Thursday, 21 July 2016
Israeli Court Sentences Palestinian Journalist to 6 Months in Prison for ‘Incitement’
[ Ed. note – Praise the Lord for women of courage. In the photo above, Palestinian journalist Samah Dweik looks rather defiant and unrepentant as she is hauled off to jail for “incitement.” Apparently such laws apply only to Palestinians. In addition to the story below about Dweik, you might be interested in recent comments by Israeli opposition leader Isaac Herzog, who believes the country is caught up in “growing hatred and racism” which he says is encouraged by right-wing politicians.
Also you might, if you have not done so, check out a post I re-blogged yesterday about a social media experiment in which someone posted a statement on Facebook expressing a desire to kill Palestinians in order to see how many “likes” it would get. The number was quite a few. The statement was posted by an Israeli Jew. According to the report, no police ever came to his house.
And of course we have the chief-rabbi-to-be of the Israeli military who has previously stated it is acceptable for Israeli soldiers to rape non-Jewish women. You would think American and British politicians would be embarrassed to continue expressing their support for a country like this. Apparently not so, however. ]
JERUSALEM (Ma’an) — An Israeli court on Monday sentenced a Palestinian journalist to six months in prison over charges of “incitement,” her family told Ma’an.
The family of Samah Dweik, a 25-year-old journalist working for Shabakat al-Quds (The Jerusalem Network), said that she was detained in April in her home in the occupied East Jerusalem neighborhood of Ras al-Amud over alleged “incitement” on Facebook.
The Israeli magistrate court in Jerusalem found her guilty of posting “inciting” posts on social media.
Amjad Abu Asab, the head of the Jerusalem Committee for Families of Prisoners, told Ma’an in May that Dweik had been detained after writing a status and sharing an image in support of Palestinians recently killed by Israeli forces.
In recent months, Israel has detained scores of Palestinians for social media activity, alleging that a wave of unrest that swept the occupied Palestinian territory last October was encouraged largely by “incitement.”
Palestinians have instead pointed chiefly to the frustration and despair brought on by Israel’s nearly 50-year military occupation of the Palestinian territory and the absence of a political horizon.
In May, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Center for Studies (PPCS) estimated that at least 28 Palestinian women had been detained by Israel since October over alleged “incitement” on social media, with six of them still in prison, including Dweik.
Most recently, Israeli military’s public prosecutor issued an indictment on Thursday against Tamer Tarayra — the brother of 17-year-old Muhammad Nasser Tarayra who was killed by Israeli forces after carrying out a stabbing attack on an illegal Israeli settlement in the southern occupied West Bank district of Hebron, killing a 13-year-old Israeli girl — for alleged “incitement.”
Muhammad Nasser Tarayra himself had reportedly expressed admiration on Facebook for Palestinians killed while carrying out or allegedly carrying out attacks, including his cousin, Yousef Mustafa Tarayra, who was shot dead alongside two other Palestinian youth in March after they allegedly carried out two consecutive attacks.
Israel has responded to the perceived threat of social media incitement by blaming Facebook for not doing more to censor posts promoting “terrorism” against Israelis.
Following a series of deadly incidents, Israel’s Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan reportedly said that Facebook chairman and cofounder Mark Zuckerberg had “blood on his hands” for not adequately cooperating with Israel to remove content.
An Israeli lawyer has filed a $1 billion lawsuit against Facebook Inc., claiming that the social media platform allowed members of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas to plan and carry out attacks against Americans and Israelis.
Israeli Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked and Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan have also proposed a bill that would compel social media providers like Facebook, Google, YouTube, and Twitter to remove “criminal” content that constitutes a danger to personal, public, or state security
In response to incitement claims against Palestinians, Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) Secretary-General Saeb Erekat condemned the current Israeli government for its failure to “entrench a culture of peace and coexistence within Israeli society” in a statement last week.
Erekat flipped the script, holding Israel responsible for incitement, saying “official Israeli discourse entrenches hatred, racism, and discriminatory attitudes against Palestinians. The discourse is only further entrenched by the institutional protection that is given to those who commit or incite violence against Palestinians.”
The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Blog!
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