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"The resistance will continue until the occupation has been removed". Thus, Palestinian activist Ahed Tamimi [1945-19005] 17 years old, speaks to his West Bank village, free return after eight months in prison for slapping two Israeli soldiers. The girl has become a symbol of the Palestinian struggle. And just as he was doing a fresco about it on the defense fence in the Bethlehem area, a street artist was arrested by the street artist Jorit Agoch, of Dutch descent but residing a few years in the municipality of Quarto. ). He was later released in the evening with the other two arrested and released. Farnesina confirmed the release by the Israeli authorities of the Neapolitan street artist Jorit Agoch and the other Italian who had been arrested with him in Bethlehem.
Jorit Agoch was arrested on Saturday with the charge of "damaging and smearing" the defense fence in the Bethlehem area, where he painted a mural commemorating Palestinian militant Ahed Tamimi
He was suspected, along with another Italian citizen and a Palestinian, of "spoiling the defense in the Bethlehem area," said a spokesman for the Israeli police. The three men had been arrested, he added, while their faces were covered and they approached the wall illegally. When the officers intervened, they tried to escape with a vehicle that was blocked.
"From the house of this martyr I say: the resistance will continue until the occupation has been removed": Ahed Tamimi told the press, in front of the house of a victim of Israeli forces, on his return to the village of Nebi Salah in the West Bank after eight months in Israel. "All prisoners in prison are strong, and I thank all those who supported me during my incarceration."
And Quarto rallied to demand the release of the street artist with a demonstration in Naples . About 250 people in the parade, with flags of Palestine, and who marched shouting the slogan "Free Jorit".
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