Bush Says No to Peace - We Say No to Bush
Bush Says No to Peace - We Say No to Bush
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[Through billboard we forward about twice a week what is on the agenda, based upon our own material and on announcements received from others. We include articles and reports. For more information, approach the addresses appearing in each item.]
CONTENTS
[1] New jailed refusenik,
Saturday Yesh Gvul vigil Athlit, + more
[2] Saturday:
Hadash demo outside American Embassy T-A 6.30 pm
[3]
Peace Now weekend protests
[4] ACRI, B'Tselem, Hamoked
and PHR-Israel:
Law Denying Compensation - Black
Mark on the Laws of Israel
[5] Two million Palestinians
under curfew
[6] Fighting for his day in court, Moshe
Gorali - Ha’aretz, June 26
[7] The Cantonization of the
West Bank by Amira Has
[8] Rebuilding Palestinian Homes
Together
BEGINS
[1] New jailed refusenik, Saturday Yesh Gvul vigil Athlit, + more
------- Forwarded message follows -------
From: "peretz kidron"
YESH GVUL Dear friend, Sgt.
First Class Amit Bar-Tzedeq, an Armoured Corps reservist,
was sentenced on June 16 to a 21 day confinement (till July
11) at a tank base in eastern Galilee. p Bar-Tzedeq (28) is
single and lives in Tel Aviv, where he works as a director
of community theatre. Amit is a Yesh Gvul activist, and
was one of the original signatories of the Courage to Refuse
letter in January 2001. This is his second sentence for
refusal to serve in the Occupied Territories, after being
jailed for 28 days in Feb.-March 2001.
We don't yet have
Amit's military address, so messages of support can be sent
to: Amit Bar- Tzedeq PO Box 16238 Tel Aviv E-mail:
amitbtz@zahav.net.il Letters of protest on behalf of Amit
and the other refuseniks to: Mr. Binyamin Ben-Eliezer,
Minister of Defence, Ministry of Defence, 37 Kaplan St.,
Tel-Aviv 61909, Israel. E-mail: mailto:sar@mod.gov.il or
mailto:pniot@mod.gov.il Fax: ++972-3-696-27-57 /
++972-3-691-69-40 / ++972-3-691-79-15. *** Yesh Gvul
will hold a solidarity vigil for Amit Bar-Tzedeq and the
rest of the jailed refuseniks on Saturday June 29th on the
hill above Prison No.6 (Athlit). Meeting: 12:30, Old
Haifa-Hedera highway, Bet Oren junction Transportation:
Jerusalem (Binyanei Haumma) 10:00 Tel Aviv (Rakevet Tzafon,
Arlozorov-Namir) 11:00 *** Our programme for adoption of
jailed refuseniks is beginning to take off: 1. Sefi Sendik
has been adopted by the Tikkun group in the San Francisco
area contact person Paola Taranta -
ptaranta@california.com 2. Itai Swirsky has been adopted
by a group in West Lafayette, Indiana: contact person Sheila
Rosenthal rosefam6@earthlink.net 3. Guy Rosin is adopted
by a group at U. of Chicago, contact person Yali Amit
amit@marx.uchicago.edu 4. David Zonsheine (released from
jail pending the outcome of his petition to the Supreme
Court for a formal courtmartial) has been adopted by Bubbes
and Zaydes for Peace in the Middle East (Susan Miller,
point person suski@navpoint.com) *** Yesh Gvul's rally
of solidarity with the refuseniks, with participation of
performing artists and public figures, will take place on
Friday July 12, in Tel Aviv. Preparations are in full swing,
full details, location etc. to come. [2] Saturday:
demo Tel-Aviv outside American Embassy 6.30 pm -------
Forwarded message follows ------- From:
Communist Party of Israel Bush Says No
to Peace We Say No to Bush The Democratic Front for
Peace and Equality (HADASH) calls for a demonstration
against Bush's cynical support for Sharon's attack on peace
and plans for the reoccupation of the Palestinian
territories. The demonstration will take place this
Saturday, June 29, 2002 at 6:30 in the evening outside the
U.S. Embassy on Hayarkon St. Tel-Aviv! for more
information: 03/6293944 [3]
Peace Now weekend protests ------- Forwarded message
follows ------- To:
ddremez@netvision.net.il From: Didi Remez
Date sent: Thu, 27 Jun
2002 18:39:13 +0200 SATURDAY NIGHT: PROTESTS IN J'LEM,
TA, HAIFA, BEERSHEVA AND KEFAR SABA This Saturday night,
June 29, protests will be held in Tel-Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa
Beersheva and Kefar Saba. p This weekend activists will
man 28 intersections countrywide, hanging signs and
distributing materials. "A solid majority of Israelis
support a withdrawal from the Occupied Territories and the
dismantling of the settlements. Yet Sharon and Ben-Eliezer,
acting on behalf of a small minority of the public, continue
to expand settlements, reoccupy Palestinian areas and reject
any notion of political negotiations. Israel requires
another kind of leadership," say the organizers. PROTESTS
* Jerusalem: PM's residence, 20:00. Among the speakers: Yuli
Tamir * Tel-Aviv: Tayelet (Seaside promenade), near
McDonalds, 20:00. p * Haifa: Merkaz Hacarmel, 19:00
(organized by the Haifa Peace Forum.) * Beersheva: "Big"
shopping center, 20:00. * Kefar Saba: "Arim" shopping
center, 20:00 (organized by the Sharon Area Peace
Coalition.) Further Information: Press: Didi Remez,
Peace Now Spokesman, 054-302796 or didi@peacenow.org.il
Activists - to get involved in planning and organization of
activities contact: [In Tel-Aviv] Ori Ginat, 054-405157 or
ori@peacenow.org.il [In Jerusalem] Shiri Iram, 054-687539
or shiri@peacenow.org.il [In the Sharon area] Mary
Shweitzer, 054-638399 or mary@peacenow.org.il [Everywhere
else] Noa Millman, 054-556052 or noa@peacenow.org.il Peace
Now Website: www.peacenow.org.il Snail mail address: PO Box
29828, Tel-Aviv Israel Phone: 972-3-5663291, 972-2-5660648
Fax: 972-3-5663286
[4] ACRI, B'Tselem, Hamoked and PHR-Israel: Law
Denying Compensation - Black Mark on the Laws of
Israel ------- Forwarded message follows ------- Date
sent: Wed, 26 Jun 2002 14:07:33 +0200 From:
"Lior Yavne - B'Tselem" 26 June
2002 Association for Civil Rights in Israel, B'Tselem,
Hamoked: Center for the Defence of the Individual,
Physicians for Human Rights - Israel Joint Statement The
Knesset’s Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee today
approved the proposed law denying compensation to
Palestinians injured by Israeli Forces BLACK MARK ON THE
LAWS OF ISRAEL Today the Knesset’s Constitution, Law, and
Justice Committee approved the proposed law denying
compensation to persons injured by Israeli security forces
in the Occupied Territories. The proposed law will soon be
submitted to the Knesset for second and third readings, and
thus pass into law. p The proposed law severely infringes
the basic right of persons injured by the negligent or
intentional acts of IDF soldiers, by attempting to expand
the definition of combat activities, for which the state is
exempt from compensation. Human rights organizations
repeat and emphasize that the purpose of the law is not to
protect IDF soldiers against claims relating to their acts
of combat. Rather, it is intended to save state treasury
money regarding claims based on injury resulting from the
intentional or negligent acts of IDF soldiers, such as
firing in violation of army regulations. This purpose
completely contravenes the fundamental values of the State
of Israel. The human rights organizations add that the
proposed law as a whole is an expression of lack of faith in
the courts' ability to determine the truth, and denies the
courts discretion in these matters. The proposed law
severely infringes the right to bodily integrity, property,
and equality, and contravenes the rule of law and the
fundamental principles of Israeli and international
law. Leading jurists at Israeli universities agree with
this assessment. The attempt to enact a law whose
objective is to deny existing rights, leaving the injured
with no relief, is unprecedented. Human dignity, the
sanctity of life, and the right to bodily integrity are
among the basic values of Israeli law. If passed, the law
would place an black mark on the laws of
Israel. ------------- For details and a copy of the
position paper, contact: Tally Gur, The Association for
Civil Rights in Israel, 051-890714 Lior Yavneh, B’Tselem -
050-387230 or 03-6106666 (pager 31146) [5] Two million
Palestinians under curfew ------- Forwarded message
follows ------- From: "Palestine Monitor
Alquds" Date sent: Wed, 26 Jun
2002 19:44:00 +0200 The Palestine Monitor, A PNGO
Information Clearinghouse Information Brief 2 million
Palestinians under curfew June 26 2002 Currently all
Palestinian cities in the West Bank, except Jericho, are
under strict military imposed 24-hour curfew. In real terms
this means that almost two million Palestinians in the West
Bank are confined to their houses with heavy Israeli
military presence on the streets enforcing the curfew. This
situation seriously impinges on the safety of the civilian
population: patients cannot get to hospital, people are
prevented from going to work, families cannot buy necessary
food and medical supplies, children cannot go to
kindergarten or even out to play and students are prevented
from sitting their final exams. Today a seven years old
boy, Bassam Ghassan As-Saadi, was killed by Israeli soldiers
in the Jenin refugee camp. He was out playing with other
children when Israeli troops opened fire on them. Bassam was
hit by live ammunition all over his body. Twelve year old
Fida’ Nimr Abu Qandil was injured in the leg in the same
incident. The curfew is enforced by tanks and military
patrols in addition to snipers positioned to shoot at anyone
violating the curfew. Only when the Israeli army lifts the
curfew can people leave their houses, but even then without
full assurance of their safety. Last Friday three children
and one adult were killed and several others injured when
Israeli troops opened fire at them after conflicting
information regarding the lifting of the curfew. The same
confusion and chaos occurred in Ramallah yesterday leaving
people injured by tear gas and rubber bullets. Villages
and rural areas are already isolated and disconnected from
their surroundings due to the closure and siege. However the
current curfew regime imposed on the main cities has severe
effects on these villages as they rely on the cities for
essential services such as medical care, education and
employment. Currently even emergency services are
inaccessible to villagers due to the curfews inside the
cities. The lengthy duration and far-reaching scope of
the curfews clearly demonstrates that these are collective
punitive measures imposed by the Israeli army upon the
Palestinian civilian population. Currently the whole
population suffers from the effects of the curfew. The use
of collective punishment by the occupying power, in this
case the imposition of prolonged and wide-spanning curfews
is prohibited and illegal according to article 33 of the
Fourth Geneva Convention. Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi said
today: “During the last days many people have called the
Palestinian Medical Relief with desperate pleas for
help. People need medical treatment, medicines and some
people are also running out of food and milk supplies. I
fear a humanitarian crisis. In Ramallah today the Israeli
army detained and seriously harassed a 57 year old American
volunteer while she was assisting the Medical Relief in
distributing humanitarian assistance”. Palestinian cities
currently under curfew: · Nablus: under curfew since 21st
of June · Jenin: under curfew since 19th of June · Beitunia
(near Ramallah): under curfew since 19th of June
· Qalqiliya: under curfew since 22nd of June · Tulkarem:
under curfew since 19th of June · Bethlehem: under curfew
since 19th of June · Ramallah: under curfew since 24th of
June · Hebron: under curfew since 25th of June · Tubas and
Arrabe villages near Jenin: under curfew since 25th of
June For more information contact The Palestine Monitor
+972 (0) 52 396 196 and see www.palestinemonitor.org [6]
Fighting for his day in court, Moshe Gorali - Ha’aretz, June
26
http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=180174&contras
sID=2&subContrassID=5&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y By Moshe
Gorali Ha’aretz, June 26 2002 In an unusual move, First
Lieutenant (Res.) David Zonsheine was released from custody
on Monday - at least temporarily. Zonsheine, a 29-year-old
software engineer and reserve officer in an elite
paratroopers unit, refused to serve in the territories
during Operation Defensive Shield. His commanders decided
to bring him before a superior officer in a disciplinary
hearing, but Zonsheine asked to present his case in formal
proceedings before a military court. The military prosecutor
of the IDF Central Command, Lt. Col. Ro'i Ginot, denied
Zonsheine's request. He was then tried before Brig. Gen.
Tal Rousso, who sentenced him to 35 days in prison.
p Zonsheine did not give up. Attorney Michael Sfarad from
Avigdor Feldman's law firm petitioned the High Court of
Justice on behalf of Zonsheine to order the IDF to comply
with his request to be tried in a military
court. Zonsheine won a temporary injunction last week, and
the court ordered a hearing date set as soon as possible.
The hearing took place on Monday, after Zonsheine had
already sat in prison for 13 days. A three-justice panel
including Aharon Barak, Dorit Beinish and Ayala Procaccia
decided that more time would be required to consider the
case and proposed that the prisoner be released in the
meantime. Attorney Yuval Roitman, representing the IDF,
agreed to release Zonsheine. p Zonsheine is taking a
considerable risk: a military court is authorized to hand
down a two-year sentence for the offense Zonsheine is
charged with - "failure to carry out an order." On the other
hand, an officer who tries a soldier in a disciplinary
hearing can deliver a sentence of 35 days at most. Zonsheine
received the maximum sentence in his disciplinary hearing,
but he was not provided an opportunity to present his
ideological defense. In addition, his attorney argued, he
is entitled to a serious legal procedure and ruling that
befit such a weighty matter. p Not just guard duty The
army has good reasons not to upgrade the refuseniks from
disciplinary hearings to court proceedings. In particular,
the IDF is not interested in providing them a platform for
ideological debate. In addition, as attorney Roitman
expressed the IDF policy: "The petitioner is asking to hide
the disciplinary hue of the offense. The refusal to carry
out a command is a simple and clear disciplinary matter."
Attorney Sfarad heatedly objects: "This is not a matter
of refusing to wear a beret or failing to do guard duty.
Disciplinary hearings are meant to deal with minor
violations or to respond quickly with serious breaches of
discipline, and this does not apply to the case before us."
Sfarad built his case on an article of military law that
grants a soldier the right to ask to be tried in a military
court. Roitman replied that "the law gave the IDF Judge
Advocate General control over this process [that is, to
decide whether to send a case to a disciplinary hearing or a
military court - M. G.] and his decision was certainly
reasonable." Since the start of Operation Defensive
Shield, there have been about 80 cases of refusal and all of
them have been handled in disciplinary hearings. Only
Zonsheine is insisting on reaching a military court.
p "The arguments that I wish to present," he wrote in his
request, "can be heard only in the framework of a trial in
military court. Since the officer in a disciplinary hearing
is not a jurist, and the army does not allow representation
by attorneys before these officers, the legal questions that
should determine whether I am indeed guilty of an offense
or, as I claim, am innocent of any crime, cannot be heard in
a disciplinary hearing." Zonsheine says the army should
also have an interest in hearing the issues that he is
raising in a military court. Otherwise, reserve soldiers
will continue to be tried in disciplinary hearings for
similar offenses without any real decisions being made.
p Ostensibly, the High Court is supposed to rule only on
the question of whether the judge advocate general made a
reasonable decision when determining that the case involves
a disciplinary infraction and does not belong in military
court. But Sfarad has already managed to put before the High
Court justices some of the main arguments of his defense:
"This involves a refusal to carry out a command that the
petitioner regarded as blatantly illegal. He is entitled to
a defense of necessity, both from the normal criminal
perspective and the constitutional perspective, according to
which necessity of conscience is part of human dignity. The
danger to which the petitioner was exposed must also be
taken into consideration, a danger that the honorable
President Barak recently noted - the possibility of being
brought to trial before an international criminal court that
is soon to be established." The message is clear: can an
officer presiding over a disciplinary hearing, who is not a
jurist, cope with such heavy legal artillery? Does he fully
understand the meaning of the necessity defense? Is he aware
of the new system of balances that the constitutional
revolution has imposed? Attorney Roitman slipped into
this trap in his response, which aroused a stir among the
crowd (sympathetic to Zonsheine) in the packed
courtroom. `The petitioner was not sent to carry out an
assassination," Roitman said, "but rather to reserve duty in
Judea and Samaria. Perhaps this argument can be raised
against a certain command, and then it might be handled
differently." Sfarad definitely noted this argument.
He'll be sure to use it when his petition against the
legality of targeted killings is heard. The fact that the
state's representative chose to use this example of
assassinations to illustrate the possibility of legitimate
refusal is liable to help in this petition. p When the
hearing ended on Monday and the justices left the room,
Zonsheine's supporters shouted out in celebration, something
that rarely occurs in the halls of the Supreme Court. They
saw the justices' indecision as an encouraging sign, but the
victory in getting the petition heard also means an
escalation of the confrontation. This escalation will put
the refuseniks to the test and demand a higher price than
media and legal campaigns. The state has so far managed to
generally defuse the pockets of refusal, which have yet to
pull the Israeli public into a real debate. This is because,
among other reasons, there are no prisoners of conscience
withering away in prison for dozens of years, turning into
symbols of identification, around whom the struggle is
waged. The successful struggle in South Africa, for example,
was symbolized by Nelson Mandela, who sat in prison for 35
years, not the maximum 35 days that Israel "agrees" to allot
to its refuseniks. [7] The Cantonization of the West Bank
by Amira Has ------- Forwarded message follows
------- Date sent: Tue, 25 Jun 2002 14:05:43
+0200 From: Yehudit Keshet
[The following article by Amira
Has is one of several which appeared in the Hebrew edition
of Ha'aretz newspaper but not in the English edition. For
more such articles, turn to Yehudit Keshet
Diary of Closure: Besieging
Ramallah or The Cantonization of the West Bank by Amira
Has (Hebrew edition of Ha’aretz newspaper, 23 June
2002.). The group of women surrounded by clouds of dust,
bombarded by the noise of car motors and exhaust fumes, and
did not know what to do. “Looks like it’s final”, said one
of them, “the soldiers won’t let us through”. p The women
are residents of Ramallah, teachers in Palestinian schools
in the villages south- east of Ramallah. In the last week
in April 2002, after three weeks of enforced vacation
because of the Israeli army’s invasion of the West Bank
(Operation Defensive Wall) and the curfew placed on
Ramallah, they were returning to work. That is, they were
trying to return to work. p As they have been doing for
the past five months, the soldiers at the Kalandia
checkpoint, the southern exit from Ramallah, separated
Palestinian bearers of blue ID passes (Jerusalem residents)
and bearers of orange or green passes (West Bank residents).
p Jerusalemites can pass, others cannot. In summer the
checkpoint opens at 6:00 a.m. and closes at 7:00 in the
evening. Sometimes the soldiers don’t pay strict
attention to women, and some of the teachers were able to
assume the confident appearance of Jerusalemites, sure of
their identity cards, and flow with the crowd of adults and
students hurrying along the margins of the road - to work,
to school, to the clinic, to visit family – to the other
side of the checkpoint. Mostly they took the risk of
crossing via the quarry and the field to the east of the
checkpoint, together with hundreds of other West Bankers.
There, especially during ‘rush hour’ soldiers would stand on
a small hilltop and throw tear gas and stun grenades into
the crowd to prevent them from reaching the main road. At
all events, since the beginning of May 2002 even this exit
has been closed: Israeli army (IDF) troops have erected a
high barbed wire fence along the fields, the quarry and the
hillock that stretch eastwards of the checkpoint. The fence
reaches the village of Jaba in the east and blocks the
exit to the road and the Palestinian neighbourhood of A-Ram
to the south. An APC, and a military or Border police jeep
are permanently stationed at the entrance to the road
leading to the quarry and the soldiers or policemen check
the ID’s of everyone who presumes to outsmart the rules of
the checkpoint. If someone is caught and, for his sins, he
is a West Bank resident, the ID is taken away and he is
held in detention for hours at the checkpoint army post. If
he is not arrested, he is sent home at dusk. p At the
checkpoint itself, people huddle behind strands of barbed
wire and concrete blocks and wait until the soldier, behind
his concrete barricade some several meters distant, calls
them and checks their ID’s. Sometimes people are required
to lift their shirts. In the background, an APC or two
comes and goes, a military jeep honks and wails, a soldier
aims his gun downwards from the look-out post above.
Sometimes, traffic is stopped, as happened on the afternoon
of May 5 2002. The soldiers told the many pedestrians, who
had been detained for two hours and were standing nervously
behind the concrete blocks and barbed wire, that a
suspicious vehicle had been located. Later they said that a
terrorist had been found with a belt of explosives.
Suddenly they threw tear gas grenades into the crowd. p
Women clutching their children ran in panic from the fumes.
Old people coughing and weeping wandered off leaning for
support on someone. Youngsters giggled, they are used to
tear gas. p The army spokesman knew nothing of a suspicious
car nor of a suicide bomber, but knew for sure that stones
had been thrown at the soldiers. However, the writer, who
was at Kalandia at the time, did not see a single stone
thrown at the soldiers during the hour prior to the tear gas
being thrown. Later, a soldier threw a stun grenade among
the cars parked beyond the checkpoint area. Another soldier
demanded that the drivers reverse, all the while aiming his
gun at them, shouting and cursing. The taxi drivers waiting
there for passengers started up in panic and fled. Because
of the chaos a traffic jam ensued, which only increased the
sense of panic because no one knew whether the soldiers
would continue to throw their stun and gas grenades.
Suddenly an APC appeared among the crowds and vehicles, who
did not know where to put themselves. “The Humanitarian
Officer” According to transitees at Kalandia, sights like
these are regular occurrences, a claim supported by
journalists, staff of international organizations who also
pass there. They describe the lengthy and unexplained
delays, edgy soldiers armed with stun grenades only 10
meters from the long and anxious line-up of people hurrying
to work for which they are constantly late. p They talk
about the APC’s cruising along the margins of the road,
scattering the peddlars and stall-holders. They see the
old men on crutches, little pig-tailed girls, blind people
led by a companion, smartly dressed clerks, everyone and
everything covered with the dust churned up beneath the
feet of hundreds of pedestrians. Perhaps this is why in
mid-May an older, bespectacled soldier was to be seen at
Kalandia. He introduced himself to the writer as the
“Humanitarian Officer” and could be heard reproving
soldiers who spoke roughly to transitees. However, he also
required the transitees to line up nicely in two rows while
waiting for their turn to walk up and present their ID’s to
the soldier: one line for men, the other for women. p
During those same May days, with the road through the quarry
blocked off, the teachers tried pleading and persuasion
with the soldiers to allow them to pass. To their amazement
they were now told: “Go to the Civil Administration offices
and get a transit permit; right now, go back the way you
came.” A permit to pass from one Palestinian village to the
next ? To a village two kilometers from Ramallah ? The
teachers sought advice from the Palestinian Ministry of
Education in Ramallah and discovered that the Civil
Administration clerks in each area had already taken the
trouble to call up the Palestinian supervisors and
coordinators, offering them assistance. After all, the
critical situation in Palestinian schools is well known. The
Civil Administration advised regional supervisors and
school principals to present a list of teachers for each
school and to issue them with transit permits. Meanwhile
the Palestinian Authority has forbidden the issue of such
permits which would mean Palestinian legitimization of the
Israeli policy of dividing the West Bank into separate,
detached cantons. The tightening of the closure is
strongly felt in the Palestinian schools beyond the Kalandia
checkpoint. Seventeen of the 31 teachers at Beth Lakiyeh,
west of Ramallah, have not been able to reach the school
there. In mid-May 2002, 14 out of 29 teachers were absent
from Beth Ur as were 10 out of 24 teachers from Bir
Naballah. At Jib, only 35 of the 90 teachers working at
four local schools managed to get to work. Some of them are
residents of the village, others live close by, some have
blue, Jerusalem, ID’s while a very few managed to slip
through the checkpoint. Some of them left their homes, a
distance of 9 kilometers away, at 6:30 in the morning and
arrived late at 9:30 a.m. after having changed taxis three
times, climbed over mountain paths and scrambled through
ditches. The ‘Pirate” Bypasses will be closed H’, an
11-year old girl, crosses the checkpoint alone each morning
on her way to Ramallah. On the north side she is met by her
father, A’ a West Bank resident. Her mother is a
Jerusalemite and they live in the neighborhood of A-Ram,
south of Kalandia. A’ has rented a room in Ramallah and
each morning comes to the north side of the checkpoint. His
wife brings H’ to the south side and the child passes along
the pedestrian lane, behind the barbed wire fencing and the
concrete blocks, underneath the gunsights of the duty guard.
At the other side she meets her father who takes her to
school. At weekends A’ returns home. He climbs hills,
descends ditches, takes one taxi, then another, making a
detour of 40 km instead of the seven that separate Ramallah
from his home. Some West Bankers make this detour twice a
day: to get to work in A-Ram and the neighboring villages
and back again. They mount the taxis that wait for them
beyond the crowded and chaotic Kalandia checkpoint. These
are taxis with Israeli license plates and their drivers are
Palestinian Jerusalemites who risk being fined for
transporting “illegal” West Bank residents if they are
caught on the roads designated for Israelis only. From time
to time the IDF comes and digs a trench across some obscure
pathway connecting two villages. The taxis seek out another
obscure pathway, or else their passengers get out and
scramble across the trench, not before making sure there are
no IDF troops around. After a day or two someone makes
sure to dismantle the earthworks or fill in the trench, and
then the IDF comes and digs another one. p On a Saturday in
May, when A’ was travelling in one of those taxis over dirt
tracks in order to get to work in Ramallah, he looked with
mounting anguish at the barbed wire fence that blocks off
the fields south of the Kalandia refugee camp. Someone said
that a similar fence was being erected to the west of the
Kalandia checkpoint as far as the Bethunia checkpoint. A’
guesses that the day is not far off when a fence of this
sort will be stretched around Ramallah and El- Bireh. “All
the “pirate” by-ways will be permanently closed. And then we
will have no choice but to go to the Civil Administration
and ask for permits to enable us to move around inside the
West Bank.” A Swedish journalist who passed the Kalandia
checkpoint in early May, 2002 could not disguise her fury
at the humiliation and human suffering that she witnessed
there. When she complained to one of the soldiers he
replied: “Don’t worry, in another year this checkpoint will
be just fine.” [8] Rebuilding Palestinian Homes
Together ------- Forwarded message follows ------- Date
sent: Tue, 25 Jun 2002 12:05:44 +0200 From:
JeffandZiad@Rebuildinghomes.org Dear Friend, Given the
tragic destruction and violence of the past few months, it
is extremely important that we - Israelis, Palestinians,
and global citizens who stand for justice - make loud and
clear our determination to build rather than destroy, to
defy policies that inspire hatred, and to support
grassroots efforts that pave a path towards a just peace. p
What action can overcome the rule of tanks, house
demolitions, and the suicide bomb? Is there any language
besides the language of demonization and blame? Is there any
vision besides the empty formulas of elected officials? We
know there is! It is the vision of ordinary people leading
ordinary lives. It is the language of compassion and mutual
respect. It is the voice of justice challenging ideology
and power. It begins by rebuilding homes. p The Right to a
Home and a Homeland, www.rebuildinghomes.org, is a
coordinated global campaign to rebuild demolished
Palestinian homes as a means of building trust among two
groups of people typically sworn off as "enemies." It is a
project of two groups, one Israeli and one Palestinian -
The Israeli Committee Against Home Demolition (ICAHD) and
The Jerusalem Center for Social and Economic Rights (JCSER)
- who have joined forces in a constructive act of
resistance to the injustices of the Israeli Occupation.
Together, we are rebuilding homes, building trust, and
forging a just peace. p House demolitions have become the
hallmark of the Occupation, as the wanton destruction of
the Jenin refugee camp shows. Since 1967 Israel has
demolished almost 9000 Palestinian homes, leaving some
50,000 traumatized and homeless. We need to protect human
rights and confront the injustice of the Occupation so that
Palestinians, Israelis, and the world community will
eventually enjoy the fruits of a just peace. p We start by
rebuilding 20-30 homes throughout the West Bank, Gaza, and
East Jerusalem, each new house representing another form of
hope, solidarity, and peaceful protest. We cannot build
enough houses to truly relieve the suffering of thousands of
victims. But we can make our voices heard. In the words of
Salim Shawamreh, whose home was demolished three times by
the Israeli authorities: "Palestinians need to live like
anyone else -- in a home!" We need your help. Only you,
members of the international civil society, standing with
like- minded Palestinians and Israelis, can provide the
crucial support we need to make our voices heard. p Please
support our global campaign by hosting a House Party to
Rebuild a Home. Our website has tips on how to invite 20 of
your friends to a fundraising gathering at your home and we
will help you every step of the way, giving advice by phone
and email; providing a video and educational materials for
your event. Your fundraiser will pay for building materials
and enable Palestinians, Israelis, and international
volunteers to work together to rebuild Palestinian homes. p
Visit our website www.rebuildinghomes.org to register to
hold a House Party to Rebuild a Home. Join us in this
constructive way to re-build homes, build trust, and forge
peace. Please forward this email to your friends and
colleagues - together we will make a difference. Thank
you, Jeff Halper, Coordinator, Israeli Committee Against
House Demolitions Ziad Hamouri, Director, Jerusalem
Center for Social and Economic Rights
Right to a Home and a
Homeland P.O. Box 610061, Redwood City, CA
94061 USA USA: 01 415 820-3204, Israel: 972-(0)56-875-893,
Palestine: 972-2-627-5335 / 6 email:
info@rebuildinghomes.org
www.rebuildinghomes.org ENDS ---- Full
transcript of the war crimes panel available on the Gush
site For Hebrew
http://www.gush-shalom.org/archives/forum.html For
English http://www.gush-shalom.org/archives/forum_eng.html
French available at request Also on the site:
photo's - of action or otherwise informative the weekly
Gush Shalom ad - in Hebrew and English the columns of
Uri Avnery - in Hebrew, Arab and English (and a lot
more)
http://www.gush-shalom.org