News Nosh 01.19.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Tuesday January 19, 2016
 
Quote of the day:
"B’tselem invites you – right-wing moles, imposters and pretenders – to a tour in the south Hebron hills, on Friday Jan. 29th. Costumes are not required, no need to equip yourselves with hidden cameras.
Program: Munchies, mingling with Palestinians, discussion circles with B’tselem field investigators about the evils of the occupation, and at the end – free time for questions, quoting and taking sentences out of context."

--B'tselem ad in today's Haaretz newspaper. The ad ended with the words, "Come, ‘Im Tirtzu,'" meaning: ‘if you want,’ but also the name of the far right-wing organization that called B’tselem employees ‘foreign moles.’)


Breaking News:
15-year-old from south of Hebron detained from his home on suspicion of stabbing to death Dafna Meir in Otniel settlement on Sunday. [Media showed photo of him, despite him being a minor. - OH] (Ynet, Maariv, Maan)

Front Page:
Haaretz
Yedioth Ahronoth
Maariv This Week (Hebrew links only)
Israel Hayom

 
News Summary:
The top stories from Israel centered around the West Bank: The funeral of the Israeli woman stabbed at the entrance to her home in Otniel, the wounding of another Israeli woman who was stabbed in Tekoa settlement, the European Union decision that agreements with Israel are inapplicable to West Bank settlements and the US Ambassador’s speech slamming Israel’s separate standards of law in the West Bank: one for Israelis and one for Palestinians. The speech by IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot also made waves, when he said the Iran nuclear agreement wasn’t all bad and that despite the terrible murders, Palestinians’ routine of life must not be made to suffer.
 
Hundreds (or thousands according to Israel Hayom) attended the funeral of Dafna Meir, a mother of six, as the search continued for her murderer. The 15-year-old killer was later detained from his bed late last night [according to radio reports today, his family turned him in – OH] The IDF reacted by banning Palestinian laborers from entering settlements to work and said the situation would be reviewed on a day to day basis.
 
Meanwhile, another Palestinian teen entered a clothing store in Tekoa settlement yesterday and stabbed Michal Fruman, the pregnant daughter-in-law of the deceased Rabbi Menachem Fruman. In a telling reaction, Michal’s husband, Shibi Fruman, said: “She says she felt that the terrorist wanted to die more than he wanted to kill her, and the two things together express how serious the situation is.” Fruman was moderately wounded. The attacker, was shot and critically injured as he ran away. He later died in Hadassah Hospital. 

Speakers at the annual Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) conference at Tel-Aviv University Monday discussed the violence and radicalization in Israel, the Palestinian Territories and on Israel’s borders, and raised some eyebrows. In his speech, US Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro sharply criticized Israel for law enforcement in the West Bank that ignores the settlers acts, saying that “too much Israeli vigilantism in the West Bank goes on unchecked.” He accused Israel of adhering to 'two standards of law' in the West Bank. Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said that was “unacceptable and untrue” and blasted him for saying that on the day of a funeral and an attack on settlers.
 
Despite Israel’s attempts to stop it, the EU passed the resolution requiring that all agreements between the EU and Israel must “unequivocally and explicitly indicate their inapplicability to the territories occupied by Israel in 1967.” However, the decision was softened because several countries, with whose leaders Netanyahu spoke the night before, refused the harsher sounding resolution formulated by France, Germany, Britain, Italy and Spain. The clause requiring EU member states to draw a "distinction" between Israel and these territories – the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights – was removed. (Maariv) The EU also reinforced its position that all products made in Israeli settlements must be clearly labeled in Europe. Hamas urged the EU to adopt the draft differentiating Israel and the West Bank settlements and lauded the labeling of settlement goods at a step in the right direction, but not enough. Israeli Opposition leader, Zionist Camp chairman, MK Isaac Herzog, reacted saying Netanyahu's policy was a failure and added: "I regret the EU is lending a hand to BDS.” (Maariv)
 
IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot also made headlines at the INSS conference, and probably got the right-wing government cabinet members angry. [See Commentary/Analysis below.] He said the Iran nuclear deal has risks, but also opportunities for Israel. That Hezbollah was the IDF’s main enemy. That the IDF had no warning of any of the 101 stabbing attacks and that the mixture of settlers and Palestinians in the West Bank “creates a huge operational challenge.” He also said that Israel should react to Palestinian violence with restraint and not make collective punishment against the whole population. Unsurprisingly, Israel Hayom’s headline focused on Eisenkot’s statement that “Daesh could strike Israel and Jordan.”
 
Also at the conference, President Reuven Rivlin warned that Daesh is already inside Israel as Israeli Arabs grow more extreme. He said Israel must not “abandon the Arab community to deal alone with the threat of ISIS that is growing within it.” (Israel Hayom left that quote out.) 
 
Quick Hits:
  • Debris at Unfinished Bedouin School Forces Kids Indoors - High school in Negev village has 280 students and a lot of safety hazards, parents say. (Haaretz+) 
  • CCTV footage: Shot Eritrean asylum seeker beaten, untreated for 18 minutes - Haftom Zarhum, slain after being mistaken for the terrorist behind Be'er Sheva attack, was beaten by nine passersby, including Israeli security forces. Only four have been indicted. (Haaretz+)
  • Netanyahu taps U.S. activist critical of China, Egypt as media czar - David Keyes, who is close to a number of PM's confidants, has been an outspoken critic of human rights violations perpetrated by regimes that Israel seeks ties with. (Haaretz+) 
  • Top Israeli official welcomes new Egyptian envoy - Foreign Ministry Director General Dore Gold meets with new Egyptian ambassador to Israel, Hazem Khairat • "Israel considers Egypt an important country in the region and relations with it are vital to Israel," Gold says. (Israel Hayom)
  • Mendelblit gets final greenlight to become Israel's attorney general - High Court of Justice rejects two petitions by good-governance nonprofits; cabinet secretary will segue into new post at start of February. (Haaretz+)
  • Left-wing Activist Hit With Further Detention - Court rejects request to send man, whose name cannot be published, to house arrest, asks police to refrain from renewing remand. (Haaretz+) 
  • Undercover Israeli forces detain Fatah official in Nablus  - Israeli forces dressed as construction workers detained Muhammad Mahmoud al-Tabouq, 34, and (sic?) a Fatah official, after raiding and ransacking the official's home. (Maan+PHOTO)
  • Israeli forces demolish structures in Ramallah-area villages - In the village of Kharbatha, forces demolished a garage belonging to a resident identified as Jamal Ahmad Darraj, as well as an extra room attached to a house belonging to Hamdi Abu Khalil. In nearby Kharbatha al-Musbah, they damaged a quarry belonging to Ahmad al-Habiba. (Maan)
  • Senior IDF officer convicted of taking 250,000 shekels in bribes (from Palestinians) and sent to 5 years in prison - Military Tribunal convicted Major Joseph Zayed of illegal allocation of 182 permits for Palestinian workers, who were forced to pay him, while exceeding authority to the point of endangering national security. (Maariv
  • Palestine's Armenian community celebrates Christmas in Bethlehem - Palestine's Armenian Christians celebrated Christmas and the Feast of the Epiphany on Monday in the occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem. (Maan)
  • Why did Israeli soldiers hand out cucumber seeds to Palestinians at a checkpoint? - The IDF handed out cucumber seeds as a message of hope, but the fact they were from a Jewish settlement made it hard for Palestinians to see it as a friendly gesture. (Haaretz+)
  • IDF opens probe into financial corruption tied to Haredi draft - As of the end of last year, about 5,000 ultra-Orthodox officers, conscript soldiers and career soldiers were serving in the IDF, the army says. (Haaretz+) 
  • New Technological School Opens For Advanced Arab Students In Jerusalem - The school, situated in Beit Hanina, is meant to reduce gaps in the education system of Jerusalem's Arab sector; it will allow Jerusalem's most qualified Arab students to tackle the technological challenges of the 21st century. (Ynet)
  • Israel-focused Jewish Group Booted From Major LGBTQ Event in the U.S. - Jewish group that connects American and Israeli gays says its event at an LGBTQ conference in Chicago was cancelled under pressure from anti-Israel activists. (Haaretz+) 
  • Swiss Jews Unconcerned Over Construction Plan Near Jewish Cemetery - A rally is scheduled for Monday in NY against the project that some ultra-Orthodox say will destroy a medieval Jewish cemetery, but Swiss Jews disagree. (JTA, Haaretz)
  • Ukraine threatens sanctions against Israelis doing business with Russians in Crimea - Ukrainian embassy claims to receive information that Israelis entered areas of Russian-occupied Crimea in violation of Ukrainian and international law while contravening a March 2014 UNGA resolution. (Haaretz+) 
  • WATCH: Sanders Goes Beyond Obama and Clinton, Calls for Normalizing Ties With Iran - Clinton, the former secretary of state who helped shape the Iran nuclear deal, praised it, but like Obama, said she still regarded Iran as a rival not meriting normalization. (JTA, Haaretz)
  • Iran: New U.S. Sanctions on Ballistic Missile Program Are Illegitimate - Iranian foreign ministry says it will respond to the new measures by 'pursuing its legal missile program stronger than before'. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Iran's Rohani to Go on First Europe Trip After Sanctions Lifted - Iranian president to visit Italy and France, meet Pope Francis. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Two Iranian Poets, Facing Lashings and Prison Amid Crackdown on Expression, Flee Country - The poets' escape is a reminder that despite the growing detente with the West, hard-liners still exert control over much of life in the Islamic Republic. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • After Year-long Battle With ISIS, Iraq's Ramadi Lies in Ruins - More than 3,000 buildings had been damaged and nearly 1,500 destroyed in the Iraqi city once home to nearly 500,000 people. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Iraqi Security Forces Deployed After Three Americans Go Missing in Baghdad - Local authorities report that unknown gunmen seized the trio from a private apartment; there have been no immediate claims of responsibility. (Agencies, Haaretz)
  • Rocket From Syria Kills One, Injures Another in Turkish School - Blaming ISIS, Turkish military retaliates 'in kind' for killing of a female school employee. (Agencies, Haaretz
  • Who Will Save the Children of Moadamiya? A transitional government is supposed to be established in Syria within six months, and elections held within 18 months. But by the time that eventually happens, it will be too late for many. (Haaretz+)
  • Alan Rickman Remembered by Rachel Corrie's Father - Craig Corrie highlighted Rickman's 'courage and care' in turning the late Palestinian activist's story into a 2005 play. (Haaretz)


Features:
Poem of the Week // No, the Ancients Were Not Zionists
The noble Haim Gouri, above all a poet: He refused a prize for Zionist art because his latest work does not fit that definition. (Vivian Eden, Haaretz
“Daphna was like a mother for me”
This is the story of an unusual friendship: Dr. Ahmed Nasr from the (Israeli) village of Araba and Dafna Meir,
who was murdered at the entrance to her home in Otniel (West Bank settlement). They worked together in Soroka Hospital, they would “talk for hours about the deepest things” and they understood each other with one glance. “It was surprising also to me that she, of all people, a settler with a head covering, connected to the fiber of my soul. Dafna fought like a lion against the brutal terrorist in order to protect her children. It burns my heart.” (Rotem Elizera, Yedioth’s ’24 Hours’ supplement, cover)
Letters to the Editor: Defecating on the Flag and Arabs in Israel (Haaretz)
 
Commentary/Analysis:
The Word 'Terrorism' Gives Monsters Too Much Credit. This Is Murder. (Bradley Burston, Haaretz+) After 18 hours in which a woman was slaughtered in her own home, and a pregnant woman stabbed, maybe it's time to call the monsters who do things like this by their proper name: murderers. 
And what about the panic? (But) Gadi Eizenkot is a job with simple definitions (Ben Caspit, Maariv) Yesterday, at the annual conference of the Institute for National Security Studies, the Chief of Staff called the nuclear agreement with Iran “a strategic turn” and that "there are risks and opportunities." In other words, there are good and bad things. Hearing his words, Netanyahu must have gnashed his teeth: Opportunities? Where did he find opportunities? What about the panic that needs to alarm the public? What about the pessimism? Where is the emerging catastrophe, the second Holocaust that we need to prevent? All these, Netanyahu knew he would not find in the current chief of staff. Lt. Gen. Eizenkot is a simple man of simple definitions and sharp decisions. He's a working man, he doesn’t deal with making accounts, he is like a soccer referee: whistling what he sees and trying to do it impartially. 
In Israel, the army chief also has to defend democracy (Amos Harel, Haaretz+) IDF chief of staff provides intelligent, balanced take on events both regional and global, unlike some of his peers in the cabinet. 
The cost of living in Israel: It’s as bad as you thought (Robert Swift, Ynet) The 'Start-Up Nation' it might be, with a high-tech economy that largely escaped the effects of the 2008 crash, but for many young families, Israel is an expensive place to call home.
The Smear Campaign Against Breaking the Silence Only Serves Israel's Enemies (Moshe Arens, Haaretz+) The kind of concern the IDF displayed to prevent unintended ‘collateral damage’ in Gaza does not seem to be a high priority in the bombardments being carried out in Iraq and Syria by U.S., French, British or Russian forces.
Hebron has become 'terror central' (Yossi Yehoshua, Yedioth/Ynet) 55 out of the 150 attacks carried out so far in the current terror wave originated in Hebron; the Otniel attack marks an escalation in the severity of the attacks, as they now are at people's doorsteps.
Hillel International's Shameful Retreat Behind the Barricades on Israel and Palestine (Stefan Krieger, Haaretz+) Three generations of my family weren't asked for loyalty oaths or litmus tests on our attitudes toward Israel to participate in Hillel on campus.
We are all targets (Dr. Haim Shine, Israel Hayom) The attack in Otniel demonstrated once again the unfathomable cruelty of Palestinian terrorists.
Israel Must Find a Solution for Asylum Seekers (Haaretz Editorial) The current government, like the two that preceded it, acts as if it can resolve the problem by implementing antidemocratic laws.
Who Needs Fascism in Israel? (Yitzhak Laor, Haaretz+) ‘The people of Israel' are behind this government. It can use democracy like it uses the Gay Pride Parade and veganism in Tel Aviv: as propaganda for the West.
The burden policy: The last thing we need is more Palestinians out of work (Alon Ben-David, Maariv) Two major forces emerge as leading this eruption of violence: viral on the Internet and copying. The atmosphere of violence is spreading online, and the attention that each attack gets spawns the copycat to make the next attack. The “success” of the terrorist in murdering a woman in Otniel settlement drove yesterday a young terrorist to try and copy him in Tekoa. Fortunately, this time there was no death. Precisely because of the two severe stabbing incidents, the chief of staff chose to clarify, with courage, that it is our interest to allow routine to continue for most of the Palestinian population, which is not taking part in terrorism. with the support of the Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon, the Chief of Staff is able to lead a policy that leaves the overwhelming majority of the Palestinians outside of the events. Tens of thousands will continue to work in Israel and those who were prevented from entering settlements, will return soon. Without them – there won’t be anyone more settlements. Every week the top military brass find themselves facing a incendiary government cabinet that demands collective punishment. What was once a serious thinking forum for making decisions has turned, in this government, into a meeting of ‘Internet Commenters’, who compete who has the strongest proposal ‘to give it to them.’ With the help of the Defense Minister, the military is succeeding in pushing back time after time against those proposals to impose (on the Palestinians in the West Bank) a siege, closure, and to close (West Bank) roads and make life a burden to the (Palestinian) population. They know that the last thing Israel needs is thousands of Palestinians who are at home without work and will go vent their frustration at IDF checkpoints. Too bad that Israel continues playing with the bodies of the Palestinians. Our neighbors have always gotten the better of us in the trade of bodies and their parts - and Israel has no reason to enter into this competition. But all the heroes of the cabinet do not dare to seriously raise the only step that can discourage individual attackers - family deportation to Gaza. It's not simple from a legal point of view, it will lead to widespread condemnation throughout the world and yet - if evert terrorist knows that once he raises the knife he is sentencing his family to a miserable existence - there are likely to be fewer volunteers.
When Israel's Actions Threaten Diaspora Jews (Samuel Heilman, Haaretz+) The actions or inactions of Israel and of Diaspora Jews continue to deeply affect the other, whether they like it or not.
The Arab Spring: Five Violent Years On (Anshel Pfeffer, Haaretz+) Fervent hopes of freedom of expression and democracy have all but been quashed in the Middle East, although a flicker of hope remains in Tunisia.
What Pope Francis' synagogue visit says about Jewish-Catholic relations (Ruth Ellen Gruber, Haaretz+) The pontiff's 1.5 mile journey to the towering Tempio Maggiore shows that what was once unthinkable is now the norm.
 
 
Prepared for APN by Orly Halpern, independent freelance journalist based in Jerusalem.