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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, August 11, 2018
Israel ramps up arrests of Palestinian journalists
Rights groups say Israel's arrests of seven Palestinian journalists since 30 July are 'politically motivated'

Three of seven journalists were arrested in past week in pre-dawn raids (AFP)
Israeli forces have arrested at least seven Palestinian journalists in
the West Bank since 30 July, drawing condemnation from local and
international journalists' rights groups and watchdogs that called the
move “politically motivated”.
The journalists have not been charged, which has been slammed by the New
York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, who called on Israeli
authorities to do so or release them.
“We call on Israeli authorities to disclose charges against the seven
journalists arrested over the past week or release them and allow them
to work freely,” said Sherif Mansour, CPJ's Middle East and North Africa
program coordinator.
Three of seven journalists were arrested in the past week in pre-dawn
raids after the ban of the Hamas-affiliated al-Quds TV and its
designation by Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman as a terrorist
organisation on 3 July.
Last year, 17 Palestinian media outlets were closed by the Israeli military, according to Palestinian rights group MADA.
“The ban imposed by the Israeli authorities on al-Quds is supposed to
concern Israeli territory, but the arrests were carried out in the West
Bank, a procedure often used by the Israeli security forces,” said
Sophie Anmuth, who heads the Middle East desk at the Paris-based media
rights group Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF).
Targeting freelance journalists
Israeli soldiers arrested three freelance journalists – Mohammed Alwan,
Qutaiba Hamdan, and Husni Anjas from the Ramallah area – in addition to
al-Quds TV director Alaa al-Rimawi
“Israel has been relentless in its assault on the Palestinian press,”
Mansour said. “Declaring a media outlet a terrorist organisation set the
tone for the country's latest crackdown on Palestinian journalists.”
Al-Rimawi's wife, Mimouna, described a scene wherein at least a dozen
soldiers barged into their home at about 3 am and checked her husband's
identity card before taking him away.
“Israeli forces searched the house and confiscated a laptop, my
husband's protective gear and his car before taking him away,” she told
MEE. “They did not charge him with anything and they didn't say where
they were taking him to.”
They did not charge him with anything and they didn't say where they were taking him to- Alaa al-Rimawi's wife, Mimouna
Freelance reporter Alwan, and freelance cameramen Hamdan and Anjas were
taken from their respective homes in al-Bireh, Beitunia, and the village
of Kharbata Bani Harith, just outside of Ramallah.
All were taken to Israeli settlement compounds after their arrests:
Hamdan – like al-Rimawi – was taken to Ofer prison near Ramallah; Anjas
to Kiryat Sefer settlement and Alwan to Pesagot settlement before they
were transferred to Ofer.
MADA and the Doha Center for Media Freedom said that none of the
journalists was charged with a crime when they were arrested and that
their equipment, protective gear, laptops and phones, and a car were
confiscated during the raids.
Earlier this week at a hearing, an Israeli military court, which tries
Palestinians, extended the detention of the four journalists for a week
pending investigation.
Israeli authorities say that they work for the banned al-Quds TV;
however, all but one had gone freelance after Israeli authorities closed
the broadcaster's Palestine offices in 2017. Only al-Rimawi, who was
previously imprisoned for 12 years in Israel, stayed on as staff.
'Held for political reasons'
RSF, which ranks Palestine 134th out of 180 countries in its 2018 World
Press Freedom Index, said that the journalists' arrests were politically
motivated.
“Palestinian journalists held solely for political reasons must be
released at once,” said Anmuth, the head of RSF’s Middle East desk. “In
the absence of any proof to the contrary, these journalists have
committed no crime justifying their detention, which is therefore
completely arbitrary.”
On 1 August, Israeli soldiers arrested Mohamed Muna, a reporter for the
Hamas-affiliated Al Quds press, who also manages a local radio station
in Nablus. His family said he was taken from his home in the village of
Zuatta, near Nablus, after searching through his things and confiscating
some of his belongings. He, also, was not charged with any crime.
“A day later, the Israeli military court extended Mohamed's detention
for a week for interrogation purposes without providing any further
details,” his brother, Abdel Kareem Muna, told MEE. “He is being
detained at Huwara, but will most likely be transferred to Megiddo
prison,” north of Jenin.
Five years ago, Muna was arrested by Israeli forces and held in
administrative detention – a legal loophole that allows authorities to
indefinitely hold Palestinians without charge or trial – until his
release in 2015.
On 6 August, Ibrahim al-Rantisi, a reporter for the Turkish broadcaster
TRT Arabic, was arrested during a raid on his home in the village of
Rantis, near Ramallah. In a procedure similar to the arrests of the
other journalists, Israeli soldiers broke into his house in a pre-dawn
raid.
His home was searched and his phone and ID card were confiscated,
according to his brother, Fakhr al-Rantisi. “One of the soldiers was
filming the entire arrest. [Al-Rantisi] kissed his little daughter
goodbye and left,” the journalist's brother told CPJ.
Fakhr al-Rantisi said he only found out later through lawyers from the
Palestinian Prisoners' Club, a local rights group, that his brother was
taken to Ofer prison.
“I believe my brother has been arrested for his work as a journalist,”
Fakhr al-Rantisi said, adding that his brother used to work for Al Quds
TV until December 2017, when he took a job with TRT, the Turkish
state-owned broadcaster.
That same day, Israeli police arrested Nader Baybars, a cameraman for
the official Palestine TV, at his home in Wadi al-Joz in East Jerusalem.
Baybars was previously taken in for interrogation in 2016 and
questioned about his work as a journalist and the “Good Morning
Jerusalem” programme he works on.
More than 95 violations against journalists and media institutions were
made by Israeli forces last month, according to Swedish rights group
Skyline International, most of which occurred in the West Bank. These
included arrests of journalists, confiscation of their equipment,
attacks and shootings with live ammunition and teargas.

