We marched to Calandia with women leading, straight to the checkpoint,
which
is currently a big set of plastic and concrete blocks blocking off the
main
road into Ramallah, heavily guarded by armed soldiers and police.
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Today 5-6000 people - Israeli Peace Activists, Palestinians in Israel
and
Palestinian MK's in the Israeli Knesset marched to the Calandia
checkpoint,
with several aims: To ensure that urgently needed aid people here had
collected - medicines and food - would enter Ramallah. For the
Palestinians,
to try to enter Ramallah, breaking the military closure around the city
and
protesting against the curfew and occupation; to protest America's open
support for the clearly illegal occupation, and re-assault in the West
Bank.
We marched to Calandia with women leading, straight to the checkpoint,
which
is currently a big set of plastic and concrete blocks blocking off the
main
road into Ramallah, heavily guarded by armed soldiers and police.
We began to push against the blocks. I was in the front line. The
soldiers
and police reacted by letting off sound bombs over our heads, which
caused
people to panic. Tear gas bombs were thrown at us. "Tear gas" causes a
temporary inability to breath, then immense pain as the gas enters your
lungs and eyes. With that, people dispersed, running for cover. From
nowhere, onions were passed out. A few minutes later, people
re-gathered. We
marched to the checkpoint blocks again.
The truck passed through into Ramallah after much bargaining and
pleading.
By accident, one young Palestinian woman found herself on the other
side of
the checkpoint. She returned to us by climbing over the checkpoint. The
soldiers and police began to argue with her (after she arrived to the
other
side of the checkpoint, our side). A policeman lost his temper and
began to
beat her, the green light for the police to throw more tear gas at the
crowd, dispersing us again.
The police were indiscriminately beating people - friends running away
were
smashed with batons, the police pushed an old man before me. The press
was
affected by the tear gas. It seemed that they had been specifically
targeted. They were clearly marked with "TV" - it's impossible that the
police didn't't see that.
We ran away and re-gathered. The police began to organize themselves.
They
pushed aside their plastic barriers and began to chase us, throwing
tear gas
into the crowds and beating us with batons. We kept regrouping,
chanting,
waving Palestinian flags, standing in groups with our hands linked,
refusing
to be beaten into submission, refusing to use force. Police would stand
behind us, beating us with their batons, abusing us, especially the
Druze
police, who kept abusing us in Arabic. If we reacted, they would beat
us. If
we ran, they would chase after us, throwing tear gas and beating us.
One young man was caught. Around 5-6 policemen stood around him,
beating
him, kicking him, smashing their batons upon him. Then he was arrested.
Towards the end of the protest, we stood at traffic lights, closer to
Beit
Hanina. Again, chanting, grouping up, waving Palestinian flags. The
police
surrounded us, throwing more tear gas and beating who ever they could
catch.
We took refuge behind cars, in the grassy, muddy field below the road,
anywhere we could. It was a war zone, but only one side was armed.
We kept searching for each other, seeking familiar faces, to reassure
ourselves. In pauses between teargas, sound bombs and violent police,
we
were hugging, sometimes crying. As we walked back to our buses, we
could
count the toll: around 30 injured, including three Palestinian MK's in
the
Knesset - Issam Makhoul, Ahmad Tibi and Mohammad Barakeh. Two young men
arrested. One young man has his finger torn off when a tear-gas bomb
exploded next to his hand. A woman had her head re-stitched after the
police
smashed over the head with his baton.
On the bus, we received a phone call that the medicines and food convey
reached the NGO's. Some of the older Palestinian women on the bus began
to
weep.
Ms. Diaa Hadid
Public Relations and Fundraising
Ittijah: Union of Arab Community Based Associations
Tel: +972-4-850 7110
Fax: +972-4-850 7241
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