Palestinian teen hailed as hero after being arrested for 'humiliating' Israeli soldiers

Palestinian teen hailed as hero after being arrested for 'humiliating' Israeli soldiers
Seventeen year old Ahd Tamimi has been hailed as a hero after a video of her slapping an Israeli soldier raiding her house caused her arrest
5 min read
21 December, 2017
This is not the first time Ahd has been arrested [Twitter]
The Palestinian teenager, Ahd al-Tamimi has been hailed for her courage after confronting an Israeli soldier who shot her cousin, which ultimately led to her own arrest.

In a video that went viral on Israeli social media, Tamimi was seen slapping an Israeli soldier, after he stormed into her house and shot fifteen year old Mohammed Tamimi.

Mohammed Tamimi was shot to the head and is currently in critical condition in intensive care at the Arab Istishari Hospital.

In Israel, the soldiers' decision not to react to the seeming provocation by Ahed Tamimi, a blonde firebrand, has stirred a debate about deterrence and drawn allegations that the army was humiliated.

Three days after the Friday confrontation, amid an uproar in Israel, Tamimi was arrested from her home in a pre-dawn raid and now faces charges of attacking soldiers.

She was led in leg shackles to an Israeli military courtroom where a judge reserved a decision on whether to keep her without bail. He ordered her held for five more days, a decision that was appealed by her defense lawyer.

"Stay strong, stay strong," her father Bassem, a veteran activist, shouted from the spectators' section.

Israeli social media users reacted in anger to the video of Ahd confronting the soldiers. Naftali Bennett, the right wing Israeli education minister said, "these girls should be imprisoned and locked up for life"

The Israeli army also pitched in, saying that it had been a mistake to not arrest her "immediately" as she "tried to block the soldiers' mission".

The sharply conflicting Palestinian and Israeli interpretations of the widely viewed video clip highlight the deep rift between the two societies, at a time of heightened tension over the status of contested Jerusalem, the centerpiece of the long-running conflict.

Trump broke with decades of US policy earlier this month by recognising Jerusalem as Israel's capital and declaring he would move the country's embassy from Tel Aviv to the contested city.

Jerusalem is a key issue in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the move has caused widespread anger in the region and garnered international condemnation.

Nebi Saleh is a village of about 600 people, most of them members of Tamimi's extended family. For eight years, villagers along with Israeli and foreign activists have protested weekly against Israeli policies in the West Bank.

The Israeli military claimed Friday's protest turned violent, with about 200 Palestinians throwing stones at soldiers. Several people entered a local house, with the consent of the owners, and continued to throw stones.

Soldiers entered the house, removed the stone-throwers and stayed at the entrance to prevent others from entering, it said. At that point, several Palestinians emerged from the house and began to "violently provoke the soldiers," the army said.

Bassem Tamimi said that minutes earlier, soldiers had fired a rubber bullet from close range at 15-year-old Mohammed Tamimi, a cousin of Ahed and a frequent guest in the Tamimi home.

The teen remained in intensive care Wednesday after surgeons removed the bullet that had entered from his mouth and lodged in his brain, said officials at Ramallah's Istishari Hospital. The patient was alert after extensive surgery and would likely recover, they said.

We hope that this generation will be stronger than us, and can take the flag from us with more power and more serious resistance to end the occupation

Bassem Tamimi said his daughter was upset about the shooting when she approached the soldiers. The army confirmed using rubber bullets to disperse what it called a violent demonstration but said it had no information on the boy who was shot.

The video shows Ahed Tamimi and a young woman walking toward the two soldiers. Tamimi tells the soldiers to leave. She pushes and kicks them, and then slaps one of them.

The young woman films the scene on her mobile phone. An older woman joins, at one point stepping between Ahed and the soldiers, but then also tries to push back the soldiers who don't respond.

In an interview Wednesday, Bassem Tamimi praised his daughter as courageous, scoffing at criticism that she was an attention-seeking provocateur.

"We hope that this generation will be stronger than us, and can take the flag from us with more power ... and more serious resistance to end the occupation," said Tamimi, 50, who spent more than four years in nine different stints in Israeli jails for anti-occupation protests.

On social media, Palestinians celebrated Ahed as a hero in widely distributed cartoons. In one, she is shown in a Joan of Arc-like pose, raising a Palestinian flag, framed by her easily recognizable mane of blonde curls.

Ahed has made headlines in the past, including in 2015 when she bit the hand of a masked Israeli soldier who was holding her now 14-year-old brother Mohammed in a chokehold during an attempted arrest. A video of the incident that was widely watched, earning her an invitation to meet with the Turkish president.

In Israel, the military said the company commander involved in Friday's incident "acted in a professional and restrained manner."

Detention of minors

The detention of Tamimi also highlighted the issue of arrests of Palestinian minors.

Defense for Children International-Palestine, a local group, said 331 Palestinians under the age of 18 were held in military detention as of May, according to the most recent statistics released by Israeli authorities. It said that in 2016, an average of 375 minors were in detention each month.

The Israeli military was unable to provide data on the number of minors it is holding.

It said, however, that "unfortunately, in recent years, many minors, sometimes very young, have been involved in violent incidents, incitement and even terrorism. In such cases, there is no choice but to take steps, including arrest, interrogation and prosecution." It said the military does everything possible to "ensure that the rights of the minors are respected."