woensdag 28 juni 2006

De Israelische Terreur 47



Palestinians hold pictures of jailed relatives during a demonstration in the West Bank city of Hebron calling for the release of Palestinian prisoners being held in Israeli jails June 27, 2006. (MaanImages/Mamoun Wazwaz)

Electronic Intifada bericht: 'A Welcome Spotlight on Palestinian Child Prisoners. Catherine Hunter.

Kidnap, killings, and night raids on Israeli military army bases may not be the most effective way of reaching out to international opinion, but by conditioning the release of Israeli hostage Gilad Shalit on the release of some 380 Palestinian child prisoners, the Palestinian Popular Resistance Committees have touched on an issue which has resonance well beyond the immediate tit-for-tat killings and recriminations that have a tendency to dominate international media coverage of the 'Middle East conflict.The plight of Palestinian children arrested by the Israeli army has long been one of the neglected aspects of Israeli occupation, involving some 600 minors a year since the outbreak of the second Intifada in September 2000. Nearly all are held without access to legal support during questioning, often compelled to sign confessions in Hebrew, a language they don't understand, while subjected to intimidation and mistreatment as a matter of routine course. It starts with the arrest itself, which can take place during night-time incursions or mass arrest campaigns, or alternatively at the military checkpoints which have played such a part in curtailing the economic and social life of the West Bank. After a night or two behind bars, some minors are released without charge, while the unfortunate ones, around 300 a year, start their passage through the Israeli military justice system which stands as the rule of law in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. This system allows no special provisions for minors, despite the fact that Israel is a signatory of numerous international treaties which demand due consideration for age in the legal process, not least of which is the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Those considerations are, by contrast, applied to Israeli minors, including those living cheek by jowl with the Palestinians in illegal West Bank settlements.Life doesn't improve on the inside, with Palestinian children routinely reporting torture or mistreatment. In a typical recent case, Defence for Children International (DCI) defended two 13-year olds arrested for stone throwing near the 'separation barrier' in the South of the West Bank. The pair, Zakariyah and Nemer, were roughly handled on arrest, blindfolded and kicked, before being taken to a detention centre in the illegal settlement of Gush Etzion near Hebron. There, the boys spent 16 days in a small cell with up to 17 other people, sleeping on the floor and allowed access to the bathroom for half an hour once a day. The remaining 23 hours and 30 minutes were spent locked in the squalid cell, with no contact allowed with either friends or family.' Lees verder: http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article4856.shtml

Valt het u op hoe de familie van de Israelische krijgsgevangene wel in beeld komt en de families van de gevangen Palestijnse kinderen niet. Ze worden bewust gezichtsloos gehouden door de vele Nederlandse correpondenten in Israel. Overigens dienen de kinderen van een aantal correspondenten als reservisten in het Israelische leger. De beantwoording van de vraag hoe onafhankelijk de correspondent dan nog kan zijn, laat ik aan uw verbeeldingskracht over.

Geen opmerkingen:

Peter Flik en Chuck Berry-Promised Land

mijn unieke collega Peter Flik, die de vrijzinnig protestantse radio omroep de VPRO maakte is niet meer. ik koester duizenden herinneringen ...