Thursday, January 31, 2013

Palestinian villagers to sue Israel


Palestinian villagers to sue Israel

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plf_suePalestinian villagers are initiating legal action against the Israeli military for conducting military drills that cause extensive damage to their agricultural fields, Press TV reports.
A group of villagers told Press TV that Israeli forces carried out the week-long maneuver near villages in the occupied West Bank city of al-Khalil. 
“The entire area is confiscated by the Israeli military. They only allow people to build in small, enclosed areas. If you build outside this area, they will demolish your land,” said Solomon Najata, a Palestinian villager.
“They divided the area for military training which leaves the shepherd with nowhere to graze their sheep,” he added.
The Palestinian villagers said Israeli forces carried out the drill without prior notice. 
The villages were reportedly evacuated during the exercises. However, the Israeli military’s move is a violation of the order issued by a high court of justice forbidding the eviction of villagers from their homes. 
Human rights groups referred the case to the court after calls on the Israeli military to stop the drills and compensate the Palestinian villagers were ignored. 


Source: http://www.plfpakistan.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=40249:palestinian-villagers-to-sue-israel&catid=6:palestine

UN concerned about Israel’s use of live ammo against Palestinians


UN concerned about Israel’s use of live ammo against Palestinians

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plf_ammoThe United Nations has expressed concern about the rising number of casualties from Israel’s use of live ammunition against Palestinians.
James W. Rawley said in a Wednesday statement, “The United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator is seriously concerned by the increased casualties resulting from the use of live ammunition by Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank.” 
The statement added that some eight Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank in separate incidents since mid-November 2012. The victims included three minors and one woman.
Rawley further called for “maximum restraint” in an effort to prevent further Palestinian civilian casualties.
“Using live ammunition against civilians may constitute excessive use of force and any such occurrences should be investigated in a timely, thorough, independent and impartial manner.” 
The Tel Aviv regime recently refused to attend a UN Human Rights Council review, which was taking place in Geneva to examine the Israeli violations of the rights of Palestinians. 
The UN Human Rights Council reviewed Israel’s human rights records on Tuesday as part of the Universal Periodic Review process. Israel is not a member of the UN rights council, but it is required to undergo Universal Periodic Review (UPR). 
The Review, which is held once every four years, was established by the UN General Assembly in 2006 to examine human rights records of the UN members. 
Israel severed all ties with the UN rights council in March 2012 after the council adopted a resolution condemning Tel Aviv’s announcement of building new settlement units. 

Source: http://www.plfpakistan.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=40248:un-concerned-about-israels-use-of-live-ammo-against-palestinians&catid=6:palestine

Summary of nine days of demolitions and displacement in Al Maleh


Summary of nine days of demolitions and displacement in Al Maleh, Jordan Valley

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plf_summaryOn 17 January, Israeli occupation forces demolished 47 (sic) residential and other structures in Hamamat Al Maleh area, displacing 60 people, more than half of them children.
On 19 January, Israeli occupation forces confiscated basic emergency tents that had been provided to the families in the aftermath of the demolitions. On 21 January evening, while villagers tried rebuilding their homes, army returned and forced them to stop. A few days later, on 24 January, another 4 structures belonging to one of the displaced families were destroyed. Israeli occupation forces entered Al Maleh again on 25 January to photograph remaining structures. At the same time, a large group of illegal Israeli settlers, accompanied by Israeli soldiers, toured the area. The families have been informed by the army that if they erect further shelters or try to rebuild their homes, they will be subject to arrest and their livestock confiscated. As a result, the families have been forced to temporarily relocate to another area to receive basic humanitarian assistance, including emergency tents, after having spent several nights without shelter.
Hamamat al Maleh area is home to around 260 people residing in three clusters of communities: 1) Hamamat Al Maleh, 2) Hamamat Al Maleh – Al Meita and 3) Hamamat Al Maleh – Al Burj, which have existed in the Jordan Valley since the 1970s. The communities have suffered demolitions in the past, including in 2011 and 2012, and have also suffered repeated temporary displacement due to military training exercises carried out by Israeli occupation forces in the area. Prior to this year’s demolitions, the affected families had received a combination of stop-work orders (30 July 2012), demolition orders (August/September 2012) and eviction orders from a closed military area (6 November and again on 31 December 2012). The lawyer of the families had tried to challenge these orders on numerous occasions, submitting the last request for postponement on 20 December 2012.
According to initial information the communities are located on a land owned by the Latin Patriarchate, with reportedly owns around 7,000 dunums of land in the area. Some of the land, including the land where Hamamat al Maleh-al Meita stands, has been designated by the Israeli military as a closed military zone for training purposes. However, the other two communities seem to be located outside the current boundaries of that area.
Here is a brief history of the nine days in Al Maleh:
Pre-2013: Since 2009, four demolitions took place in the Al Maleh area, all in Hamamat Al Maleh – Al Meita, on the grounds that the structures were located in a Firing Zone. During these demolitions – three in 2011 and one in 2012 – seven residential structures, 10 animal structures, and one beehive were demolished, resulting in the displacement of 36 people and affecting 35 others.
17 January 2013: Israeli occupation forces demolished 47 (sic) residential and animal structures: 20 residential tents (18 inhabited/2 uninhabited), 20 animal structures, five kitchens and one toilet in Hamamat Al Maleh – Al Meita and Hamamat Al Maleh. Two water tanks and a solar panel were also damaged. As a result, 10 families comprising 60 people, including 36 children, were displaced and two additional households including three children were affected.
19 January 2013: Between 6.30 am and 8 am, Israeli army confiscated 37 emergency tents (including 14 new tents given by Red Cross) provided as humanitarian assistance in response to the demolitions on 17 January, leaving the families without any shelter for themselves or their animals. The area was subsequently declared a closed military area and access to the area was restricted through existing checkpoints as well as several flying checkpoints. International observers and journalists were denied access.
21 January 2013: The Palestinian DCL (District Civil Liason), the Israeli DCL and the Tubas Governor carried out a joint visit to Al Maleh. Israeli army indicated during the visit that they would try to find an acceptable solution, but no further information has been received in that regard. In the evening the people of Al Maleh tried to rebuild their homes and tents. However, within one hour the army returned to demand that they stop rebuilding. Army’s message is clear: “If you are going to put up any tents, structures, build anything, we are going to demolish it and punish you by confiscating your animals.” People slept in fields, fearing further army retaliations.
24 January 2013: At 8 am in the morning Israeli occupational forces once again demolished homes in Al Maleh: a residential tent, a tent used for storage, a kitchen and a livelihood structure (for bees). A family of nine people including six children, was displaced as a result. Army bulldozers swifted off to Jiftlik to carry out another destructive piece of work.
25 January 2013: Israeli forces took photographs of all remaining structures in Hamamat Al Maleh as well as in Al Farisiya. A group of Israeli settlers, including women and children, visited the area on the same day, accompanied by Israeli soldiers.
The communities in Hamamat al Maleh are some of the most vulnerable in the West Bank. The restrictions imposed on their lives and livelihoods, including their repeated evacuation to make way for military training exercises, has increased their levels of poverty and their dependence on aid. These recent developments have had a devastating impact on the families, leaving them without adequate shelter, disrupting their livelihoods and access to basic services, and has resulted in trauma, particularly amongst the children.
Repeated displacement of civilians, combined with the destruction or confiscation of their property and the deliberate obstruction of humanitarian assistance, raises serious concerns under international law. Israel, as an occupying power, has an obligation to protect civilians at all times and to administer the territory for their benefit, ensuring that people’s basic needs are met. International law specifically prohibits an occupying power from forcibly displacing or transferring civilians, regardless of the means or methods used, or to destroy or confiscate private or public property.
Now the villagers are relocated to another area. An NGO has provided shelters as part of humanitarian response, funded by EU. Israeli occupation forces keep taking photos of the village. The governor of Tubas is in communication with Latin Patriarchate. The village of Al Maleh continues to “exit by resisting”, the latest example being on 26 January by planting olive trees and organizing a fun day for children, supported by other Palestinians and international activists. Israeli army reacted by closing off the area during these activities and by installing a temporary roadblock until late hours. Sources say that “the demolitions were inevitable as the Latin Patriarchate did not prolong the contracts to the villagers”.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Racism Pervades Israeli Electoral Campaign

Racism Pervades Israeli Electoral Campaign
Yusuf Fernandez
The last electoral campaign in Israel has been dominated by racism. It is not just racism against Arabs, which is as old as the existence of the Zionist entity, but also racism against Black people, whose life is becoming more and more miserable in Israel. According to the statistics, there are currently about 60,000 African immigrants in the Zionist entity. Most of them come from South Sudan, Eritrea, Ivory Coast, Congo and other countries.
Netanyahu electionsThe situation of Africans in Israel, both Jews and non-Jews, is actually desperate. Some thousands have low-quality jobs where they are unscrupulously exploited by Israeli employers. Others are homeless and are begging on the streets of Israeli cities to survive. In spite of claims of rampant crime in the suburbs of South Tel Aviv where most Africans live, a senior police commander, David Gez, was quoted as saying the level of crime among this population was actually relatively low.
The last episode of anti-Black racism was a recent video made by the religious Shas party – which represents Sephardi Jews, who ironically have also been historically subjected to discrimination by Jews of European-origin (Ashkenazis). The five-minute video sought to fuel fear of Africans and increase support for the Shas´s anti-immigration platform ahead the January 22 parliamentary elections.
The message of the video was that only the leader of the Shas party, Eli Yishai, who is also currently interior minister, can successfully fight against the “threat” allegedly posed by African immigrants, whom Yishai and other Israeli politicians repeatedly refer to as “infiltrators.” In an interview with Ynet, Yishai said the “the threat from infiltrators is no less severe than the Iranian nuclear threat.”
In May, Yishaid told Maariv that in the previous months dozens of Israeli women had been raped by “infiltrators” in South Tel Aviv but they had decided not to report the attacks so that people would not think they had “contracted AIDS”.
Israeli AfricansThe content of the video was not different to other similar ones made by far-right European parties. There were in it remarks by local residents who express their fear for their safety and anger over a housing shortage — all allegedly due to the African immigrants. According to Times of Israel, one woman says that “it is their fault that there are no apartments. It is their fault that housing is very expensive.” A man complains that “tomorrow the Sudanese will keep on walking around here, continue to beat (people) up, continue to stab and continue to rape our women.”
The narrator says that the black “infiltrators” “control neighbourhoods in south Tel Aviv, Eilat, Ashdod, and other cities,” and pose a “social, religious and security threat.” He goes on to assert that the “greatest threat of all is the demographic threat.” The video also claim that the majority of African migrants are Muslim, and that they therefore “do not believe in the State of Israel´s right to exist.”
Ironically, the Shas has also denounced the racial bias of the other Israeli parties. Recently, Aryeh Deri, the number three of the party, accused the Likud-Yisraeli Beitenu party of “being a party of Russians and whites” and having ostensible bias against Sephardi Jews, who have been considered a second-class citizens in the Zionist entity, where the power has been traditionally in the hands of Ashkenazi Jews, who mostly came from Eastern Europe.
For his part, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has announced that he wants to expel tens of thousands of African undocumented immigrants and that the inflow into Israel from Egypt has been brought to a halt due to the new barrier. “Our aim is to repatriate tens of thousands of infiltrators now in Israel to their countries of origin,” he said, adding Israel was in contact with some governments from Africa “to solve this problem”.
On May 23, Likud leading members took part in a demonstration in Tel Aviv’s impoverished suburb of Hatikva to protest against the presence of Africans in Israel. Miri Regev of Likud addressed the rally to which more than 1,000 people attended. There, she described the Africans as a “cancer in our body” and pledged to do everything she could “in order to bring them back to where they belong”. She attacked human rights and “left-wing” groups aiding the immigrants.
Danny Danon, another leader of Likud, said that the only solution to the issue of the “infiltrators” would be to “start to talk about their expulsion”. “We must expel the infiltrators from Israel. We should not be afraid to say the words “expulsion now”,” he said. He went on saying that Africans had set up an “enemy state”, whose capital was Tel Aviv.
Violent attacks
Shortly after the speeches, violent incidents broke out. Demonstrators smashed shops, properties and cars belonging to the African immigrants and beat up men and women while chanting “Blacks out”.
In April, apartments where Africans lived as well as at a kindergarten were attacked with Molotov cocktails in Shapira in south Tel Aviv.
On July 12, an Eritrean man was badly burned and his pregnant wife suffered smoke inhalation after attackers tried to burn down their apartment in central Jerusalem (Al Quds). The incident, the second arson attack on African immigrants in the city within six weeks, took place near the city's Mahane Yehuda market, AFP quoted a police source as saying.
The Israeli government has refused to condemn these attacks on African immigrants and instead used them as an excuse to promote its anti-migrant agenda, which included a new law allowing the authorities to keep undocumented Africans imprisoned for three years and jail those who help them for up to 15 years. According to recent polls, one in three Israelis support those attacks.
Even “left-leaning” parties, such as the Labor, support racist policies. The Labor leader, Shelly Yachimovich, accused recently the the government of “having failed… and let the slums be flooded by migrant workers and refugees, thereby helping to kindle wild passions” and claimed the need to “protect the country from facing a huge mass of migrant workers”.
In March, Israel started to build a huge prison camp, the world´s largest, in the Negev desert. Such a facility is situated near the Ketziot prison, where thousands of Palestinian prisoners have been jailed. The camp will be run by the prison service and thousands of Africans will be locked there. A spokesperson for the Israeli Ministry of Interior confirmed that Yishai wanted to eventually jail all of the thousands of undocumented African immigrants currently in the Zionist entity.
Other immigrants have already started to be expelled. On June 10, the immigration police began a mass roundup operation, which was initially focused on South Sudanese nationals but was then expanded to include those from the Ivory Coast. Hundreds of these Africans were detained and around 240 were sent to Juba, capital of South Sudan.
There is no doubt that racism and xenophobia are being fuelling by the current Israeli government and nearly all the Zionist parties. Their main goal is to divert growing outrage over the decline of living standards and rising social problems by promoting racist claims and demands to preserve the “Jewish identity” of the Zionist entity at a time when the latter is getting weaker and more internationally isolated due to its settlement policies.

Palestinian woman killed by Israeli fire


Palestinian woman killed by Israeli fire in West Bank

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plf_westbankA Palestinian woman has been killed after being shot by Israeli military forces in the southern West Bank, Palestinian medical sources say.
The 21-year-old woman, identified as Lubna Hanash, was shot in the face by Israeli troops who got out of a civilian car.
The shooting took place outside a college near a refugee camp about eight kilometers north of the city of al-Khalil (Hebron). 
Israel has set up hundreds of checkpoints in the West Bank and the Israeli forces often launch attacks on the Palestinians living in the territory from these checkpoints.
This comes as on January 18 Israeli soldiers shot and wounded another Palestinian youth near the West Bank city of Bethlehem.
Israeli security forces seriously wounded a 15-year-old Palestinian boy during a protest in the Aida refugee camp, north of Bethlehem. 
The teenager was hit in the face by a bullet that bounced off the ground and was taken to hospital in Beit Jala, before being transferred to Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital in al-Quds (Jerusalem) for further treatment. 

Source: www.plfpakistan.com
http://www.plfpakistan.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=40124:palestinian-woman-killed-by-israeli-fire-in-west-bank&catid=6:palestine

Palestine Threatens To Take Zionist Entity to ICC

Palestine Threatens To Take Zionist Entity to ICC
The Palestinians threatened to take the Zionist entity to the International Criminal Court case if the new Israeli government allows settlements in occupied areas near al-Quds (Jerusalem).Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki
Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki said allowing Jewish settlers into the so-called E1 zone east of al-Quds would be "trespassing the red lines".
The Palestinians are "absolutely not going to tolerate any construction in that particular area," Malki told reporters after addressing a UN Security Council meeting on the Middle East conflict.
"We will wait to see how Israel will react from now on, especially after the formation of the new government," he added.
E1 is one of the occupied areas in the West Bank where Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's outgoing government has “authorized” building of thousands of new settlement units.
The Palestinian leadership also has a priority list of UN agencies and treaties that could be joined after the UN General Assembly voted to recognize a Palestinian state in November, Malki said.
"We are ready to sign on treaties and conventions, and we are ready also to see ourselves applying for UN agencies and international organizations," Malki said. The foreign ministry was awaiting a "green light" from President Mahmud Abbas.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Zionists kidnap 12 Palestinians in Beit Fajjar


Zionists kidnap 12 Palestinians in Beit Fajjar


Friday at dawn January 18, Zionist troops invaded Beit Fajjar town, south of Beit-ul-lahm, and kidnapped twelve Palestinians after breaking into their homes and searching them. Soldiers also invaded towns near Jenin, and a town in occupied East Al-Quds.
Several armored Israeli military jeeps invaded Beit Fajjar after surrounding it, while dozens of troops were deployed in its streets and on its main entrances.
The troops then broke into and violently searched dozens of homes causing excessive damage and kidnapped the twelve residents.
The kidnapped residents have been identified as Hasan Deeriyya, 17, Ahmad Majed Thawabta, 27, Islam Mahmoud Thawabta, 26, Mahmoud Ali Thawabta, 24, Mohammad Ahmad Thawabta, 28, Islam Nafeth Thawabta, 27, Ahmad Anwar Taqatqa, 25, Ahmad Salem Taqatqa, 24, Shakeeb Abed Taqatqa, 24, Rafat Ali Taqatqa, 29, Eyad Abed Taqatqa, 30, and Ali Hussein Rashed, 19.
In related news, the army invaded Sielet Al-Thaher town, near the northern West Bank city of Jenin, and handed six residents military warrants ordering them to head to the Salem military and security base for interrogation.
The troops also invaded Al-Arqa village, near Jenin, and fired several concussion grenades, gas bombs, and several flares.
On Thursday evening, the army invaded Sur Baher town, south of occupied East al-Quds, and surrounded the Al-Omary mosque.
The army, and a number of security officers, stopped dozens of residents leaving the mosque, and inspected their ID cards while interrogating them.
Zionist troops also handed 15 residents military warrants ordering them to head to a nearby military base for interrogation.
The invasion led to clashes between the troops and the residents, and the army fired several concussion grenades and gas bombs at the residents.

Israel won’t dismantle settlements: Benjamin Netanyahu


Israel won’t dismantle settlements: Benjamin Netanyahu


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed that the illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank will not be dismantled if he is reelected.
In an interview with the Israeli daily Maariv on Friday, the Israeli premier said, “We haven’t uprooted any settlements, we have expanded them.” 
More than half a million Israelis live in over 120 settlements built since the 1967 Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East al-Quds (Jerusalem). Much of the international community considers the settlements illegal.
The latest Israeli plans to build more settler units have also been censured by many countries. 
The Maariv report was published a day after Israeli police took down a tent camp that had been set up by Palestinians in the West Bank in protest against the Tel Aviv regime’s plans to construct a large settlement there. 
On January 16, an Israeli court issued a ruling that permitted the Tel Aviv regime forces to remove the tents set up at E1 area near al-Quds (Jerusalem). 
The Palestinians had received the court’s temporary injunction allowing them to keep the encampment. However, Netanyahu called for the decision to be reversed. 
Netanyahu’s Likud Party is expected to win a majority of seats in the general elections which will be held on January 22. 

Friday, January 18, 2013

Israeli police dismantle Palestinian camp


Israeli police dismantle Palestinian camp at E1 area of West Bank

Israeli police have dismantled a tent camp that was set up by Palestinians in the occupied West Bank in protest against the Tel Aviv regime’s plans to construct a large settlement there.
Micky Rosenfeld, an Israeli police spokesman, said on Thursday, “The 24 tents in the encampment were dismantled during the night by police.” 
Abir Kopty, a Palestinian activist who helped pitch the camp, also confirmed that the tent “village” had been taken down. 
On Wednesday, an Israeli court issued a ruling that permitted Tel Aviv regime forces to remove the tents set up at E1 area near al-Quds (Jerusalem).
The Palestinians had received the court’s temporary injunction allowing them to keep the encampment. However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for the decision to be reversed. 
On January 11, Palestinian activists set up the camp, which they named Bab al-Shams (Gate of the Sun) in a move to protest against Israeli plans to build more illegal settler units in E1 area.
Israeli forces, however, attacked the tents and forced the activists out of the location two days later. 
On January 15, Palestinian protesters tried to return to the site, but Israeli forces blocked them, declaring the area a closed military zone. 
The E1 project aims at connecting the West Bank settlement of Maale Adumim to East al-Quds (Jerusalem), about six kilometers away. The plan will cut off the northern part of the West Bank from the south.
More than half a million Israelis live in over 120 illegal settlements built since the 1967 Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East al-Quds. 

Source: http://www.plfpakistan.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=40016:israeli-police-dismantle-palestinian-camp-at-e1-area-of-west-bank&catid=6:palestine






ِIntroduction of PLF Pakistan

Palestine Foundation (PLF) of Pakistan was launched in May 2008. The PLF has been formed to highlight and create awareness among people about just Palestine.
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Palestine Foundation (PLF) of Pakistan was launched in May 2008. The PLF has been formed to highlight and create awareness among people about just Palestine cause. Palestinians have been suffering the worst sort of victimization by Zionists proclamation of Israel since May 1948 to date. The PLF follows the ideology founding fathers of Pakistan who rejected creation of Jewish state on Palestinians land.
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