From the BBC:
"Palestinian girl charged after slapping soldier on video"
Israeli authorities have charged a Palestinian teenager with assault after a video of her hitting and pushing Israeli soldiers went viral. Ahed Tamimi, 17, and her cousin were filmed in a confrontation with the soldiers that was widely shared by Palestinians on social media. She faces 12 charges including aggravated assault and throwing stones. But the family say they were involved in legitimate resistance during protests in the occupied West Bank. Israel's military says the soldiers were preventing Palestinians from throwing stones at nearby motorists. The video, filmed on 15 December, shows a group of women including Tamini shouting at, hitting and kicking two heavily-armed Israeli soldiers. It was widely circulated online, and many Palestinians have hailed Tamimi as a hero of the resistance to Israeli occupation. On Sunday, her cousin, Nour Tamimi, was charged with assault and disturbing soldiers from carrying out their duties. Her mother, who filmed the video and posted it on Facebook, has also been charged. At the time of her arrest, Ahed's father said soldiers had fired tear gas and broken windows at the family's house. Bassem Tamimi, a prominent activist, added that Ahed's 14-year-old cousin, Mohammed, had also been hit in the face with a rubber bullet fired by Israeli soldiers. Mohammed was reportedly wounded during a weekly protest in the village of Nabi Salih where the Israeli military said more than 200 Palestinians threw stones. "Several Palestinians entered a nearby home and continued throwing rocks at soldiers from inside the home with its occupants' consent," the military said. "Forces removed the rioters from the home and remained standing in the entrance in order to prevent further entry. Later, several Palestinian women came out to face the soldiers in order to incite provocation." The military said an investigation had determined that an infantry company commander was one of the two soldiers shown being confronted in the video, and that he had "conducted himself professionally by not responding in kind". In the video, the girl identified as Ahed can be heard telling the soldiers to leave the entrance to the home. When they do not move, she punches and kicks the soldiers. A second girl and a woman also push and kick the soldiers later in the video. Last month, Mr Tamimi told the Israeli newspaper Yedioth Aharonth that the incident in the video took place after the soldiers "entered the grounds of the house, started throwing gas grenades around and broke the house's windows". "Their conduct may seem humane at that instance, but I don't think their general conduct that day was humane. I'm proud of my daughter and what she did", he said. Two years ago, Ahed Tamimi was in a video which went viral in which she was seen biting the hand of an Israeli soldier holding a Palestinian boy who the army said had been throwing stones. Palestinian activists praised her actions, while many in Israel accused her family of using her as a propaganda tool.
^ It is people like Ahed Tamimi and those that praise her the Palestinians are still seen as violent terrorists who will do anything to destroy Israel and kill Jews. She may not be considered a terrorist, but she is not a symbol (at least not a good one.) I would have respect for her and her convictions if she was non-violent and used civil disobedience rather than attacking people like she did. The fact that she is 17 years old just shows that her family have not brought her up in the correct way and that is just sad. Until the Palestinians realize that their violent actions (whether with bombs or assaults) have never worked - in the nearly 70 years since Israel's independence - to get them what they want (a state of their own) and stop using violence and start using common sense (doing something for 70 years with the same result and yet expecting a different result isn't very intelligent), diplomacy and non-violent means then they will continue to not have hope of a future country for themselves. ^
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