Ahed Tamimi, 17, appeared fresh and confident as she entered the packed
courtroom. She briefly whispered to relatives in the back of the room before the
judge ordered everyone except her family out.
"Stay strong! Stay strong!" shouted her father, Bassem Tamimi.
Ahed Tamimi has been incarcerated since she was arrested on Dec. 19, four days
after she was filmed confronting the soldiers outside her West Bank home.
Israel has treated her actions as a criminal offense, indicting her on charges
of assault and incitement that could potentially lead to years in prison.
But Ahed Tamimi's supporters see a brave girl who struck two armed soldiers
outside her West Bank home in frustration after having just learned that Israeli
troops seriously wounded a 15-year-old cousin, shooting him in the head from
close range with a rubber bullet during nearby stone-throwing clashes.
The teen with the large curly mane of blond hair, who turned 17 in jail last
month, has become the latest symbol of the long-running battle between
Palestinians and Israelis over global public opinion.
Israel's full-throttle prosecution of Tamimi, one of an estimated 300
Palestinian minors in Israeli jails, and a senior Israeli official's recent
revelation that he once had parliament investigate whether the blond, blue-eyed
Tamimis are a "real" Palestinian family have helped stoke ongoing interest in
the case.
International human rights groups have criticized the aggressive prosecution,
and diplomats from the European Union and several European countries, including
Germany and the Netherlands, attended Tuesday's hearing as observers before they
were kicked out along with journalists.
SOURCE : Alalam