Violence worsens after Israeli troops fatally shoot Palestinian man in the occupied West Bank.
Jerusalem — Weeks of tension and violence have continued to worsen, with a Palestinian man killed by Israeli troops in the occupied West Bank and numerous attacks and acts of vandalism reported inside Israel.
Mohammed
Jawabreh, 22, was killed on Tuesday during clashes in Al-Arroub refugee camp
near Hebron. Medics said he was shot in the chest. An Israeli army spokesperson
confirmed that soldiers used live ammunition in the camp, but said they did so
only after firing tear gas and rubber-coated steel bullets.
Police
said a 36-year-old Palestinian worker from Nablus was also shot dead in central
Israel, though the circumstances remain unclear. The Israeli newspaper Yediot
Aharonot suggested that the shooting might have had “nationalistic
motives”, a term used for attacks motivated by the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.
The
shootings followed a pair of stabbings on Monday that killed two Israelis, one
at a Tel Aviv train station, and the other at a junction in Gush Etzion, a bloc
of illegal settlements in the West Bank. Demonstrators gathered at the scene of
both attacks, chanting “death to terrorists” and “no Arabs, no terror attacks.”
It
all adds to a steadily growing sense of chaos on both sides of the Green Line,
Israel’s pre-1967 borders. The unrest started in Jerusalem over the summer,
after a Palestinian teenager was murdered in an act of revenge for the killing
of three Jewish Israelis in the West Bank.
The
city has seen nightly riots since then, fueled by a range of grievances,
including visits by right-wing Knesset members to the Temple Mount/Haram
al-Sharif and ongoing illegal settlement growth in the eastern half of the
city.
Palestinian
residents of East Jerusalem have carried out three attacks since Oct. 22,
including two hit-and-runs that killed four people and the attempted
assassination of a right-wing Jewish activist. Vandals slashed car tyres in the
city on Monday night, spray-painting “no cars, no Arabs” on the sidewalks
nearby.
Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas warned of a “religious war” if the provocations at
Jerusalem’s holy sites continued.
“With
their actions, they are leading the region and the world to a devastating
religious war,” he said at a ceremony in Ramallah marking the tenth anniversary
of the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat’s death.
Riots
also spread to northern Israel on Friday night after a Palestinian was shot dead by police. A surveillance video showed the man,
Khair Hamdan, banging on the windows of a police van while holding what
appeared to be a knife; he then started retreating and turned away before an
officer shot him.
The
shooting sparked five days of clashes in his hometown, Kafr Kanna, where dozens
of people have been arrested, including 14 on Monday night.
The
mayor called the shooting “murder in cold blood”; the justice ministry has
opened an investigation, but the officers involved returned to work earlier
this week.
“It
was brutal behaviour. The officers didn’t abide by the regulations on when to
shoot a suspect,” said Sawsan Zaher, a lawyer at Adalah, a Palestinian rights
organisation.
Residents
of Kafr Kanna said the shooting reinforced a long-standing belief that police
are quick to use force with Palestinians. After a series of riots in October
2000, in which 13 Palestinians were killed by police, a commission headed by a
former high court justice accused officers of using “excessive force” against
the protesters.
“[Israel]
must educate its police that the Arab public is not the enemy, and should not
be treated as such,” the commission’s 2003 report concluded.
A
decade later, though, the sense of discrimination has not changed. Yitzhak
Aharonovich, the public security minister, said last week that he hoped “all
terrorist attacks” would end with the attacker’s death; police have killed all
of the assailants in Jerusalem in recent weeks. Other senior politicians,
including Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, have also defended the officers.
“We’re
still seen as the enemy,” said Faris Mahrous, who shut his garage during a
general strike in Kafr Kanna earlier this week. “Aharonovitch, Bennett, they
gave the police the legitimacy to kill Arabs, whether they’re involved in
violence or not.”
The spreading
violence has become a major political liability for the government. The army
announced on Tuesday that it would send two additional battalions to the West
Bank, and police have deployed heavily inside Israel. “We need to prepare for
the possibility of escalation,” Defence Minister Moshe Ya’alon said.
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has instructed the interior ministry to consider
revoking the citizenship of those who “call for the destruction of the state of
Israel,” a call that has drawn widespread rebuke from Israel’s Palestinian
community.
“We
are not citizens with conditions,” said Ahmed al-Tibi, a Palestinian member of
the Knesset.
Related article: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/ML_ISRAEL_PALESTINIANS_TIMELINE?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-11-11-15-15-31
Related article: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/ML_ISRAEL_PALESTINIANS_TIMELINE?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-11-11-15-15-31
No comments:
Post a Comment