaped by the intent to oppress and dominate.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency

Palestine welcomes report by Amnesty International on Israel’s apartheid regime

The State of Palestine welcomes the report by Amnesty International on Israel’s apartheid regime and racist policies and practices against the Palestinian people, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates said in a statement.

“Amnesty International joins a long list of distinguished Palestinian, Israeli and international human rights organizations and experts in exposing Israel’s colonial occupation for what it is: an institutionalized system of oppression and domination over the Palestinian people, designed to legitimize its colonial settlement expansion, deny the Palestinian people their inalienable right to self-determination, and erase Palestinian history, present, and future in their homeland,” the statement said.

“The report is a detailed affirmation of the cruel reality of entrenched racism, exclusion, oppression, colonialism, apartheid, and attempted erasure that the Palestinian people have endured since the Nakba. It is a reality in which the State is structured to maintain Jewish Israeli domination by ensuring the perpetual denial of the fundamental and national rights of the Palestinian people.

This abominable reality of criminality and impunity is undeniable to the international community. It is also sustained and emboldened by the willful abandonment of principled obligations under international law through inaction and documented complicity. Amnesty International’s report must compel those who have chosen appeasement and inaction to realign their actions with their stated positions and international obligations.”

“Allowing this wholesale and institutionalized brutalization and dehumanization of the Palestinian people to continue without consequence is a betrayal of the values and principles of universal human rights. Such a betrayal would also negatively impact the rights and lives of victims of injustice around the world. This would undermine the global fight for justice and universal application of human rights. It would be simply inexcusable,” the statement added.

“The United Nations Security Council and the General Assembly are obliged to heed the compelling evidence presented by Amnesty and other leading human rights organizations and hold Israel accountable for its crimes against the Palestinian people, including through sanctions. Equally and urgently, the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court must investigate Israel’s crime against humanity of apartheid without delay.

Meanwhile, the Palestinian people will continue to exercise their legitimate right to oppose and resist all forms of occupation, colonization, dehumanization, racism, and apartheid until they achieve justice and realize their rights to self-determination, return, freedom, and independence,” the statement concluded.

Source: Palestinian News & Information Agency