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"International Solidarity Movement" ISM Updates of 31
March 2003: Jenin
Israeli Army Retracts
Claim that ISM Sheltered Armed Man
In a very rare occurrence, the Israeli army has actually
admitted that their spokesperson gave false information to the Associated
Press regarding the incident in the ISM apartment in Jenin. The Israeli
army spokesperson claimed that there was a pistol found in the apartment.
Another spokesperson claimed that there were two Russian rifles also in
the apartment. However, The Israeli Army website claimed that the pistol
was found near the apartment.
As a result of these inconsistencies, the media office
was able to track down one of the spokespersons. After much discussion
and persistence with AP and the Israeli Army; we finally got an admission
by the Israeli Army that there had never been any gun in the ISM apartment.
As a result of the Israeli Army being caught lying, the AP published a
new story, retracting their original story and even criticizing the Israeli
Army. Below is the retraction, the press release from the ISM, and the
original story as it appeared in the Jerusalem Post. If you have seen
the original AP story in any of your local papers, please be sure that
they get a copy of the retraction.
Army backtracks on details about militant arrest at International
Solidarity Movement
Sat Mar 29, 1:21 PM ET
JERUSALEM - The Israeli army on Saturday withdrew its
claim that a gun was found during a search of a West Bank office of the
International Solidarity Movement, a pro-Palestinian group.
Israeli troops raided the office in the West Bank town
of Jenin on Thursday and seized a wanted member of the militant Islamic
Jihad group.
Originally, the army reported that a pistol was found
in the office during the search. On Saturday, the army withdrew the allegation,
saying only a weapon was found in the building, which also has apartments
and the offices of two other international organizations.
"The information originally released was wrong," an army
spokeswoman said. It was unclear where exactly the gun was found.
The army alleged that the Islamic Jihad member, accused
of planning several attacks against Israelis, was being sheltered by the
International Solidarity Movement.
The group, however, said there were clashes outside their
office on Thursday when the man appeared in the stairway. A volunteer
invited him into the office because he looked hurt, the group said.
"He looked terrified, was soaking wet and appeared to
be in pain. Concerned about his welfare ... he was brought into the apartment,"
a statement from the group said. "He was given a change of clothes, a
hot drink and a blanket."
The group said the man spoke Arabic and none of the members
in the office could communicate with him. Shortly after he entered, Israeli
troops arrested him.
He is still being held and has not yet been charged.
Members of the International Solidarity Movement often
act as human shields, placing themselves in between Israeli troops and
Palestinians.
An American member of the group was killed on March 16
while trying to stop an Israeli military bulldozer in the Gaza Strip (news
- web sites). She fell in front of the machine, which ran over her and
then backed up, witnesses said.
Israeli officials are still investigating the bulldozer
incident that killed 23-year-old Rachel Corrie, a student at The Evergreen
State College in Olympia, Washington.
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