Trial to Begin of Ahed Tamimi, Palestinian Teen Who Hit Soldiers

Ahed Tamimi, at the Ofer military court in the West Bank, on December 25, 2017. (Flash90)

Tel Aviv, MINA – The trial of Ahed Tamimi, a Palestinian teenager turned protest symbol who hit Israeli soldiers in a viral video, will begin on Tuesday.

Tamimi will face 12 charges, including assault and incitement, in the Ofer Military Court in the West Bank, DPA reported.

Her trial, which will likely take months, has sparked immense public interest and international condemnations of the minor’s imprisonment.

Palestinians see Tamimi as a hero who opposes Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank, while Israel says she is an agitator who attempts to provoke soldiers on film as part of a Palestinian PR campaign.

In the video, the 17-year-old with curly blonde hair is seen slapping and punching two Israeli soldiers who entered the driveway of the family’s home during a protest in Tamimi’s hometown of Nabi Saleh.

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International human rights groups, the European Union, and others have criticized Israel’s handling of Tamimi, which has placed scrutiny on the Israeli military court system that Palestinian youths face in the West Bank.

Tamimi’s case is connected to Nabi Saleh, which has staged weekly demonstrations since 2009, after the Israeli army restricted Palestinian access to nearby lands, making way for Jewish settlers in the area.

Members of the Tamimi family, which numbers in the hundreds, have died and been arrested in the protests and Israeli commentators have accused them of placing minors in harm’s way. (T/RS5/RS1)

Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)