השריפה בחלמיש: שוחררו הפלסטינים שנעצרו בחשד להצתה
שני הפלסטינים שנעצרו לפנות בוקר (שבת) בחשד להצתת השריפה בהתנחלות חלמיש שבבנימין שוחררו לפני זמן קצר. הבוקר הצליחו כוחות הכיבוי להדוף את האש ביישוב, לאחר ש-15 בתים נשרפו כליל.
Kaksi aamulla tuhopoltosta epäillyistä pidätetyistä palestiinalaisista on vapautettu. Tänä aamuna sammutusjoukkojen onnistui torjua tuli asutuksessa - mutta 15 taloa ehti tuhoutua täysin.
25.11. 2016
Halamish tarkoittaa kalliota, ja raamtussa sanotaan, että Jumala otti Aabrahamin tällaisesta kalliosta ja teki hänestä kansan. sen takia ei pidä ihmetellä jos Halamish- sna antaa vuorikiipeilijöistä kuvan. videona
Israelissa on harediuskonnollsiten asutus nimeltä Halamish.
Siellä syttyi tulipalo nyt puolen yön aikaan. ja asukaat evakuoitiin. perheitä on n 350 . Henkilöitä toista tuhatta. Tulen voima kuluttu jo näissä alkuminuuteissa kymmenen taloa.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWDqxfaZV_w
Internet kertoo tästä kylästä seuraavaa.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halamish
Halamish (Hebrew: חַלָּמִישׁ. lit. Flint), also known as Neveh Tzuf (Hebrew: נווה צוף, lit. Nectar Home), is a communal Israeli settlement in the West Bank, located in the southwestern Samarian hills to the north of Ramallah, 10.7 kilometers east of the Green line. The Orthodox Jewish community was established in 1977. It falls under the jurisdiction of Mateh Binyamin Regional Council. In 2015 it had a population of 1,278.
The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, but the Israeli government disputes this.[2]
According to a Peace Now-report of 2006, 33 percent of the land Neveh Tzuf is built on, is privately owned, all or most of it by Palestinians.[3] even though the Supreme Court of Israel had ruled during the time of the village's founding that the land was state land.[4]
The settlement of Neveh Tzuf has several outposts,[5] and is home to the religious pre-army Mechina Elisha.[6]
On 16 October 1977, two groups of settlers, one religious, calling itself “Neveh Tzuf” and one secular, called “Neveh Tzelah” with a total of 40 families moved into the abandoned former British Tegart fort building near the Palestinian village Nabi Salih.[7]
The original name of the settlement, Neveh Tzuf, was rejected by the government naming committee, arguing that it might be misleading since the biblical location, Eretz Tzuf, was elsewhere. The naming committee gave the new settlement the official name 'Halamish' instead, and since this was rejected by the settlers, both names are used for the settlement.[7]
Upon the first work preparing the land, residents of the nearby Palestinian village Deir Nidham went to the Supreme Court of Israel and claimed ownership of the Havlata Hill, which is now in the centre of Halamish. Based on aerial photos from the turn of the 20th century, showing the disputed land to be barren, and Ottoman Empire land law specifying that land not worked for over ten years becomes state land, the land on that hill was declared state land and freed for settlement constructions. This court ruling became the precedent for future land ownership disputes.[4]
The residents of the nearby Palestinian village of Nabi Salih regularly protest against the takeover of a spring by settlers of Halamish, declared an "antiquities site" by the Civil Administration, which is located on private land belonging to inhabitants of Nabi Salih, as well as against being prevented from working the fields around the spring.[8] The protests regularly lead to violent clashes, with Palestinian youths throwing stones and Israeli forces firing on protesters with tear gas, rubber bullets, and water cannons.[9] Since the end of 2009, 64 people (13% of the village's population) has been arrested by Israeli forces.[10] Bassem al-Tamimi, one of the leaders of the protests, who was declared a human rights defender by the European Union and a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, has been arrested twelve times to date.[9] On 24 March 2011 he was arrested and charged with incitement, holding a march without a permit, sending youths to throw stones, and perverting the course of justice.[11] After an 11-month military trial, he was cleared of the central charge of incitement and of perverting the course of justice by an Israeli military court, but found guilty of taking part in illegal demonstrations and of soliciting protesters to throw stones largely based on the testimony of two Palestinian youths aged 14 and 15.[9][11] After being released on bail on 24 April 2012,[11] he was given a 13-month sentence in May 2012, corresponding to the time he had served in prison while awaiting trial.[12]
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