Telling the truth has become a revolutionary act, so let us salute those who disclose the necessary facts.
5 May 2016
Terrorist Israel: The Month In Pictures
The Electronic Intifada:Israeli
forces shot deadthree Palestinians, one of them a little child, during the
month of April, and no Israelis were killed - a dramatic drop in the
number of fatalities after months of increased violence. Sixty Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces during the first
three months of this year, and more than 140 in the last three months of
2015. Approximately 30 Israelis were killed during those six months. More than 130 Palestinians have been killed since the beginning of
October during what Israel says were attacks or attempted attacks on
civilians and soldiers; dozens more Palestinians have been killed during
protests.
Brother and sister killed
Israeli forces killed a pregnant young mother of two and her 16-year-old brother at a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank on 27 April and denied emergency medics access to the siblings. Israel claimed Maram Salih Hassan Abu Ismail and her brother Ibrahim
Salih Hassan Taha were killed during an attempted attack on soldiers,
but eyewitnesses disputed this version of events. The siblings’ family said that Abu Ismail had obtained a permit to
cross the Qalandiya checkpoint outside Ramallah to travel to Jerusalem
for a medical appointment and didn’t understand the orders shouted at
her by the soldiers in Hebrew. On 1 May, Israel revealed that the fatal shots had been fired by a
private security guard contracted by the Israeli defense ministry, and
not by police, as initially reported. “Since police weren’t the ones who fatally shot” the siblings, the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretzreported, “no probe was opened by [the] justice ministry’s police investigation unit into the officers involved.” It is unclear if there will be any investigation at all into the killings. On 14 April, Israeli forces killed 50-year-old Ibrahim Baradiya
from al-Arroub refugee camp near the West Bank city of Hebron after he
allegedly attempted to hit a soldier in the head with an ax. Another Palestinian, Abd al-Hamid Abu Srour, a 19-year-old from Aida
refugee camp near the West Bank city of Bethlehem, died from wounds he
sustained during an explosion on a Jerusalem bus. Israel named Abu Srour as a suspect in the alleged bombing in which 20 Israelis were reported injured. As of 27 April, Israel was withholding the bodies of 18 Palestinians killed during alleged attacks over the previous six months, according to the United Nations monitoring group OCHA.
Arrests and demolitions
During the month of April Israeli forces arrested dozens of
Palestinians in Jerusalem in connection with protests against the entry
of Israeli and settler groups into the al-Aqsa mosque compound in the
Old City, according to OCHA. Throughout the West Bank, Israeli forces demolished dozens of
Palestinian-owned structures, displacing approximately 175 Palestinians,
including nearly 100 children. Israel also issued 30 stop work and demolition orders in the Silwan neighborhood of Jerusalem, putting 1,000 Palestinians living in 90 homes at risk of displacement. A settler group is working with the Israeli government to seize Palestinian property in the area to convert them into settler homes and tourist facilities for a religious theme park. A Palestinian home in the Jenin area was meanwhile converted into an
Israeli military observation point, affecting three families of 25
members, including 19 children. Suspected Israeli settlers hit three Palestinians, including two children, with their cars during the month. A Palestinian was critically injured during one of the incidents,
OCHA reported. A 64-year-old Palestinian bus driver was meanwhile
assaulted and injured by a group of Israelis near the central bus
station in West Jerusalem. Israeli settlers marched towards the West Bank village of Duma
reportedly in solidarity with a settler being prosecuted for a July 2015
attack on a home in the village which resulted in the killing of a
Palestinian baby and his parents. Forty-five Palestinians were injured during the incident in which the army intervened.
Gaza under fire
Israeli forces opened fire in Gaza dozens of times during the month
of April, including on fishermen, despite Israel’s reported expansion of
the permitted fishing area along the Gaza coast. Israeli authorities
meanwhile suspended the import of cement into Gaza for the private
sector, claiming that supplies were being diverted to Hamas, further hindering reconstruction of thousands of homes destroyed during Israel’s 2014 assault. The Egypt-controlled Rafah crossing — the sole point of exit and
entry for the vast majority of Gaza’s 1.8 million residents — remained
closed throughout the month. The crossing has been closed since late
October 2014 with the exception of 42 days of partial openings. Gaza authorities reported that more than 30,000 people, including
approximately 9,500 medical cases, and 2,700 students are registered and
waiting to travel through the crossing. Palestinians in Yarmouk refugee camp near the Syrian capital of Damascus came under fire once more
as fierce fighting between rival armed groups broke out in the camp,
preventing the thousands of civilians who remain there from accessing
food and water. The United Nations’ special envoy to Syria stated in April that he estimated that 400,000 people had been killed during five years of civil war in the country.
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