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Not a single African ever allowed in any of the Pali governments,Home Aussie Dave Why Doesn’t Black Lives Matter Speak Out Against Discrimination of Afro-palestinians in...
Why Doesn’t Black Lives Matter Speak Out Against Discrimination of Afro-palestinians in Palestinian Society?
By
David Lange
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June 29, 2020
In case you missed it, the Black Lives Matter organization in the UK yesterday got their Jew-hatred on, using the antisemitic trope that British politics is “gagged” in terms of debating Israel, a claim “particularly preposterous because Israel is one of the most-discussed foreign policy issues in this country.”
They then followed this with another 11 tweets on the topic.
And here’s the thing: If they were truly about Black lives mattering, why don’t they ever speak out against the Arab-Muslim slave trade?
Why Doesn't Black Lives Matter Speak Out Against Discrimination of Afro-palestinians in Palestinian Society?
(OBSERVATION)
But Mondoweiss reports thatIsraeli authorities have demolished a Palestinian drive-through coronavirus testing centre in the city of Hebron, south of the occupied West Bank.
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Raed Maswadeh, a 35-year-old engineer whose family owns the land in which the drive-through test service was being built, told Middle East Eye that three months ago the municipality had appealed to Palestinians to raise funds to build the facility.
“My family decided to donate our land at the northern entrance of Hebron for the purpose of constructing a Covid-19 test clinic,” Maswadeh said.
It was built in the memory of his grandfather, who died recently due to coronavirus, and Maswadeh said the project cost his family around $250,000.
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Maswadeh said that they started building the centre without a permit, like many properities in the area.
“If we applied for a permit, we would not have gotten it. We thought maybe during Covid-19, there would be some exceptions,” he said.
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Maswadeh told MEE that construction had been ongoing for two months, while Israeli soldiers patrolled the area. The soldiers watched bulldozers and building equipment enter the site, but said nothing, according to Maswadeh.
However, on 12 July, they received a military order to stop the construction, which was handed to them by an Israeli army commander.
So when a local resident of Hebron approached the mayor about donating a plot of land to be used for a local field hospital, Abu Sneineh immediately got to work.
“We pulled together the funds from local donors and immediately began working on the field hospital,” Abu Sneineh said, adding that the plot of land is located right outside the entrance to Hebron city, near an intersection leading to Route 60, a main settler highway in the West Bank.
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But earlier this week, just a few days after construction on the field hospital began, a number of Israeli military jeeps pulled up beside the hospital’s skeleton frame.