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Written by Ahmad Jaradat, Alternative Information Center (AIC)
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Monday, 07 April 2008 |
Children demonstrating against the Israeli military's attempt to close schools and orphanages in Hebron, Palestine (photo by Ahmad Jaradat, AIC, 2008).
Fourteen Hebron-area schools and orphanages, which
serve approximately 7000 Palestinian children and orphans, today face the
threat of closure by the Israeli army, Eight of these schools and orphanages
belong to the Islamic Charitable Society, while the remaining six belong to the
Muslim Youth Society.
On 25 February 2008, the Israeli military commander
of the West Bank, General Gadi Shamni, issued a military order confiscating all
properties located in Hebron that belong to these Islamic societies, including
schools, stores, centres and residential houses. According to Palestinian
security sources, in the past month the Israeli army conducted an intensive
military operation in the city of Hebron, ransacking several offices, schools
and properties of these societies. On 26 February the army invaded several
buildings while damaging gates and furniture and stealing food, notebooks,
books, clothes and computers. On 6 May
the Israeli army attacked a store on Hebron’s El-Hawooz Street, where the
Islamic Charitable Society collected clothes and personal items for the
orphans.
According to Abdul-Kareem Farrah, the
information advisor to the Islamic Charitable Society, these Israeli thefts and
damages cost approximately NIS 1 million.
The original military order indicated that
the schools and orphanages would be closed as of 1 April 2008. However, after
the governor of Hebron, Hussain al-A’raj, expressed his astonishment at the
order and requested the Israeli authorities to revoke it, and after the lawyer
Osama Hallabi petitioned the Israeli High Court in this matter, the order was
postponed for one week. On the morning of 2 April, school officials received
word that the Israeli High Court had given the Israeli army four days to provide
full justification for the closure and evacuation of the schools and orphanages.
On 3 April the attorney for the Islamic Charitable Society was informed that
the Israeli High Court will rule in this matter on Monday 7 April. Today.
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Written by The Alternative Information Center (AIC)
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Thursday, 03 April 2008 |
Palestinian Authority Attorney General Ahmed al-Meghani
“Corruption is authority plus monopoly minus transparency”
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Anonymous
The Palestinian Authority (PA) has been repeatedly accused
of corruption since it was established in 1994. The first audit conducted by
the PA’s comptroller, whose findings were published in 1997, was self-critical.
Since then, the battle waged by the Palestinian public and international donors
against non-transparent practices of the PA has been ongoing, and is perceived
in international circles as most successful under the direction of former Finance
Minister and current Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. Several international actors
have also accused the PA of corruption, most notably the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) in a 2003 report that was widely covered in the local and
international press. The IMF’s report of unaccounted public funds being
diverted into private bank accounts prompted Israeli allegations at the time that
the PA, and specifically Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, “financed
terrorism.”
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Written by Connie Hackbarth, Alternative Information Center (AIC)
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Thursday, 03 April 2008 |
Movimiento por la Paz, el Desarme y la Libertad
This speech was originally presented by Connie Hackbarth on 2 April at the Derechos hacia una Cultura de Paz conference of the Movimiento por la Paz, el Desarme y la Libertad.
Good evening. I wish to congratulate the Movimiento por la Paz, el Desarme y la Libertad (MPDL) on
its 20th anniversary and thank them for organizing this important
conference, in which we can together examine the crucial importance of
promoting human rights and democracy as an essential component of
peace-building throughout the world. Specifically, I will speak about how
Israeli violations of Palestinian human rights, together with international complicity
in and even support for these violations, are completely destroying any chance
for a real peace between Palestinians and Israelis.
Further, as a member of the Palestinian, Israeli and international civil
societies, I will also explore the challenges currently facing us in the
struggle for justice in the Middle East and
throughout the world.
Today’s most visible Israeli violation of Palestinian human rights is perhaps
the siege of the Gaza Strip. Despite widespread condemnation and almost universal
legal agreement that the siege violates international humanitarian and human
rights law, the siege continues. International aid agencies have declared this
to be a humanitarian crisis unprecedented in the history of Gaza—all
because of Israel’s
human rights violations. As the head of UNRWA has
pointed out, “hungry, unhealthy, angry communities do not make good partners
for peace.”
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Written by Ahmad Jaradat, Alternative Information Center (AIC)
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Tuesday, 01 April 2008 |
Palestinian villagers from Baqa'a are forbidden from building or farming for 180 meters on either side of settler Bypass Road 60.
Palestinian villagers from a small overcrowded village in the southern
West Bank, to the northeast of Hebron,
were recently threatened by the Israeli authorities with 32 house demolitions, which
were to include a health clinic still under construction. The residents of this
village are rapidly becoming poorer and risk losing their homes, all to create
space for Israeli settlement expansion and the building of Bypass Road 60. In
addition to land confiscated specifically for the building of Road 60, the
Israeli authorities have designated an additional “buffer zone” of 180 meters
on either side of the road, upon which Palestinians have been forbidden to
build on their own land.
The Baqa’a valley, where this village lies, is a beautiful and fertile area
situated to the east of Hebron,
about a half-hour walk from the center of the city. The village houses
approximately 60 Palestinians families, including several refugees from 1948. The
inhabitants are mostly farmers, growing crops with grape vineyards, fruit and ancient
olive trees. Where the soil is too rocky and steep for planting, sheep and
donkeys graze freely around the homes.
In 1968, following the Israeli military conquest of the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, the first group of Jewish Israeli settlers came to Hebron,
relocating to a nearby military base to the east of Hebron, now the settlement of Kiryat Arba. This
settlement, to the south of the Baqa’a valley and only a few meters from
Palestinians homes, is today the biggest settlement in the area with more than
7,000 inhabitants. To the north of the
valley is the settlement of Givat Haharsina. Between them, cutting the valley
in two, is bypass Road 60, built in 1996 on a north-south axis to the east of Hebron to connect the settlements with Jerusalem, and known for its frequent
gatherings and protest marches by settlers. Road 60, built on confiscated
Palestinian land which used to be planted with grape vines and olive groves, is
now cuts off from farmers’ access.
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Written by Leena Dallasheh for the Alternative Information Center (AIC)
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Tuesday, 01 April 2008 |
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met in Jerusalem on 30 March with Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad
Barak, Rice and Fayyad
met. This is how a Palestinian joke would begin these days. Unfortunately, this
week, it was a real story. The joke, however, remains. Even a superficial
examination of the results of the highly publicized meeting highlights the
glaring gaps and the serious problematic that arises.
The statements by the US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice—who is visiting the region this week—and
the State Department stressed the importance of what they referred to as “quality
of life and the security of ordinary people on both sides,” as a step in implementing
the Roadmap. These steps include, primarily, the removal of roadblocks,
improvements in checkpoint infrastructures, redeployment of Palestinian
Authority security forces and expansion of their responsibilities and steps to
promote economic developments.
Most Palestinians feel
cynical about these statements. Past experience proves that despite repeated
statements by the Israeli government about “improvements in life quality” or “loosening
restrictions” on checkpoints, reality on the ground hardly changes and, if
anything, everyday life has taken a turn for the worst. There is no reason to
believe that things will be different this time.
Moreover, even if these
pledges were to be fully implemented, they barely scratch the surface of the
moves necessary to make a genuine difference, and are far from dealing with the
real issues needed to achieve a just peace. How significant can the removal of
50 roadblocks be when there exist 539 illegal roadblocks dissecting the West Bank (OCHAoPT report, 11.7.07) and hindering
movement between Palestinian towns and villages? And what about the complete
siege of the Gaza Strip? The continuing construction of the Apartheid Wall on
Palestinian lands? The ongoing expansion of Israeli settlements? Despite past Israeli
commitments, new construction projects have been repeatedly authorized in the
Palestinian territories, in addition to expansion of the existing 161
settlements and 96 outposts throughout the West Bank.
These settlements, illegal under international law, not only take over
Palestinian land and resources, but render unviable any future Palestinian
state or economy. The pledges coming out
of this latest meeting almost completely ignore such critical issues.
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