Israeli-Palestinian conflict (90 Viewers)

Is Hamas a Terrorist Organization?

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Jul 2, 2006
18,835
Jerusalem family’s home destroyed by Israel for second time in two years

Israeli occupation forces have knocked down the home of Khaled al-Zeer and his family two times in as many years.

The latest demolition occurred on 29 October, when Israeli authorities sent bulldozers to the small flat that Khaled, his wife Areej and their six daughters shared in the al-Abbasiyeh quarter of Silwan, a neighborhood of occupied East Jerusalem.

Al-Zeer, 40, was alerted by a friend early that morning to the arrival of the demolition team working for the Jerusalem municipality and accompanied by armed police. He abruptly woke up his daughters and sent them to his parents’ home.

“It took the girls several months to shake off the trauma caused by the demolition of our former home last year and I did not want them to witness another demolition,” al-Zeer said.

That previous demolition had occurred in August 2013. The reason cited for the demolition was one with which Palestinians are all too familiar. Al-Zeer had built his home without getting permits from the Israeli occupation authorities, who routinely deny such permission to Palestinians in Jerusalem.

“Unbearable”

That demolition had occurred despite a court injunction which was supposed to put the demolition on hold. Following it, the family had to live temporarily in a cave.

“Life in the cave was unbearable,” said Nagham, Khaled’s ten-year-old daughter. “Rocks were falling on us all the time and there were a lot of insects. We couldn’t study, eat or sleep properly. We particularly feared for my sister Nada, who was six months old back then.”

A metalworker by profession, al-Zeer tried to make the cave habitable. But the Jerusalem municipality obtained a court order forbidding him to undertake any work on the cave, claiming that it was a “historical site.”

As winter approached, Khaled built a small home on the ruins of the previously demolished one. He also built a barn for the family’s horse and shelter for their sheep. All were demolished on 29 October this year.

“They bulldozed everything,” al-Zeer said. “They even uprooted the fifteen trees I had planted outside. They confiscated our furniture and my work equipment.”

The demolition was captured on the above video taken by the Wadi Hilweh Information Center, a Palestinian human rights organization based in Silwan. The video shows that vehicles made by three corporations — Volvo of Sweden, Hyundai of South Korea and Iveco of Italy — were used in the demolition.

As the bulldozers arrived, al-Zeer argued with Israeli police, who promptly arrested him, along with his brother. They are among 900 Jerusalemites to have been arrested by Israeli forces since July.

“They burned a cigarette on my hands”

“I was also beaten up in detention, electrocuted and they burned a cigarette on my hands before releasing me on the same day,” Khaled al-Zeer said.

He then erected a protest tent across the street from his demolished home. He also set up a container for his animals. Both the tent and the container were removed by Israeli occupation forces on 3 November.

More than 48,000 homes have been destroyed by Israel in the West Bank — including East Jerusalem — and the Gaza Strip since 1967, according to the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions.

Victims of these demolitions sometimes receive media attention when they occur. Yet hardly any attention is paid to the long-term consequences of being made homeless as a result of state violence. Statistics cannot describe the suffering involved.

This time around, Khaled al-Zeer and his family have moved into his parents’ home. His daughters speak of the experience in a way that belies their youth.

“Obviously, I’m not really comfortable here,” said Rasha, Khaled’s eight-year-old daughter, referring to her grandparents’ home. “I miss my home, my bed and my toys and we know that we cannot stay here forever.”

“Grew up too fast”

As the girls’ mother, Areej, said, “They have gone through so much trial and pain in the last year that they grew up too fast and barely had time to live their childhood.”

Khaled al-Zeer refuses to leave Silwan. He argues that the Palestinian community in the neighborhood need greater support than they have received to date.

“My great grandparents lived here in Silwan,” said al-Zeer. “This is our land and we will cling to it, even if we are forced to rebuild each time they demolish.

“But I feel that here in Silwan, we are left alone, fighting Israel on our own. Everyone pays lip service to Jerusalem, but on the ground, no one is really doing anything for us. And to tell you that my economic situation is rough is an understatement. Even my car was confiscated a few months ago because of unpaid taxes to the occupation municipality.”

The distinctive Dome of the Rock near the al-Aqsa Mosque — a site being targeted by right-wing Zionists — can be seen from the environs of al-Zeer’s demolished home.

Israel is trying to force Palestinians out of Silwan so that they can be replaced with Jewish settlers. Israeli authorities threaten to demolish large numbers of Palestinian buildings to make way for the City of David, an archeological theme park honoring a king who is reputed to have spent time in the area several millennia ago.

More demolitions have occurred since al-Zeer’s home was destroyed. One week later, two buildings belonging to the Abu Rajab and Abu Sbeih families were knocked down.

Several Palestinian buildings in Silwan were also taken over by Israeli settlers during September and October.

“We don’t feel safe”

“Silwan has been transformed into a military zone,” said Khaled al-Zeer. “The Israelis are using all possible methods to intimidate us and drive us away, including traffic stops and fines, the property taxes that we cannot pay and endless provocations by settlers.”

One day after the al-Zeer family’s home was destroyed, Israeli forces raided the home of Mutaz Hijazi, a former political prisoner from Silwan, and shot him dead. The young man was named by Israel as a suspect in the attempted assassination of Yehuda Glick, an American-born settler who leads of a religious movement which seeks the destruction of the al-Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock.

Khaled’s daughter Nagham added: “The heavy presence of soldiers scares us. There are soldiers and police everywhere in the neighborhood. I have to hold my sisters’ arms each time we go to school because we don’t feel safe walking alone.”

Some Zionist organizations such as Ateret Cohanim have been known to take advantage of the poverty which most Palestinians face by buying their homes so that they can be handed over to Jewish settlers.

As these groups often recruit Palestinian collaborators, their efforts can prove divisive. Many locals believe that the Israeli authorities and the Zionist groups working with them are trying to undermine the strong sense of community among Palestinians in Silwan.

Al-Zeer believes that the Palestinian Authority should not negotiate with Israel. Such negotiations are exploited by Israel to buy time so that it can further its plans to Judaize East Jerusalem through the ethnic cleansing of Palestinian neighborhoods.

“Silwan is facing an unprecedented attack,” said al-Zeer. “But nothing justifies selling your home. We have no choice but to resist and stay on our land.”
http://electronicintifada.net/conte...-destroyed-israel-second-time-two-years/14019
 

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AFL_ITALIA

MAGISTERIAL
Jun 17, 2011
29,673
2 Palestinians broke into a synagogue and killed 4 Jews with axes while they prayed. Netanyahu vows to "respond with a heavy hand to the brutal murder of Jews who came to pray and were met by reprehensible murderers."

Here we go again.
 

Hust

Senior Member
Hustini
May 29, 2005
93,357
Of course.

- - - Updated - - -

Not surprised.

If they denied it, that would have been a lie anyways so again, not surprised.

- - - Updated - - -

The two attackers are cousins Rassan and Uday Abu Jamal, close relatives of a Hamas terrorist who was released in 2011 as part of the exchange deal for the captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit
So, they give them a terrorist back and 2 more are spawned. Fantastic. This makes we want to play Call of Duty.
 

AFL_ITALIA

MAGISTERIAL
Jun 17, 2011
29,673
OP

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #11,775
    Jul 2, 2006
    18,835
    EU court removes Hamas from terror list

    European Union says court's decision is legal ruling, not a political decision, which will be made by EU governments.


    The EU still lists Hamas as a terrorist group, despite its General Court’s ruling Wednesday that Hamas should be removed from the official list of terrorist organizations.

    "The EU continues to consider Hamas a terrorist organization," European Commission spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic said. The EU General Court's decision to remove Hamas from the terrorist list, she said, ''is a legal ruling, and not a political decision taken by EU governments.''

    The EU General Court ruled Wednesday that the decision to list Hamas on the 2001 terrorist list was not based on "acts examined and confirmed in decisions of competent authorities, but on factual imputations derived from the press and the Internet."

    Freezes on Hamas' funds will remain in place for three months in case of any appeal, according to the Luxembourg-based general court.

    ''The EU institutions are studying carefully the ruling and will decide on the options open to them,'' a statement by the European Union External Action Service said. ''They will, in due course, take appropriate remedial action, including any eventual appeal to the ruling. In case of an appeal the restrictive measures remain in place.''

    In December 2001, the European Council -- made up of representatives of the 28 member countries -- adopted a terrorist list requiring freezing of the funds of those people and entities listed. Hamas opposed the measures, which kept it on the list.

    The General Court of the European Union’s decision to lift Hamas from the terrorist list came a few hours before the European Parliament voted Wednesday for a nonbinding resolution calling for recognition of Palestine as a state, based on peace talks that include Israel.

    Israeli leaders slam EU court ruling on Hamas

    Israeli leaders on Wednesday slammed a ruling by the General Court of the European Union removing Palestinian resistance movement Hamas from the EU's list of "terrorist" organizations.

    "We are not satisfied with the European Union's explanation that the removal of Hamas from its list of terrorist organizations is a 'technical matter'," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement issued in response to Wednesday's court ruling.

    "The burden of proof is on the European Union and we expect it to put Hamas back on the list forthwith given that it is understood by all that Hamas – a murderous terrorist organization, the covenant of which specifies the destruction of Israel as its goal – is an inseparable part of this list," he added.

    Netanyahu vowed that his country would continue to fight Hamas with "strength and determination so that it never achieves this goal."

    Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein, for his part, said the EU "must have lost its mind" to remove Hamas from its terror list.

    The decision, he was quoted as saying by The Jerusalem Post, displayed "inflexibility [and] moral distortion and grants a prize to the extremist Islamic terror that is currently plaguing the entire world, including Europe itself."

    Earlier Wednesday, the European court officially removed Hamas from the EU's list of "terrorist" organizations – a move hailed by the Palestinian movement as a "victory for justice."

    European diplomats had been quoted by the Israeli media as saying that the court was likely to rule in Hamas' favor because the initial decision to label the resistance group a "terrorist organization" had not been taken in accordance with EU regulations.

    Hamas was added to the EU's list of "terrorist" groups in 2003 after claiming responsibility for a spate of attacks on Israeli targets during the second Intifada, a popular uprising that erupted in 2000 against Israel's decades-long occupation.

    Thousands of Palestinians were killed in the uprising, which finally came to an end in 2005.

    www.aa.com.tr/en
     

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