By Fayha Shalash for Palestine Chronicle
The policy of collective punishment against the families of ‘wanted persons’ has long been adopted by Israel but intensified in conjunction with the ongoing aggression on the Gaza Strip.
Dunia Dawoud, 52, is still in mourning over her son Tariq, 17, who was killed by the Israeli occupation army several days ago near Qalqilya, north of the West Bank.
Tariq was only released last November by the Israeli occupation authorities along with other Palestinian boys on an exchange deal for a number of Israeli detainees held by the Resistance Movement Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Following his release, Israel claimed Tariq was a ‘wanted person’ for allegedly joining armed groups in the refugee camps located in the northern West Bank.
During this period, Israel was on the lookout for Tariq, constantly chasing after the young boy. Not content with this, the Israeli army also subjected his family to all forms of repressive measures, which included arresting his parents and siblings and raiding his home dozens of times.
The policy of collective punishment against the families of ‘wanted persons’ has long been adopted by Israel but intensified in conjunction with the ongoing aggression on the Gaza Strip.
This policy has reached the point of punishing members of families of ‘wanted persons’ or those imprisoned in an attempt to achieve what it labels as the ‘Deterrence Equation.’
This policy, however, did not affect the growth of armed resistance in the West Bank. Nonetheless, it did not deter Israel from pursuing it either.
Humiliating a Family
During the period the Israeli army was on the lookout for her son, Tariq’s mother was arrested 14 times, in order to pressure the boy to surrender himself.
On each arrest, Dunia was subjected to verbal and physical violence, shoving, restraining, blindfolding, and being forced to stay for hours in the extreme cold or heat before being released after several days and then re-arrested again.
‘One time, they forced me to take off all my clothes, then they searched me, tied me up, and placed me blindfolded in a portable iron room. When they unblindfolded me, I found myself in a room with seven captive men,’ she said.
Tariq’s father was also arrested more than ten times even though he suffers from diabetes and nerve problems in his hands. He was handcuffed anyway until he started screaming.
Maher and Khaled, Tariq’s brothers, were also arrested and abused. On one occasion, Maher was badly beaten while tied up and left naked in the open. Israeli soldiers prevented him from going to the bathroom and forced him to urinate on himself while they laughed and filmed him.
‘In addition, my son-in-law was arrested, beaten, and insulted, and the homes of Tariq’s uncles were broken into and vandalized,’ Dunia explained.
‘They kept telling me to ask him to surrender himself, they would say things like ‘go and bring him home,’ and although I told them that I did not know his whereabouts, they continued to insult me and arrest me because their goal was to frighten me and his family,’ Dunia continued.