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Tag Archive | "U.S."

The UN is part of Palestine’s problem


At the United Nations building in New York City on Friday, 23 September 2011, Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority and chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) addresses the General Assembly in his bid to obtain full recognition of Palestine, as a state, in the United Nations.

As President Obama, and Prime Ministers Cameron and Netanyahu were when they spoke, Mahmoud Abbas is sharply dressed and wears a suit.

There is only one major difference between him and the others, but a crucial one: Mahmoud Abbas gives his speech in Arabic.

Mahmoud Abbas wears the imperialists’ clothes but does not speak the imperialists’ language of choice. Abbas, in the eyes of Obama, Cameron and Netanyahu, represents the “other” — the “majority world” (often mistakenly called “developing world”), the oppressed. He represents the people that, for them, do not count.

For all the talk about the PA bid putting the US and Israel under pressure, for all the nervousness shown by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, US President Barack Obama and the rest, they do not, at the end of the day, care the slightest about it.

They do not care if all the polls in the world showed that the majority of people asked are in favor of recognizing Palestine as a state and they do not care if Abbas wears a suit or not.

Abbas could have worn Arafat’s famous kuffiyeh, the checkered scarf that has become a Palestinian nationalist symbol; the result would have been the same. In their heads, there will always be masters (them) and servants (the others). Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinians, today, still represent the other.

And the other does not have a voice, even at the UN.

The UN is one of the most undemocratic bodies in the world. After all, five permanent members have the right to veto anything they disagree with. The decisions of those five members, the masters — United States, United Kingdom, France, Russia and China — overrule the actions that the rest of the world is sometimes willing to take.

In a way, this arrangement mirrors internationally what goes on in most countries: A powerful elite living the high-life and making decisions for everyone else while the majority of humanity is struggling to make ends meet.

The UN is therefore part of the problem and will never bring justice to the Palestinians. It is precisely this body which exacerbated in 1947 the mess the Palestinians are currently in by passing a resolution calling for the partition of Palestine without the consent of its indigenous people. Thus, the UN violated the Palestinians’ right to self-determination at the very moment other colonized peoples were exercising theirs.

Since then, dozens of resolutions have been adopted by the General Assembly and the Security Council upholding the Palestinians’ right of self-determination, demanding an end of occupation and colonization and Israeli withdrawal from occupied lands, and the right of return of the refugees.

Yet without exception, those resolutions have been violated by Israel with total impunity. Why? Because Israel is part of the masters’ clique. Israel is in their club and represents the same interests.

While it is easy to understand the PA’s motivations in making a move at the UN — taking matters for the first time in a long time into their own hands, not succumbing to pressure, making a statement — it has unfortunately very little chance to make any real difference on the ground. By going to the UN, the PA continues to accept the rules of its master/oppressor.

In history, there has never been a case of a master relinquishing power for philosophical and altruistic reasons.

Did the slave masters suddenly decide that it was morally reprehensible to use other people as slaves? Did the segregationists in the US decide that Rosa Parks, after all, should be able to sit in the seat of her choice when going on a bus?

Did white South Africans, after the Sharpeville massacre, think that killing black women, kids and innocents was not what their beloved God or nationalist ideology had in mind? Did Hosni Mubarak after more than thirty years in power think that it was time to have a real democracy in Egypt?

They did not.

Those struggles were won by people’s power. When the people said NO. When the people, despite eventually facing terrible consequences, organized, took on the streets, marched, chanted, went on strike, united, rebelled and said “we will not have it your way any longer.”

What will make the road shorter for the Palestinians — who have already struggled and endured for so long — is to mobilize as much international solidarity as possible, to shift the balance in favor of the people faster.

And this is on the way. Palestinian civil society has done precisely this with its 2005 civil society call for boycott divestment and sanctions (BDS).

All over the world, people acting on the BDS call are building a movement, and building momemtum that no one can control because it comes from the bottom up, is in constant evolution and keeps re-inventing itself. A movement based on human rights and international law.

This movement, accompanied by other initiatives such as the International Solidarity Movement, the Free Gaza Movement, the flotillas and “‘flytilla,” the Viva Palestina convoys, the Russell Tribunal on Palestine and many other creative and spontaneous actions hav isolated and delegitimized Israel, a rogue state, far more effectively than years of endless and fruitless negotiations.

People are taking matters into their own hands; they are writing and making, history. The masters know that this has happened many time in the past. The thought of it happening again sends shivers into their expensive suits.

Frank Barat

Electronic Intifada

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Palestinians’ U.N. gamble could backfire


It goes without saying that Palestinians and Arabs are outraged by the idea that the United States is threatening to block recognition of a Palestinian state at the United Nations.What is less obvious, perhaps, is that some of the most vociferous critics of the Palestinian bid for upgraded U.N. recognition are Palestinians themselves. How could it be that advocates of Palestinian rights could be suspicious of, if not altogether opposed to, the U.N. gambit? Isn’t the creation of an internationally recognized independent state the goal shared by all Palestinians?Not exactly. The Palestinian cause concerns more than merely statehood. And although much depends on how the statehood bid is formally expressed, there is every possibility that U.N. action on the wrong set of terms could be a setback in the Palestinians’ decades-long struggle for self-determination and the right to live normal, dignified lives in their ancestral land.

At the heart of the problem is how “Palestine” might come to be defined in the U.N. The statehood bid probably will be structured along the lines long discussed as the basis for a two-state solution: territory encompassing the 22% of historical Palestine that remained after hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced from their homes during the creation of Israel in 1948 — namely, the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, which were subsequently captured by Israel in 1967. But that could change who the United Nations considers to be Palestinian and how their rights may be determined, to their profound detriment.

Today, the Palestine Liberation Organization is recognized by the U.N. and most of its member states as the sole legitimate representative of the entire Palestinian people: those living under occupation, those living in Israel and those living in exile or as refugees, who constitute the single largest group of Palestinians. If its place in the international body is taken by a Palestinian state identifying itself with the occupied territories, Palestinians who do not live in those territories — that is, the majority of Palestinians — could lose their representation at the U.N. and be pushed back into the shadowy silence and invisibility from which they fought to emerge in the 1960s. The 1.5 million Palestinians living as second-class citizens of Israel could be left to fend for themselves against legalized discrimination and political repression directed against them as non-Jews in a state whose Jewish identity the Israelis are demanding ever more insistently that the Palestinians acknowledge.

Moreover, an internationally recognized state limited to the shards of Palestine that remained after 1948 would do nothing for the Palestinian right of return to homes and land in what is today Israel, and could in fact gravely threaten the exercise of that right, which is fundamental to the Palestinian cause.

A very broad set of Palestinian rights is already recognized by the U.N. As the Oxford legal scholar Guy Goodwin-Gill notes, the General Assembly has repeatedly emphasized that “the Palestinian people is the principal party to the question of Palestine,” just as it has recognized that the right to self-determination and the right of return to homes and property from which they were displaced inheres in the Palestinians as a people. And U.N. resolutions do not limit the Palestinian people or their rights merely to the territories occupied in 1967; General Assembly Resolution 194, for example, expressly recognizes their right of return to homes in what is now Israel.

It would be profoundly problematic, not to say dangerous, if the Palestinian U.N. bid substituted a very narrow formal recognition — which would mean little practically, given that mere recognition would do nothing to actually end Israel’s ongoing occupation of Palestinian land — for the much broader definition of the Palestinian constituency and the array of Palestinian rights already recognized by the U.N.

These worries are not unfounded if one considers the Palestinian politicians preparing the statehood bid: the venal clique surrounding Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority “president” whose term expired almost three years ago. Abbas and his circle are not merely unelected; their party was actually thrown out of office in the last Palestinian elections in 2006.

Shrouded in mystery, their current bid is consistent with the pattern they established during the endless secret negotiations of a two-decade peace process whose only tangible result has been to give them a fleeting taste of power while leading their people deeper and deeper into a morass. Indifferent to the democratic tide sweeping the Arab world, they neither have, nor have they sought, a popular mandate for the gamble they are undertaking. Indeed, many Palestinian observers see the current U.N. gambit as yet another cynical maneuver that has more to do with resuscitating a failed two-state strategy —and Abbas’ own waning political fortunes — than with genuine concern for his people’s inalienable rights.

We are, then, in a moment pregnant with ironies. With its eye on the 2012 elections, the Obama administration intends, as usual, to come to Israel’s rescue at the U.N. But in the act of serving Israel by blocking the expression, however flawed, of legitimate Palestinian aspirations, the U.S. would also inadvertently be thwarting Abbas and company, one of the unpopular and undemocratic regimes it has long propped up throughout the Arab world. And, although it would be doing so for the wrong reasons, by standing in the way of recognizing a state whose contours and purported leadership do nothing to address the rights of most Palestinians, the U.S. might also contribute unwittingly to maintaining the integrity of the Palestinian cause.

Saree Makdisi is a professor of English and comparative literature at UCLA. He is the author of, among other books, “Palestine Inside Out: An Everyday Occupation.”

Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

Posted in International News, Palestine newsComments (2)

Gaza-US photo exchange breaks down stereotypes


Jessica Campbell and Emmet Whittaker of the US-Gaza Cultural Exchange entered Gaza three weeks ago with a set of digital cameras, 130 art sets and artwork created by children in the US.

The artwork they brought with them is part of a cultural exchange initiative based on the theme “View from my window”, which aims to create a platform for exploring different realities across the globe.

“The project aims to foster relationships between children on the opposite side of the world and to break down negative stereotypes that they might have developed about each other,” Campbell told Ma’an.

“The children have just been so great to work with.”

The artwork was created by schoolchildren in Oregon in the United States who also learned about how Gazans live; from what food they eat, to the language they speak.

The children took photographs of their communities and created artwork about their environment.

 

 

 

 

Children in Gaza were also asked to create their own artwork and take photographs based on a specific theme: “What I see when i look out of my window”.

 

 

 

The US-Gaza Cultural Exchange has partnered with the UNRWA Summer Games to work with children at the Beach Camp Elementary School.

The children, ranging from 6-12 years old, develop their artistic skills during the Summer Games and create artwork and photography to return to the students in Oregon.

At the end of the exchange, students keep artwork created by Oregon students and their art set, which includes watercolor paints, watercolor pencils and a sketchpad.

The students in Oregon were enthusiastic to learn about children in another part of the world and are excited that their artwork has been delivered to children in Gaza.

“The children in Gaza have been so good to work with, they have been loving and open,” Whittaker said.

“We are honored that the Gazan community has let us into their lives and we are very grateful to them for that.”

 

 

 

Artwork and photography from the participants in the Summer Games will be displayed at the Palestine Stadium in Khan Younis during the world record attempt for largest hand-painting on Thursday.

Over 6,000 Gazan children will walk through the exhibit prior to entering the field to break the world record.

Campbell, who just graduated from university with a BS in genetics, and Whittaker, an engineer and student in education, entered Gaza with all of the art, art supplies and cameras in hand after coordinating with Egypt.

Ma’an

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US collusion in the Gaza blockade is an affront to human rights – Cindy Corrie


My daughter’s death shows the cruelty of an America that won’t protect its own and is complicit in harming Palestinian civilians.
Peace activist Rachel Corrie being interviewed by a TV crew in the Rafah refugee camp in 2003, two days before being killed by an Israeli bulldozer. Photograph: Getty

When Greek authorities prevented the US ship the Audacity of Hope leaving its port in Athens this week, they dealt a blow to a group of brave and principled Americans who were trying to carry thousands of letters from US citizens to those who wait on Gaza’s shores.

I know many of the people who were on this boat, and my family’s letter was part of their cargo. In 2003 my daughter Rachel Corrie made her journey to Gaza and was run down and killed by a US-made Israeli military Caterpillar D-9 bulldozer. She was trying to protect a Gazan family and their home, one of thousands illegally destroyed in Israeli military clearing operations.

Now my family is on a parallel journey with those activists as we return this week to Israeli court to confront Colonel Pinhas Zuaretz, the commanding officer of the Gaza Division’s Southern Brigade in 2003. His testimony should shed light not only on actions of troops responsible for Rachel’s killing but also on the Israeli military’s broad failures as an occupying power to protect civilian life and property.

This week’s flotilla was travelling to Gaza, as Rachel did, to stand with Palestinians against oppression and illegal occupation and for a just, enduring peace.

Some liken the action to those of “freedom riders” who 50 years ago journeyed bravely to the American south to oppose racist laws that kept blacks and whites from sitting together on buses. The flotilla participants are pursuing Israeli and US policy that provides access and egress for Gazans commensurate with what other peoples enjoy in their homelands. They demand freedoms for Gazans that we in the US celebrate for ourselves but are complicit in denying to Palestinians.

A senior administration official in 2010 told our family that the blockade of Gaza was a “failed policy”. He emphasised that the attack on the first flotilla that claimed nine lives (including a US citizen) was tragic, but had created movement for lessening restrictions for Gaza.

Some members of Congress have declared the “imprisonment” of Gazans a greater threat to Israeli security than rockets from Gaza. Nevertheless, a year after the Israeli commando attack on the Mavi Marmara, the US has been unwilling or unable to influence Israel to make many of the changes still needed.

In 2003 Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon promised President Bush a “thorough, credible, and transparent” investigation into my daughter’s killing. The US government’s position continues to be that the promise has gone unfulfilled. In 2008 the Department of State wrote: “We have consistently requested that the government of Israel conduct a full and transparent investigation into Rachel’s death. Our requests have gone unanswered or ignored.”

After eight years, our family remains engaged in prolonged court proceedings seeking accountability that the US government has been unable to secure – though it has no difficulty sending Israel $3bn annually in weapons that do the damage.

The US government has failed repeatedly to obtain accountability for its own citizens and Palestinian civilians harmed by Israel. Now, it is an accomplice in manipulating policing of the Mediterranean and maintaining Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza. It has thwarted and threatened citizens acting in the nonviolent tradition of our most revered champions of human rights. Much of the world is watching, disgusted with US abandonment of its own and with its collusion in the imprisonment of the people of Gaza.

Gaza flotillas reflect the world’s embrace of the Palestinian cry for freedom – and most immediately their cry for an end to the blockade and siege of Gaza. Israel and the US may slow or stop the boats, but in doing so, will only find themselves increasingly isolated. Civil society is acting and will continue to until the US government and others catch up. Only when we apply to Israel/Palestine a framework of international law, human rights, and a belief in freedom and equality for every human being, is there realistic hope for a sustainable resolution and peace.

During the course of our lawsuit those not on the witness stand often figure most in my thinking. Palestinian and Jewish Israelis have supported our family’s needs for legal assistance, housing, translation, medical care and companionship. I treasure memorable conversations over meals in homes and Haifa neighbourhood cafes, and the friends who come to be with us at court. Whatever the eventual judgment from the legal system, Israeli supporters have made clear that what happened to Rachel, and to many others in this poisonous conflict, should not have occurred and should not continue.

Rachel did the right thing going to Gaza – taking all of us with her. Her example is best served by supporting those who journey there in the same brave spirit, acting upon values articulated in our own Declaration of Independence, rather than circumventing them as our government seems bound to do.
Guardian

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Getting in bed with Israel has now made Greece morally bankrupt too


When you’re all but down and out you usually try and make as many fiends as possible, in the hope that one of them will rescue you.

Greece has been brought to its knees because of the global economic recession which arguably hit it harder than any other country in Europe, but its new found friends will do little to help it stand back on its feet.

Since last year’s Freedom Flotilla, and the outcry cause by Israel’s murder of nine innocent civilians in international waters, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has been doing his best to prevent a similar expedition of humanitarians exposing Israel’s true nature.

One of the findings of the Turkel Commission (I use the second word liberally here – it was nothing less than a joke) was that Israeli diplomats and intelligence services were to blame for the huge embarrassment caused by the 2010 Freedom Flotilla – the commission found that diplomatic pressure should have been exerted on European countries to stop the vessels from setting sale in the first place.

Failing that, Israel’s security services should have sabotaged the ships, making it impossible for citizens of the world to deliver humanitarian aid to the besieged people of Gaza.

It seems Israel is acting on those findings to the letter. In the past year, Netanyahu has met with his Greek counterpart several times - in fact, George Papandreou is the first Greek prime minister to have visited Israel in 30 years.

Meanwhile, at least two vessels planning to take part in the flotilla this time round have been sabotaged, putting the lives of innocent men, women and children at risk yet again.

But that isn’t surprising, Israel’s willingness to kill indiscriminately is not new; what is astonishing, is the morally bankrupt alliance between Greece and Israel.

Greece stands to gain nothing from joining the “lets bend over backwards for Israel and be complicit in occupation and killing” club.

Israel does not invest economically abroad, it does not give out loans to countries, and it’s not like it’s top of the “most popular country” charts at the moment either.

Even domestically, the vast majority of Greeks are sympathetic with the Palestinian struggle for liberation.

In 2010, when there were also national workers’ strikes, Greek labourers suspended picket lines to load aid onto the first Freedom Flotilla in a gesture of solidarity with their Palestinian comrades – many of whom are on involuntary strike because of Israel’s siege and the massive unemployment it has caused.

Possibly the only thing Greece has to gain from this decision is to spite neighbouring Turkey.

But even if that is the motive, it’s a very short sighted and politically immature one at best.

Turkey is a greater regional and international power than Greece will ever be.

Israel will never abandon its attempts at trying to warm relations with Ankara, because of economic and geopolitical reasons as well as Turkey’s massive strategic importance.

Greece’s attempts to score points with Israel is like the rebound girl after a man gets divorced by the much more beautiful and successful wife who’s realised she could have always done better than him and never wants to see him again.

The rebound girl doesn’t realise she’s being used, and when she does it’s too late.

There are many Gulf countries who may have considered investing more in Greece, no doubt their people will now pressure them to look elsewhere.

Practically speaking, the attempts to block the Flotilla from setting sail are also futile.

The mere fact that despite Israel’s cold blooded murder of nine innocent people last year, thousands have volunteered to deliver aid to Gaza this time round, is testament that you can not defeat the power of the people.

In fact, this year’s planned flotilla has a broader coalition, a greater number of vessels and a much larger support base than the 2010 one enjoyed.

If Greece continues to try and prevent the vessels from setting sail, there are still dozens of free nations who will gladly support the notions of humanitarianism, solidarity and liberation.

And many of them may prove a little too close to comfort for Israel.

Because what many media outlets failed to pick up on during this Arab Spring is just how high up the Palestinian cause played in these unprecedented uprisings.

In Suez, the battle against Mubarak was likened to the battle against Ariel Sharon which took place on exactly the same street.

In Tahrir square, Palestinian flags were almost merged with Egyptian ones.

In Alexandria, when Mubarak seemed incapable of comprehending his people’s demands, the chants of “tell him to leave in Hebrew, he can’t understand Arabic” rang out.

In Syria, the people are asking why Assad’s tanks are not rolling down south rather than into the homes of his own people. In Yemen, Tunisia, Morocco all the sentiments are the same.

Governments and world leaders alike must start accepting that the dynamics of power in the world today are changing, rapidly.

The barrier of fear which enslaved millions for so many years has been comprehensively destroyed, as has the invisible cloud of “practicality” which would rain on any parade of hope before it even started.

Governments and world leaders must start truly looking at what is best for their people, rather than what will score points with lobbies and powers that will soon collapse faster than a pack of cards.

Greece has a chance to settle its moral debt by reversing its decision, and if it does, who knows, that might just be the invitation some were waiting for to help it in settling its economic balance.

jamal.elshayyal@aljazeera.net
Al-Jazeera

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Tour of the US Ship, The Audacity of Hope,


http://www.democracynow.org/2011/6/30/exclusive_tour_of_gaza_bound_us

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Israel threat to bar Gaza flotilla journalists under review


Warning of 10-year ban on entering Israel was not sanctioned by Binyamin Netanyahu, says his deputy

gazaPro-Palestinian activists due to board aid ships bound for Gaza this week in defiance of an Israeli blockade hold banners during a press conference in Athens.
Israel says it is rethinking its threat to bar foreign journalists from entering the country for 10 years if they board a new aid flotilla that plans to challenge the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip.
“[The prime minister,] Binyamin Netanyahu, heard about it on the news and asked to re-examine this issue because it’s problematic,” his deputy, Moshe Yaalon, said on Monday, referring to the warning from Israeli government’s press office (GPO) the previous day.
“I know the prime minister was as surprised as I was to hear this,” he said, without disclosing who had made the decision to deliver the threat.
“There’s no way to stop the media in this day and age if they [are on board] anyway. It’s better not to clash with them.”
The Foreign Press Association in Jerusalem described the warning, which the GPO director, Oren Helman, sent to international media organisations, as a “chilling message” that raised questions about Israel’s commitment to freedom of the press.
Pro-Palestinian activists have said around a dozen ships carrying aid to the Gaza Strip, territory controlled by Hamas, could depart from European ports in the coming days.
Israel has made clear it will enforce the blockade it says is aimed at stopping weapons from reaching Hamas.
Palestinians say the blockade is illegal and is helping to strangle Gaza’s underdeveloped economy. Israeli officials have said the convoy could dock in Egypt or Israel and have its cargo of aid transferred overland to Gaza.
In an email, Helman said participation in the flotilla would be “an intentional violation” of Israeli law and could result in a 10-year entry ban to Israel and the impoundment of journalists’ equipment.
A year ago, nine Turkish activists, including one with dual US-Turkish nationality, were killed by Israeli soldiers who raided a Gaza-bound aid convoy and were confronted by passengers wielding clubs and knives. 

Netanyahu’s security cabinet discussed the new flotilla on Monday. A statement from his office said: “Israel is determined to prevent the flotilla from reaching Gaza with as little friction as possible with its passengers.”

Guardian

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Hamas: Israel will not end siege, flotilla should sail.


Hamas urged organizers of the Freedom Flotilla II to push ahead with plans to sail to Gaza and break Israel’s siege “despite threats,” a statement from the party’s spokesman said Thursday.

The party gave its endorsement to the convoy of 10 international ships, saying it considered them as acting within the law in their attempt to break a siege that international rights groups and UN missions have called illegal.

Speaking for the party, spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said the flotilla – which plans to sail during the last week of June with a cargo of aid and activists – was essential, since Israel had demonstrated that “it never keeps its promises regarding the lifting or easing of the blockade” on Gaza.

Following an international outcry over the slaying of nine activists by Israeli commandos who commandeered the ships from the first Freedom Flotilla in international waters at the end of May 2010, pressure from Quartet envoy Tony Blair and other actors prompted Israel to announce measures for the partial lifting of the ban on the passage of people and goods in and out of Gaza.

The announced measures have yet to be fully implemented.

Organizers have said that the ships plan to sail, and activists are arriving in Greece and France, from where the flotilla is scheduled to set sail.

Ma’an

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Israel gives Noble Energy green light to develop Noa field – steal Gaza’s natural gas reserves



Minister of National infrastructures Dr. Uzi Landau has instructed Noble Energy to develop the Noa North gas reserve in the Noa license. Sources inform “Globes” that the final decision to develop the field came after operator Noble Energy convinced Ministry of National Infrastructures experts that he field did not spill over into other parts of the reserve, which is partly under the jurisdiction of the Palestinian Authority in the economic zone of the Gaza Strip.

Up to now, Landau has refrained from ordering development of the Noa field, fearing that this would lead to diplomatic problems vis-à-vis the Palestinian Authority. “Globes” reported in the past that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu discussed the matter with President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas.

Noble Energy holds 47% of Noa, the other 53% being held by Delek Group Ltd. (TASE: DLEKG), mainly through Delek Drilling LP (TASE: DEDR.L) and Avner Oil and Gas LP (TASE: AVNR.L).

From Globes – Israel Business Arena

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Many heard of Gaza blockade first time with Flotilla incident


Many people learnt about Israel’s brutal blockade on Gaza for the first time with the attack on the Freedom Flotilla.

Many heard of Gaza blockade first time with Flotilla incident

Iara Lee, based in the United States, is a Korean Brazilian activist, film producer and founder of the Caipirinha Foundation that advocates global solidarity and peace. Having directed a number of short and long documentaries such as “Synthetic Pleasures”, “Modulations”, “Architettura” and “Beneath the Borqa” among others, Iara Lee took part in the Gaza Freedom Flotilla. The footage of the attack on the flotilla that was captured by a cameraman in Lee’s crew had major repercussions worldwide. Among many individuals who recorded the attack time onboard the Mavi Marmara boat was Srdan Stojilkkovi? from Lee’s crew. Stojilkkovi? managed to hide most of the footage of the attack successfully and later Lee shared it with the world. Iara Lee’s account of the attack was made public in the book “Freedom Flotilla through Language of Global Conscience: Interviews with Passengers,” authored by Zahide Tuba Kor and published by IHH Book. Here are excerpts from the interview:

Pre-dawn on May 31, we were expecting to confront Israeli forces somehow. When it became obvious that Israeli commandos were going to board the boat, most of the passengers were told to go downstairs. I did so too. A while ago we heard gunshots. Since I know every part of the boat was searched tediously before sailing, I realized it was our friends who were being shot at. I first thought they were using rubber bullets or were firing into the air. But I later saw many bloody bodies, some of whom were shot in the head, being carried into the lower deck.

Since I predicted Israeli navy would confiscate our belongings, hard drives, memory cards, etc. I asked my cameraman (Srdan Stojilkkovi?) to replace existing ones with smaller (SD) memory cards. He did so and to prevent SD cards being confiscated he hid them in his underwear. In case Israelis found the cards, I directed him to tell them I had requested him to hide the cards and he was just doing his job. Israeli officials frisked hundreds of people but since they focused mostly on long-bearded Muslims, they did not frisk my white-tanned cameraman thoroughly and therefore could not find hidden SD cards.

*

When I returned to the United States, I faced expected insults from fervent supporters of the Israeli government. However, there was incredible interest to the footage we sneaked out of the boat not only from solidarity movements but also from fully independent organizations. The United Nations Correspondents Association (UNCA) invited me to present the footage to public at a press conference to be held at the United Nations. The Israeli delegation leveled groundless accusations against the association for showing the raw footage and holding a question and answer session with attending correspondents.

*

The Freedom Flotilla, owing to Israel’s deadly attack that claimed lives of nine beloved fellow activists, brought about an unprecedented wave of condemnation by the international community against the Israeli government. Despite all evidence put forward by respectable organizations, many people learnt about Israel’s brutal blockade on Gaza for the first time with the attack on the Freedom Flotilla.

Iara Lee

IHH

Iara is releasing her new documentary ‘Cultures of Resistance’ very soon

Be sure to keep up to date with Gaza TV News as we will be broadcasting the film in the near future.
(watch this space for details)

Trailer and synopsis: http://films.culturesofresistance.org/about

Calendar of Events: http://films.culturesofresistance.org/screenings

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UN marks 5 years of Gaza siege


“If the aim of the blockade policy was to weaken the Hamas administration, the public employment numbers suggest this has failed,” a UNRWA spokesman said Tuesday as the UN marks Gaza’s fifth year under intense Israeli siege.

Commenting on a report released by the UN agency charged with providing care and services for the one million refugees living in the Gaza Strip, on the fifth anniversary of the siege, spokesman Chris Gunness added “it has certainly been highly successful in punishing some of the poorest of the poor in the Middle East region.”

According to UNRWA, wages in Gaza fell 34.5 per cent since the first half of 2006, while unemployment reached 45.2 percent in the second half of 2010.

“These are disturbing trends,” Gunness said, “and the refugees, which make up two thirds of Gaza’s 1.5 million population were the worst hit in the period covered in this report. It is hard to understand the logic of a man-made policy which deliberately impoverishes so many and condemns hundreds of thousands of potentially productive people to a life of destitution.”

On 14 June 2006, militants in the Gaza Strip captured an Israeli soldier patrolling its border. In retaliation for the capture of a soldier, Israeli forces entered the West Bank and abducted eight Hamas ministers and 21 party lawmakers from their homes and offices. Imports and exports into and out of Gaza were scaled down to a fraction of normal levels in an attempt to pressure the ruling party Hamas to return the soldier.

Hamas, negotiating on behalf of the factions which captured the soldier, are demanding the release of 1,000 Palestinian prisoners in return for his release.

Israel tightened the siege, restricting access to coastal fishing waters in October 2006, reducing the fishing limit from 20 nautical miles down to six. Then following Israel’s offensive on Gaza in the winter of 2008-9, the fishing limit was reduced to three nautical miles, effectively quashing the industry.

Imports between 2006-2010 were restricted to a short list of goods, with reports suggesting calculations had been made to import only the minimum necessary food supplies to sustain the population. After an international aid flotilla sailed to Gaza in June 2010 and Israeli commandos shot and killed nine of the activists on board, world outcry against the siege prompted a slight easing, with more commercial goods permitted in.

Prohibitions on industrial goods and building materials remain, however, making reconstruction of the 6,000 homes destroyed during Israel’s winter offensive impossible without intervention from international agencies.

Israel says materials used in construction of homes could be used to manufacture weapons.

A massive tunnel import industry grew in the southern Gaza Strip after the blockade was imposed, allowing building materials, cars foodstuffs and weapons to be brought into Gaza. The goods are too expensive for most Palestinians in the Strip to afford.

Exports of goods and produce from Gaza have effectively been stopped, with only a few hundred loads of strawberries and carnations having been exported to Europe under a Dutch government program since the imposition of the siege.

During the past five years, UNRWA noted in its report, that the private sector had been hit particularly hard in comparison with the public sector. While private businesses were forced to cut nearly 8,000 jobs in the second half of 2010, the Hamas dominated public sector grew by nearly three percent over the same period.

“Our research indicates that since 2007, Hamas has been able to increase public employment by at least one-fifth,” said Gunness. “Even more striking, in what should have been a relatively good year for the Gaza private sector with the supposed easing of the blockade, the public sector generated 70% of all net job growth as between second-half 2009 and second-half 2010.”

UNRWA has stated that it will continue to operate in the health and education sectors in Gaza, with some 213,000 children currently attending UNRWA run schools. However, the report stated that since the start of the blockade, the number of people living on less than one dollar a day has tripled to nearly 300,000 since the blockade was imposed.

“With many reconstruction projects still awaiting approval, the future looks bleak” Gunness said.

Ma’an

Posted in Gaza News, International NewsComments (1)

U.N. chief says Gaza flotilla panel to report in July


A much-delayed U.N. panel set up to investigate last year’s Israeli attack on an aid convoy bound for Gaza is now due to report back next month, U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon said on Monday.

“This panel is still discussing the incident,” Ban told reporters. “They will bring me their recommendations and their findings some time in July.”

In May of last year, Israeli marines intercepted a six-ship flotilla in international waters and killed eight Turks and a Turkish-American aboard one vessel, the Mavi Marmara, owned by a Turkish charity.

Last August, Ban appointed a panel headed by former New Zealand Prime Minister Geoffrey Palmer to look into the incident. The panel also included former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe as well as Turkish and Israeli representatives.

Ban never publicly set a deadline for it to complete its work, although U.N. officials had originally hoped it might do so first in February and then in April.

Diplomats and U.N. officials have said the panel has been held up by disputes between its Turkish and Israeli members. U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky suggested last month the group might not be able to produce a consensus document.

Ban said there was still no exact date for the panel to report and that it was “still working very, very hard.”

Israel illegally blockades Gaza, a move it says is legal because ‘Palestinian militants in the Hamas-ruled territory fire rockets at the Jewish state’. Many states and the United Nations have called for the blockade to be lifted.

Israel says any aid for Gaza should go overland, which in practice has meant through Israel, who is responsible for the denial of vast amounts of previous aid and the siege in it’s entirety.

Pro-Palestinian groups have said they are planning a new flotilla for Gaza in late June, a move that led Ban to appeal last month for governments to try to dissuade them (A move with absolutely no legal basis).

 

Posted in Flotilla News, International NewsComments (0)

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bD4=