ISRAEL NEWS


May 9, 2010

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Israeli Forces Demolish Settlement Homes

Jerusalem
JTA Wire Service

A Jewish family was evacuated from its West Bank home by force before the house was demolished.

About 100 protesters surrounded the home Thursday after two other homes in the Hashmonaim neighborhood were razed. The homes were believed to be violating the 10-month West Bank construction freeze.

The owners of the last home to be razed had attempted to show the security forces proof that the house had been built legally, Haaretz reported. Family members had barricaded themselves inside to prevent the demolition.

Earlier in the week, several buildings were demolished in the northern West Bank settlement of Shavei Shomron.

Israel Deports Spanish Clown for Terrorist Ties

Israel’s security service deported a renowned Spanish clown.

Ivan Prado, director of the International Clown Festival in Galicia, arrived in Israel late last month with plans to organize a clown festival in Ramallah. The Shin Bet questioned Prado, as well as the Spanish national of Arab descent with whom he was traveling, for six hours before placing them on a return flight, Haaretz reported.

Prado was accused of having ties to Palestinian terrorist organizations.

Since his return to Spain, Prado has launched a media campaign denouncing Israel and comparing the situation of Palestinians in the West Bank with Jews in Poland, Haaretz reported.

Arrest of Arab Leader, Gag Order Are Protested
 
A number of Palestinian and pro-Palestinian groups are calling on Israel to release the director of an Israeli-Arab umbrella body whose arrest is under a gag order.

Nine groups signed the statement appearing on the Electronic Intifada Web site calling for the release of Ammer Makhoul, who directs Ittijah—the Union of Arab Community-Based Associations.

Makhoul was arrested before dawn Thursday; Israeli authorities have imposed a gag order on his arrest.

Electronic Intifada, which is U.S.-based, would not be subject to such a gag order. One of the signatories, Addameer, a Palestinian prisoners’ rights group based in Ramallah, also posted the statement on its Web site.

According to the statement, 16 security agents and police raided Makhoul’s Haifa apartment, confiscating computers and cell phones belonging to him, his wife and his two daughters. Ittijah’s office also was raided. The reasons for the arrest and raids are not known.

Makhoul was remanded for six days and was denied access to a lawyer for 48 hours, according to Electronic Intifada.

The statement said that Israeli Interior Minister Eli Yishai had signed an April 21 order banning Makhoul from leaving the country for two months because his “exit poses a serious threat to the security of the state.” The nine groups said that “as Makhoul’s arrest warrant and travel ban order are based on emergency regulations and ‘secret’ information that is never disclosed to the defense, the undersigned consider them to be arbitrary political actions in violation of fundamental due process principles and human rights standards.”

NGO Monitor, a watchdog of nongovernmental organizations that are highly critical of Israel, says Ittijah played a “prominent” role at the United Nations Durban conference on racism in 2001, which devolved into anti-Israel and anti-Jewish hate fest. According to NGO Monitor, Ittijah will not accept aid conditioned on non-affiliation with terrorist groups.

In addition to Addameer, other signatories include the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, based in the Gaza Strip, and the Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies.

This story reprinted courtesy of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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