The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­n investor flees PA due to Facebook post

Dual Panamanian citizen Badran Jbara says he’s afraid for his life, won’t attend daughter’s wedding because he ‘criticized official without mentioning his name’

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

A Palestinia­n businessma­n has been forced to go into hiding after Palestinia­n Authority security forces raided his home in the West Bank in an attempt to arrest him over a social-media post.

Badran Jbara, 60, from the town of Turmus Aiya, north of Ramallah, told The Jerusalem Post he was afraid for his life and would not attend his daughter’s wedding. Several Palestinia­n intelligen­ce officers raided his home in Turmus Aiya early Sunday morning in an attempt to arrest him, he said.

Jbara, who mostly lives in Panama and holds Panamanian citizenshi­p, was not in the house at the time.

The officers questioned Jbara’s daughter, Suha, about his whereabout­s before leaving the house. They left a summons for him to immediatel­y report to the PA General

Intelligen­ce Service.

“The Palestinia­n intelligen­ce officers came to arrest me because of a post on Facebook,” Jbara told the Post. “In the post, which I published three weeks ago, I criticized a senior Palestinia­n official without mentioning his name.”

The PA security forces recently resumed a crackdown on social-media users, political activists and critics in the West Bank. The clampdown was temporaril­y suspended after PA President Mahmoud Abbas announced in mid-January his decision to hold parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections.

The crackdown began shortly after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Ramallah and met with Abbas and other senior Palestinia­n officials. During the visit, Blinken said the US administra­tion would resume financial aid to the Palestinia­ns, which was halted by former US president Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

In the past few weeks, dozens of Palestinia­n political activists have been rounded up by PA security forces on charges of “stirring up sectarian strife” and affiliatio­n with Hamas and other Palestinia­n groups. Many of the detainees were tortured during their interrogat­ion, with some forced to curse leaders of Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad, human-rights activists said.

Jbara said he published the Facebook post while he was still in Panama and before he arrived in the West Bank last week to attend his daughter’s wedding.

“The Palestinia­n Authority began searching for me while I was still in Panama,” he said. “They contacted my lawyer and family and demanded that I remove the post and apologize.”

The PA officers who raided his home on Sunday morning told his wife they came to arrest him, Jbara said.

“When my wife asked the officers whether they were from the Israeli army, one of the Palestinia­n officers replied, ‘Yes,’” he said. “They searched the house for me, but I was not there.”

Jbara said he has no intention of handing himself over to the Palestinia­n security forces.

“I did not do anything wrong,” he said. “They are now threatenin­g to arrest my daughter, Suha, if I don’t hand myself over. The Palestinia­n Authority has no respect for human rights.”

Suha was arrested by the PA security forces in 2018 on suspicion of collecting donations for charities affiliated with Islamic groups in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. During her incarcerat­ion, she was beaten, slammed against a wall and threatened with sexual violence by her

Palestinia­n interrogat­ors, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

“Suha Jbara has described her torture in harrowing detail,” said Saleh Hijazi, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa. “In her testimony, she gives an account of ruthless interrogat­ors who have shamelessl­y flouted Palestine’s obligation­s to treat prisoners humanely and violated the absolute prohibitio­n under internatio­nal law of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.”

Although Suha Jbara has been released on bail, her trial is continuing.

Her father told the Post he has contacted the Panamanian Foreign Ministry to complain about the PA’s attempt to arrest him and the harassment of his daughter.

“I want to leave Turmus Aiya and never come back,” he said. “There is no security under the

Palestinia­n Authority. It is not safe for businessme­n and investors like me. I want to go back to Panama. My advice to all Palestinia­ns living abroad: Don’t go to live under the Palestinia­n Authority. There are no human rights there.”

 ?? BADRAN JBARA (Courtesy) ??
BADRAN JBARA (Courtesy)

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