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piercehawkeye45
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« Reply #40 on: October 15, 2007, 05:20:43 PM »

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/912729.html

The 41st kilometer

A zoo. This is one of the ways that Palestinians describe the conditions under which nearly 1.5 million of them have been living: in an area of some 360 square kilometers, closed in on three sides by sophisticated barbed-wire fences, concrete walls and military lookout towers, and to the west by Israeli navy ships that seal them off from the sea. Overhead, in the sky, unmanned aircraft and hot air balloons continually photograph whatever happens inside this closed cage, which has seven gates connecting it to the world, all of which are sealed off almost hermetically.

During the past four months, Israel has permitted about 2,000 people to leave the Gaza Strip - a minority of them were ill; more than half were Fatah senior activists or loyalists who were fleeing from the Strip; and the rest were individuals holding dual citizenship or visas for prolonged stays abroad. For the sake of comparison: In 1999, 1,400 people a day went through the Rafah crossing point alone, in addition to the thousands who passed though the Erez crossing point, despite the permanent closure policy. Now, 1.5 million human beings are living with the knowledge that the length of their world is at most 41 kilometers long and 12 kilometers wide.

The comparison to a zoo was made by Dr. Mamdouh al Aker, a doctor who heads the Palestinian Independent Commission for Citizens' Rights. For another Gazan, a prominent businessman whose food plant is working at about 5 percent of its capacity, the situation is reminiscent of a hospital: Like patients, the inhabitants do not work, but they receive food. They do not work, because for four months Israel has prohibited not only the exit of any Gazan products to market, but also the entry of any raw materials or means of production. If the prices of goods continue to rise and the cash crisis worsens because of the severing of contact between banks in Israel and the banks in Gaza, the international aid organizations will soon increase the quantities of food that they donate, which today account for about 10 percent of the supplies that are brought in. Perhaps the day will come when they will drop food packages from helicopters.

The governments of Israel, the United States and Europe see the hermetic imprisonment of 1.5 million human beings and the final destruction of Gaza's economic infrastructure as a suitable answer to Hamas, at least until it falls. It appears that the Ramallah "government" agrees with them. Indeed, the head of the Gazan "government," Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, has hinted that the exclusive Hamas regime in Gaza is temporary. But, this temporary nature depends on the success of a dialogue between Hamas and Fatah, whereas Israel and the United States are forbidding Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas from carrying on such a dialogue. And Abbas, in any case, is for the moment sticking to the approach that Hamas is a hostile entity.

As always, the students who are not being allowed to leave are a minority whose imprisonment reflects the extent of the destruction inflicted upon the Palestinian future. For years now Israel has been preventing Gazans from studying in the West Bank. As a consequence, those who want to undertake advanced studies at the university level must go abroad. Take, for example, 10 outstanding students who have received scholarships for master's and doctoral studies in Germany. Take another several hundred students who are already studying abroad and got stuck in the Gaza Strip over the summer, and others who registered for studies abroad this year. The essential future contribution by all of these students to their community is ensured. But if they do not leave the Gaza Strip today, right now, some of them will lose their scholarships, others the first semester of the school year and still others the entire year. Thousands of other young people have simply given up on their aspiration to study abroad because of the closed-gates policy. And when they do not receive the opportunity to get to know the world, the world according to Hamas and the religious horizons that it offers are the most persuasive.

Since 1991, Israel has been using the partial or total imprisonment of the Gazans in their cage, for longer or shorter periods, as a political strategy: Sometimes it is depicted as punishment, sometimes as a deterrent action and always as a preface to a political plan. Until not long ago, it seemed as though the terms of imprisonment could not be any worse. The past four months have proven that there is always "worse."
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« Reply #41 on: October 18, 2007, 06:39:33 AM »

http://www.icahd.org/eng/articles.asp?menu=6&submenu=2&article=402

These are figures for Palestinian homes. If approximately 120,000 Druze and Arabs were expelled from the Syria Golan Heights in 1967 and their villages (134 in number) were completely demolished, that makes about 20,000 additional demolished homes, assuming six people per family unit. The following sources are by year. In years without sources, the figures were arrived at through interviewing Israeli government or military personnel, or by collecting Palestinian testimonies.

compiled by Jeff Halper, Executive Director, ICAHD
(sources below)

* year - number of demolitions
* 1967 - 6,317
* 1968 - 140
* 1969 - 301
* 1970 - 191
* 1971 - 2,231
* 1972 - 35
* 1973 - 34
* 1974 - 61
* 1975 - 77
* 1976 - 24
* 1977 - 1
* 1978 - 2
* 1979 - 18
* 1980 - 30
* 1981 - 24
* 1982 - 35
* 1983 - 12
* 1984 - 2
* 1985 - 44
* 1986 - 49
* 1987 - 104
* 1988 - 587
* 1989 - 567
* 1990 - 306
* 1991 - 307
* 1992 - 193
* 1993 - 130
* 1994 - 153
* 1995 - 69
* 1996 - 168
* 1997 - 257
* 1998 - 180
* 1999 - 142
* (Intifada) - 4,747 (2,781 military, 1,966 administrative)
* 2005 - 290
* 2006 - 319

* TOTAL 18,147

Sources

* 1967: United Nations General Assembly (1967). “Report of the Secretary-General under General Assembly resolution 2252 (ES-V) and Security Council resolution ).” Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . Thomas Aboud (2000) “The Moroccan Quarter: A History of the Present.” Jerusalem: Jerusalem Quarterly. Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . Palestine Remembered (n.d.) “Imwas”, “Bayt Nuba”, “Yalu”. Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . The UN Report refers to 850 houses demolished in Qalqilya and 360 in Beit Awa. It also states that the Beit Mersim (Beit Marsam) was entirely demolished and had an original population of approximately 500. We averaged just over 8 people per house to arrive at the figure of 60 houses for this village. Also quoted in the report is the demolition of 18 houses in Surif. Abowd’s articles states that 135 houses were demolished in the Moroccan Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City. The villages of Imwas, Yalu and Beit Nuba were entirely demolished in 1967. The website “Palestine Remembered” cites the 1931 British census listing 224 houses in Imwas, 245 in Yalu and 226 in Beit Nuba. According to the 1961 Jordanian census, the population of the towns increased by 91%, 70% and 43%. An extremely conservative estimate would be a 10% increase in the amount of housing by the 1961 census, adding a total of 69 more houses for a three-village-total of 764. This total does not include the numbers from the Jordan Valley villages of Nuseirat, Jiftlik, and Arajish, all of which were leveled.

* . United Nations General Assembly (1984). “Report of the Secretary-General, Living Conditions of the Palestinian People in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.” Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . This is the source for all statistics on demolitions between 1967 and 1982. In the actual report these are listed as punitive demolitions because all demolitions were classified as “Collective Punishment.”

* 1971. Human Rights Watch (2004). Razing Rafah. New York: Human Rights Watch. Jeff Halper (2005) Obstacles to Peace (Third Edition). Jerusalem: PalMap. This number is from a mass demolition that took place in the Gaza Strip in August. It happens that Ariel Sharon was the leader of that mission.

* 1983. Ronny Talmor (1989). Demolition and Sealing of Houses As a punitive measure in the West Bank and Gaza Strip during the Intifada. Jerusalem: B’tselem. This report is the source for the data on punitive demolitions from .

* 1987. B’tselem (2005). “Statistics on demolition of houses as punishment .” Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . All the statistics on punitive house demolitions from come from this source. B’tselem (2006). “Statistics on demolition of houses built without permits.” Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . All the statistics on administrative demolitions between come from this source.

* 1994. Meir Margalit (2006) Discrimination in the Heart of the Holy City. Jerusalem: IPCC. Also personal communication with Dr. Margalit, field researcher for ICAHD. B’tselem (2006). “Statistics on demolition of houses built without permits.” Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs ). Weekly Humanitarian Briefings #s 86-178. All statistics about administrative house demolitions between come from these sources.

* . B’tselem (2006). “Statistics on houses demolished for alleged military purposes.” Retrieved 25 September 2006 from . UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs ). Weekly Humanitarian Briefings #s 86-178 

 
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« Reply #42 on: October 30, 2007, 07:54:54 PM »

http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/world-news/article3110339.ece

Israel's decision to cut power in Gaza is illegal, says UN

The UN's top official in Gaza will tell British ministers today that Israel's cuts in fuel and power to the Palestinians violate international law, while the isolation of Hamas has strengthened extremism and started to drive non-affiliated moderates who can leave Gaza to do so.

"We keep saying people in Gaza are at rock bottom but they keep digging into the rock," Karen Koning- Abu Zayd, head of the UN refugee agency UNRWA, said of Israel's decision to start power cuts and reduce fuel supplies to Gaza in response to continued Qassam rocket attacks. Israel began cutting supplies on Sunday. The Supreme Court has given the state five days to answer a petition by human rights groups against the move, which follows the cabinet's declaration of Gaza as a "hostile entity" last month. An Israeli soldier and two Palestinian militants were killed yesterday in Gaza as the Israeli military continued operations designed to curb the Qassam attacks.

The UNRWA chief, who will meet Douglas Alexander, Secretary of State for International Development and other ministers in London today, said: "I can understand why from the Israeli point of view people may think we need a stronger reaction to the Qassams [and] nothing has worked so far. But I don't see how you can want to punish people, all of them in Gaza, which means most of them who are not behind these activities, in the way you are doing now." In an interview, Ms Koning-Abu Zayd said: "Most people, even in some of the refugee camps, live in high-rise apartments in Gaza and if you don't have electricity, you don't have water, you probably don't have food and if you're older or sick in any way you probably can't climb up and down all those stairs." A cut in fuel would have a "very serious" effect on civilian movement.

Ms Koning-Abu Zayd cast doubt on the idea that the Israeli squeeze on Gaza, including phased cuts in power – starting with 15 minutes per hour in towns such as Beit Hanoun, from which rockets have been frequently launched – would trigger an effective revolt against militants.

"I don't think it's working myself," she said, adding she did not think surveys showing a fall in support for Hamas were "very significant". She said: "The ones that do support them support them even more strongly and because things are getting worse the ones that were talking about compromise and moderation and working together are discredited so you know many people become more extreme."

The Israeli cabinet minister Benjamin Ben Eliezer suggested yesterday that the cuts were the only alternative to moving "four divisions" into Gaza. But Ms Koning-Abu Zayd said: "When we first heard these things I kept saying they won't do this because it's against international law."

Ms Koning-Abu Zayd, the longest serving UN official in Gaza, also made some of the strongest criticisms yet by a UN official of the Israeli and international community's boycott of Hamas since March 2006, which she said had strengthened hardline extremists in the faction.

She hoped that the planned Annapolis conference would renew a peace process and said UNRWA had a "very simple message" that refugees should be on the agenda. But it was a "big negative" that Hamas would not be taking part, and that "at some moment" they would have to be brought into the process.

Since Hamas won the elections two months earlier, "We were saying ... you had to deal with whoever is elected democratically, fairly, justly and that if you didn't, and history seemed to us to prove this, you drive people into becoming more extreme."
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« Reply #43 on: October 30, 2007, 07:56:04 PM »

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/20921.html

Conditions worsen in Gaza as Israel tightens grip

BEIT LAHIYA, Gaza Strip — Day after day, Saladin Sultan sits in his nearly empty corner market as his family's economic lifeblood drains away.

Suppliers come every day and ask Sultan to settle mounting debts he can't afford to pay. There's almost nothing for him to sell, which doesn't matter so much since his customers don't have any money to buy.

To feed his wife and five children, Sultan sold of one of the store's refrigerators. Then, at his wife's urging, he sold his gold wedding ring.

This month, the 39-year-old merchant sold the living room furniture.

Now, with Israel tightening its economic chokehold on Gaza, Sultan and the entire Gaza Strip are heading into a dangerous tailspin from which the World Bank has warned there may be no pulling out.

"The situation is so bad that you really prefer to die," Sultan said. "I prefer to die rather than to live a life like this."

In the four months since Hamas seized effective control of the Gaza Strip in a brutal military takeover, Israel has cut off the desolate region from the outside world and created a political crisis for the Islamist militant group now leading the government here.

Popular support for Hamas appears to be dwindling as frustration builds.

While Hamas managed to restore a semblance of safety to the Gaza Strip, it has failed to do much more. The Hamas-led government enjoys virtually no international recognition. Israel and the United States have rushed to shore up Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who has championed the international campaign to marginalize Hamas.

Now Hamas is confronting intense internal fissures.

Ghazi Hamad, one of the best-known Hamas pragmatists in the Gaza Strip, has been effectively sidelined after criticizing the militant group for leading the Palestinians into an international political ambush.

Hamad, who until recently served as chief spokesman for deposed Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, called the Hamas takeover a "serious strategic mistake that burdened the movement more than it can bear."

Other Hamas leaders in Gaza are vowing to stand fast and not let the latest Israeli steps force them to capitulate. But Israel's actions have created rank stagnation that is permeating daily life.

Stores along Gaza City's main streets are shuttered. Greenhouses along the coast lie abandoned. Factories near the Israeli borders are deserted.

A putrid smell fills the air as sewage trickles past half-finished water treatment projects and out into the Mediterranean Sea.

Since June, the number of Gaza residents pushed into poverty has mushroomed.

Two-thirds of the 100,000 private-sector jobs have been lost. The World Bank has warned that "any economic backbone and private-sector vitality in Gaza risks collapse if the current closure policy continues."

Things are about to get worse. This week, Israel began tightening the screws, closing one of the two remaining crossings used to transfer food and other supplies in and out of the Gaza Strip.

Despite warnings that the actions could be illegal under international law, Israel intends to let nothing but essential food and medical supplies into Gaza. No more than 55 daily truckloads of goods are expected to cross a border once expected to handle 800 or more.

Israel also has begun cutting the flow of natural gas into Gaza by 15 percent and plans to cut off electricity for at least 15 minutes a day, though on Monday the Israeli attorney general barred the move until the impact can be further analyzed.

"This is a signal to Hamas and the Palestinian people in Gaza," said Shlomo Dror, a spokesman for the Israeli government agency responsible for relations with the Gaza Strip. "The only reason we are doing this is to make the lives of the terrorists harder."

The attempt to squeeze Gaza is drawing widespread international criticism.

The United Nations, leaders in the European Union and a growing number of human rights groups have warned Israel not to go too far.

While Israel officially ended its 38-year-rule over Gaza in 2005 when it removed 9,000 Jewish settlers and razed their homes, the United Nations still considers Gaza to be occupied by Israel because it retains effective control over the population.

Israeli forces guard every exit from Gaza by land, sea and air. The Israeli military continues to stage daily operations to root out Palestinian militants, who fire mortars and rudimentary rockets into neighboring Israeli cities, towns and farms.

"International law very clearly forbids collective punishment," said Sari Bashi, director of Gisha, an Israeli human rights group fighting the sanctions. "It is a legal and moral red line."

Gisha and other human rights groups are asking Israel's Supreme Court to block the latest cutbacks. But Israeli officials say the sanctions will end when Hamas cedes power to Abbas and rocket attacks from Gaza come to an end.

"If I were a Palestinian, I would go to Hamas and ask them to stop the attacks," Dror said. "The responsibility is in the hands of Hamas, not ours."

But Bashi said Israel couldn't escape its responsibilities for the residents of Gaza simply because Hamas is in control.

"We appreciate the difficult position Israel is in trying to prevent rocket attacks," Bashi said. "But the proper response is not to make families in Gaza suffer, too."

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« Reply #44 on: November 18, 2007, 09:25:19 PM »

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-11/18/content_7097319.htm

Hamas says ready to establish independent state if Israel ends occupation


 GAZA, Nov. 17 (Xinhua) -- The Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) said on Saturday that it will be ready to establish a Palestinian state if Israel completely ends its occupation of the West Bank, Gaza and Jerusalem.

 Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Zahar told the Qatari al-Jazeera satellite TV channel that his movement "is representing a majority among the Palestinians" and it should rule the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

Hamas movement has unseated former ruling President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement in the legislative elections held in the Palestinian territories in late January last year.

    It formed a first ever government, controlled the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) and formed a security force in Gaza called the executive force, which was later called the police.

    In mid June, the movement armed wing al-Qassam Brigades and the executive force took control of the Gaza Strip following a week of fierce armed clashes with President Abbas' security forces and his Fatah movement's militias.

Asked if Hamas has to apologize to President Abbas for taking control of Gaza by force, al-Zahar said: "Who should apologize to whom. We are a majority and we should dominate the West Bank, currently controlled by illegal leadership."

    Abbas in return, sacked Hamas-led national unity government and formed a new caretaker government based in Ramallah. But Hamas has rejected the Abbas decree and insisted they are still legal.

    Al-Zahar also expressed "pessimism" towards a U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace conference to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, saying the conference "will fail in ending the conflict and finding a fair solution to the questions of the Palestinian refugees' right of return and Jerusalem."

    "We don't hold any Palestinian side responsible for annulling the right of return or wasting the question of Jerusalem. Palestine will be liberated and Islam will be the civilized power that would antagonize injustice," he said.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hmm....I thought Hamas was against the two-state solution. Does anyone know if they are giving in with their stance or if this is something different?
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« Reply #45 on: December 16, 2007, 10:40:19 AM »

http://quicksilverscreen.com/watch?video=17355

Documentary containing views on the bias of media coverage of the issue.

With:

Noam Chomsky
Robert Fisk et al.
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« Reply #46 on: December 25, 2007, 11:07:44 PM »

http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=87846

12/26/07

How is it that Israel declares its plans to build 740 new homes in illegal colonies in the eastern part of occupied Jerusalem, post-Annapolis, and is still considered by the international community to be a party committed to the peace process, which entails freezing all colony activity?

With the whole world watching, Israel agreed in Annapolis to revive the 2003 peace plan known as the roadmap. That plan required the Jewish state to halt all colony construction and expansion. But soon after the conference, Israel made this announcement.

At a time when Israelis and Palestinians should be discussing a final peace deal, Tel Aviv is reactivating its illegal colony policy. This puts the Palestinians in a very tricky position; if they choose to put the peace talks on hold until Israel halts its shameful land-grabbing policy, they will be accused of stalling the peace negotiations altogether. If they continue with their scheduled meetings, they will have yet again paved the way for further concessions for the sake of nothing more than mere communication with Israel.

The question that begs itself is, is this sort of illegal act any longer shocking? A quick look at history reveals that Israel has always talked the talk of peace but hardly delivered. The occupation of Palestinian land continues, indiscriminate shelling and home demolitions goes on unabated, and policies of aggression against ordinary Palestinian civilians have become the norm. Not to mention the on-going construction of the illegal wall which has grabbed more Palestinian land and disrupted the lives of thousands of Palestinian people.

Over the past week alone, Israel has killed about 30 Palestinians but most alarmingly, a report on its iniquitous policies is hardly found in the international media.

When it comes to colonies, one Israeli prime minister after another has strengthened and increased their construction in the West Bank and occupied Jerusalem as part of their ultimate quest for a “greater Israel” (from the Nile to the Euphrates), which encompasses parts of Palestine. Of former Israeli Prime Ministers Benjamin Netanyahu and Ariel Sharon, the late Edward Said once said that they expected their colony methods to “bludgeon Palestinians into accepting everything Israel did, with no reciprocal Israeli measures”.

This statement could not be more accurate given the current Israeli actions today.

As a result, we have in place, an intricate network of colonies that will most certainly disrupt any future attempt to make East Jerusalem the capital of a Palestinian state or even secure the 1967 borders which are agreed upon by both, Palestinians and the international community. With regards to the former, Palestinians will most likely be offered partial independence over East Jerusalem or merely, supervision under the guidance of the Israeli state.

Much like the complicated network of Israeli colonies, Annapolis for Israel is nothing more than a vague long-term process that will guarantee Israel the image of a serious actor for peace.

The Israeli Minister for Jerusalem Affairs Rafi Eitan said Israel had never promised to stop building within occupied Jerusalem and “had a duty to house its citizens”. But why aren’t they housing Israeli citizens inside Israel? And why should Israeli citizens exist at the expense of Palestinians?

So many questions must be asked; where is the international community in all this and why isn’t Israel being held accountable for its illegal actions? The simplest reaction would be to halt foreign aid (which is more than plenty) to Israel until it stops its illegal acts.

There is currently a genuine lack of political courage amongst the so-called sponsors of peace, which is absolutely essential for the creation of a Palestinian state. Because diplomatic courage entails a political confrontation with the Israeli political leadership, things have remained grim for the Palestinian people. In other words, political impotence continues to exist, and there is no political will.

The international community has tried to compensate with financial generosity, as was demonstrated in last week’s aid conference in France.

Perhaps Ahmad Youssef, a senior Hamas official, was right in dismissing the Annapolis meeting as “a farewell party for George Bush” that would do nothing for the people of the Middle East.

Olmert has recently said Israel is ready to make “painful concessions for peace”. That constructing and expanding illegal colonies isn’t one of them is the Palestinian people’s painful reality.
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« Reply #47 on: December 31, 2007, 09:02:23 PM »

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7165652.stm

Middle East conflict toll 'falls'


Israeli human rights group B'Tselem says that the number of deaths in Israeli-Palestinian violence fell sharply in 2007 as compared to 2006.

But the group's annual report says that Israeli security forces killed 373 Palestinians, and 131 of these were not involved in hostilities.

There was a deterioration in the general situation, notably Gaza's humanitarian crisis.

Palestinians killed 13 Israelis in 2007 - seven of them civilians.

Of these, three died in a suicide attack in Eilat, two in Qassam rocket attacks on Sderot, and two were killed in the West Bank.

This is the lowest annual figure for Israeli deaths since 2000 and compares to 17 Israeli civilians killed in 2006.

Six Israeli soldiers were killed in 2007 by Palestinians.

General deterioration

There was little improvement in Palestinians' freedom on movement in the West Bank, B'Tselem says.
   
There were on average 66 checkpoints manned by soldiers and 459 physical roadblocks across the West Bank, through the year.

Other key points:

    * 2007 saw an increase of 13% in the number of Palestinians held in administrative detention without trial or charge, to 830 people.

    * The Jewish settler population grew by 4.5% - compared with 1.5% population growth inside Israel . This was a fall compared to the growth rate in 2006.

    * Sixty-nine Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem, occupied by Israel since 1967, were demolished, a 38% rise compared to 2006.

    * Palestinians continued to face severe discrimination in the allocation of water in the West Bank , causing serious hardship in the summer.

    * The number of Palestinians killed in intra-Palestinian clashes, 344, was the highest since the start of the Palestinian intifada in September 2000. Of these, 73 were not involved in hostilities.

"There is no doubt that Israel faces serious security threats, and is entitled and even obligated to do its utmost to protect its population. However, far too often, Israel fails to appropriately balance its security needs with equally important values, including protecting the rights of Palestinians under its control," the report says.

"In addition, Israeli authorities often exploit security threats in order to advance prohibited political interests, such as perpetuating settlements and effectively annexing them to Israel ."

B'Tselem also notes a lack of accountability of Israeli security forces, in all matters relating to human rights.

"This can be seen clearly in the reluctance of the state to thoroughly investigate violations and to prosecute those responsible for them," the report said.
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« Reply #48 on: January 17, 2008, 09:10:58 AM »

Mumia Abu-Jamal -- The Root of the Problems

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« Reply #49 on: January 22, 2008, 05:16:54 PM »

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/947099.html

22/01/08


Gaza Strip residents Monday moved from worrying about the electricity cuts of the previous 40 hours to worrying about a water shortage. The municipality needs electricity to bring water to homes and the houses need it to pump water to the roof tanks. Hence 40 percent of Gaza Strip homes - 600,000 people - had no running water Monday, the Palestinian water authority said.

Oxfam International said Monday that unless diesel and fuel supplies were resumed immediately, all the Strip's water pumps could stop working Tuesday. The non-governmental organization also warned of the sewage system's collapse in the absence of diesel.
   
"Without electric power we can manage somehow, without bread too," says a resident of the Nasser neighborhood in northern Gaza. "It's cold enough to prevent the food from going bad and we try to open the refrigerator as little as possible. The kids grumble but they can learn to live without the computer. But without water?"

"We calculate each step," he says. "We don't put on the gas heaters, because tomorrow might be colder. We don't cook for long. But to consider whether to go to the toilet? Whether to wash our face? That is insufferable."

The Israeli human rights organizations Adalah and Gisha Monday petitioned the High Court of Justice for an urgent interim injunction to prevent Israel from continuing to restrict the industrial diesel oil supply to the Gaza Strip. They said the shortage deriving from Israel's deliberate cuts in recent weeks culminated in the dramatic closure of the border crossings on Friday. The power cuts caused a shortage of drinking water and damage to the hospitals' function already on January 5, when Gaza's electric power's production was cut by 30 percent. But the High Court of Justice dismissed their request.

From small transistor radios, people listened to Al-Jazeera news broadcasts on local radio stations throughout the day. This was their only link to the world, as no newspapers are reaching the Strip either. The report of the defense minister's order to resume the diesel supply reached one Gaza City resident while he was sitting on the sofa at home, wrapped in a blanket. The gas in the heater ran out on Sunday. His daughters and wife were also covered with blankets, as were most city residents. It was the only thing they could do, to ward off the cold.

He asked himself if the resumption of diesel supply - if indeed the promise was kept - would change the picture he saw from his window: a grid of dark streets. The weak light, coming from the windows of a few apartments that had private generators, only enhanced the darkness all around.
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« Reply #50 on: January 17, 2009, 07:15:54 AM »

http://www.almanar.com.lb/NewsSite/NewsDetails.aspx?id=70607&language=en

  17/01/2009  "This unilateral ceasefire does not foresee a withdrawal" by the
Israeli army,” Hamas’s representative in Lebanon Oussama Hamdan said Saturday. He stressed the resistance group will fight on if Israel orders a unilateral ceasefire in Gaza.
"As long as it remains in Gaza, resistance and confrontation will continue," he said.
Speaking at a conference in Beirut, also attended by European representatives supporting the Palestinians, Hamdan added that Israel's proposal for a unilateral ceasefire, which was to be put to a vote of the security cabinet later on Saturday, was an "attempt to derail the Egyptian plan" for a reciprocal truce. “The different initiatives for a ceasefire were aimed at getting the Palestinians to concede things "which the enemy failed to achieve through the fighting,” he said.
 
Hamas would only agree to a ceasefire if the conditions set by the organization are met.
"I would like to suggest to all the mediators to focus in their initiatives on halting the offensive and lifting the blockade and not to touch anything else."
 
He called on regional elements to stand by the resistance and warned Israel that “if we don't hear what we want, we'll return to the fighting arena."
'Don't suggest that we surrender because we haven't been defeated and we won't be defeated. Our determination grows stronger every day, because our debt to the martyrs whose blood has been spilled is bigger. We shall continue fighting, so don't suggest that we surrender,” Hamdan stressed.
 
The senior Hamas official called on the Palestinian people to continue the struggle and addressed resistance fighters in Gaza.
"Just like the resistance was victorious in Lebanon in 2006, you will win in January 2009."
 
"There are elements in the region which believe that the enemy treats them as a partner. They don’t understand that the enemy treats them like servants or like an improved image of the ancient slaves, but this is the 21st century," he said signaling several leaders dubbed by the US as so called ‘moderate Arabs.’
 
He also criticized Mahmoud Abbas, whose term as PA leader ended in January 9, for not showing up at the Arab summit in Qatar.
 
Hamdan stressed that Israel's leaders should be put on trial for committing war crimes in the Gaza Strip. He told the Europeans that "the Zionist entity enjoys a special status in the European Union."
 
He also congratulated the presidents of Venezuela and Bolivia for severing their diplomatic ties with Israel, and ridiculed Arab leaders who he said were letting Israel act without disturbances.
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« Reply #51 on: January 19, 2009, 02:48:28 AM »

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/rafah-a-landscape-scarred-by-israels-war-1419273.html

The southernmost city in Gaza has suffered mightily at Israeli hands in recent years, but Donald Macintyre was not ready for what he found there

Monday, 19 January 2009

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/rafah-a-landscape-scarred-by-israels-war-1419273.html?action=Popup&ino=4

Even in the darkness, we could see the piles of rubble: one had been the police station, destroyed in the heavy bombing on the first day of Israel's offensive, killing 22 Hamas policemen; another pile accounted for the houses that had been destroyed around Muntasa, a favoured children's play area and park which the Israelis say militants had used for firing rockets – residents deny the claim. The park is no more, a field of smashed masonry and concrete.

Rafah, the southernmost city of Gaza, probably suffered more than any other from the eight long years of conflict before the start of Operation Cast Lead but even on the short journey here from the Egyptian border, some of the new devastation visited on the area and its inhabitants was evident. The Hamas mayor of Rafah had been building a new house for himself; it had been pulverised and lay in ruins.

Earlier, as we entered Gaza from Egypt – among the first Western journalists to do so – the red lights of Palestinian ambulances flashing against a darkening sky as medics unloaded the wounded at the border were the first real sign of the war that had raged for three weeks. A boy, perhaps 15 years old, was delicately lifted from one ambulance to another, the medics struggling to prevent the drips attached to him from tangling.

As night fell over Rafah, from which thousands had fled to escape the relentless bombing of the smuggling tunnels along the border, you could still hear a pilotless Israeli drone overhead, a reminder of how uneasy the ceasefire that began at 2am yesterday will be.

The Harb family were reinstalling the windows of their second-floor apartment, little more than 500m from the border. Even without fuel for the generator to heat the house during the power cuts, explained Jawwad Harb, it was preferable to expose his six children to the January cold, using coats and blankets to protect them, rather than risk them being cut by glass during the scores of repeated explosions that had shaken the house.

"The Israelis were using a weapon that seemed to go deep underground," said Mr Harb. "It sent out waves like an earthquake. It was like being in an earthquake every hour."

Mr Harb, who works for the humanitarian organisation, Care, said he had felt helpless during the airstrikes as he snuggled against his children, trying to comfort them with the idea that the bombing they could hear would be "very temporary".

He recalled that when he had said this, his 15-year-old daughter, Banyas, had replied: "This is temporary for ever", meaning that she "is forever moving from war to war since she was born. Then my six-year-old son, Ziad, asked me 'are we going to die?' That really broke my heart."

With electricity blackouts periodically cutting water supplies to the apartment, Mr Harb set out one day to fetch 20 litres of clean water from the local desalination plant.

"On my way back there were four airstrikes. Some people poured out the water and ran away. But I have six children at home in need of clean water so I hugged my canisters to my chest like something precious and kept on till I got home."

But the worst day, he said, was probably last Friday.

As we waited in vain on the other side of the crossing for the Egyptians to let us in to Gaza on Saturday, we had watched what seemed fairly relentless bombing sorties of F16s streaking across the sky along the border.

But Mr Harb said this was nothing compared to the previous day. Their house is near the offices – empty since the beginning of the offensive – of the Hamas "benevolent association", part of the social network which has helped to form its political base.

When the family heard the bombing start at about 3.30pm, the children had run out of their houses, terrified, and their families had been obliged to follow them. Nearly the whole neighbourhood had run about 200m up the street and waited for about two-and-a-half hours until it was simply too cold for the children to stay out of doors.

Mr Harb's neighbour Mohammed Jeish, 36, described how his two-year-old son Khaled had started suffering headaches and loss of appetite. "When I took him to the doctor, he asked if he had been scared recently. Of course he had. It was psychological." But the Harb family knows well that even these privations are far exceeded by many of those likely to come to light in the coming days across Gaza.

Mr Harb's good friend, Walid al Zubi, a construction engineer, was one of the many men arrested in the intense fighting in the Tel al Hawa district of southern Gaza City last Thursday. Mr Al Zubi had described to him how nine soldiers had arrived at his apartment, taken away his wife, his six-year-old daughter and infant son, and opened intimidatory fire at the walls and television.

Mr Al Zubi, who Mr Harb says has no connection with any political faction, was then blindfolded and interrogated for an hour about the identity and whereabouts of armed gunmen before being taken down to a basement, where he realised that his had not been the only apartment attacked.

The military had handed over his wife and children to the Palestinian Red Crescent but Mr Al Zubi did not know that until he was told at 7am that he could go and pick them up. That, said Mr Harb, was part of the pressure put on him to give information. He had described to Mr Harb his night of anxiety as a "new synonym for pain".

Asked about Israel's charge that Hamas, because it operates in residential areas, is to blame for putting in harm's way the many hundreds of civilians who are part of the total casualty toll of more than 1,200, Mr Harb said: "I am not a politician. But according to the Geneva Convention civilians must be able to leave the war area and the battlefields. In other places this may happen. Only in Gaza it seems they are prevented from leaving the battlefield."

In other areas of Gaza yesterday, Palestinians – 60,000 or so are estimated by the UN to have fled their homes in the past three weeks – slowly began returning to their shattered homes, on foot or using donkeys and carts, loaded up with mattresses, and household belongings.

In Beit Lahiya, rescue workers used bulldozers to pull scores of dead bodies, many of them believed to be Hamas fighters, from debris.

Last night, Gaza's de facto Prime Minister, Ismail Haniyeh, in hiding since the Israeli onslaught began, declared "victory" over Israel.

He said his movement's decision to match Israel's unilateral ceasefire with its own truce, announced 12 hours after Israel's came into being, was "wise and responsible".

In a broadcast, he said: "The enemy has failed to achieve its goals". In Rafah, reporters who had been denied access to Gaza for three weeks, arrived to be greeted by Ghazi Hamad, a senior adviser to Mr Haniyeh, who is very much at the more pragmatic end of the Hamas spectrum and therefore not necessarily representative of the Islamic faction's political hard-liners, let alone its military wing.

But Mr Hamad lost little time in warning that the ceasefire was precarious, and that if Israel did not withdraw its forces within a week, then "resistance" would resume.

Even with shops open again in Rafah yesterday – with people venturing out to buy supplies and with the guns, tanks and warplanes silent for the first time in three weeks – no one is counting on the war not starting again.
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« Reply #52 on: January 24, 2009, 02:55:08 AM »

http://www.almanar.com.lb/NewsSite/NewsDetails.aspx?id=71210&language=en

23/01/2009 There is evidence that Israel committed war crimes during its 22-day campaign in the Gaza Strip and there should be an independent inquiry, UN investigator Richard Falk said on Thursday.
 
The mental anguish of the civilians who suffered the assault is so great that the entire population of Gaza could be seen as casualties, said Falk, UN special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
 
Falk said compelling evidence that Israel's actions in Gaza violated international humanitarian law required an independent investigation into whether they amounted to war crimes.
 
"I believe that there is the prima facie case for reaching that conclusion," he told a Geneva news conference, adding that Israel had made no effort to allow civilians to escape the fighting.
 
"To lock people into a war zone is something that evokes the worst kind of international memories of the Warsaw Ghetto, and sieges that occur unintentionally during a period of wartime," Falk, who is Jewish, said.
 
"There could have been temporary provision at least made for children, disabled, sick civilians to leave, even if where they left to was southern Israel," the US professor said.
 
Egypt’s regime kept the Rafah crossing closed during the war and banned Palestinians from escaping the Israeli war. Egyptian authorities, under pressure by the media, let some Arab doctors and a few tons of aids into the war torn Strip.
 
Falk said the entire Gaza population, which had been trapped in a war zone with no possibility to leave as refugees, may have been mentally scarred for life. If so, the definition of casualty could be extended to the entire civilian population.
 
Falk, who was denied entry to Israel two weeks before the assault started on Dec. 27, dismissed Israel's argument that the assault was for self-defense in the light of rocket attacks aimed at Israel from the Hamas-ruled Gaza strip.
 
"In my view the UN charter, and international law, does not give Israel the legal foundation for claiming self-defense," he said.
 
Israel had not restricted fighting to areas where the rockets came from and had refused to negotiate with Hamas, preventing a diplomatic solution, Falk said.
 
About 1,300 Palestinians, many of them civilians, were killed and 5,000 wounded in the assault during which internationally banned weapons like white phosphorus were excessively used in densly populated areas.
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Mobile-friendly version Immortal Technique Biography

Born Felipe Andres Coronel on the 19th of February 1978, hip-hop artist Immortal Technique is a controversial figure in the U.S. His songs speak of the need for social justice and equality among all races, with special emphasis on the people of color or Latin Americans, but they also cover topics such as the fight against unfair imprisonments or militarism and many others.

His biography is hence quite intriguing, to say the least, and, just like the best anti aging cream is probably going to be lingering over the shelves of all cosmetic stores for many years to come, Immortal Technique’s songs are going to remain hot, fresh and sought after for a really long time. Due to the fact they speak about topics which are to be considered taboos, his lyrics continue to be listened to with the exterior shutters down in most homes.

Immortal technique was born in Peru, in El Hospital Militar de Lima; several years later, his family moved to America in order to escape the harsh living conditions in Peru. Even though they could not afford to buy any terrain a vendre there, they managed to move to Harlem in the ‘80s. Immortal Technique went to Hunter High School, but just like a hip replacement recall is never of good omen, his grades and behavior weren’t any good during high school either. He was the school bully, he harassed other students and he was not afraid to get involved in scandals with drug dealers from around the area. And while his interactions with these drug dealers were not as numerous as used cars in Phoenix are, they still managed to leave an ugly mark on his biography.

Plus, his graffiti did not actually resemble any Dreamweaver templates, but he was famous for his controversial acts of vandalism. His violence against others almost got him expelled in 1996, but he somehow managed to finish high school and even attend college at Pennsylvania State University. This time, his college experience only lasted for two years; he was then charged and convicted and he was eventually imprisoned in Pennsylvania.

In prison, just like a SEO San Antonio company would focus on booting a web site’s ranking, Immortal Technique also focused on boosting his own social ranking. He began studying the policy of religious history, and, finding the inspiration he needed, he began putting his thoughts in lyrics. In 1999 he was paroled and, even though he was first considered some sort of Agen Bola, as no one had heard of him at first, he began to attend freestyle battles he started winning.

From there on, his career started to bloom, as he gave birth to albums such as “Revolutionary Vol 1” in 2002, “Revolutionary Vol 2” in 2004 and “Revolutionary Vol 3” in 2008. He also became a political activist and started to sing about political injustice (check out his opinion on the imprisonment of Mumia Abu-Jamal or the songs on George W. Bush). Despite of the fact that his albums might not have gotten the type of positive reviews African mango reviews are usually comprised of, this has not stopped him from getting involved in future projects, including an important film collaboration. He might not approve the work of the CNA Financial Corporation, but we all need to eat, right?




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Many travel locations and hotels don't offer water softeners either, which is a problem. If they read some water softener reviews there'd probably be more hotels offering this amenity. Although many hotels and resorts do offer indoor fountains which help provide a nice source of relaxation. You can even find hotels and resorts that offer temporary office space for meetings or conferences. Regardless of where you may be traveling this summer pay attention to the passive income opportunities around you. You never know when you may come across an opportunity to earn passive income online to help alleviate your travel expenses. Heck, you may even end up selling WOW gold online and make a fortune. If you are dead stuck on money during your trip, just take a look for the local pay day loans location. While it may hurt in the long term they are helpful for getting cash in your pocket and keeping the trip alive.
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The History and Growth of Rap Music

If you are a music enthusiast, then it is very likely that you have come across a genre of music called rap music. Rap music is area that has very clear distinguishing features most notably the rapid and rhythmic chanting of the lyrics perfectly timed to the beat and musical accompaniment that forms the base of the song. Rap music traces its roots to the development of the hiphop subculture which predominantly carries four complementary musical styles namely: rapping, dancing and in particular break dancing, scratching or more popularity known as DJing, and graffiti writing which others dub as vandalism. Another sub-element of this genre is beat-boxing which also features heavily in the repertoire of many rap artists. If you thought this was an easy musical genre to characterize, then you were poorly informed: consider, many research papers and doctoral dissertations have been written on the subject of rap music and its accompanying stylistic elements.

The history of rap music, or hip-hop music, is composed of a series of rapid development phases that have all culminated in the popular rap versions of today. Before rap music took off in the 1990s, it was predominantly referred to as disco rap in the late 1970s. The three rappers who had a hand in coining the term “rap music” were DJ Hollywood, Lovebug Starski, and Keith Cowboy, the last one being officially credited with the term hip-hop. Rap music original began with improvisations and freestyle singing to add an element of unpredictability to the songs in parties and other gatherings. Even in the 1960s to 1970s, the initial elements of rap music where already sown in urban subcultures particularly in New York City where adhoc performances in the streets led to a coalescing of influences in the wake of the Civil Rights era. Like the iPhone 5 release date, it had a slow and steady rise building into an explosion of creativity and style that has made it into what it has become today.

At this very early stage of rap development, it was particularly tied to emcee-ing more than it was associated to any specific song. It predominantly tied songs together as an adlib in between. It was born out of the creative inputs of DJs who had to work with self-imposed musical constraints such as the 4/4 time beat and sampling or sequencing sections of other songs to create a smooth flow of uninterrupted musical stimuli. These were eventually married with electronic equipment such as drums and synthesizers, and ultimate melodies to give it that bite and identity. In a sense, rap music artists were basically like a video game designer who had to figure out each artistic component at every turn until it developed into a more coherent musical genre that became the rap music we know today.

The first recorded version of rap music came alive in the early 1980s when DJs decided to make records out of their freestyle MCing. This necessitated the documentation of song lyrics so they do not change during each and every rendition. The age of the stromanbieter for rap music was gone paving the way for more organized chaos. Still, the freestyle and improvisation element remained a part of many DJ interludes as the song goes through certain sections that did not require too much rap singing.

Likewise, as a consequence of the hip-hop records, the influence of rap began to spread faster than ever before. Artists no longer had to travel far to get their music heard. Now, records from New York City and Philadelphia can be reproduced and transported to cities like Los Angeles, New Orleans, Dallas, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Seattle among others for people to appreciate and enjoy. This was primarily the reason for rap music’s rapid growth. Like Christmas mini lights, cities formed the nodes through which rap music would spread to other parts of the country. From small beginnings to grand achievements, the birth certificate translation to true stardom took a matter of years for rap music to be realized. Since then, its take-off and rise has been meteoric.

In this regard, it is almost impossible to talk about rap music but not discuss the golden age of rap. This was the era from the late 1980s to the mid 1990s when rap grew at an astounding rate fueled by the creative contributions of many artists from all over the continental United States and in many parts of the world. The primary trait of the Golden Age or Rap was that it was an almost unbroken wave of transformative music with every single pushing the boundaries of the genre. From this age and in the succeeding Gansta Rap age came names like Run-D.M.C., Dr. Dre, Ice T, MC Hammer, The Wu-tang Clan, Snoop Dogg, and The Notorious B.I.G. among others. The list of names can virtually fill a Sharepoint Hive without any problems.

According to social studies published in 2005, teenagers and children are more familiar with hip-hop and rap music more than any other musical genre. Up to 65% of all children from ages 8 to 18 hear hip-hop music on a daily basis, making it their routinary keratin hair treatment session, almost to the point that it has become an intrinsic part of their lives. With the diversification of the genre to include the more stylish R&B or rhythm and blues, it is not difficult to explain how rap music has continued to pervade radio station, TV and movie song line-ups. The marriage of rap and jazz which paved the way for R&B is itself a phenomenon that warrants all sorts of social analysis.

And with its very strong following, it is safe to say that rap music is here to stay. Years from now, when you open your TV on a bright Saturday morning, there’s a big chance you would be watching the next stage in the evolution of rap music, and there’s an even better chance you would be dancing or singing to that tune.

Immortal Technique Rapper Biography

Immortal technique is the stage name for which rapper Felipe Andres Coronel is popularly known. His lyrics characterized by its unique mixture of socialist commentary of social class hierarchy, religion, wealth, poverty to contemporary issues touching on governmental and institutional racism. Perhaps you may have come across information about this popular icon as you undertake research for that mba online, or for whatever course you are undertaking, be it bachelors in criminal justice, performing arts degree, governance systems, online nurse practitioner programs, history, or any other course for which you have to do online research.

The rapper was born on the 19th day of February 1978 in Lima, Peru. During the internal conflicts that took place in their country at the time, his parents migrated to Harlem, New York. Probably, in the process of migration to the country, they may have used boats at least once in the journey. Like many American teenagers, the rapper was engaged in various acts against the law that led to his arrest several times, which in one his public interviews admitted that they were selfish and at best childish acts. After completing his incarceration terms, he took up a political science course in a bid to mend his seemingly torn life, while living with his father.

After completing his studies, he was not lucky enough to secure a job in his field of study owing to the unemployment situation prevailing in the entire United States. Like many American fresh graduates who take up it jobs, nursing jobs, waiter and nursing jobs among many other common jobs that may not necessarily need a specialist, he took up a working in a restaurant to earn a buck from which he could live on.

Through his deep interest in championing for equality between the elite and the under privileged in society, and being not a Mesothelioma Lawyer, the rapper begun his music career basing his lyrics on such issues as injustice, exploitation and mistreatment of the poor. This is captured clearly in his desire to keep control over his production, since he strongly believes that in the music industry, the producers normally make a large profit while the artist for who credit belongs, normally end ups earning peanut amounts at the end of the day.

His popular sediments are captured in his albums that include the revolutionary, both volume one and two, and the 3rd world and the middle passage album. the rapper is increasingly involved in prison visits and working with migrant rights activists, though which he speaks to youths and the unprivileged in the society trazer amor de volta. His investments are largely in farmland in Latin America, which like soweto properties is an unpopular investment option for many celebrity figures. His advice to the youth is not much on taking up an aacsb online mba or an online criminal justice degree, but rather it is based on exploiting ones talents and living soberly within the law.

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