San Francisco Chronicle

Teen sentenced to 8 months for hitting soldiers

- By Areej Hazboun Areej Hazboun is an Associated Press writer.

OFER MILITARY PRISON, West Bank — Palestinia­n teenage protest icon Ahed Tamimi on Wednesday was sentenced to eight months in prison for slapping and kicking a pair of Israeli soldiers outside her West Bank home, capping a case that sparked uproar in Israel, turned the 17-year-old girl into a Palestinia­n hero and attracted internatio­nal attention.

Tamimi’s Israeli lawyer, Gaby Lasky, said Tamimi agreed to the sentence as part of a plea deal with prosecutor­s that allowed her to avoid more serious charges that could have imprisoned her for years. Under the deal, she is due to be released in the summer. She is also being fined the equivalent of about $1,400.

Lasky called the legal proceeding­s a “farce.” She said “they are trying to deter other Palestinia­n youth from resisting occupation as Ahed did.”

The judge agreed to a similar plea deal for Tamimi’s mother, Nariman, who has been charged with incitement.

“This is injustice, this court is designed to oppress the Palestinia­ns,” her father, Bassem, said. He said they agreed to the deal because they had been threatened with three years in jail. Bassem had visited his daughter and wife for the first time in prison the day before. He said Ahed spends her time doing school work.

An Israeli supporter of Tamimi slapped a prosecutor after the ruling and was later arrested by police.

Tamimi was arrested in December after video surfaced of her kicking the soldiers outside her West Bank home. While some praised the soldiers for showing restraint, hard-line politician­s criticized what they felt was a weak response and called for tough action against the girl, whose family has a long history of run-ins with the Israelis.

But the full-throttle prosecutio­n of Tamimi, who turned 17 behind bars, has drawn widespread internatio­nal criticism. An Israeli official’s revelation that he had once had parliament investigat­e whether the blond, blue-eyed Tamimis are “real” Palestinia­ns drew accusation­s of racism and helped stoke additional interest in the case.

The case touches on what constitute­s legitimate resistance to Israel’s rule over millions of Palestinia­ns, now in its 51st year, in territorie­s it captured in the 1967 war.

“No justice under occupation, and we are in an illegal court,” Tamimi said to reporters in court.

Since 2009, residents of Tamimi’s village of Nabi Salah have staged regular anti-occupation protests that often end with stone-throwing clashes.

 ?? Thomas Coex / AFP / Getty Images ?? Ahed Tamimi (right) enters an Israeli military court at Ofer prison in the West Bank, where she was tried for assaulting two Israeli soldiers. She settled her case to avoid more jail time.
Thomas Coex / AFP / Getty Images Ahed Tamimi (right) enters an Israeli military court at Ofer prison in the West Bank, where she was tried for assaulting two Israeli soldiers. She settled her case to avoid more jail time.

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