Two Palestinians Injured, Five Israeli' Arrested
Two Palestinians Injured and Five Israeli Activists Arrested
in
the Village of Turmas’ayya During an Israeli Settler
Attack.
Israeli settlers from the illegal settlement
outpost near Shilo
surrounded villagers from nearby
Turmas’ayya during the yearly
Palestinian olive
harvest, attacking two villagers who had been
separated
from the rest of the harvest. Talal Gebrara, an
elderly
member of the Turmas’ayya municipality, had
parked his car and was
walking back to the mountains when
he was confronted by a carload of
Israeli settlers,
yelling at him in Hebrew. ‘I didn’t know what
they
were saying, but I knew they wanted to fight me’.
Settlers then
punched him in the head, the blow striking
his temple. Talal recalls
that he tried to fight back,
but was quickly overwhelmed when two more
carloads of
settlers arrived. ‘I am just one old man, and there
were
twelve of them, from 25 to 40 years old’. After
suffering a few more
blows, Talal ran over to the nearby
Israeli military, who had been
standing by, doing nothing
to protect him. With the soldiers, he
walked back to his
car, and found it had been destroyed by the
settlers –
windows and windscreen smashed and all tyres
slashed.
Another car parked nearby also had its
windscreen and windows smashed
by the
settlers.
Villagers also report a woman from the village
was then attacked by
settlers as she made her way back
from the olive groves towards the
road. Despite having
her five small children with her, settlers
reportedly
sprayed an unknown burning substance in her face,
causing
redness and swelling.
During these attacks, a
90 year old shelter in the olive groves,
belonging to a
Palestinian family was torched by unknown persons.
Awad
Hazama, whose family owns the shelter and the
surrounding lands, was
harvesting olives at the time, but
didn’t see the arsonists. He was
accompanied to the
lands by Israeli activists, due to the threat of
settler
violence, which was suspected due to the recent erection of
an
illegal settlement outpost on the lands.
The
accompanying Israeli activists saw the flames and moved
closer in
order to take photos, when they were set upon
by settlers throwing
stones at them. The activists report
that they attempted to run away,
but were cornered by a
settlement security guard, who, loading a gun
in their
faces, demanded they get into his security car, while
he
called the police. Quickly, they were surrounded by
settlers armed
with clubs and machine guns. The
activists, fearing for their lives,
were removed from the
situation when they were arrested by Israeli
police
officers on unsubstantiated charges of arson.
Activists
report that the charges were based on the accusations of
one
settler who they claim was not present during the
event. The
accusations were levelled at one activist in
particular, an elderly
photographer.
Villagers,
including the family who own the land and structure,
reject
any suggestion that the Israeli activists were
involved in the fire.
‘That’s not true. No’, said
Talal, who drove the activists to the
olive groves. Many
villagers, rather, believe that it was the settlers
who
torched the shelter, in order to disrupt the Palestinian
olive
harvest.
‘When they make trouble like this,
it’s good for them, because
military come and everybody
comes and it makes a big problem. Then
next year when we
want to go to our lands, they [Israeli DCO] will
say
no.’
Currently Palestinians from Turmas’ayya
are only allowed to access
these olive groves during
olive harvest. They report that if they
attempt to go at
other times they are attacked by settlers and
driven
away. This is the second incident during
Turmas’ayya’s olive harvest
this year, following
harassment by settlers on
Sunday.
ENDS