3 شهداء برصاص الاحتلال الإسرائيلي في جنين

استشهد ثلاثة شبان فلسطينيين، فجر اليوم الجمعة، برصاص قوات الاحتلال، في كمين نصبته خلال اقتحامها مدينة جنين (شمال الضفة)، كما أصيب 8 فلسطينيين بجروح خطيرة.

وافادت مصادر محلية، بأن الشهداء الثلاثة هم: يوسف ناصر صلاح (23 عاما)، وهو شقيق الشهيد سعد صلاح من جنين، وبراء كمال لحلوح (24 عاما) من مخيم جنين، وليث صلاح أبو سرور (24 عاما)، وهو شقيق الشهيد علاء أبو سرور من جنين.

ووفق مصادر محلية؛ فقد اقتحمت نحو 30 آلية عسكرية مدينة جنين، ونصبت الكمائن والقناصة في المنطقة الشرقية، وحاصرت سيارة في حي المراح، وأطلقت النار على أربعة شبان كانوا داخلها، فقتلت ثلاثة، وأصابت الرابع بجروح خطيرة، قبل أن تنسحب.

وأضافت المصادر أن فلسطينيين حاولوا التصدي لقوات الاحتلال بعد الاشتباه بأنها جاءت لهدم منزل عائلة الشهيد رعد حازم، منفذ عملية “تل أبيب” الشهر الماضي، وإثر الاقتحام اندلعت مواجهات بين عشرات الفلسطينيين والجيش الإسرائيلي، استخدم خلالها الأخير الرصاص الحي وقنابل الغاز المسيل للدموع.

وأشارت إلى أن قوات الاحتلال داهمت منزل المواطن موسى العجاوي في الحي الشرقي وفتشته وعبثت بمحتوياته.

Source: Quds Press International News Agency

تقييم أمني: “حماس” تخطط لمفاجأة “إسرائيل” في المعركة القادمة

قالت وسائل إعلام عبرية، إن “تقييمات الدوائر الأمنية والعسكرية، تشير إلى أن حركة حماس ستحاول مفاجأة اسرائيل في المعركة القادمة، دون الانجرار إلى معركة عسكرية مفتوحة”.

وذكرت /هيئة البث الإسرائيلي/، اليوم الخميس، أن “التقييمات ترى أن الإنجاز بنظر حماس في حال هاجن الجيش الإسرائيلي غزة، هو باختطاف جنود”.

وخلص التقرير إلى أن “حماس”، تعتبر الأنفاق “وسيلة إستراتيجية، لأنها تمكِن عناصرها من الاقتراب من السياج الأمني”.

ونقلت /هيئة البث الإسرائيلي/ عن مصدر عسكري “رفيع”، أن “عدد الأنفاق في قطاع غزة يقدر بالعشرات، منها تلك التي تتيح لعناصر حماس الاقتراب حتى مسافة خمسين مترا من السياج، وتنفيذ عملية هجومية”.

وكان رئيس المكتب السياسي لحركة المقاومة الإسلامية “حماس”، إسماعيل هنية، أوضح الشهر الماضي، أن “الفلسطينيين لديهم ثلاث خيارات لمواجهة التصعيد الإسرائيلي، وهي ثلاثية الأمة والشعب والمقاومة، الجاهزة لكل السيناريوهات”.

Source: Quds Press International News Agency

Israeli forces seal entrance of Ramallah-district village for eighth consecutive day

For the eighth consecutive day, Israeli forces Thursday sealed the main entrance of Aboud village, northeast of Ramallah, according to local sources.

They said that Israeli soldiers stationed at the military watchtower at the village entrance shut the metal gate the army had set up at the entrance, banning the movement of vehicles in and out of the village and forcing the villagers to take long alternative routes to reach their homes or workplaces.

Israeli severely restricts Palestinians’ freedom of movement through a complex combination of approximately 100 fixed checkpoints, flying checkpoints, settler-only roads and various other physical obstructions.

Closures besides to other measures, taken under the guise of security, are intended to entrench Israel’s 55-year-old military occupation of the West Bank and its settler colonial project which it enforces with routine and frequently deadly violence against Palestinians.

Aboud is one of the Palestinian villages, with a balanced Muslim and Christian population who live in harmony. The village is renowned for its many churches and monasteries, including the Orthodox Church dating back to the Byzantine era.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

PACBI calls to boycott of Israeli embassy-partnered Doc Edge film festival

The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) Wednesday called to boycott Doc Edge Festival in New Zealand until it drops its partnership with the embassy of apartheid Israel.

PACBI, a founding member of the Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC), the largest entity in Palestinian society that leads the global BDS movement, said in a press statement that more than a hundred artists, including Hollywood stars, recently condemned Israeli occupation forces’ murder of prominent Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. Film directors including Pedro Almodovar, Mira Nair, Jim Jarmusch, Carol Morley, Boots Riley, Asif Kapadia, Ken Loach and Mike Leigh decried the hypocrisy of Western governments who “have rushed to impose blanket boycotts and sanctions in response to Russia’s illegal invasion of the Ukraine”, while they “continue to fund and shield Israel’s decades-long occupation and grave human rights violations against Palestinians”.

The artists, including actors Susan Sarandon, Miriam Margolyes, Tilda Swinton, Mark Ruffalo, Kathryn Hahn and Eric Cantona concluded: “There must be no double standards when it comes to the basic human right to freedom from persecution and oppression and the right to life and to dignity.”

These film professionals join thousands of international artists who have called for effective measures to hold apartheid Israel to account for its brutal oppression against Palestinians. More than two hundred queer filmmakers have pledged not to submit films to or otherwise participate in “events partially or fully sponsored by complicit Israeli institutions until Israel complies with international law and respects Palestinian human rights”. Actors including Gael García Bernal, Maxine Peake, Peter Capaldi, Viggo Mortensen, Harriet Walter and Charles Dance endorsed “meaningful solidarity with Palestinians struggling for their human rights under international law”.

Indigenous Palestinians, inspired partly by the international boycotts against apartheid in South Africa, are calling for international artists, including documentary filmmakers, to show meaningful solidarity with our struggle by refusing to screen with film festivals and institutions that are complicit in Israel’s regime of apartheid, military occupation and settler-colonialism. PACBI said that Doc Edge is complicit through its art-washing partnership with apartheid Israel while urging all film professionals to boycott it until it drops the Israeli embassy as an official festival supporter.

The BDS movement made it clear that it categorically rejects censorship and upholds the universal right to freedom of expression as stipulated in the United Nations’ International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and added that the institutional boycott it is calling for is in harmony with this right.

“Beyond the scope of BDS guidelines for the international cultural boycott of Israel, activists may still choose to advocate a “common sense” boycott against a documentary film that, say, incites to racial hatred, whitewashes war crimes, tries to normalise apartheid and military occupation, etc. While these “common sense” boycotts are outside the realm of BDS, no documentary film should have a free pass to promote the violation of international law, whether it is an Israeli, US or NZ production; consistently applying the same principle to all. Any film institution that programmed such a film would expect “common sense” boycotts from conscientious film audiences.”

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

Three Palestinian fishermen injured by Israeli navy offshore Gaza

Three Palestinian fishermen were shot and injured today during a pursuit by Israeli navy boats off the Gaza shore, according to sources.

Israeli navy opened fire on Palestinian fishing boats sailing within three nautical miles offshore al-Sudaniya area to the northwest of Gaza city, shooting and injuring three fishermen.

They were transported to hospital in Gaza for medical treatment. One of the boats was reportedly damaged in the attack.

As part of its 15-year-long stifling blockade on the Gaza Strip, Israel bans Palestinian fishermen from sailing more than three nautical miles in the northern Gaza shores.

Israeli navy regularly targets Palestinian fishermen and their fishing boats off the Gaza coast.

Fishing is one of the main sources of income for hundreds of families in the impoverished Gaza Strip.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

EU says Israeli verdict convicting Gaza aid worker “inconsistent with international fair trial standards”

The European Union Wednesday said that the Israeli guilty verdict against a charity worker from Gaza is “inconsistent with international fair trial standards”.

The EU Delegation to the Palestinians said in a tweet that EU diplomats and representatives from likeminded countries attended Wednesday’s verdict in the case of Mohammed Halabi that followed 171 court hearings and 24 detention extensions since 2016.

Halabi has been on trial for six years over “terror” financing charges based on secret evidence and an alleged coerced confession.

“According to OHCHR, the verdict is deeply problematic as it is based on secret evidence, with the defendant having been detained for 6 years without a verdict. This is inconsistent with international fair trial standards. Without a fair and due process, justice for Halabi cannot be served,” the EU tweeted.

The Israeli district court, according to Electronic Intifada, did not find Halabi guilty of “assisting the enemy,” the most serious charge against him, according to his lawyer, who said that he would appeal the conviction at Israel’s high court. But in its 254-page classified ruling, the court finds Halabi guilty of diverting funds from the international Christian charity World Vision, where he served as director of its Gaza office.

Multiple international audits have found no evidence that the father of five, hailed as a “humanitarian hero” by the United Nations before his arrest, diverted funds to armed groups in Gaza.

Israel convicted El Halabi despite international outcry over his arrest and prosecution.

Upon his arrest at Erez checkpoint on the northern Gaza frontier, Halabi was denied access to a lawyer for 50 days and held incommunicado.

The UN Office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights has “continuously raised serious concerns” in El Halabi’s case over “cruel, degrading and inhuman treatment that may amount to torture.”

The UN office has also stressed the “lack of fair trial guarantees, including disregard of the presumption of innocence and lack of impartiality of the court, extensive use of secret evidence and classification of court proceedings undermining the right to a defense.”

Israel’s only piece of evidence is an alleged confession made “seemingly under duress” that the prosecution has referred to in public hearings, while the content of this alleged confession is being kept in secret from the public, the UN office adds.

The Australian government, which provided around a quarter of World Vision’s budget in Gaza between 2014 and 2016, commissioned an external audit that “found no evidence of diversion of funds and no material evidence that Halabi was part of or working for Hamas.”

During his trial, Halabi turned down numerous plea deals, refusing to admit guilt for a crime he insists he did not commit and, in the process, tarnish the reputation of World Vision.

An Israeli judge, pressing Halabi to accept a plea deal in 2017, told him that he has “little chance” of being found not guilty.

The Australian outlet ABC reported at the time that “sources close to Halabi’s legal team” said that “they believe the prosecution does not have the evidence to back up the explosive claims” against the aid worker.

A plea deal would have prevented Israel from having to prove its claims against Halabi in court.

Failing to secure a plea deal, Israel instead resorted to convicting Halabi on the basis of secret evidence. After his conviction hearing on Wednesday, Halabi’s lawyer said that the court’s ruling is secret and he can only review it in the presence of intelligence officers.

Israel’s manufactured case against Halabi would anticipate the “terror group” designations it made against several prominent Palestinian human rights and social services groups based in the West Bank last year.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

Israeli settlers assault Palestinian in Nablus-district town

Israeli settlers Wednesday assaulted a Palestinian in Huwara town, south of Nablus city, according to a local activist.

Ghassan Daghlas, who monitors Israeli colonial settlement activities in the northern West Bank, said that a group of settlers spewed pepper spray in the face of a man after the latter attempted to confront them.

The man attempted to prevent the assailants, who stormed the town, from removing the Palestine flag hoisted in the main street.

In the aftermath of the attack, a sizable army force arrived at the scene to protect the assailants.

Similar confrontations recently took place when settlers, under military protection, or the Israeli military took down the Palestine flags hoisted on electrical poles in town.

The cluster of villages and towns in Nablus district has been a scene of frequent settler attacks, including chopping down dozens of olive trees, attacking vulnerable houses, leveling farmlands and torching mosques.

There are over 700,000 Israeli settlers living in colonial settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

Two Palestinians sustain wounds in settler attack near Nablus

Two Palestinians today sustained wounds in a settler attack in Burqa town, northwest of Nablus city, according to a local activist.

Ghassan Daghlas, who monitors Israeli colonial settlement activities in the northern West Bank, said that a group of settlers attacked two young men while the latter were tending their cultivated land in al-Mas’udiya area, a part of the town located close to a military checkpoint recently set up on the main traffic artery connecting Nablus to Jenin, resulting in multiple wounds across their bodies.

The casualties were rushed to a hospital for treatment.

Settler violence against Palestinians and their property is routine in the West Bank and is rarely prosecuted by Israeli authorities.

Settler violence includes property and mosque arsons, stone-throwing, uprooting of crops and olive trees, attacks on vulnerable homes, among others.

There are over 700,000 Israeli settlers living in colonial settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

World Vision points to “irregularities in the trial process” of Gaza aid worker

The World Vision Wednesday pointed to irregularities in the trial process of charity Gaza aid worker who has been on trial for six years over “terror” financing charges based on secret evidence and an alleged coerced confession.

The World Vision (WV) expressed in a press statement its “disappointment” over the decision of the Israeli District Court convicting Mohammad El Halabi.

The Israeli district court did not find El Halabi guilty of “assisting the enemy,” the most serious charge against him, according to his lawyer, who said that he would appeal the conviction at Israel’s high court. But in its 254-page classified ruling, the court finds El Halabi guilty of diverting funds from the international Christian charity World Vision, where he served as director of its Gaza office.

Multiple international audits have found no evidence that the father of five, hailed as a “humanitarian hero” by the United Nations before his arrest, diverted funds to armed groups in Gaza.

“We have previously expressed our significant concerns about this case, as noted in our prior statements,” the charity said.

“In our view there have been irregularities in the trial process and a lack of substantive, publicly available evidence,” World Vision added.

“We support [El Halabi’s] intent to appeal the decision, and call for a fair and transparent appeal process based on the facts of the case.”

It said that it was saddened that its work helping Gaza’s most vulnerable children has been disrupted for so long, and we hope to return to Gaza.

“We remain committed to improving the lives of vulnerable children in the region, and hope we will be able to advance our humanitarian work in the context of our longstanding cooperation with the relevant Israeli and Palestinian authorities.”

Israel convicted El Halabi despite international outcry over his arrest and prosecution.

Upon his arrest at Erez checkpoint on the northern Gaza frontier, Halabi was denied access to a lawyer for 50 days and held incommunicado.

The UN Office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights has “continuously raised serious concerns” in El Halabi’s case over “cruel, degrading and inhuman treatment that may amount to torture.”

The UN office has also stressed the “lack of fair trial guarantees, including disregard of the presumption of innocence and lack of impartiality of the court, extensive use of secret evidence and classification of court proceedings undermining the right to a defense.”

Israel’s only piece of evidence is an alleged confession made “seemingly under duress” that the prosecution has referred to in public hearings, while the content of this alleged confession is being kept in secret from the public, the UN office adds.

The Australian government, which provided around a quarter of World Vision’s budget in Gaza between 2014 and 2016, commissioned an external audit that “found no evidence of diversion of funds and no material evidence that Halabi was part of or working for Hamas.”

During his trial, Halabi turned down numerous plea deals, refusing to admit guilt for a crime he insists he did not commit and, in the process, tarnish the reputation of World Vision.

An Israeli judge, pressing Halabi to accept a plea deal in 2017, told him that he has “little chance” of being found not guilty.

The Australian outlet ABC reported at the time that “sources close to Halabi’s legal team” said that “they believe the prosecution does not have the evidence to back up the explosive claims” against the aid worker.

A plea deal would have prevented Israel from having to prove its claims against Halabi in court.

Failing to secure a plea deal, Israel instead resorted to convicting Halabi on the basis of secret evidence. After his conviction hearing on Wednesday, Halabi’s lawyer said that the court’s ruling is secret and he can only review it in the presence of intelligence officers.

Israel’s manufactured case against Halabi would anticipate the “terror group” designations it made against several prominent Palestinian human rights and social services groups based in the West Bank last year.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

Israeli authorities deliver stop construction notices against three houses, structures in Bethlehem area

Israeli occupation authorities today notified to stop the construction work on three Palestinian-owned inhabited houses, and other structures in the town of al-Khader to the south of Bethlehem, according to local activist Ahmad Salah.

He told WAFA that Israeli forces broke into the western part of the town of al-Khader and handed residents notices ordering them to stop the construction work on three inhabited houses, in addition to notices ordering them to stop work on the foundations of two houses.

Forces also delivered a stop-construction notice against an agricultural shed and ordered the removal of a 300-square-meters animal barn, housing 100 sheep.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

FM decries failure to hold police accountable for Al Jazeera journalist’s funeral crackdown

The Foreign Affairs and Expatriates Ministry today decried Israel’s failure to hold police accountable for the violent crackdown on the funeral procession of slain Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh.

The Ministry said in a press statement that the Israeli police statement on the conclusion of an internal investigation into the conduct of police officers at the funeral procession of Abu Akleh, but without publicizing the findings and without disciplining the police officers is nothing but a smokescreen to conceal the crime, promote a fair portrayal of police, and shield the perpetrators from accountability.

It added that such an investigation is also designed to disguise the truth about the extrajudicial killing of Abu Akleh and circumvent the international pressures that have rightfully been exerted upon the occupation authorities to open a fair and transparent investigation into the killing.

The Ministry held the Israeli government, headed by ultra-nationalist Naftali Bennett, directly and fully responsible for the killing of Abu Akleh while expressing extreme amazement at US and international calls for Israel to open an investigation into the crime.

It concluded that the occupation authorities have to name and arrest the perpetrators and bring them to justice through credible, fair and transparent trials.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency

Ahmad Manasra’s defense team says child is in real health danger if he remains in prison

Today, lawyer Khaled Zabarka visited the Palestinian child prisoner Ahmad Manasra in Ramla Prison Hospital, and closely examined his psychological health condition.

During the meeting, traces of wounds appeared along the left arm of the young prisoner up to the wrist, as well as traces of wounds on his right arm.

The defense team said in a statement that in this meeting with lawyer Zabarka, Ahmad did not communicate visually or verbally with the lawyer, and seemed to show signs of illness and general exhaustion.

According to the advice of the psychological team that is following up his case with the defense team, this situation is very worrying and there is a serious and real danger to Ahmad’s psychological and public health and safety if he continues to remain in the prisons of the occupation authorities.

In light of this, the defense team submitted an urgent request to the Israeli Prison Authority to release the young prisoner Manasra immediately due to the deterioration in his psychological health condition.

The defense team held the Israeli occupation authorities responsible for “the deterioration in Ahmad’s physiological condition in particular and his health in general,” adding that “a disregard of Ahmad’s health condition could lead to a serious psychological setback.”

Manasra was arrested by the Israeli occupation forces in 2015 when he was only 13 years after shooting him and his cousin Hassan, who was killed instantly.

Source: Palestine News & Info Agency