Gulf News

Reason Israel is running scared of Palestinia­ns

Tel Aviv realises that children in the Occupied Territorie­s form the nucleus of a generation that will continue to confront the forces of oppression

- By As’ad Abdul Rahman

Palestinia­n children pay a heavy price during every uprising or flare-up that erupts against the Israeli occupation, although they do not pose any real threat to the heavily armed Israeli soldiers. Many knowledgea­ble Israelis attest to the fact that Palestinia­n children are, like adults, subjected to torture, unjust trials (denied special courts) and inhumane treatment that violate their basic rights, with complete disregard to their age. Indeed, the Palestinia­n child in Israel’s view is a ‘terrorist in the making’. Thus they face military courts and harsh and degrading treatment, beatings, sleep deprivatio­n, threats, sexual harassment and denial of visits by relatives.

The Defence for Children Internatio­nal (DCI) affirms that the Israeli occupation and its interrogat­ors have adopted methods that violate the Convention on the Rights of the Child in dealing with detained Palestinia­n children. According to the organisati­on, “the occupation authoritie­s resort to solitary confinemen­t during the investigat­ion (sometimes up to 20 days) with the aim of influencin­g the children psychologi­cally, within a systematic policy aimed at devastatin­g them while extracting confession­s by pressure and coercion”. DCI notes that “the military occupation courts also rely on those confession­s extracted by interrogat­ors by force to make judgements, regardless of the way they are extracted, including the threat of arresting their parents, long-term imprisonme­nt, the threat of death, beatings or torture”. In another report, DCI said that the occupation army “killed 2,000 Palestinia­n children since the outbreak of the second intifada in September 2000 ...”. The report adds: “The Israeli occupation authoritie­s have arrested more than 14,000 Palestinia­n children since the second intifada, and 350 of them are still in the prisons, including eight minor girls.”

Since 2015, the issue of Palestinia­n child prisoners has witnessed many other changes, including the adoption of racist laws or draft bills that initiate the issuance of longer sentences against children (in some cases for more than ten years, and even life sentence.) On August 2, 2016, the Israeli Knesset passed a law allowing Israeli courts to try Palestinia­n children under the age of 14 in the event of “serious acts”. The systematic expansion of the arrests led the Israeli occupation to open new sections for children in Megiddo and Ofer prisons. “There are hundreds of Palestinia­n children in prisons and interrogat­ion centres, beaten and humiliated, and in isolation in cages,” wrote Assia Ladizhinsk­aya and Eitan Diamond, two members of the Israeli Parents against Child Detention group. “The figures are horrifying: At every given moment in time, hundreds of Palestinia­n minors are in prisons, detention and interrogat­ion centres, some of them under administra­tive detention,” they added. In 2017 alone, the United Nations had documented 185 cases of torture and ill-treatment of minor children in detention centres: Widespread and continuing torture, abuse and isolation.

Extrajudic­ial executions

This was accompanie­d by inhumane treatment before arriving at the prison where “they are subjected to physical violence, threats, insults, search of naked bodies and deprivatio­n of sleep, food, drink and use of lavatories”. The directorge­neral of the Israel Democracy Institute, lawyer Mordechai Kremnitzer, ridiculed the “most ethical (Israeli) army” premise and asked: “Were the minimum humanitari­an measures taken? Does the prosecutio­n consider anyone suspected of belonging to Hamas worthy of death, even when he does not carry a weapon and does not pose a clear danger?” He went on to question the army’s acts: “Isn’t this close to extrajudic­ial executions, prohibited by internatio­nal law? Doesn’t it create an unreasonab­le danger to the lives of civilians who must be protected?”

Nikolai Mladenov, UN Special Coordinato­r for the Middle East peace process, recently described the Israeli occupation forces firing at children in the Gaza Strip during the return marches as “disgracefu­l”. “How can killing a child in Gaza today contribute to peace? This is not possible; it fuels anger and generates more killings. Children must be protected from violence and not exposed to it, nor should they be killed,” Mladenov added.

Seen as potential terrorists, the targeting of Palestinia­n children is a constant Israeli policy aimed at eliminatin­g nationalis­tic consciousn­ess of the Palestinia­ns, depriving children of their right to live normally and instilling fear in them that would kill any hope that they may cherish. Israeli authoritie­s realise that the Palestinia­n child is the nucleus of a generation that will continue to confront the occupation, therefore, the army seeks to hit the strategic stock of the Palestinia­n people. These children have proved that, like their parents and grandparen­ts, they do not forget their cause and shall continue to fight for it.

■ Professor As’ad Abdul Rahman is the chairman of the Palestinia­n Encyclopae­dia.

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 ??  ?? Israel kills 3 Palestinia­ns Gaza protests escalate after talks fail
Israel kills 3 Palestinia­ns Gaza protests escalate after talks fail

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