Archive for May, 2007

House of Horror

From Ali Abunimah’s Israel’s House of Horrors:

Reading an account of an Israeli cabinet meeting in Ha’aretz is like a trip through a House of Horrors.

Here are some choice excerpts: “Ministers Meir Sheetrit and Rafi Eitan proposed Wednesday that Israel produce its own version of the Qassam rocket to be fired at targets inside the Gaza Strip in response to Palestinian rocket fire on its southern communities.”

 ”Minister of Industry, Trade and Labor Eli Yishai of Shas proposed that Israel use air strikes to destroy Palestinian towns and villages in response to the rocket fire, after giving local residents advance notice allowing them to evacuate their homes.”

“Shas MK Yitzhak Cohen proposed cutting off the supply of electricity, water and fuel to the Strip, and justify the move by saying that Qassam rockets had destroyed Israel’s infrastructure and that it will take a long time to repair the facilities with which to supply the Palestinians with basic resources. Shin Bet security service director Yuval Diskin suggested that Cohen’s idea is worth examining.”

 This is the state that is supposed to be the conscience of the world following the Nazi holocaust? Which other government could openly hold such discussions to such overwhelming silence from the so-called “international community”?

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S. Hersh on Fateh al-Islam

HALA GORANI: Well, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh reported back in March that in order to defeate Hezbollah, the Lebanese government supported a Sunni militant group, the same ones they’re fighting today. Seymour joins us live from Washington. Thanks for being with us. What is the source of the financing according to your reporting on these groups, such as Fatah al-Islam in these camps of Nahr el Bared, for instance? Where are they getting the money and where are they getting the arms?

SEYMOUR HERSH: The key player is the Saudis. What I was writing about was sort of a private agreement that was made between the White House, we’re talking about Richard — Dick — Cheney and Elliott Abrams, one of the key aides in the White House, with Bandar. And the idea was to get support, covert support from the Saudis, to support various hard-line jihadists, Sunni groups, particularly in Lebanon, who would be seen in case of an actual confrontation with Hezbollah — the Shia group in the southern Lebanon — would be seen as an asset, as simple as that.

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US opposes G8 climate proposals…and Dubai gets hybrid taxis

The US appears to have rejected draft proposals by Germany for G8 members to agree tough measures in greenhouse gas emissions, leaked documents have shown.

Greenpeace Director John Sauven described the US position as “criminal”.

“The US administration is clearly ignoring the global scientific consensus as well the groundswell of concern about climate change in the United States,” he said.

On the bright side, not to be beaten by NY, Dubai government has announced that it will be gradually moving to a 6000-strong hybrid taxi fleet.  That’s interesting considering there isn’t a single hybrid car in the UAE today.  Hopefully now I’ll be able to buy a hybrid in a couple of years…

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Who’s behind the fighting in North Lebanon?

Confused about what’s happening in Nahr al-Bared and how it relates to the current political scene?  The article by Franklin Lamb on Counter Punch’s front page is a MUST READ. 

Excerpts below:

The camp population all say that Fatah Al-Islam came in September-October 2006 and have no relatives in the camp. They are from Saudi, Pakistan, Algeria, Iraq, and Tunisia and elsewhere. No Palestinians among them except some hanger ons. Most say they are paid by the Hariri group.Reports that Fateh al-Islam helps people in Bared are denied. ” All they do is pray, one woman told me..and do military training.. They are much more religious than the Shia” she said.

Population of Badawi camp was 15,000 and as of of this morning it is 28,000. Four bodies arrived this morning at Safad, the only Palestinian Red Crescent Hospitals in north Lebanon.

To understand what is going on with Fatah al-Islam at Nahr el-Bared one would want a brief introduction to Lebanon’s amazing, but shadowy ‘Welch Club’.

The Club is named for its godfather, David Welch, assistant to Secretary of State Rice who is the point man for the Bush administration and is guided by Eliot Abrams.
Key Lebanese members of the Welch Club (aka: the ‘Club’) include:

The Lebanese civil war veteran, warlord, feudalist and mercurial Walid Jumblatt of the Druze party( the Progressive Socialist Party or PSP)

Another civil war veteran, warlord, terrorist (Served 11 years in prison for massacres committed against fellow Christians among others) Samir Geagea. Leader of the extremist Phalange party and its Lebanese Forces (LF) the group that conducted the Israel organized massacre at Sabra-Shatilla (although led by Elie Hobeika, once Geagea’s mentor, Geagea did not take part in the Sept. 1982 slaughter of 1,700 Palestinian and Lebanese).

The billionaire, Saudi Sheikh and Club president Saad Hariri leader of the Sunni Future Movement (FM).

Over a year ago Hariri’s Future Movement started setting up Sunni Islamist terrorist cells (the PSP and LF already had their own militia since the civil war and despite the Taif Accords requiring militia to disarm they are now rearmed and itching for action and trying hard to provoke Hezbollah).

The FM created Sunni Islamist ‘terrorist’ cells were to serve as a cover for (anti-Hezbollah) Welch Club projects. The plan was that actions of these cells, of which Fatah el-Islam is one, could be blamed on al Qaeda or Syria or anyone but the Club.

To staff the new militias, FM rounded up remnants of previous extremists in the Palestinian Refugee camps that had been subdued, marginalized and diminished during the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. Each fighter got $700 per month, not bad in today’s Lebanon.

The first Welch Club funded militia, set up by FM, is known locally as Jund-al-Sham (Soldiers of Sham, where “Sham” in Arabic denotes Syria, Lebanon, Palestine & Jordan) created in Ain-el-Hilwa Palestinian refugee camp near Sidon. This group is also referred to in the Camps as Jund-el-Sitt (Soldiers of the Sitt, where “Sitt” in Sidon, Ain-el-Hilwa and the outskirts pertain to Bahia Hariri, the sister of Rafiq Hariri, aunt of Saad, and Member of Parliament).

The second was Fateh-al-Islam (The name cleverly put together, joining Fateh as in Palestinian and the word Islam as in Qaeda). FM set this Club cell up in Nahr-al-Bared refugee camp north of Tripoli for geographical balance.

Fatah el-Islam had about 400 well paid fighters until three days ago. Today they may have more or fewer plus volunteers. The leaders were provided with ocean view luxury apartments in Tripoli where they stored arms and chilled when not in Nahr-al-Bared. Guess who owns the apartments?

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What Bremer got wrong in Iraq…

Excerpt from a very good article by Nir Rosen in the Wahington Post

Time and again, he refers to “the formerly ruling Sunnis,” “rank-and-file Sunnis,” “the old Sunni regime,” “responsible Sunnis.” This obsession with sects informed the U.S. approach to Iraq from day one of the occupation, but it was not how Iraqis saw themselves — at least, not until very recently. Iraqis were not primarily Sunnis or Shiites; they were Iraqis first, and their sectarian identities did not become politicized until the Americans occupied their country, treating Sunnis as the bad guys and Shiites as the good guys. There were no blocs of “Sunni Iraqis” or “Shiite Iraqis” before the war, just like there was no “Sunni Triangle” or “Shiite South” until the Americans imposed ethnic and sectarian identities onto Iraq’s regions.

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More on MSU-UCI events

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Check out this blog by MSU-UCI members for more on last week’s anti-Israeli-Apartheid events at UCI.

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Israeli professors visit UK to fight academic boycott

“Israeli universities cooperate with the occupation, and therefore, all cooperation with them should be boycotted,” declared Tom Hickey, one of the Britons. “Israel commits terrible, exceptional crimes in the occupied territories.”

Dr. Jonathan Rynhold of Bar-Ilan University retorted angrily: “You are imposing standards on Israel, and Israeli academe, that you do not demand of any other country - not even British academe, of which you are a part. And you treat the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as if it were completely one-sided.”

“It is one-sided,” responded Hickey.

I really hope the British academics go through with the boycott, it’s the least they can do to voice their condemnation of Israeli apartheid policies.

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OC Register on UCI events

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I hear that last 2 weeks have been pretty interesting at UCI.  I’ll try to post some more info and pics on the lectures and activities going on (including a new and improved mock Apartheid Wall), but below is a taste of the action:

Check out this OC Register article on the FBI harassing (and almost running over) a member of the Muslim Student Union (MSU) at UCI.

What I found the most interesting was this sentence at the beginning of the article:

“The incident occurred Monday night in view of campus police and dozens of Muslim student spectators, who were helping to disassemble a large wooden representation of the wall that Israelis have built in occupied Palestine.”

For those of you who are not familiar with the US press, the phrase “occupied Palestine” is NEVER EVER used.  It’s usually ”Palestinian territory” or “disputed territory” or something soft like that…no mention of occupation or the word “Palestine” at all.  Plus, the statement also acknowledges that the wall is built IN and nor AROUND the occupied areas.

Sounds like its too good to be true?  Well, it kinda is.  The OC Register’s print edition has a different phrase:

“”…who were helping to disassemble a large wooden representation of the wall that Israelis have built around Palestinian territory.

See the difference?  By changing 3 key words the article gives a completely different impression of the situation in the West Bank.  A classic example of the mainpulation of words by the American media. 

In any case, overall the article is still pretty balanced and does attempt to show both sides of the issue. 

Stay tuned…

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Sunnah-Shia violence in Gaza ?!!

وفي دلالة على طبيعة التعبئة التي يتزود بها المتقاتلون قال عنصر أمن ملثم، كان يقف على ناصية الشارع المؤدي إلى منزل القيادي البارز في حركة “فتح” محمد دحلان، ويده على الزناد، “إنني هنا لأحمي قادتنا من الدمويين الشيعة” في إشارة إلى مسلحي حركة “حماس”

Rough translation

In a sign of the propaganda the fighters are exposed to, a security officer standing on the corner of the street leading to the house of Mohammad Dahlan, an important leader in Fatah, with his hand on the trigger “I am here to protect our leaders from the blood thirsty shias”, alluding to

Hamas fighters

Even in Gaza, where all Muslims are from one sect (sunnah), the US, Israel and their friends have found way to convince people of the existance of “sectarian strife”.

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Asmaa Abdol-Hamid, you go sister!!

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Excerpts from a recent article in The Guardian

“For the extreme right, the young activist is a political provocateur, an agent of Islamic fundamentalism bent on infiltrating the seat of Danish democracy. To many on the left, Ms Abdol-Hamid is also problematic, personifying through her dress the reactionary repression of women and an illiberal religious agenda that should have no place in her leftwing “red-green” alliance of socialists and environmentalists.

The Danish People’s Party or DFP, the far-right movement that unofficially props up the weak centre-right government of the prime minister, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, is on the warpath. A couple of DFP politicians compared the headscarf to the Nazi swastika. One described the prospective MP as “brainwashed”.

“Some Muslims don’t think it’s right for a female to act like this. They go to my father and tell him, get her married, get her married,” she laughs. “Others think you can’t be Muslim and Danish at the same time. Some of the Muslims and the extreme right are just the same.

“And there are women in my party who say that anyone who wears the headscarf is oppressed. It’s like they think I’m dumb. They’re taking away my individuality. We need the right to choose. It’s up to us whether or not we wear headscarves.

“They think I’m a woman from the Middle East. No. I’m a Danish Muslim.”

And Asma is only 25 years old, by the way.

Just like with Dr. Tariq Ramadan, because Asma is not willing to compromise her Muslim identity, she is bring criticized by the “left” as well as the “right” in Europe. 

And don’t get me started on the ridiculous comment by the DFP members comparing her hijab to the Nazi swastika!!

Asmaa, stay strong!  You are truely a role-model for Muslims everywhere, and especially in the “West”.  Whether you win or not, the fact that you proudly voice your opinions and stand up for justice while holding strong to your Muslim and European identity is inspiring.  May Allah (swt) give you success in this world and the next. You go girl!

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Darfur money going to the Zionist lobby

By Joachim Martillo, Boston 

On April 27, 2007, Ruth Messinger, president and executive director of the American Jewish World Service (AJWS), was welcomed by the Harvard Jewish students’ organization, Hillel, for an inspirational talk….

….

Messinger fundraises for lobbying-oriented humanitarian aid through the American Jewish World Service in New York, which is collecting money for “Save Darfur.” Last year she raised approximately $31 million of which Darfur was to
receive approximately $3 million. Most of the money donated for relief and development in Sudan was channeled back into Jewish lobbying efforts, Messinger admitted with very little shame, adding that AJWS has no real way to do anything for Sudan. She urged Jewish students to participate in “Save Darfur” as a way to get connected and create a “presence” in world “humanitarianism,” which would engage in a coordinated Jewish effort of organizing, electing and legislating.

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Netanyahu’s solution: cut off the water and power supply to Gaza

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…in a controlled manner (whatever that means!).  Never mind human rights laws and conventions…

Here for full article

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Red Cross condemns Israel’s Jerusalem policy

“The international Red Cross has privately accused Israel of reshaping Jerusalem to further its own interests, in violation of international law. A leaked ICRC report says Israeli policy has far-reaching humanitarian consequences for Palestinians living under occupation in East Jerusalem.”

Also check out Laila Haddad’s post on this issue. 

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The One State Solution: a political marriage of necessity

I rarely post complete articles, but this one  (like many of Ali Abunimah’s other works) is a must-read: clear, rational, and straight to the point. 

A political marriage of necessity: a single state of

Palestine-Israel

The case of South Africa shows that a unity government can succeed.

As Israel celebrates 59 years of independence, Palestinians on May 14 commemorate the Nakba, the catastrophe of expulsion and decades of exile that continue to this day.

When my mother was 9 years old, she and her family mounted the back of a pickup truck and left their village of Lifta, adjacent to Jerusalem, under threat from Zionist militias. My grandmother covered the furniture in the family home that my grandfather had built. Anticipating a short absence until fighting in the area died down, they took only a few clothes. That was almost six decades ago. Like hundreds of thousands of other Palestinians, they were never allowed to return, and their property was seized by Israel.

My mother remembers her early childhood and the Jewish neighbors who rented the apartment her father owned. She recalls helping them on the Sabbath and playing with their daughter after school. A life such as this is no more than a distant memory for most Palestinian refugees, who, with their descendants, now number more than 5 million.

But a better life needn’t be just a memory. It is feasible for Palestinians to return to their homeland while peace with Israelis is built at the same time. Another diplomatic push will not bring about the fantasy of neat separation of Israelis and Palestinians into two states. This would only perpetuate inequality and division. Instead, international pressure should be put on Israel to drop its insistence on supremacy over Palestinians. Then both parties can come together to begin building a single, multiethnic state where Jews and Palestinians can again live side by side.

One of the hard – but not impossible – tasks will be convincing many Israelis of the viability of a single-state solution. In 2004, for example, Israeli historian Benny Morris, who has written several books documenting the forced expulsion of the Palestinians, said that a “Jewish state would not have come into existence without the uprooting of 700,000 Palestinians. Therefore it was necessary to uproot them.” But Mr. Morris is no bleeding heart. He added, “There are circumstances in history that justify ethnic cleansing.” If Israel’s founding prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, could be faulted, Morris said, it was because he “did not complete the transfer in 1948.”

Millions of Palestinians live in squalid camps under Israeli military rule and in surrounding countries. Israel has refused to allow these refugees to return home as required by international law.

The reason is simple: From its inception, the Zionist movement set out to turn a country where the vast majority of people were not Jewish into a country that gives special rights and privileges to Jews at the expense of non-Jews. If Palestinian refugees were black Africans, no one would dispute an “apartheid” label that former US president Jimmy Carter has used to describe the situation.

But while some see Israel as a miracle, many Israelis themselves recognize that the Zionist project has been far from a success: Today the number of Israeli Jews and Palestinians inhabiting the country is roughly equal at about 5 million each. Just more than 1 million Palestinians live as citizens of Israel, albeit with inferior rights, while almost 4 million live under occupation in the West Bank and Gaza. Their high birthrate means that in a few years, Palestinians will once again become the majority as they were prior to 1948.

To assert, as Israel does, that it has a right to be a “Jewish state” means to recognize that it has a right to manipulate demographics for the purpose of ethnic domination. This outlook violates fundamental human rights.

Palestinians, many of whom are already being forcibly displaced by the cruel wall that snakes through the West Bank, fear another 1948-like expulsion. At the last Israeli election, parties that explicitly endorse ethnic cleansing of Palestinians made major gains, including the one led by Deputy Prime Minister Avigdor Lieberman.

Palestine/Israel is as unpartitionable as was South Africa and Northern Ireland, where similar ethnic conflicts had also defied resolution for generations. In both places, it was only when the dominant group dropped its insistence on supremacy that a political settlement could be reached. What was once unimaginable happened: Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress and F.W. de Klerk’s National Party joined hands in a national unity government in 1994. Leaders in Northern Ireland made similar progress this year.

Neither political marriage came about through love, but through necessity and with outside pressure. In time, social reconciliation may come, but it has not been the prerequisite for political progress in South Africa or Northern Ireland. Such pressure on Israel as the strongest party is necessary, which is why I support the growing movement for boycott, divestment, and sanctions modeled on the antiapartheid campaign. At the same time, we must begin to construct a vision of a nonracial, nonsectarian Palestine-Israel, which belongs to all the people who live in it, Israeli Jews, Palestinians, and all exiles who want to return and live in peace with their neighbors.

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Visiting Palestinians in Israeli prisons

Here for original report (Arabic) published in today’s issue of Al Khaleej.

Palestinian families wishing to visit their loved ones in Israeli prisons have to go through a nightmare 21-hour journey.  Typically, they leave their homes at 3 am and go from one bus to another, and from one checkpoint to the next until they reach the prison walls.

There, the real nightmare begins.  They are held in humiliating conditions for 3-4 hours and are forced to strip completely naked before being allowed to see their imprisoned family member.

When they finally get to see their loved one it is only for half an hour, and then it is back to the ordeal of degrading ”security” searches and checks.  The family does not get home before midnight.

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The Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq gets a new name

I thought this was interesting:

But Mr Hakim said his party’s name had been changed to reflect the fact that the former Iraqi president, Saddam Hussein, had been overthrown.

“Revolution means change,” he told reporters.

“This is what we sought from the creation of the council.”

“The council participated in realising political changes in Iraq, the most important of which was regime change. So this word became unnecessary.”

So lemme get this straight.  They wanted a revolution when Saddam was in charge, but are now OK with the US occupation and the US-puppet government in place?  Do they see Iraq as a better, safer place now?

Disclaimer:

1. I am no fan of Saddam, and never was.

2. The issues I have with political figures and parties in Iraq (and anywhere else for that matter) are solely based on their politics (not their religion or sect).  My main problem is with groups and individuals that are willing to sacrifice national interests for personal gains.

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Not so cool facts about Israel…

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Planning war not peace

Even Israelis are beginning to realize their government is not interested in peace: 

Instead of focusing on preparations for a war that allegedly is unavoidable, the candidates for the leadership of the country should be asked to present the citizenry with a peace plan.

Does Likud have a reasonable solution to the contradiction between the wish to retain the Zionist and democratic character of the state and the continued hold over the territories, with all the demographic implications inherent in this?

It is no coincidence that the candidates for the leadership of the country are concentrating on the next war and ignoring their duty to propose solutions to the country’s fundamental problem: the occupation.

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Iraqi Israeli tells his story

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It was an easy, happy life. Jews shared almost all aspects of life with their Arab neighbours, reminisces Yakov.

He was 17 years old in 1951, when his family emigrated to Jerusalem.

For the Jews of Middle Eastern origins, like their European co-religionists, coming to Israel was the culmination of a religious journey - it was the fulfilment of the centuries-old dream to live in the so-called Promised Land.

Wait, but I though all Jews were humiliated, tortured, and forcibly kicked out of Arab land after the creation of Israel??!!  Think again!  For more on “Jewish refugee” lie, check out this previous post.

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World Bank: Freedom of movement for Palestinians is the exception

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AP photo: Palestinians at Hwara checkpoint near Nablus, WB

The World Bank says Israel harms Palestinian freedom of movement and access to parts of the West Bank, damaging any chances for the Palestinian economy to emerge from crisis.The bank’s particularly critical report also says the limitations imposed on Palestinians’ movement prevents their access to about 50 percent of the West Bank, and prevents any likelihood that the Palestinian economy can grow.“Currently, freedom of movement and access for Palestinians within the West Bank is the exception rather than the norm contrary to the commitments undertaken in a number of Agreements between GOI [government of Israel] and the PA,” the report states.The Palestinians are sometimes accused of being a useless people, living on donations from the rest of the world.  Even the World Bank acknowledges that this is due to the Israeli Apartheid system in place.  How can Palestinians think of establishing an indendent, sustainable economy when they have no control over their borders and are not even allowed to travel within “their” territories freely?

With the international boycott in place, even the donations that have stopped.  The Palestinians are now completely on their own.

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