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January 4, 2009

Collaboration and Resistance

The massacre in Gaza continues with the world governments and powers watching. No they are not watching but they in fact are collaborating.

"If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have taken the side of the oppressor" Desmond Tutu.

Some governments have gone from claiming neutrality to actual overt collaboration. I do not want to simply lay the blame on western governments but Arab governments--all of them without exception--have been active collaborators with the war criminals in Washington and Tel-Aviv. At the top of the list is the impotent puppet Husni Mubarak and Mahmoud Abbas the garbage collector in Ramallah that likes to call himself "president". I have had enough I am mad as hell and so should everyone be when people are being killed and the rest of the world sits and watches on their little TV screens in HD. This is not a show but real people experiencing real death and killing.




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Published at 15:19 / 2 comments / 124 visits
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January 4, 2009

Could it Get Worse?

As the Troops Enter, We Fear the Worst

By Eyad El-Sarraj
Sunday, January 4, 2009; B01

GAZA CITY

How much worse can it get? After a horrifying week, the Israelis have arrived once again at our doorstep. What now? Already we have experienced so much terror and want.

When the Israeli strikes first began, my wife and I were worrying about lentils. She said we could not have lentil soup for lunch because there were no lentils in the shops. Nor any rice or flour. Suddenly there was a deafening noise, followed by a succession of blasts the likes of which I had never experienced. Our house was rocking, the windows rattling in their panes.

Panicked, we ran into the small hallway. My sister-in-law, who lives upstairs, joined us, frantic because her young daughter was not yet home from school. Sari, a boy from the neighborhood, banged on our door asking for shelter. He trembled as he told us that he'd been on his way home from school in a taxi when there was a thundering blast. The driver stopped the car and ran for cover. The passengers scattered in all directions. Sari found himself running aimlessly. The explosions seemed to be chasing him, he said. Suddenly, he came upon people lying bleeding in the street. He went up to a man, wanting to help him, and touched his hand. It was nothing but a piece of burnt flesh. Somebody shouted at him to get away, so he ran off.

The news came over the telephone and the television. More than 200 people had been killed and even more wounded in less than 10 minutes. The numbers were climbing and the funeral scenes filled the TV screen. Apparently F16s had dropped more than 100 tons of bombs on crowded Gaza and had hit more than 300 targets in one mission. The pilots must have reported back to their commanders that their mission had been accomplished. But they never reported the pain and suffering of the innocent people and the fear their fighters had spread in the hearts of our children.

Noor, my stepdaughter, was silent throughout the day. Then she suddenly burst out alternately crying and laughing hysterically. She is a bright girl with artistic talents. She wants to write poetry.

On Monday, the phone rang. It was my friend Salam, asking for advice. His four children, ages 11, 9, 7 and 5, had wet their beds the night before. They'd mostly outgrown that a long time ago.

Three days after the attacks began, Fawaz Abu Sitta, a professor of political science at Al-Azhar University here, was declared dead on the radio. The announcer said that the rubble of a bombed ministry building had completely smothered his small villa. A friend who happened to hear the broadcast alerted civil defense officials to search Fawaz's basement. They did, and Fawaz was rescued along with his wife, his children and his elderly mother.

This carnage goes on, as does another humanitarian crisis brought about by the Israeli siege of Gaza: a lack of medicines, bread, flour, gas, electricity, fuel and almost everything else. The Israeli siege has literally turned Gaza into a massive prison. All our borders are sealed, so there is no way out.

By Tuesday night, Gaza was like a ghost town. Its streets were deserted and people didn't dare to come out of their houses.

The children suffer the most, I think. They see the fear in their mothers' eyes. The image of their fathers as a source of security is shattered. Their fathers could not provide them with food, and now they are unable to protect them. The rockets will eventually stop flying, I am certain, but it may be too late for these children. To me, the chances seem great that they will join Hamas as they search for a replacement for the father figure, someone to provide and protect. In this way, Israeli actions will only strengthen Hamas.

Wisdom tells us that violence can only breed violence. Israel's brutality guarantees that its people will not be secure. Israel may destroy much and kill many in Hamas, but that is not the solution. Hamas was born because of the occupation and won the democratic elections in 2006 because of false promises of peace and people's disillusionment with the Palestinian Authority. Israel and its allies should address Palestinian grievances instead of aggravating them by denying justice and security and by violating basic human rights. Most of the Palestinians in Gaza are here because they were expelled in 1948 when Israel was created. Since then, we have not had a day of freedom or of equal rights with Israelis. We can barely feed our children or provide them with medicine, because Israel controls everything that goes in and out. From where I sit, in the middle of this barrage of bombing, Israel looks to be increasingly living outside the norms of the world community and outside international law.

I am not alone in thinking this. U.N. Human Rights envoy Richard Falk declared that what Israel is doing is a crime against humanity. Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter, South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mary Robinson, former head of the U.N. Human Rights Commission, have expressed similar views in the past. Israel must be stopped.

It looks increasingly likely, though, that before the missiles stop exploding, we will have more days like last Thursday, when a family that lives across the street came to our house. They had gotten a phone call telling them to evacuate because their home would soon be bombed. Israelis sometimes make these calls, but you can't always be sure what will happen. Some houses are actually bombed after such messages. But some are hoaxes.

Our neighbors stayed with us for a couple of hours before they found out that the threat was just a joke -- a very dark kind of humor.

Then on Friday we got word that my stepdaughter' s friend -- a Christian -- had died from wounds she had sustained earlier in the week. Noor spent the day crying.

So many people have left their homes. The people who live near Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas leader, have fled. The entire neighborhood is empty.

I'm scared, but I'm staying put, though I am fearful of what's next. I'm worried about what will happen next, the serious bloodshed that will surely follow as the Israeli forces come through on land.

Hamas fighters will be battling from homes, in the streets, in the neighborhoods where we remain.

Eyad El-Sarraj, a psychiatrist, is the founder and president of the Gaza Community Mental Health Program and a commissioner of the Palestinian Independent Commission for Human Rights.

http://www.washingt onpost.com/ wp-dyn/content/ article/2009/ 01/02/AR20090102 02195.html

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January 6, 2009

The Silence is deafening

Israeli shelling kills dozens at UN school in Gaza

Reports of more than 40 killed in and around UN shelter


• 12 members of family killed in Gaza City air strike

The civilian death toll in Gaza increased dramatically today, with reports of more than 40 Palestinians killed after missiles exploded outside a UN school where hundreds of people were sheltering from the continuing Israeli offensive.

Two Israeli tank shells struck the school in Jabaliya refugee camp, spraying shrapnel on people inside and outside the building, according to news agency reports.

The medical director of the hospital in Jabaliya told the Guardian 41 bodies had been brought in so far and more could be on the way. Reuters journalists filmed bodies scattered on the ground amid pools of blood and torn shoes and clothes. A donkey lay on the ground in its own blood.

In addition to the dead, several dozen people were wounded, hospital officials said. The Israeli military said it was looking into the reports.

Elsewehere at least 12 members of an extended family, including seven young children, were killed in an air strike on their house in Gaza City. The bodies of the Daya family were pulled from the rubble of a house in Gaza city's Zeitoun district after it was hit by two Israeli missiles. The dead included seven children aged from one to 12 years, three women and two men. Nine other people were believed to be trapped in the rubble.

Hours earlier, three young men – all cousins – died when the Israelis bombed another UN school, the Asma primary school in Gaza City. They were among about 400 people who sought shelter there after fleeing their homes in Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza.



The UN, which said the school was clearly marked, said it was "strongly protesting these killings to the Israeli authorities and is calling for an immediate and impartial investigation".

"Where it is found that international humanitarian law has been violated, those responsible must be held to account. Under international law, installations such as schools, health centres and UN facilities should be protected from attack. Well before the current fighting, the UN had given to the Israeli authorities the GPS co-ordinates of all its installations in Gaza, including Asma elementary school."

The killings take the total toll in Palestinian lives since the Israelis launched their assault on the Gaza Strip 11 days ago to above 600. Doctors at Gaza hospitals say that at least one-fifth of the victims are children and a large number of women are among the dead.

Israel continues to insist that the bulk of those killed are Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters, although its claim to be going to extraordinary lengths to target only "terrorists" has been undermined by one of its own tanks firing on a building being used by Israeli troops, killing four.

The sharp spike in the number of civilian casualties came as Israeli troops and tanks moved into Gaza's second largest city, Khan Younis, for the first time today, supported by intensive artillery strikes as the military pledged to press on with its attack.The heaviest fighting has been in northern Gaza, with witnesses reporting wave after wave of bombing strikes across the north of the territory accompanied by gunfire from helicopters and artillery from land and sea. Thousands of Palestinians have been ordered to leave their homes or forced to flee the fighting.

In Shajaiyeh, east of Gaza City, Israeli troops seized control of three apartment blocks and set up gun positions on the rooftops. Residents were locked in their homes and soldiers confiscated their mobile phones, neighbours said.

Three of the four Israeli soldiers killed by friendly fire died when a tank mistakenly fired on a building where the soldiers had taken up positions. There was heavy artillery fire to cover the evacuation of 24 soldiers who were injured, including the commander of the Golani infantry brigade, one of Israel's key fighting forces.

Israel's defence minister, Ehud Barak, said his country's troops would continue their operation despite mounting Palestinian casualties and growing international calls for a ceasefire.

"Hamas has so far sustained a very heavy blow from us, but we have yet to achieve our objective, and therefore the operation continues," Barak said.

The Israeli foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, said the offensive was intended to change permanently the shape of Israel's conflict with Hamas. "When Israel is targeted, Israel is going to retaliate," she said. Israel has rejected calls for a ceasefire.

The military said it had bombed more smuggling tunnels across the border with Egypt, in the south, and hit more than 40 other sites across Gaza including buildings storing weapons and rocket launching areas.

In Gaza, Mahmoud Zahar, the most senior leader of Hamas in the strip and a hardliner in the movement, appeared on the party's al-Aqsa television station and gave a defiant speech threatening attacks not only in Gaza but elsewhere.

"The Zionists have legitimised the killing of their children by killing our children. They have legitimised the killing of their people all over the world by killing our people," Zahar said. He urged Hamas fighters to "crush your enemy".

Another Hamas figure, a recognised military spokesman called Abu Ubaida, said thousands of Hamas fighters were waiting in Gaza to take on the Israeli military, and that rocket attacks would increase. More than 40 were fired into southern Israel yesterday, including one that landed in an empty kindergarten, which, like all schools near the Gaza border, has been closed since the conflict began.. Israeli police said a total of 520 rockets had been fired in the past 11 days of fighting.

Israeli troops are now deployed in and around the major urban areas of Gaza, particularly to the north, in Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and Jabaliya. Using leaflets, telephone calls and radio announcements, they have ordered residents in many areas to leave their homes, forcing at least 15,000 Palestinians to flee to safety elsewhere. At least 5,000 are staying in 11 different UN schools and shelters.

The UN said more than 1 million Gazans were still without electricity or water and that it was increasingly difficult for staff to distribute aid or reach the injured. It said more industrial diesel was needed to reopen the strip's sole power plant, which has been shut for a week. Ten transformers have been damaged in the fighting.

More wheat grain is needed for food handouts, and the UN said Karni, the main commercial crossing, should be reopened to allow it in. Four ambulances and three mobile clinics were destroyed when bombs hit the headquarters of the Union of Health Care Committees in Gaza City.

John Holmes, the UN emergency relief coordinator, said Gaza represented an "increasingly alarming" humanitarian crisis, and that the territory was running low on clean water, power, food, medicine and other supplies since Israel began its offensive. Israeli leaders claim there is no humanitarian crisis.

Published at 16:05 / 3 comments / 109 visits
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January 6, 2009

Mubarak's Help !!!

Doctors stuck at bottleneck on Egypt-Gaza

border

  • By REBECCA SANTANA, Associated Press Writer Rebecca Santana, Associated Press Writer – 3 mins ago
AP – Egyptian paramedics evacuate an injured Palestinian man toward an Egyptian ambulance at the Egyptian …

RAFAH, Egypt – Greek anesthesiologist Dimitrios Mognie and another doctor arrived at this border crossing loaded with medical supplies to help Gazans wounded in the Israeli offensive. Instead, they have waited at the border for days.

On Tuesday, a representative from a Norwegian medical aid organization was allowed to enter the Gaza Strip from Rafah. But most doctors have been denied entry by Egyptian authorities and spend their days drinking tea and coffee at a small, dusty cafe near the crossing's metal gates.

"This is a shame," said Mognie, who used his vacation to travel from Greece to try to help in Gaza. He thought entering through Egypt, which has a narrow border with the Hamas-ruled strip, was his best bet.

"That in 2009 they have people in need of help from a doctor and we can go to help and they won't let us. This is crazy," said Mognie, who has worked in conflict zones from Iraq to Somalia.

Gaza's few hospitals have been swamped by more than 2,400 wounded in Israel's 11-day campaign to stop Hamas militants from launching rockets into Israel. Almost 600 Palestinians have been killed. Nearly half of the dead are civilians, according to U.N. and Palestinian officials.

Mognie and his colleague, both from the Greek organization Doctors for Peace, were the last in their group of six Greek doctors to remain at the Rafah border after arriving last Friday with medical supplies. The others returned home after being continually rebuffed by the Egyptian border guards.

Three Norwegian medical personnel, including the one who crossed on Tuesday, have been allowed into Gaza from Egypt.

Israel and Egypt first closed their borders with Gaza after Hamas took control of the area in June 2007. The Egyptian closure has been seen by some as abetting Israel's siege of the crowded strip, home to 1.4 million people.

Since Israel's offensive, Egypt has taken in a trickle of wounded Palestinians through the crossing at Rafah. The Egyptian government, the main mediator between Israel and Hamas, has said it would only open Rafah if moderate Palestinian forces of President Mahmoud Abbas are in charge of the crossing.

There have been increasing calls for Egypt to ease the border bottleneck — where aid convoys first have to unload cargo from Egyptian trucks before it is loaded onto Palestinian ones and taken into the strip.

Palestinian ambulances are not allowed beyond the Egyptian border crossing. Patients are taken out of the often poorly equipped Palestinian ambulances and transferred on gurneys to Egyptian ones.

At least 20 wounded Palestinians were brought to Egypt on Tuesday, bringing the total transferred to 143 since the start of the offensive, said Mohammed Arafat, a Palestinian Authority representative in Rafah.

The day before, Palestinian doctor Abed el-Qader Lubbad arrived at the border in one of the ambulances transporting patients from Gaza. Of the eight patients he ferried, one who was seriously wounded died on the way, said Lubbad, who works in the intensive care unit at Shifa Hospital in Gaza.

Obstetrician Jemilah Mahmood, the president of Mercy Malaysia, said her group worked with the Egyptian Red Crescent to transfer about $100,000 worth of medical supplies to Gaza on Monday and planned to send another shipment next week.

But while supplies can get through, Mahmood said neither she nor her colleagues were allowed to cross.

"Can you imagine how many women are hurt and how few women doctors there are?" she said. "All of us are sitting at the border."

__

Associated Press writer Ashraf Sweilam contributed to this report.

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January 6, 2009

Temoignages



"Nous vivons cette agression comme une punition collective"

LEMONDE.FR | 06.01.09 | 19h05 • Mis à jour le 06.01.09 | 19h13

Un universitaire, une mère de famille, un médecin et une journaliste. Depuis le début de l'offensive israélienne, il y a onze jours, ces quatre Gazaouis vivent littéralement coupés du monde. Les lignes téléphoniques ne marchent que rarement, et l'armée israélienne a instauré des check-points infranchissables sur tout le territoire. Tous les quatre issus de la classe moyenne, ils racontent par téléphone cette guerre à huis clos dont ils se sentent les otages.

Haider Eider, maître de conférences à l'université Al-Aqsa,
habite à quelques centaines de mètres des bâtiments ministériels de la ville de Gaza, pilonnés par l'aviation israélienne. "La première fois que le complexe ministériel a été bombardé je dormais. Tout le bâtiment a tremblé. Les vitres ont éclaté tout autour de moi. Il y avait du verre partout dans ma chambre. J'ai eu de la chance d'être allongé à ce moment là. Je n'ai plus fermé l'œil depuis. A l'instant où je vous parle, je peux voir des hélicoptères, des F-16 et des drones par ma fenêtre. Toutes les cinq minutes, il y a des tirs d'artillerie, des tirs d'obus ou des attaques aériennes", raconte-t-il alors que résonnent derrière lui des détonations. "Vous entendez ? C'est l'artillerie."

Cet universitaire, qui se définit comme un laïc, n'a pas voté pour le Hamas en 2006. Malgré ses convictions, il ne lui viendrait pas à l'idée de tenir le vainqueur des dernières législatives pour responsable de la situation. "Ce n'est pas une guerre entre Israël et le Hamas, mais une remise en cause de l'existence même du peuple palestinien. Nous vivons cette agression comme une punition collective : nous sommes bombardés parce que nous avons porté le Hamas au pouvoir. C'est un crime de guerre et un crime contre la démocratie."

Selon lui, loin d'affaiblir le Hamas, l'attaque israélienne a soudé l'ensemble de la population contre "l'agresseur". "Mais la question dépasse largement le Hamas : parmi les combattants, il y en a de tous horizons. Il s'agit d'un mouvement de libération nationale. Cela me fait penser à ce qui s'est passé il y a deux ans au Liban. Israël voulait détruire les infrastructures du Hezbollah, qui est ressorti de cette guerre plus populaire que jamais..."

Nirmeen Kharme est une mère de famille vivant dans la ville de Gaza. Elle raconte sa lassitude de se battre pour élever ses trois enfants dans un territoire en état de siège permanent. "Nous sommes enfermés à la maison depuis onze jours. Ma belle-sœur et sa fille vivent avec nous. Ils habitaient au 4e étage, mais étaient terrifiés à cause des bombardements. Nous avons des stocks de nourriture. Nous avons l'habitude de ce genre de situation. Les enfants sont tellement stressés qu'ils mangent toute la journée. Gaza n'est pas un endroit pour élever des enfants..."

Cette mère de famille estime que le Hamas est en partie responsable de la situation. "Je n'ai jamais été partisane du Hamas et ne le serai jamais. Aujourd'hui, seule la nouvelle génération du Hamas se bat dans les rues. Où sont les autres ? Personne ne le sait. Ce n'est pas à nous de payer à leur place. Nul ne peut dire si le Hamas sortira renforcé de cette guerre. J'espère que non. J'aimerais tellement pouvoir vivre, simplement, comme un être humain..."

Hadi Abu Khusa dirige l'ONG Union of Palestinian Medical Relief Comites, qui gère des cliniques mobiles dans toute la bande de Gaza. Alors que des bruits d'explosions retentissent derrière lui, il explique en quoi le territoire est au bord de la "catastrophe humanitaire". "Si Israël ne fait rien pour aider les innocents qui habitent à Gaza, ils vont mourir. Faute d'électricité, nous n'avons plus assez d'eau pour satisfaire nos besoins. Vous imaginez ! L'eau, c'est comme l'oxygène. Dans les supermarchés, on ne trouve plus rien, plus de fruits, plus de pain. Nous mangeons des patates et des œufs..."

Selon lui, 95 % des blessés admis dans les hôpitaux sont des civils. Et ses équipes n'ont plus assez de médicaments pour s'occuper de toutes les victimes. M. Abu Khusa ne veut pas se laisser abattre – "nous continuons à travailler", dit-il – mais un sentiment d'impuissance se dégage de son discours. "Nos équipes médicales ont de plus en plus de mal à intervenir. L'armée israélienne a coupé la bande de Gaza en trois. Personne ne peut passer d'une zone à l'autre. A la morgue, des corps anonymes s'entassent que personne ne peut venir identifier..."

Fida Qishta habite à Rafah. La voix atone, cette journaliste indépendante dit ne pas comprendre pourquoi Israël s'en prend aux civils. "Les F-16 sillonnent le ciel jour et nuit. Ils bombardent tout ce qui pourrait aider les Palestiniens à construire leur pays : les écoles, les ministères, les routes et même les maisons. Dans le nord, ils disent aux civils d'évacuer leurs domiciles, puis les bombardent ! Ils visent aussi les mosquées, tous les musulmans, sans distinction. Une centaine d'enfants ont perdu la vie depuis dix jours. Pourquoi ? Hier, des enfants du voisinage sont morts alors qu'ils jouaient devant chez eux... Aujourd'hui, j'ai entendu que sept enfants ont été tués avec leur famille dans le bombardement de leur maison à Gaza... Vous imaginez ? Il faut que le monde réalise ce qui se passe ici."

Soren Seelow
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January 7, 2009

Why do they hate us?

Another honest and brilliant article by th veteran journalist Robert Fisk. Indeed, the question many Americans asked after 9-11 was why do they hate us? Well what do you the think the answer for that is?

Published at 12:05 / 14 comments / 231 visits
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January 7, 2009

Take over of Israeli consulate in Toronto

Arrests underway in Toronto Israeli Consulate Sit-in Toronto: Wednesday January 8, 2009 Time: 11:20 am Police have moved in to arrest a group of Jewish Canadian women who are currently occupying the Israeli consulate at 180 Bloor Street West in Toronto. The women took their action in protest against the on-going Israeli assault on the people of Gaza.

The group is carrying out this occupation in solidarity with the 1.5 million people of Gaza and to ensure that Jewish voices against the massacre in Gaza are being heard. They are demanding that Israel end its military assault and lift the 18-month siege on the Gaza Strip to allow humanitarian aid into the territory. Israel has been carrying out a full-scale military assault on the Gaza Strip since December 27, 2008. At least 660 people have been killed and 3000 injured in the air strikes and in the ground invasion that began on January 3, 2009. Israel has ignored international calls for a ceasefire and is refusing to allow food, adequate medical supplies and other necessities of life into the Gaza Strip. Protesters are outraged at Israel's latest assault on the Palestinian people and by the Canadian government's refusal to condemn these massacres. They are deeply concerned that Canadians are hearing the views of pro-Israel groups who are being represented as the only voice of Jewish Canadians. The protesters have occupied the consulate to send a clear statement that many Jewish-Canadians do not support Israel's violence and apartheid policies. They are joining with people of conscience all across the world who are demanding an end to Israeli aggression and justice for the Palestinian people.

The group includes: Judy Rebick, professor; Judith Deutsch, psychoanalyst and president of Science for Peace; B.H. Yael, filmmaker; Smadar Carmon, an Canadian Israeli peace activist and others. Spokespersons for the group will be outside the Israeli consulate: Dr. Miriam Garfinkle: 416-731-6605 mgarfinkle@sympatico.ca Cathy Gulkin: 416-697-0768 cgulkin@rogers.com Release is online at http://www.sources.com/Releases/NR135.htm

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January 11, 2009

Song For Gaza

Song for Gaza by Michael Heart. Please visit his website below

www.michaelheart.com

Published at 20:03 / 8 comments / 442 visits
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January 11, 2009

Poem by Michael Rosen for the Children of Gaza

In Gaza, children,
you learn that the sky kills
and that houses hurt.
You learn that your blanket is smoke
and breakfast is dirt.

You learn that cars do somersaults
clothes turn red,
friends become statues,
bakers don't sell bread.

You learn that the night is a gun,
that toys burn
breath can stop,
it could be your turn.

You learn:
if they send you fire
they couldn't guess:
not just the soldier dies -
it's you and the rest.

Nowhere to run,
nowhere to go,
nowhere to hide
in the home you know.

You learn that death isn't life,
the air isn't bread.

The land is for all - you have the right to be
not dead.
The land is for all - you have the right to be
not dead.
The land is for all - you have the right to be
not dead.
The land is for all -you have the right to be
not dead.

Published at 20:12 / 2 comments / 371 visits
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January 14, 2009

Awakening? We Can Hope.

Finally it seems that some awakening may be taking place although it is premature to say conlusively whether conscience is finding it way to the soul of politicians.

I have taken exerpts from three articles which appeared in the Guardian, UK newspaper, the links to the articles are also attached.

Let's hope that this is an awakening and that war crimes will not go unpunished.

Published at 18:56 / 0 comments / 166 visits
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January 15, 2009

War on whom?

Schools, hospitals, ambulances, mosques, UN buildings, homes all were targets of Israeli "pinpoint bombings"!!!! Yes this is not a war on Hamas, it is not a war to stop its rockets (there are other ways this could be achieved). This is a war to punish the Palestinian people and to cripple their will to defy the occupation. It is a war to subjugate the spirit of resistance and to extinguish the flame of freedom. IT WON'T SUCCEED. Israel will never be able to supress the yearning of the Palestinians for freedom.

BOYCOTT DIVESTMENT SANCTIONS

Like the old Apartheid in South Africa, the Israeli Apartheid will fall.

Please visit my friend Firas blog nevertoforgivenevertoforget.blogspot.com

Published at 13:47 / 4 comments / 279 visits
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January 15, 2009

San Francisco. Israeli Consulate Closed for War Crimes by Protestors

Thanks to the bay independent media and kudos to those committed activists.

Source of the story: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/01/15/18563491.php

Please support this valuable media resource which has to struggle against the giant corporate media.

Published at 23:51 / 1 comment / 850 visits
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January 17, 2009

A Call From Gaza

I just received the message below from the ODS group in Gaza.

Published at 00:04 / 2 comments / 186 visits
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Published at 13:23 / 0 comments / 189 visits
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January 18, 2009

Ceasefire

The Israeli cabinet met today Jan. 17th and declared a unilateral ceasefire. Yesterday an anonymous Israeli official declared as reported by Rueters: "The goal is to announce, subject to cabinet approval, a suspension of military activities because we believe our goals have been attained."

I can't help but wonder what goals have been achieved? Is it the 1200 people killed and thousands injured? Is it the destruction of homes, schools, hospitals, and other infrastructure? What precisely has been achieved?

In all cases, ceasefire is good. I hope that Hamas does not do any more stupid things and stops launching rockets giving Israel an excuse to resume its massacre. It is time for us Palestinians to engage in direct non-violent action. Non-violence is not submission and is not inaction. We have to confront the occupation head on but we have use other methods than military action to liberate ourselves from the yoke of occupation.

This last Israeli attack on Gaza has rallied many to the cause of freedom for Palestine. The deaths of the innocent and wanton destruction in violation of international law and all norms of warfare have opened the eyes of many. Let us not squander the support of people around the world.

Azmi Bishara, was a serious threat to Israel not because he was armed. He wasn't. The biggest threat to Israel and to Zionism is the demand for equal rights for all. One country and one person one vote should become our objective from now on. The Oslo agreement and all the "peace initiatives" prior and since have been nothing but a charade and a smoke screen used for propaganda. There was never any real intent on the part of Israel in action to demonstrate its willingness to achieve a lasting peace with the Palestinians. Its objective was to maintain the territories or at least control of the territories without having to deal with the population. The PA was intended to be not a partner for peace but as an enforcer and legitimzer of Israeli policy and occupation. The PA must be dismantled and replaced with a popular movement demanding equality of citizenship in a secular and democratic state in all of historic Palestine from the river to the sea.

Enough deaths, enough bloodshed and enough destruction. We need to ensure a future for our children and heal their wounds, trauma and suffering. It is our responsibility that our children have a future to look forward to. Lay down the guns and the bullets and confront the war machine with a single shout "equal rights for all".

Published at 13:36 / 5 comments / 306 visits
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January 18, 2009

Lowkey Long Live Palestine (studio version)

LONG LIVE PALESTINE - LOWKEY



While we listen to tunes, made by ignorant fools,
Israel blocked the UN from delivering food,
They'll bring in the troops and you won't even glimpse at the news,
They make money of the products that we are quick to consume,
It's not simply a question of differing views,
Forget emotions, this is fact, what I spit is the truth,
Makes no difference if you're a Christian or if you're a Jew,
They are just people living in different conditions to you,
They still die when you bomb their schools, mosques and hospitals,
It is not because of rockets, please god can you stop it all,
I'm not related to the strangers on the TV,
But I relate because those faces could have been me,
Words can never ever explain the raw tragedy,
It's not a war they're just murdering more rapidly,
We are automatically supporting pure savagery,
Imagine how you'd feel if it was your family,


This is for Palestine, Ramallah, West Bank, Gaza,
This is for the child that is searching for an answer,
I wish I could take your tears and replace them with laughter,
Long live Palestine, Long live Gaza,

Palestine remains in my heart forever,
We stand for peace, in times of war we shan't surrender,
Remember, it didn't start in that dark December,
Every coin is a bullet, if you're Mark's and Spencer,
And when your sipping Coca-Cola,
That's another pistol in the holster of a soulless soldier,
You say you know about the Zionist lobby,
But you put money in their pocket when you're buying their coffee,
Talking about revolution, sitting in Starbucks,
The fact is that's the type of thinking I can't trust,
Let alone even start to respect,
Before you talk learn the meaning of that scarf on your neck,
Forget Nestle,
Obama promised Israel 30 billion over the next decade,
They're trigger happy and they're crazy,
Think about that when you're putting Huggies nappies on your baby,

This is for Palestine, Ramallah, West Bank, Gaza,
This is for the child that is searching for an answer,
I wish I could take your tears and replace them with laughter,
Long live Palestine, Long live Gaza,

This is not just a war over stolen land,
Why do you think little boys are throwing stones at tanks?
We will never really know how many people are dead,
They drop bombs on little girls while they sleep in their beds,
Don't get offended by facts, just try and listen,
Nothing is more anti-Semitic than Zionism,
So please don't bring bad vibes when you speak to me,
I know there's plenty of Rabbi's that agree with me,
It's your choice what you do with this message,
Don't get it confused; I view this from a truly human perspective,
How many more resolutions have to be violated,
How many more children have to be annihilated
Israel is a terror state, there terrorists that terrorise,
I testify, my television televised them telling lies,
This is not a war, it is systematic genocide,
But whatever they try, Palestine will never die!!!

Published at 21:54 / 2 comments / 422 visits
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January 19, 2009

Operation Unpunished Lead

Operation unpunished lead



16 January 2009-01-18

By Eduardo Galeano



Original Spanish:

http://www.brecha.com.uy/alter/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=585&Itemid=70



To justify itself, state terrorism manufactures terrorists: it sows hate and reaps alibis



Eduardo Galeano



Everything indicates that this Gaza bloodbath, which according to its authors is intended to eliminate the terrorists, will multiply them in the end. Since 1948 the Palestinians have been condemned to perpetual humiliation. They cannot even breathe without permission. They have lost their country, their lands, their water, their liberty, everything. They do not even have the right to elect those who will govern them. They are punished when they vote for whom they are not supposed to vote. Gaza is being punished. It has been turned into a mousetrap without an exit since Hamas cleanly won the elections in 2006. Something similar happened in 1932 when the Communist Party won the elections in El Salvador. Bathed in blood, the Salvadorean people expiated their bad behaviour and lived under military dictatorships since then. Democracy is a luxury that not everyone deserves.



***



The homemade rockets that Hamas ineffectually fires at the former Palestinian lands that were usurped by Israel are the sons of impotence.



And the desperation, verging on suicidal madness, is the mother of the bravado that denies Israel's right to exist, shouts impotently, while for years now the very efficacious war of extermination has been negating Palestine's right to exist.



Not much of Palestine remains. Step by step, Israel is erasing it from the map.



Settlers invade, and then the soldiers go to rectify the border.

Bullets consecrate the despoilment as legitimate defence.



There is no aggressive war that does not call itself a defensive war. Hitler invaded Poland to prevent Poland from invading Germany. Bush invaded Iraq to prevent Iraq from invading the world. In each one of its defensive wars, Israel has swallowed another piece of Palestine, one meal after another. This process of devouring is justified by the land-deeds conferred by the Bible, by the two thousand years of persecution that the Jewish people suffered, and by the panic generated by the prospect of Palestinians lying in wait.



***



Israel is the country that has never fulfilled the recommendations or the resolutions of the United Nations, the country that never complies with the rulings of international tribunals, that mocks international laws, and is also the only country that has legalized the torture of prisoners.



Who gave it the right to negate all rights? From whence the impunity with which Israel executes the massacre in Gaza? The Spanish government could not have bombed the Basque country with such impunity to eliminate ETA; nor could the British government have devastated Ireland to liquidate the IRA. Perhaps the tragedy of the Holocaust implies confers eternal impunity. Or does that green light come from the big boss of which Israel is the most unconditional of vassals?



***



The Israeli army, the most modern and sophisticated in the world, knows whom to kill. It does not kill by error; it kills by horror. The civilian victims are called collateral damage, according to the dictionary of other imperial wars. In Gaza, of every ten collateral damages, three are children. And the thousands of mutilated, victims of the technology of human dismemberment the military industry is successfully testing in this operation of ethnic cleansing.



And as always, it is always the same: in Gaza, a hundred to one. For every hundred dead Palestinians, one Israeli.



Dangerous people, warns the next bombardment by the massive media of manipulation, which invite us to believe that one Israeli life is worth a hundred Palestinian lives. And those media also invite us to believe that Israel's two hundred nuclear bombs are humanitarian, and that it was a nuclear power called Iran that annihilated Hiroshima and Nagasaki.



***



The so-called international community, does it exist?



Is it anything other than a club of merchants, bankers and warriors? Is it anything more than the artistic name that the United States gives itself when it stages a show?



Faced with the tragedy of Gaza, the Arab countries wash their hands. As always. And as always, the European countries rub their hands.



Old Europe, so capable of bellicosity and perversity, sheds a tear or two while secretly celebrating this masterful play. Because Jew-hunting was always a European custom, but for a half century that historical debt has been paid by the Palestinans, who are also Semites and who never were nor are anti-Semites. They are paying somebody else's debt, in hard cash.

(This article is dedicated to my Jewish friends who were murdered by Latin American dictatorships that Israel supported)



(English translation: Mark Marshall)

Published at 14:03 / 2 comments / 164 visits
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January 21, 2009

Hold War Criminals to Account--sign the petition please

Please sign and forward the following petition to incriminate Israeli goverment war crimes in Gaza!

http://www.PetitionOnline.com/EAFORD09/petition.html



Hello all



Please distribute this petition as widely as you can. We want to exercise as much pressure as possible for the creation of this special tribunal.



Thank you.

THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE ELIMINATION OF ALL FORMS OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION (EAFORD)

5 route des Morillons, CP 2100. 1211 Geneva 2, Switzerland

Telephone: (022) 788.62.33 , Fax: (022) 788.62.45

e-mail: info@eaford.org, www.eaford.org

Published at 15:29 / 6 comments / 257 visits
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January 27, 2009

The End of the Two State Solution?

It seems that the winds of change are blowing in the US. I hope that this is true and not just a passing moment of lucidity. Please write to CBS 60minutes and thank them for this report. I am certain that they will bring the wrath of many unconditional supporters of Israel and of AIPAC.



www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=4752349n

You can go to the following site to view video and send thank you note:

tinyurl.com/dctzsk

Published at 01:34 / 3 comments / 270 visits
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