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Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
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An Italian activist has been killed in Gaza after being kidnapped on April 14. Vittorio Arrigoni, an international solidarity activist, had lived in Gaza for several years and had participated in non-violent protests against the occupation. His captors released a video showing the Italian bruised and blind-folded. They demanded the release of Salafi prisoners held by Hamas and threatened to kill the activist within 30 hours if their demands were not met. Vittorio Arrigoni’s body was found hanged in a house in north Gaza on the morning of April 15. Salafi leaders have denied involvement in the murder. Palestinians and peace activists met in both Gaza and the West Bank on April 15 to pay their respects.

Hamas leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh said Friday that his government "strongly denounces" the killing of Vittorio Arrigoni. “The murder does not reflect the values, morals, or the religion of the Palestinian people. This is an unprecedented case that won't be repeated," he said at an emergency meeting to discuss the crisis.

President Mahmoud Abbas also strongly condemned the murder, extending condolences to Arrigoni's family. He described the killing as a 'heinous and despicable crime that is strange to the tradition of our people.'

Further Israeli airstrikes were launched on April 16 following a lull in activity over the last week. No injuries were reported. Local sources said two military bases of Hamas’ armed wing Al-Qassam Brigades were targeted. Witnesses said warplanes and drones continued to hover over the Gaza Strip, leading to fears that further airstrikes may occur.

Following South African Justice Richard Goldstone’s recent change in opinion concerning his report into Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in Gaza in 2008-2009, the US Senate has asked the United Nations to rescind the report. On April 15, the Senate resolution called on UN Human Rights Council members "to reflect the author's repudiation of the Goldstone report's central findings, rescind the report and reconsider further Council actions with respect to the report's findings."

However, three authors of the report have rejected the calls to rescind the report saying, "We concur in our view that there is no justification for any demand or expectation for reconsideration of the report as nothing of substance has appeared that would in any way change the context, findings or conclusions of that report with respect to any of the parties to the Gaza conflict." On April 15, Pakistani human rights lawyer Hina Jilani, Christine Chinvin, a professor of international law at the London School of Economics and former Irish peacekeeper Desmond Travers issued the above statement in The Guardian newspaper in Britain.

On April 12, the UN released a report which concluded that the Palestinian Authority is, by and large, ready to assume control of a Palestinian state. The report, entitled “Palestinian State-building: A Decisive Period” is based on the PA’s implementation of a program in August 2009 that involved creating institutions that would prepare the Palestinians for statehood in two years.

Two days later, on April 14, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton announced the signing of a deal that would open Palestinian markets to Europe on a duty free basis. The announcement was made during the Ad Hoc Liaison Committee meeting in Belgium in which international donors met with caretaker Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. Chaired by Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store, along with an Israeli government official, the donor representatives backed the recent assessment by the UN, World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

Fayyad applauded the UN, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank for their recent reports praising the PA’s performance and confirming its readiness for statehood. “When these international organizations applaud the PA for administrative and governance performance, and when they confirm that Israel [has] impeded the PA’s efforts to achieve sustainable development, this is further evidence that Israeli occupation is the major obstacle to a Palestinian state," he noted.

He continued, "For that reason, the international community should necessarily take tangible steps binding Israel to stick to international law and resolutions to end occupation of all the Palestinian territories, and enable our people to establish an independent state on the territories occupied in 1967 with Jerusalem as its capital."

On April 14, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would make a speech to a joint session of the US Congress in May in order to present his own plan for peaceful solution with the Palestinians. In televised remarks to his Likud Party, he said that he did not just want ‘peace on paper’. He added that there were conditions to this peaceful agreement.

"The two most important of them are, first of all, Palestinian recognition of Israel as the state of the Jewish people. The second principle is real security arrangements on the ground."

On April 13, the Quartet meeting scheduled for April 15 in Berlin was postponed by the US Administration because they felt that it would not produce anything useful in terms of getting Israeli-Palestinian talks restarted. The postponement was met by frustration and condemnation by Palestinian officials. Saleh Ra’fat, member of the PLO Executive Committee, said the decision to cancel the meeting came upon pressure from the US Administration because it refuses to exert any pressure on Israel to halt settlement activities and to decide on the issue of the borders.

More people were arrested and detained in the northern West Bank village of Awarta following the Itamar murders of a settler family last month. On April 12, 71 villagers including a teenage girl and two elderly women remained held in Israeli custody without charge, and official visits to ensure their well being were prevented by Israeli forces. Even Salam Fayyad was prevented by the Israeli military from making a visit to the village the previous day. On April 11, the caretaker Prime Minister was denied entry into the village. He had announced his plans to visit Awarta following the mass round-up of 100 women and more men from the village who were arrested and forced to give fingerprints and DNA samples

The northern West Bank saw a number of minor incidents between Palestinian locals and Israeli settlers and military. On April 13, Israel's army closed the primary army checkpoint in the northern West Bank amid fierce clashes between settlers and Palestinians in the Burin village. On April 14, an 11-year-old Palestinian boy was injured after Israeli soldiers fired tear-gas canisters in an attempt to separate the Palestinians from Burin village and settlers from Givan Ronen who had begun to throw rocks at each other. Palestinian Authority official Ghassan Daghlus said the boy, Amid Asous, was treated in hospital for tear-gas inhalation.

 
 
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