Israeli settlers prevent a Christian service in Beit Sahour, assault worshippers
Over two hundred Israeli settlers assaulted Palestinian and International worshippers who were holding a prayer service at Ush Ghrab park in Beit Sahour Wednesday evening.

Settlers trying to force worshippers out                    (Photo: Rami Rishmawi-IMEMC)
As the mass started the settlers, who organized an activity                    in the same site, started to provoke the worshippers and asked                    them to leave, eyewitnesses reported.
Settlers also                    threatened some of the local and international journalists who                    were present.  The Israeli soldiers who were there asked                    the internationals and the Palestinians to leave the park and                    did not attempt to stop the settlers when they started to                    force everyone to leave, the witnesses said.
The city                    council of Beit Sahour is planning to build a children                    hospital in the site in cooperation with intentional                    organization CURE.  However, the Israeli army imposed a                    military order on the designated area and the settlers started                    to frequently plan activities on the site and claimed that the                    land belongs to them and that they want to built a settlement                    on this land.
The worshippers raised their prayers for                    the sake of the children of Bethlehem in order to have the                    planned hospital built.
The settlers, who come from the                    neighboring illegal settlements of Har Homa and Efrat and                    others in the Bethlehem area, erased murals that some                    Palestinian and international activists had made a week ago                    and wrote some racist graffiti, calling for the death of                    Arabs.
Ush Ghrab was occupied by the Israeli army in 1967 and was used as a military base. In 2006 the army abandoned the site and the city council in Beit Sahour rehabiliatated the site and turned part of it into a public park, and had a plan to build a hospital on the rest of it, in addition to some other facilities that would server the local community in Bethlehem.
George N. Rishmawi
The Palestinian Center for Rapprochement between People (PCR)
www.pcr.ps , www.imemc.org
 
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