Eric Mueller
comments: THIS article is translated
from the Palestine Chronicle and,
on the basis of extensive
interviews, indicates that the
Zionist practice of stripping
male prisoners naked in public is
widespread. Then, below it, on the lighter
side, is a Canadian article I
almost missed because the title
put me off. But I was wrong! The
Canadian author Thomas Walkom
(and you can find his photo on
the Toronto Star website by
searching under "columnists" for
his name, which is where you can
locate this story as well) says
that Bush might be a dangerous
lunatic, but not a moron, because
morons are nice people. The Toronto Star's URL is
www.thestar.com. I have the URL
for this particular story down
below with the story, but it's
extraordinarily long and if it
doesn't work you might just have
to click on columnists and then
find it
(as the second one) under
Walkom's name. Arabist Eric Mueller is
this website's expert on Middle
Eastern affairs. |
Palestine
Chronicle Tuesday, November 26 2002 Stripping
Palestinians has Become Common Practice:
Eyewitness Accounts "They forced Yasser to take
off all his clothes including his
underwear
they ordered him to walk
like a dog and then he burst into tears
.." By Suzanne Russ
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM (PC) -
On Monday, November 25,
Israeli soldiers ordered a young resident
of the town of Nablus to strip completely
naked in the street, according to
Palestinian witnesses. Yasser Sharar, 25, was caught
violating the curfew in Nablus and was
stopped by Israeli soldiers at gunpoint,
who immediately ordered him to remove his
clothes. In an interview with Reuters, a witness
explained, "They forced Yasser to take off
all his clothes including his
underwear
they ordered him to walk
like a dog and then he burst into
tears," The eyewitness who watched the scene
from a few meters away continued, "He kept
crying and was in a very stressful
situation
many residents, including
women watched him and he was very
embarrassed." Israeli soldiers refuted the claim,
saying that they merely asked him to lift
his shirt, but he voluntarily removed all
his clothing to get media attention. The
Reuters report also claimed that this is
the first time Israeli soldiers have
ordered Palestinians to completely strip
naked publicly in a security
operation. However, recent interviews conducted by
the Palestine Chronicle with scores
of residents of the Jenin refugee camp
contradicted the Reuters claim. Dozens of
residents of the refugee camp claimed that
during the Israeli invasion of April,
2002, it was a common practice to force
residents to strip naked as a form of
humiliation, or as the Israelis say, a
"security operation." Na'el Ammar, 43, is a resident
of the Jenin refugee camp and explains how
Israeli soldiers arrested and detained
scores of men from the refugee camp, and
forced many to strip naked, " We were
mostly older people, sick and wounded. We
had nine handicapped people with us, three
were from the same family, sons of Abu
Ibrahim. Some of us were too old, they
were senile. When they told them "go left"
they would go right, but they stripped
them naked anyway. I tried to help them as
much as I could. I was the only one who
spoke Hebrew
Close to us was a group
of young men. They were handcuffed, naked
and lying on their stomachs. The Israeli
tanks would pass by them so fast, only
forty centimeters away from their
heads." Nawal Hawashin, a mother of
eight, told Palestine Chronicle
reporters that they threatened her 18 year
old son with death if he did not follow
their orders to strip naked, "They ordered
my son and other young men to take off all
their clothes and throw them on the
ground. The soldiers warned that if the
boys made any move, they would be shot.
Near the Sahah, there was a body of a man
with a white beard. He was lying dead on
the ground, and tanks were rolling right
over him. I couldn't recognize him. My son
Mohammed said, "Mother, I am too ashamed
to take my clothes off in front of women."
I told him, 'Son, this is our fate." Jamal Hussein has a family of
thirteen. A man who worked as a cheap
laborer in Israel before the invasion of
Jenin described in detail how terrified
Jenin residents were gathered in the
center of the camp and forced to undress,
"Soldiers stationed on the top of a nearby
house started throwing dirt on us.. We
remained 15 men and boys. Half an hour
later a tank came and stood near us. They
pointed the canon at us. And they spent
over an hour terrifying us that way. The
commander of that unit spoke in Arabic to
us, "Go to Saha". While we were on our
way, we kept reading Koran. We felt that
they were going to execute us. Once we
arrived there, we found a large number of
men, forced to strip completely naked.
There was a big pile of clothes. Soldiers
started shooting right above our heads,
they would call on us, one by one. Once
they pointed at you, you would have to
pull your pants down and your shirt up,
when it was my turn, as I stood up, I
noticed the body of a man, Jamal Sabbagh.
It was some sort of a test. If you pass,
you are arrested and if you don't, they'll
shoot and kill you." According to Jenin residents, Israeli
forces were not discriminatory in their
aggression, young men, old and disabled
were targeted. 45-year old Um Siri
lamented how her son was not only forced
to strip naked, but how he was later used
as a human shield, "Then they took my son,
they had him strip naked, and they also
started firing between his legs to
terrorize him." Israeli soldiers arrested and detained
Um Siri's son for days, during this
time, she did not know if he was dead or
alive. Finally she found him in a rescue
shelter where he recounted how he was
treated, "When I also found my son, he
told me that the soldiers took him to a
field near the camp with many other young
men, he told me that the soldiers had them
walk in front of the tanks, as they were
looking for fighters." The vulnerable and elderly, according
to residents, were treated just as
mercilessly. Um Siri recounted how the
women of Jenin tried to come to the aid of
some men, forced to stand naked publicly,
in the pouring rain, "We passed by the
sons of Sheikh Abdel Salam. They
were standing there in the rain, after the
Israelis had them strip completely naked.
There was a woman who came with us. She
took her headscarf and tore it to several
pieces and gave it to the young men to
cover themselves. A very thin old man
approached while screaming, 'My sons, my
money, for God's sake, they took
everything!' The Israelis had him strip
naked like the day he was born. Once the
women saw that, they started pulling their
hair, hitting their heads, and wailing. He
has all of his life's savings with him,
because he was worried that he might lose
it in the invasion, but when the Israelis
stripped him naked, they found the money
and took it." Other residents described how young men
were stripped naked and then shot.
Yusuf Shalabi, a young man from the
camp explained how the Israeli soldiers
denied medical treatment to the wounded,
"
I remember this nightmare very
well. It is very difficult to talk about
it. I remember them stripping the people
naked, they would handcuff them and
blindfold them. I remember seeing two
wounded men, one was wounded in the
shoulder and the other in the leg. They
were screaming in pain and the soldiers
would not allow them to be treated. The Israeli army, who according to
Amnesty International committed war crimes
in Jenin in April of 2002, targeted
medical workers as well. They also forced
the women to remove their head scarves.
Seham Shalabi, a young woman who
works in a textile factory in Jenin
recounted her memories of those days last
April, "An army jeep came and started
circling the house, then it opened fire at
us. Why would they open fire at us? Then
they came and they searched us, and had us
walk two by two, out of the camp. Just as
we began moving, we saw another group of
tanks and bulldozers. We found some
doctors and medical workers, forced strip
naked, handcuffed. Then they put them in
trucks and took them to the Salem
detention center. The Israelis started
shouting and ordering us to take off our
head scarves. Humiliation of medial workers was not
only reported by the residents of Jenin,
but these events were also narrated by the
medical workers themselves. Mohammed
Rafi' the director of the Red Crescent
Society's youth development programs in
Jenin recounted how the Israelis held
medical workers hostage in the Jenin
hospital for days, and then forced them to
strip naked as well. "They did not allow
anyone in or out. If one of us wanted to
leave to the hospital across the street,
it would take two hours of telephone calls
and deliberation. Ambulance drivers would
be forced to wait for two hours with
people bleeding inside before they were
allowed entry to the hospital, they would
take our volunteers or drivers, have them
stripped naked, and interrogated and
insulted. Of the scores upon scores of interviews
conducted by Palestine Chronicle
reporters in the Jenin refugee camp, that
act of forcing civilians to strip naked
was reported time and again. The Israeli
army has defended the action, saying that
such tactics are necessary to assure that
Palestinians are not carrying
explosives. Many of the quotes within
this article will be included the book
titled Searching Jenin, edited
by Ramzy Baroud, Editor-in-Chief of the
Palestine Chronicle. Searching
Jenin will be available in
bookstores in December 2002. Redistributed via
Press International News Agency (PINA).
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