BEIT UMMAR: Israeli military abducts Palestinian mayor; CPT Hebron visits family

From: CPTnet editor, Rochester, NY (CPTnet.editor.guest.445947@MennoLink.org)
Date: Sun Aug 27 2006 - 11:08:22 EDT


CPTnet
27 August 2006

BEIT UMMAR: Israeli military abducts Palestinian mayor; CPT Hebron visits
family

by Dianne Roe

At 2:00 a.m. Thursday, 24 August, Miriam (Im Musa) Alqam heard loud knocking
on the door. She feared soldiers were coming to take her husband. She was
right. Israeli soldiers who had come in six jeeps surrounded the family
home in the farming village of Beit Ummar, just north of Hebron.

The children (ages four to fourteen) were still sleeping when the soldiers
took their father away in his night clothes, refusing his request to use the
bathroom or to get a change of clothes from his closet.

Farhan Alqam (Abu Musa) is the mayor of Beit Ummar. He is the most recent
of the Hamas elected officials that the Israeli army has abducted and
imprisoned without charges.

CPTers Christina Gibb, John Lynes, and Dianne Roe visited the Alqam family
two days later. Eleven year-old Musa told CPT that when he got up in the
morning and saw his uncle, he knew something was wrong. He asked his uncle
if Israeli soldiers had arrested his father. His uncle answered, "Yes."

Musa added, "Most children in the world have fathers who can take them
places. Our fathers are taken to prison."

Three weeks earlier, 3 August 2006, at CPT's request, Mayor Alqam had
hosted thirty internationals representing several different Christian
organizations visiting Israeli and Palestine. He had shared with the
visiting internationals the difficulties his village faced because of the
American and Israeli sanctions on the Palestinian Authority. Tracy Hughes,
who brought a delegation from Common Global Ministries, expressed shock when
she heard of the arrest. "The mayor clearly stated his belief in non
violence as a way to find a solution to the problems."

Mayor Alqam had good working relationships with international and Israeli
peace and human rights groups. (See 24 July 2006 release, "A different image
of Hamas.")

At the time of his arrest, the Mayor was in the process of inviting former
President Jimmy Carter to visit Beit Ummar. President Carter and his wife
Rosalyn visited the village in the early 1980s. Beit Ummar named one of its
quarters after Jimmy Carter.

CPT has had a relationship with Beit Ummar for ten years.

A video of the 3 August meeting with the mayor and of the 24 August
interview with his family will soon be available on the website. To view
farmers praying in the fields of Beit Ummar, go to

http://tinyurl.co.uk/kpu2

_______________

To stop receiving messages from CPTNET on MennoLink, do NOT hit reply. Send
a message with only the word, "suspend," in the body to
server@MennoLink.org.

Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) seeks to enlist the whole church in
organized, nonviolent alternatives to war and places teams of trained
peacemakers in regions of lethal conflict. Originally a violence-reduction
initiative of the historic peace churches (Mennonite, Church of the Brethren
and Quaker), CPT now enjoys support and membership from a wide range of
Christian denominations.

To express concerns, criticisms or affirmations to CPT's Chicago office send
messages to peacemakers@cpt.org. To express concerns, criticisms or
affirmations to CPT's Canadian office, send messages to
guest.996427@MennoLink.org.

To receive news or discussion of CPT issues by e-mail, fill out the form
found on our WEB page at http://www.cpt.org/subscribe.php

Donate to CPT on-line with your credit card! Go to
http://cpt.org/donate.php and click the DONATE button to make a
contribution through Network for Good, a secure way to help support CPT.



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Sep 01 2006 - 13:28:31 EDT