The trial of the Palestinian court of Tamimi began before an Israeli court in closed session











The Palestinian court of justice, which has become a symbol to confront the Israeli occupation after a video appeared in it, hitting two soldiers in her village, before an Israeli military court to be held in a closed session, Press.

The military court judge ordered the journalists to be removed from the courtroom as an open trial would not be in the interest of the 17-year-old and tried as a minor.

"Military law allows minors to be tried in closed sessions, and adults are not allowed to mix with minors," Tamimi lawyer Gaby Laski told reporters outside the court.

"But in an era court, from the very beginning the court was open."

Al-Tamimi, 17, was arrested in December after a video showing two Israeli soldiers were shot in her village of Nabi Saleh in the occupied West Bank.

"Even the prosecutor does not mind that the trial is open, but the court believes it is better for her not to be there, and not what is the best for the era," she said.

The Tamimi era has become an icon for Palestinians to share since childhood in confrontations with Israeli forces. If convicted, she could be sentenced to several years' imprisonment.

Nur and her family came close on Dec. 15 from two soldiers who were leaning against a wall in the village of Nabi Saleh in the occupied West Bank and started pushing them before kicking, slapping and punching them.

The tape, which has spread through social media outlets and the Israeli media, shows that the two armed soldiers did not respond to the two girls and retreated, while Naiman, the mother of Ahed, tried to intervene in an effort to force the soldiers to leave the house.

The incident occurred on a day of clashes across the occupied West Bank against US President Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
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