Media Analysis

Five Palestinians have been killed protesting illegal settlement — but ‘NYT’ covers ‘gentle stream’ in nearby kibbutz

Update: The day after this post appeared, the New York Times covered the illegal settlement, and buried the fact that several Palestinians have died protesting it.

Last night Palestinians led a torchlit protest deep in the occupied West Bank against an “outpost” Jewish settlement that has been established on village lands in recent weeks. This is a big story because as Yumna Patel reported for us, five Palestinians have now been killed in protests against the outpost. And it is a test of Israel’s new government.

The story is getting wide coverage in Palestine but not in the United States, though these lands are the supposed basis of a “Palestinian state” — and again, five Palestinians have been killed defending their rights.

Funeral of Ahmed Bani Shamsa, who was killed in Beita on June 17
Mourners carry the body of Palestinian teenager Ahmed Zahi Bani Shamsa, who died of wounds sustained at the hands of Israeli forces during clashes, in the village of Beita, south of in the West Bank of Nablus, on June 17, 2021. Photo by Shadi Jarar’ah (c) APA Images.

The new settlement is called Eviatar and is built on a hilltop called Jabal Sabeeh outside the village of Beita. Three times in recent years the settlers have been evacuated by authorities; but religious Jewish zealots restarted the settlement in recent weeks in a bold and plainly illegal move, and Israeli soldiers are evidently maintaining the status quo now. And the people of Beita are determined to hold on to their lands.

Turkish media reports “a barrage of violence and deadly confrontations since May.” The settlement threatens olive groves that belong to 17 families, TRT reports. Settlers have conducted regular raids into Beita to cut down olive trees. On June 7 the Israeli army issued an order declaring the area a closed military zone in an apparent effort to freeze construction– and limit Palestinian access to land.

Middle East Eye covered yesterday’s torchlit protest.

While Pierre Klochendler reported from the settlement for i24 News earlier this week:

“This illegal outpost looks like a military camp, which it used to be. It’s not very comfortable but it’s free.”

The settlers have been evacuated three times and will keep coming back, “until we take root,” one told Klochendler, who reports that the settlers moved from other settlements to the outpost with the support of the settlers’ council in the northern West Bank. The paved streets have names like Zion and Jerusalem, and 16 homes were built in little over a month.

Look at the political stakes. The Associated Press reports that the new Bennett government in Israel is likely not to do anything about the settlement, because such issues divide the fragile coalition of leftwingers and rightwingers. Though Palestinians describe it as a “cancer” and the village of Beita regards it as an existential matter to protest the colony’s creation.

“Environment Minister Tamar Zandberg, a member of the dovish Meretz party, told Israeli television’s Channel 12 that she believes the peace process is important, but that the new government has agreed, ‘at least at this stage, not to deal with it.’”

Yousef Munayyer points out the anti-Palestinian bigotry inherent in New York Times coverage of this area. He cites a long article in the June 22 newspaper by Isabel Kershner about different groups of Jews in the Galilee fighting for access to a pretty stretch in a stream. (A kibbutz controls the waterway and locks its gates on residents of a nearby city.) Munayyer:

Meanwhile, just 30 miles away in the village of Beita several Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli military while protesting the rapid expansion of an Israeli settlement over the last several weeks. I don’t think the @nytimes has covered this once during this time.

I cannot find any reference in the Times to the settlement or the Beita protests in the last couple weeks; and State Department briefings have also not addressed the issue.

It is apparent that it is not in the political interest of the U.S. government, or the Israeli government, for Eviatar to become a flashpoint. Both Washington and Israel want these issues to disappear quietly– though the outpost obviously is a flashpoint for Palestinian rights, or the lack thereof.

Beita protests
Palestinians burn tires during a night demonstration against the expansion of a Jewish settlement on the lands of Beita village, near the occupied West Bank city of Nablus, on June 23, 2021. Photo by Shadi Jarar’ah. (c) APA Images.

An Israel lobbyist advises the Biden-Bennett axis to slow down settlement activity but to do so in a quiet way, so no one gets upset politically. Michael Koplow at Israel Policy Forum says the new Israeli government needs to try to “avoid any hurdles that prove insurmountable,” and Biden should accommodate by not allowing any differences to go public.

This does not mean stepping back from U.S. principles or refraining from pushing the new government on areas of importance, but it does mean doing everything possible to avoid having the U.S., its role, and its requests be hot-button political issues that give Bennett a reason to publicly push back… The U.S. should clearly communicate our concerns and requests to Bennett and Lapid, and push for progress on things like evictions and demolitions, reforming the building permitting process, and reducing IDF presence in Area A, but in a quiet manner that allows the Israeli government a measure of ambiguity and even deniability. 

Again, this is not in Palestinians’ interests: They want more attention to the human rights atrocity unfolding in the West Bank. And where is the American press?

4 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

“Yousef Munayyer points out the anti-Palestinian bigotry inherent in New York Times coverage of this area.”

Let me point out another way the New York Times has fallen asleep on the job: whenever there’s a major news story the Times often does analysis and fact checking – here’s an example of the Times fact checking one of Trump’s state of the union speeches: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/05/us/politics/fact-check-state-of-the-union.html

They have no problem stating that this claim is true, this claim is false, etc. Well, a few months ago Human Rights Watch came out with a 200+ page report on apartheid in Israel ( https://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/media_2021/04/israel_palestine0421_web_0.pdf ) – has the NYT reported on it in detail, analyzed and fact checked it for readers? Not that I can see – they ran one short and superficial piece on it.

Not precisely on topic, but regarding Palestinians and the U.S., well worth noting:
Black-Palestine solidarity is making its way to Capitol Hill (972mag.com)

“Black-Palestine Solidarity is making its way to Capitol Hill”
+972 Magazine, June 16/21 by Alex Kane.

EXCERPT:
“On May 13, something remarkable happened on the floor of the U.S. Congress: 11 Democratic representatives delivered blunt speeches criticizing Israel for its military assault on Gaza and its crackdown on Palestinian protests in Jerusalem. Perhaps the most powerful speeches came from two Black Congresswomen — Ayanna Pressley and Cori Bush — who connected the Black freedom struggle in the United States to the Palestinian movement for liberation.

“’When Black Lives Matter protesters took to the streets to demand justice, they were met with force,’ said Pressley, who represents the Boston area in Massachusetts. ‘They faced tear gas, rubber bullets, and a militarized police just as our Palestinian brothers and sisters are facing in Jerusalem today.’ Her fellow Congresswoman Bush, who represents St. Louis, Missouri, said ‘When heavily militarized police forces showed up in Ferguson in 2014… our Palestinian siblings showed up too.’

“The speeches signaled the growing prominence of a small bloc of Black Democrats — which includes Reps. Jamaal Bowman and Ilhan Omar, in addition to Bush and Pressley — who are drawing on their support for the Black Lives Matter movement to denounce Israel’s human rights abuses against Palestinians. While there have been past Black Democrats who were openly critical of Israel — figures like former Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney — the current crop of Black representatives are more robust in numbers and far more influential within the party and its base.

“’My heart instinctively goes out to the minority group that’s being harmed by a government that’s made clear its disdain for them, and it’s why I believe the world needs to value Palestinian life the way that we value Israeli life,’ Congressman Bowman, who represents parts of the Bronx and Westchester County in New York, told +972. ‘When I say Palestinian lives matter, much like when I say Black Lives Matter, I’m highlighting an unjust status quo that inflicts disproportionate harm on a specific group of people.'”

In The Guardian:

“Amnesty: ‘catalogue of violations’ by Israeli police against PalestiniansPalestinians face repression from Israel and Palestinian Authority, human rights watchdog says

The latest flare-up of violence in the Gaza Strip has been accompanied by a “catalogue of violations” committed by Israeli police against Palestinians in Israel and occupied East Jerusalem, according to research from Amnesty International.

Arab citizens of Israel have been subjected to unlawful force from officers during peaceful demonstrations, sweeping mass arrests, torture and other ill-treatment in detention, and police have failed to protect Palestinians from premeditated attacks by rightwing Jewish extremists, the human rights watchdog said on Thursday. …

… At least 2,150 people – 90% of them Palestinian – have been arrested, most for allegedly insulting or assaulting a police officer or taking part in an illegal gathering rather than for violent offences, while rightwing Jewish extremists have for the most part continued to organise freely.

On at least two occasions in Haifa and Nazareth, witness accounts and verified videos showed police attacking groups of unarmed protesters without provocation, Amnesty reported.

Also captured on video was an incident in which an Israeli police officer shot a 15-year-old girl in the back outside her Sheikh Jarrah home, and another in which a protester was shot in the face while using his phone to film police from a balcony in Jaffa.

Amnesty also documented the torture of detainees who were tied up, beaten and deprived of sleep at a police station in Nazareth and at Kishon detention centre.

“It was like a brutal prisoner-of-war camp. The officers were hitting the young men with broomsticks and kicking them with steel-capped boots. Four of them had to be taken away by ambulance, and one had a broken arm,” said a witness who was at the Nazareth police station. …”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/24/amnesty-catalogue-of-violations-by-israeli-police-against-palestinians

<i>”It’s time for American Jews to recognize they have been duped”</i>
https://mondoweiss.mystagingwebsite.com/2015/07/american-recognize-duped

The Jewish community has been the most ruthlessly duped of all.