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Mandate for TIPH foreign observer force in Hebron officially ends

(PHOTO: A TIPH member takes a photo of a Jewish
resident of Hebron. Credit: Elimelech Karzen. Below: TIPH observers walk through
Hebron. Credit: Elimelech Karzen.)


 


TIPH is finally leaving Israel after a public campaign to expose
corruption and anti-Israel bias in the foreigner observer group. After 22 years,
the Temporary International Presence in Hebron will finally end their temporary mandate
which saw the group patrolling the streets of in search of human rights violations
allegedly committed by Israelis against Palestinian Authority residents. The
mandate was renewed every six month.


 


Following Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s
announcement that he would not renew TIPH’s mandate at
the end of January, another foreign NGO, the EAPPI announced they would also leave the
city out of fear of “settler violence,” although no such incidents against them have
been reported. The Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel, a program
of the World Council of Churches, has also been accused of anti-Israeli bias and
harassment of on-duty Israeli Defense Force soldiers.


 



 


TIPH observers “created an atmosphere of conflict, not a congenial atmosphere
of peace,” stated Yishai Fleisher, international spokesperson for the Jewish community
of Heron. “Jews and Arabs have inhabited the city for
decades. We know each other and I’m sure we’ll find a way to get along without
Norwegian help,” he said referring to one of the countries from which the observers were
recruited. Fleisher clarified that “everybody keeps using the words ‘evicted,’
‘ousted’ or ‘expelled’ but no, their term ran out.” 


 


The group was created as part of the 1997 Hebron Accords that divided
the city giving 80% to the Palestinian Authority. (Read full text
here
.)


 


Together we proved that it is possible to bring to an
end to many years of injustice and folly and to allow for a more reasonable life in
the City of our Forefathers,” stated Elimelech Karzen, social media coordinator and
local activist for the Jewish community. He thanked Im Tirtzu, My Israel, the
Yesha Council, and the many Members of Knesset who supported the cause in recent
months.


 


Matan Peleg, head of Im Tirtzu group which leads college student trips
to Hebron called it “an important move that strengthens Israeli sovereignty. The
phenomenon in which foreign governments are working from within Israel to weaken the
state must stop.”


 


David Wilder, veteran spokesman for the Jewish community, remembered
when TIPH first arrived in Hebron. He celebrated the end of TIPH in an editorial in
which he reminisced meeting with members of the group. He described one
individual as never having known the Cave of Machpela had a Jewish history. Others
had openly met with PLO leader Yasser Arafat. Another TIPH member asked Wilder why
Hebron Jews were apprehensive to the group to which he replied, “how would you feel if
strangers who didn’t speak your language followed your children around, filming
them everywhere they went?” 


 


TENSIONS WITH ARAB RESIDENTS


 


The Palestinian Authority, and several foreign politicians decried the
ousting of TIPH, but some Arab residents are breathing a sigh of
relief.


 


British journalist Katie Hopkins visited Hebron in July 2018 and met with
both Jews and Arabs in the city. One resident was Ghassan Jabari, a Muslim shopkeeper,
who told her that he thought the foreign NGOs were an impediment to peace. “It’s all
about making money from foundations abroad,” Jabari said, adding, “there will be a
higher opportunity to find peace” without the flow of money from international
organizations.


 



 


Money is one of the scandals that prompted the Israeli government not to
renew the TIPH mandate. 


 


In December reports revealed that TIPH has been accused of bank fraud and
other crimes. ‎TIPH’s former chief procurement and financial officer Bennet Nygaard
Solum testified “I investigated fraud ‎allegations against three local employees who
were ‎accused of drawing checks from the Arab Bank in ‎Hebron. The case centered around
checks that were ‎not delivered to a supermarket that was our main ‎supplier,” Nygaard
Solum stated in an affidavit.

 

Local ‎employees embezzled the money but “TIPH’s legal adviser instructed me not to
mention ‎this incident in a hearing we had in 2011,” he said.‎

 

He also spoke of a 2009 previous fraud case which involved “incorrect sums in
‎procurement orders, which didn’t match what was ‎actually received by the purchasing
department.”


 


Following the announcement not to renew the charter, Haaretz
reported “support for it is scarcely found among Palestinians and left-wing
activists in Hebron. Many activists, who refused to speak about TIPH, admitted off the
record that it did very little apart from going around the city in their white vehicles,
carrying easily recognizable red license plates.”


 


TIPH OFFICIAL SLAPS JEWISH BOY


 


But the real headlines came this summer when the legal adviser to TIPH slapped a ten-year-old Jewish boy
in the face, sending his kippah flying off his head. The TIPH official had been touring
the city with the contentious Breaking the Silence group, something not allowed
according to their charter. 


 


Following the slapping incident, it was revealed that an earlier incident
involving TIPH was caught on film. A member of the observer group punctured the tire of a vehicle
belonging to a Jewish Hebron resident. In both cases, TIPH hushed up the
incident.


 



 


In December, a special tribute to the Jewish community of Hebron was held at
the Knesset attended by top elected officials. One by one, MKs and cabinet ministers
praised the Hebron Jews and called for TIPH’s ouster.


 



 


PLO Secretary-General Saeb Erekat bashed Israel for the decision and demanded
foreign observers for the protection of Arabs in eastern Jerusalem and throughout Judea
and Samaria as well. The idea of having a foreign observer force patrol all Jewish areas
over the post-1967 borders was proposed during the Oslo Accords
negotiations.


 


TIPH has faced violence from the Arab community in the past. On March 26,
2002 two TIPH observers, Catherine Berruex of Switzerland and Turgut Cengiz Toytunç of
Turkey were killed in an ambush shooting by a Palestinian Arab gunman near Halhul, a
city adjacent to Hebron. On February 8, 2006 following an attack on their headquarters
by rioting Palestinian Authority residents, all TIPH observers were temporarily
withdrawn from the city.


 


NOTES:


 











 


PAST ARTICLES ON TIPH


 









 


VISIT HEBRON TODAY!


 

United States contact info:



http://www.hebronfund.org

1760 Ocean Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11230

718-677-6886

info@hebronfund.org

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/hebronofficial

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/hebronfund


Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jewishcommunityofhebron/



Israeli contact info:

http://en.hebron.org.il/

02-996-5333

office@hebron.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hebron.machpela

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/hebronvideo


Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jewishcommunityofhebron/



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