Beduinët në shkretëtirë gjatë viteve
Sud u Pretoriji izreći će 13. oktobra kaznu atletičaru Oskaru Pistoriusu, koji je proglašen krivim za ubistvo iz nehata svoje devojke Rive Stenkamp. Pistorijusu prijeti kazna zatvora do 15 godina. Sudija Tokozile Masipa prethodno je izjavila da tužilaštvo nije pružilo dovoljno dokaza da bi Pistorijus bio osuđen za ubistvo s predumišljajem. Olimpijski šampion ubio je svoju djevojku 14. februara 2013. godine u njihovoj kući u Pretoriji. Priznao je da je pucao, ali je rekao da ju je ubio greškom pošto je mislio da je u kuću upao provalnik.
Palestinian protesters run as Israeli border policemen fire a stun grenade duringa demonstration to show solidarity with Bedouin citizens, near the West Bank village of Hizma, south-east of Ramallah August 1, 2013.
Israeli riot police fire tear gas at Israeli Arab and Palestinians activists during a protest against the Prawer Plan plan to resettle Israel’s Bedouin minority from their villages in the Negev Desert, in the village of Arara.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (center) talks with Joseph W. Westphal, U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, before boarding his plane at King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, Sept. 12, 2014.
A general view of an unauthorized Bedouin village in the northern Negev Desert March 23, 2006.
Rahat, one of seven Israeli-built Bedouin cities in the Negev Desert.
Supermarket in the Bedouin city of Rahat
Unrecognized Bedouin Settlement in Israel's Negev Desert.
Unrecognized Bedouin Settlement in Israel's Negev Desert
Sophia Demos sits with her daughter, Evniki Tsokanis, 4, among a sea of American flags during a memorial in Matthews, N.C., on the 13th anniversary of the Sept. 11, terrorist attacks.
A woman holds a mock iPhone 6 plus (L) and an iPhone 5s as she waits in a line, ahead of the September 19 release of iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, in front of an Apple Store at Tokyo's Ginza shopping district, Japan.
A traveler couple kiss as they sit on a large pot with sunflowers outside Schiphol Airport's passenger terminal in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Bedouin men sit in a village known by Bedouin Arabs as al-Arakib, one of many ramshackle desert communities whose names have never appeared on any official map, November 2, 2011.
Bedouin tent near Israeli-built city of Rahat, ca. 1955
An aerial view shows a damaged bridge across the River Tawi at Mandal village on the outskirts of Jammu, India.
Beersheva Market Place, January 18, 1940
Bedouin shiekhs at horse/camel race meet, Beersheva, May 4, 1940.
Unidentified Bedouin sheikh of Beersheva, June, 1938.
Well at Beersheva in the northern Negev Desert, 1930
Young Bedouin woman spinning wool, 1932.
Bedouins and British officers celebrating the end of the 1930 locust campaign at Beersheva. The first in a succession of swarms appeared in the Jordan valley at the end of October 1929. The extensive use of poison baits in the Beersheba area led to concerns that arsenic was being washed out by winter rains and contaminating cisterns used to collect rain water.
Bedouins watching camel races at celebrating marking end of locust campaign, June 30, 1930
Beersheva Bedouins, ca. 1930
Sheikh Hamed Al-Sane at Beersheva, ca. 1920 - 1933. The Bedouin were often exoticized, romanticized and sentimentalized by Europeans, as this portrait would suggest
Bedouin woman and children in tent near Beersheba, ca. 1920-1930. At the time--and up until the mid 20th Century, the Bedouin were known as the "Arabs of Beersheba (‘arab as-saba’). The Bedouins called themselves 'Arab'
Bedouins in marketplace, ca. 1905
Bedouin man, ca. 1905
Bedouin Sheikh M'salam ibn Said with the Turkish governor (Mutasarrif) of Jerusalem, Ali Akram (Ekram) Bey, at opening of Beersheba
Photo shows the official opening of Beersheba by the Ottoman Turkish government before World War I. By 1906, the town consisted of 50 buildings, including a mosque and a police station
Beersheva, c. 1900. The town was founded in 1900 by the Ottomans as an administrative center from which they could keep the Bedouin in check. The town quickly grew to be the 'capital' of the Negev. The Bedouin Sheiks of the region settled there--and began building with stone for the first time