February 1987 Palestinian unrest
February 1987 Palestinian unrest | |
---|---|
Part of Israeli–Palestinian conflict | |
Date | 9 February 1987 | – 22 February 1987
Location | |
Methods | Protest, political demonstration, strike action, stone throwing, grenade attack |
The February 1987 Palestinian unrest was a wave of unrest across the Occupied Palestinian Territories in February 1987. The wave began on 9 February, with protests breaking out after Israeli soldiers used live ammunition to disperse a demonstration held at the Balata Camp, in the West Bank. The wave continued until late February, escalating into a grenade attack on an Israeli border post and the killing of a Palestinian cab driver who drove into an Israeli military patrol. During the unrest, all five major Palestinian universities were temporarily ordered closed by Israeli authorities.[1]
Background
After Israel's victory in the Six-Day War in 1967, Israel has occupied the Palestinian territories, including the West Bank.[2] The occupation has been controversial, with Israel accused of violating international law, as well as committing human rights abuses and apartheid against Palestinians.[3] The Israeli government has also actively promoted the creation and growth of Israeli settlements in Palestine.[4] The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), an umbrella group representing the most prominent armed Palestinian nationalist paramilitaries in the second half of the 20th century, mostly left-wing and secular, has also been accused of a number of human rights violations and of waging a terrorist campaign against Israelis.[5]
1986 in the Occupied Palestinian Territories had ended with a significant wave of unrest after two Birzeit University students were shot and killed by Israeli forces while protesting against a roadblock erected on the main road into the campus.[6][7] Tensions in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would continue to fester during the early weeks of 1987, although relatively calmly, including demolitions of Palestinian houses by Israeli authorities,[8] deportations of Palestinian political figures,[9] seizures of Palestinian land by Israeli authories,[10] the non-fatal stabbing of two Jewish brothers in the Old City of Jerusalem,[11] the non-fatal shootings of several Palestian protestors,[12][13][14] the wounding of nine Israelis in a bus bombing,[15] and the announcement of the charges in a case against four Israeli peace activists for holding a peace meeting with a group of moderate PLO members in November 1986.[16][17] In late January 1987, Israeli Minister of Defence Yitzhak Rabin also threatened to permanently close Palestinian universities if they didn't take steps to prevent their students from participating in political demonstrations.[18] Israeli settler violence and vigilitanism was also becoming an increasing issue, particularly as the number of settlers had doubled in the last four years and were hotspots of far-right and Israeli ultranationalist sentiment.[19][20][21]
Events
On 9 February 1987, a demonstration was held by Palestinians in the Balata Camp, near Nablus in the West Bank, in protest over the seige of the Palestinian Shatila refugee camp in Lebanon by the Amal Movement.[22][23] Israeli forces responded to the demonstration by attempting to forcibly disperse it, first using tear gas and rubber bullets and then live ammunition, injuring four of the demonstrators. One Israeli solider was lightly injured after being hit by a thrown stone.[24] As news of the shooting spread, students at the nearby An-Najah National University gathered to hold a demonstration protesting against the use of force to disperse the protest. Israeli forces then moved to forcibly disperse the student demonstration as well, injuring seven students. The Israeli military claimed that protestors at the two demonstrations had "endangered the lives of the soldiers," including by refusing to follow the soldiers' orders, throwing stones, throwing bottles, and raising Palestinian flags.[24] A curfew was subsequently imposed on the Balata Camp and the military ordered An-Najah National University to be shut down for a period of one month.[25]
The Israeli response to the 9 February demonstrations sparked a wave of protests across the Occupied Palestinian Territories in the following days.[22][26] The protests included rallies by An-Najah students on the university campus, despite the forced closure, secondary school student strikes, women's marches, commerical strikes, and demonstrations in Palestinian cities.[1][27][28] Several further protests against the Shatila seige were also held, including a march by Birzeit University students and an artists' vigil in East Jerusalem.[29]
Israeli soldiers moved to disperse several of the protests using tear gas, rubber bullets, and in some cases, live ammunition, and protestors at several demonstrations threw stones and bottles at Israeli soldiers and Israeli vehicules. By 15 February, at least seven Israeli soldiers had been injured by stones.[30] On 10 February, an Israeli nighttime raid resulted in the arrests of around one hundred youth on charges of inciting the demonstrations.[27] On 11 February, Israeli authorities ordered the al-Rawda College in Nablus closed for two weeks,[28] placed thirty Balata Camp youth in administrative detention on charges of incitment and stone throwing, and shot and injured a Palestinian boy in Khan Yunis.[31] On 14 February, eighteen Hebron University students were arrested at a protest held on the university campus.[32] On 16 February, nine Palestinian youth were shot and injured by Israeli soldiers during demonstrations in Gaza City, and Israeli authorities ordered the Islamic University of Gaza shut down for three days.[33] Also on 16 October, Birzeit University professor Roger Heacock was arrested by the Israeli military and charged with having incited a women's demonstration in Ramallah.[1] On 17 February, a 16-year-old Palestinian girl was shot and injured when demonstrators in Khan Yunis threw stones at an Israeli military vehicule,[34] and both Bethlehem University and Birzeit University were ordered closed for four days.[35] During the course of the unrest, the Israeli military would declare some areas of the West Bank as closed military zones, blocking reporters from entering, and moved to punish shopkeepers who took part in commercial strikes by permanently welding shut the doors to their shops.[36]
Some Israelis were also involved in actions related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict during the period of unrest. On 10 February, a joint Israeli-Palestinian demonstration was held in Sur Baher, near East Jerusalem, in protest against plans by the Israeli government to tear down Palestinian-owned olive trees on land that the Israeli government had recently seized.[27] On 11 February, a group of settlers from Gush Katif tried to blockade the main highway in the Gaza Strip.[31] On 16 February, the Israeli Alternative Information Center NGO was raided by Israeli police, being ordered shut down for six months and having its director, Michel Warschawski, arrested on charges of aiding the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.[33][37]
The last stages of the period of unrest were marked by two more violent incidents. On 18 February, a Palestinian cab driver was shot and killed by Israeli soldiers after driving into an Israeli patrol in the Askar Camp, injuring two soldiers.[38][39] The Israeli military claimed the incident was a deliberate vehicle-ramming attack, while some Palestinian eye-witnessses claimed that it had been accidental, with the cab driver swervering to try and avoid hitting protestors who were throwing stones at the patrol.[40][41] On 22 February, a grenade was thrown at an Israeli border post at the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem, injuring twelve Israeli soldiers, two Israeli civilians, and three Palestinian civilians, most with light injuries.[42] The PLO claimed responsibility for the attack, the most serious attack in Jersualem since October 1986. Seventy Palestinians were subsequently detained by Israeli forces for interrogation over the attack.[42]
Some protests would continue throughout the next days of February,[43][44] including a shopkeepers strike in Gaza City in protest over arrests of Palestinian university students,[45] however, the wave of unrest mostly subsided.[46] During this period, Israeli authorities would order Hebron University closed for three weeks and Al-Azhar University – Gaza closed for ten days, the later after having had to force open the campus gates to disperse a student demonstration.[46][47] On 21 February, the Gaza Trade Union of Carpenters and Construction Workers would also hold the first union election in the Gaza Strip in twenty years, despite the Israeli authorities having banned the union from holding the election.[48]
Analysis
Glenn Frankel of The Washington Post suggested that there was "a shift in the nature of the struggle here," moving away from a conflict between the Israeli military and "professional terrorists imported from outside the West Bank" towards a conflict that centred around incidents that were "initiated locally, most of them by Palestinian youths."[19] Penny Johnson of Birzeit University argued that some commentators "exaggerate the novelty of the forms of protest - many have been employed by Palestinians in the occupied territories during the last two decades," but that the commentators "rightly emphasise the re-emergence of mass mobilisation" among the Palestinian population.[1] Johnson also argued that the Israeli military's response to the unrest was not just "a response to growing unrest (which in itself is an outgrowth of Rabin's "iron fist" policy, among other factors). Instead, military policy has been informed by political objectives, and army actions toward universities are one of the most striking examples."[1]
Aftermath
A larger wave of unrest would break out in the West Bank in late March 1987, including a Palestinian prisoners' hunger strike, the killing of an Israeli settler, and the killing of a Birzeit University student.[19][49][50] Tensions in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would continue to increase through mid to late 1987, ulimately culminating in the breakout of the First Intifada in December, the largest wave of protests, strikes, boycotts, and acts of civil disobidience by Palestinians since the beginning of the Israeli occupation in 1967.[51][52]
Alternative Information Center director Michel Warschawski's trial on aiding the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine would last until 1989, when he would be found guilty of having printed a booklet authored by the PFLP on how to endure Israeli torture techniques.[53] He was sentenced to twenty months incarceration, which he served in the Maasiyahu Prison.[54]
See also
References
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- ^ Berg, Raffi (19 July 2024). "UN top court says Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories is illegal". BBC News. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
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- ^ Myre, Greg (29 December 2016). "7 Things To Know About Israeli Settlements". NPR. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
- ^ Beauchamp, Zack (14 May 2018). "What is the Palestinian Liberation Organization? How about Fatah and the Palestinian Authority?". Vox. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
- ^ "Students under fire - a preliminary report on army actions at Birzeit University on December 4, 1986". Birzeit University. 31 December 1986. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
- ^ Lustig, Robin (12 January 1987). "Palestinian 'children of occupation' nurse bitter hatred for Israelis". The Press. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
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- ^ Frankel, Glenn (18 January 1987). "2 JEWISH MEN STABBED BY ARABS IN JERUSALEM". Washington Post. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
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- ^ "Letter dated 3 February 1987 from the Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General". United Nations Digital Library. 3 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ "Sunday, February 8, 1987". The Palestine Chronology. 8 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ Friedman, Thomas L. (22 March 1987). "ISRAEL TRYING JEWS FOR TALKING TO P.L.O." The New York Times. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ Johnson, Penny (1 April 1987). "Palestinian Universities under Occupation, November 1986-January 1987". Journal of Palestine Studies. 16 (3): 134–141. doi:10.2307/2536794. JSTOR 2536794. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
- ^ a b c Frankel, Glenn (1 June 1987). "SOULS ON FIRE ON THE WEST BANK". Washington Post. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ "Public Opinion Polls Indicate Pervasive Dissatisfaction with Life in Israel and a Decline in Esteem". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 6 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ "Behind the Headlines: Grassroots Peace Activists Speak out". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 25 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
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- ^ a b c "Tuesday, February 10, 1987". The Palestine Chronology. 10 February 1987. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
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- ^ "The World : Anti-Israel Strife Hurts 17". Los Angeles Times. 16 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ a b "New Violence in West Bank, Gaza Strip". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 13 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
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- ^ a b "Monday, February 16, 1987". The Palestine Chronology. 16 February 1987. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
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- ^ "Cabbie killed". The Australian Jewish News. 27 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
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- ^ a b "Anti-Israel Violence Persists Throughout the Territories". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 24 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ "The World - News from Feb. 22, 1987". Los Angeles Times. 22 February 1987. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ "Saturday, February 21, 1987". The Palestine Chronology. 21 February 1987. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
- ^ Black, Ian (1 September 1987). "Prisoners of the Killing Fields". Journal of Palestine Studies. 17 (1): 193–196. doi:10.2307/2536678. JSTOR 2536678. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
- ^ Johnson, Penny (1 January 1988). "The Routine of Repression". Middle East Research and Information Project. Retrieved 3 January 2025.
- ^ Tedla, Aden (1 May 2010). "Palestinians wage nonviolent campaign during First Intifada, 1987-1988". Global Nonviolent Action Database. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
- ^ Beauchamp, Zack (14 May 2018). "What were the intifadas?". Vox. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
- ^ Shaoul, Jean (4 February 2020). "Advocate (2019): "An angry, optimistic woman" in pursuit of justice for the Palestinians". World Socialist Web Site. Retrieved 10 January 2025.
- ^ Sela, Maya (11 October 2013). "From French Yeshivas to Israeli Prison: Michel Warschawski Recalls 50 Years of Peace Activism". Haaretz. Retrieved 10 January 2025.