Activists see Israeli police using violence to silence support for Sheikh Jarrah

Ahmed Maher

The National  /  June 9, 2021

Israeli and Palestinian activists say security forces are using increasingly heavy-handed tactics to stifle protests.

Israeli and Palestinian activists accused the country’s security forces of waging a violent campaign to silence those protesting against the threatened eviction of Palestinian families from East Jerusalem.

The police, they said, burst into the homes of prominent activists and arrested them, assaulted marathon runners trying to support the Palestinian families, tear-gassed demonstrators and detained journalists.

The tiny neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah has become one of the most highly militarized zones in the city, with security checkpoints and a heavy police presence on the streets.

The new measures effectively turned Sheikh Jarrah into a prison for its Palestinian residents, they said.

“The Israeli police are treating the Palestinians of East Jerusalem as the enemy,” said Daniel Seidemann, an Israeli attorney specializing in Israeli-Palestinian relations in Jerusalem and a world-renowned expert on the geopolitics of Israel.

“They are targeting the Palestinian residents in East Jerusalem and the press. My friends from Peace Now all receive threats, and they are not idle threats, because of their anti-occupation stances,” he told The National, referring to an NGO in Israel advocating for a two-state solution.

On Sunday, Israeli police raided the home of activist Muna al-Kurd, 23, who led protests against the potential expulsion of dozens of Palestinian families from their homes in the area, including her own.

Ms Al-Kurd, a prominent campaigner for the families on social media, was led away in handcuffs before being released later in the day along with her twin brother Mohammed, who was also detained after turning himself in for questioning.

As their father Nabil al-Kurd held a press conference with Muna outside the police station where she and her brother had been detained, the police threw stun grenades and tear gas canisters to disperse the crowd.

The arrests came days after Israeli police detained reporters and beat photojournalists for covering demonstrations in the contested neighbourhood.

Jalal Abukhater, a Palestinian writer and civil servant in Jerusalem, wrote on Twitter that he was attacked by Israeli police forces on Friday during a marathon outside Sheikh Jarrah to draw attention to the families’ plight before a third hearing, at the Israeli Supreme Court, in the long-running legal battle.

“I run marathons around the world. Never have I been attacked violently by police forces as I was today, during the Jerusalem run from #SaveSheikhJarrah to #SaveSilwan. I was beaten six times, attacked by Israeli forces, for running in my ancestral town and city,” he tweeted, referring to Silwan, another neighbourhood in East Jerusalem, where seven Palestinian families face losing their homes to Jewish settlers.

Israel used a new chemical, known as Skunk, to disperse the Palestinian protests.

Developed by two Israeli defence companies and named after the mammals that produce a foul-smelling odour as a defence mechanism, Skunk is sprayed on to crowds of demonstrators from armoured vehicles.

The stinking fluid is marketed as a more effective alternative to tear gas and rubber bullets. The Israeli army says Skunk is designed to minimize casualties [sic].

Rights groups including Amnesty International and the Association for Civil Rights in Israel criticized the extensive use of the weapon.

Activists on the ground say the actions of the security forces in East Jerusalem are designed to silence those championing the Sheikh Jarrah demonstrations.

“This is not the Israeli police that we know. This is different,” said Mr Seidemann, who has lived in Jerusalem for 50 years and is the founder of Terrestrial Jerusalem, an Israeli NGO with a mission to identify and track the full spectrum of developments in Jerusalem that could affect either the political process or permanent status options.

The Israeli police did not respond to a request for comment.

The legal battle for the right to live in East Jerusalem coincided with weeks of Arab-Jewish riots in Israel and helped to ignite an 11-day Gaza war in May. A ceasefire took effect on May 21.

At least 243 people, including 68 children, were killed in Gaza. In Israel 12 people were killed, including two children.

Heavy-handed tactics

The heavy-handed tactics employed by the Israeli police at Al-Aqsa Mosque last month sparked the worst communal violence in Israel in decades.

Violence flared in several Israeli cities and towns with sizeable Arab populations, chiefly the town of Lod [Lydda], south-east of Tel Aviv.

Aya Zinatey, 33, a Palestinian activist from Lod, says the Israeli police have a policy of detaining people and then releasing them as a way of intimidation.

“Silencing our voices in Palestine is a long-running Israeli policy. But it has become more evident recently,” Ms Zinatey told The National.

Ms Zinatey, who defines herself as a political feminist, is organizing open-air public speaking and discussions on the Israeli occupation in her hometown and other Palestinian cities that were under Ottoman and then British colonial rule before the creation of Israel in 1948.

“I heard that Palestinian women before Al-Nakba in 1948 held gatherings called halakat istikbal [round table talks] on Palestine and decided to follow suit,” she said, using the Arabic term for catastrophe, which the Palestinians use to describe the war that broke out after Israel’s creation in which many of their ancestors had to flee their homes.

Al Nakba is generally marked on May 15 – the day after Israel’s Independence Day.

“This Saturday we are organizing a campaign in Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan to encourage Palestinians to buy the products of fellow Palestinians and boycott Israeli products. We will never stop drawing international attention to the displacement of fellow Palestinians,” Ms Zinatey said.

Mr Seidemann, the Israeli lawyer and peace activist, said the Israeli occupation of East Jerusalem and other Palestinian territories must come to an end sooner or later.

“The Jewish people have achieved freedom in the form of a sovereign state: Israel. The Palestinians will also achieve their freedom. I have spent my adult life trying to make it possible but it will happen and, only when the Palestinians are free to run their lives completely, will Israel be free. I’m not comparing the occupier with the occupied, but occupation is a curse on both,” he said.

Ahmed Maher – Senior Correspondent, Abu Dhabi