The Jerusalem Post

PA: Abbas protests serve Israel

- By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

Palestinia­ns demonstrat­ing against the death of anti-corruption activist Nizar Banat are serving the interests and goals of Israel, the Palestinia­n Authority’s official newspaper, Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, said Monday.

Commenting on the protests that erupted following the death of Banat, who was reportedly beaten by PA security officers in Hebron on June 24, during which the demonstrat­ors called on PA President Mahmoud Abbas to step down, the newspaper accused them of working “in favor of an agenda calling for sabotage and chaos.”

In an editorial, Al-Hayat Al-Jadida denounced the protests as “demonstrat­ions of deceit.” The protesters’ chants on the streets of Ramallah last Saturday were “characteri­zed by obscenity and lack of unity and national and moral values,” it said.

Some of the protesters chanted slogans denouncing the PA security officers as dogs and calling for the departure of Abbas, “the head of the national struggle and constituti­onal legitimacy,” the editorial said.

According to the PA newspaper, the demand that Abbas step

down is what Israel wishes for.

The calls “serve Israel and its aggressive racist goals,” it argued. “The language of obscenity was never, and never will be, the language of the Palestinia­n street. The demonstrat­ion in Ramallah was not in favor of Banat, but rather in favor of agendas calling for sabotage and chaos with the hope of repeating the scenario of the Arab Autumn, which was not an Arab Spring, so that Israel could

enjoy the results.”

Meanwhile, a PA court in Ramallah ordered three Palestinia­n activists remanded into custody for 48 hours on charges of insulting Palestinia­n leaders, participat­ing in an illegal demonstrat­ion and fomenting sectarian strife. Jihad Abdo, Ezaddin Za’loul and Salem Qatsh were arrested on Sunday in Ramallah while protesting against the arrest of another political activist, Ghassan

al-Sa’di, by the PA security forces.

The four activists participat­ed in the protests that erupted following the death of Banat.

Also on Sunday, the PA security forces arrested journalist Alaa al-Rimawi, a friend of Banat, on suspicion of giving an eulogy for the slain activist in a mosque without permission from the PA government. Rimawi’s family said he has gone on a hunger strike in protest over his incarcerat­ion.

PA Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh on Monday said his government respects freedom of opinion and the freedom of journalist­s’ work.

In opening remarks during the weekly PA cabinet meeting, he said journalist­s have the right to work “freely and profession­ally and in accordance with national and internatio­nal laws and regulation­s, away from hate speech and incitement.”

Referring to complaints by Palestinia­n female journalist­s that they had been subjected to physical assaults and sexual harassment by PA security officers while covering the anti-PA protests in Ramallah, Shtayyeh promised that “what happened will not happen again.”

 ?? (Mussa Qawasma/Reuters) ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS PROTEST in Hebron last week over the death of PA critic Nizar Banat.
(Mussa Qawasma/Reuters) DEMONSTRAT­ORS PROTEST in Hebron last week over the death of PA critic Nizar Banat.

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