A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
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, July 31, 2018
Ahed Tamimi released from Israeli jail, vowing to continue resistance
Teen
says she will now seek to become a lawyer to help further the
Palestinian cause, paying tribute to the women still incarcerated
Ahed Tamimi (centre) following her release from Israeli jail. (MEE)
Ahed Tamimi, the Palestinian girl jailed for slapping an Israeli soldier
and an icon of resistance against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank,
was released on Sunday after eight months.
Tamimi, who was 16 at the time of her detention, vowed to continue her struggle against the Israeli occupation.
"I will continue my university tuition and I will study law so that I
can address the cause of my country in all of the international forums
and to be able to represent the prisoners' cause," Tamimi said at a news
conference following her release.
"Prison taught me a lot of things, I was able to figure out the right
way to deliver the message of my homeland," she added, stood beside a
two-pronged tree which was mocked up as a slingshot with a tyre at its
base - symbols of Palestinian resistance.
"Of course I am very happy that I came back to my family, but that
happiness is partial because of the prisoners who are still in prison,"
she said.
Earlier, as she left Israeli custody, Tamimi paid tribute to all the Palestinian women currently incarcerated by Israel.
"All the female prisoners in jail are strong, and I thank everyone who
stood by me while I was in prison," she told reporters, wearing the
trademark Palestinian keffiyeh scarf.
All the female prisoners in jail are strong, and I thank everyone who stood by me while I was in prison- Ahed Tamimi
Tamimi’s case made headlines around the world when she was arrested
following an altercation with Israeli soldiers who refused to leave her
home in Nabi Saleh, a village in the West Bank.
Just hours before the soldiers arrived at the Tamimi home on 15
December, the family were informed that Israeli forces had shot Ahed’s
15-year-old cousin Mohammed in the head.
Distressed, the family demanded that the soldiers leave its home. When they refused, Ahed lashed out.
Her mother live-streamed the event on Facebook, and when the Israeli
authorities used the recording as evidence to arrest Tamimi the teenager
became a cause celebre for supporters of the Palestinians.
Media scrutiny
Tamimi has garnered support from around the globe.
Amnesty International condemned the arrest, saying it violated
international law and underlining that the detention of minors should be
used only as a last resort.
Israel is at present detaining some 300 minors.
Human Rights Watch's Omar Shakir tweeted on Sunday that "Israel's
jailing of a child for 8 months - for calling for protests and slapping a
soldier - reflects endemic discrimination, absence of due process and
ill-treatment of kids.
"Ahed Tamimi is free, but 100s of Palestinian children remain locked up with little attention on their cases," he added.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas meets with Ahed Tamimi after she was released from an Israeli prison (Reuters)
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has hailed the teen, while soon
after her detention a cross-party group of British MPs released a
statement saying she had been "targeted" and decrying the Israeli
tactics.
In the face of such media scrutiny and criticism, great tension surrounded Tamimi’s release.
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Keen to avoid the press, the Israeli authorities changed the location and time of her release three times.
Originally she was due to be set free at the Jibara check point near Tul
Karem. Israel finally settled on saying it would release her at the
Rantis checkpoint, an hour's drive from there, leaving her relatives
scrambling to reach the location in time.
Dozens of relatives, her immediate family and her friends, had waited
for Tamimi since early on Sunday, along with many journalists.
Opponents of Tamimi gathered too, with Israeli settlers, who live
illegally in the occupied West Bank, appearing to wave the Israeli flag.
Resistance icon
When Tamimi was finally released, her father Bassem put his arms around
her and led the teenager through the crowd of journalists and
supporters, who chanted: "We want to live in freedom".
From the Rantis checkpoint, Tamimi headed to the tomb of Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat in Ramallah, where she laid some flowers.
Then she visited the home of a relative who had been shot dead by Israeli forces during a demonstration.
Poster near her home reads “One thousand congratulations on your freedom, the icon of popular resistance Ahed Tamimi”
Tamimi also met Abbas, who described her subsequently as "a model of
peaceful civil resistance..., proving to the world that our Palestinian
people will stand firm and constant on their land, no matter what the
sacrifice".
On Saturday, Israeli police detained two Italian artists and a
Palestinian for painting an enormous mural of Tamimi's face on the
Israeli separation wall at Bethlehem.
According to an Israeli police statement, the three were arrested "on
suspicion of damaging and vandalising the security fence in the
Bethlehem area".
The statement said the three, who were masked, "illegally drew on the
wall, and when border policemen took action to arrest them, they tried
to escape in their car, which was stopped by the forces".
The Israeli police intervened despite the four-metre mural being painted
on the Bethlehem side of the wall, which ostensibly is supposed to be
under the control of the Palestinian Authority.
Painting on the wall is a common occurrence, with icons of the
Palestinian resistance such as Arafat and Leila Khaled being depicted by
artists.