US FINANCED ISRAELIS SYSTEMATICALLY MURDER PEACEFUL AND UNARMED ACTIVISTS IN OCCUPIED PALESTINE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iz0Vef4Fu8U
BELGIAN TERRORIST POLICE GUARDING THE COURT AGAINST "TERRORIST" MALIKA EL AROUD!!!
Fact Sheet: The Killing of Rachel Corrie
Background
Rachel was born to Cindy and Craig Corrie on April 10, 1979, in
Olympia, Washington. She was the youngest of three children in the
family. From an early age,
she displayed a concern for social justice and those less fortunate
than her. Her personal interests included playing soccer and the poetry
of Pablo Neruda.
After graduating from high school, Rachel studied art at Evergreen
State College in Olympia, where she became involved in peace activism
and worked with a group called Olympians for Peace and Solidarity. For a
senior class project, she proposed spending a year in Palestine, where
she could meet with and learn from Palestinian activists and develop a
sister city program between Olympia and Rafah, a border town in the Gaza
Strip.
Through Olympians for Peace and Solidarity, Rachel became involved with the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), a Palestinian-led group of international activists dedicated to protesting Israeli human rights abuses, including the destruction of Palestinian homes,
using nonviolent direct action. In late January 2003, amidst the
violence and repression of the second Palestinian uprising against
Israel's then more than 35-year-old military occupation, Rachel traveled
to the occupied territories as a volunteer with the ISM.
Rachel in Gaza
On January 22, 2003, Rachel arrived in occupied East Jerusalem. The
next day she traveled to the West Bank for a two-day training session
at the ISM's headquarters, which involved advice on how to avoid injury
during nonviolent direct actions that were planned. The main mission of
Rachel and the other ISM volunteers was to act as human shields for
Palestinian civilians in Rafah, who regularly came under fire from
Israeli soldiers, and to prevent the destruction of Palestinian homes
and infrastructure such as water wells that were also regularly targeted by the Israeli army.
On January 27, 2003, Rachel entered Gaza through the
Israeli-controlled Erez Crossing and traveled to the southern town of
Rafah. Situated along the border with Egypt, large swathes of homes in
Rafah were targeted for destruction by Israel under the pretext of
creating a security belt. (Between 2000 and 2004, the Israeli army
destroyed more than 2500 Palestinian homes in Gaza, almost two-thirds of them in Rafah. For more, see Human Rights Watch report: Razing Rafah: Mass Home Demolitions in the Gaza Strip, October 2004. For more on Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes, see here.)
In a February 7 email to her friends and family back home in the US, Rachel wrote:
"[N]o amount of reading, attendance at conferences,
documentary viewing and word of mouth could have prepared me for the
reality of the situation here. You just can't imagine it unless you see
it - and even then you are always well aware that your experience of it
is not at all the reality: what with the difficulties the Israeli army
would face if they shot an unarmed US citizen, and with the fact that I
have money to buy water when the army destroys wells, and the fact, of
course, that I have the option of leaving."
A few weeks later, on February 14, Rachel and other ISM members had
a close call with an Israeli army bulldozer. Of the incident, Rachel wrote:
"The internationals stood in the path of the bulldozer and
were physically pushed with the shovel backwards, taking shelter in a
house... The bulldozer then proceeded on its course, demolishing one
side of the house with the internationals inside."
In a February 27 email to her mother Cindy, Rachel wrote:
"I have bad nightmares about tanks and bulldozers outside
our house and you and me inside. Sometimes the adrenaline acts as an
anesthetic for weeks and then in the evening or at night it just hits me
again - a little bit of the reality of the situation. I am really
scared for the people here."
Rachel's Death
On March 16, 2003, dressed in fluorescent orange vests and using a
bullhorn to make their presence known to Israeli soldiers, Rachel and a
group of seven other American and British ISM volunteers set off to
attempt to prevent the destruction of Palestinian homes in the so-called
Philadelphi corridor area of Rafah, along the border with Egypt.
Late in the afternoon, after several hours of confronting soldiers
who were using two 60-ton armored Caterpillar D9 weaponized bulldozers
to destroy homes, Rachel slipped while standing on a mound of earth in
front one of the bulldozers and was run over. Severely injured, she was
taken to hospital by ambulance where she was declared dead. (See here for photos taken that day.
WARNING:
Contains disturbing images.) Rachel's death was the first in a string
of deadly incidents involving ISM members and the Israeli army (see
below for more).
According to fellow ISM volunteer and eyewitness Tom Dale, a British citizen who now works as a journalist in Egypt:
"The bulldozer went towards her very slowly. She was fully
in clear view, straight in front of them... Unfortunately she couldn't
keep her grip there and she started to slip down. You could see she was
in serious trouble; there was panic in her face as she was turning
around... All the activists there were screaming, running towards the
bulldozer, trying to get them to stop. But they just kept on going."
According to another witness and ISM volunteer, Richard Purssell:
"The driver cannot have failed to see her. As the blade
pushed the pile, the earth rose up. Rachel slid down the pile. It looks
as if her foot got caught. The driver didn't slow down; he just ran over
her. Then he reversed the bulldozer back over her again."
The day after Rachel died, March 17, 2003, Amnesty International USA released a statement
condemning her killing and renewing a call "for a suspension of US
transfers to Israel of military equipment, including bulldozers, which
have been used to commit human rights abuses." The statement noted:
"In the past two years, the Israeli army has demolished
more than 3,000 Palestinian homes in the Occupied Territories, as well
as large areas of agricultural land, public and private properties, and
water and electricity infrastructure in urban and rural areas.
Bulldozers used for demolitions have killed Palestinian civilians, but
to date no thorough investigation has taken place. "Amnesty
International and other international, Israeli, and Palestinian human
rights groups have reported on Israel's use of disproportionate,
excessive, and lethal force without regard to civilian lives,
indiscriminate attacks on civilians, extrajudicial executions and
unwarranted destruction of civilian property that have resulted in
deaths of innocent bystanders... Amnesty International urges that such
transfers immediately be suspended until Israel is found to be in
compliance with the terms of US laws and bilateral defense agreements
governing transfers or offers effective and enforceable guarantees that
US weapons will not be misused in this fashion."
Official Israeli Investigation
Less than a month after Rachel was killed, the Israeli military ruled her death an accident in a report
that was sharply criticized by human rights groups. Initially, Israel
refused to let US officials or the Corrie family see the report,
eventually producing a 20-page document that contained no direct quotes
from eyewitnesses or documentary evidence.
In 2005, Human Rights Watch issued a report entitled "Promoting Impunity: The Israeli Military's Failure to Investigate Wrongdoing,"
which condemned Israel's investigations into Rachel's death, stating
they "fell far short of the transparency, impartiality, and thoroughness
required by international law.
Response of the United States Government
The administration of US President George Bush expressed regret
over Rachel's death but declined to conduct its own investigation,
despite the fact that a year after Rachel was killed Lawrence Wilkerson,
chief of staff to then-Secretary of State Colin Powell, wrote a letter
to the Corries stating
that, "without equivocation," the Israeli military investigation had
been insufficient. Rep. Brian Baird, from Rachel's home state of
Washington, attempted, unsuccessfully, to launch a congressional
investigation.
THE CORRIE FAMILY'S SEARCH FOR ACCOUNTABILITY
US Lawsuit
After years of unsuccessfully lobbying the Israeli and US
governments for a thorough and transparent investigation into Rachel's
death, in March 2005, along with several Palestinians, Rachel's parents filed a federal lawsuit
in the US against Caterpillar Inc., arguing that the company was liable
in her death because it sold bulldozers to Israel despite the fact that
they were being used to commit human rights abuses in violation of
international law. In November 2005, a judge dismissed the case. In
2007, an appeals court refused
to reinstate the case, ruling that it dealt with foreign policy
questions that were the purview of the executive branch of the
government.
Israeli Civil Suit
In March 2010, seeking answers to unresolved questions surrounding their daughter's death, Cindy and Craig Corrie began
a civil suit against the Israeli government, accusing the Israeli
military of either unlawfully or intentionally killing her or of gross
negligence. The family described the suit as their "absolutely last
resort."
Information revealed in court painted a picture of neglect and
dereliction of duty on the part of Israeli investigators, who failed to
visit the scene of the incident or interview the ISM volunteers and
Palestinians who were present that day, including the medical workers
who treated Rachel. As a Time magazine article
observed, one of the three military police officers who conducted the
official investigation of Rachel's death "testified that [their]
interview of the bulldozer driver was halted on the order of a senior
commander. He also testified that investigators waited a week to
retrieve from another unit the only known videotape of the incident;
failed to interview non-military eyewitnesses; ignored the ambulance
workers, doctors and other Palestinians who treated her; and did not
even visit the scene of her death."
On August 28, 2012, the judge overseeing the case ruled
that Rachel's death was a "regrettable accident" and the Israeli
government bore no responsibility for it. In response, Rachel's mother,
Cindy, declared:
"I believe this was a bad day not only for our family, but a bad day
for human rights, for humanity, for the rule of law and also for the
country of Israel... Rachel's right to life and dignity were violated by
the Israeli military."
Prior to the verdict being handed down, Haaretz newspaper reported
that US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro had told Rachel's parents that
the Israeli investigation wasn't as thorough, credible or transparent
as it should have been.
"Amnesty International condemns an Israeli court's verdict
that the government of Israel bears no responsibility in the death of
Rachel Corrie, saying the verdict continues the pattern of impunity for
Israeli military violations against civilians and human rights defenders
in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). The verdict shields
Israeli military personnel from accountability and ignores deep flaws in
the Israeli military's internal investigation of Corrie's death. "By
upholding the flawed Israeli military investigation, completed within
one month of Rachel Corrie's death in 2003, the verdict seems to have
ignored substantial evidence presented to the court, including by
eyewitnesses. The full military investigation has never been made
public, but US government officials have stated that they do not believe
the investigation was 'thorough, credible and transparent.'"
Rachel's Legacy
Following her death, Rachel's parents created The Rachel Corrie Foundation for Peace & Justice to honor her memory. According to its mission statement,
its goal is to continue "the work that Rachel Corrie began and hoped to
accomplish, and carries out that work with her vision, spirit, and
creative energy in mind. We conduct and support programs that foster
connections between people, that build understanding, respect, and
appreciation for differences, and that promote cooperation within and
between local and global communities. The foundation encourages and
supports grassroots efforts in pursuit of human rights and social,
economic, and environmental justice, which we view as pre-requisites for
world peace." The foundation's projects include funding a water purification and desalination unit for a kindergarten in Rafah and the Rachel Corrie Memorial Scholarship at Evergreen State College.
Rachel's life has inspired numerous artistic works, most notably the play My Name is Rachel Corrie,
edited and directed by award-winning British actor Alan Rickman, which
was based on her diary entries and emails. First staged in April 2005 at
the Royal Court Theatre, London, it has been performed in at least 10
countries since. Entries from Rachel's diary and emails home were also
published in the book Let Me Stand Alone: The Journals of Rachel Corrie (2008).
A ship bearing Rachel's name, the MV Rachel Corrie, took part in
the 2010 Gaza Freedom Flotilla, which attempted to bring humanitarian
supplies to the besieged and blockaded Gaza Strip to draw international
attention to the plight of the Palestinians living there.
Rachel's dedication to the cause of Palestinian freedom also
inspired numerous tributes and memorials for her from Palestinians, both
in the occupied territories and in the diaspora. In March 2003, the
Union of Health Work Committees in Gaza named a clinic and children's
center in Rafah after her, the Rachel Corrie Children's Center.
The center's goal is to build "relationships between the isolated
children and youth in Rafah and their peers in other countries." In
2010, a street was named after Rachel in Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank.
UNARMED INTERNATIONAL ACTIVISTS & OTHERS SEVERELY INJURED OR KILLED BY THE ISRAELI MILITARY SINCE RACHEL CORRIE'S DEATH
The following is a partial list of nonviolent foreign activists and
others who have been seriously injured or killed by Israeli forces since
Rachel Corrie's death on March 16, 2003. It does not include the far
greater number of unarmed Palestinian activists injured or killed by Israeli forces during the same period.
A few weeks after Rachel is killed, American citizen and ISM volunteer Brian Avery
is shot in the face by Israeli soldiers in the city of Jenin in the
West Bank. Lucky to survive, Avery undergoes a series of facial
reconstruction surgeries and suffers severe facial scarring. After
initially refusing to investigate the incident, the Israeli government
subsequently agrees to an out-of-court settlement paying Avery
$175,000.
Less than a week after Avery is shot in the face and seriously
wounded by Israeli soldiers in the West Bank, British ISM member and photographer
Tom Hurndall is shot in the head by Israeli soldiers in Gaza while he
attempts to help a group of Palestinian children to safety after Israeli
soldiers begin shooting in the vicinity. After nearly a year in a coma,
Hurndall dies in January 2004. Following pressure from the British
government and Hurndall's family, the Israeli army lays charges of
manslaughter against a soldier who confesses to the shooting. The
soldier is convicted in 2005 and sentenced to eight years in prison, but
is released early for good behavior in 2010.
British cameraman James Miller
May 2, 2003 -
Respected
British cameraman James Miller, who had worked for major international
news organizations such as CNN, is shot and killed by Israeli troops in
Gaza he while carries a white flag.
ISM activist Tristan Anderson
March 13, 2009 -
Oakland native and nonviolent ISM activist Tristan Anderson is shot in the face
with a high-velocity tear-gas canister by Israeli forces while
participating in a demonstration against a section of the wall Israel is
building on land belonging to the town of Ni'lin in the occupied West
Bank. Anderson suffers multiple fractures to his skull, a severe injury
to the frontal lobe of his brain, and a collapsed eye socket, causing
him to lose sight in his right eye. He spends more than a year in an
Israeli hospital recovering before returning to the US, where he
continues to suffer the effects of his injury.
Turkish and American citizen Furkan Dogan is shot and killed along
with eight other Turkish human rights activists by Israeli commandos who
storm the boat they're traveling on in international waters as part of
the Gaza Freedom Flotilla.
May 31, 2010 -
Turkish and American citizen Furkan Dogan is shot and killed along
with eight other Turkish human rights activists by Israeli commandos who
storm the boat they're traveling on in international waters as part of
the Gaza Freedom Flotilla. Dogan is shot multiple times in his leg,
foot, back, and twice to the head. A United Nations investigation concludes
that he and five of the other victims have been shot "execution-style"
at close range, finding that Furkan has been shot in the face after
"lying on the deck in a conscious or semi-conscious, state for some
time."
21-year-old
American artist and student Emily Henochowicz is hit in the face
May 31, 2010 -
At a demonstration at the Qalandiya checkpoint in the occupied West
Bank to protest the attack on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, 21-year-old
American artist and student Emily Henochowicz is hit in the face by
a tear gas canister fired by Israeli border police. The force of the
impact fractures her jaw and orbital bone and causes the loss of her
left eye.
Sixty-year-old American citizen and member of Michigan Peace Team Sandra Quintano
May 1, 2011 -
Sixty-year-old American citizen and member of Michigan Peace Team Sandra Quintano suffers two broken wrists
and a laceration to her head after being assaulted by Israeli soldiers
in the West Bank village of Izbet al-Tabib during a peaceful
demonstration against the construction of Israel's wall, which will cut
off villagers' access to their land.
Twenty-two-year-old Palestinian-American student Munib Masri is
shot in the back with live ammunition by Israeli soldiers along the
Lebanon border as he participates in a march to mark the 63rd
anniversary of the Nakba, the expulsion of Palestinians from their homes
during the establishment of Israel. The bullet destroys Masri's left
kidney and spleen and breaks apart in his spine. He remains in a
wheelchair.
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