| Israeli authorities pull Mousa Abu Maria away from his wife during a court appeal of his administrative detention, Jerusalem, July 2008 (Oren Ziv/Activestills.org). |
Mousa Abu Maria, father of a newborn baby and co-coordinator of the grassroots Palestine Solidarity Project (PSP) in the occupied West Bank village of Beit Ommar, was used to the sound of boots running on the ground and surrounding his home in the middle of the night. Awakened once again at 2:00am on Tuesday, 6 April, Abu Maria told an international volunteer with PSP who was sleeping in his house not to worry but that they should start moving the computers out of the rooms. Weeks earlier, PSP's office was raided by Israeli forces; computer hard drives and printers were confiscated as Abu Maria's entire family was forced to stand outside in the freezing cold.
But when Abu Maria looked outside the window this time, it wasn't Israeli forces shouting at him to come outside. It was a squadron of heavily-armed Palestinian Authority (PA) police.
"They told me that they needed to talk with me for just one hour," Abu Maria told EI on the phone from Beit Ommar. "But they kidnapped me, forced me into a jeep, and took me to the Hebron police station where they held me until the next afternoon.
PSP has been instrumental in coordinating weekly demonstrations in front of Route 60, the "settler road" that runs alongside Beit Ommar and connects Jerusalem to the settlement colonies in the Bethlehem/Hebron area, and Abu Maria has borne the brunt of Israeli backlash for his involvement in the group's nonviolent direct actions. He was abducted by Israeli forces in April 2008 and held in administrative detention -- without charges or conviction -- for an entire year. "In total, I've spent seven years in Israeli prisons on three separate occasions because of my work to challenge the illegal Israeli occupation," Abu Maria said. Members of his family, including his brother, Youssef, have also faced harsh Israeli prison sentences because of their organizing and involvement with civil disobedience actions in the village.
But on 6 April, Abu Maria said that he was made to wait in the Hebron PA police's detention facility overnight. Phone calls from Palestinian community leaders, Israeli activists and internationals poured into the PA government offices headquartered in Ramallah demanding a reason for the arrest and calling for Abu Maria's immediate release. The following afternoon, still held at the police station, Abu Maria said he began to receive a deluge of apologies from police officials, including the head of the Palestinian police department in Hebron who reportedly kissed Abu Maria on the head as he left the station. "They said they made a mistake, and didn't need me for questioning," Abu Maria told EI. "I told them that they should be ashamed for acting like Israeli soldiers, and that if they needed to talk to me, they can meet me in a normal way -- there is no reason to arrest their own people in the middle of the night and terrify Palestinians like this."
Local Palestinian media jumped on the story, since it directly highlights the narrowing differences between the actions of Israeli and PA forces operating in the West Bank. As the PA continues to solidify its militarized presence on the ground in the West Bank -- sending its forces to train with US General Keith Dayton in Amman, Jordan, for internal "counter-insurgency" techniques that are consequentially used against leaders and activists within opposing political parties -- many Palestinians are growing increasingly cynical of the ability of the administration of PA president Mahmoud Abbas to represent all elements of Palestinian civil society in a fair and just way. "They should represent Palestine and its people. I'd respect them if they were working for the Palestinian cause, for the justice that we all deserve," Abu Maria remarked. "But they made me respect the PA even less after what happened to me."




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