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PETITION TO PROTEST ISRAELI ASSAULT ON MOHAMMED OMER
Washington Report, via Desertpeace
CONTACTS :
communications@wrmea.com

Washington Report
Correspondent Mohammed Omer Hospitalized
Following Detention by Israeli Soldiers at Allenby Bridge Crossing
Palestinian journalist Mohammed Omer, Gaza correspondent for
the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs and
co-recipient of the 2008 Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism, was
hospitalized with cracked ribs and other injuries inflicted by
Israeli soldiers at the Allenby Bridge crossing from Jordan into
the occupied West Bank.
Omer was returning home to Gaza after a
European speaking tour and the June 16 London ceremony at which he
accepted the prestigious Gellhorn Prize.
Dutch MP Hans Van Baalen, head of the
parliament’s foreign relations committee, and award-winning
journalist John Pilger spent weeks lobbying Israel to issue an
exit permit for the 24-year-old journalist. As has been the case
before, diplomatic intervention was necessary to secure permission
for his return as well. Nevertheless, Israeli authorities
initially refused to allow Omer to return to his home in Rafah
from Amman. Finally—after missing his brother’s wedding—he was
told that arrangements had been made for him to cross the border
on Thursday, June 26. Dutch diplomats awaited him on the other
side to escort him to the Gaza Strip.
Instead of being granted free passage,
however, Omer was detained, questioned by a Shin Bet agent, strip
searched at gunpoint, assaulted and dragged by the heels to an
ambulance after he began vomiting and going in and out of
consciousness. When he finally came to, he was in a Palestinian
hospital in Jericho, where he was treated and allowed to return
home in the custody of the Dutch diplomats. See the following
article by John Pilger in the July 2 Guardian:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jul/02/israelandthepalestinians.civilliberties
The following afternoon, speaking from home,
a recovering but still traumatized Omer told the Washington
Report that he was having difficulty breathing and
swallowing. The next day, suffering from cracked ribs and other
injuries, he was admitted to a hospital in Gaza, where he remains
as of this writing.

In his article in the August 2008
Washington Report, "A Voice for the Voiceless," Omer defines
his life’s mission as "to get the truth out," and describes
himself as "not pro-Palestinian or anti-Israeli, but simply…an
eyewitness on the ground, reporting what happens and why."
One of the Shin Bet agents who interrogated
him at the Allenby crossing advised Omer not to return to Gaza,
where—thanks to the Israeli siege—there is no electricity, potable
water, medical supplies, gasoline or other necessities of life.
Clearly Israel wants to silence Mohammed Omer’s voice, as it has
silenced the voices of other journalists—most recently Omer’s
colleague Fadel Shana, the 24-year-old Reuters cameraman killed by
an Israeli tank shell on April 16.
Palestinian journalists risk their lives on
a daily basis to tell the world what is happening in their
homeland. Their words and pictures remind us that we have yet to
realize the vow, "Never again!"
Please
click on the button at right or visit the Washington Report
website,
www.wrmea.com, to sign a petition condemning Israel’s attacks
on journalists, both Palestinian and international. Add your voice
to Mohammed Omer’s on behalf of voiceless Gazans and all
Palestinians living under Israeli military occupation—an
occupation made possible by American tax dollars.
http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m45375&hd=&size=1&l=e
Link:
desertpeace.wordpress.com/2008/07/02/petition-to-protest-israeli-assault-on-moha
mmed-omer/ |
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