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  • Netanyahu: Palestinian Leaders Want Future State to Be Ethnically Cleansed of Jews -
    Haaretz and The Associated Press Sep 09, 2016
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.741192

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused the Palestinian leadership on Friday of wanting to ethnically cleanse the future Palestinian state of Jews.

    Netanyahu made the remarks in an English-language video message posted on his Facebook page.

    Cricitizing the common argument that settlements in the West Bank are an obstacle to peace, the prime minister stated, “No one would seriously claim that the nearly two million Arabs living inside Israel — that they’re an obstacle to peace.”

    Instead, the diversity of the Israel shows that it is ready for peace, while a Palestinian state with the precondition of no Jews amounts to ethnic cleansing, the prime minister said.

    #impudence

  • In wake of Haaretz report, lawmakers demand debate on Israeli efforts to bolster Bashir’s Sudan
    http://www.haaretz.com/misc/article-print-page/.premium-1.740883

    Lobbying israélien pour que les Etats-Unis et leurs alliés occidentaux se réconcilient avec Omar al-Bashir

    Haaretz reported Wednesday that Israel has contacted the U.S. government and other Western countries and urged them to take steps to improve relations with Sudan in the wake of the break in relations between the Arab-African country and Iran in the past year.

    Senior officials in Jerusalem raised the issue last week during a visit of Thomas Shannon, the U.S. undersecretary of state for political affairs, Haaretz reported.

    Citing Israeli officials, the report said one of the messages conveyed to Shannon by Foreign Ministry officials was the need to improve relations between the U.S. and Sudan. The Foreign Ministry believes Sudan cut its ties with Iran about a year ago, that arms smuggling from Sudan to the Gaza Strip has been halted and that Khartoum has moved closer to the axis of Sunni Muslim states led by Saudi Arabia.

    Israeli officials said another message relayed to Shannon was that the positive steps taken by Sudan must not be ignored, and that American gestures toward Khartoum could be helpful. One thing Sudan has been seeking in the past year is for Washington to remove it from the list of state sponsors of terrorism. Foreign Ministry officials told the Americans they understand that the U.S. will not lift its sanctions on Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, but that increasing the American dialogue with others in the Sudanese government would be a positive move.

    In addition to talking to the American administration about Sudan, in the past year #Israel has held similar talks with France, Italy and other European countries. One Jerusalem official said Israeli diplomats asked their contacts in Europe to assist Sudan in dealing with its vast external debt, which stands at close to 50 billion dollars, and to consider erasing some of it, as has been done with other countries that have fallen into severe economic crisis. Israel warned that an economic collapse in Sudan could further undermine stability in this part of Africa and end up strengthening terrorist elements there.

    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.740676

    • Middle East’s leaders cross the Red Sea to woo east Africa
      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/12/middle-east-scramble-power-east-africa-sudan-kenya-ethiopia

      Somalia and Sudan both dumped alliances with Iran earlier this year in favour of new ties with Saudi Arabia. Somalia received pledges from Riyadh of aid worth $50m within hours of the decision. Heavily sanctioned Sudan may have gained billions – a crucial financial lifeline.

      “What we are seeing is a shift in … agendas of major players in the Gulf. There’s a historical context to the relationship … but the [region] is now being seen as part of their ‘near abroad’, and an important sphere of influence,” said Soliman.

      [...]

      One of the most active of the new players in east Africa is #Israel. Benjamin Netanyahu, the rightwing prime minister, has led a push for better relations across Africa, particularly in the east, where he has reinforced ties with old allies such as Kenya.

      #Soudan #Arabie_saoudite

  • Unarmed Palestinian shot dead by Israeli forces at military post near Ramallah
    Aug. 26, 2016 1:06 P.M. (Updated: Aug. 26, 2016 6:17 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=772867

    RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — A reportedly unarmed Palestinian was shot dead by Israeli forces at a military post near the illegal Israeli Ofra settlement at the western entrance to the town of Silwad in northeastern Ramallah on Friday, contradicting earlier reports by Israeli media that he had opened fire at soldiers.

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that Israeli soldiers stationed at a military post in Silwad identified a suspect on foot running toward them.

    The Israeli soldiers “shot towards the suspect, resulting in his death,” the spokesperson said.

    No injuries among Israeli soldiers were reported by the army.

    Medics from the Palestinian Red Crescent who had arrived at the scene were reportedly prevented from accessing the site by Israeli forces.

    Initial reports from Hebrew media, however, said the suspect had opened fire from inside a vehicle, and that a woman might have been inside the car with him.

    According to reports, witnesses said that he was shot and critically injured while inside his vehicle, and was later pronounced dead.

    When asked about the conflicting reports, and whether or not the suspect had been armed, the Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an the details of the incident were still being checked.

    The suspect was later identified by local sources in the Ramallah area as 38-year-old Iyad Zakariya Hamed . He was married and a father of three.

    Israeli news site Ynet quoted an anonymous Palestinian official as saying that Hamed suffered from mental illness and was not found to have any weapons on his person when searched, and no signs of gunfire were found on the guard post.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Israel investigating claim unarmed Palestinian was shot in the back
      Aug. 28, 2016 11:47 A.M. (Updated: Aug. 28, 2016 1:53 P.M.)
      https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=772882

      BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — The Israeli army’s military police have reportedly opened an investigation into the killing of an unarmed Palestinian man who was shot dead by Israeli forces on Friday, an Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an.

      Thirty-eight-year-old Iyad Zakariya Hamed, a resident of the Ramallah area village of Silwad, was shot dead by Israeli forces near a military post at the village’s entrance not far from the illegal Israeli settlement Ofra, when soldiers alleged that they saw Hamed “charging” towards them.

      Israeli media initially reported that Hamed, a husband and father of three, fired shots at the Israeli soldiers, though it was later confirmed that he was unarmed.

      According to Israeli newspaper Haaretz, any death of a Palestinian in the occupied West Bank who was “not involved in actual fighting” warrants an Israeli military police investigation, and that the investigation into Hamed’s killing will look into the activity of the soldiers responsible — who were members of the “ultra-orthodox” Kifr Brigade — before they opened fire, and why they fired deadly shots at Hamed when “danger was not immediately clear.”

      In addition, the investigation will look into the claim from Palestinian medical officials that Hamed was shot in the back. The officials also reportedly said that Hamed had mental disabilities and had been receiving psychiatric treatment.

      The Israeli army has maintained however, that Hamed was running toward the military post when the soldiers opened fire.

    • Israel: Where the media will blindly buy what the ruling authorities dictate
      By Gideon Levy | Aug. 27, 2016 | 11:56 PM
      http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.738936
      A thousand reports are published about every West Bank settler who is murdered, yet Friday’s killing of an innocent man evoked one big yawn. It’s not terror, or apartheid, or racism or dehumanization. It’s only killing a subhuman.

      It was late in the morning. In Israel people were completing their preparations for Shabbat. The military reporters bought challahs, the soldiers left their bases for the weekend. At the Yabrud checkpoint in the West Bank their colleagues saw a man. Actually, they didn’t see a man. They saw a subhuman. They shot him as they were taught. The military reporters reported also as taught: “A terrorist fired a weapon at a pillbox post in Ofra. Nobody was hurt. The force fired back and the terrorist was killed.”

      Routine. There is no contradiction between “nobody was hurt” and “the terrorist was killed.” Only Jews can be hurt. An update followed: “The Kfir squad commander, who saw the terrorist throw a firebomb at an IDF pillbox in Silwad, shot and killed him. Nobody was hurt.” Now the shooting had turned into “a firebomb.” A short time later, it was reported: “Apparently, he was mentally unstable. A search on his body resulted with no findings.” In other words, murder.

      This is what Channel 10 reporter Or Heller tweeted on Friday, as did some of his colleagues, including Alon Ben-David. Heller is far from the worst of the military reporters, who recite automatically whatever the army spokesman dictates to them without attributing the quote to the spokesman, and consider themselves journalists.

      There is no other coverage area in which journalists can act like that. They buy blindly, fervidly, what the ruling authorities dictate to them. The lies about what happened on Friday at the Yabrud checkpoint were spread by the IDF, of course. Afterward the IDF corrected itself, and only after that did the reporters follow suit and report: “the Palestinian didn’t try to attack the soldiers.” Good evening and Shabbat Shalom.

      It was late in the morning. Iyad Hamed, of Silwad, was on his way to Friday prayers in the mosque. Years ago he hurt his head in a traffic accident and since then had been mentally unstable. He was 38, a father of three, including a baby. A witness who testified to B’Tselem Saturday, Iyad Hadad, said Hamed had lost his way, panicked when he saw the soldiers at the checkpoint and ran. He ran for his life. He wasn’t armed, he endangered no one.

      Paramedic Yihia Mubarak believes he was shot in the back as he ran. He saw an entry wound in the victim’s back and an exit wound in his chest. Hamed died on the spot. Shortly afterward his body was returned. Israel’s lust for bodies was satiated this time, after it transpired that Hamed had been killed although he had done nothing wrong.

      A dead Arab. Oh well. We’ve moved onto other, more interesting and important matters. When a single Qassam rocket from Gaza lands, without hurting anyone or causing any damage, Israel launches a revenge campaign of bombardments and shelling, sowing devastation and horror. It’s allowed to do anything. The disappointed military reporters provoke the defense minister, asking, “why only real estate?” And what about Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, whom Avigdor Lieberman had promised to assassinate?

      Israel is allowed to do anything. Are the Palestinians allowed to take revenge for the killing of their friend? What a ludicrous question. Are they allowed to try to “deter” IDF soldiers, as Israel does with Hamas, so that they don’t kill innocent passersby again? Another ludicrous question. Will anyone be punished for this killing? An even more ludicrous question.

      If an Israeli dog had been killed by a Palestinian assailant, Israel would have been much more shocked than by Hamed’s killing. A thousand reports are published about every West Bank settler who is murdered, yet Friday’s killing of an innocent man evoked one big yawn. It’s not terror, or apartheid, or racism or dehumanization. It’s only killing a subhuman.

      I was in Silwad about nine months ago, after Border Policemen killed Mahdia Hamed, a 40-year-old mother of four. The Border Policemen claimed she had tried to run them over with her car, but eyewitnesses testified she had been driving slowly. At home, her 10-month-old infant was waiting to be breast-fed.

      They shot her several times and the bullets pierced and ran through her body. Nobody was put on trial. The widower, Adiv Hamed, asked me then, in his naivety: “Do the Israelis know what happened? Was there a public debate in Israel after she was killed?”

      I was silent with shame.

    • A mentally disabled Palestinian shot dead by Israeli troops for behaving strangely
      http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.739750
      ’Let’s say Iyad was behaving strangely. Why kill him?’ his brother ponders. ’When they grow up, Iyad’s children are liable to hate Israel, and with good reason. You killed their father.’
      By Gideon Levy and Alex Levac | Sep. 2, 2016 | 4:39 PM | 5

      The man who was shot to death last Friday by a soldier from the Kfir Brigade’s ultra-Orthodox Netzach Yehuda Battalion was 38 and the father of two small children, a son and a daughter, who were this week scurrying around the living room of their house, in a state of bewilderment, she in a purple skirt, he in shorts. Their father, Iyad Hamed, had a congenital mental disability: Introverted and taciturn, he was prone to stare at the ground as he walked. He enjoyed communing with nature and picking figs and almonds. Still, there was structure in his life: He had a wife and children, and worked in construction in a simple job. “He wasn’t the sharpest of people,” his brothers say.

      Footage from the security camera of the grocery store in Silwad, a village near Ramallah, shows his last minutes. Hamed, in a light-colored shirt, is seen buying snacks for his children and paying. A few moments later, he sets out for a mosque for the Friday prayers, never to return. Nothing in the footage hints at what is about to happen: A father buys treats for his children in the final hour of his life.

      Most of Hamed’s family is in America, as are many of the natives of this well-to-do village. Ten years ago, his six brothers moved to Ohio – to Columbus and Cleveland – where they work in real estate. Iyad, the eldest, remained in Silwad, as did his sister. He started a family, but recently decided to emigrate, as well; one of his brothers said he’d submitted a petition to the authorities to that end.

      He lived on the ground floor of the family’s stone house. The building is handsome, though less splendid than other mansion-type dwellings in this elegant neighborhood on a hill. The second floor is used by the brothers and their families during their annual vacations here. This summer they visited twice: once on holiday and then not long afterward – to mourn and grieve for their dead brother.

      Their parents divide their time between America and Silwad, some of whose privately owned land was taken to build the settlement of Ofra. Many residents of this well-to-do village have moved in recent years to the United States.

      Last December, Border Police shot and killed another Silwad resident, Mahdia Hammad, a 40-year-old mother of four, claiming that she was trying to run them over. Now the army has killed Iyad Hamed without any apparent reason: He wasn’t armed and didn’t pose a threat to anyone.

      The Israel Defense Forces itself admits that.

      The killing took place at the edge of the village, not far from Highway 60, a former venue for demonstrations and stone throwing. The demonstrations ceased in the past month, under pressure from locals, who are tired of the tear gas and the upheaval. Five Silwad residents were killed in the past year by Israeli troops.

      We are standing next to a mound of stones where Hamed collapsed, bleeding, last Friday. He’d come this far, after dropping off the snacks for the kids at home, on his way to a mosque in the neighboring village of Yabrud, where he prayed on Fridays. He preferred it to the mosques in Silwad.

      On the way, he stopped at the Silwad gas station to say hello to his friend Rashad, who works there. The gas station’s security camera caught him again. He then went on his way to Yabrud, which is located on the other side of Highway 60. He could have used the passage beneath the road but opted for the shorter route, which passes next to a towering, armored IDF pillbox.

      It was about 11:40 A.M. On the other side of the road, Abdel Hamid Yusuf, a solidly built young man of 26, was driving his sewage tanker to the site where he empties it. An eyewitness to the events, he is now standing with us at the place where Hamed was killed, along with Iyad Hadad, a field researcher for the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem.

      Hamed was behaving oddly, recalls Yusuf, who knew him well and was aware of his condition. Hamed seemed to have lost his way and also his senses; he ran back and forth below the army tower. Yusuf says he saw no soldiers while Hamed was running about between it and the surrounding barbed-wire fences. Hamed looked frightened. He had wanted to cut across the highway to the mosque, but couldn’t find his way out. He was like a caged animal; the barbed-wire fences were impassable. “It’s dangerous there, get out!” Yusuf shouted to him from across the road. Hamed didn’t respond – maybe he didn’t hear Yusuf.

      It’s crucial to note that Hamed was not holding anything in his hands. That is confirmed by Yusuf and by what the footage from the gas station’s camera shows: an unarmed civilian in a light-colored shirt, who apparently got confused and lost his way.

      Suddenly a few shots rang out. Hamed started to run frantically back toward the village. It’s not clear where the shots came from, but immediately afterward Yusuf saw a few soldiers emerge from the vegetation at the foot of the tower. Hamed kept running. More shots were fired at him, apparently by the soldiers, who had been in ambush. He was hit and fell to the ground. One bullet entered his back and exited through his chest, paramedic Yahya Mubarak, who took possession of the body, would report afterward.

      A., who lives in apartment No. 9 in the nearby Hurriya Tower building in Silwad, went out to his balcony when he heard shooting. What he told the field researcher corroborated Yusuf’s account: Hamed ran for his life until he was felled.

      Four soldiers rolled Hamed’s body over with their feet. He probably died instantly, though that’s not certain. An Israeli ambulance arrived about 15 minutes later, but Yusuf says he couldn’t see whether Hamed received medical aid. More troops arrived in a silver-gray civilian car. The body lay on the ground for some time before being removed by soldiers. A few hours later, the body was returned to the family, after it became clear to the IDF – which is rarely in a hurry to give back bodies – that Hamed had done nothing wrong and was killed in vain.

      The cardboard packages that contained IDF-issue bullets are scattered on the ground where Hamed went down. An IDF officer approaches us from the direction of the tower, and four soldiers emerge out of nowhere from another direction. Minutes later, another group of soldiers comes up from the valley. Maybe one of them killed Hamed?

      The soldier who fired the shot that killed him was questioned this week by the Military Police on suspicion of causing death by negligence and then sent back to his unit. He wasn’t so much as suspended from his duties.

      In the house of mourning is the father, Zakariya, 58, dignified and wearing a stylized embroidered galabia. With him are two of his sons, Yahya, 34, from Columbus, and Ahmed, 31, from Cleveland. Hamed’s fatherless offspring, 9-year-old Zakariya and 3-year-old Lian, are with their mother, newly widowed Narmine.

      “Come on, we are human beings, we don’t get shot at like that,” Yahya says. “Come on, we have kids. The soldier took a human life. It made me want to throw up when I read the reports of what happened in [the newspaper] Yedioth Ahronoth.”

      When they were here a month ago, on vacation, the brothers brought new clothes for Iyad as gifts. Iyad hadn’t worn them yet; he was saving them for Id al-Adha, the Feast of Sacrifice. Now he will never wear them, “because some soldier decided to kill him.” The faces of the brothers are contorted in grief again.

      Yahya: “Let’s say Iyad was behaving strangely. Why kill him? Shoot him in the leg. Why kill him? You’re not God. In the first intifada, they shot at the legs. You could talk with the soldiers. Now you reach a hand toward your pocket, and they kill you. Do you know what a tragedy the soldier who killed my brother caused? How many families he destroyed?”

      The children cuddle up to their two uncles. Lian blows up a balloon and floats it in the room. She has lazy eye, and wears thick glasses. She’s scheduled to have an operation for the condition in a few weeks; her father will not be there to accompany her.

      Yahya, who reads the English-language edition of Haaretz in the United States on his phone, says, “The children know that a Jewish soldier killed their father,” he says. “When they grow up, they are liable to hate Israel, and with good reason. You killed their father.

      “We are not a political family,” he continues. “We have never been in prison, we have never thrown a stone. Neither had Iyad. But what love will these children have for Israel when they grow up? You want to live here? Fine. But don’t kill us. Let us live, too. You love life – so do we. Everyone will tell you what a pure soul Iyad was. He never hurt anyone. I’d like to know what [Chief of Staff] Gadi Eisenkot will have to say about this killing. And what the soldier who killed Iyad is feeling. I heard he’s religious. Does that mean he has earlocks?

      “When I accidentally run over a cat on the road, I feel bad for a long time afterward,” Yahya says. “What does the soldier who killed my brother feel now?”

  • Un cavalier allemand représente la Palestine aux Jeux olympiques, une « initiative pour la paix » | Middle East Eye
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/fr/reportages/un-cavalier-allemand-repr-sente-la-palestine-aux-jeux-olympiques-une-

    Le concurrent à l’épreuve de dressage Christian Zimmermann (54 ans) explique que sa décision de représenter son pays d’adoption à Rio est « pour la Palestine, mais pas contre Israël »
    (...)
    Cependant, a-t-il ajouté, il a choisi de concourir sous le drapeau palestinien pour faire une remarque politique sur les relations de l’Allemagne avec Israël.

    « Nous, en tant qu’Allemands, avons une responsabilité particulière envers le peuple juif et Israël », a-t-il déclaré au journal.

    « Mais cette responsabilité signifie également que nous devons encourager la paix dans le conflit au Moyen-Orient, aussi difficile que cela puisse être. En plus de cela, on peut critiquer l’évolution de la politique israélienne au cours des dernières années. Donc finalement, j’ai décidé de monter pour la Palestine, comme un geste envers le peuple palestinien. Si, en participant aux Jeux olympiques, je peux contribuer d’une certaine manière à donner à la région et à ses habitants une plus grande voix, j’aurai réussi. »

    La délégation olympique palestinienne, composée de six personnes, comprend également un coureur du 100 m de Gaza, un judoka et une nageuse du 50 m qui a réalisé toute sa formation dans une piscine de 25 mètres car il n’y a pas d’installations olympiques en Cisjordanie.

  • How Hezbollah Tricked Senior Israeli Officials Into an Interview - Israel News - Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.734861

    A Hezbollah-affiliated television network just aired a documentary with senior Israeli interviewees, which begs the question, how did they pull this off?
    Among those interviewed in “What Happened in 2006,” a documentary about the Second Lebanon War that aired on the Hezbollah-linked Al-Mayadeen channel on Saturday, were Maj. Gen. (res.) Eyal Ben-Reuven and Maj. Gen. (res.) Amos Yadlin, as well as then-Defense Minister Amir Peretz and Tomer Weinberg, a combatant who was injured in the initial stages of the conflict.
    Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth revealed Tuesday that the interviews were conducted by an Italian journalist, Michela Moni, who told his interviewees that the footage was intended for Italian television and the BBC in Britain.

  • Rejected Asylum Seeker Languishing in Israeli Prison for Past Decade

    Israel tried to deport the man back to the Ivory Coast after rejecting his asylum request, but he refused citing fear for his life. Now he appealed anew to a court for his release.

    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.732435

    #détention_administrative #rétention #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Israël

  • Secret 1970 document confirms first West Bank settlements built on a lie
    In minutes of meeting in then-defense minister Moshe Dayan’s office, top Israeli officials discussed how to violate international law in building settlement of Kiryat Arba, next to Hebron.
    By Yotam Berger | Jul. 28, 2016 | 10:17 AM

    1973 map of West Bank settlement Kiryat Arba credit:Peace Now
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.733746

    It has long been an open secret that the settlement enterprise was launched under false pretenses, involving the expropriation of Palestinian land for ostensibly military purposes when the true intent was to build civilian settlements, which is a violation of international law.

    Now a secret document from 1970 has surfaced confirming this long-held assumption. The document, a copy of which has been obtained by Haaretz, details a meeting in the office of then-defense minister Moshe Dayan at which government and military leaders spoke explicitly about how to carry out this deception in the building of Kiryat Arba, next to Hebron.

    The document is titled “The method for establishing Kiryat Arba.” It contains minutes of a meeting held in July 1970 in Dayan’s office, and describes how the land on which the settlement was to be built would be confiscated by military order, ostensibly for security purposes, and that the first buildings on it would be falsely presented as being strictly for military use.

    Aside from Dayan, the participants include the director general of the Housing Ministry, the Israel Defense Forces’ commander in the West Bank and the coordinator of government activities in the territories.

    ’Construction will be presented as ...’

    According to the minutes, these officials decided to build “250 housing units in Kiryat Arba within the perimeter of the area specified for the military unit’s use. All the building will be done by the Defense Ministry and will be presented as construction for the IDF’s needs.”

    A “few days” after Base 14 had “completed its activities,” the document continued, “the commander of the Hebron district will summon the mayor of Hebron, and in the course of raising other issues, will inform him that we’ve started to build houses on the military base in preparation for winter.” In other words, the participants agreed to mislead the mayor into thinking the construction was indeed for military purposes, when in fact, they planned to let settlers move in – the same settlers who on Passover 1968 moved into Hebron’s Park Hotel, which was the embryo of the settler enterprise.

    2015 map of West Bank settlement Kiryat Arba credit:Peace Now

    The system of confiscating land by military order for the purpose of establishing settlements was an open secret in Israel throughout the 1970s, according to people involved in creating and implementing the system. Its goal was to present an appearance of complying with international law, which forbids construction for civilian purposes on occupied land. In practice, everyone involved, from settlers to defense officials, knew the assertion that the land was meant for military rather than civilian use was false.

    This system was used to set up several settlements, until the High Court of Justice outlawed it in a 1979 ruling on a petition against the establishment of the settlement of Elon Moreh.

    Participant: We all knew the score

    Maj. Gen. (res.) Shlomo Gazit, who was coordinator of government activities in the territories at the time of the 1970 meeting in Dayan’s office about Kiryat Arba, told Haaretz it was clear to all the meeting’s participants that settlers would move into those buildings. He said that to the best of his recollection, this constituted the first use of the system of annexing land to a military base for the purpose of civilian settlement in the West Bank. He also recalled Dayan as the one who proposed this system, because he didn’t like any of the alternative locations proposed for Kiryat Arba.

    Nevertheless, and despite what the document advocated, Gazit said, army officers told the mayor of Hebron explicitly that a civilian settlement would be established next to his city, rather than telling him the construction was for military purposes.

    Hagit Ofran, head of Peace Now’s Settlement Watch project, also said this appears to be the first use of the system of using military orders to seize land for civilian settlement. And while this system is no longer in use, she said, “Today, too, the state uses tricks to build and expand settlements. We don’t need to wait decades for the revelation of another internal document to realize that the current system for taking over land – wholesale declarations of it as state land – also violates the essence of the law.”

    Gazit said that in retrospect, the system was wrong, but that he was just “a bureaucrat, in quotation marks; I carried out the government’s orders, in quotation marks.”

    “I think this pretense has continued until today,” he added. “Throughout my seven years as coordinator of government activities in the territories, we didn’t establish settlements anywhere by any other system.”

    But government officials had no idea Kiryat Arba (pop. 8,000) would become so big, Gazit insisted. They only sought to provide a solution for the squatters in the Park Hotel, who “weren’t more than 50 families.”

    Today, even Kiryat Arba residents admit that this system was a deception. Settler ideologue Elyakim Haetzni, one of Kiryat Arba’s original residents, noted that during a Knesset debate at the time, cabinet minister Yigal Allon said clearly that this would be a civilian settlement.

    “It’s clear why this game ended; after all, how long could it go on? This performance had no connection whatsoever to Herut (the predecessor to Likud); it was all within Mapai,” Haetzni added, referring to the ruling party at the time, a precursor of today’s Labor Party.

  • The Mahmoud Darwish Poem That Enraged Lieberman and Regev - Poem of the Week - Haaretz

    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/culture/poem-of-the-week/1.732421

    Aux chiottes Lieberman, aux chiottes.

    ID Card

    Mahmoud Darwish

    Write it down! I’m an Arab
    My card number is 50000
    My children number eight
    And after this summer, a ninth on his way.
    Does this make you rage?
    I am an Arab.
    With my quarry comrades I labor hard
    My children number eight
    I tug their bread, their clothes
    And their notebooks
    From within the rock
    I don’t beg at your door
    I don’t cower on your threshold
    So does this make you rage?
    Write it down!
    I am an Arab.
    I am a name with no honorific.
    Patient in a land
    Where everything lives in bursting rage
    My roots were planted before time was born
    Before history began
    Before the cypress and the olive trees
    Before grass sprouted
    My father is from the plough clan
    Not from the noble class
    My grandfather was a peasant farmer
    Had no pedigree
    Taught me the pride of the sun
    Before teaching me to read
    A shack to guard groves is my home,
    Made of branches and reeds
    Are you pleased with my status?
    I am a name with no honorific.
    Write it down!
    I am an Arab.
    Hair color: charcoal
    Eye color: brown
    Attributes:
    A cord around the quffiyeh on my head
    My hand as hard as rock
    That scratches if you touch it
    My address:
    I am from a forgotten abandoned village
    Its streets nameless
    All its men in the fields and quarries
    Does this make you rage?
    Write it down!
    I am an Arab.
    You have stolen my ancestors’ groves
    And the land we cultivated
    I and all my children
    Leaving nothing for us and all my grandchildren
    Except these rocks
    Will your government take them
    Like people say?
    Therefore,
    Write down on the top of the first page:
    I do not hate people
    And I do not steal from anyone
    But if I starve
    I will eat my oppressor’s flesh
    Beware, beware of my starving
    And my rage.

    1964. Translated from Arabic by Salman Masalha and Vivian Eden

    In yet another swipe by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government at freedom of the press, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman summoned Army Radio commander Yaron Dekel for a dressing-down over the broadcast last week of a discussion of this poem by Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish – in a series on formative Israeli texts on the station’s “University on the Air” program.

    Earlier, Culture and Sport Minister Miri Regev slammed the radio station, which has been on the government’s hit list for a while, for having “gone off the rails.”

    #darwish for ever

    • Inscris « Je suis Arabe », Mahmoud Darwich

      Inscris !
      Je suis Arabe
      Le numéro de ma carte : cinquante mille
      Nombre d’enfants : huit
      Et le neuvième. . . arrivera après l’été !
      Et te voilà furieux !

      Inscris !
      Je suis Arabe
      Je travaille à la carrière avec mes compagnons de peine
      Et j’ai huit bambins
      Leur galette de pain
      Les vêtements, leur cahier d’écolier
      Je les tire des rochers. . .
      Oh ! je n’irai pas quémander l’aumône à ta porte
      Je ne me fais pas tout petit au porche de ton palais
      Et te voilà furieux !

      Inscris !
      Je suis Arabe
      Sans nom de famille – je suis mon prénom
      « Patient infiniment » dans un pays où tous
      Vivent sur les braises de la Colère
      Mes racines. . .
      Avant la naissance du temps elles prirent pied
      Avant l’effusion de la durée
      Avant le cyprès et l’olivier
      . . .avant l’éclosion de l’herbe
      Mon père. . . est d’une famille de laboureurs
      N’a rien avec messieurs les notables
      Mon grand-père était paysan – être
      Sans valeur – ni ascendance.
      Ma maison, une hutte de gardien
      En troncs et en roseaux
      Voilà qui je suis – cela te plaît-il ?
      Sans nom de famille, je ne suis que mon prénom.

      Inscris !
      Je suis Arabe
      Mes cheveux. . . couleur du charbon
      Mes yeux. . . couleur de café
      Signes particuliers :
      Sur la tête un kefiyyé avec son cordon bien serré
      Et ma paume est dure comme une pierre
      . . .elle écorche celui qui la serre
      La nourriture que je préfère c’est
      L’huile d’olive et le thym

      Mon adresse :
      Je suis d’un village isolé. . .
      Où les rues n’ont plus de noms
      Et tous les hommes. . . à la carrière comme au champ
      Aiment bien le communisme
      Inscris !
      Je suis Arabe
      Et te voilà furieux !

      Inscris
      Que je suis Arabe
      Que tu as rafflé les vignes de mes pères
      Et la terre que je cultivais
      Moi et mes enfants ensemble
      Tu nous as tout pris hormis
      Pour la survie de mes petits-fils
      Les rochers que voici
      Mais votre gouvernement va les saisir aussi
      . . .à ce que l’on dit !

      DONC

      Inscris !
      En tête du premier feuillet
      Que je n’ai pas de haine pour les hommes
      Que je n’assaille personne mais que
      Si j’ai faim
      Je mange la chair de mon Usurpateur
      Gare ! Gare ! Gare
      À ma fureur !

    • The Late Palestinian National Poet Will Continue to Haunt Israel

      Mahmoud Darwish insists on mentioning what Israelis don’t want to acknowledge: A great sin took place here when the State of Israel was founded in 1948.
      Gideon Levy Jul 23, 2016 11:53 PM
      http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.732885

      The specter of Palestinian national poet Mahmoud Darwish will never leave us. Every few years, a witch hunt will erupt over his poetry, stirring emotions and riling Israelis until they compare him to Hitler. It subsides but then revives again. There’s no escaping it. None of the ghosts of the 1948 War of Independence will leave us until we recognize the guilt, acknowledge the sin and take responsibility for it by apologizing, paying compensation and, above all, changing ourselves. Until then, the ghosts will continue to torment us and not give us rest.

      The most recent Darwish scandal, which was fanned by two ignorant ministers – Culture and Sports Minister Miri Regev and Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, whom it’s doubtful ever read a Darwish poem – is another link in the chain. Even in their ignorance, the two knew whom to attack. They knew that, more than any other figure, Darwish hits Israeli society’s most sensitive nerve and drives Israelis crazy every time. They always try to cover up any way they can – concealing, denying, lying and repressing – but always without success.

      Darwish touches on the original sin, which makes him Hitler. He exposes the gaping wound, which makes him off-limits. If Israelis had been convinced that there was no sin and no bleeding wound, they wouldn’t have been so afraid of his poetry. If they were convinced that everything had been done properly back then, in 1948, and that nothing could have been different, Darwish would have been left to the realm of literature departments.

      But the late poet insists on mentioning what Israelis don’t want to know: a great sin took place here. The establishment of Israel – just as it was – was accompanied by the unforgiveable crime of ethnic cleansing of wide parts of the country. No Jewish National Fund grove can cover up the moral ruins on which the state was built. Israel added insult to injury by not allowing the Palestinians who were expelled or fled to return. A thousand historical testimonies, which we also avoid like fire, are not equal to one line of Darwish poetry: “Where will you take me, my father?”

      I will never forget that punch to the stomach, or rather, the dagger to my heart, from the Spring 1996 issue of the Hebrew journal Hadarim, edited by Halit Yeshurun. A dozen pages of Darwish poems from “Why Did You Leave the Horse Alone?” (translated into Hebrew by Anton Shammas): “And who will live in the house after us, my father? / The house, my son, will remain as it was! / Why did you leave the horse alone? / To keep the house company, my son. / When their residents go, the houses will die. / Together we will hold on / until we return. / When, my father? / Tomorrow, my son, and perhaps in another day or two! / That tomorrow trailed behind them, chewing the wind / in the endless winter nights.”

      I didn’t know at the time, and don’t know today, what we as Israelis do with those lines. With: “In our hut, the enemy rids himself of his rifle / which he lays on my grandfather’s chair. He eats of our bread / like guests do, and without being moved. Grabs a little nap / on the bamboo chair.”

      Or: “Ask how my home is doing, foreign sir. / My small coffee cups / of our bitter coffee / still left as they were. Will it enter your nose / the scent of our fingers on the cups?” Or: “And I will carry the yearning / until / my beginning and until its beginning / and I will go on my way / until my end and until its end”!

      Darwish’s end came too early, unfortunately, and some time ago, in 2008. But it was not the end of his poetry – just ask Regev and Lieberman. The year 1948 was also some time ago but, just like Darwish’s poetry, it has never ended, not even for a moment. Israel has never altered its conduct – not its violent and overbearing approach to the Palestinians, who were born here, not their dispossession, the occupation and sometimes also their expulsions.

      In 2016, Israel is handling the Palestinians exactly like it did in 1948. That’s why Darwish isn’t leaving Israel alone, and that’s why he’s so frightening to the country: He confronts Israel with the most primordial truth about itself.

  • Former Saudi general visits Israel, meets with Foreign Ministry director-general

    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.732776

    During the highly unusual trip, retired Saudi General Anwar Eshki also met with a group of Knesset members to encourage dialogue in Israel on the Arab Peace Initiative.

    Retired Saudi General Anwar Eshki visited Israel this week and met with Foreign Ministry Director-General Dore Gold and Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories Maj.-Gen. Yoav Mordechai.

    Eshki, who headed a delegation of Saudi academics and business people, also met with a group of Knesset members to encourage dialogue in Israel on the Arab Peace Initiative.

    #highly_unusual

  • When Israeli Soldiers Kill Palestinians, Even a Smoking Gun Doesn’t Lead to Indictments
    Mustafa Tamimi was killed when he was shot in the face with a gas canister in a 2012 protest. A year later, Rushdi Tamimi was shot in the belly with live fire. No one ever faced charges. A closer look at the two cases reveals that putting soldiers to trial is the exception, not the rule.

    Chaim Levinson Jul 07, 2016 Haaretz
    : http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.729602- I

    An in-depth study of two incidents in which Palestinian protesters were shot and killed during demonstrations in the West Bank shows that the level of evidence required to indict an Israel Defense Forces soldier is substantially higher than that demanded when Palestinians are investigated.
    Furthermore, the heavy media coverage given to the prosecution of Sgt. Elor Azaria – the Israeli soldier standing trial for manslaughter after shooting a subdued Palestinian assailant in March – is extremely rare, even though his actions are not.
    Of the 739 complaints filed by the Israeli nonprofit B’Tselem concerning death, injury or beatings of Palestinians since 2000, only 25 resulted in prosecutions (less than 4 percent). And these charges were usually for the smallest possible violations, such as negligent use of a weapon.
    Haaretz has obtained access to the IDF’s correspondence with the human rights group (which represented the families) concerning two high-profile cases – the deaths of Mustafa Tamimi and Rushdi Tamimi (no relation) – which were closed without any indictments being filed. The relevant documents and correspondence are classic examples of the manner in which the military advocate general conducts investigations into Palestinian fatalities.
    Mustafa Tamimi’s death occurred in December 2011, in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh. Following prayer services at the mosque, the local residents gathered in the village square, where their usual Friday ritual commenced. They attempted to march toward their farmland, which had been expropriated “for military purposes” and upon which the settlement of Neve Tzuf was established. The army deployed in order to prevent them from exiting the village. The two sides confronted each other. Initially there were songs, followed by curses, and then someone threw a stone at the soldiers. They responded with tear gas and the marchers dispersed. The stone throwers remained.
    For hours, the two sides played cat and mouse, one side throwing stones, the other firing tear gas. This is the norm in the village every Friday.
    However, things didn’t follow the usual script on December 9. Photos taken by Haim Schwartzenberg documented what happened at 14:26: An army jeep with soldiers from the Kfir Brigade inside was on a stone-strewn road outside the village. Two Palestinians wielding stones approached them, one with his face covered and the other wearing a gas mask. A stone was thrown and the back door of the jeep opened just a fraction. A tear-gas canister was fired from the jeep and hit the Palestinian wearing the gas mask in the head. The jeep moved away as the man fell to the ground, bleeding profusely.
    The wounded man was Mustafa, a 28-year-old from the village. Soon, many of the marchers gathered around him, photographing his smashed head from all angles. He was quickly put into a Palestinian taxi, which took him to a nearby checkpoint.
    “I opened the taxi door,” recounted a paramedic later, “and saw him unconscious, breathing with a rattle. The whole right side of his face under the eyes was ripped.”
    Tamimi was taken to Beilinson Hospital, Petah Tikva, where doctors commended the treatment provided by the female paramedic. However, he died the next morning. A slingshot was found in his pocket.
    Rushdi Tamimi’s death took place a year later, on November 17, 2012. The West Bank was seething as Operation Pillar of Defense raged in Gaza. There were incidents on the terraces lying between Nabi Saleh and the adjacent road, which links settlements in the Binyamin regional council and Israel’s center. A reserves’ military unit was summoned to protect the road.
    Video footage documented soldiers running toward Rushdi Tamimi, who was lying on the ground. The soldiers surrounded him and moved those present back. He was taken to hospital with a bullet in his stomach, but died two days later. A military inquiry found that a “mistake” had occurred, contravening the army’s values.
    For 90 minutes, the army had fired all the tear gas at its disposal, until it ran out. A medic was sent to get more, but in the meantime soldiers switched to using live ammunition, firing 80 bullets at demonstrators until the lethal one hit Rushdi Tamimi. In a highly exceptional move, the company commander was dismissed after the incident.

  • For Jews and Arabs, Israel’s School System Remains Separate and Unequal
    The cutting of funding for Arab teachers’ colleges is only the latest sign.

    Or Kashti Jul 07, 2016
    read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.729404- Israel News - Haaretz

    Naftali Bennett likes to tweet that he’s “the education minister of all Israeli children.” But the decision to give Arab teachers’ colleges in the north only about half the funding per student compared to other teachers’ colleges casts doubt on that statement. Arab students already suffer budgetary discrimination in elementary and high school, and now this discrimination is being extended to higher education.
    The ministry has thus unapologetically evolved from empty declarations about equality to different policies for Jews and Arabs. The message is the same as the one sent by the new civics textbook: The Arab minority’s status in Israel will always be different and limited.
    The Education Ministry isn’t solely to blame for the inequality in the job market that has resulted in a glut of Arabs becoming teachers. But it’s hard to accept the ministry’s claim that the thousands of unemployed Arab teachers require it to cut funding for Arab teachers’ colleges.

  • Affaire #Mimran : les 200.000 dollars qui enfoncent #Netanyahou
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/060716/affaire-mimran-les-200000-dollars-qui-enfoncent-netanyahou

    Benjamin Netanyahou, le 27 juin 2016, aux Etats-Unis. © Reuters La retranscription du premier interrogatoire d’Arnaud Mimran dans le dossier du “casse du siècle” contredit les déclarations du premier ministre israélien, selon lesquelles il n’aurait touché de l’affairiste français qu’une unique donation de 40 000 dollars en 2001.

    #International #France #CO2 #Quotas_carbone

    • Mafia du CO2 : Arnaud Mimran est condamné à 8 ans de prison ferme
      7 juillet 2016 | Par Fabrice Arfi
      https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/070716/mafia-du-co2-arnaud-mimran-est-condamne-8-ans-de-prison-ferme

      Arnaud Mimran, organisateur du “casse du siècle” et intime de Benjamin Netanyahou, a été condamné, jeudi 7 juillet, à huit ans de prison au terme du procès de la fraude aux quotas de CO2. Il a quitté le tribunal escorté par les gendarmes, direction la prison. Un mandat d’arrêt a été émis contre son associé, qui ne s’est pas présenté.

    • French Tycoon Linked to Netanyahu Sentenced to 8 Years in Prison

      Arnaud Mimran was convicted of fraud charges in what has been dubbed the ’fraud of the century.’ He has separately claimed to have deposited 170,000 euros in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s account.
      Dov Alfon (Paris) Jul 07, 2016 7:20 PM
      http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.729465

      Arnaud Mimran arrives at the Paris courthouse for deliberations in his trial over an alleged carbon tax scam, on July 7, 2016.Bertrand Guay, AFP

      PARIS — A Paris court on Thursday convicted and sentenced Arnaud Mimran in a massive carbon-tax fraud dubbed “the sting of the century” by French media outlets.

      Mimran claimed in the course of the investigation that he donated $200,000 to Benjamin Netanyahu for the latter’s 2009 election campaign. The prime minister says the only money he ever received from the French businessman was a $40,000 donation in 2001.

      Mimran, the main suspect in a trial with a dozen defendants, received an eight-year prison sentence and a 1-million-euro fine. In addition, personal assets up to the value of 283 million euros — the loss to tax revenue as a result of his offenses — will be forfeited to the state.

      The court accepted nearly all the recommendations of prosecutor Patrice Amar, who had requested a 10-year sentence for Mimran. The judges also denied Mimran’s request for a stay of sentence pending an appeal, and after the sentence was read out he was taken to prison in handcuffs.

      Six of Mimran’s codefendants were French Jews who were tried in absentia, having fled to Israel before the trial began. They reportedly received Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return, and the French government has filed extradition requests.

      Four of the other five defendants failed to appear for judgment and sentencing on Thursday, causing a minor courtroom drama. It was thought that they too — all of them French Jews with bank accounts in Israel, as well as numerous relatives and acquaintances — had fled to Israel.

      Mimran, in a final and characteristic act of defiance, entered the courtroom after the judges were already seated, moments before the bailiff declared him absent as well.

      The complete ruling was expected to be released later on Thursday. The head of the panel of judges read out a shorter version, stating at the outset that the court decided to impose harsh sentences in light of the “extensive harm to taxpayers” resulting from the fraud as well as the “great sophistication of this criminal organization, which may be unprecedented in the history of financial crimes.”

      Turning to face, Mimran, the head judge said, “The court found that it cannot believe your feigned proclamation of innocence, according to which your visits to the center of the fraudulent operations in Israel were a coincidence.” He added: “Mister Mimran, you led this fraud, albeit in partnership with the head of the Israeli gang Sami Sweid, who was later murdered in uncertain circumstances. You contributed significantly and knowingly to the organization and to the extent of money that was moved around. You are the main person responsible for the theft of enormous amounts from the pockets of French taxpayers.”

      Other defendants also received stiff sentences. The French-Israeli real-estate broker Eddie Abittan, who was tried in absentia and is believed to be in Israel, received a six-year custodial sentence — longer than prosecutors had requested. He was also fined 1 million euros and ordered to forfeit his assets. An Interpol arrest warrant was issued for Abittan and the other defendants who were convicted and who are presumed to be in Israel.

      Only one defendant was acquitted on all charges: Alexander Bernshtein, an Israeli citizen and the CEO of Albercom Finance Services. The court accepted his lawyer’s argument that the state failed to prove criminal intent or that his client had violated Israeli laws. His company, which specializes in currency transfers, was also exonerated.

      Marco Mouly, the trial’s No. 2 defendant was convicted on all counts. Like Mimran, he received an eight-year prison sentence, a fine of 1 million euros and the forfeiture of all his assets. Mouly failed to appear in court Thursday, having presumably fled to Israel after reporting to a police station on Wednesday, as required by his terms of release. When police searched his home they found several passports, at least one of which had been reported stolen. In addition to French and Israeli citizenship, Mouly has Tunisian citizenship and he has many financial assets in Israel and Switzerland.

      The trial’s No. 3 defendant, Jaroslaw Klapucki, the CEO of the French arm of Poland-headquartered emissions brokerage Consus, was sentenced to seven years in prison and fined 1 million euros. Consus was convicted of money laundering and was fined 3 million euros.

      The court found that Mouly and Klapucki founded MK Holdings as a phantom company incorporated in Israel for the purpose of laundering the profits from the fraud. Haaretz previously reported that there was no evidence that such a company had been registered or had operated in Israel.

      The lesser codefendants, some of them relatives of Mouly, did not appear in court and some are thought to be in Israel. They received prison sentence of between one and five years. It’s not clear whether prosecutors will request their extradition.

      Surprise was evident in the courtroom when the sentence of the key witness in the trial was read out. Jeremy Grinholz is hiding out in Israel under the name Eitan Liron. The court admitted that without his testimony, which he delivered to the fraud unit of the Israel Police, the prosecution would have found it difficult to dismantle the criminal organization at the center of the affair, but the judges ruled that this was insufficient to warrant reducing his punishment.

      “He was the group’s programmer, who enabled the enormous scope of this fraud and the lightning speed at which selling orders were executed. Without his skills this organization would have been cut down to its natural size,” the judges said.

      The court ordered prosecutors to start investigating additional offenses that surfaced during the trial. It did not detail the new allegations, with the exception of the suspicion that Mimran’s brother and parents were party to the fraud. The court stayed the confiscation of a building in the 16th arrondissement of Paris that the family owns until an investigation of its purchase is complete. Netanyahu has called the Mimrans a respectable Jewish family

    • Rappel
      Mafia du CO2 : soupçons sur la police
      27 avril 2016 | Par Fabrice Arfi
      https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/270416/mafia-du-co2-soupcons-sur-la-police?page_article=2

      (...) Il y a parfois de saisissants hasards de calendrier. Pendant le procès du CO2, une autre audience devrait agiter en mai la chronique médiatique au même moment à Paris : l’ancienne star de l’anti-gang français, le commissaire Michel Neyret, sera en effet jugée dans une salle voisine pour corruption en raison des faveurs consenties par deux escrocs lyonnais, Gilles Bénichou et Stéphane Alzraa, en échange de renseignements confidentiels. L’histoire est connue et a déjà fait grand bruit. Mais il est un pan peu exploré du dossier qui touche, lui, directement aux affaires du CO2 et à ses meurtres.

      Les nombreuses écoutes menées en mars 2011 sur les corrupteurs présumés de l’ancien numéro 2 de la PJ de Lyon, que Mediapart a pu consulter en intégralité, montrent ainsi combien il est parfois aisé pour des milieux peu réputés pour leur amour du code pénal de connaître en temps réel les avancées policières sur tel ou tel dossier – ça peut toujours servir. Le plus bavard des “amis” de Neyret est incontestablement Gilles Bénichou, pendu pendant des heures au téléphone avec Stéphane Alzraa, dont le nom a été associé dans certains volets de la fraude au CO2.

      Six mois après l’assassinat de Souied, Bénichou se lâche sur son portable grâce aux informations obtenues par Neyret sur la disparition de l’associé de Mimran :

      « On n’est pas simplement dans une affaire de règlement de comptes, là. C’est une très, très grosse affaire. […] D’après ce qu’on me dit, ce serait la plus grosse affaire de ces dix dernières années. […] Il y a énormément d’argent, ça débouche sur du trafic à l’international, sur du blanchiment, sur de l’association de malfaiteurs, ça débouche sur une tonne de merde. […] Elle va être étroitement liée au CO2. […] J’ai cru comprendre qu’il y aurait même des relations avec des gens du grand banditisme. » (écoute du 3 mars 2011)

      « Là, je suis en train de prendre les infos pour savoir exactement où en est l’affaire de Samy [Souied]. Ils sont sur une affaire d’Arnaud [Mimran]. Ils veulent vraiment tout pour sauter tout le monde. Ils sont sur Arnaud Mimran pour un montant relativement important. » (écoute du 7 mars 2011)

      « Alors, d’une affaire de meurtre, ça va découler sur l’affaire du CO2. […] Ça va vraiment gicler très haut. Je te dis, il y a des familles entières qui vont être décimées. Et puis c’est des peines [de prison] à deux chiffres qui arrivent. » (écoute du 9 mars)

      Qui informe Neyret, qui n’a jamais été saisi de ces affaires, avant que lui-même ne rencarde Bénichou & Co ? Sur cette question précise, accessoire au regard du fond du dossier Neyret mais fondamentale pour les sujets touchant à la mafia du CO2, l’enquête de l’Inspection générale des services (IGS) et du juge d’instruction Patrick Gachon a été d’une grande pudeur.

      En janvier et mars 2012, devant le magistrat instructeur, le commissaire Neyret a affirmé : « Mon seul interlocuteur sur Paris, pour cette affaire, c’était Franck Douchy [patron de l’OCLCO à l’époque – ndlr]. » « J’ai appelé Douchy car il a une connaissance étendue du banditisme parisien. Je l’ai appelé naturellement parce qu’en plus, c’est quelqu’un avec qui je corresponds régulièrement », a-t-il ajouté. Ce qui est vrai : une expertise technique a établi que les deux policiers avaient été en relation une trentaine de fois par mail sur la période, entre janvier et juillet 2011.

      Entendu à son tour en décembre 2011 par la “police des polices”, le commissaire Douchy a seulement assuré que Neyret l’avait contacté pour savoir « s’il était intéressé par les affaires du milieu juif parisien (escroquerie sur les droits à polluer et règlements de comptes) ». Neyret lui aurait proposé de l’introduire auprès du frère du Samy Souied, ce que Douchy a « évidemment » accepté. Mais il dément aujourd’hui catégoriquement avoir pour autant donné la moindre information à Neyret sur le contenu des enquêtes en cours, les pistes privilégiées et les éventuels suspects dans le viseur des policiers. Dans l’entourage de Douchy, on se demande même si Neyret n’a pas protégé un autre informateur un peu trop bavard place Beauvau. Aucune enquête n’a permis à ce jour de tirer au clair cette question.

      Un épais mystère entoure également la manière dont Neyret a pu se procurer un mail reçu par la brigade criminelle de Paris (en charge de l’affaire du meurtre de Souied), que Bénichou a pu lire avec gourmandise au téléphone en mars 2011 à un célèbre financier du trafic de cocaïne en cavale, Yannick Dacheville. Il est question dans ce message, une fois encore, d’Arnaud Mimran, qui aurait blanchi de l’argent de Samy Souied en Israël sur fond de business immobilier. Au téléphone, Bénichou dit « avoir tout reçu de Neyret, il m’a tout amené ce matin ». Mais Neyret n’est pas le destinataire initial du mail. Une autre adresse électronique apparaît sur le courriel. Qui se cache derrière ? Mystère. Au palais de justice et au 36, quai des Orfèvres, on se demande encore comment un tel document a pu tomber entre les mains de « voyous » avant d’être lu tranquillement au téléphone à l’une des plus grandes figures du trafic de drogue, toujours en fuite.

  • Scotland Yard a convoqué Livni pour des soupçons de “crimes de guerre”
    Par i24news \ Publié: 03/07/2016 - 14:31
    http://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/israel/diplomatie-defense/118734-160703-scotland-yard-a-convoque-livni-pour-soupcons-de-crimes-de-guer

    La convocation a été annulée suite à des contacts diplomatiques entre Israël et la Grande-Bretagne

    L’ancienne ministre des Affaires étrangères et actuelle députée de l’Union sioniste Tzipi Livni a reçu jeudi une convocation de la police britannique pour être interrogée sur des soupçons de participation à des crimes de guerre pendant l’Opération Plomb Durci à Gaza en 2008.

    Livni se trouve actuellement à Londres pour assister à une conférence organisée par le journal israélien Haaretz.

    La convocation a cependant été annulée après des contacts diplomatiques entre Israël et la Grande-Bretagne, à la fin desquels Tzipi Livni a pu bénéficier d’une immunité.

    Un haut fonctionnaire à Jérusalem, qui a requis l’anonymat en raison de la sensibilité de l’affaire, a déclaré au journal Haaretz que l’ambassade d’Israël à Londres a reçu jeudi une lettre de l’unité des crimes de guerre de Scotland Yard, demandant à ce que la convocation soit remise à Livni.

    Selon le responsable, le courrier indiquait que la police britannique savait que Livni devait arriver à Londres durant le week-end, et lui a donc demandé de venir au poste de police pour être interrogée.

    Le but de l’entrevue était de discuter de la participation de Livni à des crimes de guerre et des violations de la Convention de Genève, en tant que ministre des Affaires étrangères et vice-premier ministre, et en tant que membre du cabinet diplomatique de sécurité lors de l’opération Plomb durci en 2008 à Gaza.

    Au cours des dernières années, les organisations pro-palestiniennes ont déposé une série de plaintes concernant cette opération contre de hauts responsables israéliens, notamment Livni, dont le dossier a été traité avec ténacité par les autorités britanniques.

    La lettre a été reçue par l’ambassade deux jours avant la venue de Livni à Londres, qui devait participer à une conférence organisée par Haaretz et rencontrer la communauté juive.

    Le haut fonctionnaire a précisé que la lettre soulignait le fait que la convocation devait se faire « sur une base volontaire », et qu’elle n’était effective seulement si Livni souhaitait venir.
    (...)
    Des contacts ont par la suite été établis avec le gouvernement britannique, par crainte de voir Livni arrêtée à son arrivée à Londres ou durant de son séjour.

    Il a alors été convenu avec le ministère britannique des Affaires étrangères que la visite de Livni à Londres allait obtenir le statut d’une « affectation diplomatique spéciale », qui lui accorderait automatiquement une immunité, la mettant à l’abri d’une éventuelle arrestation et de poursuites judiciaires.

    Dans le même temps, l’ambassade d’Israël en Grande-Bretagne a informé Scotland Yard que Livni ne se rendrait pas pour interrogatoire.

    ““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    In Unprecedented Move, British Police Summoned Tzipi Livni Over Suspected Gaza War Crimes

    Livni is currently in London to attend the Haaretz Israel Conference; The summons was cancelled after diplomatic contacts between Israel and Britain.
    Barak Ravid (London) Jul 03, 2016 12:41 PM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.728619

    (...) Livni referred to the summons at the Haaretz conference in London on Sunday, saying that a solution needed to be found once and for all to the legal threat facing Israeli leaders who visit Britain.

    Livni said that she came to the conference to “speak about what I represent, the desire for peace,” but added that for years, every one of her visits to the U.K. has been subject to legal threat due to the arrest warrants against her in connection with Israeli military action against Hamas in Gaza.

    She added that she had decided to address the issue publicly in light of the police summons. “I’m proud of the decisions I made as a cabinet minister in the Israeli government,” Livni said.

    She slammed Hamas, stressing that it was defined as a terrorist organization in Europe. The group’s religious ideology was not directed at establishing a state, but at fighting Jews and Christians, Livni said.

    Hamas, she added, continued to attack Israel despite the fact that Israel had left the Strip and abandoned its settlements in the territory. “Just two days ago, Hamas targeted a children center in Sderot. Thank God it was closed,” she said.

    Livni said she rejects any comparison between Israeli soldiers or air force pilots, who try to avoid harming civilians, and terrorists, as well as any comparison between a Hamas arch-terrorist who gives an order and Israeli decision makers.

    “The British legal system is being abused,” she said.

    Livni said that Israel is open to visits by British ministers, and that Israel did not question their decisions in cabinet. Israel, she said, respects Britain’s fight against global terrorism and therefore expects Britain to respect Israel.

    “The fact that Israeli decision-makers and army commanders are forced to participate in a ’theater of the absurd’ when we come to London is something that is not acceptable,” she said. “It’s not a personal issue, it’s a moral issue and this is something that needs to be changed.”

  • In response to Elie Wiesel advertisement comparing Hamas to Nazis, 327 Jewish Holocaust survivors and descendants publish New York Times ad accusing Israel of ’ongoing massacre of the Palestinian people.’
    Holocaust Survivors Condemn Israel for ’Gaza Massacre,’ Call for Boycott - Diplomacy and Defense - Haaretz

    Haaretz Aug 23, 2014
    read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.612072

    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.612072

    Hundreds of Holocaust survivors and descendants of survivors have signed a letter, published as an advertisement in Saturday’s New York Times, condemning “the massacre of Palestinians in Gaza” and calling for a complete boycott of Israel.
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    According to the letter, the condemnation was prompted by an advertisement written by Elie Wiesel and published in major news outlets worldwide, accusing Hamas of “child sacrifice” and comparing the group to the Nazis.
    The letter, signed by 327 Jewish Holocaust survivors and descendants of survivors and sponsored by the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, accuses Wiesel of “abuse of history” in order to justify Israel’s actions in the Gaza Strip:
    “…we are disgusted and outraged by Elie Wiesel’s abuse of our history in these pages to justify the unjustifiable: Israel’s wholesale effort to destroy Gaza and the murder of more than 2,000 Palestinians, including many hundreds of children. Nothing can justify bombing UN shelters, homes, hospitals and universities. Nothing can justify depriving people of electricity and water.”
    The letter also blames the United States of aiding Israel in its Gaza operation, and the West in general of protecting Israel from condemnation.
    “Genocide begins with the silence of the world,” the letter reads.
    The letter ends with a call to bring the blockade of Gaza to an immediate end, and for a full boycott of Israel. “Never again” must mean NEVER AGAIN FOR ANYONE!,” the letter concludes.
    Full text of letter:
    "Jewish survivors and descendants of survivors and victims of Nazi genocide unequivocally condemn the massacre of Palestinians in Gaza
    "As Jewish survivors and descendants of survivors and victims of the Nazi genocide we unequivocally condemn the massacre of Palestinians in Gaza and the ongoing occupation and colonization of historic Palestine. We further condemn the United States for providing Israel with the funding to carry out the attack, and Western states more generally for using their diplomatic muscle to protect Israel from condemnation. Genocide begins with the silence of the world.
    "We are alarmed by the extreme, racist dehumanization of Palestinians in Israeli society, which has reached a fever-pitch. In Israel, politicians and pundits in The Times of Israel and The Jerusalem Post have called openly for genocide of Palestinians and right-wing Israelis are adopting Neo-Nazi insignia.
    "Furthermore, we are disgusted and outraged by Elie Wiesel’s abuse of our history in these pages to justify the unjustifiable: Israel’s wholesale effort to destroy Gaza and the murder of more than 2,000 Palestinians, including many hundreds of children. Nothing can justify bombing UN shelters, homes, hospitals and universities. Nothing can justify depriving people of electricity and water.
    “We must raise our collective voices and use our collective power to bring about an end to all forms of racism, including the ongoing genocide of Palestinian people. We call for an immediate end to the siege against and blockade of Gaza. We call for the full economic, cultural and academic boycott of Israel. “Never again” must mean NEVER AGAIN FOR ANYONE!”
    For full list of the letter’s signatories, click here

    • Des survivants de l’Holocauste condamnent Israël pour le massacre de Gaza et appellent au boycott
      Déposé par VB dans 26 août 2014
      http://www.gauche-anticapitaliste.ch/old/?p=12348

      Nous publions, dessous, un article paru le 23 août dans le quotidien israélien Haaretz portant sur une lettre rédigée par 327 juifs et descendants de survivants de l’Holocauste qui condamnent le massacre en cours à Gaza et appellent au boycott d’Israël.

      Des centaines de survivants et descendants de survivants de l’holocauste ont signé une lettre, publiée sous forme de publicité dans le New York Times de samedi, condamnant « le massacre des Palestiniens de Gaza » et appelant à un boycott total d’Israël.

      Selon la lettre, la condamnation a été motivée par une annonce écrite sous forme d’une publicité par Elie Wiesel et publiée dans les principaux organes de presse du monde entier, accusant le Hamas de « sacrifice d’enfants » et comparant le groupe aux nazis. Le chapeau de l’encart publicitaire que s‘est payé Elie Wiesel (prix Nobel de la paix, rescapé du nazisme) annonçait de façon plus que provocatrice « Les juifs ont rejeté le sacrifice des enfants il y a de ça 3,500 ans. A présent c’est au tour du Hamas ». La lettre, signée par 327 survivants et descendants de survivants de l’Holocauste juif et parrainée par le réseau international juif anti-sioniste, accuse Wiesel « d’abus de l’histoire » afin de justifier les actions d’Israël dans la bande de Gaza :

      « Nous sommes dégoûtés et scandalisés par la violence d’Elie Wiesel qui abuse notre histoire dans ces pages pour justifier l’injustifiable : l’effort systématique d’Israël à détruire Gaza et à assassiner plus de 2.000 Palestiniens, dont des centaines d’enfants. Rien ne peut justifier le bombardement des abris de l’ONU, les maisons, les hôpitaux et les universités. Rien ne peut justifier de priver les gens de l’électricité et de l’eau ». La lettre accuse également les Etats-Unis d’aider Israël dans son opération de Gaza, et l’Occident en général de protéger Israël de la condamnation. »Le génocide commence par le silence du monde », dit la lettre. Elle se termine par un appel à mettre immédiatement un terme au blocus de Gaza et à un boycott total d’Israël. La lettre conclue par « Never again » (ndlr : « Plus jamais ça ») doit signifier « Plus jamais ça pour qui que ce soit ! »

      Le texte intégral de la lettre :

      « Les survivants et descendants de survivants et victimes du génocide nazi condamnent sans équivoque le massacre des Palestiniens à Gaza.

      Comme survivants et descendants de survivants juifs et des victimes du génocide nazi, nous condamnons sans équivoque le massacre de Palestiniens à Gaza, l’occupation continue ainsi que la colonisation de la Palestine historique. Nous condamnons en outre les États-Unis pour fournir à Israël le financement nécessaire pour mener à bien cette attaque, et les pays occidentaux plus généralement, pour peser de tout leur poids diplomatique afin de protéger Israël de la condamnation. Tout génocide commence par le silence du monde.

      Nous sommes alarmés par l’extrême et très raciste déshumanisation des Palestiniens dans la société israélienne, qui a atteint un paroxysme. En Israël, les politiciens et les experts dans le Times d’Israël et le Jerusalem Post ont appelé ouvertement au génocide des Palestiniens, tandis que la droite israélienne arbore désormais publiquement des insignes néo-nazi.

      En outre, nous sommes dégoûtés et scandalisés par la violence d’Elie Wiesel pour justifier l’injustifiable : l’effort de guerre d’Israël consiste à détruire Gaza et à assassiner plus de 2.000 Palestiniens, dont des centaines d’enfants. Rien ne peut justifier le bombardement des abris de l’ONU, des maisons, des hôpitaux et des universités ! Rien ne peut justifier de priver les gens d’électricité et d’eau !

      Nous devons élever nos voix et utiliser notre pouvoir collectif pour mettre un terme à toutes les formes de racisme, y compris le génocide en cours du peuple palestinien. Nous demandons la fin immédiate du siège et du blocus de Gaza. Nous appelons au boycott économique, culturel et académique d’Israël. « Never again » doit signifier PLUS JAMAIS POUR PERSONNE ! »

    • Clinton Campaign Slams Max Blumenthal for Accusing Eli Wiesel of ’Inciting Hatred’

      ’Secretary Clinton emphatically rejects these offensive, hateful, and patently absurd statements about Elie Wiesel,’ policy adviser says.
      JTA Jul 07, 2016 2:19 PM
      read more: http://www.haaretz.com/world-news/u-s-election-2016/1.729514

      (...) Secretary Clinton emphatically rejects these offensive, hateful, and patently absurd statements about Elie Wiesel,” Jake Sullivan, a policy adviser to Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, said in a statement shared with JTA on Wednesday. “She believes they are wrong in all senses of the term.”

      The statement was in response to a series of tweets over the weekend by Max Blumenthal, a journalist who often writes critically about Israel. Although Blumenthal has no connection to the Clinton campaign, he is the son of Sidney Blumenthal, a longtime confidante and adviser to the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate. The connection is mentioned frequently by other journalists when writing about Max Blumenthal.

      Just hours after Wiesel’s death on Saturday, Max Blumenthal wrote a flurry of tweets insisting Wiesel should not be be honored because of his unwavering support for Israel.

      “Elie Wiesel is dead. He spent his last years inciting hatred, defending apartheid & palling around with fascists,” Blumenthal wrote.

      “Elie Wiesel went from a victim of war crimes to a supporter of those who commit them. He did more harm than good and should not be honored.”

      In his response, Sullivan said Blumenthal and others “should cease and desist” from criticizing the Auschwitz survivor and author.

      “Elie Wiesel was a hero to her as he was to so many, and she will keep doing everything she can to honor his memory and to carry his message forward,” Sullivan wrote of Clinton.

      Responding to the campaign’s statement, Max Blumenthal accused Clinton of remaining silent when Wiesel accused Palestinians of “ritual child sacrifice.” He was referring to an advertisement in 2014 by The Jewish Values Network in which Wiesel spoke out against Hamas and allegations that it had intentionally placed munitions and fighters in areas near children.

      Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, who heads The Jewish Values Network, has called Blumenthal an “informal adviser” to Clinton, which the campaign categorically denies.(...)

  • Départ vers Israël d’un bateau turc chargé d’aide pour Gaza
    AFP
    01/07/2016
    http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/994346/depart-vers-israel-dun-bateau-turc-charge-daide-pour-gaza.html

    Un navire turc transportant de l’aide destinée aux habitants de Gaza a pris le large vendredi depuis un port du sud du pays, une initiative qui s’inscrit dans le cadre de la normalisation des relations entre Israël et Ankara annoncée en début de semaine.

    Chargé de plus de 10.000 tonnes d’aide humanitaire, le Lady Leyla a quitté le port de Mersin vers celui d’Ashdod en Israël, pour une traversée censée durer une trentaine d’heures, a indiqué la chaîne privée de télévision turque NTV, précisant que l’aide devait être livrée aux habitants de l’enclave palestinienne avant la fête de fin du ramadan prévue mardi.(...)

    #GAZA

    • Arrivée de l’aide humanitaire turque pour Gaza à Ashdod
      Par i24news
      Publié: 03/07/2016 - 13:40, mis à jour: 14:10

      Les familles de trois Israéliens dont les corps sont détenus par le Hamas ont manifesté

      Le premier convoi d’aide humanitaire turque à destination de la bande de Gaza est arrivé ce dimanche au port d’Ashdod en Israël.

      Chargé de plus de 10.000 tonnes d’aide humanitaire, le Lady Leyla, navire battant pavillon panaméen, chargé de fournitures, avait quitté vendredi le port de Mersin vers celui de la ville côtière israélienne.

      Israël a autorisé l’envoi de marchandises vers le territoire palestinien et fournit 1.000 camions d’aide quotidienne pour leur transfert, après la conclusion d’un accord de normalisation avec Ankara la semaine dernière.

      De leurs cotés, les familles de trois Israéliens dont les corps sont détenus par le Hamas ont organisé une manifestation pour protester contre l’acheminement de cette aide.

      ““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““

      Turkish Ship With Humanitarian Aid for Gaza Strip Docks in Israeli Port

      Families of fallen and missing Israelis vow to block transfer of aid to Gaza in protest at the failure of the Israel-Turkey agreement to deal with the return of their sons.
      Almog Ben Zikri Jul 03, 2016 http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.728592

      A picture taken on July 1, 2016 shows the Panama flagged ship Lady Leyla setting off from the southern Turkish port of Mersin bound for Ashdod.Huseyin Kar, AFP

      A Turkish cargo ship bearing humanitarian equipment and food destined for the Gaza Strip docked in the southern Israeli port city of Ashdod on Sunday afternoon in accordance with the recent reconciliation agreement signed between Israel and Turkey.

      Israel and Turkey last week agreed to normalize relations after six years of diplomatic standoff between the two states. In terms of the agreement, Turkey is able to send aid to Gaza via Israel.

      Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim announced last Monday that the ship would set sail on Friday, carrying 20,000 tons of aid. Yildirim also said that the agreement with Israel reflects Turkey’s role as protector of oppressed peoples in the Middle East.

      The family of Oron Shaul, an Israeli soldier whose body is being held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip, arrived at the Kerem Shalom border crossing on Sunday morning, planning to block the transfer of the ship’s cargo to Gaza.

      The family, along with the families of other Israelis missing in Gaza and families of soldiers who died in 2014’s Operation Protective Edge, opposed the agreement with Turkey because it did not include the return of missing Israelis.

      “My son has been here, just over this fence, for two years already,” said Zehava Shaul, Oron’s mother. “Two years in which we didn’t open our mouths and sat in silence.”

      She criticized the Israeli government for allowing humanitarian aid into Gaza but neglecting the humanitarian problem of returning the missing to their families.

      “We aren’t opposed to this agreement,” Herzl Shaul, Oron’s father. “But it is a terrible deal for the families. Our boys are not mentioned in it. This is a prize to Hamas and a loss for Israel. The prime minister got two years of silence with countless promises that he would see to it that the boys would be returned home.”

      The issue of the missing soldier’s bodies was not part of the final agreement between Turkey and Israel, though Turkey issued a separate “letter of goodwill” in which it promised to work with Hamas for the release of the missing Israelis.

    • Arrivée d’une aide turque pour Gaza après l’accord de normalisation israélo-turc
      Ashdod (Israël) (AFP) 03.07.2016 - 18:31
      http://www.courrierinternational.com/depeche/arrivee-dune-aide-turque-pour-gaza-apres-laccord-de-normalisa

      Un navire turc transportant de l’aide humanitaire à destination de la bande de Gaza est arrivé dans un port israélien dimanche, une semaine après la normalisation des relations entre Israël et la Turquie après six ans de brouille.

      Le navire cargo Lady Leyla est arrivé dimanche après-midi au port d’Ashdod, à une trentaine de kilomètres au nord de la bande de Gaza, après avoir quitté la Turquie vendredi, a constaté un journaliste de l’AFP.

      Sa cargaison est composée de 11.000 tonnes de denrées alimentaires de première nécessité et de jouets, selon l’agence nationale d’informations turque Anadolu.

      Elle sera inspectée par les autorités israéliennes avant d’être envoyée dans la bande de Gaza, contrôlée par le mouvement islamiste Hamas et durement touchée par trois guerres avec Israël depuis 2008 et par un blocus israélien.

      La Turquie avait d’abord exigé une levée du blocus du territoire palestinien pour normaliser ses relations avec Israël, ce que l’Etat hébreu avait refusé. Les deux pays ont finalement trouvé un compromis autorisant la Turquie à envoyer de l’aide humanitaire via le port d’Ashdod.

      Israël estime le blocus nécessaire pour empêcher le Hamas de recevoir des matériaux pouvant être utilisés à des fins militaires, notamment pour construire des tunnels permettant à des hommes armés de s’infiltrer en Israël.

      Des responsables de l’ONU ont de leur côté appelé à une levée du blocus en raison de la détérioration des conditions de vie dans l’enclave palestinienne.

    • Turkish delegation welcomes humanitarian aid to Gaza
      July 4, 2016 8:02 P.M. (Updated: July 4, 2016 11:07 P.M.)
      http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=772117

      GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — An official delegation from Turkey arrived in the Gaza Strip on Monday to partake in an official ceremony to welcome Turkish humanitarian aid to Gaza, which arrived a day earlier on board a Turkish ship.

      The ceremony, held at the Kerem Shalom crossing, included the Turkish delegation, headed by ambassador to the Palestinian Authority Mustafa Sarni, as well as Palestinian officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Social Development.

      Ministry of Social Development in Gaza Undersecretary Yousif Ibrahim said that the 11,000 tons of aid — which include flour, sugar, rice, cooking oil, clothes, toys and diapers — would immediately be distributed to the needy in the besieged Gaza Strip.

      Israeli demonstrators on Saturday reportedly attempted to block the delivery of aid to the besieged Gaza Strip from the Turkish cargo ship Lady Leyla, which docked at Israel’s Ashdod port earlier that morning.

  • WATCH: Verbal Clashes in Knesset After Lawmaker Calls Israeli Soldiers Murderers

    Israeli Arab MK Zoabi causes storm during debate on reconciliation with Turkey, prompting calls to have her barred from legislature.
    Jonathan Lis Jun 29, 2016 5:46 PM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.727913

    A clash broke out at the Knesset plenum on Wednesday after MK Haneen Zoabi (Joint List) called Israeli soldiers who participated in the takeover of the 2010 Gaza flotilla “murderers.” Her comments took place during a legislature session on the reconciliation agreement with Turkey, formally announced on Tuesday.

    Lawmakers Mickey Levy (Yesh Atid), Oren Hazan (Likud) and Hilik Bar (Zionist Union) gathered around the podium and demanded that Zoabi be removed. Levy even ran from his seat and tried to forcefully remove her from the podium. The meeting’s chairman, Deputy Knesset Speaker Hamad Amar (Yisrael Beiteinu) removed Zoabi from the platform and the plenum. Other lawmakers, including Hazan, Levy, Meretz chairwoman Zehava Galon and Joint List MK Jamal Zahalka, were also removed.

    Turkey and Israel have reconciled after a six-year rift. The agreement renormalizes diplomatic relations between the two countries and ends the crisis that erupted following the death of nine Turkish civilians during a raid by Israeli commandos on the Mavi Marmara flotilla to Gaza Strip in May 2010 – on which Zoabi was also present.

    “I stood here six years ago, some of you remember the hatred and hostility toward me, and look where we got to,” Zoabi said in her speech. “Apologies to the families of those who were called terrorists. The nine that were killed, it turns out that their families need to be compensated. I demand an apology to all the political activists who were on the Marmara and an apology to MK Haneen Zoabi, who you’ve incited against for six years. I demand compensation and I will donate it to the next flotilla. As long as there’s a siege, more flotillas need to be organized.”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QVW2fOMVjQ


    MK Haneen Zoabi’s full speech at the Knesset

    #Haneen_Zoabi

    • Des parlementaires israéliens tentent de s’en prendre à Haneen Zoabi
      Publié le 29 juin 2016 sur le blog de Jonathan Cook | Traduction : Jean-Marie Flémal
      http://www.pourlapalestine.be/des-parlementaires-israeliens-tentent-de-sen-prendre-a-haneen-zoabi

      (...) Tous les échanges verbaux de cette vidéo sont en hébreu, mais cela n’importe guère. Vous n’avez pas besoin de comprendre la langue pour vous rendre compte de ce qui se passe. Un député juif, Oren Hazan, du parti du Likoud de Netanyahou, chahute Zoabi sans arrêt pendant plus de quatre minutes, alors que le président de l’assemblée ne fait rien de plus que de lui demander poliment de se calmer et de s’abstenir d’interrompre l’oratrice.

      Rappelez-vous que des députés palestiniens se font régulièrement éjecter de la Knesset pour bien moins que ce genre de comportement intempestif et de violation du protocole parlementaire. Remarquez également que la caméra de la Knesset passe autant de temps, si pas plus, à filmer le trublion qu’à suivre Zoabi, légitimant implicitement de la sorte ce comportement antidémocratique.

      Mais, quand Zoabi accuse les militaires de « meurtre » – après quelque 4 min 30 sur la vidéo – c’est tout l’enfer qui se déchaîne brusquement. Une douzaine, voire plus, de députés juifs se précipitent vers le perchoir et se mettent en encercler Zoabi comme une meute aboyante de hyènes. À ce stade, quand Zoabi est menacée physiquement par plusieurs députés en plein parlement, on pourrait penser qu’il serait temps d’en éjecter quelques-uns par la force, ne serait-ce que pour bien montrer que cette subversion du processus démocratique ne peut être tolérée. Mais pas le moins du monde. On les traite avec des gants blancs.(...)