Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Film shows UNRWA teaching kids to kill Jews in Judea and Samaria |
2024-09-06 |
[Israel365News] “The theme of UNRWA education is ‘peace starts here.’ How could it possibly be that a U.N. social work agency would be using their education system to prepare kids for war?” Revelations by Israel’s government about the United Nations Relief and Works Agency have shattered the group’s carefully cultivated image as a humanitarian organization, revealing it to be no less than an arm of Hamas in Gaza. However, little light has been thrown on UNRWA’s identical role in Judea and Samaria. A new film, “UNRWA at War,” focuses on the educational side of UNRWA’s activities, in which children are taught not just to hate, but to kill. Just as it did in Gaza, UNRWA is inculcating children with the same genocidal creed in Judea and Samaria, only in this case for Fatah, the controlling party in the Palestinian Authority. The roughly 20-minute film was released by the Jerusalem-based Center for Near East Policy Research on Sept. 1 and is available online. The center’s director, David Bedein, told JNS that the movie shows what’s happening in Bethlehem. “That’s the next place they [the terrorists] are going to break out,” he said. When could such an attack take place? “It could be as soon as tomorrow,” he said. It's all about killing the Jews. “I want to stab them again and again”, “I want to become a suicide bomber”, etc. The film shows that terrorists, such as Dalal Mughrabi, a Fatah member who participated in the 1978 Coastal Road massacre in Israel, in which 38 Israeli civilians, including 13 children, were murdered, are routinely held up as heroes and role models in UNRWA schools. Images of Mughrabi and other terrorists adorn the schools’ walls. In the film, Arab students in Judea and Samaria, products of UNRWA schools, speak of Mughrabi with reverence. “She’s like my sister, like my mother. She’s part of our people,” says a boy from the Al-Amari refugee camp east of Ramallah. A girl of about six, also from Al-Amari, says, “Dhalal Mughrabi is a Palestinian martyr. She fought against the Jews. She blew them up.” Bedein, who has been sounding the alarm regarding UNRWA for decades, describes the indoctrination the kids are receiving as “murder education.” UNRWA, he said, is a “machine” that produces genocidal children in a “cookie-cutter” manner. Kutaiba Hatab, 15, attends the UNRWA Boys School in the Jalazone refugee camp north of Ramallah in Samaria. Asked in the film what he’s taught about the right of return, he says, “To fight, and to keep fighting, until Palestine is liberated!” He goes on to state that when he grows up, “I’ll be a jihadist and fight for Allah!” “Do you hate Jews,” an interviewer asks Rada Abu-Hatab, 12, an UNRWA student in Jenin. “Yes, a lot,” she answers. “I want to fight and become a martyr and ascend to heaven with Allah!” Mohammed Mahmud Khalil, an UNRWA student from Ein Arik, an Arab town near Ramallah, says, “What is the solution to Jerusalem? To kill the Jews. We’ll get rid of the Jews … With Allah’s help, I will become a holy warrior.” All the children connected the Hamas invasion of Oct. 7 to the right of return, characterizing the gruesome attack as an effort to liberate the land from the Jews. “Oct. 7 is related to the right of return because Hamas reconquered part of our land that was taken by the occupiers,” says Osama Belashe, an UNRWA student from Jalazone. “In school our teacher taught us we have to return. Even if Israel gives us compensation [to stay here] we have to return.” For Bedein, the most important thing the film documents is that at UNRWA, children receive military training. In previous films, Bedein has shown that these training camps were set up near Israel Defense Forces bases. He worries that Israel has been slow to adapt to the post-Oct. 7 reality. “They’re making the same mistake they made last October, not paying attention to the preparations for war in the UNRWA camps,” he said. However, he sees signs of awakening, noting a recent Israel Army Radio report that the military intended to investigate military training at UNRWA camps. And next week, Bedein is to present his findings to a Knesset committee. “People who did not take me seriously over a period of 36 years are now taking me seriously,” he said. Incompetence, or willful blindness, on the part of the Israeli authorities is a recurring theme for Bedein. He said the Foreign Ministry has a special division dedicated to overseeing UNRWA, yet its representatives were oblivious regarding the weapons held at UNRWA camps. He brought them to the Askar camp bordering Nablus (Shechem) to show them. “They had no idea about the guns,” he said. Moreover, Israel never exercised what oversight it had, he said. “Israel has the power to veto anything in Palestinian education. What we learned from Oct. 7 is that they weren’t doing it,” he added. “Back in the 1980s, I began this conversation with how humanitarian supplies were sold in the open market and with no supervision,” Bedein said. “And they [Israel] didn’t make any changes. There was no oversight. To say they’re not doing their job is an understatement,” he added. Although many have argued for doing away with UNRWA, according to Bedein that’s not a realistic solution. The organization is too embedded in the territories and in the United Nations, and the General Assembly would never accept it, he argued. However, he continued, it is possible to change UNRWA from within by pointing out the absurd situation and demanding change. “The theme of UNRWA education is ‘peace starts here,’” he said. “How could it possibly be that a U.N. social work agency would be using their education system to prepare kids for war?” Bedein has put together a five-point plan for changing UNRWA from within: 1. Cancellation of the new UNRWA curriculum based on jihad. 2. Disarmament of UNRWA schools and cessation of paramilitary training. 3. Dismissing UNRWA employees affiliated with Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Fatah. 4. Resettling fourth- and fifth-generation refugees from the 1948 war rather than keeping them in perpetual refugee status. 5. Demanding an audit of donor funds. He has met five times with Antonio Guterres, the U.N. secretary general, whom he said is open to his proposals. While UNRWA was always corrupt, he said, it wasn’t always the way it is now, he said. Even the children going through the schools, while they spoke of “their homes in Jaffa,” didn’t talk about going back and killing everyone in Jaffa as they do now, he said. “The change took place after 1992 when the PLO was put in charge by [then-Foreign Minister] Shimon Peres,” he said. “UNRWA was handed over to the PLO.”
Related: United Nations Relief and Works Agency: 2024-09-03 Nine UNRWA Staff Dismissed for Ties to October 7 Atrocities United Nations Relief and Works Agency: 2024-08-22 Outgoing Israeli UN ambassador calls for the destruction of the UN United Nations Relief and Works Agency: 2024-07-28 UNRWA's Philippe Lazzarini: Nearly 200 organization members killed in Gaza Related: Center for Near East Policy Research: 2021-02-06 UAE massively cut aid to Palestinians after normalization with Israel Center for Near East Policy Research: 2020-02-13 Palestinian, Saudi Arabian textbooks demonize Jews, Israel – studies Center for Near East Policy Research: 2018-08-14 Where has all the flour gone? The fake humanitarian UNRWA crisis |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
IDF releases new photos of manhunt for terrorists who killed Rina Shnerb |
2019-08-25 |
[Jpost] The IDF on Saturday night continued to scour the West Bank for the Paleostinians responsible for the bombing at the popular Ein Buvin water spring, that killed Rina Shnerb and maimed her father Eitan and brother Dvir, 19. During the manhunt Ribhi Abu al Safa and Mohammed Abu al Safawere were arrested in the village of Ein Arik close to Ramallah. Hamas, a contraction of the Arabic words for "frothing at the mouth", member Israr Ma'arouf, a student at Birzeit University who has spent time in Israeli jails, was arrested in the nearby village of Ein Qiniya. Details regarding the arrests and the identity of the three men were publicized on social media and in the Paleostinian media. The IDF has not linked the trio to the attack, stating only that they were arrested during the manhunt and are now being interrogated. |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
IDF vows tough response to Kassams |
2007-05-07 |
![]() The IDF said 10 Kassam rockets have been fired at Israel since Friday. Two more were fired Sunday night but landed in open fields. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack and said it was in retaliation to IDF operations in the West Bank. Defense officials estimated that the government would not launch a ground operation inside Gaza in response to the attack, but would order the IDF to step up pinpointed strikes on terrorists and infrastructure involved in the production and operation of Kassam rockets. Earlier in the day, a 42-year-old security guard was seriously wounded after Palestinian terrorists gunned him down at the joint Israeli-Palestinian tank farm where he was employed in the West Bank. The guard was exiting the second-floor balcony where the facility's bathrooms are located when three or four attackers in a passing car opened fire at him. Employees of the facility, which is located not far from Nili, west of Ramallah, said the bathroom area was the one part of the facility exposed to attack. The facility is a transfer point where gasoline from Israel is transferred to PA distributors. Filled with hundreds of gallons of flammable gasoline, the facility is considered to be a potential powder keg. Due to the level of danger, few people are willing to work as security guards at the site. But the worker, a new immigrant, had been employed there for around a year. Witnesses said they saw the car involved in the shooting speed off towards the nearby Palestinian village of Dir Kadis. The IDF later closed the village of Ein Arik, to which they believe the terrorists fled. Coworkers, including one man who had worked for years as an MDA ambulance driver, piled the guard into a car and drove him to the Na'alin checkpoint, where an MDA ambulance waited to rush him to Sheba Hospital at Tel Hashomer Medical Center. Medics said that although the guard was conscious immediately following the attack, his condition deteriorated en route to the hospital. Ultimately, rescuers were forced to resuscitate him before reaching the intensive care unit. Binyamin Police who swept the area for evidence discovered shells near the scene, which they suspected had come from the gun used in the attack. Doctors said the shooting victim remained in extremely serious condition on Sunday night. His condition still had not stabilized, and doctors emphasized that he was still fighting for his life, after losing a leg and an eye, as well as sustaining severe head wounds. At least two of the guard's wounds are each life-threatening on their own, even before taking into consideration the "whole picture" of the additional wounds. The Aksa Martyrs Brigades later claimed responsibility for the shooting. Security forces believe that the same group was responsible for an attack in the area three weeks ago in which four Israelis were wounded. In that case, too, the shooters were members of the group, and the attack was carried out by a car speeding by. |
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Israel-Palestine |
Israeli Soldiers Admit Killing Innocent Cops |
2005-06-04 |
Hisham Abu Taha, Arab News ![]() After gunmen from the Palestinian faction Fatah killed six soldiers at a checkpoint outside the West Bank city of Ramallah on Feb. 19, 2002, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon approved stepping up the scale and variety of retaliations. "The feeling was that this would be 'an eye for an eye'," an ex-soldier who took part in the shooting spree told Maariv. Eighteen Palestinians were killed in various retaliatory attacks, including 15 policemen shot while manning their checkpoints near Ramallah and Nablus, another West Bank city. "'We are going to liquidate Palestinian policemen at a checkpoint in revenge for our six soldiers that they killed'," the ex-commando quoted his commander as ordering the troops. At one of three checkpoints raided the Palestinians managed to return fire, but caused no Israeli casualties, Maariv said. "The moment we knew we were going to eliminate them, we no longer saw them as human," another former commando said. Hours after the death of the six Israeli soldiers at a West Bank checkpoint called Ein Arik, the commander of an elite reconnaissance unit, "Yael," assembled his soldiers and told them that they were being asked to avenge the six combat engineers, a staff sergeant in the Yael unit, who was only identified as D, told Maariv. Another soldier in the unit, identified as R., said the commander told them they would be targeting a Palestinian police post. "He said that our mission was to get there and kill them," Maariv quoted the soldier as saying. The two soldiers said their unit attacked a Palestinian post north of the town of Ramallah. R. said seven or eight men were at the post, drinking coffee, and that only two were in uniform and armed. After soldiers opened fire on the post, the Palestinians scattered, and only three remained in shooting range. "We began to liquidate them," said R., adding that soldiers pumped one Palestinian policeman full of bullets after he had already been fatally hit. The newspaper said at least two Palestinian police were killed. A paratrooper reconnaissance unit, meanwhile, was ordered to attack two Palestinian police posts near the Balata refugee camp on the outskirts of the West Bank city of Nablus, soldiers told Maariv. The newspaper quoted one paratrooper as saying the order was to kill everyone at the post his unit targeted. Seven policemen were killed by Israeli Army fire near Nablus on that day, Feb. 20, 2002, according to the newspaper. The newspaper said in its headline that a total of 15 Palestinian police were killed in various revenge operations, but the report only detailed nine deaths. The newspaper also quoted soldiers as saying they had filmed some of the killings. The army said it had no knowledge of such a video. Maariv's interviewees, whose names were withheld for what the newspaper called legal reasons, said they decided to come forward as part of "Breaking the Silence", a campaign by former soldiers to expose alleged Israeli abuse of Palestinians. "This vengeance operation has never been investigated regarding the legality or morality of the act," Maariv said. The army said in a statement in response to the Maariv report that its forces attacked "checkpoints manned by Palestinian policemen who facilitated the passage and actively assisted terrorists." |
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Middle East |
Two PA intel officers nabbed |
2002-04-25 |
Wednesday night, a Border Police undercover unit arrested two Palestinian Intelligence Service officers in the village of Kusra, south of Nablus and northeast of Shilo in Samaria. They are suspected of involvement in the attack on an IDF roadblock in Ein Arik, west of Ramallah on February 19, in which three Palestinian gunmen disguised as laborers killed six soldiers and wounded two. |
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