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  • 14
    Mar
    2011
    9:08am, EDT

    Baz Ratner / Reuters

    Israelis carry the bodies of 11-year-old Yoav Fogel and his brother, 4-year-old Elad Fogel, during their funeral in Jerusalem March 13, 2011. A Jewish couple, Ehud and Ruti Fogel, and three of their children, 3-month-old Hadas, Yoav and Elad, were stabbed to death in bed in a West Bank settlement in what Israeli officials said on Saturday was an attack by one or more Palestinians who broke into their home.

    Stabbing victims buried in Jerusalem

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    Israel has approved hundreds of settler homes after five members of an Israeli family were stabbed to death as they slept in a West Bank settlement over the weekend. Full story.

    3 comments

    that event turned out to be NOT a Palestinian who killes them but some Isrealy guy he had work differences with about money..but its so interesting how they never followed that story and let the truth out ...ohh well what can palis do to we always get the blame :)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: israel, middle-east, funeral, settlements, world-news, jerusalem, stabbing-victims
  • 23
    Feb
    2011
    11:19am, EST

    Palestinian house inside cage in Jewish settlement

    Ben Hubbard reports for AP from Beit Ijza, West Bank:

    The al-Ghirayib family lives in one of the stranger manifestations of Israel's 43-year occupation of the West Bank: a Palestinian house inside a metal cage inside an Israeli settlement.

    Sebastian Scheiner / AP

    In this photo taken on Feb. 9, a Palestinian boy stands in the yard of the fenced-in house of the al-Ghirayim family between the Jewish settlement of Givon Hahadasha and the West Bank village of Beit Ijza.

    The family's 10 members, four of them children, can only reach the house via a 40-yard passageway connecting them to the Arab village of Beit Ijza farther down a hill. The passageway passes over a road used by Israeli army jeeps and is lined on both sides with a 24-foot-high heavy-duty metal fence.

    The same fence rings the simple one-story house, separating it from the surrounding settlement houses. Some of those dwellings are so close that the family can hear the insults shouted by a nearby Jewish neighbor.

    Sebastian Scheiner / AP

    A Palestinian boy sits on a rooftop near the fenced-in house of the al-Ghirayim family on Feb. 9.

    While the al-Ghirayibs' situation is unusual, Palestinians say it reflects the pressures put on their communities by Israel's more than 120 West Bank settlements.

    The Palestinian Authority has refused to hold peace talks with Israel while settlement construction continues. The latest round of talks collapsed over the settlement issue in September, only three weeks after starting.

    Some 500,000 Israelis live in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, occupied territories claimed by the Palestinians for a future state.

    This week, the Palestinians directed their anger toward the United States after it vetoed a resolution before the U.N. Security Council condemning the settlements as "illegal."

    The U.S. said it opposes settlements, but that peace talks are the only way to resolve such issues. The council's 14 other members voted for the measure.

    "The Americans have chosen to be alone in disrupting the internationally backed Palestinian efforts," Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad said.

    Ahead of the vote, Fayyad visited the home with the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, who commented: "This is an inhuman life they have."

    Sebastian Scheiner / AP

    A Palestinian boy stands in the yard of the fenced-in house of the al-Ghirayim family on Feb. 9.

    Sadat al-Ghirayib, 30, said his father built the house in 1978 on about 27 acres of family land, where he planted fruit trees. The Israeli army soon confiscated part of the land, he said.

    The settlement of Givon HaHadasha was founded in the early 1980s. Al-Ghirayib said the army confiscated more land as the settlement spread. Today, it is home to some 1,100 Jewish settlers, some of their homes no more than two dozen steps from the al-Ghirayib home. Just a handful of trees remain.

    In 2005, the army built a section of its West Bank separation barrier near the settlement. Israel says the barrier keeps out attackers. Palestinians say it steals land by cutting deep into the West Bank in some places.

    The home was the only one in the village of about 700 people on the settlement side of the barrier.

    Al-Ghirayib, who works in a local metal shop, said he and his family tried to stop the construction crews and the army detained them. When they were released, the cage was in place, he said. Security cameras at the heavy metal gate at the end of the passageway monitor all who come and go.

    He said army officers have recently threatened to shut the gate, saying village children come in to throw stones at the settlement.

    "They have cameras. If they see kids throwing stones, they can come shoot them," said his 74-year-old father, Sabri. "Am I supposed to guard the gate?"

    Sebastian Scheiner / AP

    A Palestinian boy rides his bicycle outside the fenced-in house of the al-Ghirayim family on Feb. 9.

    The Israeli army did not comment on whether the land was confiscated, how the fence was built or if there are plans to close the gate.

    In a statement, it said the Israeli Supreme Court was examining the issue of the family's land and that the army had "invested" tens of thousands of dollars to make sure the family can leave the home without coordinating with the army.

    The neighbors are very close. On a recent afternoon, Gary Bar Dov, 15, who lives in a third-floor apartment overlooking the house, walked by while children on the inside gripped the fence and watched.

    "It's very strange to live this way," he said. "It's strange, but you get used to it."

    112 comments

    We need to stop backing Israel. The U.S. should have voted for the resolution.

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    Explore related topics: israel, middle-east, politics, settlements, west-bank, palestine, world-news, featured, beit-ijza
  • 9
    Nov
    2010
    8:48am, EST

    Clashes and construction in East Jerusalem

     

    Marco Longari / AFP - Getty Images

    Masked Palestinian youths are seen enveloped by dust from a passing lorry on Tuesday during clashes with Israeli forces in the Arab village of Issawiya in east Jerusalem.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Israeli police officers take position during scuffles with Palestinian youths.

    Baz Ratner / Reuters

    A Palestinian laborer works on a construction site in a Jewish settlement near Jerusalem known to Israelis as Har Homa and to Palestinians as Jabal Abu Ghneim on Tuesday. Israel is pushing ahead with plans to build 1,300 new apartments for Jewish families in Arab East Jerusalem, the Interior Ministry said on Monday, despite fierce opposition from Palestinians.

    Read more about the Israeli plan to build more settlements, and the Palestinian Authority's reaction, here. President Obama also discussed the plan in Indonesia today.

    msnbc.com story: Israel defends construction in east Jerusalem

    95 comments

    Israel has done little to nothing to prove that it wants peace. The US puts it's ciitzens and soldiers safety on the line for Israel everyday only to be snubbed by Israel when we ask for the simplest of requests to stop the settlement building. Not the way to treat friends.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: israel, palestinians, settlements, east-jerusalem

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Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

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