Protests in Bil’in honoring slain US citizens
Protesters at demonstration in Bil’in honoring slain US citizens face attacks and arrests by Israeli forces.
On Friday 13th February, Israeli
forces assaulted the demonstration in Bil’in with hundreds
of tear gas rounds, dozens of stun grenades and pepper
spray, injuring ten Palestinian, Israeli and international
demonstrators. Member of the Bil’in popular committee
Mohammed Khatib and a UK citizen and solidarity volunteer
Michael “Mick” Bowman were both violently arrested. At
the demonstration, Palestinian activists carried posters
honoring Kayla Mueller and condemning the murders of the
three students in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Next week’s
demonstration will mark the tenth anniversary of
Bil’in’s popular resistance.
“As people were
protesting a soldier suddenly came running, wielding pepper
spray, spraying it at journalists and activists
indiscriminately,” reported Karam Saleem, Palestinian
activist present documenting the demonstration. Those who
had been pepper sprayed, including Mohammed Khatib, were
taken down to the ambulance to treat their burns. Saleem
continued, “Mohammed was about twenty meters away from the
main part of the protest, still suffering from pepper spray,
when suddenly a soldier ran after him and grabbed him.
Another five soldiers quickly surrounded him and shoved him
violently to the ground.” He was handcuffed and
blindfolded before being loaded into a military jeep. Soon
after, Israeli forces assaulted the protesters a second
time. “Most people ran away, but Mick was still standing
there with a camera. This was when they grabbed him, sat on
him and handcuffed him.”
Tali Shapiro, an Israeli
activist who was severely pepper sprayed in Friday's
demonstration, suffered from first degree burns on her
hands, ears, and most of her throat and neck. “We saw they
were beating and arresting someone (Mohammed Khatib), so I
ran towards them. By the time I got up the hill Mohammed had
been taken away and another man [Michael] was on the ground
with many soldiers on top of him, twisting his limbs and
head. I immediately took out my phone to take pictures. The
soldiers started pushing away journalists. They formed a
line in front of several of us, and before I could assess
the situation another soldier sprayed my face with pepper
spray.”
Fifty-six-year-old Mick Bowman, a social
worker and resident of Newcastle upon Tyne, recalled that in
the time before his arrest, “The Israeli forces behaved
with particular aggression towards protesters who were
carrying the posters of Kayla and of the students from
Chapel Hill North Carolina.” Border police threw stun
grenades directly towards demonstrators, scattering those
holding posters near the front of the protest.
“Next thing I knew,” Mick recalled, “three or
four soldiers jumped on me from behind and forced me to the
ground. I was lying face downwards, with a couple of them
kneeling on my back. As they were handcuffing me, one of
them stood on my hand, rubbing his boot back and forth and
crushing my thumb. One of them grabbed my nostrils, and
another was pressing down on my face, causing abrasions and
bruising around my right eye. After they had handcuffed me,
a border policeman also pepper sprayed the left side of my
face from the distance of a few inches.”
After their
arrest, Mohammed and Mick were transported to the Binyamin
settlement police station. Mohammed Khatib was taken to Ofer
military prison and Michael Bowman was taken to Muskubiya
(the Russian Compound) prison in Jerusalem. Both were
charged with ‘assaulting a soldier.’ “When police
officers use violence they always claim that violence was
used against them. It’s standard procedure" explained
Mohammed Khatib. Mick was released on the evening of
February 14th, and Mohammed was eventually released on the
evening of February 15th, on a bail of 4,000 shekels (1,030
USD).
Abdullah Abu Rahma, head of the Bil'in popular
committee, described the purpose of demonstration in Bil'in:
"On Friday we protested against the theft of our land by
Israel's illegal wall and settlements and to express our
resistance to terrorism everywhere. We carried the images of
Kayla Mueller who was killed while being held captive by
Da'esh and who had marched with us in Bil'in. We also
carried the images of Deah Barakat, Yusor Mohammad, and
Razan Abu-Salha, who were murdered in their home in North
Carolina. We made it clear that we will oppose terrorism and
the killing of innocent people whether it is committed by
organizations like Da'esh, by states like Israel or by
individuals like the murderer from Chapel
Hill.”
Ends