OCUPIED
JERUSALEM, November 26 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The United
Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) Tuesday, November 26, denounced
the "humiliating" treatment of one of its employees by Israeli
troops in the West Bank town of Bethlehem, four days after another
relief worker was shot dead.
UNRWA,
which helps Palestinian refugees, said Allegra Pacheco had been held at
gunpoint for two hours outside her home and her husband strip-searched
before being taken into custody, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
"Ms
Pacheco was held at gunpoint in the open air for two hours while her
house was searched, her mobile phone was taken from her and her car was
used as a prop for IDF weapons," an UNRWA statement charged.
"Ms
Pacheco repeatedly protested her U.N. status to the troops. Those
protests were ignored."
Pacheco's
husband, Abed al-Ahmar, was forced to partially strip before he was
taken into Israeli army custody for 11 days, the statement added.
UNRWA
slammed the acts against Pacheco, saying the "degrading treatment
of her and her spouse is disruptive of her ability to carry out her
official functions.
"This
is completely contrary to the undertakings made by the government of
Israel to facilitate the work of the agency."
The
organization said Pacheco's husband was being held without just cause
and demanded his release.
Its
protest came four days after a British UNRWA engineer supervising
reconstruction of a refugee camp was shot dead by Israeli troops in the
northern West Bank camp of Jenin on Friday, November 22.
The
Israeli army has admitted responsibility for the death of Iain Hook, 53,
saying two soldiers mistook him for an armed Palestinian during a raid
on the camp.
In
Geneva, UNRWA said Tuesday that Hook was shot in the back with a single
bullet at a time when no military activity was taking place in the area.
Of
23 Palestinian UNRWA staff currently being held by Israel, 20 have not
been charged, the statement said, adding that UNRWA had been given no
explanations for their detention and refused access to its staff.
Meanwhile,
the French aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF, Doctors without
borders) expressed "fear for the security of its teams"
operating in the West Bank and Gaza Strip following Hook's death.
"This
incident has increased our concern for our medical teams who, until now,
have been shot at by the Israeli army on several occasions in the past
few months," Olivier Maizoue, MSF coordinator for the Palestinian
territories told AFP.
During
one incident in the Gaza Strip, he said: "Israeli soldiers fired at
MSF teams several meters away to stop them from moving, even though they
were clearly identifiable.
"Taking
into account the risks in Jenin, MSF has had to provisionally withdraw
its psychological team, consisting of two psychologists, a French
coordinator and a Spanish doctor."