Showing posts with label protest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label protest. Show all posts

7 January 2011

Bezettingstoerisme weer op Vakantiebeurs

Op de Vakantiebeurs zijn weer diverse reisbureau's aanwezig die de comsument misleiden. Het gaat om de zogenaamde Israëlreizen, waarin ook bezoeken worden gebracht aan de bezette Westelijke Jordaanoever en de bezette Golanhoogte, en zelfs naar de nederzettingen. Maar volgens die reisbureaus liggen die locaties vrijwel allemaal "in Israël".

'Israel Wonders'

Organisatie: Israelisch Nationaal Bureau voor Toerisme (stand 08.D088)
Voorheen opererend onder de naam GoIsrael, en sinds kort heet het bureau Israel Wonders.

Vakantiebeurs: St. George klooster in de Judea woestijn toegankelijk voor toeristen
"In de Israëlische Judea woestijn ligt het St. George klooster, beter bekend als het St. George Monastery."

Het Israelisch Nationaal Bureau voor Toerisme trekt zich blijkbaar niets aan van de uitspraak van de Reclame Code Commisie. De Judea woestijn is namelijk helemaal niet "Israëlisch", maar ligt tussen Bethlehem en de Dode Zee, dus op de bezette Westelijke Jordaanoever. Het klooster ligt in het Palestijnse dorp al-Khader (St. George).

Vlakbij dit dorp ligt de joodse nederzetting Efrat, wiens militante kolonisten o.a. Palestijnse boomgaarden en waterbronnen vernielen. In 2008 hebben ze de 700 jaar oude moskee Al-Hamadiyya in al-Khader in de as gelegd. Toen de tweede intifada uitbrak werden de inwoners van al-Khader zo vaak en zo lang gedwongen thuis te blijven middels de door Israël ingestelde spertijden, dat ze hun land niet meer konden bewerken. Daar maakten joodse kolonisten, die geen spertijd opgelegd kregen, gebruik van door land te stelen en outposts neer te zetten, zoals: "The larger petition against the outpost, which has 17 permanent homes and 15 caravans, was filed by eight Palestinian farmers from the village of al-Khader, together with Peace Now." (augustus 2009)


Links de officiële landkaart van Israël, rechts de versie van het Bureau voor Toerisme - "Israel Wonders"... welke bezetting?


Tijdens de jaarlijkse festiviteiten rond de oprichting van de staat Israël, toont het IDF traditioneel haar hardware. Deze rij machinegeweren werd opgesteld voor de kolonisten van Efrat.

"Op verzoek van de Grieks Orthodoxe aartsvader besloot het Israëlische Ministerie van Toerisme in samenwerking met het Ministerie van Transport de toegangsweg opnieuw aan te leggen. De nieuwe toegangsweg is vanaf 1 december geopend voor toeristen."

Aldus het Israëlische Bureau voor Toerisme, dat natuurlijk niet vermeldt dat Israël met de aanleg van die weg weer meer land van de Palestijnen hebben ingepikt, en dat de protesten van de landeigenaren zoals gewoonlijk weer onderin de prullenbak verdwenen. Het dorp al-Khader wordt bedreigd met complete insluiting door de Israëlische Muur, waardoor het 75% van haar landbouwgrond zal kwijtraken.

Eerlijke reizen naar Israël en de Palestijnse gebieden

Wilt u eerlijk reizen, zodat uw euro's niet worden uitgegeven aan illegale nederzettingen, bezetting en het terroriseren van de lokale bevolking:

Van 11 tot 16 januari presenteren touroperators en reisbureaus hun nieuwe reizen en vakantiebrochures op de Vakantiebeurs in de Jaarbeurs in Utrecht. Dit jaar zal ook de Olijfbomencampagne aanwezig zijn om alternatieve reizen naar Israël en de Palestijnse gebieden te promoten. De stand van de Olijfbomencampagne is te vinden op de Wereldhulpmarkt in Hal 2. Er zullen Palestijnse olijfproducten verkocht worden, verschillende toeristische gidsen, er is informatie van verschillende reisorganisaties in Israël en de Palestijnse gebieden èn de nieuwe promotiefilm van de Olijfbomencampagne zal worden vertoond. Natuurlijk maken wij ook promotie voor onze eigen olijfpluk- en plantreizen!
 
De publieksdagen zijn van 12 t/m 16 januari, dagelijks van 10.00 tot 18.00 uur en op vrijdag tot 22.00 uur

15 December 2010

Breaking the Silence: 'Ik heb hem in zijn broek laten schijten'

Breaking the Silence is een organisatie van voormalige Israëlische soldaten die willen vertellen over de dagelijkse terreur die het Israëlische leger uitoefent op de Palestijnse bevolking. Dit is één van de 101 gedocumenteerde getuigenissen, die ik heb vertaald naar het Nederlands.

Getuigenis 16
'Ik heb hem in zijn broek laten schijten'
Eenheid: Grenspolitie
Locatie: Wadi Ara
Jaar: 2003


Het werk met de bevolking was het entertainment. In ieder geval in Katzr, wat er op dat moment gaande was in Jenin weet ik niet, maar het was entertainment. Te werken met de mensen was...

"Werken met de mensen" is een aardige woordspeling.

Ja. Afwerken. Dat was er te doen. En toen opeens bouwden ze het hek, en toen was er geen bevolking meer. Er was de Israëlische bevolking waar je voorzichtig mee moet zijn, en er is Barta'a die je nog een beetje kon ...

Dus de activiteiten verplaatsten zich naar Barta'a?

Iets meer, ja. Maar opnieuw was er de neiging met Barta'a, ze bewaarden Barta'a voor het IDF, dus het werk was grotendeels langs het hek.

En wanneer ze iemand betrapten?

Dan gingen we naar binnen. Wanneer je iemand snapt mag je naar binnen. Echt, het grootste gedeelte van de tijd waarin ik geweld zag was in de periode vóór het hek, toen was het gewoon routine. We leegden de tassen van de kinderen op de vloer, en speelden met hun speelgoed. Je weet wel, we grepen er eentje en speelden "uit de weg houden met hun speelgoed."


BARTA’A SHARQIYYA, PALESTINE; 2004. Israeli forces patrol the perimeter of the industrial zone, while in the background a Caterpillar D-9 destroys a factory. Barta’a Sharqiyya is located near the Green Line, and the buildings were being razed to make way for the wall Israel is building within Palestinian lands. (Photo by Lucas Mulder)

Huilden de kinderen?

De hele tijd. Ze huilden en ze waren bang. Ik bedoel, daar kon je niet omheen.

Huilden de volwassenen ook?

Natuurlijk, want ze werden vernederd. Een van de doelen was altijd: ik heb hem laten huilen ten overstaan van zijn kinderen, Ik heb hem in zijn broek laten schijten.

Je hebt gezien dat mensen in hun broek poepten?

Ja.

Waarom?

Grotendeels door het geslagen worden. Doodgeslagen worden, en bedreigd worden, tegen je geschreeuwd worden, je staat gewoon doodsangsten uit. Vooral als de kinderen erbij waren, schreeuwen ze en jagen hen angst aan, zodat je ook de kinderen bang maakt. Een keer, nogmaals, was er een man die we met zijn kind staande hielden, de jongen was klein, vier jaar of zoiets. Ze sloegen het niet, maar de politieman ergerde zich eraan dat de volwassene zijn kinderen meebracht opdat hij gespaard zou worden. Hij zegt tegen hem: "Je brengt je kind mee om medelijden op te wekken, dus laten we je even zien wat dat is." Hij slaat hem in elkaar en schreeuwt naar hem, zeggende: "wat, ik vermoord je voor de ogen van je zoon, misschien voel je je dan meer..." Het is angstaanjagend. Nogmaals, er zijn een heleboel eervolle verhalen.

Plaste hij in zijn broek van angst?

Ja.

En de jongen kon dat zien.

Ja. Een veel eervolle verhalen, check mij maar, ik liet hem schijten, ik liet hem doen wat ik wilde. Ze spraken er de hele tijd over, routinematig, het is niet een soort...

Waar praatten ze erover, in de kantine, waar officieren bij waren? Was het openlijk?

Het was openlijk. Ik denk dat wanneer een officier zegt dat hij er niet van wist, hij liegt dat hij barst. Bij de officier, de hoge officieren wisten ervan. De pelotonscommandanten hadden er minder mee te maken, maar de compagniescommandant, de assistent compagniescommandant, de operatie-officieren - moedigden het zelfs een soort aan. Nogmaals, niet rechtstreeks, ze kwamen niet binnen en zeiden, yalla sla ze maar in elkaar, maar er was een soort van legitimering, anders zou het niet gebeurd zijn. Nogmaals, het is een feit dat het minder in Jenin gebeurde, en naar mijn mening niet alleen omdat er was minder werk was met de bevolking.

Lees meer getuigenissen (deel 1) op 972mag.com.

22 November 2010

Joodse vredesboot 'Irene' naar Gaza, wat wij niet mochten weten

Op zondag 26 september vertrok een kleine boot (catamaran) met 7 joodse vredesactivisten van Jews For Justice For Palestine en goederen naar Gaza. De boot heette 'Irene' en voer onder Britse vlag. De boot vervoerde speelgoed, schoolboeken, muziekinstrumenten en visnetten.

In Nederland was 'Boot met joodse activisten onderweg naar Gaza' groot nieuws, en elke krant en nieuwsmedium berichtte erover. Toen de boot, alweer in internationale wateren, door Israëlische commando's werd geënterd was de journalistieke 'euforie' al tot de helft gereduceerd. Over hoe de entering in zijn werk ging hebben we in Nederland alleen uit monde van Israël kunnen vernemen: het gebeurde "op vreedzame wijze" en "verliep zonder problemen". Aan wederhoor is nooit gedaan. De bekende pro-Israël en zionistische weblogs verzwegen de joodse actie volledig, alsook de joodse organisaties in Nederland. Behalve Kees(-jemaduraatje) Broer die traditioneel weer verviel in zijn archaïsche katholieke antisemitisme.

Hieronder volgt een gedeelte uit een verslag van een opvarende. Bezoek jewishboattogaza.org voor alle verslagen, en natuurlijk voor meer informatie.



On the Irene that fateful Tues morning, the weather was beautiful as the sun reflected a mirage of gold on the Mediterranean. It was the day we would have reached Gaza and we were now close to 20 miles from shore but still in International waters. At 9 AM we sighted warships on the horizon moving towards us. Soon we could see the guns and war paraphernalia on board. It was all so surreal. Surely this was not really happening? I felt I was watching a war movie. Several smaller frigates moved too close to us, one in the front, back and on both sides sides. What act of insanity could this be? For a moment I imagined myself escaping, our small boat of tired Jews surrounded by the Nazi navy but I moved quickly away from this thought. Instead, try to imagine in the same space as the warships, a fleet of 4 or 5 pleasure sail boats gliding along as if nothing was happening. It was ludicrous to see pleasure sail boats n the same waters as the warships. Did they feel protected from the enemy “terrorists” on the small sailboat, by the big Navy fleet? Keep in mind we were a tiny unarmed boat dressed with wonderful flags including the Palestinian flag and dozens of names of potential passengers surrounded by doves sewn by Edith.

All I could think of is why are these warships coming to board our little catamaran with 9 Jews mostly in their 60’s 70’s and 80’s? How did it come to this, Jew against Jew? What insanity brought these soldiers dressed to the gill with high boots, tasers, guns, helmets and gloves with their fingers uncovered to take over our boat, in essence to kidnap us? One soldier tire down and ripped apart our beautiful flags while we huddled close together, hands linked and sang “we shall overcome.” Although the Israeli press described the kidnapping of our boat as without incident, it was anything but that. We were one in our stance of passive resistance and non violence. It was crazy as they boarded in large numbers. One had to see this to believe it as a few of them kicked Glyn until he fell as he held onto the wheel. It was all so brutal, so completely unnecessary, insane. They ceased to be human as they dragged Itamar to their frigate, tied his hands and kicked him as he lay flat on his back, his hands tied. Jonatan was by then trying to quiet 82 year old Reuven who lost it when his harmonica’s fell to the floor where they were about to be stepped on. Reuven with a pacemaker inside him became agitated and screamed at the scary looking steely faced soldiers that they should be ashamed of themselves. Luckily we rescued the harmonicas but at that moment I knew if the Mavi murders had not happened, they could have shot Reuven or any one of us. Instead restraint had most likely been ordered. Then we heard a scream. These military robots, 3 or 4 of them had knocked Yonatan onto the ground, pulled away his life jacket and tasered him in his heart. His cry like a wounded animal is something I will not forget. Unconscious, they dragged him onto the frigate.I saw first hand the dehumanization and the brutality. They picked on 2 true heroes of Israel and I suspect targeted them to hurt them. Since Glyn had made sure the engines would not work, we were towed to Ashdod at a speed of 10 knots, twice as fast as this boat was able to do for we had sailed no faster than 5 knots. We thought the boat could break in two and sat anxiously in our life vests. But this wonderful boat held out for us.

And now we were towed to Ashdod. It was brutally hot as we were herded from the boat into a courtyard. To get there each of us had to be pulled up a steep stone wall one by one. I noticed someone had pulled away a ladder which would have been less humiliating and easier for us. During our individually performed searches, all cameras, computers and cell phones were confiscated. I soon found myself in a well guarded van with tightly closed shades as we had become prisoners that had been arrested. I was happy to see Edith in the van. Her clothes were still wet from partial flooding on our boat while being towed at such a rapid speed. Despite the heat, she was shivering. I did not know then where the rest of us were. Edith and I were taken to Holon, about an hours drive on the outskirts of Tel Aviv while loud music roared in our ears. All we could say to one another was to acknowledge Israel as a state of collective mental illness.

(via MondoWeiss)

16 November 2010

Young, Jewish and Proud



In Our Own Words:


Through Others’ Eyes:


www.youngjewishproud.org

23 October 2010

'Viva Palestina' activists deliver tons of aid to Gaza Strip

In Nederland vormt het verzwijgen van informatie, om het publiek tegen de werkelijkheid te beschermen, de meest voorkomende vorm van censuur van onze commerciële massamedia.

Haaretz | By Avi Issacharoff | 21.10.10


Most of the activists arrived at the Egyptian port El-Arish on flights from Syria, while just 30 activists made the journey with the aid supplies by ship.

Over 300 activists from Syrian aid flotilla "Viva Palestina" crossed Thursday the Egyptian Border into Gaza by land with tons of medical equipment and food supplies for the residents of the coastal enclave.

According to the organizers of the flotilla, which departed from the Syrian port of Latkia, activists transported products worth in excess of $5 million.

Most of the activists arrived at the Egyptian port El-Arish on flights from Syria, while just 30 activists made the journey with the aid supplies by ship.

Egyptian security services barred a Mauritania citizen who arrived with the group from crossing the border into Gaza and his passport was taken for inspection. While 12 Mauritania activists remained with him pending the inspection, the remaining activists crossed the land border with Gaza uneventfully.

Viva Palestina activists claimed the point of their aid flotilla was to "break the siege on Gaza" despite the fact that Israel recently lifted many of the restrictions imposed on the enclosed coastal strip.


International peace activist hold Palestinian flag as their aid convoy wait to cross in to Gaza at the Rafah border Crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip, Thursday, Oct. 21, 2010. The aid convoy arrived in the Gaza Strip overland from Egypt on Thursday to a warm welcome from the territory's Islamic militant, The convoy was organized by 'Viva Palestina,' headed by former British member of parliament George Galloway. Egypt banned Galloway from accompanying the convoy because of previous clashes with Egyptian security. Hamas official Ahmed Youssef said the aid is worth about $5 million and includes 137 used vehicles for ambulances and transport.

Israel imposed the blockade in 2007 after Hamas wrestled control over the territory in a violent coup.

During a visit to Syria on Tuesday, former U.S. president Jimmy Carter called for Israel to lift its blockade on the Gaza Strip. Carter made the remarks in the forum of a delegation known as The Elders, who met with Syrian President Bashar Assad and Hamas leaders in Syria.

"The blockade is one of the most serious human rights violations on Earth and it must be lifted fully," said Carter from Syria.

Besides Carter, the Elders delegation includes former Irish president Mary Robinson and former UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi. While in Gaza, the group described Israel's blockade as an "illegal collective punishment" and "an impediment to peace."

Rechtzaak Rachel Corrie, dag 1

In het buitenland op de voet gevolgd, in Nederland verzwegen. Wat een schurkenstaat van een democratische staat onderscheidt is o.a. dat een schurkenstaat zijn criminelen beschermt, in plaats van de slachtoffers. In Gaza reed een bulldozer van het Israëlische leger tot twee keer toe over de Amerikaanse activiste Rachel Corrie heen. Haar ouders spande een civiele procedure aan. Na 7 jaar blijkt de eerste dag in de Israëlische rechtbank een travestie.

Leon de Winter was erbij in Gaza

In het buitenland op de voet gevolgd, in Nederland verzwegen. Hoewel... Leon de Winter schreef er op 13 juni dit jaar in de Telegraaf over: "De tragische hysterica Rachel Corrie kwam om het leven toen zij voor een rijdende bulldozer van het Israëlische leger sprong." Leon de Winter is echter niet als getuige opgeroepen. Maar vreemd is dat niet, want voor het Israëlische "onderzoek" zijn helemaal geen getuigen ter plekke gehoord, noch de artsen die haar lichaam hebben behandeld.



Driver testifies in Corrie case

A bulldozer driver who crushed a US activist in Gaza in 2003 tells Haifa court he can not recall much about day she died

Al Jazeera | 21 Oct 2010




The first day of a civil lawsuit brought by the parents of a US peace activist who was crushed to death by an Israeli army bulldozer in the Gaza Strip in March 2003 has ended in the Israeli city of Haifa.

The army driver of the bulldozer that crushed 23-year-old Rachel Corrie to death testified in court on Thursday, but her parents were denied a chance to confront him face-to-face.

The unidentified former soldier was shielded behind a wood-and-plastic partition, and his testimony about the events leading up to Corrie's death were relayed into the courtroom over a microphone.

"I wish I could see the whole human being," Cindy Corrie said before the testimony began, her voice shaking.

She and her husband, Craig, travelled from their home in Olympia, Washington, to hear his testimony.

Three witnesses were to testify on Thursday, but Al Jazeera's Sherine Tadros, reporting from Haifa, said that only one gave testimony as "at the last moment the judge said he didn't have time for three witnesses".

The military commander in charge of the unit that included the bulldozer on the day Corrie was killed will give evidence at a future date.

No 'remorse'

Corrie's family filed the private lawsuit against the state of Israel five years ago after an Israeli military investigation into the incident concluded that the soldier operating the bulldozers could not see Corrie and closed the case.

Both the bulldozer driver and the commander claimed that they were not aware of Corrie's presence, and that civilians aren't acknowledged in a war zone.

Reporting from outside Haifa district court, Tadros said that the driver who testified on Thursday "kept reiterating two main points. Firstly, that he was working within a command structure, that he had his orders from above, and secondly, that he really couldn't remember even the most basic of details to do with that incident".

She also said that the driver "couldn't even remember the time of day that Rachel was killed," which was very difficult for Corrie's parents to hear.

"I haven't heard one moment of remorse, and to me, that's one of the saddest things," said Cindy Corrie during a break in the proceedings.

She later told Al Jazeera that she was troubled by the "disregard" and "lack of reliability" of the driver's memory of the details of the day.

"If you've killed someone, you'd think you might remember if it was in the early afternoon or late in the day," said Cindy Corrie.

The Corries are suing the government for the symbolic amount of $1, saying that Corrie's "unlawful killing" denied her her "basic human rights".
They have also accused the government of "gross negligence".

Corrie was protesting against Israel's demolition of Palestinian homes in the town of Rafah, close to the border with Egypt, when she was killed.


Lees ook op dit weblog: Autopsy doctor admits to violating court order in Rachel Corrie autopsy (incl. links naar meer informatie)


IDF killed an "object" (IDF footage):

20 October 2010

ACRI: Harming Democracy in the Heart of Democracy

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI)
A Position Paper Ahead of the Knesset's Winter Session
by Attorney Debbie Gild-Hayo, October 2010


For links to the texts of all Knesset bills and document cited, please view the complete PDF version of this document.

Background

Over the past two years, we have been increasingly troubled by expanding tendencies to harm Israel's democracy. These trends are extensively surveyed in the State of the Democracy Report – published by The Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) in intermittent chapters. The two chapters that have been published so far deal with education system, and with the status of the Arab minority in Israel. The three future chapters will address the Knesset and the judicial system, free media, and freedom of protest and political activity.

A source of great concern is the fact that one of the key rings in which the Israeli democracy is threatened is the parliament itself - the very heart of democracy. Ahead of the upcoming opening of the Knesset's Winter Session, we have drafted this brief review. It surveys the main aspects of anti-democratic trends in the Knesset, focusing on anti-democratic legislation, which includes bills that harm basic democratic rights - mainly the freedom of expression and political protest, and equality before the law; verbal and even physical abuse of members of the Knesset minority factions at this time;[1] attempts to delegitimize and infringe on the legitimate and much-needed operations of human-rights and social-change organizations;[2] and attempts to restrict the freedom of Israel's academy. The above are most troubling signs, attesting to the deterioration of Israel's democratic regime.

The attacks against Israel's democracy are mainly characterized by attempts to silence social or political minorities' views or public criticism; attempts to delegitimize political rivals, human-rights organizations, and minorities; attempts to restrict parties with positions or activities that do not coincide with the political majority's desired direction; and by presenting minorities in the Israeli society as enemies of the State, generalizing in an attempt to infringe on their civil and political rights.

As a result, the basic principles of the Israeli democratic system are harmed; there is ongoing infringement on issues such as the freedom of expression, and human dignity and equality; on the possibility of upholding the pluralism of views and thoughts; on the freedom to congregate and protest; and on the legitimacy of certain views and stands. We are witnessing a reality of increasing tyranny against social, political, and national minorities, which harms their very rights.

It should be noted that these events have been taking place against the backdrop of a social and political reality which is always very loaded and often very harsh. Over the past 2 years, for example, we witnessed the continuation of the occupation and all that it entails: fire on Israel's southern area, the military operation in Gaza, the flotilla affair, terror attacks, and more. We believe, however, that raising the banner of "A Self-Defending Democracy" is a cynical attempt to infringe on a democratic right of some minority (ethnic, social, or political) and is neither legitimate nor just. We believe that the State of Israel and its democracy must be defended, albeit proportionally and appropriately, and that basic rights may be denied or restricted only in the most extreme cases - as the Israeli law currently stipulates. It is inappropriate to legitimize the denial of minority rights as a matter of routine.

These anti-democratic moves employ various means, most troubling of which is the use of allegedly legitimate parliamentary tools, mainly through legislation. In recent years, we witnessed harsh and unprecedented remarks by senior politicians against political and human rights organizations, as well as various minorities, coupled by a variety of restrictive moves against them. At the same time, attempts were made to promote legislative initiatives and bills that clearly impair on the Israeli democracy and the rights, positions, and civil status of parties that did not belong to the political majority at the time.

It should be remembered that remarks and/or moves by senior members of the Israeli political establishment, particularly members of the Knesset, which has been a symbol of Israel's democracy and its main upholder, have far-reaching implications on the Israeli public stands and attitudes toward democracy, human rights, and political, social, and ethnic minority groups. Surveys that the media carried over the past two years indicate that the Israeli public, mainly Israeli youths, support undemocratic and racist views.

Ahead of the Knesset's October 2010 Winter Session

The 18th Knesset's Winter Session 2010-11 will commence on October 10th. Anticipating it, we wish to warn against the troubling trend of infringement against democracy in Israel as expressed through the persistent promotion of anti-democratic bills, decisionmaking process, and conduct by Members of Knesset (MK). The Knesset plenum and committees have recently served as platforms for offensive and anti-democratic discourse.

In July 2010, at the close of the last Knesset Summer Session, The Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) sent a letter to the prime minister and the Knesset speaker in which we warned about the troubling trend of infringement on democracy, pointing at the important role the Knesset plays in defending democracy, and calling on them to take steps to end that trend.[3]

In the letter, we presented a list of bills promoted in the Knesset to demonstrate this troubling trend. At this time, ahead of the opening of the Winter Session, we wish to offer an update on these bills, some of which were not promoted while others were.

First, we wish to address bills that were listed in the aforementioned letter, and new bills that were submitted since and were not promoted because the Ministerial Legislation Committee rejected them, probably due to lack of agreement among its members (additionally, we list a bill that was passed and thus, naturally, will not be discussed in the upcoming Knesset session).

1. Bill on MK's Pledge of Allegiance (David Rotem)
According to this bill, all MKs are required to pledge allegiance to the State of Israel as Jewish a democratic state, to its laws, symbols, and national anthem. The bill intends to delegitimize and even practically prevent minority groups from partaking in the Israeli democratic process.
Status: Not promoted due to lack of coalition agreement.

2. Bill Denying the High Court's Right to Rule on Nationalization (Rotem and another 44 MKs)
This bill, which intends to bypass the High Court of Justice (HCJ), was devised in the wake of HCJ discussions of the Nationalization Act, though the court has not yet ruled against it, but probably may do so in the future.
Status: Not promoted due to lack of coalition agreement.

3. Bill for the Establishment of a Constitution Court (David Rotem)
This bill wishes to restrict the Supreme Court. In a democracy, the separation of powers means that the court must defend the rule of the law and prevent harm to human rights in general and to constitutional rights in particular through legislation, among other things. The proposed bill, which aims at denying the HCJ powers through a series of acts, severely harms the principle of the separation of powers, the protection of human rights, and the democratic system.
Status: Not promoted

4. A series of government-initiated bills that intend to restrict the Knesset's opposition factions
Seven MKs may split from a Knesset faction to establish a new faction - not one-third of the original faction members; increasing the quorum needed for budget-related bills to 55 MKs; if after a vote of no-confidence is endorsed by a Knesset majority, the new candidate for prime minister should fail to form a coalition-based government, the ousted government should regain its seat; a cabinet member who quits the Knesset shall be replaced by another on his faction list.
Status: passed the first reading; it seems there is no intention to promote further it at this time.

5. Bill or Pardoning Disengagement Offenders (Rivlin et al)
Though legislation that eases punitive measures against persons who exercised their right to political protest is welcome in principle, this particular bill is problematic because it makes a distinction between political and ideological activists of various groups. Instead of promoting a general principles of "going easy" on protesters, this bill was promoted by the current political majority in favor of their electorate alone .[4]
Status: the Knesset passed the bill; the HCJ is currently reading a petition against its inequality.

6. The Cinema bill
According to this bill, the entire crew of a film that seeks public funding will have to pledge allegiance to the State of Israel as Jewish a democratic state, its laws, symbols, etc. This bill infringes on the freedom of expression, protest, and artistic and creative expression - referring only to a specific political, national, and social group.
Status: not promoted.

7. Bill on Denying an MK's Parliamentary Status (Dani Danon)
According to this bill, the parliamentary status of an MK may be revoked by a majority of 80 MKs if he expressed his opposition Israel's existence as a Jewish and democratic state, incited to racism, or supported an armed struggle against the State of Israel. Status: Not approved by the government.


It may be expected, however, that some of the bills that the Knesset started promoting in the previous session will be actively promoted further in the upcoming session. Following is a list of bills that we believe carry high probability of promotion and even ratification, with such or other wording, and turn into state laws in the coming Winter Session.

1. The Nakba Bill (Alex Miller)
According to this bill, persons marking Nakba Day as a day of mourning for the establishment of the State of Israel will be sentenced to prison. The government endorsed the bill but, in the wake of public protests, its wording was changed to state that persons marking Nakba Day shall be denied public funds. Even this "minimized" version still legally impairs on the freedom of expression, as the political majority bans a certain political view.
Status: The bill passed the first reading and will be discussed by the Knesset Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee ahead of its second and third reading.

2. Anti-Incitement Bill (Zvulun Orlev)
An amendment of the existing act, according to which persons publishing a call that denies the existence of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state shall be arrested. This is an extension of the penal code, which intends to incriminate a political view that another political group does not accept.
Status: Passed the preliminary reading and may be discussed by the Knesset Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee ahead of its first reading.

3. Nationalization, Pledge of Allegiance (David Rotem)
According to this bill, all Israeli citizens will have to pledge allegiance to the State of Israel as Jewish a democratic state, and do a term of military or national service.
Status: The government did not endorse this bill; a ministerial committee rejected it in May 2010, but another attempt was made in July to get the cabinet to endorse it and failed. Additional attempts to promote this bill may be expected.

4. Bill on Admission Committees of Communal Settlements (David Rotem, Israel Hason, Shay Hermesh)
According to this bill, admission committees may turn down candidates for membership with a communal settlement if they "fail to meet the fundamental views of the settlement," its social fabric, and so on. The bill primarily intends to deny ethnic minorities' access to Jewish settlements, offering the possibility to reject anyone who does not concur with the settlement committee's positions, religion, political views, and so on. It should be noted that ACRI filed petition against this bill, which is pending with the HCJ. [5]
Status: The bill passed the first reading and will be discussed by the Knesset Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee ahead of its second and third reading.

5. Bill on Funds from Foreign Political Entities (Elkin et al)
According to the (original version) of this bill, any person or group financed by a foreign nation must register with the party registrar and immediately report each contribution, mark every document in this spirit, and state at the opening of any remark they make that they are funded by a foreign state. The bill names strict penalties too. In practice, the bill intends to delegitimize and impair on the activities of organizations that receive funds from, among other sources, foreign states. Though the Israeli law already makes reporting such donations imperative, this bill wishes to expand the existing law and force certain civil organizations to mark their activities as subversive and illegitimate. Furthermore, the bill practically refers to the activities of specific civil groups, focusing on human rights organizations, implicitly incriminating them when compared with other bodies or individuals funded by foreign non-state entities.[6] It should be noted that we sent a letter to the foreign minister recently warning against the state's illegitimate intervention in fundraising by Israel's civil organizations.[7]
Status: An amended version of the bill was endorsed by the Knesset Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee; and will soon be presented for a first reading and then discussed by the committee ahead of its second and third reading.

6. Bill on Infiltration (Government)
The bill stipulates, among other things, that infiltrators based on their country of origin, and persons who assist them (!) may be sentenced to 5 to 7 years in prison. This bill follows the trend of delegitimizing human rights and aid organizations and individuals who help refugees and labor immigrants.
Status: The government pulled back the bill, but key points from it will be introduced through a new bill which, to the best of our knowledge, is currently drafted by the Justice Ministry.[8]

7. Bill Against Boycott (Elkin et al)
According to this bill, persons who initiate, promote, or publish material that might serve as grounds for imposing a boycott against Israel are committing a crime and a civil wrong, and may be ordered to compensate parties economically affected by that boycott, including fixed reparations to the tune of 30,000 shekels, freeing the plaintiffs from the need to prove damages. If the felon is a foreign citizen, he may be banned from entering or doing business with Israel; and if it is a foreign state, Israel may not repay the debts it owes that state, and use the money to compensate offended parties; that state may additionally be banned from conducting business affairs in Israel. And if that is not enough, the above shall apply one year retroactively.

This too is a bill that discriminates against certain political groups in Israel, and is introduced by the political majority in an attempt to neutralize the political opposition it is facing. Primarily, the bill intends to reject legitimate boycotts of products of settlements, and thus severely impairs on a legitimate, legal, and nonviolent protest tool that is internationally accepted (including by Israel), while impairing on the Israeli citizens' freedom of expression, protest, and congregation.[9]

Status: The bill passed a preliminary reading and the Knesset Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee will discuss it ahead of its first reading. It should be noted that a ministerial committee rejected the chapters pertaining to foreign citizens and states, probably out of consideration for Israel's foreign relations, and spiked the retroactive clause.

8. Bill on Revoking the Citizenship of Persons Convicted of Terrorism or Espionage (David Rotem)
This bill infringes on the basic rights of Israel's citizens because when a citizenship (which in itself is a basic right) is denied, a series of basic rights that follow from it are denied too. Furthermore, the Israeli Penal Code already specifies ways of dealing with persons convicted of terrorism or espionage.[10]
Status: The bill was discussed by the Knesset Interior Committee, which will continue discussing it ahead of its first reading.


On top of these, two additional bills submitted over the past 2 months may be promoted in the coming session:

1. An Associations Bill (ban on filing suits abroad against Israeli politicians or army officers), according to which an association that deals with suits against senior Israeli officials abroad may not be established, or will be shut down.

2. Bill banning wearing veils in public, according to which, it would be illegal to cover one's face in any public location, under penalty of imprisonment.


We further wish to stress that there is a tough and intolerant approach toward minority members and stands in the Knesset, as expressed in plenum and committees' discussions. This trend was particularly visible after the flotilla affair, and included verbal and even physical abuse against MK Zuabi, as well as other Arab MKs, during and after the plenum discussion, when the Knesset discussed the revocation of her parliamentary rights. It should be noted that a petition was filed with the HCJ against that revocation, under the pretext that it was an undemocratic act.

The prevailing atmosphere is not expected to change soon, certainly not during the current loaded period of talks with the Palestinians, terror attacks, rocket firing from Gaza, and the debate over freezing or not freezing construction works in the territories.

Answering our letter, dated July 2010, the Knesset speaker wrote that he too is uncomfortable with some of the bills mentioned in our letter, saying that he feel that "the State of Israel as the state of the Jewish nation, and as a Jewish and democratic state, is strong enough and needs no 'fortifications' such as those proposed by the bills you mentioned in your letter. I believe that, often unintentionally, they actually weaken and not bolster it."[11]

Additional Issues on the Knesset Agenda Ahead of the October 2010 Session

While dealing with anti-democratic laws, we constantly work against legislation that impairs on human rights in all aspects of life.

At this time, we deem it particularly important to address two topical and central issues that carry human-rights implications that the Knesset will discuss in the upcoming session:

The Planning and Housing Reform - A new planning and construction law is about to be introduced that has far-reaching implications that might impact on all aspects of the Israeli residents' lives. We believe that the currently proposed reform might impair on the public's participation in related forums and on the protection of public interests. Cooperating with other organizations, we work to amend and correct the suggested reform so as to introduce tools that would ensure appropriate representation, the implementation of the public's participation, and that various social interests are considered.

The State Budget and the Arrangements Act - Israel's biannual budget for 2011-12 will be discussed and sealed in the coming months. We feel that the suggested budget contains numerous resolutions and amendments that impair on human rights in a wide range of issues. On behalf of ACRI and in collaboration with additional organizations, we drafted several position papers on issues such as - impairing on the courts' accessibility; impairing on the rights of the unemployed and seekers of state allowances; harming the laborers' rights; infringing on the residential rights of inhabitants of public housing, and so on.

Below are a few additional issues (samples only) that we handle and which are expected to be raised in the upcoming Knesset session:

1. A long line of bills dealing with immigration and civil status is expected to be discussed as part of the Arrangements Act, government deliberations ahead of the forming act, the new anti-infiltration bill, and more.

2. An amendment we initiated, banning discrimination in public services that will not allow further selection at club entrances, will be discussed by the Knesset Economic Committee in preparation for a second and third reading.

3. An amendment of the National Health Act, adding a standing mechanism for updating the medications basket that will ratify continuity, which we initiated together with the Knesset Labor Committee, will be discussed soon, having passed the first reading in the previous Knesset.

4. A bill we initiated offering a program to replace the Wisconsin Program, which the Knesset Labor Committee will discuss.

Summary

Anti-democratic tendencies in the Knesset are gaining momentum and, regrettably, the Winter Session is expected to follow on the last session's trends. We feel, however, that it is important to point out that not all the anti-democratic bills were promoted, and that some of those that were promoted have undergone significant changes that minimized the damage they might cause. The last Knesset session stood out in laying the foundations for anti-democratic legislation, but the vast majority of the legislation processes concerning the aforementioned bills is not yet over. In this respect, the coming session will be a trying time. If the said bills should ripen and turn into state laws, their potential damage to democracy would be realized; but should the Knesset sober up and restrain itself, protecting our democracy against the tyranny of the majority, the Israeli parliament will pass the important test of the democracy's durability.

Even if the anti-democratic bills - some, or even all, of them - do not eventually become laws - even then, Israeli democracy will have already sustained a serious blow. For the issue has yet another, public and educational, lasting aspect. The winds blowing from the Knesset, through these legislative efforts, are already affecting the public, helping to create a public perception of Israeli Arabs as always suspect, of human rights activists and organizations as enemies of the State, and of basic democratic norms as subject to the majority's whims. Thus, the activities of many MKs, often supported by leading cabinet members, effectively provide the public with ongoing classes in anti-democracy.

In conclusion, we would like to cite remarks that the Knesset speaker made on 2 August 2010, addressing Foreign Ministry cadets, as published in Haaretz: "Certain MKs address the people's sentiments, and in doing so create an international image of Israel as an Apartheid state…. [Such MKs] create a wrongful discourse between Jews and Arabs in the Knesset that reflects on the existing conflict in the Israeli society."[12]

We hope that in the upcoming session, the MKs will sober up and change the parliament's direction, and that the trends of tyranny of the majority will be replaced by new approaches that will restore essential democratic values and reintroduce the need to protect them into the heart of our democracy. Either way - whether the Knesset mends its ways or not - ACRI will keep guarding democratic values, monitoring the Knesset's legislative processes, and doing everything it can to help promoting the values of equality, social justice, and human rights.


[1] See our letter to the Knesset speaker, dated 6 June 2010, following the flotilla events, and his reply dated 10 June 2010.
[2] See our letter to the President, the prime minister, and the Knesset speaker, dated 31 January 2010, concerning the delegitimization of human rights organizations.
[3] See our letter dated 21 July 2010
[4] See an ACRI position paper on the issue dated 25 June 2010.
[5] See an ACRI position paper on the issue dated 21 December 2009.
[6] See an ACRI position paper on the issue dated 9 August 2010.
[7] See an ACRI letter to the foreign minister, dated 1 September 2010.
[8] See an ACRI position paper by the Refugees' Rights Forum on the issue dated 4 June 2008.
[9] See a position paper on the issue dated 7 September 2010.
[10] See an ACRI position paper on the issue dated 4 July 2010.
[11] See the Knesset Speaker's letter dated 3 August 2010.
[12] http://www.haaretz.co.il/hasite/spages/1182847.html. Read the English translation of the article here.


The Association for Civil Rights in Israel.
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19 October 2010

Regisseur Mike Leigh protesteert tegen Israël

(Novum) - Regisseur Mike Leigh heeft zijn geplande reis naar Israël voor een filmfestival afgeblazen uit solidariteit met de Arabische inwoners van dat land. Leigh, zelf van Joodse afkomst, is het fundamenteel oneens met een nieuwe Israëlische wet.

In de wet staat dat elke niet-Joodse immigrant een eed van trouw moet afleggen aan de 'Joodse en democratische staat'. Dit wordt door velen als discriminatie gezien tegen de Arabische inwoners. In een brief aan de school die het filmfestival organiseert schrijft Leigh dat hij het al heel lang oneens is met de manier waarop Israël het beleid van de Gazastrook voert, maar dat deze wet 'de druppel was die de emmer deed overlopen'.

Het schoolhoofd zegt dat Israëlische kunstenaars steeds meer in een isolement terechtkomen vanwege de huidige Israëlische politiek. De 67-jarige Leigh, vooral bekend van zijn films Naked (1993) en Secrets & Lies (1996), zou naar Israël reizen om deel te nemen aan een filmfestival dat daar volgende maand plaatsvindt. (Nieuws.nl)

4 September 2010

Haaretz: Fascism is already here

If protesters didn't exist, Netanyahu, Livnat and Sa'ar would have to invent them. After all, these figures are the last living proof of a democratic regime in Israel.

Haaretz | By Yossi Sarid | 03.09.10


Israeli democracy is mainly for decoration, like a tree grown for its beauty, not to bear fruit. Few people actually use it or the rights it affords. Many are merely happy that they can vote in the Knesset elections, and even this number is getting smaller.

Does Israel's civic passivity stem from laziness or apathy or despair? That feeling that there's no way they can influence or change anything? And if governments suffice with running countries, this government is adamant about dictating the policies of the opposition - with an opposition comprised of such figures as Tzipi Livni, Shaul Mofaz and Tzachi Hanegbi, this is certainly possible. A democracy that is atrophying, that is not utilized on a daily basis, becomes an unnecessary tool.



Two ultra-Orthodox Jewish newspapers have altered a photo of Israel's new cabinet, removing two female ministers. Yated Neeman daily newspaper replaced the women with two men in the lower image. (BBC News 2009)

But here we find a paradox: Those who fight against democracy in order to destroy it, to set up an alternative state in its place, are the very people who know how to exploit it to the full. The settlers know, as do the rabbis, who teach their students how their "Jewish state" will look. During the past few months it appears as if fascism has already arrived here and is waiting just behind the wall. And even the genius of our times - for whom everything has been turned inside out - knows, judging by his weekly hot-air emissions. They use democracy in order to toss it out.

Here and there a few, the few who were lost in the desert, renounce them, but then immediately pounce on them to scare them and shut them up - the government and the rabble alike. And what can a person who wants to protest do when his soul has despaired of those who kill and those who are killed? When his soul is fed up with the occupation, and all he wants is that it should not manage to occupy his desires? Someone seeking salvation for his soul and ours - what is left for him to do?

If he participates in the popular struggle against the separation fence, he will be buried outside the fence of the cemetery; if he demonstrates in Sheikh Jarrah, he will feel the heavy hand of the police; if he is a university lecturer, they'll send the watchdogs after him in the name of Zionism; if he belongs to a theater troupe, someone who can still see the Green Line in his mind's eye, they will threaten the source of his income; if he is a school principal who tries not just to support settlements but to inculcate them, they will look for a different institution for him because that is not how we do things; if he is a judge who dares deny that security is of the utmost importance, they will blame him for bloodshed; if he is a journalist who refuses to join in the chorus, there will be cries to boycott his newspaper; if he is a citizen who wishes to protect a child being threatened with expulsion from the country, he too will be blacklisted as an enemy of the people; and a long list remains.

What a foolish government. If such people hadn't been around to break through the fences and hold their own, Benjamin Netanyahu, Limor Livnat and Gideon Sa'ar would've had to invite them to do so, to find a special clause in the budget to support them. After all, these figures are their alibis and the last living proof of a democratic regime in Israel.

Without them, this government would be left with only the inflated Eli Yishai and Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, who is constantly letting out hot air but, heaven forbid, should not be denounced as the national skunk. The prime minister pretends he can't hear and all the ministers keep mum just like him. How simple it is to condemn left-wing artists at the start of the cabinet meeting, to threaten to turn out the lights on their stage.

Next week the president will make his annual pilgrimage to the rabbi, to wish him a happy new year, a year in which all his wishes and desires will be fulfilled.

28 August 2010

'Palestijnse Ghandi' veroordeeld voor protesteren tegen Muur, EU protesteert, NL media zwijgen

De Europese Unie heeft zich uitgesproken tegen de veroordeling van onderwijzer Abdallah Abu Rahmah, organisator van de vreedzame protesten tegen de Muur in Bil'in. Hij werd na 8 maanden voorarrest door een militaire (sic) rechtbank veroordeeld wegens "deelname aan illegale protesten" en "ophitsing". Voor de aanklachten "het gooien van stenen" en "wapenbezit" werd hij vrijgesproken. Hij kan tot 10 jaar gevangenisstraf krijgen.


Hoofd Buitenlandse Zaken van de EU Catherine Ashton benadrukte dat Abu Rahmah een mensenrechtenactivist is en stelde weer eens dat Israëlische Muur illegaal is en gebouwd op Palestijns land. Het grootste gedeelte van de Muur is gebouwd voorbij de zogeheten Groene Lijn. Ashton benadrukte dat het recht op vreedzaam protesteren van de Palestijnen legitiem is.

In Bil'in werd ook deze levensbedreigende terroristenboot snel en vakkundig onschadelijk gemaakt door de helden van het bezettingsleger i.h.k.v. "zelfverdediging":

Palestinians and other activists run from gas canisters fired by Israeli security forces during a protest against Israel's storming of a Gaza-bound aid flotilla, near the controversial Israeli barrier in the West Bank village of Bilin near Ramallah June 4, 2010. The vehicle pictured was used during the protest to represent the aid flotilla.

De Nederlandse media zwijgen, want de EU veroordeelt Israël, en dat hoeft niemand te weten. De laatste berichten uit Israël/Palestijnse gebieden gaan over de overleden journalist Conny Mus en pogen de Iranofobie warm te houden want de wapenhandel, en de Amerikaanse subsidies voor Israël (8 miljoen dollar "militaire hulp" PER DAG) moet door. De laatste berichten over de Europese Unie gaan over schoolfruit en kloonkalfjes.

Links:
» Amnesty: Palestinian anti-wall protester convicted by Israeli military court
» Huffington Post: "Palestinian Gandhi" Convicted for Protesting; U.S. Silent
» Al Jazeera Video: EU slams Palestinian's conviction
» The Guardian: EU rebukes Israel over conviction of West Bank separation barrier protester
» BBC News: EU rebukes Israel for convicting Palestinian protester
» AP: EU slams Israel's verdict on Palestinian activist

'Pottenkijkers' bij het militaire geweld in Bil'in zijn niet populair:


Israeli troops push away photojournalists at the site of a protest against the controversial Israeli barrier in the West Bank village of Bilin 23 September 2005.

10 August 2010

Kunstenaars portretteren Avigdor Lieberman

TEL AVIV - 23 Israëlische kunstenaars geven hun visie op de extreemrechtse minister van Buitenlandse Zaken Avigdor Lieberman.

In de galerie Midrasha in Tel Aviv loopt een van de meest geruchtmakende exposities van dit moment in Israël. Onder leiding van curator Doreet Levitte Harten hebben 23 vooraanstaande Israëlische kunstenaars hun visie gegeven op de omstreden minister van Buitenlandse Zaken Avigdor Lieberman.

De in Moldavië geboren Lieberman staat bekend om zijn harde uitspraken, waarin vooral Palestijnse inwoners van Israël het doelwit zijn. Zijn partij Yisrael Beiteinu (Israël Ons Huis) won fors bij de jongste verkiezingen, met name door steun onder Russische migranten en kolonisten in bezet gebied.



Al weken voor de opening, afgelopen donderdag, leidde de tentoonstelling tot rumoer, zegt curator Levitte Harten. Anonieme bellers en briefschrijvers beschuldigden haar van het demoniseren van Lieberman. Rechter Adrian Agassi, die net als Lieberman aanhanger is van de radicale kolonistenbeweging, zei dat de tentoonstelling een belediging van de minister is. Hij riep bij de minister van Cultuur vergeefs op tot een verbod.

Veel kunstenaars die Levitte Harten om zich verzamelde, maken deel uit van de mondaine kunstscène in Tel Aviv, een omgeving waar Lieberman doorgaans wordt verafschuwd.

Sommige kunstenaars doen geen moeite om hun afkeer te verbergen. In het midden van de expositie valt een klein beeldje van papier-maché op: een roze varken. Dit beeld vinden ook sommige bezoekers van de galerie te ver gaan.

Performancekunstenaar Uri Katzenstein bond drie boormachines aan elkaar, gaf ze armen en laat het object met veel herrie autonoom ronddwalen door het gebouw. Zo is Lieberman, volgens Katzenstein: veel herrie, grillig, maar geen richting of idee.

Kunstenaar Gary Goldstein, uit Jeruzalem, verdiepte zich in het gezicht van Lieberman. Hij keek naar de blik in zijn ogen, het lachje om zijn gezicht, het typerende kleine stropdasje.

'Hoe langer ik ernaar keek, hoe minder ik er het gezicht van een angstaanjagende vijand in zag', zegt hij. 'Lieberman is eigenlijk een tragische persoon. Hij zit gevangen in extreme retoriek, in keiharde aanvallen op minderheden.'

(De Standaard)




"I just wanted to make something very simple and clear. If you put it in the context of this exhibition, it's obvious that Lieberman is a pig," Israeli artist Zoya Cherkassky, 33, told AFP at the Beit Berl Art College gallery. "If you take it out of context, it's just a pig," she added, pointing to her artwork.


Taken out of context, they're just two pigs.

17 July 2010

Engelse activisten tegen oorlogsmisdaden Gaza vrijgesproken

Goed nieuws, maar zoals gebruikelijk verzwegen door onze zelfbenoemde "kwaliteitskranten", aangezien het een succesvolle actie tegen Israël betreft, en die tevens de collaboratie van Groot-Brittannië met de Israëlische bezetting aanstipt. Zeven Engelse activisten vernielden in januari 2009 het interieur van de wapenfabriek met als doel om Israëlische oorlogsmisdaden te voorkomen. Rechter George Bathurst-Norman tot de jury:

"You may well think that hell on earth would not be an understatement of what the Gazans suffered in that time."



De wapenfabriek is EDO MBM in Brighton, onderdeel van de ITT Corporation, een grote wapenfabrikant met haar kantoor in de VS. In april 2009 gaf minister van buitenlandse Zaken David Milliband toe dat het bedrijf onderdelen maakt voor o.a. de F16 (bomrekken), die via de VS aan Israël worden geleverd, en dat deze gebruikt zijn voor het bloedbad van Gaza (Operation Cast Lead 2008-2009).



Globalinfo:

Goed nieuws: EDO-smashers vrij


Zeven antimilitaristen in Groot-Brittannië die in januari 2009 een wapenfabriek binnengedrongen waren en binnen de boel korte en klein hadden geslagen, zijn door de rechter vrijgesproken omdat ze hadden gehandeld om oorlogsmisdaden (van Israël tegen de Palestijnen) te voorkomen.

Ze waren tot hun besluit gekomen nadat ze hadden gezien hoe Israël een offensief gelanceerd had tegen de bevolking van Gaza. De betreffende wapenfabriek, EDO in Brighton, sinds 2007 onderdeel van ITT, levert een deel van de wapens die het Israëlische leger gebruikt. De activisten hadden het motto van de lokale campagne tegen de wapenfabriek, "Smash EDO" vervolgens nogal letterlijk genomen.

Rechter George Bathurst-Norman hield de jury voor dat "you may well think that hell on earth would not be an understatement of what the Gazans suffered in that time". Twee andere verdachten moesten later nog voorkomen en werden door de rechter ook vrijgesproken.

De actievoerders hebben maandenlang gevangen gezeten. Een van hen, Elijah Smith zelfs anderhalf jaar! Desondanks zijn ze allemaal vrolijk en van plan door te gaan met actievoeren tot EDO van de aardbodem verdwenen is. "Zij behoren in de beklaagdenbank, niet wij".



The Guardian:

Jury clears activists who broke into Brighton arms factory


Five found not guilty after arguing they were seeking to prevent Israeli war crimes in Gaza

Five activists who caused £180,000 damage to an arms factory were acquitted after they argued they were seeking to prevent Israeli war crimes.

The five were jubilant after a jury found them not guilty of conspiring to cause criminal damage to the factory on the outskirts of Brighton.

The five admitted they had broken in and sabotaged the factory, but argued they were legally justified in doing so.

They believed that EDO MBM, the firm that owns the factory, was breaking export regulations by manufacturing and selling to the Israelis military equipment which would be used in the occupied territories. They wanted to slow down the manufacture of these components, and impede what they believed were war crimes being committed by Israel against the Palestinians.

After being acquitted, one of them, Robert Nicholls, told the Guardian: "I'm joyful really, at being a free man. The action was impulsive really, we just wanted to do something that would make a real difference to the people of Palestine."

Another, Ornella Saibene, said: "I've felt very peaceful all the way through the trial because I'm proud of what I've done. It was the right thing to do."

They are the latest group of peace and climate-change activists to successfully use the "lawful excuse" defence – committing an offence to prevent a more serious crime – as a tactic in their campaigns. The acquitted are Nicholls, 52, Tom Woodhead, 25, Harvey Tadman, 44, Ornella Saibene, 50, all from Bristol, and Simon Levin, 35, from Brighton. They had decided to act last January after three weeks of Israeli military manoeuvres against Gaza in which many Palestinians were killed. According to a UN investigation by former South African judge Richard Goldstone, Israel committed war crimes by deliberately attacking civilians during the offensive known as Operation Cast Lead.

In his summing up, Judge George Bathurst-Norman suggested to the jury that "you may well think that hell on earth would not be an understatement of what the Gazans suffered in that time".

The judge highlighted the testimony by Caroline Lucas, the Green MP for Brighton Pavilion, that "all democratic paths had been exhausted" before the activists embarked on their action.

Hove crown court heard the activists had broken into the factory in the night. They had video-taped interviews beforehand outlining their intention to cause damage and, in the words of prosecutor Stephen Shay, "smash-up" the factory.

These statements were posted on the Indymedia website shortly after they were arrested. Dexter Dias, barrister for one of the defendants, accused Paul Hills, EDO MBM's managing director, of lying in the witness box when he said his company did not supply components which were being used by the Israeli military. The jury is considering its verdict on two other defendants, Elijah Smith, 42, and Chris Osmond, 29 of Brighton.


Hoewel de directeuren van EDO officieel oorlogsmisdadigers zijn (en sinds 1947 vervolgd kunnen worden), wordt het bedrijf beschermd door de overheid.



RESISTING WAR CRIME IS NOT A CRIME !

1 July 2010

War criminal and minister Ben-Eliezer: ' This business just isn't working anymore'

Israeli Minister of Trade, Industry and Labor, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, says the world is tired of Israel and that Israel, rather than the Gaza Strip, is actually blockaded.

"We're not the ones maintaining a blockade. We're blockaded, utterly isolated. We're in a situation where the world is tired of us," the Jewish Daily quoted Ben-Elezier as saying in an interview in the Yediot Ahronot Friday supplement.

"They're tired of hearing our explanations, of showing empathy for our troubles, even if they're real troubles. (The world is) Tired of understanding us. This business just isn't working anymore. After 43 years, nobody wants to hear any more explanations about why this occupation is continuing and how we have nobody to talk to." Elezier continued.

Born in 1936 in Basra in southern Iraq, Binyamin “Fuad” Ben-Eliezer is the senior leader of the Labor Party’s hawkish wing, a tough-as-nails ex-general and currently the party’s grand old man.

Press TV, 30 Jun 2010


Coca Cola honouring a war criminal


Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (L), and Defense Minister Brigadier-General Binyamin Ben Eliezer at an army camp outside the Palestinian refugee camp of Jenin in the West Bank, 10 April 2002, being briefed on the progress of the on-going slaughter of the Palestinian inhabitants which began 7 days ago.

In September 2009 Coca-Cola hosted a special reception at the Coca-Cola world headquarters to honour Brigadier-General Binyamin Ben-Eliezer[33][34], Israel's ex-Minister of Defense currently Minister of Industry, Trade & Labor. The reception was attended by the American-Israel Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors and almost 150 members of the American-Israel Chamber of Commerce[18]. Brigadier-General Binyamin Ben-Eliezer is a wanted war criminal. According to Dr.Aryeh Yitzhaki, a mainstream Israeli military historian, the IDF killed around a 1000 Egyptian POWs during the Six-Day War. Ben-Eliezer "Shaked unit" was responsible for one-third of those murders. [44][45]

Dr. Yitzhaki reports that Palestinian volunteers in the Egyptian army were executed Nazi-style in El-Arish in 1967. Gabby Biron, a right-wing journalist who witnessed the murder of about 10 POWs before being forced to leave, confirmed Yitzhaki's report. Biron says that Israeli intelligence officers put POWs one by one through a short interrogation. If the IDF determined by the prisoner's accent that he was Palestinian, he was taken behind the building, forced to dig his own grave, and shot. According to Holocaust survivors, the incident bears a striking similarity to Nazi tactics.[46][44][43]


Defense Minister Brigadier-General Binyamin Ben Eliezer(L), Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Moshe Yaalon (C) and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (R) - three war criminals.[61]

Ben-Eliezer was the First Commanding Officer in Southern Lebanon, appointed in 1977, acting as a liaison between the local Christian militias and Israel, laying the foundations for the collaboration which would result in the Sabra Shatilla massacre in 1982. From 1978-1981 he was the Military Governor of the West Bank and from 1983-1984 he was the Government Coordinator of Activities in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Under Sharon, Ben-Eliezer served as Defence Minister (Mar 2001- Oct 2002) during Operation Defensive Shield where Israel brutally attacked and reoccupied Palestinian cities perpetrating war crimes with total disregard for civilian populations, prominent among them was the massacre at Jenin.

Source & footnotes: Inminds UK



Jenin 2002




The burned remains of a Palestinian boy lay amidst toys in a house destroyed by Israeli soldiers in the Jenin refugee camp Saturday, April 13, 2002.


A Palestinian woman looks at dead bodies in a house in the refugee camp in the West Bank town of Jenin, April 13, 2002.


April 15: UN Commission on Human Rights Condemns Israeli Mass Killings in Palestine


April 17: Red Cross workers cover the remains of a Palestinian woman killed by Israeli soldiers in the Jenin refugee camp.



They were warned by loudspeaker to get out of the house before I come, but I gave no one a chance. I didn't wait. I didn't give one blow, and wait for them to come out. I would just ram the house with full power, to bring it down as fast as possible. I wanted to get to the other houses. To get as many as possible. ...

Many people were inside houses we started to demolish. They would come out of the houses we were working on. I didn't see, with my own eyes, people dying under the blade of the D-9. and I didn't see house falling down on live people. But if there were any, I wouldn't care at all. I am sure people died inside these houses, but it was difficult to see, there was lots of dust everywhere, and we worked a lot at night. I found joy with every house that came down, because I knew they didn't mind dying, but they cared for their homes. If you knocked down a house, you buried 40 or 50 people for generations. If I am sorry for anything, it is for not tearing the whole camp down.

(source)

Albert Heijn verkoopt producten uit illegale Israëlische nederzetingen



Welke producten

Israëlische producten in Nederlandse supermarkten

In Nederland richt het BDS platform zich vooral op verkoop van Israëlische producten in de supermarkten. Vaak komen deze ook nog uit de illegale nederzettingen. Wij willen in eerste instantie dat Albert Heijn als marktleider het goede voorbeeld geeft en stopt met de verkoop van Israëlische Apartheid!

>Let op de stickers en land van herkomst op de bordjes bij de producten. De supermarkt beslist zelf welke groenten en fruit worden ingekocht en dat kan per week verschillen!

Check: www.youtube.com/watch?v=N2nrNn7-B2g

In Nederlandse supermarkten gaat het vooral om:

Sinaasappelen (merk Jaffa), Avocados (merk Kedem), Mangos, Kleine tomaatjes, Selderij, Paprika, Zoete mais, Aardappels, Dadels

Broodbeleg van het merk Sabra en Maza (humus en babaganoush)

Vegetarische producten van het merk Tivall (is nu huismerk AH)

Wijn van de Galil Mountain Winery, the Golan Heights Winery and the Dalton Winery.

De Golan Heights Winery heeft veel wijngaarden op bezet gebied in de Golan Hoogte (in 1967 bezet  van Syrië)

De acties van het BDS platform richten zich op Albert Heijn die als marktleider een voorbeeld voor moreel verantwoordelijk zakendoen moet stellen. Albert Heijn profileert zichzelf met de slogan ‘Puur en Eerlijk‘ maar er is niets eerlijks aan producten waarop Made in Israël staat terwijl ze gekweekt zijn op gestolen grond met gestolen water. Wij vragen de Albert Heijn dan ook om te stoppen met de verkoop van deze producten. AH heeft ons per brief laten weten dat zij het standpunt innemen dat zolang de overheid niet tot een boycot overgaat, AH dat ook niet doet. Wij vinden echter dat AH net als alle grote bedrijven zelf verantwoordelijkheid moeten nemen en geen bedrijven moeten steunen die profiteren van een illegale bezetting. Daarom blijven wij AH en het publiek benaderen en informeren. Wij staan regelmatig met lokale actiegroepen bij AH’s door het hele land om handtekeningen te verzamelen achterop onze actiekaarten. Deze zullen vervolgens aangeboden worden aan het management van Albert Heijn. Als je wilt weten of in jouw buurt ook een actiegroep actief is, mail ons dan via bdsnederland@gmail.com

BDSederland Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions

Ook op dit weblog: Albert Heijn misleidt zijn klanten

30 June 2010

The invisible Israelis - Something is missing in the PLO report

The Palestinian Monitoring Group at the Negotiations Affairs Department of the Palestine Liberation Organization is continuing on a daily basis to report the events of the previous day. The report is concise and tends to be repetitive, with some omissions that are understandable and others that are not. (For example, they do not keep track of Israeli bureaucratic harassment, perhaps because they lack the manpower to keep an eye on all these events ). The report provides boring but necessary statistics that remind us where we are living.


Israeli activists are detained by Israeli border police during a protest near a disputed house in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, Friday, May 14, 2010. According to Israeli police 30 left-wing Israeli activists were detained Friday during a protest.

In the past week, a daily average of 174 occupation-related incidents were reported in the West Bank (including East Jerusalem ) and the Gaza Strip. What brought the average down was Saturday, which had a mere 138 events, mainly because there were no "wall construction events," which are counted on other days (at present at 19 sites ). This daily item also does not appear in the summary for May. That is perhaps one of the reasons why the daily average in May is much lower than what is mentioned in the daily reports.

Six Palestinians were killed during May - four armed men and a 65-year-old civilian by fire from the Israel Defense Forces in the Gaza Strip, while in the West Bank, settlers apparently shot and killed a 16-year-old youth who apparently threw stones. Outside this count, there was also a year-and-a-half old toddler from the village of Beit Ummar who choked to death after inhaling tear gas and a woman from the same village who was killed by an Israeli car.

A total of 70 people were injured, including 10 children and nine armed Palestinians in Gaza, both by the IDF and settlers. During the month of May, 289 Palestinians were arrested (two in Gaza ) and the largest number in the Jerusalem district - 66. Among these were 35 minors and 16 Palestinian security officers.

During the past few months, another sub-chapter has been added to the daily report - "Provocation" of the Palestinian security forces by the Israeli army. There were 22 such events in May, a rise of 83.3 percent over the previous month. What is considered provocation? For example, there were eight cases in which Israeli troops presented Palestinian security forces with a summons to the Shin Bet security forces - including a general intelligence officer from Jerusalem and three officers of the national security force who returned from training in Jordan via the Allenby Bridge. There were also three instances in which an Israeli unit was stationed right next to positions held by the Palestinian police or preventive security forces. The statistics also note 11 cases where Palestinian security officers were stopped and their vehicles searched, including three buses carrying 150 officers from the national security force at the Hamra roadblock in the Jordan Valley.

Indirect statement

The choice of the term "provocation" in connection with the Palestinian security forces is interesting. Unintentionally, this term gives legitimacy to the army's others actions - raids, shooting and arrests. This term exposes, clearly without meaning to do so, the philosophy of coordination between the security forces, a philosophy that is distorted by the IDF and the Shin Bet when they treat Palestinians in uniform as they do any other person, that is, as part of an occupied people.

The IDF carried out 669 raids in civilian residential areas during May, 25 of these in the Gaza Strip. On June 19, a week ago Saturday, for example, there were 18 raids. They included one in the village of Azoun and another in the village of Iraq Bourin. In Iraq Bourin the residents were demonstrating against the expropriation of their lands when the army raided the village and declared it a closed military area. Clashes broke out with the residents. The army used tear gas and started shooting rubber-coated bullets. A wheat field went up in flames when tear gas grenades fell there. In a similar demonstration three months earlier, two youths were killed by live fire.

Of 35 raids on June 23, one took place in Gaza. A large force of armored vehicles and a bulldozer entered an agricultural area east of the large village of Abasan El Khabira. While the bulldozer was digging up the earth, intensive fire was directed toward the houses. The daily report takes pains to note that at 2:55 P.M. and at 7:30 P.M., fire was opened from Abasan in the direction of an Israeli patrol on the Green Line, and that the IDF returned fire.

The Palestinian group noted 82 incidents of settlers' violence during May. This is a 4.7 percent drop as compared with April but a 39 percent rise compared with March.

Mainly on Fridays, there is another clause in the report - "Demonstrations." On June 18, at 1:30 P.M. in Bil'in, at 1.40 P.M. at Na'alin, at 2 P.M. at the court checkpoint, at 2:10 P.M. at Nabi Salah. The court checkpoint in East Ramallah (on the way to the settlement of Beit El ) has for a decade blocked direct access to Ramallah from 19 villages.

The group's reports speak of "international peace activists" who participated in demonstrations and were also detained by the army. Spokesmen for the popular struggle committees reported that three activists were detained on the same day in Bil'in, a British woman and two Israeli women.

No coincidence

The omission of the Israeli presence in the demonstrations is systematic and not coincidental. Even in the weekly regular demonstration at Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem, according to the daily report, there is massive participation by "international peace activists." But we know that the demonstration's organizers, most of the participants and most of those arrested are Israelis. True, there are Palestinians who oppose any joint activity with Israelis against the occupation and who consider it part of the "normalization" (befriending the occupier, accepting the occupation as a normal situation ) that they reject (therefore they are cross with the Popular Struggle Committees, which consider Israelis active against the occupation as partners to all intents and purposes ).

It seems their influence has permeated the PLO's Negotiations Department as well, which is one of the strongholds for meetings with Israelis, even of the type that perpetuates the occupation. Perhaps in the political department they are afraid that mentioning the regular activity of the Israelis who oppose the occupation will cast suspicion on them as promoting "normalization" with the occupation.

Haaretz | By Amira Hass | 28.06.10


An Ultra-Orthodox Jewish man gestures as he stands outside the house of the Palestinian Kurd family who were evicted by Israeli settlers in east Jerusalem's Arab quarter of Sheikh Jarrah on April 17, 2010.


Palestinians, foreign and Israeli activists hold banners during a demonstration in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, Friday, April 2, 2010.


An Israeli activist is detained by Israeli border police during a protest near a disputed house in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, Friday, May 14, 2010.


A Palestinian woman whose house has been occupied by Jewish settlers argue with Israelis who came to celebrate Jerusalem Day on May 12, 2010 in front of her disputed house in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah.


An Israeli soldier smokes a cigarette as he stands guard next Israeli settlers gesturing opposite Palestinians (not seen) camping outside their homes from which they have been expelled in the Jerusalem's Sheikh Jarrah quarter on April 10, 2010.


Palestinians and left wing Israelis demonstrate during a rally against the eviction of Palestinians from their homes in favor of Jewish settlers who claim ownership, in the east Jerusalem neighborhood in Sheikh Jarrah, Saturday, March 6, 2010.