Zionist Raids Spark International Outcry
RAMALLAH (Dispatches) -- Israeli forces have raided the offices of six Palestinian human rights groups in the occupied West Bank that it previously accused of being terrorist organizations, a move decried as an “appalling attack” on Palestinian civil society.
Property belonging to the prominent advocacy groups was confiscated and entrance doors sealed by Zionist soldiers in the early hours of Thursday.
At the offices of Al-Haq, an internationally respected human rights organization based in Ramallah, the front door was welded shut and a Hebrew statement left saying it would remain closed for “security reasons”. The minister of an Anglican church on the ground floor of the building, which rents the space to Al-Haq, said the church was also raided and its glass doors smashed.
In October the occupying regime of Israel outlawed Al-Haq; Addameer, which advocates for Palestinian prisoners; the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees; the Union of Agricultural Work Committees; the Bisan Center for Research and Development; and Defense for Children International – Palestine (DCI-P).
The Zionist regime claimed that the groups had ties to the militant Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).
However, the occupying regime has provided little evidence to back up the accusations. All six organizations deny the allegations and three have challenged the designation in Israel’s courts.
Washington claimed it was “concerned” by the Zionist regime’s closure of the Palestinian NGOs. U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said on Thursday: “We have not changed our position or approach to these organizations.”
Last month a group of EU member states that fund some of the Palestinian organizations’ activities rejected the Israeli claims, saying that “a free and strong civil society is indispensable for promoting democratic values and the two-state solution”.
The European Commission restored suspended funding to Al-Haq in June. The EU is also expected to continue working with the other affected groups.
Later on Thursday, staff from Al-Haq removed the metal sheet covering its office door and vowed to get back to work despite the seizure of computers and other equipment.
“We were established here not by Israel, not by their decision and we will continue our work,” Al-Haq’s director, Shawan Jabarin, told a press conference.
The Zionist military said it had closed seven institutions and seized their property in Thursday’s raid. The seventh appears to have been the Union of Health Work Committees, which the occupying regime banned from working in the West Bank in 2020.
On Wednesday, the office of the Zionist war minister, Benny Gantz, reiterated its claim that the groups “operate under the guise of performing humanitarian activities to further the goals of the PFLP, to strengthen the organization and to recruit operatives”.
Aida Touma-Suleiman, an Israeli member of the Knesset, tweeted: “[Gantz] declared six Palestinian human rights organizations as terror groups, the international community didn’t buy the lie, so today he sent the occupation forces to shut them down.”
The occupying regime of Israel has long accused human rights groups and international bodies working in the Palestinian territories of bias.
Many of the six targeted organizations document human rights violations by Israel as well as the Palestinian Authority – both of which routinely detain Palestinian activists. The PA must grant the Israeli army permission to operate in areas of the West Bank under its control, such as Ramallah.
In a statement, the United Nations agencies and the Association of International Development Agencies (AIDA) working in the occupied Palestinian territories called on the Zionist regime to allow Palestinian human rights and humanitarian organizations to continue their work.
“We urge…Israel to refrain from any action that would prevent these organizations from continuing their critical human rights, humanitarian and development work in the Occupied Palestinian Territory,” the statement said.