After a two-week lull, the Palestinian Authority has resumed its crackdown on Palestinian journalists and bloggers in the West Bank.Some caution is going to be needed regarding that last bit there - would that part suggest they still support segregation from Israel? If they do, that's only going to guarantee they'll have more and more troubles like what Abbas' gang is now brewing for them. On the other hand, what if that resumption meant reconnecting with the rest of Israel? They'd be strongly advised to support that idea.
The crackdown, which began three months ago, has targeted journalists and bloggers who reported about corruption cases in PA institutions or posted critical comments on Facebook.
The ongoing campaign comes despite promises by PA leaders to stop arresting and harassing Palestinian journalists and bloggers, especially those who post critical comments on Facebook.
At least nine journalists and bloggers have been arrested or interrogated by various branches of the PA security forces. The PA has also blocked a number of news websites belonging to Palestinians who are critical of PA President Mahmoud Abbas.
On Tuesday, the PA's General Intelligence Service detained Shadi Zamara, a 27-year-old journalist and blogger, and questioned him about his work and comments he had posted on Facebook.
Zamara said he received a phone call from a man who identified himself as an officer for the General Intelligence Service asking him to report for questioning.
"When I went there, I was interrogated about my journalistic work and activities on Facebook," Zamara said. "The interrogation focused mainly on articles I had published and which included criticism of the Palestinian Authority."
After two and a half hours of questioning, Zamara was released and asked to report again for further interrogation next week.
But half an hour after he left the offices of the General Intelligence Service, he received another phone call asking him to return immediately for questioning.
"When I arrived, they put me inside a room and closed the door," Zamara recounted in a statement to the SKeyes Center for Media and Cultural Freedom. "I started shouting, demanding that they release me. I told them that I came voluntarily and there was no need for this kind of treatment. Then one of the interrogators entered the room and demanded to know why my case was already on Facebook."
Zamara told the interrogator that because he was a journalist he saw that there was a need to inform the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate and the PA's Government Press Office of the decision to summon him for questioning.
"I believe that that there is a campaign against journalists and that the Palestinian Authority is following all our activities," he said. "This is a clear violation of freedom of media."
In a related development, 88% of Palestinians believe that the recent arrest of journalists and bloggers in the West bank is unjustified, a public opinion poll published Wednesday showed.
The poll, which was conducted by the independent research center AWRAD, covered some 1200 Palestinians.
More than 60% of respondents in the Gaza Strip and 27% in the West Bank believe freedom of speech has diminished compared to 10 years ago, the poll found.
An overwhelming majority of Palestinians [about 80%] said that the two Palestinian governments were censoring freedom of expression, the survey showed.
According to the results, 84% of Palestinians support the immediate conduct of elections in the Palestinian territories, while another 55% are in favor of the resumption of peace talks with Israel.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
PLO ARRESTS MORE REPORTERS AND BLOGGERS
Here's another something that contradicts the PLO's commitments to peace:
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