The Prince George Citizen

Canadian student arrested in West Bank protest

- Daniela GERMANO Citizen news service

A Toronto university student protesting the demolition of a Palestinia­n-Bedouin village in the West Bank has been arrested by the Israeli forces, her mother said Thursday.

Karen Rodman said her 21-yearold daughter, Michaela Lavis, and two other foreigners were involved in a stand-in at the village of Khan al-Ahmar when Israeli soldiers arrested all three Thursday morning.

“She screamed very loudly and she wouldn’t scream unless she was being hurt, because that’s not her,” said Rodman, who witnessed her daughter’s arrest. “And then she got up and she turned and she smiled... and gave me a look that showed that she was terrified yet strong at the same time.”

Rodman said she and her daughter, who is about to enter her fourth year at Ryerson University’s Child and Youth Care program, have been doing humanitari­an work in the West Bank since late May. Lavis, she said, has been volunteeri­ng with the Defence for Children Internatio­nal-Palestine and working with an occupation­al therapist who provides support to children with special needs.

Lavis was always aware that she could get arrested for her activism in the Middle East, Rodman said, but she “didn’t expect it to happen.”

Rodman said she didn’t know when her daughter would be allowed to see a lawyer.

A spokeswoma­n for Global Affairs Canada said they were aware that a Canadian citizen was detained in the West Bank.

“Consular services have been provided to the Canadian and the family,” Allison Lewis said in an email.

The arrests come a day after Israeli police scuffled with activists protesting at the same site, apprehendi­ng 11 people.

Israeli officials have said that the structures that make up the Khan al-Ahmar encampment were illegally built and pose a threat to residents because of their proximity to a highway.

The Bedouin village outside the Kfar Adumim settlement, territory Israel captured in the 1967 ArabIsrael­i War, is set to be demolished at an unknown date after Israel’s Supreme Court approved the move in May. Israel agreed to resettle the residents in an area some 12 kilometres away.

Critics have said it is nearly impossible to get a building permit from Israel and the village’s demolition and the removal of its 180 or so residents is a ploy to clear the way for new Israeli settlement­s.

The Canadian government has said it is “deeply concerned” about the planned demolition of the Bedouin village.

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