Video shows Israeli soldier kneeling on elderly Palestinian protester's neck
Israeli security forces suppressed a Palestinian farmer in the occupied West Bank city of Tulkarm on Tuesday. The video footages showed an Israeli soldier kneeling on the head of an elderly Palestinian protester. The video circulating on social media uncovered that the Israeli soldier struggling to restrain 65-year old Khairi Hannoun.
- World
- AP
- Published Date: 12:34 | 02 September 2020
- Modified Date: 03:42 | 02 September 2020
A video circulating on social media appears to show an Israeli soldier kneeling on a Palestinian protester's neck while arresting him during a demonstration in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday.
The 65-year-old protester said he was not seriously injured. Palestinians and Israeli rights groups often accuse Israeli security forces of using excessive force to disperse Palestinian protests.
Those confrontations have come under heightened scrutiny amid the recent protests over racial injustice in the United States, as some Palestinians have sought to link their cause to the Black Lives Matter movement. The U.S. protests were sparked by the killing of George Floyd, a Black man who died in police custody after a white officer kneeled on his neck for several minutes as he cried out that he couldn't breathe.
The video circulating Tuesday shows an Israeli soldier struggling to restrain Khairi Hannoun, a Palestinian protester, as other troops raise their rifles and call on a group of news photographers to back away. The soldier eventually wrestles Hannoun to the ground and then appears to kneel on his neck and back while putting him in handcuffs.
Hannoun said he was with dozens of demonstrators near the West Bank town of Tulkarem who were protesting Israeli plans to build an industrial park. Israel seized the West Bank in the 1967 war and the Palestinians view it as the heartland of their future state.
Hannoun said he pushed a soldier who had aimed his rifle at the protesters, setting off the scuffle.
"The Israeli soldiers hit me hard and one of them pressed his knee against my neck for a few minutes," he told The Associated Press. "I stayed still to avoid more pressure on my neck, but people pulled me out."
Hannoun said he suffered bruising but no serious injuries.
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