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The Palestinian Vice-Prime Minister kidnapped by Israel
by Silvia Cattori
The Palestinian Vice-Prime Minister, Mr Naser Shaer, was kidnapped on 19
August by Israeli soldiers. Few weeks ago, Voltairenetwork published an
exclusive interview with this very respectful personality by the
Palestinians. Mr Naser Shaer, 45 years old, became Vice-Prime Minister and
Minister of Education in the new Palestinian Government formed by Hamas on
March 2006. Former rector of the Faculty of Law at the National University
of Al Najah in Nablus, Mr Shaer is a moderate person. He does not belong
to any political party, and is not a member of Hamas as widespread in the
media. Tasneem, his eldest daughter, gives to Voltairenetwork, in a very
simple and sober way, her account of the abduction of Mr Shaer and the bad
and humiliating conditions of his detention.
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Silvia Cattori: Were you there when 30 Israeli military vehicles surrounded Mr Shaer’s home and took him away? What pretext did the Israeli soldiers use to justify this kidnapping, and what did Mr Shaer answer them? Tasneem Shaer:
It was four o’clock in the morning when the Israeli soldiers surrounded
our two storey house, and started banging on the door after waking up our
neighbours. _ I opened the door and the Israeli officer ordered everybody
in the house to come outside and he even told my mother to wake up my 9
years old sister and 7 years old brother, without even caring how early in
the morning it was. The officer asked my father about his job and what he
does, so my father replied: " I am the minister of
Education and Higher Education and my job is to manage the performance of
schools and universities in Palestine." Silvia Cattori: Unknown to the outside world until that day, the face of Mr Shaer suddenly appeared on TVs and newspapers all over the world. The Israeli military spokesman presented that operation like something which is part of the « fighting against the Hamas terror organisation»? Did your family make any complaint to the Israeli government who suggest that Mr Shaer would be a member of a “terror organisation”? Tasneem Shaer: My father, Naser Shaer, is known to be a very mild person that entered the government as an independent man. He was chosen to be a minister in the new Palestinian government because he is known to be a highly educated person carrying a PhD degree, and a former university teacher. What made him accept such a position is his will to make education grow in Palestine and to allow others to get the knowledge, and that is why you find him as the minister of Education and Higher Education. So, my family is not the only group that says that my father is not a terrorist, nor a member of Hamas. All people in Palestine agree on that; to them it is a fact that needs no questioning. Silvia Cattori: Press agencies like AFP, for instance, wrote: « Israeli soldiers have arrested (…) Naser Shaer, member of Hamas”. And on this basis all the media repeated that. Did you ask AFP to correct this wrong assertion? Tasneem Shaer:
Well, I would like to remind any press agency covering what happens in
Palestine that the major ethical rule of journalism is not to be biased
and not to take sides; instead, each journalist should be accurate when
covering events around the world and should listen to all the sides
related in the covered event. But what we see here, in Palestine, is that
most press agencies only take words from the mouths of the Israeli
government, without bothering about the other side which is the
Palestinian one. Silvia Cattori: Could this Israeli abuse be considered an “arrest” and presented as a normal and legal arrest? According to international law, is not the kidnapping and arbitrary detention a crime? Are not Mr Shaer and all the ministers and MPs abducted by the Israelis to be considered sequestered people? Tasneem Shaer: "Arrested" is a word used when talking about a criminal who broke the law or carried out an act that disturbed the security and peace of others. But such a description doesn’t suit my father’s acts and personality. Also it is known that my father is a minister in a government that came about through elections that were described by international observers, including American ones, as totally just, fair and clean. This testimony makes my father and all his partners in the government and the Legislative council as people who are legitimate ministers and governmental people that have international protection according to the international law, the protection of which America and its followers claim to be fighting for. This makes the act of taking my father who was sleeping among his family members, at four o’clock in the morning, an act of kidnapping, and not of arresting as Israel is trying to make the world believe. This leads me to saying that Israel is a country that puts all international laws behind its back and goes around killing and kidnapping any person carrying a Palestinian nationality, and I believe that such actions can’t be denied because the cameras show everything and don’t lie. Silvia Cattori: Did Mr Shaer lately take less precaution than before? Is it the first time that your family is confronted with such a difficult event? Since the night of his abduction, did you get any news of him? Where is he, is he well treated? Tasneem Shaer:
My father began to take precautions when the Israeli soldiers came the
first time and kidnapped the other ministers from Ramallah, but he wasn’t
at home then. For less than a week he would sleep outside the house and
change his place when knowing that Israeli vehicles were entering the
city, but he continued to go to the ministry and to run it every day. But
this didn’t last; as I said, after less than a week, he returned to live
his life normally; he returned to sleep at home among his family and, for
his work, he didn’t stop at all. My father always told us that Israel only
cares about stopping the Palestinians from having a free life and this
would allow it to do anything, even kidnapping. He believed that he was
totally free and far from doing anything that would work against him if
taken to prison by Israel, so there is no need for him to run away or
hide. Why should he? All he does is acceptable throughout the world and he
is always ready challenging anyone who says anything else. Silvia Cattori: To see a battalion of Israeli soldiers entering Ramallah to kill and kidnap people is just something usual in Palestine. But the kidnapping of a peaceful minister of an elected government is something very controversial. How did the diplomacy react? Which state did condemn Israel for the kidnapping of Mr Saher? Tasneem: The kidnapping of my father was condemned by a number of Arab, European and Islamic countries. Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, and other Arab countries, condemned the act, while France was the first European country to state clearly that it rejected this act and considered it totally unacceptable.
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