Labels

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Israelis Evict Palestinians

Israeli border police remove a Palestinian activist from an outpost of tents in a disputed area known as E1. Ammar Awad/Reuters
The encampment, which the protesters called the village of Bab al-Shams (Arabic for “Gate of the Sun”), represented a new kind of action by Palestinian grass-roots activists involved in what they describe as the nonviolent popular struggle against the Israeli occupation. 

Employing a tactic more commonly used by Jewish settlers who establish wildcat outposts in the West Bank, the protesters had pitched their tents on Friday on what they said was privately owned land, and with the permission of the Palestinian landowners. They were immediately served eviction notices by the Israeli military authorities, but their lawyers had obtained a temporary injunction against their removal from the High Court of Justice until the state detailed the grounds for such a move. 

But on Saturday evening, with the end of the Sabbath, the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a statement saying he had ordered security forces to evacuate “forthwith” the Palestinians...READ MORE

Saturday, January 12, 2013

"We know the [Israeli] army follow us on Twitter and Facebook, so we made out we were holding a protest somewhere else."

The tent village in the area known as E1, near Jerusalem. Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters

State of Palestine

[FACEBOOK]Like This Page ·

Bab al-Shams Village... We, the sons and daughters of Palestine

Bab al-Shams Village
We, the sons and daughters of Palestine from all throughout the land, announce the establishment of Bab al-Shams Village (Gate of the Sun). We the people, without permits from the occupation, without permission from anyone, sit here today because this is our land and it is our right to inhabit it.

A few months ago the Israeli government announced its intention to build about 4000 settlement housing units in the area Israel refers to as E1. E1 block is an area of about 13 square km that falls on confiscated Palestinian land East of Jerusalem between Ma'ale Adumim settlement, which lies on occupied West Bank Palestinian land, and Jerusalem. We will not remain silent as settlement expansion and confiscation of our land continues. Therefore we hereby establish the village of Bab al-Shams to proclaim our faith in direct action and popular resistance. We declare that the village will stand steadfast until the owners of this land will get their right to build on their land.

The village's name is taken from the novel, 'Bab al-Shams,' by Lebanese writer Elias Khoury. The book depicts the history of Palestine through a love story between a Palestinian man, Younis, and his wife Nahila. Younis leaves his wife to join the Palestinian resistance in Lebanon while Nahila remains steadfast in what remains of their village in the Galilee. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Younis smuggles through Lebanon and back to the Galilee to meet his wife in the 'Bab Alshams' cave, where she gives birth to their children. Younis returns to the resistance in Lebanon as his wife remains in Bab Al Shams.

Bab al-Shams is the gate to our freedom and steadfastness. Bab al-Shams is our gate to Jerusalem. Bab al-Shams is the gate to our to our return.

For decades, Israel has established facts on the ground as the International community remained silent in response to these violations. The time has come now to change the rules of the game, for us to establish facts on the ground - our own land. This action involving women and men from the north to the south is a form of popular resistance. In the coming days we will hold various discussion groups, educational and artistic presentations, as well as film screenings on the lands of this village. The residents of Bab al-Shams invite all the sons and daughters of our people to participate and join the village in supporting our resilience.

Palestinians Set Up Tents Where Israel Plans Homes

Palestinians erected tents in the contested piece of Israeli-occupied West Bank territory known as E1 on Friday. Jim Hollander/European Pressphoto Agency
Israel says that most of the E1 area is Israeli land. Protest leaders said they had set up their encampment on a parcel of land owned by a Palestinian family from A-Tur, a neighborhood of East Jerusalem. They added that the landowners had given their full permission for the encampment and had joined the activists at the site. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/12/world/middleeast/palestinians-set-up-camp-in-israeli-occupied-west-bank-territory.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_ee_20130112&_r=0

By
Published: January 11, 2013

JERUSALEM — Adopting a tactic more commonly employed by Jewish settlers who establish wildcat outposts in the West Bank, scores of Palestinian activists erected tents on Friday in a hotly contested piece of Israeli-occupied West Bank territory known as E1, and they said they intended to stay put...READ MORE


Thursday, January 10, 2013

Israel continues to demolish Palestinian homes- and peace

Jamal K Kanj: January 2013, 4 story house belonging to a Palestinian family demolished in E Jerusalem, while Israeli Government financed illegal Jewish only settlements
Photo of the day: Palestinian dejected as his house is being demolished by a racist gov which permits building illegal Jewish only homes in East Jerusalem.

Israel uses the crisis in Syria to try to coerce Abbas into relinquishing Palestinian refugee rights

Palestinians cross a road flooded and swept away by heavy rains in the northern West Bank village of Kabatyeh, Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013.  (AP Photo/Mohammed Ballas)

http://news.yahoo.com/palestinian-leader-rejects-deal-syria-refugees-105551580.html

Palestinian leader rejects deal on Syria refugees

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas says he rejected a conditional Israeli offer to allow Palestinians from war-torn Syria to resettle in the West Bank and Gaza.

Palestinians in Syria are descendants of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled or were expelled in the war over Israel's creation in 1948.

The fate of Palestinians uprooted by Israel's creation is an explosive issue. Israel worries that a mass influx of Palestinians could destroy the notion of a Jewish state.

Last month, Abbas asked the U.N. to seek Israeli permission to bring Palestinians caught in Syria's civil war to the Palestinian territories.

Abbas said in comments published Thursday that Israel linked its acceptance to refugees relinquishing claims to returning to what is now Israel.

Abbas says "we rejected that."

Israeli officials declined comment.


*****
Abbas to U.N.: help Syria refugees enter Palestinian territory December 19, 2012

Snow covers the Dome of the Rock in the Old City Photograph: Darren Whiteside/Reuters
A Palestinian man, and a snowman, stand on the roof of a house near the Dome of the Rock Photograph: Abir Sultan/EPA
Palestinians play in the snow next to a section of Israel's separation barrier in Qalandia, between Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah Photograph: Majdi Mohammed/AP

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Walls and winter rains afflict Palestinian towns

Maan News Photos Palestine Floods
 http://news.yahoo.com/walls-winter-rains-afflict-palestinian-towns-144516399.html



QALQILYA, West Bank (Reuters) - Heavy winter downpours have turned some Palestinian lands in the occupied West Bank into a morass of filth and flooding as an Israeli barrier blocks the waters from draining away.

In Qalqilya, a town of 42,000 in the northern West Bank almost completely surrounded by the concrete wall, Khaled Kandeel and his family huddled by an open fire in a shed as trash-laden water swelled through his pear orchard.

"Before the wall, the water used to drain fine, and flowed down to the sea easily. They could just flip a switch and end our suffering, but they don't," Kandeel said, his breath steamy from the winter cold.
Israel started building the barrier, a mix of metal fencing, barbed wire and concrete walls, in 2002 in response to a wave of Palestinian suicide bombings.

Drainage channels run under the imposing ramparts but their automated metal gates are mostly closed and now clogged with refuse and stones that block the outflow of storm water.

The Israeli military, citing security reasons, generally bars locals from clearing the obstructions or digging their own channels close to the barrier.

Built mostly within occupied land and not on the "Green Line" which was Israel's de facto border before the 1967 Middle East War, the barrier inside the West Bank is deemed illegal by the U.N.'s International Court of Justice.

It directly impacts the farming, grazing and environment of about 170 communities, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) says.

Hemmed-in residents of northern towns in the West Bank have been deprived of large swathes of rural land, forcing poorly-regulated waste dumping closer to farms and homes.

Driving rain could not mask the stench of raw sewage being unloaded from a tanker on a village road outside Qalqilya on Tuesday, its putrid contents mixing with the brown torrent pouring past olive trees clustered on the hills.

"Raw sewage is disposed near, or on, agricultural land resulting in the contamination of soil and groundwater," UNRWA said in a report.

SUNK SOUQ
Planning restrictions, inked as part of interim peace accords by Israeli and Palestinian negotiators almost two decades ago, widely limit locals' ability to build water infrastructure or repair damaged or polluted wells.

But in Hebron, whose old city is a flashpoint of conflict with Jewish settlers, rare coordination with the Israeli military allowed Palestinian officials to lift the concrete slabs which separate the ethnic enclaves to relieve flooding.

"We removed the concrete to prevent the passage of water to the old city souq, where flooding reached up to one meter," said Walid Abu Halawa of Hebron...READ MORE

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Excellent letter in the Guardian by Keith Lichman RE Israel's drift

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jan/08/steady-drift-right-israel

While Jonathan Freedland's evident horror at Israel's shift to the right is welcome (Comment, 5 January), his explanations fail to account for the country's steady drift to the right since its inception and the ineluctable logic of imposing a Jewish state in someone else's country. The internal contradictions of a state in which the rights of Jewish and Palestinian citizens were supposedly "separate but equal" could only be resolved by the transformation of the state into one of genuine equality, ie a secular democracy, or by the rising hegemony of those who celebrated separateness and inequality.

That religious extremism and rightwing anti-egalitarians have become dominant in Israel is inextricably linked to the theocratic underpinning of the state. Like most other European Jews, I lost family in the Holocaust and I have experienced racism in the country of my birth, but my survival as an English Jew does not depend on the existence of the state of Israel and my right to "return" to a country to which I have never been. It depends on my being treated as a human being with the same rights and needs as everyone else. The same rights that everyone born in Israel or Palestine or anywhere else in the world should have.

Keith Lichman
London

My letter to the Washington Post RE Wading into the Middle East morass By Jackson Diel

Film Forum Emad Burnat is a Palestinian farmer who lives with his wife and four small children in the village of Bil’in in the central West Bank. Teamed with Israeli filmmaker Guy Davidi, the two men document Burnat’s experiences with his neighbors, the Israeli army, and Israeli activists as his village is increasingly drawn into a multi-year conflict over the construction of a barrier that will confiscate much of the village’s cultivated land. His “five broken cameras” are all shot or smashed in the course of nonviolent demonstrations by the villagers: olive trees are burnt; buildings are bulldozed and lives are lost.

RE: Wading into the Middle East morass By Jackson Diel
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/jackson-diehl-wading-into-the-middle-east-morass/2013/01/06/8879ec84-55c6-11e2-8b9e-dd8773594efc_story.html

Dear Editor,

Times change- awareness is raised: 5 Broken Cameras, a deeply personal, first-hand account of non-violent resistance in Bil’in, a Palestinian village threatened by encroaching Israeli settlements, is up for an Oscar.

Awareness has been raised and continues to rise- that is not a morass, that is a golden opportunity to finally move beyond the extremist rhetoric, militancy, cynicism, religious idiocy, bigotry, ignorance, misinformation and propaganda that has been sabotaging peace in the Middle East for decades.

Sincerely,
Anne Selden Annab

NOTES

The Office of International Religious Freedom ( http://www.state.gov/j/drl/irf/)   Given the U.S. commitment to religious freedom, and to the international covenants that guarantee it as the inalienable right of every human being, the United States seeks to:
Promote freedom of religion and conscience throughout the world as a fundamental human right and as a source of stability for all countries

Palestinian Refugees(1948-NOW) refused their right to return... and their right to live in peace free from religious bigotry and injustice.

".... it being clearly understood that nothing
          shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious
          rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine..."

The Golden Rule... Do unto others as you would have them do unto you

"Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home - so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world. Yet they are the world of the individual person; the neighborhood he lives in; the school or college he attends; the factory, farm, or office where he works. Such are the places where every man, woman, and child seeks equal justice, equal opportunity, equal dignity without discrimination. Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere. Without concerted citizen action to uphold them close to home, we shall look in vain for progress in the larger world." Eleanor Roosevelt


The Arab Peace Initiative

Refugees and the Right of Return
Palestinian refugees must be given the option to exercise their right of return (as well as receive compensation for their losses arising from their dispossession and displacement) though refugees may prefer other options such as: (i) resettlement in third countries, (ii) resettlement in a newly independent Palestine (even though they originate from that part of Palestine which became Israel) or (iii) normalization of their legal status in the host country where they currently reside.  What is important is that individual refugees decide for themselves which option they prefer – a decision must not be imposed upon them.

My letter to the NYTimes RE Israel’s True Friends by Roger Cohen

1856 map of ancient Palestine
RE:  Israel’s True Friends by Roger Cohen
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/08/opinion/israels-true-friends.html?ref=global&_r=0

Dear Editor,

Negotiations shaped to entrench sovereign violations of international law and the Palestinians basic human rights become another weapon of war rather than a tool of peace: 

Israel's continued settlement expansion in the West Bank is indeed self-defeating and wrong... AND so is Israel's ongoing refusal to respect the Palestinian refugees' inalienable legal and natural right to return to original homes and lands.

A good faith quest for a two state solution recognizes that rampant religious extremism, bigotry, and hate mongering are making a bad situation worse, with dangerous ramifications world wide.

Compromise for both sides is agreeing that there are two separate sovereign states where once there was one area referred to in our history books and on antique maps as historic Palestine. 

Compromise for both sides is finding ways to ensure that all people, regardless of supposed race, religion or gender are respected equals protected by the rule of fair and just laws.

Sincerely,
Anne Selden Annab

NOTES

The Office of International Religious Freedom ( http://www.state.gov/j/drl/irf/)   Given the U.S. commitment to religious freedom, and to the international covenants that guarantee it as the inalienable right of every human being, the United States seeks to:
Promote freedom of religion and conscience throughout the world as a fundamental human right and as a source of stability for all countries
Palestinian Refugees(1948-NOW) refused their right to return... and their right to live in peace free from religious bigotry and injustice.

".... it being clearly understood that nothing
          shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious
          rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine..."

The Golden Rule... Do unto others as you would have them do unto you

"Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home - so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world. Yet they are the world of the individual person; the neighborhood he lives in; the school or college he attends; the factory, farm, or office where he works. Such are the places where every man, woman, and child seeks equal justice, equal opportunity, equal dignity without discrimination. Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere. Without concerted citizen action to uphold them close to home, we shall look in vain for progress in the larger world." Eleanor Roosevelt

 

Palestinian refugees must be given the option to exercise their right of return (as well as receive compensation for their losses arising from their dispossession and displacement) though refugees may prefer other options such as: (i) resettlement in third countries, (ii) resettlement in a newly independent Palestine (even though they originate from that part of Palestine which became Israel) or (iii) normalization of their legal status in the host country where they currently reside.  What is important is that individual refugees decide for themselves which option they prefer – a decision must not be imposed upon them.