20 Congress
Members Send Obama Letter Requesting Protection Of
Palestinian Children From Israeli Abuses
Reps. Betty McCollum, Keith Ellison, Barbara Lee and
more highlight Israel's systematic abuse of
Palestinian kids.
By Ben Norton
June 22, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Salon"
- The lawmakers sent the president a
letter on June 20, urging him to appoint a
“special envoy for Palestinian youth” in order to
monitor the Israeli government’s violation of
Palestinian children’s human rights.
The letter
(embedded below), notes that Palestinian children
are “growing up under military occupation with very
few opportunities to improve their lives.”
The letter
describes the occupation as “an unimaginably
difficult and at times hopeless environment,” where
children “live under the constant fear of arrest
detention and violence at the hands of the Israeli
military.”
Israel’s
illegal military occupation marked its 49th
anniversary earlier this month. Nearly half, 46
percent, of the roughly 4.7 million Palestinians
living in the Israeli-occupied territories are
minors under 18 years of age.
The 20
lawmakers raised concerns about Israel’s frequent
imprisonment of Palestinian children as young as 12,
sometimes without charge or trial.
UNICEF,
Human Rights Watch, the Israeli human rights
organization B’Tselem and other rights groups have
documented
Israel’s systematic abuse of Palestinian
children.
According
to
the U.N., Israel has tortured Palestinian
children and has even used them as human shields.
An April
report by Defense for Children International —
Palestine cited by the letter found, after
interviewing 429 Palestinian children who had been
detained by Israel, that three-quarters experienced
some form of violence.
Minors
reported being physically and psychologically
abused, threatened and forced into solitary
confinement. In 42 percent of cases, Israeli
soldiers arrested children in their homes in the
middle of the night. In 88 percent of cases,
Palestinian minors were arrested and were unable to
notify their parents.
“Israel has
the dubious distinction of being the only country in
the world that systematically prosecutes between 500
and 700 children in military courts each year,”
Defense for Children International — Palestine
wrote.
There were
440 Palestinian minors in Israeli military prisons,
as of February. An average of 204 children are held
in Israeli custody each month, according to the
rights group.
The letter
was initiated by Rep. Betty McCollum, a Democrat
representing Minnesota. Salon spoke with McCollum,
who emphasized, “Military prisons for 12-year-old
Palestinian children is inhuman. It totally
dehumanizes them and it’s an abuse of Palestinian
human rights. That needs to stop.”
“I want the
Israeli people to have peace and security, but I
also want Palestinian children and their parents to
have security, dignity, justice and equality,” she
added.
McCollum
said the letter is an important sign “that my
colleagues and I care about Palestinian children and
we understand that ensuring their safety and
well-being will play an important role in being able
to create a more peaceful Middle East.”
The
additional 19 congresspeople who endorsed the letter
represent states around the country. Among the
fellow signees are Reps. Keith Ellison, Barbara Lee,
Luis Gutiérrez and more.
Ellison, a
Democrat also representing Minnesota, has been
particularly outspoken in
support of Palestinian human rights.
Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders appointed Rep.
Ellison to the
drafting committee of the Democratic Party in
May.
Rep.
McCollum said she and the other congresspeople
imagine that the role of the special envoy for
Palestinian youth would be to “shine a bright light
on how Palestinian children are held in military in
detention, sometimes in solitary confinement, on how
they don’t have access to their parents, let alone
an attorney.”
“That’s
just abuse that needs to come to an end,” McCollum
stressed. She warned that, when children are abused
in this way, they grow up to feel hopeless, and that
leads them to desperation.
In the
letter, the lawmakers argue that the
increase in violent attacks in the past year
“must be examined and understood within” this
context: “a life of utter hopelessness and the
collective psychological trauma associated with the
Palestinian people living for decades under Israeli
military occupation.”
McCollum
told Salon that she hopes the conflict can resolve
with a two-state solution. “Many people say it’s too
late, but I remain hopeful,” she said.
Hard-line
right-wing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
was re-elected on the promise that there will never
be a Palestinian state (although he later tried to
walk back this claim, just after winning the
election). McCollum said she does not have much
confidence that the current Israeli government,
which is very far to the right, is interested in
pursuing peace with the Palestinians.
“It is very
alarming,” McCollum lamented, noting that the
defense minister recently resigned in protest of the
Israeli cabinet’s increasing extremism.
In May,
Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, a fellow member of
the prime minister’s staunchly right-wing Likud
party, stepped down early after Netanyahu offered
the defense minister position to Avigdor Lieberman,
one of the most extreme figures in Israeli
politics.
Ya’alon warned that “extremist and dangerous
elements have taken over Israel.”
McCollum said she hopes that the next U.S.
presidential administration works together
with Israelis and Palestinians in order to
bring an end to the occupation.
“This
is about the right for Israeli and
Palestinian children, and children
throughout the Middle East, to grow up with
an opportunity of having a safe and secure
childhood, and opportunities for success,”
she explained.
“We
need to work together to make sure that
Israeli and Palestinian children don’t see
another 40 years of unrest and violence in
their lives.”
The
idea for the letter was a joint project,
Rep. McCollum recalled. Several lawmakers,
particularly those who have traveled to
Israel-Palestine and other parts of the
Middle East, expressed interest in trying to
help contribute to peace.
In
the letter, the congresspeople also called
on the U.S. State Department to elevate the
human rights of Palestinian children to a
priority status in its negotiations.
“These children deserve to grow up with
dignity, human rights and a future free of
repression,” the lawmakers wrote.
The
letter was supported by the
No Way To Treat a Child campaign, a
joint project of the rights groups Defense
for Children International — Palestine and
the American Friends Service Committee.
The
other lawmakers who signed the letter are
Reps. Eddie Bernice Johnson, Andre Carson,
John Conyers, Earl Blumenauer, Donald Beyer,
Hank Johnson, Bobby Rush, Marcy Kaptur,
Chellie Pingree, Danny Davis, Peter Defazio,
Raul Grijalva, Sam Farr, Jim McDermott,
Yvette Clarke and Mark Pocan.
The
letter can be read below.
Rep. McCollum letter to
Obama, urging special envoy for Palestinian
youth
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