I’d execute Palestinian fighter’s family: Israeli legislator

Al Jazeera
July 27, 2017

Jerusalem, Jul 27: Palestinians have criticised an Israeli legislator who said he would "execute" a Palestinian assailant's family as revenge for an operation that killed three Israelis in an occupied West Bank settlement.

orenIn a video posted (Hebrew) over the weekend on his official Facebook account, which has more than 82,000 likes, Israeli Knesset Member MK Oren Hazan said he would demolish the home of Palestinian assailant Omar al-Abed and "execute" his family.

Mustafa Barghouti, the former Palestinian information minister and general secretary of the Palestinian National Initiative political party, said Hazan's comments expose "how deeply ingrained racism" has become in Israel through "its system of apartheid and occupation".

"It's very dangerous," he told Al Jazeera by telephone, "and these types of comments are overlooked by many parties in the international community."

Hazan said in the video: "I want to be honest without sounding too extreme, god forbid, but if it was up to me I would've gone to the terrorist's house yesterday, grabbed him and his whole family and executed them all together."

He went on to say that "an execution is the lightest sentence" that Abed could receive.

Abed, 20, hopped over the fence of Halamish, a Jewish-only settlement in the central West Bank, and stabbed three Israelis to death last week as tensions soared over Israel's crackdown on entry to the al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem.

Hazan complained that Abed, who Israeli forces shot, has been hospitalised in an Israeli facility, adding: "Let him [Abed] die, let him wallow in his own blood. They don't have a right to live, they don't have the right to even exist, and I hope that everyone will say that with me."

He is a member of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud Party.

On Tuesday, the Israeli army arrested Ibtisam al-Abed, the assailant's mother, for saying she was "proud" of her son in a video shared widely on social media outlets.

She had also told the Israeli daily Haaretz that she did not support the attack.

In the Facebook video, Hazan also blamed Hanin Zoabi and Ahmed Tibi, Palestinian legislators in the Israeli Knesset, for supposedly inciting Palestinian attacks on Israelis.

At the time of publication, Hazan had not replied to Al Jazeera's request for a comment.

Reprimanded

Barghouti said: "This shows the level of incitement on the Israeli side, while they accuse Palestinians of incitement. It's not the first time: We're talking about racism in every political speech and every television broadcast."

Hazan has been reprimanded in the past for violent rhetoric, including a recent threat to Palestinian MK Aida Touma-Sliman and other similar comments. "We will erase your smile from your face ... We will erase your ugly smile from your face," he reportedly told her recently at a Knesset function.

On Tuesday, the Knesset's Ethics Committee voted to reprimand Hazan for those comments. It is unclear what that punishment will entail.

The far-right legislator also sparked controversy when he pledged his support for France's populist politician Marine Le Pen earlier this year, prompting criticism from Israelis and French Jewish legislators.

"[US President Donald] Trump said the United States belongs to the Americans, and so Le Pen also says that France belongs to the French," Hazan said on an Israeli radio show at the time.

"This is the way to stop radical Islam, and to stop France from becoming a Palestinian state in Europe, and that is why I support it."

Amjad Iraqi, international advocacy coordinator at the Haifa-based Adalah Legal Center, said that there is "no accountability for Israeli public officials" who engage in incitement against Palestinians.

"The statements by Hazan and others are part of this context and double standard about what's interpreted as incitement and what constitutes free speech," he said, referring to Israel's frequent arrests of Palestinian activists for social media posts.

"It essentially legitimises racist attitudes towards Palestinians," he said. "It goes hand in hand with state policies to repress Palestinian efforts to achieve their human rights."

'New Nakba'

On Saturday, Israel's regional cooperation minister, Tzachi Hanegbi, warned Palestinians of a "new Nakba", referring to the 1948 establishment of Israel and expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homeland, as reported by the 972 blog at the time.

"You've already paid that crazy price twice for your leaders," he wrote on Facebook, alluding to the 1948 and 1967 Middle East wars. "Don't try us again because the result won't be any different."

Back in March 2015, Avigdor Lieberman, Israeli defence minister and leader of the Yisrael Beitenu party, said Palestinian citizens of Israel who oppose the country should be "beheaded" for their disloyalty.

In July 2014, at the outset of Israel's 51-day military offensive against the besieged Gaza Strip, Israeli politician Ayelet Shaked approvingly republished on Facebook an article by Israeli speech writer and Netanyahu confidant Uri Elitzur labeling "the entire Palestinian people" as "the enemy".

Shaked later became Israel's justice minister, a post she holds until today.

The article called for Palestinian mothers to be killed because they give birth to "little snakes".

"This is an article by the late Uri Elitzur, which was written 12 years ago, but remained unpublished. It is as relevant today as it was at the time," Shaked wrote in the Facebook post, which she later deleted.

Nadia Hijab, executive director of Al-Shabaka: The Palestinian Policy Network, described what she called an uptick in incitement as "pretty typical", arguing that the "collective punishment" proposed by Hazan and others violates the Geneva Convention.

"In retaliation to attacks, the homes of family members are demolished and entire families made homeless, villages are put under curfew and blockaded, and [their] family members are arrested," she told Al Jazeera.

"Hazan is taking collective punishment to the next level."

'Tipping point'

On Monday, Israel decided to remove metal detectors it had placed at the entrance of Jerusalem's Old City to restrict entry into the al-Aqsa Mosque as protests intensified in the city.

Jamal Zahalka, a Palestinian legislator in the Israeli Knesset, accused Israel of an "unprecedented level of incitement" and attempting to divert the blame to Palestinians who have demonstrated against the measures.

"They lit the fires, and now they want to say that we're responsible for it," he told Al Jazeera by telephone. "But it will never be quiet as long as the occupation continues."

Danny Danon, Israeli ambassador to the UN, accused the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority of promoting violence on Monday.

"The [Security] Council must demand real action by [Palestinian President] Mahmoud Abbas, make him stop his tacit support for terror, force him to end this unbearable wave of violence and make him do so immediately before the lives of more innocent victims are lost," he said.

Palestinians have been protesting Israeli measures to limit entry to the al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest site in Israel, amid a sharp uptick in violence in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories.

On Wednesday, Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador to the UN, urged the Security Council to take action to protect Palestinians and their holy sites from Israel's "reckless and destructive agenda".

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News Network
May 10,2020

Dubai, May 10: Kuwait will enact a "total curfew" from 4pm (1300 GMT) on Sunday through to May 30 to help to curb the spread of the new coronavirus, the Information Ministry said on Twitter on Friday.

Further details of the curfew will be announced soon, it said.

Kuwait on April 20 expanded a nationwide curfew to 16 hours a day, from 4pm to 8am, and extended a suspension of work in the public sector, including government ministries, until May 31.

On Friday the Gulf state announced 641 new coronavirus cases and three deaths, bringing its total number of confirmed cases to 7,208, with 47 deaths.

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News Network
January 7,2020

Tehran, Jan 7: Iranian state television says 35 people have been killed and 50 others injured in a stampede that erupted at a funeral procession for a general slain in a US airstrike.

The TV says the stampede erupted in Kerman, the hometown of Gen. Qassem Soleimani where the procession was underway on Tuesday.

A procession in Tehran on Monday drew over 1 million people in the Iranian capital, crowding both main thoroughfares and side streets in Tehran.

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Agencies
July 19,2020

Occupied Jerusalem, Jul 19: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s corruption trial resumed on Sunday.

Netanyahu is charged with fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in a series of scandals in which he is alleged to have received lavish gifts from billionaire friends and exchanged regulatory favors with media moguls for more agreeable coverage of himself and his family.

Netanyahu denies wrongdoing, painting the accusations as a media-orchestrated witchhunt pursued by a biased law enforcement system.

The trial opened in May. Just before appearing in front of the judges, Netanyahu took to a podium inside the courthouse and flanked by his party members bashed the country’s legal institutions in an angry tirade.

Netanyahu was not expected to appear at Sunday’s hearing, which is taking place at an occupied Jerusalem court and is mostly a procedural deliberation.

The trial resumes as Netanyahu faces widespread anger over his government’s handling of the coronavirus crisis.

While the country appeared to have tamped down a first wave of infections, what’s emerged as a hasty and erratic reopening sent infections soaring. Yet even amid the rise in new cases Netanyahu and his emergency government — formed with the goal of dealing with the crisis — appeared to neglect the numbers and moved forward with other policy priorities and its reopening plans.

It has since paused them and even re-impose restrictions, including a weekend only lockdown set to begin later this week.

Netanyahu’s government has been criticized for a baffling, halting response to the new wave, which has seen daily cases rise to nearly 2,000. It has been slammed for its handling of the economic fallout of the crisis.

His trial thus comes at inopportune timing. Netanyahu had hoped to ride on the goodwill he gained from overcoming the first wave of infections going into his corruption trial, but the increasingly souring mood has affected his approval rating and may deny him the public backing he had hoped for. The anger has sparked protests over the past few weeks that have culminated in violent clashes with police.

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