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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Paleostinian youths set cars on fire in renewed Jerusalem violence
2010-08-28
[Gulf Times] Paleostinians torched half a dozen vehicles in East Jerusalem yesterday and threw stones and Molotov cocktails at Israeli police after Jewish settlers approached a mosque, local residents and police said.

There were no reported injuries in the incident in the volatile Silwan neighbourhood, where tensions have flared between Paleostinians and a small group of settlers who have moved there in the past two decades.

Local residents said settlers tried to reach a spring, which religious Jews view as a Biblical site, by crossing through a mosque courtyard.
Oh, noze!
Israeli police said Paleostinians then took to the streets in violent demonstrations, throwing rocks and firebombs at police and vehicles, burning six cars.

Meanwhile, an Israeli official lashed out at EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton for questioning the conviction of a Paleostinian activist, calling her comments "highly improper," the Jerusalem Post reported yesterday.

An Israeli military court on Wednesday convicted 39-year-old Abdullah Abu Rahma of organising and attending banned demonstrations against Israel's West Bank separation barrier in the picturesque villageof Bilin. Sentencing is to be delivered at a later date.

A statement issued by Ashton's office after the hearing expressed her concern "that the possible imprisonment of Mr Abu Rahma is intended to prevent him and other Paleostinians from exercising their legitimate right to protest against the existence of the separation barriers in a non-violent manner."

The Post quoted Israeli Foreign Ministry front man Yigal Palmor as saying that Ashton should either honour the court ruling or join Abu Rahma's legal team.

"She should respect the ruling of the Israeli justice system, and refrain from casting aspersions on a legal system that is lauded worldwide by its peers," he said.

"Moreover, interfering with a transparent legal procedure of a democratic country is not just highly improper, but is hardly consistent with promoting European values," he was quoted as saying.

Palmor could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Regular demonstrations by Paleostinian muscle and foreign supporters staged for the past several years in Bilin and nearby Nilin, both close to the quiet little city of Ramallah, are billed as non-violent.

But they frequently turn into clashes between rock-throwing Paleostinian youths and Israeli troops firing tear gas and rubber bullets.

Israel says the barrier - a network of walls, fences and closed military roads - is designed to prevent attacks against the Jewish state and Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank.

The Paleostinians view it as an "apartheid wall" that carves off key parts of their promised future state.
Posted by:Fred

#1  maybe if they changed the picturesque village's name to Chillin', things would calm down
Posted by: Frank G   2010-08-28 10:02  

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