Irish Peace Laureate Shot By Israeli Troops at Non-Violent Protest - Why Isn't This News? by Robert Naiman
Democracy now link here: If you listened to Democracy Now on Monday, you already know the following:
Irish Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire was among a number of people shot Friday by Israeli troops at a nonviolent
protest of the "apartheid wall" in the Palestinian village of Bil'in, near Ramallah.
But if you didn't listen to Democracy Now Monday, you probably didn't know that. Maguire was shot with what the Israeli
military - and some press reports - misleading refer to as a "rubber bullet" - that is, a rubber- coated steel bullet.
Why isn't this "news" in the United States? There's nothing on the web sites of the New York Times, the Washington Post,
or the Los Angeles Times, not even a wire story.
Those who blame the Palestinian people for their fate, attributing it to Palestinian violence, and faulting the
Palestinians for not emulating Gandhi, King, or Mandela (whose role in the "armed struggle" against apartheid in South
Africa is always conveniently elided for the purpose of this comparison) should periodically ask themselves, when
Palestinians do engage in nonviolent protest, and are subjected to brutal repression as a result, how come the
mainstream U.S. media don't pay any attention?
Wouldn't this be a precondition for a successful nonviolent protest strategy? That people find out about it? Imagine if
U.S. news organizations had not reported on lunch counter sit-ins in the South, Freedom Rides, or the Montgomery bus
boycott - and the repression that resulted. What if no-one reported on the deaths of Evers, Goodman, Schwerner, Chaney.
Would these protests have been as effective?
That U.S. political, diplomatic, and financial support for the Israeli government's policies in the West Bank provide
crucial support for these policies should be beyond debate. Don't the American people have a right to know what's going
on?
And if a Nobel peace laureate is shot at a non-violent protest using weapons paid for by the U.S. taxpayer, isn't that
news?
A great deal of ink has been spilled about how the United States is perceived in the Middle East. Too little of that ink
has addressed whether the perception of the United States might be the predictable result of unjust U.S. policies, and
whether changing some of those policies might be part of a strategy for changing the perceptions.
A new poll from World Public Opinion.org finds that nine in ten Egyptians thinks that the U.S. is at war with Islam, and
wants the U.S. to "remove its bases and military forces from all Islamic countries." Eight in ten Egyptians support
attacks on U.S. troops in the region to bring this about.
U.S. policy towards the Palestinians is surely not the whole story, but it is surely an important part of the story. If
the U.S. cannot, in the short term, compel Israel to accept a political settlement with the Palestinians along the lines
of the international consensus - withdrawal to the 1967 borders - can't we at least get them to stop shooting unarmed
demonstrators? Or, if even that is too much to ask, how about no shooting Nobel peace laureates?
Wednesday night Bill Moyers will examine on PBS how the U.S media failed us in the run-up to the Iraq war. Perhaps Mr.
Moyers could look into how the U.S. media is failing us on our policy towards the Palestinians. (end)
Israeli Military Shoots Nobel Peace Laureate, from the Institute for Public Accuracy: Nobel Peace Prize recipient
Maguire said today: "I was invited with my friend to attend a nonviolent conference in Bilin, a village outside Ramallah
[in the West Bank], and to give a talk there, which I did. At the end of the conference, we were invited to participate
in a nonviolent demonstration with some of the Palestinian members of parliament and Israeli peace activists and local
villagers and international visitors.
"We walked along to try to walk up toward the separation wall, and it was a totally nonviolent protest. And we were
viciously attacked by the Israeli military. They threw gas canisters into the peace walkers, and they also fired
rubber-covered steel bullets.
"As I tried to move back and help a French lady, I was shot in the leg with a rubber-covered steel bullet, and the young
Israeli soldier who shot me was only 20 meters from me. I was stunned by it, and then later on, after having some
treatment by the ambulance medics, I went back down to the front line with the peace activists, and we were again
showered with gas. I was overcome and had a severe nosebleed and had to be taken by stretcher to the ambulance and
treated.
"And I witnessed there ... an old Palestinian man with blood on his face. These were over 25 unarmed peace people who
had been viciously attacked by the Israeli military. And it was a completely peaceful protest. It was absolutely
unbelievable. I never in all my years of activism witnessed anything so vicious as from the Israeli military."
The shooting of Maguire took place on Friday, April 20; she is now back in Ireland and available for interviews.
ENDS