Sunday, January 11, 2015

Rand Paul moves to ban aid to Palestinians until ICC bid withdrawn

The U.S. senator met with a group of Jewish donors to the Republican Party before introducing his bill, according to the National Journal.

 U.S. Senator Rand Paul speaks during a news conference in Washington, DC. June 13, 2013
U.S. Senator Rand Paul speaks during a news conference in Washington, DC. June 13, 2013 Photo by AFP
The so-called "Defend Israel by Defunding Palestinian Foreign Aid Act of 2015" was the second anti-Palestinian bill introduced by Paul in as many years, according to the National Journal. Last year, he introduced the "Stand with Israel Act," which would have terminated U.S. aid until the Palestinians agreed to a cease-fire and recognized the state of Israel.
The PA submitted the necessary documentation to become a member of the world's permanent war crimes tribunal last week. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Tuesday its the member ship would become official on April 1.
As a member of the court, the PA will be able to pursue war crimes charges against Israel.
Hours before introducing the bill, Rand met with a group leading Jewish donors to the Republican Party, including casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, the Journal reported.
Paul's bill would eliminate all U.S. foreign assistance, loan guarantees, and general aid to the Palestine Authority so long as it seeks to join the international court, according to an aide to the senator.
Interviewed by Fox News, Paul argued that it "hardly seems to me a good idea to give American taxpayer money to a country or an entity that is now saying that an ally of ours—that their soldiers need to be investigated for war crimes."
The junior Republican senator from Kentucky is openly exploring a run for the White House in 2016. Observers see his bill as being part of a bid to win the support of Republican pro-Israel hawks, who tend to regard the libertarian Paul with skepticism, if not outright hostility.

TWO CHILDREN AMONG EIGHT PALESTINIANS KIDNAPPED BY IOF IN SILWAN

Two children among eight Palestinians kidnapped by IOF
At least eight Palestinian citizens were kidnapped by the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) overnight Saturday following a round of arbitrary mass-abduction campaigns carried out across Jerusalem’s town of Silwan.
The Silwan-based Wadi Helwa Information Center said a special unit of the Israeli occupation army stormed Jerusalem’s town of Silwan and rounded up the Palestinian minors Hamdi Jaber, 14, and Khalil Resheq, 15.
The assault culminated in the apprehension of the youths Mohamed Shwayat, Hamza Jaber, Khaled Kastero, Fares Abu Nab, and Morad Kastero, all in their 20s.
The IOF further broke into the family home of the Palestinian civilian Abd Zaytoun and shoved his wife.
invading IOF troops stormed the house of the Palestinian citizen Nidhal Zaytoun and took multi-dimensional snapshots of the building, moments after they provocatively checked out the inhabitants’ IDs.
In a related development, the IOF early Sunday morning sealed off the main entryways to the town of Asira al-Shamaliya, north of the West Bank city of Nablus.
The IOF troops raided the town at dawn and fenced off the so-called 17 checkpoint leading to Nablus city.
The Israeli occupation patrols further blocked the passageway between the towns of Asira and the adjacent Agensinya, denying Palestinian citizens and workers access out of and into the area.
Source: PIC

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Israel to halt transfer of tax revenues to Palestinians following ICC bid

Pre-Trial Judges conducting a hearing © ICC-CPI / Associated Press
Pre-Trial Judges conducting a hearing © ICC-CPI / Associated Press

Israel will withhold critical tax revenue and seek ways to bring war crimes prosecutions against Palestinian leaders in retaliation 
for Palestinian moves to join the International Criminal Court (ICC), Israeli officials said on Saturday.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas announced earlier this week that Palestine seeks to join the ICC in the Hague to pursue war-crimes charges against Israel.  The move follows a failed motion last week in the U.N. Security Council to set a 2017 deadline for a Palestinian state to be established in territory occupied by Israel in the war of 1967.
Making a punitive response, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided in consultation with senior ministers on Thursday to withhold the next monthly transfer of tax revenue, totaling some $125 million, an Israeli official told Reuters on Saturday. These tax revenues make up two-thirds of the annual budget of the Palestinian Authority (PA), excluding foreign aid. The funds are critical to running the PA, which exercises limited self-rule, and paying salaries for its public employees. 
Saeb Erekat, chief negotiator for the Palestine Liberation Organization, told Al Jazeera that the move showed that Israel was scared over the move to join the ICC. "Israel collects our customs and our taxes for us so then when they withhold these funds it means that this month people will not be able to pay the schools, the hospitals, the medical supplies, the milk and bread, so they are trying to suffocate the whole nation,” Erekat said.
"It shows that when it comes to enforcing collective punishment, they are punishing 4 million Palestinians, starving them, because they want to act with impunity," he added. "This shows the legitimacy of what we are doing in the ICC."
Israel took a similar step in December 2012, freezing revenue transfers for three months in anger at the Palestinians' launch of a campaign for recognition of statehood at the United Nations.
In addition to the revenue freeze, an Israeli official told Reuters that Israel was "weighing the possibilities for large-scale prosecution in the United States and elsewhere" of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and other senior Palestinian officials. Israel would probably press these cases via non-governmental groups and pro-Israel legal organizations capable of filing lawsuits abroad, a second Israeli official said.
Netanyahu had previously warned that unilateral moves by the Palestinian Authority at the U.N. would expose its leaders to prosecution over support for Hamas, viewed by Israel and much of the West as a terrorist organization. Israel sees the heads of the Palestinian Authority in the occupied West Bank as collaborators with Hamas, the party that dominates Gaza, because of a unity deal forged in April, the officials said.
Hamas remains the de facto power in the Gaza Strip and fought a bitter summer war with Israel, which took the lives of 73 Israelis and nearly 2,200 Palestinians, mostly civilians.
When asked about the possibility of Palestinian leaders, particularly members of Hamas, being pursued for war crimes, Palestinian Ambassador to the U.N. Riyad Mansour said that the option was "political posturing."
"We are not afraid of the judgment of the law, especially international law," he said, speaking at the U.N. headquarters in New York City on Friday.
There are concerns, however, about whether the move to join the ICC will draw repercussions from the United States. The U.S., Israel's main ally, supports an eventual independent Palestinian state but has argued that moves made unilaterally or through international institutions could damage the peace process.
Washington sends about $400 million in economic support to the Palestinians every year. Under U.S. law, that aid would be cut off if the Palestinians used membership of the ICC to press claims against Israel.
The Palestinians' ICC bid is part of a shift in strategy for the Palestinians, who are seeking to internationalize their campaign for statehood and move away from the stalled U.S.-led negotiation process.
Palestinians seek a state in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East War. Momentum to recognize a Palestinian state has been building since Abbas succeeded in a bid for de facto recognition at the U.N. General Assembly in 2012, which made Palestinians eligible to join the ICC.
Al Jazeera and wire services 

UN: 1,200 Palestinian children injured by Israeli forces in the West Bank in 2014

File photo of a Palestinian child injured by Israeli

File photo of a Palestinian child injured by Israeli forces





















Israeli forces injured a total of 1,190 Palestinian children in the West Bank during 2014, according to a UN agency report.

The figure, contained within a weekly briefing covering the period 23-29 December, accounts for 20 percent of all Palestinian injuries.
UN OCHA noted that 280 of the injuries were recorded in July in the Jerusalem governorate, in the context of confrontations with Israeli occupation forces after the murder of Mohammad Abu Khdeir, and in light of Israel's attack on the Gaza Strip.
More than in 1 in 5 of the child injuries were caused by Israeli forces' use of live ammunition, with the rest from rubber-coated metal bullets, tear gas inhalation, and assault.
Earlier this week, it was revealed that Israel had detained 1,266 Palestinian children in 2014, an average of seven children every two days.

Palestinian Farmer

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

UN slams Israel for abusing Palestinians’ human rights


The UN Human Rights Committee has slammed Israel for violating the rights of Palestinians and the maltreatment of Palestinian prisoners.

The committee published conclusions on Thursday from its review earlier this month of the Israeli regime’s human rights record.

The report expressed grief over Israel’s continued destruction of Palestinian houses in the occupied West Bank, censuring the ongoing “confiscation and expropriation of Palestinian land and restrictions on access of Palestinians” in the occupied territories including East al-Quds (Jerusalem).

The committee also condemned reports on the use of torture by Israeli prison authorities and maltreatment of Palestinians, including children, in Israeli detention facilities.

Elsewhere it expressed concern over human rights abuses committed during three Israeli wars on the besieged Gaza Strip since late 2008, including the latest military aggression of summer 2014 that left nearly 2,200 Palestinians dead.

The Geneva-based committee emphasized in its conclusions that Israel should make sure that all human rights violations carried out during “its military operations in the Gaza Strip in 2008-2009, 2012 and 2014 are thoroughly, effectively, independently and impartially investigated.”
The perpetrators must be prosecuted and the victims and their families must receive effective remedies, the report stated.

The UN committee slammed Israel’s ongoing blockade of Gaza, saying the siege continues to “negatively impact Palestinians’ access to all basic and life-saving services such as food, health, electricity, water and sanitation.”
The Gaza Strip has been under the Israeli blockade since June 2007, a situation that has caused a decline in the standards of living and poverty in the Palestinian territory.
MR/HSN/SS

Source : Press TV

Palestinian Children in the Israeli Military Detention System



Palestinian children testify about cruel treatment by Israeli soldiers
Submitted by Adri Nieuwhof 2012 .

Newly released today, Defence for Children International-Palestine Section (DCI) has produced this short film about Israel’s ill-treatment of Palestinian children during their arrest, transfer and detention. 
Alone: Palestinian Children in the Israeli Military Detention System contains images of children who found the courage to talk about the appalling treatment.

Since 2000, around 7,500 Palestinian children from the occupied Palestinian territories have been detained, interrogated and imprisoned within the Israeli military law system. The film also presents basic information and the impact of their arrest and detention on families.

In 75 procent of the cases documented by DCI, child detainees suffered some form of physical violence during arrest, transfer and interrogation.

The suffering starts the moment a child is arrested and continues throughout interrogation and court sessions, explains DCI lawyer Iyad Misk. Children are often physically, verbally abused, insulted by soldiers during transport in the jeep. The abuse continues during the interrogation.

Children are also often enticed with offers of immediate release in exchange for confessions. However, what normally happens is just the opposite. Once a child confesses, he is sent to prison and his file is sent to the court. Interrogations are set up to terrorize, says Misk.

Nader Abu Amsha of the East Jerusalem YMCA Rehabilitation Programme says that the purpose of the raids, arrests and interrogations is more than getting information. It is to break the will and spirit of a generation. The purpose is to break the children and make them live in fear and confusion so they become an inactive, unproductive generation.