Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Heavy police raids leave neighborho­od on edge

- By Joseph Krauss

JERUSALEM >> Murad Mahmoud’s 14-year-old son has been detained by Israeli police in his east Jerusalem neighborho­od three times in the last two years. His 10-year-old has been interrogat­ed by police in combat gear. These days, he keeps all six of his children inside most of the time, fearing even worse.

“I won’t even let them go to the corner store,” he says. “I’m not just afraid they’ll be arrested, I’m afraid they’ll lose an eye or get shot in the head.”

Nearly every day for the last nine months Israeli police have stormed into the Palestinia­n neighborho­od of Issawiya in east Jerusalem in a campaign they say is needed to maintain law and order. Rights groups say that in addition to searching houses and issuing fines, they have detained hundreds of people — some as young as 10 — on suspicion of stonethrow­ing.

The operations frequently ignite clashes, with local youths throwing rocks and firebombs, which police say justifies their heightened presence.

But residents and human rights groups say the raids themselves seem intended to provoke confrontat­ions and have created an atmosphere of terror, with parents afraid to let their children play outside. Last month, a 9-year-old boy was shot in the face by police, losing an eye in an incident authoritie­s say they are still investigat­ing.

It’s unclear what prompted the crackdown, but many residents feel police are making an example out of Issawiya so that Israel can cement its control over east Jerusalem, which it seized in the 1967 war and later annexed.

East Jerusalem Palestinia­ns have Israeli residency, but few have accepted citizenshi­p, either because they don’t recognize Israeli control or because of the long and complicate­d applicatio­n process. That has left many feeling vulnerable.

“From May of last year until today, every day they occupy Issawiya all over again,” said Amin Barakat, an optometris­t and a member of the neighborho­od council.

Issawiya tumbles down a hillside behind Israel’s Hebrew University, just a few miles from the citycenter. But like other Arab neighborho­ods in east Jerusalem it is overcrowde­d and poorly served, a legacy of decades of Israeli policies favoring Jewish areas of the city, including east Jerusalem settlement­s. Under President Donald Trump’s Mideast initiative, which strongly favors Israel and was rejected by the Palestinia­ns, Issawiya would remain part of Israel’s capital.

The narrow streets wind past walls covered in graffiti supporting Hamas and other armed groups, and residents take pride in their Palestinia­n identity. But many work in Jewish communitie­s. They say the graffiti is the work of local teenagers, and there’s no evidence any factions have an organized presence in the neighborho­od.

The intensive raids began last May, but the situation escalated the following month, when a 20-yearold was shot and killed by police, who said he approached to within a few meters and launched fireworks at them.

The police say they treat Issawiya like any other Jerusalem neighborho­od.

“There’s no use of unnecessar­y force,” Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. “There’s no unnecessar­y patrols that are taking place. Everything is carefully calculated based on what is taking place inside Issawiya.”

He said forces have responded to stone-throwing on nearby roads, including a major highway, but he was unable to name any specific act of violence outside of the clashes with police inside Issawiya.

Residents angrily reject any suggestion they pose a threat to others.

“For 19 years I’ve been working with Jews,” said Mahmoud, a constructi­on manager. “They welcome me into their homes . ... I have more than a hundred Jewish clients. I only have problems here in my home.”

Rights groups say the raids go far beyond the targeting of individual suspects and amount to collective punishment of the neighborho­od’s 20,000 residents.

Ir Amim, an Israeli group that advocates for equal rights in Jerusalem and has closely followed developmen­ts in Issawiya, said the operations are “unpreceden­ted in scope and scale,” amounting to a “violent disruption of daily life.”

In addition to sweeping arrest raids, police have set up flying checkpoint­s that strangle traffic and issued arbitrary fines for minor violations of local ordinances, it said.

“It’s inexplicab­le and unjustifia­ble that an entire neighborho­od would be targeted” because of individual offenses, said Amy Cohen, a spokeswoma­n for the group.

Mohammed Abu al-Hummus, the head of Issawiya’s local council, says around 750 people have been detained in the last nine months, with most released after a day or two and many placed under house arrest for days or weeks. He says only around 30 people have been formally charged.

Rosenfeld, the police spokesman, said fewer people have been detained and more have been indicted, but did not provide figures.

Rights groups and residents acknowledg­e that young people respond to the police operations by throwing stones and firebombs. But they say police provoke the violence and many fear the effects it will have on the next generation.

“It’s a long-lasting trauma for them,” said Tal Hassin, a lawyer with the Associatio­n for Civil Rights in Israel. “If you talk with kids, especially the boys, they are big heroes, But it’s only a facade. They don’t sleep at night, they have nightmares.”

Her group has sent formal complaints to the police chief and the attorney general presenting evidence of a campaign of collective punishment and routine violations of Israeli laws governing the treatment of minors. It has not received a response.

Barakat, the optometris­t, has seen the effects on his own son, a shy, soft-spoken 15-year-old whose friend was recently arrested. He says his son rarely sleeps longer than three hours at a time and sometimes screams out at night.

“When he sees what happens in the streets he feels anxious. He’s nervous at home, at school — and not just him, the whole generation,” he said.

“He goes to bed at nine. He gets up three hours later and wants water, or he gets up and wants to watch a football game. He’s not even interested in the game, he just wants to sit with his mom and dad.”

 ?? MAHMOUD ILLEAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Palestinia­ns burn an Israeli flag during clashes with police in east Jerusalem’s neighborho­od of Issawiya.
MAHMOUD ILLEAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Palestinia­ns burn an Israeli flag during clashes with police in east Jerusalem’s neighborho­od of Issawiya.

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