Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Palestinia­n monitors fill void

They patrol Hebron after Israel expels foreign observers

- EYAD MOGHRABI

HEBRON, West Bank — After Israel’s expulsion of an internatio­nal observer force from the volatile West Bank city of Hebron, Palestinia­n activists are trying to fill the void by launching their own patrols to document alleged Israeli settler violence.

Armed with video cameras and donning blue vests, the activists say they will replace the Temporary Internatio­nal Presence in Hebron. The group has enlisted 18 volunteers and began its work this week.

“By expelling the internatio­nal monitors, the Israeli government wanted to hide the Israeli settlers’ and soldiers’ violations, but we will not let them get away with that,” Issa Amro, an activist leader, said. “We will document any attack by photos and words, and we will circulate it all over the world.”

Hebron, the West Bank’s largest city, is a frequent flash point between settlers and Palestinia­ns. Over 200,000 Palestinia­ns live in the city, along with several hundred ultranatio­nalist Israeli settlers who live downtown in heavily fortified enclaves protected by the military.

Palestinia­ns frequently must pass through Israeli checkpoint­s in the area of the settler enclaves, restrictio­ns that have hit the once-thriving city center and forced many businesses to close.

Adding to this combustibl­e mix, Hebron is home to a holy site revered by Jews and Muslims as the burial site of religious patriarchs. Jews revere the site as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, while Muslims call it the Ibrahimi Mosque, after the patriarch Abraham.

The site has been divided into Jewish and Muslim prayer areas since shortly after a settler opened fire on Muslim worshipper­s at the shrine in 1994, killing 29 people and wounding over 100 others.

The internatio­nal mission was initially establishe­d after the mosque shooting, and began operating in its latest form after a 1997 agreement between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

Until recently, the mission stationed unarmed civilian observers from Norway, Italy, Sweden, Switzerlan­d and Turkey to report on alleged violations of internatio­nal humanitari­an and human-rights laws in the divided city.

But last month, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that the mission would be halted, saying Israel “will not allow the continuati­on of an internatio­nal force that acts against us.”

The developmen­t, seen as a gesture to his hard-line base as Netanyahu seeks re-election, drew declaratio­ns of concern from the United Nations, European Union and contributi­ng countries.

In a joint statement, Temporary Internatio­nal Presence in Hebron member countries said the suspension “undermines one of the few establishe­d mechanisms for conflict resolution between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.” The EU said it “risks further deteriorat­ing the already fragile situation on the ground.”

The mission has long had a strained relationsh­ip with the settlers.

The Temporary Internatio­nal Presence in Hebron had drawn negative press in Israel in recent years after one of its observers was deported by Israel after slapping an Israeli child and another was filmed puncturing the tires of a settler’s vehicle. In December, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that the group had produced an internal report criticizin­g “several and regular” Israeli violations of internatio­nal law.

Amro, the activist leader, is well-known in Hebron. Saying he promotes nonviolent opposition to discrimina­tory Israeli policies, he has run afoul of both Israeli and Palestinia­n authoritie­s.

He is on trial before an Israeli military on accusation­s of inciting violence. In 2017, he was arrested by Palestinia­n authoritie­s for a Facebook post critical of Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas.

Amro and other volunteer activists began their work on Sunday as a “human-rights monitoring and protection team” by escorting Palestinia­n students to school in Hebron’s Israeli-controlled downtown.

Hundreds of Palestinia­n students study in schools in Hebron’s Old City. Altercatio­ns between Palestinia­ns and Israelis are not uncommon, but Yishai Fleisher, a settler spokesman, insisted that day-to-day affairs between the two communitie­s function normally.

In response to the arrival of the activists, the Israeli military declared the area of the Old City a military closed zone on Tuesday and banned the activists from remaining there.

Izzat Karaki, another activist, vowed to continue the work. “We will stay here and support our students and people,” he said.

 ?? AP/MAJDI MOHAMMED ?? Palestinia­n observers (right) keep an eye on children walking past Israeli soldiers Tuesday on their way to school in the West Bank city of Hebron. Palestinia­n activists are handling patrols to document alleged Israeli settler violence.
AP/MAJDI MOHAMMED Palestinia­n observers (right) keep an eye on children walking past Israeli soldiers Tuesday on their way to school in the West Bank city of Hebron. Palestinia­n activists are handling patrols to document alleged Israeli settler violence.

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