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Tag Archive | "Hamas"

Hana Shalabi: On Hunger Strike For 22 Days


 

Today as the world celebrates “International Women’s Day”, spare a thought for Hana Shalabi who is on hunger strike for 22 days. Hana is in the Israeli prison of Hasharon, and she started her hunger strike on February 16th in protest against her detention without trial or charge by the Israeli authorities.

Hana was arrested  on February 16th and immediatly began refusing food. To date, she has only been drinking water, and when her lawyer visited her on Monday, she was experiencing pains in her chest and waist. Her voice has become weakened, and she is suffering from severe nausea and dizziness.

Hana confirmed that on 16 February, she was forcibly strip searched by a male soldier and assaulted, merely hours after soldiers brought her to Salem Detention Center following her arrest. In the affidavit given to Addameer Lawyer Samer Sam’an, Hana described the forced strip search and assault at the hands of the soldiers of the Israeli Occupying Forces as “utterly degrading” and that what they did to her was “not acceptable in all customs of the world”.

Since her arrest, Hana’s parents have not been allowed to visit her, and for the past 13 days, they too have been on hunger strike in support of their daughter.

Just 2 weeks ago, Khader Adnan ended his hunger strike after 66 days. Like Hana, Khader was protesting against Administrative Detention. Khader recieved worldwide attention and support, and the same support is now needed to save Hana’s life.

Amnesty International are urging people to take up Hana’s case, and to contact the Israeli authorities to demand her release.

For further information on Hana’s arrest and detention, please click on the following link for Addameer, the Prisoner Support And Human Rights Association.

http://addameer.org/etemplate.php?id=448

 

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Khader Adnan now on his 63rd day of Hunger Strike


 

 

Khader Adnan is now on his 63rd day on Hunger Strike, and is very close to death.

 

Sahar Francis, a Lawyer for Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, Ad-Dameer, visited Khader  yesterday, Friday17th Feb. Adnan told Francis that he is determined to continue his hunger strike, despite his gradually deteriorating health condition, and added that:

“his battle is not personal, but a Palestinian struggle against the illegal Administrative Detention, that confines hundreds of detainees behind bars without charges, in direct violation of International Law and the Fourth Geneva Conventions”.

Francis said that the Israeli Prison Administration agreed, only two days ago, to allow Adnan to bathe, cut his hairs and nails, for the first time since he was kidnapped and taken prisoner in December 2011.

She added that Adnan still enjoys high confidence, and solid determination, despite his bad health condition, and is determined to continue his strike.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, issued a statement today, Saturday, saying that the

“EU is concerned over reports of the deteriorating health condition of Khader Adnan,”

Ashton went on to say that

“the EU is concerned about the extensive use by Israel of administrative detention without formal charge.” 

Today, Khader’s wife Randa said that he was not ending his Hunger Strike, and is determined to carry on.

In his hometown, family and friends handed out bags of bread from his bakery.

On Wednesday, Randa visited him in hospital, and she described his condition in the following statement:

 ”His health has drastically deteriorated from the last time I saw him. . . .I expect the worst,”

“The world should pressure the Israeli government to release him before it’s too late.”

““Israel denied Khader fairness & decency, maybe the rest of humanity will show more mercy.”

 

A Doctor who examined Khader on Wednesday, described his condition as been “In immediate danger of death”, and his Lawyers have filed an urgent appeal. The appeal was approved by a High Court Justice, and will be heard at the earliest opportunity.

Richard Falk, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories,  described the situation as urgent, and said the international community should intervene on Mr. Adnan’s behalf.

“In view of the emergency of his situation, the Government of Israel must take immediate and effective action to safeguard Mr. Adnan’s life, while upholding his rights,” said Mr. Falk in a statement.

Richard Falk went even further today in an Op Ed piece in the following Al Jazeera article:

Saving Khader Adnan’s life is saving our own soul Richard Falk

 

The Jimmy Carter Center in Atlanta issued the following statement on Thursday:

“The Carter Center calls on the Israeli government to immediately charge or release Palestinian prisoner Khader Adnan, who was arrested on Dec. 17, 2011, based on “secret evidence” and has been held in administrative detention without charge. Mr. Adnan has undertaken a hunger strike since his arrest 62 days ago and his life is in imminent danger. His grave medical condition has been verified by Physicians for Human Rights-Israel.”

Due to the urgency of Khader’s condition, the Palestinian Council of Human Rights Organizations (PCHRO) urges the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the European Union to take immediate action and intervene with Israel in the strongest manner possible to save Khader’s life.

The PCHRO demands that the international community put pressure on Israel to end his arbitrary detention before it is too late.

Today in Gaza and the west Bank, thousands of people came out to show their support for Khader.

Speaking to a mass rally in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh had this to say about Khader:

“We stand by the heroic symbol of prisoners, brother Khader Adnan, in his unlimited hunger strike,”

Across the world, vigils are been held for Khader, and at the prison facility, Ofer, daily demonstrations are been held. The protesters have come under sustained attacks from the Israeli military, and many people have been injured after been shot with rubber bullets, and effects of tear gas inhalation.

Support for Khader Adnan has also come in from Oliver Hughes, whose brother Francis , 25, died in the H Blocks after 59 days. His cousin, Thomas McElwee, 33, also died on Hunger Strike after 62 days. In total, 10 Irish men died during this Hunger Strike in 1981 which included Bobby Sands.

OnTuesday, as Khader Adnan entered his 60th day on Hunger Strike, Oliver, sends a message of support and solidarity to Khader.

Click on the link below to hear Oliver’s message.

Khader Adnan receives message of support from Oliver Hughes. Feb 14th, 2012

Tommy McKearney, an Irish man who went 53 days on Hunger Strike also sent a message to Khader as he entered his 54th day last week

Khader Adnan receives message of support from former Hunger Striker Tommy McKearney

Khader was arrested on 17 December 2011 and has since been refusing food and medical treatment until he is granted release. On 8 January 2012, Israeli authorities issued a four-month administrative detention order, which was confirmed on 7 February 2012 by an Israeli military judge despite his worsening health condition.

The appeal against his administrative detention order was rejected by an Israeli military judge on 13 February.

 

Anti-colonial heroes: Khader Adnan & Mahatma Ghandi

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“My Brother died after 59 days on Hunger Strike, and my cousin Thomas McElwee after 62 days” Oliver Hughes


 

 

Comrade, On Behalf of the family of Irish Republican Army Volunteer Francis Hughes, who died on Hunger Strike on the 12th of May 1981, we offer to you and your comrades our total support and best wishes.

 

“On this day you will have completed 59 days on Hunger Strike. It was after 59 days on Hunger Strike that my brother died.. My cousin Thomas Mc Elwee also died after 62 days.

The Irish people understand the plight of the Palestinian people. Our country has been occupied by the British for 800 years, and throughout all those years we have suffered murder, imprisonment, and death on Hunger Strike.
The Palestinian people are a proud people. You must keep up the struggle. You have a lot of support and sympathy worldwide. My thoughts and prayers are with Khader Adnan his comrades, family, and friends on this day.”

 

Oliver Hughes, February 14th, 2012,

 

Click on the following link to watch video

Khader Adnan receives message of support from Oliver Hughes

 

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Former Irish Hunger Striker Speaks Out For Khader Adnan


Tommy McKearney shows his support for Khader Adnan

 

My name is Tommy Mc Kearney.


I am a former member of the IRA and 32 years ago I was on hunger strike for 53 days in the H.Blocks.

Today, Khader Adnan will be 54 days on hungerstrike.
Held by the Israeli government on Administrative Detention, in other words, without charge or conviction.
He is battling against atrocious conditions and a very unjust system.
His life is ebbing away in a very cruel and harsh regime. His conditions are hard, difficult and awful.
The world must intervene to save this mans life in the name of humanity, in the name of decency, justice and legality.
54 days on hungerstrike his body is beginning to collapse. We cant say whether this man will be alive tonight or tomorrow night because at this stage, he has passed the critical stage that a human body can survive without food and nourishment.

His pain is enormous and his plight deplorable. We must act, the world must act to save this man and I call upon the Israeli regime to show some mercy, something it has not shown in the past, but we must demand that it shows mercy and correctness and justice to release this man immediately to save his life and to save dignity and humanity throughout the world

Click on the following link to listen to Tommy’s message

Khader Adnan receives message of support from former Hunger Striker Tommy McKearney

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Khader Adnan, near death as he begins Day 62 on Hunger Strike


 

Khader Adnan is now on his 62nd day on Hunger Strike, and is very close to death.

Yesterday, Khader’s wife visited him in hospital, and she described his condition in the following statement:

 ”His health has drastically deteriorated from the last time I saw him. . . .I expect the worst,”

“The world should pressure the Israeli government to release him before it’s too late.”

““Israel denied Khader fairness & decency, maybe the rest of humanity will show more mercy.”

 

A Doctor who examined Khader on Wednesday, described his condition as been “In immediate danger of death”, and his Lawyers have filed an urgent appeal. The appeal was approved by a High Court Justice, and will be heard at the earliest opportunity.

Richard Falk, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories,  described the situation as urgent, and said the international community should intervene on Mr. Adnan’s behalf.

“In view of the emergency of his situation, the Government of Israel must take immediate and effective action to safeguard Mr. Adnan’s life, while upholding his rights,” said Mr. Falk in a statement.

Richard Falk went even further today in an Op Ed piece in the following Al Jazeera article:

Saving Khader Adnan’s life is saving our own soul Richard Falk

 

The Jimmy Carter Center in Atlanta issued the following statement today:

“The Carter Center calls on the Israeli government to immediately charge or release Palestinian prisoner Khader Adnan, who was arrested on Dec. 17, 2011, based on “secret evidence” and has been held in administrative detention without charge. Mr. Adnan has undertaken a hunger strike since his arrest 62 days ago and his life is in imminent danger. His grave medical condition has been verified by Physicians for Human Rights-Israel.”

Due to the urgency of Khader’s condition, the Palestinian Council of Human Rights Organizations (PCHRO) urges the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the European Union to take immediate action and intervene with Israel in the strongest manner possible to save Khader’s life.

The PCHRO demands that the international community put pressure on Israel to end his arbitrary detention before it is too late.

Across the world, vigils are been held for Khader, and at the prison facility, Ofer, daily demonstrations are been held. The protesters have come under sustained attacks from the Israeli military, and many people have been injured after been shot with rubber bullets, and effects of tear gas inhalation.

Support for Khader Adnan has also come in from Oliver Hughes, whose brother Francis , 25, died in the H Blocks after 59 days. His cousin, Thomas McElwee, 33, also died on Hunger Strike after 62 days. In total, 10 Irish men died during this Hunger Strike in 1981 which included Bobby Sands.

OnTuesday, as Khader Adnan entered his 60th day on Hunger Strike, Oliver, sends a message of support and solidarity to Khader.

Click on the link below to hear Oliver’s message.

Khader Adnan receives message of support from Oliver Hughes. Feb 14th, 2012

Khader was arrested on 17 December 2011 and has since been refusing food and medical treatment until he is granted release. On 8 January 2012, Israeli authorities issued a four-month administrative detention order, which was confirmed on 7 February 2012 by an Israeli military judge despite his worsening health condition.

The appeal against his administrative detention order was rejected by an Israeli military judge on 13 February.

 

Carlos Latuff

 

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Thank You, Hamas


The prisoner swap deal with Israel, which Hamas has concluded through Egyptian and German intermediaries, is undoubtedly a perfect gift to the entire Palestinian people, given the deal’s auspicious timing, having taken place three weeks before the occurrence of Eidul Adha holiday.

Families celebrating the reception in RamAllah

The imminent release of some 1030 Palestinians from Israeli bastilles, dungeons and concentration camps is a definitive victory for Palestine and its struggling people by all conceivable standards.

Israel, the country, which has been oppressing and tormenting our people nonstop  for generations, has been forced to treat us with some respect, with a semblance of parity despite the enormous gap in the balance of powers between the two sides.

Israel, after all, is effectively a superpower which also tightly controls the politics and policies of the world’s sole superpower, its guardian-ally, the United States.

This is whereas Hamas is a small, besieged and blockaded resistance group, with a few thousand militiamen, struggling to resist a Nazi-like militaristic state that is hell-bent on murdering more Palestinians and stealing still more of their land.

Hence, the success of Hamas and other resistance groups to deal with Israel from a position of near  parity is a great moral, psychological and political victory for the Palestinian Islamist movement.

We should all remember that only a few months ago, Israel was demanding rather vociferously the destruction of  all Hamas’s human and resistance infrastructure.

Indeed, in addition to  the overwhelming joy which will hover over more than a thousand Palestinian  households, the deal will encompass the entire  Palestinian people because in the final analysis the prisoners’ cause is the national cause par excellance.

For many decades, Israel instilled in our minds the idea that Palestinian freedom fighters are “hopeless cases” that would only leave jail on their way to their graves!!

This deal is proving that for Palestinian political and resistance prisoners, spending one’s life and dying in an Israeli jail is not and doesn’t have to be an ineluctable fate.

This should be viewed as a strategic gain for the resistance as well as a huge morale booster for the estimated 4000 prisoners, still languishing in Israeli jails, and their families and beloved ones.

This means that the Israeli theory of deterrence will never be the same from now on. Yes, Israel is likely to seek and find ways and means to reaffirm and renew its psychological deterrence. However, the Palestinians, too, will never stop being more creative and more innovative, and, yes, more daring, in their unrelenting efforts to force Israel to meet their just grievances.

Because, ultimately, those fighting a foreign occupation are akin to those resisting rape and murder. One really exaggerates little by saying that the Israeli occupation of Palestine is an ultimate act of rape.

Hence, calling these Palestinian heroes “terrorists” and other evil epithets is the ultimate form of “fornication with language.”

Another point, which must be featured prominently, is that protracted negotiations between the Palestinian Authority (PA) and successive arrogant Israeli governments produced virtually nothing, apart from the accumulating frustration and despair among our people.

Hence the imminent swap deal shows that resistance to Israeli aggression, terror and criminality, should never ever be abandoned because then there would be no pressure on Israel to meet Palestinian demands, however just and legitimate these demands may be.

Yes, Israel might occasionally resort to offering Palestinians some “overtures” and “gestures of good will.” But this is very much like receiving handouts and charity whereby the giver decides everything while the receiver, or more correctly the beggar, has no choice but to accept whatever is thrown unto him.

Beggars can’t be choosers.

I felt I had to employ this analogy because since the conclusion of the hapless Oslo Accords in 1993, Israeli rejectionism, insolence, and arrogance of power effectively reduced the pathetic PA into a vanquished supplicant, begging Israel and the United States, for everything, from obtaining a travel permit to reach Jerusalem to releasing Palestinian inmates from Israeli jails.

Now, the resistance is demonstrating that its way pays off, because Israel knows only the language of real politik, in other word the language of force.

There is no doubt the imminent prisoner exchange deal will boost the status and stature of Hamas, not only among Palestinians but among Muslims worldwide. Hamas deserves this enhanced standing; it has earned it the hard way.

Rawhi Mushtaha (right) who was imprisoned since 1988

The deal is also expected to further cement relations between Egypt and Hamas. The deal asserted Egypt’s Arab and regional status as a central state which will always be a huge asset for all Arabs and Muslims and their various causes.

We hope and  pray that Cairo will keep moving away from the Zionist axis and keep getting nearer and closer to the masses’ axis.

The masses, long humiliated by nefarious Israeli policies and  murderous Israeli practices,  hate and loathe   Israel, the criminal state that doesn’t stop trying to obliterate the Arab-Islamic identity of Palestine, even by burning mosques and unearthing ancient cemeteries.

A final salute must go to those who kept Shalit’s whereabouts an absolute secret for more than five years.

Those unknown soldiers proved to friend and foe alike that there are still honorable men in Palestine who won’t be intimidated by sticks or induced by carrots.

Their exemplary determination, discipline, resilience and integrity thwarted Israeli efforts to rescue or liberate Shalit, who was being detained all these months and years, not in Tehran or Cairo, or Beirut, but under Israel’s nose, in her very backyard, only a few kilometers from Israel’s centers of power.

Finally, a word or two to Israel and its leaders.

I know you are in no mood to receive advice from Gentiles, let alone from your enemy, or more correctly, your victims, the Palestinians.  Your phenomenal arrogance and insolence don’t allow you to be reasonable, just and wise.

But let me tell you this, don’t you ever  force the Palestinians to kidnap your soldiers; treat them with some Justice and respect, don’t detain their children  for prolonged periods for political reasons, treat them as you would want to be treated.

Remember the pornographic oppression you are meting out to us, such as dumping our young men, including intellectuals, in your jails and dungeons is likely to boomerang on you.

PIC

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Transfer of freed Palestinian prisoners ‘begins Tuesday’


One of the groups involved in the capture of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit said Thursday that the transfer of some 450 Palestinian prisoners will begin Tuesday.

Spokesman Abu Mujahed of the Popular Resistance Committees said Thursday that as soon as the detainees are released, officials will check each one to make sure they are among those listed in the deal.

Once the prisoners are checked, the factions holding Shalit will release him too.

An official in the PRC’s military wing, meanwhile, released a list of prisoners it says Israel agreed to free in exchange for Shalit. The list includes 477 names along with the conditions of each prisoner’s release.

Several lists are floating around, including one which appeared on Hamas’ Al-Aqsa TV. The ministry of prisoners affairs in the Gaza Strip says none of them are entirely accurate.

Abu Mujahed, the PRC spokesman, said those detainees who are to be exiled from the West Bank will depart Israel via Egypt and enter Gaza. Those who will be exiled abroad will go to Turkey or Qatar via Cairo.

Israel and Hamas agreed Tuesday to swap more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners for captive soldier Shalit, resolving one of the most emotive and intractable issues between them.

The deal was overseen by the Egyptian intelligence minister two weeks ago. Israel and Hamas send delegates to Cairo and it was agreed that 450 prisoners would be freed in a first round.

There are at least 6,000 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. They are regarded as heroes in their struggle against Israeli occupation and quest for statehood.

Shalit, who also holds French citizenship, was last seen in a videotape released by his captors in September 2009. He has received no visits from the Red Cross, despite many appeals.

Ma’an

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Declaration of a Bantustan in Palestine


The “induced euphoria” that characterises discussions within the mainstream media around the upcoming declaration of an independent Palestinian state in September ignores the stark realities on the ground and the warnings of critical commentators. Depicting such a declaration as a “breakthrough”, and a “challenge” to the defunct “peace process” and the right-wing government of Israel, serves to obscure Israel’s continued denial of Palestinian rights while reinforcing the international community’s implicit endorsement of an apartheid state in the Middle East.

The drive for recognition is led by Salam Fayyad, the appointed Prime Minister of the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority (PA). It is based on the decision made during the 1970s by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to adopt the more flexible program of a “two-state solution”. This program maintains that the Palestinian question, the essence of the Arab-Israeli conflict, can be resolved with the establishment of an “independent state” in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, with East Jerusalem as its capital. In this program Palestinian refugees would return to the state of “Palestine” but not to their homes in Israel, which defines itself as “the state of Jews”. Yet “independence” does not deal with this issue, nor does it heed calls made by the 1.2 million Palestinian citizens of Israel to transform the struggle into an anti-apartheid movement, since they are treated as third-class citizens.

All this is supposed to be implemented after the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the West Bank and Gaza. Or will it merely be a redeployment of forces as witnessed during the Oslo period? Yet proponents of this strategy claim that independence guarantees that Israel will deal with the Palestinians of Gaza and the West Bank as one people, and that the Palestinian question can be resolved according to international law, thus satisfying the minimum political and national rights of the Palestinian people.

Forget about the fact that Israel has as many as 573 permanent barriers and checkpoints around the occupied West Bank, as well as an additional 69 “flying” checkpoints; and you might also want to ignore the fact that the existing “Jewish-only” colonies have annexed more than 54 per cent of the West Bank.

At the 1991 Madrid Conference, then Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir’s “hawkish” government did not even accept the Palestinian “right” to administrative autonomy. However, with the coming of the “dovish” Meretz/Labor government, led by Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, the PLO leadership escaped into behind-curtains negotiations in Norway. By signing the Oslo Accords, Israel was released of the heavy burden of administering Gaza and the seven crowded cities of the West Bank. The first intifada was ended by an official – and secret – PLO decision without achieving its interim national goals, namely “freedom and independence”, and without the consent of the people the organisation purported to represent.

Once declared, the future ‘independent’ Palestinian state will occupy less than 20 per cent of historic Palestine.”

This same idea of “independence” was once rejected by the PLO, because it did not address the “minimum legitimate rights” of Palestinians and because it is the antithesis of the Palestinian struggle for liberation. What is proposed in place of these rights is a state in name only. In other words, the Palestinians must accept full autonomy on a fraction of their land, and never think of sovereignty or control of borders, water reserves, and most importantly, the return of the refugees. That was the Oslo agreement and it is also the intended “Declaration of Independence”. No wonder, then, that Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu makes it clear that he “might agree to a Palestinian state through negotiations”.

Nor does this declaration promise to be in accordance with the 1947 UN partition plan, which granted the Palestinians only 47 per cent of historic Palestine even though they comprised over two-thirds of the population. Once declared, the future “independent” Palestinian state will occupy less than 20 per cent of historic Palestine. By creating a Bantustan and calling it a “viable state”, Israel will get rid of the burden of 3.5 million Palestinians. The PA will rule over the maximum number of Palestinians on the minimum number of fragments of land – fragments that we can call “The State of Palestine”. This “state” will be recognised by tens of countries – South Africa’s infamous Bantustan tribal chiefs must be very envious!

One can only assume that the much talked-about and celebrated “independence” will simply reinforce the same role that the PA played under Oslo. Namely providing policing and security measures designed to disarm the Palestinian resistance groups. These were the first demands made of the Palestinians at Oslo in 1993, Camp David in 2000, Annapolis in 2007 and Washington last year. Meanwhile, within this framework of negotiations and demands, no commitments or obligations are imposed on Israel.

Just as the Oslo Accords signified the end of popular non-violent resistance of the first intifada, this declaration of independence has a similar goal, namely ending the growing international support for the Palestinian cause since Israel’s 2008-2009 winter onslaught on Gaza and its attack on the Freedom Flotilla last May.Yet it falls short of providing Palestinians with the minimal protection and security from any future Israeli attacks and atrocities. The invasion and siege of Gaza was a product of Oslo. Before the Oslo Accords were signed Israel never used its full arsenal of F-16s, phosphorous bombs, and DIME weapons to attack refugee camps in the Gaza and the West Bank. Over 1,200 Palestinians were killed from 1987-1993 during the first intifada. Israel eclipsed that number during its three-week invasion in 2009; it managed to brutally kill more than 1,443 in Gaza alone. This does not include the victims of Israel’s siege in place since 2006, which has been marked by closures and repeated Israeli attacks before the invasion of Gaza and since.

Ultimately, what this intended “declaration of independence” offers the Palestinian people is a mirage, an “independent homeland” that is a Bantustan-in-disguise. Although it is recognised by so many friendly countries, it stops short of providing Palestinians freedom and liberation. Critical debate – as opposed to one that is biased and demagogic – requires scrutiny of the distortions of history through ideological misrepresentations. What needs to be addressed is an historical human vision of the Palestinian and Jewish questions, a vision that never denies the rights of a people, that guarantees complete equality, and abolishes apartheid – instead of recognising a new Bantustan 17 years after the fall of apartheid in South Africa.

Haidar Eid is an associate professor at Al-Aqsa University in Gaza.

Al-Jazeera

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Gilad Shalit exchange deal could boost both Hamas and Israeli government.


Gilad Shalit has been the most famous prisoner in the Middle East since he was captured by Palestinian fighters on the Israeli side of the border with the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2006.

The deal to free the sergeant, sealed on Tuesday, is a sensational agreement with the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, which controls Gaza but is shunned as a terrorist organisation by Israel.

Though there were not full details on the Palestinians Israel would agree to free in return, it would almost certainly involve members of the PLO as well as Hamas.

Reuters quoted one source as saying it could be as many as 1,000.

Caution is in order: this is not the first time a breakthrough in the case has been reported and experience suggests that premature publicity can prove fatal.

Last month the London-based Arabic newspaper al-Hayat reported that secret talks were making progress following a display of Israeli flexibility regarding the number of prisoners it is prepared to free to secure Shalit’s release.

The key player in this shadowy drama has been a German mediator and former intelligence officer named Gerhard Conrad, who was reported to have been in Cairo in the last few days.

Egypt, still in turmoil following the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak in February, is well placed to act as a go-between, though its relations with Israel have deteriorated in recent weeks.

Hamas has been feeling uncomfortable due to the turmoil in Syria, its main base outside the Gaza Strip, so a mass release of its men from Israeli jails would be popular with its own supporters and a significant boost to its credibility and legitimacy.

Shalit, a conscript, is a household name in Israel. But there has been criticism of the government for failing to do more to secure his release in line with the principle that no effort should be spared to bring Israeli soldiers back from captivity – dead or alive.

Past swaps have involved releasing hundreds of Palestinian or Lebanese prisoners for the bodies or even the body parts of Israelis who were killed in action.

Israel has done so in the face of often furious domestic criticism that it is handing victory to its own worst enemies: in 1985 it freed 1,150 prisoners in exchange for three soldiers captured during the Lebanon war.

Shalit’s lonely, five-year plight has moved and angered Israelis who, by and large, still accept the burden and risks of compulsory national service.

Palestinians face the problem on a far larger scale: they count some 11,000 security prisoners in Israeli jails, the admiring Arabic label “factories for men” masking the toll this takes on families. The men Israel calls “terrorists” are the Palestinians’ “freedom fighters”, leading resistance to occupation.

For all its vaunted intelligence capabilities, from electronic surveillance to networks of informers, Israel was never able to locate Shalit or mount a rescue operation. Hamas, in defiance of international law, never allowed access to him by the Red Cross or any other humanitarian organisation.

When the soldier’s captors released letters, audio or most recently a videotape, it was always as part of a bargaining process and designed to influence Israeli public opinion.

Guardian

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Gaza represents the ultimate failure of politics – David Miliband


Government is all about statistics. But life is about people, and the disjunction between the two explains a lot about the cynicism and disaffection with politics. This is true for domestic policy, but also in international affairs, where the confusion and fatigue induced by distance is increased by the seemingly intractable nature of many of the problems.

The people who suffer are those who most need the attention of the world. This is notably true of the 1.5 million people crowded into the Gaza Strip, locked between Israel, Egypt and the Mediterranean sea.

The statistics say that 80% of the population are on UN food aid. The youth unemployment rate is 65%. The website of the United Nations office for the co-ordination of humanitarian affairs has a comprehensive database where you can see how many trucks, containing different kinds of supplies, have been allowed in by the Israeli authorities.

The situation of the people – or rather the fight about their situation – is periodically in the news, most recently when violence broke the otherwise reasonably effective ceasefire in August. But Gaza has become the land that time – and the wider international community – forgot.

It is for this reason that I took up the offer from Save the Children to visit the Gaza Strip. I had not been able to visit while in government for security reasons. Now I wanted to get a sense of life, not statistics. The purpose of the visit was not to meet politicians or decision-makers, but to get a glimpse, albeit brief, of life for the people.

And there is real life. Boys in western football shirts – mainly Lionel Messi of Barcelona. Restaurants overlooking the Mediterranean. Girls in white headscarves wherever you look coming back from school. Barbers, clothes shops, fruit stalls. And a good deal of traffic – with new cars smuggled in through tunnels underneath the Philadelphi route that runs along the Egyptian border.

But although life is real, it is traumatic and limited. We saw buildings – not just the former Hamas headquarters – still reduced to rubble. There are houses riddled with bullet holes. The electricity supply cuts out for up to eight hours a day. There are not enough schools or teachers, so there are classes of 50 or 60 and the school day is restricted to a few hours to allow for two or even three shifts.

The consequences of war are everywhere, nowhere more so than for those caught in the crossfire. We met the niece and son of a farmer caught in the “buffer zone” between the Israeli border and Gaza. She had lost an eye and he a hand to Israeli shells in the war of 2008-09.

Save the Children, obviously, is most concerned about the 53% of the Gaza population under 18. The statistics say 10% of children are “stunted” – so undernourished before the age of two that they never grow to their full potential.

We saw what Save the Children is trying to do about it, at a nutrition centre serving mothers and children in Gaza City. The needs are basic: promoting breastfeeding, health boosts for young children through food supplies, medical attention for mothers. But not all those who need help are coming to get it, so Save the Children funds outreach workers to go and encourage families to use the services.

There is remarkable work to create opportunity as well as prevent catastrophe. The Qattan Centre for the Child is a privately funded library, drama, computer and youth centre that would grace any British community. The director told me it was dedicated to a philosophy of “building people not buildings”. The centre is a true oasis.

The situation in Gaza represents the ultimate failure of politics. Nearly three years ago, after the Gaza war, the international community was preoccupied with opening up Gaza. Three years on, there is a stalemate – to match the wider stalemate in the wider search for a Palestinian state that can live alongside Israel.

The first responsibility is with Israel. The international call in the UN Gaza peace resolution, which Britain authored, on the Israeli government to open up the supply lines has been heeded only in small part. That is why the tunnels do such a roaring trade – which Hamas then taxes to fund its activities. So there is a real boomerang. In return, the Israeli government would retort that the parallel call in the resolution for the flow of arms into Gaza to be stopped has not been delivered. That’s true, too.

Yet the international pressure is muted. The focus has shifted. But the needs and the people have not moved on.

This is not a party political hit on the British government. The Department for International Development is the second biggest donor to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency. The prime minister spoke up about Gaza early in his term of office. There is room for a genuine cross-party drive to make sure that the children and adults of Gaza are not forgotten.

To make the situation even more infuriating, the status quo is actually irrational. It is not in anyone’s political interest. Israel doesn’t become safer, or Hamas or Fatah more popular.

One young mother at the nutrition centre told me that she was just completing her accountancy degree – but there was no work. Yusuf, nine, working on a computer at the Qattan centre, told me he wanted to be a pilot. These people are not a threat to peace in the Middle East. They are actually its hope. But for that they need a chance to shape their own future.

Guardian

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Ban on palm frond export hits Gaza farmers


Growers of palms say they will lose more than $1m because of the ban imposed by Hamas.


Palm tree farmers in the Gaza Strip say they will lose more than $1m after the Hamas government banned the export of its fronds to Israel.

While Israel blocks almost all exports from besieged Gaza, it had exempted the fronds used in the observation of a Jewish holiday which starts on Wednesday.

Nicole Johnston reports from central Gaza.

Al-Jazeera

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A curse on both your houses: Israel and the PA are both sinful


Welcome to the Weekend Holyland Wrap. No glib and whimsical intro this week, as I’m not in the damn mood. Let’s just get to it.

By Rechavia “Rick” Berman

I’ve already outlined the technical reasons why recognizing Palestinian “statehood” would be a mere mockery (to recap: No control over own population registry, no control over own imports, to name just two bits and pieces of ludicrous), but in the run-up to the whole stupid UN wankathon, we got an inkling of just how disgusting, duplicitous and devoid of integrity the Paltustanian Authority really is.

In an interview to Lebanon’s Daily Star newspaper, the PLO’s Ambassador to that country (which is to say the Paltustanian Authority’s ambassador to that country) stated flatly that even if Palestine is recognized as a full UN member along the 1967 borders (the West Bank and Gaza Strip), it will not grant citizenship to refugees – not even those refugees living in camps within the borders of this state.

The implications of this declaration are inescapable. The Israeli Right has actually been right all along – the Palestinian leadership really does not want peace and a state of its own, and will use whatever it’s given not to do for its own people, but to continue to hammer Israel.

I understand that the ambassador was referring only to a situation in which the UN recognizes but nothing changes on the ground regarding the reality of occupation, and that an actual bilateral agreement could change that; but still, it’s very telling. If you declare a state but keep almost 700 thousand of your own people stateless and disenfranchised (not even counting the 1.1 million refugees in Gaza, which the PA doesn’t even control on a Bantustan level anymore, and of course not counting another couple million refugees abroad) – then you’re not at all interested in serving your people. If you really want statehood, then the moment you declare it, it applies to all your people, or at least all your people already in the area you pretend to control.

On the other hand, what Israel wants to do – keep the entire Palestinian population of the West Bank disenfranchised, occupied, molested and oppressed until they leave or break out in a bloody enough uprising to give “fog of war” cover to another Nakba – is equally heinous. Probably more. I lose count at such levels of stench.

US Secretary of State Clinton with Netanyahu and Abbas at failed peace talks in September 2010 (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

Bibi made it absolutely clear (somewhere in between zoological observations) that he has zero intention of making an actual agreement resulting in an actually independent, contiguous Palestine. There are no security assurances in the universe that will make the specter of Qassams fired at Ben Gurion Airport less threatening – except massive overt and covert Israeli presence on the “Palestine” side of the border, rendering any pretense of independence a sham. Bibi wants troops along the mountains, in the (still being raped, thank you) Jordan Valley, and everywhere else that will put his Jid paranoia to a semblance of rest. Merely having the ability to re-invade and stomp Palestine into the ground at will in retaliation for such an attack wouldn’t be enough. He needs to already be there.

Cause, see, this whole UN bid is not about sovereignty, it’s about access to the International Criminal Court, and the ability to sue Israelis for the crimes of the occupation. While this is a worthy goal which I support, when you say “I hereby declare myself a sovereign state”, that’s gotta mean something. If you take a minimalist approach to your own sovereignty, don’t be surprised when others give it even less than that.

Meanwhile, while two corrupt, evil aging men in designer suits were blathering in front of a bunch of other crooks, a vehicle carrying a settler and his baby flipped over somewhere along an apartheid road in the apartheid occupied territories, killing both occupants. The Israeli police have determined that this accident had nothing to do with rocks being allegedly thrown at the car, but the hard-core settlers don’t care, and are vowing a pogrom in revenge. While this blameless accident occurred, another possible accident occurred in which a Palestinian child was run over by a settler, and one outright murder took place as Essam Kemal Odeh, 37, was shot to death in his home village of Qusra during a protest. The IDF thugs have confirmed that they were using live ammunition and have promised to “look into the matter”, with the reigning officer in the area saying “there appear to have been some irregularities in the conduct of the forces” No shit, Sherlock? What tipped you off – the use of live ammunition where it’s supposedly not allowed, or did you give special dispensation for that in light of the UN-geddon?

These sorts of incidents, and not oral vomiting at the UN, is what reality in the occupied territories is about. And now that the dog and pony show is over for now, Palestinians will be free to succumb to disillusion and turn to violence – which is exactly what their enemy wants.

Now, the two-state solution is dead. There is no political will for it in Israel, poll results aside. Nobody is gonna stomach removing 300 thousand settlers, let alone another 300 thousand from East Jerusalem (and to think that in the 90’s Israel could have evacuated the rest of the WB and kept every single settler neighborhood in what it calls “Jerusalem” in place, and the world would have celebrated its sacrifice)

And to those of you waxing naïve about a democratic one state, please, for the love of all gods and goddesses, put the bong down (pass it here, actually…) and do the math, even assuming the democratic nature and functioning requisite institutions among the Palestinian population:

Tomorrow morning a OneState is declared, with the vote given to everyone currently living between the Jordan and the Mediterranean. Elections are called. What will the results be? That’s right, you clever boys and girls you – deadlock. A very slight majority for Jewish parties, and zero possibility of any actual reforms that will give the Palestinians anything other than the vote. Like Martin Luther King said, it don’t matter if the negro is allowed at the lunch counter when he ain’t got the money to buy himself a burger there. And ALL the economic and military power will be in Jewish hands pending any reforms – which the above-proven deadlock will prevent.

To pretend otherwise is to believe that after making the immense concession of enfranchising the occupied Palestinians and dooming themselves to an electoral minority status within a decade or two, any significant number of Jewish voters will then, in the first unified elections, not feel that they have already conceded above and beyond, but will go on and vote for any sort of affirmative action to make up for decades of exploitation and discrimination.

So, we have one state, we have political deadlock, the lives of most Palestinians don’t get any better and no refugees are allowed back to where they or they’re granddaddy came from (because that requires changing laws in a democratic process). How long before inevitable civil war? Not long at all.

And for the last time – don’t talk to me about South Africa. In SA, all you had to do was give everyone the vote, hold elections, and voila! You had a single party with an absolute majority to make immediate reforms to ease the pressure. Here you don’t have that. That’s a decisive difference.

Therefore, to dream about a one-state solution is to imagine that the world will not only force Israel to enfranchise everyone, but having done so will not consider the task over, and will continue to force Israel to make the necessary reforms – and that Israel will actually succumb to this pressure peacefully and not go all Masada in response. That, my dear deluded friends, will never happen.

So the two-state solution (which I only ever believed in as an interim solution for a federation, which would then be formed by equal, sovereign entities) is dead, and the one-state solution is a guaranteed bloodbath. Continuing the occupation also guarantees a bloodbath.

So damn you, the current and any foreseeable government of Israel. Blast you, Fatah and the PA. A curse on both your houses – just try to hold it off till I scrounge the money to get my family the hell out of this doomed land. I love it, but while I personally don’t much care if I live or die anymore, I don’t have the right to adopt the same attitude for my children.

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Posted in International News, Palestine newsComments (1)

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bD4=