Here are the headlines from Mondoweiss for 08/18/2010: Two weeks later, Palestinians arrested in shocking video remain in Israeli prison Aug 17, 2010 11:06 pm | Adam Horowitz Gideon Levy has interviewed the Jabari family featured in the video above. The article only seems to be available on Haaretz's Hebrew language website, but Noam Sheizaf translated the following excerpt. Sheizaf also adds that Fadel and Wadee Jabari, whose arrest was shown in the video, are still in Israeli prison, awaiting trial: Last Sunday the Jabaris went to visit the family's grandfather, Badran Jaberi. Palestine, Khaled's mother is a teacher. Fadel, his father, is a peddler of clothes and curtains. The couple has three small children. Khaled [the boy seen in the clip], aged four and two months, is the older. Grandfather Badran, Palestine's mother, was a professor of sociology and active member in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. He spent 12 years in Israeli prison, nine of them without trial, until he became a farmer. Israel has never allowed him to leave the West Bank. Badran, aged 65, has 11 acres east of Kiryat Arba – a vegetables garden and a vineyard. The family of his youngest daughter, who lives in the north of Hebron, went there last week to spend a few days of the summer vacation. On the first day of their visit, Khaled joined his grandfather and together they went to work in the field where the zucchini, tomatoes and cucumbers are grown. A dog the child adopted accompanied them. Grandpa is calling Khaled by his nicknames: Jabber and Abbud. The family remained awake till late, eating, drinking and playing together. Badran talks about what happened in good Hebrew, which he learned at Damascus University in 1965. The next day, around six in the morning, the grandfather woke up to the sound of military vehicles approaching the house. He says it was a convoy of 20 vehicles: trucks, jeeps and bulldozers, border police forces, Police, Civil Administration and IDF. An entire army has raided his fields. He went outside to ask what this was all about, but the policemen ordered him to return home immediately. He asked to speak with the officer in charge, but an officer told him the Civil Administration's infrastructure officer has not arrived yet. "This is my field, what are you doing here? Rome will burn before Nero arrives," he answered the policemen and soldiers, though it is doubtful if they knew what he was talking about. Badran had already experienced such raids: the affair regarding him tapping into the water network that crosses his fields has been going on for a long time, and included many such raids by the Civil Administration, which upholds the law only when Palestinians are concerned. The noise made the grandmother come out as well. She was pushed by the soldiers and fell on the ground. They [the soldiers and policemen] began to dismantle the plumbing and to load the pipes on the truck. In doing so, they tore the plastic sheets and hurt the crops. Badran says that whenever he tried to speak with the officer in charge, they pushed him and cursed him: "Go home, old bastard." To his daughter, Wissam, they referred as "a slut." Badran was handcuffed, while the action continued. Meanwhile, the younger son Wadee woke up. Badran says he told his son to get back to the house, but one of the officers ordered: "The SOB has boys, arrest the son." Wadee entered the house and run away from the back door, chased by the border police soldiers. "We were afraid for the child," says Badran. Later, Wadee was caught [picture right] and his father tried to rescue him from the soldiers (Badran says his son was beaten). Then woke the eldest son, Fadel, little Khaled's father. He went outside barefoot, wearing only his pajamas, and was beaten as well. Badran says his son was knocked down three or four times. "We tried to talk to the officer, but it did not help. He just said [to the soldiers]: 'arrest all those disturbing you. The old man too.'" Badran says he tried to calm his sons. He remembered how in a previous raid on his fields, on July 6, soldiers threw stun grenades and fired rubber coated bullets. "After that, they took my child, Fadel, and Khaled woke up and tried to rescue his father," Badran continues. "The boy was barefoot, he wept and shouted and fell several times between the legs of soldiers and the policemen. Khaled tried to defend his father and his uncle Wadee. 'I want my father,' he cried. When they took Fadel to the Jeep I told them: 'Arrest me as well. What shall we live from? You took everything.' I couldn't take it any more. I sat and wept and told the border police officer: 'You are harder than the stones here. You have no heart; you have no brain, look at what you are doing. You took everything'". A Palestinian photographer working for Reuters captured the events and passed the images on. Fadel and Wadee were taken to the Kiryat Arba police station. Their father immediately sent a lawyer to the station, but he wasn't allowed to meet them. The police told the father that they were taken to the Etzion detention facility. At Etzion he was told that Fadel remained there and that Wadee was taken to Ofer facility, near Ramallah. Last Thursday the two brothers were detained for six more days, in which they will be charged with assaulting five soldiers. The border police spokesperson told Haaretz that "during enforcement action against water thieves in the southern Hebron hills, the police and army force was attacked with stones. Two people involved in the riot were arrested. During the arrest, as can be seen in the photos, the family chose to make a cynical use of a child, which was staged and directed [by them]. Instead of acting responsibly and removing the child from the scene, they chose to engage in cheap Anti-Israeli propaganda, deliberately aimed at presenting us in a negative way in the world." Sheizaf: Regarding the context of the affair, Levy writes: In 1995 a water pipeline was constructed through the fields of Badran from the town Banni Na'im to the settlement of Tkoa. Badran asked the Israeli water company to connect him the pipeline passing through his field (…) and was referred to the municipality of Banni Na'im. Badran claims he received a permit from the municipality to connect to the water line. After a few days the army came and confiscated the plumbing. Badran turned to the Palestinian Water Authority in Ramallah, where they gave him and three of his neighbors a permit to connect to the water line. After a month, the Israeli Civil Administration came back, deemed the connection illegal, and confiscated the pipes [for the first time]. Badran says that a Civil Administration officer once told him: "I do not want to see something green on your fields. I want to see everything yellow." Comment on this article > More evidence that Israel's image has dramatically shifted Aug 17, 2010 11:05 pm | Philip Weiss Robert Mackey of the Times did a good piece today about the former Israeli soldier's facebook photos of humiliated Palestinian prisoners. He mentions Breaking the Silence's collection of similar photos, he quotes a Palestinian on routine humiliation. He leads with the former soldier's statement that she feels like she did nothing wrong. A commenter named M. Junaid from New York wrote: In a pathetic but very real sense, this woman is right - within the context of a society such as Israel, there is indeed "nothing wrong" about humiliating and oppressing another people. That deterioration of any moral sense is exactly what happens in any colonizing country, whether it was France in Algeria or the British in Kenya. The difference, of course, is that the Israeli colonial project has no interest in pulling back to pre-1967 borders. For that, we can thank AIPAC and the American public that foolishly subsidizes Israeli colonialism, no matter how wrong it is or how much it alienates the entire Muslim world.
187 readers then recommended this comment. More than any other by far. Oh wait, Fizzy in Philadelphia comes close at 111: As a result of their "Ethno-Centric" consciousness, they [the Jewish people] have become like those who persecuted them for generations. Ultra nationalistic, egomaniacal, and militaristic. They have gained world power status at the expense of their soul as a people.
Something is stirring in the American elite consciousness... (Thanks to Peter Voskamp) Comment on this article > Maybe the U.S. bears some responsibility for intolerance in Afghanistan Aug 17, 2010 10:49 pm | Philip Weiss A week or so back Time Magazine ran that sensational cover of the Afghan woman whose nose and ears were cut off by her Taliban husband. The cover line was "What happens if we leave Afghanistan." Today in the Times there is a piece out of Afghanistan with the same message. It says that women's rights have collapsed wherever the Taliban holds sway, and lately a provincial couple who fell in love and eloped, at 25 and 19, were lured back to their home town and stoned to death, some of the stones delivered by family members. I hate these stories as much as any neocon. And yes they give me a certain discomfort with fundamentalist Islam. But I would like to point out an inconvenient fact and an inconvenient possibility: --the woman was disfigured (last year) and the couple were stoned to death (earlier this week) while the United States was occupying Afghanistan. I don't hear anyone arguing that we should have more troops than we do already in Afghanistan. And yet with all the troops we do have there, we could do nothing about either atrocity. --it is a fair possibility that our occupation in Afghanistan has contributed to this oppression. Robert Pape has shown that suicide bombings occur when there is a military occupation in which a religious difference exists between the occupied and the occupier; and maybe a similar principle holds for the destruction of women's and civil rights, occupation has a role. Occupation breeds desperate resistance, and resistance in these societies is necessarily rooted in the most traditional anti-western elements of the society, not in the great democracy that we are selling, with all those collateral civilian deaths from drones. I have been to Gaza and I can tell you that the most intolerant elements in Palestinian society were empowered by occupation and western opposition to Hamas. Virtually every Palestinian is opposed to occupation, and in opposing occupation, and working against their western foe, people turn to what is theirs, their traditional culture. You would too. Believe me they're not watching Sex in the City when Americans are killing Muslims right and left. The Time cover was shallow and manipulative. If we really thought we could stop honor killings, we'd be occupying countless countries in the Third World. But there is a further argument to be made that our presence is consolidating the worst elements in Afghanistan, and the way to stop young women from being disfigured and young couples from being stoned to death is to get out of the way of these people's self-determination and seek to influence them by other means. Comment on this article > Islamophobia in New York, Redux: We should have seen the 'ground zero' furor coming Aug 17, 2010 10:25 pm | Alex Kane When the Islamophobic furor against the proposed Muslim community center two-and-a-half blocks away from Ground Zero began to peak in mid-late July, some people wondered why it was occurring now, nine years after the 9/11 attacks. As the New York Times recently noted, an article published in the paper "last December about the project drew little negative comment." Daisy Khan, the wife of the imam who is spearheading the Cordoba House, told the Times that the possibility of their project being controversial "never occurred" to them. But there is no reason to be surprised at the anger over the community center. While others have pointed to the economy, or to the recent surge in thwarted homegrown "terror" plots, to explain the anger over the community center, one can read what's being played out as simply a continuation–albeit a much more intense strain–of the virulent anti-Muslim and anti-Arab sentiment that began after the September 11 attacks. Specifically, the concocted controversy over the Khalil Gibran International Academy (KGIA) in 2007 should have set off alarm bells about the power of Islamophobic activists whose aim is to shut Muslims and Arabs out of American public life. The Brooklyn academy, the nation's first dual-language Arabic public school, barely survived an onslaught of racist right-wing attacks against the school. Unfortunately, the founding principal, Debbie Almontaser, was not spared, and fell victim to an orchestrated smear campaign not unlike the one now targeting Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf. There are many parallels between the controversies around the Cordoba House and KGIA: both of the project's leaders–Rauf and Almontaser–are well-known and respected interfaith leaders in New York City; both campaigns were begun by right-wing, Islamophobic blogs and leaders and were only later picked up by mainstream media; and both campaigns smeared Islam and demonstrated a profound ignorance about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Imam Rauf is currently being tarred as a "radical Muslim" who supports al-Qaeda and wants to build the Muslim community center to celebrate "Islamic triumphalism." Almontaser, too, was painted as a Muslim radical and a "9/11 denier" whose school would secretly indoctrinate students to hate America and Israel and support sharia law. The hysteria about Rauf and Almontaser misses basic, sobering facts about the two leaders: both of them have demonstrated a profound commitment to interfaith understanding between Muslims and other groups in the U.S. after 9/11 and have sought to fight anti-Arab and anti-Muslim stereotypes. Rauf is a Sufi Muslim leader in New York who, as Fareed Zakaria in Newsweek put it, "speaks of the need for Muslims to live peacefully with all other religions…emphasizes the commonalities among all faiths…advocates equal rights for women, and argues against laws that in any way punish non-Muslims…His vision of Islam is bin Laden's nightmare." Almontaser was described as "the city's most visible Arab-American woman" in an excellent profile of her written by the New York Times' Andrea Elliott: After 9/11, Education Department officials had enlisted Ms. Almontaser to hold workshops on cultural sensitivity for schoolchildren. She spread the message that Islam was a peaceful religion. She told of how her own son had served as a National Guardsman in the clearing effort at ground zero. She was soon attending interfaith seminars, befriending rabbis and priests. Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg honored her publicly.
But none of these facts seem to matter to the bigots who are trying to take down Rauf and the proposed community center, or who successfully forced Almontaser to resign as head of KGIA. The current drive against the Islamic community center in Lower Manhattan was started by, as Salon's Justin Elliott has shown, "third-tier right-wing blogs, including Pamela Geller's Atlas Shrugs site," and quickly moved to the New York Post, as well as other mainstream media outlets. Republican politicians have now taken up the cause, and it's impossible to turn on cable news and not see a racist rant directed against Muslims in the U.S. The anti-Cordoba House movement has now reached a fever pitch, but it has not yet invented the "smoking gun" that would mean the downfall of the initiative, as they did in the case of Almontaser. There was a similar trajectory in the case of Almontaser and KGIA. As soon as plans for the school were announced in February 2007, Pamela Geller and friends begun a campaign to shut what they called a "madrassa in New York's public school system" down. Daniel Pipes, a neoconservative author who has made a career out of stoking fears of Muslims and Arabs in the Western world, and the so-called "Stop the Madrassa" coalition, were instrumental in the targeting of KGIA. Soon after the school was announced, assisted by columns by Pipes that mis-characterized and lied about the school, the story migrated to the New York Sun and eventually the New York Post. Almontaser's downfall came after the Post labeled her the "'intifada'" principal, as I reported for the Indypendent in September 2008: The intense media focus on KGIA peaked when the New York Post picked up the story. The DOE pressured Almontaser to agree to an interview with the Post. In an Aug. 6, 2007, article, the Post declared that Almontaser "defended" the use of the word "intifada" on a t-shirt made by Arab Women Active in the Arts and Media (AWAAM), a group whose only connection to Almontaser was that she was on the board of a Yemeni-American organization that at times shared office space with AWAAM. On Aug. 9, Deputy Mayor Dennis Walcott, following what Almontaser says was a directive from Mayor Bloomberg, forced Almontaser to resign as KGIA principal, saying that either she or the academy had to go. "That was the most horrendous and devastating 24 hours of my life," Almontaser says. "To experience working with people who admired me and respected me and who believed in me, and then just to see a complete shift, basically saying that 'you're the problem' … was absolutely devastating."
The quote used by the Post to claim that Almontaser "defended" the use of the word "intifada" on a shirt was found later to have been "inaccurately reported by The Post and then misconstrued by the press," according to a federal appeals court. In March of this year, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission found that New York City's Department of Education "succumbed to the very bias that the creation of the school was intended to dispel, and asmall segment of the public succeeded in imposing its prejudices on the DOE as an employer." The conflating of Islam with terrorism and a demonstrated ignorance about the religion is another common feature of the furor over KGIA and the Cordoba House. The opposition to the Islamic community center can only be justified by asserting collective Muslim guilt for the attacks of September 11, despite the fact that many Muslims died during the attack and the fact that al-Qaeda has killed more Muslims that any other religious group in the world. Furthermore–and this is not to say that other sects of Islam aren't also peaceful– Sufi Islam, which Imam Rauf is an adherent to, "couldn't be farther from the violent Wahhabism of the jihadists. [Rauf's] videos and sermons preach love, the remembrance of God (or "zikr") and reconciliation," as William Dalrymple writes today in the Times. In the case of KGIA, Pipes claimed that "Arabic instruction is heavy with Islamist and Arabist overtones and demands." According to Pipes, any teaching of Arabic is bound to promote Islamism–which, in Pipes' world, is all one and the same, an ideology that promotes terrorism and al-Qaeda. Lastly, let's turn to the Israel-Palestine angle. Imam Rauf has been pilloried for not condemning the Palestinian Hamas movement as a "terrorist organization," as they are labeled by the U.S. State Department. When asked about Hamas and terrorism, Rauf said, "Look, I'm not a politician. The issue of terrorism is a very complex question." And he's exactly right. The State Dept. list of "terrorist groups" is a highly politicized grouping. "Terrorism," in mainstream parlance, has no real meaning besides armed struggle against the West and Israel. If you support the U.S. or Israel, you're not a terrorist. To simply call Hamas a "terrorist" group is a disservice to understanding what Hamas, an Islamist movement, is. Hamas has committed terrorist acts; but by the same token, so has the U.S. and Israel, but on a far larger scale. Hamas is resisting a brutal occupation, whereas Israel is focused on continuing their colonization of Palestinian lands. Almontaser attempted to explain the origin of the word "intifada," which appeared on t-shirts made by Arab Women Active in the Arts and Media. The Post, in the article that led to Almontaser's forced resignation, spun her explanation as "downplaying" the significance of the t-shirts and the word intifada. The Post reported that the "inflammatory tees boldly declare 'Intifada NYC' – apparently a call for a Gaza-style uprising in the Big Apple." Further down in the story, they quote Pamela Hall, who fought against KGIA, as saying, "Intifada is a war. Isn't that what Arafat had?" Intifada, as Almontaser tried to explain in that Post article, "basically means 'shaking off.' That is the root word if you look it up in Arabic." As for what the Palestinian uprisings were: The first Palestinian intifada was largely nonviolent. And the second intifada, as Neve Gordon pointed out in his book Israel's Occupation, began as a nonviolent popular uprising, but only turned violent after Israel brutally suppressed the uprising, firing 1.3 million bullets into the West Bank and Gaza Strip after Israeli security forces were directed to "fan the flames", as Haaretz's Akiva Eldar reported in 2004. These misunderstandings and distortions about the situation in occupied Palestine have added fuel to the Islamophobic fire. The lesson of the KGIA controversy should have been that Islamophobes hold a disturbing amount of power in the United States and that anti-Muslim and anti-Arab sentiment needs to be combated. So it's no surprise that Islamophobia continues to be a potent political weapon. Perhaps we should take this opportunity to double-down on our efforts to combat Islamophobia, so when the next furor over Islam in the U.S. comes–and it will–education and activism can successfully tamp down these dangerous games being played. If we didn't learn that lesson after KGIA, we better learn it now. This article originally appeared on Alex Kane's blog. Comment on this article > The noxious comeback of the SUV Aug 17, 2010 10:24 pm | James North On my walks around the streets of Manhattan, I recently started noticing many more new sport utility vehicles. Sure enough, a recent article in the New York Times confirmed my impression. Low gas prices have prompted the sales of pickup trucks to jump 29 per cent; SUVs are up 17 per cent. The return of the SUV, particularly in a place like New York City, is a loathsome sight. You can understand why a hard-working rancher in west Texas needs a pick-up truck, but suburban New Jersey housewives could certainly get into the city in something smaller and more fuel efficient. You do not need a 4-wheel drive to negotiate the rugged Holland and Lincoln tunnels, or the perils of the George Washington bridge. SUVs were a symbol of the 1990s, big, voracious and out of control, just like that era's president, and today they should be well down the road toward extinction. SUVs continue to thrive partly because they are classified as "trucks," and exempt from fuel efficiency standards. The reporter Keith Bradsher did an excellent book some years ago, High and Mighty, that warned that their reputation for increased safety is a complete myth, in part because they are so poorly designed that they roll over more often. Bradsher also pointed out that SUV buyers "tend to be people who are insecure and vain. . . They often lack confidence in their driving skills. Above all, they are apt to be self-centered and self-absorbed, with little interest in their neighbors or communities." Using world resources to manufacture and fuel SUVs for American suburbia is an immoral waste by any ethical standard. But the comeback of the dangerous monsters does not seem to have triggered much debate yet. Those of us who follow the Middle East should have a particular concern. The Western exploitation of oil in the region over nearly the past century has promoted instability, injustice, and conflict, in ways both obvious and not-so-obvious. The left and the right may not have the same analysis, but both should agree that importing even more Middle Eastern oil to fuel the giant, utterly unnecessary gas-guzzlers is quite simply wrong. Comment on this article > Bedouin village in the Negev razed for the fourth time to make way for Jewish National Fund park Aug 17, 2010 03:04 pm | Seham And other news from Today in Palestine: Land and Property Theft and Destruction/Ethnic Cleansing Settlement freeze dispute threatens direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks (The Christian Science Monitor) The Christian Science Monitor - An Israeli settlement freeze is emerging as the biggest obstacle to resuming direct talks aimed at ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is expected to announce as early as Monday his willingness to enter such negotiations, but with preconditions Israel has said it is not prepared to accept. http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20100816/wl_csm/319892 Bedouin village razed for fourth time BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Israeli authorities on Tuesday demolished an unrecognized Bedouin village for the fourth time, Israeli media reported. The Al-Araqib village was razed two weeks ago for the third time, after residents rebuilt dwellings demolished to make way for a Jewish National Fund park. The efforts to rebuild were prompted by decision by the Higher Follow-Up Committee for Arab Citizens of Israel after the village was first torn down. Locals said following the last demolitions that they intended to rebuild their homes. A spokesman for Israel's national police said he would look into the report. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308618 Another Palestinian village faces total demolition order For the third time in less than a month, Israeli occupation forces have handed house demolition orders to all the inhabitants of the village of Farseya in occupied Palestine. The head of the municipal council of Al Maleh and Madareb Bedouin area, Aref Daraghma, said that the notices were given to all of the village's inhabitants. Just under a month ago, the Israeli authorities demolished 120 buildings before returning two weeks ago to demolish another six Palestinian homes, as well as those that were rebuilt after the first round of demolitions. http://www.middleeastmonitor.org.uk/news/middle-east/1423-another-palestinian-village-faces-total-demolition-order Israel plans new road to West Bank settlement JERUSALEM — The Israeli government says it is pressing ahead with plans for a new road to a large West Bank settlement. Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat says the plan sabotages U.S. efforts to restart direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Israel's Housing and Construction Ministry said in a statement Monday that it is seeking bids for the highway from Jerusalem to nearby Maaleh Adumim, a settlement of about 35,000 residents. The ministry says the project does not violate Israel's freeze on West Bank housing construction. Palestinians demand a halt to all Israeli building in the West Bank before they will resume direct peace talks. http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ioi_0jtO9RjMwPNRoXNCndRPRq3gD9HKLVFG0 Report: Israel to build elevator to Western Wall JERUSALEM (Ma'an) -- Israel is planning to construct an elevator leading to the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City, Israeli media reported Monday. The project will be proposed to planning committees that will make a final decision on the 56-meter structure, the Israeli daily Ma'ariv reported Tuesday. The elevator is to be named after US businessman Baruch Klein, who will fund the $10 million project, Ma'ariv reported. The Al-Aqsa Foundation says the plans are a threat to the Al-Aqsa Mosque, which is adjacent to the Western Wall. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308471 Jordan Valley is a microcosm of Israel's colonisation | Ben White The Jordan Valley, stretching all the way down the West Bank's eastern side, is a microcosm of Israel's discriminatory policies of colonisation and displacement. For 40 years, settlements have been established, military no-go areas declared, and Palestinians' freedom of movement restricted. There are now 27 colonies in the Jordan Valley – most of them had been established by the late 1970s under Labour governments. There are also nine "unauthorised" outposts. In the 1990s, the size of territory afforded to the settlements increased by 45%. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/aug/17/jordan-valley-microcosm-israel-colonisation Solidarity/Activism/Boycott, Sanctions & Divestment Ahlam Mohsen rocks! Ms. Ahlam Mohsen threw a pie at Zionist senator Carl Levin. Ms. Mohsen had no regard for future job prospects, proper appearances or "strategy." Like Muntadhar Zaidi, she put justice above concern for her own wellbeing. We congratulate Ms. Mohsen for setting a fine example for antiwar activists everywhere. http://ikhras.com/2010/08/ahlam-mohsen-rocks/ Troops Fire At Unarmed Protesters In Northern Gaza Strip Gaza – PNN - Palestinian farmers along with international supporters protested on Tuesday the Israeli buffer zone near the town of Biet Hanoun in northern Gaza Strip. http://english.pnn.ps/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=8656 Bethlehem district: villagers stand in solidarity with Jerusalem August 16th, 2010-- Israeli occupation forces repress the weekly protests in the villages of al-Ma'sara and al-Walajeh. Militay attacked and beat the demonstrators with batons and rifle butts and firing tear gas and sound bombs in their direction. http://stopthewall.org/latestnews/2342.shtml Nabi Saleh: Israeli repression cuts off protesters from their village August 16th, 2010-- On Friday, the IOF repressed the weekly protest in the village of Nabi Saleh with batons and tear gas canisters closing off the entrance to the village to prevent demonstrators from escape. The clashes in the village lasted a few hours. http://stopthewall.org/latestnews/2341.shtml Ni'lin: protestors brave occupation forces despite hot weather and Ramadan fast August 15th, 2010-- Israeli Occupation Forces charged at protesters in Nil'in today with a barrage of tear gas canisters. Many collapsed as a result. Immediately after, the military opened the gate through the Wall, chasing the demostrators in order to arrest them. http://stopthewall.org/latestnews/2340.shtml 'Why did you lie to security about going to Bi'lin?',Laura Durkay On Saturday, Laura Durkay published a blogpost about getting stopped at the Palestinian border with Jordan by Israeli security last Tuesday. Durkay is a writer and activist who recently traveled to Palestine/Israel on a delegation sponsored by Interfaith Peace-Builders and the American Friends Service Committee (Great Lakes Region).Here is her story. http://mondoweiss.net/2010/08/why-did-you-lie-to-security-about-going-to-bilin.html Settlement boycott starts to bite, Pamela Olson Haaretz today notes that the settlers are becoming apoplectic because the Palestinians won't stop boycotting settler goods, despite explicit requests by the Israelis that they do so. The article lists several settlement companies that are targeted: "Shamir Salads, Kobi Burekas, Ramat Hagolan Dairies, Jerusalem Granola, Bagel Bagel, Mei Eden, Soda Club, Barkan Wineries, Ramat Hagolan Wineries, Rav-Bariach and Ahava Products." http://mondoweiss.net/2010/08/settlement-boycott-starts-to-bite.html Im Tirtzu threatens boycott of Israeli university over 'anti-Zionist' bias Rightist group targets political science faculty at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/im-tirtzu-threatens-boycott-of-israeli-university-over-anti-zionist-bias-1.308452?localLinksEnabled=false Leftists denounce new bill on NGO funding as 'McCarthyist' Bill would require Israeli NGOs to disclose every donation they receive from foreign governments, or from any source mostly funded by a foreign government. http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/leftists-denounce-new-bill-on-ngo-funding-as-mccarthyist-1.308460?localLinksEnabled=false 'We'll drive away donors if you don't end anti-Zionist bias' Right-wing movement Im Tirtzu sends letter to Ben-Gurion University president threatening to drive away donors, students should it not change its study program, add right-wingers to its staff. 'Demand reminiscent of McCarthyism,' university says in response. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3938088,00.html The Siege (Gaza & West Bank)/Humanitarian and Human Rights/Restriction of Movement Father says denied permit to visit wife and newborns RAMALLAH (Ma'an) -- A Palestinian father says Israel has denied him a permit to visit his wife and newborn triplets in a Jerusalem hospital. Safi Abdul Hamid Al-Tamimi said his wife gave birth five days ago in Al-Makassed Hospital, where she was transferred from Ramallah due to complications during labor. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308556 Gaza schools, clinics face closure due to UN budget crisis (AFP) AFP - The UN agency for Palestinian refugees warned on Monday that it is running an 84-million-dollar deficit that could soon force it to shut schools and clinics in the Gaza Strip. http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100816/wl_mideast_afp/mideastgazaeconomyunnorway Work Permits and Ramadan in the West Bank, Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler HIRBET DEIR, Occupied West Bank – For Muhammad el-Baradiyeh, 38, the Muslim holy month of Ramadan is always a blessing. In fact, every day of the month-and-a-half prior to Ramadan has been good for Muhammad. Thanks to a permit granted by the Israeli authorities, he's been able to work inside Israel and save extra money he'll need for the holiday. Not that life is ever simple for Muhammad: the six-month work permit costs a third of what he earns as a construction worker in the Israeli town of Bet Shemesh. http://original.antiwar.com/kessel-klohendler/2010/08/16/work-permits-and-ramadan-in-the-west-bank/ IDF soldier posts images of blindfold Palestinians on Facebook, from 'best time of my life' Female soldier smiles for camera in front of bound prisoners, before joking online with friends; army calls photos 'ugly and callous'. http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/idf-soldier-posts-images-of-blindfold-palestinians-on-facebook-from-best-time-of-my-life-1.308402?localLinksEnabled=false Facebook scandal: More soldiers' photos published Additional photographs show IDF soldiers, Border Guard police officers posing next to bound Palestinians, Arab bodies; Breaking the Silence group: This is part of broad phenomenon, many more photos out there. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3938324,00.html 'Facebook photos of soldiers posing with bound Palestinians are the norm' Rights group Breaking the Silence refutes IDF claim that photos posted by female soldier under the heading 'the time of my life' are an anomaly. http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/facebook-photos-of-soldiers-posing-with-bound-palestinians-are-the-norm-1.308582?localLinksEnabled=false Eden Abergil, The Product Of A Blindfolded Society, Max Blumenthal Is there anything shocking about the Facebook photos showing the Israeli female soldier Eden Abergil posing in mocking positions next to bound and blindfolded Palestinian men? While her conduct was abominable, I did not find it especially distinct from the documented behavior of Israeli soldiers and Border Police in the Occupied Territories. Below is a photo I took in Hebron in June before soldiers demanded that I stop shooting (I will release video from Hebron as soon as I get the chance). Scenes like these can be witnessed on any given day in the West Bank. Not only do they show the dehumanization that the Palestinian Morlocks are subjected to on an hourly basis, they depict the world where Abergil spent what she called "the most beautiful time of [her] life." It is easy to see how young Israelis (or anyone) would be sapped of their humanity in such an environment. http://maxblumenthal.com/2010/08/eden-abergil-typical-product-of-a-blindfolded-society/ Mustafa Barghouti: The behavior and actions of the Israeli female soldier posing with Palestinian prisoners reflects the prejudice, racism and hatred of the Israeli army Secretary General of the Palestinian National Initiative, Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi said that the cruel and painful images that were published by one of the Israeli soldiers during the arrest of Palestinian citizens at a checkpoint in the West Bank reflects the inhumane behavior of the Israeli soldiers towards the Palestinian people. These actions, which disregard the most basic of human rights and tramples on International Law and the Geneva Conventions which primarily serve to protect civilians in times of war. http://www.palestinemonitor.org/spip/spip.php?article1515 Israeli denies Facebook mistake [Why is the BBC referring to this as a "mistake"?] A former Israeli soldier says she did nothing wrong by posting pictures of her and Palestinian prisoners onto Facebook. http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-middle-east-10997011 Gaza's record-breaking children Gaza's kids truly are record-breakers. They survived Israel's 2008-2009 winter invasion and every day they put up with a state of war during a so-called ceasefire. Smeared in blood, they've crawled through the rubble of shelled buildings, taking care of younger siblings, and tending to languishing parents, often emerging from under the remains of their own beds. Vittorio Arrigoni writes from the Gaza Strip. http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article11459.shtml?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+electronicIntifadaPalestine+%28Electronic+Intifada+%3A+Palestine+News%29 Violence: Past and Present/Provocations and other Occupation Injuries Israeli settlers throw stones at Palestinian car Nablus, August 17, 2010 (Pal Telegraph) – Israeli settlers threw stones today at Palestinian car on Nablus-Ramallah road in the occupied West Bank, no injuries were reported. The car of Mohammed Abu Karsh was stoned while he was driving on Nablus-Ramallah road which resulted in breaking the glass of the car. The Israeli settlers continue their attacks of the civilian Palestinians specially the villages in the West Bank. http://www.paltelegraph.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6798:israeli-settlers-throw-stones-at-palestinian-car&catid=59:west-bank&Itemid=135 IOF breaks into Khan Younis, shells houses Gaza, August 17, (Pal Telegraph) Israeli artillery shelled demolished houses today morning with three mortar shells in the town of "Abasan", an Israeli military force broke into the Farrahin area east of Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip. According to witness, the Israeli missiles hit directly the house of Hashim Daghma, which was demolished by the Israeli occupation forces before, and is located at a distance of 300 meters of the wired border fence between Gaza and the occupied territories of 1948. http://www.paltelegraph.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6800:iof-breaks-into-khan-younis-shells-houses&catid=58:gaza-strip&Itemid=134 Infant's hand fractured by checkpoint turnstile HEBRON (Ma'an) -- A 10-month old child sustained a hand fracture and bruising on Monday after his arm got caught in a checkpoint turnstile as it continued to rotate, the infant's mother said. Shirin Qasrawi told Ma'an her son Mu'min was taken to the Al-Maqaseed Hospital in East Jerusalem for treatment after he tried to cross the 300 checkpoint, also known as the Rachel's Tomb checkpoint, between Bethlehem and Jerusalem. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308735 Israeli man 'tried to enter Al-Aqsa compound' JERUSALEM (Ma'an) -- A Palestinian man stopped an Israeli activist attempting to enter the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem on Monday, witnesses said. Old City resident Ala Az-Zerba said his brother Ammar, who lives near a gate leading to the mosque, stopped a man impersonating a Muslim worshiper and held him until police arrived. Police detained the Israeli man, but another patrol arrived later and detained Ammar as well, Az-Zerba said. He said his brother was still being held at the Russian compound Monday night, he said. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308499 Court: State responsible for Palestinian girl's death Jerusalem judge rules death of 10-year-old Abir Aramin from rubber bullet in 2007 due to State's negligence. 'Shooting did not target rioters or stone-throwers,' she determines. Court to rule on damages to family in October. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3937640,00.html Detainees Hamas: PA forces detain 4 in West Bank BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Hamas said Tuesday that Palestinian Authority Security Services detained four party-affiliates in the West Bank, a statement read. The Islamist movement said the detentions were carried out in Ramallah and Nablus. On Monday, Hamas said PA forces in Bethlehem summoned a party-affiliated former minister and accused the Ramallah-based leadership of a "campaign against the movement and its supporters." http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308656 Israeli forces detain 7 in Hebron district HEBRON (Ma'an) -- Israeli forces detained six Palestinian men and one woman across the Hebron district overnight Monday, after searching several homes. A source identified the detained woman as Ayat Nasser Abu Markhiyya from Hebron City who was stopped by Israeli forces as she walked by Ash-Shuhada Street. She was taken to a police station in the Kiryat Arba settlement, the source added. Among those detained were: Muhammad Al-Jundym 23, in Yatta Ashraf Izzat Najjar, 23, in Yatta Raafat Muhammad Ali Najjar, 19, in Yatta Ibrahim Mahmoud Masalma, 22, in Beit Awwa Anan Muhammad Jawabra, 20, in the Arrub refugee camp Amir Samir Abu Ayyash a student at Palestine Polytechnic University in Hebron, 19, in Beit Ummar. Forces confiscated his laptop. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308745 2 detained in overnight raids HEBRON (Ma'an) -- The Israeli army detained two Palestinians during raids in the Hebron district Sunday night. Israeli soldiers detained Tamer Abdullah Amro, 14, from Fawar refugee camp, and Osama Ibrahim An-Najar, 40, from Al-Thaherya town. An Israeli military spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308561 Retaliation Violence near Gaza border wounds 2 Israeli troops (AP) AP - The Israeli military says two of its troops have been lightly wounded by a mortar shell fired from Gaza. http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100817/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_palestinians Political/Flotilla Developments Source: Israel seeks to avoid Quartet stance RAMALLAH (Ma'an) -- The Israeli government is trying to prevent the release of the Quartet statement on direct talks, and hopes to replace it with a US decision, a source within the PLO told Ma'an on Monday evening. The source said the PLO's Executive Committee would convene after the Quartet releases its statement, expected to call for talks under conditions that would attempt to satisfy both Israeli and Palestinian negotiators. A PLO position would be determined following the announcement, the source said. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308600 Netanyahu hopes for direct peace talks in near future (Reuters) Reuters - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday he hoped for direct negotiations with the Palestinians "in the very near future." http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100816/wl_nm/us_israel_greece_netanyahu Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, "Palestinian Factions Reject US/Zionist Pressure for Direct Negotiations" The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine joined with Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and 7 other Palestinian factions to issue a joint statement in Damascus in opposition to the resumption of negotiations, direct or indirect, with Israel on August 15, 2010. . . . Comrade Taher said, "The Zionist/U.S. pressure to conduct direct negotiations is an attempt to provide cover for the U.S. and Israel's aggressive plans for the region." The statement went on to say that "in a time of a growing international movement in solidarity with the Palestinian people and their just cause, and increasing isolation of Israel as a racist state, the U.S. and Israel are insisting on direct negotiations in order to provide a lifeline to lift the isolation of the criminal occupation state." http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2010/pflp170810.html Turks return to Marmara, seek evidence (VIDEO) Al-Jazeera presents images from ship raided by IDF, reports that investigators analyzing direction of shooting and who opened fire. Commando chief tells BBC unaccustomed to media exposure. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3937616,00.html Other News German government denies influencing bail of suspected Mossad agent Decision to release Uri Brodsky, extradited from Poland on charges of forging passport used in the assassination of a Hamas chief, was 'purely judicial'. http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/german-government-denies-influencing-bail-of-suspected-mossad-agent-1.308411?localLinksEnabled=false Lipstick on a pig: IDF trying something new in West Bank: politeness Most Arabic expressions soldiers learn are designed to order civilians to stop, open the door, identify themselves and present ID papers. http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/idf-trying-something-new-in-west-bank-politeness-1.308233 Where were they when Israel attacked Gaza? Palestine sends medical relief team to Pakistan RAMALLAH (Ma'an) -- Medical crews and an aid convoy have been sent to assist Pakistan's flood victims, the Palestinian Authority Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced Tuesday. Six teams of doctors and nurses were sent as a joint project of the Palestinian embassy in Islamabad and the Pakistani National Disaster Management Authority, ministry officials said. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=308754 New Arabic online magazine to include gay writers (AFP) AFP - Arab and Palestinian writers and intellectuals on Monday launched a new online magazine in Israel that aims to challenge taboos, including by featuring articles by gays and lesbians. http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100816/lf_afp/mideastisraelarabcultureinternethomosexuality Israeli Park rangers tell gay couple: Family membership doesn't count for you Israel Nature and Parks Authority workers refused to let a gay couple with two children enter two sites over the weekend, claiming the family's membership was for straight couples only. "A couple is a man and a woman, not a man and a man," the cashier at the Banias reserve said, before finally letting them in. At another site a staff member refused to let them in and insisted they buy an additional ticket for one of the adults. http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/park-rangers-tell-gay-couple-family-membership-doesn-t-count-for-you-1.308456 Prosecution: Katsav saw women staffers as pool of sexual objects Former president's defense team reacts to prosecution's sexual harassment trial closing statement saying it demonizes Katsav, treats him like 'a serial killer.' http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/prosecution-katsav-saw-women-staffers-as-pool-of-sexual-objects-1.308548?localLinksEnabled=false Analysis/Opinion/Human Interest In praise of … Mordechai Vanunu He survived his vindictive spell in isolation, and pariah status, with head unbowed - now Israel must allow him to go. When the nuclear whistleblower, Mordechai Vanunu, was released from prison in 2004 after serving 18 years, 12 of them in solitary confinement, he said he was ready to start a new life. The authorities in Israel were not. He was charged with breaking the terms of his parole which forbade him from speaking to foreigners, a restriction which can be traced to the emergency regulations of the British Mandate. A week ago Vanunu was released once again, after serving 10 weeks for that so-called offence. He said he hoped the prime minister and the head of Shin Bet would solve the problem of having to rearrest him by letting him leave the country. The idea that 24 years after he leaked details and pictures of Israel's nuclear bomb programme to the Sunday Times, and six years after he completed his sentence, this junior technician from Dimona would still have sensitive secrets up his sleeve is plainly ludicrous. It is one that no serious Israeli military analyst accepts. He survived his vindictive spell in isolation, and his pariah status as Israel's most reviled man, with his head unbowed. As Daniel Ellsberg, the man who released the Pentagon Papers has said, Vanunu is the preeminent hero of the nuclear era. By telling the truth, and revealing that his country's stockpile was much larger than the CIA and others had guessed, he certainly caused it mild problems 24 years ago, when Norway announced a ban on exports of heavy water. He causes no problems now. Israel must allow Vanunu to go. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/aug/16/in-praise-of-mordechai-vanunu IS ISRAEL AN APARTHEID STATE? Renown journalist Jonathan Cook and top Israeli human rights lawyer Michael Sfard on apartheid & Israel. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJX1rPFGZQc&feature=player_embedded Israel should not keep its history behind lock and key, Jonathan Cook History may be written by the victors, as Winston Churchill is said to have observed, but the opening up of archives can threaten a nation every bit as much as the unearthing of mass graves. That danger explains a decision quietly taken last month by Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, to extend by an additional 20 years the country's 50-year rule for the release of sensitive documents. The new 70-year disclosure rule is the government's response to Israeli journalists who have been seeking through Israel's courts to gain access to documents that should already be declassified, especially those concerning the 1948 war, which established Israel, and the 1956 Suez crisis. The state's chief archivist says many of the documents "are not fit for public viewing" and raise doubts about Israel's "adherence to international law", while the government warns that greater transparency will "damage foreign relations". http://www.jkcook.net/Articles3/0516.htm#Top Akiva Eldar / Peace talks with Syria can avert war with Lebanon The fragile quiet on the northern border is liable to break unless Israel, Syria and Lebanon hold peace negotiations. http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/features/akiva-eldar-peace-talks-with-syria-can-avert-war-with-lebanon-1.308485?localLinksEnabled=false Under threat from all sides; Democracy is flagging in both the Palestinian territories HANNA NASIR, the head of Palestine's Central Elections Commission, is not prone to expletives. But the Christian nuclear physicist and former dean of Palestine's leading university was full of them when the cabinet of the Palestinian prime minister, Salam Fayyad (pictured above left), who runs the West Bank, recently cancelled the municipal elections he was organising. If anything, his rival prime minister in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas (pictured on the right), is even less keen to put his movement's popularity to the test. It was the third election the Palestinian Authority (PA) has annulled in less than a year. The terms of the PA's presidency, parliament and municipalities have all now expired. With no date for fresh polls and in constitutionally uncharted waters, officials increasingly rule by fiat. How far, bemoans Mr Nasir, has Palestine fallen from the heights of 2005 and 2006, when he ran elections that international observers hailed as being among the fairest in the Middle East. Instead of building a democratic state, the PA is fast on its way to creating just another Arab autocracy. http://www.economist.com/node/16793370?story_id=16793370&fsrc=rss For Hamas, an end to Gaza's tunnel trade may be only the beginning As Israel eases the Gaza blockade, Hamas is positioned to strengthen its grip on the Gaza Strip. The Gaza tunnel trade that thrived under the blockade provided tax revenues and helped Hamas stay firmly in control. http://rss.csmonitor.com/%7Er/feeds/world/%7E3/rn9C8EXBTdU/For-Hamas-an-end-to-Gaza-s-tunnel-trade-may-be-only-the-beginning Christian Zionism: The Root of All Evil?, Tammy Obeidallah It is common knowledge that many so-called Christians throw unconditional, unyielding support behind the Jewish state. Known as Christian Zionists, or more recently "Israel-firsters"—indicating their degree of loyalty over and above the interests of their own country—it is estimated they are over 50 million strong in the United States alone. By stripping biblical passages out of their proper context and ignoring historical perspective, Christian Zionist leaders have convinced the masses that Jesus Christ will return when all Jews are gathered in Palestine, even if it means the systemic destruction of the Palestinian people. http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=16204 Palestinian roots of Western civilization: an interview with Basem Ra'ad Basem Ra'ad is a professor at Al-Quds University in occupied East Jerusalem. For the past two decades, he has been researching the ancient past of Palestine, much of which concerns the Western and Israeli appropriation of ancient languages and cultures, from the Canaanite alphabet to the Canaanite pantheon of gods and goddesses. Jonathan Scott spoke with Ra'ad for The Electronic Intifada. http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article11460.shtml?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+electronicIntifadaPalestine+%28Electronic+Intifada+%3A+Palestine+News%29 About Cordoba, Samah Sabawi I am not an American but I can tell you in a way I know how you feel and I understand those sensitivities you speak of. I am a Palestinian Muslim Woman from Gaza. I know too well the sting of the pain of losing pieces of one's homeland, watching buildings blow up; landmarks demolished farmlands scorched and people uprooted. My heart is filled with pain over loved ones lost over the years to senseless human violence. But if there is anything I've learned in my life it is that wars and terror can take everything you have but only you can actually surrender your principles and your values. http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=16202 Lebanon Hezbollah gives Hariri evidence to Lebanon judiciary * Documents given to judiciary after request from U.N. court, * Hariri calls for calm, * Newspaper says Hariri met Nasrallah's assistant, * Lebanon to hold a national talks on Thursday http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/LDE67G18S.htm Hariri persists with calls for calm as tribunal tensions simmer BEIRUT: Ambiguity continues to surround the tug of war among Lebanese parties over investigations into former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri's murder as Premier Saad Hariri remains silent over Hizbullah's refusal to cooperate with the UN-backed tribunal. http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=118268 Hezbollah ruins Israeli drone contract Hezbollah's recent revelation in airing photos taken by Israel's unmanned surveillance planes has markedly affected the sale of the drones. On August 9, Hezbollah Secretary General Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah said the Lebanese resistance movement had intercepted Israeli drone transmissions and used the intelligence in a deadly attack on Israeli commandos in the Lebanese coastal village of Antsaria back in 1997. Nasrallah also presented footage taken by Israeli drones of routes taken by Lebanon's slain Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri prior his assassination in February 2005, saying the video proved Israel's involvement in the murder. Citing a report by Jane's Defense Weekly, al-Manar said the televised speech and the revelation has affected agreements between Tel Aviv and Moscow for purchasing Israeli surveillance drones. http://www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=138916§ionid=351020203 Removing cluster bombs from soil Lebanon's southern border with Israel (VBS.TV) -- Deposited along Lebanon's southern border with Israel are vast numbers of American-made cluster bombs buried beneath the grasses of the region's valleys. Originally used by the Israeli military to combat Hezbollah forces firing rockets across the border, the bombs impacted in the soil were being ferreted out by a small U.N. team from the French battalion. Eddy Moretti, VBS's creative director, and a small film crew donned camouflaged PPO -- protective personal equipment -- and tagged along on one of their minesweeping missions in October 2007. http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/08/10/vbs.cluster.bombs/ UNIFIL chief insists stability has returned to south Lebanon BEIRUT: The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) commander Major General Alberto Asarta Cuevas on Monday held separate talks with Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Speaker Nabih Berri, aimed at reassuring parties that stability had returned to the south. http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=118269 Lebanon grants Palestinian refugees right to work (AFP) AFP - Lebanon's parliament adopted on Tuesday a law granting full employment rights to the roughly 400,000 Palestinian refugees living in the country, a high-ranking official said. http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100817/wl_mideast_afp/lebanonpoliticspalestinianrights Irate southerners protest against chronic power cuts SIDON: The weekend saw a number of protests against electricity rationing in south Lebanon, with mobs burning tires and blocking main roads in a number of locations. On Monday, protesters barricaded the main highway in the area of Qasmiyyeh in the south. http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=118272 Israel's Hidden Hands in Lebanon; Who Killed Hariri?, ESAM AL-AMIN On Valentine's Day in 2005, former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri left in his motorcade along the seaside highway, cruising towards his mansion. As the motorcade slowed down in front of the St. George Hotel in downtown Beirut, a huge explosion of a parked Mitsubishi pick-up truck detonated at 12:56 PM, killing him along with 22 others including his entourage, bodyguards and some passers-by. http://www.counterpunch.org/amin08162010.html Iraq Suicide blast kills 59 at Iraq army recruitment centre (AFP) AFP - A suicide bomber blew himself up at a crowded army recruitment centre in Baghdad killing 59 people Tuesday, officials said, as violence coinciding with the Muslim holy month of Ramadan raged across Iraq. http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100817/wl_afp/iraqunrest 3 Iraqi judges wounded in bombing Three judges and a number of security guards were wounded in a roadside bombing on a northern neighborhood of Baldroz District, eastern Baaquba. The bombing targeted the car of three judges namely Yas Latif, Maher Ibrahim and Issa Maleh. http://www.alsumaria.tv/en/Iraq-News/1-53216-3-Iraqi-judges-wounded-in-bombing.html Monday: 1 US Soldier, 3 Iraqis, 4 Iranians Killed; 16 Wounded At least three Iraqis were killed and seven more were wounded in the latest attacks. A U.S. soldier was also killed during a hostile attack in Baquba. Nearby, four Iranian tourists were killed and nine were wounded in a separate attack in Diyala province. Casualties were also reported in an attack in Fallujah. http://original.antiwar.com/updates/2010/08/16/monday-1-us-soldier-3-iraqis-4-iranians-killed-16-wounded/ Vigilantes strike fear in Iraq town Simply wearing jeans, listening to pop music or having too much fun in the southern Iraqi city of Nasiriyah now can elicit the wrath of self-appointed religious vigilantes. The Islamist vigilantes, wearing black hoods to conceal their identity, seize phones containing pop music or "immoral" pictures. They punish those wearing Western clothes. A trendy haircut can also land a youngster in trouble. Anonymous and unofficial by nature, it is not clear who backs the groups - who give themselves names such as The Sword of Righteousness, The Promotion of Virtue, or Men of the Sword. These unofficial patrols come out at night and accost people they deem to be in violation of strict Islamic rules. http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=380426&version=1&template_id=37&parent_id=17 Mandaeans in struggle for existence Brutal attacks, kidnappings and forced conversions of Sabaen Mandaeans, pacifist followers of John the Baptist who have lived in southern Iraq since the second century AD, have whittled the sect's numbers down to only a few thousand in Iraq and about 70,000 throughout the globe, many of these in Syria. They believe their religion faces extinction. http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LH18Ak02.html Iraq parties break off coalition talks: spokeswoman (AFP) AFP - Iraq's two main political blocs led by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and ex-premier Iyad Allawi broke off coalition talks on Monday over remarks made by Maliki on television, Allawi's group said. http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100816/wl_afp/iraqpoliticstalks Iraq plunges into darkness and fuel queues make comeback Iraqi provinces, apart from the three Kurdish provinces in the north, have plunged into darkness. The reason, according to the Electricity Ministry, is excessive use of electricity. http://www.azzaman.com/english/index.asp?fname=news%5C2010-08-14%5Ckurd.htm Gates to Iraqis: We'll Stay, Just Ask Us A revealing article appeared in Voice of America (VOA) on August 12. Defense Secretary Robert Gates made the following statement: "I think we have an agreement with the Iraqis that both governments have agreed to, that we will be out of Iraq at the end of 2011," he (Gates) said. "If a new government is formed there and they want to talk about beyond 2011, we're obviously open to that discussion. But that initiative will have to come from the Iraqis." http://dissidentvoice.org/2010/08/gates-to-iraqis-well-stay-just-ask-us/ The UK can only gain by helping Iraqi refugees On July 20 Eliza Manningham-Buller, the director general of the United Kingdom's MI5 Security Service from 2002 to 2007, spoke before the Iraq inquiry committee set up by former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown and chaired by Sir John Chilcot to examine the lessons learnt from the Iraq conflict. Manningham-Buller stated that the Iraq war "was a highly significant factor in how 'home-grown' extremists justified their [violent] actions." http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=118252#axzz0wo2bTBje Iran Timescale set for Iran atomic plant Official says construction of new uranium facility will start early next year. http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/08/20108161653781121.html West invokes Iranophobia in region to sell weapons: spokesman TEHRAN, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said Tuesday that the West follows the policy of Iranophobia in the region to sell weapons. The United States and its allies in the Middle East region are seeking to present fearful image of Tehran to sell weapons to the regional countries, Mehmanparast said at his weekly press conference. "Iran has repeated that Iranophobia is orchestrated by the Western countries and the Zionist regime (Israel)," he said, adding "and this is aimed at providing conditions to sell their weapons." http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-08/17/c_13449418.htm 25,000 Jews live in Iran, Mike Whitney "Iranian civility toward Jews tells us more about Iran — its sophistication and culture — than all the inflammatory rhetoric. That may be because I'm a Jew and have seldom been treated with such consistent warmth as in Iran." http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article26173.htm Mohamed ElBaradei: The View From the Muslim World "Some people want to make it appear that we will wake up tomorrow and find that Iran has developed the bomb. This is not the case. Sixteen US intelligence agencies have said that Iran stopped working on developing the bomb in 2003." http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mary-wald/mohamed-elbaradei-the-vie_b_682882.html The 'Atlantic' runs a rationale for war by a journalist embedded in the Israeli psychosis, Philip Weiss I finally read Jeffrey Goldberg's piece on the likely Israeli attack on Iran in The Atlantic, The Point of No Return, and I'm surprised. Surprised that Goldberg would put it out there, given his role in promoting the Iraq war on a dubious basis and his admission last year on Israeli TV that Zionists have an interest re Iran that conflicts with the American interest; surprised that the Atlantic would run it, given the piece's relentless ethnocentrism and emotional appeal to Jews and the Israel lobby on behalf of the Obama hawks; and finally, surprised that more journalists have not stepped up to attack this dangerous piece as a crude manifestation of the Israel lobby in our politics. http://mondoweiss.net/2010/08/the-atlantic-runs-a-rationale-for-iran-war-by-a-journalist-embedded-in-the-israeli-psychosis.html What Israel and the lobby really fears about Iran, M.J. Rosenberg The internet has been burning up with responses to Jeffrey Goldberg's Atlantic cover story on the likelihood that either Israel or the United States will preempt development of an Iranian nuclear bomb by attacking its atomic sites. Goldberg does not flat-out endorse bombing Iran. Rather, after numerous conversations and briefings with US and Israeli officials, he concludes that there is at least a 50-50 chance that bombs will fly in a year or so. Goldberg himself does not take a position on whether bombing is warranted or justified. But, given the way he frames the article and his personal closeness, to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu – who speaks in apocalyptic terms of the existential danger a nuclear Iran poses to Israel – it is clear that Goldberg sees no alternative to preventing an Iranian nuke, by whatever means necessary. And that includes war. http://pulsemedia.org/2010/08/17/what-israel-and-the-lobby-really-fears-about-iran/ U.S. and Other World News White House denies Turkey arms ultimatum The White House denied a report Monday that the U.S. has threatened Turkey with potentially withholding future arms sales because of its tougher stance towards Israel and vote against UN Iran sanctions. Obama "emphatically denied" a Financial Times story saying the president had told Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan future arms sales would be contingent on softening his anti-Israel talk, White House pool reporter Jonathan Weisman of the Wall Street Journal writes. http://www.politico.com/blogs/laurarozen/0810/White_House_denies_Turkey_arms_ultimatum.html?showall# Gitmo Child Soldier in Legal Grey Area Former child soldier Omar Khadr will have a tough battle in his trial in Guantanamo, and his case is in a legal grey area, says legal expert Paul Wolf. Press TV has conducted an interview with human rights and international law expert Paul Wolf in Washington and Kim Petersen, the co-editor of Dissident Voice, from Vancouver Island about the unusual case of Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen who has been held captive by the US in Guantanamo Bay since the age of 15. http://dissidentvoice.org/2010/08/case-of-gitmo-child-soldier-in-legal-grey-area/ Reid: Build mosque elsewhere; Reid says he supports mosque, not at ground zero The Senate's top Democrat says a mosque should not be built near the site of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada on Monday became the highest profile Democrat to break with President Barack Obama, who on Friday backed the right for the developers to build a mosque near ground zero. In a statement, Reid said the first amendment protects freedom of religion and he respects that, but the mosque should be built somewhere else. http://rawstory.com/rs/2010/0816/reid-build-mosque/ WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange describes possibility of casualties as 'acceptable risk' ANY US and allied casualties that result from the publication of classified Afghan war documents would be an acceptable risk, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said today,, saying "such information is also likely to save a great many lives." http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/breaking-news/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-describes-possibility-of-casualties-as-acceptable-risk/story-e6frf7jx-1225906131241 Why Is The US Fighting a War In Afghanistan: Zbigniew Brzezinski on Afghanistan and the American strategy for Eurasia and the world. Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfikRg2jE6o&feature=player_embedded Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGjAsQJh7OM&feature=player_embedded Part 3: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xat-C4SpBl4&feature=player_embedded#! Why WikiLeaks Won't Stop the War, Noam Chomsky The CIA memorandum should remind us that states have an internal enemy: their own population, which must be controlled when state policy is opposed by the public. http://www.zcommunications.org/why-wikileaks-won-t-stop-the-war-by-noam-chomsky Hamas supports the right of Muslims to pray in mosques — even in New York, Paul Woodward Hamas has leaped into the New York mosque controversy — well, actually, not so much leaped as diffidently tiptoed when pressed to express an opinion on the issue. In an interview on New York's WABC radio (audio can be heard here), Mahmoud al-Zahar, a co-founder of Hamas who is in the Gaza political leadership, was asked by Aaron Klein to comment on the construction of the mosque. http://mondoweiss.net/2010/08/hamas-supports-the-right-of-muslims-to-pray-in-mosques-%E2%80%94-even-in-new-york.html#comments Lucia Brawley: The "Mosque", Lucia Brawley If we allow 9/11 to make us abandon the First Amendment's declaration of religious freedom for all, then the terrorists have won. It shocks me that so many Americans are ready and willing to abandon their commitment to the Constitution, demanding the prohibition of the Cordoba House, an Islamic cultural center -- which many are calling a mosque -- from being built near Ground Zero. When Timothy McVeigh bombed Oklahoma City, did Oklahomans suddenly call for a ban on the congregation of Christian libertarians in the area? Islamic extremists, not all Muslims, bombed the World Trade Center. Hitler, not all Christians, committed genocide on the Jews. If we suddenly confuse the part for the whole, where does it end? Are all white people members of the KKK? Do all Catholic priests molest little boys? http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lucia-brawley/the-mosque_b_684197.html What Should A Poor Warmongering Neoconservative Do?, Juan Cole This political grouping includes WASPS such as former CIA director James Woolsey and former UN ambassor John Bolton, but at its core is politically active and extremely wealthy Jewish former Democrats who broke with their party in the 1980s to become war hawks in Republican administrations, and most of whom are rooted in Rightwing Zionism as exemplified in the thought of prominent fascist theorist Vladimir Jabotinsky. http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article26158.htm www.TheHeadlines.org
Comment on this article > The question of apartheid in Israel/Palestine Aug 17, 2010 08:20 am | Adam Horowitz The latest from Lia Tarachansky: Comment on this article > Israel is delegitimizing itself Aug 17, 2010 08:17 am | Adam Horowitz Henry Siegman writing in the Huffington Post: There is therefore something bizarre in Israel's insistence that condemnations of its violations of international law are not intended to challenge the illegality of its settlements and continuing occupation but the legitimacy of its very existence. If Israel keeps it up, that insistence may well turn into a self-fulfilling prophecy. Perhaps Israel's right wing government believes that by accusing the international community of seeking to undermine its existence it will distract attention from an increasingly untenable claim that Israel is a model democracy that also enshrines Jewish values. Both claims have been undermined by its settlements policy and its determination to maintain the status quo, bringing into question the very foundation of America's "special relationship" with Israel. When a state's denial of the individual and national rights of a large part of its population becomes permanent - a permanence that has been the goal of Israel's settlement project from its very outset (and that many believe has been achieved) - that state ceases to be a democracy. When the reason for that double disenfranchisement is that population's ethnic and religious identity, the state is practicing a form of apartheid or racism. The democratic dispensation that Israel provides for its mostly Jewish citizenry cannot hide its changing (or changed) character. A political arrangement that limits democracy to a privileged class and keeps others behind military checkpoints, barbed-wire fences and separation walls does not define democracy. It defines its absence.
Comment on this article > Settlement boycott starts to bite Aug 17, 2010 08:00 am | Pamela Olson Haaretz today notes that the settlers are becoming apoplectic because the Palestinians won't stop boycotting settler goods, despite explicit requests by the Israelis that they do so. The article lists several settlement companies that are targeted: "Shamir Salads, Kobi Burekas, Ramat Hagolan Dairies, Jerusalem Granola, Bagel Bagel, Mei Eden, Soda Club, Barkan Wineries, Ramat Hagolan Wineries, Rav-Bariach and Ahava Products." When I was last in Palestine in 2009, there was a campaign called Intajuna ("our products"), in which volunteers placed special stickers on good produced in Palestine in an effort to help people make better-informed consumer choices. Now they're handing out photographs of settler goods to avoid as well. The settlers, used to abject domination, are beside themselves. They're whining, absurdly, that consumer boycotts violate international trade rules and policies, even though these rules don't apply to consumer boycotts -- and as if the very existence of the settlements themselves didn't violate international law. They're threatening that a decline in the settlement economy will hurt the Palestinians (which is true in the short-term, but last I heard, a fund had been set up by the PA to try to offset the losses of Palestinians laid off from settlement work). Most delicious of all -- the settlers have "asked the [Israeli] Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry for compensation for its members who have been hurt by the Palestinian boycott against goods produced in the West Bank." Settlements: Built on stolen land, subsidized by the Israeli government, funded by American tax dollars, and now with the gall to ask for even more help because the mean old world is cruel enough to point out, speaking through their own money, that everything they're doing is illegal. Comment on this article > |
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