Middle East Monitor - The Latest from the Middle East

Tuesday, February 09, 2010 11:00

Commentary

Cameron's Conservatives already dancing to Israel's tune
Cameron's Conservatives already dancing to Israel's tune

If the Conservative Party wins the next General Election in Britain, as is expected by many, David Cameron's government will refuse to talk to Hizbullah in Lebanon.

Read More

Israeli Exceptionalism

Kathleen Christison
Review by
Kathleen Christison
Zionism Laid Bare

News Flash

As part of the Europe-wide campaign to highlight the issue of Palestinian MPs who have been abducted by the Israeli authorities, Baroness Jenny Tonge has had informal discussions with the Speaker of Britain's House of Commons. Sixteen Palestinian MPs remain in Israeli custody, without charge. Baroness Tonge spoke to Speaker John Bercow, MP, about an invitation from the Palestinian Legislative Council to visit Gaza, meet fellow parliamentarians and see for himself the devastation caused by Israel's disastrous invasion a year ago, in the hope that such a visit could be the first of many such links between the two parliaments. The Baroness visited Gaza herself last month as part of a delegation made up of national MPs and MEPs from across the European Union; the delegation included Sir Gerald Kaufman, the veteran Labour MP who has been an outspoken critic of the Israeli government.

Read more...

In Pictures

Gaza Air Strike
Gaza Air Strike
Gaza Air Strike
Gaza Air Strike
Gaza Air Strike

Follow us on Twitter!
Become a fan on Facebook!
MEMO Blog


AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (MIDDLE EAST)

Israeli army kidnapped 6,200 children since 2000

E-mail Print

Official report: Israeli army kidnapped 6,200 children since 2000Official report

An official report, received by Arab League from the minister of prisoners' affairs in the Palestinian Authority (Ramallah), revealed that the Israeli occupation forces have kidnapped about 6,200 Palestinian children since the beginning of Al Aqsa Intifada (2000), including approximately 337 children still detained in Israeli prisons and interrogation centers.

During last Saturday's meeting of the Arab League's permanent delegates council, which was set to discuss the conditions of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, Minister Issa Qaraqe introduced the report, which unveiled the "repressive, inhumane practices of the Israeli occupation authorities against Palestinian children in Israeli prisons and detention camps," stressing that this violates the rules of international law, conventions on children's rights, and all international norms.

The report pointed out that "any person under the age of 18 is considered a child, according to international law, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and, recently, Israeli domestic law," and according to the definition of juvenile by the United Nations' Basic Principles for the Treatment of Prisoners, which were adopted in the General Assembly Resolution 45/113, dated December 14, 1990.

Qaraqe stated that the Israeli occupation authorities "deprive detained children from the basic rights granted by international conventions, such as the right to know the reason for their arrest, the right to counsel, the right of families to know  the reason and the place of detention of their child, the right to appear before the judge, the right to object to the charge and lodge an appeal against it, the right to communicate with the outside world, and the right to a humane treatment that preserves the dignity of the detained child."

The report warned that the occupation authorities, "blatantly violated the rights of detained children"; dealt with them as "potential subversives", "and subjected them to different types of torture and cruel treatment, such as beating, sleep deprivation, starvation, sexual harassment, and deprivation of visits. The occupation forced applied the worst mental and physical means to extract confessions from child prisoners and to pressure them to work for Israeli intelligence."

The report also mentioned that during the first Intifada, massive numbers of children were arrested and detained on charges of throwing stones and other forms of political resistance, whereas, during the second intifada, Tel Aviv began adopting administrative detention against Palestinian children and it started convicting and detaining children under the age of 14 for periods of up to 6 months. The report further stated that, according to the 2002 annual report of the Defense of Children International organization, those arrest patterns did not exist during the years of the first intifada.


Source:
Quds Press

Last Updated ( Monday, 16 November 2009 14:37 )  

0 Comments

Add Comment


    • >:o
    • :-[
    • :'(
    • :-(
    • :-D
    • :-*
    • :-)
    • :P
    • :\
    • 8-)
    • ;-)

     
    You are here: Home News Middle East Israeli army kidnapped 6,200 children since 2000

    MEMO Interacitve

    Interactive, send us your videos, pictures and comments

    News In Pictures

    News in Pictures

    MEMO TV

    Middle East Monitor TV

    Join Our Mailing List