Israel: Teen Girl Among 71 Held In Itamar Case Roundup

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Concern is mounting for the residents of Awarta, as 71 villagers including a teenage girl and two elderly women remain held in Israeli custody without charge, and official visits to ensure their well being were prevented by Israeli forces.

Detentions of Awarta residents spread even outside of the village on Tuesday morning, with three residents who work in Ramallah detained from their city home in Beituniya.

Rights workers told Ma’an that heavily-armed Israeli forces surrounded the building at 3 a.m. and forced all residents to evacuate their apartments and wait outdoors as inspections and questioning took place.

Soldiers checked the identity cards of each resident, and detained 40-year-old Nu’man Salim Awwad, his brother 29-year-old Noah, and 19-year-old Yazid Hasan Awwad all from Awarta. They were all taken to the nearby Israeli Ofer detention center.

Israel
Israel

According to locals, Noah is a physician and moved to live in Ramallah to monitor his brother Nu’man who suffers from kidney failure.

An Israeli military spokesman said he could not comment on the report.

Israeli officials are not talking about events in the village either, following a gag-order put on by the Israeli government, preventing details about an investigation into the death of a settler family in a settlement adjacent from becoming public.

For the 31 days since the 11 March murders, Israeli forces have entered Awarta for repeated waves of arrests, searches and forced DNA testing of residents.

Village mayor Hasan Awwad said 71 young men and 16-year-old Julia Mazin Niyaz remain in Israeli detention facilities. Rights groups said they have not been permitted to see council, and have accused Israel of violating international law throughout its investigation of the grisly stabbings.

On Monday night, caretaker Prime Minister in the West Bank Salam Fayyad was refused permission by Israel to enter the area and visit the residents, alarming groups calling for an international presence there to observe the ongoing arrests and searches.

Umm Adam, detained by Israeli forces on 6 April, said she and her 80-year-old husband were taken in to the Huwwara military base for questioning.

She and an estimated 150 other women from the village were gathered in a yard, and one by one taken for questioning.

“An interrogator accused me about the murdering of five settlers in Itamar. I answered him that I am a seventy-year-old sick woman, that it would be fanciful to believe that I could have been involved … then they took my fingerprints and released me four hours later in the early morning cold,” she said.

During the same arrest raid, Umm Adam’s three daughters, all married and living with husbands in the village, were taken along with their spouses for ten hours of questioning before they were released.

Umm George said her family home was ransacked five times. During the raids, she said all of the family members were detained and interrogated including she and her husband. Samples for DNA testing were taken and fingerprints were copied. Her sons George and Hakim remain in the custody of Israeli forces, she said.

Every time the soldiers raided the house, they turned everything upside down, during the fifth raid, she said she and her teenage daughter were detained. That time, she added, a sound bomb was launched into the home before they were taken away.

Umm Majdi said all of her sons have been detained over the past month, and her home has been damaged repeatedly by the searches.

“They brutally beat my sons; Majdi, who is 21, Amhad, who is 19, and 17-year-old Hakam. They beat them for no reason, they handcuffed my husband and broke everything inside the house; windows, the refrigerator, the washing machine and kitchen appliances. The spilled oil, sugar, salt and flour all together on the floor.”

Despite the continuous raids, arrests, testing and questioning, no suspect has been identified in the case. Because of the gag-order, it is unclear what evidence points to Awarta residents, and no comments have been made indicating that other avenues are being pursued.

An early report said Thai workers from the settlement were taken for questioning in the wake of the stabbing deaths, but little else has surfaced since.

“This is collective punishment,” Awwad said, accusing the soldiers of intimidating village residents in an effort to drive them from the land. “Already they took 12 dunums to build Itamar, and now they want the rest.”

Palestinian officials and even some militant groups condemned the murders of the Fogel family, following accusations from Israeli officials that the murders had been a “terrorist attack” and pointing the finger at Palestinian militant groups, who have denied involvement.

Maan

Launched in 2005, Ma'an News Agency (MNA) publishes news around the clock in Arabic and English, and is among the most browsed websites in the Palestinian territories, with over 3 million visits per month.

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