Green light to more settler attacks on children?
In the April 2009 edition of this e-Bulletin, DCI-Palestine
reported an alarming rise in settler attacks against children
during that month, citing three incidents in which children
were shot and one incident in which 20 settlers threw stones
at two detained children, while Israeli soldiers looked on.
Sadly, since April, DCI-Palestine has documented another 10
cases of settler assaults on Palestinian children, bringing the
number of cases documented by DCI alone so far this year to
14. Of these 14 cases, six took place in Hebron, five in Nablus,
two in Jerusalem and one in Bethlehem.
These ongoing attacks constitute an alarming trend. In
response, DCI-Palestine is preparing a short documentary on
settler attacks against children (for release in 2010) as well as an update of its November
2008 report: Under Attack: Settler Violence against Palestinian Children in the OPT. The
updated report will include over 25 case studies that document incidents of settler
violence against more than 30 children, and is due to be released in December.
Meanwhile, in recent days, the Israeli government approved plans to expand a
settlement in Jerusalem, just days after the US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton essentially
encouraged Palestinians to
accept negotiations without
requesting the precondition
of a settlement freeze by
Israel, marking a worrying
change in official US
settlement policy. It remains
unclear whether the US
Administration, which claims to be
an ‘honest broker’ in the Middle East
Peace Process, will be able to stop Israel
from building settlements.
However, what is clear is that as long as
West Bank and East Jerusalem settlements
continue to exist and expand, there will be
no serious prospect for a viable, contiguous
Palestinian state, no real hope for peace,
and no security for Palestinian children. In
the words of a 9-year-old boy from Safa
village, Hebron, which was attacked a few
months ago by a group of about 200
settlers, with the protection of six Israeli
soldiers, “there will be no security as long
12-13 November: DCI to
participate in international
conference on CRC litigation
19-21 November: DCI 7th
National Children's
Conference
20 November: 20th anniversary
Issue 20, Oct 2009
Advocacy news
1 October – DCI and partners send letter to
UNGA urging endorsement of Goldstone Report.
3 October – DCI and partners issue statement
condemning PA decision to postpone Goldstone
vote at HRC.
6 October – DCI presents its alternative report on
child recruitment to the UN Committee on the
Rights of the Child.
15 October – DCI report cited in child detainees’
article in US magazine The Nation.
15 October – DCI and partners give oral
statement at and send written statement to HRC
Goldstone special session.
16 October – DCI briefs UNICEF Goodwill
Ambassador Mia Farrow on child detention
during her visit to the OPT.
24 October – DCI, member of OPGAI, organises
International Advocacy Conference 2009.
“...many Israelis worry that their
government’s continuing
construction of homes for Jews in
the occupied West Bank may also
embolden the militant Jewish
settlers who are increasingly
turning to violence against not just
Palestinians, but fellow Israelis...”
– Matt McAllester, Global Post,
19 November 2009
Shuhada Street, once the thriving
commercial centre of Hebron, has been
reduced to a ghost town. Photo: DCI
as such settlements exist near our houses.”
Rights of the Child
31 October – DCI releases Mohammed’s story –
video about an ex-child detainee’s experience
and announces UK speaking tour.
The e-Bulletin is a monthly publication produced by the advocacy team of Defence for Children International-Palestine Section.
To subscribe, go to e-Bulletin@dci-pal.org
1 opmerking:
Alfred Pijpers http://www.nrc.nl/opinie/article2421489.ece/Hamas_verdient_geen_steun
"Het is ook een beetje goedkoop om nu voortdurend de huidige minister van Buitenlandse Zaken, Maxime Verhagen, voor de voeten te lopen met ingezonden stukken en manifesten."
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