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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Hamas Rising?

"If the Israelis, Americans and Europeans prefer to deal with Hamas rather than Mahmoud Abbas and Fayyad, they need only continue their current policies. And if they then find themselves unhappy with a new Islamist-dominated Palestinian national movement, they can rest assured they sat by and watched it happen in real time, and did absolutely nothing to stop it." Hussein Ibish
Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh and the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani arrive to a ceremony in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. (Mohammed Salem-Pool / Getty Images)

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/10/24/hamas-rising.html

Hamas Rising?



Is everyone conspiring to undermine the Palestinian Authority and promote Hamas? This morning, in the context of yesterday's visit of the Emir of Qatar to Gaza, with his pledges of massive financial and diplomatic support, it sure looks that way.
 
The biggest threat to the PA is a fiscal crisis originating in its quixotic U.N. membership bid of September 2012, which produced a confrontation with its main donors, particularly the United States.

The PA requires approximately $1 billion in external funding annually. The biggest individual donor has been the United States, and the biggest collective one the European Union. As a result of the inevitable failure at the U.N. last year, aid to the PA from both has dropped to approximately half of its previous level. And half of the remaining American aid, $200 million, remains on congressional hold. Meanwhile, numerous Arab states have failed to meet their own pledges.

The result is that the institution-building program led by Prime Minister Salam Fayyad is paralyzed. Public employee salaries are being paid piecemeal, services cut and taxes increased. The cost of living has shot through the roof. All of this has killed the promise that responsible governance could provide a measure of hope at a time of diplomatic impasse. Palestinians can no longer reasonably expect improvements in their quality of life even if they have to wait for progress towards independence.

The inevitable consequence has been the destabilization and discrediting of the PA, and real questions about its stability and future...READ MORE

My letter to the Guardian RE The death of the Israel-Palestine two-state solution brings fresh hope by Rachel Shabi

RE:  The death of the Israel-Palestine two-state solution brings fresh hope by
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/oct/23/israel-palestine-two-state-solution

Dear Sir,

The Guardian's own intrepid reporter Harriet Sherwood recently explained that "More than two-thirds of Israeli Jews say that 2.5 million Palestinians living in the West Bank should be denied the right to vote if the area was annexed by Israel, in effect endorsing an apartheid state"  Israeli poll finds majority in favour of 'apartheid' policies

The poll also mentions that among Israel's ultra-Orthodox Jews "95% backing discrimination against Arabs in the workplace."

The death of the Israel-Palestine two-state solution does not bring fresh hope. It is the exact same situation that has been arming religious extremism and bigotry and cynicism on both sides for more than six decades, pushing Palestinians into poverty and forced exile at every turn, individually as well as collectively.

A fully secular two state solution to actually end the Israel-Palestine conflict really is the best way forward.... and it is never ever too late to tear down apartheid walls, remove illegal settlements, empower compassion and invest in real justice and a lasting peace based on full respect for international law and universal basic human rights.

Sincerely,
Anne Selden Annab

NOTES
Israeli poll finds majority in favour of 'apartheid' policies

C-SPAN: IMF Warns of Palestinian Authority's Financial Collapse: Middle East Institute Discussion on the Political and Economic Implications of the Palestinian Authority's Fiscal Crisis

Ibrahim Abu-Ta'a: Obama and Romney need to confront, solve Israeli-Palestinian divisions

Accountability & a Confession

Israel vs. No. 2 Pencils... Palestinians have suffered from a profound lack of sovereignty for decades now

How blaming the West hides a war on women

Group decries plans for army college on Mount of Olives

Maen Rashid Areikat: Israeli settlements are no ‘secondary issue’

Churches for Middle East Peace: Beginning of Harvest Season in Palestine Brings Violence

UN envoy alarmed by reports of Israeli settlers attacking Palestinian farmers


ATFP's Hussein Ibish: Where Settler Terrorism Comes From

William Hague intervenes over West Bank barrier: Foreign secretary shares concern with Archbishop of Westminster in private letter about Israeli-built wall

''The Life of a Palestinian''

Muslims who would restrict speech to "protect Islam" have no greater allies than Jews who would do so to "protect Israel."


King Abdullah II of Jordan: The reason behind Tehran’s nuclear programme is the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.


************

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

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






Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Israeli poll finds majority in favour of 'apartheid' policies

Two-thirds say Palestinians should not be allowed to vote if West Bank was annexed, while three in four favour segregated roads
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/oct/23/israeli-poll-majority-apartheid-policies
Israeli soldiers walk past a settlement in the West Bank. Almost six in 10 Israeli Jews said the country already practised apartheid. Photograph: Majdi Mohammed/AP

More than two-thirds of Israeli Jews say that 2.5 million Palestinians living in the West Bank should be denied the right to vote if the area was annexed by Israel, in effect endorsing an apartheid state, according to an opinion poll reported in Haaretz.

Three out of four are in favour of segregated roads for Israelis and Palestinians in the West Bank, and 58% believe Israel already practises apartheid against Palestinians, the poll found.

A third want Arab citizens within Israel to be banned from voting in elections to the country's parliament. Almost six out of 10 say Jews should be given preference to Arabs in government jobs, 49% say Jewish citizens should be treated better than Arabs, 42% would not want to live in the same building as Arabs and the same number do not want their children going to school with Arabs.

A commentary by Gideon Levy, which accompanied the results of the poll, described the findings as disturbing...READ MORE

C-SPAN: IMF Warns of Palestinian Authority's Financial Collapse: Middle East Institute Discussion on the Political and Economic Implications of the Palestinian Authority's Fiscal Crisis


http://www.c-span.org/Events/IMF-Warns-of-Palestinian-Authority39s-Financial-Collapse/10737435214/

IMF Warns of Palestinian Authority's Financial Collapse

Washington, DC
Tuesday, October 23, 2012

In September, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund warned donor nations attending the opening sessions of the United Nations that the ongoing financial crisis in Gaza and the West Bank threatened to bring down the Palestinian Authority (PA).

Facing a $400 million shortfall in its annual $2.5 billion budget, the PA, also the biggest employer in Gaza and the West Bank, has adopted austerity measures leading to high unemployment and civil unrest.

The shortfall is a result of politics and the global economic slowdown. Donor nations such as Saudi Arabia have failed to make promised payments due to falling revenues. Payments from the U.S. fell dramatically after the PA appealed to the Security Council for recognition as a member state. Congress promptly voted to withhold regular payments to the PA.

The State Department has restored some of those funds, but is threatening to withhold more if the PA does not return to the negotiations for a two-state solution with Israel.

Oussama Kanaan, one of the International Monetary Fund officials who commissioned the report, discusses the PA financial crisis with Khaled Elgindy of the Brookings Institution and Robert Danin of the Council on Foreign Relations

Hussein Ibish of the American Task Force on Palestine moderates this event hosted by the Middle East Institute

MEI's George and Rhonda Salem Family Foundation Lecture Series and the SAIS Conflict Management Program Present:
The Political and Economic Implications of the Palestinian Authority's Fiscal Crisis
 
featuring    
Robert Danin
Council on Foreign Relations

Khaled Elgindy
Brookings Institution
and
Oussama Kanaan
International Monetary Fund
moderated by
Hussein Ibish

Ibrahim Abu-Ta'a: Obama and Romney need to confront, solve Israeli-Palestinian divisions

Ibrahim Abu Ta'a nursing a broken leg at Jerusalem's Sha'arei Tzedek Medical Center after being attacked by a group of Jews on September 6, 2012 (photo credit: Yoav Ari Dudkevitch/Flash90) Times of Israel

[AS ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ GOOD ARTICLES IN FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and conversations) THAT EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE & PEACE... and hopefully Palestine]

Obama and Romney need to confront, solve Israeli-Palestinian divisions
By Ibrahim Abu-Ta'a, Palestinian resident of East Jerusalem
October 22, 2012
 
I was born and raised in Jerusalem. Most of my work colleagues are Jewish, and despite the growing tension between Jews and Palestinians in Israel, years of working together have made us quite close. I speak Hebrew fluently, as well as my native Arabic, and I have always engaged my Jewish acquaintances with the same openness and respect I would give to anyone else.
At the annual employee appreciation party for the upscale Jerusalem hotel where I work as an accounts representative, one of my Jewish colleagues, a good friend, had too much to drink. She asked another co-worker and me to give her a ride home. When we arrived at the apartment she shares with her family, she assured us that she would be able to continue on her own. But when she exited the car, she promptly lost her balance. As we got out to help her, a group of nine Israeli-Jewish teenagers approached us and asked what was going on. We responded in Hebrew that everything was fine so they began to walk away.  With a look of concern, my friend turned to speak to me. “Ibrahim,” she said, less quietly than intended, “leave them be.”
Today I know that if my name had been Avraham, and not Ibrahim, I would not have been attacked that night several weeks ago. Ibrahim is the Arabic version for the Bible’s Avraham. Nowadays, however, instead of hearing the slight variation in pronunciation, people hear Palestinian, or Jewish. And, within seconds after my friend uttered my name, I felt the pressure of a hand grab my shoulder, as eight other men joined in pummeling my body. One of my attackers struck my left leg with a heavy iron rod, shattering the bone and sending me to the ground. I remember trying to protect my face, while I faded in and out of consciousness....READ MORE

Monday, October 22, 2012

Accountability & a Confession ... poem by Anne Selden Annab

Universal Human Rights logo

       Accountability & a Confession

Commenting on Haaretz
in private or public...
or quoting the New York Times
or the Washington Post
or any statistics from Peace NOW
endorses Israel- proves Israel is
and that there are decent people
everywhere.... peace
is worth pursuing.

Perpetuating
the Israel-Palestine conflict
by taking two state efforts
international law-
and universal basic human rights
to use to argue for one state
and scorn negotiations
is not honorable or honest
or kind.

Palestine needs Israel- and America...
and all three need citizen diplomats
electing to empower dignity
decency
real justice
and a lasting peace.



Sunday, October 21, 2012

Israel vs. No. 2 Pencils... Palestinians have suffered from a profound lack of sovereignty for decades now



"The Israeli policy of bulldozing and destroying Palestinian schools continues unabated. Israeli settlers in the West Bank harass and violently abuse Palestinian schoolchildren—and the hundreds of humiliating checkpoints, Israeli settler-only roads, and the apartheid wall significantly impede freedom of movement for Palestinians and the right to access school. Additionally, Palestinian academic institutions such as Birzeit University find it tremendously difficult to secure basic resources and supplies for their students such as books from abroad. Yet Palestinians are an incredibly resilient people. Despite the assault we face on our right to education and on our livelihoods in general..."  Lena K. Awwad and SHATHA I. HUSSEIN in the Harvard Crimson....

Israel vs. No. 2 Pencils



How blaming the West hides a war on women

Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head by the Taliban for speaking out in favor of girl’s education.NYTIMES cartoon 10 2012

The Salt Lake Tribune Pat Bagley cartoon: What scares the Taliban


Poet Roya Hakakian in the Washington Post: "Western politicians can apologize for crooked policies and retreat into passivity for fear of committing new errors, which are bound to be deemed as new sins by future generations. Yet none will change the elemental facts. The notion of an Islamic democracy is merely another euphemism for turning women into lesser citizens, and it ought to be deemed as unjust and anti-democratic as America before the end of racial segregation. “Terrorism” is only one manifestation of the evil that the world hopes to root out from the region where part-time terrorists have always been full-time chauvinists.

The real enemy is misogyny. Malala Yousafzai is not just a teenager in Pakistan’s Swat Valley but a victim of the greatest apartheid of our time, and a wounded warrior in feminism’s newest front line."

How blaming the West hides a war on women

Group decries plans for army college on Mount of Olives

http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=530773
Israeli soldiers in a Memorial Day ceremony at the military cemetery on
the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem, April 2012. (Reuters/Ronen Zvulun)
Published 21/10/2012

JERUSALEM (Ma’an) -- A Muslim-Christian group on Sunday decried an Israeli government plan to build a military academy in occupied East Jerusalem.

Peace Now settlement watch director Hagit Ofran said on Sunday that notices were hung around the Mount of Olives, giving the public 60 days to file objections to the building of the eight-story military college.

The Islamic-Christian Commission said the plan is part of Israeli authorities' efforts to erase the Palestinian identity of East Jerusalem.

Israel captured East Jerusalem in a 1967 war and later illegally annexed the city, a move never recognized by the international community. Palestinians insist East Jerusalem is the capital of their hoped-for state.

Israel approved some 800 new housing units in the illegal settlement of Gilo near Jerusalem earlier this week, drawing condemnation from the European Union.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Maen Rashid Areikat: Israeli settlements are no ‘secondary issue’



WASHINGTON POST

Letter to the Editor

Israeli settlements are no ‘secondary issue’

The Oct. 15 editorial “A U.S. ‘reset’ with Israel?” stated that President Obama “erred in centering his push for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations on a secondary issue: Israeli settlement-building in the West Bank and Jerusalem.”

Illegal Israeli settlements on Palestinian territory are not secondary; they are the crux of the Israeli-Palestinian problem and have been for the past two decades.

Israel’s settlements undermine the possibility of an independent Palestinian state ever coming into being. Moreover, the attack campaigns mounted by extremist settler groups against Palestinian farmers, holy sites and even olive trees (Palestinians’ most treasured crop), thanks to a lack of serious deterrence by the Israeli government, are making the settlement issue an existential threat to not only Palestinians but also the prospects of resolving this conflict altogether. In fact, many Israelis have been complaining about the destructive effect the settlers have had on Israeli society itself.

If anything, Mr. Obama didn’t make the settlements issue primary enough.

Maen Rashid Areikat, Washington 
 
The writer is chief representative of the general delegation of the Palestinian Liberation Organization to the United States.

 

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Churches for Middle East Peace: Beginning of Harvest Season in Palestine Brings Violence

Formed in 1984, Churches for Middle East Peace is a coalition of 24 national Church denominations and organizationsincluding Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant traditions. It works to encourage U.S. government policies that actively promote a just, lasting and comprehensive resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, ensuring security, human rights and religious freedom for all people of the region.
 
 CMEP Bulletin
October 14, 2012

Violence Surrounds West Bank Olive Harvest
Start of Harvest Season Brings Violence
Further Reading


Beginning of Harvest Season Brings Violence

Every autumn, Palestinian farmers harvest olives from the trees in their groves, many of which go back decades. In recent years, these farmers have faced settler violence and intimidation in order to pick their olives, a crop that brought $100 million into the Palestinian economy in 2010 and sustains many families in the West Bank.

According to Rabbis for Human Rights, “Every year at this time Palestinian farmers from a number of villages across the West Bank receive threats to their safety, are denied access to their land or have their olives stolen, their trees poisoned, or even cut down altogether.” Last year, The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that over 2,500 olive trees were destroyed in September 2011, and 7,500 throughout 2011.

There were several attacks believed to be carried out by settlers during this first week of the harvest. Human rights groups are monitoring olive groves near Israeli settlements and documenting attacks by settlers. So far, according to B’Tselem:

Between October 7th and 10th, 2012, with the start of the West Bank's annual olive harvest, B'Tselem has documented five cases of injury to Palestinian farmers and their olive trees in the Ramallah and Nablus regions. In two incidents, settlers attacked farmers picking olives and damaged their yields. In three other cases, olive trees were discovered damaged or with the olives stolen, apparently by settlers.

In one incident B’Tselem documented, 220 trees were already harvested when farmers arrived to their grove and many of them were damaged. The perpetrators are unknown but B’Tselem points out that the owners of the land cannot reach it without prior coordination with the army because it is so close to an outpost. In al-Mughayir, northeast of Ramallah, a farmer discovered 100 of his trees were damaged, most were cut down at the trunk.

The groups are concerned about the inaction of security forces in the areas when these events occur. In B’Tselem’s roundup of the events, they note:
The direct attacks documented by B'Tselem occurred while members of the security forces were present. All the locations where damage to trees was discovered are familiar to the security forces as areas where Palestinians are subject to repeated harassment by settlers.

Not only are the attacks not stopped but the criminal investigations rarely find the perpetrator. Yesh Din, an Israeli human rights group focusing on legal action looked at the cases of tree vandalism over the past seven years and only found one instance of an indictment out of 162 cases. In the report they conclude that, “The police's failure to enforce the law encourages such acts of vandalism, since the perpetrators are not punished.”
Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said there is an increased police presence in the West Bank and they are using more technology to stop these crimes.

Further Reading

Violence flared up between Israeli forces and Gaza militants as they exchanged fire. Israeli forces conducted strikes against two men they say are responsible for attacks, killing one and later targeted two mosques and a factory that injured five. Israeli military spokeswoman said the buildings were “Hamas posts” but did not elaborate. Hamas joined the Islamic Jihad to launch 30 rockets towards Israel that caused property damage but no casualties. Hamas’ inclusion is noteworthy and Y’net explains why they joined in.

Israeli Ambassador to the UN Ron Prosor sent a letter to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the president of the Security Council regarding their failure to condemn the rocket fire from Gaza. He cited a double standard after the Security Council condemned Syria hours after a Syrian missile exploded in Turkey last week.

Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held captive in the Gaza Strip for over 5 years has given his most detailed interview since his release one year ago in a prisoner exchange.

Human Rights Watch is calling on Hamas to make widespread reforms after releasing a report accusing Hamas of arbitrary arrests and executing people over confessions extracted under torture in Gaza.

READ MORE

Raise Peace in the Holy Land this Campaign Season

 With the campaign season in full swing you have an opportuity to raise your concern for peace in the Holy Land in campaign-related ways. Incumbents and challengers are spending their time on the campaign trail talking with constituents like you.

Asking questions now, when candidates are asking for your vote, can influence their actions when they come to Washington. In town hall meetings, meet and greets, letters-to-the editor and through individual correspondence you can let your candidates know your concerns about the the role of the U.S. in ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Since many candidates are active on Facebook, Twitter and other forms of social media, and their campaigns monitor these sites closely, post one of these questions on your candidates’ pages.
Here are questions you may ask to find out more about their positions. Click here to download a copy of these questions.

1. As a Christian and supporter of Churches for Middle East Peace, I am concerned about the conflict in the Holy Land. What steps do you believe the U.S. government should take to encourage and support diplomacy between Israelis and Palestinians in order to find a peaceful and lasting resolution to the conflict that respects the rights and security of both peoples?

2. As a Christian and supporter of Churches for Middle East Peace, I am concerned about the continuing growth of Israeli settlements in the Palestinian Territories and the future of a two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians. U.S. administrations, both Democratic and Republican, have endorsed a two-state solution. Do you support an Israeli and Palestinian state living side by side in peace and security and what steps should the United States government be willing to take to ensure a two-state solution is achieved?

3. As a Christian and supporter of Churches for Middle East Peace, I am concerned about the uncertainty of U.S. aid to Palestinians in the budget and how some lawmakers want to use the funds to score political points. Last year, several politicians supported cutting this funding for humanitarian aid, development and security to punish the Palestinians for pursuing recognition in the United Nations. Do you support continued aid to Palestinians at reasonable levels and what conditions do you think are appropriate to maintain aid to Palestinians in future budgets?

4. As a Christian and supporter of Churches for Middle East Peace, I am concerned about the status of Jerusalem, a holy site to Christians, Jews and Muslims. No country, including the U.S., has recognized Israel’s 1967 annexation of East Jerusalem and Palestinians insist that it must be the capital of their future state. U.S. administrations for decades have supported leaving Jerusalem as an issue for the parties to decide in final status negotiations and have avoided taking actions that may prejudice an outcome. Will you support the continuation of this policy and oppose unilateral provocative actions, such as moving the U.S. embassy, which will interfere with negotiations?

Please keep CMEP informed of your efforts to learn the positions of candidates in your area. Email Alex Stevens at alex(at)cmep.org or call (202) 543-1222.

Thank you for raising the issue of peace in the Holy Land with your candidates.

UN envoy alarmed by reports of Israeli settlers attacking Palestinian farmers

Robert Serry, Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process. UN/P. Filgueiras
14 October 2012 – A top United Nations envoy today said he was alarmed at recent reports that Israeli settlers have repeatedly attacked Palestinian farmers in the West Bank, destroying hundreds of olive trees at the height of the harvest season.

“These acts are reprehensible and I call on the Government of Israel to bring those responsible to justice,” said the United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Robert Serry.

“Israel must live up to its commitments under international law to protect Palestinians and their property in the occupied territory so that the olive harvest – a crucial component of Palestinian livelihoods and the Palestinian economy – can proceed unhindered and in peace,” he said.

In a briefing to the Security Council last month, Mr. Serry had warned that the lack of progress between Israelis and Palestinians on the political track and the continuing conflict and occupation was putting at risk the viability of the two-State solution.

He added that the Palestinian Authority (PA) in particular, was experiencing the consequences of this risk in the form of a severe financial and economic crisis, and stressed that international donors and the Israeli Government should do more to alleviate the PA's burden and ensure its fiscal viability in the short and medium term.


The Israelis and the Palestinians have yet to resume direct negotiations since talks stalled in September 2010 after Israel refused to extend its freeze on settlement activity in the occupied Palestinian territory.

Negotiators from both sides began preparatory talks at the start of January in Amman, under the facilitation of King Abdullah II of Jordan and that country's Foreign Minister, Nasser Judeh, with a view to a resumption of direct talks.

UN News Centre
[AS ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ GOOD ARTICLES IN FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and conversations) THAT EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE & PEACE... and hopefully Palestine]