MIFTAH
Friday, 19 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Israeli settlers from the Shilo settlement near Ramallah destroyed 250 olive trees on October 10. These settler attacks on olive trees have been very characteristic of the past week that marked the season of olive harvest. Similar incidents throughout the West Bank were reported where 120 trees were destroyed around Nablus, 40 in the town of Beitillu near Ramallah, 100 newly-planted olive saplings and around 60 vine trees in Al-Khader village near Bethlehem in addition to settler attacks on farmers harvesting olives in Hebron. Human rights groups have raised alarm over settler attacks and vandalism that were committed sometimes in the presence of the Israeli army. B’tselem- an Israeli rights group which has also documented some of these incidents has called on the army and police to investigate reported incidents and provide protection to farmers who need it. Olive trees are the main source of income for many Palestinian families that rely on agriculture with the UN Office for the Coordination of Human Affairs reporting that over 7,500 olive trees were destroyed throughout 2011, costing Palestinian farmers over $500,000.

Israeli daily Haaretz reported on October 12 that the Israeli Civil Administration is ignoring reports of the theft of soil from Palestinian lands around illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank. The report said Palestinians around settlements of Almon near Jerusalem, Ibei Hanal outpost, Givat Avigail, Beit El, Maaleh Mikhmash, the Shiloh Vallley and Susisiya have lost tons of soil from private Palestinian lands around the settlement. A police officer has replied to these accusations quoting the lack of law enforcement tools for such kinds of theft as the problem.

Israeli forces handed out a stop-work order to a resident in Dier Netham, a village near Ramallah but in Area C which according to the Oslo Accords is under Israeli military control. The soldiers raided the village on October 11 to deliver the order and clashed with local youth in the process. Similar orders were given to residents near Bethlehem in the village of Nahhalin a day before, on October 10.

Israel attacked several sites in Gaza early October 13 which the Israeli military said were in retaliation to a projectile launched from Gaza and that landed in the city of Netivot on Friday. The airstrikes targeted a training site for Hamas’ military wing in Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City, another training site near Gaza’s power plant in Nuseirat refugee camp, and a an open area in Bureij refugee camp. The attack caused material damage to buildings near these sites but no injuries were reported.

The military wing of the Popular Resistance Committees active in Gaza said on October 12 that the Hezbollah-sent drone that penetrated the air space of southern Israel last week, would help the resistance of Palestinians deter Israel from attacking them. The Brigades’ support for the incident came after Hezbollah admitted to having sent the drone, which Israel shot down last weekend. Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah said in a televised speech on October 11 that the drone parts were manufactured in Iran and passed through Lebanon and Israel at different parts of the assembly process before it was sent to Israel.

Three rockets were fired on Israeli military vehicles east of Rafah, Gaza. The Hamas military wing Izz Addin Al-Wassam Birgade said on October 10 that the rockets were launched to force the vehicles to withdraw. An Israeli army spokeswoman has confirmed the rocket attack but said the vehicles were undertaking “routine military activity near the fence in southern Gaza”.

The Palestinian Prisoners Society reported that there was a clash between Israeli prison guards and Palestinian prisoners in the Shata Prison on October 12, after 70 officers raided a cell in which the Palestinian prisoners fought back. One section of the prison was later closed as a result and three of the Palestinian detainees moved to isolation.

Palestinian lawyers walked out of the Israeli Salim military court on October 11 in protest over body searches they were subjected to before entering the courtroom. Ministry of Prisoner Affairs said that Palestinian lawyers would boycott Israeli courts over these searches which they said are a violation of international law. The ministry also added that restriction put on Palestinian lawyers is yet another one of Israel’s strategies to undermine Palestinian prisoners’ right for legal representation.

PA economy minister Jawad al-Naji said on October 12 that opening up Arab markets to Palestinian products would boost the Palestinian economy. The Minister who attended the conference of the Standing Committee for Economic and Commercial Cooperation of the Organization for Islamic Cooperation said he presented projects about revitalizing the Palestinian economy through rehabilitation of Palestinian economies, seeking new ones and establishing commercial centers and exhibitions. He has also urged the 57 member countries of the organization to provide the PA with financial support.

The union for university professors and staff in the West Bank and Gaza said on October 11 that professors and staff would go on strike on October 16 and for two days the following week. Head of the union – Amjad Barham said that the Ministry of Education had failed to address the unions’ demands for cost-of-living adjustment to salaries, health insurance for retired staff and the abolition of taxes on end-of-service pay.

The PA anti-corruption commission is investigating PLO-owned land registered to individual PLO leaders, commission chief Rafiq Natsha said on October 10. The commission retrieved about 400 dunams of PLO-owned land registered to individual PLO leaders so far. The commission which only refers cases to judicial authorities for prosecution said that some leaders have voluntarily approached the commission to return PLO land that was registered in their names while others claim private ownership of the land.

President Mahmoud Abbas informed European diplomats that he will resume peace talks with Israel after the UN vote on Palestinian status update as a non-member state in the general assembly. Abbas said on October 9 that a freeze on expansion of settlements may not be a precondition for returning to peace talks with Israel if the UN recognizes Palestine as a state. The President of the General Assembly said last week that a General Assembly vote on a Palestinian bid for a status upgrade will most likely be conducted mid-November.

An Israeli settler is reported to have been stabbed by a Palestinian near Bethlehem on October 10. Israeli and Palestinian officials have identified the attacker as a Palestinian but have differed in their account of details of the event. While Israeli police framed it as a “terrorist act”, Palestinian medics said the suspect himself was attacked. In similar news, a settler was reported to have run over a Palestinian teenager in Hebron’s Old City on October 12.

Three Israeli settlers in the south Hebron hills were arrested on October 8 for attacking undercover Israeli police posing as Palestinian shepherds. The settlers are under Israeli custody for attacking the Israeli policemen, thinking they are Palestinian shepherds.

 
 
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