MIFTAH
Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

On Sunday, August 3, the Palestinian Center for Human Rights confirmed that 11 people were killed and 107 injured during Saturday battles between de facto Hamas police and members of the Hillis family in Gaza City. The injured, according to the report, included four women and 18 children; a large number of private homes and property were also destroyed. Workers with the rights institution were prevented from reaching the area where the clashes took place and from meeting with any eyewitnesses or injured citizens. PCHR pressed the need to respect the role of national rights institutions and strengthen their presence since they help guarantee all civilians’ rights.

On Monday August 4, as a result of this fighting, Israeli forces prepared to transfer 180 Fateh activists and the Hillis family members to the West Bank city of Ramallah. Preparations for the transfer began early in the morning with the Israeli army moving most of the Fateh supporters who fled the Gaza Strip on Saturday to the West Bank under the Fateh-led government. Israeli sources explained that Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak had made the decision to move the fighters and affiliates to the West Bank rather than back to Gaza because of "security considerations." It was also reported that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad spoke with Barak about the issue, and insisted that those who fled be transferred to Ramallah for their own safety.

Media sources also reported that the leader of the clan involved in the Gaza battle on Saturday Ahmad Hillis was arrested by Israeli police on Sunday. He was apprehended in Soroka hospital in Beersheva where he was being treated for injuries sustained during the battle.

Following on from the story of previous weeks, in which a teenage Palestinian girl filmed an Israeli soldier shooting a blindfolded Palestinian man, the Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem summoned a Palestinian girl on Sunday August 3 to give testimony against the Israeli officer. Sixteen-year-old Salam Kan'an filmed an Israeli officer shooting 27-year-old Ashraf Abu Rahma from Nil'in west of Ramallah at short range with a rubber coated steel bullet while he was handcuffed and masked. The video was filmed on July 17. Israeli forces arrested the girl's father three weeks later and sentenced him to 100 days in prison. Kan'anan was summoned to the Beit El court in the illegal Israeli settlement of the same name north of Ramallah.

Tensions between Fateh and Hamas were not limited to just the Gaza Strip, as was evident when Birzeit University, a leading Palestinian institution near the central West Bank city of Ramallah, was evacuated on August 4 after unarmed fighting between students loyal to the rival Palestinian factions broke out. "Six Hamas-affiliated students sustained bruises after being attacked by Fatah-affiliated students unjustifiably," said Ayman Abu 'Iram, a leader of Hamas' student movement at the university. He added that Fatah-affiliated students had torn down Hamas posters hanging on walls in the campus.

Palestinian security officials are attempting to establish more productive relationships with local media outlets and began with a meeting in Jenin on August 5. Ibrahim Ramadan, director of the Palestinian preventive security services for the region discussed with media officials how journalists and preventive security service can cooperate. He promised to offer assistance to journalists and update them on all information related to his security service. For their parts, journalists requested that security services appoint a spokesperson in order to ensure up to date information for the press, thus avoiding multiple sources of information and guaranteeing more accurate reporting.

Amos Gilad, head of the Israeli Defense Ministry's political-military bureau, headed to Cairo on August 7 to resume indirect negotiations on a prisoner exchange deal with Hamas. Separately, the Israeli Minister of Pensioner Affairs, Rafi Eitan, said that releasing Palestinian prisoners as a gesture to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas would help Israel reach a deal with Hamas. According to Israel Radio, Eitan, a member of the Israeli security cabinet, hopes that Palestinian prisoners' families in the Gaza Strip will place pressure on Hamas to reach an agreement with Israel and release Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

President Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert met on August 6 at Olmert’s residence in Jerusalem for the first time since Olmert announced his intention to resign last week. The meeting came after tripartite meetings in Washington last week between the Israeli and Palestinian negotiating teams and American mediators. PLO Chief Negotiator Sa’eb Erekat said in remarks reported by Israeli radio, “The meeting will discuss final status issues in addition to settlements, checkpoints and prisoners.” Abbas aide Kamal Sharafi said that Abbas asked Olmert to free high profile Palestinian prisoners, including Fatah leader Marwan Al-Barghouthi, Popular Front For the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) leader Ahmad Sa’adat and the Hamas-affiliated speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC), Aziz Dweik.

Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) members from several political parties called on the Palestinian leadership on August 6 to start a comprehensive national dialogue as soon as possible, and prioritize restructuring the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). During a session held at the PLC headquarters in Ramallah, PLC members requested that the PLO Central Council meet as soon as possible, and also called for the formation of a committee with representatives from all parliamentary blocs to deal with the internal crises following the Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip in June 2007. The meeting was attended by representatives from all parties with the exception of the Hamas-affiliated Change and Reform bloc.

Also on August 7, the Interior Ministry of the de facto government in Gaza released Abdallah Abu Samhadana, a Fatah leader and the governor of the Deir Al-Balah area in the central Gaza Strip, along with 150 other people. Abu Samhadana was released in response to a petition by the Hamas-affiliated speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC), Ahmad Bahar. The Interior Ministry said on its website, "In response to the appeal of the Legislative Council Chairman Dr Ahmad Bahr, the ministry decided to release Abdullah Abu Samhadana as a gesture of goodwill and to reduce the Palestinian division and clashes."

Six Gazans died in 24 hours waiting for medical treatment outside the Strip while hundreds of others are still waiting for permission to travel. Spokesman for the Popular Committee Against the Blockade (PCAB) Rami Abdu quoted medical sources when he announced the deaths on Friday August 8. Among the dead are 33-year-old Wael Mohammad Arafat who died Thursday as a result of heart disease and Mohammed As-Sayed Juneid from Jabalia, north of Gaza City who suffered from kidney failure. Medical sources confirmed that Juneid had all the necessary medical documents but was denied permission to receive treatment abroad. Ibrahim Jaber Al-Ghoul from Gaza City also died Thursday. He suffered from cancer and was denied permission to seek treatment outside Gaza.

Five Israeli settlers were arrested by Israeli army soldiers on August 8 as they snuck into Joseph's shrine in Nablus. Settlers must coordinate their movement in Palestinian areas with Israeli troops, who are supposed to ensure that confrontations between locals and settlers are limited. Earlier Friday soldiers escorted a bus of 50 settlers to the shrine where they prayed, and were escorted back to their settlements. Later Friday morning, however, the five settlers arrived in the area in private cars. This is a violation of the terms set out by the Israeli army. The individuals were all arrested.

Arrests in Nablus continued this week, with Israeli forces arresting six Palestinians after incursions were reported in several neighborhoods of the northern West Bank city on August 4. Palestinian security sources said that 10 Israeli military vehicles raided Nablus at 2:00 am and broke into several homes before arresting six young men in the old city and in the area of Kuroom Ashur. Those arrested were 27-year-old Abdullah Issa, 34-year-old Amin Kalbounah, 28-year-old Amid Ashurand his 24-year-old brother Ammar, 29-year-old Allam As-Sakhl and his brother 30-year-old Abdul-Fattah.

Israeli forces used a new weapon against Bil'in protesters on Friday August 8 by opening up streams of contaminated water on Palestinians, Israelis and international activists protesting the construction of the separation wall on village lands. Protesters gathered at the center of the village and moved towards the construction site. Once they arrived at the site, they chanted slogans against the occupation soldiers and their officers that command them to shoot unarmed civilians while holding up photos of the murdered children Ahmed Husam Yousif Musa and Yousif Ahmed Amera.

Four charitable organizations and two print and copy shops were closed in Hebron on August 8 on the orders of the Palestinian caretaker government's ministry of the interior according to Palestinian security sources. Security sources confirmed that the places closed were: the Islamic complex in Ath-Tahahreya town south of Hebron, the cultural center in the village of Tafuh and the charitable society of Beit Ula west of Hebron in addition to two printing and copy shops in the al-Huda and Lujein areas of the city. The closure order came from caretaker Minster Abed Ar-Razaq Al Yahya after he reportedly received information that the organizations and copy centers had materials that might incite violence or other action against the Palestinian Authority and the caretaker government in Ramallah.

 
 
Read More...
 
Footer
Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street,
Al Massayef, Ramallah
Postalcode P6058131

Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647
Jerusalem
 
 
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1
972-2-298 9492
info@miftah.org

 
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
* indicates required