Nazareth,
November 18 (IslamOnline) - Nine Palestinian citizens of Israel
accused of illegally demonstrating and attacking police outside an
Israeli employment office in 1999 will face trial on November 20.
The
defendants, from the northern Galilee region, believe that this case
is an example of the Israeli government strategy of silencing those
who dare to challenge the racism inherent in the legal and political
structures of the state.
“Every
day I am dealing with cases of discrimination against Arab citizens in
the job office which are a direct result of the racism inherent in the
state,” said one of the defendants, Wehbe Badarne, director of Sawt
El-Amel, a worker’s rights organization.
“This
case is yet one more example of government racism against the 20% of
the population who are Palestinians,” he added.
In
September 1999, the Israeli government declared that the unemployed of
the Arab village Ein Mahel must sign at the employment bureau in
Jewish Nazareth Illit, and not in Arab Nazareth as they had previously
done.
Ein
Mahel, on the edge of Nazareth, has one of the highest unemployment
rates in the area. Land confiscation to develop Nazareth Illit, the
Jewish new town built in a loop around Arab Nazareth, has continued
over the years leading to high unemployment amongst the former farming
community.
An
Arab worker’s rights organization, Sawt El Amel, believed that the
move was a cover for the adoption of discriminatory practice designed
to deny benefits to Arab citizens, and to reduce government
unemployment figures.
This
claim was supported by the investigation of Yediot Aharonot, a
Hebrew language newspaper who reported that on transfer to the
Nazareth Illit office, 199 jobless out of 454 from Ein Mahel were
registered as ‘refusers’.
If
a person is said to have refused work, they are not entitled to
benefits. Thus the government claimed that between August and October
1999, the unemployment rate in Ein Mahel had fallen from 18.8% to
10.5%.
Reporter
Hagar Enosh said that one of the bureau’s main strategies was to
send the Ein Mahel unemployed to workplaces that did not exist. When
the worker returned to the office to claim benefits, the form was
signed to say that the individual was a refuser, even though the job
did not exist.
In
October 1999, hundreds of Ein Mahel residents went to the job office
in Nazareth Illit to demonstrate and demand a meeting with the area
supervisor.
When
this was refused, the workers began demonstrating in the hall of the
job office itself.
The
police were called and started to provoke demonstrators. Three
unemployed women were injured, and 9 people were arrested including
Sawt El-Amel director Wehbe Badarne.
The
prosecution refused a plea by Adalah, the Legal Center for the Rights
of Arabs in Israel, to drop the case, and after 3 years the nine will
face trial beginning 20 November.
The
state is attempting to imprison the demonstrators, 3 women and 6 men;
Mahmoud Habiballah, Khitam Habiballah, Wehde Habiballah, Mahmoud Aref
Habiballah, Jamal Hasanayn, Haldiya Hasanayn, Ghalib Habiballah, Aref
Habiballah and Wehbe Badarne, for 6 months