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IDF fire tear-gas at Ni'ilin protesters

Media Summary

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village in the West Bank, near Ramallah. This village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of a barrier which will remove ⅓ of Ni'lin's land. Ni'ilin, Palestine. 27/03/2009.
in Society, on the 27th of March 2009
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44913
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44894
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44895
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44896
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44897
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44898
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44899
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44900
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44901
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44902
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44903

Weekly demonstrations against a nearby expansion of the Israeli West Bank barrier in Ni'ilin.

ID: 44907
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44908
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44909
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44910
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44911
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44914
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44912
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44915
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44916
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44919
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44922
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44920
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44921
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site.
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.

ID: 44918
Posted by:

Photojournalist currently based in Ramallah, OPT M. 00972595772101

Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.
Ni'ilin is a Palestinian village located in the West Bank, near Ramallah. For about a year this village has been the theatre of violent protests against the construction of the wall. The planned barrier will cut through Ni'ilin leaving many unable to freely access their lands. And the constant presence of the IDF and Border police, as it is common during construction in order to prevent sabotage, does not improve the situation.
Every Friday after prayer crowds gather in the main road and begin walking towards the wall. With every passing week the demonstration is stopped farther and farther from the site. 
On March 27, when the pictures were taken, the crowd set off at around 12pm from the hospital to walk only 100m to the main road. At this point, in the middle of the village, the IDF started firing tear gas at the peaceful crowd.
The answer to the firing came shortly after, when young men began throwing stones at police positions.
The clashes went on for a few hours until about 4pm.

On Friday March 13th, Tristan Anderson, an American human rights activist, was critically injured during one such demonstration in Ni'ilin. He was shot at in the head with a newly adopted tear gas canister that can travel up to 400m, is equipped with a mid-air propeller, is silent and does not leave a smoke trail behind. Anderson is still in hospital in critical conditions. So far, four Palestinians, including a 10 year old child, have been killed by the IDF and Border police since the beginning of the demonstrations.