World

UN experts slam Israel's 'harassment' in West Bank

A Palestinian demonstrator holds a flag as people clash with Israeli forces during a protest against Israeli settlement activity in Beit Dajan, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Tuesday. - Reuters
 
A Palestinian demonstrator holds a flag as people clash with Israeli forces during a protest against Israeli settlement activity in Beit Dajan, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Tuesday. - Reuters
GENEVA/JENIN: UN experts on Tuesday slammed Israel's 'harassment' of human rights defenders and humanitarian workers in the occupied West Bank's Masafer Yatta villages, where Israel has a military zone.

The special rapporteurs insisted such harassment must stop, and said residents continue to be threatened by the risk of forcible transfer, including mass forced evictions and arbitrary displacement.

'Israeli authorities' hubris is proving without limits. They are even harassing human rights defenders and humanitarian workers seeking to support and protect people facing grave human rights violations in Masafer Yatta,' the four experts said in a joint statement.

'This is a direct assault on the core of human rights and international humanitarian law... this also confirms that impunity over abuse of power fosters power to abuse.'

The case of Masafer Yatta -- or Firing Zone 918 -- an agricultural area near Hebron, has been one of Israel's longest running legal battles.

In the early 1980s, the army declared the 30-square-kilometre territory a restricted military area and claimed it was uninhabited.

Residents of eight villages had been in court for around 20 years fighting Israeli government efforts to evict them.

But in May this year, Israel's High Court approved the eviction of Palestinian villagers to make way for a military training zone.

'The tragic implications of that decision are now before our eyes: roughly 1,200 Palestinian residents in Masafer Yatta are left defenceless in front of the threat of forced eviction and arbitrary displacement,' said the experts, who do not speak for the United Nations but are mandated to report their findings to it.

The statement was penned by a special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory as well as rapporteurs on internally displaced persons, adequate housing, and the situation of human rights defenders.

They voiced dismay at reports that human rights defenders and humanitarian workers have been harassed by the Israeli military in Masafer Yatta.

'They have been stopped and detained for several hours at checkpoints and had their identification documents or cars confiscated, often on grounds that they had entered a closed military site without permission,' their statement said.

The experts expressed particular concern for Sami Hureini, a prominent human rights defender and member of the 'Youth of Sumud' activist group 'engaged in peaceful resistance against illegal settlements in the southern Hebron hills'.

On June 28, he was reportedly arrested at a checkpoint in Masafer Yatta and detained by the military for several hours, the experts said.

'He is currently being tried in the Ofer Military Court for allegedly obstructing and assaulting a soldier and entering a closed military zone, following his participation in a peaceful demonstration on 8 January 2021,' they said.

Hureini's attorney, Riham Nasra, said her legal team has presented 'hundreds of photos and videos' to disprove the allegations against her client.

'Five activists who were near Sami during the protest testified that at no point did Sami resort to violence,' Nasra said in a statement.

The Israeli military and the country's foreign ministry did not immediately comment on the remarks by the UN experts.

BORDER AREAS CLOSED

Israel's army closed areas near the Gaza border to civilians on Tuesday, citing a risk of reprisals, following the overnight arrest of two senior Palestinian Islamic Jihad members, the military and Palestinian sources said.

A 17-year-old Palestinian was shot dead by Israeli forces during a late Monday raid in the flashpoint West Bank district of Jenin.

Islamic Jihad identified the teenager as Dirar al Kafrayni, and said he was a member of the group and 'our heroic martyr'.

The army said it had operated alongside police, who arrested 'two wanted terror suspects.'

A Palestinian security source, who requested anonymity, said that one of those detained was Bassem al Saadi, a senior figure in Islamic Jihad's political wing in the West Bank.

The source identified the second person detained as Saadi's son-in-law, a Jenin-based fundraiser for the hardline group.

The Israeli military said it was preventing civilian access to areas near Gaza 'due to a direct threat'. - AFP