Palestinian activists detained in East Jerusalem flashpoint district

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Friends and relatives welcome Palestinian activist Mona Al-Kurd as she arrives home in the neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem after being released from an Israeli police station. (AFP)
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Palestinian activist Muna Al-Kurd, center, wears a medal from a marathon as she leaves the site where Israeli police fired tear gas during clashes in the Silwan neighborhood of east Jerusalem on June 4, 2021. (File/AP)
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Updated 07 June 2021
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Palestinian activists detained in East Jerusalem flashpoint district

  • Her father Nabil said police stormed the house in large numbers
  • The reason for the arrest is that we say that we will not leave our homes, and they do not want anyone to express his opinion. They do not want anyone to tell the truth

JERUSALEM: Israeli police on Sunday detained for several hours two prominent activists whose campaign against the threatened expulsion of Palestinian families from homes in the flashpoint Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah has found a global audience.
Mona Al-Kurd, 23, was taken into custody on Sunday morning from her home in the Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem district, where a legal battle between Israeli settlers and several Palestinian families has crystallized anger over Israel’s settlement movement.
Security forces also left a summons for her twin brother, Mohammed, who later turned himself in.
Israeli police told AFP that Mona was “suspected of having participated in riots and other recent incidents in Sheikh Jarrah.”
Both were later released and returned home, an AFP reporter said.
While in detention, Mona had been “threatened in an attempt to stop her carrying on with her legally permitted activities,” family lawyer Nasser Odeh said.
Their father Nabil Al-Kurd said she had been denied access to a lawyer during interrogation, adding that the detentions were “an operation to terrorize the parents, because the voice that emerged from the neighborhood was thanks to its youth.”

As Mona left custody, security forces used stun grenades and fired rubber-coated bullets to disperse protesters who had gathered outside the east Jerusalem police station where she had been held. The Palestinian Red Crescent said 18 people were wounded.
Protests in Sheikh Jarrah spread early last month into the city’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound, sparking a crackdown by Israeli security forces against Palestinians there that further inflamed tensions.
While Palestinians and their backers see the issue as a microcosm of Israeli efforts to push them out of the highly contested city, Jewish settlers and their supporters have labelled it a property dispute to be decided by Israeli courts.
Last month Israel’s Foreign Ministry accused Palestinian “terror” groups of “presenting a real-estate dispute between private parties, as a nationalistic cause” to incite violence.

BACKGROUND

The Al-Kurd family in Sheikh Jarrah has been at the forefront of months of protests against the planned evictions.

The Kurd twins, from one of the families that faces being ousted from their home, have led an active protest movement on the streets and online.
They have gained hundreds of thousands of followers on platforms including Twitter and Instagram, using the hashtags #SheikhJarrah and #SaveSheikhJarrah to bring their neighborhood’s plight global attention.
“Our weapon is the tongue and the camera,” their father said.
“Mohammed and Mona made the whole world turn around for our cause.”
Last month, as tensions in Jerusalem mounted during the build-up to the Gaza fighting, the Israeli supreme court postponed a hearing in the Sheikh Jarrah cases until further notice.
Under Israeli law, if Jews can prove that their families lived in east Jerusalem before the 1948 Arab-Israeli war that created the state of Israel, they can request the “return” of their property, even if Palestinian families have been living there for decades.
Palestinians whose ancestors became refugees in the 1948 war have no means to retrieve their homes or land in modern-day Israel.
Israeli right groups Ir Amim says up to 1,000 Palestinians in Sheikh Jarrah and the nearby Silwan district face being displaced.
Sheikh Jarrah has also drawn the attention of press freedom watchdogs, as journalists say they have been targeted by police while trying to report on demonstrations there.
On Saturday, Israeli forces arrested Al Jazeera reporter Givara Budeiri “in a brutal manner,” the network said in a statement, adding that authorities had destroyed a videographer’s camera as he was trying to work.
Budeiri was released from custody several hours after her arrest.
Al Jazeera television’s acting director-general, Mostefa Souag, decried “the systematic targeting of our journalists,” dubbing it “in total violation of all international conventions.”
The Paris-headquartered Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has voiced concern over Israel’s “disproportionate use of force against journalists.”
It criticized “attacks” on reporters filming in Sheikh Jarrah, the detention of Palestinian reporters, and the Jewish state’s demolition of a tower in the besieged Gaza Strip where news outlets operated.
During their military campaign in Gaza, Israel levelled the 13-story building that housed the Qatar-based Al Jazeera television along with the US news agency The Associated Press after warning the structure’s owner to evacuate.
Israel defended the strike, alleging the building also hosted a Palestinian “terrorist” intelligence office.
Al Jazeera’s Jerusalem bureau chief, Walid Al-Omari, accused Israel of trying “to silence media that are witnessing, documenting and reporting the truth.”


US special envoys in Israel to discuss future of Gaza, sources tell Reuters

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US special envoys in Israel to discuss future of Gaza, sources tell Reuters

JERUSALEM: US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner were in Israel on Saturday to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, mainly ​to discuss Gaza, two people briefed on the matter told Reuters.
The US on Thursday announced plans for a “New Gaza” rebuilt from scratch, to include residential towers, data centers and seaside resorts, part of President Donald Trump’s push to advance an Israel-Hamas ceasefire shaken by repeated violations.
The Israeli prime minister’s office did not immediately respond to a request for ‌comment.
The head ‌of a transitional Palestinian committee ‌backed ⁠by the ​US to ‌temporarily administer Gaza, Ali Shaath, said on Thursday that the Rafah border crossing — effectively the sole route in or out of Gaza for nearly all of the more than 2 million people who live there — would open next week.
Israel wants to restrict the number of Palestinians entering Gaza through the ⁠border crossing with Egypt to ensure that more are allowed out than ‌in, three sources briefed on the matter ‍said ahead of the border’s ‍expected opening.
The border was supposed to have opened ‍during the initial phase of Trump’s plan to end the war, under a ceasefire reached in October between Israel and Hamas.
The death toll in Gaza since October 7, 2023, now stands at 71,654, ​and the death toll since the October ceasefire at 481, according to data from Gaza’s health ⁠ministry on Saturday.
Earlier this month, Washington announced that the plan had now moved into the second phase, under which Israel is expected to withdraw troops further from Gaza, and Hamas is due to yield control of the territory’s administration.
The Gaza side of the crossing has been under Israeli military control since 2024.
Trump also said on Thursday that the United States has an “armada” heading toward Iran, but hoped he would not have to use it, as he renewed warnings ‌to Tehran against killing protesters or restarting its nuclear program.