Sunday, August 29, 2010

Palestinian rivals crack down harder on opponents

Palestinian rivals crack down harder on opponents

By KARIN LAUB and DIAA HADID
The Associated Press
Sunday, August 29, 2010; 1:43 PM

RAMALLAH, West Bank -- The rival Palestinian governments in the West Bank and Gaza Strip have clamped down harder on opponents and critics in recent months - deepening a nasty split that could prevent Palestinian statehood even if peace talks with Israel kicking off this week succeed against long odds.

New reports by Palestinian rights groups highlight a surprising symmetry in the abuse that the U.S.-backed government of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank and his Iranian-supported rivals Hamas in Gaza inflict on each other.

Both governments carry out arbitrary arrests, ban rivals from travel, exclude them from civil service jobs and suppress opposition media, the rights groups say. Torture in both West Bank and Gaza lockups includes beatings and tying up detainees in painful positions.

Hamas and Abbas' Fatah organization have harassed each other ever since the Islamic militant Hamas seized Gaza in 2007. However, the crackdowns have become more sweeping in recent months as each aims to strengthen its grip on its respective territory.

Just last week, security agents in the West Bank broke up a meeting of independents opposed to Abbas' decision to resume peace talks with Israel, despite government claims that it only targets militants who pose a security threat. In Gaza, Hamas is pushing legislation that is seen as an attempt to take over and silence the respected Independent Palestinian Commission for Human Rights.

"In both the West Bank and Gaza, we are going toward a ... regime in which the security forces intervene in everything," said Shahwan Jabareen of the Palestinian human rights group Al-Haq.

For Gaza resident Assad Saftawi, 21, this has meant four stints in detention after writing an article criticizing Hamas for taxing cigarettes. Heart patient Mohammed Nahhal, a Fatah official, says Hamas prevented him from leaving Gaza for a medical checkup in Jordan, even after he obtained Israeli permission to leave the blockaded territory.

In the West Bank, Nawaf Amr, producer for Al Quds TV, a pro-Hamas satellite station, says his West Bank correspondents face frequent harassment, including having tapes seized and being called for interrogation. Hamas supporter Munir Morie, a 25-year-old carpenter, says he was tortured for a month this spring and still suffers from joint pain.

With each incident, the wedge is hammered deeper and the hostility grows between the two halves of what is meant to be a future Palestine, just as the U.S. relaunches Mideast talks at the White House this week in hopes of getting an agreement within a year.

The talks aim to create a Palestinian state, but it appears unlikely any deal could be implemented as long as the split persists, particularly if Hamas - shunned by Israel and the West as a terror organization - remains in charge in Gaza.

In the West Bank, touted by the international community as the cradle of a democratic Palestine, rights violations committed in the name of protecting that vision could end up destroying it, rights activists say.

Both sides have strong motives for keeping their rivals down.

Abbas fears a Hamas takeover of the West Bank and needs to keep the militants in check to maintain international support. Hamas appears increasingly intolerant of domestic challenges, both because of its isolation and its fundamentalist ideology.

Hamas is increasingly targeting independents and civil groups, which provide a key alternative voice in the territory. Hamas has already closed more than 100 groups in Gaza that were once controlled by Fatah loyalists, said Hamdi Shakoura, who leads the Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights.

Recently, Hamas banned anyone who held a government job before the group took over Gaza - meaning, mainly Fatah loyalists - from serving on the boards of such groups.

The government also stepped up its campaign to impose a strict version of Islam on Gaza's 1.5 million people, most recently banning women from smoking water pipes in public and ordering mannequins wearing lingerie out of display windows.

The crackdown by Abbas' government focuses largely on Islamists, and robust political debate still flourishes in some niches. Still, dozens of journalists have been detained or harassed in both territories, and each side bans the other's newspapers.

The Abbas government said last fall that it was halting abuse in its prisons - and rights groups say it abated for a time. But now complaints of torture have resurfaced, though not as widespread as before.

Hamas activist Nouh Hreish said he was arrested and tortured for a week in December - and there were further repercussions for his family: His brother couldn't get his taxi license renewed and another relative was fired from a teaching job.

"Today, people have the feeling that they live in a police state," said Hreish.

Both governments insist they target only those who pose a potential security threat. They say abuses are the work of individual officers, and violators are punished.

"We don't permit two things, weapons and money laundering," Abbas recently told reporters. "Aside from those two things, anyone can do anything he wants."

Still, both sides appear to have carried out ideological purges.

Hamas gradually moved loyalists into teaching jobs after pro-Fatah teachers went out strike. In the West Bank, the government has fired some 2,500 civil servants since 2007, most of them teachers, said West Bank Hamas leader Mahmoud Ramahi.

Said Abu Ali, the West Bank interior minister, said many teachers have Hamas sympathies, but only those suspected of breaking the law, including by engaging in incitement, are targeted.

"This is a very sensitive sector," he said. "We will not allow our society to turn into a Taliban one."

---

Additional reporting by Associated Press writers Dalia Nammari and Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, and Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City

Court: Israel responsible for Arab girl's death

FILE- In this photo taken on Jan. 2007, a memorial poster showing ten year old Palestinian Abir Aramin is seen on the door of the family home as relatives gather in the West Bank village of Anata, near Jerusalem. A Jerusalem court has said that the state is responsible for the death of Abir Aramin who was killed by a rubber bullet as she stood outside her home, her family's lawyers said Monday, Aug. 17, 2010. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer, File) (Kevin Frayer - AP)
 
 
By DIAA HADID
The Associated Press
Tuesday, August 17, 2010; 4:40 PM
 
JERUSALEM -- A Jerusalem court decided in a ruling made public Tuesday that the Israeli state was responsible for the death of a 10-year-old Palestinian girl killed by gunfire more than three years ago as she stood some distance from a demonstration.
 
The case gained wide attention because the girl's father, Basam Aramin, was a Palestinian militant turned advocate for Israeli-Palestinian coexistence. He helped found Combatants for Peace, a group of former Israeli and Palestinian fighters who work for a peaceful resolution of the conflict.
 
Abir Aramin was critically wounded in January 2007 as Israeli border police were dispersing a demonstration of rock-throwing youths in the village of Anata, north of Jerusalem. The girl was standing some distance away and was hit by a rubber-coated bullet. She died two days later in a Jerusalem hospital.
 
Police initially said she was killed by a stray rock thrown by a Palestinian.
 
"There cannot be any dispute over the conclusion that Abir was hit by a rubber bullet fired by border police, meaning the fire was conducted either due to negligence or violation of the rules of engagement," the court said in its ruling.
 
Israeli border police are paramilitary units responsible for crowd and riot control.
 
During the decades of Palestinian protests against Israeli occupation, Israeli forces have frequently used rubber-coated steel pellets for crowd control. They usually cause painful but non-lethal wounds, but can also be fatal.
 
The court ruled on the case Monday, but lawyers only spoke about the decision on Tuesday.
 
"We received the news with tears," said the father Aramin, 42. "Her killing is an open wound that will bleed through our lives, even if the killer is punished. But certainly, we felt some justice has been achieved so far. For justice to be complete, her killer must be put in jail."
 
The court's decision to blame the state is rare, said the family's lawyer, Leah Tsemel. Cases involving Israeli forces wounding or killing Palestinians rarely make it beyond an initial investigation.
 
Another hearing is expected in October to determine compensation, she added.
 
After the case was closed by police, an Israeli human rights organization pressed for an autopsy, which ended up showing the girl was hit by a stray rubber bullet rather than a rock.
 
The family is also pursuing a separate case in Israel's Supreme Court to charge the policeman who shot the bullet. A police spokesman was not available for comment. The Israeli Justice Ministry said in a statement Tuesday that the evidence is not strong enough to win a conviction.
 
Also Tuesday, two Israeli soldiers were lightly wounded by a mortar shell fired from Gaza. The incident came a day after Israeli troops killed a Palestinian militant from Islamic Jihad. The Israeli military said the militant was planting a bomb along the border.
 
Late Tuesday, Israeli warplanes struck targets including Hamas training facilities in five locations in Gaza, Palestinian security officials said. No one was hurt. The Israeli military had no immediate comment.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

On Facebook: Israeli soldier posed with bound Arab

In this undated photo, originally posted on a Facebook page belonging to Eden Aberjil, and taken from the Israeli blog site sachim.tumblr.com, an Israeli army soldier poses in front of blindfolded men identified in the Israeli media as Palestinian prisoners. The Hebrew in the top right translates as, "Eden Arberjil's photos - army...the best time of my life." Israeli news media and bloggers have identified the soldier in the photos as Aberjil.
 
 
By DIAA HADID
Associated Press Writer
 
A former Israeli soldier posted photos on Facebook of herself in uniform smiling beside bound and blindfolded Palestinian prisoners, drawing sharp criticism Monday from the Israeli military and Palestinian officials.
 
Israeli news websites and blogs showed two photographs of the woman. In one, she is sitting legs crossed beside a blindfolded Palestinian man who is slumped against a concrete barrier. His face is turned downwards, while she leans toward him with her face upturned. Another shows her smiling at the camera with three Palestinian men with bound hands and blindfolds behind her.
 
The incident was a reminder of the fraught relations between Israeli soldiers and the West Bank Palestinians under their control.
 
Israeli soldiers have run into trouble on the social media sites like Facebook and YouTube before. Most recently a group of combat soldiers were reprimanded for breaking into choreographed dance moves while on patrol in the West Bank town of Hebron. The dance featured prominently on YouTube.
 
Palestinian Authority spokesman Ghassan Khatib condemned the photos and said they pointed to a deeper malaise - how Israel's 43-year-old occupation of Palestinians has affected the Israelis who enforce it.
 
"This shows the mentality of the occupier," Khatib said, "to be proud of humiliating Palestinians. The occupation is unjust, immoral and, as these pictures show, corrupting."
 
The Israeli military also criticized the young woman, who Israeli news media and bloggers identified from her Facebook page as Eden Aberjil of the southern Israeli port town of Ashdod. No official confirmed her identity.
 
"These are disgraceful photos," said Capt. Barak Raz, an Israeli military spokesman. "Aside from matters of information security, we are talking about a serious violation of our morals and our ethical code and should this soldier be serving in active duty today, I would imagine that no doubt she would be court-martialed immediately," he told Associated Press Television News.
 
It was not clear whether the army could punish the woman, because she has finished her compulsory military service.
 
The comments by the woman and her friend in an exchange below one photograph suggested how casually the picture was treated, including jokes and sexual innuendoes.
 
"You're the sexiest like that," her friend wrote.
 
"I wonder if he's got Facebook!" the woman in the photograph responded. "I have to tag him in the picture!"
 
Aberjil did not respond to reporters' questions Monday.
 
The photographs were a reminder of snapshots taken in 2003 by American soldiers at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq that showed Iraqi detainees naked, humiliated and terrified. In that case, some soldiers went to prison after the photos came to light.
 
The photographs of the Israeli soldier and the Palestinians, by contrast, show no overt physical abuse or coercion of the prisoners, although they are ridiculed in the comments between the soldier and her friends.
 
Palestinians are routinely handcuffed and blindfolded when they are arrested to stop them from trying to flee.
 

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Police: Israeli also suspect in stabbing in Israel

An Israeli youth walks in front of the family house of of Elias
Abuelazam in the Arab-Jewish town of Ramle, central Israel, Friday,
Aug. 13, 2010. Israeli police said Friday the suspect in stabbings in
three states also was a suspect in a separate stabbing attack in
Israel earlier this year, but charges were never pressed. Abuelazam,
33, was arrested Wednesday night in Atlanta before a flight to Israel,
his native country, and charged with attempted murder in a July 27
knife strike in Flint that put the victim in a hospital for a week.
Authorities said more charges were expected in Michigan, Ohio and
Virginia.(AP Photo/Dan Balilty) (Dan Balilty - AP)

Police: Israeli also suspect in stabbing in Israel

By DIAA HADID
The Associated Press
Saturday, August 14, 2010; 3:12 AM

RAMLE, Israel -- A man accused of going on a stabbing spree across
three U.S. states and who was once suspected in a stabbing near his
hometown in Israel has baffled profilers, who say murder does not
appear to have been his goal.

So it remains a mystery as to what drove Elias Abuelazam, who
relatives described as a shy man from a respected family who had
recently become despondent.

Abuelazam is suspected of attacking people in Michigan, Ohio and
Virginia, leaving 13 people wounded in addition to the dead. He was
arrested Wednesday in Atlanta as he prepared to board a flight to his
native Israel, where relatives said he lived until his family sent him
to the U.S. when he was 18.

The 33-year-old man appeared briefly Friday in an Atlanta courtroom
and agreed to return to Michigan to face an attempted murder charge in
one of the attacks - a July 27 stabbing in Flint, Mich., that put the
victim in the hospital for a week.

Authorities said more charges were expected in the three states.

A family member in this poverty-stricken community said Abuelazam had
become unhappy about his personal life in recent months. And others in
the Arab neighborhood where he grew up expressed shock that the man
they knew could be a suspect in the gruesome attacks.

"I wouldn't believe it even if I saw it with my own eyes," said
Abuelazam's 49-year-old cousin, also named Elias Abuelazam.

He said that when his cousin last visited earlier this year, he was
tense, unhappy and unsure what to do with his life. The younger
Abuelazam said he wanted to get married and settle down in Israel.

"He seemed confused," the cousin said. But he said suggestions that
Abuelazam was a killer were "malicious rumors."

He said news of the arrest had devastated Abuelazam's mother, who was
excitedly waiting for a text message to pick her son up at the airport
when she heard the news. "She couldn't stand up ... She was
hysterical," he said.

During Friday's court hearing, Abuelazam was expressionless as he
responded to questions from the judge. He initially said he wanted to
stay in Georgia. But the judge told him he would have to return to
Michigan if he wanted to fight the allegations.

After the judge explained the process further, Abuelazam agreed to
waive his extradition rights and go back to Michigan.

"All right, then I'll do so," he said. "It sounds more logical to go
right now than in 90 days."

Back in Israel, the family's modest two-story stone home, in a
Christian section of Ramle's historic old city, remained shuttered and
dark on Friday, and Abuelazams' mother, Hiam, was holed up inside.

In a brief radio interview, she described her son as a "religious,
God-fearing man" and said she refused to believe he was a killer.

However, Israeli police said Abuelazam was a suspect in a stabbing
attack early this year, although charges were never pressed.

A senior police commander said Abuelazam was believed to have stabbed
a close acquaintance in the face with a screwdriver during an argument
in a parked car about six months ago. The commander said police
dropped the case because the victim refused to cooperate with
investigators.

He said Israeli police would request samples of Abuelazam's DNA to
investigate unsolved stabbings in the Ramle area. The city is known as
a violent hot spot of drug activity.

The commander spoke on condition of anonymity because he was barred by
police rules from speaking to the media.

The alleged victim in the attack, Ziad Shahin, denied being assaulted
by Abuelazam but had a large scar from his right ear to his throat.
Speaking outside his candy store in Ramle, Shahin said he was born
with the mark.

Ramle's roughly 3,000-member Arab Christian community is tight-knit,
and residents were extremely cautious about discussing Abuelazam's
past.

Acquaintances said Abuelazam's father died of illness when he was a
baby, and that he was raised by his single mother and four sisters.
The family owned a grocery store and two other shops in town, and the
mother was well regarded. Abuelazam, a member of Ramle's Greek
Orthodox community, attended two prestigious Catholic schools, they
said.

Abuelazam's most recent visit came earlier this year, and he returned
to the U.S. in the spring, shortly before the stabbing spree began in
Flint, with the attacker approaching men on lonely roads at night and
asking for directions or help with a broken-down car. Then he would
pull out a knife, plunge it into his victim and speed away.

All but four of the 18 attacks occurred the Flint area. The others
were in Leesburg, Va., and Toledo, Ohio. In one case, the attacker
used a hammer.

The youngest victim was 15; the oldest 67. At least 15 victims were
black, although there's no evidence that race played a role,
authorities said. A motive was not known.

Robert Keppel, a retired Washington state homicide detective who
profiles serial killers, said it's rare for someone to attack males
exclusively.

Whoever is responsible for the 18 attacks, "he's just getting off on
stabbing people. He's not guaranteeing that they die," said Keppel,
who investigated the Ted Bundy homicides in the Pacific Northwest in
the 1970s.

"For some reason, the satisfaction is just in the action of the
stabbings," Keppel said. "He's only turned on by the act of the
approach and the initial stabbing. He's got some hang-ups. ... He's a
rare killer among rare killers."

Also Friday, police in Leesburg, Va., said they were investigating
whether Abuelazam is responsible for the March 2009 stabbing death of
a 44-year-old man who lived across from Abuelazam in a townhome
community.

If authorities connect Abuelazam to that slaying, he could face the
death penalty. Michigan, where the other deadly attacks occurred, does
not have capital punishment.

A tip led police this week to a market outside Flint where Abuelazam
had worked for a month. Investigators talked to employees, and a store
video showed that he matched the description of the man wanted by
authorities.

But Abuelazam was gone: He told people he was off to Virginia and had
not been seen since his Aug. 1 shift.

Police in Arlington, Va., stopped him for a traffic offense Aug. 5 and
arrested him on a 2008 misdemeanor assault charge from Leesburg, Va.,
where he had lived and worked in the mental-health field. A hammer and
a knife were found inside the Chevrolet Blazer, which was returned to
him after his brief detention. There was no national alert for
Abuelazam or his vehicle.

Virginia authorities "had no idea at that time that he was involved in
these crimes," Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton in Michigan
said.

Abuelazam eventually returned to Michigan, obtained a $3,000 airline
ticket to Tel Aviv from his uncle and made it as far as the
Hartsfield-Jackson Airport in Atlanta, where officers snatched the man
in flip-flops and shorts after he was paged over the intercom.

---

Associated Press writers Kate Brumback in Atlanta; Corey Williams and
David Runk in Flint, Mich.; Ed White in Detroit; Greg Bluestein in
Atlanta; Nafeesa Syeed in Washington; Matthew Barakat in Leesburg,
Va., and the AP News Research Center in New York contributed to this
report.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Gaza power plant shuts down during heat wave as Palestinian ...


Gaza power plant shuts down during heat wave as Palestinian infighting prevents fuel shipments

By Ibrahim Barzak (CP) – 22 minutes ago

GAZA, Palestinian Territories — Engineers shut down Gaza City's sole power plant on Saturday because of a lack of fuel, switching off electricity to some half a million people in the midst of a heat wave.

The fuel for the plant comes from the rival Palestinian government in the West Bank which says it has reduced shipments because the Gaza's Hamas government is behind on payments

"The electricity was cut in Gaza City because of there wasn't enough fuel for the station," said power station official Suheil Skeik.

The plant serves Gaza City and its surroundings, while the remaining million people in the rest of the tiny territory rely on neighbouring Egypt and Israel for their power needs.

An engineer said they expected an emergency fuel shipment on Sunday, which would allow them to restart one of the plant's four turbines and supply a few hours of power.

For the past few months the plant has supplied just six to 10 hours of power a day because of the ongoing problems getting enough fuel from the West Bank government.

Residents who can afford it use generators to supplement the shortage and in Gaza City's commercial district roaring generators squat on the sidewalk filling the air with the smell of gasoline.

But a complete power cut is expected to deepen misery in Gaza, where residents have suffered through a sweltering heat wave — severe even by the standards of this hot, dry seaside enclave. Temperatures have soared well over 95 degrees Fahrenheit (35 degrees Celsius) for the past few weeks.

Gaza's rulers, the militant Islamic group Hamas, are meant to collect utility bills and send the cash to their rivals, the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, which use it to buy the fuel.

Palestinian Authority spokesman Ghassan Khatib says Hamas isn't sending enough money, and on average, they were receiving only $1.3 million a month from the distribution company, while they were paying $9 million for the fuel.

"We need some transparency here. There has to be some kind of audit," Khatib said.

Skeik said the plant sent about one million dollars last week, and expected to send another million in coming days.

Although the Palestinian Authority hasn't had a presence in Gaza since Hamas seized power over the territory in June 2007, it receives aid from the international community to pay for part of Gaza's bills.

____

Associated Press Writer Diaa Hadid contributed to this report from Jerusalem.