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Soldiers Attack Kufur Qaddoum Weekly Protest, detain one

12:00 Jan 25 2013 Kufr Qaddoum and Ariel Police Station

Soldiers Attack Kufur Qaddoum Weekly Protest, detain one
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by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News

Friday January 21; Israeli soldiers attacked the weekly nonviolent protest against the Annexation Wall and Settlements, in Kufur Qaddoum village, near the northern West Bank city of Qalqilia, kidnapped one resident and wounded several others.

Morad Shteiwy, coordinator of the Popular Committee Against the Wall in Kufur Qaddoum, reported that the soldiers kidnapped one resident identified as Hilmi Shteiwy, 21.

He added that the soldiers fired several gas bombs and rubber-coated metal bullets at the protesters; dozens of residents were treated for the effects of tear gas inhalation.

Also, soldiers violently attacked and beat resident Zahy Ali, 47, leading to several cuts and bruises to various parts of his body.

Shteiwy said that dozens of soldiers invaded the village during early morning hours Friday, and closed the main road that leads to the village to the Al-Jabal area in an attempt to prevent the residents from conducting their weekly protest.

After the army attacked the protesters, a number of youths hurled stones and empty bottles at them.

Also on Friday, three protesters and a journalist were injured when the soldiers attacked the anti-wall and settlements protests across the West Bank.

Protests were also held in Bil’in and Ni’lin villages, near the central West Bank city of Ramallah, and in the Al Ma’sara village, near Bethlehem.

Three protesters and a journalist were slightly injured by Israeli army rubber-coated steel bullets in the village of Bil’in, and many protesters were treated for the effects of tear gas inhalation in Ni’lin.

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Galib Hilmi Ishtewi, screenshot from Facebook video. (View video at News Source Link.)


by Adam Horowitz on February 6, 2013, for Mondoweiss

From the Times of Israel:

Galib Ishtewi, a 21-year-old student from the Palestinian village of Kafr Qaddum east of Nablus, told the Times of Israel that some 15 Israeli soldiers stormed his home on January 25, accusing him of stone throwing following a weekly protest organized by Fatah in the village. He said he was watching TV when soldiers entered his home and detained him and his 11-year-old brother.

Upon his arrest, Ishtewi was asked about his activity on Facebook and that of his fellow villagers. When he denied being active on the social media site or participating in the demonstration, he was taken to the nearby Ariel police station for further interrogation. There, a police interrogator again questioned him about his online activity . . .

Ishtewi told the Times of Israel that he had “friended” a number of Israeli activists on Facebook and called on them to boycott the Israeli elections, which he considered “biased.”

Following his questioning in Ariel — where he refused to admit any Facebook activity — Ishtewi was imprisoned for four days — the first two of which were in solitary confinement — and received no access to a lawyer.

“I’ve never been arrested before,” he told The Times of Israel. “Never before was anyone in my village asked about their Facebook activity.”

Responding to an email query by the Times of Israel, the IDF spokesman’s office said on Tuesday that Ishtewi “was arrested on Friday afternoon during the course of a violent and illegal riot. Security forces apprehended the suspect because he was hurling stones.”

But Ishtewi denied that allegation, arguing that, strangely, the soldiers who entered his home already knew his name when making the arrest.

Shimri Zameret, an Israeli activist who knew Ishtewi from Qaddum, said he was shocked to learn about the arrest just three days after the elections.

“We were scared. This looks like a very clear message; the army is scared of a peaceful third Intifada like the one in Egypt, where social media played a key role,” he said.

Zameret said that Ishtewi had given a number of interviews to foreign television stations.

“I can’t be 100% sure that he was arrested because of Facebook; but if I at first suspected that, after hearing about his interrogation, I now assume that is the reason,” Zameret said.

For more on the Real Democracy campaign see ‘This is an act of refusal, a democratic rebellion’: 2,000 Israelis offer their vote to Palestinians living under occupation.
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