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4 février 2017 6 04 /02 /février /2017 10:11
L’évacuation d’Amona achevée, le lobby des colons est plus fort que jamais
Cisjordanie

Le gouvernement à promis la création d'une nouvelle implantation, la première depuis 25 ans.

OLJ
03/02/2017
 
 
 

 

Des centaines de policiers israéliens ont extrait de force, hier, des colons retranchés dans la synagogue de la colonie d'Amona en Cisjordanie occupée, épilogue d'un psychodrame qui a poussé le gouvernement à promettre la création d'une nouvelle implantation, la première depuis 25 ans.

Il a fallu des heures aux policiers pour forcer les accès du lieu de prière et achever la vaste opération, lancée la veille, pour faire partir les 200 à 300 habitants de cette colonie vouée à la démolition sur ordre de la Cour suprême.

Retransmise par les chaînes israéliennes, l'évacuation théâtrale a constitué le point d'orgue d'une bataille de plusieurs années aux lourds enjeux humains, politiques et diplomatiques. Il a fallu longtemps aux policiers pour venir à bout des plaques de métal et des madriers placés derrière portes et fenêtres, en se protégeant derrière des boucliers contre les crachats, les substances caustiques et les projectiles lancés par les interstices.

À l'intérieur, des dizaines de jeunes gens regroupés autour de deux rabbins faisaient barrage de leurs corps. Les policiers ont fini par attaquer les parois et les ouvertures du préfabriqué à la scie circulaire. Enfin dans la place, ils ont extirpé les irréductibles un à un par les bras et les pieds.

Beaucoup étaient des adolescents venus des colonies environnantes avec la conviction inébranlable que ces terres de Cisjordanie, territoire palestinien occupé par Israël depuis 1967, sont israéliennes selon la Bible, quoi qu'en disent les juges, les Palestiniens ou la communauté internationale. « Nous partons le cœur brisé », a dit l'un des rabbins, Yaïr Frank, « nous avons agi pour la terre d'Israël et le peuple d'Israël ».

 

Une première colonie depuis 1992
La veille, les policiers s'étaient empoignés avec des centaines de jeunes les accusant de trahir le peuple juif, dans une confusion de cris, de chants et occasionnellement de jets de pierres. Les policiers étaient parvenus, à grand-peine, à évacuer la quasi-totalité des dizaines de préfabriqués dans lesquels s'étaient installés les colons depuis la fin des années 1990, en haut d'une colline pelée et venteuse, présumée biblique.
« Huit policiers ont été blessés aujourd'hui, 24 mercredi.

Quatorze personnes ont été arrêtées mercredi. On compte les arrestations pour aujourd'hui. Le but était d'évacuer la zone, c'est chose faite », a dit hier le porte-parole de la police, Micky Rosenfeld. Amona devrait être démolie la semaine prochaine, a-t-il ajouté.

L'évacuation pourrait rester comme le début de ce que le ministre israélien de la Défense, Avigdor Lieberman, a qualifié de « nouvelle époque » pour la colonisation. De fait, le Premier ministre Benjamin Netanyahu a annoncé mercredi soir la formation d'un groupe chargé de rechercher rapidement le terrain de ce qui serait une nouvelle colonie pour les gens d'Amona.

Si la colonisation s'est poursuivie sous tous les gouvernements israéliens depuis 1967, aucun n'avait officiellement annoncé de nouvelle colonie depuis 1992, avant les accords d'Oslo sur l'autonomie palestinienne, a dit Hagit Ofran, de l'organisation anticolonisation La Paix maintenant.

C'est une « décision très grave », a ajouté Mme Ofran, tout en précisant que le relatif moratoire observé depuis 1992 n'avait pas empêché, loin de là, la colonisation. Soit Israël construisait à l'intérieur de colonies existantes, soit il reconnaissait rétroactivement des colonies dépourvues de son approbation officielle.

Les colons gagnent par K.-O.
Amona, qui était l'une de ces colonies sauvages, a cristallisé la problématique de la colonisation à un moment charnière.

Elle a servi l'agenda du lobby des colons, jusqu'au sein du gouvernement. Elle a inspiré un projet de loi qui permettrait de légaliser 55 colonies sauvages et de s'approprier des centaines d'hectares de terre palestinienne.

Un pas de plus vers l'annexion de la Cisjordanie que réclament ouvertement certains ministres, selon les détracteurs du texte.

À la différence d'Israël, l'ONU considère toutes les colonies comme illégales et comme un obstacle à la paix, toujours insaisissable, entre Israéliens et Palestiniens.

Tourmenté par sa droite et par les enquêtes de police, M. Netanyahu s'est engouffré dans l'espace ouvert par l'avènement de Donald Trump, jetant aux orties la relative retenue qu'il était forcé d'observer, selon lui, sous la pression « énorme » de l'administration Obama.

Depuis le 20 janvier, Israël a annoncé la construction de plus de 6 000 logements de colonisation. Sans s'être installé dans le cœur des Israéliens, « le mouvement des colons (qui fêtera son 50e anniversaire dans cinq mois) a gagné par K.-O. la guerre » dans le débat public, écrivait le quotidien Maariv.
(Source : AFP)

 

 

https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1033072/levacuation-damona-achevee-le-lobby-des-colons-est-plus-fort-que-jamais.html

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4 février 2017 6 04 /02 /février /2017 10:09
Israeli naval forces open fire on Gaza fishermen for 2nd time in same day
 
 
Feb. 2, 2017 5:25 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 2, 2017 5:28 P.M.)
 
 
 
 
GAZA CITY (Ma'an) -- Israeli forces opened live fire at Palestinian fishing boats off the coast of northern Gaza for the second time on Thursday.

Head of the fishermen union, Zakariya Bakr told Ma’an that Israeli naval ships opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats off the coast of northern Gaza City. No injuries were reported.

Israeli naval boats had also opened fire at fishermen of the coast of Beit Lahiya on Thursday morning, while Israeli forces opened fire at Palestinian farmers in the eastern Gaza Strip.

An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an she would look into reports on the incident.

Israeli army incursions inside the Palestinian territory have long been a near-daily occurrence, as the Israeli army regularly opens fire on unarmed Palestinian fishermen and farmers along the border areas if they approach Israel’s unilaterally declared “buffer zone,” which lies on both the land and sea sides of Gaza.

The practice has in effect destroyed much of the agricultural and fishing sector of the blockaded coastal enclave.

 
 
 
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3 février 2017 5 03 /02 /février /2017 09:52
PA challenges Israeli settlement expansion, official urges UN to intervene
 
 
Feb. 2, 2017 4:15 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 2, 2017 4:16 P.M.)
 
 
RAMALLAH (Ma’an) -- The Palestinian Authority (PA) Wednesday announced plans to challenge Israeli threats of annexation and continued settlement expansions, while the Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations sent three letters to senior UN officials on Thursday urging them to intervene in Israeli settlement activities in the occupied Palestinian territory in order to prevent the collapse of the peace process.

Waleed Assaf, head of the PA Committee Against the Wall and Settlements said Wednesday that a Palestinian government plan is being developed to “strengthen Palestinian determination” in Area C -- the more than 60 percent of the West Bank under full Israeli military and civil control allocated for illegal Israeli settlement construction -- and to counter Israeli attempts at annexation and settlement expansion.

Assaf made the statement during a program podcast on Palestine TV, adding that the plan to combat the recent spike of Israeli settlement expansion since the inauguration of US President Donald Trump would be two-directional.

The first approach would be focused on the field, in collaboration with the Jericho and Jerusalem districts with Palestinian ministries providing the funds, and would provide legal protection for Palestinians residing in Area C, including the Jordan Valley, while rebuilding structures that have been demolished by Israeli forces, providing basic services such as medical and educational assistance, and guaranteeing a functioning electricity and water supply.

Assaf also noted that the plan would cost the government 25 million shekels (about $6,500,000).

He added that the second approach would be a “political direction” aimed at activities that could “put pressure on international organizations” to force Israeli authorities to comply with UNSC resolution 2334, passed last year which strongly condemned Israel’s settlement in Palestinian territory.

Khalil al-Tafkaji, an expert on Israel’s settlement policies, also said that the Israeli construction plans being carried out in the Palestinian territory were planned and approved prior to the election of Donald Trump as US President.

Assaf added that Israeli colonization activities are being executed in three stages: renewing several confiscation orders on land in occupied East Jerusalem, demolishing Bedouin villages, and isolating Bedouin communities in an attempt to force them to leave the area.

The UN has estimated that at least 297,900 Palestinians reside in Area C, with 30,171 Palestinian Bedouins residing in 183 residential areas.

Assaf emphasized that Israeli escalations are aimed to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian independent state.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday evening that he had taken preliminary steps to establish a new illegal settlement in the West Bank to house settlers residing in Amona amid increasing resistance from the outpost’s residents as Israeli authorities attempted to evacuate the outpost -- considered illegal under both Israeli and international law.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, the Israeli government gave its approval for the construction of more than 3,000 new illegal settlement homes across the occupied West Bank just hours after the widely condemned “Legalization bill” -- which would retroactively legalize dozens of illegal Israeli outposts -- passed its final committee vote.

Secretary General of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) Saeb Erekat also released a statement on Tuesday describing Israel’s continued settlement expansion as an “immoral situation,” as he called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) to “open an immediate investigation into the Israeli settlement enterprise.”

“Israel continues to systematically violate the rights of the Palestinian people and to give a green light and support for settlers to take over more Palestinian land and to terrorize the Palestinian population. This immoral situation shouldn't continue to be tolerated by the International community. It has to end,” the statement said.

However, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on Wednesday that officials in Washington have threatened to revoke all US aid to the PA and to re-label the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) as a terrorist group if Palestinian leaders take Israel to the ICC over their contraventions of international law in the Palestinian territory.

During Trump’s first week as President, he signed an order to “execute a congressional resolution, drawn up during Barack Obama’s term, to move against the PA and Fatah (the largest faction of the PLO) if the Palestinians sue Israel,” Haaretz reported.

Meanwhile, Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations Riyad Mansour said in statement on Thursday that he had sent three letters to UN officials protesting against Israeli violations against Palestinians.

The letters were sent to Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, the head of the Permanent Mission of Ukraine to the UNSC, and the President of the UN General Assembly, Peter Thomson.

The letters were sent as a protest against the thousands of Israeli settler units being planned on Palestinian territory in contravention to international law and the UNSC resolution.

Mansour emphasized that Israel had approved the construction of more than 6,000 settler housing units in less than two weeks, describing it as “a continuous and systematic contempt for international intentions,” referring to the longstanding two-state solution supported by the international community as the most effective avenue of resolving the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

The letter also demanded that the international community stop all Israeli settlement activities and force Israel to comply with the frameworks of a two-state solution.

Mansour highlighted that Israeli settlement construction on Palestinian land occupied since 1967, including East Jerusalem, was completely illegal, a violation of international law, and a major obstacle to achieving a two-state solution.

He reiterated demands for Israel to halt settlement construction in the Palestinian territory and for authorities to respect the state’s legal commitments. “Both Palestine and Israel are standing at a crossroads,” he added. “In order for peace and a two-state solution to be achieved, Israel must stop all illegal activities of confiscating Palestinian lands, expelling Palestinian civilians from their lands, and replacing them with thousands of Israeli settlers.”

Mansour added that the Palestinian people would not accept “permanent occupation against all human rights laws," and concluded the letters by calling the situation a “point of no return” and called upon the UN to immediately intervene to salvage what is left of the peace process.

 
 
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3 février 2017 5 03 /02 /février /2017 09:38
Publish Date: 2017/02/02
Adalah: Unlike Jewish communities in the south, Arab children do not have school bus stops
 
 
 

BEERSHEBA, February 2, 2017 (WAFA) – While Jewish communities are provided with school bus stops in their neighborhoods thus children do not face any safety hazard when going to their schools, Arab Bedouin communities in the same area do not have that privilege and therefore their lives are always in danger, according to a petition by Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel.

In the petition to the Beersheba District Court filed on January 25, Adalah demanded that the Israeli Ministry of Education and regional councils build school bus stops for Bedouin children from six villages in Israel's southern Naqab desert region.

"Every day hundreds of students gather at informal and unmarked spots, sidewalks, and lean-tos on the shoulders of main highways. The lack of school bus stops and other safety requirements constitutes a danger to the students' life and limb," Adalah attorney Muna Haddad wrote in the petition.

The petition, filed on behalf of Bedouin residents and the parents of children studying in Abu Tlul, Abu Qrinat, Alzarnouk, Wadi al-Na'am, Umm Batin, and Kuhleh, was addressed to the Israeli Education Ministry and the Neve Midbar and Al-Qasoum Regional Councils.

Adalah also demanded that authorities act to repair safety issues such as missing protective guardrails and missing signs, and to establish designated and marked crosswalks.

Adalah stressed that while state authorities are responsible for building bus stops, the Education Ministry and local councils have failed to fulfill this obligation.

"Contrary to directives from the Education Ministry director general concerning educational facility safety standards, the roads along which schoolchildren gather in the mornings and afternoons are unpaved and covered with rocks and other obstacles, posing a danger each and every time they leave home or school for bus pick-up locations, and while they are waiting for their buses."

Adalah also emphasized that the Neve Midbar and Al-Qasoum Regional Councils, and the Education Ministry, are violating Transportation Ministry regulations:

"In contravention of Transportation Ministry safety regulations, in areas adjacent to schools under the responsibility of the respondents, there are no proper bus waiting spots, no areas for students to wait protected from the dangers of vehicular traffic, no warning or directional signage, nor organization or supervision of school transport. In practice, the buses pick up and drop off children at any possible location and then make U-turns amongst crowds of schoolchildren in order to return to the main road."

Adalah Attorney Haddad emphasized that disregard of safety regulations constitutes harm to the rule of law and to a child's constitutional right to a safe and adequate education, the right to health and life, and the right to equality in education.

"These conditions do not exist in schools in Jewish communities in the Naqab, where authorities take care to establish proper bus stops and to eliminate safety hazards. The failure to establish proper school bus stops [for the Bedouin community] creates a situation of blatant inequality in the enforcement of the law," said Haddad.

M.K.

 

http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=Opsy3da52254094959aOpsy3d

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2 février 2017 4 02 /02 /février /2017 07:40

Moving US embassy to Jerusalem will impact regional stability’

 


By JT - Feb 01,2017 - Last updated at Feb 01,2017
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Their Majesties King Abdullah and Queen Rania meet with leading US congressmen in Washington, DC, on Tuesday (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Tuesday discussed regional developments and Jordan's strategic relations with the US at meetings in Washington, DC, with chairs and members of Congress committees.

Talks at the meetings, part of which was attended by Her Majesty Queen Rania, also covered the Kingdom's role in dealing with the crises in the region and anti-terrorism efforts from a holistic approach, according to a Royal Court statement.

The King met with Senate leaders and the heads and members of the Senate's Appropriations Committee and its Armed Services Committee.
His Majesty also held talks with the chairpersons and members of the US House of Representatives' foreign affairs and armed services committees, in addition to its subcommittee on state, foreign operations and related programmes, the statement said.
Talks addressed developments such as the Middle East peace process, the Syrian crisis and the situation in Iraq.
King Abdullah warned that moving the US embassy to Jerusalem will have regional consequences that will diminish the opportunity for peace and reaching the two-state solution.
It may also weaken the chances for a successful war on terror, His Majesty added.

Relocating the embassy from Tel Aviv will have a negative impact on the region’s security and stability, he continued, citing Jerusalem’s key importance for Arab and Muslim peoples.

Such a move, according to His Majesty, will feed into the anger and despair among Arabs and Muslims, enabling extremists to further spread their dark ideologies and agendas.

In this regard, the Monarch stressed that there is no alternative to the two-state solution, which guarantees justice, freedom and stability, highlighting the importance of avoiding measures that may undermine opportunities to resume the peace process.

On the Syrian crisis, His Majesty called for sustaining the ceasefire in the country and for fighting terrorism, which, he said, represents the ideal solution to protect Syrians and ensure for them security all over Syria.

King Abdullah stressed the significance of the unity and stability of Syria and Iraq, as well as the need to work out inclusive political solutions to curb the threat of sectarian division.

The King and the members of Congress also reviewed the latest developments in Iraq, highlighting the need to achieve national conciliation involving all components of the Iraqi society.
In this regard, His Majesty said that supporting the Iraqi national concord is a Jordanian higher interest.
He also called for global cooperation in the war against terrorism, which, he said, threatens the entire world, underlining the importance of assessing the repercussions of some policies, so as to prevent extremists from having a tighter foothold and isolating Islamic communities in the West.
King Abdullah praised the role of the US government and Congress in providing economic and military assistance to the Kingdom.
For their part, the heads and members of committees expressed their appreciation of His Majesty’s vision and policy on various regional and international challenges, as well as Jordan’s key role in efforts to bring about peace and stability in the Middle East.
In an interview with the Jordan News Agency, Petra, the chair of the US House’s Foreign Affairs Committee, Ed Royce (R-California), said the King’s vision on various issues is important for the US and for US Congress members.
Royce cited His Majesty’s “excellent” relations with several nations around the world and his ability to offer advice on what needs to be done to achieve stability and economic growth in the region.
The US Congress, he added, “highly” values the King’s views on these issues.
Over the years, the lawmaker said, King Abdullah has provided advice on how to deal with the Syrian crisis, but the international community failed to heed that advice.
Now, the King is working once again to galvanise international efforts to take the necessary steps to deal with the Syrian refugee crisis and bolster chances of ending conflict in the region, Royce added.
The US representative commended His Majesty’s efforts to urge the US and the world to find solutions to crises and conflicts in the Middle East, Petra reported.
The head of the House’s Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Florida), told Petra that the King represents “the voice of reason”, welcoming his “deep” insight into the region and the various challenges pressuring Jordan.
She thanked the King for the support Jordan offers to refugees, stressing the importance of the long-standing US-Jordanian ties.
For his part, Eliot Engel (D-New York), who is also a member of the US House’s Foreign Affairs Committee, affirmed that members of the congressional panel respect His Majesty, stressing the “positivity” in US-Jordanian ties due to the King’s leadership and his role as “a man of peace”.
He said that when he feels frustrated on what is going on in the Middle East, and hears His Majesty, it is like “breathing fresh air”, and he comes to the conclusion that there are leaders in the Middle East who can lead the region to peace.
He added that the friendship between the US and Jordan is “deep-rooted”, and members of the committee believe that Jordan is a partner in peacemaking, and that His Majesty plays a key role towards this end.
Regarding the repercussions Jordan is facing as a result of the refugee crisis and the US role in helping in this regard, Engel expressed appreciation for the Kingdom’s efforts in shouldering this burden, adding that the Washington would continue helping Jordan so that it is not left alone.
Jordan should not be punished for doing this part as a good neighbour and an effective partner that understands the magnitude and dimensions of the problem, the lawmaker added.
Kay Granger (R-Texas), chairwoman of State and Foreign Operations Appropriations Subcommittee, said that the meeting with King Abdullah was important and the relations between the US and Jordan have a special nature and importance.

King Abdullah’s visions and views are always helpful when it comes to US relations with the Middle East, especially in light of the various changes in the region, she said.

The congresswoman described the Kingdom as peace protector in the region.

His Majesty does not only speak about Jordan’s issues, as he defends all regional causes and seeks peace and stability in the entire Middle East, Granger noted.

She also stressed that the US support to Jordan is very essential, referring to a memorandum of understanding that governs the US financial support for the Kingdom, adding that this support is not only important to Jordan but to the US as well, because Jordan serves not only its interests but also those of the region and the world community.

http://www.jordantimes.com/news/local/moving-us-embassy-jerusalem-will-impact-regional-stability%E2%80%99

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2 février 2017 4 02 /02 /février /2017 07:31

Les municipales palestiniennes fixées au 13 mai

 

 

AFP 31/01/2017

Mon OLJ Abonnez-vous

 

 

http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1032521/les-municipales-palestiniennes-fixees-au-13-mi.html

 

 

 

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2 février 2017 4 02 /02 /février /2017 07:21

Palestinians and the Syrian War: Between Neutrality and Dissent

 

by Samar Batrawi on January 29, 2017


Overview
Like millions of Syrians, Palestinians from Syria have suffered immensely throughout the five-year war. However, unlike other Syrians, their precarious position as stateless residents of the country has been amplified. The war has killed thousands and forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes in Syria, to become internally displaced or refugees in yet another host country. 1
This wartime experience of violence, misery, and double exile is a story in its own right. Yet it has also brought into high relief a fundamental dilemma affecting the Palestinians of Syria, namely that of being forced to maintain political neutrality, given their vulnerable position, or to support the regime, despite its direct role in their suffering. This is to the detriment of human rights for Palestinians as well as for Syrians as a whole.

This policy brief examines the issue of neutrality by first unravelling the notion of the Syrian regime as a Palestinian ally, and then assessing the role that Palestinian factions have played in the war. It moves on to examine two related issues that the war has cast into relief – the status of Syria as a second home for Palestinians and the weakness of Palestinian representative bodies – and the implications for the broader Palestinian national movement. The brief concludes with recommendations for how Palestinian leaders and solidarity movements can better advocate for human rights and self-determination.


Palestinians and the Assads’ Messy Legacy of Pan-Arabism
Syria’s Palestinian community is part of the country’s wider social fabric. Before 2011, their refugee camps were not rigorously guarded, and their education and professions were not as policed as they are, for example, in Lebanon. As a result, there was a degree of “Syrianization” of Palestinians in the sense that many second and third-generation refugees felt that being Syrian was part of their identity. At the same time, there was a degree of “Palestinianization” of Syrians who lived close to the camps. 

This mutual integration was not the result of the Assad regime’s particular generosity toward Palestinians. The legal framework that accords Palestinians a similar status to Syrians (with the exception of obtaining Syrian nationality and the right to vote) predates Hafez al-Assad’s rule. Nidal Bitari, a Palestinian writer from Yarmouk, argues that an underlying reason for the relatively good quality of life that Palestinians were able to enjoy in Syria before 2011 was their relative lack of involvement in Syrian politics, especially after the events in Lebanon in the 1980s.

Palestinian political involvement instead focused more narrowly on Palestinian issues such as the Right of Return Movement. Government discouragement and close monitoring of potential dissidence among Palestinians also led to reluctance to become involved in Syrian affairs. For example, Military Intelligence Branch 235 in Damascus – the “Palestine Branch” – was founded to monitor the political and military activity of Palestinians. It now runs an infamous facility that detains and tortures non-Palestinian Syrians as well, according to former detainees, whose testimonies were collected by Human Rights Watch in 2012.

Stability (in Syria) is understood as the greater good, which negates demands for justice Since the early days of his reign, the late Hafez al-Assad’s relationship with Palestinians was marked by a desire to both consolidate his domestic power and to balance against US-Israeli interests in the region.

Patrick Seale argues that from the onset of his rule Assad saw Palestinians as a liability, though he remained rhetorically supportive of their cause. 2

This culminated in Assad’s intervention in the Lebanese Civil War against the progressive forces backed by the Palestinians, which alienated the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat from Assad.

Syria became primarily concerned with managing the Palestinian question by co-opting it, and by fostering dependence among the Palestinian leadership on its patronage. 3 This was, for Hafez al-Assad, central to achieving a key strategy in the broader Arab-Israeli conflict: To recover the land Syria had lost to Israel in 1967 and prevent further loss of land. Manipulating the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) was also seen as key to being able to play the “Palestinian card.” Rashid Khalidi adds that although control over his wider environment, which included Palestinians, was a key concern for Hafez al-Assad, manipulating the Palestinian movement also resulted from a fear of being left out of any agreements with Israel.

When the uprisings in Syria unravelled in 2011, most Palestinians wanted to remain neutral, haunted by the memory of what happened to Palestinians in Jordan in the 1970s, Lebanon in the 1980s, Kuwait in 1991, and Iraq in the early 2000s. Joining any opposition to the Syrian regime came with high risks, even within the framework of the popular movement, with which many young Palestinians identified. This identification is unsurprising: The integration of Palestinians into Syrian society meant that they, too, were subject to the social control enforced by the Assad regime throughout the country. Arresting and torturing dissidents was a common practice long before the spirit of the Arab uprisings reached the Syrian streets in 2011. Therefore, while Bashar al-Assad’s anti-Western and anti-Zionist rhetoric made him seem a trustworthy ally to Palestinians, in practice the lives of Syrian Palestinians were no better nor worse than his other subjects.

Therefore, far from being beacons of resistance, Hafez and Bashar al-Assad both represent the messy legacy of Pan-Arabism in relation to the Palestinian question and Palestinian human rights.


The Lure and Trap of Political Neutrality
Most Palestinian factions mirrored Syrian Palestinians’ initial tendency toward neutrality, which in practice amounts to tacit support for the Assad regime. Hamas attempted to maintain good relations with the Muslim Brotherhood and the Assad regime by remaining silent about events in Syria. In early 2012, Hamas disengaged from the alliance and from the Syrian regime, although it remained hesitant to openly criticize the regime. This, together with other regional shifts of power after 2011, forced Hamas to look to other supporters, shifting the balance of power in the Gaza Strip in favor of Qatari or Iranian backing. 
In a controversial move, after a 32-year estrangement Fatah reestablished its relationship with the Assad regime in mid-2015. Although the reestablishment was billed as a move that preserved neutrality, the stance has at times derailed into apologism for regime violence. For example, while addressing concerns about Assad’s treatment of Palestinians in Syria, Fatah’s central committee member Abbas Zaki appeared to justify the bombing of Palestinian refugee camps in Syria by comparing these actions to “a doctor eradicating a failed body part.”
In anticipation that the solution to the war in Syria may involve the Assad regime, the PLO in Syria, which has its own distinctive composition, has also been keen to maintain neutrality. 4  While this neutrality is historically understandable considering the strained relationship Palestinians have had with other host countries, it also attests to the PLO’s weakness when it comes to defending and representing Palestinian interests. 
The question of neutrality versus active involvement in Syria has not only been a divisive issue among the Palestinians in exile, but also among Palestinians within Syria, mirroring the internal rifts and rivalries within the Palestinian movement. These disagreements revolve around issues such as the nature of the Syrian uprisings, the role of Western imperialism, and Israel’s interests in the region. Russia, Iran, and the Syrian regime’s offensive in Eastern Aleppo spurred even more arguments about the nature of the Syrian uprising and foreign intervention in the country.
A number of Palestinian factions within Syria are explicitly allied with Bashar al-Assad, including the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command (PFLP-GC). Led by Ahmed Jibril, it is the Palestinian faction with the strongest links to the regime, and has acted as an extension of Syrian regime policing in the Palestinian camps. There are also Palestinian-Syrian militias among the numerous pro-regime militias that play a role in the war, such as the Jerusalem Brigade, the Galilee Brigade, and the Galilee Forces.
The Palestine Liberation Army (PLA), originally founded as the military wing of the PLO, is another Palestinian faction allied to the Syrian regime. In Syria, the PLA is the unit in which Palestinians are often conscripted instead of the regular Syrian Army. The PLA epitomizes the schismatic nature of Palestinian-Syrian relations. During the Lebanese Civil War, it fought as Syria’s proxy force against the PLO.  Today, it is closely linked with As-Sa‘iqa, another faction that is officially affiliated to the PLO. Both As-Sa‘iqa and the PLA are of limited relevance outside of Syria.
Prospects for Palestine are no better with Russian influence Click To Tweet
It is common for pro-regime Palestinian brigades to describe themselves in terms of secular resistance, in which Arab nationalism and Syrian resistance are bound up with the Palestinian cause. Their rhetoric is in line with the Pan-Arab, anti-Zionist paradigm of the Syrian Ba‘th party. The appeal of a secular stance is also amplified by the rise of Islamist and Salafi-jihadist factions fighting the Syrian regime, which help falsely present the Syrian conundrum as a choice between secularism and extremism. Though such a stance is attractive to those whose suffering has been marked by imperial interests and violence, it is at odds with the reality of Syria’s policy toward the question of Palestine, which, according to Jean-Pierre Filiu, the regime has used as a “commodity” to “trade on their own terms.” 5
The discouraging notion that the Palestinian question is merely another chess piece within the war in Syria is amplified when one looks more closely at the rhetoric that the Syrian regime has used throughout the war to justify its mass violence against civilians and to appeal to the international community. In the early days of the uprising, Rami Makhlouf, cousin and close partner of Bashar al-Assad, told the New York Times: “If there is no stability here, there is no way there will be stability in Israel…No way, and nobody can guarantee what will happen after, God forbid, anything happens to this regime.”
“Stability” is understood in this rhetoric as the common greater good, which negates demands for justice in favor of order imposed by a strongman. Since popular uprising and political violence is made synonymous with instability, this view negates historical grievances of those who, by virtue of their militancy, are made into mere security problems to be solved – often by greater violence. It is a discourse also often employed by the Israeli far-right to discredit Palestinian narratives. The corrosive effect of these false binaries is well known to Palestinians, whose voices have faced systematic oppression for the sake of “stability,” especially since the rise of Islamism in Palestine in the 1980s and 1990s. 6
The Syrian regime’s relationship with Russia is problematic for Palestinians as well, especially as Israel and Russia have recently been fostering a close relationship. In strengthening this relationship, Israel is seeking to position Putin as a mediator between itself and the Syrian regime, presuming that the latter succeeds in maintaining power with the help of Russian intervention. Some argue that this shift of focus to Russian support is the result of increased US and EU criticism of Israeli policies such as illegal settlement expansions. The recent US abstention and the consecutive adoption of a UN Security Council resolution on illegal Israeli settlements may aggravate this tendency, although the impact of the incoming US administration on the Arab-Israeli conflict remains to be seen.


Although it is easy to view Russian intervention in Syria as a welcome counterweight to US influence in the region, the prospect for the Palestinian cause is not much better under Russian influence, as Russia and Israel share narrow understandings of “stability” in the Middle East. Putin even expressed admiration for Israel’s counter-terrorism methods during a conference in October 2016, stating that the world should “[l]earn from Israel,” since “it never lets go. They fight until the end. That's why it exists at all…There is no other option.”


Toward Speaking Truth to Power: Syria’s Palestinians After the War
There are two ways for Palestinians to move beyond the false choice of neutrality versus regime support and work toward Palestinian – and Syrian – human rights. 

First, by recognizing that the Palestinians’ experience in Syria requires an understanding of how living in Syria has shaped their identity. The problem is that acknowledging that many of these Palestinian refugees see Syria as a home to which they long to return may feed anti-Palestinian voices who wish to strip Palestinian refugees of their right to return to Palestine.

However, Palestinians can stand in solidarity with those who long to return to their lives in Syria and simultaneously defend their right to return to Palestine – which is inalienable to them, and is not contingent on the quality of life they enjoy in their host country.

Moreover, it is important to acknowledge the different layers of identification that those who struggle with dispossession may feel, and that Syria’s Palestinians feel as attached to Syria as they do to their ancestral homes in Palestine.

A number of groups have emerged that aim to document the situation of Palestinians in Syria, such as the Palestinian League for Human Rights - Syria, founded in Yarmouk, and the Action Group for Palestinians of Syria, based in the United Kingdom. The Jafra Foundation, based in Damascus and Homs, provides relief work in camps such as Yarmouk, Khan el-Sheih, Jaramana, and Homs. These groups are critical to the documentation and amplification of Palestinian experiences in Syria. This is in turn crucial to protect Syria’s Palestinians from the fate of those Palestinians who fled Iraq more than a decade ago, many of whom remain trapped in statelessness in host countries, unable to return to either their ancestral homes in Palestine or to the lives they had built for themselves in Iraq. 


Syria's war exposes the limits of Palestinian representative bodies
Second, the Syrian war exposes the limits of Palestinian representative bodies and underscores the importance of strengthening and broadening solidarity networks.

The Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement has been a key strategy for the Palestinian movement in light of failing, or at best stagnating, political representation. It has been both a tool for rallying support to uphold ethical standards, and for exercising pressure - often successfully. When done right, BDS fundamentally relies on dedicated consciousness and communal solidarity. Extending the moral compass of BDS beyond Israel and toward rallying solidarity for Palestinian (and non-Palestinian) human rights and social justice movements is both a moral imperative and a strategic necessity.

The choice that individual Palestinians outside Syria face is whether to maintain a stance of neutrality in order to maximize the chances of inclusion of Palestinian interests in the agenda of whichever party maintains or acquires power in Syria, or to stand in solidarity with the Syrian people.

The latter is a position of controversy since the Syrian people face a crisis of representation, in the sense that there is an abundance of interests that claim to speak for them, as there is in the case of Palestine.

A position of neutrality may seem a safer bet, especially considering the shift in power to Assad’s favor after Russia’s decision to intervene and Donald Trump’s election in the US. However, considering the demographic shifts engineered by the Syrian regime, it remains to be seen whether there will be a place for the predominantly Sunni Muslim Palestinian refugee population if Bashar al-Assad does maintain power, especially those who rallied against his rule.

Above all, neutrality in Syria is a philosophically untenable and morally indefensible position considering the nature and scale of the unfolding violence.

One of the most prevailing ideas in the Palestinian movement is to speak truth to power, to stand in defiance of injustice, and to call for self-determination in the face of oppression. Especially after the tragedy in Aleppo, and especially as the enlightened spirit of the revolution struggles to survive the tyranny and sabotage of the Assad regime and the chokehold of the Islamists, Syria should be no exception to this.

To move toward a more just position, the PLO and PA should rethink their stance of neutrality with regard to the Syrian regime’s mass atrocities against its citizens as well as against Palestinians in Syria.

Palestinian solidarity movements can reject the Syrian regime’s appropriation of the Palestinian question and reiterate the commitment of solidarity networks to human rights and justice everywhere.

They can also amplify Palestinian-Syrian voices and defend both their right to reparation and justice within Syria, as well as their inalienable right to return to their homes in Palestine.

Finally, they can reiterate dedication to fostering global solidarity in light of the disturbing developments in the international political realm, such as the recent election of Donald Trump. No matter how dire the outlook may seem, through dedicated solidarity and tireless activism there will come a time when things will be different. In the meantime, only our moral compasses can guide us there.


Notes:
1.Before 2011, the 560,000 Palestinian refugees officially registered with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) formed around 2% of Syria’s population. According to UNRWA, since 2011 110,000 have resettled in other countries, including Lebanon and Jordan. But 450,000 remain in Syria, the vast majority in Damascus. Two-thirds are internally displaced, while 95% are in need of humanitarian assistance, which UNRWA is unable to provide in most places. The Action Group for Palestinians of Syria, which keeps track of victims, detainees, and missing Palestinians within Syria, currently records 298 missing people, 1,118 detainees, and 3,390 deaths, the vast majority of whom were killed in pro-regime bombardments (1,124), shot (809), or tortured to death (454). Those whose cause of death is labelled “gunshot” include pro-regime Palestinians who died while fighting opposition groups, while the majority of torture victims died in regime prisons. 

2.Hafez al-Assad’s problematic role in the Palestinian national movement is documented at length in Yezid Sayigh, 

3.The PLO in Syria includes Fatah, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), the Palestinian People’s Party, Fida, the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front, and the Palestine Liberation Front (Abu Abbas faction).  In addition, there is the Alliance of Palestinian Resistance Forces, formed in opposition to the Oslo Accords in 1993.This group is backed by the Syrian regime, and was founded by Hamas, the PFLP, the DFLP, the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine, PFLP-GC, As-Sa‘iqa, Fatah al-Intifada, the Palestine Liberation Front (Abu Nidal Ashqar faction), the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front, and the Palestinian Revolutionary Communist Party. The PFLP and DFLP split from the alliance in 1998.

4.Jean-Pierre Filiu, From Deep State to Islamic State: The Arab Counter-Revolution and its Jihadi Legacy (London: Hurst & Co, 2015), 

5.Robin Yassin-Kassab and Leila al-Shami, Burning Country: Syrians in Revolution and War (London: Pluto Press, 2016), 39.


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2 février 2017 4 02 /02 /février /2017 07:00

Uri Avnery's column

President Kong

28/01/17

 

I KNEW he reminded me of somebody, but I couldn't quite place it. Who was it who pounded his chest with such vigor?

And then I remembered. It was the hero of a movie that was produced when I was 10 years old: King Kong.

King Kong, the giant primate with the heart of gold, who scaled huge buildings and downed airplanes with his little finger.
Wow. President Kong, the mightiest being on earth.
SOME OF us had hoped that Donald Trump would turn out to be quite a different person than his election persona. In an election campaign you say many kinds of inane things. To be forgotten the day after.
But the day after has come and gone, and the inane things have multiplied. The incredible Trump we believed didn't really exist is here to stay – for four years, at least.
On his first day in office, we saw the absurd sight of two boys in the schoolyard arguing about who had the largest.
In this case, the largest inauguration crowd. He insisted that he had the greatest ever. As he should have expected, within minutes aerial photos appeared on TV, showing that Barak Obama's crowd was far larger.
So did he apologize? On the contrary, he insisted.
A spokeswoman appeared and explained that this was just a case of "alternative facts". A wonderful phrase. Pity I did not know it during my many years as a journalist. When I say at noon that it is midnight, it is just an alternative fact. (And is of course true - in Hawaii or somewhere.)
I HAVE a very limited understanding of economics. But just a small amount of simple logic tells me that Trump’s economic promises are baloney. One doesn't "bring back jobs" by talk.
Manual jobs are lost because of automation. The German and British textile workers destroyed the machines that took their jobs away. That was some 300 years ago, and it did not help them. Now Trump looks a hundred years back, and wants things to revert.
A hundred years ago you needed a thousand workers to do the job done now by ten. This will remain so and intensify, even if you smash all the computers in the world.
Globalization is the spirit of the times. It is the natural outcome of a situation that allows me to react to Trump’s words within a few seconds of his uttering them. When I can fly around the world in much less than 80 hours.
Trump can do very little about this. He cannot bring back the "protectionist" policies of the 18th century. If he slaps punitive duties on imports from China, China will impose duties on imports from the USA. Already, this week, a trade war has broken out between the US and Mexico.
CREDULOUS PEOPLE may believe such simplistic slogans. Which brings us to the problem of democracy.
I just read an article asserting that democracy is dead. Gone. Passé.
Winston Churchill famously said that democracy is a very bad system, but that all other systems tried until now are worse.
He also said that the best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with an average voter.
Democracy could function when there was a sensible filter between the candidate and the people. A truthful press, an educated elite. Even in the Germany of 1933, with millions of jobless around, Adolf Hitler never did obtain a majority in free elections.
Now, with candidates addressing the voters directly through social media, all the filters are gone. So has Truth. The most atrocious lies travel through twitter and facebook in seconds, straight into the minds of millions, who have no capacity to judge them.
I think it was Joseph Goebbels who wrote that the bigger the lie, the more believable it is, since simple people cannot imagine that anybody would spread such a huge lie.
For example, the claim by President Trump that three million votes were stolen from him, thus causing him to lose the popular vote. No proof. Not even a shred of supporting evidence. Sheer nonsense, but many millions of ordinary people seem to believe it.
But if democracy is becoming obsolete, what is there to replace it? As Churchill intimated – there is no better system around.
SO THIS is the harvest of the first week in office: more packs of lies, or "alternative facts", by the day.
What about the substantive issues?
If we believed that many of his policy promises were just election stuff, we were wrong. On issue after issue, Trump has started to faithfully fulfill his promises.
Abortion rights. Protection of the environment. Medical insurance. Taxes on the super-rich. All going down the Potomac.
This, too, is a sign of the modern age: the poorest vote for the richest, against their own most elementary interests. That is true in America as it is true in Israel.
AH, ISRAEL. Israel is occupied with endless speculation about Trump’s promise to relocate the US embassy in Jerusalem.
One could have assumed that Israel has bigger troubles. There is the kind of civil war raging now between the government and the Arab minority, which constitutes some 21% of the citizens of Israel proper. There are casualties on both sides. And especially with the Bedouin (also in Israel proper) who volunteer for the army, but whose homes the government wants to destroy, to make place for Jewish settlers.
And the occupation of the West Bank. And the blockade of the Gaza Strip. And the multiple corruption investigations of the Prime Minister and his wife, and the possible giant bribes to relatives of Binyamin Netanyahu for the acquisition of submarines. And for bribing newspaper tycoons.
No, all these are bagatelles, compared to the location of the US embassy.
The UN partition plan of 1947, which formed the legal basis for the State of Israel, did not include Jerusalem in Israeli territory. It provided for a Jewish and an Arab state in Palestine, with Jerusalem and Bethlehem as a separate enclave.
Israel, of course, annexed West Jerusalem soon after its foundation, but no foreign embassy moved there. They all remained in Tel Aviv, which is an uglier but much livelier city. They are all still there. Including the American embassy, which is located on Tel Aviv's seashore, just opposite my window.
(In between, some South American banana republics did move to Jerusalem, but they soon moved back.)
In every American election, some candidate promises to move the embassy to Jerusalem, and every incoming president revokes the promise, once his experts tell him the facts of life.
Trump also promised. He, too, wanted to attract some Jewish votes, in addition to the one of his Jewish son-in-law. Trump probably thought: apart from these damn Jews, who cares?
Well, about 1.5 billion Muslims around the world care. And care a lot.
If Trump knew anything, he would be aware of the fact that in the very early days of Islam, the Qibla (direction of prayer) was Jerusalem, before it was moved to Mecca. East Jerusalem is the third holiest site in Islam. Recognizing the whole of Jerusalem Including East Jerusalem as the capital of Israel could lead to unthinkable violence against US installations from Indonesia to Morocco.
It seems that by now the experts have told Trump too, because he has begun to stutter about this issue. He is thinking about it. He needs time. Perhaps later. Perhaps the new US ambassador, a fervent right-wing Zionist, will go to live in Jerusalem, while the embassy remains in Tel Aviv.
Poor man. He will have to travel daily from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv, a road almost always blocked by traffic jams. But everyone has to suffer for his convictions.
BUT THE real sad fact is that in every single speech since the inauguration, the main theme – indeed, almost the only theme - of President Donald Trump is I – I – I.
I – I – I with a lot of chest thumping.
Look out for the movie – King Kong II.

http://zope.gush-shalom.org/home/en/channels/avnery/1485520711/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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2 février 2017 4 02 /02 /février /2017 06:48

Uri Avnery's Column

President Kong 
28/01/17


I KNEW he reminded me of somebody, but I couldn't quite place it. Who was it who pounded his chest with such vigor?

And then I remembered. It was the hero of a movie that was produced when I was 10 years old: King Kong.
King Kong, the giant primate with the heart of gold, who scaled huge buildings and downed airplanes with his little finger.
Wow. President Kong, the mightiest being on earth.

SOME OF us had hoped that Donald Trump would turn out to be quite a different person than his election persona. In an election campaign you say many kinds of inane things. To be forgotten the day after.
But the day after has come and gone, and the inane things have multiplied. The incredible Trump we believed didn't really exist is here to stay – for four years, at least.
On his first day in office, we saw the absurd sight of two boys in the schoolyard arguing about who had the largest.
In this case, the largest inauguration crowd. He insisted that he had the greatest ever. As he should have expected, within minutes aerial photos appeared on TV, showing that Barak Obama's crowd was far larger.


So did he apologize? On the contrary, he insisted.
A spokeswoman appeared and explained that this was just a case of "alternative facts". A wonderful phrase. Pity I did not know it during my many years as a journalist. When I say at noon that it is midnight, it is just an alternative fact. (And is of course true - in Hawaii or somewhere.)
I HAVE a very limited understanding of economics. But just a small amount of simple logic tells me that Trump’s economic promises are baloney. One doesn't "bring back jobs" by talk.
Manual jobs are lost because of automation. The German and British textile workers destroyed the machines that took their jobs away. That was some 300 years ago, and it did not help them. Now Trump looks a hundred years back, and wants things to revert.
A hundred years ago you needed a thousand workers to do the job done now by ten. This will remain so and intensify, even if you smash all the computers in the world.
Globalization is the spirit of the times. It is the natural outcome of a situation that allows me to react to Trump’s words within a few seconds of his uttering them. When I can fly around the world in much less than 80 hours.
Trump can do very little about this. He cannot bring back the "protectionist" policies of the 18th century. If he slaps punitive duties on imports from China, China will impose duties on imports from the USA. Already, this week, a trade war has broken out between the US and Mexico.


CREDULOUS PEOPLE may believe such simplistic slogans. Which brings us to the problem of democracy.
I just read an article asserting that democracy is dead. Gone. Passé.
Winston Churchill famously said that democracy is a very bad system, but that all other systems tried until now are worse.
He also said that the best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with an average voter.


Democracy could function when there was a sensible filter between the candidate and the people. A truthful press, an educated elite. Even in the Germany of 1933, with millions of jobless around, Adolf Hitler never did obtain a majority in free elections.
Now, with candidates addressing the voters directly through social media, all the filters are gone. So has Truth. The most atrocious lies travel through twitter and facebook in seconds, straight into the minds of millions, who have no capacity to judge them.
I think it was Joseph Goebbels who wrote that the bigger the lie, the more believable it is, since simple people cannot imagine that anybody would spread such a huge lie.
For example, the claim by President Trump that three million votes were stolen from him, thus causing him to lose the popular vote. No proof. Not even a shred of supporting evidence. Sheer nonsense, but many millions of ordinary people seem to believe it.

But if democracy is becoming obsolete, what is there to replace it? As Churchill intimated – there is no better system around.

SO THIS is the harvest of the first week in office: more packs of lies, or "alternative facts", by the day.
What about the substantive issues?
If we believed that many of his policy promises were just election stuff, we were wrong. On issue after issue, Trump has started to faithfully fulfill his promises.
Abortion rights. Protection of the environment. Medical insurance. Taxes on the super-rich. All going down the Potomac.
This, too, is a sign of the modern age: the poorest vote for the richest, against their own most elementary interests. That is true in America as it is true in Israel.

AH, ISRAEL. Israel is occupied with endless speculation about Trump’s promise to relocate the US embassy in Jerusalem.
One could have assumed that Israel has bigger troubles. There is the kind of civil war raging now between the government and the Arab minority, which constitutes some 21% of the citizens of Israel proper. There are casualties on both sides. And especially with the Bedouin (also in Israel proper) who volunteer for the army, but whose homes the government wants to destroy, to make place for Jewish settlers.

And the occupation of the West Bank. And the blockade of the Gaza Strip. And the multiple corruption investigations of the Prime Minister and his wife, and the possible giant bribes to relatives of Binyamin Netanyahu for the acquisition of submarines. And for bribing newspaper tycoons.

No, all these are bagatelles, compared to the location of the US embassy.
The UN partition plan of 1947, which formed the legal basis for the State of Israel, did not include Jerusalem in Israeli territory. It provided for a Jewish and an Arab state in Palestine, with Jerusalem and Bethlehem as a separate enclave.
Israel, of course, annexed West Jerusalem soon after its foundation, but no foreign embassy moved there. They all remained in Tel Aviv, which is an uglier but much livelier city. They are all still there. Including the American embassy, which is located on Tel Aviv's seashore, just opposite my window.

(In between, some South American banana republics did move to Jerusalem, but they soon moved back.)

In every American election, some candidate promises to move the embassy to Jerusalem, and every incoming president revokes the promise, once his experts tell him the facts of life.
Trump also promised. He, too, wanted to attract some Jewish votes, in addition to the one of his Jewish son-in-law. Trump probably thought: apart from these damn Jews, who cares?
Well, about 1.5 billion Muslims around the world care. And care a lot.
If Trump knew anything, he would be aware of the fact that in the very early days of Islam, the Qibla (direction of prayer) was Jerusalem, before it was moved to Mecca. East Jerusalem is the third holiest site in Islam. Recognizing the whole of Jerusalem Including East Jerusalem as the capital of Israel could lead to unthinkable violence against US installations from Indonesia to Morocco.

It seems that by now the experts have told Trump too, because he has begun to stutter about this issue. He is thinking about it. He needs time. Perhaps later. Perhaps the new US ambassador, a fervent right-wing Zionist, will go to live in Jerusalem, while the embassy remains in Tel Aviv.

Poor man. He will have to travel daily from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv, a road almost always blocked by traffic jams. But everyone has to suffer for his convictions.

BUT THE real sad fact is that in every single speech since the inauguration, the main theme – indeed, almost the only theme - of President Donald Trump is I – I – I.
I – I – I with a lot of chest thumping.
Look out for the movie – King Kong II.

 

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1 février 2017 3 01 /02 /février /2017 07:16
Protesters condemn planned demolition of Bedouin community of al-Zarnouq
Jan. 29, 2017 5:18 P.M. (Updated: Jan. 29, 2017 6:40 P.M.)
 
 
BEERSHEBA (Ma’an) -- Dozens of demonstrators gathered in front of the governmental complex in the city of Beersheba in the Negev region Sunday morning, in protest of a plan by Israeli authorities to expel thousands of Palestinian citizens of Israel from the unrecognized Bedouin community of al-Zarnouq.

Protesters held signs condemning Israel’s policy of removing the indigenous Palestinian population from the Negev and transferring them to government-zoned townships to make room for the expansion of Jewish-Israeli communities.

More than half of the approximately 160,000 Negev Bedouins reside across 35 villages considered “unrecognized” by the Israeli state.

The state of Israel plans to evacuate some 5,000 residents to the village of Rahat in order to construct new Israeli housing on al-Zarnouq’s lands, protesters said.

Among the participants of the demonstration were Rahat Mayor Talal al-Qrinawi, Palestinian Knesset member Talab Abu Arar, and head of the Steering Committee of Arabs in Negev and former Knesset member Talab al-Sana.

Al-Qrinawi told Ma’an that it was “unacceptable” to expel the residents of al-Zarnouq from their original lands, noting that the community’s residents were “already living through a housing crisis,” likely referring to the fact Israeli authorities have refused to connect unrecognized Bedouin villages to the national water and electricity grids, while excluding the communities from access to health and educational services, and basic infrastructure.

Resident of al-Zarnouq Jabir Abu Qweider demanded that Israeli authorities formally recognize their village, which he said was established 100 years ago, and demanded that Israel put a stop to the plan to bring “Israeli settlers” to their land.

 

 

The protest came the same morning that Israeli forces raided the unrecognized Bedouin community of Umm al-Hiran, surrounding mobile homes which had been donated the previous day to house families left homeless two weeks ago after Israeli authorities razed their homes to the ground.

Eight homes and seven agricultural structures were demolished in Umm al-Hiran on Jan. 18, hours after locals, activists, and Palestinian members of Israel's parliament, the Knesset, gathered to resist the evacuation, sparking clashes with Israeli police that left two people killed under widely contested circumstances.

Leadership among Palestinian citizens of Israel have organized ongoing protests in the wake of the evacuation, that also followed the demolition of more than ten homes in the city of Qalansawe earlier this month.

 

 

Meanwhile, Israeli news site Arab 48 reported on Sunday that Israeli police had interrogated two principals of schools in the northern Israeli city of Haifa over their role in organizing and participating in a student march in solidarity with Umm al-Hiran.

According to Arab 48, students who participated in the march were also targeted by an anonymous campaign, with unknown sources threatening them not to participate in future actions.

The leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) released a statement on Saturday commending thousands of Palestinian citizens of Israel for having participated in recent marches “against the racist Zionist practices against them.”

The PFLP, which is second-largest of the groups forming the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), said they saluted the protesters' steadfastness in the face of deportation and displacement.

The Front said that the ongoing demonstrations affirmed that the Palestinian struggle would continue “against Zionist projects of Judaization, land confiscation, home demolitions, destruction of neighborhoods, and displacement of Palestinian Arab citizens.”

The statement also expressed solidarity and mourning over the death of Yaqoub Abu al-Qian, who they said was “shot down in cold blood and then vilified by the occupier” during the raid to evacuate Umm al-Hiran.

Abu al-Qian was killed under widely contested circumstances, as Israeli authorities claimed he was carrying out a vehicular attack when he was shot by police, despite numerous eyewitnesses and evidence attesting to the fact that forces opened fire on him while he was posing no threat, which then caused him to lose control of his car and ram into policemen, killing one officer.

The PFLP statement noted the mass participation of Palestinian youth and women in the ongoing protests in villages and towns across Israel and the occupied territory, despite activists facing “all forms of intimidation, threats, attacks, and arrests” by Israeli forces.

The leftist group further condemned Israeli officials for labeling the Palestinian people a “clear security threat” in order to justify the crimes committed against them.

“International action is necessary to stop the ethnic cleansing against our people through various racist laws and practices.”

“The PFLP emphasizes the importance of supporting the steadfastness of the Palestinian people in occupied Palestine ’48 at all levels as an integral part of the struggle of the Palestinian people,” the statement concluded, referring to lands that have formed the state of Israel since 1948.

Bethlehem-based NGO BADIL has meanwhile argued in a report that the “oppressive measures” carried out in Umm al-Hiran were part of the same Israeli policy of forcible displacement carried out against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

“While 2016 witnessed a record number of home demolitions by Israel in the (occupied Palestinian territory), with 1,089 Palestinian-owned structures being demolished displacing 1,593 Palestinians, this increase has also taken place inside Israel itself,” the group said.

BADIL cautioned that the international community “rarely stressed” the forcible population transfer of Palestinians in both areas, despite the "daily manifestations" of the displacement of Palestinians, regardless of their status as residents of the occupied West Bank or East Jerusalem or citizens of Israel.

 
 
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