Female Palestinian farmer injured by Israel as they have broken the ceasefire with Gaza over 15 times

According to medical sources the Palestinian woman was shot in the lower limbs early Tuesday when she entered her land near the southern Gaza Strip border with Israel, east of Khan Younis.

Last Wednesday a Palestinian farmer in his 70s was shot in the lower limbs in the same area. Another Palestinian farmer was also shot and wounded by Israeli soldiers stationed on Gaza's northwestern border with Israel on late Monday. 


 Israel is guilty of violating the Egypt-mediated ceasefire in the Gaza Strip more than 15 times since it went into force officially on June 19.
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From triumph to torture

 
John Pilger
Israel's treatment of an award-winning young Palestinian journalist is part of a terrible pattern

Two weeks ago, I presented a young Palestinian, Mohammed Omer, with the 2008 Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism. Awarded in memory of the great US war correspondent, the prize goes to journalists who expose establishment propaganda, or "official drivel", as Gellhorn called it. Mohammed shares the prize of £5,000 with Dahr Jamail. At 24, he is the youngest winner. His citation reads: "Every day, he reports from a war zone, where he is also a prisoner. His homeland, Gaza, is surrounded, starved, attacked, forgotten. He is a profoundly humane witness to one of the great injustices of our time. He is the voice of the voiceless."

The eldest of eight, Mohammed has seen most of his siblings killed or wounded or maimed. An Israeli bulldozer crushed his home while the family were inside, seriously injuring his mother. And yet, says a former Dutch ambassador, Jan Wijenberg, "he is a moderating voice, urging Palestinian youth not to court hatred but seek peace with Israel".

Getting Mohammed to London to receive his prize was a major diplomatic operation. Israel has perfidious control over Gaza's borders, and only with a Dutch embassy escort was he allowed out. Last Thursday, on his return journey, he was met at the Allenby Bridge crossing (to Jordan) by a Dutch official, who waited outside the Israeli building, unaware Mohammed had been seized by Shin Bet, Israel's infamous security organisation. Mohammed was told to turn off his mobile and remove the battery. He asked if he could call his embassy escort and was told forcefully he could not. A man stood over his luggage, picking through his documents. "Where's the money?" he demanded. Mohammed produced some US dollars. "Where is the English pound you have?"

"I realised," said Mohammed, "he was after the award stipend for the Martha Gellhorn prize. I told him I didn't have it with me. 'You are lying', he said. I was now surrounded by eight Shin Bet officers, all armed. The man called Avi ordered me to take off my clothes. I had already been through an x-ray machine. I stripped down to my underwear and was told to take off everything. When I refused, Avi put his hand on his gun. I began to cry: 'Why are you treating me this way? I am a human being.' He said, 'This is nothing compared with what you will see now.' He took his gun out, pressing it to my head and with his full body weight pinning me on my side, he forcibly removed my underwear. He then made me do a concocted sort of dance. Another man, who was laughing, said, 'Why are you bringing perfumes?' I replied, 'They are gifts for the people I love'. He said, 'Oh, do you have love in your culture?'

"As they ridiculed me, they took delight most in mocking letters I had received from readers in England. I had now been without food and water and the toilet for 12 hours, and having been made to stand, my legs buckled. I vomited and passed out. All I remember is one of them gouging, scraping and clawing with his nails at the tender flesh beneath my eyes. He scooped my head and dug his fingers in near the auditory nerves between my head and eardrum. The pain became sharper as he dug in two fingers at a time. Another man had his combat boot on my neck, pressing into the hard floor. I lay there for over an hour. The room became a menagerie of pain, sound and terror."

An ambulance was called and told to take Mohammed to a hospital, but only after he had signed a statement indemnifying the Israelis from his suffering in their custody. The Palestinian medic refused, courageously, and said he would contact the Dutch embassy escort. Alarmed, the Israelis let the ambulance go. The Israeli response has been the familiar line that Mohammed was "suspected" of smuggling and "lost his balance" during a "fair" interrogation, Reuters reported yesterday.

Israeli human rights groups have documented the routine torture of Palestinians by Shin Bet agents with "beatings, painful binding, back bending, body stretching and prolonged sleep deprivation". Amnesty has long reported the widespread use of torture by Israel, whose victims emerge as mere shadows of their former selves. Some never return. Israel is high in an international league table for its murder of journalists, especially Palestinian journalists, who receive barely a fraction of the kind of coverage given to the BBC's Alan Johnston.

The Dutch government says it is shocked by Mohammed Omer's treatment. The former ambassador Jan Wijenberg said: "This is by no means an isolated incident, but part of a long-term strategy to demolish Palestinian social, economic and cultural life ... I am aware of the possibility that Mohammed Omer might be murdered by Israeli snipers or bomb attack in the near future."

While Mohammed was receiving his prize in London, the new Israeli ambassador to Britain, Ron Proser, was publicly complaining that many Britons no longer appreciated the uniqueness of Israel's democracy. Perhaps they do now.
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Israel Bars UN Rights Team from WB , GS, Jerusalem

Israeli authorities have barred on Tuesday a UN human rights committee from visiting Palestinian Territories on a fact-finding mission, the leader of the group said on Tuesday.
Head of the UN panel Prasad Kariyawasam said that Israeli authorities did not allow us to visit the Palestinian territories, adding that 'no reasons were given by Israel because they do not recognize our mandate'.
Kariyawasam told a news conference in the Jordanian capital Amman that despite the ban by the Jewish state, the committee has interviewed Palestinians from the Gaza Strip(GS), the occupied West Bank(WB) and East Jerusalem.
Some were interviewed by telephone as several witnesses were prevented from travelling to Amman or Cairo, he said.
'The international community has a moral and legal obligation to ensure that all international human rights and humanitarian law standards are fully implement at all times,' Kariyawasam said.
The three-member panel, which has already visited Egypt and plans to go to Syria later on Tuesday, expressed serious concern about the conditions of Palestinians in the occupied areas.
They warned against 'the deteriorating human rights and humanitarian situation in the occupied Palestinian territory, the grave situation in the Gaza strip, the impact of the separation wall on the human rights of Palestinian people, and the continuing settlements policy,' according to Kariyawasam.
The United Nations and other international organisations say Israeli-imposed sanctions on Gaza and have increased poverty and destroyed the economy in the densely populated area.
'Such policies and practices affecting Palestinian people are a serious threat to self-determination of the Palestinian people and must be halted immediately,' Kariyawasam said.
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Targeting Journalists

By Eva Bartlett

The killing of Gaza-based Palestinian Reuters cameraman received considerable attention 2.5 months ago. Filming at the site of shelling in Gaza earlier in the day, Fadel Shana was himself targeted by shelling from the very tanks he was filming. After the incident, with international outcry from rights groups, journalists associations, and individuals, Israel promised to look into his death.

Given the high number of journalist fatalities and injuries at the hands of the Israeli army, it is not hard to believe that perhaps Israel is targeting journalists.

24 year old Mohammed Omer, an internationally-recognized journalist from Rafah in Gaza’s south, is the latest to be targeted by Israel, although this time not while reporting.

Omer had left Gaza weeks earlier, traveling via Israel and Jordan to London where, on June 16th, he was awarded the prestigious Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism. On the same day, journalists in Gaza marched in memory of the slain Fadel Shana, at the same time protesting the vacuum of silence that has followed Shana’s killing just two months later. In the days before the award ceremony, Omer had spoken in Sweden, the Netherlands and Greece on the current situation in Gaza with the year-long internationally-backed Israeli siege.

Although Omer had previously left Gaza, after much bureaucracy from the Israeli authorities, this time was worse, both leaving and returning, with injuries added to insult on his return.

While expecting delays and difficulties in getting Israel to facilitate passage, Omer hadn’t been expecting the abuse which came with hours of interrogation by Israel’s intelligence, the Shin Bet.
According to an interview Omer gave the IPS, “At first I refused but then I had an M16 (gun) pointed in my face and my clothes were forcibly removed, even my underwear.”

IPS reports that Omer was told, “You haven’t seen anything yet,” in reply to his requests they stop the interrogation. Subjecting the journalist to a full-body search, IPS reports that “every cavity of his body was searched as one of the investigators pinned him down on the floor, placing his boot on Omer’s neck. Omer began vomiting, and fainted.” He was later dragged along the ground to a Palestinian ambulance which took him to a Jericho hospital.

When he came round his eyelids were being forcibly opened and his eardrums probed by an Israeli military doctor, who was also armed. He was then dragged along the floor by his feet by the Shin Bet officials, with his head repeatedly banging on the floor, to a Palestinian ambulance which had been called, according to IPS’ report.

Days later, Mohammed Omer still feels the effects of his interrogation.
“I can’t talk much, it hurts too much to speak,” Omer explained over the phone, voice barely audible. He later detailed why he was having so much trouble speaking, breathing: “they put their fingers into my solar plexus and leaned into me, pushing hard.”

Menassat, the Middle East North Africa news agency, reports that Israeli army spokesperson Avihay Adre’y stated after Shana’s killing: “Our soldiers know that the journalist is sacred and is never part of the conflict.” The Menassat article mentions that Israel maintains its soldiers are given special instructions on how to deal with Palestinian journalists operating in combat.

The same article quotes an Israeli journalist who contends that reporting is the only weapon that Gaza journalists have, that they shouldn’t be “stopped, killed or targeted.” The journalist, Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot’s Roni Shaked, avowed “If the situation [in Israel] was similar to that in Gaza, I would definitely be present to cover the events and no-one could stop me.”

This is what Mohammed Omer has been doing, since beginning to report as a journalist on the ground 7 years ago. His reporting, formally recognized with the New America Media’s Best Youth Voice award, appears regularly in the New Statesman, WRMEA, IPS, and numerous internet news-sites, and he is a regular interviewee on the BBC and Democracy Now, among others.

One wonders how Palestinian journalists can continue to report, when targeted on the ground and meticulously abused at the hands of the Israeli army. One wonders even more when Israel will actually be held accountable for its actions, when the international community will no longer accept the dismissive promise to ‘hold an investigation into the matter’. The matter has been investigated ad nauseum, and the matter is fairly clear: Israel is targeting journalists (not to mention civilians).
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Israeli Ministers may be arrested in Spain

By Tova Tzimuki

To view original article, published by Ynet on the 30th June, click here
Several Israeli officials instructed not to visit European country due to international arrest warrant issued against them over their involvement in assassination of senior Hamas member Salah Shehade.

The Foreign Ministry has instructed a number of Israeli officials not to visit Spain after an international arrest warrant was issued against them on suspicion of committing war crimes.
A Spanish human rights organization, believed to be representing a Palestinian group, filed a lawsuit last week against Israeli officials involved in the assassination of senior Hamas member Salah Shehade six years ago. Sixteen Palestinians were killed in the airstrike in the heart of Gaza.

Nearly all heads of the defense establishment at the time of the assassination are included in the list of defendants: Former Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, former IDF Chief of Staff Lieutenant-General (Res.) Moshe Yaalon, former Shin Bet Director Avi Dichter, former Israel Air Force Commander Dan Halutz, former head of the IDF Operation Branch Major-General (Res.) Giora Eiland, and former Southern Command Chief Doron Almog.

Former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is also on the list, despite the fact that he has been in a coma since suffering a stroke two and a half years ago. During his tenure as prime minister, Sharon gave the army the green light to assassinate the leader of Hamas’ military wing.

Spain is a member of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague and has adopted a law allowing war crime lawsuits to be filed within its borders. According to the ICC’s constitution, any of its members have the universal judicial authority to try suspected war criminals, even if the defendants or the acts they are suspected of have nothing to do with that particular country.
Since the war in Iraq, the United States has been pressuring European countries not to use this universal authority.

In the past, a petition was filed with the High Court of Justice against the appointment of Halutz as deputy IDF chief of staff on the backdrop of Shehade’s assassination. Halutz was abroad during the operation, but asked in an interview how he felt when he found out of the operation’s results, he said, “If you want to know how I feel when I release a bomb – I feel a small shake in the plane’s wing. It passes a second later.”
In response to the petition, Attorney General Menachem Mazuz informed the High Court that the defense establishment has formed a committee which would retroactively approve targeted assassinations.

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni will be able to ask the Spanish authorities to cancel such a lawsuit, arguing that the affair has already been discussed by the State of Israel’s official legal institutions.
Itamar Eichner contributed to this report
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Grave water shortage in the West Bank

To view original press release from B’Tselem click here
Average water consumption in Israel is 3.5 times that in West Bank

B’Tselem today (Tuesday, 1 July) warned of a grave water shortage this summer in large areas of the West Bank. The shortage will have serious repercussions on the economy and the health of tens of thousands of Palestinians. The chronic water shortage results in large part from Israel’s discriminatory policy in distributing the joint water resources in the West Bank, and the limits it places on the Palestinian Authority’s ability to drill new wells. The shortage will be worse this summer due to the accumulated effects of recent arid years.
According to figures of the Palestinian Water Authority, 40-70 million cubic meters are lacking to meet the needs of West Bank Palestinians. Per capita consumption of water in the West Bank now stands at 66 liters a day, about two-thirds of the World Health Organization’s recommended minimum amount. In parts of the northern West Bank, water consumption is one-third the WHO minimum, and the consumption figures include water for livestock. The average water consumption per capita of Israelis is 3.5 times that of Palestinians.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the West Bank are not connected to a water network, and have to buy water from tankers, which cost three to six times more (depending on location and movement restrictions) than water supplied through a water network. Many poor families draw water from unsupervised wells, leading to an increase in infectious diseases in many rural areas in the summertime.
Even Palestinians who are connected to a water system do not enjoy a constant supply of water. Many residents report lengthy interruptions in supply. According to testimonies to B’Tselem, in the summer, the Israel water company Mekorot, reduces supply of water to Palestinian towns and villages in order to meet the increased need of the settlements.

The water shortage is compounded by theft of water by Palestinians in parts of Area C, which are under complete Israeli civil and military control. Israeli law-enforcement authorities fail to properly cope with this phenomenon.

Access to water without discrimination is recognized by international law as a fundamental human right.
Furthermore, the discrimination practiced by Israel in its division of water is a violation of its obligations under International Humanitarian Law. B’Tselem calls on the government of Israel to ensure immediate, regular, adequate supply of water to every resident of the West Bank without discrimination, and to allow the Palestinian Authority to develop new water sources.
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