Some Background on Ni’ilin
Recently, I have received a number of requests for information about the village of Ni’ilin. The Popular Struggle Coordination Committee, one of the best resources for information on the unarmed resistance to Israel’s occupation which I have recently become a part of, has an excellent history of the struggle in Ni’ilin. It is republished below.
Two Years of Resistance in Ni’ilin
Two years have passed since the village of Ni’lin began a campaign. Hundreds of demonstrations have been held on the lands of a small agricultural village, located north of Ramallah in the West Bank. The demonstrations began when112 bulldozers arrived. We tried to block their paths with our bodies, stop their motors from uprooting our trees, destroying our livelihoods.
The residents of Ni’lin began organizing when construction of the Wall first began in 2004. While a court injunction temporarily delayed the theft of village lands, the Army came back in May 2008. In response to just efforts, the Army put the village under a 4 day curfew, hoping to break the spirit of our resistance.
The millitary intended to scare us into silently handing over our fields. In the first months of protests, Ahmed Mousa, aged 10 and Youself Amira, aged 17 were killed by Israeli armed forces. The demonstrations strengthened and the army turned to night raids to weaken our movement. Soldiers came regularly in the night, harassing family members of suspected protesters, trying to turn us against each other.
The violence on protesters intensified during the Gaza assault in December 2009. During an unarmed solidarity with Gaza demonstration, Mohammed al-Khawaja and Arafat Ratib al-Khawaja were shot with live ammunition by Israeli soldiers. The army began using a new high-velocity tear gas projectile and re-introduced a 0.22 caliber live ammunition as a means of crowd control. Tristan Anderson, an American solidarity activist was critically injured by a gas projectile and Aqel Srour was killed with a 0.22 bullet to his chest. But we continued, every Friday, to march from the center to the place where an electric fence replaced our olive trees.
The settlement of Hashmonaim and the Wall, ruled illegal by the International Court of Justice in 2004 stole around 7000 dunums of the village, leaving us with 56% of our land. We began to cut the electrical fence, and implement international law ourselves. Israel hid the fence behind a high concrete wall.
Yet we persist. Five deaths, hundreds of arrests, countless injuries from the weapons regularly intended to scare us, to stop us. Two years. A new wave of repression has been unleashed on all the villages who organize against the illegal theft of their livelihood. East Jerusalem, Bil’in, al-Ma’asara, al-Walaja, Beit Jala, and Nabi Saleh continue to fight for justice. We cannot be silent. Can you?
| Print article | This entry was posted by Joseph Dana on 17/07/2010 at 11:28, and is filed under West Bank. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |
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