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07 February 2011 By Stephen
Lendman Israel is an equal opportunity
abuser, treating women, old men, invalids, and
children like young adults because they're
Palestinians, not Jews, so they're fair game, vilified
as national security threats or terrorists for wanting
freedom, equality, justice and peace. Defence for Children
International (DCI) Palestine "is a national section
of the international non-government child rights
organisation and movement (dedicated to) promoting and
protecting the rights of Palestinian children,"
according to international law principles. Each year, hundreds, under 18,
are arrested, detained, interrogated, tortured, and
prosecuted, around 6,500 since 2000 alone. In June 2009, DCI/Palestine's
report titled, "Palestinian Child Prisoners,"
documented their systematic, institutionalized torture
and abuse, including testimonies providing chilling
evidence, including from Mahmoud speaking for others
saying: "I went from having a normal life
at home to handcuffs, deprivation of sleep, shouting,
threats, rounds of interrogation, serious
accusations," beatings and other abuse. As a result,
"life (is now) dark, filled with fear and pessimism -
tough days that words cannot describe." On January 6, DCI/Palestine
issued an "urgent appeal (for the) children of Silwan,"
an Arab village adjacent to Jerusalem's Old City, one
of 28 such communities incorporated into the city. Evidence of serious forms of
abuse were documented. In 2010, sharp increases in
child arrests occurred. According to Israeli police
data, 1,267 criminal files were opened between
November 2009 and October 2010, accusing children of
throwing stones, based solely on unconfirmed
suspicions. On November 24, 2010, 60
prominent Israeli professionals, including educators,
authors, psychiatrists and psychologists, social
workers, and children's rights specialists wrote Prime
Minister Netanyahu and other top officials saying: "....children and teenagers
related that they had been dragged out of their beds
in the middle of the night or arrested in their
neighborhoods by undercover detectives and special
security forces; taken in for questioning while
handcuffed and unescorted by their parents; in certain
cases, the families were not notified of the arrest in
real time; minors were asked to give names and
incriminate friends and relatives as a condition of
their release; were threatened and humiliated by their
interrogators; and some were even subjected to
physical violence while taken in for questioning and
under interrogation." DCI/Palestine investigated 24
cases, collecting 18 sworn affidavits, 15 from
children, aged seven to 17. Specific violations
included: -- detaining, interrogating, and
abusing children as young as seven; yet under Israeli
law, they're not criminally liable and must be
released; -- 76% reported violence during
arrest, transfer and/or interrogation, including
punching, slapping, kicking, beating with rifle butts,
and in one case, throwing a pen at a child's head
during questioning; -- 61% reported painful hand
ties, yet under section 10B of Israel's Youth Law
relating to trial, punishment and modes of treatment,
other methods should always be employed; restraints
may only be used to prevent escape of harm to others; -- 53% reported interrogations
with no parent present; under Israeli law, they're
entitled to be there, except in special limited cases;
and -- 53% reported threats during
interrogation, suggesting long imprisonments, various
forms of abuse, and other forms of intimidation. Imagine, their alleged "crime"
was stone-throwing, not theft, vandalism, assault or
murder, yet they were treated like dangerous
criminals, beaten, humiliated, isolated, and otherwise
abused. One case involved a seven-year old boy beaten
by soldiers on his way to school. He's now terrified
to leave home. DCI/Palestine's December Bulletin
commemorated the killing of 352 children during Cast
Lead, but regular violence never stops. Last December,
four more Gazan children were shot for being too close
to Israel's border. On December 23, a 17-year old boy
was shot in the head while buying strawberries about
800 meters inside Gaza. On the same day, another
17-year old boy was shot in the right elbow while
collecting gravel about 350 meters from Israel's
border fence. On December 21, a 17-year old was shot
in his right leg collecting building materials about
400 meters inside Gaza. Incidents like these occur
regularly, nonviolent Palestinian civilians, including
children, attacked, abused and at times killed by
Israeli soldiers or police. Gaza remains a war zone,
subjected to regular Israeli incursions, drone and
F-16 attacks, fishermen fired on at sea, farmers
attacked in their fields, and children shot while
buying fruits and vegetable, collecting gravel, wood,
or other materials, grazing goats, or simply living
too close to Israel's border fence. Snipers in
watchtowers use them for target practice. From March 26 through December
23, twenty-three shootings were documented, willful
crimes gone unpunished even though Israeli and some
Western media report them, none in America. Israeli repression devastated all
Gazans, suffocating under siege and reeling from Cast
Lead's aftermath, especially those living too close to
Israel's border fence, in easy range of rogue snipers
able to pick them off with ease. In addition, reports from Gisha,
the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR),
Amnesty International, and other human rights groups
showed little improvement since Israel's announced
siege easing last June, besides regular documented
instances of assaults, shootings and killings. Yet international law absolutely
prohibits targeting civilians and non-military
facilities or infrastructure, regardless of
circumstances. Israel remains systemically in breach,
criminally complicit as a serial violator, flouting
all legal principles with impunity. "Gaza on the edge of no return," Amira Hass headlined on January 6 in the New Statesman, saying: One mother, like others, fears Israeli drones may strike anytime without warning, like Cast Lead's devastating onslaught. "In Gaza slang," drones are called "zanana," three kinds a Hamas official told her. "One watches over us and photographs every move, every person; the second fires missiles at us....And the third kind? Its whole purpose is to annoy us, to drive us crazy." Their use is central to Israeli intimidation and "process of turning Gaza into a vast panopticon, a detention camp under constant supervision and increasing invisible control." For days leading up to Cast Lead, Gazans noticed regular humming. "They grew more anxious - and rightly so." Now every sound scares them, "reawaken(ing) fears of another attack," and small ones happen regularly. Gazans never know when Israel will next strike full force, perhaps with intent to entirely destroy Gaza and kill thousands of its residents. Some feel it's just a matter of time. Israeli leaders commit unspeakable crimes, then lie calling them self-defense, including when young children are shot. In a recent weekly Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) report, incidents, included: -- Israeli air strikes wounding three Gazan civilians; -- soldiers firing at Palestinian workers, farmers, and fisherman in Gaza border areas; -- four Palestinian fishermen arrested, their boat confiscated; -- residences bombed and damaged; -- 30 West Bank incursions and one in Gaza, causing one death, five injuries, and 28 arrests, including nine children, a PLC member and one Israeli journalist; -- two East Jerusalem houses demolished; and -- continued settlement expansion, and settlers allowed to attack Palestinian civilians and property freely. On January 9, Israeli bulldozers began demolishing the old Shepherd Hotel compound in Sheikh Jarrah, to be replaced by 20 new East Jerusalem homes for Jews - on stolen Palestinian land. Hatem Abdel, overseeing Palestinian Jerusalem affairs, called the matter "extremely dangerous." Abdel Qader said Israel is trying to "create (an irreversible) belt of settlements," around East Jerusalem, one Palestinian property demolition at a time until the entire city is Judaized. In 1967, after Israel annexed East Jerusalem, the hotel was declared "absentee property," subject to confiscation. PA-appointed mayor Adnan Husseini called destroying it an "act of barbarism." His family claims ownership and went to court, challenging what led to its sale. After annexation, East Jerusalem residents struggled to stay where their families lived for generations and they were born. Many, however, were forced out, their status to remain revoked. Those there aren't wanted in their own city, facing possible expulsion at the whim of Israeli authorities, targeting all Palestinians for removal. In Occupied Palestine, the rule of law is null and void. Israel rampages freely as it's done for over 43 years, terrifying millions of residents wanting only to live free on their own land, regularly stolen for settlements and other development, excluding unwanted Arabs.
Numerous previous articles discussed it, several specifically on children, accessed through the following links: http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/03/brutalizing-palestinian-children.html http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/04/imprisoning-palestinian-children.html http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/07/palestinian-children-under-occupation.html http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/09/israeli-soldiers-sexually-abuse.html http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/10/israel-shooting-and-electric-shocking.html Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening. http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/. |