Friday, 31 July 2015

Palestinian toddler killed; Jewish arsonists suspected

Suspected Jewish attackers torched a Palestinian home in the occupied West Bank on Friday, killing an 18-month-old toddler and seriously injuring three other family members, an act that Israel's prime minister described as terrorism.

Suspected Jewish attackers torched a Palestinian home in the occupied West Bank on Friday, killing an 18-month-old toddler and seriously injuring three other family members, an act that Israel's prime minister described as terrorism.

The house in Duma, a village near the city of Nablus, had its windows smashed and fire bombs thrown inside shortly before dawn as the family slept, the military and witnesses said. Graffiti in Hebrew reading "revenge" was scrawled outside.

Both the child's parents and his four-year-old brother were badly hurt. They were taken by helicopter for treatment in an Israeli hospital, officials said. A second house in the village was also set ablaze, but no one was at home.

This would be the worst attack by Israeli assailants since a Palestinian teenager was torched to death in Jerusalem a year ago. That followed the kidnapping and killing of three Israeli teenagers by Palestinian militants in the West Bank.

The Israeli military boosted forces in the area to search for the suspects, described by a spokesman as "two masked terrorists", and prevent any escalation in violence. The Palestinian Islamist group Hamas called for revenge.

Ibrahim Dawabsheh, a Duma resident, said he heard people shouting for help from the house and rushed to it. "I saw two masked men outside," he told Reuters. He went to get help and when he returned they had gone.

"We found the parents outside with burns, they said there was another son in the house. We brought him out and then they said there was another boy inside, but we couldn't reach the bedroom because of the fire. He was left inside until rescue forces came," Dawabsheh told Reuters.

Pictures circulated by Palestinian media on the Internet showed a smiling, chubby-faced boy, named as Ali Dawabsheh. Footage from the house showed blackened walls and singed family photos scattered across charred belongings.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was shocked and promised that "all means" would be used to bring the assailants to justice. "This is a terrorist attack. Israel takes firm action against terrorism, no matter who its perpetrators are," he said.

Part of Netanyahu's right-wing coalition is the ultranationalist Jewish Home party, which advocates more settlements and settler rights in the West Bank. Jewish Home leader Naftali Bennett was quick to denounce the attack, but

Palestinians accused the party of laying the ground for it.

Israeli military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Lerner said an investigation was underway and called the arson

"nothing short of a barbaric act of terrorism".

A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas held Israel responsible. "Such a crime would not have occurred if the Israeli government did not insist on pursuing settlements and protecting settlers," Nabil Abu Rdainah said.

"PRICE TAG"

Hamas spokesman Hussam Badran called for retribution. "This crime has made occupation soldiers and settlers everywhere legitimate targets," he said.

Fearing the killing would provoke violence in Jerusalem, police restricted entrance to al-Aqsa mosque for Friday prayers to men over the age of 50 and to women. Police increased their presence in areas where stone-throwing clashes often occur.

Israeli Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said the torching was an apparent "Price Tag" attack, a reference to militant settlers who threaten to exact retribution for any Israeli government curbs on settlement expansion in the West Bank.

Israel tore down two illegal structures in the Beit El settlement near Ramallah and removed dozens of people from another settlement near Nablus on Wednesday, prompting protests.

The "Price Tag" group has been blamed for torching a number of mosques in the West Bank in recent years. Those attacks caused widespread damage but no casualties.

Though Israel has promised to crack down on such assailants only a handful of indictments have been handed down.

The Palestinians seek a state in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. In the West Bank, they have limited self rule but nearly 60 percent of the territory remains under the full control of the Israeli military.

Israeli settlements are considered illegal under international law. The last round of U.S.-brokered peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians broke down in 2014.

Saturday, 7 March 2015

TOMS donation warms the feet of Gaza children

Following a generous donation from TOMS of approximately 100,000 pairs of shoes, UNRWA was able to distribute them to the needy children in its schools. 

During March UNRWA continues to distribute shoes to eligible children in its schools all across the Gaza Strip. Today, hundreds of boys at UNRWA New Gaza Elementary Boys School in Gaza City were queuing to receive their own pair. Many families in Gaza live on less than US$ 1.53 per person per day and lack the means to meet their basic food needs and living requirements. 

Receiving shoes for their children allows families to free some resources to meet other essential needs.

Thursday, 15 January 2015

Hamas denounces Charlie Hebdo's new edition

(dpa) - Hamas, the Islamist movement in control of the Gaza Strip, has denounced the cartoon of a weeping prophet Mohammed in the first edition of Charlie Hebdo after the deadly attack by Muslim extremists at the Paris offices of the French satirical magazine.

The Palestinian group‘s official newspaper, Felesteen, Thursday said that insulting the prophet is not warrented by freedom of expression.


It published a cartoon showing a hand making a stop sign opposite another hand with a paintbrush resembling the devil. The first hand appears with the slogan "Anything but the Prophet," and the one with the brush reads "Freedom of speech."

Charlie Hebdo‘s first issue after the attack on Wednesday featured a crying cartoon of the prophet holding a "Je suis Charlie" sign under the headline: "All is forgiven."

Senior Hamas leader Izzat Risheq said the decision to publish that cartoon "poured oil on the fire."

Report: Abbas 'Willing' to Give Israel a Break on ICC

A Lebanese newspaper reported that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi that the Palestine would not file a case against Israel in the International Criminal Court if negotiations resumed “in the coming weeks.”
According to the report in the Al-Ahabar newspaper, Abbas made the comments to Sisi during their meeting in Cairo Wednesday.

Several weeks ago, State of Palestine formally requested
membership in the ICC. Last week, Palestine recognized the ICC's jurisdiction to investigate Israeli war crimes committed during last summer's Gaza war. The ICC can prosecute individuals accused of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes committed since July 1, 2002.


Israel police kill Palestinians in W. Bank and Negev

Israeli police have killed an Arab Israeli man during clashes with stone-throwing Bedouin protesters in the southern Negev region, sparking anger with the Arab communities in the area, an Arab Israeli lawmaker said.


"We, the Palestinians in Negev, have lost another man. This is another sign that the Israeli police are dealing recklessly when it comes to our lives," MP Taleb el-Sana told The Anadolu Agency.


According to al-Sana, Sami al-Jaar, 20, was killed late Wednesday during clashes between Arab protesters and Israeli police in the Negev city of Rahat.

"They could have captured him rather of killing him. Now, the whole Negev is boiling with anger," he added.

In a statement, the Israeli police said that two policemen were injured in clashes with stone-throwing individuals in Rahat, asserting that its personnel were in the city to pursue criminals.

Israel refers to Palestinians who remained in their homes and cities after the creation of Israel in 1948 as "Arab Israelis."

There are around 1.6 million Arabs in Israel, accounting for around 20 percent of the country's population, according to official Israeli figures.

Claiming that most land in the Negev Desert is "state property," the self-proclaimed Jewish state has repeatedly demolished Bedouin homes in the area.

Palestinian Deficit Heading to $2Bn, Says PA Insider

The cost of reconstructing Gaza is taking its toll on the Palestinian Authority's budget.

The Palestinian Authority (P.A.) is likely to face a US$2 billion deficit in 2015, a Palestinian official warned Wednesday.

Although financial contributions from the United States and the European Union have been sinking for two years, according to an anonymous official who spoke to Turkey's Anadolu Agency, Gazan reconstruction costs are also largely to blame for the P.A.'s financial shortfall.

An estimated US$7.8 billion is needed for Gaza to recover from Israel's assault in 2014.

Over 2000 Gazans were killed during the fighting, which left hundreds of homes and businesses in ruins, and public infrastructure decimated.

Palestine's economy minister Mohammad Mustafa has stated donor countries need to boost aid to the P.A.

“Starting from next year, the Palestinian budget will need additional external support worth US$1.3 billion to fulfill its obligations to the citizens,” he stated in October, according to the Middle East Monitor.

In 2012, a funding shortfall left the P.A. unable to pay public worker salaries. Palestinian officials blamed the shortfall on a handful of donors failing to fulfill financial pledges.

On Wednesday, Iraq pledged a new US$28.7 million to the P.A., according to Palestine's official WAFA news agency.

“Iraq has taken this step despite the dire circumstances it has been undergoing, especially those related to the approval of the new Iraqi budget,” WAFA quoted Iraq's Arab League representative Diya Dabbas.

Qatar has also handed the P.A. US$25 million in aid this week.

Israeli forces shoot dead Palestinian at Gush Etzion

Israeli forces opened fire at two Palestinians near the Gush Etzion Junction between Bethlehem and Hebron in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday evening, killing one.

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told Ma'an that two Palestinians "were involved in a criminal incident" in the area, and one was shot by Israeli soldiers after he attempted to flee the area.


The man was "injured seriously and died in the evening," he told Ma'an, adding that the other was arrested.

Israeli news website Israel National News, which is known for its right-wing leanings, said that incident occurred as the 30-year-old victim was "attempting to steal a car in the parking lot of the Rami Levy supermarket branch" in the area.

The supermarket, while located inside the Jewish-only settlement, is located immediately beside the junction and is thus open to Palestinians as well.

The Israeli news site said that military police had launched an investigation into the incident.