Several Israeli settlers attacked Palestinian children and two
Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) workers as they walked to their
village of Tuba on Sunday 27 July 2008. The children had been attending
summer camp in the village of At-Tuwani.
As the fourteen children and two internationals workers were walking
in a valley south of the illegal settlement outpost of Havot Ma’on, one
masked settler came down the hill, throwing stones with a slingshot.
The children and CPT worker Jan Benvie, from Scotland, ran ahead.
But other settlers were approaching the group from the opposite side
of the valley. Fortunately, none of the stones thrown by the settlers
struck the children, aged between 6 and 15 years old, and they were
able to run to safety.
Christian Peacemaker Teams’ Joel Gulledge was filming the attack.
When the masked settler saw Gulledge with the video camera, he began
directing his stones at Gulledge. The settler hit Gulledge in the leg
with a rock and he was unable to run. The settler then ran to him,
wrested the camera from him, and began beating him with a rock and the
camera. After that, the settler ran off with the camera.
On 22 July 2008, the military declined to escort the children. Only
seven children were willing to risk walking alone to At-Tuwani. The
children informed CPT that at least eight other children did not attend
the summer camp because they were too afraid to walk without a military
escort. On the morning of 23 July, the army again refused to escort the
children. The children were chased by three settlers, one of whom was
masked and carrying a stick, while they walked unescorted to the summer
camp.
On 26 July, a military personnel informed internationals that the
army would no longer provide an escort for the children, who were
waiting for the army to arrive while four settlers from the illegal
Israeli settlement outpost of Havot Ma’on shouted at the children. The
personnel would not give the name and brigade of the commander refusing
to provide the escort. When the international worker explained the
dangerous situation for the children, the military personnel said, “I
don’t think the settlers will attack the children.”
In October 2004, Israeli settlers attacked Palestinian
schoolchildren and internationals in the same area as the attack on the
27th. Two international workers were hospitalized and, after
international media coverage of the attack, the Israeli Knesset
recommended that the Israeli military provide a daily escort for the
children to go to and from school. |