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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Palestinians to form ‘protection committees’ against Israeli settler violence
A new project will seek to connect isolated Palestinian villagers to establish committees for documenting settler rights violations
Palestinian Fatima speaks to an audience of villlagers in Imnezel (MEE)-Yousef speaks to the Hebron governor about a lack of services in his village (MEE)
A new project will seek to connect isolated Palestinian villagers to establish committees for documenting settler rights violations
Palestinian Fatima speaks to an audience of villlagers in Imnezel (MEE)-Yousef speaks to the Hebron governor about a lack of services in his village (MEE)
24 year old Sawsan lives in cave after her family home was demolished (MEE) - Hebron Governor Kamel Hemeid (MEE)
Nearly 200 members of the most isolated and under threat Palestinian
communities living in the occupied West Bank came together on Monday for
the launch of a new project aimed at establishing “protection
committees” to document Israeli human rights violations.
Community leaders and families from villages across the governorates of
Hebron and Bethlehem met at a school in the tiny poverty stricken
village of Imnezel, which is surrounded by Israeli settlements filled
with new and luxurious homes deemed illegal under international law.
Sheltered from the hot sun by a beige tarpaulin in a makeshift marquee,
Palestinians welcomed the launch of a new three-year project by
international aid agency ActionAid, which will see the formation of
local community protection committees that will document human rights
violations in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Hebron Governor Kamel Hemeid was at the event and he said that it was
“important” to support projects that seek to equip Palestinians with the
ability to properly document Israeli settler violence.
Many of the Palestinians who attended the event hailed from small
villages where they are not only under threat from ever expanding
Israeli settlements but they also suffer from a lack of access to
electricity, water, transportation and medical care.
All of them live in Area C, which makes up around 62 percent of the West
Bank and is under the full control of Israeli authorities.
ActionAid’s West Bank Programme Manager Ibrahim Ibraigheth told Middle
East Eye that Palestinians living in Area C require assistance in making
connections with each other as they are often isolated in distant
villages.
“All the potential economic development for the Palestinian people is
located in Area C and it contains the only way for a future Palestinian
state to be able to survive,” he said. “Part of the occupation is to
isolate each community.
“We will bring these communities together to create internal solidarity and enable them to raise their voices.”
The project will educate community leaders about human rights and
international law allowing them, Ibraigheth said, to document human
rights violations with “solid evidence”.
“We will take this evidence to all stakeholders beginning with the
Palestinian Authority, going on to international human rights
organisations, and hopefully ending with the United Nations.”
Six of the seven Hebron communities who attended do not have access to
water or electricity, while the five Bethlehem communities explained how
they live under the constant threat of violence from nearby Israeli
settlers.
One of the community leaders who attended on Monday was Sawsan, a
24-year-old university graduate from the small village of El Mfagra in
the south of the Hebron governorate.
Sawsan gave an impassioned speech about how she had faced stiff
challenges over the past several years, after Israeli authorities
unceremonially demolished her family home in 2011.
Sawsan said she was held in prison for 10 days by Israeli authorities
for protesting her home’s demolition, adding that for the past five
years her family has been forced to live in a cave that only has access
to electricity through solar panels donated by Israeli rights group
B’Tselem.
Sawsan is now a committed activist determined to raise the voice of her
community, and she said she was excited by the prospect of being part of
ActionAid’s plan to set up protection committees so people can know
“the truth” about how it is to live in her village.
“It is up to me to fix our situation,” she said. “If I don’t do it no one will.
“Israel want us to leave our land but we will never do this – it is my right to stay here.”
Despite it being a Palestinian village in the middle of desolate
farmland, the roads leading up to Imnezel are lined with Israeli flags
on every lamppost, and there is an ever-present feeling that settlements
are nearby.
Fatima, whose village in Bethlehem is surrounded by settlements, said
Palestinians feel under constant threat from Israeli settlers.
“It’s never safe,” she said. “They are always threatening us and burning
or taking our land. We are farmers and the soldiers sometimes block us
from collecting our crops – so they go bad and are left to rot.”
Fatima is an imposing mother of five, who has had one son killed in
clashes with Israeli soldiers and another one imprisoned. She exudes the
authority of a woman who commands the respect of her peers, and she is
clear that her being a woman is of central importance to her community
leadership.
“Palestinian women are more important than the men,” she said. “We are
on the front line facing up to the settlers, and we have to protect
ourselves.”
Two common themes dominated the morning’s event. Those meeting for the
first time shared messages of solidarity that gave hope for new
connections and solidarity across communities, while similar concerns of
a lack of services were consistently raised by most of the speakers.
Yousef, an elderly man from Um al-Darraj village in south Hebron,
questioned Hemeid on why his village has few transportation links and
poor access to medical care, and called on him to provide financial
support for young people wanting to go to university but who are unable
to afford the fees.
“We will make 100-percent effort to provide for all the needs of
everyone in your villages,” Hemeid told the audience. “We will never
allow a poor student not to go to university.
“And we will provide all legal support necessary against any Israeli
aggressions,” he added, before leaving along with his Palestinian police
escort.
Yousef told MEE that he didn’t want to argue with Hemeid but that he
would follow up to see if he would deliver on his promise that all
villages would get access to the services they need.
As the event came to a close, Yousef walked over to Sawsan, and, while
passing prayer beads through his fingers, he said that the day had given
him hope that marginalised Palestinian villagers may work together to
have a stronger voice in the future.
“Poverty is a virus and for us villagers we suffer it the most,” he
said. “But if we can build on today and work together perhaps we can see
the day when we will have what we need to live on our land in peace.”
All those interviewed asked only to be identified by their first names in order to protect their anonymity.