November 1, 2009

Israeli right-wing journalist has, at last, come up with the final solution. That is, the final solution to the problem of Israel being criticised in the British press and media:

Just sue them: Ynet News

Yair Lapid offers new tactic in international struggle against new anti-Semites
We sat in the small and well-kept backyard at the home of Israel’s ambassador in London, Ron Prosor. Light rain was falling intermittently, leaving behind it fresh English air, yet the expressions around the table remained grim. The conversation focused on the British media’s takeover by anti-Israel elements.
Prosor is a large and smiling man, with a soft base voice, but his smile was gone when he spoke of the way he is being welcomed by pro-Palestinian protestors every time he arrives for a lecture at a British university.
You need to read some of the things they write about us here, he sighed. I don’t even know how to start responding to them.
Don’t respond, I said. Sue them.
One of those present, an influential London attorney, raised his head: What do you mean sue them? He said.
What’s so complicated? I replied. Just like they threaten to sue IDF officers, we need to sue them. Every journalist who refers to us as “war criminals” or “child killers” needs to know that the next day his newspaper will be slapped with a million pound lawsuit on behalf of the State of Israel.
What will we gain from it? Someone else asked.
Newspapers don’t like lawsuits, I said. It takes time, it costs money, the paper’s insurance company raises their premium, stockholders are wondering why they got into this mess to begin with, and the editor in chief is infuriated after he discovers that he needs to waste two days on testifying in respect to an article that he didn’t even read.
The press won’t come out against us? Prosor asked.
There is no such thing as “the press,” I said. This is the most competitive profession in the world, and everyone is just waiting to see the others fall. Do you really think that The Independent cares whether we sue The Guardian? They’ll be happy about it.
And who will represent us? Asked someone else.
Him, I gestured at the lawyer sitting with us, and a hundred others like him. If the Jewish people has one reservoir that will never run out, it’s lawyers. Every Western capital boasts at least five successful Jewish law firms, and most of them will be glad to represent the State of Israel against the new anti-Semitism.
The lawyer in the group suddenly looked up. It will work, he said. I’m willing to take London upon myself.

We’ll be attacked over this, said Prosor. So? I responded. Aren’t they attacking us already at this time?

Well, they are used to attack all the time, so why not in this area? Maybe the next stage will be to shoot the journalist, like they do in Gaza… no one will be allowed to question r criticise Israel! And they wonder why anti-semitism is rising… One also wonders, will the suing of media outlets be limited to Britain, or will they also sue Israeli papers? Here is one candidate for suing for printing the truth – Gideon Levy in Haaretz:

America, stop sucking up to Israel: Ha’aretz

By Gideon Levy
Barack Obama has been busy – offering the Jewish People blessings for Rosh Hashanah, and recording a flattering video for the President’s Conference in Jerusalem and another for Yitzhak Rabin’s memorial rally. Only Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah surpasses him in terms of sheer output of recorded remarks.
In all the videos, Obama heaps sticky-sweet praise on Israel, even though he has spent nearly a year fruitlessly lobbying for Israel to be so kind as to do something, anything – even just a temporary freeze on settlement building – to advance the peace process.
The president’s Mideast envoy, George Mitchell, has also been busy, shuttling between a funeral (for IDF soldier Asaf Ramon, the son of Israel’s first astronaut Ilan Ramon) and a memorial (for Rabin, though it was postponed until next week due to rain), in order to find favor with Israelis. Polls have shown that Obama is increasingly unpopular here, with an approval rating of only 6 to 10 percent.
He decided to address Israelis by video, but a persuasive speech won’t persuade anyone to end the occupation. He simply should have told the Israeli people the truth. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who arrived here last night, will certainly express similar sentiments: “commitment to Israel’s security,” “strategic alliance,” “the need for peace,” and so on .
Before no other country on the planet does the United States kneel and plead like this. In other trouble spots, America takes a different tone. It bombs in Afghanistan, invades Iraq and threatens sanctions against Iran and North Korea. Did anyone in Washington consider begging Saddam Hussein to withdraw from occupied territory in Kuwait?
But Israel the occupier, the stubborn contrarian that continues to mock America and the world by building settlements and abusing the Palestinians, receives different treatment. Another massage to the national ego in one video, more embarrassing praise in another.
Now is the time to say to the United States: Enough flattery. If you don’t change the tone, nothing will change. As long as Israel feels the United States is in its pocket, and that America’s automatic veto will save it from condemnations and sanctions, that it will receive massive aid unconditionally, and that it can continue waging punitive, lethal campaigns without a word from Washington, killing, destroying and imprisoning without the world’s policeman making a sound, it will continue in its ways.
Illegal acts like the occupation and settlement expansion, and offensives that may have involved war crimes, as in Gaza, deserve a different approach. If America and the world had issued condemnations after Operation Summer Rains in 2006 – which left 400 Palestinians dead and severe infrastructure damage in the first major operation in Gaza since the disengagement – then Operation Cast Lead never would have been launched.
It is true that unlike all the world’s other troublemakers, Israel is viewed as a Western democracy, but Israel of 2009 is a country whose language is force. Anwar Sadat may have been the last leader to win our hearts with optimistic, hope-igniting speeches. If he were to visit Israel today, he would be jeered off the stage. The Syrian president pleads for peace and Israel callously dismisses him, the United States begs for a settlement free ze and Israel turns up its nose. This is what happens when there are no consequences for Israel’s inaction.
When Clinton returns to Washington, she should advocate a sharp policy change toward Israel. Israeli hearts can no longer be won with hope, promises of a better future or sweet talk, for this is no longer Israel’s language. For something to change, Israel must understand that perpetuating the status quo will exact a painful price.
Israel of 2009 is a spoiled country, arrogant and condescending, convinced that it deserves everything and that it has the power to make a fool of America and the world. The United States has engendered this situation, which endangers the entire Mideast and Israel itself. That is why there needs to be a turning point in the coming year – Washington needs to finally say no to Israel and the occupation. An unambiguous, presidential no.

What a pity that Obamah and Clinton don’t read Ha’aretz…

EU court: No customs breaks for Israeli goods from settlements: Ha’aretz

Israeli goods produced in West Bank settlements are not eligible for customs benefits in the European Union, stated an advocate general of the European Court of Justice last week.
Israel and the EU have a free-trade agreement that gives Israeli exports substantial customs breaks.
The advocate general’s non-binding opinion, if followed, could mean that goods produced in the territories may be saddled with full customs duties.
The opinion, submitted in a case in Germany brought by water purification firm Brita in 2002, could serve as a precedent in the EU. The company was ordered to pay 19,155 euros in customs for equipment it imported from the Israeli firm Soda Club, whose factory is in the West Bank.
German customs authorities asked Israeli authorities whether the goods were produced in the territories, and when no answer was received, Brita was ordered to pay customs duties.
Brita then appealed the decision to the German court system, and the Finance Court in Hamburg requested advice on the matter from European Union legal authorities.
In the past, EU authorities have ruled that the Golan Heights and East Jerusalem are also part of the “occupied territories,” but in this case, the advocate general said his opinion referred only to the West Bank and Gaza.
Currently, for goods from the territories to receive customs breaks, they must bear a certificate issued by the Palestinian Authority.
The disagreement with the EU over Israeli exports from the territories has been going on for a long time. At one point, the EU threatened sanctions against all Israeli exports if an agreement was not reached. However, Israel refused to label or otherwise differentiate products from the settlements.
Five years ago, Israel and the EU agreed that all exports would be labeled with the place of manufacture, or the factory’s zip code, and the EU customs authorities would then decide whether to levy customs.
Israeli exports to the EU totalled $17.8 million in 2008, of which only a tiny fraction were from the territories. However, Der Spiegel recently reported that a third of Israeli exports to Europe are made in part or in full in the territories.

Meanwhile, the unofficial boycott is spreading to European governments:

Belgium to stop exporting ‘arms that bolster the IDF’ to Israel: Ha’aretz

Belgium’s government has agreed to ban the export to Israel of weapons that “strengthen it militarily,” a Belgian minister said on Thursday. A Brussels-based research group accused Israel of enlisting child soldiers.
The Belgian daily De Morgen quotes Minister Patricia Ceysens from the Flemish regional government as saying: “There’s a consensus [among ministers] not to approve exports that would strengthen Israel’s military capacity.”
Ceysens said this after a discussion on policy regarding weapons exports to Israel following the operation in Gaza. A final resolution has not been passed yet, but Belgian Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht already said recently that “given the current circumstances, weapons cannot be shipped from Belgium to Israel.”
According to a recently-released report by the European Institute for Research and Information on Peace and Security on Belgian arms exports to the Jewish state, Israel is the fourth largest importer of Belgian arms in the Middle East. In 2007, Belgium sold Israel weapons (mostly light firearms) to the tune of $5,409,223, according to the report.
The report, which accuses Israel of human rights violations, also says that Belgium’s major weapons clients in the Middle East are Saudi Arabia (69 percent), Jordan (17 percent) and the United Arab Emirates (4.2 percent). The 15-page report does not deal with human rights violation in those countries.
Quoting a 2003 amendment to Belgian law which forbids the sale of weapons to armies with child soldiers, the report says that Israel “accepts and arms underage volunteers.” Further on, the report mentions “use of underage Palestinians as informants and sometimes human shields.”
The Israeli Defense Forces’ Gadna program runs a one-week military training session on a base as part of the curriculum at most Israeli high schools. The army accepts volunteers from the age of 17 into non-combat posts.
Meanwhile, 13 Belgian politicians, authors and scholars released a statement that calls for a more evenhanded approach to Israel.

And if you wish to read about racism, just turn to the Israeli papers. Another one to sue?…

Crossing boundaries: Ha’aretz

By Sefi Rachlevsky
Even if the children of foreign workers are not deported in the end, the sword of deportation hanging over their heads is still a painful image reflecting the face of the State of Israel.
The ministers of this country are seriously deliberating the dangers posed to the Jewish people, the dangers of mixing, the influence of non-Jews on the Jews of the land – when even the nationalists, the pragmatists and the demographers should be delighted to receive such a loyal addition, comprised of people longing to serve in the army, to work and to contribute to the only country they know.

The state funds the education of more than half of all the Jewish first-graders who attend religious and ultra-Orthodox schools. In teaching the assertion of Rabbi Yehuda Halevi – that goyim occupy the lowest rung of all things natural, and Jews belong to the highest – these schools treat this dictum as self-evident.
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Protests recently broke out regarding the ethnic segregation in the education of immigrants from Ethiopia – but of course this system observes the segregation of boys from girls, and instills a qualitatively different perception of the secular and the religious. It also insists there is a sharp hierarchical difference between Jews and non-Jews.
When Israeli children grow up they discover that a woman can be exempt from military service simply by being defined as religious, as opposed to non-religious; that the title of “religious student” can make years of mandatory service go away; and that Israeli law does not allow a Jewish man and a non-Jewish woman to marry.
The portrait of the current Israeli reality is not unconnected with the ability to nominate a man like Avichai Rontzki as chief rabbi of the Israel Defense Forces, who ruled that a paramedic must not treat an Arab non-Jew on Shabbat unless he is ordered to do so – in which case he must try to have the order reversed. These views, which resulted in Rontzki’s zealous emissaries delivering sermons to IDF troops during the last round of fighting, cannot be separated from the bleak picture, that can be seen through any undistorted mirror, of what those soldiers did where they had been sent. The other side does not have people defined as “Jewish people.”
This week Israel is marking the anniversary of the assassination of its prime minister and minister of defense, Yitzhak Rabin. Far from being a pacifist universalist, he nonetheless maintained the vision of a national-democratic state aspiring to a normal existence. To many, Rabin was not murdered a “Jew.” Many years before his murder, he had been redefined as “a mixed multitude” – meaning an Amalekite who is merely pretending to be Jewish, belonging to those who infiltrated the ranks of the Israelites on their way to the promised land, the main culprits causing pure Jews to stray off the righteous path.
Unfortunately, the racist mentality that has led many to join the messianic revolution threatening to sweep over Israel continues to show its animosity toward “foreigners.” This mentality, which manifested itself in the murder of the prime minister, is continuing to recruit souls on the hills for which Rabin had fought.
This process, which replaces the current democratic-national state (with all of its contradictions and problems) with a borderless entity whose essence is ethno-religious, is not only a moral catastrophe that contradicts the Zionist vision in its entirety. Israel did not withstand all of its enemies since the great rebellion as an ethnic-religious entity. As a borderless, stateless entity Israel will not withstand the growing strategic threat against it. Thus not only the desire for peace for which Rabin was killed will die out, but also the proud dream of Hebrew safety to which Rabin dedicated his life.

To read more about who runs Israel, and on their views which could have come straight from the Third Reich, read this Israeli minister on migrants. Is this not what they used to say about Jews, perchance? It is good to see some historical continuity in racist argumentation, isn’t it?

Yishai: Migrant workers will bring diseases to Israel: Ha’aretz

Interior Minister Eli Yishai said on Saturday that he still supported the deportation of illegal migrant workers, one day before the government was to decide on whether to deport such workers and their families.
“If hundreds of thousands of migrant workers come here now, they will bring with them a profusion of diseases: hepatitis, measles, tuberculosis, AIDS and drug [addiction],” Yishai, the head of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, told the Channel 2 program Meet the Press.
“Will any of Israel’s citizens be willing for migrants to enter at this rate?”
Plans to deport the group, which includes 1,200 children, have met with fierce public opposition. Protesters last week called on cabinet ministers to “do what is moral, true and right” and grant the children legal status.
But in the Channel 2 interview, Yishai asked: “With all of this sanctimoniousness, do [the workers] not threaten the Zionist project in the State of Israel?”
The Prime Minister’s Office said on Saturday that no decision had yet been made on the matter. The Oz task force, which replaced the Immigration Police, has said it is still operating according to its current guidelines, which prohibit the detention of families with children.
However, a high-ranking government official said Saturday that the deportation of the children was likely to be postponed until after the end of the school year.
Yishai, who is also a deputy prime minister, added: “I need to choose between popularity and hypocrisy: How will I appear to the journalists today, or how will I appear to the State of Israel in 20 years time.”

Israeli minister’s speech disrupted at London university: Electronic Intifada

Press release, LSE SU Palestine Society, 27 October 2009

The following press release was issued by the London School of Economics Student Union Palestine Society on 26 October 2009:
Students protested and disrupted a lecture tonight at the London School of Economics (LSE) by Daniel Ayalon, the controversial Deputy Foreign Minister of Israel.
More than 50 students and activists greeted Ayalon outside of the lecture on LSE’s campus with placards and banners, while inside audience members heckled the controversial minister as a “racist” and “murderer” in relation to the illegal occupation and violence carried out by the Israeli state.
Ayalon was in the UK to meet British government officials and speaking at the LSE ahead of these talks in a lecture titled “The Middle East: The View From Israel.” Security at the university was tight, with private security and police officers keeping a close watch on protesters. The minister began and ended his lecture amid boos and chants of “Free, Free, Palestine” while his speech was interrupted relentlessly throughout with audience members questioning Israel’s atrocities.
The action was organized by the LSE Students’ Union Palestine Society and the Palestine Solidarity Initiative. The London School of Economics Students’ Union is officially twinned with An-Najah University [West Bank] and has previously voted to divest funds from those companies profiting from the Israeli occupation of Palestine. The motion also called on LSE to respect human rights and follow suit in embracing a divestment agenda with regards to such companies.
Mira Hammad who attended the lecture and is the Chair of the LSE SU Palestine Society said after the protest, “The Palestine Society at LSE has grown in support since the atrocities committed in Gaza which explains the huge turnout tonight. We will continue to support the growing international resistance against the occupation of Palestine until a just peace is achieved.”
Merna Al Azzeh, a Palestinian masters student who was in the audience, added, “As an LSE student, I find it disgusting that LSE could invite a Minister to speak from a racist government that has been committing war crimes for the last 60 years.”
“The recent Goldstone Report overwhelmingly condemns the genocide waged against Gazan civilians last winter and as a Palestinian I am reassured by the growing international resistance to Israeli apartheid.”

Israelis Targeting Grassroots Activists: Israeli Occupation Archive

By Mel Frykberg, IPS News – 27 Oct 2009

EAST JERUSALEM, Oct 27 (IPS) – Israeli authorities are increasingly targeting and intimidating non-violent Palestinian grassroots activists involved in anti-occupation activities who are drawing increased support from the international community.
Several weeks ago masked Israeli soldiers stormed the home of Ehab Jallad from The Jerusalem Popular Committee for the Celebration of Jerusalem as the Capital of Arab Culture for 2009.
“Around 3am the soldiers started kicking and banging on the door and threatened to break it down if I didn’t open immediately. My young daughters were terrified as they didn’t know what was happening,” recalls Jallad, a young Palestinian architect from Jerusalem.
“The soldiers then proceeded to ransack my home before confiscating my laptop, several computers, files with my contacts and my ipod. When I asked them why they were doing this and told them I wanted to call my lawyer, they told me to shut up and threatened to beat me up,” Jallad told IPS.
This is just the latest incident in which the Israeli authorities have arrested and taken Jallad in for questioning over his organisation of cultural events marking East Jerusalem as the capital of Arab culture. Jallad has also been monitoring the protests outside Al-Aqsa Mosque during the last few weeks.
“The Israeli officer questioning me said he knew I was in contact with the media but stated this would not help. He further warned me that I was being monitored, and if I continued with my activities my family and I would be subjected to further raids and harassment,” said Jallad.
The same morning that Jallad was arrested Israeli security forces raided a warehouse used by Jerusalem community groups and cultural events organisers.
“They vandalised material we use for cultural events and confiscated other material,” Jallad told IPS.
To date Jallad has not been charged with anything. But a war between Palestinians and Israeli continues unabated over Israel’s continued Judaisation of East Jerusalem.
This has involved the expulsion of Palestinian residents from their homes in the eastern sector of the city and the expropriation thereof to make way for Israeli settlers.
A number of Palestinian families continue to live in tents pitched on streets outside their former homes as they watch Israeli settlers go about their daily business in their former homes.
Periodic violence between the two groups has broken out during the last few weeks with the Israeli police selectively arresting only Palestinians.
The Jerusalem Municipality has deliberately limited building permits for East Jerusalemites despite a chronic housing shortage, while the settlement of Israeli settlers in the area has been actively encouraged. Palestinian homes built without permits are regularly destroyed.
The Palestinian Authority (PA) envisions East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state. Under international law East Jerusalem is part of the Palestinian occupied West Bank.
The PA has tried to counter Israel’s Judaisation efforts by asserting its presence in the contested part of the city. Organising cultural events has been part of the effort.
Hatem Abdul Qader, a PA official for Jerusalem Affairs, has been arrested by Israeli security forces several times over the last few months. He has also been banned from the city for several weeks on a number of occasions.
Meanwhile, Muhammad Othman, 33, from the northern West Bank village Jayyous continues to languish in solitary confinement in a dirty Israel prison cell devoid of natural light or windows.
Othman has been labelled a “security threat” by the Israelis ever since his arrest on Sep. 22 as he crossed into the West Bank from Jordan. Othman had returned from a trip to Norway where he met with senior officials to discuss human rights abuses in the occupied Palestinian territories. The Norwegian government has divested its funds from Elbit, an Israeli company which supplies drones and other military technology.
During his incarceration Othman has been subjected to hours of interrogation, handcuffed, seated in stress positions and denied sleep. Like Jallad he has had no involvement in military activities which could constitute a security threat to the Jewish state. He too, has not been charged with any infringement of the law.
But Othman, a political activist, has been joining the Stop the Wall Campaign against the illegal Zufim settlement built by Russian billionaire Lev Leviev. The Stop the Wall Campaign is fighting against Israel’s construction of a separation barrier which separates Israel proper from the West Bank.
The wall cuts through swathes of Palestinian territory dividing Palestinians from their agricultural fields, and trapping some Palestinian communities in pockets of territory between Israel and the West Bank.
The wall was ruled illegal by the International Court at the Hague, and several years ago an Israeli high court ordered the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) to reroute parts of the wall, arguing that is compromised the livelihoods of Palestinian farmers.
Othman is also involved in the Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) campaign which has been drawing increased international support.
Othmans supporters believe his main “crimes” are his activities on behalf of the BDS which wants to see a boycott of Israel along the lines of the former boycott against apartheid South Africa.
“I think Israel is worried about its reputation amongst the international community now that more people are waking up to the human rights abuses and injustices being committed here,” Jallad told IPS.
“I think in some ways we are perceived as more of a threat than an armed cell of Hamas fighters precisely because we are non-violent and what we are fighting for is reasonable.”

Richard Goldstone: Response to the Berman–Ros-Lehtinen Resolution: Israeli Occupation Archive

By Richard Goldstone – 29 Oct 2009
Dear Chairman Berman and Ranking Member Ros-Lehtinen,
It has come to my attention that a resolution has been introduced in the Unites States House of Representatives regarding the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, which I led earlier this year.
I fully respect the right of the US Congress to examine and judge my mission and the resulting report, as well as to make its recommendations to the US Executive branch of government. However, I have strong reservations about the text of the resolution in question – text that includes serious factual inaccuracies and instances where information and statements are taken grossly out of context.
I undertook this fact-finding mission in good faith, just as I undertook my responsibilities vis à vis the South African Standing Commission of Inquiry Regarding Public Violence and Intimidation, the International War Crimes Tribunal on the former Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the International Panel of the Commission of Enquiry into the Activities of Nazism in Argentina, the Independent International Commission on Kosovo, and the Volker Committee investigation into the UN’s Iraq oil-for-food program in 2004/5.
I hope that you, in similar good faith, will take the time to consider my comments about the resolution and, as a result of that consideration, make the necessary corrections.
Whereas clause #2: “Whereas, on January 12, 2009, the United Nations Human Rights Council passed Resolution A/HRC/S-9/L.1, which authorized a `fact-finding mission’ regarding Israel’s conduct of Operation Cast Lead against violent militants in the Gaza Strip between December 27, 2008, and January 18, 2009; ”
This whereas clause ignores the fact that I and others refused this original mandate, precisely because it only called for an investigation into violations committed by Israel. The mandate given to and accepted by me and under which we worked and reported reads as follows:
“…to investigate all violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law that might have been committed at any time in the context of the military operations that were conducted in Gaza during the period from 27 December 2008 and 18 January 2009, whether before, during or after”.
Whereas clause #2: “Whereas the resolution prejudged the outcome of its investigation, by one- sidedly mandating the `fact-finding mission’ to `investigate all violations of international human rights law and International Humanitarian Law by … Israel, against the Palestinian people … particularly in the occupied Gaza Strip, due to the current aggression’”
This whereas clause ignores the fact that the expanded mandate that I demanded and received clearly included rocket and mortar attacks on Israel and as the report makes clear was so interpreted and implemented. It was the report carried out under this broadened mandate – not the original, rejected mandate – that was adopted by the Human Rights Council and that included the serious findings made against Hamas and other militant Palestinian groups.
Whereas clause #3: “Whereas the mandate of the `fact-finding mission’ makes no mention of the relentless rocket and mortar attacks, which numbered in the thousands and spanned a period of eight years, by Hamas and other violent militant groups in Gaza against civilian targets in Israel, that necessitated Israel’s defensive measures;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. As noted above, the expanded mandate clearly included the rocket and mortar attacks. Moreover, Chapter XXIV of the Report considers in detail the relentless rocket attacks from Gaza on Israel and the terror they caused to the people living within their range. The resulting finding made in the report is that these attacks constituted serious war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity.
Whereas clause #4: “Whereas the `fact-finding mission’ included a member who, before joining the mission, had already declared Israel guilty of committing atrocities in Operation Cast Lead by signing a public letter on January 11, 2009, published in the Sunday Times, that called Israel’s actions `war crimes’;”
This whereas clause is misleading. It overlooks, or neglects to mention, that the member concerned, Professor Christine Chinkin of the London School of Economics, in the same letter, together with other leading international lawyers, also condemned as war crimes the Hamas rockets fired into Israel.
Whereas clause 5: “Whereas the mission’s flawed and biased mandate gave serious concern to many United Nations Human Rights Council Member States which refused to support it, including Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cameroon, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the Republic ofKorea, Slovakia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. The mandate that was given to the Mission was certainly not opposed by all or even a majority of the States to which reference is made. I am happy to provide further details if necessary.
Whereas clause #6: “Whereas the mission’s flawed and biased mandate troubled many distinguished individuals who refused invitations to head the mission;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. The initial mandate that was rejected by others who were invited to head the mission was the same one that I rejected. The mandate I accepted was expanded by the President of the Human Rights Council as a result of conditions I made.
Whereas clause #8: “Whereas the report repeatedly made sweeping and unsubstantiated determinations that the Israeli military had deliberately attacked civilians during Operation Cast Lead;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. The findings included in the report are neither “sweeping” nor “unsubstantiated” and in effect reflect 188 individual interviews, review of more than 300 reports, 30 videos and 1200 photographs. Additionally, the body of the report contains a plethora of references to the information upon which the Commission relied for our findings.

To read the whole reply by Goldstone, please use the link above

Zeev Sternhell: With a conscience that is always clear: Ha’aretz

The most interesting aspect of the debate surrounding the Goldstone report has attracted no attention. The cabinet and its supporters are dealing only with the question of damage control as far as image is concerned, and how to deflect international criticism. The question of what really happened in Gaza is considered to be tainted with anti-Semitism. The ever-quiet conscience of the average Israeli deflects the question effortlessly. But as time passes the legal aspect will be increasingly shunted aside, and it will be the moral dimension of the report that is etched in our consciousness and that of the world.
Everyone understands that the army’s opposition to a probe of the accusations against it can have only one reason: There is something to hide. There is a simple way to convince people that any further investigation is unnecessary. That is, of course, to publicize the the army’s own investigations. Publicity is one of the foundations of law. There is no reason to believe the army more than any other public body. Therefore, all that needs to be done is to present the material to the public.
But that coin has two sides. On the one hand, in principle everything is known. The directives handed down by the decision-making troika – the prime minister, the defense minister and the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff – were as clear as day. The army was to carry out its mission without losses and at the same time break the spirit of the Gazan population, punish it for the past and deter both militants and civilians from any future provocation. That is the other side of the problem, and Israel’s Achilles’ heel: The operation in Gaza was a campaign of punishment and intimidation. That is why Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi refuse to allow an investigation of the operational echelon. It is reasonable to assume that to every question a field commander is asked, he will respond that the mission was carried out in accordance with orders approved in advance by all the appropriate authorities. These include the military advocate general and the Justice Ministry, which it may be assumed was also involved. It is no coincidence that Daniel Friedmann, who was justice minister at the time of Operation Cast Lead, attacked the Goldstone report with a vengeance.
By the same token, all that is needed to counter the harsh and legitimate criticism is to respond to specific claims of war crimes. The sweeping claim that the IDF is completely irreproachable is no more persuasive than the self-righteous outbursts of anger by Israel’s leaders. Many people have been repulsed by the Israeli demand to change the rules of warfare. What is it that Israel wants? Permission to fearlessly attack defenseless population centers with planes, tanks and artillery? The likelihood that international institutions will accept this demand is practically nil.
The army will have to find the middle ground between the methods of the British in Northern Ireland, which focused on removing the terrorists from the general population, and the Israeli method of placing responsibility for terror on the entire population. It is this method that leads to horrors like the killing of children and the wiping out of entire families, not to mention the destruction of civilian infrastructure and the means for the population to earn its livelihood. Thus responsibility, both moral and political, devolves on Israel’s government and the top brass, which in any case has controlled the cabinet for many years. Sanctions are inevitable, and as usual the temptation to blame everything on the field command will be great. For now, this should be avoided. The primary responsibility is always that of those who loosened the reins. However, this does not absolve those who committed criminal acts, if there were any, of responsibility.
It is not the Goldstone report that has opened another painful phase in the erosion of Israel’s credibility, but rather the cavalier attitude here toward the heavy Palestinian losses. In broad circles of Western European and American intelligentsia – in the universities and among cultural and media figures – Israel arouses ever-deepening hostility.
To have friends is power, Thomas Hobbes said in the mid-17th century, but Israel’s friends are dwindling. Even those who remain, except for the usual mouthpieces, find it difficult to accept as legitimate the huge gap between the capabilities of the two sides. Most cannot understand the clear conscience of “the only democracy in the Middle East,” which does not hesitate to hold an entire people under occupation and siege, and at the same time punctiliously presents itself as always, in any situation, as the innocent victim of the hostile gentiles.

October 31, 2009

AN ARMY THAT HAS A STATE

In a democratic country,
The Minister of Defense
Represents the civil authority
Vis-à-vis the army.

In Israel, the army
Has vetoed the appointment
Of a Commission of Inquiry
Into the harm done to
Gaza civilians.

Minister of Defense Barak
Saluted and went to deliver
To the government
The Order of the General Staff.

Uri Avneri in Ha’aretz, October 30th, 2009

Academic Boycott of Israel and the Complicity of Israeli Academic Institutions: Alternative Information Centre

The idea of an academic boycott of Israel first emerged in 2002 as part of the growing boycott and divestment campaign
against Israel, itself a part of the struggle against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories and the violation of Palestinian human and national rights. Compared to other types of boycott, the academic boycott has gathered a relative amount of widespread support amongst academic unions and organizations, primarily in Great Britain. Not surprisingly,
this relative success has stirred a public debate and opposition to the boycott, mostly by pro-Israeli organizations and academics. The campaign for academic boycott has wavered under these pressures and various degrees and measures of boycott have since been approved and then often canceled by academic organizations. The arguments in favor of this kind of boycott have relied largely on the facts of the Israeli occupation and the idea of pressuring Israel through its academic
world; often, they have not utilised details relating to the specific academic institutions that they call to boycott.
Through this report, however, the Alternative Information Center (AIC) aims to inform and empower the debate on an academic boycott by giving information not on Israeli violence and violations of international law and human rights, but on
the part played in the Israeli occupation by the very academic institutions in question. The report demonstrates that Israeli academic institutions have not opted to take a neutral, apolitical position toward the Israeli occupation but to fully support the Israeli security forces and policies toward the Palestinians, despite the serious suspicions of crimes and atrocities hovering
over them. Any who argue either for or against an academic boycott against Israeli institutions, we believe, should.

To read this excellent first proper article in English about Academic complicity in Israel’s occupation, use the link above. This is amust for anyone wondering about the justification for academic boycott! It is 64 pages long, and has more than 180 references!

Six Questions for Desmond Travers on the Goldstone Report: Harper’s Magazine

By Ken Silverstein

Desmond Travers was one of the four members of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, which produced the controversial Goldstone Report. Travers is a retired Colonel of the Army of the Irish Defence Forces. His last appointment was as Commandant of its Military College. He also served in command of troops with various UN and EU peace support missions. I recently spoke to Travers by phone about the report. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

1. Were you surprised by the criticism of the report?

There was a lot of criticism even before the report came out, primarily against individuals, especially Justice Richard Goldstone. So we were not unduly surprised by the whinging when the report was released, except for the intensity and viciousness of the personal attacks. Justice Goldstone has publicly invited the critics, especially within the U.S. government, to come forward with substantive evidence of incorrect or inaccurate statements. But there has been no credible criticism of the report itself or of the information elucidated in it.

2. Douglas Griffiths, the American delegate to the Human Rights Council, said, “While Justice Goldstone acknowledged Hamas’s crimes, in examining Israel’s response sufficient weight was not given to the difficulties faced in fighting this kind of enemy in this environment.” Is that a fair criticism?

I was a soldier for 42 years and I reject that criticism, which seems intended to excuse alleged Israeli breaches of the laws of warfare. I retired as a colonel in the Irish army in 2001 having served in war zones in Cyprus, Lebanon, Bosnia and Croatia, and I would not underestimate the challenge of combat in built-up areas. Nonetheless, armies have never had the technological luxury that they do today when it comes to taking out targets without inflicting collateral damage.

3. What’s your opinion of the overall U.S. reaction to the report?

The Obama Administration said that Israel should carry out an investigation into its actions, and that’s an enormously important statement for the U.S. to make. In the view of the fact-finding mission the core message of the report is that there has to be an end to impunity to commit war crimes.

4. Critics have also said that Hamas deliberately inserted its fighters among civilians and that doing so increased the civilian toll. Did you find that to be the case?

We found no evidence that Hamas used civilians as hostages. I had expected to find such evidence but did not. We also found no evidence that mosques were used to store munitions. Those charges reflect Western perceptions in some quarters that Islam is a violent religion. Gaza is densely populated and has a labyrinth of makeshift shanties and a system of tunnels and bunkers. If I were a Hamas operative the last place I’d store munitions would be in a mosque. It’s not secure, is very visible, and would probably be pre-targeted by Israeli surveillance. There are a many better places to store munitions. We investigated two destroyed mosques—one where worshippers were killed—and we found no evidence that either was used as anything but a place of worship.
There is a sinister and foolish notion among certain proponents of insurgency warfare that to fight an insurgency means that civilians will inevitably be killed. But if you give the state authority to be indiscriminate with the lives of civilians in pursuing insurgents, it plays into the hands of the insurgents. Dead bodies are grist to the insurgents’ mill: if the dead are on your side they represent insurgent victories and if the dead are on their side then they have martyrs.

5. What is your view of the claim by Israeli officials that the IDF is the most “moral” army in the world?

Given the tactics, the weapons used, and the indiscriminate targeting, I think this is a dubious claim.

6. What other issues do you think need to be addressed?

We were disturbed by the lethality and toxicity of weapons used in Gaza, some of which have been in Western arsenals since the Cold War, such as white phosphorous, which incinerated 14 people, including several children in one attack; flechettes, small darts that are designed to tumble upon entering human flesh in order to cause maximum damage, strictly in breach of the Geneva Convention; and highly carcinogenic tungsten shrapnel and dime munitions, which contain tungsten in powder form. There is also a whole cocktail of other problematic munitions suspected to have been used.
There are a number of other post-conflict issues in Gaza that need to be addressed. The land is dying. There are toxic deposits from all the munitions that have been dropped. There are serious issues with water—its depletion and its contamination. There is a high instance of nitrates in the soil that is especially dangerous to children. If these issues are not addressed, Gaza may not even be habitable by World Health Organization norms.

Rattling the Cage: Some victims we are: Jerusalem Post

The kill ratio was 100-to-1 in our favor. The destruction ratio was much, much greater than that. To this day, thousands of Gazans are living in tents because we won’t let them import cement to rebuild the homes we destroyed. We turned the Gaza Strip into a disaster area, a humanitarian case, and we’re keeping it that way with our blockade.
Meanwhile, here on the Israeli side of the border, it’s hard to remember when life was so safe and secure.
So let’s decide: Who was the victim of Operation Cast Lead, them or us?
No question – us. We Israelis were the victims and we still are. In fact, our victimhood is getting worse by the day. The Goldstone report was the real war crime. The Goldstone report, the UN debates, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the Red Cross, B’Tselem, the traitorous soldiers of Breaking the Silence and the Rabin Academy – those were the true crimes against humanity. This is what’s meant by “war is hell.”

It is we who’ve been going through hell from the war in Gaza. It is we who’ve been suffering.

Gazans? Suffering? What’s everybody talking about?
We let them eat, don’t we?
This imaginary monologue is how we actually see ourselves today. We initiated the war in Gaza, we waged one of the most one-sided military campaigns anyone’s ever seen – and we’re the victims.
We’re fighting off the world with the Holocaust; witness Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu at the UN with his Auschwitz props. “We won’t go like lambs to the slaughter again,” vowed his protégé, Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz, in a cabinet discussion of the Goldstone report.
Auschwitz, lambs to the slaughter, Operation Cast Lead. To Israelis today, it’s all of a piece, it’s one story, one unbroken legacy of righteous victimhood.
The truth is that the State of Israel has never been a victim, and our likening of ourselves to the 6 million has been embarrassing from the beginning – but now? After what we did in Gaza? With the stranglehold we have on that society, while we over here live free and easy?

Victims? Lambs to the slaughter? Us?

No, this has gone beyond embarrassing; this is out-and-out shameful.
And, despite our excuses, it’s not that we’re “traumatized” by the past into believing that we’re still weak, still the frightened, powerless Jews about to be led to the gas chambers. Many Holocaust survivors still believe this, and to some very limited extent, this vestigial fear still takes up space in the Israeli mind.

But by now, 64 years after the Holocaust, 42 years after seeing in the Six Day War how strong we’d become, we know, whether we admit it to ourselves or not, that we aren’t the victims anymore. We know we aren’t a continuation of the 6 million but rather a deliberate and stark departure from them.

THE REASON we tell ourselves and the world that we are victims is because we know, whether we admit it to ourselves or not, that victimhood is power. Victimhood is freedom. A victim can’t be told to restrain himself. A victim fighting for survival can’t be accused of abusing his power because, after all, his back is to the wall, he’s desperate.
On the facts, it’s very hard to convince ourselves, let alone the world, that Gaza and its Kassams have pushed Fortress Israel’s back to the wall, that we’re desperate, that we’re struggling to survive. So, to convince ourselves and the world that this really is so, we do two things.
One, we refuse to acknowledge any facts that mar this image of ourselves as victims, and instead go over and over and over only the facts that fit the picture.
We talk only about the thousands of Kassams fired at Sderot; we never mention the thousands of Gazans we killed at the same time.
We talk only about Gilad Schalit; we never mention the 8,000 Palestinian prisoners we’re holding.
And we never mention our ongoing blockade of Gaza or the devastation it does to those people.
The second thing we do to convince ourselves and the world that we’re still victims is to never, ever, ever let go of the Holocaust – because that’s when we really were victims. Victims like nobody’s ever known, victims a million times worse than the Gazans.
Auschwitz, lambs to the slaughter. Remember us, the people of the Holocaust? That wasn’t the Middle East’s superpower you saw fighting in Gaza.
That was the 6 million.
So you can’t blame us. We’re immune from your criticism. We’re the biggest victims the world has ever known. We’re desperate, so don’t tell us about kill ratios and disproportionate use of force and collective punishment. We’re fighting for our survival.
This is what we tell ourselves and the world, and, in the face of what we did and are still doing in Gaza, it has become intolerable. We are not the 6 million. The 6 million were powerless Jews three generations ago; we cannot wrap our abuses of power in their tragedy.
Instead, let’s take a good, hard look at what we did and what we’re doing in Gaza. Then let’s take a good, hard look in the mirror. And then let’s admit who’s the true victim here and now, and, more importantly, who isn’t.

Israeli blockade strangling Gaza agriculture: The Electronic Intifada

Mya Guarnieri,  29 October 2009

The ongoing Israeli siege of the Gaza Strip prevents Palestinian farmers from exporting their goods. (Hatem Omar/MaanImages)
The ongoing Israeli siege of the Gaza Strip prevents Palestinian farmers from exporting their goods. (Hatem Omar/MaanImages)

Recently, Israel announced that it would import palm fronds from the Gaza Strip for the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. The move came at the behest of Minister of Religious Services, Yakov Margi, who feared that a shortage of palm fronds and a local monopoly on the item would send prices skyrocketing for the Jewish holiday, which came in early October this year.

Before the holiday, palm fronds are in high demand as religiously observant Jews build thatched huts that commemorate the 40 years that, according to Biblical tradition, the ancient Hebrews wandered the desert. Once Sukkot begins, however, palm fronds are no longer needed.

Initially, the decision to allow Gaza to export palm fronds seemed like an easing, however small, of the Israeli siege. But according to Gaza’s farmers, exporters and the Israeli non-governmental organization Gisha, it wasn’t.

The announcement came just three days prior to Sukkot. Because palm frond farmers in Gaza have not been able to export their crop since the blockade began in 2007, they were surprised by the decision and were left with insufficient time to harvest, dry and sell their product.

Kamel Aklook is a 43-year-old trader from Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip. “In the beginning, I was happy to hear [Israel’s decision to import palm fronds from Gaza],” Aklook said, explaining that he heard about it on Al-Jazeera. “I called my clients in Israel. And then I realized there was no time.”

Aklook believes that the announcement was only intended to bring the prices of palm fronds down. “It was a political decision, just for show,” he said, pointing out that Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak was under pressure from rabbis to break the local monopoly and lower the cost for Jewish consumers.
Before the siege, Aklook exported palm fronds from Gaza to Israel for more than 20 years. Aklook, his wife and their 12 children enjoyed the fruits of a brisk business with Jewish partners.

The first year of the blockade, Aklook suffered a $55,000 dollar loss and he was forced to throw the unsold palm fronds away. Now he is not working and relies on the UN agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA) to feed his family, something he finds humiliating. “To ask for help from anyone, except for God, is dishonorable,” Aklook says.

Jibreel Baraka, a 40-year-old palm frond farmer from Deir al-Balah, told a similar story. “In 2007,” he said, “I prepared 4,000 units for delivery but I didn’t get a permit and they went to waste.”

When palm frond season came this year, Baraka didn’t bother harvesting as he had no expectations of selling it. And the Israeli move to import palm fronds from Gaza didn’t offer any hope, Baraka explained, as it would have taken him at least a week to prepare the crop for export.

Though business was good before the blockade, Baraka is now a subsistence farmer. Still, he worries about his ability to feed his wife and their 13 children. The vegetables they live off of aren’t growing well, he said.

The troubles facing palm frond farmers and exporters underscore the devastating effects of the blockade on the whole of the Gaza Strip’s agriculture industry. In 2008, the second season impacted by the Israeli closure, Oxfam estimated that Gaza’s farmers alone took a $6.5 million hit.

Zachary Hijazi, a carnation farmer, says that he has lost between $9,000 to $10,000 dollars per dunam (the equivalent of 1,000 square meters) of land annually since the siege began.

In 2007, he cultivated and harvested his flowers in hopes of exporting them to Holland, as he had in years past. But in the end, Hijazi couldn’t get his product to market. Like other farmers, he was forced to throw the flowers away or feed them to livestock.

In 2009, with assistance from the Dutch government, Gaza’s carnation farmers, Hijazi included, managed to export just more than half a million flowers to Holland. While Hijazi appreciated the help of the Dutch, he pointed out that before the blockade Gaza’s carnation farmers exported 60 million flowers annually. The trickle of flowers that made it out wasn’t enough.

Israel’s attacks on Gaza last winter made an additional impact on Hijazi’s business; the irrigation pipes were damaged and he was forced to repair them. This is a serious problem facing many of Gaza’s farmers; the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics reports that the Israeli incursion inflicted $170 million of damages to the Gaza Strip’s agricultural infrastructure and land. The Palestinian Ministry of Agriculture predicts that the agricultural industry will be impacted by an additional $88 million of indirect losses attributable to the bombardment.

Hijazi is now deep in debt due to three failed seasons. And he believes that the world has forgotten about the people in the Strip.

Ahmed Surani, spokesperson for the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committee in Gaza, is not only concerned about the economic impact of the blockade. The widespread feelings of hopelessness are worrisome, too. “We feel like we are in a jail,” he said. “We are compressed from all sides.”

Fishermen can’t access the Israeli-controlled Mediterranean Sea. And Israel has stepped up its patrol of the buffer zone, which eats up approximately 25 percent of Gaza’s agricultural land.

Surani points out that this tight control of Gaza’s borders hinders more than exports; it also poses an obstacle to subsistence farming and fishing. Due to the buffer zone, farmers who ordinarily would be able to grow food for their families are severed from their land and must rely on international aid instead, said Surani. Meanwhile, their fields lie fallow.

The total devastation of Gaza’s agricultural sector, which prior to the blockade generated nearly 10 percent of the Strip’s GDP, has serious implications for the future. “It affects the possibility for a viable Palestinian state,” Surani said.

Rehabilitation and reconstruction of the agricultural industry is crucial, according to Surani. Borders must be opened so palm fronds, carnations and Gaza’s other agricultural goods can be exported. The buffer zones must be dissolved so farmers can access their land.

Creating jobs and sustainable activity, Surani said, “gives hope to the people.”

Sari Bashi, director of Gisha, remarked, “The palm fronds are just one example of the potential for mutual benefit — currently stymied — in allowing farmers in Gaza to import raw materials and to export their produce to Israel, the West Bank and third[-party] countries. It is not clear how Israeli security is enhanced by preventing Gaza residents from exercising their right to engage in dignified work.”

Mya Guarnieri is a Tel Aviv-based journalist and writer and a regular contributor to The Jerusalem Post. Her work has also appeared in Outlook India — India’s equivalent to and subsidiary of Newsweek — as well as The National, The Forward, Maan News Agency, Common Ground News Service, Zeek, The Khaleej Times, Daily News Egypt and other international publications.

Norway university to vote next month on boycott of Israel: Israeli Occupation Archive

By Cnaan Liphshiz, Haaretz – 30 Oct 2009
www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1124667.html
The university of Trondheim in Norway may become the first university in the West to adopt an academic boycott of Israel, if a majority of its board votes in favor of the move at a meeting on the subject next month.
Three days prior to the November 12 vote by the board of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), the institution will host a lecture on Israel’s alleged use of anti-Semitism as a political tool.
The lecture, by Prof. Moshe Zuckermann of Tel Aviv University, is part of a controversial six-session seminar on Israel that is comprised entirely of Norwegians and Israelis known for highly critical attitudes toward Israel.
Prof. Morten Levin, an NTNU lecturer and member of the seminar’s organizing committee, set up the series of lectures – which also featured Ilan Pappe and Stephen Walt – with Ann Rudinow Saetnan and Rune Skarstein. All have signed a call for an academic boycott of Israel.
In a letter this week to Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s director for international relations, Shimon Samuels, called the seminar “a new stage in Norwegian incitement to Jew-hatred” and “outrageously anti-Israel bigotry.”
According to a scientist working at NTNU who spoke to Haaretz on condition of anonymity, the idea of holding a vote on boycotting Israel was modeled on the campaign run by Sue Blackwell, a leading proponent of an academic boycott of Israel in the United Kingdom.
A group of pro-Israel employees of NTNU are currently looking for ways to prevent the boycott from being adopted, drawing on the legal reasoning that in 2007 prompted Britain’s University and College Union – of which Blackwell is a prominent member – to nix plans for a boycott of Israel.
According to people who fought the U.K. boycott motion, it was dropped after legal consultants told UCU officials that a boycott of Israel would violate anti-discrimination laws. “We have to see how similar the laws in Norway are,” the Trondheim scientist said.
“If this were the U.K., [a boycott] would be illegal. But this is Norway, where these things may fly,” said Manfred Gerstenfeld, chairman of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, who has published a book on anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism in the Nordic countries.

October 29, 2009

Noam Chomsky delivered two key lectures in London at LSE and the Institute of Education this week. As both were sold out within hours, before they were ever adverstised, the lectures on Thursday 28th October was streamed live to 12 universities in the UK, and projected to large audiences. To see and hear Chmosky’s lecture in full, use the link below:

The video as well as an audio file are now available on

http://www.soas.ac.uk/events/event52739.html

Settler shoots Palestinian in Jerusalem: Ma’an News

Bethlehem – Ma’an – Right-wing Israeli settlers attacked the Salah family on their way to Friday prayers in a bid to take over their home in the East Jerusalem community of Beit Safafa on Friday, Israeli and Palestinian officials said.
The settlers, 12 according to Palestinian sources, six according to Israeli media, and three according to the Jerusalem police chief, pulled up in a car with an eviction order for the family home of Ali Ibrahim Salah and his children.
Salah said the buildings shelter 55 residents, 30 of which are under 12 years old and include his children, Ismail, Mohammad, Mahmoud, Ahmad. He said the settlers claimed they bought the homes from their Armenian owners.
The Palestinian News Network quoted Sheha Salah as saying that her husband had purchased the buildings from its owners in 1966, and had the documents to prove the validity of the sale. Israel’s High Court issued an eviction order on the home in August, giving the family one month to vacate the premises.
An argument erupted as the settlers demanded the family get out of their home. One of the settlers, reportedly all in their 50s, was armed with a gun, and fired on the family members. Israeli sources differed saying between one and four were injured, most of them youth.
The following family members were admitted to the Al-Maqased Hospital in East Jerusalem after the attack:
Daoud Salah, 18, sustained blows to the head and extensive bruising on his foot
Mohammad Salah, 48, sustained bruises to his lower back after being hit with an iron bar
Sheha Salah, 89, sustained bruises to his head and neck
Ismail Slah, 60, was shot with a live bullet in his hand
Ali Ibrahim Salah, 95, sustained moderate bruises to his body after being struck several times
The Israeli news agency Ynet said the middle-aged extremists fled the scene after the shooting, but were later found and detained.
An Israeli police spokesman had a different version of the incident, saying, “Three Jewish people came to the home in Beit Safafa to deliver the eviction order to the family then fighting erupted. It seems one of the Jewish people opened fire with his personal weapon and injured one of the Arab residents in the hand… then the Jewish people fled the scene driving their car.”
Following their release from the hospital, members of the Salah family were summoned to the police station for interrogation.

Protest at Daniel Ayalon’s meeting at LSE: Blip.TV

The racist Daniel Ayalon, moutpiece of the Israeli government, was invited by the lSE management to speak to staff and students. Enraged by this invitation, a large group of students have made their views known:

Bethlehem student deported to Gaza: Ma’an News

Bethlehem – Ma’an – Israeli forces forcibly “deported” Berlanty Azzam, a Bethlehem University student, to Gaza overnight after detaining her at a military checkpoint on Wednesday.

“I pray that no one else goes through the same experience,” she said over the phone from Gaza, recounting her last hours in the West Bank.
Born in Gaza, Azzam, 21, was sponsored by the university for study in the West Bank and had been living in Bethlehem since 2005, the university confirmed. She received a travel permit from the Israeli military to cross from Gaza to the West Bank in 2005.
On Wednesday, however, she was heading home to Bethlehem from a job interview in Ramallah, and arrived at the “container” checkpoint at 1pm. Israeli forces checked her ID and held her until 7pm without explanation. Then they blindfolded and handcuffed her, put her in a jeep and told her they were taking her to “Etzion Israeli coordinating office,” she said.
She described the journey as silent. Most of the trip no one spoke to her or told her where they were taking her, she said.
They stopped somewhere along the way, and she remembers being in a place that looked like a cafeteria. She asked to use the restroom, and the soldiers kept her blindfolded all the way to the restroom door. They were there for what Berlanty estimates was about 15 minutes. Then she was put back in the army jeep, and the journey continued.
Hours after the journey began, the jeep came to a stop. Soldiers took her out, removed the blindfold and handcuffs and told her, “You are in Gaza.”
“I haven’t been to Gaza for four years,” she replied. “I didn’t know the way, and it was dark. It was an empty area.”
“Give me directions,” she told the soldiers, “I don’t know where to go.” They just gestured for her to continue, following behind, so she kept walking until she came to a gate. That gate opened, she went through it, then through another one, to ultimately find de facto government police and her parents waiting for her on the other side.
Asked how the family was doing, her father said, “Well you know how things are here.”
Education officials appealed to concerned supporters and asked them to “demand that they [Israel] release Berlanty Azzam immediately so that she can resume and complete her last year of studies at the Vatican-sponsored Bethlehem University.”
“The Israeli military has banned Palestinian residents of Gaza from studying at Palestinian universities in the West Bank,” according to Bethlehem University Vice President Brother Jack Curran, in a statement issued just before the deportation.
He added, “Military authorities are holding this 4th year Christian student in the Sharon Detention Center near Netanya in Israel and are threatening to ‘deport her’ to Gaza ‘for trying to complete her studies at Bethlehem University.'”
Matthew Kalman, a writer for the Chronicle for Higher Education, spoke to Sari Bashi, Berlanty’s lawyer and executive director of the human rights group Gisha. “I spoke to her today for about 10 minutes until the army took away her cellphone. She’s terrified. She’s 21. She has never been in detention and doesn’t know what’s happening to her.”
The lawyer continued, explaining, “We asked the army to let her go… [but] they said no. They did agree to wait until after our lawyer visits in the morning. They won’t deport her pending an opportunity for our lawyer to file a court petition.”
She was nevertheless deported overnight, without ever speaking to her lawyer.
With disappointment, Azzam adds, “When I reach the point that I will graduate, now I’m being held back again.” A fourth-year business administration student, she only had three credits left to go.

And while the world was getting involved against Iran:

Lebanon warns UN: Israel planning to attack us: Ha’aretz

Lebanon’s ambassador to the United Nations has warned that Israel is exhibiting signs of an imminent attack on his country, the Lebanese newspaper Al-Hayyat reported on Friday.
Ambassador Noaf Salaam sent missives to the United Nations secretary general and to the Security Council condemning Israel’s recent artillery fire on the village of Houla, the site where a Katyusha rocket was fired at the Upper Galilee last week.
Salaam called the artillery fire a clear violation of Lebanon’s sovereignty as well as of UN Resolution 1701, which saw a truce between Israel and Lebanon following the 2006 war.
According to Al-Hayyat, Salaam described in his missive repeated Israeli threats against the Lebanese government and citizens, an expression he believes signals Israeli plans for to attack.
Salaam also said that the Israeli decision to bomb Lebanese territory following every Katyusha attack delayed and prevented Lebanese forces from investigating the rocket attacks.
Lebanese troops found and dismantled four rockets ready for launching near the border with Israel last Wednesday, a day after the Katyusha was launched from the southern village.
The Katyusha fire was the first such incident since last month, and the ninth since the Second Lebanon War.
The attack drew a rapid response from Israeli artillery in a brief flare-up across the border. Neither the rocket nor the artillery caused casualties.

And if you were wondering why Obamah and Hilary sound more and more like Israeli generals, read below:

The IDF has become Israel’s diplomatic channel to the West: Ha’aretz

Regular visitors to Tel Aviv’s northern beaches were surprised this week to find Tel Baruch beach strictly off-limits, guarded by makeshift barbed-wire fences and joint patrols by Israel Defense Forces soldiers and burly American men – and a few women – in desert camouflage.
The biennial Juniper Cobra exercise, aimed at improving coordination between American and Israeli missile defense systems, has become almost routine for the two armies since its inception in 2001, but this time there were a number of marked differences. Not only was this the largest joint Israeli-American military exercise in history, it was also the largest exercise of its kind by U.S. forces.
“This is the first time we’ve deployed all these systems, the THAAD missile, the Aegis system and the X-band radar all together against threat scenarios,” Colonel Tony English, commander of the Germany-based 357th Air Defense Brigade told reporters this week near Tel Aviv.
The exercise has major strategic significance not only for Israel, but also for the world as a whole. While Israel is developing a multilayered missile defense system, whose long-range Arrow missile component is operational while the others are on schedule in terms of development, the U.S. X-band radar system deployed in the Negev has tripled Israel’s ability to detect missiles fired from the east (in other words, from Iran’s direction).
The X-band system – the first and only permanent deployment of U.S. troops in Israel – together with the additional systems demonstrated during Juniper Cobra, which the U.S. would provide Israel on short notice in an emergency situation, greatly enhances the defensive shield over the country.
On the diplomatic level, the promise of emergency deployment could serve to reassure Israel that it need not act hastily.
For the United States, this year’s Juniper Cobra provided the first opportunity to practice deploying an entire mobile missile defense envelope. Following President Barack Obama’s decision to cancel plans to build a permanent missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic, the U.S. trend is to move to mobile solutions. While exercising their interoperability with Israeli missile defense units, the Americans were also proving something to themselves: that in a global situation, where the threat may come tomorrow from Iran, North Korea or an increasingly unstable Pakistan, they are capable of flexibility.

Give and take
There was, however, a slightly less positive undertone to Colonel English’s remarks, implying that just as this defense can be extended to America’s allies, it can also be withdrawn. The entire setup, including the X-band radar system, which in a few weeks will celebrate its one-year anniversary on Israeli soil, can be disassembled within a few hours, moved overland and then loaded onto C-17 transport aircraft and redeployed anywhere in the world.
But no one, at least in the U.S. military, is currently talking about reducing Washington’s security commitment to Israel. Although relations between the countries’ leaders are at a low, their armed forces have never been closer. IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi never tires of telling guests that he speaks with the U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Michael Mullen, at least once a week on the secure line between their offices.
As Israel appears to be increasingly isolated diplomatically, the relationship between Western and Israeli military leaders is beginning to resemble a convenient back channel for the exchange of information on Syria as well as on Iran, Hezbollah and Islamist threats. During Ashkenazi’s three-day stay in Germany this week, the official press releases emphasized mainly the visits by Israel’s No. 1 soldier to Holocaust-related sites, such as the villa on Lake Wannsee where the Final Solution was decided upon. But the truly pressing matters on Ashkenazi’s agenda were far from historical. In just three weeks he has met with the chiefs of staff of the five largest armies in NATO – the United States, Britain, Canada, France and now Germany.
“The army chiefs are a very useful diplomatic channel,” one IDF General Staff officer says. The content of Ashkenazi’s meetings with Germany’s Chief of Staff, Gen. Wolfgang Schneiderhan, was of course not made public. But at a time when the major Western countries are engaged in a frustrating dialogue with Iran over the future of its nuclear program, there is little doubt over what could have been of joint interest to the two generals. Israel, in particular, has a clear interest in conveying its viewpoint to the senior military advisors of these nations’ leaders.
But the military relationship between Israel and Germany goes much deeper than just dealing with the current Iranian problem. German shipyards are building two Dolphin class submarines for the Israel Navy, which according to foreign reports are capable of launching ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads. The German government is funding one-third of the costs of the new submarines. The three Dolphins previously delivered to Israel were funded fully by Germany. Meanwhile, last week the Israel Navy began talks with the Blohm & Voss shipyard over the possible construction of two new corvettes (warships).
The military know-how goes both ways. This week a new deal for the purchase of Israel Aerospace Industries Heron unmanned aerial vehicles by the Luftwaffe was announced. The deal is believed to be worth $90 million at present, with additional orders in the pipeline.
The Heron system, consisting of drones and command and control cabins, will be shipped immediately to Afghanistan. The German units that are part of the NATO effort there urgently need flexible, real-time air surveillance capability to help counter the Taliban in the once-peaceful northern sector. In the past few months the insurgents have drawn the troops deployed there into the bloodiest fighting experienced by German soldiers since World War II.
Officially, Israel has no involvement in the fighting in Afghanistan. The last thing the Western armies struggling to gain the confidence of the local Muslim population need right now is to be linked to the “Zionist entity.” But the new German unmanned aerial vehicles will join similar Israeli-designed drones – used by Canada, Spain and the United States – in the sky, while on the ground will be combat vehicles covered in armor plating designed on Kibbutz Sasa, in the Upper Galilee.
But cooperation with Israel goes further than just the supply of hardware. Many of the forces facing threats from suicide bombers and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) operate according to doctrines adapted from those developed by the IDF when facing Hezbollah and armed Palestinian organizations.
Furthermore, in recent months, the similarity of the threat facing the IDF and its Western counterparts has grown. Analyses by the forensic laboratory of the IDF Ground Forces’ technological logistics directorate show a distinct technological advance in the IEDs used against the IDF near the border with the Gaza Strip. One senior officer stationed in that sector said last week, “They are not really improvised anymore.” In any event, from information supplied by the British and U.S. armies, it seems that the devices in Gaza are almost identical to those used by the Taliban in Afghanistan, including the recent incorporation of tungsten.
The new materials and expertise almost certainly came from bomb experts smuggled into Gaza through tunnels under the Egyptian border. Since the end of Operation Cast Lead more than 10 months ago Hamas has virtually ceased carrying out operations against the IDF. All of the attempted attacks have been traced to Islamic Jihad groups that flout Hamas’ authority. Like the Taliban, these groups are now being funded and trained by Al-Qaida.
In a related development, U.S. Army Surgeon General Lt. Gen. Eric Schoomaker visited Israel this week to study methods of dealing with battlefield trauma. A senior IDF physician who met him asked Schoomaker to take him to Afghanistan.
“I said that Afghanistan is now the place to learn about battlefield trauma, we could gain a lot through the experience,” the physician related. “But he said, ‘Don’t even ask, you know it’s impossible, we’ll have to keep meeting here.'”

October 25, 2009

Obama: Nobel Peace Laureate by Latuff
Obama: Nobel Peace Laureate by Latuff

View the film on the BBC link below. Seeing is believing.

Israel rejects police abuse probe: BBC

Israeli border police officers who were filmed apparently abusing Palestinian civilians will not face charges, an Israeli state prosecutor has ruled.
An appeal calling for an investigation was rejected and the police’s actions dismissed as “only light blows”, said human rights group, Yesh Din. The three videos show Palestinian civilians being struck, grabbed and humiliated by uniformed officers.
The incident allegedly took place in East Jerusalem in 2008. Israeli police have refused to comment on the ruling.
‘Wink of consent’
The Yesh Din group was set up in 2006 to provide legal assistance to Palestinians in the occupied territories.
It described the ruling a shocking decision:
“This shows a reality where soldiers feel that it is permissible to harass and beat civilians. Criminal law forbids assault.
“It is a wrong and dangerous wink of consent.” The group quoted Israeli Deputy State Prosecutor Shai Nitzan as justifying the officers’ actions within the law: “They were light blows that do not cause real damage, are not illegal.” It is not clear how the footage was made public, but reports suggest it was recorded on a mobile phone that was then lost. In one of the videos, an Israeli officer is seen hitting a young Palestinian man, then striking him on the back of the neck – an action that is culturally an insult. The officer then dishevels the man’s clothes and knees him in the backside. In another video, a Palestinian is made to salute the officer before being released. The Israeli Department for the Investigation of Police Officers had announced in January 2009 that it was not going to seek prosecution against the officers. The latest ruling was a rejection of Yesh Din’s appeal against that decision. The human rights group said it would consider further legal means to challenge the decision.

Below, you can read about the love which never falters, the only true love story in the entire universe – that of Uncle Sam and Miss Israel… and this after Turkey called off the NATO excercise because of Israel, so the lone lovers continue unabated:

Israel joins US for defence drill: BBC

Israel and the US are due to begin a two-week military defence exercise, thought to be the largest of its kind in Israel’s history.
The exercise will focus on providing a joint defence against a simulated co-ordinated missile attack on Israel.
Up to 2,000 joint military personnel are believed to be taking part, along with at least 15 American ships.
The Israeli army said the exercise was not a “response to any world events” but had been planned for a while.
It is thought that a highly sophisticated new American radar, based in the Israeli desert, will be central to the exercise.
Two-fold significance
The simulation will involve elements such as barrage of missiles fired on Israel from all points south, east and north.
The BBC’s Middle East correspondent Tim Franks said many observers inside Israel believed the exercise carried a two-fold significance.
This included sending a message of deterrence to any would-be attackers of Israel – whether they were in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria or Iran. It was also possibly an attempt to reassure Israel’s people that the US took the country’s security seriously – especially at a time when the US has expressed increasing concern about Iran’s nuclear programme, although Tehran insists it is purely peaceful. Analysts say use the manoeuvres could also serve to make Israel feel more secure, and therefore encourage a return to Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. Last week, Turkey, one of the few Muslim countries with whom Israel has had good contacts, cancelled a joint air force exercise with Israel.
Israel, Turkey and the US countries took part in a joint exercise in the Mediterranean Sea, off Haifa last year.
Tim Franks said Turkish-Israeli relations have become strained this year, since Turkey heavily criticised Israel’s war in Gaza.
The exercise, which is entitled Juniper Cobra, is due to finish on 5 November.

Palestinian woman stabs Israeli guard at West Bank checkpoint: Ha’aretz

An Israeli security guard was moderately wounded on Sunday when a Palestinian woman stabbed him in the stomach at the Qalandiya checkpoint north of Jerusalem.
The guard, 28, was taken to the trauma unit at Hadassah Ein Karem Hospital for treatment. The assailant, a 21-year-old resident of Ramallah was arrested on the spot. She was detained for questioning at the Jerusalem Police’s juvenile unity.
According to the Magen David Adom paramedic who treated the guard at the scene, the wound was deep and caused by a short-bladed knide.  “He was bleeding and very pale, but fully conscious and told us that he had been stabbed by a terrorist,” said the medic. The medic was able to curb the bleeding at the scene before evacuating the casualty to hospital. The stabbing came after a day of clashes at the Temple Mount in the Old City of Jerusalem, where at least 28 people – 25 Palestinians and three Israel Police officers – were wounded. Police detained at least 15 Palestinian protesters over the course of Sunday.

Israel Police battle Arab rioters on Temple Mount; PA official arrested: Ha’aretz

Stone-throwing Arab youths wounded three policemen on the Temple Mount on Sunday as Jerusalem police, firing water cannons and stun grenades, raided the holy site in a bid to quell repeated bouts of rioting. At least 25 Palestinians were wounded over the course of the day. Police stormed the compound twice; the first time was in response to Arab youths who pelted officers with rocks and poured oil on them. Later Sunday morning, about 100 Arab youths renewed rioting at the Temple Mount, after which Border Police and regular policemen raided the site again, using stun grenades to disperse the rioters.
Police were attempting to completely clear the compound of worshippers. Officers arrested some 16 people during the disturbances. During the clash, police arrested Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ adviser on Jerusalem affairs, Hatam Abd al-Qadir, on suspicion of disorderly conduct. Police said he attacked officers and urged worshippers to hold a protest march. Ali Abu Sheikha, a senior official from the northern faction of the Islamic movement was also arrested during the clashes. Police said Abu Sheikha was at the Temple Mount disrupting the peace and inciting the youths. Early Sunday morning, police were patrolling near the Temple Mount, in the Old City of Jerusalem, when the youths began to hurl stones at them. Officers subsequently stormed the compound and arrested 12 people on suspicion of disorderly conduct.
A large wall of riot police, holding glass shields, closed in on the crowd, sending many of the rioters running into the mosque for cover. Arab youths hurled a firebomb at police during clashes at the site, but no one was wounded. A Jerusalem police spokesman, Shmuel Ben-Ruby said police did not enter the Al-Aqsa mosque atop the compound. The violence came after Jerusalem police announced Saturday that they would beef up their forces on Sunday around the Temple Mount, after Muslim leaders urged Arabs to defend Jerusalem against “Jewish conquest.” There have been repeated rumors among Palestinians that Jewish extremists are planning on harming the holy site. No such attempt has been made. Earlier in the month, Police clashed sporadically with Muslim protesters in and around the compound. No one was seriously wounded, but in the past deadly violence has erupted at the site.

Below you can read Ali Abinimah, reprting on his most successful derailing of the Olmert USA lecture tour, with much support from US students and faculty:

Why I disrupted Olmert: The Electronic Intifada

Ali Abunimah,  23 October 2009

If former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had merely been a diplomat or an academic offering a controversial viewpoint, then interrupting his 15 October speech at University of Chicago’s Mandel Hall would certainly have been an attempt to stifle debate (Noah Moskowitz, Meredyth Richards and Lee Solomon, “The importance of open dialogue,” Chicago Maroon, 19 October 2009). Indeed, I experienced exactly such attempts when my own appearance at Mandel Hall last January, with Professor John Mearsheimer and Norman Finkelstein, was constantly interrupted by hecklers.
But confronting a political leader suspected of war crimes and crimes against humanity cannot be viewed the same way.
The report of the UN Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict last winter, headed by Judge Richard Goldstone, found that Israel engaged in willful, widespread and wanton destruction of civilian property and infrastructure, causing deliberate suffering to the civilian population. It found “that the incidents and patterns of events considered in the report are the result of deliberate planning and policy decisions” and that many may amount to “war crimes” and “crimes against humanity.” If that proves true, then the individual with primary responsibility is Ehud Olmert, who, as prime minister and the top civilian commander of Israel’s armed forces, was involved in virtually every aspect of planning and execution.
The killings of more than 3,000 Palestinians and Lebanese during Olmert’s three years in office are not mere differences of opinion to be challenged with a polite question written on a pre-screened note card. They are crimes for which Olmert is accountable before international law and public opinion.
Israel, unlike Hamas (also accused of war crimes by Goldstone), completely refused to cooperate with the Goldstone Mission. Instead of accountability, Olmert is, obscenely, traveling around the United States offering justifications for these appalling crimes, collecting large speaking fees, and being feted as a “courageous” statesman.
In their 20 October email to the University of Chicago community, President Robert Zimmer and Provost Thomas Rosenbaum condemned the “disruptions” during Olmert’s speech. “Any stifling of debate,” they wrote, “runs counter to the primary values of the University of Chicago and to our long-standing position as an exemplar of academic freedom.”
Was it in order to promote debate that the University insisted on pre-screening questions and imposed a recording ban for students and media? In the name of promoting debate, will the University now invite Hamas leader Khaled Meshal — perhaps by video link — to lecture on leadership to its students, and offer him a large honorarium? Can we soon expect Sudan’s President Omar Bashir to make an appearance at Mandel Hall?
When I and others verbally confronted Olmert, we stood for academic freedom, human rights, and justice, especially for hundreds of thousands of students deprived of those same rights by Olmert’s actions.
During Israel’s attack on Gaza last winter, schools and universities were among the primary targets. According to the Goldstone report, Israeli military attacks destroyed or damaged at least 280 schools and kindergartens. In total, 164 pupils and 12 teachers were killed, and 454 pupils and five teachers injured.
After the bombing, Olmert and Israel continued their attack on academic freedom, blocking educational supplies from reaching Gaza. Textbooks, notebooks, stationery and computers are among the forbidden items. In September, Chris Gunness, spokesman for UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestine refugees, publicly appealed to Israel to lift its ban on books and other supplies from reaching Gaza’s traumatized students.
Israel destroyed buildings at the Islamic University and other universities. According to the Goldstone report, these “were civilian, educational buildings and the Mission did not find any information about their use as a military facility or their contribution to a military effort that might have made them a legitimate target in the eyes of the Israeli armed forces.”
Gaza’s university students — 60 percent of them women — study all the things that students do at the University of Chicago. Their motivations, aspirations, and abilities are just as high, but their lives are suffocated by unimaginable violence, trauma, and Israel’s blockade, itself a war crime. Olmert is the person who ordered these acts and must be held accountable.
Crimes against humanity are defined as “crimes that shock the conscience.” When the institutions with the moral and legal responsibility to punish and prevent the crimes choose complicit silence — or, worse, harbor a suspected war criminal, already on trial for corruption in Israel, and present him to students as a paragon of “leadership” — then disobedience, if that is what it takes to break the silence, is an ethical duty. Instead of condemning them, the University should be proud that its students were among those who had the courage to stand up.
For the first time in recorded history, an Israeli prime minister was publicly confronted with the names of his victims. It was a symbolic crack in the wall of impunity and a foretaste of the public justice victims have a right to receive when Olmert is tried in a court of law.
Co-founder of The Electronic Intifada, Ali Abunimah is author of One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse. This article was originally published in the University of Chicago’s Chicago Maroon newspaper and is republished with permission.

Only when such war criminals as Olmert will be put on trial, will we see the beginning of justice done. Remember Milosevic! Remember Karadjic!

Below an excellent article by Jonathan Cook, again exposing the illegal and immoral occupation regime in its shenanigans:

Israeli intelligence pose as Arabs to spy on citizens: The Electronic Intifada

Jonathan Cook, 21 October 2009
Civil rights groups in Israel have expressed outrage at the announcement last week that a special undercover unit of the police has been infiltrating and collecting intelligence on Israel’s Palestinian Arab minority by disguising its officers as Arabs. It is the first public admission that the Israeli police are using methods against the country’s 1.3 million Arab citizens that were adopted long ago in the occupied territories, where soldiers are regularly sent on missions disguised as Palestinians. According to David Cohen, the national police commissioner, the unit was established two years ago after an assessment that there was “no intelligence infrastructure to deal with the Arab community.” He said that, in addition, undercover agents had been operating in East Jerusalem for several years to track potential terrorists. Israel’s Arab leaders denounced the move as confirmation that the Arab minority was still regarded by the police as “an enemy” — a criticism made by a state commission of inquiry after police shot dead 13 unarmed Arab demonstrators inside Israel and wounded hundreds more at the start of the second Palestinian intifada in 2000.
In a letter of protest to Israeli officials this week, Adalah, a legal rights group, warned that the unit’s creation violated the constitutional rights of the Arab minority and risked introducing “racial profiling” into Israeli policing. Although the police claim that only Arab criminals are being targeted, Arab leaders believe the unit is an expansion of police efforts to collect information on political activists, escalating what they term a “climate of fear” being fostered by the rightwing government of Benjamin Netanyahu. Awad Abdel Fattah, general secretary of the National Democratic Assembly party, whose activists are regularly interrogated by the police even though the party is represented in the national parliament, said there was strong evidence that undercover units had been operating in Arab communities for many years.
“The question is, why are the police revealing this information now? I suspect it is designed to intimidate people, making them fear that they are being secretly watched so that they don’t participate in demonstrations or get involved in politics. It harms the democratic process.” Secret agents disguised as Arabs — known in Hebrew as mista’aravim — were used before Israel’s founding. Jews, usually recruited from Arab countries, went undercover in neighboring states to collect intelligence. The Haaretz newspaper revealed in 1998 that the secret police, the Shin Bet, also operated a number of mista’aravim inside Israel shortly after the state’s creation, locating them in major Arab communities.
The unit was disbanded in 1959, amid great secrecy, after several agents married local Arab women, and in some cases had children with them, in order to maintain their cover. But the mista’aravim are better known for their use by the Israeli army on short-term missions inside Arab countries or in the West Bank and Gaza, where they have often been sent to capture or kill local leaders. Famously Ehud Barak, the current defense minister, was sent to Beirut in 1973 disguised as an Arab woman to assassinate three Palestinian leaders. More recently, however, the army’s mista’aravim have come to notice because of allegations that they are being used as agents provocateurs, especially in breaking up peaceful protests by Palestinians in the West Bank against the wall.

In April 2005, during a demonstration at the village of Bilin, north of Jerusalem, Palestinians throwing stones at soldiers were revealed to be mista’aravim. They were filmed blowing their cover shortly afterwards by pulling our pistols to make arrests. The army later admitted it had used mista’aravim at the demonstration.Palestinians claim that stone-throwing by mista’aravim is often used to disrupt or discredit peaceful demonstrations and justify the army’s use of rubber bullets and live ammunition against the protesters in retaliation.Last week Jamal Zahalka, an Arab member of the parliament, warned other legislators of the danger that mista’aravim police officers would adopt similar tactics: “Such a unit will carry out provocations, in which the Arab public will be blamed for disorderly conduct.”Abdel Fattah said there were widespread suspicions that mista’avarim officers had been operating for years at legal demonstrations held by Israel’s Arab citizens, including at the protests against Israel’s winter attack on Gaza. He said they were often disguised as journalists so that they could photograph demonstrators. He said a woman activist from his party had been called in by the police for interrogation after a demonstration last year in the Arab town of Arrabeh. “The officer told her, ‘I know what you were saying because I was standing right next to you.’ And he then told her exactly what she had said.”In his testimony to a government watchdog, the police commissioner, Insp. Gen Cohen, said he had plans for the unit “to grow” and that it would solve a problem the police had in infiltrating Israel’s large Arab communities: “It’s very hard for us to work in Umm al-Fahm, it’s very hard for us to deal with crime in Juarish and Ramle.”
Several unnamed senior officers, however, defended their role in monitoring the Arab community, claiming the commissioner was wrong in stating that the use of mista’aravim inside Israel was new. One told Haaretz: “Existing units of mista’aravim have operated undercover among this population for about a decade.”
Orna Cohen, a lawyer with the Adalah legal group, said the accepted practice for police forces was to create specialized units according to the nature of the crime committed, not according to the ethnicity or nationality of the suspect.
She warned that the unit’s secretive nature, its working methods and the apparent lack of safeguards led to a strong suspicion that the Arab minority was being characterized as a “suspect group.” “Such a trend towards racial profiling and further discrimination against the minority is extremely dangerous,” she said.
Comments two years ago from Yuval Diskin, the head of the Shin Bet, have raised fears about the uses the police unit may be put to. He said the security services had the right to use any means to “thwart” action, even democratic activity, by the Arab minority to reform Israel’s political system. All the Arab parties are committed to changing Israel’s status from a Jewish state to “a state of all its citizens.”
Abdel Fattah said: “This is about transferring the methods used in the West Bank and Gaza into Israel to erode our rights as citizens. It raises questions about what future the state sees for us here.”

Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His latest books are Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East (Pluto Press) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair (Zed Books). His website is www.jkcook.net.

A version of this article originally appeared in The National, published in Abu Dhabi.

Olmert visit sparks Palestine movement at US university: The Electronic Intifada

Emily Ratner writing from New Orleans, US, Live from Palestine, 20 October 2009

Activists stage a sit-in to protest former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's visit to Tulane University. (Abdul Aziz/Penta Press)
Activists stage a sit-in to protest former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's visit to Tulane University. (Abdul Aziz/Penta Press)

On 13 October, Tulane University, an elite university in the southern United States, hosted former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert as a featured speaker. Forced from office due to corruption charges and under indictment in his own country, Olmert’s speaking engagements at respected American universities should at the very least raise questions as to the propriety of such events. That he and members of his military and political cabinet have been accused of war crimes during the 2006 Israeli invasion of Lebanon and last winter’s invasion of Gaza requires people of good conscience to raise their voices in dissent. In response to his visit, a coalition of students, teachers, activists and community members — Muslims, Jews, Christians, Palestinians and their allies — rallied in opposition and protest inside and outside the event. Despite much hostility, they also found a great deal of support and more momentum for their organizing efforts.
Although outnumbered, we were more powerful than the war criminal and his Mossad protectors and stronger than his security checkpoints and his electronically amplified lies. We strapped red tape to our bodies and stashed fake-bloodied clothes in our packs. Those of us who had the required documents, who had student IDs from New Orleans universities, passed through the checkpoints while our barred friends and allies gathered outside, armed with truths painted on poster board and voices amplified by our growing numbers. With less than two weeks’ notice, we had formed a broad coalition that planned a multi-phased action to reclaim the same campus that is home to TIPAC (the Tulane-Israel Public Affairs Committee). In 2007, the university hosted conservative commentator Ann Coulter for “Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week” in 2007 and had invited Olmert for a brief respite from international and Israeli courts. As Tulane University constructed a safe-haven and solicited interviews and meetings on behalf of its delinquent guest, dozens of our neighbors began to organize. And scores more responded to the call for action.
Tulane has long been an unwelcoming environment to our broader community, as well as to Muslim and Arab students. Olmert’s strategists and local friends chose the city’s most Zionist and “secure” nonreligious institution for his visit, and many activists questioned the wisdom of challenging a hostile student body and a sometimes even more hostile private police force. Tulane voices have been almost entirely absent in a great many community dialogues and meetings about Palestine solidarity work, and the prospect of initiating a campaign for boycott, divestment and sanctions on Tulane’s campus has always seemed laughable. But New Orleans is a city where so many feel linked to the Palestinian struggle through shared themes like the experience of diaspora, the right of return and near-daily racist violence and oppression by police and military authorities. There is no space in our city where Israeli war criminals will not be challenged.
Tulane was as hostile an environment as we expected. Hundreds of Tulane students showed up to hear Olmert speak, and many laughed and applauded when he made jokes about the comments of overwhelmed Palestinians who threw up their hands in exasperation at his remarks (i.e., lies) and walked out of the building. Many of our own group were only kept silent by the red tape we’d hidden on our bodies and then used to cover our mouths when Olmert first walked onto the stage. Scrawled on the tape were words that enumerated some of Olmert’s administration’s crimes, such as “human shields,” “illegal settlements,” “white phosphorous” and “occupation.”
We breathed deeply and sat through an onslaught of racist lies about our Palestinian friends and family, until Olmert began to talk about the mistake Israel had made in “withdrawing” from Gaza. Then, one by one, our jaws aching from biting down on our testimonials of what we have seen with our own eyes and what our families and friends continue to suffer, we rose from our seats throughout the auditorium, slowly made our way to the aisle, and walked out.
Olmert’s audience became our own for a moment. They gasped and whispered as more than 20 individuals stood glaring at Olmert and his guards and then marched out of the auditorium. As we left, we heard the chants of our friends, and breathed freely for what felt like the first time in over an hour. The hostility inside was palpable, but we were embraced by our friends outside whose numbers had easily tripled since we’d last seen them. They’d been shouting for two hours now, competing with calls of “Heil Hitler” and “Palestinians are Nazis” from students passing by. A Muslim woman in a hijab (headscarf) was hit with plates of food thrown from an adjacent third floor balcony while campus police looked on.
Within 20 minutes we’d set up the next phase of our action: four persons dressed in bloodied clothes laid down on the ground in front of the auditorium, and we placed cardboard grave markers with the numbers of massacred Palestinians and Lebanese around them. As students began to flow out of the auditorium, we handed out fliers detailing Olmert’s war crimes and tried to stop passersby from spitting on our friends on the ground. We were mostly successful, and prevented a student from urinating on one of the participants.
We were not at all surprised by the hostility we faced, but we were surprised by the positive responses of far more Tulane students than we expected. Members of Tulane Amnesty International, Tulane American Socialist Students United and individual undergraduate and graduate students were active in every phase. They were joined by students from the General Union of Palestine Students and Amnesty International of University of New Orleans and students from Loyola University. As a result of this action, the challenges we face in our local solidarity work seem more surmountable. Indeed, Olmert’s visit marked the beginning of Tulane’s Palestine solidarity movement.
Emily Ratner is an organizer and mediamaker based in New Orleans. She is a member of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, and a graduate of Tulane University (class of 2007). In June, she joined a New Orleans delegation to Gaza. She can be reached at emily A T nolahumanrights D O T org.

Arab MK: Israel provoking a billion Muslims over Temple Mount: Ha’aretz

An Israeli Arab lawmaker warned on Sunday that Israel was “provoking” the Muslim world by cracking down on Arab rioters on the Temple Mount in Jeruslaem. “Israel is provoking a billion Muslims around the world, who will not hesitate to protect the Temple Mount with their own bodies,” said MK Talab Al-Sana (United Arab List-Ta’al).
Earlier Sunday, Stone-throwing Arab youths wounded three policemen on Sunday, after Jerusalem police raided the holy site in a bid to quell repeated bouts of rioting. Al-Sana said: “Israeli police initiate avoidable riots that will end in blood shed, when they enable extremists to desecrate the Al-Aqsa Mosque.” He was referring to repeated rumors among Palestinians that Jewish extremists are planning on harming the holy site. No such attempts have been made.
The lawmaker warned that the situation could deteriorate to a complete loss of control and that the government is entirely responsible for any possible outcome. “The Al-Aqsa mosque is under Israeli jurisdiction, and it is therefore the job of Israeli police to protect one of the holiest sites in the Muslim faith,” he added.
Meanwhile, Police Commissioner David Cohen arrived at the scene to witness the riots. He said the leaders responsible for the incitement were on location, provoking the rioters. “There are large groups of East Jerusalem Arabs there who are being encouraged by the Islamic Movement leaders,” said the commissioner. “The police will forcefully clamp down on those responsible for disrupting the peace at the Temple Mount.”
Cohen added that Israel’s policy is to keep the Temple Mount open to both Jewish and Muslim visitors “today and on every other day.”

For those still shaken by the disgusting performance of Nick Griffin on the BBC few nights ago, go no further – here is the Israeli version:

Eli Yishai is just Jean-Marie Le Pen with a beard: Ha’aretz

By Gideon Levy, Haaretz Correspondent
Nineteen years after his murder, Meir Kahane’s spirit is alive and kicking. Not only in the lunatic fringes of the radical right and the settlers, not only in the shameful graffiti smeared on every corner. We’re dealing with an established political party, whose leader is deputy prime minister and Israel’s interior minister. Eli Yishai is the ultimate Israeli xenophobe, Jean-Marie Le Pen with a beard, Jorg Heider in a skullcap, a mizrahi Kahane.
They, however, are notorious, while Yishai is seen as an acceptable legitimate statesman whom no one thinks of ostracizing. A member of the security cabinet, he is also one of the major decision-makers, a senior statesman.
Yishai’s legitimacy is a mark of disgrace on Israeli society and politics. Had anyone like him served as a deputy prime minister in a European state, Israel would have severed diplomatic ties with it abruptly.
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Yishai gives Kahanism a bad name. While the racist rabbi from America made do with nefarious incitement against the Arabs, Yishai has extended racism and hatred to all foreigners. Yishai is an internationalist – all non-Jews are equal in his eyes and their sentence is one.
The man who said only seven years ago in an interview with Haaretz: “Israelis are displaying buds of xenophobia … I don’t want under any circumstances to see in Haaretz a picture of a woman with a baby in her arms crying while policemen deport her,” has become the head of the deportation army’s thugs, heading the ugly front against foreign workers. Their 1,200 wretched children, who have no other country or tongue, are to him no less than a “demographic threat,” an “assimilation danger” and an “infringement on the state’s Jewish identity.” In Germany such statements would be taken as sheer racism. But in this complacent, indifferent country they were uttered by a respectable statesman.
Had Shas espoused racial purity and xenophobia as its causes, maybe it would be treated differently. But Shas is Kahane in disguise, the “National Front” in a mask. It ostensibly champions social causes, while inflaming dark emotions under that deceitful banner.
It’s hard to believe: A movement that pretends to speak for the needy and downtrodden is leading the incitement and instigation against the most needy and downtrodden of all – the foreign workers and the Palestinians. Yishai calls to deport the former and brutally attack the latter.
The Goldstone report cites Yishai, and for good reason, saying “we should bombard thousands of houses in Gaza, destroy Gaza. As simple as that.” If a deputy prime minister talks like that, and nobody thinks of firing him for incitement to war crimes, why should we think the IDF did not act in his spirit?
Once, when the shadow of his charismatic predecessor Aryeh Deri still hovered over him, Yishai spoke differently. He said “yes to Oslo, yes to evacuating Hebron and yes to Arafat.” But since he found that inciting his voters against foreigners and Arabs – the weakest and most oppressed – is a sure recipe for electoral success, he has cynically become more extreme.
Yishai’s attitude is not restricted to strangers. He reveals his appallingly dark inner world in his treatment of another group of Jews: gays. This is another winning card used by all the racist movements in the world. But it is doubtful whether any of Europe’s racists would dare go so far as to say,”Gays and lesbians are sick people. It’s definitely a disease. They haven’t invented a cure for it yet, but I hope they will.”
Israel’s deputy prime minister, don’t forget, is also the leader of a male chauvinist party.
Kahane is preferable. True, he proposed that only a member of the Jewish people may be an Israeli citizen, just like Yishai would probably want. But we ostracized Kahane, the Knesset plenum used to empty when he gave his hate speeches and nobody thought of interviewing him. This is true even though Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin is now considering holding a session in his memory, calling his opinions “legitimate.”
Unlike Kahane, Yishai managed to penetrate the heart of the consensus and is wreaking havoc. He is poisoning generations of Mizrahim (Jews of Middle Eastern descent) and young ultra-Orthodox, inflaming hatred of the foreigner and the other, and encouraging open racism and nationalism while enjoying his lofty status. That says much more about us than about him.

As occupier, Israel must face up to Goldstone report: Ha’aretz

By Zvi Bar’el, Haaretz Correspondent
Goldstone was born in June 1967. I am not referring to the judge from South Africa, but to his report, or more precisely, the notion that Israel needs a synonym for the soul-searching it must carry out after 42 years of occupation. In the 575 pages of the report that is loaded with details, names, numbers, a list of weapons, interrogation methods and articles of international law, three paragraphs hide among the conclusions on pages 521 and 522, numbered 1674 to 1676. Here lies the explanation for the tragic results of Operation Cast Lead.
In those paragraphs Goldstone uses the term “continuum” to establish that the operation cannot be understood on its own without assessing it as part of a chain of events, which also includes the complete closure of the Gaza Strip for three years, the policy of razing homes, the arrests, the interrogations and torture, not only in the Gaza Strip but also in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. In short, Operation Cast Lead is not an “incident.” It is a link in a chain as old as the occupation itself.
The equation Israel is demanding – between those wounded in the Gaza operation and those wounded in Sderot, between the Qassams and the F-16s, between the mortars and the tank that killed three of Dr. Ezzeldeen Abu al-Aish’s daughters, between Hamas and Israel – betrays a poor understanding of the report’s essence. Goldstone puts the symptom under the microscope and derives the illness. The result is a textbook whose title should have been “A manual for the occupier in the fifth decade.”
Unfortunately for us, the publication of this tome, not its content, has given rise to competition between Israel and other countries: The issue that concerns Israel is no longer the shocking description of the events, but if and where the report will be deliberated, and who will vote for or against. Israel has a score to settle with everyone except itself. Israel is fighting against the microscope.
And the medicine? That, too, is typical. After blaming the messenger, there is a need to look for a real culprit, who has already been found. The occupied and their violent messengers are to blame. They are the ones who attack from schools and mosques, who carry bombs in ambulances and who dare to oppose the occupation using unacceptable means, leaving no option but to kill them without discrimination. If this is so, then it is not the nature of warfare that needs to be changed but the laws that limit it. To legalize the illegitimate war. And a strategy to this end is taking shape called “asymmetric warfare” – an army against groups, an army against civilians; all that is left is for an army of legal experts to develop new legislation and provide new legitimacy to kill indiscriminately, sending Goldstone to the trash bin.
It is interesting that only after the Goldstone report has the question of the laws of warfare been raised. Why was there no initiative after tragic strikes like the one in the southern Lebanese village of Qana? Why not after the Israeli bombing that produced the story about the “slight shudder on the wing” that brought down an apartment building housing civilians in the Gaza Strip? Why not after the no-limits bombing of Lebanon? In part because at that time there was still a sense of clarity that there must be an uncompromising standard to establish what is and is not allowed, and that this distinction cannot be blurred. But this distinction is increasingly becoming blurred. Were it not, a commission of inquiry would have already been set up in Israel, not to impress the world’s nations after the publishing of a condemning report, but to bolster the standards of humanity.
One more matter is puzzling. Why has the issue been directed against Israel and not, for example, the United States or Britain? Many Iraqi, Afghani and Pakistani civilians – their numbers are uncertain – have been killed in indiscriminate bombings by foreign armies. No official international investigation committee has been set up to examine the conduct of the U.S. or British armies. The reason is that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan enjoy international legitimacy, to some extent in the eyes of the local people. More importantly, the occupation in Iraq has a defined termination date. The Israeli occupation, on the other hand, gives off signs of being eternal. Disgust at this is powerful enough to affect even our friends.

October 23, 2009

Solidarity with Jewish Activist, by Latuff
Solidarity with Jewish Activist, by Latuff

Goldstone tells Obama: Show me flaws in Gaza report: Ha’aretz

South African jurist Richard Goldstone, who led a damning United Nations probe into Israel’s offensive in the Gaza Strip last winter, has challenged Barack Obama’s administration to justify its claims that the report is one-sided and flawed.
Goldstone’s report, commissioned by the UN Human Rights Council, accuses both Israel and Hamas of war crimes in the Gaza offensive. Israel has rejected the report as biased and the U.S. has said it would support Israel’s efforts to prevent a UN Security Council debate on the report.
Goldstone told Al Jazeera on Thursday that he is still waiting for the U.S. to clarify its claim that the report has a number of flaws.  “The Obama administration joined our recommendation calling for full and good-faith investigations, both in Israel and in Gaza, but said that the report was flawed,” Goldstone told Al Jazeera.

The commission chair said that once Washington points out the flaws, he would be ready to respond. “I have yet to hear from the Obama administration what the flaws in the report that they have identified are. I would be happy to respond to them, if and when I know what they are,” he said. The remarks follow a U.S. opposition to a UN Human Rights Council resolution on the report in Geneva last Friday. Russia and China are also among those who voted against a discussion of the Goldstone probe in the Security Council. The report passed by 25 votes to six, 11 countries abstained, and five countries did not vote, among them Britain and France. Meanwhile, a recent poll shows that more than two-thirds of the Israeli public opposes an Israeli inquiry panel into the events of Operation Cast Lead.
The poll, Geocartography Institute directed by Professor Avi Degani, shows that only 32 percent of those questioned supported the idea of an investigative committee on the Goldstone report. On Wednesday night, 30 Sderot residents arrived at the UN offices in Jerusalem to personally pass on a petition opposing the Goldstone report, signed by 100 thousand people from around the world. The Sderot residents stood outside the UN offices holding signs saying “Goldstone apologize” and “We’re sick of anti-Semites”.

October 21, 2009

We have all heard much dross in the last few months about Dear old Obamah, and how is will save the economy, environment, the health service in the US, not to mention Palestine, the weather, and the minke whale . For an incisive, revelatory and courageous analysis, read Joseph Massad article below; this is Massad at his best and clearest, a voice that must be listened to. Due to its importance, I quote it here in full:

Obama’s peace: The Electronic Intifada

Joseph Massad,  20 October 2009

Obama's most recent pursuit of peace has been to force the corrupt Palestinian Authority to discard the UN-issued Goldstone Report. (Chuck Kennedy/White House Photo)
Obama's most recent pursuit of peace has been to force the corrupt Palestinian Authority to discard the UN-issued Goldstone Report. (Chuck Kennedy/White House Photo)

For his continued wars against Pakistanis, Afghans, and Iraqis, his support for the overthrow of democracy in Honduras, his abetting dictatorships across the Arab and Muslim worlds (which his government finances, arms and trains in torture methods), his planning for a possible invasion of Iran, and his enthusiastic support for the racist Israeli settler colony (and its colonial wars and occupations against Palestinians), US President Barack Obama received the Nobel “Peace” Prize. This comes as no surprise, as Obama joins a long list of recipients of this sham of a prize, who are distinguished for similar “peaceful” pursuits. These include terrorists like Menachem Begin, war criminals like Henry Kissinger, ethnic-cleansing colonial generals like Yitzhak Rabin, dictators like Anwar Sadat, corrupt politicians like Yasser Arafat, and imperial presidents like Jimmy Carter. Granting this overambitious power-hungry man the recognition of the Nobel committee is therefore most apt. Obama’s most recent pursuit of peace has been to force the corrupt Palestinian Authority to discard the United Nations-issued Goldstone Report which detailed the war crimes committed by Israel in its murderous war against Palestinian civilians in Gaza ten months ago. Indeed, the first black American president has just enjoined the Palestinians and Arab and Muslim countries from the pulpit of the UN to recognize Israel’s right to be a racist “Jewish State.” One wonders what the American reaction would be if Palestinian and Arab leaders would call on Obama and on African Americans to recognize the right of the US to be a white state.
This is the same Obama whose hubris was of such caliber that when he gave his infamous speech in Cairo several months ago he did not grieve the tens of thousands of Arab, including Egyptian, civilians killed by Israel’s six decade-long wars and massacres against them; nor did he show solidarity with the millions of Arabs who were rendered refugees (including one million Egyptians during the War of Attrition) by Israel’s barbaric bombings. Instead, Obama chose to give Arabs a lesson in European Jewish history and enjoined them to appreciate the holocaust committed by European Christians against European Jews and not the ongoing Nakba committed by European Jewish colonial settlers against Arabs. He has even forbidden Palestinians or other Arabs from ever attempting to destroy Israel’s racist structures to end its racist rule. Indeed, Obama threatened Arabs that any attempt by them to destroy the racist basis of the Jewish state would be seen as tantamount to a holocaust. One wonders if he thinks ending segregation in the US and apartheid in South Africa were tantamount to the extermination of white people! This is also the same Obama who, in order to fend off the accusation of being Muslim, told us during his electoral campaign that not only was he a Christian, but that he prays to Jesus every night and that the blood of Jesus Christ will redeem him.
But general wisdom in the US has it that the election of Obama, even if it did not instantiate any change in US imperial policy abroad, has been the best thing that happened to most Americans, or at least to white liberal Americans and all African Americans, at the domestic level. This is a largely mistaken conclusion. Obama in my estimation is the worst thing that happened in recent years to African Americans, who continue to face institutional, structural, economic, cultural, social and personal discrimination on a daily basis. The racism that informs US domestic policy and causes the poverty of African Americans is not unrelated to the racism that informs US imperial policies that impoverish Egyptians, Palestinians, Hondurans, Iraqis and Afghans.
Obama’s election has been best for white liberal Americans whose conscience can be assuaged by pretending that they are not racist at all and that indeed America is no longer a racist place evidenced by the election of a black man to the presidency. The fact that today African Americans are less educated and poorer than they were in the 1960s is immaterial to this self-congratulatory logic. Neither is the fact that there are more African American men today (in relative and absolute numbers) in America’s racist jails than there had been at the height of apartheid in South Africa. As for Obama’s ongoing policies on education and racialized crime, they of course continue the policies of his white predecessors in pushing for more corporatization of schools and jails and busting teachers unions in the interest of the white business class.
But Obama is the culmination of white liberal hopes entertained since the early ’70s when the language of racism was transformed, as an effect of the cooptation of the Civil Rights movement, into a culturalist language. Black people were not inferior racially, white liberals averred, “their problem” was diagnosed as “cultural.” The feeling was that if black Americans would simply speak and act like a fantasized white middle class and adopt its social and cultural values, they would cease to face discrimination and they would break the “cycle of poverty.” Reform, it was decided, should aim to effect such transformation. The black middle class, formed in the late 19th century in the wake of the abolition of slavery, though a small minority among African Americans, was seen as a model to be emulated. Indeed white liberal remedies like Affirmative Action (the largest beneficiaries of which were and still are white women and not African Americans) when it benefited any blacks at all, it did so by benefiting the established small black middle class. It was conservative members of this class who, after reaping its benefits, would advocate against Affirmative Action. Thus, white women and middle class African Americans benefited from a program that improved little in the lives of most African Americans, while the latter would increasingly be blamed for benefiting from it at the expense of white men — a refrain used by most white conservatives and not a few white liberals!
As Derrick Bell has eloquently demonstrated, Affirmative Action is a cover for a system by which racism continues to be institutionalized and African Americans continue to be blamed for refusing to improve their lives despite alleged Herculean efforts on their behalf. Some of the culturalist arguments of white liberals centered on Affirmative Action’s production of white-acting black folks who would join the ranks of “hard-working Americans,” a racist code that refers to white people which Obama often invokes in his speeches. The fantasy of low-grade American television programs in the late 1970s and 1980s like “Different Strokes” and “Webster” was to demonstrate that if white families were afforded the opportunity to raise black kids, these kids would end up as model citizens; indeed, they could grow up to become presidents one day. It was culture, you see, not race!
Obama was of course not only raised by his white Christian mother and her family (something he — and Joe Biden — never tired of reminding us during his electoral campaign to fend off his paternal Muslim contamination), but even his black father was African and not African American. Passing him off as an example of what happens when African Americans are raised the “right way” is the pride and joy of white liberals enamored of their own culturalist-cum-racist ideology and inebriated by virulent American nationalism. Obama’s continuation of America’s imperial wars and aggressions is proof that if you put an African American in office who is raised “the right way,” he will perform his imperial duties as well as any white president. Obama’s winning the Nobel Peace Prize was therefore a major gain for white liberal Americans who can bask in the sun of their achievement. For after all, producing a few African Americans in the form of Barack Obama can and will silence whoever can still muster the courage to criticize this thoroughly racist system dubbed “American democracy” which continues to victimize most African Americans and much of the Third World.

Joseph Massad is associate professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at Columbia University. This article was originally published by Al-Ahram and is republished with the author’s permission.

So Olmert has decided to travel a little, before he goes to jail, and where else but to Chicago University, few days ago. He did not manage to give his ‘lecture’, as tens of students got up and told him what they think about war criminals! Thanks to Electronic Intifada for suppplying the proof which UC was trying to suppress, but banning camers altogether, and disallowing the press! Soon, I hope, Olmert will face much more serious calls for his arrest, not by angry students, but by international barristers and European states. He can go back to Jerusalem and to jail, where he will be much safer…

EI video of Olmert protest goes global: The Electronic Intifada,

Report, 19 October 2009

On 15 October 2009, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert came to give the annual King Abdullah II Leadership Lecture at the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy. Outraged that a man accused of war crimes in Palestine and Lebanon that killed more than 3,000 persons during his term of office, would be so honored, community members confronted Olmert inside the lecture hall effectively preventing him from delivering his speech as planned.

Recording and photography were officially banned at Olmert’s request, but The Electronic Intifada had a camera anyway as protester after protester rose to make a statement before police forced them to leave. Within three days, EI’s exclusive video report of this event, posted on YouTube, had 100,000 views and had been reposted or cited as a source by news organizations all over the world.

Al-Jazeera, seen in tens of millions of Arabic-speaking households all over the world, used a clip of EI’s exclusive footage in its report on the protests. The event was widely covered in Israel as well with Israel’s leading news websites including Haaretz and Yediot Ahronot carrying the video and reports on their Hebrew and English websites. Israel’s Channel 2 television and Israel Army Radio also carried reports, citing EI as the source.

Here is a selection of some of the main coverage in English, Arabic and Hebrew:

“Protesters hijack Olmert speech as UN body endorses war crimes report,” The Raw Story, 17 October 2009
“Olmert invite sparks outrage at US university,” Maan News, 16 October 2009
“Olmert protested at University of Chicago,” JTA, 18 October 2009
“Students interrupt Olmert in Chicago,” Al-Jazeera (Arabic), 16 October 2009
“University of Chicago students receive Olmert with protests and shoes,” CNN Arabic, 18 October 2009
“US students call Olmert war criminal,” The Jerusalem Post, 17 October 2009
“Olmert faces rude welcome in Chicago,” Ynet, 17 October 2009
“Students in the United States shout ‘war criminal’ at Olmert,” Ynet (Hebrew), 17 October 2009
“WATCH: ‘War criminal’ cat-calls interrupt Olmert Chicago speech,” Haaretz, 18 October 2009
“Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert spoke; demonstrators shouted ‘war criminal’,” Haaretz (Hebrew), 17 October 2009
“Cries at Olmert in Chicago: ‘war criminal’,” Galei Tzahal (Israel Army Radio – Hebrew), 18 October 2009
“Olmert faces furious attack during lecture in Chicago,” Israel Channel 2 (Hebrew), 18 October 2009

The Economy of the Occupation 23-24: Academic Boycott of Israel

Academic Boycott of Israel and the Complicity of Israeli Academic Institutions in Occupation of Palestinian Territories

The idea of an academic boycott of Israel first emerged in 2002 as part of the growing boycott and divestment campaign against Israel, itself a part of the struggle against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories and the violation of Palestinian human and national rights. Compared to other types of boycott, the academic boycott has gathered a relative amount of widespread support amongst academic unions and organizations, primarily in Great Britain. Not surprisingly, this relative success has stirred a public debate and opposition to the boycott, mostly by pro-Israeli organizations and academics. The campaign for academic boycott has wavered under these pressures and various degrees and measures of boycott have since been approved and then often canceled by academic organizations. The arguments in favor of this kind of boycott have relied largely on the facts of the Israeli occupation and the idea of pressuring Israel through its academic world; often, they have not utilised details relating to the specific academic institutions that they call to boycott.

Through this report, however, the Alternative Information Center (AIC) aims to inform and empower the debate on an academic boycott by giving information not on Israeli violence and violations of international law and human rights, but on the part played in the Israeli occupation by the very academic institutions in question. The report demonstrates that Israeli academic institutions have not opted to take a neutral, apolitical position toward the Israeli occupation but to fully support the Israeli security forces and policies toward the Palestinians, despite the serious suspicions of crimes and atrocities hovering over them. Any who argue either for or against an academic boycott against Israeli institutions, we believe, should know and consider not only facts regarding the situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), but also the ways in which the Israeli academic institutions make political choices and actively take sides in the ongoing conflict.

This report deals with relevant facts about the connections between Israeli academic institutions and the occupation. It is doubtful that in the process of researching this report all facts relevant to the subject were uncovered, especially since some of the economic connections between academic institutions and private companies are actively hidden by the parties involved. The involvement of Israeli academic institutions in the occupation takes many forms and scopes, and not all Israeli academic institutions can be said to be involved on the same scale. However, all main Israeli academic institutions are involved in the occupation. Indeed, all major Israeli academic institutions, certainly the ones with the strongest international connections, were found to provide unquestionable support to Israel’s occupation. Some of the details depicted in this report are evidence of blunt and direct support to the occupation while others are more minor details, which, nonetheless, provide a clear indication of the political stance taken by academic institutions.

To read the full report, use the link above.

October 19, 2009

Tony Blair, he of the illegal war in Iraq fame, has done his very best to support Israel, ever since the Quartet (what exactly, and where exactly, is the Quartet? Whose music are they playing?) has installed him in a Jerusalem hotel. This did not go unnoticed in Israel – he won a $1M prize from Tel Aviv University, with other sums on the way. Still, this is hardly enough for all his good work. Surely, Israel can do more for the man who, himself accused of war crimes, is doing his best to make sure those same accusation against Israel bite the dust of the Security Council! May we never forget the great achievements of this good friend of Berlusconni and Bush!

Tony Blair and the business of covering up war crimes: The Electronic Intifada

Jim Holstun, 14 October 2009

Tony Blair on a visit to Israel's wall in Qalqiliya in the occupied West Bank, August 2009. (Khaleel Reash/MaanImages)
Tony Blair on a visit to Israel’s wall in Qalqiliya in the occupied West Bank, August 2009. (Khaleel Reash/MaanImages)

On 7 October 2009, Tony Blair gave a lecture at a New York university. In responding to an unexpectedly direct student question, he publicly joined, for the first time, the US and Israeli Zionist consensus rejecting the Goldstone report.
On 27 June 2007, Blair left his job as UK prime minister under the cloud of the war on Iraq that he had concocted with former US President George W. Bush. Just hours later, he assumed his new position as the Special Envoy to the Mideast Quartet (EU, Russia, UN, US). He had long been a Zionist and a member of Labor Friends of Israel, and he received heartfelt farewells-and-hellos from Ehud Olmert (“A true friend of the State of Israel”) and Tzipi Livni (“a very-well appreciated figure in Israel”). Palestinians living under Israeli occupation did not find this a very a promising development.
Though Blair spends only a week a month in the Middle East, he has managed to keep busy. He maintains a grueling, globe-trotting schedule of lectures, for which he receives up to $500,000. On top of this, he has been at work on his memoirs, for which he received a $7.3 million advance. Consulting work brought him $3.2 million (including a bonus) from J. P. Morgan Chase and $800,000 from Zurich Financial Services. By October 2008, he had amassed at least $19 million, far outdistancing even the enterprising Bill Clinton. He is thought to be the highest paid public speaker in the world.
Blair’s schedule has caused some concern in the Middle East. His office insists that his “current role in the Middle East takes up the largest proportion of his time,” but in late 2008, a Western diplomat in Jerusalem wondered if “his overstretchedness has produced a tactical blunder,” while a UN official in Jerusalem said, “There is a general sense that he is not around” (“Lectures see Tony Blair earnings jump over #12,” The Times, 29 October 2008). In September 2008, a coalition of Mideast aid groups accused the Quartet of “losing its grip,” adding that its “failings could have serious ramifications for implementing international law around the globe” (“Aid groups: Tony Blair faces imminent failure in Middle East,” The Times, 25 September 2008).
On 27 December 2008, Israel launched the Gaza massacre, which it dubbed “Operation Cast Lead.” Eight days later, when asked about Blair’s reaction, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown explained, “Tony’s on holiday at the moment.” While Blair found time to attend a private opening of the new Armani store in Knightsbridge, he found none to call for a ceasefire in Gaza, thus recalling his silence during the 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon (“As Gaza is torn apart by war, where is Middle East peace envoy Tony Blair? He’s been on holiday,” Daily Mail, 5 January 2009). In early January, Blair flew to Israel, but he did not condemn the Israeli assault. In February 2009, while Palestinians in Gaza were still digging themselves out and mourning their dead, he accepted a $1 million prize from Tel Aviv University as the “Laureate for the Present Time Dimension in the field of Leadership” (Press release, 2009 Dan David Prize, 17 February 2009).
On 1 March 2009, he finally made it to Gaza. He conceded “a huge amount of damage” and the deaths of “large numbers of civilians,” but rejected as “not very sensible” any discussion of disproportionality in Israel’s attacks (“Blair shocked at devastation on first Gaza visit as envoy,” The Scotsman, 2 March 2009). Blair did not meet with Hamas leaders, and his visit to Gaza lasted only a few hours, for he had to make a pilgrimage to Sderot, the Gilad Shalit of western Negev settlements (“Middle East envoy Tony Blair in Gaza for first time,” The Independent, 1 March 2009). In June, he visited Gaza a second time and, as proof of his deep humanitarian instincts, went so far as to say that the Palestinians were in a “tough situation” (“Former British PM Blair Visits Gaza Strip,” Voice of America News, 15 June 2009).
On 15 September 2009, the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, chaired by Justice Richard Goldstone of South Africa, issued its 575-page report entitled “Human Rights in Palestine and Other Occupied Arab Territories.” For three weeks after the Goldstone report’s publication, Blair said nothing about it in public. Then, on 7 October 2009, he spoke at SUNY Buffalo (UB), where I teach, to a huge audience in the university’s Distinguished Speakers Series. I didn’t hear the lecture, for I was outside in a free speech corral (the first one to have appeared on my campus) with a group protesting Blair’s invitation and his enormous lecture fee of $150,000, as confirmed to me by his exclusive agent, the Washington Speakers Bureau.
We also protested the censorship of questions. For several years now, by requiring that all questions to them be pre-submitted and approved, the UB administration has protected from direct questioning those of our Distinguished Speakers whose resumes include war crimes in the Balkans and West Asia. This time, they packaged the censorship as “The Blair Student Question Contest”: students pre-submitted questions for review, and the administration invited the lucky winners up on the podium to deliver their approved questions in person. When questioned about the practice, Dennis R. Black, UB Vice President of Students and emcee for the evening, told The Buffalo News that “there was no attempt at censorship and that the questions were merely moderated” — an interesting distinction.
An audio version of the whole speech is available on the website of UB’s public radio station (“UB Distinguished Speaker Series – Tony Blair,” WBFO, 13 October 2009). It consists primarily of earnest platitudes and whimsical anecdotes, concluding, incredibly enough, with a story about a comical horse-betting Irishman, rendered in Blair’s very best music-hall brogue. But things took a change for the better in the question-and-answer period. Nicolas Kabat, a UB political science major, co-founder of UB Students for Justice in Palestine, and member of the Western New York Peace Center Palestine-Israel Committee, was one of the lucky contest winners because of the slow-pitch, painfully bland question he pre-submitted. But at the microphone, he asked a hard-edged question about Blair’s response to the Goldstone report, why he thinks the basic principles of international law are irrelevant to the Middle East peace process, and why the continuing siege on Gaza isn’t also harmful to that process.
A video of the five-minute Kabat-Blair exchange is available on YouTube. I’m told by the UB student who recorded it that UB Vice President for Students Dennis Black (visible at the end of the clip) heard Kabat’s unapproved question with vein-popping disbelief. Later, Director of UB Special Events William Regan wrote Kabat to chastise him for departing from the approved question, saying that he had “violated a trust that needs to exist for a contest like this to function properly.” In a delightful Freudian slip, he added that “We are very disappointed with your ethical conduct.” There is something exquisite about the righteous indignation of a befuddled censor.
Blair seemed at first to be thrown off balance by an actual, uncensored question. Though he eventually found his feet and began to concoct his classic blend of choirboy sanctimony and Machiavellian misdirection, he also seemed to wander unwittingly into a public rejection of the Goldstone report. Like most of its opponents, he failed to find fault with a single one of its factual claims but moved immediately into nostrums and whinging. Despite Kabat’s clear statement that the report condemned both Palestinian armed groups and Israel, Blair brightly observed that “you have given one view, and the trouble is that there is another view. … And one of the things you learn about conflicts like this … is that you never solve these conflicts by taking one view and forgetting about the other. … And rocket attacks came out of Gaza on Israeli towns. Now those rocket attacks have got to stop as well.”
Like Benjamin Netanyahu in his recent speech to the UN, Blair failed to note the report’s forthright and detailed chronicle and condemnation of Palestinian rocket and mortar attacks, and its statement that they had all but ended during the lull of June-November 2008 (31-33, 71-82, 449-74). In fact, Hamas ceased all of its attacks and cracked down on firings by other groups, reducing them by 97 percent and Israeli casualties by 100 percent. This Hamas peace offensive was just too much for Israel to bear, so on 4 November 2008, a squad of Israeli commandos infiltrated Gaza and killed six Hamas soldiers, thus shattering the lull (78).
Blair also suggests that we must reject the Goldstone report as hopelessly partisan because it ignores provocations by Hamas: “The Israeli soldier that is kidnapped at the moment, Gilad Shalit, should be released.” The problem here is that the report actually exhibits the usual disproportionate and tacitly racist concern for this lone Israeli detainee (on pages 25, 28, 57, 66, 288, 289, 291, 304, 371-73, 412, 415, 418, 486, 541, 551), though unlike Blair, it also discusses the 8,100 detained Palestinian men, women and children (27-29, 401-23).
The center of Blair’s rejection of the Goldstone report, however, lay in his dismissal of international law as such. He genuflected briefly toward it, but added that we’ll never get anywhere through “a debate over a report that is hotly supported on one side, hotly and deeply contested on the other.” In other words, international law is fine until Israel disagrees with it, at which point we should abandon it. How, then, will the conflict be resolved? Israel needs “security” and the Palestinians need an “independent state,” but first, there needs to be “an end to violence,” which, of course, never includes the root violence of occupation. And most of all, we must “understand the pain on either side, get them to understand that they are not alone in their pain.”
In short, Blair guides us gently away from the fussy, contentious, legalistic and impractical world of international law, which makes us throw our hands up in the air, Rashomon-style, and toward that warm and empathetic place where we feel each other’s pain. This empathetic pain seems to be quite distinct from and finer than the everyday pain experienced by mere Palestinians in Gaza, as they bleed and die in particular places. In the classic mode of conservative ideologists, Blair insists that, if we ever hope to change social institutions, we must first change the human heart.
For all its faults, the Goldstone report never descends to this sort of vacuous moral idiocy. It combines an analysis of massive violations of international law with a chronicle of the human pain those violations have caused: the suffering of people in Gaza crushed in their homes beneath debris (239), wounded and denied medical care (232-33, 377), shot down while waving white flags (199-203), seared by white phosphorus (533), and left to sicken and die in a state of permanent siege (9-10, 22-25, 95-100, 335-71). And the ongoing reality of war crimes arising from an illegal military occupation pervades the report.
But of course, this is Tony Blair, so there’s a cheery upside to things, too, thanks to the Palestinian Authority’s neoliberal development projects and its West Bank security gang: “And just to tell you some good news out of Israel and Palestine this week. … When I first became the Envoy … I couldn’t have gone to a city like Jenin or Nablus on the West Bank. Today, I go to Jenin or Nablus, where they opened a hotel in Nablus just the other day. I go to places like Qalqilyah, I go to Hebron, I go to Jericho, Ramallah obviously. In other words, I can go around the West Bank.”

Who could ask for anything more?

Israel spying devices found by UN: BBC

Israeli spying devices that were planted during the 2006 war with Hezbollah have been discovered in southern Lebanon, the UN has said.
UN peacekeepers discovered the buried devices when they were blown up by remote control by Israel on Sunday.
Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora accused Israel of blatantly violating the UN Security Council resolution that led to the end of fighting.
Israel has declined to comment directly on the matter.  Mr Siniora said an Israeli plane flying above peacekeepers and Lebanese troops investigating the blasts constituted further violation of the resolution.  The incident comes at a time of increased tension between the Lebanese authorities and Israel.  Earlier in October the Israeli army released a video which it said showed Hezbollah removing munitions from the scene of an explosion near the city of Tyre.  Under the same UN Security Council resolution, there should be no weapons south of the Litani river except in the hands of regular Lebanese forces and peacekeepers.
Hezbollah subsequently broadcast its own video which it said disproved the claims.  It also says overflights by Israeli spy-planes violate the resolution.  The war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2006 lasted 33-days during which time Hezbollah fired a hail of rockets into Israel and the Israelis bombed carried out a huge bombing campaign across Lebanon and a large ground incursion.  More than 1,125 Lebanese died during the conflict, as well as 119 Israeli soldiers and 40 Israeli civilians.
Israel made little headway in ground operations and the war ended inconclusively with Hezbollah’s military wing largely intact.
The UN Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1701 (2006) calling for the end of hostilities, the demilitarisation of the south of Lebanon and a mandate for a UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) to oversee the implementation of the resolution.

UN body adopts Goldstone report: The Electronic Intifada

Thalif Deen, 19 October 2009

UNITED NATIONS (IPS) – The 47-member Human Rights Council (HRC) approved a resolution Friday endorsing war crimes charges against Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas, as spelled out in a report by a four-member international fact-finding mission headed by Justice Richard Goldstone. As expected, the United States threw a protective arm around Israel and voted against the resolution, along with some members of the European Union (EU): Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands and Slovakia, as well as Ukraine. “The voting was predictable,” an Asian diplomat told IPS, pointing out that while Western nations voted against the resolution or abstained, most of the developing countries voted in favor. The vote was 25 in favor, six against, 11 abstentions and five no-shows. The Geneva-based Council not only endorsed the recommendations of the Goldstone report but also strongly condemned Israeli policies in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), including those limiting Palestinian access to their properties and holy sites, particularly in occupied Jerusalem. Phyllis Bennis, director of the New Internationalism Project at the Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies told IPS the US vote — and its obvious pressure on governments dependent on US political, financial or military support — “indicates just how out of step the administration of President Barack Obama is on this issue.”

“There is a clear double-standard, once again, in the US position between Ambassador Susan Rice’s recognition of the primacy of accountability for war crimes in the case of Darfur and Sudan, regardless of any potential impact on future peace talks, while rejecting accountability in the case of Israeli actions in Gaza,” she said. She said the US administration claims to base its foreign policy on a commitment to international cooperation and the rule of law. It is unfortunate that on the question of war crimes against innocent civilians in Gaza, the United States is continuing its longstanding pattern of Israeli exceptionalism, said Bennis, author of Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Primer. “If Washington remains unwilling to hold Israel accountable for its violations, the potential for a new US position in the world — one in which the United States is respected instead of resented, welcomed as a partner instead of feared — will be impossible,” she added. Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, strongly supportive of Israel, said his organization was “outraged, but far from surprised” by the Council’s endorsement of the Goldstone report. Describing the resolution as one-sided, Foxman said the vote only proves the Council’s “unwavering and biased focus on all things related to Israel.”

“We express profound appreciation to the United States and the five other nations which showed their commitment to principles of fairness and moral responsibility by voting against this resolution,” he added. An overwhelming majority of developing countries in the Council, along with Russia, supported the resolution: Argentina, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, China, Cuba, Djibouti, Egypt, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Mauritius, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, South Africa and Zambia. The abstentions came from Belgium, Bosnia Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Gabon, Japan, Mexico, Norway, Republic of Korea, Slovenia, Uruguay. The five countries that skipped the voting were Angola, France, Kyrgyzstan, Madagascar and Britain.

Naseer Aruri, chancellor professor (emeritus), University of Massachusetts, told IPS it remains to be seen how Israel and the Obama administration will react to the adoption of the Goldstone report. “The latter action will expose Israelis to possible arrests and criminal prosecution under the principle of universal jurisdiction, when traveling abroad,” he noted. He said the Goldstone report recommends that both Israel and Hamas bring their accused to justice. “If they don’t, they could be facing prosecution in the International Criminal Court and it could signal a major diplomatic defeat for the Obama administration,” Aruri said. “If Obama uses more vetoes in the Security Council to protect Israel from the international scrutiny, he would be placing his country in moral jeopardy,” he declared.

Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies said Washington also must take into account its own complicity and potential liability in war crimes during “Operation Cast Lead,” the code name for the 22-day Israeli military attacks on Gaza last December. Violations of the US Arms Export Control Act, which narrowly constrains Israel’s use of US-supplied weapons and military equipment, must be investigated thoroughly and violators held accountable, she added. “The significance of the Goldstone report overall is not because it exposed war crimes that had not been known before; the significance lies in the comprehensiveness of the assessment, certainly, but most of all in the breadth of the recommendations,” Bennis said. She said it is almost unprecedented for a UN human rights report to move so broadly to identify obligations and responsibilities under international law — not only for the alleged perpetrators, but as well for virtually all relevant United Nations agencies, as well as for individual governments. It was particularly so in invoking universal jurisdiction, and most especially in defining obligations and recommendations for global civil society.

She said the reversal of the earlier withdrawal of the report from consideration at the Human Rights Council reflects the significance of the issue not only among Palestinians inside the OPT, inside Israel and among the diaspora, but as well in international civil society. “It was that pressure that forced the Palestinian Authority to reverse its wrong-headed rejection of the report,” Bennis added. Aruri said the government of Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, whose term of office expired 9 January, had succumbed to pressure being exerted by Israel and the United States to defer all discussion of the Goldstone report until next March. Nearly two weeks later, however, Abbas succumbed to a different kind of pressure, this time exerted by Palestinians, Arabs and various members of the UN Human Rights Council. A broad coalition succeeded in getting Abbas to rescind his earlier position. Undoubtedly, Abbas — who was widely condemned in Palestinian circles, including being accused of treason — could not withstand the pressure, especially that which included credible calls on him to resign, Aruri added.

In a statement issued Friday, Amnesty International said the resolution recommends that the UN General Assembly, the next body which is able to consider the Goldstone report, do so during its current session. “Amnesty International urges the Assembly to demand that both Israel and the Hamas de facto administration in Gaza immediately start independent investigations that meet international standards into alleged war crimes, possible crimes against humanity and other serious violations of international law reported during the conflict,” the statement added. All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service (2009). Total or partial publication, retransmission or sale forbidden.

Israel must end ‘unfair’ jailing: BBC

Israel holds hundreds of Palestinians without trial or any way to clear their names, say two Israeli rights groups which urge an end to such detentions.
The groups say currently 335 prisoners are held in “administrative detention” under rules dating back to 1945 when the area was under British control.
They add it is only meant for extreme circumstances and Israel’s extensive use breaks international law.
Israel says the detentions are used as a last resort to prevent future attack.
Detention orders last for six months without the Israeli military having to bring a prosecution against the detainee.
After six months the orders can be extended by a judge, but the campaign groups, B’Tselem and HaMoked, say this only gives an impression of fairness.

KEY FACTS
7,150 Palestinians in Israeli custody: 5,000 serving sentences and 1,569 awaiting trial
335 Palestinians in administrative detention
Nine Palestinians are detained as “illegal combatants”
Source: B’Tselem

In the vast majority of cases, the report Without Trial says, judges declare the evidence secret and rely on intelligence reports that are never shown to the detainee or defence lawyers.
“Consequently, it is impossible for the detainee to refute the allegations or to present alternative evidence,” the report says.
The groups call on Israel to release the administrative detainees or prosecute them in accordance with standards of due process that are set forth in international law.
Burden of proof
An Israeli army statement stressed administrative detention was used to “remove terror activists regarding whom there is concrete information concerning a clear and present danger posed by them”.
It added that efforts were being made to decrease the use of detention without trial. The B’Tselem-HaMoked report acknowledges a decline in numbers such case.
B’Tselem says overall Israel currently holds 7,150 Palestinians in custody. Of these some 5,000 are serving sentences and 1,569 were awaiting trial, with 335 under administrative detention.
There are also nine people detained under a 2002 law regarding “illegal combatants”.
The joint B’Tselem-HaMoked report also calls for an immediate end to such incarcerations, which they say offers “fewer protections” to internees than offered to administrative detainees.
They argue that “illegal combatant” internees are only released if they can prove they will not harm state security “thus switching the burden of proof onto the shoulders of the internee, who can never refute the allegations”.
The army insisted that such interments – along with administrative detention – were “fully consistent with international law and with the rulings of the Supreme Court”.

October 17, 2009

‘Delegitimization of Israel must be delegitimized‘: Ha’aretz

Click here for more on the Goldstone commission report on the Gaza conflict in Ha’aretz
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned on Friday that Israel must prepare for a protracted struggle against a damning United Nations report on its winter offensive in Gaza, after the UN’s Human Rights Council endorsed the report.
“The delegitimization [of Israel] must be delegitimized,” said Netanyahu at meetings Friday. He said the battle against the report, which accused both Israel and Hamas of war crimes, would be legal and diplomatic, adding that Israel should take the appropriate measures against it.
While the UN investigation labeled Hamas rocket attacks on Israeli towns as war crimes, the bulk of the findings focused on Israeli actions during the three-week campaign.
The 575-page document, authored by South African jurist Richard Goldstone, concluded that Israel used disproportionate force, deliberately targeted civilians, used Palestinians as human shields and destroyed civilian infrastructure during the operation to root out Gaza rocket squads.
In his comments Friday, Netanyahu further said that the report was a symptom of a broader phenomenon that has taken place in the West and UN institutions over recent years.

“The UN has returned to the dark days during which it equated Zionism with racism,” he added.

Meanwhile, Israel will seek clarifications from Russia, China and India in light of their voting for the motion on Friday. The deputy foreign minister, Danny Ayalon, said Israel was disappointed by those countries’ behavior.
“They needed to act with greater consideration, since the report is unprofessional, false and takes the right to self defense from democratic states, which in the end will also hurt them,” said Ayalon at a cultural event in Holon.
Israel rejects UN body support for report
Also Friday, Israel’s Foreign Ministry rejected the council’s decision to endorse the, calling the decision “unjust.”
The Foreign Ministry issued an official response to the UN vote, saying that “Israel will continue to exercise its right to self-defense and to preserve the security of its citizens.”
“Israel believes,” the statement continued, “that the decision harms efforts to protect human rights in accordance with international law and hinders efforts to promote the peace process as well as encouraging terror organizations around the world.” During the UN Human Rights Council session Friday, the Palestinian UN delegate said during the session that “Israel denies Palestinians basic human rights and this issue cannot be compromised.”
U.S. State Department Spokesman Ian Kelly on Friday defended the U.S. vote against adopting the resolution, saying it had an “unbalanced focus” and that the U.S. is concerned “it will exacerbate polarization and divisiveness.”
Kelly continued by saying that the U.S. vote against endorsing the report “in no way diminishes the deep concern that we have about the tragic events of last January and the suffering caused by the violence in Gaza and southern Israel.”
The parties need adequate time to study the report and establish accountability measures, said Kelly, adding that U.S. envoy George Mitchell will be meeting with Israeli and Palestinian officials this week and next.
Jerusalem sources said that a marked improvement could be seen in Friday’s UN Human Rights Council session, in comparison to the initial vote to establish the Goldstone commission, which investigated Israel and Hamas’ conduct during the war, and subsequently compiled the damning report.
“However,” the ministry statement said, “Israel still feels that the UNHRC decision was one-sided.”
“Israel thanks the countries that supported our position, and those who, with their vote, voiced their opposition to the unjust decision which ignores the murderous Hamas attacks against Israeli citizens,” the statement said. “The decision ignores the fact that the Israel Defense Forces took unprecedented measures to avoid harming innocent civilians, and the fact that terror organizations used civilians as human shields in Gaza.”
Livni: UN body’s vote was political and cynical

Former foreign minister and opposition leader Tzipi Livni also issued a response to the vote, saying that “since the inception of the Human Rights Council, it has viewed Israel in a distorted fashion, just as the report itself does. Today’s vote was political and cynical. Israel will continue to do the right thing and to protect its citizens, and will continue the international battle against the report to ensure the legal protection of IDF officers, wherever they may be.”
Israeli Arab MK Ahmed Tibi welcomed the council’s decision and said that the adoption of the report’s findings was an important ethical and legal decision.
“It is wrong to leave an entire population without the protection of the UN and the international community, who have now regained their honor,” Tibi said.
Shas Chairman Eli Yishai condemned the UN council’s decision calling it an anti-Israel decision based on an anti-Israel report.
Meanwhile, Friday, Hamas welcomed the UN vote, saying that the organization hoped it would lead to “the beginning of the prosecution of the leaders of the occupation.”
“The Palestinian government welcomes the endorsement on the Goldstone report and thanks the friendly countries which voted in favor of the report,” Hamas spokesman Taher al-Nono said.
Nabil Abu Rudeinah, a spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, added that what was needed was a follow-up on implementation of the recommandations in the report, “to protect the Palestinian people from Israeli aggression.”
“The most important thing now is to continue with steps to make sure that the Zionist criminals are brought to trial,” said another Hamas spokesman, Sami Abu Zuhri.
Following the vote, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy wrote a joint letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Press Association reported.
The letter acknowledged the sensitivity of the Goldstone report in Israel and encouraged Israel to handle it in a way that supports progress in the Middle East.
Israel’s right to defend itself was stressed in the letter, which included an invitation to Netanyahu to visit Europe for talks.
Brown and Sarkozy laid out steps to move the peace process forward, including an independent and transparent investigation into accusations made against Israel in relation to alleged war crimes in Gaza; improved humanitarian access to Gaza; and a complete freeze on Israeli settlements in the West Bank.