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  • 4
    days
    ago

    Palestinian kids swept up in wave of Israeli arrests

    Lawahez Jabari / NBC News

    Ahmed Jawabreh, 14, was arrested in the middle of the night for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli soldiers in the West Bank refugee camp where he lives and wasn't released for another 18 days. His was only one of a recent wave of arrests of Palestinian children by Israeli authorities, human rights groups say.

    By Lawahez Jabari, Producer, NBC News

    TEL AVIV – Ahmed Jawabreh, 14, was asleep in his home in early April at the al-Arub refugee camp near Hebron, in the occupied West Bank, when Israeli soldiers came looking for him. He had been anticipating exams at school in the morning, not a knock at the door at 3:30 a.m.

    Ahmed was arrested that night for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli soldiers in the camp earlier in the day and wasn’t released for another 18 days, when a judge ordered that a fine of $1,100 be paid and that Ahmed be placed under house arrest.

    His was only one of a recent wave of arrests of Palestinian children by Israeli authorities, human rights groups say. According to Defence for Children International (DCI), an independent non-governmental organization based in Geneva, Switzerland, since the beginning of this year there has been a 17 percent increase in arrests of Palestinian children. An average of 198 children were arrested each month in 2012; that average has risen to 232 arrests during the first three months of 2013, DCI reported.  

    Human rights groups say that in Hebron in particular – where Ahmed was detained – there are clear violations of international law on a daily basis, with children as young as 8 being held for violations ranging from throwing stones to being in restricted areas illegally. On March 20 alone, Israeli soldiers arrested 27 children in Hebron.

    Reports of this spike in arrests come on the heels of a UNICEF study released in February which estimated around 700 Palestinian children between the ages of 12 and 17 are detained each year. Over the past decade, the report said, around “7,000 children have been detained, interrogated, prosecuted and/or imprisoned within the Israeli military justice system – an average of two children each day.”

    'Prevalence of minors'
    The Israeli Defense Force (IDF) said in a statement that there has been an increased threat to Israeli civilians and security forces recently in the form of “popular violence and rioting in Judea and Samaria [also known as the West Bank],” and that there was “a prevalence of minors taking part in such riots.”

    The statement added: “It should be noted that these arrests do take place at night in order to prevent large-scale riots that would ultimately escalate the situation.”

    Under Israeli military criminal law it is possible to arrest and put on trial anyone 12 years or older. Statutes in that law also state that anyone throwing stones on "a fixed target" can face a term of up to ten years, and that throwing a stone "on a moving target" can be sentenced to up to 20 years in prison.

    Beyond the immediate concern about abuses carried out against minors like Ahmed, the consequences of imprisoning and convicting young people in this way are widespread and long-term, said Khaled Quzmar, a lawyer with DCI.

    "(A) big number of those children end up leaving school or are recruited by the Israeli forces to collaborate with them following threats during investigations,” he said. “They threaten them with imprisonment if they did not collaborate."

    In Ahmed's case, the soldiers were accompanied by an Israeli TV crew filming the arrest for a documentary. During the filming, Ahmed is seen begging to be allowed to take his exams in the morning. The soldiers are polite but still handcuff and blindfold him.

    Ahmed, who says he admitted to throwing stones only after being mistreated, said the soldiers beat him after the cameras were turned off.

    His mother thought the arrest could have been handled differently.

    “They could've asked me,” she said. “I would've taken him to the police station. But not at 3:30 in the morning – to take a child from his bed!"

    In 2009, the IDF established a juvenile court with special provisions for trying minors in criminal cases. The minor is given a court-appointed defense attorney and a parent or relative is required at the hearing. Minors have the right to be informed of their rights prior to an investigation, the IDF says.

    However, UNICEF reported minors are often held without a parent or legal guardian present, they are often not provided with legal counsel and in some cases they are handcuffed, blindfolded and confined inside checkpoint containers.

    Ahmed’s version echoes UNICEF’s findings.

    "I was left outside in the sun in the daytime and in the cold at night. I was beaten many times. I was screaming," he said. "In the end I admitted to throwing two stones." 

    NBC News' Marian Smith contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • Resistance through reality TV? Young Palestinians battle to become 'President'
    • UN suspends aid in Gaza after protesters storm headquarters
    • Obama visits a Bethlehem in midst of change, Islamization

    383 comments

    Throwing stones at cops and or Armed Soldiers. Yup, that could and should land a kid in Juvvy. Its disgusting yet telling to read his mom defend her kid and complain:... who should have been studying for the "Big Test" instead of throwing rocks at people. They never fail to miss an opportunity for s …

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  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    9:49am, EDT

    Palestinian funerals draw thousands amid some of worst West Bank violence in years

    Nasser Shiyoukhi / AP

    Palestinian security forces carry the body of Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh, center, during his funeral in the West Bank city of Hebron on Thursday, April 4, 2013.

    By Noah Browning, Reuters

    ANABTA, West Bank -- Thousands of mourners turned out on Thursday for the funerals of three Palestinians, including two teenagers killed by Israeli army gunfire in some of the worst violence in the occupied West Bank in years.

    The upsurge in unrest was triggered on Tuesday by the death of Maysara Abu Hamdeya, a 64-year-old prisoner serving a life term in an Israeli jail and suffering from cancer.

    Palestinian officials accused Israel of delaying treatment for Hamdeya and gave him full military honors at a funeral on Thursday in Hebron, where masked gunmen fired into the air as his body arrived at a mosque in the divided West Bank city.

    In the wave of disturbances that followed his death, four Palestinian youths threw firebombs at an Israeli checkpoint near Tulkarm in the northern West Bank on Wednesday, the army said.

    Soldiers returned fire and killed two teenagers from the nearby town of Anabta -- Amer Nassar, 17, and Naji Belbisi, 18.

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Israel's use of lethal force showed that it wanted to "provoke chaos" in the Palestinian Territories and avoid any moves toward a peace deal.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Palestinian nurses hold posters with the picture of Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh with Arabic that reads, "Captive martyr brigade, Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh, the captive movement martyr, died on April 2, 2013," outside the morgue of a hospital in Hebron on Thursday.

    The wave of violence erupted two weeks after U.S. President Barack Obama paid his first official visit to the region, urging the Israelis and the Palestinians to resume long-stalled peace talks but offering no initiative to break the deadlock.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is scheduled to travel to Jerusalem again next week to review the stalemate.

    First airstrike since truce
    The United Nations office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said Israeli forces had killed nine Palestinians, most of them in clashes in the West Bank, so far this year, compared with three in the same period in 2012.

    The bodies of Nassar and Belbisi, their blood-stained faces clearly visible, were carried on stretchers through the packed streets of Anabta, held aloft by uniformed members of the Palestinian security forces.

    "O martyrs rest, rest. We will continue the struggle," the crowds chanted as the lifeless teenagers passed by.

    Israeli officials urged Palestinian leaders to push for calm, and dismissed suggestions that a third uprising, or Intifada, was brewing in the West Bank -- territory Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war and which is now home to more than 340,000 Jewish settlers.

    "The term 'Third Intifada' is meant to describe a general breakdown and uprising ... There are no powers there pushing for a third Intifada or general uprising," senior defense official Amos Gilad told Israel Radio.

    Underscoring the potential for more violence, the Israeli army said that for a third straight day, a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip struck southern Israel on Thursday. No casualties or damage were reported.

    Following initial rocket fire on Tuesday, Israeli jets carried out their first airstrike on Gaza since a truce ended several days of fighting in November.

    Alaa Badarneh / EPA

    Palestinian women mourn during the funeral of Amer Nassar and Naji Balbisi in Anabta village near the West Bank city of Tulkarem on Thursday.

    An al Qaeda-linked group, Magles Shoura al-Mujahadeen, claimed responsibility for rocket attacks on Tuesday and Wednesday, saying it was responding to the death of Hamdeya.

    Israel says Gaza's ruling Hamas movement bears overall responsibility for any rocket fire and has urged Egypt, which helped broker the November truce, to use its influence with the Islamist group.

    "The Egyptians are very active. Dialogue with them is constant and their interest is in keeping stability and preventing firing, violence and terrorism," Gilad said.

    For the second time this year, the death of a Palestinian prisoner has sparked widespread anti-Israeli disturbances.

    In February, Arafat Jaradat, 30, died after an interrogation session. Palestinian officials said he had been tortured, an allegation Israel denied.

    Palestinians say Hamdeya complained of feeling sick last August, but was only discovered to be suffering from cancer in January. They say he did not receive adequate treatment and should have been released because of the gravity of the illness.

    Israelis said Hamdeya, serving a life term for attempted murder after sending a suicide bomber to a Jerusalem cafe, was a heavy smoker and had received adequate care.

    Related:

    'Not welcome': Disappointment greets Obama on West Bank visit

    Slideshow: Israel and Gaza - 8 days of violence in November 2012

    Israel and Hamas agree to Gaza ceasefire

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    38 comments

    I'm sorry but if you're throwing fire bombs, what do you think is going to happen? The police are going to say "oh thank you for this wonderful gift. Here, have a Palestinian state!"?

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  • 23
    Mar
    2013
    7:24am, EDT

    'Amazing': Obama turns tourist in ancient city of Petra

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    U.S. President Barack Obama ended his Middle East trip with a visit to the ancient city of Petra, Jordan, Saturday.

    By Steve Holland, Reuters

    PETRA, Jordan -- President Barack Obama marveled at the sights of Jordan's ancient city of Petra on Saturday as he wrapped up a four-day Middle East tour by setting aside weighty diplomatic matters and playing tourist for a day.

    The visit followed a trip to Israel and the Palestinian Territories that was capped by Obama's brokering of a rapprochement between Israel and Turkey, but which offered little more than symbolic gestures toward Middle East peacemaking.

    Before heading to Petra, Obama used his stop in Jordan to ratchet up criticism of Syrian President Bashar Assad, but he stopped short of promising military aid to Syrian rebels to help end a two-year-old civil war that has claimed 70,000 lives.

    President Obama receives applause from a crowd in Jerusalem Thursday by challenging groups that reject Israel.

    U.S. officials privately voiced satisfaction with the results of Obama's first foreign trip of his second term, but the president's aides had set expectations so low that it was not hard to proclaim it a mission accomplished.

    Shifting into sightseeing mode on Saturday, Obama flew by helicopter to Petra and took a walking tour of the restored ruins of a city more than 2,000 years old which is half-carved into sandstone cliffs.

    Ordinary tourists had been cleared out for the president's visit, and guards with assault weapons dogged his every step.

    "This is pretty spectacular," the president, wearing sunglasses, khaki trousers and a dark jacket, said as he craned his neck to look up at the Treasury, a towering rose-red façade cut into a mountain. "It's amazing."

    The U.S. president arrived in Jordan on Friday after an unexpected diplomatic triumph in Israel, where he announced a breakthrough in relations between Israel and Turkey after a telephone conversation between the countries' prime ministers.

    President Barack Obama on Thursday urged the Israeli people to put themselves in the shoes of Palestinians and recognize their "right to self-determination, their right to justice." NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

    Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu apologized on behalf of his country for the killing of nine Turkish citizens in a 2010 naval raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla, and the two feuding U.S. allies agreed to normalize ties.

    The 30-minute call was made in a runway trailer at Tel Aviv airport, where Obama and Netanyahu huddled before the president boarded Air Force One for a flight to Jordan.

    The rapprochement could help Washington marshal regional efforts to contain spillover from the Syrian civil war and ease Israel's diplomatic isolation in the Middle East as it faces challenges posed by Iran's nuclear program.

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    Obama, left, looks at the Treasury while he receives a tour of the ancient historic and archaeological site of Petra on Saturday.

    During his visit, Obama appeared to have made some headway in easing Israelis' suspicions of him, calming their concerns about his commitment to confronting Iran and soothing his relationship with the hawkish Netanyahu.

    Obama attempted to show Palestinians he had not forgotten their aspirations for statehood but he left many disappointed that he had backtracked from his previous demands for a halt to Israeli settlement building in the occupied West Bank.

    The president offered no new peace proposals but he promised his administration would stay engaged while putting the onus on the two sides to set aside mutual distrust and restart long-dormant negotiations - a step the president failed to bring about in his first term.

    Muhammad Hamed / Reuters

    Members of the U.S. Secret Service Counter Assault Team survey a path after Obama walked through it during his tour of the ancient historic and archaeological site of Petra on Saturday.

    After visiting both Israel and the West Bank, President Obama met with King Abdullah of Jordan, a country facing some very turbulent times of its own, post Arab Spring. But there may be no stronger Arab ally to the U.S. and Israel than Jordan. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

    As Obama's critics were complaining that his Middle East trip was heavy on symbolism and lacking in substance, the last-minute move toward Israeli-Turkish reconciliation gave his aides a chance to tout a tangible achievement.

    On the last leg of his trip, Obama promised further humanitarian aid in talks with Jordan's King Abdullah, a close ally, as the economically strapped country grapples with a refugee crisis caused by Syria's civil war.

    Obama also used the opportunity to underscore U.S. wariness about arming rebels fighting to overthrow Assad, despite pressure from Republican critics at home and from some European allies to do more.

    He warned that a post-Assad Syria could become an "enclave" for Islamist extremism and insisted it was vital to help organize the Syrian opposition to avoid that, but he stopped short of announcing any new concrete steps.

    Related:

    Palestinian activists frustrated by lack of US action as Obama ends visit

    Obama lays stone from MLK memorial on grave of Israeli PM slain for trying to make peace

    Obama appeals to Israelis: Give justice to the Palestinians

    Obama: 'Still time' for diplomatic solution to Iran nuke dispute


    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    264 comments

    President Headfake plays tourist. Amazing!

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  • 22
    Mar
    2013
    11:23am, EDT

    Obama wraps up Holy Land visit at Bethlehem church after Holocaust tribute

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    U.S. President Barack Obama and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas walk in the Church of the Nativity during their visit to the West Bank city of Bethlehem on March 22, 2013.

    Jason Reed / Reuters

    Obama meets Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theophilos III (3rd left) during a tour of the Church of the Nativity.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    Obama walks out of the Hall of Remembrance at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem.

    By Matt Spetalnick and Ali Sawafta, Reuters

    President Barack Obama made a pilgrimage on Friday to Bethlehem, the traditional birthplace of Jesus.

    At the Church of the Nativity, Obama ducked to enter through its small Door of Humility. Manger Square, the plaza in front of the church, was almost deserted except for security personnel.

    Earlier, Obama visited Israel's most powerful national symbols, paying homage at the Holocaust memorial and the graves of Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern Zionism, and Yitzhak Rabin, the prime minister assassinated in 1995 by an extremist Jew over peace moves with the Palestinians.

    Wearing a Jewish skullcap, Obama rekindled an eternal flame at the Yad Vashem memorial next to a stone slab above ashes recovered from Nazi extermination camps after World War Two.

    "We have a choice to acquiesce to evil or make real our solemn vow - never again," Obama said.

    Saul Loeb / AFP - Getty Images

    Obama tours the Hall of Names at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem, alongside Avner Shalev (right), Chairman of the Yad Vashem Directorate, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Uriel Sinai / Getty Images

    Obama pays his respects in the Hall of Remembrance at Yad Vashem after Marines laid a wreath on his behalf.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    Obama listens to Netanyahu during their visit to the Children's Memorial at Yad Vashem.

    Jason Reed / Reuters

    Obama walks with Rabbi Israel Meir Lau in the Hall of Remembrance at Yad Vashem.

    Previously on PhotoBlog: Obama begins first official trip to Israel

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    3 comments

    Very moving places - it would be wonderful if all people could visit these Holy places important to all religions.

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  • 21
    Mar
    2013
    7:14pm, EDT

    Message to Obama from the Palestinian street less than enthusiastic

    There was a warm, official welcome for President Obama in Ramallah. But away from the Palestinian government compound, Palestinians staged demonstrations. NBC's Martin Fletcher reports.

    Comment

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  • 4
    Mar
    2013
    6:23pm, EST

    West Bank rabbi and peace activist Menachem Froman dies

    AFP / Getty Image

    Israeli Menachem Froman, the rabbi of the West Bank settlement of Tekoa,during an interview at his home in February 2006. Froman was convinced that a peace agreement can be reached with Hamas through mutual religious understanding.

    By Kari Huus, Staff writer, NBC News

    An Israeli settler and Orthodox rabbi famous for his efforts to promote dialogue and peaceful coexistence among Arabs and Jews died on Monday. Rabbi Menachem Froman, 68, had been suffering a prolonged illness, his son Shiva Froman said.

    Froman, a rabbi in the West Bank settlement of Tekoa, advocated for Israeli-Palestinian dialogue as early as the 1980s, when it was still illegal to be in contact with the Palestine Liberation Organization.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Born in pre-state Israel in 1945, Froman had a extensive contacts in the military, arts, politics and religious circles. He became the spiritual leader for many young people, and a sought-after adviser to politicians, according to an obituary in Haaretz of Israel.

    In recent years, Froman launched several religious peace organizations and held intensive talks with religious leaders from both Hamas and Israel’s Islamic Movement, out of a conviction that dialogue between spiritual leaders was the path to peace.

    "For almost 40 years I have maintained that it is impossible to forge peace here without taking into account the religious element," he said in an interview with Haaretz in July.

    That religious element, he said, "is very powerful in the Arab public and also stronger than what some readers of Haaretz would like to believe in the Jewish public."

    Froman had ties to many Palestinian leaders and sometimes visited holy sites with Palestinian officials. He was a vocal opponent of attacks on mosques by Jewish settlers.

    He also opposed removing Jewish settlers from the area, arguing that they have a biblical connection to the land, but said he would be willing to live in the West Bank under Palestinian rule.

    When the militant Hamas came to official power through elections in the Gaza Strip in 2006, Froman stepped up his efforts to generate Israeli-Palestinian dialogue. Working with a journalist close to Hamas, he drafted a ceasefire agreement that would put an immediate end to Palestinian attacks on Israel, end the Israeli seige of Gaza, lift the punishing embargo of Gaza and lead to the release of abducted Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. Senior Hamas officials endorsed the draft, but the Israeli government did not respond to the unofficial effort, effectively rejecting it.

    As news of Froman’s death spread, a list of condolences began building on his Facebook page, offering a glimpse of the wide array of people who followed and admired the unconventional rabbi.

    He is survived by his wife Hadassah, with whom he had 10 children.

    His funeral is scheduled for Tuesday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    2 comments

    Wow, now this is a tragerdy.

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  • 3
    Mar
    2013
    5:00pm, EST

    A $1 billion bet on peace: Qatar funds huge Palestinian settlement in West Bank

    Paul Goldman / NBC News

    The new settlement under construction at Rawabi.

    By Martin Fletcher, Correspondent, NBC News

    RAWABI, West Bank — As gambles go, it hardly gets bigger: A $1 billion dollar bet on peace — or at least a measure of calm — in the West Bank.

    Even the founder of Rawabi, the biggest construction project in the history of the Palestinian people, says nobody in his right mind would invest here.



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    Standing on a wind-swept hilltop overlooking the biblical hills of Judea, a half-hour drive from Ramallah, Bashar Al-Masri points to the Palestinian flags flying atop the giant cranes that are building, with phenomenal speed, the first modern Palestinian town.

    "As a teenager, raising the Palestinian flag was enough to be shot and killed," he says, immaculate in a form-hugging, thin-lapelled dark suit and narrow burgundy tie.

    "This is a small, symbolic way of how long we came along, and how much we will come along in the future," adds Al-Masri, who as a teenager threw stones at Israeli soldiers.

    The largest flag is mounted on a pole facing the Jewish settlement of Atteret, a community of about a hundred families located across a small valley.

    The flag is a deliberate statement.

    "So that we can show our unfriendly neighbors who were violently against us that we're here, and we're here to stay, and we're not afraid of you, we will remain here," Al-Masri says.

    Nation-building
    Two-thirds of the investment in this town comes from the government of Qatar’s investment fund, Al-Masri explains. The design, planning and construction are all by Palestinians, with outside help, and what appears to make him proudest of all, he says, there is no input from Israel.

    He says there are more than 8,000 families interested in moving in, and the first few hundred apartments will go on the market in March, with the town’s inauguration in May. The cost of the apartments, depending on size and location, is between $75,000 and $140,000.

    "This is about nation-building, this is about doing what’s right, this is my contribution that I know the best," says Al-Masri. "The human rights activists have their contribution, the [Palestinian Authority] people are building capacity and building the government, we're all together as the Palestinian people building a state."

    There are two main practical problems for the new town. All the water has to be piped in, and there is no obvious source. “We are in this project, putting facts on the ground, and things will have to follow,” is Al-Masri’s answer, hoping for a miracle.

    And access. The only road to Rawabi passes through what is known as Area C: that part of the West Bank that is fully controlled by Israel, administratively and militarily. It is a narrow, winding road that the Palestinians can use only with an Israeli permit, which must be renewed each year.

    Al-Masri talks of a tunnel through the hills linking Rawabi with Ramallah, barely visible on the horizon. Will that ever happen? "Probably not,” he admits. "It’s a problem."

    Paul Goldman / NBC News

    The view to Rawabi from the nearby Jewish settlement of Atteret.

    On the nearest hill, looking at Rawabi from Atteret, the manager of the Jewish settlement, Noam Aharon, agrees. "They throw stones at us," he says, talking about young Palestinians. "Just last month they smashed my windscreen. Stones can kill. And if they try to kill us, we will kill them."

    "What do you think of their new town?"

    "It spoils the view. But they can have it — they can do what they want, as long as we can live here in peace. If we can’t, neither can they."

    Leap of faith
    Building a new town out of this scraggly, dry wilderness — from where on a clear day you can see the towers of Tel Aviv and the Mediterranean Sea — is a leap of faith, which al-Al-Masri does not deny.

    It is being built against the opposition of many Palestinians who see any peaceful project as a way of affirming the status quo with Israel, of denying the Palestinian struggle.

    "Of course I believe, I must believe that there will be peace with Israel, and it’s a matter of time," he says. "The majority of Israeli people, at least 70 percent, want a Palestinian state. So, peace is possible. It just requires the right leaders."  

    So what percentage of Palestinians want peace with Israel?

    "The vast majority. I'm certain of that."

    Rawabi looks much more like an Israeli middle-class town than a Palestinian city: It will have high-rises, an outside theater to seat 20,000, soccer fields and cinemas and a theater, a swimming pool, a pedestrian precinct in the city center, bars and shopping malls.

    All it needs now is people, water and a larger access road.

    But the statement the project makes may be as important as the facts on the ground. It says that, between a failed peace process and a possible third intifada, there is a third way: Building Palestine from the bottom up.

    Martin Fletcher is the author of "The List", "Breaking News" and "Walking Israel".

    Related:

    'Force to be reckoned with': Israel's settlers dig in ahead of Obama visit

    Israel faces European backlash over decision to expand settlements

    US slams Israel's decision to expand settlements

    255 comments

    Financial aid from the U.S. taxpayers to Israel helps fund the illegal Israeli settlements that the U.S. claims to be against. That the Palestinians have found some support for their wellbeing and statehood somewhere else is not a bad thing.

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  • 25
    Feb
    2013
    7:07pm, EST

    Death of Palestinian in Israeli jail sparks West Bank protest, clashes

    Thousands of Palestinians -- among them masked gunmen -- took to the streets of the West Bank for the funeral of a prisoner who died in an Israeli jail. His family says he was tortured while Israel claims it was a heart attack in what threatens to becomes a new uprising. ITV's John Ray reports.

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  • 25
    Feb
    2013
    11:09am, EST

    Clashes as Palestinians bury man who died in Israeli custody

    Atef Safadi / EPA

    Palestinians hurl stones at an Israeli police vehicle during clashes next to the Ofer military prison, south of the West Bank town of Ramallah, on Feb. 25, 2013. Palestinians clashed with Israeli soldiers after the funeral of a Palestinian who died in an Israeli jail.

    Darren Whiteside / Reuters

    Palestinians carry the body of Arafat Jaradat during his funeral in the West Bank village of Se'eer, near Hebron, on Feb. 25, 2013. Jaradat's death in an Israeli jail on Saturday and a hunger strike by four other prisoners have raised tension in the West Bank, where stone-throwers have clashed repeatedly with Israeli soldiers in recent days.

    Ammar Awad / Reuters

    A relative mourns during the funeral of Arafat Jaradat in Se'eer on Feb. 25, 2013.

    Tensions flared in the West Bank after the death of a Palestinian detainee who died in an Israeli prison. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    The Associated Press reports — A Palestinian man who died under disputed circumstances in Israeli custody was given a hero's funeral Monday, with thousands thronging his gravesite and Palestinian police firing a 21-gun salute.

    Palestinian officials, citing an autopsy, say Arafat Jaradat was tortured during Israeli interrogation, while Israeli officials said more tests are needed to determine the cause of death.

    The weekend death of the 30-year-old gas station attendant and father of two comes amid rising West Bank tensions that have prompted talk in Israel about the possibility of a new Palestinian uprising. There have also been daily protests in support of some 4,600 Palestinians held by Israel. Read the full story.

    Related:

    Christians, Muslims pray to halt Israeli security wall

    Smuggled sperm: Palestinians become dads from jail

    Israeli-Palestinian conflict plays out in a rocky field

    Uriel Sinai / Getty Images

    Palestinians mourn over the body of Arafat Jaradat during his funeral on Feb. 25, 2013.

    Atef Safadi / EPA

    An Israeli soldier fires tear gas and rubber bullets at Palestinian stone throwers during clashes next to the Ofer military prison on Feb. 25, 2013.

    Mohamad Torokman / Reuters

    A stone-throwing Palestinian protester uses a sling to throw back a tear gas canister fired by Israeli troops during clashes outside the Ofer military prison on Feb. 25, 2013.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    5 comments

    Let's see: Poor little defenseless guys versus big, bad armored car: Check Corpse swarm: check Keening and wailing women in big chunks of fabric: Check Corpse closeup wrapped in crappy flag: Check Bad soldier in body armor: check Romantic moron posed throwing cannister "back" but actually right at p …

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  • 4
    Jan
    2013
    10:19am, EST

    Palestinian unity? Fatah holds first mass Gaza rally in years

    Mohammed Salem / Reuters

    Palestinians take part in a rally marking the 48th anniversary of the founding of the Fatah movement in Gaza City on Jan. 4, 2013.

    Reuters reports — Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians joined a rare rally staged by President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah group in Gaza on Friday, as tensions ease with rival Hamas Islamists ruling the enclave since 2007.

    A long hiatus in peace talks between Abbas's administration and Israel has narrowed ideological differences between the two main Palestinian factions. Solidarity has deepened since Israel's Gaza assault in November, after which hardline Hamas, though battered, declared victory.

    Suhaib Salem / Reuters

    A poster depicting late Palestinian and Fatah leader Yasser Arafat.

    Abbas remains based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, but several of his senior advisers attended Friday's march in the Gaza Strip, festooned with yellow Fatah flags rather than the green Hamas colors that have dominated such events since Hamas fighters drove Fatah from the territory in 2007. 

    Ahmed Zakot / Reuters

    A youth waves a Palestinian flag as he climbs a tree during the rally in Gaza City.

    Egypt has long tried to broker Hamas-Fatah reconciliation, but past efforts have foundered over questions of power-sharing, control of weaponry, and to what extent Israel and other powers would accept a Palestinian administration including Hamas. Read the full story.

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    37 comments

    If the US stay out of the ME problems and stop telling Israel what to do, Israel will take care of itself and the Hamas, and we will no longer hear about these problems anymore.

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, rally, gaza, palestinian, world-news, fatah
  • 2
    Jan
    2013
    9:53am, EST

    Israeli-Palestinian conflict plays out in a rocky field

    Majdi Mohammed / AP

    Surrounded by Israeli border police, Jewish settlers from the Esh Kodesh settlement outpost sit in a field in an attempt to prevent Palestinians from farming land in the northern West Bank, on Jan. 2. Both the settlers and Palestinians living in the area claim ownership of the disputed land.

    Reports state that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas insists that talks cannot proceed without a construction freeze on Israeli West Bank settlements, a precondition that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejects.

    -- The Associated Press, European Pressphoto Agency

    Alaa Badarneh / EPA

    An Israeli soldier runs to stop a Jewish settler as she tries to prevent a Palestinian farmer from ploughing his fields near the West Bank village of Jaloud on Jan. 2.

    Alaa Badarneh / EPA

    Israeli soldiers prepare to remove a Jewish settler as she tries to stop a Palestinian farmer from ploughing his fields near the West Bank village of Jaloud near Nablus on Jan. 2.

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    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Palestinians rally, celebrate as UN upgrades their status
    • Palestinians clash with Israeli soldiers over prisoners
    • Israel authorizes additional permits for Palestinian workers
    • West Bank cities erupt in violent protests over escalating prices
    • Jewish settlers voluntarily evacuate West Bank enclave

    85 comments

    I see the Nazi turds have infested this board.

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    Explore related topics: israel, middle-east, palestinian, west-bank, conflict, settlers
  • 12
    Dec
    2012
    4:32am, EST

    Israel vows to withhold $400M in tax revenues from Palestinians over statehood drive

    Murat Kaynak / Anadolu via EPA

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul (left) and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (second left) review the honor guard during a welcoming ceremony in Ankara, Turkey, Tuesday.

    By Reuters

    JERUSALEM - Israel will withhold tax revenues from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' administration until March at least in response to his statehood campaign at the United Nations, Israel's foreign minister said. 

    Under interim peace deals, Israel collects some $100 million a month in duties on behalf of the Palestinian Authority in the occupied West Bank -- money that is badly needed to pay public sector salaries. 

    "The Palestinians can forget about getting even one cent in the coming four months, and in four months' time we will decide how to proceed," Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said in a speech Tuesday night. 

    Israel says Abbas violated previous peace accords by sidestepping stalled negotiations and securing a Palestinian status upgrade in the United Nations last month. 

    Debts for power, water
    Israel has already withheld the December transfer, saying the money would be used to start paying off $200 million the Palestinians owe the Israel Electric Corporation. 

    Lieberman, a hardliner in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's conservative coalition government, said the Palestinians also had another debt with the Israeli water authority that would have to be paid off. 

    "Israel is not prepared to accept unilateral steps by the Palestinian side, and anyone who thinks they will achieve concessions and gains this way is wrong," he said. 

    Palestinians had a major symbolic victory when the United Nations General Assembly voted overwhelmingly to recognize them, but the U.S. argued the new status could set back Palestinians in the path to peace. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    Hamas leader returns to Palestinian territories for first time since 1967

    Yasser Abed Rabbo, a senior Palestinian official, said earlier this month that Israel was guilty of "piracy and theft" by refusing to hand over the funds. 

    The European Union has also criticized Israel for not handing over the cash.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Contractual obligations ... regarding full, timely, predictable and transparent transfer of tax and custom revenues have to be respected," it said on Monday. 

    UN upgrades Palestinian status, bolstering statehood claim

    Israel has previously frozen payments to the Palestinian Authority during times of heightened security and diplomatic tensions, provoking strong international criticism, such as when the U.N. cultural body UNESCO granted the Palestinians full membership a year ago. 

    Abbas's U.N. victory was a diplomatic setback for the United States and Israel, which were joined by only seven other countries in voting against upgrading the Palestinians' observer status to "non-member state", like the Vatican, from "entity." 

    Hours after the U.N. vote, Israel said it would authorize 3,000 new settler homes in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and expedite planning work for thousands more in a geographically sensitive area close to Jerusalem. Critics say this plan would kill off Palestinian hopes of a viable state. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    310 comments

    Now why does this not surprise me.

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    Explore related topics: mideast, israel, tax, abbas, palestinian, featured, avigdor-lieberman
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