city:beirut

  • The Aviationist » F-35 Stealth Aircraft Goes “Live” On Flight Tracking Websites As It Flies Mission Over Israel
    https://theaviationist.com/2018/07/24/f-35-stealth-aircraft-goes-live-on-flight-tracking-websites-as-it-fl

    An F-35, most probably one of the Adir jets recently delivered to the Israeli Air Force, appears on Flightradar24.com: deliberate action or just a case of bad OPSEC?
    On Jul. 23, an F-35 went fully visible on popular flight tracking website Flightradar24.com as it performed a mission out of Nevatim airbase. The aircraft could be monitored for about 1 hour as it went “feet wet” (over the sea) north of Gaza then flew northbound to operate near Haifa.
    […]
    As for the reasons why the aircraft could be tracked online, there are various theories. The first one is that it was a deliberate action: considered the F-35 went “live” few hours Israel made first operational use of David’s Sling missile defense system against two SS-21 Syrian ballistic missiles, there is someone who believes the mission was part of a PSYOPS aimed at threatening Israel’s enemies (Syria in particular). Our readers will probably remember the weird, most probably bogus claim of an IAF F-35 mission into the Iranian airspace originally reported by the Al-Jarida newspaper, a Kuwaiti outlet often used to deliver Israeli propaganda/PSYOPS messages.

    However the Israeli Air Force has already made public the fact that the F-35 has been used in air strikes in the Middle East (Syria and another unspecified “front”) lately. On May 23, the Israeli Air Force Commander, Maj. Gen. Amikam Norkin said during a IAF conference attended by 20 commander of air forces from around the world: “The Adir planes are already operational and flying in operational missions. We are the first in the world to use the F-35 in operational activity”. He also showed a photograph of an “Adir” flying at high altitude off Beirut (with radar reflectors, hence not in “stealthy mode”). In other words, there’s probably no need to remind Syria or Iran that the Israeli Air Force has the F-35 since they are already using it in combat.

    For this reason, there is also someone who believes that the first appearance of an Israeli Adir on Flightradar24 may have been a simple mistake: the Mode-S transponder was not turned off. A case of OPSEC fail in one of the most secretive air arms in the world.

    Indeed, transponders are usually turned off during real operations as well as when conducting missions that need to remain invisible (at least to public flight tracking websites and commercial off the shelf receivers). Unless the transponder is turned on for a specific purpose: to let the world know they are there. In fact, as reported several times here, it’s difficult to say whether some aircraft that can be tracked online broadcast their position for everyone to see by accident or on purpose: increasingly, RC-135s and other strategic ISR platforms, including the Global Hawks, operate over highly sensitive regions, such as Ukraine or the Korean Peninsula, with the ADS-B and Mode-S turned on, so that even commercial off the shelf receivers (or public tracking websites) can monitor them. Is it a way to show the flag? Or just a mistake?

  • With Weddings in Cyprus, Israelis and Lebanese Bridge a Divide - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/18/world/middleeast/israel-lebanon-cyprus-marriages.html

    They eat falafel, live on the Mediterranean and worry that a new war could erupt across the hostile border that separates them. But many Israelis and Lebanese share something else: a desire to circumvent their respective religious authorities when getting married.

    In both Lebanon and Israel, only religious leaders can perform marriages, so lovers who wish to keep the rabbis, sheikhs, priests and pastors out of their love life have to tie the knot elsewhere.
    […]
    Cyprus owes its rise as an international marriage destination to geography, economics and law. Its airports receive direct flights from cities across Europe and the Middle East; its prices are good; and its laws permit foreigners to contract marriages with no clerics involved.

    And its palm-studded beaches, historic sites and abundant hotels are inducements for couples to start honeymooning as soon as the ink on their marriage contract is dry.

    About 7,000 marriages are conducted in Cyprus per year, adding 1 million euros, or over $1.1 million, to the economy annually, according to the Cyprus Tourist Organization. While European lovers prefer more picturesque towns elsewhere on the island, Israelis and Lebanese tend toward Larnaka, which can be reached by air from both Tel Aviv and Beirut in less than an hour.

  • The world isn’t flat - Opinion
    The dangerous nation-state law declares the intention of its authors: To teach generations of Israeli Jews that the world is flat and entrust them with the mission of expelling and wiping out a nation

    Amira Hass
    Jul 24, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-the-world-isn-t-flat-1.6310944

    From a balcony in Ramallah, surrounded by friends and acquaintances, the nation-state law shrinks to its proper ludicrous proportions. The creationists erased a nation from the written text.
    And yet, nine indisputable representatives of that nation sat and joked, turned serious, reminisced, traded political gossip about senior Palestinian Authority officials, voiced fears and concerns, made predictions and retracted them. What a privilege it was for me to sit among them and enjoy what is so natural to them that they don’t even categorize it — a rootedness and a belonging that don’t need verbal trappings; a zest for life; unimaginable strength and courage.
    They were born in a village that was destroyed; in a refugee camp in the Gaza Strip; in Damascus, Jaffa, Nablus, Ramallah, Nazareth, Acre. They’re the first, second and third generations of the 1948 refugees. Some are third-class citizens — fifth-class, now — of the state that robbed them of their homeland. Some returned to their homeland after the Palestinian Authority was established in 1994 and settled down in the West Bank, subject to Israeli military orders.
    >> Planted by Netanyahu and co., nation-state law is a time bomb exploding in Israel’s face | Analysis ■ By degrading Arabic, Israel has degraded Arabs | Opinion ■ Israel’s contentious nation-state law: Everything you need to know >>
    All are members of the same nation, regardless of what is written on their identity cards. They escaped Israeli bombings in Beirut and in Gaza; they lived under Israeli-imposed curfew, siege and house arrest; they were jailed in Israeli prisons for political activity; they were interrogated by Israel’s Shin Bet security service; they raised themselves from poverty; they wandered, studied, worked in left-wing organizations.

    All of them have lost relatives and close friends, killed by Israel or in civil wars in the Arab countries where they used to live. All of them treasure the silent, pained gazes of their parents, who told them about the home that was lost 70 years ago.
    Some of them also became bourgeois. Which doesn’t spare them the checkpoints; the Israeli expressions of racism and arrogance; the forced separations from relatives who cannot go (from the Gaza Strip) or come (from Syria); the fears for the future.

    Not far, yet very far from there — under a lean-to in Khan al-Ahmar — women sit on thin mattresses placed on the ground and talk about the attack by police officers two weeks ago and a wedding party that is scheduled for this week. The strength and courage of these women from the Jahalin Bedouin tribe are equally evident. There, in those heartbreaking shelters, Israel’s greedy racism is also an immediate issue, broadcast by the spacious houses of the settlement of Kfar Adumim.
    How do they live like this, with nonstop threats and aggression from bureaucrats, soldiers, policemen and settlers who covet the little that remains to them? Where do they get the strength to live in crowded conditions that are hard to get used to, without electricity or running water — which are the minimum conditions for community life — with shrinking pasturage and shrinking income, and yet not give in to the expellers’ orders? Their strength comes from that same rootedness and natural sense of belonging, which the deniers of evolution, the drafters of the nation-state law, are incapable of understanding.
    For over a month, this community, which is threatened with a new expulsion, has been hosting mass public events — press conferences, rallies, speeches, delegations. There’s an element of exploitation and ostentation here on the Palestinian Authority’s part. Yet at the same time, another process is taking place, one that is very political: Palestinians from both urban and rural communities are liberating themselves from the alienation they used to feel toward the Bedouin.

  • Patrick Cockburn · The War in Five Sieges · LRB 19 July 2018
    https://www.lrb.co.uk/v40/n14/patrick-cockburn/the-war-in-five-sieges

    The decision to defend certain areas, or to besiege them, was often determined by sectarian or ethnic allegiances. Both the government (dominated by the Shia Alawi sect) and the opposition (dominated by Sunni Arabs) would play down the fact, but divisions between communities were at the heart of the Syrian civil war. These divisions decided the location of the military frontlines that snaked through Damascus and Homs, much as they had once done in Belfast and Beirut. The government-held districts were inhabited by the minority groups, Alawites, Kurds, Christians, Druze, Ismaili and Shia, which together make up about 40 per cent of the population. A businessman in Damascus told me that the weakness of the anti-Assad forces was that ‘the exiled opposition leaders have not developed a serious plan to reassure the minorities.’ Opposition enclaves were overwhelmingly Sunni Arab, though the Sunni community was itself divided between rich and poor and between rural and urban areas. Well-off secular Sunnis in government-held West Aleppo didn’t feel much sympathy for the poor, religiously minded Sunni in the rebel-held east of the city.

    #Syrie #classe #religions #environnement

  • Gaza : polémique autour d’un immeuble bombardé par l’armée israélienne
    Par RFI Publié le 16-07-2018 - Un reportage de Hassan Jaber et Guilhem Delteil
    http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20180716-gaza-immeuble-bombarde-armee-israelienne-polemique-hamas

    Samedi 14 juillet 2018 a eu lieu la plus importante confrontation militaire entre les groupes armés de la bande de Gaza et l’armée israélienne depuis la fin de la dernière guerre qui les a opposés en 2014. La journée fut marquée par des dizaines de bombardements israéliens et plus d’une centaine de tirs de roquettes et d’obus de mortier palestiniens. Parmi les cibles visées par l’armée israélienne un immeuble en construction dans la ville de Gaza. Deux adolescents ont été tués. Le bâtiment est présenté par Israël comme un centre d’entraînement militaire du Hamas, le mouvement islamiste qui contrôle l’enclave palestinienne. Mais à Gaza, ces accusations sont rejetées.

    Ahmad Halis fouille les décombres de l’immeuble dont il avait la garde. A ses côtés, son collègue, Fouad Limzini, sort de sa poche un morceau d’objet calciné. « C’est un bout de l’obus qui a touché le bâtiment », assure-t-il.

    Cet immeuble encore en construction dépend de la prison voisine, dit Fouad Limzini. Et il se veut catégorique : ce n’était pas un centre d’entraînement du mouvement islamiste au pouvoir à Gaza.

    « Le Hamas n’est pas présent ici. Quand nous voyons qui que ce soit du Hamas, nous lui disons de partir. Il n’est pas autorisé à être là. »

    Daoud Shehab, le porte-parole du Jihad islamique, deuxième groupe armé de la bande de Gaza et allié du Hamas, réfute également les accusations israéliennes.

    L’idée que ce bâtiment situé à proximité de ministères et de trois universités puisse être un terrain d’entraînement militaire fait même rire Daoud Shehab.

    « C’est un lieu très central : des milliers de personnes passent autour de cet immeuble tous les jours. Si vous emmenez votre dulcinée là-bas pour l’embrasser, tout Gaza vous verra ! » (...)

    • Israel First Country to Kill Children using US-made F35 Fighters
      July 16, 2018 9:49 PM
      http://imemc.org/article/israel-first-country-to-kill-children-using-us-made-f35-fighters

      According to Days of Palestine, the Israeli occupation state is the first country to use the US-made F-35 fighter jet to kill people –two innocent Palestinian children in Gaza Strip.

      While America and the rest of the world’s attention was focused on the Wold Cup, Wimbledon, Trump’s visit to England, and the Stormy Daniels story, Israel unleashed the heaviest air strikes since 2014, on the besieged Gaza Strip.

      This makes Israel the first country in the world to use the new US-made F-35 fighter jets to kill people.

      Last week, the Israeli air forces also used the F-35 fighter jets to fly over Beirut, Lebanon and bombard targets inside Syria.

      According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, Israeli airstrikes, on Saturday, injured hundreds of civilians, killing two Palestinian boys Louay Khoheel , aged 16, and Amir al-Namara , also 16, who were at a public park next to an unfinished building.

      A few hours later, Amir and Louay’s parents visited the morgue to claim their bodies.

      Mahmoud el-Yousseph is a retired USAF veteran from Westerville, Ohio.

    • Israeli Air Strikes Kill Two Children, Injure 25 Palestinians, In Gaza
      July 15, 2018 12:56 AM IMEMC News
      http://imemc.org/article/israeli-air-strikes-kill-two-children-injure-25-palestinians-in-gaza

      The Israeli Airforce carried out, on Saturday evening, several airstrikes targeting Gaza, killing two children and wounding at least twenty-five Palestinians in Gaza city, when the missiles struck a building next to a public green park, filled with people.

      The Health Ministry in Gaza said the Israeli missiles killed Amir an-Nimra, 15 , and his friend Luay Kahil, 16 , in addition to causing injuries to at least 25 other Palestinians.

      It added that the Israeli missiles also targeted ambulances, the Central Medical Emergency building, and several mobile clinics.

      The targeted public square, known as al-Kateeba, is near al-Azhar and the Islamic Universities, and is surrounded by several government ministries and facilities. It is also used by Palestinian factions when they celebrate certain events, such as the anniversaries of their establishment.

      #Palestine_assassinée #GAZA

    • Gaza : funérailles des deux victimes des frappes israéliennes
      Publié le 15-07-2018
      http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20180715-gaza-funerailles-deux-victimes-frappes-israeliennes

      Un certain calme est revenu dans la bande de Gaza, ce dimanche 15 juillet 2018. Avec des dizaines de bombardements israéliens et plus d’une centaine de roquettes et d’obus de mortiers tirés depuis l’enclave palestinienne, samedi fut la journée la plus violente depuis la fin de la dernière guerre en 2014. Deux adolescents palestiniens ont été tués dans le bombardement d’un immeuble en construction dans la ville de Gaza. Et ce dimanche, les Gazaouis ont rendu un dernier hommage à ceux qu’ils qualifient de « martyrs ».

      Avec notre envoyé spécial à Gaza City, Guilhem Delteil

  • How a victorious Bashar al-Assad is changing Syria

    Sunnis have been pushed out by the war. The new Syria is smaller, in ruins and more sectarian.

    A NEW Syria is emerging from the rubble of war. In Homs, which Syrians once dubbed the “capital of the revolution” against President Bashar al-Assad, the Muslim quarter and commercial district still lie in ruins, but the Christian quarter is reviving. Churches have been lavishly restored; a large crucifix hangs over the main street. “Groom of Heaven”, proclaims a billboard featuring a photo of a Christian soldier killed in the seven-year conflict. In their sermons, Orthodox patriarchs praise Mr Assad for saving one of the world’s oldest Christian communities.

    Homs, like all of the cities recaptured by the government, now belongs mostly to Syria’s victorious minorities: Christians, Shias and Alawites (an esoteric offshoot of Shia Islam from which Mr Assad hails). These groups banded together against the rebels, who are nearly all Sunni, and chased them out of the cities. Sunni civilians, once a large majority, followed. More than half of the country’s population of 22m has been displaced—6.5m inside Syria and over 6m abroad. Most are Sunnis.

    The authorities seem intent on maintaining the new demography. Four years after the government regained Homs, residents still need a security clearance to return and rebuild their homes. Few Sunnis get one. Those that do have little money to restart their lives. Some attend Christian mass, hoping for charity or a visa to the West from bishops with foreign connections. Even these Sunnis fall under suspicion. “We lived so well before,” says a Christian teacher in Homs. “But how can you live with a neighbour who overnight called you a kafir (infidel)?”

    Even in areas less touched by the war, Syria is changing. The old city of Damascus, Syria’s capital, is an architectural testament to Sunni Islam. But the Iranian-backed Shia militias that fight for Mr Assad have expanded the city’s Shia quarter into Sunni and Jewish areas. Portraits of Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hizbullah, a Lebanese Shia militia, hang from Sunni mosques. Advertisements for Shia pilgrimages line the walls. In the capital’s new cafés revellers barely notice the jets overhead, bombing rebel-held suburbs. “I love those sounds,” says a Christian woman who works for the UN. Like other regime loyalists, she wants to see the “terrorists” punished.

    Mr Assad’s men captured the last rebel strongholds around Damascus in May. He now controls Syria’s spine, from Aleppo in the north to Damascus in the south—what French colonisers once called la Syrie utile (useful Syria). The rebels are confined to pockets along the southern and northern borders (see map). Lately the government has attacked them in the south-western province of Deraa.

    A prize of ruins

    The regime is in a celebratory mood. Though thinly spread, it has survived the war largely intact. Government departments are functioning. In areas that remained under Mr Assad’s control, electricity and water supplies are more reliable than in much of the Middle East. Officials predict that next year’s natural-gas production will surpass pre-war levels. The National Museum in Damascus, which locked up its prized antiquities for protection, is preparing to reopen to the public. The railway from Damascus to Aleppo might resume operations this summer.

    To mark national day on April 17th, the ancient citadel of Aleppo hosted a festival for the first time since the war began. Martial bands, dancing girls, children’s choirs and a Swiss opera singer (of Syrian origin) crowded onto the stage. “God, Syria and Bashar alone,” roared the flag-waving crowd, as video screens showed the battle to retake the city. Below the citadel, the ruins stretch to the horizon.

    Mr Assad (pictured) has been winning the war by garrisoning city centres, then shooting outward into rebel-held suburbs. On the highway from Damascus to Aleppo, towns and villages lie desolate. A new stratum of dead cities has joined the ones from Roman times. The regime has neither the money nor the manpower to rebuild. Before the war Syria’s economic growth approached double digits and annual GDP was $60bn. Now the economy is shrinking; GDP was $12bn last year. Estimates of the cost of reconstruction run to $250bn.

    Syrians are experienced construction workers. When Lebanon’s civil war ended in 1990, they helped rebuild Beirut. But no such workforce is available today. In Damascus University’s civil-engineering department, two-thirds of the lecturers have fled. “The best were first to go,” says one who stayed behind. Students followed them. Those that remain have taken to speaking Araglish, a hotch-potch of Arabic and English, as many plan futures abroad.

    Traffic flows lightly along once-jammed roads in Aleppo, despite the checkpoints. Its pre-war population of 3.2m has shrunk to under 2m. Other cities have also emptied out. Men left first, many fleeing the draft and their likely dispatch to the front. As in Europe after the first world war, Syria’s workforce is now dominated by women. They account for over three-quarters of the staff in the religious-affairs ministry, a hitherto male preserve, says the minister. There are female plumbers, taxi-drivers and bartenders.

    Millions of Syrians who stayed behind have been maimed or traumatised. Almost everyone your correspondent spoke to had buried a close relative. Psychologists warn of societal breakdown. As the war separates families, divorce rates soar. More children are begging in the streets. When the jihadists retreat, liquor stores are the first to reopen.

    Mr Assad, though, seems focused less on recovery than rewarding loyalists with property left behind by Sunnis. He has distributed thousands of empty homes to Shia militiamen. “Terrorists should forfeit their assets,” says a Christian businesswoman, who was given a plush café that belonged to the family of a Sunni defector. A new decree, called Law 10, legitimises the government’s seizure of such assets. Title-holders will forfeit their property if they fail to re-register it, a tough task for the millions who have fled the country.

    A Palestinian-like problem

    The measure has yet to be implemented, but refugees compare it to Israel’s absentees’ property laws, which allow the government to take the property of Palestinian refugees. Syrian officials, of course, bridle at such comparisons. The ruling Baath party claims to represent all of Syria’s religions and sects. The country has been led by Alawites since 1966, but Sunnis held senior positions in government, the armed forces and business. Even today many Sunnis prefer Mr Assad’s secular rule to that of Islamist rebels.

    But since pro-democracy protests erupted in March 2011, Syrians detect a more sectarian approach to policymaking. The first demonstrations attracted hundreds of thousands of people of different faiths. So the regime stoked sectarian tensions to divide the opposition. Sunnis, it warned, really wanted winner-take-all majoritarianism. Jihadists were released from prison in order to taint the uprising. As the government turned violent, so did the protesters. Sunni states, such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, provided them with arms, cash and preachers. Hardliners pushed aside moderates. By the end of 2011, the protests had degenerated into a sectarian civil war.

    Early on, minorities lowered their profile to avoid being targeted. Women donned headscarves. Non-Muslim businessmen bowed to demands from Sunni employees for prayer rooms. But as the war swung their way, minorities regained their confidence. Alawite soldiers now flex arms tattooed with Imam Ali, whom they consider the first imam after the Prophet Muhammad (Sunnis see things differently). Christian women in Aleppo show their cleavage. “We would never ask about someone’s religion,” says an official in Damascus. “Sorry to say, we now do.”

    The country’s chief mufti is a Sunni, but there are fewer Sunnis serving in top posts since the revolution. Last summer Mr Assad replaced the Sunni speaker of parliament with a Christian. In January he broke with tradition by appointing an Alawite, instead of a Sunni, as defence minister.

    Officially the government welcomes the return of displaced Syrians, regardless of their religion or sect. “Those whose hands are not stained with blood will be forgiven,” says a Sunni minister. Around 21,000 families have returned to Homs in the last two years, according to its governor, Talal al-Barazi. But across the country, the number of displaced Syrians is rising. Already this year 920,000 people have left their homes, says the UN. Another 45,000 have fled the recent fighting in Deraa. Millions more may follow if the regime tries to retake other rebel enclaves.

    When the regime took Ghouta, in eastern Damascus, earlier this year its 400,000 residents were given a choice between leaving for rebel-held areas in the north or accepting a government offer of shelter. The latter was a euphemism for internment. Tens of thousands remain “captured” in camps, says the UN. “We swapped a large prison for a smaller one,” says Hamdan, who lives with his family in a camp in Adra, on the edge of Ghouta. They sleep under a tarpaulin in a schoolyard with two other families. Armed guards stand at the gates, penning more than 5,000 people inside.

    The head of the camp, a Christian officer, says inmates can leave once their security clearance is processed, but he does not know how long that will take. Returning home requires a second vetting. Trapped and powerless, Hamdan worries that the regime or its supporters will steal his harvest—and then his land. Refugees fear that they will be locked out of their homeland altogether. “We’re the new Palestinians,” says Taher Qabar, one of 350,000 Syrians camped in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley.

    Some argue that Mr Assad, with fewer Sunnis to fear, may relax his repressive rule. Ministers in Damascus insist that change is inevitable. They point to a change in the constitution made in 2012 that nominally allows for multiparty politics. There are a few hopeful signs. Local associations, once banned, offer vocational training to the displaced. State media remain Orwellian, but the internet is unrestricted and social-media apps allow for unfettered communication. Students in cafés openly criticise the regime. Why doesn’t Mr Assad send his son, Hafez, to the front, sneers a student who has failed his university exams to prolong his studies and avoid conscription.

    A decade ago Mr Assad toyed with infitah (liberalisation), only for Sunni extremists to build huge mosques from which to spout their hate-speech, say his advisers. He is loth to repeat the mistake. Portraits of the president, appearing to listen keenly with a slightly oversized ear, now line Syria’s roads and hang in most offices and shops. Checkpoints, introduced as a counter-insurgency measure, control movement as never before. Men under the age of 42 are told to hand over cash or be sent to the front. So rife are the levies that diplomats speak of a “checkpoint economy”.

    Having resisted pressure to compromise when he was losing, Mr Assad sees no reason to make concessions now. He has torpedoed proposals for a political process, promoted by UN mediators and his Russian allies, that would include the Sunni opposition. At talks in Sochi in January he diluted plans for a constitutional committee, insisting that it be only consultative and based in Damascus. His advisers use the buzzwords of “reconciliation” and “amnesty” as euphemisms for surrender and security checks. He has yet to outline a plan for reconstruction.

    War, who is it good for?

    Mr Assad appears to be growing tired of his allies. Iran has resisted Russia’s call for foreign forces to leave Syria. It refuses to relinquish command of 80,000 foreign Shia militiamen. Skirmishes between the militias and Syrian troops have resulted in scores of deaths, according to researchers at King’s College in London. Having defeated Sunni Islamists, army officers say they have no wish to succumb to Shia ones. Alawites, in particular, flinch at Shia evangelising. “We don’t pray, don’t fast [during Ramadan] and drink alcohol,” says one.

    But Mr Assad still needs his backers. Though he rules most of the population, about 40% of Syria’s territory lies beyond his control. Foreign powers dominate the border areas, blocking trade corridors and the regime’s access to oilfields. In the north-west, Turkish forces provide some protection for Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a group linked to al-Qaeda, and other Sunni rebels. American and French officers oversee a Kurdish-led force east of the Euphrates river. Sunni rebels abutting the Golan Heights offer Israel and Jordan a buffer. In theory the territory is classified as a “de-escalation zone”. But violence in the zone is escalating again.

    New offensives by the regime risk pulling foreign powers deeper into the conflict. Turkey, Israel and America have drawn red lines around the rebels under their protection. Continuing Iranian operations in Syria “would be the end of [Mr Assad], his regime”, said Yuval Steinitz, a minister in Israel, which has bombed Iranian bases in the country. Israel may be giving the regime a green light in Deraa, in order to keep the Iranians out of the area.

    There could be worse options than war for Mr Assad. More fighting would create fresh opportunities to reward loyalists and tilt Syria’s demography to his liking. Neighbours, such as Jordan and Lebanon, and European countries might indulge the dictator rather than face a fresh wave of refugees. Above all, war delays the day Mr Assad has to face the question of how he plans to rebuild the country that he has so wantonly destroyed.


    https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2018/06/30/how-a-victorious-bashar-al-assad-is-changing-syria?frsc=dg%7Ce
    #Syrie #démographie #sunnites #sciites #chrétiens #religion #minorités

    • Onze ans plus tard, on continue à tenter de donner un peu de crédibilité à la fable d’une guerre entre « sunnites » et « minoritaires » quand la moindre connaissance directe de ce pays montre qu’une grande partie des « sunnites » continue, pour de bonnes ou de mauvaises raisons, mais ce sont les leurs, à soutenir leur président. Par ailleurs, tout le monde est prié désormais par les syriologues de ne se déterminer que par rapport à son origine sectaire (au contraire de ce qu’on nous affirmait du reste au début de la « révolution »)...

  • Syrians in Golan Heights to boycott municipal election by Israel | Golan Heights
    Al Jazeera | by Nour Samaha | 21 juin 2018

    https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/syrians-golan-heights-boycott-israel-election-area-180619180933900.html

    Beirut, Lebanon: Thousands of Syrian residents of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights are expected to boycott the first municipal elections imposed by Israel on the area, rejecting what they call the ’Israelization’ of the territory.

    Following a decision handed down by Israel’s supreme court last year to hold, for the first time ever, municipal elections in October 2018 for the occupied Golan’s 26,000 Syrian residents, local religious leaders and village elders are calling for a full rejection of the elections, calling it a “red line.” (...)

  • Israeli army frames slain medic Razan al-Najjar as “Hamas human shield”
    Jonathan Ofir on June 7, 2018
    http://mondoweiss.net/2018/06/israeli-frames-najjar

    Just when you thought Israel couldn’t get any lower… The Israeli army has just released an incitement video, titled “Hamas’ use of human shields must stop”, in which it frames the slain medic Razan al-Najjar as a “Hamas human shield”– a day after it claimed she was killed by accident.

    This is more than adding insult to injury. This is adding malice to crime.

    The propaganda effort is based on twisting al-Najjar’s own words. I have consulted with three Arabic experts, who have looked at the original Arabic interview from which the IDF took the “human shield” text, and it is clear to them beyond a doubt that the IDF was knowingly and cynically manipulating Razan’s words to mean something other than what she said.

    Bear with me, this requires close analysis:

    First the video features Razan throwing away a gas grenade in the field. Obviously, this is one of the tear gas grenades fired by the Israeli army, which she is taking up and throwing to a safe distance. By this visual, the IDF is trying to create the impression that Razan is a kind of ‘combatant’.

    Then comes the short clip from an interview. The original interview has been found to be from Al Mayadeen News, a channel based in Beirut. The IDF video runs subtitles, saying: “I am Razan al-Najjar, I am here on the frontlines and I act as a human shield…”

    That’s all the IDF needs. Now, with the ominous music in the background, the IDF text states:

    “Hamas uses paramedics as human shields”.

    But the IDF cut out a very significant part of the sentence. Razan actually says:

    “I the Paramedic Razan al-Najjar, I am here on the Front Line acting as a human shield of safety to protect the injured at the Front Line. No one encouraged me on being a Paramedic, I encouraged myself. I wanted to take chances and help people…” (my emphasis).(...)

    #Propagande #sans_vergogne
    #Razan_al-Najjar

  • Defying the gaze of others in Abu Bakr Shawky’s Yomeddine |
    Adham Youssef
    June 1, 2018
    MadaMasr

    https://www.madamasr.com/en/2018/06/01/feature/culture/defying-the-gaze-of-others-in-abu-bakr-shawkys-yomeddine

    After finishing my interview with director Abu Bakr Shawky and producer Dina Emam at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, I move to my next scheduled meeting — a group discussion with a Kenyan director about her film, which is screening in the Un Certain Regard competition. Shawky is conducting an interview with a foreign journalist nearby, and I can’t help but overhear their conversation. The reporter asks him about the “political and religious messages” behind his debut feature and Palme d’Or contender, Yomeddine (2018).

    Later, when I meet with Shawky again, I ask him to comment on that question. “Wherever there is a good story I will go,” he says. “There is an expectation from Middle Eastern films that they have to be about politics and religion, but I don’t want to do that anymore. Not because they are irrelevant, but I watch films from the United States, Europe and Asia that are not political, and I like them. So why can’t a Middle Eastern film not be political in the traditional sense and still be considered enjoyable and significant?”

    There were three other Arabic-language films in Cannes this year; Nadine Labaki’s Cafarnaüm (2018), a Lebanese drama about poor children and migrants in the informal housing areas of Beirut; Gaya Jiji’s My Favourite Fabric (2018), a film that tackles female sexuality and the Syrian revolution (guaranteed to be a hit with Western audiences); and Sofia, Meryem BenMbarek’s story about premarital pregnancy in Morocco. Yomeddine stood out among them as a different narrative that is placed within a specific context, yet is universally appealing and relatable nonetheless.

    • U.S. Ambassador Dean Ambushed in Lebanon, Escapes Attack Unhurt - The Washington Post
      https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1980/08/28/us-ambassador-dean-ambushed-in-lebanon-escapes-attack-unhurt/218130c3-6d7e-438f-8b0c-a42fc0e5eb57

      1980

      U.S. Ambassador John Gunther Dean escaped unharmed tonight after gunmen in a speeding Mercedes attacked his bulletproof limousine as he was leaving his Hazmieh residence in a convoy.

      The ensuing battle between the ambasador’s bodyguards and the gunmen left the embassy car demolished on the passenger side, with window glass shattered and tires flat, embassy sources said.

      Later this evening, Dean appeared at the gate of the embassy and waved to bystanders but refused to make a statement on the incident. He showed no signs of injury. [The Associate Press, quoting security sources, said Dean’s wife Martine and daughter Catherine also were unharmed.]

      It was the first attempt on an American ambassador’s life in Lebanon since June 16, 1976, when ambassador Francis E. Eloy, economic counselor Robert O. Waring and their chauffeur were kidnaped and killed on their way from West Beirut to East Beirut during the civil war.

      [Several hours after the attack on Dean, gunmen with automatic rifles dragged the Spanish ambassador and his wife from their car and drove away in the embasy vehicle. Ambassador Luis Jordana Pozas told the Associated Press. Jordana said five men pushed them from the car in mostly Moslem West Beirut. There was no indication whether the theft of Jordana’s car was related to the attack on the American diplomat.]

      Today’s attack came just hours after Dean said the United States was working with Israel and the United Nations to end the violence among Christian militiamen and Palestinian guerrillas in southern Lebanon. It was his first public statement since Aug. 21, when he created an uproar by condemning an Israeli raid on Palestinian guerilla strongholds in the area. The U.S. State Department later disavowed the statement.

      There were conflicting reports about the kind of explosive that was aimed at the ambassador’s car. Some local radio stations said it was a rocket, while others said it was a rifle grenade. None of the reports could be confirmed.

      The shooting took place as Dean was driving to Beirut. Excited security guards outside the U.S. Embassy told reporters that a spurt of machine-gun fire followed the explosion.

      The attackers, who abandoned their car, fled into the woods on the side of the highway, Beirut’s official radio said.

      Lebanese Army troops and internal security forces were quickly moved to the ambush site and an all-night search was begun to track down the would-be killers. Reliable police sources said two Lebanese suspected of being linked to the assassination attermpt were taken in for questioning.

      Following a meeting with Lebanese Foreign Minister Fuad Butros today, Dean stressed that "American policy includes opposition to all acts of violence which ignore or violate the internationally recognized border between Lebanon and Israel.

    • The remarkable disappearing act of Israel’s car-bombing campaign in Lebanon or : What we (do not) talk about when we talk about ’terrorism’
      Rémi Brulin, MondoWeiss, le 7 mai 2018
      https://seenthis.net/messages/692409

      La remarquable occultation de la campagne israélienne d’attentats à la voiture piégée au Liban ou : Ce dont nous (ne) parlons (pas) quand nous parlons de terrorisme
      Rémi Brulin, MondoWeiss, le 7 mai 2018
      https://seenthis.net/messages/695020

    • Inside Intel / Assassination by proxy - Haaretz - Israel News | Haaretz.com
      https://www.haaretz.com/1.5060443

      Haaretz 2009,

      Did Israel try to kill the U.S. ambassador in Lebanon in the early 1980s?Haggai Hadas’ experience is not necessarily an advantage in the talks over Gilad Shalit’s release The Israeli intelligence community has committed quite a number of crimes against the United States during its 60-year lifetime. In the early 1950s it recruited agents from among Arab officers serving in Washington (with the help of military attache Chaim Herzog). In the 1960s it stole uranium through Rafi Eitan and the Scientific Liaison Bureau in what came to be known as the Apollo Affair, when uranium was smuggled to Israel from Dr. Zalman Shapira’s Nuclear Materials and Equipment Corporation - in Apollo, Pennsylvania). In the 1980s it operated spies (Jonathan Pollard and Ben-Ami Kadish), and used businessmen (such as Arnon Milchan) to steal secrets, technology and equipment for its nuclear program and other purposes.

      Now the Israeli government is being accused of attempted murder. John Gunther Dean, a former U.S. ambassador to Lebanon, claims in a memoir released last week that Israeli intelligence agents attempted to assassinate him. Dean was born in 1926 in Breslau, Germany (today Wroclaw, Poland), as John Gunther Dienstfertig. His father was a Jewish lawyer who described himself as a German citizen of the Jewish religion who is not a Zionist. The family immigrated to the U.S. before World War II. As an adult Dean joined the State Department and served as a diplomat in Vietnam, Afghanistan and India, among other states.

    • Remi Brulin on Twitter: "Shlomo Ilya was, in the early 1980s, the head of the IDF liaison unit in Lebanon. He is also (in)famous for declaring, at the time, that he only weapon against terrorism is terrorism, and that Israel had options for “speaking the language the terrorists understand.” https://t.co/TKx02n2SpA"
      https://mobile.twitter.com/RBrulin/status/1001904259410071552

  • L’armée israélienne montre avec fierté un F-35 survolant Beyrouth. (Je te rappelle qu’il suffit pour un Libanais d’approcher la frontière israélienne avec des moutons pour être traité de terroriste. L’armée israélienne se montrant en train de survoler la capitale du Liban, en revanche…)
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/this-is-the-israeli-army-s-photo-of-an-f-35-over-beirut-1.6114446

    https://images.haarets.co.il/image/upload/w_1056,h_614,x_0,y_20,c_crop,g_north_west/w_609,h_343,q_auto,c_fill,f_auto/fl_any_format.preserve_transparency.progressive:none/v1527107235/1.6114457.2665712464.PNG

    Pictures of an Israeli F-35 stealth fighter flying over Beirut were shown on the Wednesday night broadcast of Israel Television News.

    On Tuesday, Israel Air Force commander Maj. Gen. Amikam Norkin said Israel is the first country in the world to carry out an “operational attack” with the F-35 jet. Norkin was speaking at a three-day conference organized by the IAF in Herzliya, to which senior officers from air forces from all over the world were invited.

    The IDF Spokesman’s Office said the military was not behind the release of the pictures and they were not intended for publication.

    At the conference, Norkin presented images of the F-35 in the skies over Beirut and said that the stealth fighter did not participate in the most recent strike in Syria, but did in two previous attacks.

  • Still too ‘tough on Arabs’ - Haaretz Editorial - Israel News | Haaretz.com
    Police violence against the Arab community in Israel appears part of a racist policy led by Benjamin Netanyahu’s government

    Haaretz Editorial May 21, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/still-too-tough-on-arabs-1.6098764

    Over the weekend there was a demonstration in Haifa protesting the killings along the Gaza border fence. The violent suppression of this protest and the detention of 21 demonstrators, including Jafar Farah, the director of the Mossawa Center that advocates for Israeli Arabs’ rights, are a further sign of the growing restrictions on the democratic space available to this community.
    The harsh events in Gaza should have brought multitudes out onto the streets, particularly in light of the complexities plaguing relations between Arab citizens and the state. In practice, the protest in Arab society was minor and measured: a partial strike lasting only a day and local protest gatherings. Despite this, the police failed to contain the demonstrations.
    True, the protest in Haifa on Friday evening had no permit, but these are precisely the times when the police must use their discretion and show restraint. They should have used the presence of Farah, a veteran activist who once headed the Arab student union and who for years has been a partner to civic initiatives for Arab civil rights and against racism. A wise police force would have seen his presence as a channel for dialogue and an opportunity for calming tensions. Instead, the police used him to quell the protest.
    In footage taken at the demonstration one sees that the police did not suffice with arresting him but marched him handcuffed through Haifa’s streets as a warning to others. Even though Farah was seen walking, he was hospitalized the next day; relatives said one of his knees had been broken in detention.
    The Arab community is calling for an investigation into the police’s conduct in the demonstration, and the police are expected to carry out an internal probe into the Farah case. But this doesn’t suffice; the violence by the police against Arab protesters appears not random but intentional, part of an inflammatory and racist policy against the Arab community in Israel that Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is leading.
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    Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan and Police Commissioner Roni Alsheich talk a lot about the importance of making police services more accessible to the Arab community, using every public platform to announce the opening of new police stations and the recruitment of Arab police officers. But the conduct in Haifa shows yet again that the police showed unwarranted “resolve” while ignoring the ramifications on the Arab community’s faith in law enforcement.
    The Public Security Ministry and police brass must understand that the delegitimization of elected Arab officials and prominent Arab activists, as well as the suppression of any political protest by brutal arrests, won’t contribute to a sense of trust. On the contrary, police violence against Arab citizens widens the circle of mutual suspicion and deepens this community’s alienation.

    • By +972 Blog |Published May 21, 2018
      ’Police broke my knee, threatened my doctors,’ Arab civil society leader tells court
      By Oren Ziv, Yael Marom, and Meron Rapaport
      https://972mag.com/police-broke-my-knee-threatened-my-doctors-arab-civil-society-leader-tells-court/135621

      Seven require medical treatment for injuries sustained during their arrests or while in custody, including Jafar Farah, who says an officer broke his knee inside the police station. Police file criminal complaint against Arab MK Ayman Odeh for calling the officers who refused to let him visit a hospitalized protester ‘losers’.
      (...)
      “But we shouldn’t be surprised by police violence and this isn’t that big a story,” Atrash continued. “What are a few punches compared to the murder of children in Gaza? What’s important is that all of us in Haifa, Gaza, Ramallah or Beirut — we are one. We don’t want nicer police officers, we want the apartheid regime to end.”
      (...)
      ”The demonstration on Friday was the third to take place in Haifa last week, and police had already employed aggressive tactics to try to shut them down. In addition to several arrests at the protests themselves, police arrested and detained a number of Palestinian and Jewish activists in Haifa to deter them from participating in and organizing protests.

      #Jafar_Farah

  • Saudi Arabia Detains Activists Who Pushed to End Ban on Women Driving
    By Ben Hubbard
    May 18, 2018
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/18/world/middleeast/saudi-women-drivers-arrests.html

    BEIRUT, Lebanon — Saudi Arabia has detained at least five people connected to the campaign to end the kingdom’s longtime ban on women driving, despite the fact that the government has promised to lift the ban next month, associates of the detainees said on Friday.

    The Saudi government has billed the lifting of the driving ban as part of a reform push spearheaded by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The changes have also included curtailing the powers of the religious authorities and expanding the entertainment options available in the conservative kingdom.

    But those efforts have coincided with waves of arrests that have scooped up clerics, businessmen, members of the royal family and activists who have a history of challenging the government’s positions. Many of them have not been officially charged with crimes despite having been held for months.

    The Saudi government did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the new detentions, and it remained unclear whether those detained had been charged with anything.

    #réformes #MBS #arabie_saoudite

  • Anti-Syrian banners and graffiti in context: Racism, counter-racism and solidarity for refugees in Lebanon

    In the run up to the Lebanese elections on 6 May 2018, national and international media and human rights organisations have denounced the appearance of anti-Syrian banners across #Beirut.

    Reading “The day will come when we tell the Syrians: gather your things and everything you stole, and leave,” the words on the banner below are presented as originating from the mouth of the late-Lebanese President, General Bashir Gemayel, the politician pictured to the right and named on the left of the banner.


    https://refugeehosts.org/2018/04/27/anti-syrian-banners-and-graffiti-in-context-racism-counter-racism-and-
    #réfugiés_syriens #anti-syriens #Liban #racisme #street-art #art_De_rue #graffitis #xénophobie

    ping @clemencel

  • ‘Treachery isn’t a perspective’: Boycotting Israel in Lebanon | MadaMasr
    https://www.madamasr.com/en/2018/04/29/opinion/u/treachery-isnt-a-perspective-boycotting-israel-in-lebanon/?platform=hootsuite

    It is common for me to hear friends in Lebanon exchanging their experiences of meeting an Israeli for the first time. Many stories include feelings of shock, horror, anger and disgust.

    My first experience with an Israeli was during my teenage years in the 1990s. I was at Cairo International Airport, waiting for my flight back to Beirut, when two slightly older young men sat next to me on high bar stools for coffee. They spoke to me in English and I chatted with them. When one of them told me, “You’re beautiful, you look Israeli,” I realized they were Israelis. I shuddered, my mind froze, I felt a lump in my throat and, in that moment, I despised my vulnerability almost as much as I despise Israel.

    I yelled at them nonsensically. They told me that they had packed their belongings and left Palestine — their place of birth — because they reject the settler occupation upon which Israel is founded and have no desire to serve in its military forces. But I couldn’t keep listening to them; this very act of communication seeming akin to acceptance, defeat. A crime. My entire existence at this moment felt like a crime. For many years to come, I was ashamed of this treachery because they had sat next to me at that airport coffee bar, and I was only 15 years old.

    This is neither a healthy space for expressing hostility toward Israel, nor a healthy mode of being.

  • What Red Lines And Foreign Intervention Look Like for Syrian Civilians.
    https://www.newsdeeply.com/syria/community/2018/04/16/what-red-lines-and-foreign-intervention-look-like-for-syrian-civilians

    I have lived in the Syrian capital of Damascus since the beginning of the Syrian conflict. I haven’t left Syria for more than a week, and even then it was only to Beirut and only recently, which means only after seven years of war.

    I was in Damascus when U.S. president Donald Trump announced that the U.S., the U.K. and France would launch a joint airstrike targeting Syrian military facilities. I was in Damascus when the strikes hit. I didn’t see them from my house, but I didn’t have to witness the explosions with my own eyes to be able to understand what it means for Syria and what it means for us civilians on the ground.

    Anyone who has followed Trump’s speeches since he was elected president can see that he has always criticized the peaceful approach of former president Barack Obama’s administration and its soft policy decisions regarding the use of chemical weapons. This is particularly true regarding Obama’s 2013 declaration that there would be a strike in Syria – a threat he never followed through on. Looking at it this way, it seems Trump didn’t want to go back on his own initial statement that threatened retaliation for the use of chemical weapons, because this would ruin his image on an international level and he would be viewed in the same way as Obama, who he has publicly criticized.

  • The biography of the founder of the Palestinian Popular Front makes it clear: The leftist leader was right -

    Israelis considered George Habash a cruel airline hijacker, but Eli Galia’s new Hebrew-language book shows that the PFLP chief’s views would have been better for the Palestinians than Arafat’s compromises

    Gideon Levy Apr 13, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/palestinians/.premium-biography-makes-it-clear-this-palestinian-leftist-leader-was-right

    George Habash was Israel’s absolute enemy for decades, the embodiment of evil, the devil incarnate. Even the title “Dr.” before his name — he was a pediatrician — was considered blasphemous.
    Habash was plane hijackings, Habash was terror and terror alone. In a country that doesn’t recognize the existence of Palestinian political parties (have you ever heard of a Palestinian political party? — there are only terror groups) knowledge about the man who headed the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine was close to zero.
    What’s there to know about him? A terrorist. Subhuman. Should be killed. Enemy. The fact that he was an ideologue and a revolutionary, that his life was shaped by the expulsion from Lod, changed nothing. He remains the plane hijacker from Damascus, the man from the Rejectionist Front who was no different from all the rest of the “terrorists” from Yasser Arafat to Wadie Haddad to Nayef Hawatmeh.
    Now along comes Eli Galia’s Hebrew-language book “George Habash: A Political Biography." It outlines the reality, far from the noise of propaganda, ignorance and brainwashing, for the Israeli reader who agrees to read a biography of the enemy.
    Presumably only few will read it, but this work by Galia, a Middle East affairs expert, is very deserving of praise. It’s a political biography, as noted in its subtitle, so it almost entirely lacks the personal, spiritual and psychological dimension; there’s not even any gossip. So reading it requires a lot of stamina and specialized tastes. Still, it’s fascinating.
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    Galia has written a nonjudgmental and certainly non-propagandistic biography. Taking into consideration the Israeli mind today, this isn’t to be taken for granted.
    Galia presents a wealth of information, with nearly a thousand footnotes, about the political path of Habash, a man who was considered dogmatic even though he underwent a number of ideological reversals in his life. If that’s dogmatism, what’s pragmatism? The dogmatic Habash went through more ideological changes than any Israeli who sticks to the Zionist narrative and doesn’t budge an inch — and who of course isn’t considered dogmatic.

    The exodus from Lod following an operation by the Palmach, 1948.Palmach Archive / Yitzhak Sadeh Estate
    In the book, Habash is revealed as a person of many contradictions: a member of the Christian minority who was active in the midst of a large Muslim majority, a bourgeois who became a Marxist, a tough and inflexible leader who was once seen weeping in his room as he wrote an article about Israel’s crimes against his people. He had to wander and flee for his life from place to place, sometimes more for fear of Arab regimes than of Israel.

    He was imprisoned in Syria and fled Jordan, he devoted his life to a revolution that never happened. It’s impossible not to admire a person who devoted his life to his ideas, just as you have to admire the scholar who has devoted so much research for so few readers who will take an interest in the dead Habash, in an Israel that has lost any interest in the occupation and the Palestinian struggle.
    The book gives rise to the bleak conclusion that Habash was right. For most of his life he was a bitter enemy of compromises, and Arafat, the man of compromise, won the fascinating historical struggle between the two. They had a love-hate relationship, alternately admiring and scorning each other, and never completely breaking off their connection until Arafat won his Pyrrhic victory.
    What good have all of Arafat’s compromises done for the Palestinian people? What came out of the recognition of Israel, of the settling for a Palestinian state on 22 percent of the territory, of the negotiations with Zionism and the United States? Nothing but the entrenchment of the Israeli occupation and the strengthening and massive development of the settlement project.
    In retrospect, it makes sense to think that if that’s how things were, maybe it would have been better to follow the uncompromising path taken by Habash, who for most of his life didn’t agree to any negotiations with Israel, who believed that with Israel it was only possible to negotiate by force, who thought Israel would only change its positions if it paid a price, who dreamed of a single, democratic and secular state of equal rights and refused to discuss anything but that.
    Unfortunately, Habash was right. It’s hard to know what would have happened had the Palestinians followed his path, but it’s impossible not to admit that the alternative has been a resounding failure.

    Members of the Palestinian National Council in Algiers, 1987, including Yasser Arafat, left, and George Habash, second from right. Mike Nelson-Nabil Ismail / AFP
    The Palestinian Che Guevara
    Habash, who was born in 1926, wrote about his childhood: “Our enemies are not the Jews but rather the British .... The Jews’ relations with the Palestinians were natural and sometimes even good” (p. 16). He went to study medicine at the American University in Beirut; his worried mother and father wrote him that he should stay there; a war was on.
    But Habash returned to volunteer at a clinic in Lod; he returned and he saw. The sight of the Israeli soldiers who invaded the clinic in 1948 ignited in him the flame of violent resistance: “I was gripped by an urge to shoot them with a pistol and kill them, and in the situation of having no weapons I used mute words. I watched them from the sidelines and said to myself: This is our land, you dogs, this is our land and not your land. We will stay here to kill you. You will not win this battle” (p.22).
    On July 14 he was expelled from his home with the rest of his family. He never returned to the city he loved. He never forgot the scenes of Lod in 1948, nor did he forget the idea of violent resistance. Can the Israeli reader understand how he felt?
    Now based in Beirut, he took part in terror operations against Jewish and Western targets in Beirut, Amman and Damascus: “I personally lobbed grenades and I participated in assassination attempts. I had endless enthusiasm when I was doing that. At the time, I considered my life worthless relative to what was happening in Palestine.”
    “The Palestinian Che Guevara” — both of them were doctors — made up his mind to wreak vengeance for the Nakba upon the West and the leaders of the Arab regimes that had abandoned his people, even before taking vengeance on the Jews. He even planned to assassinate King Abdullah of Jordan. He founded a new student organization in Beirut called the Commune, completed his specialization in pediatrics and wrote: “I took the diploma and said: Congratulations, Mother, your son is a doctor, so now let me do what I really want to do. And indeed, that’s what happened” (p. 41).
    Habash was once asked whether he was the Che Guevara of the Middle East and he replied that he would prefer to be the Mao Zedong of the Arab masses. He was the first to raise the banner of return and in the meantime he opened clinics for Palestinian refugees in Amman. For him, the road back to Lod passed through Amman, Beirut and Damascus. The idea of Pan-Arabism stayed with him for many years, until he despaired of that as well.
    He also had to leave medicine: “I am a pediatrician, I have enjoyed this greatly. I believed that I had the best job in the world but I had to make the decision I have taken and I don’t regret it .... A person cannot split his emotions in that way: to heal on the one hand and kill on the other. This is the time when he must say to himself: one or the other.”

    Militants from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Jordan, 1969.1969Thomas R. Koeniges / Look Magazine Photograph Collection / Library of Congress
    The only remaining weapon
    This book isn’t arrogant and it isn’t Orientalist; it is respectful of the Palestinian national ideology and those who articulated and lived it, even if the author doesn’t necessarily agree with that ideology or identify with it. This is something quite rare in the Israeli landscape when it comes to Arabs in general and Palestinians in particular. Nor does the author venerate what’s not worthy of veneration, and he doesn’t have any erroneous romantic or other illusions. Galia presents a bitter, tough, uncompromising, very much failed and sometimes exceedingly cruel struggle for freedom, self-respect and liberation.
    And this is what is said in the founding document of the PFLP, which Habash established in December 1967 after having despaired of Palestinian unity: “The only weapon left to the masses in order to restore history and progress and truly defeat enemies and potential enemies in the long run is revolutionary violence .... The only language that the enemy understands is the language of revolutionary violence” (p.125).
    But this path too met with failure. “The essential aim of hijacking airplanes,” wrote Habash, “was to bring the Palestinian question out of anonymity and expose it to Western public opinion, because at that time it was unknown in Europe and in the United States. We wanted to undertake actions that would make an impression on the senses of the entire world .... There was international ignorance regarding our suffering, in part due to the Zionist movement’s monopoly on the mass media in the West” (p. 151).
    The PFLP plane hijackings in the early 1970s indeed achieved international recognition of the existence of the Palestinian problem, but so far this recognition hasn’t led anywhere. The only practical outcome has been the security screenings at airports everywhere around the world — and thank you, George Habash. I read Galia’s book on a number of flights, even though this isn’t an airplane book, and I kept thinking that were it not for Habash my wanderings at airports would have been a lot shorter. In my heart I forgave him for that, for what other path was open to him and his defeated, humiliated and bleeding people?
    Not much is left of his ideas. What has come of the scientific idealism and the politicization of the masses, the class struggle and the anti-imperialism, the Maoism and of course the transformation of the struggle against Israel into an armed struggle, which according to the plans was supposed to develop from guerrilla warfare into a national war of liberation? Fifty years after the founding of the PFLP and 10 years after the death of its founder, what remains?
    Habash’s successor, Abu Ali Mustafa, was assassinated by Israel in 2001; his successor’s successor, Ahmad Saadat, has been in an Israeli prison since 2006 and very little remains of the PFLP.
    During all my decades covering the Israeli occupation, the most impressive figures I met belonged to the PFLP, but now not much remains except fragments of dreams. The PFLP is a negligible minority in intra-Palestinian politics, a movement that once thought to demand equal power with Fatah and its leader, Arafat. And the occupation? It’s strong and thriving and its end looks further off than ever. If that isn’t failure, what is?

    A mourning procession for George Habash, Nablus, January 2008. Nasser Ishtayeh / AP
    To where is Israel galloping?
    Yet Habash always knew how to draw lessons from failure after failure. How resonant today is his conclusion following the Naksa, the defeat in 1967 that broke his spirit, to the effect that “the enemy of the Palestinians is colonialism, capitalism and the global monopolies .... This is the enemy that gave rise to the Zionist movement, made a covenant with it, nurtured it, protected it and accompanied it until it brought about the establishment of the aggressive and fascistic State of Israel” (p. 179).
    From the Palestinian perspective, not much has changed. It used to be that this was read in Israel as hostile and shallow propaganda. Today it could be read otherwise.
    After the failure of 1967, Habash redefined the goal: the establishment of a democratic state in Palestine in which Arabs and Jews would live as citizens with equal rights. Today this idea, too, sounds a bit less strange and threatening than it did when Habash articulated it.
    On the 40th anniversary of Israel’s founding, Habash wrote that Israel was galloping toward the Greater Land of Israel and that the differences between the right and left in the country were becoming meaningless. How right he was about that, too. At the same time, he acknowledged Israel’s success and the failure of the Palestinian national movement. And he was right about that, too.
    And one last correct prophecy, though a bitter one, that he made in 1981: “The combination of a loss of lives and economic damage has considerable influence on Israeli society, and when that happens there will be a political, social and ideological schism on the Israeli street and in the Zionist establishment between the moderate side that demands withdrawal from the occupied territories and the extremist side that continues to cling to Talmudic ideas and dreams. Given the hostility between these two sides, the Zionist entity will experience a real internal split” (p. 329).
    This has yet to happen.
    Imad Saba, a dear friend who was active in the PFLP and is in exile in Europe, urged me for years to try to meet with Habash and interview him for Haaretz. As far as is known, Habash never met with Israelis, except during the days of the Nakba.
    Many years ago in Amman I interviewed Hawatmeh, Habash’s partner at the start and the leader of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which split off from the PFLP in 1969. At the time of the interview, Habash was also living in Amman and was old and sick. I kept postponing my approach — until he died. When reading the book, I felt very sorry that I had not met this man.

  • « Dans sa BD, son roman graphique Beirut Bloody Beirut, la jeune auteure Tracy Chahwan campe un road movie urbain dont le personnage central est la ville de Beyrouth. (...) Dès les premières cases, le cosmopolitisme beyrouthin, la diversité des communautés religieuses, sociales sont au rendez-vous. Crêtes iroquoises de touristes punks, costume d’hommes d’affaires, hijabs, djellabas, croix donnent le ton d’une société multiculturelle. »

    https://www.roaditude.com/2018/04/10/beyrouth-la-nuit

    #BD #Beyrouth #Bandedessinée

    • Qualifier Israël de régime d’apartheid est-il erroné ou excessif ? La Commission économique et sociale pour l’Asie occidentale des Nations Unies a voulu en avoir le cœur net en confiant une étude sur le sujet à deux universitaires. Publié en 2017, le rapport de Richard Falk, ancien rapporteur spécial de l’ONU sur les territoires occupés, et de Virginia Tilley, professeure étasunienne spécialisée dans les conflits à caractère racial ou ethnique, est pourtant passé presque inaperçu.

      Et pour cause : postée sur le site des Nations Unies, l’étude en a vite été retirée : « Notre rapport a été validé par les Nations Unies et nous n’avons reçu aucune critique sur le fond. Mais, mis sous pression par Israël et ses soutiens, le secrétaire général de l’ONU a prétexté que le texte n’avait pas été soumis selon les règles de procédures. Ce qui est faux », assure Virginia Tilley au Courrier. La spécialiste était de passage fin mars à Genève pour y donner une conférence à l’Institut des hautes études internationales et du développement.
      « Actes inhumains »

      Il faut dire que les conclusions du rapport n’y vont pas par quatre chemins : « Les preuves disponibles établissent au-delà de tout doute raisonnable qu’Israël est coupable de politiques et de pratiques qui constituent le crime d’apartheid tel que défini juridiquement dans le droit international. » Pour les auteurs de l’étude, l’apartheid s’applique selon eux tant aux Palestiniens des territoires occupés et de la bande de Gaza, à ceux qui vivent à Jérusalem-Est et en Israël, qu’aux réfugiés demeurant dans d’autres pays. « Tous ces éléments que nous voyions au départ comme séparés, compartimentés, proviennent d’une même logique première : la discrimination raciale », précise Virginia Tilley.

      C’est dans les territoires occupés et à Gaza, où vivent quelque 4,6 millions de Palestiniens, que l’apartheid apparait plus clairement, estime la professeure : « Là, il y a deux systèmes très distincts : un mur qui sépare les populations, des routes réservées aux juifs (colons), des lois civiles pour les juifs, d’autres – militaires – pour les arabes, des tribunaux pour les juifs, d’autres pour les Palestiniens. C’est une séparation totale ». A cela s’ajoutent « une gestion discriminatoire de terres et de l’aménagement du territoire par des institutions nationales juives chargées d’administrer les ‘terres d’Etat’ dans l’intérêt de la population juive », et les « actes inhumains quotidiennement et systématiquement pratiqués par Israël en Cisjordanie », constate le document.

      Et c’est là que la similarité avec l’Afrique du Sud est la plus forte, estime Virgina Tilley, qui a vécu et mené des études sur l’apartheid dans ce pays : « Les Israéliens ont appris énormément sur le système des bantoustans et ont importé les méthodes d’Afrique du Sud. Quand j’y travaillais, des membres du gouvernement me racontaient que chaque fois qu’Ariel Sharon leur rendait visite, il posait beaucoup de questions sur ces régions autonomes réservées aux Noirs. » La séparation de la Cisjordanie en zones A, B et C s’inspirerait directement du système sud-africain. « De nombreuses dispositions des accords d’Oslo sont calquées sur les Constitutions des bantoustans, point par point. »
      Lois discriminatoires

      La situation des quelque 1,7 million de Palestiniens qui résident en Israël même est très différente de celle qui prévalait en Afrique du Sud. Mais les « arabes » y sont également soumis à l’apartheid selon les deux experts. « Leur situation peut porter à confusion car ils sont des citoyens d’Israël et peuvent voter, prévient Virgina Tilley. Mais ils sont soumis à des lois discriminatoires, lesquelles assurent que les citoyens juifs ont des privilèges : accès aux terres et à des emplois, à des logements subventionnés, de meilleurs salaires, des protections diverses, etc. Tous types d’avantages basés sur le fait d’être juif. Les Palestiniens et arabes en sont exclus. »

      Le rapport ajoute : « Cette politique de domination se manifeste aussi dans la qualité inférieure des services, dans des lois de zonage restrictif et des allocations budgétaires limitées pour les collectivités palestiniennes. » Les citoyens juifs disposent d’un statut supérieur à celui de leurs homologues non juifs, ils ont la nationalité (le’um), alors que les autres n’ont « que » la citoyenneté (ezrahut).

      Si les arabes israéliens ont le droit de vote, ils ne peuvent contester la législation qui maintient le « régime racial », précise l’étude. « C’est illégal en Israël car ils n’ont pas le droit de créer un parti politique qui s’oppose aux lois qui font d’eux des citoyens de seconde classe », précise Virginia Tilley.

      Quant aux 300 000 Palestiniens de Jérusalem-Est, ils sont encore plus mal lotis : « Ils sont victimes d’expulsions et de démolitions de leurs maisons décidées par Israël dans le cadre de sa politique ‘d’équilibre démographique’ en faveur des résidents juifs. » Ses habitants arabes ne disposent que du statut de « résident permanent » et peuvent être expulsés vers la Cisjordanie, et perdre jusqu’à leur droit de visite dans la ville, « s’ils s’identifient politiquement, de manière ostentatoire aux Palestiniens des territoires occupés », indique la professeure.
      La solution d’un Etat démocratique pour tous

      Les Palestiniens réfugiés à l’étranger, entre 5 et 8 millions, seraient victimes d’apartheid en raison du refus d’Israël de les laisser rentrer chez eux, expliquent Richard Falk et Virginia Tilley : « Cela fait partie intégrante du système d’oppression et de domination du peuple palestinien dans son ensemble, estiment-ils. Le refus du droit au retour fait en sorte que la population palestinienne ne croisse pas au point de menacer le contrôle par Israël du territoire [occupé] ni de fournir aux Palestiniens citoyens d’Israël le poids démographique nécessaire pour obtenir les pleins droits démocratiques, éliminant par là le caractère juif de l’Etat d’Israël. »

      Pour les deux universitaires, seul l’établissement d’un Etat démocratique pour tous sur l’ensemble du territoire d’Israël et de Palestine est à même d’en finir avec l’apartheid, et donc, de régler la cause du conflit (lire ci-dessous). Une solution que préconise Virginia Tilley depuis la publication de son livre sur la question en 2005, The One State solution.

      #apartheid #Israël #mots #terminologie #rapport #ONU #discriminations #vocabulaire

    • ESCWA Launches Report on Israeli Practices Towards the Palestinian People and the Question of Apartheid

      United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) Rima Khalaf pointed out today that it is not an easy matter for a United Nations entity to conclude that a State has established an apartheid regime. In recent years, some have labelled Israeli practices as racist, while others have warned that Israel risks becoming an apartheid State. A few have raised the question as to whether in fact it already has.

      Khalaf’s remarks were given during a press conference held this afternoon at the UN House, in Beirut, when she launched a report by ESCWA on “Israeli Practices towards the Palestinian People and the Question of Apartheid.”

      Khalaf noted that Israel, encouraged by the international community’s disregard for its continual violations of international law, has succeeded over the past decades in imposing and maintaining an apartheid regime that works on two levels. First, the political and geographic fragmentation of the Palestinian people which enfeebles their capacity for resistance and makes it almost impossible for them to change the reality on the ground. Secondly, the oppression of all Palestinians through an array of laws, policies and practices that ensure domination of them by a racial group and serve to maintain the regime.

      The Executive Secretary stressed that the importance of this report is not limited to the fact that it is the first of its kind published by a United Nations body, clearly concluding that Israel is a racial State that has established an apartheid regime. It also provides fresh insight into the cause of the Palestinian people and into how to achieve peace.

      Khalaf maintained that the report shows that there can be no solution, be it in the form of two States, or following any other regional or international approach, as long as the apartheid regime imposed by Israel on the Palestinian people as a whole has not been dismantled. Apartheid is a crime against humanity. Not only does international law prohibit that crime, it obliges States and international bodies, and even individuals and private institutions, to take measures to combat it wherever it is committed and to punish its perpetrators. The solution therefore lies in implementing international law, applying the principles of non-discrimination, upholding the right of peoples to self-determination and achieving justice.

      Khalaf concluded that the report recognizes that only a ruling by an international tribunal would lend its conclusion that Israel is an apartheid State greater authority. It recommends the revival of the United Nations Centre against Apartheid and the Special Committee against Apartheid, the work of both of which came to an end by 1994, when the world believed that it had rid itself of apartheid with its demise in South Africa. It also calls on States, Governments and institutions to support boycott, divestment and sanctions initiatives and other activities aimed at ending the Israeli regime of apartheid.

      The report was prepared, at the request of ESCWA, by two specialists renowned for their expertise in the field: Richard Falk, a former United Nations special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967 and professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University; and Virginia Tilley, a researcher and professor of political science at Southern Illinois University with a wealth of experience in Israeli policy analysis.

      Two former special rapporteurs on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory, Falk and his predecessor, John Dugard, raised in their reports the issue of whether Israel has actually become an apartheid State and recommended that it be examined more closely. About two years ago, member States requested that the ESCWA secretariat prepare a study on the matter. At the Commission’s twenty-ninth session, held in Doha, Qatar in December 2016, member States adopted a resolution stressing the need to complete the study and disseminate it widely.

      The report concludes, on the basis of scholarly enquiry and overwhelming evidence, that Israel has imposed a regime of apartheid on the Palestinian people as a whole, wherever they may be. A regime that affects Palestinians in Israel itself, in the territory occupied in 1967 and in the diaspora.

      During the press conference, Khalaf gave the floor to Falk and Tilley who participated by video conference. Falk said that this study concludes with clarity and conviction that Israel is guilty of the international crime of apartheid as a result of the manner in which exerts control over the Palestinian people in their varying circumstances. It reached this important conclusion by treating contentions of Israeli responsibility for the crime of apartheid by rigorously applying the definition of apartheid under international law.

      Falk added that the study calls, above all, on the various bodies of the United Nations to consider the analysis and conclusions of this study, and on that basis endorse the central finding of apartheid, and further explore what practical measures might be taken to uphold the purpose of the Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid. It should also be appreciated that apartheid is a crime of the greatest magnitude, treated by customary international law as peremptory norm, that is a legal standard that is unconditionally valid, applies universally, and cannot be disavowed by governments or international institutions.

      For her part, Dr Tilley noted that it has become entirely clear that “we are no longer talking about risk of apartheid but practice of apartheid. There is an urgency for a response as Palestinians are currently suffering from this regime. There are many references to apartheid in polemics on the Israel-Palestine conflict.” She added that reference for a finding of apartheid in Israel-Palestine is not South Africa but International Law. She concluded that the key finding is that Israel has designed its apartheid regime around a strategic fragmentation of the Palestinian people geographically and legally.

      https://www.unescwa.org/news/escwa-launches-report-israeli-practices-towards-palestinian-people-and-ques

      Lien pour télécharger le rapport:
      https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/wp-content/uploads/downloads/201703_UN_ESCWA-israeli-practices-palestinian-people-apartheid-oc

  • Palestinian journalists injured covering mass protest in Gaza Strip - Committee to Protect Journalists
    April 2, 2018 12:52 PM
    https://cpj.org/2018/04/palestinian-journalists-injured-covering-mass-prot.php
    https://cpj.org/IOPT+Alert%204.2.18_AP.jpg

    Beirut, April 2, 2018 — Israeli authorities should independently and credibly investigate reports that Israeli security forces injured journalists covering protests in the Gaza Strip on March 30, 2018, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

    At least 10 Palestinian journalists were injured while covering mass protests on the Gaza border, according to the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS), the Palestinian press freedom group Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedom (MADA), the regional press freedom group Center for Defending the Freedom of Journalists (CFJ), and news reports. (...)

  • How ISIS Broke My Questionnaire - Issue 58 : Self
    http://nautil.us/issue/58/self/the-isis-in-the-room-rp

    I walk into Starbucks in Achrafieh, Beirut and feel all eyes on me. I tug at my top self-consciously, probably making things worse, and wonder a) do I look like an easy Westerner; b) do I look like a ragamuffin (in comparison to the groomed Lebanese); c) are my shoes weird for this country (I think so); or d) have I got something on my face? This feeling says as much about my state of mind as it does about anyone’s judgement, and I know from past fieldwork that the self-consciousness lessens over time. But it’s early days, so even my order is whispered and has to be repeated, shrivelling inside. Then I find an empty seat too quickly, so that I don’t notice I’m actually boxed in and can’t easily approach anyone at all. This is all going fairly disastrously. Coffee will surely help, I (...)

  • Breaking : East Ghouta militants massacre more than civilians in Damascus, 20+ killed

    Juste parce qu’on ne vas pas en parler beaucoup ailleurs...

    BEIRUT, LEBANON (7:00 P.M.) – Minutes ago, the militants in the East Ghouta region fired several missiles and artillery shells into Damascus city, killing and wounding scores of civilians.

    According to an Al-Masdar field correspondent in Damascus, the militants fired a missile into the Kashkoul District, hitting a crowded market in the city.

    The correspondent added that the death toll is rapidly rising, with more than 20 civilians already reported dead as a result of this attack.

    In addition to the attack on Kashkoul, the militants also wounded one woman and five children in the Mezzeh District of Damascus after they launched several indiscriminate artillery shells into the area.

    #syrie

    • A contre-courant, #Sarajevo affiche sa solidarité

      Quelque 600 migrants parmi les 8 000 entrés dans le pays depuis le début de l’année sont actuellement en transit dans la capitale.

      La scène est devenue familière. Sur le parking de la gare de Sarajevo, ils sont environ 300 à former une longue file en cette soirée chaude de juillet. S’y garera bientôt une camionnette blanche d’où jailliront des portions des incontournables cevapcici bosniens, quelques rouleaux de viande grillée servis dans du pain rond, accompagnés d’un yaourt. Une poignée de femmes et quelques enfants se mêlent à ces jeunes hommes, venus de Syrie, d’Irak, du Pakistan ou d’Afghanistan et de passage en Bosnie sur la route vers l’Europe de l’Ouest. Environ 600 des 8 000 migrants entrés dans le pays depuis le début de l’année sont actuellement en transit dans la capitale. La majorité est bloquée dans le nord-ouest, en tentant de passer en Croatie.

      « Ici, l’accueil est différent de tous les pays par lesquels nous sommes passés. Les gens nous aident. Ils essaient de nous trouver un endroit où prendre une douche, dormir. Les flics sont corrects aussi. Ils ne nous tabassent pas », raconte un Syrien sur les routes depuis un an. Plus qu’ailleurs, dans la capitale bosnienne, les habitants tentent de redonner à ces voyageurs clandestins un peu de dignité humaine, de chaleur. « Les Sarajéviens n’ont pas oublié que certains ont été eux-mêmes des réfugiés pendant la guerre en Bosnie[1992-1995, ndlr]. Les pouvoirs publics ont mis du temps à réagir face à l’arrivée des migrants, contrairement aux habitants de Sarajevo qui ont d’emblée affiché une solidarité fantastique. Grâce à eux, une crise humanitaire a été évitée au printemps », affirme Neven Crvenkovic, porte-parole pour l’Europe du Sud-Est du Haut Commissariat des Nations unies pour les réfugiés.

      En avril, 250 migrants avaient mis en place un campement de fortune, quelques dizaines de tentes, dans un parc du centre touristique de Sarajevo. L’Etat qui paraissait démuni face à cette situation inédite ne leur fournissait rien. « Dès que nous avons vu venir des familles, nous nous sommes organisés. Des gens ont proposé des chambres chez eux, ont payé des locations », raconte une bénévole de Pomozi.ba, la plus importante association humanitaire de Sarajevo. L’organisation, qui ne vit que des dons des particuliers en argent ou en nature, sert actuellement un millier de repas par jour dans la capitale bosnienne et distribue vêtements et couvertures. Lors du ramadan en mai, 700 dîners avaient été servis. Des nappes blanches avaient été disposées sur le bitume du parking de la gare de Sarajevo.

      Non loin de la gare, un petit restaurant de grillades, « le Broadway », est tenu par Mirsad Suceska. Bientôt la soixantaine, cet homme discret apporte souvent des repas aux migrants. Ses clients leur en offrent aussi. Il y a quelques semaines, ils étaient quelques-uns à camper devant son établissement. Un groupe d’habitués, des cadres qui travaillent dans le quartier, en sont restés sidérés. L’un d’eux a demandé à Mirsad de donner aux migrants toute la nourriture qui restait dans sa cuisine. « Quand je les vois, je pense aux nôtres qui sont passés par là et je prends soin de ne pas les heurter, les blesser en lançant une remarque maladroite ou un mauvais regard », explique Mirsad. Dans le reste du pays, la population réserve un accueil plus mitigé à ces voyageurs.

      http://www.liberation.fr/planete/2018/07/29/a-contre-courant-sarajevo-affiche-sa-solidarite_1669608

    • Et au contraire... la #non-hospitalité

      Le guide de l’hospitalité que n’a pas écrit #Christian_Estrosi

      En juillet 2013, le maire LR de #Nice, Christian Estrosi, envoyait à 3 500 édiles ses recommandations pour éviter la concentration de populations migrantes. Le Perou, un collectif d’urbanistes, a adressé en juillet aux mêmes communes un guide de l’hospitalité, issu de leurs expériences dans des bidonvilles.

      http://www.liberation.fr/france/2018/08/07/le-guide-de-l-hospitalite-que-n-a-pas-ecrit-christian-estrosi_1671153

      Pour télécharger le #guide du #Perou :
      http://www.romeurope.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Guide_PEROU_images.pdf

    • Barcellona e Open Arms si uniscono per salvare vite umane nel Mediterraneo

      La nave #Open_Arms avrebbe dovuto lasciare il porto di Barcellona in direzione della zona SAR della Libia per continuare il suo compito umanitario di osservazione e salvataggio, ma la Capitaneria di porto, che dipende dal Ministero dello Sviluppo spagnolo, le ha negato l’autorizzazione a partire fino a quando non sarà garantito un accordo con le autorità della zona SAR del Mediterraneo per lo sbarco delle persone salvate in mare. È improbabile che ciò avvenga, vista la chiusura dei porti di Italia e Malta.

      In risposta, la sindaca di Barcellona Ada Colau ha inviato una lettera al Ministro dello Sviluppo, José Luis Ábalos, chiedendo l’immediata revoca del blocco della nave OpenArms. La sindaca esprime la preoccupazione che per ragioni amministrative il governo spagnolo non riesca a proteggere i migranti che intraprendono un viaggio molto pericoloso attraverso il Mediterraneo, in fuga dall’orrore. Esorta inoltre il Ministero ad attuare le azioni necessarie per superare il più rapidamente possibile gli ostacoli amministrativi che impediscono alla nave di lasciare il porto di Barcellona.

      Allo stesso modo, il Comune di Barcellona ha firmato un accordo di collaborazione con Open Arms per lo sviluppo del progetto della fondazione per la protezione dei migranti a rischio di naufragio e conseguente pericolo di morte imminente per le aree SAR nel Mediterraneo centrale come emergenza umanitaria. L’accordo persegue inoltre l’obiettivo di denunciare la situazione di violazione dei diritti umani nel Mediterraneo.

      Il progetto Open Arms “Protezione per presenza, soccorso umanitario e comunicazione di emergenza nel Mediterraneo” si articola in tre filoni di lavoro:

      – Protezione attraverso la presenza nella zona SAR, la visibilità come deterrente per eventuali violazioni dei diritti umani e la garanzia di protezione per le persone trovate in mare.

      – Protezione attraverso l’azione, con il salvataggio di persone in pericolo di morte in acque SAR e sbarco con garanzie di sicurezza.

      – Comunicazione di emergenza, per rendere visibile e denunciare l’attuale situazione di violazione dei diritti dei migranti nel viaggio attraverso il Mediterraneo e le sue frontiere.

      L’accordo, in vigore fino all’ottobre del 2019, finanzierà con 497.020 euro il 35,4% del progetto della ONG. Con questo contributo la città di Barcellona si riafferma come città rifugio, vista la presenza minima di ONG nel Mediterraneo centrale dalla scorsa estate a causa della chiusura dei porti italiani e maltesi e della criminalizzazione e blocco delle imbarcazioni delle ONG di soccorso umanitario.

      Il Comune di Barcellona e Open Arms concordano sul fatto che la situazione di crisi e il blackout umanitario al largo delle coste libiche richiedano un’azione di emergenza con il massimo sostegno delle istituzioni pubbliche, in particolare delle città europee, sull’esempio di questo accordo.


      https://www.pressenza.com/it/2019/01/barcellona-e-open-arms-si-uniscono-per-salvare-vite-umane-nel-mediterrane

      #Barcelone

    • Siracusa pronta ad accogliere i migranti della Sea Watch. Sindaco: «Cittadini disponibili a ospitarli nelle loro case»

      Il primo cittadino del capoluogo aretuseo, #Francesco_Italia, ha già scritto al ministro della Marina mercantile chiedendo di consentire l’attracco della nave. «Al resto, penseremo noi, la Curia e le associazioni di volontariato disposte a prestare aiuto»

      https://meridionews.it/articolo/73871/siracusa-pronta-ad-accogliere-i-migranti-della-sea-watch-sindaco-cittadi
      #Syracuse #Siracusa

    • Numéro spécial sur villes et hospitalité de la revue Plein Droit :

      À rebours des politiques migratoires impulsées par les États, des municipalités ont décidé de se montrer solidaires des migrant⋅e⋅s qui passent ou qui s’installent sur leur territoire, et de leur venir en aide, voire de les protéger contre des autorités étatiques qui ne cherchent qu’à les chasser. Villes-refuge, villes sanctuaires, villes solidaires, villes d’asile, villes rebelles, les qualificatifs sont aussi nombreux que les degrés d’hospitalité qui vont de l’affichage médiatique à une réelle politique municipale qui crée les conditions d’un accueil digne des exilé⋅e⋅s. Et quand les municipalités se montrent également hostiles à l’égard des migrant⋅e⋅s, il arrive que les citoyen⋅ne⋅s prennent le relais, faisant fi des menaces institutionnelles, de la pression policière ou du climat xénophobe, parfois pour parer à l’urgence humanitaire, parfois pour favoriser une réelle cogestion fondée sur l’autonomie. Ces expériences multiples d’hospitalité et d’activisme local montrent que l’humanité peut l’emporter sur la fermeté, n’en déplaise aux gouvernements.


      https://www.gisti.org/spip.php?article5812

    • #BD publiée par @vivre sur la commune de #Fourneaux :

      La BD reportage « Après l’arrivée » raconte une histoire d’accueil. Comment 33 réfugiés, débarquant du jour au lendemain de la jungle de Calais, s’inscrivent dans le récit d’une commune de Savoie et de ses habitants. Un dessinateur, HERJI, une journaliste, Julie Eigenmann, sont partis à leur rencontre et ont ramené dans leur valise ce reportage dessiné. L’histoire pourrait se dérouler un peu partout sur la planète, parce qu’il s’agit d’humanité, de partage et de ces rencontres qui montrent qu’un autre monde est possible.


      https://asile.ch/sommaire/ve-165-decembre-2017

    • #Convention_sur_l'accueil de #Grande-Synthe :

      Dans un contexte de sécurisation et de fermeture des frontières européennes, l’#accueil des réfugiés s’impose dans le débat public et dans nos réalités locales.

      Grande-Synthe reçoit la Convention nationale sur l’accueil et les migrations, 2 jours de débats pour réfléchir collectivement à une politique d’accueil fondée sur la solidarité et le respect des droits humains et pour questionner les pouvoirs publics. Avec la participation de nombreuses associations et ONG impliquées quotidiennement ainsi que de personnalités : Anne Hidalgo (Maire de Paris), Benjamin Stora (Historien, Professeur et Président du Musée national de l’histoire de l’immigration), Edwy Plenel (Médiapart), Eric Piolle (Maire de Grenoble), Frederic Leturque (Maire d’Arras), Pierre Laurent (Secrétaire national du PCF) mais également Benoit Hamon, Aurélien Taché (Député LREM), Eric Coquerel (Député – France Insoumise), Michel Agier (Dir. d’études à l’EHESS), Rony Brauman (co-fondateur de MSF) , Cédric Herrou, ainsi que des représentants du HCR, de la Cimade, de MDM et des associations locales…

      Autour de cette convention ouverte à tous, une programmation culturelle plurielle : expo, humour, concert, docus…

      http://convention-accueil-grande-synthe.fr

    • Des dizaines de villes inventent une politique d’accueil des migrants

      Jeudi et vendredi s’est tenue à Grande-Synthe la première #Convention_nationale_sur_l’accueil_et_les_migrations. Des élus aux associatifs, tous les acteurs de l’aide aux migrants ont jeté des ponts entre les initiatives locales, cherchant à construire un réseau des villes accueillantes.

      https://reporterre.net/Des-dizaines-de-villes-inventent-une-politique-d-accueil-des-migrants

    • Entre accueil et rejet : ce que les villes font aux migrants. Ce que les villes font aux migrants

      ce livre permet de mieux comprendre la diversité et la complexité des formes de l’accueil des migrants sur notre continent. Il nous fait saisir comment cet enjeu refaçonne les liens sociaux, les valeurs et les émotions collectives, et interroge les définitions pratiques de la citoyenneté prise dans un jeu de frontières. Dans un contexte d’anxiété identitaire qui se manifeste par la fermeture des frontières, le confinement et les expulsions, ce livre montre que la ville peut constituer un pôle de résistance et de contournement, voire de renversement des décisions de l’État central.

      Il est constitué d’enquêtes claires et approfondies menées dans plusieurs grandes villes européennes (Paris, Copenhague, Berlin, Barcelone, Istanbul…), et de témoignages d’acteurs concernés (migrants, militants, observateurs directs…).

      http://lepassagerclandestin.fr/catalogue/bibliotheque-des-frontieres/entre-accueil-et-rejet-ce-que-les-villes-font-aux-migrants.html

    • Les ciutats fan front a la necessitat urgent d’habitatge públic

      Les ciutats europees han de fer front a la necessitat urgent d’habitatge públic. Per això, molts governs municipals estan reforçant les seves polítiques amb mecanismes innovadors que permetin fer front a la crisi de l’habitatge i a l’expulsió dels veïns dels seus barris.

      L’Ajuntament de Barcelona ha presentat un projecte per construir pisos d’estada temporal de construcció ràpida, sostenible i de qualitat. La iniciativa, anomenada APROP (Allotjaments de Proximitat Provisional), oferirà una resposta urgent mentre es construeixen les promocions d’habitatge públic, que requereixen de més temps.

      Responsables del consistori barceloní van explicar ahir aquest projecte en un acte organitzat per l’Observatori DESC i el propi Ajuntament.

      La jornada, anomenada ‘Urgent: solucions innovadores en habitatge públic’, es va celebrar al Pati Manning de Barcelona i hi van participar representants de les ciutats d’Amsterdam i Munic, a banda d’entitats com la Federació d’Associacions de Veïns i Veïnes de Barcelona (FAVB), la Fundació Hàbitat 3 i l’Institut de Tecnologia de la Construcció de Catalunya (ITeC), entre d’altres.

      http://ajuntament.barcelona.cat/lescorts/ca/noticia/les-ciutats-fan-front-a-la-necessitat-urgent-dhabitatge-pzblic

      Et dans ce cadre, le projet #APROP:
      https://www.barcelona.cat/infobarcelona/en/temporary-local-housing-to-combat-gentrification-2_622017.html
      #Barcelone

    • Sanctuary in the City : #Beirut

      The world’s refugee crisis is a global responsibility that is especially discharged locally, in particular, in Lebanon, where refugees and displaced persons form a large percentage of the national population. Since the beginning of the Syrian Crisis in March 2011, Lebanon has been a refuge for many hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war. This project explores how municipalities cope with the crisis within the normative framework of human rights and corresponding obligations. It seeks to give voice to the experience of Beirut among the world’s cities claiming to apply that framework in policies, practice, services and local democratic leadership and administration.

      Through a series of workshops and other survey tools, the project captures the expressions, principles and experiences of local governance amid the refugee/displacement crisis. It seeks to channel the experience of refugees, civil society and local authorities by expressing operational principles and allows people in Beirut to identify what works and what could work better.

      One outcome of the project will be a local charter that gives voice to this community of practice among the world’s cities that are facing comparable challenges. The charter will form a basis for exchange, mutual learning and guidance for local administrations in future. The Beirut charter is seen as one tangible way to give credit to the people of Beirut for their role in assuming a local responsibility that the wider world shares.

      http://hic-mena.org/spage.php?id=qG8=

      Ici pour télécharger la charte de la ville de Beirut :
      http://www.hlrn.org/img/documents/Beirut_Charter_to_share_EN.pdf
      #ville-refuge

    • Migrants’ (Denied) Right to the City

      The history of cities in the Indian sub-continent goes as far as the middle of the third millennium BC with the emergence of cities like Harappa and Mohenjo Daro in the Indus valley (Champakalakshmi 2006:8). During different phases of Indian history, many new cities have emerged and many have declined, shaping the history of India (Ramachandran 1995). The dynamics of city growth shows that migration has been a very important component as cities were centres of trade, manufacturing and services. These functions could not have been sustained without migration and migrant labour. People migrate to cities not only for work, but also on account of business, education, marriages, natural disasters and conflicts etc. As cities have evolved through various migrations over a long period of time, they are characterized by diversity in terms of ethnic and religious identities, occupations, language, culture, food habits and so on. In fact heterogeneity is the hallmark of cities and innovations -in which migrants have played a very significant role -are central to their existence. Migration, especially internal migration, contributes significantly to the growth of Indian cities. The Indian Constitution guarantees freedom of movement and freedom to settle within the territory of India as a fundamental right of all citizens (Article 19). Yet migrants face several barriers in terms of access to civic amenities, housing and employment, as well as restrictions on their political and cultural rights because of linguistic and cultural differences. These discriminations are articulated in various parts of India in the theory of ’sons of the soil’, which evokes anti migrant sentiments (Weiner 1978, Hansen 2001). Migrants are all the more vulnerable to discrimination and exploitation as many of them are poor, illiterate and live in slums and hazardous locations prone to disaster and natural calamities. As such, the condition of migrants in cities needs to be addressed squarely in urban policies and programmes.

      https://www.researchgate.net/publication/234169322_Migrants'_Denied_Right_to_the_City

    • Mobile Commons, Migrant Digitalities and the Right to the City

      This book examines the relationship between urban migrant movements, struggles and digitality which transforms public space and generates mobile commons. The authors explore heterogeneous digital forms in the context migration, border-crossing and transnational activism, displaying commonality patterns and inter-dependence.



      https://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9781137412317
      #livre

    • Ce qu’ils font est juste : ils mettent la solidarité et l’hospitalité à l’honneur

      L’étranger est par essence louche, suspect, imprévisible, retors, de taille à commettre des avanies, même s’il survit dans le plus profond dénuement, s’il souffre de la faim, du froid, qu’il n’a pas de toit pour se protéger. L’étranger, homme, femme ou enfant, représente toujours un danger, qu’il faut combattre à tout prix.

      La loi dispose que « toute personne qui aura, par aide directe ou indirecte, facilité ou tenté de faciliter l’entrée, la circulation ou le séjour irrégulier d’un étranger en France » encourt jusqu’à 5 ans d’emprisonnement et 30 000 euros d’amende.

      Cette sanction pénale est réservée aux « aidants » désintéressés, animés par le seul élan d’humanité et de dignité vis-à-vis d’eux-mêmes et de ceux voués à tout juste subsister. Ils ont choisi, en connaissance de cause, de commettre ce qu’on appelle le « délit de solidarité » ou « d’hospitalité ». Des expressions devenues familières, dans leur obscénité, depuis qu’on a vu traduits devant les tribunaux des « désobéissants », paysans, professeurs, élus municipaux, citoyens bienfaisants coupables d’avoir, sans contrepartie d’aucune sorte, secouru, protégé, rendu service à des hommes, femmes et enfants qui n’avaient pas l’autorisation de fouler la terre française.

      Les élections présidentielle et législatives en France ont fourni l’occasion d’une chasse aux désobéissants, comme si la majorité des candidats s’étaient accordés pour rassurer l’opinion en la sommant de collaborer : la France ne laissera pas entrer chez elle des hordes de réfugiés, de migrants si menaçants. Chaque jour a apporté son nouveau délinquant, lequel n’a pas désarmé, il est entré en résistance. Il offre le gîte, le couvert, la circulation à des exilés miséreux, il est capturé par des policiers, punit par des magistrats… et il recommence, parce que l’hospitalité et la solidarité ne sont pas une faveur mais un droit, un devoir et qu’il aime accomplir ce devoir-là.

      Des écrivains ont accepté avec enthousiasme d’écrire, à leur guise, dans une nouvelle, fiction ou rêverie, leur respect pour ces gens de bien, et leur inquiétude de voir agiter les spectres de graves menaces incarnés par des êtres humains réduits à peu de choses. Pas seulement : c’est aussi vers l’Autre que va leur curiosité, l’Autre qui gagne toujours à être connu et non chassé.

      http://www.donquichotte-editions.com/donquichotte-editions/Argu.php?ID=147