Israel drags more Palestinian women to court for ‘slapping’ soldiers

Palestinian women take part in a protest against US President Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, in Gaza City, on Dec. 15, 2017. (AFP)
Updated 21 December 2017
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Israel drags more Palestinian women to court for ‘slapping’ soldiers

OFER MILITARY COURT: Two more Palestinian women appeared in an Israeli military court on Thursday after a viral video of an alleged assault on Israeli soldiers in the occupied West Bank, an AFP journalist said.
Nariman Tamimi, 43, and Nour Naji Tamimi, 21, were detained in a case that has set Israeli and Palestinian social media alight.
The video filmed in the village of Nabi Saleh in the occupied West Bank shows Nour and her cousin Ahed Tamimi, 17, approaching two Israeli soldiers, before shoving, kicking and slapping them while filming on mobile phones.
The heavily armed soldiers do not respond in the face of what appears to be an attempt to provoke rather than seriously harm them.
They then move backward after Ahed’s mother Nariman becomes involved.
A second video shows the two cousins telling the soldiers, apparently standing on the stairs of the family home, to leave.
The court was expected to decide on the cases of Nariman and Nour later Thursday.
Ahed, the primary instigator in the videos, appeared before a court on Wednesday and her detention was extended until Dec. 25.
She is accused of “assaulting a soldier, harming the security of the area, incitement, and other felonies,” according to court documents.
The Tamimi family are at the forefront of regular protests in Nabi Saleh, a frequent scene of demonstrations against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank.
The residents say part of the village’s land was confiscated by Israeli authorities and given to a nearby Israeli settlement.
The videos of the alleged assault were widely picked up by Israeli media, which often accuse Palestinian protesters of seeking to provoke the army into responses which are then filmed.
Israeli politicians hailed the restraint of the soldiers as evidence of the military’s values, but some called for tough responses in the face of seeming embarrassment.
Palestinians on social media criticized Ahed’s arrest in the middle of the night, arguing it is the people’s right to resist military occupation.
A member of the Tamimi family was shot in the head with a rubber bullet during protests on Friday, the family said.


Syrian troops, Kurdish forces poised on front lines as truce deadline looms

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Syrian troops, Kurdish forces poised on front lines as truce deadline looms

  • One-week deadline extension is possible, officials say
  • US mediators want to firm up ceasefire, see SDF integrate
QAMISHLI, Syria: Syrian troops and Kurdish forces were massed on opposing sides of front lines in northern Syria on Saturday, as the clock ticked down to an evening deadline that would determine whether they resume fighting or lay down their arms.
Neighboring Turkiye, as well as some officials in Syria, said late on Friday that the deadline could be extended.
Government troops have seized swathes of northern and eastern territory in the last two weeks from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in a rapid turn of events that has consolidated President Ahmed Al-Sharaa’s rule.
Sharaa’s forces were approaching a last cluster of Kurdish-held cities in the northeast earlier this week when he abruptly announced a ceasefire, giving the SDF until Saturday night to come up with a plan to ‌integrate with Syria’s ‌army.
Culmination of a year of rising tensions
As the deadline approached, ‌SDF ⁠forces also reinforced ‌their defensive positions in the cities of Qamishli, Hasakah and Kobani for a possible fight, Kurdish security sources said.
Syrian officials and SDF sources said it was likely the Saturday deadline would be extended for several days, possibly up to a week.
“Extending the ceasefire for a little longer may come onto the agenda,” said Hakan Fidan, the foreign minister of Turkiye, which is the strongest foreign backer of Sharaa’s government and sees the SDF as an arm of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK.
The possible showdown in northern Syria is the culmination of ⁠rising tensions over the last year.
Sharaa, whose forces toppled longtime ruler Bashar Assad in late 2024, has vowed to bring all of ‌Syria under state control — including SDF-held areas in the northeast.
But Kurdish ‍authorities who have run autonomous civilian and military institutions ‍there for the last decade have resisted joining up with Sharaa’s Islamist-led government.
After a year-end deadline ‍for the merger passed with little progress, Syrian troops launched an offensive this month.
US, France caution Sharaa on Kurds, sources say
They swiftly captured two key Arab-majority provinces from the SDF, bringing key oil fields, hydroelectric dams and some facilities holding Islamic State fighters and affiliated civilians under government control.
The US has been engaging in shuttle diplomacy to establish a lasting ceasefire and facilitate the integration of the SDF — once Washington’s main partner in Syria — into the state led by its new US-favored ally, Sharaa.
Senior officials from the ⁠United States and France, which has also been involved in talks, have urged Sharaa not to send his troops into remaining Kurdish-held areas, diplomatic sources said.
They fear that renewed fighting could lead to mass abuses against Kurdish civilians. Government-affiliated forces killed nearly 1,500 people from the Alawite minority and hundreds of Druze people in sectarian violence last year, including in execution-style killings.
Amid the instability in the northeast, the US military has been transferring hundreds of detained fighters from the Daesh group from Syrian prisons across the border into Iraq.
Iraq’s Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein told the EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, in a phone call on Saturday that Baghdad should not bear the “security and financial burdens” of the transfer of IS prisoners alone, the Iraqi foreign ministry said in a statement.
Turkiye’s Fidan, speaking on broadcaster NTV late on Friday, cited these transfers as possibly necessitating ‌an extension to the Saturday deadline.