Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Israeli Military Detention - No Way to Treat a Child

HE STAGES OF
ISRAELI MILITARY
DETENTION OF
PALESTINIAN
CHILD PRISONERS
Children arrested by Israeli Military
The following account of treatment of Palestinian children is based on aUNICEF report, which drew its evidence from a database of more than 400 cases of child detention and ill treatment.
1) ARREST.  Palestinian children first encounter the military detention system when they are arrested.  It often happens at home, in the middle of the night.  Soldiers force the child to come with them.  Often neither the child nor the parents know where he is going or when he will return.
Arrested children are transfered to interrogationPalestinian children are interrogated by Israeli soldiers
2) TRANSFER. Arrested children are blindfolded and taken to an interrogation center, a journey that can take from an hour to a whole day.  In some cases, they endure verbal or physical abuse and have no food, water, or access to toilets.
3) INTERROGATION. Children have no lawyers or family members present during interrogation.  In order to force them to confess, children are subject to physical violence and threatened with death and sexual assault.  Not surprisingly, most children confess.  Some are put in solitary confinement until their court hearing.
Palestinian children are shackled and brought befor a military court.Palestinian children are sentence by an Israeli military court.
4) HEARING. Children shuffle into a military courtroom wearing prison uniforms and shackled with iron leg chains.  Usually the main evidence against a child is a confession made under duress.  Bail is usually denied.  The military judge can extend a child’s pretrial detention up to 188 days.
5) SENTENCE. With so much stacked against them, almost all children plead guilty in hopes of reducing the length of their pre-trial detention.  Imprisoned children are allowed one 45-minute visit from family members every two weeks.  However, those who go to prison are often sent to prisons inside Israel, making it difficult toimpossible for Palestinian families to travel to Israel to visit an incarcerated child.

Children suffer emotionally and physically from the military detention system.  They are torn from their families and communities and subjected to harsh treatment with no one to defend them.
Source: 

Two journalists hit by Israeli rubber bullets while covering protest (VIDEO)

28th October | Operation Dove | Um Al Kheir, Occupied Palestine
Yesterday, Israeli forces demolished a total of seven structures in the Bedouin village of Um al Kheir. The structures demolished are, three houses made of concrete, a caravan donated by the United Nations (United Nations Human Rights Response Fund with the support of Ireland, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom) to be used as a home, a tinplated house, a tinplated kitchen, and a traditional oven.

“The impact was so strong that it made me fall to the ground,” Mohammed said. “The policeman aimed straight at us ... even though we were clearly a group of media people and there were no protesters at all around us.”
Both journalists reported minor injuries and Simeonov’s camera was also damaged.
AP said it would lodge a protest with the Israeli government. John Daniszewski, AP’s senior managing editor for international news, said the incident showed “outrageous disregard for the safety of journalists” lawfully doing their jobs.
Israeli police spokesman, Micky Rosenfeld, said it was not immediately clear why the border patrol policeman had opened fire on the journalists. He added the police “dispersed hundreds of rioters,” some of whom threw firebombs and stones at the Israeli forces.

Palestinian journalist and human rights activist was arrested and physically assaulted by Israeli Occupation Forces



In "Israel", if you are Palestinian, you may be arrested, assaulted, humiliated and tortured by MISTAKE... You know... It happens!
Ahmad Sub Laban, a Palestinian journalist and human rights activist from Jerusalem, was arrested and physically assaulted by Israeli Occupation Forces last Friday 24th of October. Ahmad, 35 years old, father to two children and resident of the Old City of Jerusalem left his house on Friday night going to the nearby grocery to buy milk and document the clashes taking place in the Old City as he is the field researcher for a human rights NGO.
Ahmad said: “I saw a boy running from three soldiers that were chasing him. They grabbed the boy and started to beat him. I wanted to take pictures but I feared they will attack me too. I decided to go back home, however I know I shouldn’t run away but stand in my place so the soldiers will understand I am not part of the clashes taking place. Nevertheless, three soldiers grabbed me and accused me of throwing stones. I tried to explain that I am a journalist but they started beating me up. One of them grabbed my neck and choked me. They then took me to the police station. With me were two teenagers aged 17 and 20. They kept beating us all the way to the police station including beating us with the butts of their M-16 rifles.”
He continue: “In the police station, they sat me on a chair and started to beat me again. They asked me: ‘who threw stones?’ I tried to explain to them that I work with Ir Amim, an Israeli human rights NGO, but they continued to beat me. They were four border control police and one policeman who started laughing. Ten minutes later, another policeman arrived and asked them to take us outside where they continued to beat us. I decided to shut up as I realized nothing I say will help and they will beat me even more if I say anything. The worst part is that we didn’t have the right to say a single word, because if you speak, you would be beaten. You feel like a child.”
“An hour later, an officer came in and I hear that he had an argument with the policemen who arrested us. He told them that we did nothing. Nevertheless, an hour and a half later we were taken to Al-Kishleh Police Station. We were detained there while being handcuffed. The 17 year old boy was kicked between his legs and he had to go to the toilet several times, maybe around 15 times. At 5.30 Am, an investigator went in and ordered the policemen to take the handcuffs off my hands. He then told me: ‘Listen, we are sorry, we arrested you by mistake!’”
The most painful part was when my two year old son asked me: “Dad, did the Jews arrest you?” He had heard me shouting downstairs from the window when they arrested me and see the blood. I try to raise my children away from this conflict, but every time the practices of the Israeli authorities puts them in the middle of it.”
Israeli police later released a statement that three men were arrested and were released later after checking the security cameras which proved that they were not involved in throwing stones. The police did not comment on the aggression and assaults on those who were arrested.

Source : http://blogs.haaretz.co.il/nirhasson/

Related :
http://stateofblood.blogspot.com/2014/10/soldiers-kidnap-palestinian-researcher.html

See More at :

http://stateofblood.blogspot.com/2014/10/israeli-soldiers-blindfold-and-detain.html\

http://stateofblood.blogspot.com/2014/08/gaza-massacre-2014.html

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