Israel arrests Palestinian wedding singer, says NGO
RAMALLAH: Israel has arrested a Palestinian wedding singer after he performed a song about an assailant who fatally stabbed three Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank, a Palestinian NGO said Wednesday.
The singer was among four Palestinians arrested on Tuesday in the West Bank city of Ramallah, three of whom perform in a band together, a Palestinian Prisoners Club spokeswoman said.
Palestinian media said the band, led by singer Mohammed Al-Barghouti, had been singing about Omar Al-Abed, a Palestinian, who is alleged to have stabbed three settlers last month. A video of the band performing the song, which praises Abed, has been posted on social media.
“I heard the sound of the machine-gun in the Arab village Kobar ... It’s Omar who crossed the woods and carried out the operation,” the lyrics say, referring to Abed’s hometown. The Israeli Army did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Abed sneaked into a Jewish settlement during a Sabbath meal and stabbed four people, killing three of them.
The July 21 attack came at a time of high tensions over the sensitive Haram Al-Sharif mosque compound in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
Israel not to bar
Al-Jazeera journalist
Israel on Wednesday backtracked from a decision to revoke the accreditation of an Al-Jazeera journalist, saying he explained that comments he made last year did not amount to support for Palestinian violence.
Elias Karram, an Arab citizen of Israel, had told a Turkish-based TV station last year that his role as a journalist in Israelioccupied territories where Palestinians seek statehood was inseparable from the “work of the resistance.”
In a statement, Israel’s Government Press Office (GPO) said Karram clarified at a hearing on Aug. 21 that those comments did not constitute support or sympathy for violence.
The GPO said that, in response to his explanation and after consultations with security officials, it had frozen for six months the lifting of Karram’s accreditation and would review his news reports during that period. A spokesman for Al-Jazeera in Doha, the Qatari capital where the satellite channel is based, declined immediate comment but said a statement would be forthcoming.
Israel’s original decision, announced two weeks ago, was condemned by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. The CPJ wrote to the GPO that it could not find “any justification for the harassment of Karram or evidence of Al-Jazeera inciting violence.”
For many Israelis and for Palestinian militant groups that seek Israel’s destruction, the term “resistance” is synonymous with armed attacks. Palestinians who support a peace process with Israel leading to statehood say the term can refer to nonviolent protests, such as hunger strikes by prisoners.