Showing posts with label Occupied West Bank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Occupied West Bank. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Jewish settler attempts to stab Palestinian farmer south of Nablus

[ 04/05/2011 - 09:36 AM ]

NABLUS, (PIC)-- A Jewish settler on Tuesday afternoon tried to stab a Palestinian farmer near Qaryut village, south of Nablus city.

Local sources said a settler from Eli settlement attacked farmer Radi Issa, 45, as he was tilling his land as usual in the western party of Qaryut village and tried to stab him with a knife.

The farmer spotted the settlers and walked away leaving his tractor a prey to the settler who savagely ripped its tires.

The sources noted that the settler, named Korn, carried out several attacks on Qaryut villagers and farmers, uprooted their trees and destroyed vast tracts of agricultural land.

In another incident, Jewish extremists renewed their call on their Israeli government to take control over the West Bank in retaliation to the Palestinian reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah factions.

Israel's channel 7 said that leaders of Yesha council, a Zionist umbrella organization of the West Bank settlements, held an urgent meeting on Monday evening to discuss the steps that should be taken to confront the reconciliation agreement between Hamas and Fatah.

The council stated that such behavior by the Palestinians relieved Israel from its obligations towards the establishment of the Palestinian state and made it obligated to control all West Bank areas without exception.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

When Israeli soldiers came to arrest my father

When Israeli soldiers came to arrest my father

 Posted by realistic bird on May 3, 2011


by Hanin Ahmad Qatamesh, The Electronic Intifada

Last week, on 21 April, Israeli soldiers invaded my home in Ramallah, held hostage all those present, and forced me at gunpoint to call my father, a writer and human rights advocate, in order to demand his surrender. This is common operating procedure for Israeli occupation forces. This time, however, they had taken hostage an American citizen willing to speak out. And I will not be silent.

I was born in New York, but raised mainly in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. I currently study in Cairo, but returned to Ramallah to spend my Easter break with my family. My joy soon gave way to heartbreak.

Last Wednesday night, just past midnight, my mother and I were chatting when we suddenly heard pounding on the door and someone shouting in chillingly familiar broken Arabic, “iftakh bab!” (open the door). We looked carefully from behind the slit-open curtain to realize that many Israeli occupation soldiers were surrounding the house, heavily armed and in combat formation. Shortly afterwards, they broke in and occupied the house.

They pointed their machine guns at us and told us they wanted to search the house. My 14-year-old cousin, Nai, and 69-year-old aunt were sleeping inside. Without thinking, I rushed to my room to alert Nai so that she would not wake up with a gun pointed at her face. That was the most haunting experience in my own traumatic childhood, when Israeli forces arrested my father many years earlier.

Nai still woke up trembling and speechless, though silence is not one of her virtues. Simultaneously, as if on cue, my mother jumped to wake up my aunt. The visibly agitated soldiers considered our moves hostile and ordered us to stop, aiming at our heads. Fortunately, my mother and I succeeded in waking the two before the soldiers reached them.

After a futile search, the soldiers went to the apartment right above ours whose owners — also US citizens — were away. They knocked down the main door and wrecked the place.

There we were, four Palestinian females of different ages stuck in a room with a bunch of guns pointed at us. They confiscated our phones, disconnecting us from the outside world. I could not prevent some tears from slipping down my cheeks, despite my attempts not to let that happen in front of the soldiers. I thought to myself, I shall not get a chance to say goodbye to my father — he is more than my beloved baba, he is my mentor. My vacation will be over in a few days, and I’ll head back to my college. He was dreaming of me getting my diploma, so I must continue at all cost, I convinced myself.

Nai suddenly interrupted my thoughts and said, “Look, we can either cry or talk non-stop” — the latter being her pastime. She and I transcended our fear and decided to talk, laugh, make jokes and talk more, enough to make the soldiers regret the moment they cruelly invaded our home. To help calm us down, Nai played “Li Beirut,” a charming song by the Lebanese diva Fairouz, on her iPod. A visibly angry soldier shouted at her “Give me the [expletive] thing or else!” She handed it to him — but not before poking fun at him — “Cowards! Even Fairouz scares you!”
As they were about to enter my room, I warned the commander, “My MacBook and Blackberry are inside; I hope they’ll still be there after your search.”

“We never take anything that is not ours,” he irately shot back. I could not resist shouting, “Aside from stealing our land on a regular basis, nine years ago, Israeli soldiers were caught lifting valuables from many Palestinian homes. Don’t you dare tell me you do not steal what is not yours!” Pointing his US-made M-16 at me, he silenced me. How ironic, a weapon made in my country of birth is being used by Israeli soldiers to silence me while they ransack my own room in the middle of the night.

They told us that they were looking for my father, Ahmad Qatamesh.

Unsurprisingly, they did not explain why they wanted to arrest him. They kept us against our will in the living room, insisting that he must “turn himself in” before they would leave. My mother told them, “He is not here, and he is not wanted!” Only then did we realize that we were taken hostage.
My father is a sixty-year-old political scientist, writer and human rights advocate who is widely respected in Palestinian society. This whole commotion took me back to when I was nine, anxiously waiting at the gates of an Israeli prison for his imminent release. He had been held for almost six years under “administrative detention,” without charge, without trial, without a chance to defend himself or even know what he was accused of. Amnesty International and other human rights organizations condemn the procedure as an affront to justice. I hugged him then like I was meeting him for the first time and asked him to promise not to be gone for so long again. Being impeccably honest, he said: “I wish I could. They must first get out of our lives before I can make such a promise.”
The commander forced me at gunpoint to call my father, who was at his brother’s house. I did. He then grabbed my phone and shouted at him, “Surrender yourself or we’ll destroy the house!”

My father shouted back, loudly enough so I could hear him, “You and your soldiers are tools of the occupation. You are violating our basic rights. You have no right to be in our home. Come arrest me here and leave my family out of this!”

Some of them went to arrest him, and only after they held him did the soldiers who stayed at our place prepare to leave. Before the last one exited, however, he rubbed it in my face, saying “We got your father, and we are gonna take care of him!” Almost crying, I shouted, “He takes care of himself! You are criminals!”
Perhaps the most important principle that I learned from my dad was never to allow obstacles to keep me from realizing my dreams. I will continue to dream of Palestinian freedom. Along the way, I will continue to expose the brutality of Israel’s occupation of our land — and houses.

Hanin Qatamesh was born in New York in 1989. She lived under occupation, in Palestine, until she finished high school. She is an undergraduate student at the American University in Cairo (AUC), majoring in Mass Communication.

Hundreds of settlers raid Yousuf's Tomb in Nablus

[ 03/05/2011 - 05:42 PM ]
NABLUS, (PIC)-- Hundreds of Jewish settlers infiltrated Monday night Yousuf's Tomb in the West Bank city of Nablus under the protection of the Israeli occupation forces.
Among those present was Israeli Knesset member and minister Limor Livnat.
They entered after coordinating with the IOF and then prayed at the tomb in memory of Ben-Joseph Livnat, the nephew of Minister Livnat, who was shot dead after trespassing on the site a week back without prior coordination with the army.
Locals reported dozens of settlers tried to stay after prayers were finished, but the soldiers proceeded to evacuate them.
Palestinian youth hurled stones at the settlers injuring one of them as clashes erupted in the area.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

PA rounds up four Hamas men in West Bank, summons dozens

[ 03/05/2011 - 12:18 PM ]

WEST BANK, (PIC)-- Palestinian Authority security forces rounded up four Hamas men and summoned dozens for questioning including women as Fatah and Hamas politicians near the signing of a national reconciliation deal in Cairo.

PA security chiefs have openly rejected the agreement between parties ruling Palestine and vowed to continue targeting Hamas in the West Bank, as it sees the group as a security threat to the Israelis.

Locals reported Tuesday that preventive security nabbed three of those men in the Askar refugee camp. All of the men have been previously held in the custody of the PA security forces.

The fourth man was taken while responding to a call for questioning by intelligence in the West Bank city of Al-Khalil.

The same day, dozens of Hamas supporters were summoned, including several women, among them the mother of a man detained in Tulkarem.

In a related development, security agencies in Nablus have brought 19 men in Al-Juneid prison to a military tribunal where it was ruled that their trials would be postponed until June 12.

Some of those men have been held prisoner for over five months after a long period of interrogation and torture, according to statements by their relatives.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Jewish settlers burn mosque

[ 03/05/2011 - 11:45 AM ]

Burnt copies of the Holy Quran in a previous arson attack by settlers in the W.B village of Yasuf

NABLUS, (PIC)-- Jewish settlers set a small mosque on fire in Hawara school near Nablus at dawn Tuesday, local sources said.

The sources told the PIC reporter that a group of settlers sneaked from the nearby settlement of Yitzhar into Hawara village and set its school's mosque on fire.

They said that villagers rushed to extinguish the fire as the settlers fled back to their settlement, adding that big the mosque was badly damaged.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

IOF soldiers detain six Palestinians

[ 03/05/2011 - 11:08 AM ]

AL-KHALIL, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) stormed West Bank cities and village at dawn Tuesday and detained six Palestinians for interrogation.

Local sources said that IOF soldiers broke into Nablus and nearby villages and rounded up six youths. In a similar storming operation the soldiers burst into Bethlehem city and its Aida refugee camp and detained two young men.

In Ramallah, soldiers were seen roaming the streets of Nabi Saleh village, after closing its entrance, and clamping a curfew, locals reported.

Hebrew media said that the IOF raised alert in 1948 occupied Palestine and West Bank areas in anticipation of any violent reaction to the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Monday, May 2, 2011

IOF soldiers damage Palestinian land in Jordan Valley

[ 02/05/2011 - 09:43 PM ]

JORDAN VALLEY, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) destroyed tens of dunums of cultivated land in Wadi Al-Malih in the northern Jordan Valley on Sunday evening, local sources said.

They added that the solders deliberately destroyed 30 dunums owned by Mahmoud Anis, adding that the soldiers this time each year damage the crops in the same area in the hope to convince farmers not to cultivate their land again.

The sources noted that the troops did not leave the area after destroying it since last night.

Farmers in Wadi Al-Malih's Burj area are the constant target of attacks by the IOF soldiers and Jewish settlers who systematically burn or destroy their crops.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

IOF soldiers raid Shufat, round up 5 West Bankers

IOF soldiers raid Shufat, round up 5 West Bankers

[ 02/05/2011 - 02:54 PM ]

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) rounded up five Palestinian citizens from Bethlehem and Nablus at dawn Monday and earlier on Sunday evening stormed the Shufat refugee camp in occupied Jerusalem.

Local sources said that IOF soldiers arrested four young men in Husan village, Bethlehem district, and one in Assira Al-Shamalia, Nablus district.

They noted that the detention was preceded by violent search of the detainees' homes.

Meanwhile, IOF troops stormed the Shufat refugee camp on Sunday evening and fired teargas canisters at residential quarters.

Many citizens suffered breathing problems while young men threw stones at the invading soldiers.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Israeli minister calls for annexing West Bank in retaliation to reconciliation

[ 02/05/2011 - 08:45 AM ]

NAZARETH, (PIC)-- Israeli information minister Yuli Edelstein has called for annexing the West Bank to Israel in reprisal to the Palestinian national reconciliation announcement.

Edelstein told the weekly Israeli cabinet meeting on Sunday that the step should be taken to respond to the Fatah-Hamas agreement.

Israel has displayed absolute dismay at the news of the reconciliation and decided to impose a set of penal measures against the Palestinian Authority in retaliation.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Heated clashes erupt in silwan and West Bank towns


[ 01/05/2011 - 12:17 PM ]

WEST BANK, (PIC)-- Intense clashes flared in the West Bank districts of Al-Khalil and Nablus on Sunday morning, but no injuries have been reported.

Locals reported that Jewish settlers seeped into the Iraq and Burin villages southwest of Nablus city in northern West Bank in a bid to provoke and terrorize Palestinian residents.

Clashes broke out after locals addressed the attacks backed by the Israeli army.

The same morning, the Israeli army stormed the Abu Ishnineh district in southern Al-Khalil in search of youths suspected of throwing stones at them.

Locals told PIC correspondent that violent clashes ensued between the soldiers and dozens of youth amid a shower of rubber-coated bullets and gas and stun grenades.

Youth responded with stones and bottles without report of injury.

Earlier on Saturday, heated clashes ignited in the Batn al-Hawa neighborhood in Jerusalem's Arab Silwan district.

Locals said youth hurled molotov cocktails on the roof of a Palestinian structure occupied by the Israeli army in order to protect nearby Jewish settlers and their armed militias.

Locals sustained breathing difficulties after the soldiers showered the community with gas grenades in pursuit of the youths.

Violent clashes erupt anew in Silwan

[ 01/05/2011 - 03:56 PM ]

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- Violent clashes erupted anew in Silwan town, south of the Aqsa Mosque, on Sunday during which citizens threw a firebomb at an Israeli military point in Bustan suburb, according to an Israeli radio broadcast.

Witnesses reported clashes in six suburbs in Silwan between young Palestinians and Israeli occupation forces.

They said that the IOF soldiers used teargas in abundance to quell and disperse the youths, adding that some of the canisters were fired at houses.

The locals said that tens were treated for breathing problems, adding that the soldiers could not storm the Bustan suburb as the young men blocked their repeated attempts to do so.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Jewish settlers raid Kifl Hares in bid to claim shrine

[ 30/04/2011 - 07:49 AM ]
SALFIT, (PIC)-- Thousands of Jewish settlers raided Friday the West Bank town of Kifl Hares north of Salfit to perform traditional prayers at what they have claimed is the tomb of Joshua the son of Nun.
Israeli Radio put the number of settlers that raided the site from Thursday night to Friday morning at 15,000. They were protected by Israel occupation forces (IOF).
Among the worshipers were Rabbi Yona Metzger and Israeli minister Yuli-Yoel Edelstein and four members from the Israeli Knesset.
The IOF banned Palestinians from roaming or mobilizing as Jews made prayers at the tomb.
According to a fresh report by the PIC, there are three Islamic shrines in Kifl Hares, Dhul-Kifl, Dhul-Nun, and a shrine built by Sultan Saladin, which Israelis wish to convert into a biblical site, naming it the shrine of Joshua, who led Moses' army into Palestine from Jericho.
Palestinians fear Israel wants to hijack the shrine in the center of the village and add it to the alleged Jewish heritage list, as was done with Ibrahimi and Bilal Ben Rabah mosques.
The Sultan Saladin shrine lies amid the town's old houses and has such Islamic features as a dome and green prayer niche facing Makkah.
The place was built by Sultan Saladin. Locals say they saw inside the date of construction etched in a rock alongside a Quranic verse.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

IOF troops raid southern Gaza, round up 6 West Bankers - Savage Jewish settlers burn commercial stores in Al-Khalil old city

IOF troops raid southern Gaza, round up 6 West Bankers
[ 27/04/2011 - 10:27 AM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- Israeli occupation forces (IOF) raided eastern Khan Younis, south of the Gaza Strip, on Wednesday morning amidst indiscriminate shooting at Palestinian residential quarters and agricultural land.

Local sources said that three IOF tanks escorted six bulldozers and advanced amidst random firing then bulldozed citizens' land.

Earlier at dawn Wednesday, IOF soldiers rounded up six Palestinians in various West Bank districts.

Locals said that soldiers broke into two homes in Tobas and questioned their inhabitants after searching them.

IOF soldiers also stormed Awarta village, southeast of Nablus, firing live bullets and sonic bombs in the process. They searched the homes of relatives of Amjad and Hakim Awad who were charged by Israel with killing five settlers in the nearby Itamar settlement in mid March before withdrawing from the village.

Savage Jewish settlers burn commercial stores in Al-Khalil old city

[ 27/04/2011 - 10:50 AM ]

Al-KHALIL, (PIC)-- Armed Jewish settlers attacked at dawn Tuesday Palestinian commercial stores with Molotov cocktails in Kazazeen souk (market) in the old city of Al-Khalil burning down four of them and all goods inside them.

Owners of these stores are Shaban Hashlamoun, Mohamed Al-Shalloudi, Atta Al-Shweiki and Abdelhameed Al-Natsha.

Firefighters from Al-Khalil municipal council tried to enter the old city to extinguish the fire, but the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) blocked their way at the pretext the area was a closed military zone.

Eyewitnesses said they saw armed Jewish settlers in Kazazeen souk dancing in circles, singing and shouting racist chants against Arabs before culminating their revelry with an arson attack on the stores.

"We know the settlers torched our stores in order to expel us from our old city and fully take it over, but they can never achieve that and we are staying in the city even if we get killed," one of the Palestinian store owners said.

"They offered us huge amounts of money to sell our stores, and one of their leaders told us, 'You have an open check,' but we kicked them out and we told them to leave along with their lackeys because our [Palestinian] land is more precious than our blood and they cannot take a grain of its soil," he added.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Hundreds of rabbis sign edict prohibiting withdrawal from WB

[ 26/04/2011 - 07:07 PM ]

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- Hundreds of Jewish rabbis sent a message to Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday telling him that withdrawing troops from the West Bank was religiously forbidden.
The message signed by 350 rabbis protested Netanyahu’s declaration that he was ready to evacuate a number of areas in the West Bank and deliver them to the Palestinian Authority along with readiness to resume negotiations with it.
The rabbis included a Toratic edict in their message which prohibited withdrawing from West Bank land, describing it as the borders of the “Hebrew state”.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Foreign solidarity activists participate in building school in the Jordan Valley

[ 26/04/2011 - 06:04 PM ]

JENIN, (PIC)-- Foreign solidarity activists along with Palestinian citizens started on Tuesday in building a school in Ras Al-Oje southeast of Tobas in the Jordan Valley .

Citizens in the area told the PIC reporter over the phone that more than 70 Palestinians and foreign solidarity activists laid down the foundation stone of the school.

They said that the school was named after the slain Italian activist Vittorio Arrigone to affirm that the killing of the Italian activist would not deter foreign sympathizers from pursuing their support for the Palestinian people.

They said that the school would be built of straw and mud, and added that they welcome any material or financial donations. They noted that the school was built solely depending on their own resources.

The school is meant to ascertain the right of 70 students in the area in learning, they said.

Ras Al-Oje is deprived of all services and is inhabited by around 300 Bedouin families, who had been expelled from their land by the Israeli occupation authority for the sake of building an army camp back in 1982.

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Monday, April 25, 2011

Ashqar: Child death should have have touched world conscience

[ 25/04/2011 - 09:18 PM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- If the world community had one iota of mercy, ethics, or humanitarian feelings it would have been shocked at the scene of the little Palestinian child Abeer Eskafi who died as a result of not being able to see her detained father in Israeli occupation jails, Riad Al-Ashqar, the spokesman for the prisoners' ministry, said on Monday.

Eskafi, from Al-Khalil, was traumatized after Israeli prison administration did not allow her to see her father who is serving four life sentences in Beer Sheba desert prison, Ashqar said.

He added that the child's condition later worsened until she was paralyzed then died. "Regretfully the world does not care about the suffering of our poeple", he said.

If the same thing happened to one of the captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit's parents or his old grandfather for not being able to see their son the whole world would have stood up in rage and would have labeled the Palestinian people as war criminals who should be punished, the spokesman elaborated.

Ashqar, who was speaking at a ceremony organized by the women branch of Hamas east of Rafah to honor families of Palestinian prisoners, explained the suffering of Palestinian prisoners and their relatives due to the Israeli visit deprivation policy.

He also tackled the deliberate medical neglect of prisoners on the part of the Israeli prison service (IPS), relaying a number of incidents due to such a sustained policy during which some of the prisoners died.

The spokesman charged the IPS with delaying urgent surgeries for years, giving prisoners expired medication or not fit for their diseases, and finally depriving them of proper meals.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

PA orders its security elements not to open fire at Israelis in self-defense

[ 25/04/2011 - 06:53 PM ]

RAMALLAH, (PIC)-- The Fatah-controlled Palestinian authority (PA) in Ramallah issued strict instructions to its security apparatuses in the West Bank not to open fire at Israeli troops or settlers even if it was in self-defense.

The source affirmed that the leaders of the PA security apparatuses told their cadres that they would not be lenient with anyone of them shooting at Israeli troops and settlers under any reason, even if it was for self-defense because such act would be detrimental to the higher national interests and only serve the occupation as they said.

He noted that the PA intelligence apparatus embarked on Sunday morning on interrogating all policeman and security elements who were present in the area where the attack on some settlers happened.

Widespread popular outrage is prevailing in Nablus city because of the shameful and cowardly attitude of the PA security forces towards the killing of one settler at Yousuf's Tomb east of Nablus.

As the Israeli occupation forces (IOF) stormed Nablus without prior notice following the incident, the Palestinian citizens saw all the PA security forces, even the traffic policemen, leaving their posts, disappearing from the streets and shutting down their headquarters and institutions.

Eyewitnesses told the PIC that the PA security men stationed near Yousuf's Tomb left their posts and vanished quickly when the IOF entered the eastern part of Nablus city, but later they appeared after the IOF withdrew.

They affirmed that after the withdrawal of the invading Israeli troops from the scene following violent clashes with Palestinian young men, a large number of angry citizens poured into the Tomb and set fire to it.

The Israeli investigations showed that one of the PA national security men opened fire at a group of Israelis after they refused to comply with orders to evacuate the Tomb because there was no prior coordination with the Israeli side.

An eyewitness affirmed to the PIC that he heard the sound of gunfire from an Israeli automatic weapon, M16, and it was followed by the sound of shooting from a Kalashnikov gun which is used by all PA security men.

He expressed his belief that one of the Jewish settlers visiting Yousuf's Tomb started to open fire at the PA national security men who responded in self-defense to the settler.

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Police dog bites man, two boys nabbed amid West Bank crackdowns

[ 25/04/2011 - 11:22 AM ]

AL-KHALIL, (PIC)-- Israeli soldiers injured a Palestinian man using a police dog and arrested two minors as tensions run high in the West Bank.

Hatem Abdurrazzaq Talahima, 42, said Israeli soldiers released a police hound against him while he was passing near the apartheid wall in the Al-Ramadein area southwest of Dhahiriyya south of Al-Khalil on Monday. The man bled after the dog bit into his arm.

Police then refused to transfer him to the Al-Khalil hospital after a Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance arrived at the scene.

The same day, the Israeli occupation force (IOF) nabbed two minors during raids in Juyous, east of the West Bank city of Qalqilya.

The soldiers patrolled the town's streets and alleys on foot and vehicles in a bid to send a message of terror to citizens.

The incident came after a Jewish settlers attacked a group of Palestinian children in Jerusalem's Sheikh Jarrah district a day earlier, beating them and spraying hot gas in their eyes.

Also on Monday, IOF soldiers randomly distributed a number of notices at the Kafriyat crossroads south of Tulkarem in the West Bank.

The notices called for citizens to refer to the Israeli intelligence headquarters in the city.

Locals reported that IOF soldiers have erected random checkpoint at the said crossroads and checked the identification of passengers blocking traffic.

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Hundreds of settlers attack Palestinian cars in Nablus

[ 24/04/2011 - 10:23 PM ]

NABLUS, (PIC)-- Hundreds of Jewish settlers attacked Sunday the cars of Palestinians south and east of the West Bank city of Nablus.

The aggression came just hours after a Jewish settler was killed and four others injured, one of them critically, during a shooting by a Palestinian policeman near Yousuf's Tomb in the city.

Angry settlers blocked the roads entering the city of Nablus and hurled stones at cars driven by Palestinians, witnesses reported. Several car windows were broken.

The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) closed the Hawara checkpoint south of Nablus following the settler attacks.

Settlers gathered at the intersection of the Burin village and at the Beit Fourik checkpoint near Nablus and attacked Palestinians, witnesses added.

A Palestinian man and his son aged 11 were injured after Jewish settlers struck their vehicle with rocks near the Hawara checkpoint south of Nablus. They were transported to hospital.

The same day, following the Nablus shooting, Knesset member Michael Ben-Ari made calls to the Israeli government to regain control of Yousuf's Tomb, where the incident took place. He urged for an immediate establishment of a Yeshiva there.

Rep. Tzipi Hutobli said the deadly shooting proves that freedom of safe access to the tomb cannot be guaranteed without Israeli control of the site. She said she sees no reason why the Tomb should be less important to Israelis than the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem.

Meanwhile, the IOF has tightened measures at permanent and random checkpoints in the northern and central West Bank, causing traffic jams and obstructing movement.

Witnesses said soldiers have been stopping and searching cars and checking the identification of their passengers without report of arrest.

Security has been tightened on the Hawara checkpoint south of Nablus because of the movement of Jewish settlers into the area after the shooting Sunday morning.

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Corruption ring leaders placing funds in Israeli banks

[ 24/04/2011 - 10:17 PM ]

NABLUS, (PIC)-- Director of the anti-corruption authority in Ramallah Rafiq al-Natshe said Palestinian Authority funds and property has been retrieved from its staff through a voluntary initiative by them.

He said funds used to pay for property twice has been retrieved.

“Junior staff that received bribe money have been disciplined and referred to the public prosecutor and then to the special courts for corruption crimes,” he said, assuring that progress has been made toward correcting operations in the PA's institutions and prosecuting corrupt officials.

Natshe called on Palestinians to cooperate with the anti-corruption authority, stressing his determination to follow a path to build a transparent society free from corruption.

He said that, for the first time ever, officials are being questioned about corruption cases using official methods, and that some officials remain wanted for justice. He said the largest corruption ring leaders have placed monies in Israeli banks.

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Jihad: Death of settler natural result to occupation's aggression

[ 24/04/2011 - 05:10 PM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- Daoud Shihab, spokesman for the Islamic Jihad movement, said that the killing of a Jewish settler in Nablus on Sunday was a natural result to the continued provocation on the part of those settlers against the Palestinian people and land in the occupied West Bank.

Shihab said that the problem is in the presence of the Israeli occupation forces and settlers who daily commit crimes against Palestinian citizens, farmers and their land.

He warned that the growing popular unrest in the occupied Palestinian land could lead to an explosion the repercussion of which could not be controlled by anyone.

The spokesman said that it was only natural for the Palestinians in the West Bank to resist the occupation of their land.

He hoped the PA in Ramallah would not contribute in quelling the people just to maintain the defeatist settlement process.

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