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08/09_06: ISM report
by ISM Monday, Jun. 09, 2003 at 3:21 PM mail:

Balata Refugee Camp & Nablus City Opened...but for how long Nablus 7 Jun 03 Jenin under seige,soldiers open fire on cars and buses, drivers detained and beaten,mobile soldier ’checkpoints’ create havoc Jenin 9 Jun 03



On June 4th 2003, the Palestinian PM Mahmoud Abbas, the Israeli PM Ariel Sharon and the US president George Bush met at Beit al Baha Palace in the Jordanian Red Sea resort of Aqaba.
The summit was intended to begin the process along the "road-map" to a settlement of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, with the goal of having an independant Palestinian state by 2005.
George Bush, who convened the summit, said:
"Each of us is here because we understand that all people have the right to live in peace. Great and hopeful change is coming to the Middle East".

The same day in Balata Refugee Camp, Nablus it seemed that nobody informed the Israeli Occupation Forces about this "great and hopeful change".
They were busily imprisoning the camp with 6 roadblocks blocking the 2 main streets and other streets of the camp, severely hindering vehicular movement in and around the camp, including emergency medical services. The formerly 3 minute journey from Balata Refugee Camp to Askar Refugee Camp then took 15 minutes through numerous nearby fields.
Later that day the local community & the International Solidarity Movement attempted to remove some of these roadblocks, a show of non-violent direct action against the illegal Israeli occupation.
The IOF responded to this by firing live bullets at the workers and confiscating their shovels. That night they increased all the roadblocks in size.

Balata was not the only area of Nablus to be suffering from severe restrictions on movement during these peace process days. On May 28th the local community and ISM
had removed the roadblocks on Jammal Abdel Masser Street (known as Amman Street), after just one week of it being open, the IOF replaced a roadblock. The roadblocks were in place for 12 months, following the IOF invasion of the Old City in April 2002, except for nearly 2 weeks in January when the the local community and ISM removed them.

The 8th of June, the local community along with the ISM came together again and showed their committment to non-violent direct action against the Israeli occupation. The group opened the Balata Refugee Camp first by removing 3 roadblocks at the main entrance to the camp on Market Street (the Main Street).
Following this, they opened the roadblocks on School Street, and at another entrance to the camp.
After two days of complete closure, this community is finally able to drive vegetable and other food lorries into the camp with ease, and emergency vehicles can now serve the 18,000+ inhabitants inside the 2 square kilometres of the camp.

Having successfully opened the majority of Balata, the group moved to Jammal Abdel Masser Street to open the roadblock that was replaced recently. For an hour the group worked on the roadblock, with internationals surrounding the locally driven bulldozer to provide protection from the IOF sniper towers on the overlooking mountain. Like the roadblocks in Balata, as soon as the roadblocks were open they were being used by all members of the community; medical services, taxi drivers, workmen & families.

The removal of these roadblocks, by Palestinians and Internationals, is a direct protest against the unjust restriction of movement in Nablus, and the West Bank &
Gaza as a whole.
This unjust Israeli occupation of Palestine, takes the form of illegal colonies (settlements), military checkpoints, fences, trenches, gates, roadblocks, and (at it’s most extreme) the ongoing construction of the Apartheid Wall that flagrantly ignores the pre-1967 borders.

****************************************************

Today Jenin is ’open’, however, the past five days or so - the time-period of the RoadMap Peace facade meetings - have seen soldiers shoot three people, destroy at least two vehicles and detain hundreds in Jenin.

Approximately five days ago, soldiers at the Jenad Street checkpoint ordered a man to go back into Jenin and buy them an Argheela (shisha water pipe),in exchange for his ID card which they had stolen from him. A new ID card costs 200 Shekels (a weeks wages for some) and takes approx. three days to materialise. When the man returned with the Argheela, stunned soldiers demanded to know why he neglected to bring them tobacco as well. He was forced to return to Jenin to bring them back a packet of tobacco.
Al Ithlall - the humiliation.

Five days ago, approximately 50 people in total, gathered from the Seabaht and Jabbryyat areas, were prevented from entering Jenin and detained for 5 hours (some of the drivers, for 8) by soldiers who’d set up checkpoints in between the trees behind the Jabbryyat mountain road, and in front of the winding evergreen forest flanked road in Suetat.
Soldiers beat some of the drivers with their M16s, confiscated all the car keys, shot one car to pieces, and stole three car stereos and two mobile phones. Keys were finally returned and the drivers forced to return to where they came from at 5pm that day. Some people ahd been detained in the sun since 8am.

Two days ago, soldiers at the Aba checkpoint - a dirt-pass crossing a vast army bulldozer gouged trench running alongside a settler road serving Eduminum settlement
- opened fire on a bus full of passengers heading for Jenin from Aba. Three were injured, two requiring hospital treatment, one in the leg, the other in his arm.
Both were men in their thirties.
The driver of the bus was forced at gunpoint to climb up on to the roof of his bus and get down again at the whim of the soldiers.
He was made to sit on the roof and comply with the orders of the soldiers for a total of five hours; up and down, sit, stand up; in the blazing midday sun.

Approximately 30 cars, including a UPMRC ambulance,were stopped on the road to Qabatia,off Jenad street, two days ago. At least 10 drivers were beaten by a group of three soldiers roaring up and down the road at haphazard intervals in a jeep.
Approx. 100 people were forced to sit on the ground from the morning, and wait for their car keys and permission to leave. I arrived on the scene at 2.30pm.
The UPMRC ambulance crew were having tea on chairs in the street beside a dust encrusted roadhouse. Servis taxi drivers were sitting listlessly in their vehicles; Radio Al
Balad the only sound on the heady pine-scent airwaves; a group of men were sharing fanta on a shady grass bank at the end of the tail of abandoned cars. Every so often a battered up car would gingerly swerve up the road,the river, shoulder-glancing, asking where the soldiers were, only to be told, Theyre not here right now, quick, yalla move. The group of men - taxi drivers, their passangers had left them to walk the 25 minute walk into Jenin towncentre hours ago - had been forcd to wait for their keys and IDs since 8am.
A jeep approached the group about 20 minutes after my
arrival. The soldiers exited the jeep and proceeded to scream and shout, insanely, at the men and myself. Me calmly asking them when these men could expect their keys and ID cards back enraged them further. They then beckoned one man from the grassy bank,spoke to him in lowered, growled demands, gripped him, told him he was coming with them and that he was under arrest. I tried to prevent the man’s arrest through taking his arm, getting between them, asking the soldiers why? why him?why had he been chosen? what was the reason? The commander of the group became infuriated (even more so than he already was) and told me that one more word out of me would see me arrested too. I asked him where the man was being taken? Which prison? At this point
he grabbed me but I manged to shake free.
He then pursued me, grabbed my wrists and tied them behind my back with the standard white plastic cord and told me that he’d warned me and now Id be deported out of the country.
The taxi drivers tried to intervene but were abused and threatened by the soldiers and intimidated into moving
back to their position on the grassy bank. I, alone (they swapped the randomly selected man for myself) was then driven up Jenad Street, past the Shoohadda triangle, all the way passing key-stolen frozen cars plus a group of twelve men being detained by an IOF Hummer, and into the middle of a field,a box weighed down with ID cards and a mound of carkeys clopping up and down at my feet as the jeep
bounced along the dirtclod tracks. And Khalass, they gave me a talking to, the commander right in my face,untied me and I walked back to Jenin.
I was prevented from even approaching the group of twelve men situated between the Jenad street checkpoint and Shoohadda, by the fat, Canadian soldier who had beaten Michael (Shiehk Saksooka) about the face last week and more importantly, has no doubt murdered many in the past and will do so again.

An Al Awda Hospital ambulance had its keys stolen from it as it drove into Jenin Town Centre on the same day. One of the patients inside was kicked by a soldier and the other had his checkbook vandalised by another demanding he sign him a check for 150 shekels. They were left stranded for 4 hours. All day, soldiers in Jeeps were literally stopping drivers haphazardly, casually brutalising the vehicles’
occupants, stealing their keys and IDs and leaving them marooned in the middle of roads. The roads out of Jenin were just strewn with arrested cars.

Yesterday 15 cars, two lorries and their occupants were left stranded in the Suetat area for over 4 hours. Again, drivers were beaten. The group of soldiers responsible was the same group that beat the men in the Qabatia road and arrested me the day before.

At around 4pm, on the Yamoon village road, soldiers opened fire on a car travelling through a field. Nabil Ahmad jusef Jaradat (45) was shot in the head with a dumdum bullet, thought to have been shot from a tank. His o-passanger,Tariq Ziad Jaaradaat suffered glass wounds from the shattered car window.
Nabil is now in the ICU at Raffidia hospital in Nablus. Bullet fragments are still in his head. The ambulance
which took him there yesterday was detained at the Janad street checkpoint for an hour.

3 nights ago, a group of 20 soldiers entered Jenin Camp,from the Jabbryyat, on foot, supported by a jeep and tank after they slid into the Jiorta Dahab area, and arrested 20-year-old Computer Science student Ahmad Ehrewesh. The soldiers knew everything about his family: their history; that his father had passed away; that his brother had been arrested before; and their respective jobs.
Ahmad was not wanted and had no political connections. He is currently being held in Salem.

Another male Jenin Town resident was arrested on the same night, also a student by the name of Ahmad. He too is thought to be in Salem.

Jenin Camp Resident Mohammad Saadi,a driver with the Patients Friends Society was also arrested, at Beit Eba Checkpoint,4 days ago, after he was detained for over 4
hours with his patient. The soldiers said his patient was wanted. Mohammad is now being held in Huwara.

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