31 dec 2017
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Israeli soldiers invaded, on Sunday morning, the village of Deir Nitham, northwest of the central West Bank city of Ramallah, broke into and ransacked homes, and forced children out of their schools after invading them.
Safi Tamimi, the coordinator of the Land Defense Committee in Deir Nitham, said that many armored military jeeps, and a bulldozer, invaded the village, at dawn, before closing its main entrance.
Tamimi added that the soldiers then broke into and ransacked many homes, and occupied the rooftops of the home of the village’s Imam, Fadel Abdul-Hamid, in addition to Asif Hussein Diab, and broke into the Local Council building.
On Sunday morning, the soldiers invaded many schools in the village, while the students were conducting their mid-term exams, and forced them out of their schools.
It is worth mentioning that the soldiers invaded many schools, Saturday, in the village, an issue that caused many to hurl stones at the soldiers, while the army fired gas bombs, causing dozens of students to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation.
It is worth mentioning that the soldiers broke into a school in the al-Khader town, south of Bethlehem, while the students were conducting the mid-term exams, and fired many gas bombs and concussion grenades.
The soldiers also fired gas bombs and concussion grenades at the students, while leaving their school. Video
Safi Tamimi, the coordinator of the Land Defense Committee in Deir Nitham, said that many armored military jeeps, and a bulldozer, invaded the village, at dawn, before closing its main entrance.
Tamimi added that the soldiers then broke into and ransacked many homes, and occupied the rooftops of the home of the village’s Imam, Fadel Abdul-Hamid, in addition to Asif Hussein Diab, and broke into the Local Council building.
On Sunday morning, the soldiers invaded many schools in the village, while the students were conducting their mid-term exams, and forced them out of their schools.
It is worth mentioning that the soldiers invaded many schools, Saturday, in the village, an issue that caused many to hurl stones at the soldiers, while the army fired gas bombs, causing dozens of students to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation.
It is worth mentioning that the soldiers broke into a school in the al-Khader town, south of Bethlehem, while the students were conducting the mid-term exams, and fired many gas bombs and concussion grenades.
The soldiers also fired gas bombs and concussion grenades at the students, while leaving their school. Video
30 dec 2017

Dalal Lawlah 9
A Palestinian child with special needs, from Awarta town in Nablus, died on Friday evening after Israeli soldiers obstructed her transfer to hospital.
Palestinian medical sources said that nine-year-old Dalal Lawlah died after Israeli soldiers at Huwara checkpoint prevented her father from taking her swiftly to Rafidia hospital.
The sources added that Dalal was unable to breathe and needed urgent medical intervention, but delaying her transfer to the hospital for about half an hour led to her death.
The child’s father, Deeb, told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that he tried at first to use the main road through Awarta checkpoint to take her daughter, who was a child with special needs, to a hospital in Nablus after she suffered a health problem, and argued with soldiers to convince them to let him through, but to no avail.
Later, he said, he had to go to Huwara checkpoint, which was closed at the time because of skirmishes in the area.
After a long hold-up on the road, the ambulance carrying the child arrived at the hospital, where she was pronounced dead, the father added.
The father held the Israeli occupation army fully responsible for the death of his daughter, accusing Israeli soldiers of firing tear gas grenades at the ambulance.
A Palestinian child with special needs, from Awarta town in Nablus, died on Friday evening after Israeli soldiers obstructed her transfer to hospital.
Palestinian medical sources said that nine-year-old Dalal Lawlah died after Israeli soldiers at Huwara checkpoint prevented her father from taking her swiftly to Rafidia hospital.
The sources added that Dalal was unable to breathe and needed urgent medical intervention, but delaying her transfer to the hospital for about half an hour led to her death.
The child’s father, Deeb, told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that he tried at first to use the main road through Awarta checkpoint to take her daughter, who was a child with special needs, to a hospital in Nablus after she suffered a health problem, and argued with soldiers to convince them to let him through, but to no avail.
Later, he said, he had to go to Huwara checkpoint, which was closed at the time because of skirmishes in the area.
After a long hold-up on the road, the ambulance carrying the child arrived at the hospital, where she was pronounced dead, the father added.
The father held the Israeli occupation army fully responsible for the death of his daughter, accusing Israeli soldiers of firing tear gas grenades at the ambulance.
29 dec 2017
2016 at Qalandia military checkpoint and she was considered the youngest Palestinian female prisoner.
According to the Palestinian Prisoners and Ex-Prisoners Affairs Commission, there are 59 Palestinian female prisoners languishing in Israeli jails and suffering from regular abuse and harassment.
According to the Palestinian Prisoners and Ex-Prisoners Affairs Commission, there are 59 Palestinian female prisoners languishing in Israeli jails and suffering from regular abuse and harassment.
28 dec 2017

Israeli forces shot 14-year-old Mohammad al-Farani in the face with a tear gas canister, causing skull fracture and loss of his right eye
With Israel’s crackdown on protests over Jerusalem has come a spike in violations of Palestinian children’s rights.
Since 6 December, when President Donald Trump announced that the US recognized the city as Israel’s capital and pledged to move the country’s embassy there, Palestinian children have been among the hundreds injured and arrested by Israeli forces.
Several children have suffered potentially irreversible head injuries, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
Two have lost eyes.
Two boys were hit in the face with tear gas canisters fired by Israeli soldiers from a watchtower near Erez checkpoint during an 11 December protest at the Gaza-Israel boundary.
Mohammad al-Farani was sitting on a concrete block when he was hit.
“It was so painful, I don’t know how to describe it. There was a lot of blood running down my face,” the 14-year-old told Defense for Children International-Palestine.
The group stated that the child “was treated for a fractured cheekbone, head gash, internal bleeding in the brain and later underwent eye surgery to remove his right eye.”
Nidal al-Majzoub, also 14, was standing nearby and was hit soon after Mohammad, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine. He required 10 stitches to his forehead.
Shot in head with live ammunition
In the occupied West Bank, a 15-year-old boy was shot in the face with live ammunition near the town of Salfit on 12 December. He was detained and reportedly remains hospitalized in critical condition.
Israel initially claimed that the boy, identified by media as Hamed al-Masri, was attempting to stab soldiers when he was shot. Later they said that the child was “suspected of an attempt to attack on the border.”
Defense for Children International-Palestine also documented “two live fire injuries including a 16-year-old who was shot above his right eye, causing skull fractures and vision loss. The teen told DCIP he participated in a march on 8 December near Tulkarem in the northern West Bank.”
Other children were seriously injured by “less lethal” ammunition fired by soldiers.
A 15-year-old boy identified by the group as Qassam K. was critically injured when he was shot in the skull with a rubber-coated metal bullet during a late-night raid in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus on 20 December.
With Israel’s crackdown on protests over Jerusalem has come a spike in violations of Palestinian children’s rights.
Since 6 December, when President Donald Trump announced that the US recognized the city as Israel’s capital and pledged to move the country’s embassy there, Palestinian children have been among the hundreds injured and arrested by Israeli forces.
Several children have suffered potentially irreversible head injuries, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
Two have lost eyes.
Two boys were hit in the face with tear gas canisters fired by Israeli soldiers from a watchtower near Erez checkpoint during an 11 December protest at the Gaza-Israel boundary.
Mohammad al-Farani was sitting on a concrete block when he was hit.
“It was so painful, I don’t know how to describe it. There was a lot of blood running down my face,” the 14-year-old told Defense for Children International-Palestine.
The group stated that the child “was treated for a fractured cheekbone, head gash, internal bleeding in the brain and later underwent eye surgery to remove his right eye.”
Nidal al-Majzoub, also 14, was standing nearby and was hit soon after Mohammad, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine. He required 10 stitches to his forehead.
Shot in head with live ammunition
In the occupied West Bank, a 15-year-old boy was shot in the face with live ammunition near the town of Salfit on 12 December. He was detained and reportedly remains hospitalized in critical condition.
Israel initially claimed that the boy, identified by media as Hamed al-Masri, was attempting to stab soldiers when he was shot. Later they said that the child was “suspected of an attempt to attack on the border.”
Defense for Children International-Palestine also documented “two live fire injuries including a 16-year-old who was shot above his right eye, causing skull fractures and vision loss. The teen told DCIP he participated in a march on 8 December near Tulkarem in the northern West Bank.”
Other children were seriously injured by “less lethal” ammunition fired by soldiers.
A 15-year-old boy identified by the group as Qassam K. was critically injured when he was shot in the skull with a rubber-coated metal bullet during a late-night raid in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus on 20 December.
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![]() Muhammad Tamimi, 15, was seriously injured when he was shot in the face with a rubber-coated metal bullet fired at close range in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh on 15 December.
He required complex surgery and was placed in an induced coma and doctors fear he may be left with permanent disabilities. His cousin, 16-year-old Ahed Tamimi, was arrested days later during a night raid on her home after she was seen in a widely circulated video slapping and shoving an Israeli soldier on her family’s property shortly after Muhammad was shot. |
Ahed’s mother and another cousin were also arrested.
An Israeli military court extended all three of their detention orders by another four days on 25 December.
The military court judge “accepted police claims that Ahed Tamimi presents a danger, and that she could impede soldiers in their work,” the Israeli daily Haaretz reported.
“I remember my face bleeding”
An Israeli military court extended all three of their detention orders by another four days on 25 December.
The military court judge “accepted police claims that Ahed Tamimi presents a danger, and that she could impede soldiers in their work,” the Israeli daily Haaretz reported.
“I remember my face bleeding”

A 16-year-old boy seen blindfolded and frogmarched by a group of Israeli soldiers in a now iconic photograph taken in the West Bank city of Hebron is among the 77 children who have been newly detained at Ofer military prison in the first three weeks of December, according to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
The boy, who has been identified by media as Fawzi al-Juneidi, told the rights group that he had been beaten and verbally abused for two hours before he was taken in for interrogation.
“When I arrived at the checkpoint, I remember my face bleeding, mostly my lips because of the beating. They took me to a room, knocked me down to the floor and began kicking me all over my body,” the boy testified to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
Palestinian media reported that the child was released Wednesday night. A video shows the boy upon his release:
In the video, Fawzi appears with his arm in a sling and states that his injury was from the beating by Israeli soldiers.
Some 500 to 700 Palestinian children go through Israel’s military courts each year.
“In 590 cases documented by DCIP between 2012 and 2016, 72 percent of Palestinian child detainees reported physical violence and 66 percent faced verbal abuse and humiliation,” the group stated.
“Under Israeli military law, Palestinian children have no right to a lawyer during interrogation. Confessions that are often coerced through ill-treatment are routinely used in military courts to sentence children to prison terms.”
Palestinian children who go through civilian courts in Jerusalem are also subjected to “extensive denial of their rights,” according to a recent study.
Children are left traumatized after being detained by Israeli forces.
Ashraf, a 5-year-old boy from Jalazone refugee camp detained by soldiers for five hours earlier this month, has trouble sleeping at night, refuses to go to school and speaks very little, his father told Haaretz reporter Amira Hass.
The small boy’s detention was defended by Yoav Mordechai, head of COGAT, the bureaucratic arm of Israel’s military occupation, who stated on Facebook that the child had engaged in “dangerous and violent behavior” by throwing stones at soldiers.
Israel violates Palestinian children’s rights with nearly total impunity.
Thirty-five Palestinian children were killed by Israeli soldiers, police and armed civilians last year. It was the deadliest year for Palestinian children in the West Bank in the past decade.
Families of children who are badly injured by soldiers struggle to cover the costs of medical care and related expenses.
Israeli law all but bars Palestinians from getting compensation for injuries caused by its forces.
The boy, who has been identified by media as Fawzi al-Juneidi, told the rights group that he had been beaten and verbally abused for two hours before he was taken in for interrogation.
“When I arrived at the checkpoint, I remember my face bleeding, mostly my lips because of the beating. They took me to a room, knocked me down to the floor and began kicking me all over my body,” the boy testified to Defense for Children International-Palestine.
Palestinian media reported that the child was released Wednesday night. A video shows the boy upon his release:
In the video, Fawzi appears with his arm in a sling and states that his injury was from the beating by Israeli soldiers.
Some 500 to 700 Palestinian children go through Israel’s military courts each year.
“In 590 cases documented by DCIP between 2012 and 2016, 72 percent of Palestinian child detainees reported physical violence and 66 percent faced verbal abuse and humiliation,” the group stated.
“Under Israeli military law, Palestinian children have no right to a lawyer during interrogation. Confessions that are often coerced through ill-treatment are routinely used in military courts to sentence children to prison terms.”
Palestinian children who go through civilian courts in Jerusalem are also subjected to “extensive denial of their rights,” according to a recent study.
Children are left traumatized after being detained by Israeli forces.
Ashraf, a 5-year-old boy from Jalazone refugee camp detained by soldiers for five hours earlier this month, has trouble sleeping at night, refuses to go to school and speaks very little, his father told Haaretz reporter Amira Hass.
The small boy’s detention was defended by Yoav Mordechai, head of COGAT, the bureaucratic arm of Israel’s military occupation, who stated on Facebook that the child had engaged in “dangerous and violent behavior” by throwing stones at soldiers.
Israel violates Palestinian children’s rights with nearly total impunity.
Thirty-five Palestinian children were killed by Israeli soldiers, police and armed civilians last year. It was the deadliest year for Palestinian children in the West Bank in the past decade.
Families of children who are badly injured by soldiers struggle to cover the costs of medical care and related expenses.
Israeli law all but bars Palestinians from getting compensation for injuries caused by its forces.

Israeli soldiers abducted, on Wednesday evening, four Palestinian children, from Kafr Dan town, west of the northern West Bank city of Jenin, while in their families’ lands in Marj Ibn Amer Meadow.
Eyewitnesses said the abducted children have been identified as Hamza Abdul-Jabbar Sabah, Mohammad Abdul-Jabbar Salah, Mustafa Allam Mer’ey, and Ahmad Aref Salah.
They were in their families’ lands, near the illegal Annexation Wall in the area, when the soldiers abducted them, and moved them to an unknown destination.
Eyewitnesses said the abducted children have been identified as Hamza Abdul-Jabbar Sabah, Mohammad Abdul-Jabbar Salah, Mustafa Allam Mer’ey, and Ahmad Aref Salah.
They were in their families’ lands, near the illegal Annexation Wall in the area, when the soldiers abducted them, and moved them to an unknown destination.

The Israeli Authorities released, on Wednesday at dawn, a Palestinian child, who was abducted and assaulted by 23 Israeli soldiers, earlier this month, and was instantly moved to a hospital for treatment.
Media sources in Ramallah said the soldiers released Fawzi Mohammad al-Juneidi, 16, who was held in Ofer military base and detention center, west of the central West Bank city of Ramallah.
Fawzi, from the southern West Bank city of Hebron, was rushed to Palestine Medical Complex, in Ramallah, for specialized treatment for a fracture in his shoulder.
Al-Juneidi, who was assaulted and abducted on December 7th, told WAFA Palestinian News Agency that, after the soldiers attacked him, he was moved to Etzion military base, north of Hebron, where he spent the night being interrogated and tortured by the soldiers and interrogators.
He added that his release came after his family paid 10.000 Israeli Shekels fine to the Israeli Authorities.
Media sources in Ramallah said the soldiers released Fawzi Mohammad al-Juneidi, 16, who was held in Ofer military base and detention center, west of the central West Bank city of Ramallah.
Fawzi, from the southern West Bank city of Hebron, was rushed to Palestine Medical Complex, in Ramallah, for specialized treatment for a fracture in his shoulder.
Al-Juneidi, who was assaulted and abducted on December 7th, told WAFA Palestinian News Agency that, after the soldiers attacked him, he was moved to Etzion military base, north of Hebron, where he spent the night being interrogated and tortured by the soldiers and interrogators.
He added that his release came after his family paid 10.000 Israeli Shekels fine to the Israeli Authorities.
27 dec 2017

Israeli soldiers invaded, on Wednesday at dawn, Silwan town, south of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, in occupied Jerusalem, and conducted violent searches of homes, before abducting at least thirteen Palestinians, including children, and demolished two buildings.
Media sources in Silwan said the soldiers stormed and ransacked dozens of homes in the town, and abducted thirteen Palestinians, in addition to summing many others for interrogation.
The invasion was carried out by dozens of soldiers and police officers, who also installed roadblocks in many neighborhoods, in addition to closing several roads with concrete blocks.
The Wadi Hilweh Information Center in Silwan (Silwanic), identified the abducted Palestinians as:
The soldiers also forced the Palestinians to remove graffiti, calling for resistance and liberation, from many walls.
In addition, the army demolished a commercial building, and a barn in the town, allegedly for being constructed without permits.
The army also handed several demolition orders targeting many homes and buildings, in Silwan.
Silwanic said the soldiers violently invaded many stores, causing excessive damage, and confiscated goods and supplies, in addition to smashing the door of a store, selling propane gas, and confiscated propane gas barrels.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded a shop, and confiscated a fridge, in addition to confiscating a car in the town.
The soldiers also invaded a Restaurant in Silwan, and confiscated seven propane gas barrels, in addition to forcing a man to smash the door of his scarp shop, before invading it.
Media sources in Silwan said the soldiers stormed and ransacked dozens of homes in the town, and abducted thirteen Palestinians, in addition to summing many others for interrogation.
The invasion was carried out by dozens of soldiers and police officers, who also installed roadblocks in many neighborhoods, in addition to closing several roads with concrete blocks.
The Wadi Hilweh Information Center in Silwan (Silwanic), identified the abducted Palestinians as:
- Mohammad Sarhan, 14.
- Mo’men al-Abbassi.
- Mofeed Mohammad al-Abbassi.
- Fuad al-Qaaq, 20.
- Odai Samer Abu Tayeh, 20.
- Mohammad Zidani.
- Amjad Shweiki, 43.
- Mohannad al-Qawasmi, 24.
- Mohammad Shiokhi.
- Karim Shiokhi.
- Bassel Hamza Shalloudi, 17.
- Hamada Odeh.
- Mohammad Mousa al-Abbassi, 20.
The soldiers also forced the Palestinians to remove graffiti, calling for resistance and liberation, from many walls.
In addition, the army demolished a commercial building, and a barn in the town, allegedly for being constructed without permits.
The army also handed several demolition orders targeting many homes and buildings, in Silwan.
Silwanic said the soldiers violently invaded many stores, causing excessive damage, and confiscated goods and supplies, in addition to smashing the door of a store, selling propane gas, and confiscated propane gas barrels.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded a shop, and confiscated a fridge, in addition to confiscating a car in the town.
The soldiers also invaded a Restaurant in Silwan, and confiscated seven propane gas barrels, in addition to forcing a man to smash the door of his scarp shop, before invading it.
26 dec 2017

Palestinian medical sources have reported, Tuesday, that many schoolchildren suffered the severe effects of teargas inhalation, after dozens of soldiers invaded Ya’bad town, and stormed the school while firing gas bombs and rubber-coated steel bullets.
Media sources in Jenin said the soldiers fired many concussion grenades and gas bombs at the Ezzeddin Al-Qassam School, after invading its yard, while the students were behind their desks during the mid-term exams.
They added that dozens of children suffered the effects of teargas inhalation, while many others suffered anxiety attacks, before Red Crescent medics rushed to the school and provided them with the needed treatment.
Tareq Alawna, the head of the Education Department in Jenin, said the soldiers have been sporadically carrying out these provocative invasions and violations, and added that the soldiers shot and killed a student, identified as Fuad Turkman, during an invasion into the school seven years ago.
Alawna stated that the army deliberately targets the students, and the educational process, in different parts of the occupied West Bank.
It is worth mentioning that the soldiers are constantly deployed near the school, and conduct ongoing violations and provocative acts against the students.
Media sources in Jenin said the soldiers fired many concussion grenades and gas bombs at the Ezzeddin Al-Qassam School, after invading its yard, while the students were behind their desks during the mid-term exams.
They added that dozens of children suffered the effects of teargas inhalation, while many others suffered anxiety attacks, before Red Crescent medics rushed to the school and provided them with the needed treatment.
Tareq Alawna, the head of the Education Department in Jenin, said the soldiers have been sporadically carrying out these provocative invasions and violations, and added that the soldiers shot and killed a student, identified as Fuad Turkman, during an invasion into the school seven years ago.
Alawna stated that the army deliberately targets the students, and the educational process, in different parts of the occupied West Bank.
It is worth mentioning that the soldiers are constantly deployed near the school, and conduct ongoing violations and provocative acts against the students.

On the 15th of December 2017, Mohammed climbed his house’s three-meter wall, to watch the movement of Israeli occupation forces (IOF), yet there was a soldier lying down, and watching his movement. The soldier shot the 15-year-old boy with a single bullet that penetrated his face. The boy fell from the top of the wall and hit the ground.
Mohammed’s mother told the PIC reporter, “I was praying inside my house, when my daughter screamed: Muhammad was shot, and he fell from the wall of the house.”
“However, the words of young people who ran to help him, telling me to calm down and asserting that he was shot by a rubber-coated bullet, not live ammunition, gave me a little bit of relief.”
Full of pain and tears, the mother of the wounded boy, Mohammed al-Tamimi, 15, from the village of Nabi Saleh, north of Ramallah, continues saying: “The x-ray showed that a rubber bullet penetrated the head of Mohammed from the left ear and settled inside the skull. The doctors needed several hours to get it out.”
Speaking of his situation, she added, full of tears, “Muhammad is still in a coma, connected to artificial respiration and lying in the intensive care unit. His health condition could only be judged after he recovers from his coma. As a result of the bleeding, he inhaled a lot of blood, which resulted in suffering from pneumonia.”
Targeting children
According to Ali al-Tamimi, who witnessed the shooting of the rubber-coated bullets at Mohammed, Israeli soldiers deliberately fired at him from a zero distance. “We were stunned by the large amount of blood Mohammed lost. We dragged him to the center of the village.”
He continued: “The IOF not only shot Mohammed, but also arrested his cousin Ahed al-Tamimi a few days later, and members of her family, in retaliation for the family’s rejection of the injustice of the occupation, and their participation in weekly peaceful protests in the village of Nabi Saleh.”
Continued suffering
Mohammed’s mother confirms that her child is a freed prisoner. He was arrested and thrown into Israeli prison when he was only 13 years old. He was injured more than once during the clashes in the village of Nabi Saleh.
She added, “Since the Trump’s recognition of occupied Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, almost every day there are confrontations with the occupation forces, where soldiers are stationed at the entrance of the village, claiming that they check the identity of young people as a pretext and arrest Palestinians who they deem wanted. Permanent tension continues to prevail.”
Since US President Donald Trump announced the recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, 15 young Palestinians were killed, and more than 3,000 were wounded in the West Bank, Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, during protests condemning the American decision.
Mohammed’s mother told the PIC reporter, “I was praying inside my house, when my daughter screamed: Muhammad was shot, and he fell from the wall of the house.”
“However, the words of young people who ran to help him, telling me to calm down and asserting that he was shot by a rubber-coated bullet, not live ammunition, gave me a little bit of relief.”
Full of pain and tears, the mother of the wounded boy, Mohammed al-Tamimi, 15, from the village of Nabi Saleh, north of Ramallah, continues saying: “The x-ray showed that a rubber bullet penetrated the head of Mohammed from the left ear and settled inside the skull. The doctors needed several hours to get it out.”
Speaking of his situation, she added, full of tears, “Muhammad is still in a coma, connected to artificial respiration and lying in the intensive care unit. His health condition could only be judged after he recovers from his coma. As a result of the bleeding, he inhaled a lot of blood, which resulted in suffering from pneumonia.”
Targeting children
According to Ali al-Tamimi, who witnessed the shooting of the rubber-coated bullets at Mohammed, Israeli soldiers deliberately fired at him from a zero distance. “We were stunned by the large amount of blood Mohammed lost. We dragged him to the center of the village.”
He continued: “The IOF not only shot Mohammed, but also arrested his cousin Ahed al-Tamimi a few days later, and members of her family, in retaliation for the family’s rejection of the injustice of the occupation, and their participation in weekly peaceful protests in the village of Nabi Saleh.”
Continued suffering
Mohammed’s mother confirms that her child is a freed prisoner. He was arrested and thrown into Israeli prison when he was only 13 years old. He was injured more than once during the clashes in the village of Nabi Saleh.
She added, “Since the Trump’s recognition of occupied Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, almost every day there are confrontations with the occupation forces, where soldiers are stationed at the entrance of the village, claiming that they check the identity of young people as a pretext and arrest Palestinians who they deem wanted. Permanent tension continues to prevail.”
Since US President Donald Trump announced the recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, 15 young Palestinians were killed, and more than 3,000 were wounded in the West Bank, Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, during protests condemning the American decision.
25 dec 2017

It is the Israeli mindset. During Israeli offensive on Gaza in 2014, an Israeli soldier called on Netanyahu to rape all Palestinian mothers in Gaza.
Prominent Israeli journalist called for raping the Palestinian minor female prisoner inside Israeli jails Ahed al-Tamimi, 16, over slapping an Israeli soldier who shot her 15-year-old cousin in the head.
“In the case of the girls [Ahed al-Tamimi], we should exact a price at some other opportunity, in the dark, without witnesses and cameras,” journalist Ben Caspit wrote in an article published by the Hebron Maariv newspaper.
What might this price exactly be, considering that he is referring specifically to teenage girls? We are left to wonder. Perhaps he wishes to leave it to the imagination of the soldiers who would invade the home at night, ensuring that no cameras are filming.
Ben Caspit’s suggestion is a sly and wretched one, and it comes with the smugness of congratulating the soldiers for their moral strength, as it were, for not having acted back with force against the girls – on film, that is.
“There is no stomach which does not turn when witnessing this clip,” Caspit says, referring to Zionist stomachs, that is. “I, for example, if I were to encounter that situation, I would have long ago been in detention until end of procedures.”
In other words, Caspit is saying he would run amok on the girls to a degree that would get him arrested. That’s what he’s indirectly suggesting would be ‘normal,’ because he would do it.
Caspit’s suggestion resembles that of the Israeli Defence Minister Lieberman, who also said on Tuesday that “whoever goes wild during the day, will be arrested at night,” adding that “everyone involved, not only the girl but also her parents and those around them will not escape from what they deserve.”
The soldiers were repeatedly being called “gays” and “trannies” because they were not seduced by this little girl and did not rape her.
Elor Azarya, the Israeli soldier who killed a motionless Palestinian in Al-Khalil last year, wrote in July 2014, near the beginning of the onslaught on Gaza: “Bibi, you are transvestite. What a ceasefire? Penetrate their mothers!”
Israeli Culture Minister Miri Regev described the unwillingness of the Israeli soldiers to rape the little girls as “damaging of the honour of the Israeli army.”
Prominent Israeli journalist called for raping the Palestinian minor female prisoner inside Israeli jails Ahed al-Tamimi, 16, over slapping an Israeli soldier who shot her 15-year-old cousin in the head.
“In the case of the girls [Ahed al-Tamimi], we should exact a price at some other opportunity, in the dark, without witnesses and cameras,” journalist Ben Caspit wrote in an article published by the Hebron Maariv newspaper.
What might this price exactly be, considering that he is referring specifically to teenage girls? We are left to wonder. Perhaps he wishes to leave it to the imagination of the soldiers who would invade the home at night, ensuring that no cameras are filming.
Ben Caspit’s suggestion is a sly and wretched one, and it comes with the smugness of congratulating the soldiers for their moral strength, as it were, for not having acted back with force against the girls – on film, that is.
“There is no stomach which does not turn when witnessing this clip,” Caspit says, referring to Zionist stomachs, that is. “I, for example, if I were to encounter that situation, I would have long ago been in detention until end of procedures.”
In other words, Caspit is saying he would run amok on the girls to a degree that would get him arrested. That’s what he’s indirectly suggesting would be ‘normal,’ because he would do it.
Caspit’s suggestion resembles that of the Israeli Defence Minister Lieberman, who also said on Tuesday that “whoever goes wild during the day, will be arrested at night,” adding that “everyone involved, not only the girl but also her parents and those around them will not escape from what they deserve.”
The soldiers were repeatedly being called “gays” and “trannies” because they were not seduced by this little girl and did not rape her.
Elor Azarya, the Israeli soldier who killed a motionless Palestinian in Al-Khalil last year, wrote in July 2014, near the beginning of the onslaught on Gaza: “Bibi, you are transvestite. What a ceasefire? Penetrate their mothers!”
Israeli Culture Minister Miri Regev described the unwillingness of the Israeli soldiers to rape the little girls as “damaging of the honour of the Israeli army.”
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![]() An Israeli court denied, Sunday, an appeal for the release of detained world-renowned teen journalist, ‘Ahed Tamimi, 16, who stands accused of “assaulting soldiers,” who raided her family home in Nabi Saleh town, near Ramallah, before abducting her along with her mother, last Tuesday.
A video published on social media outlets showed Tamimi in court, cuffed and surrounded by Israeli officers, when a woman’s voice could be heard in the background saying, “’Hello Ahed, are you OK?” before the teenage girl nodded, while the soldiers were trying to prevent any communication her. It is worth mentioning that, one day after the soldiers abducted ‘Ahed and her mother, the army invaded Nabi Saleh again and abducted her cousin Noor Tamimi. The Israeli army is claiming that ‘Ahed attacked a soldier, when many officers attempted to invade her home. Her father, Bassam Tamimi, stated that the Israeli court denied appeals filed for her release, and decided to remand her for an additional period, while the Israeli prosecution is trying to ramp up illegal charges against her. “The Israeli occupation claims that it has a legal system, but such a system does not exist as these courts are run by the military which illegally occupies our land, and serves this colonialist regime and illegal occupation of our land,” he said. |
It is worth mentioning that, when the soldiers abducted ‘Ahed, she was trying to stop them from occupying her home’s rooftop, to use it as a firing post against and a monitoring tower, in her town, known for ongoing nonviolent resistance against the illegal Israeli Annexation Wall and colonies.
24 dec 2017

The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) on Sunday morning kidnapped two young Palestinian citizens in al-Khalil city, south of the West Bank.
Local sources told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that Israeli soldiers near the Ibrahimi Mosque stopped a group of school children and brutalized them and were about to detain them when a young man called Yusri Taha intervened and protected them. Video
However, the soldiers subdued and arrested the young man instead and took him to an unknown place, the sources added.
Meanwhile, Israeli soldiers intercepted and arrested a school girl as she was going home from school in an area near Halhoul city, north of al-Khalil.
Local sources said that the soldiers waylaid the girl and restrained her before taking her away. The identity of the girl is still unknown.
Local sources told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that Israeli soldiers near the Ibrahimi Mosque stopped a group of school children and brutalized them and were about to detain them when a young man called Yusri Taha intervened and protected them. Video
However, the soldiers subdued and arrested the young man instead and took him to an unknown place, the sources added.
Meanwhile, Israeli soldiers intercepted and arrested a school girl as she was going home from school in an area near Halhoul city, north of al-Khalil.
Local sources said that the soldiers waylaid the girl and restrained her before taking her away. The identity of the girl is still unknown.
23 dec 2017

The Israeli occupation forces on Saturday evening arrested a sick Palestinian along with his wife and children while they were working in their farmland near the apartheid wall, in Salfit’s western town of Haris, in the northern West Bank.
Speaking with PIC, eyewitnesses said Israeli soldiers aggressively beat a child on claims that he attempted to ruin the barbed wire surrounding the separation wall. The father, who rushed to the area to defend his child after he heard him crying for help, had also been made to endure heavy beating by the occupation soldiers.
The Israeli forces ended up arresting all the family members: Husni Sultan, 52 and his wife, along with his sons Youssef, 15, Alaa al-Deen, 25, and Habeeb, 20.
The family members were all dragged by the occupation soldiers to an Israeli military camp in Ariel settlement outpost.
Speaking with PIC, eyewitnesses said Israeli soldiers aggressively beat a child on claims that he attempted to ruin the barbed wire surrounding the separation wall. The father, who rushed to the area to defend his child after he heard him crying for help, had also been made to endure heavy beating by the occupation soldiers.
The Israeli forces ended up arresting all the family members: Husni Sultan, 52 and his wife, along with his sons Youssef, 15, Alaa al-Deen, 25, and Habeeb, 20.
The family members were all dragged by the occupation soldiers to an Israeli military camp in Ariel settlement outpost.

Israeli soldiers invaded, Friday, the al-Lubban ash-Sharqiya village, south of the northern West Bank city of Nablus, and opened fire on dozens of Palestinian protesters, in addition to firing gas bombs at homes, wounding seven, and causing others to suffer the effects of teargas inhalation. The soldiers also abducted one child in Nablus city.
Media sources said several armored military jeeps invaded the village, and fired many gas bombs at local protesters, pushing many to hurl stone at the invading forces.
The soldiers also fired many rubber-coated steel bullets, wounding seven, including four who were suffered moderate injuries, and were rushed to Salfit governmental hospital.
One Palestinian suffered cuts and bruises, after falling when many soldiers chased him, but were unable to abduct him.
In addition, the head of al-Lubban ash-Sharqiya Village Council, Samer ‘Oweiss, said the army also closed the main entrance of the village with concrete blocks, and sand hills.
In related news, the soldiers abducted a Palestinian child, identified as Mohammad Abu Kamla, from Nablus city, while riding his bicycle in the al-Quds Street, near the southern entrance of the city. Video
The child was taken prisoner when the soldiers assaulted Palestinian protesters, and fired many gas bombs at them.
Palestinian medics tried to secure the release of the child, who was just passing through the area, but the soldiers attacked them, and took him to Huwwara military base.
Media sources said several armored military jeeps invaded the village, and fired many gas bombs at local protesters, pushing many to hurl stone at the invading forces.
The soldiers also fired many rubber-coated steel bullets, wounding seven, including four who were suffered moderate injuries, and were rushed to Salfit governmental hospital.
One Palestinian suffered cuts and bruises, after falling when many soldiers chased him, but were unable to abduct him.
In addition, the head of al-Lubban ash-Sharqiya Village Council, Samer ‘Oweiss, said the army also closed the main entrance of the village with concrete blocks, and sand hills.
In related news, the soldiers abducted a Palestinian child, identified as Mohammad Abu Kamla, from Nablus city, while riding his bicycle in the al-Quds Street, near the southern entrance of the city. Video
The child was taken prisoner when the soldiers assaulted Palestinian protesters, and fired many gas bombs at them.
Palestinian medics tried to secure the release of the child, who was just passing through the area, but the soldiers attacked them, and took him to Huwwara military base.