THE ABSURD TIMES
Illustrations: I just had them and felt like sharing.
One more day
By
Czar Donic
Well, I can not even believe myself anymore when I write
that this is it. This final edition, So why bother? Never lie on purpose, I
always say.
Really, how obviously absurd can things get? Now the big story is how many record cases
we have of covid. “We’ve beat this thing," the administration says. People
even argue that they believe it. I
simply cannot top that.
Israeli soldiers on Tuesday killed 27-year-old Ahmed Erekat at a
checkpoint in the occupied West Bank as he was on his way to pick up his
sister, who was set to be married that night. Ahmed Erekat is the nephew of
senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat, secretary general of the Palestine
Liberation Organization, and cousin of Palestinian American legal scholar Noura
Erakat, who says Israeli claims that Ahmed was attempting a car-ramming attack
on soldiers are completely unfounded. “What we understand is that Ahmed lost
control of his car or was confused while he was in his car. That was all it
took to have a knee-jerk reaction … and immediately to cause the soldiers to
open fire on him multiple times,” she says.
Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: This
is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The Quarantine
Report. I’m Amy Goodman in New York. Juan González joins us from New
Brunswick, New Jersey, from his home during this time of the coronavirus. Hi,
Juan.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Hi, Amy. And
welcome to all of our listeners and viewers across the country and around the
world.
AMY GOODMAN: Well,
we’re going to begin today in Israel and the West Bank. Israeli officers on
Tuesday shot dead a Palestinian man at a checkpoint in the occupied West Bank
as he was on his way to pick up his sister, who was set to be married last
night. A warning to our viewers: This story contains graphic footage. The video
from the scene shows 27-year-old Ahmed Erekat bleeding, but still alive on the
street where he was shot. He’s the nephew of senior Palestinian official Saeb
Erekat, the secretary general of the Palestine Liberation Organization, who
said his nephew was, quote, “murdered in cold blood,” and wrote in a tweet that
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is responsible for his death.
Ahmed
Erekat’s family said he was killed while on his way to a beauty salon to pick
up his sister and his mother, but Israeli authorities claim he tried to run
over an officer at a checkpoint in the Palestinian village of Abu Dis, east of
Jerusalem. His family rejects the allegations, is calling for Israeli
authorities to release security footage. Ahmed himself was also due to be
married soon.
His
killing comes nearly a month after another Palestinian man was killed in
similar circumstances near Ramallah, also in the West Bank, and as Netanyahu
plans to start annexing nearly a third of the occupied West Bank next month.
For
more, we’re joined by Ahmed Erekat’s cousin, Noura Erakat, who’s a Palestinian
human rights attorney and legal scholar, assistant professor at Rutgers
University, author of Justice for Some: Law and the Question of
Palestine.
Noura,
our condolences to you and your family. This is such a terrible time for you.
We so deeply appreciate you’re able to join us. This is just hours after your
cousin was killed. Can you describe the circumstances under which you
understand he died?
NOURA ERAKAT: Thank
you, Amy. Thank you, Juan, and to the viewers. I haven’t had a chance to speak
to his parents, so I want to start out by saying [speaking Arabic].
We
understand the circumstances to be what people know. Ahmed was on his way, from
Abu Dis to Bethlehem, to pick up his sister from a hair salon for her wedding.
Her mom was there with her. You know, on the way to the hair salon, he passed
through a checkpoint separating Bethlehem from Abu Dis through a known roadway,
back roadway, a dangerous one known as Wadi Nar, or Valley of Fire. There is a
steep decline between this checkpoint on the road. And what we understand is
that Ahmed lost control of his car or was confused while he was in his car.
That was all it took to have a knee-jerk reaction, for the car to jerk a little
bit and immediately to cause the soldiers to open fire on him multiple times.
Note
that these soldiers, who are fully armed at this checkpoint, are behind
barriers, are not actually out in the open, and then left Ahmed to bleed for
one-and-a-half hours. We also understand that his father, Abu Faisal, was there
pleading with the Israeli soldiers to let him access his son. We also know that
the Palestinian Red Crescent, the equivalent of the Red Cross, was not allowed
access. And for one-and-a-half hours, as you saw in that inexplicable video,
Ahmed was left writhing and bleeding out, without the ability to care for him.
And
what is very obvious is the ease and the callousness with which this happened,
the way that it’s normalized completely. And there’s a Palestinian — there’s a
line, a queue, of Palestinian cars. And the one filming this was praying over
Ahmed as he’s dying. It should remind us that even those Palestinians who are
bearing witness to this are subject to a state of forced helplessness. They are
not even allowed to help Ahmed in that moment.
I
want to just bring up something, Amy, to the audience before I address Israel’s
vicious, dangerous and disgusting allegations that this was a car ramming, and
raise three questions for the audience that’s paying attention right now.
Right
now, one, why is Abu Dis, where Ahmed and my family is from, so severely underdeveloped
that he has to travel outside to one of the big Palestinian cities in order to
get his sisters from a hair salon? What is the cause of that underdevelopment?
Number
two, I want to ask the audience to think about the biggest Palestinian city and
commercial center to Abu Dis is Jerusalem. Abu Dis is a suburb of Jerusalem and
has been cut off from it by the apartheid wall. Why can’t Palestinians, why
couldn’t my family get to Jerusalem, and instead have to travel to Bethlehem?
And
number three, and so importantly, why is there a checkpoint between Bethlehem
and Abu Dis, two Palestinian cities? Why are there checkpoints anywhere? Just
think about those questions as we answer this broader question of the context
that Ahmed was killed in.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Noura,
that last point that you — first of all, my deepest condolences to you and
your family. But I wanted to precisely ask that question. What are these
checkpoints that are within Palestinian territory, that apparently are not even
near any Israeli settlements? How many of them are there? And what is the
justification for them from Israel’s perspective?
NOURA ERAKAT: Thank
you for that question. The Palestinian checkpoint — the checkpoints that divide
Palestinians from one another and that separate them from their homes are an
invention of the peace process. In 1995, the Palestinian West Bank and Gaza
were separated into three jurisdictions — A, B and C — demarking what was
under full Israeli civil and military control and what was under some shared
control. Note that Area C, or 60% of the West Bank, is the largest area. It is
what is now being marked for annexation, and it is what came under full Israeli
civil and security control.
The
checkpoints that are erected are meant to police Palestinians from traveling
from amongst their cities and with one another. And they are placed precisely
to divide Palestinians from one another in order to delimit and to quell any
kind of national cohesion and uprising. They are also set up because they are
policing Palestinians, who are not to travel next to settlements, around
settlements, through settlements, which are all built on confiscated
Palestinian lands.
And
you ask — you know, sometimes these checkpoints are built around places
where there are no settlements, but there will be. But there will be. All of
Palestinian territory is marked for Israeli settlements and is marked for the
removal of Palestinians. Palestinians have been steadily removed from their
homes. They are demolished. Roads are built over them for Israelis only.
Settlements are built on top of them. And Palestinians are ever contained into
smaller and smaller tracts of land, that the Trump administration just
revealed, in January, will become their permanent Bantustans or reservations,
where they will be able to practice autonomy, which — or derivative
sovereignty, but never a form of freedom, and they will be forever dominated.
I
want to switch really quick, because this is the concern of the family. In the
aftermath of Ahmed’s murder, Israel immediately started a propaganda campaign
blaming Ahmed for his own death and alleging that he tried to ram his car into
the checkpoint. This is a lie. This is a incredibly hurtful lie, but it’s a
systematic lie that Israel tells as it kills Palestinians and blames them for
their own death. What we know is that Israel has done this systematically. We
know that they have used this. As people have said, this is prepared and ready
argument.
We
know that from May to October 2018, Israel killed 267 Palestinians in Gaza who
were unarmed. That was supported by the Israeli military establishment, its
political establishment, and it was rubber-stamped, rubber-stamped as a
shoot-to-kill policy by the Israeli High Court. We know among those murdered
was paramedic, 21-year-old Razan al-Najjar, who had her hands up, was wearing a
paramedic vest, and was shot in the back. When she was killed, the Israeli
military released a doctored video claiming that Razan said, “I am a human
shield.” What they failed to play was the rest of Razan’s clip, where she said,
“I am a human shield here on the line being a protective human shield saving
the injured.” But the Israeli military doctored that video to say that she was
a human shield for Hamas.
And
guess what. The entire world stops asking questions the moment you say Hamas,
the moment you say Palestinian violence, the moment you say Palestinian
resistance. It’s as if we expect that to be a carte blanche to
kill as many Palestinians as possible. They did it with Razan. They did it with
Iyad el-Hallak. They did it with Ahmed yesterday.
And
right now the family is demanding that Ahmed’s body, his corpse, be returned.
It is being withheld as a form of collective punishment. We are also demanding
that the home be protected, because Israel has a policy of demolishing homes of
Palestinians they consider alleged assailants, without, of course, any kind of
trial. We are demanding that the footage be released, and atone and apologize
and address the systematic violence.
It
bears to note that in 2017 the Human Rights Council at the U.N. examined the
cases of Israel’s systematic killings of Palestinians and concluded, quote,
“that Israel often used lethal force against Palestinians on mere suspicion or
as a precautionary measure.” Israeli soldiers kill Palestinians as
precautionary measure. And the rest of the world accepts this because of how
used to the loss of Palestinian lives we have become numb to. This is
normalized. This amount of killing is normalized. And this is the context in
which Ahmed now, his family, is fighting for justice in his name and is also
mourning his life at the same time.
AMY GOODMAN: Noura
Erakat, as you describe Ahmed, he was picking up his mom and his sister. His
sister was going to be married last night. He was picking them up from the
salon. His sister Eman fainted when she heard what had taken place? And he
himself was going to be married in just a few weeks?
NOURA ERAKAT: Indeed.
So, the other part of the story that doesn’t add up, and, frankly, one of the
things about this is — you’re telling us these details, Amy, right? And so,
most listeners would think, naturally, “Why would a young man, 27 years old,
with his own T-shirt business, who’s incredibly happy and smiling on the day of
his sister’s wedding, plan an attack against an Israeli checkpoint, which is
basically a suicide mission? Why? Why would he do that?” Normal people will ask
that. And normal, empathetic people will say it is impossible.
And
yet, because of the dehumanization of Palestinians and the racism with which
our stories are cloaked, there are some who might say, “Yeah, it’s possible.
Palestinians are driven by a hatred for Jews and are basically born in order to
kill.” As former Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked said, Palestinian mothers
should be killed because they birth snakes? This is the discourse of the
highest people in office in Israel, not of the random extremists, but of its
representatives, who represent them to the world, this so-called only
democracy.
And
yes, Ahmed was incredibly proud of the home he had furnished and prepared for
his wife-to-be — they had shared pictures of him in his home — and had so
much to live for and deserved to live and deserves justice and deserves our
support in demanding justice, in demanding accountability.
This
is not about one bad Israeli soldier, just as it’s not about one bad cop ever.
This is a system. It is an apartheid system. It is a settler colonial system
that enshrines Jewish Israeli supremacy as a matter of law and policy on an
international scale. And it is one that marks Palestinians for removal, exile
or death. And it is done with the full, unequivocal, diplomatic, financial,
military support of the United States and with the complicity of the
international community.
So
it bears upon us to respond in this moment by supporting the Palestinian call
for freedom, by doing the little that we can by engaging in boycott, divestment
and sanctions for Ahmed, for Razan, for Iyad, to oppose the annexation, to
oppose apartheid, to fight for freedom.
AMY GOODMAN: Noura
Erakat, we want to thank you for being with us. Again, our condolences to your
family. Noura is a Palestinian human rights attorney, legal scholar, colleague
of Juan’s over at Rutgers, assistant professor at Rutgers University and author
of Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine. Over a
thousand European MPs have written a letter opposing Israel’s plan to annex
parts of the occupied West Bank. Also, the final tweet — one of the tweets of
Noura Erakat, our guest, after Ahmed died, “They left him to bleed out like
this. For 1.5 hours. His name is Ahmed. He deserved to live. He deserved to
dance tonight w his family to celebrate his sister. He deserved to dance at his
wedding, to nurture family. To live. This is not a picture of Ahmed but of
Israel’s ugliness,” she wrote.
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