Dancing children attacked by Israeli forces
25th February 2015 | International Solidarity Movement, Khalil Team | Hebron, Occupied Palestine
On
the 24th of February in occupied Al-Khalil (Hebron), Israeli forces
opened fire on dancing Palestinian youth, firing tear gas and throwing
stun grenades at group of young children performing a traditional
Palestinian dance as a form of protest in front of Shuhada checkpoint.
The
fifteen young dancers, Palestinian girls and boys between the ages of
six and twelve, gathered to perform dabke, a traditional Palestinian
dance, in an event organized by local Palestinian activist group Youth
Against Settlements. They staged their dance on the open street in Bab
Al-Zawiye (in the H1 – officially Palestinian Authority-controlled –
part of Hebron) near Shuhada checkpoint, as part of a week of actions
planned by Palestinian organizers around the annual Open Shuhada Street
campaign. The children began performing under heavy military
surveillance, as at least thirteen soldiers occupied roofs surrounding
the entrance to the checkpoint.
Even
before the demonstration had begun, Israeli forces closed Shuhada
checkpoint to Palestinian men, only allowing a few women through.
Shuhada checkpoint controls the main access between Bab Al-Zawiye and
the the H2 (fully Israeli-controlled) neighborhood of Tel Rumeida. On
the H2 side, the checkpoint faces Shuhada street, and soldiers restrict
Palestinian access onto the short portion of Shuhada street where they
are still allowed to walk.
“As soon as
the dancing kids moved closer to the checkpoint, soldiers immediately
attacked with two tear gas grenades and two stun grenades,” reported an
ISM volunteer who witnessed the incident. “Israeli soldiers fired tear
gas even though the children were not throwing stones.”
After
first fleeing the assault, the Palestinian children managed to continue
dancing even as around twenty soldiers and eight border police advanced
from the checkpoint into Bab Al-Zawiye. Israeli forces threw a dozen
stun grenades after a few youth began throwing stones at the checkpoint.
Clashes
continued for about an hour and a half, as Israeli soldiers and border
police fired even more rounds of tear gas, several additional stun
grenades, and eventually rubber-coated steel bullets at Palestinian
youth. Advancing further and further into the commercial center of Bab
Al-Zawiye, they ended up shooting into the crowded streets of the city’s
market area. Local activists reported that two Palestinians suffered
injuries from rubber-coated steel bullets.
February 25 marks the 21-year anniversary of the Ibrahimi Mosque massacre;
in 1994 US-born extremist settler Baruch Goldstein murdered 29
Palestinian worshipers inside the Al-Khalil mosque and injured dozens
more. In the time following the attack, Israeli authorities initiated a
crackdown, not on those occupying the city’s illegal settlements, but on
Palestinians. Israel put in place policies, including the closure of
Shuhada street, which would eventually lead to Al-Khalil becoming the
divided city it is today.
Children in
H2, which includes Al-Khalil’s historic Old City and once-thriving
market, constantly endure the violence and daily humiliations of Israeli
military occupation. Children living in the neighborhoods of H2 are
routinely tear gassed on their way to school and face arrest, attack and daily harassment at checkpoints.
The Open Shuhada Street actions are a yearly expression of resistance
to Israel’s Apartheid system, as Palestinians young and old demand and
end to the occupation.
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