Sunday, October 22, 2017
Danger: Olive-Picking Season
Monday, October 10, 2016
Let's Pretend to Be a Journalist
NABLUS, October 10, 2016 (WAFA) – Israeli settlers on Monday attacked Palestinians harvesting olives near the village of Qaryout, south of Nablus, according to local sources. Ghassan Daghlas, who monitors settlement activities in the north of the West Bank, told WAFA that dozens of Israeli settlers attacked Palestinian olive pickers and smashed the windshields of their vehicles.
If I am here more than a year or so, this is what I should be doing:
a) call up Daghlas for more details.
b) in checking back, I realize that the man has lied and/or exaggerated in the past.
c) to be careful, I ask for a picture or the name of a contact on the site to speak with.
d) I check the map after asking him exactly which grove was the site of the reported violence.
e) I call up local health services and ask, like I do with Israel's Magen Adom, for details.
f) I call up someone from either Shiloh or Eli which are the two closest Jewish communities or, if I have actually done item "d", I can see which community is closest, maybe Achiyah, and call there.
g) if I do not have contacts there, because I haven't developed any, I call up Miri who is the foreign media spokesperson, actually, Director, International Desk, Binyamin Regional Council, and make sure I got a reaction/response/clarification and make sure to include that in my report.
h) if I have the time, realizing that a report like this falls into the annual "olive harvesters attacked by Jews" template and even may be an attempt to draw attention away from more serious Arab terror acts, I'd drive out there. I'd even take the opportunity to talk about the "new settlement" in the Shiloh Bloc the State Department attacked, viciously, and expand the story.
Well, let's wait and see what happens.
__________________
UPDATE
Miri told me our emergency HQ hadn't heard anything.
I see now a clip of a smashed car in Qaryut. Seems in the village.
From an olive grove.
___________________
NEW UPDATE
Ma'an claims Eli residents involved.
^
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Friday, October 21, 2011
Esh Kodesh Today
Israeli forces blocked villagers in Nablus from harvesting olives on lands near Israeli settlements on Friday, locals told Ma'an. Israeli troops told harvesters in Qaryut and Azmut villages that security coordination had expired and blocked them from picking olives, a Ma'an correspondent said.
Ah, but that was a few days ago. But all these stories sound the same.
But at Twitter today:
leehee_r Leehee Rothschild
Settlers from Esh Kudesh shooting live ammo at harvesters in Jaloud, also beating them with clubs. Soldiers are watching. Injuries reported
3 people, wounded in Jaloud are being evicted to the hospital in Nablus.
Ynet (in Hebrew)
Summary:
Palestinian sources in Samaria village Jalud claimed that masked settlers, who came from Esh Kodesh, a nearby outpost, attacked farmers and left-wing activists, who were picking olives. The IDF confirmed that there was a confrontation between the parties.
Some more:
There are injured in a confrontation between settlers and Palestinians in Binyamin. Versions about another violent incident between the outpost Esh Kodesh and Jalud farmers and European leftists, who were harvesting olives. Residents of Esh Kodesh: "They are provocateurs". Palestinians: Settlers beat and broke cameras.
Ten people were injured today (Friday). Three settlers were lightly wounded by the stones and smacks, as opposed to between four and six injured Palestinians, including 12 year old boy, and some were evacuated to a hospital in Nablus.
A few minutes after the start of the conflict an IDF force fired tear gas to separate the two sides. A fire was also set in the olive grove, but it is unclear if ignited by a party or as a result of IDF gunfire.
There are several versions between the parties about who started the violence. Palestinians from the village Jalud claim that were harvesting land belonging to them and close the outpost Esh Kodesh when a group of masked settlers came from the outpost armed with sticks. According to the Palestinians, the settlers began to beat the villagers and left-wing activists who helped them. In addition, they argued that settlers broke and stole cameras at their disposal.
On the other hand, a resident of Esh Kodesh who was witness to the events told Ynet: "Normally, only Arabs attack us but this time there were 50 Palestinians and an equal number of left-wing activists and European anarchists. My little girl yelled at me from the kitchen that there was a large group of people who could not be identified by the community. They were right next to the houses. When we got to see what was happening, we were struck by a barrage of stones and after that, were beaten."
"It is important to emphasize that they came under the pretext of picking, but it was not coordinated with the army or any other body," added the man. "The trees in question were sick and nobody has touched them for ten years, so their whole purpose was to provoke rather than for agricultural purposes."
UPDATE
This short video clip purports to show a scene from the area but there is no description who is who and what is what.
^
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Look What Those Jews Are Doing to Those Olive Trees (English)
^
Thursday, November 25, 2010
What Are Those Jews Doing To Those Olive Trees?
They are harvesting them, after planting them and nuturing them. In Rechalim and Shiloh.
See the orchard of Erez Ben-Sa'adon and of Meshek Achiyah:
Some 12% of all Israel's home-use olive oil production (in the film 10% is mentioned but I double-checked with Yair Hirsch) is produced at Meshek Achiyah. 400 tons say Itamar Weiss. That's 600,000 bottles.
All-in-all, farmers in Judea and Samaria (Yesha) tend 8000 dunams of agricultural land. Scores of boutique wineries as well as olive tree growth.
^
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Pallywood: They've Been Faking Olive Tree Destruction & Damage
Hebrew story at Ynet is here.
Here's one picture taken by Ohad Amiton:
The trees were being sawed with an electric saw in an aggressive manner which indicates that the Arab was not simply trimming. The photographer saw branches broken, started taking pictues but was warned off in a threatening manner. The site was east of Bir Zeit, close to Highway 60.
I am thinking that it was done Friday close to Shabbat so that the bad news could take advantage of the Shabbat when we observant Jews do not hear the news nor can be respond and a whole day of domination would go by before we could try to find out what happened and then deal with it.
Evil people. Devious, too.
(not yet up in English)
In the JC.
UPDATE
The English:
Settlers: Arabs, leftists staged 'price tag' act
Arabs and leftist activists staged an attack on Palestinian fields in a bid to accuse settlers of vandalism, an organization that claims to have documented the incident says.
The photos, taken by members of the Tazpit Unit, were shot on Palestinian land Friday, near the Neveh Tzuf settlement. The images allegedly show Palestinians and left-wing activists cutting down Palestinian olive trees using an electric saw.
Many so-called "Price Tag' acts targeting Palestinians were recorded in the last few weeks, and the settlers now claim they were staged by the Palestinians themselves and intended to harm the settlers' image.
Tazpit photographer Ehud Amiton, who documented the vandalism act on Friday, says that this is exactly what can be seen in his images.
"We are talking about an olive grove east of Beit Zayit, located near Route 60," Amiton said."I immediately saw that it was no ordinary pruning, it was done very aggressively...Some of the branches broke and other trees were cut off entirely. When I approached closer with my camera, the Palestinian man waved his saw at me threateningly. I felt uneasy so I backed off".
Tazpit unit director Amotz Eyal said that "during every olive harvest season, just like this one, there are many cases of Arab farmers cutting down olive branches, later blaming it on the settlers."
"Time after time photos prove that these Arabs are not holding back; they provoke in order to tarnish the image of Jewish settlers," he said.
Eyal vowed that Tazpit photographers will continue to document such activities in order to show the public actual events on the ground.
And this, too:
Arabs uproot and cut down trees in Netzer-Gush Etzion
...members of Women in Green received notice that twelve Arabs had come to Netzer with axes and saws in order to uproot the big olive trees that belong to the Jews and that had been planted last week. The plot of land where the Arabs came yesterday, had already been declared by the Civil Administration as being state land. Despite that the Arabs continue to come and try to steal it away from the Jewish people.
[last] Sunday, the Arabs came and uprooted the olive trees. Women in Green and the Netzer group came back that night, between Sunday and Monday, and in a complicated operation, with tractors, replanted the big trees.
Yesterday, Friday October 29th, some twelve Arabs came, with axes and saws and cut down three trees. The IDF came, the Commander in charge of the area and others. They saw the damage and promised to catch the Arab perpetrators.
Before the army arrived, some activists from the area had run to the place to defend the trees and thus managed to prevent the Arabs from cutting down more trees. The Arabs fled before the army came.
For the Hebrew article and pictures on Arutz 7.
^
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Look Who Almost Came To Visit
The United Nations Security Council could support the Palestinians' unilateral bid for statehood if Israel does not renew its freeze on new settlement construction, UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Robert Serry warned Israel on Tuesday.
"If the freeze is not renewed, then yes, maybe this is going to happen," Serry said as he spoke with The Jerusalem Post in an olive grove in the West Bank village of Turmus'ayya, located in the Binyamin Region near the Shiloh settlement.
"If the Palestinians living in this beautiful little town do not see that these things are being rolled back, it is difficult to convince them that we are working toward a two-state solution," Serry told reporters.
...One of the more significant symbols of the Palestinians' desire to struggle for freedom from Israel "occupation" was the olive tree, said Serry.
"There could be nothing more symbolic here in Palestine than to participate in the olive harvest. The harvest is an act of identity and self-reliance. It is a symbol of a people's unyielding attachment to their homeland," he said.
As for Salam Fayyad who was also there:
Fayyad added that the government of Israel should be held accountable for "acts of violence and terrorism committed by settlers against our people."
He called on Israel to stop settlement construction, which he said was illegal under international law. "The youngest of these olive trees, is more deeply rooted in this land than the largest Israeli settlement," he said.
Gee, had I known they were coming, I'd have
Earlier this year, Hebron with the Cave of the Patriarchs and Bethlehem with the Tomb of Rachel are also problematic for Serry:
In a statement, Robert Serry, the U.N. special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, said he was concerned by Israel's announcement regarding the Hebron holy site and Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem, another shrine Netanyahu wants to include in the heritage plan.
"I call on Israel not to take any steps on the ground which undermine trust or could prejudice negotiations, the resumption of which should be the highest shared priority of all who seek peace," Serry said.
By the way, Haaretz adds from the Reuters report:
A senior UN official condemned attacks by Jewish "settler extremists" on Palestinians' olive trees in the occupied West Bank and called on Israel to "combat violence and terror by Israelis."
Robert Serry, UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, also said he was alarmed that work had started on hundreds of new homes for settlers in the occupied territory since the end of Israel's settlement freeze last month.
West Bank mosque arson
Serry was speaking to journalists on Tuesday while olive-picking with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad in the village of Tormos Ayya north of Ramallah. He said settlers had destroyed hundreds of trees in the village in recent weeks.
Palestinians began harvesting olives across the West Bank this month.
"I am appalled at acts of destruction of olive trees and farmlands, desecration of mosques and violence against civilians," Serry said.
"Israel states its condemnation of attacks, which I welcome, but its record in imposing the rule of law on settlers is lamentable," he said.
"Israel must combat violence and terror by Israelis, as is expected of the Palestinian Authority in the case of violence and terror by Palestinians," he said.
An Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman rejected Serry's use of the term "terror" in reference to Israelis and said he should have chosen his words more carefully.
"We understand that he decries acts of violence by certain settlers, but the Israeli government has been the first to condemn them and to instruct law enforcement agencies to crack down on the perpetrators - but when he speaks of terror by Israelis, does he mean Israeli suicide bombers on Palestinian buses?" spokesman Yigal Palmor said.
So, Arabs who destroy Jewish agricultural property are terrorists, too, Mr. Serry?
^
Monday, October 25, 2010
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
The Olive Tree Campaign Has Begun in Earnest
Before dealing with Kershner's hatchet job, let's see what the Int'l Red Cross thinks about the situation after last year's harvest:
25-11-2009 Interview
Harvesting olives in the West Bank: not as simple as it sounds
In the occupied West Bank, an estimated 10 million olive trees help some 100,000 families to make ends meet. For a number of years, the harvest has been hampered by restricted access. Tom Glue, who coordinates the ICRC's economic security programme in the territory, explains.
...What can you tell us about this year's harvest?
The harvest took place without major incident, which is an improvement on previous years. The Palestinian and Israeli authorities jointly coordinated Palestinian farmers' access to restricted areas around settlements and behind the West Bank barrier. The ICRC monitored the harvest but never had to take action as it did in previous years, for example when gates leading to olive groves remained shut.
It has to be said, though, that it was marred by the fact that thousands of trees were cut down or burned earlier in the year by settlers. In addition, Palestinian farmers in some areas were required for the first time to apply for permits to enter their lands behind the barrier. About 400 such applications were made for the southern part of the West Bank and fewer than half were approved. In most cases where applications were denied, the Israeli authorities argued that the farmers did not hold valid land-ownership documents.
I would suggest that "thousands" is not only an exaggeration but simply untrue. Nevertheless, the IRC is not concerned about "major" problems.
But the NYTimes is, or is making a major problem. They dealt with the area around Shiloh which has been in the center of this theme ("settlers destroy/burn/cut down/poison Arab olive trees" - and you rarely hear the reverse which happens often - "Arabs destroy Jewish olive tree saplings") for over 20 years now. Same Arabs even. And same old stories.
Here is the entire NYTimes' story
October 12, 2010
In West Bank, Peace Symbol Now Signifies Struggle
By ISABEL KERSHNER
TURMUS AYA, West Bank — Palestinians from villages like this one in the West Bank governorate of Ramallah still remember when the olive harvest was a joyous occasion, with whole families out for days in the fall sunshine, gathering the year’s crop and picnicking under the trees.
“We considered it like a wedding,” said Hussein Said Hussein Abu Aliya, 68.
But when Mr. Abu Aliya and his family from the neighboring village of Al-Mughayer — 36 of them in all, including grandchildren — drove out to their land this week in a snaking convoy of cars and pickup trucks with others from Turmus Aya, they found scores of their trees on the rocky slopes in various stages of decay, recently poisoned, they said, by Jewish settlers from an illegal Israeli outpost on top of the hill.
Branches drooped, the once lush, silver-green leaves were turning brown and the few olives still clinging on, which should have been plump and green or purple by harvest time, were shriveled and black. Dozens of trees nearby that Mr. Abu Aliya contended were similarly poisoned with chemicals last year stood like spindly skeletons, gray and completely bare.
Religious Jewish settlers consider the West Bank, which Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 war, as their biblical birthright. For the 2.5 million Palestinians of the West Bank, it constitutes the heartland of a future independent state. While the Americans and Palestinians wrangle with the Israeli government over continued Israeli construction in the West Bank settlements — an issue that has stalled the embryonic peace talks — the competition for control of each acre of land here is being played out day by day.
And the olive tree, an ancient symbol of peace and plenty that has also long been a Palestinian emblem of steadfastness and commitment to the land, has increasingly become a symbol of local, almost intimate, struggle and strife.
Husniya al-Araj, 60, said she was born in a cave nearby, in an orchard of olive and almond trees. But when she reached her family lands this week, she cried out in shock. She pointed to a newly plowed field in front of her that she said was part of her family property, but that seemed to have been taken over by the settlers. It was now surrounded by a shiny new barbed-wire fence and planted with young vines.
Mahmud Ahmad Hazama, a relative who takes care of the Araj family property, said the barbed-wire fence went up in July. Folded in his wallet was a handwritten record of every change and every complaint Mr. Hazama had made to the Israeli Army and police since 1995.
“They ask me for documents,” he said. “We have all of them. The last thing they asked for was a topographic map.” He said he had received no answers so far.
Micky Rosenfeld, an Israeli police spokesman, said the police were aware of the problems. Every complaint is investigated, he says, but sometimes the culprits turn out not to be settlers, and sometimes there is not enough evidence to know. In some cases, the complaints do lead to arrests of settlers, he says.
Tamar Asraf, spokeswoman for the Binyamin Council, which represents the settlers in this region, said that for the most part the olive harvest passes peacefully, but that there were Palestinians and settlers who cause damage to one another. “We condemn them both,” she said.
Mr. Hazama’s relatives, like many other families, found their olive trees intact but empty of fruit. They argued that the olives must have been stolen by settlers, though they had no proof.
In other villages to the north, like Yanoun, Jit and Imatin, olives were stolen from hundreds of trees in the past few days, according to Rabbis for Human Rights, an Israeli organization that helps Palestinians farm lands in trouble spots year-round.
This was the first time the villagers of Turmus Aya and Al-Mughayer had been able to have access to their lands in six months. To do so, they need permission and protection from the Israeli Army, for a few days for plowing in springtime and a few days for picking in the fall. In the past, unprotected visits to the land ended with many stories of attacks by extremist settlers and burned cars.
This time, soldiers were guarding the villagers from the hilltop where the outpost, Adei Ad, sits. Three soldiers in khaki uniforms were sitting under one of Mr. Abu Aliya’s trees, almost camouflaged among its iridescent leaves while mountain gazelles sprang across the hills.
Adei Ad was established in the late 1990s on state and private Palestinian land, according to Israeli records. Though it was established without any official authorization, the Israeli Ministry of Housing and Construction provided financing for some of the infrastructure.
About 30 families live in trailers at Adei Ad, which has been scheduled for removal for seven years. The settlers have now put up an “eruv,” an elevated string on poles that encircles a community and allows observant Jews to carry objects within the proscribed area on the Sabbath. Mr. Abu Aliya has no idea what the string is for, but he says it runs right through his land.
This year, the harvest was less of a celebration, and more a show of perseverance. The Palestinian Authority governor of the Ramallah district, Laila Ghannam, joined the olive pickers and ate breakfast with the mayor of Turmus Aya under a tree.
“Our presence here is proof that this is our land and we will never give it up,” she said.
Members of a new unit from the authority’s Ministry of Agriculture were also out in the fields with notebooks, documenting the villagers’ complaints and counting the poisoned trees. They took samples of wilting branches to send to an Israeli laboratory for testing in the hope that the results could be used as future evidence in an Israeli court.
Mr. Abu Aliya, who has lost about half of his 300 olive trees, made a promise. “The moment the settlers leave,” he said, “I’ll make a big celebration. I’ll slaughter a buffalo.”
My comments, concise and even terse:
a) A buffalo? That I'd like to see.
b) if trees were poisoned, if, then that's stupid. the soil also would be tainted and noe trees could be grown there. why do that?
c) if she had spoken to me, I would have gotten her a reaction from Adei-Ad. As it is, there isn't balance in the story, especially and she herself writes in quite a circumspecy manner.
d) yes, land ownership is a problem. proof not only of ownership but of taxes paid, of evidence of tilling, etc. is hard to come by. the Arabs just took over and expect everyone to believe, that as conquerors and occupiers, they have more rights than the Jews to whom the land was guaranteed by international law in 1922.
e) olive trees are not only a "Palestinian emblem". Kershner could have started with the Bible and the uses of olives and olive oil for Jews for over 3000 years. that also is steadfatedness.
f) she doesn't mention the Achiyah Olive Press Factory. Too bad. They've planted over the past few years more than 5000 saplings, new, that were partially damaged by our Arab neighbors and are producing close to 10% of all Israel's olive oil. That story isn't fit for the NYTimes news department.
g) the land upon which Adei-Ad sits is the land that in 1982 was assigned to Shiloh, Greater Shiloh if you wish. The same for Givat Achiyah, Keidah, Esh-Kodesh and Shvut Rachel.
h) one more point: the villages of Turmos-Aya and Al-Mughyer have been a source of terror including murder, shootings, fire-bombs, rockthrowing, destruction of property, theft and more. Just you should know.
Same basic story appears in the Washington Post. There, at least Joel Greenberg spoke to two reps from the local Jewish revenants although unlike Kershner, who only had Rabbis for Human Rights included, he also included a statement from Yesh Din.
(Thanks to SoccerDad for the referral)
Oh, and here's the NYTimes map at that story, minus any Jewish community:
P.S.
I might be updating this if I get more info.
_____________________
UPDATE
I forgot the fire that Arabs caused recently that destroyed some 60 dunams of agricultural land.
And I have been informed that over this past weekend, some 150 kilograms of olives were stolen, presumably by Arabs, who also destroyed many branches from an olive grove owned by a Jewish supporter of Shiloh from New York.
- - -
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Uprooted Olive Trees
Since this news item seemingly occurred right by me:
Occupiers uproot olive trees in West Bank
By MOHAMMED MAR’I | ARAB NEWS
Published: Aug 17, 2010 00:14
RAMALLAH: Jewish occupiers on Monday uprooted 250 olive trees in the West Bank villages of Kosra and Jaloud, near Nablus.
Ghassan Daghlas, the Palestinian Authority official monitoring settler activity in the northern West Bank, said that occupiers from nearby settlement of Shvut Rachel arrived at the groves on early Tuesday and uprooted the trees.
Daghlas added that the trees belong to Palestinian farmer Ali Abdulhamid Hassan.
I will be checking into it.
The number 250 sounds incredible unless they were saplings. It's tough to uproot an olive tree.
Jaloud is just east and north of Shiloh, on the same ridge as Achiyah. Kosra is further away from Jaloud, to the north-east.
Back in 2007, a reported 300 trees were uprooted. In 2009, at nearby al-Mughayyir, another 260 olive seedlings were reported uprooted.
There was a clash in early 2006.
Someone claims that:
Palestinians over the past 5000 years have cultivated olive trees and derived great benefit from these wonderful hardy trees
Five thousand years? 5000? But the Aarbs only arrived here in 638. Were the Jews Palestinians? The Hittites? Jebusites? Canaanites?
Are we altering history?
Well, actually, they do that.
And that's why I have to check what happened with those 250 "olive trees".
I will be back with an update.
-----------------------
UPDATE - I
I spoke with our security officer.
a) there was no report of any uprooting of Arab-owned olive trees or saplings.
Moreover,
b) on Sunday night, some 200 young olive trees were scorched and burned in the area between Keida and Esh-Kodesh, trees that were Jewish-owned!!!
UPDATE - II
Israeli residents living on an illegal West Bank outpost uprooted over 200 olive trees near the Qusra village in the Nablus district Monday, a Palestinian Authority official said.They don't give up.
PA settlement affairs officer in the northern West Bank Ghassan Doughlas said residents of the nearby Svhut [Shvut] Rachel outpost ascended upon the village, uprooting the olive grove which belonged to Ali Abdul Hamid Mohammad Hassan.
Doughlas called on the international community to pressure Israel to stop settler attacks against Palestinians and their property.
- - -
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Update on Olive Harvest Incident
A)
(AFP) – NABLUS, West Bank — Five Palestinian farmers were wounded in clashes with armed Israeli settlers in the West Bank on Tuesday, Palestinian security services and witnesses said.
Israeli security forces fired tear-gas and arrested one Palestinian, the sources said, while Israel's military and border police declined to comment on the incident.
The clashes started after about 50 settlers, some firing guns in the air, hurled rocks at Palestinians who responded in kind, the sources said.
The witnesses said the Palestinians were picking olives near Qaryut village in the northern West Bank.
A settler told army radio that the Palestinians were faking the harvest and actually involved in "terrorist activities. They go to the fields to gather information to then commit attacks," said Dibi Degani.
B)
Settlers, Palestinians confront after protest march near olive grove
A confrontation between settlers and Palestinians broke out on Tuesday morning near Karayout, a village adjacent to Nablus, after a few dozen settlers conducted a protest march against olive harvesting taking place in a grove from which gunshots were fired at a settler a few weeks ago.
Border policemen at the site managed to bring a halt to the mutual stone hurling. No casualties were reported, and no arrests were made.
In related news, Palestinians from Turmus Aya on Tuesday morning claimed that dozens of their olive trees were uprooted, apparently during the night.
C)
Settlers, Palestinian olive harvesters clash
JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Jewish settlers and Palestinian olive pickers clashed in the West Bank. The residents of the northern West Bank settlement of Shvut Rachel, including of nearby illegal outposts, held a rally to protest the harvest because they say it poses a security threat.
Following the protest, the settlers and Palestinians began throwing stones at each other. The groups were separated without incident, according to Israeli news sources.
According to Palestinian sources quoted by the French news agency AFP, five harvesters were injured and the settlers fired gunshots in the air [???]
The Israel Defense Forces approved the rally and gave the Palestinians permission to pick olives in the area. The settlers say the harvesters use the time to gather intelligence about the nearby settlements and launch attacks from the olive groves.
D)
Nine injured as settlers rampage through olive harvest
Nablus – Ma’an – Nine Palestinians were injured and one was detained on Tuesday when dozens of Israeli settlers attacked farmers were harvesting olives in the West Bank village of Qaryout, south of Nablus, according to witnesses, local officials, and medics.
According to sources in the village, the incident began when dozens of Israeli settlers assaulted farmers working near the Israeli settlement of Shavout Rachel. After the initial attack, both soldiers and settlers stormed the village [??? do you know how far the village is from the orchard?], clashing with Palestinian residents who defended the area by throwing stones at the marauding groups. Soldiers fired bullets and tear gas, residents said.
Medics identified some of the injured people as: 21-year-old Isra’ Badawi, who was hit in the eye; 50-year-old Hani Kassab, the village council’s accountant; 30-year-old Jawad Badawi; 70-year-old Muhammad Muqbil; 46-year-old Abdullah Badawi; and 31-year-old Mu’taz Ghassan.
Qaryout’s Mayor, Abd An-Nasser Al-Qaryouti, told Ma’an the farmers obtained permission to enter their own fields from the Israeli army through the Palestinian Authority’s liaison office. Part way through the olive harvest season, Israeli authorities implemented a mandatory registration and permission process for farmers who wished to access agricultural land in the West Bank for the harvest.
Despite this prior coordination, the mayor said, settlers arrived in more than 70 cars. He said the settlers initiated the fight by hurling stones at the farmers. Israeli forces were present, and they did not attempt to stop the settlers, he added.
You don't need me to read between the lines, do you?
P.S. And even Gawker gets in to the act:
No Friend Of A Farmer
[Qaryut, West Bank; October 27. Image via Getty]
A Palestinian farmer from the West Bank village of Qaryut reacts in front of Israeli soldiers on October 27, 2009. Five Palestinian farmers were wounded in clashes with armed Israeli settlers in the West Bank, Palestinian security services and witnesses said. AFP PHOTO/MARCO LONGARI (Photo credit should read MARCO LONGARI/AFP/Getty Images)"Witnesses"? Ah, independent objective non-involved witnesses?
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
How To Stage An Olive Harvest Confrontation
The pictures:
Some chanting
Backup photogs
The real press
The "trees" (notice the rather unfertile soil)
A Kedumin resident explaining the farce the press should be observing
Another real Arab (?)
Enjoying the joke
Monday, October 27, 2008
AP's Olive Harvest Story in My Backyard
AP decided that they needed to do a story on the olive harvest season among my neighbors out here in Samaria, in the Binyamin Regional Council area.
The background story to the story is complex including issues of ownership, security and human rights as an instrument of distraction and disruption.
In the report below, for example, 6 Arabs are quoted by name, other Arab supporters are quoted anonymously, two pro-Arab Jews are quoted and one "settler" is quoted by name, thus:-
A settler leader, Yitzhak Shadmi, dismissed reports of vandalism as staged.
Six photographs accompany the story, one of Jews from afar and faceless.

Here then is the full story and I'v added some comments:
Olive harvest becomes West Bank battleground
By KARIN LAUB and DALIA NAMMARI
TURMUS AYYA, West Bank (AP) — The olive harvest was off to a bad start for Said Abu Aliya — branches torn from the Palestinian farmer's trees lay scattered on the ground, along with bright-green olives.
He blamed Israeli settlers in a nearby hilltop camp, and Israeli soldiers patrolled as a buffer while he and his family picked the remaining crop.
"Without their presence, we wouldn't be able to enter our lands because the settlers would attack us," said the 47-year-old.
Olive groves within a 50 meter of so radius of Jewish communities are problematic because Arab terrorists have used them as cover and becuase not all land ownership issues have been adjudicated in courts.
For many Palestinians, the fall harvest of some 10 million trees used to be a joyful ritual steeped in tradition. But the West Bank's olive groves have increasingly become a target of extremist Jewish settlers who, hilltop by hilltop, seek to expand their control over land they say they were promised by God.
And land that is not privately owned by Arabs.
Just in the first two weeks of this season, farmers say, assailants beat a 63-year-old olive picker, slashed another man's car tires, tried to chase Palestinians out of several groves and stole or damaged some of the crop. In one incident captured on video, four settlers punched and kicked a Palestinian photographer and a foreign activist in an olive grove.
In that last incident in Hebron, the Arabs purposefully entered an area closed-off to them in order to be provocative.
Compounding the farmers' problems, more trees are harder to reach because they lie beyond Israel's lengthening West Bank separation barrier or close to Jewish settlements and their multiplying satellite camps.
The barrier has nothing to do with this in most cases.
Israeli human rights activists say securing the harvest is an important test of Israel's obligation as an occupying power to protect Palestinians. They say the military and police are doing a better job than in the past, but have failed to protect crops or bring vigilantes to justice.
And Jewish crops are protected from Arab vandalism - which isn't mentioned. At one Jewish farm site near Nahliel, over 5000 grape saplings were uprooted, twice within a month.
This week Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas complained that the army isn't doing its job, raising questions about whether Israel is serious about peace with Palestinians. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak denounced those attacking farmers as "hooligans," but said troops are making a major effort to protect farmers. The military said soldiers have been briefed about the importance of the harvest, jeeps patrol trouble areas and officers are given maps to rule on ownership disputes.
Where there is coordination, there isn't much of a problem.
In the past, Israeli troops have destroyed thousands of Palestinian olive trees along roadsides to protect against snipers and stone throwers. Palestinians still complain that settlers are often given free rein by the military. For example, the settlers who were filmed attacking the photographer were allowed to walk away, while police arrested three Israelis helping with the harvest for entering a "closed military area."
A settler leader, Yitzhak Shadmi, dismissed reports of vandalism as staged.
That's it? No example?
Growing numbers of Israelis and foreigners are flocking to the groves to help the farmers. Yaakov Manor's Harvest Coalition helped arrange West Bank trips for hundreds of Israelis last year.
Thousands of Palestinians take part in the harvest, with students given time off to help and professionals returning to their villages. Olive oil is a food staple, and even the leftovers from the oil presses are used as fuel.
The economic benefits are relatively modest — about $100 million from an expected 21,000 tons of olive oil this year — but the extra income reaches some 100,000 families. For some, it's just pocket money, for others enough to plan a wedding or build a house.
Near the village of Burin, Amneh Abdel Qader sat on a tarpaulin under a tree, as her son, daughter-in-law and three grandsons combed the branches with handheld rakes. The olives tumbled onto the tarp, and the 70-year-old sorted them, the plumpest for eating and the rest for oil.
"We used to bring a radio and have fun, sing and enjoy ourselves," Abdel Qader said. "But from the day they came," she said, referring to Israeli settlements near her village, "we can't relax anymore."
Not true. I see radios and family gatherings at the sides of the roads.
Burin's farmers can only reach lands near the settlements of Yitzhar and Bracha with special coordination from security forces. Farmers say they're allowed to visit those areas only twice a year, for planting and harvesting, and that they need more access to hang traps for olive flies, prune branches and clear underbrush.
After a terrorist burned a caravan, stabbed a boy and then was killed while trying to toss a firebomb, just last month!
Israel's Civil Administration, the branch of the military dealing with the Palestinians' day-to-day life, denied any quota on visits, but a senior official said the idea is to keep settlers and farmers away from each other.
"You can smell the fuel in the air," the official said on condition of anonymity, in line with briefing regulations. "We don't want to have a situation where the olive harvest is setting off the atmosphere again."
At times, there's also lack of coordination within the military.
In the village of Naalin this month, near Israel's separation barrier, border police fired tear gas and stun grenades as villagers and volunteers tried to reach a grove. The army had given a permit for the Naalin harvest but apparently not briefed the border police, said Rabbi Arik Ascherman of Rabbis for Human Rights. Several Israelis were injured and three detained, he said.
This demo has nothing to do with the olive harvest but is an ongoing, weekly, event.
The Palestinian olive harvest falls about 5 to 10 percent short of its potential every year because of settler violence and Israeli restrictions, estimated Palestinian economist Samir Hleileh. Israel requires permits for villagers who have land in the roughly 10 percent of the West Bank swallowed up on the "Israeli" side of the barrier.
Eighty percent of the people who used to work these lands no longer get permits, according to U.N. monitors.
Mohammed Jabareen, mayor of the village of Taibeh, which has 250 dunams (60 acres) of land beyond the barrier, said landowners have received permits, but not all of the workers needed for the harvest. The army says it's issuing extra permits during the harvest.
Some are trying to improve output by teaching farmers how to grow premium oils for export. Industrialist Bassem Khoury has invested in a premium oil storage facility with 30 steel vats, even though business prospects are uncertain.
"To me," he said, "the olive tree is a symbol of Palestine."
Additional reporting by Ali Daraghmeh in Azmut.
Karen has been the subject of a quite critical piece of Barry Rubin who is no extremist or rightwinger who has written Karin Laub and the AP do their part in war against Israel.
CAMERA also caught her out four years ago already as an unethical journalist:
the AP has used “militias” when paraphrasing statements made by Israeli and U.S. officials who did not use this word at all. As the following quotations from AP itself show, the officials actually used the terms “terror” and “terrorists”:)Hamas and Islamic Jihad leaders in the Gaza Strip have insisted the deal is not final, while Israel and the United States are skeptical about its value, saying Palestinian security forces must quickly disarm the militias..."The [U.S.] president is interested in real progress on the ground, in the dismantlement of terrorism, and in an end to the killing," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said..."If they will stop their terror attacks, we can stop the activities against them ...," he [Israeli Justice Minister Yosef Lapid] told AP. (Emphasis added. "Arafat says formal cease-fire announcement coming soon," Karin Laub, June 26, 2003
Palestine Media Watch has called her professionalism "shoddy".
Karen was most impressed that Hamas is doing a good job administering Gaza and how it treats female reporters in this recent story:
Gaza City's streets are cleaner and safer than before the takeover. Despite budget shortages, Hamas has fixed traffic lights, paved some streets and opened a new children's hospital, and claims to have imposed law and order after the chaos that often dogged Fatah rule. It has also been careful not to push an overtly Islamic social agenda. For example, officials have suggested to female reporters covering Gaza's parliament that they wear head scarves, but those who don't are not shunned.
Already in 2000 she was troubling in her reporting:
Karen Laub of the Associated Press first asserted plainly that: "The trigger for the violence was a visit by Israel's hard-line opposition leader, Ariel Sharon, last week to a bitterly contested Jerusalem shrine sacred to Muslims and Jews."22 Shortly thereafter, however, Laub acknowledges that the question of what started the riot was actually a matter of dispute: "The argument is part of the overall debate over whether the riots are a spontaneous outburst of Palestinian anger or are orchestrated to some degree by Arafat to extract concessions from Israel in the negotiations."23
22. Karen Laub, "Twelve Killed in Second Day of Clashes; Worst Violence in Four Years," Associated Press (September 30, 2000), International News.
23. Karen Laub, "Israel Says Arafat Lures Protesters with Money; Palestinians Say It's Compensation," Associated Press (October 9, 2000), International News.
And another attack on her here.
Maybe it's just incompetency?
(Kippah tip: RH)
Thursday, August 23, 2007
Like Festivals?
Olive Harvest 2007: You Are Needed More Than Ever!
Join Us in Palestine for the 2007 Olive Harvest Campaign!
Palestinian farmers and agricultural organizations, in coordination with the International Solidarity Movement, the International Women's Peace Service, and the Christian Peacemaker Team announce the 2007 Olive Harvest Campaign. The campaign will begin on October 16th, after the end of Ramadan, and will continue for six to eight weeks, depending on the size of the harvest. [Jews will be harvesting too. like our own "Meshek Achiyah" at Shiloh]
The Olive Harvest is an annual affirmation of Palestinians' historical, spiritual and economic connection to their land, and a rejection of Israeli efforts to seize it. Palestinians are the indigenous people of this land who have farmed olives here for thousands of years. [since maybe 638 CE at the most. that's 1369 years at the very most. and don't forget, there were Jews here first with their olive trees]
International and Israeli volunteers join Palestinians each year to harvest olives, in spite of efforts by Israeli settlers, soldiers and bulldozers to destroy this vital piece of Palestinian life. The Olive Harvest Campaign provides a wonderful opportunity to spend time with Palestinian families in their olive groves and homes. After a two-day training session, volunteers for the Olive Harvest Campaign will stay in Palestinian homes or international apartments in West Bank communities and accompany Palestinian families to their olive groves to serve as witnesses to document and expose attacks by settlers -- supported by the Israeli Army -- on farmers and their families.
In addition to olive harvest, volunteers will have the opportunity to join Palestinians in nonviolent protests throughout the West Bank against the construction of the annexation barrier, settlements and settlement roads.
For more information on preparation, travel and arrival in Palestine, please see the ISM Palestine website, www.palsolidarity.org/main/join/.
ISM support groups located around the world can help answer your questions about the movement and Olive Harvest Campaign. Many will provide training sessions. For information on how to contact local ISM support groups worldwide, please also see the ISM website.
But if you want a real good festival, try Shiloh on the 15th of Av.











