|
(MaanImages/Stringer) |
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=563453
HEBRON (Ma’an) -- Palestinians and foreign solidarity activists on
Saturday set up a new protest village in the south Hebron hills, and
vowed to remain there despite Israeli forces moving to dismantle the
structures.
Early Saturday, activists set up steel-framed tents near the Palestinian village of al-Tuwani, calling the encampment "Canaan".
Younis
Arar, coordinator of the popular committees in the southern West Bank,
told Ma'an that soldiers assaulted the 30 activists who had gathered in
the area.
"We began building the tents and were surprised when a
large force of the Israeli army began attacking us and destroying tents
and hitting us ... We will try and build Canaan village again," Arar
said.
A military spokeswoman said soldiers evacuated illegal
structures, and responded with riot dispersal means when around 100
Palestinians "rioted" in the area.
A Ma'an reporter said three
journalists were detained, and the military spokeswoman said five
Palestinians and five Israelis were arrested for entering the area after
it was declared a closed military zone.
Yatta popular committee spokesman Ibrahim Rabee told Ma'an the protest camp was a stand against Israeli policies in the region.
"We are establishing Canaan on our land after our homes and water wells were demolished, and our people displaced," he said.
The
south Hebron hills lies in an area of the West Bank under full Israeli
military control, and its residents say Israel does not allow any
building permits and demolishes homes and infrastructure, while
supporting Israeli settlements in the area.
Just south of
al-Tuwani, Israel has established a closed military zone where the state
wants to evict eight Palestinian villages to make way for a army
training ground.
The Canaan protest camp is the fifth such initiative in recent weeks.
In
January, the Bab al-Shams village was set up in an area where Israel
plans to build the "E1" settlement, severing the West Bank from
Jerusalem.
Then, locals established the al-Karamah (Dignity)
village in Beit Iksa, northwest of Jerusalem, which is set to be tightly
encircled by Israel's separation wall.
A week later, activists set up the Al-Asra, or prisoners, protest village in the village of Anin, northwest of Jenin.
Last
Saturday, Palestinians established the "Al-Manatir neighborhood"
encampment in an area of Burin village that activists say is slated for
confiscation by a neighboring settlement.
Israeli forces have moved to evacuate each of the camps and dismantle their structures.