Cyprus Today

Palestinia­n teen freed from Israel jail will continue resistance as lawyer

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A PALESTINIA­N teenager released by Israel on Sunday after completing a prison term for kicking and slapping an Israeli soldier said she wanted to become a lawyer so she could continue her struggle against the occupation of the West Bank.

Ahed Tamimi, 17, became a hero to Palestinia­ns after the incident last December outside her home in Nabi Saleh, a village that has for years campaigned against land seizures by Israel, leading to confrontat­ions with the Israeli military and Jewish settlers.

Israelis regarded the incident, which Tamimi’s mother relayed live on Facebook, as a staged provocatio­n.

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas described Tamimi as “a model of peaceful civil resistance, proving to the world that our Palestinia­n people will stand firm and constant on their land, no matter what the sacrifice”.

He made the statement, published by the official news agency Wafa, after he met Tamimi and her mother.

Wearing her trademark black-and-white chequered Arab scarf when she returned home, Tamimi greeted dozens of wellwisher­s. Outside the home of a villager killed by Israeli forces, she urged continued struggle against Israel’s occupation.

At a news conference later, she spoke in front of a bare two-pronged tree that had been shaped like a giant slingshot, with the trunk covered in a Palestinia­n flag and with a tyre at its base.

“I will continue my university tuition and I will study law so that I can address the cause of my country in all of the internatio­nal forums and to be able to represent the prisoners’ cause,” Tamimi said.

“Prison taught me a lot of things, I was able to figure out the right way to deliver the message of my homeland.”

Tamimi, who was 16 at the time of her detention, faced 12 charges but in March pleaded guilty to a reduced charge sheet that included assault. She was sentenced to eight months, dating back to her arrest in December.

Israeli police said two Italian artists arrested by border police last Saturday after they drew a mural of Tamimi on the wall in the West Bank town of Bethlehem must leave the country within 72 hours or be deported.

The two and a Palestinia­n were arrested while trying to escape in their car “on suspicion of defacing the wall on the Palestinia­n side after they were seen painting on it while their faces were covered”, a police statement said.

Palestinia­ns want the West Bank for a future state, along with East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. Most countries consider Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank to be illegal, something Israel disputes.

US-sponsored negotiatio­ns on founding a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel have been stalled since 2014.

Tamimi’s case drew global attention and Amnesty Internatio­nal said her sentence was at odds with internatio­nal law.

 ??  ?? Ahed Tamimi at a news conference in Nabi Saleh village on Sunday
Ahed Tamimi at a news conference in Nabi Saleh village on Sunday

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