Chattanooga Times Free Press

Case against Palestinia­n teen spotlights her activist family

- BY KARIN LAUB AND MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH

NABI SALEH, West Bank — Israel’s hard-charging prosecutio­n of a 16-year-old Palestinia­n girl who slapped and kicked two Israeli soldiers has trained a spotlight on her activist family and its role in what Palestinia­ns call “popular resistance,” the near-weekly protests against Israeli occupation staged in several West Bank villages.

The case of Ahed Tamimi has come to embody rival, grievance-filled Palestinia­n and Israeli narratives at a time of overwhelmi­ng mutual distrust about the other side’s intentions and skepticism about chances of ending the long-running conflict.

Many Palestinia­ns have embraced the teen as a symbol of a new generation standing up to Israeli rule.

In Israel, she is seen either as a naive youth manipulate­d by her elders, a serial trouble-maker or a threat to Israel’s image and military deterrence.

The December incident that catapulted her into the headlines came 10 days after President Donald Trump’s recognitio­n of contested Jerusalem as Israel’s capital — a decision seen as siding with Israel on the most sensitive issue in the conflict.

Trump’s move triggered Palestinia­n protests, including in Nabi Saleh, a village of about 600 members of the Tamimi clan. Since 2009, villagers have protested the seizure of some of their land and a spring for a nearby Israeli settlement, with demonstrat­ions often ending in clashes between Palestinia­n stone-throwers and Israeli soldiers firing tear gas, rubber bullets or live rounds.

On Dec. 15, the army said villagers were throwing stones at Israeli soldiers and a nearby road used by Israelis.

Ahed’s mother, Nariman, captured events live on Facebook, including soldiers firing stun grenades.

At one point, Ahed and her 20-year-old cousin, Nour Tamimi, approached an Israeli captain and a first sergeant at the edge of the family’s walled front yard. Ahed yelled at them to leave, then started pushing and kicking the soldiers, who casually fended off the blows. Then she hit both in the face, according to the charges.

The video caused uproar in Israel, amid complaints the soldiers had been humiliated. Ahed was arrested Dec. 19, followed by her mother and cousin.

Three weeks later, Nour is free on bail, while Ahed and her mother remain in detention. Ahed faces lengthy prison time — potentiall­y up to 14 years — after being charged with 12 counts of attacking and threatenin­g soldiers in five incidents going back to April 2016.

Ahed’s cousin, 15-yearold Mohammed, was shot in the head Dec. 15 by a rubber-coated steel pellet of the type used by Israel’s military, and is now back home after surgery. Ahed’s family said word of his grave injury helped set her off against the soldiers that day.

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