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  • US turns blind eye to Israel's new separation policy
  • The IDF – Israel's organ grinder
  • The first Israeli Jew in Fatah’s parliament
  • Boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel now urgent – Israeli academic
  • Israeli fascism: the “Bogie” Ya’alon horror show
  • The long struggle to reclaim Beersheva’s Great Mosque
  • Israel turns up the heat to evict Bedouin from desert lands
  • The travelling music is always the same
  • Prof Yehuda Hiss: the missing link in Palestinian organ theft?
  • Palestinian embassy in London strangely silent as Israeli terror-strikes and land-grabs continue
  • Israeli advertisements warn against marrying non-Jews
  • Israel’s Arab citizens call general strike in response to wave of “racist” measures
  • Israel blocks money to Gaza’s disabled
  • Branded “an enemy of Palestine” – should I laugh or cry?
  • How low will Israel stoop to win the propaganda war?
  • The not-so-hidden persuaders
  • How US tax breaks fund Israeli settlers
  • UN General Assembly president “frustrated” in his attempts to end blockade of Gaza
  • Israel’s fear of Jewish girls dating Arabs
  • On Palestinian civil disobedience
  • The comic genius of Binyamin Netanyahu
  • Binyamin Netanyahu’s UN speech: the pathology of evil
  • Gaza peace protester is prisoner in own home
  • Goldstone report's fate sealed by threats to Palestinian economy
  • Deception, spin and lies
  • “Silly season” fatwa
  • Israeli police don Arab disguise: notorious army method to be used inside Israel
  • Self-defence stories from Gaza
  • “Where have all the friendships gone...”
  • How the “most moral army in the world” wages war on students
  • Time for Britain to make amends for crimes against Palestine
  • A line in the sand: Barack Obama’s treachery in the Middle East
  • Spotlight on Palestine: an interview with Stuart Littlewood
  • The United Nations should acknowledge Palestine’s statehood
  • “Campus Watch” copycats close in on Israeli professors
  • Arab teens need “protecting from Israeli justice”
  • NATO had better steer clear of Israel
  • Have Israeli spies infiltrated international airports?
  • What festive cheer will the West bring to the Holy Land this Christmas?
  • “...And a little child shall lead them”
  • Israel’s Arab women workers need not apply
  • Israel’s notorious Hannibal procedure: army directive behind shooting of mental patient
  • Rules of human decency apply to Israelis too
  • Spot the difference: Israel’s Prussian heritage – and destiny?
  • Israeli-style “justice” for Palestinian student Berlanty – official version
  • Israeli war crimes suspect says quest for justice is for losers
  • Partition in Palestine is still the issue
  • Egypt’s President Mubarak blows his chance to behave decently
  • Gaza's untold story
  • Reaching the Gates of Hell is not so easy
  • Tactics of desperation: using false accusations of “anti-Semitism” as a weapon to silence criticism of Israel’s behaviour
  • Egypt lacks the milk of human kindness
  • The Iron Wall
  • Gaza robbed of the most basic human right: the right to health
  • Spiteful Mubarak succeeds only in creating a PR disaster for Egypt and himself
  • What next, Viva Palestina?
  • Truth will prevail: Israel panicking as the truth catches up with it
  • Israel's new rocket defence system
  • Gaza: what are promises of humanitarian aid worth?
  • In memory of Martin Luther King
  • The Liebarak
  • “Lost tribe” on fast track to Israel
  • Barack Obama’s paralysis in face of Zionist lobby
  • Arab politicians face tide of “persecution” in Israel
  • Israel stole 2 billion dollars from Palestinian workers: 40-year deception exposed
  • Israel’s war on protest: army used to deport activists against Apartheid Wall
  • Losing patience with squabbling “two-rump” Palestine
  • Sex, lies and videotape
  • Jews-only homes for Ajami
  • Israel’s re-branding exercise in Haiti backfires as past catches up
  • The long arm of Israel must be amputated
  • The new McCarthyism in Israel
  • Mossad’s murderous reach: the larger political issues
  • Do you have to be Jewish to report on Israel for the New York Times?
  • “Peace or apartheid” are not the only options for Israel
  • The truth about Israel as only Gideon Levy can tell it
  • Is Europe planning seal of approval for Israeli settlers?
  • Does Israel hope to spark a new wave of suicide bombing?
  • Rachel Corrie family finally puts Israel in dock
  • The decline of Israel and the prospects for peace
  • Israel’s “No renting to Arabs” policy
  • Israelis unhappy with weak loyalty of “British dogs”
  • Israel’s provocation at al-Aqsa
  • “By way of deception, thou shalt do war”
  • Samson and the second Nakba: a short history of the Jewish Hercules
  • Israel unveils “green” strategy to defeat enemies
  • Palestine's "turbulent priest" delivers a blistering Easter message
  • The so-called “only democracy in the Middle East”
  • Israel and the “delegitimization” oxymoron
  • The Palestinians are winning the legitimacy war: will it matter?
  • Israel: total boycott against total occupation
  • Rule by law or defiance
  • Reversing Israel’s faux legitimacy
  • Was Israel ever legitimate?
  • Israel and the question of legitimacy
  • The dark underbelly of Israel's security state
  • Mossad operation threatened against reporter
  • Did banned media report foretell of Gaza war crimes?
  • Israel’s Stasi watch over imams
  • Not much time remains for Israel – film review
  • Israel’s red line: real democracy
  • US funds Israel’s apartheid roads plan
  • Israel’s rebranding strategy focuses on delegitimizing critics and opponents
  • Israeli public sector's door closed to Arab workers
  • Even picnics in Israel are political
  • Israel’s bomb out of the shadows
  • Gaza humanitarian flotilla versus Israel’s evil navy
  • Israeli butchery at sea
  • Criminal pirate Israel makes a fool of the OECD only days after it clasped the viper to its bosom
  • The concentration camp that is Gaza
  • The madness of arrogance: Israel's attack on the Gaza aid flotilla
  • Israeli MP’s terror on aid ship: “Plan was to kill activists and deter future convoys”
  • Pirates in the Mediterranean: Israel’s shameful justification for murdering peace activists
  • “Mad dog” diplomacy: a cornered Israel is baring its teeth
  • Sea blockade of Gaza was “temporary” – 15 years ago
  • Is Israel planning act of desperation? It still holds two stolen nukes for possible port attack
  • “No citizenship without loyalty!”
  • Rise people, rise: call for zero tolerance of Israeli crimes
  • What legitimacy does Israel have?
  • You’re talking bollox, Mr Regev
  • Israeli MP who joined flotilla faces witch-hunt
  • An open letter to the Israeli Jewish public: support the Gaza Flotilla!
  • Israel's Gaza blockade: letting the chips fall where they may
  • Israel plans dig at burial place of Prophet Muhammad’s companions and Saladin warriors
  • The Israel/Palestine one-state solution sounds like a good idea, but...
  • Cutting through the confusion about Israel/Palestine
  • “Let them eat coriander!” Blockade “eased” as Gaza starves more slowly
  • Letters from Palestine: a must-read book
  • Lieberman’s “peace" plan: strip Palestinians of citizenship
  • Jerusalem politicians face expulsion by Israeli occupation authorities
  • Boycott Israel campaign wants Israel to abide by international law
  • Witch-hunt begins in Israeli schools and colleges
  • Israel's new “video game” executions
  • Israel’s parliamentary mob
  • Netanyahu: I deceived US to destroy Oslo accords
  • This Time We Went Too Far: review of Norman Finkelstein’s book on Israel’s Gaza blitzkrieg
  • Israel’s secret police exposed
  • Ethnic cleansing in the Israeli Negev
  • Israel classifies its past as top secret
  • Revered Israeli rabbi preaches slaughter of gentile babies
  • Israel’s teenage barbarians at ethnically cleansed village
  • Israel plans mass forced removals of Bedouin
  • Suspected Israeli torturer gets key police job in Jerusalem
  • Legalizing injustice in the Negev and implications for “democracy” in Israel
  • No room for Arab students at Israeli universities
  • Hamas must rebrand and take the wind out of Israel’s and America’s sails
  • Who is the Israeli state loyal to?
  • The secrets in Israel’s archives
  • A case of decency deficit: Israel’s sickness goes beyond one soldier and her Facebook pictures
  • Binyamin Netanyahu and Mahmoud Abbas: what are the possibilities?
  • Israeli and US Zionists mount ferocious attack on liberal academics in Israel
  • More pointless talks with Israel? Send in the clowns
  • Bedouin land fight: claim for native title threatens Israel’s racial exclusiveness
  • George Mitchell hoping for a quick-fix fake peace?
     
    A West Bank town’s fight to survive

    Media bias and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict

    By Neve Gordon*

    22 July 2008
     
    Neve Gordon highlights the case of the Palestinian village of Ni'lin, whose residents are heroically resisting Israeli land seizures, as an example of how the media, from the BBC to CNN, ignore stories that “shatter the stereotypical perception of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict provided by mainstream news sources”.
     
    "Jerusalem bulldozer 'terrorist' kills 3 in rampage," read the headline of a CNN article describing the recent attack of a Palestinian construction worker that left three Israelis dead and scores wounded. A Google news search indicates that the brutal assault was mentioned in 3,525 news articles. USA Today, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, BBC, Fox News and Al-Jazeera as well as all the other major media outlets covered the incident. Lesser-known media sources, such as the Khaleej Times in the United Arab Emirates, the Edmonton Sun in Canada and B92 in Serbia, also featured the event. Indeed, one could safely assume that almost all news outlets around the globe provided some type of coverage of the attack. 


    Israel lays siege to Ni'ilin in response to non-violent resistance to land grabs

    Another Google news search, this one using the name Ni'lin, produces only 75 results. A few major outlets have carried the story about the brave resistance to Israeli seizures of land staged by the residents of this Palestinian town in the occupied West Bank, but CNN, the Los Angeles Times and USA Today have not. Sources like the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times provided a short caption, no more. Considering that over the past two months the residents of Ni'lin have managed to make a mark on the history of popular opposition, the limited coverage of their campaign is not a mere oversight.
     
    Ni'lin's story is one of incremental dispossession. The residents of this agrarian town lost a large portion of their land in the 1948 war. After the 1967 war, Israel took advantage of the town's location near the internationally recognized Green Line and began confiscating its land for Jewish settlements. First,74 dunams (four dunams equal one acre) were expropriated for the settlement of Shilat. Next, another 661 dunams were seized to build the settlement Mattityahu. In 1985, 934 dunams were confiscated to build Hashmonaim, and six years later 274 dunams were appropriated for Mod'in Illit. Finally, in 1998, 20 more were sequestered for the settlement of Menora. All together, more than 13 per cent of the town's land has been expropriated for settlements.

    In 2002 Israel began building the separation barrier, which is illegal according to the International Court of Justice. Recently, construction of the segment near Ni'lin began; if it's completed, an additional 2,500 dunams, or about 20 per cent of the land that remains in the residents' possession, will be seized.
     
    This time, however, the residents had had enough. In the beginning of May they launched a popular campaign to stop the dispossession, and despite the brutal attempts to suppress the uprising – which has included a curfew and shootings that have left close to 200 people injured – they are unwilling to bow down. This is no minor feat, since the annals of history suggest that it is extremely rare for a whole town to stand up as one person and practice daily acts of disobedience, particularly when confronted with such a violent response.


    Israeli soldiers blindfold, handcuff and then shoot Palestinian protester in the village of Ni'ilin

    The events unfolding in Ni'lin also provide the perfect ingredients for a good story. During the first three days of the curfew ambulances were not allowed into the town; the body of one deceased resident was kept for four hours at Ni'lin's entrance before the military let his family bring in the remains for burial; a woman in labour was prevented from leaving the village and was forced to deliver the baby at home; a 12-year-old boy was taken from his home by soldiers and held for two days without charges; elderly women were beaten; and three residents were seriously wounded by live ammunition.
     
    So why do most media outlets fail to cover this ongoing campaign? The reason is straightforward: covering the struggle in Ni'lin would shatter the stereotypical perception of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict provided by mainstream news sources. Unlike the bulldozer attack, which reinforces the pervasive understanding of this conflict, the events in Ni'lin uncover a much more complex reality. This story does not involve Palestinians perpetrating terrorism against a civilian population but rather popular acts of civil disobedience that persist despite the ruthless repression of an occupying power.
     
    Another aspect of Ni'lin that goes against existing stereotypes is that Palestinians and Jews are not fighting on different sides of this fray, but rather scores of Jewish Israeli and international activists are standing beside the Palestinians residents as they try to stop military bulldozers from destroying Ni'lin's land. Indeed, among those injured are many Israelis.
     
    The story of Ni'lin is, in other words, the story of a colonized people resisting colonization. This is not the way the mainstream media has been accustomed to portraying the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and judging from the Google news results, most editors are not ready to change their approach. The historic campaign in Ni'lin – as well as many other nonviolent, mass civil disobedience campaigns against the occupation in places like Bi'lin and A'ram – is still unfit to print.

    Afterword

    When the military realized that violence on the ground cannot stop the residents' emancipatory drive, it began arresting both Palestinian and Israeli protesters in the hope that hefty legal costs would do the job. To support the legal expenses incurred at Ni'lin, click here.



    *Neve Gordon is a lecturer in politics at Ben-Gurion University. For details of his book, Israel's Occupation (University of California Press), click here.This article also appears in The Nation and is published here by permission of Neve Gordon.

     



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