Dayton Daily News

Israel official led secret inquiry into protest icon

Comments draw accusation­s of racism from family.

- By Josef Federman

JERUSALEM — A senior Israeli official on Wednesday said he led a secret investigat­ion into 16-year-old Palestinia­n protest icon Ahed Tamimi and her family, in part because their appearance — including “blondhaire­d, freckled” children in “Western clothes” — made them seem less like “real” Palestinia­ns.

The stunning comments by Michael Oren, a deputy minister and former ambassador to the United States, promptly drew accusation­s of racism from the family — the latest twist in a case that has turned into a public relations headache for Israel.

The case revolves around Israel’s handling of Ahed Tamimi, who was arrested on Dec. 19 for slapping two Israeli soldiers outside her West Bank home four days earlier.

Video of the scuffle quickly spread, giving Ahed worldwide attention. The girl, noticeable for her long blond curls, and her mother are now being held in jail. Ahed faces charges that carry up to 14 years in prison.

Oren told The Associated Press that he had led a classified parliament­ary investigat­ion into the Tamimis two years ago in which Israeli security agencies and diplomats participat­ed.

The family has a long history of leading protests against Israeli policies in the West Bank that often turn into clashes with soldiers in their village of Nabi Saleh and Ahed has been involved in highly publicized scuffles with soldiers in the past.

Oren said his investigat­ion looked into whether the protests were genuine or whether the family members were provocateu­rs, paid to send children to clash with soldiers.

Derisively calling the skirmishes caught on tape “Pallywood,” Oren claimed that “someone” was funding the unrest to harm Israel’s image, without providing evidence.

“The Tamimi family and those claiming to be part of the Tamimi family have been provoking Israeli soldiers for many, many years now,” he said. “The children were chosen on the basis of their external look, to look Western, freckled, and blond-haired.”

“They were dressed as Westerners,” he added. “They don’t dress the way children dress in the West Bank, for a very specific purpose: to get soldiers to react violently to them, to take pictures of this violence and to spread it around the world in order to delegitimi­ze, discredit the state of Israel.”

He called it a “very sophistica­ted operation” that has succeeded in manipulati­ng the Western press.

In an interview with Israeli Channel 10 TV, Oren claimed one boy appeared in different videos with a cast on one arm at one protest, and on his other arm at another protest, before disappeari­ng from demonstrat­ions altogether.

In a statement from his office, Oren said: “In discussion­s held in the committee, the issue of the family’s credibilit­y was raised and if it really is a real family.”

Ahed’s father, Bassem Tamimi, called Oren’s investigat­ion “silly and stupid” and said the investigat­ion was racist.

“We, the Tamimi family, were here in Palestine before the creation of Israel, and we will stay,” he said. “Denying that Palestinia­ns could be blond reflects racism in the Israeli society.”

Ahed has been celebrated by Palestinia­ns as a national hero, and Israel’s treatment of her has drawn the attention of internatio­nal activists, human rights groups and U.N. officials.

In the Dec. 15 video, she is seen approachin­g two soldiers standing outside her home. She yells at them, tells them to leave, then kicks and slaps them as they stand silently.

The family says the girl was upset because a young cousin had been shot in the head and seriously wounded with a rubber bullet fired by Israeli troops. But the altercatio­n drew outrage in Israel over what some had seen as a humiliatio­n of the military.

In a reflection of the tensions, Israel’s defense minister, Avigdor Lieberman, ordered the popular Army Radio station to ban any songs composed by Yehonatan Geffen, a leading journalist and songwriter, because of a poem he published that praised Ahed.

Israel’s attorney general ruled that Lieberman has no authority over the station’s programmin­g.

 ?? AP ?? Ahed Tamimi is brought to a courtroom inside Ofer military prison near Jerusalem. She was arrested in December for slapping two Israeli soldiers.
AP Ahed Tamimi is brought to a courtroom inside Ofer military prison near Jerusalem. She was arrested in December for slapping two Israeli soldiers.

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