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Anne Gwynne
Palestine - The Untold
Hostage Story
Many in Palestine believe
that there is more to last week’s
kidnapping than meets the eye.
PalestineChronicle.com
NABLUS, West Bank – On Thursday morning, 29th December 2005, I received
a short SMS from Muntasser Abdel Rahiim, 26, Medical Relief Society
Ambulance driver in Jenin: “I’m sorry to tell you the Israelis are
making trouble now in Jenin Camp. They are in Motassem’s house.”
On Sunday morning, 1st January 2006, a shorter SMS came in from
Muntasser: “Hi! The Israelis are gone from Jenin and from Motassem’s
home now.”
Between those two messages, 78 hours of terrorism and dozens of texts
and phone calls. This is what happened to the Refugee Camps of Balata
and Jenin during those hours.
While the media focussed on the kidnapping of three Britons in Gaza, an
enormous force of soldiers of the ‘Israeli’ occupation army (IOA)
invaded the two camps, and the city of Jenin, occupying homes and
holding families hostage and using them as human shields, as well as
doing a bit of wounding and arresting as they went along.
Khaliil Al-Qaisi, 18, was shot at point-blank range and critically
injured with multiple bullets into his abdomen. It is too dangerous to
stay in hospital so his family have taken him to safety after 2 days, as
soon as he had a chance of survival off the life support. Why too
dangerous in hospital? Because the IOA will come and abduct patients
from the Intensive Care Unit or simply shoot them where they lie.
The Abdel Rahiim family are well-known to me so I will concentrate on
their experience which was repeated all over northern Palestine. I find
the structure of what is reported extremely revealing of the
propaganda-pedalling of the BBC and the UK press. On one side we had
people in the hands of Palestinians: they were not in any danger for the
Palestinians have never harmed a hair of our heads however much they
dislike and distrust us while the IOA have murdered several of us
(Rachel Corrie, Tom Hurndall, James Miller, Iain Hook). On the other
hand we had Palestinian families in the hands of ‘Israelis’, who have,
in this Intifada alone, murdered some 4,500 innocent Palestinians, and
thus in grave danger.
When the IOA occupied the Jenin camp, they burst into the home of a
recently married couple, Motassem, 24 and Sanaabel, 18, with ‘savage
knocking on the door’ and their usual threats of ‘open the door or we
bomb it and shoot you dead’. They unplugged the landline, took the young
couple’s mobiles away and locked them in the bedroom, where they would
remain until Sunday morning. In this little home there were 15 soldiers
with their 20 ‘weekend’ bags packed with a veritable armoury (as
Muntasser put it, they brought ‘… many guns … inergia rocket launchers
and so on’). In the building are two homes: the tenants of the second
were out, so the soldiers simply blew in their door and 15 of them
occupied that too.
When the ‘Israeli’ soldiers occupy a home the dirt and devastation
cannot be imagined without seeing it. Anything from excrement smeared on
the walls, sofa urinated on, precious things smashed, insults painted
over the walls, cash and valuables looted. ‘ … I cannot even think of my
home as it is whenever they leave’ as my friend, Ghada, from Raffidiya
said to me – they have had this experience countless times.
As they hit the house Motassem has the quick wit to phone Muntasser
before his mobile is taken. He has a UPMRC Medical worker’s ID card, so
Muntasser calls the Jenin Office of the Red Cross for help and asks the
secretary to call whoever is in charge to try to do something, and to
give him that number. She calls back eventually, did not give any number
and said, ‘… they (IOA) can’t leave …’ – punkt – as they say in German.
Nothing else! That was it! When Muntasser demands to speak to the person
in charge he gets a priceless answer – ‘Today is a holiday – we can do
nothing until Monday’. Muntasser then calls his friend, the chief of the
Red Cross in Tubaas who also calls the IOA commanding officer. The reply
is the same! You see, they hold all the cards – well, all the weapons –
and there is no one who will argue with them.
So this resourceful young man, Muntasser calls Physicians for Human
Rights in Israel to ask why are his brother and sister-in-law not
allowed to leave and to request that they pressure the IOA to allow
Motassem and Sanaabel, who is only 18 and terrified, to leave the house.
They are absolutely no help at all and come back with the answer that
‘there is no (IOA) order to let them leave’! They were to be held to
prevent the resistance from fighting-back and attacking the soldiers in
the house – in other words they were to be used as human shields.
In the early hours of Friday morning Sanaabel, who is pregnant, feels
ill and she is in pain. She has not experienced this terrorism in the
home before and she is weeping all the time, which is really tough for
Motassem, in the horrible position of not being able to protect his
wife. Motassem asks the IOA to let Sanaabel go to the hospital and he is
allowed to call for help. He calls his brother Muntasser.
It is very dangerous for an Ambulance to come when the IOA are there:
there have been more than 2,000 attacks on ambulance staff over the past
5 years – ranging from murder of 25 to shooting and broken bones. But
Muntasser is just about the bravest: when he arrives he is told to stay
outside and strip so the IOA could see his ‘… body without clothes’.
After they strip and search him the officer barks – ‘get out – alone –
no Sanaabel!’.
After some hours, by 2.00 pm on Friday, she is very much worse, now
bleeding as well: the IOA ‘let’ Motassem call and he again calls
Muntasser who jumps out of the ambulance and runs to the home – he is
frantic of course. ‘Stop!’ screams a soldier, ‘do not move or I shoot
you dead’. For four long minutes Muntasser plays ‘Statues’ on the spot –
they mean it all right!
A soldier unlocks the door and brings the two at gunpoint from the
bedroom. ‘Take her. Him ‘no’’, he shouts, ‘but you must bring her back
to here after doctor or we shoot him’. Motassem is now a hostage in
danger.
At the Al-Raazi hospital Sanaabel has urine and blood tests and a
thorough examination. After the Doctor checked everything he says she
must stay in hospital at least overnight, as she is in danger of
miscarrying. At this Sanaabel becomes very distressed, ‘… but they will
hurt Motassem if I do not go back’ she keeps repeating, tears streaming
down. There was no choice, so the Doctor writes out a paper summarising
the situation and stating that she must be brought back if she became
worse – for what it’s worth she could show it to the soldiers. (The
usual response to such a paper is: ‘what is this? – you Palestinians are
always sick!’ And they throw it away.) Muntasser reluctantly takes her
back to the camp.
At 1.00 pm on Saturday Muntasser receives another call and, after
consulting the doctor at Al-Raazi, he collects some medication from the
Pharmacy and returns yet again into the camp – still full of soldiers,
tanks and other armour. When he approaches the house the soldiers, in
terrified shrieks shout ‘… go back, go back, you can’t enter, you can’t
enter’. It really is an extraordinary phenomenon to see the armed
terrified of the unarmed – just shows what brainwashing can do to the
unquestioning mind. You could almost laugh if they were not so
trigger-happy.
Finally, Sanaabel got the medication – Motassem was told to come down to
get it and Muntasser was told to hand it to him as far as possible from
the soldiers – well, you can’t be too careful with medication can you!
Just then, at 2.00 pm Saturday, a call comes in from a man in Al-Jabbriaat
district whose 75 year-old father is having a heart attack and needs
urgent medical care – ‘ … will you come?’ he said, ‘the street is
occupied with Israelis’, ‘of course, I’m coming’, answers Muntasser,
already on his way, emergency lights flashing. He knows that the first
half-hour after a heart attack is the most precious chance of life.
Outside the house were more soldiers to whom Muntasser, a paramedic,
explains the medical scenario clearly and requests ‘permission’ to take
the old man, Raja’ Abu ‘l-Hayjah, to hospital. The IOA go into a huddle,
and then gave their answer: ‘we need time to give this man to you’. He
is forced to wait for 10 agonised, life-threatening minutes. Most
minutes are life –threatening here! Raja’ Abu ‘l-Hayjah eventually
reached ICU where he remains.
At 6.00 am on Sunday the IOA left Balata and Jenin, and the ordeal of so
many families was over until the next time. Muntasser’s comment – ‘it is
the New Year’s Day gift from the Israelis’.
I really believe that no one outside can imagine things, which are a
matter of course here. First, no international journalist writing in
English lives north of Ramallah, or even comes north for more than a
couple of hours, and thus none of them has even a glimmer of
understanding of the situation on the ground. Second, and most
importantly, the New Year weekend highlights the difference in the
treatment of two stories. The chances of help for hostages are dependent
upon who’s got them! The first in which three British people were in the
hands of Palestinians, who have never hurt anyone, gets blanket coverage
for three days. The second, in which whole towns are in the hands of the
Israelis – people who have killed more than 4,500 and damaged or
destroyed nearly 70,000 homes, gets no coverage at all. It is an
interesting contrast.
Many in Palestine believe that there is more to last week’s kidnapping
than meets the eye – they suspect that Israel conspired with the
Palestinian Authority to bribe a disaffected group of very deprived
youngsters to kidnap some Brits in Gaza (and to bring about the wish of
Fatah and the president of the Palestinian Authority to stop the January
election). Israel knew that journalists would not be interested in what
was happening in the field as they sat sipping their Gin-and-Tonics in
Jerusalem and regurgitating bar-talk about the week’s sensation! They
were right.
-Anne Gwynne, an elected member of the International Federation of
Journalists and the National Union of Journalists (UK), writes from
occupied Nablus where she has worked with the Palestinian Medical Relief
Society (formerly UPMRC). She is a contributor to
PalestineChronicle.com. She can be contacted at gwynne_anne@hotmail.com.
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