NEWS 'U' alum arrested for protest in West Bank The MichiganDaily - Tuesday, July 6, 2004 - 3 The interview has been edited for space. On June 20, Israeli Defense Forces allegedly arrested University alum Fadi Kiblawi for participating in a nonviolent protest in the West Bank. Kiblawi, who co- founded the campus group Students Allied for Freedom and Equality, is currently a law student at George Washington University. While at the University, Kiblawi was also a member of The Michigan Daily's editorial board for a brief period, the Minority Affairs Chair in the Michigan Student Assembly and the organizer of the 2002 Divestment Con- ference. He has been living in East Jerusalem this summer and traveling throughout the country and said he plans to return on Aug. 7. In an interview conducted by e-mail, Kiblawi explained to The Michi- gan Daily his involvement with the protest. The Michigan Daily: Associated Press pho- tos show you being arrested. What happened? Fadi Kiblawi: I attended a nonviolent protest against the Israeli army's land theft and uprooting of olive trees in the Palestinian West Bank village of Az-Zawiya. We attempted to reach the Caterpillar bull- dozers and block them from the olive trees. Israeli soldiers responded violently by beating and tear-gassing us. Eventually, after these methods were unable to scatter (us), they arrested me. I was taken to an Israeli prison in the illegal Jewish settlement, Ariel. After 24 hours of captivity, I was released on the shoulder of a road outside of Tel Aviv. TMD: Could you explain (before adding how you felt and the conditions surrounding it), just the basics of where you were, what was going on, the sounds and images around you and then give a timeline of what happened? FK: I was in the Palestinian village of Az- Zawiya. Az-Zawiya is in the West Bank southwest of Nablus. In recent weeks, the Israeli army has initiated preparations to con- struct their wall around the illegal Jewish set- tlement of Ariel. In so doing, they have confiscated village lands and begun uprooting olive trees. Olive trees are the lifeblood of Palestinian farmers, and losing one is tanta- mount to losing a family member. Since 1967, Israel has uprooted over 360,000 Pales- tinian olive trees. Israel falsely claims that this wall is for pro- tection against terrorist attacks inside its bor- ders. However, if this were the case, they would construct it on their internationally-recognized borders. Rather, they are building it deep inside the West Bank, in villages such as Az-Zawiya, indicating that in fact the abomination amounts to nothing more than a land grab. Under the Fourth Geneva Convention, of which Israel is a signing party, this wall is illegal. The Palestinian villages on which the wall is being constructed have begun organizing themselves into popular resist- ance committees. Every day, they coura- geously confront the Israeli army and bulldozers nonviolently and are dealt with beatings, tear gas, sound bombs, and some- times live ammunition. They have requested the involvement of internationals with the hopes that our pres- ence would curtail the Israeli response. This has proven futile as the army has shown little concern for the well-being of internationals. The protests begin inside the village. From there, we march to the village lands, chanting calls for unity and an end to the occupation. As the protest approached the soldiers, positioned on top of the villagers' lands, tear gas was shot at us. We covered our faces and continued to march to the soldiers. Upon reaching the soldiers, we tried to advance around them to the bulldozers. At this point, the soldiers began beating us with clubs. Much of the demonstration was now dis- persed, however, the village elders remained steadfast in their nonviolent resistance. The most shocking site was seeing Israeli soldiers beat unarmed 70-year-old Palestinian men and women. Through the next hour, we were tear-gassed and beaten repeatedly. Eventually, they violently arrested me. I spent the evening in prison with bruises and scars all over my body. TMD: What are your feelings about what happened, what are your current and future plans and would this stop you from attending an event like Sunday's again? FK: What happened to me is a testament to the egregious violations of human rights tak- ing place in the Holy Land. It is important to keep in mind that I was arrested by a decades- long occupying army inside a Palestinian vil- lage while nonviolently protesting the illegal theft of land and destruction of livelihood. ... The conditions of my release were that I would no longer enter the Occupied Territo- ries again, with the exception of East Jerusalem. ... Furthermore, the immigration intelligence informed me that I would not be allowed entry into the country again. As an American tax-payer, I find this provision unjust, given that Israel is the largest benefici- ary of our foreign aid. Moreover, as a Pales- tinian, I reject Israeli dictates preventing me from returning to my native homeland. Compiled from Daily staff reports University Alum Fadi Kiblawi is arrested by the Israeli Defense Forces for protesting the uprooting of Palestinian Olive Trees. Kiblawi was arrested on June 20 and released 24 hours later. He plans to stay in the country until early August and will return to George Washington University in the fall, where he is a law student. Allawi: Death penalty for Saddam is up to court BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The inter- im prime minister said yesterday he would not interfere with an Iraqi tri- bunal's right to decide whether Saddam Hussein and his top lieutenants should be executed on war crimes charges, the Arab language television station Al-Ara- biya reported. Prime Minister Iyad Allawi said he was willing to abide by whatever the court decides in the trial, which is not expected to begin for months. Iraq assumed legal custody of Saddam from the United States last week and reinstated the death penalty, which had been suspended by U.S. occupa- tion authorities. "As for the execution, that is for the court to decide - so long as a decision is reached impartially and fairly," he said. Saddam's first court appearance Thursday dominated the media across Iraq. The broadly outlined charges include the slaughter of Shiites dur- ing a 1991 uprising and a chemical weapons attack against Kurds in the northern city of Halabja. Thousands of Kurds demonstrated yesterday in Halabja, demanding that Saddam and one of his key lieutenants - Ali Hassan al-Majid, also known as "Chemical Ali" - be put to death for the gas attack that killed 5,000 people on March 16, 1988. Carrying photos of their slain loved ones, the marchers said they want Saddam to be tried and exe- cuted in their town. "Every family in this city lost no less than five of its dear sons," said demonstrator Sabiha Ali, 50. "There- fore, we want to execute Saddam on the soil of the land." Also yesterday, the spokesman for militant Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr tempered threats to continue fighting, saying his movement only planned to wage "peaceful resistance" against the interim government. Iraq's oil exports were cut nearly in half as workers struggled yester- day to repair a key pipeline shut down after looters sabotaged the line, according to officials with the South Oil Co. and traders. The looters, trying to steal crude oil for sale on the black market, breached one of the country's two key southern pipelines, said an SOC official, speaking on condition of anonymity. A land mine detonated yesterday along the main route to the southern city of Samawah, where Japanese troops are based, police said. There were no reports of injuries. The route is frequented by coalition forces. In southern Iraq, insurgents fired rockets at a government building early Monday, but instead struck nearby homes, killing one person and wound- ing eight, police said. The attack tar- geted the province's main offices near the center of the Basra. Interior Ministry officials also said two Iranians suspected of trying to det- onate a car bomb were captured but gave no details. Iraqi officials have blamed foreign fighters and religious extremists for a wave of recent vehicle bombings. The attacks have led to fears that religious fanatics and Saddam loyal- ists may be joining forces to fight both the multinational force and the new Iraqi government. Iraqi troops thwarted a car bombing outside their regional headquarters northeast of Baghdad on Sunday, killing an attacker before he could detonate his vehicle. Two bystanders also died in the assault in Baqouba, the scene of fierce fighting last week between American soldiers and insurgents who tried to seize government build- ings and police stations. From Airlines to Hotels... - rom Concert tickets to Restaurants.. Even Shuttles and Luggage 400 Travel Sites In e YOU WIN! GNUplaces.com Your One Stop Travel Website