organization:duma

  • Grândola, vila morena
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_s28vLDHVJk

    Chanson de José Afonso, interdite sous la dictature. Sa diffusion à la radio, le 25 avril 1974, fut le signal de la révolution des oeillets, qui mit fin à 60 ans de dictature au Portugal.

    Grândola, vila morena
    Terra da fraternidade
    O povo é quem mais ordena
    Dentro de ti, ó cidade

    Dentro de ti, ó cidade
    O povo é quem mais ordena
    Terra da fraternidade
    Grândola, vila morena

    Em cada esquina um amigo
    Em cada rosto igualdade
    Grândola, vila morena
    Terra da fraternidade

    Terra da fraternidade
    Grândola, vila morena
    Em cada rosto igualdade
    O povo é quem mais ordena

    À sombra duma azinheira
    Que já não sabia a idade
    Jurei ter por companheira
    Grândola a tua vontade

    Grândola a tua vontade
    Jurei ter por companheira
    À sombra duma azinheira
    Que já não sabia a idade

    Lalala lalalala lala

    Traduction :

    Grandola ville brune / Terre de la fraternité / Le peuple est celui qui commande le plus / A l’intérieur de toi ville / A l’intérieur de toi ville / Le peuple est celui qui commande le plus / Terre de la fraternité / Grandola ville brune

    Dans chaque coin un ami / Dans chaque visage un ami aussi / Grandola ville brune / Terre de la fraternité / Terre de la fraternité /
    Grandola ville brune / Dans chaque visage un ami aussi / Le peuple est celui qui commande le plus

    A l’ombre d’un chêne / Dont je ne savais pas l’âge / Je t’ai juré comme compagne / Grandola à ta volonté / Grandola à ta volonté / Je t’ai juré comme compagne / A l’ombre d’un chêne / Dont je ne savais pas l’âge.

    #Zeca_Afonso
    #karaoké
    #chant_révolutionnaire
    #portugal
    #1974
    #révolution_des_œillets
    #Revolução_dos_cravos

    La Révolution des œillets en 4 minutes
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3LEF5MbW9ns

  • Jewish extremists taunt ’Ali’s on the grill’ at slain toddler’s relatives | The Times of Israel
    https://www.timesofisrael.com/jewish-extremists-taunt-alis-on-the-grill-at-slain-toddlers-relatives

    Des terroristes sionistes se réjouissent publiquement, bruyamment et impunément de la mort d’un enfant palestinien (tué par leurs pairs), et les juges sionistes chargés de juger deux participants au crime se préparent à rendre un verdict encourageant des meurtres similaires,

    Inside in a dramatic ruling moments prior, the court’s three-judge panel threw out a confession given by the teenage accomplice accused of involvement in the deadly Duma attack, saying that the statement had been given under duress.

    However, a confession given by primary suspect Amiram Ben-Uliel was cleared for use after judges determined that enough time had passed between when he was tortured and when he admitted to the crime.

    The decision creates a major hurdle for the prosecution, which may now need to throw out the case against the unnamed minor accused of helping plan the firebombing of the Dawabsha family home on July 31, 2015.

    The minor and Amiram Ben-Uliel, charged last year with carrying out the attack, have claimed innocence, insisting they only confessed to the crime after being subjected to torture at the hands of Shin Bet interrogators.

    #impunité #vitrine_de_la_jungle #Israel #sionisme #crimes

  • Putin’s War on Women – Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2018/04/09/putins-war-on-women


    Women protest a bill decriminalizing domestic violence in Moscow’s Sokolniki Park in February 2017.
    Sergei FadeichevTASS via Getty Images

    нет домашнему насилию
    заплати и колоти ?

    Non à la violence domestique
    –Cogner et payer ?_

    When Russia decriminalized domestic violence in February 2017, civil servants tasked with protecting women in the country’s far east were dismayed by the new vulnerability of their wards. Yet few officials opposed the measure. President Vladimir Putin signed off on the bill after the lower house of the Russian parliament, the Duma, overwhelmingly approved it by a vote of 380 to 3. The new law recategorized the crime of violence against family members: Abuse that does not result in broken bones, and does not occur more than once a year, is no longer punishable by long prison sentences. The worst sanctions that abusers now face are fines of up to $530, 10- to 15-day stints in jail, or community service work. That’s if the courts side with the victim. They rarely do.

  • THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 13, 2018
    United States Assessment of the Assad Regime’s Chemical Weapons Use
    https://www.defense.gov/portals/1/features/2018/0418_syria/img/United-States-Assessment-of-the-Assad-Regime%E2%80%99s-Chemical-Weapons-Use

    […]
    Multiple government helicopters were observed over Duma on April 7, with witnesses specifically reporting a Mi-8 helicopter, known to have taken off from the Syrian regime’s nearby Dumayr airfield, circling over Duma during the attack. Numerous eyewitnesses corroborate that barrel bombs were dropped from these helicopters, a tactic used to target civilians indiscriminately throughout the war. Photos of barrel bombs dropped in Duma closely match those used previously by the regime. These barrel bombs were likely used in the chemical attack. Reliable intelligence also indicates that Syrian military officials coordinated what appears to be the use of chlorine in Duma on April 7. Following these barrel bomb attacks, doctors and aid organizations on the ground in Duma reported the strong smell of chlorine and described symptoms consistent with exposure to sarin.
    […]
    In this case—as with previous instances of regime chemical weapons use—United States experts considered alternative explanations beyond the Syrian regime’s culpability for chemical weapons use. Within hours of the first allegation of chemical use on April 7, Syria’s state-run news agency painted the reports as a smear campaign by the last remaining opposition group in East Ghouta, Jaysh al-Islam. We have no information to suggest that this group has ever used chemical weapons. Further, it is unlikely that the opposition could fabricate this volume of media reports on regime chemical weapons use. Such a widespread fabrication would require a highly organized and compartmented campaign to deceive multiple media outlets while evading our detection. The Syrian regime and Russia have also claimed that a terrorist group conducted the attacks or that the attacks were staged are not consistent with the existing body of credible information. The Syrian regime, conversely, has already been condemned by United Nations (UN) investigators for past and continued chemical weapons attacks. It is the only actor in Syria with both the motive and the means to deploy nerve agents. The use of helicopters further implicates the regime; no non-state group has conducted air operations in the conflict

  • Putin Isn’t a Genius. He’s Leonid Brezhnev. – Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2018/02/12/putin-isnt-a-genius-hes-leonid-brezhnev

    There are two absolutely very well-known historical experiments in the world — East Germany and West Germany and North Korea and South Korea. Now these are cases that everyone can see!” So spoke Russian President Vladimir Putin in an address to the Duma in 2012. As a former KGB operative in communist East Germany, Putin knew of what he spoke. Communism was a “historic futility,” he later explained. “Communism and the power of the Soviets did not make Russia a prosperous country.” Its main legacy, he added, was “dooming our country to lagging steadily behind economically advanced countries. It was a blind alley, far away from the mainstream of world civilizations.

    Yet Russia today is lagging steadily behind economically advanced countries — and Russia’s president is doing nothing about it. Putin recently overtook Leonid Brezhnev as Russia’s longest-serving leader since Joseph Stalin. His economic record, coupling stability with stagnation, looks increasingly like Brezhnev’s too.
    […]
    True, Russian economists, politicians, and business leaders are putting forth grand plans to revitalize the country’s economy. There are two main schools of thought. Former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin, who has worked with Putin since their days in St. Petersburg in the 1990s, has an array of proposals to liberalize Russia’s economy and to invest in Russia’s population.
    […]
    Where Kudrin and his allies believe that Russia can attract investment only by making its economy more appealing to the private sector, an alternative camp thinks that Russia’s government should invest more itself. Russian politician Boris Titov, for example, has urged the government to sharply reduce interest rates, making it cheaper for firms to borrow. He also wants the government to subsidize loans to corporations and to invest directly in industry. Titov’s calls for state-backed investment are supported by many industrialists, who would stand to gain from government-funded infusions of credit.

  • The Hebrew neo-Nazis -
    By Gideon Levy | Aug. 20, 2017 | 4:43 AM
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.807833

    Why Israelis are remaining silent about U.S. President Donald Trump’s comments about ’many fine people’ taking part in the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville

    Israel has no moral right to judge U.S. President Donald Trump over his forgiving remarks about the neo-Nazis in his country. First, Israel wasn’t really shocked by what he said. After all, it is willing to accept anything from anyone who supports the Israeli occupation. That’s axiomatic at this point. Whether it’s a Hungarian fascist or an American neo-Nazi, as long as they support the occupation – even if they secretly hate Jews – they are considered friends of Israel and moral people.

    The best of the “friends of Israel” today are fascists and evangelicals, xenophobes and Islamophobes. What’s most important is that they support the occupation. It’s only opponents of the occupation who are anti-Semites, and we will mount a special effort to combat them. We will forgive everyone else.

    But there is also another reason for Israelis’ silence. It recalls the Yiddish saying about betrayal of one’s own guilt – that the thief thinks his hat is on fire. Neo-Nazis? We have a lot of our own “Made in Israel,” Hebrew equivalents of neo-Nazis, and the opposition to them in Israel is less than to neo-Nazis in the United States. A resolute counter-demonstration was organized by liberals in the face of the march in Charlottesville. What about here?

    The sacred symmetry that Trump tried to create between attacker and attacked, between assailant and defender, between incitement and protest, between justice and evil – that was invented in Israel. Here we have the occupier and the occupied, a violent and at times even murderous right wing and a left wing that has never murdered, but they are deemed comparable.

    Any assault by settlement thugs on Palestinian farmers on their own land is deemed a “clash.” Any Palestinian protest against the violence of the occupier is considered a “disturbance of the peace.” It’s a symmetrical brawl between the two peoples’ shepherds. After all, there are good and bad people among the settlers – just as Trump said with regard to his “alt-right.”

    The Israeli alt-right is not neo-Nazi. But a thousand neo-Nazi flowers bloom on its margins that no one thinks about weeding out. Fascism in Israel has long been accepted. Neo-Nazis haven’t, but the distinction between the two is vague. If the extremist Lehava organization isn’t neo-Nazi, what is? If Beitar Jerusalem’s La Familia fan group isn’t neo-Nazi, what is? If the firebombing of the Dawabsheh family home in the West Bank village of Duma and the kidnapping and murder of Mohammed Abu Khdeir aren’t neo-Nazi acts, what are? And what about the Arabic-language highway sign near the settlement of Halamish declaring: “This area is under the control of the Jews. The entry of Arabs is forbidden and constitutes a risk to your life!”

    The flag parade by Jews on Jerusalem Day is a state-sponsored neo-Nazi provocation, like the Purim rioting in Hebron. The Jewish community in Hebron is in essence neo-Nazi. Go see, judge for yourself. And the pools and Jewish communities along the way that are closed to Arabs? What will they do to any Arab who breaks the rules and sneaks into the Jewish swimming pool in Kochav Ya’ir – an Israeli community of people from the virtuous center-left, where a majority of voters support the enlightened Yesh Atid and Zionist Union parties? And what will they do in the Galilee community of Nofit if Arabs build houses there after expansion plans? After all, it’s not hard for us to imagine these people on the Zionist left objecting, even using unpleasant means, to Arabs coming into their communities.

    The plan for surrender proposed by MK Bezalel Smotrich (Habayit Hayehudi) is neo-Nazi, despite all his protests. Among the three options he would provide to the Palestinians, there isn’t even one that is humane – and the third calls for their expulsion and destruction. What else do we need? And his wife’s objection to giving birth in the same room as a woman of the inferior race is also neo-Nazi.

    Social media is full of frightful neo-Nazi statements – from wishing for the death of every dying Palestinian child, to similar wishes to those who tell the children’s stories. You cannot write this off as just as “a handful of deviants.” That, too, is the spirit of the times.

    We cannot ignore the sentiments in this country, where there is a policy of organized and institutionalized racism against African asylum seekers. Pre-fascist sentiments are taking hold here – with manifestations of state-sponsored neo-Nazism – more than in any other Western country.

    In the West, most contemptuous efforts are directed against foreigners. In Israel, they are directed mostly against the people who are native to the country. Complaining about Trump? That would already be the height of hypocrisy.

  • Show #337
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/l-etranger/show-337

    Ou•tré (uˈtreɪ) adj. Scrambling radio art/art of radio, social imaginary significations, collective fictional spaces, post-economic music, queer diasporas ... A relational outburst of ...

    Download audio of this show as mp3 (256kps) or OGG.

    Scrambled live:

    1. Negativland - Helter Stupid (excerpt) from S/T CD (RecRec Music, Switzerland, 1989) 2. Annie Anxiety - Barbed Wire Halo from S/T 7" (Crass Records, UK, 1981) 3. Streicher - Nihilist Assfucks Manifesto from ’ Annihilism’ cassette ( Zero Cabal, Australia, 1995) 4. Pump - Lung from ’The Decoration Of The Duma Continues’ LP (Forced Nostalgia, Belgium, 2011) 5. DJ Ra - Party Talk #3 from ’I’m So Bored With The USA #2' 7" (Diskono, UK, 1999) 6. Dieter Roth - Thy quatsch est min Castello from ’ Dieter (...)

    #experimental #freeform #outsider #weird
    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/l-etranger/show-337_03370__1.mp3

  • En Russie, la guerre contre les femmes est déclarée

    Why Russia is about to decriminalise wife-beating | The Economist
    http://www.economist.com/news/europe/21715726-it-fits-traditional-values-lawmakers-say-why-russia-about-decrim

    SHOULD it be a crime for a husband to hit his wife? In many countries this question no longer needs discussing. But not in Russia, where the Duma (parliament) voted this week to decriminalise domestic violence against family members unless it is a repeat offence or causes serious medical damage. The change is part of a state-sponsored turn to traditionalism during Vladimir Putin’s third presidential term. It has exposed deep fault lines. Many Russians now embrace the liberal notion of individual rights, but others are moving in the opposite direction.

  • Russia Moves to Soften Domestic Violence Law - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/25/world/europe/russia-domestic-violence.html

    MOSCOW — Russian lawmakers on Wednesday moved to decriminalize some forms of domestic battery for first-time offenders who do not do serious physical harm to their victims.

    Members of the State Duma passed the controversial amendment to the Russian criminal code in its second reading, which essentially assures it will go to President Vladimir V. Putin for his signature.

    #décadence #violences_conjugales décriminalisée

    En fait je cherche un tag qui regrouperait tout ce ui, en ce moement, nous ramène en arrière (Ces lois scélérates, Trump, Valls, Fillon, la Hongrie, etc...). Je ne sais pas si décadence est la meilleure alternative ou s’il faut trouver autre chose.

  • Russia ratifies bill on Turkish Stream gas pipeline - ENERGY
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/Default.aspx?pageID=238&nID=107480&NewsCatID=348

    Russia announced late on Dec. 16 that it had approved a bill to ratify the Turkish Stream natural gas pipeline project.

    The bill was passed by the Russian government and was sent to the Duma, the lower house of Russia’s parliament, the Kremlin said in a statement.

    The Russian Energy Ministry and Foreign Ministry jointly prepared the bill on the project, which is meant to supply natural gas to Turkey and other countries through Turkey.

    The Turkish Stream, announced by Russian President Vladimir Putin in a 2014 visit to Turkey, would carry gas from Russia under the Black Sea to Turkey’s Thrace region. One line, with 15.75 billion cubic meters (bcm) of capacity, is expected to supply the Turkish market, while a second line is set to carry gas to Europe.

    The agreement on the project entered into force through publication in Turkey’s Official Gazette on Dec. 6.

    Turkey’s parliament ratified a bill for the Turkish Stream agreement on Dec. 2 and it was signed into law by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

    #russie #turquie #gaz #pipelines #mer_noire

  • Israel Prize winners call for release of Palestinian poet Dareen Tatour
    Haaretz.com | Gili Izikovich and JTA Oct 11, 2016 6:41 AM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.747015

    Four Israel Prize laureates are among about 170 intellectuals and cultural figures who have recently signed a petition calling for the release from custody of Israeli Arab poet Dareen Tatour.

    Tuesday marks a year since she was detained amid allegations of incitement. She is currently under house arrest at her parents’ home.

    The signatories, who include writer A.B. Yehoshua, poet Tuvya Ruebner, philosophy professor Avishai Margalit and artist Tzibi Geva, are also calling for pending charges against her to be dropped.

    Tatour, who in the past published a book of poetry in Arabic, was arrested in a police raid on her parents’ home, where she also lived, in the village of Reineh near Nazareth. She was accused of incitement primarily over a poem that she wrote following the 2014 murder by Jews of Palestinian teenager Mohammed Abu Khdeir and the murder of three members of the Palestinian Dawabsheh family in the West Bank town of Duma last year when their home was torched, allegedly also by Jews.

    The poem, written in Arabic and posted on YouTube, is called “Resist my people, resist them.” She was charged with incitement to violence and terrorism. Although not directly referring to violence, some lines of the poem allude to joining martyrs and not “succumbing to the ‘peaceful solution.’”

  • Palestinian dies after being run over by Israeli settler in Nablus in unclear circumstances
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=772616

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — An 85-year-old Palestinian died on Wednesday after he was run over by an Israeli settler driving a motorcycle near the community of Khirbet al-Marajim, west of the southern Nablus village of Duma, in unclear circumstances.

    Palestinian security sources told Ma’an an investigation was opened to determine if the incident had been a deliberate attack or an accident.

    The Palestinian was identified as Moussa Muhammad Salman from the Nablus-area village of Talfit.

    Hasan Faraj, a relative of Salman, told Ma’an that Salman succumbed to critical injuries after he arrived to al-Najah University Hospital in Nablus.

    Salman had been riding a donkey and herding his sheep when he was run over. The donkey was also killed in the incident.(...)

    “““““““““““““““““““““““““““


    http://imemc.org/article/elderly-palestinian-man-and-donkey-killed-after-being-hit-by-israeli-motorcyc
    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Cisjordanie : l’ONU s’inquiète d’un nouvel incendie criminel contre les Dawabshas à Duma
    http://www.un.org/apps/newsFr/storyF.asp?NewsID=37696

    20 juillet 2016 – Le Coordonnateur spécial des Nations Unies pour le processus de paix au Moyen-Orient, Nickolay Mladenov, s’est dit préoccupé mercredi par les rapports faisant état d’un nouvel incendie criminel contre la famille Dawabsha, en Cisjordanie, près d’un an après la mort de plusieurs membres de cette même famille dans un incident similaire.

    « Je suis préoccupé par les rapports concernant un nouvel incendie criminel contre la maison de la famille Dawabsha, la nuit dernière, à Duma, en Cisjordanie occupée », a déclaré M. Mladenov dans un communiqué de presse. « S’il est confirmé, cet acte ignoble serait le troisième incident du même type an un an dans ce village », a-t-il dit.

    Le Coordonnateur spécial a rappelé l’attaque terroriste perpétrée le 31 juillet 2015 par des extrémistes juifs, durant laquelle ils avaient incendié la maison de la famille Dawabsha à Duma. Seul survivant, le petit Ahmed, âgé de quatre ans à l’époque, avait perdu son père, sa mère et son petit frère d’à peine 18 mois dans l’incendie. Cette attaque avait alors provoqué l’émoi et la condamnation unanime de la communauté internationale.

    ““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    Israeli police investigating suspected arson attack in Palestinian village of Duma
    July 20, 2016 12:16 P.M. (Updated: July 20, 2016 6:38 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=772310

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — Investigations by Israeli police were underway Wednesday morning after a house fire in the village of Duma in the northern occupied West Bank that locals suspected was an arson attack carried out by Israeli settlers.

    The fire broke out around 3 a.m. Wednesday in a bedroom on the second floor of a house owned by Muhammad Fayiq Dawabsha. No injuries were reported.

    Muhammad Dawabsha, alongside a large number of residents in Duma, is a member of the Dawabsha family, three members of which died in an arson attack in July 2015, when Israeli settlers set ablaze their home, burning an infant child alive. Both the baby’s parents later died from their wounds. The couple’s four-year-old son is the only remaining survivor of the attack.

    The Palestinian civil defense service said in a statement on Wednesday morning that investigations confirmed that a “very highly flammable material” had started the fire, and Dawabsha told them he heard a blast.

    The statement said civil defense investigators ruled out “all other possible causes of house fire.”

    After checking the electricity network, no evidence was discovered that the fire was caused by electricity short circuit, the statement added.

    • Pour compléter cet excellent texte d’Eric Hazan, il est intéressant de se demander « qu’est-ce que cet Israël dont on veut nous interdire le boycott ? »
      Un enfant du complexe militaire américain (occidental ?), de quelques ultra-racistes américains (français ?) très fortunés et de juifs américains (occidentaux ?) mentalement bloqués dans une conception raciste et fantasmée du monde.

      Israël les Fondations américaines financent massivement les colonies.
      http://www.courrierinternational.com/article/israel-des-fondations-americaines-financent-massivement-les-c

      En France aussi les dons au Fonds National Juif (KKL) acteur majeur de la colonisation, et à bien d’autres organisations juives israéliennes sont défiscalisés. De plus plusieurs indices font penser à une infiltration des services de police français par les intérêts israéliens.

      http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/01/06/netanyahu_american_donors_small_group_funds_huge_share_of_israeli_prime.html?

      http://newobserveronline.com/us-aid-to-israel-jumps-to-11-million-dollars-per-day

      La colonisation américaine de la Palestine :

      US presence in Israel’s military and settler fronts, and its active financial and material support of both, is an unprecedented milestone reached by the Zionist movement. Because the US offers the Zionist network its core support, the US is directly implicated in the ongoing colonization of Palestine. - See more at: http://mondoweiss.net/2015/11/american-colonization-palestine/#sthash.OKy6Gtd3.dpuf

      The US supports the Israeli occupation through nonprofits, corporations, and the military, but it does not stop with remote arrangements. The Israeli occupation is a settler project that requires human bodies as well as military force. The US is Israel’s prized source of ideological Jewish Zionists, which immigrate to Palestinian lands as illegal settlers. A recent study reveals that about 60,000 American Jews live in the West Bank, comprising 15% of the total settler population. American Jewish immigration to the West Bank is encouraged by economic incentives in the form of subsidized housing in settlements and easier loans, offered by the Israeli government and the financial assistance of American nonprofits such as Nefesh B’Nefesh, whose core mission is to inspire and facilitate Aliyah (Jewish immigration to Israel).

      As Sara Yael Hirschhorn writes in “Israeli Terrorists, Born in the U.S.A.”, American Jewish immigrants describe their settlement in Palestine as a liberal duty, “in the language of American values and idealism,” as pioneers in the ever-expanding Israeli frontier. This yearning to settle in Palestine is reminiscent of the American colonialist rhetoric of “manifest destiny”, used to validate US expansionism in Native American lands and subsequently native dispossession and ethnic cleansing. Thus, the conception and practice of American settler-colonialism (as it persists within the US today) is exported with American settlers to occupied Palestine.

      American settler-colonial violence has an exceptional history in Palestine. The massacre of 29 Palestinian Muslims at the Ibrahimi Mosque by American-Israeli settler, anti-Arab extremist Baruch Goldstein (called a “great saint” by a Hebron Fund director) in 1994 is the most infamous case of settler-terrorism in Palestine. Recent events of settler-terror include the firebombing of the Dawabsheh house in the West Bank village of Duma on July 31st, 2015. A Palestinian baby was burned alive and his parents killed. Three of the four Israeli youths caught by the Shin Bet for their accused involvement – are from the United States.

      Over two thousand Americans have joined the Israeli army, providing manpower to the occupation of Palestine as foreign “lone soldiers,” indistinguishable from their Israeli-born compatriots. The involvement of these American-born Israeli soldiers, in the violation of the human and national rights of the Palestinian people, is commonplace. As soldiers of occupation, they oversee the demolition of Palestinian homes, the restriction of Palestinian movement, and the daily violence against Palestinian civilians. American-born Israeli soldiers were on the frontlines during Israel’s 2014 onslaught in Gaza, where they were ordered to deliberately target civilians and civilian infrastructure.

      These are just a few examples of how the US engages in the transfer of colonial bodies (both settlers and soldiers) to an ever-expanding Israel.
      – See more at: http://mondoweiss.net/2015/11/american-colonization-palestine/#sthash.OKy6Gtd3.dpuf

      #Israël #États-Unis #France #organisations-sionistes #complexe-militaire #refus-du-droit #occident-qui-tue #colonisation #Palestine #BDS #Boycott #défiscalisation #racisme

  • Lieberman Is Right About the Hebron Shooting -

    Is this the first time a soldier has executed a Palestinian in cold blood, or did the fact that it was caught on film make the difference?
    Amira Hass Mar 28, 2016 1:54 AM
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.711150

    Yisrael Beiteinu leader Avidgor Lieberman is right when he says the “onslaught” directed at the Kfir Brigade solider who executed Abdel Fattah al-Sharif in Hebron last Thursday after Sharif had already been subdued is hypocrisy. In other words, that the Israel Defense Forces spokesman and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and others who condemned the soldier’s action are hypocrites.

    It’s clear, after all, that it is only because a camera documented a soldier shooting a “neutralized” Palestinian in the head that the people at the top rushed to disassociate themselves from the act. “That’s not how the IDF operates,” they said, meaning that the IDF is usually not so negligent as to allow the actions of its soldiers to be filmed so we know that it indeed is how armed Israelis conduct themselves – executing Palestinians suspected of carrying out stabbings when they no longer pose a danger.

    Here are the contours of this hypocrisy:

    On September 25, 2015, soldiers in Hebron killed Hadeel al-Hashlamoun. She hadn’t stabbed anyone but had only gone through a checkpoint with a knife. Three bullets hit her lower body and seven her upper body while she was already lying “neutralized.” There was a foreign activist there who took still pictures that were sufficient to prove that Hashlamoun was not a threat to the soldiers. A storm of controversy ensued. An investigation was carried out and findings were released about a month after the beginning of the “stabbing wave.” The commanders found that the soldiers could have arrested Hashlamoun without killing her, but decided that they should not be punished. On November 4, I wrote: “Punishing them would have required punishing other soldiers who ‘felt that their lives were in danger’ and easily took a life.” 
I should have written “felt and will feel.”

    With the typical egoism of an occupier, the current violent escalation is marked by Israelis as beginning on October 1, when a husband and wife, Eitam and Na’ama Henkin, were murdered near the settlement of Itamar. But for Palestinians and particularly the Hebronites among them, the starting point is the date on which Hadeel al-Hashlamoun was executed in cold blood. And there are also those who mark it beginning from July 31, when the members of the Dawabsheh family were murdered in the West Bank village of Duma.

    In an analysis on Friday in Haaretz, Amos Harel defines the shooting execution in cold blood and writes: “The ... soldier [a combat paramedic] shoots the prone terrorist in the head at very close range. No one standing around [soldiers and settlers] seemed particularly alarmed by what they had just seen.” There are several possible reasons for that: 1) That is the spirit of the IDF in their view; 2) They had already been present or participated in very similar incidents or knew that that’s what everyone does, only without a camera and 3) Despite remarks by IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot, the army is not acting to instill the message among soldiers that killings should not happen when life is not endangered.

    Most of those who have carried out the approximately 105 incidents of stabbing, attempted stabbing or knife-wielding since October 3 have been killed by soldiers, policemen and security guards. In all the cases that were not filmed by Palestinians, did the soldiers, police and security guards really act appropriately and had no choice but to kill? In other words, that the hand of God has decided that only what runs counter to the spirit of the IDF is what will be filmed?

    Cameras actually did document the killing on October 29 of 24-year-old Mahdi al-Muhtaseb. He had fled from a soldier he stabbed, was apparently shot in the leg while on the other side of a checkpoint in Hebron and fell to the ground. While on the ground, a border policeman shot him several times until he stopped moving. Palestinians were shocked and alarmed, but the Israelis reacted as if it was the most normal conduct.

    A security official told Haaretz at the time that when Muhtaseb showed signs that he was going to get up, the border policeman shot again. “That is what is expected of a soldier, because who knows? Maybe the terrorist would blow himself up or take out a gun and shoot,” he said. Blow himself up? In the middle of a Palestinian neighborhood? But that’s precisely the line of defense being put forward by the family of the paramedic who executed Sharif in cold blood.

    A smartphone was used on October 4 to film the execution in cold blood of Fadi Alun from Jerusalem, a stabbing suspect who was already lying on the sidewalk after being shot. Palestinians were shocked and alarmed, but the Israelis reacted as if it was the most normal conduct.

    Imad Abu-Shamsiyeh of Hebron, a former volunteer with the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem, was the person who filmed the paramedic executing Sharif. He told Haaretz that the solider had demanded that he move away, but he went onto a roof and took the video footage. He is active in the Hebron-based group Human Rights Defenders, but knew nevertheless that he had to turn the video footage over to B’Tselem so the Israelis could not dismiss the filmed evidence as some kind of Palestinian nonsense.

    * On Thursday, senior officials expressed shock that army paramedics had not administered medical care to the injured Palestinian. But many reports from the scene of stabbings or knife-wieldings in recent months have contained repeated accounts of the army failing to care for injured Palestinians who lay bleeding until they died. IDF spokespersons dismissed the claims as a common Palestinian fabrication.

    One may conclude that the only time there was a failure to provide medical care to Palestinians is when B’Tselem has had filmed evidence. When B’Tselem does not have such evidence, the soldiers are the Righteous Among the Nations.

  • Rights volunteer threatened after taking video of wounded Palestinian’s slaying
    Sheren Khalel and Abed al Qaisi | Sunday 27 March 2016
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/rights-volunteer-threatened-after-taking-video-wounded-palestinians-s
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/sites/default/files/main-images/IMGL6375+copy.jpg

    HEBRON, West Bank - Imad Abu Shamsiyyeh and his family are terrified of retribution for a video taken on Friday by Imad, a volunteer member of Israeli rights group B’Tselem.

    The video depicts an Israeli soldier shooting and killing a motionless, wounded Palestinian in the southern occupied West Bank district of Hebron after a stabbing attack on another Israeli soldier.

    The soldier seen shooting in the video hasn’t been identified by Israeli authorities. The wounded Palestinian who was shot dead was identified as Abed al-Fatah al-Sharif, who with another Palestinian, also slain, was accused of stabbing an Israeli soldier in the shoulder.

    Imad’s wife, Fayza, told Middle East Eye that she and her family won’t be returning home until she feels they’re safe. “I told Imad that he can stay and risk death if he wants, but I won’t stay and die for some bricks that make up a house,” she said after a news conference on Sunday at the Hebron governor’s headquarters.

    “There is too much to lose by staying home right now and it just isn’t worth it. The whole family decided we’re going to my parents’ house until things settle down,” she said.

    Fayza said that for the past two nights, Israeli settlers have surrounded their home in Tel Rumeida in the H2 block of Hebron’s city centre, where Palestinian security officials have no jurisdiction.

    “They were chanting about burning our house down like they did in Duma,” she said, referring to an arson attack by Israeli settlers in the northern West Bank last July, which killed a young couple and their infant child.

    #Abdul_Fatah_al-Sharef

  • Cisjordanie : le feu ravage la maison du témoin d’un incendie criminel ayant décimé une famille
    AFP / 20 mars 2016 14h56
    http://www.romandie.com/news/687231.rom

    Douma (Territoires palestiniens) - Un incendie a ravagé la maison de l’unique témoin de l’incendie criminel de Douma en Cisjordanie occupée, voisine de celle où un bébé palestinien et ses parents étaient décédés l’été dernier, ont constaté des journalistes de l’AFP.

    Ibrahim Dawabcheh et son épouse ont été réveillés dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche par une épaisse fumée qui a envahi leur maison à Douma, village devenu symbole des exactions des extrémistes juifs dans le nord de la Cisjordanie.

    Ils sont encore tous les deux à l’hôpital en état de choc et sont incapables de parler, a affirmé à l’AFP Bachar Dawabcheh, le frère d’Ibrahim qui réside aussi dans la maison incendiée.

    Vers 01H30 du matin, j’ai entendu mon frère et sa femme appeler à l’aide, je suis monté à leur étage et j’ai vu le feu, a-t-il dit.

    Toutes les pièces de l’étage étaient dimanche matin imprégnées d’une odeur âcre de brûlé, tandis que les murs étaient couverts de suie et les portes en bois réduites en cendres.

    Dans le salon, des fauteuils écrus étaient noirs de suie, et dans la chambre, le lit, calciné, n’était plus qu’un cadre noirci et carbonisé autour duquel déambulaient des habitants, choqués de revivre ces moments, et des responsables locaux qui tentaient d’évaluer les dégâts.

    La maison d’Ibrahim Dawabcheh est située à quelques mètres de celle de son cousin Saad Dawabcheh, partie en fumée en juillet quand des extrémistes juifs avaient jeté des cocktails Molotov par une fenêtre. Ils avaient laissé des slogans en hébreu sur les murs jouxtant la maison.

    Ali Dawabcheh, 18 mois, avait brûlé vif et ses parents Saad et Riham avaient succombé quelques semaines plus tard à leurs blessures. Seul son frère Ahmed, alors 4 ans, a survécu.

    Ce drame avait choqué les Palestiniens et suscité l’émoi en Israël et à l’étranger.

    Cette fois également, la fenêtre a été brisée depuis l’extérieur et des produits inflammables ont été retrouvés dans les décombres, a affirmé dimanche à l’AFP le colonel Malek Ali, chef des pompiers de Naplouse.

    Pour tous à Douma, les coupables sont les colons israéliens. Ils voulaient envoyer un message à la famille et au village : ce témoin doit disparaître, accuse Nasser Dawabcheh, frère de Saad, qui rappelle que de nouvelles audiences devant un tribunal israélien sont prévues les 12 et 13 avril.

    Selon le vice-gouverneur de Naplouse Anan al-Atireh, ce crime prouve qu’il existe un terrorisme organisé perpétré par des gangs de colons sous la protection et avec le soutien des autorités d’occupation.

    ““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    Unidentified assailants set fire to home of 2015 Duma arson witness
    March 20, 2016 9:59 A.M. 
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770767

  • 5-year-old Duma attack survivor to visit Real Madrid on March 17March 6, 2016 1:44 P.M. (Updated : March 6, 2016 1:54 P.M.)
    http://maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770581

    RAMALLAH (Ma’an) – Major Spanish football team Real Madrid will be welcoming on March 17 a young Palestinian boy whose family was killed in an arson attack committed by Israeli settlers last year, the Palestinian Football Federation said on Saturday.

    Ahmad Dawabsha, 5, was the sole survivor of a deadly arson attack carried out by extremist Israeli settlers on his family home in the northern West Bank village of Duma on July 30 last year. The child lost both his parents, Saad and Riham, as well as his 18-month-old brother, Ali.

    Federation president Jibril Rajoub said in a statement that Real Madrid “sympathized with Dawabsha after a photo of him wearing the team’s uniform in his hospital bed went viral,” and agreed to host Ahmad later this month.

    Ahmad will be accompanied by two adult family members, as well as a representative of the Palestinian Real Madrid supporters club.

    ≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈

    Israeli forces detain nine, including football player, in West Bank
    March 6, 2016 11:13 A.M. (Updated : March 6, 2016 5:17 P.M.)
    http://maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770578

    HEBRON (Ma’an) — Israeli forces detained at least nine Palestinians — including a football player — in raids in the occupied West Bank on Sunday, Palestinian and Israeli sources said.

    At least five Palestinians were detained in and around the southern West Bank city of Hebron, the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society said in a statement.

    The organization identified the detainees as Yasin al-Rajabi and his son Shadi, Layth Noor al-Alami, Shadi Ibrahim Bahar, and Sami al-Daour.

    Al-Daour is a football player from the Gaza Strip currently playing for Shabab al-Samu club, which is ranked in the first division of the West Bank league, the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society said.

    Israeli troops also stormed the southern West Bank town of Beit Ummar at dawn and detained three teenagers, including twin brothers, a local committee spokesman told Ma’an.

    Muhammad Ayyad Awad identified the detainees as brothers Mamoon and Jamal Mahmoud al-Qam, 17, and Muataz Nayhal Bahar, 17.

    #infofoot

  • ويكيليكس : أكثر ما كانت تخشاه الرياض هو تدخل روسيا في الحرب الدائرة في سوريا لخوفها من الانتقام منه في حال صمد النظام السوري | رأي اليوم
    http://www.raialyoum.com/?p=398280

    Un cable diplomatique de l’année 2012 publié par Wikileaks révèle la pire crainte des Saoudiens : que la Russie entre en guerre du côté des Syriens car « il est très important de noter que si le régime syrien réussit, d’une manière ou d’une autre, à tenir et à dépasser la crise, sa première idée sera de se venger des pays qui se sont dressés contre lui, à commencer par l’Arabie saoudite et par les autres pays du Golfe. » (!!!)

    ” من المهم جدا الإشارة إلى أنه لو تمكن النظام السوري بأي شكل من الأشكال من الصمود وتخطى هذه الأزمة، فإن مهمته الأولى والأساسية ستكون بعد ذلك، الانتقام من الدول التي وقفت ضده. والهدف الأول له سيكون المملكة العربية السعودية ودول الخليج الأخرى.

    #syrie #wikileaks

    • Le câble en question en grande partie traduit en anglais ici :
      http://levantreport.com/2016/02/25/newly-translated-wikileaks-saudi-cable-overthrow-the-syrian-regime-but
      On y voit également comment les Saoudiens prévoyaient de circonvenir les Russes en exerçant des pressions tout en se retenant de les critiquer trop ouvertement, afin de les faire changer de position pour obtenir la chute de ce régime syrien si craint :

      [...] shared interest, and believes that the current Russian position only represents a movement to put pressure on him, its goals being evident, and that this position will not persist in force, given Russia’s ties to interests with Western countries and the countries of the Gulf.
      If it pleases Your Highness, I support the idea of entering into a profound dialogue with Russia regarding its position towards Syria*, holding the Second Strategic Conference in Moscow, working to focus the discussion during it on the issue of Syria, and exerting whatever pressure is possible to dissuade it from its current position. I likewise see an opportunity to invite the head of the Committee for International Relations in the Duma to visit the Kingdom. Since it is better to remain in communication with Russia and to direct the media not to oppose Russian figures and to avoid insulting them, so that no harm may come to the interests of the Kingdom, it is possible that the new Russian president will change Russian policy toward Arab countries for the better. However, our position currently in practice, which is to criticize Russian policy toward Syria and its positions that are contrary to our declared principles, remains. It is also advantageous to increase pressure on the Russians by encouraging the Organization of Islamic States to exert some form of pressure by strongly brandishing Islamic public opinion, since Russia fears the Islamic dimension more than the Arab dimension.

      Pour la partie du câble évoquant les craintes saoudiennes de représailles du régime syrien : http://seenthis.net/messages/388071

  • A Flagship of Israeli Journalism Joins the Ranks of False Propaganda -
    The investigative TV program ‘Uvda’ should be ashamed of the report it aired which depicted human rights activists as dangerous, while ignoring the occupation.

    Gideon Levy Haaretz - Jan 10, 2016 1
    read more: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.696456
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.696456

    Channel 2’s investigative television program “Uvda” (“Fact”) broadcast its 600th show last week, paying homage to itself by reminding us of a few of its greatest moments.
    But the 600th show itself is something it will want to erase from its memory, something it will be embarrassed about some day.
    It marked the passage from intentionally avoiding dealing with the issue of the occupation, which could anger the viewers and reduce ratings, to actively contributing to propaganda and incitement. The fig leaf withered away in the 600th program. As did the loss of any semblance of fairness and professionalism.
    In a report on left-wing groups which operate in the West Bank, Uvda aired secretly recorded footage of Israeli activist Ezra Nawi saying that he had exposed Palestinian land brokers who sold West Bank land to Jews, and turned them over to the Palestinian Authority.The right wing and the settlers celebrated the event of course. Another outpost has fallen into their hands. They have already compared the left-wing activist Nawi to the Duma murderers, no less. The rightists and settlers, known for their deep concern about the lives of Palestinians, were shocked by Nawi’s statements. But the right is not the story. The story is how a lethal virus has penetrated what is almost the last outpost of real journalism.
    How has a McCarthyist right-wing organization, whose motives are clear (and despicable) and whose sources are unknown, succeeded with such ease in enticing such respected journalists as Ilana Dayan and Omri Assenheim? How has this flagship joined the ranks of the false propaganda which masquerades as journalism?
    That is how to conduct delegitimization. That is how it is done to liberal organizations in the darkest of regimes, and now here too, and on Uvda – no less.
    Presenting the human rights organizations as dangerous groups, and penetrating them, is compared to penetrating ISIS. The McCarthyists are glorified, depicted as heroes of Israel who excelled in battles in Gaza. All these are well-known ploys. And against this background, all that is left is to record Nawi boasting, to catch him uttering the taboo words, to present him as a “senior” activist, to ignore the entire context — the crimes of the occupation and the expulsion form the Southern Hebron Hills, which you never heard about on Uvda. Just ignore the holy work done by left-wing activists in this battered region, spice it with a few lies such as “execution” by the Palestinian Authority, add a few generalizations, suspicions and slander – and the dish is ready.
    There is an “investigation.” Ofir Akunis and Miri Regev are already calling for a trial. In normal times such actions should trouble every advocate of journalism. When the witch hunt is at its height, those who support democracy should lose sleep. Why did Uvda do this? Because there is no show better at adapting itself to the spirit of the times — its secret of survival for over 22 years. And when the times are dark, Uvda too is in the darkness. How characteristic and self-righteous are the confessions of the talented Assenheim on the show’s Facebook page: On the day of the broadcast he wrote: “I am considered a leftist. Israeli patriot, maybe more than ever, but a leftist.”
    That is how it is when the ground is burning under your feet, and you somehow need to save your lost honor. A “leftist” who does not see what the settlers are plotting every day there, in the place where he “revealed” Nawi’s “crimes,” where activists and soldiers need to accompany children to school out of fear of violence.
    The women activists of Machsom Watch offer humanitarian aid to those driven from the Jordan Valley; B’Tselem reports the truth about every killing in the West Bank, and documents for Israelis what is being done in their name; Physicians for Human Rights delivers medical care every week to those who have none; and Anarchists Against the Wall participates every week with unbelievable dedication in righteous protests.
    They are the last moral lighthouse of Israel. They are the insignificant minority that preserves the remnants of Israel’s honor in the world. The right has declared despicable war against them. Now Uvda has joined them. The curtain falls.

  • Don’t Be So Shocked by the Israeli ’Wedding of Hate’ @haaretz

    This is what a climate of tolerance and acceptance of violence, racism and hatred looks like.

    Anshel Pfeffer Dec 25, 2015 8:17 AM

    Stabbing the picture of Ali Dawabsheh while dancing with knives at a wedding among right-wing activists in Jereusalem.Courtesy of Channel 10 TV

    Who taught the Jewish radical settler youth to celebrate murder?
    I’m at that stage in my life where I don’t get invited to many weddings. Most of my friends already got hitched years ago and their children are still too young to take the fateful step.
    So for a while I’ve been blissfully ignorant of the latest wedding trends in the community to which I once belonged. From the handful I’ve attended in recent years, I got the impression that the standard Jewish Orthodox wedding hasn’t changed that much, except for a slight improvement in the catering. The wine is still atrocious.
    One thing though that has seem to undergone a transformation is the dancing. Back in the nineties, there was a standard medley of biblical oldies, which were regarded as cool just because they were played on a synthesizer and there was only one form of dance. Sweaty circles of three-step-sideways-half-step-jerk-back hora, and that’s it. If you were a close family member you were in the inner circle. Boys and young men did it fast in the middle circle and anyone over 30 plodded along on the outside. It sounds boring, it probably was, but at the time you believed that by being a link in the chain, in the very sweat soaking your white shirt (everyone was dressed identically of course), you were fulfilling the a mitzvah of lesameach hatan ve’kala – bringing joy to the groom and bride. Of course on the women’s side of the hall, there were slightly more varied forms of Israeli folk dancing, but you weren’t really supposed to be looking there.

    In my more recent, very occasional forays back into that world, usually at the weddings of much younger cousins, I’ve seen it all change. Bands play a wider array of instruments and styles ranging from 18th Century Hasidic to hip-hop and many of the songs seem to have their own steps. I lack the vocabulary to describe the new religious choreography; all I can say is that after a few minutes, the traditional circles break up and are replaced by, to my eye, frenzied bobbing up-and-down and weird arching pirouettes. Which is fine by me, as my dancing days, such as they were, are long over.
    A couple of years ago, at a family wedding, which I hasten to emphasize was the most mainstream affair, held in a (west) Jerusalem hall, and not on some outpost deep in the West Bank, I saw one of my relatives, a devout yet worldly man, rather agitated. “They shouldn’t have played that tune” he said. “Someone should have told the band not to put it on their play list. But at least no one was waving a knife or a gun.” Apparently they had been playing “Zachreni na,” a song based on the last words of Samson, blinded and chained in the Temple of Dagon – “Remember me and strengthen me just once more, God. And let me take one vengeance for my two eyes on the Philistines.”
    I hadn’t noticed anything untoward in the way anyone was dancing. Actually, I doubt that at that particular wedding, knowing the crowd, many there were aware it was a song from a sub-genre known as “revenge songs,” with similar biblical quotes, which came into vogue around 15 years ago during the period of the second intifada. I had heard racist anti-Arab songs before, but they were juvenile ditties, adapted from standard religious songs, not a semi-professional production and not the kind of thing anyone would have played at their wedding. But I wasn’t particularly surprised to hear the tune. Not that I believed that any of the guests at the wedding were the kind of people to dance around waving knives and M-16s and wishing actual vengeance on anyone. I thought it was either an in-joke of a few people there or just something the band had on their play list.

    I wasn’t shocked because I had been to the hilltops in the West Bank. I had seen what they were like, had my tires slashed, been chased away and come back to try to interview the hilltop settlers. Succeeded on one hilltop, got chased away from another. The difference between this and the wedding was clear. This wasn’t about a silly song but about the deadly serious game being played by teenagers and few charismatic elders who won’t let anyone stand in their way.
    skip - Jewish youths dancing at a Jerusalem wedding three weeks ago with guns and knives. The video also shows one masked youth holding up a firebomb while another is seen stabbing a photo of Ali Dawabsheh, the toddler who was killed in the Duma firebomb attack

    On Wednesday evening, Channel 10’s Roy Sharon broadcast a recent wedding video showing dozens of young men dancing to “Zachreni Na” and waving guns. One of them, his face covered, is holding a mock Molotov cocktail, while another slices a knife through a poster of 18-month-old Ali Dawabsheh, the Palestinian toddler burned to death along with his parents in a West Bank arson attack. This is no longer a case of a silly song known to a few insiders. These are the friends of the suspects currently being held by the Shin Bet security service for the murder of the Dawabshehs.
    Sharon’s scoop is quite possibly a ploy by the Shin Bet to shock the Israeli public and throw cold water on the debate over the use of “enhanced measures,” or torture, in the suspects’ questioning. And it worked.
    The Shin Bet seems to be doing a better job right now at media management than at extracting a legitimate confession from the suspects. Even most of the settlers’ leaders and their representatives in the Knesset have joined the chorus of denunciation of the “Jewish terrorists” and offered blanket support for the security service. But this is not the conclusion we should be drawing from the bloodcurdling footage.
    Torture, whether of Palestinian or Jewish terror suspects is wrong, and as we are likely to see once the suspects are either arraigned or released, usually results in a miscarriage of justice. It’s the song itself which should bother us.
    I don’t need any religious politician to tell me that those who sing and believe in its words, and support those who practice them, are a minority within the national-religious community. In some ways they have long ago cut themselves off from the community by openly identifying as non-Zionist and announcing their contempt for the state. But in many other ways they remain part of that community which today is a central component of Israeli society.
    Three people told me separately Thursday that they had to give clear instructions to the bands at their weddings not to play “Zachreni Na.” Over 13 years ago Rabbi Yuval Cherlow, a founder of the religious Zionist organization Tzohar, instructed his not inconsiderable number of followers not to dance to revenge songs lest “revenge spoil us and we fall in love with it and the evil it spreads in the world.” But the fact that the song is still played at some weddings (even though many don’t understand its deeper darker meaning); that those who dance to it have not been ostracized; and that all the guns waved at the wedding either belong to serving soldiers or are held under license — all this illustrates one thing: No one from the religious leadership or law-enforcement authorities has done anything more serious to tackle the problem than tut-tutting. This is what a climate of tolerance and acceptance of violence, racism and hatred looks like.
    Since the “wedding of hate” was broadcast, pundits have been labelling the dancers “JudeoDaesh” and apologists have been explaining how they’re basically poor deluded dropouts who found a home on the hilltops and have been radicalized by seeing their friends murdered in Palestinian terror attacks. Both approaches are disingenuous. This is not a freak mutation of Judaism or a symptom of a sociological problem. And while they are a minority on the fringes of both the political and religious spectra, they are still a part of mainstream Israeli society, a natural outcropping of our failure to recognize how the occupation of another nation has ultimately eaten away at out moral values. It’s much too easy to be shocked at these vile creatures from another world. They’re not that far away.

    Anshel Pfeffer
    Haaretz Correspondent

    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.693763

  • What Drove a Popular Palestinian Girl to Attempt a Stabbing Attack? -
    Gideon Levy and Alex Levac Nov 28, 2015 4:30 AM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/twilight-zone/.premium-1.688557
    A Palestinian teen who tried to stab an Israeli woman in the West Bank was run over and shot to death. Her father, imam of the refugee camp where she grew up, says his daughter was ’responding to the occupation.’

    A memorial poster of Ashrakat Qattanani on the wall of the Askar refugee camp. ’If the Israelis want to live in peace and security, our children too must live in peace and security.’ Credit : Alex Levac

    One can, of course, label a 16-year-old girl a “terrorist” and also justify, with unbelievable, knee-jerk insensitivity, the wild car-ramming and then the confirmation-of-kill that occurred immediately after her attack – the two bullets fired by a settler, and the two others by a soldier, into the body of the girl who was run over and lying injured on the road.

    No one is questioning the fact that this past Sunday morning, the teenager Ashrakat Qattanani, wielding a knife, chased an Israeli woman at the Hawara junction, near Nablus, attempting to stab her. But we must ask what motivated the daughter of the imam from the Askar refugee camp to tell her father that she was going to school – where she was a good student and a popular girl – and then instead to go to the junction and try to stab an Israeli woman.

    The next day, memorial posters were pasted in the narrow alleys of Askar, a crowded, desperately poor refugee camp on the southern outskirts of Nablus. But Qattanani’s funeral has not yet been held, because Israel hasn’t yet returned her body. (“That is something that takes time,” a Shin Bet security service officer told her father on the day of her death.)

    On Monday traffic in the camp was slow and totally chaotic; only one car at a time can travel through the crowded streets here. Groups of young people huddled on street corners. Even this battle-weary camp hasn’t yet come to terms with the idea of a 16-year-old shahida (martyr).

    Taha Qattanani, the girl’s father and the local imam, is an impressive man in a traditional robe and with a well-groomed beard. Speaking softly, he doesn’t try to conceal the fact that his daughter set out to stab Jews.

    “Ashrakat responded to the occupation,” he says with self-control, hiding his emotions. Those are the emotions of a newly bereaved father who must face the loss of his daughter alone, because Israel continues to deny Ashrakat’s mother entry into the West Bank, even during the mourning period.

    Such was the reality in which Ashrakat grew up and in which she went to her death. Her mother, Abala, 46, a Kuwaiti-born Palestinian, had been living with her family in the West Bank without a proper entry permit. In 2006, when Ashrakat was 4, Abala went to Jordan to visit her parents. Taha was being detained by Israel at the time for being active in Islamic Jihad.

    Taha explains now that his wife went to Jordan in the wake of psychological pressure and a campaign of intimidation conducted against her by the Shin Bet in an effort to extract information about him. Her plan was to stay in Jordan until Taha was released from prison. That happened on the last day of 2007, but since then, Israel has refused to allow Abala to return home to her husband and what were, until Ashrakat’s death, their three children, even for a short visit.

    Nine years without a mother. That is the lot of those who live in their own country, defying the law, the law of the occupation, and then are banned from returning after they’ve left it.

    Until her father’s release, then, Ashrakat and her siblings were without either parent and resided with the family of her uncle, Yassin, her father’s brother.

    Every summer the children went to Jordan to be with their mother. This past summer they were accompanied by their uncle Hassan, Taha’s brother, who speaks fluent Hebrew and is familiar with almost every residential building in the affluent Tel Aviv neighborhood of Ramat Aviv, some of which he renovated. He spent two months in Jordan with the Qattanani children.

    This year Ashrakat was in the 11th grade in the Cordoba School in the old section of Askar, not far from the new camp, where her family lives. She’d already begun preparing for the first high-school matriculation exams. Her father shows us her photo on his cell phone, taken a few days before her death. She’s giving a sermon to the girls in the schoolyard, a white kerchief on her head, a sheet of paper in her hand, wearing the striped school uniform and using a microphone to be heard.

    What happened to the 16-year-old on Sunday morning? She got up around 5 o’clock for the morning prayers, fed her cat and added water to the birdcage. She asked her father how he was doing; he had felt sick during the night. She left home after a quick breakfast, at about 7:30. She said nothing to him about her plans. Nor did anything in her behavior indicate what was about to happen, he says.

    At around 9 o’clock, news spread in the camp that there had been a stabbing attempt at the Hawara junction by a local girl and that she had been run over by a settler and shot to death. Shortly afterward, a Shin Bet agent who called himself “Zechariah” phoned Taha Qattanani and instructed him to come to the army base at Harawa. The caller promised that he would not be arrested. Taha went with Hassan; he already understood that he was being summoned about his daughter. Zechariah told the two brothers what had happened and asked them to try and calm tensions in the refugee camp and not call for revenge. “We have to move on from these things,” the agent said.

    The stunned father left immediately. Hassan stayed on to speak to the Shin Bet man. He says that the agent expressed regret over the incident. “He related that the girl had come to the junction that morning and tried to stab someone, and then the settler ran over her. She was knocked to the ground but got up and then was shot by settlers and soldiers,” Hassan says.

    The settler who hit the teenager with his car was Gershon Mesika, the former head of the Samaria Regional Council, who was forced to resign from that post earlier this year after being suspected of corruption offenses involving the Yisrael Beiteinu party and turned state’s witness in the police investigation of the affair. This is not the first time Mesika, recipient of a 2012 national award from the Education Ministry on behalf of his regional council, has run over a Palestinian. In 2001, he hit a 90-year-old pedestrian but was acquitted of causing death by negligence.

    In the meantime, Ashrakat’s mother, in Jordan, was given the news by phone. Here’s the last text message between mother and daughter – Taha reads it out from his cell phone: “What were you cooking?” Ashrakat asked. “We woke up in the morning from the noise of the army coming into the camp. The intifada is starting. I hope we get through this year safely,” she wrote her mother. Ashrakat concluded the correspondence with the parting words, “Salamu alaykum” – peace be upon you. That was on the eve of her death. As her father reads out his daughter’s last words to her mother, tears well up in his eyes for the first time. He quickly wipes them away.

    In the past month, he tells us, Ashrakat spoke a great deal about her dream of praying at the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem. “The occupation prevented her from living with her mother, and the occupation also prevented her from praying at the holiest place for her in her country,” he says. She often watched television reports of the recent acts of stabbing and the killing of the assailants, he says.

    “I will not beg the Israelis: If they want to live in peace and security, our children too must live in peace and security,” he says. Pointing to a soft-drink bottle on the table, he adds, “This bottle has a price.” The import of that comment is that the occupation, too, has a price.

    Ashrakat’s uncle, Hassan, adds, “Since the Dawabsheh family in Duma was burned to death, all our children see on television what is going on – the terrorist behavior of the settlers and the army that supports them. No respect for women or the aged. The humiliation is so deep in the soul of every Palestinian. The way our women are pushed around at Al-Aqsa. Everyone starts to light a bonfire in his head, and that is not good for the Jews or for the Arabs. It’s one big bonfire.”

    “You are deepening the hatred,” Khaled Abu Hashi, who lives in Askar, tells us. His son, Nur a-Din, stabbed a soldier to death in an attack at a Tel Aviv train station a year ago. He has not been allowed to visit him in prison even once, and is waiting for Israeli forces to demolish his home.

    “I don’t care about the house, I care about the children who are growing up with all this,” he says. “As a father, I know what effect all these photographs have on our children. How will we live together with all this hatred?” Abu Hashi relates that he built and renovated “all of Ra’anana, from Kfar Sava to Kiryat Sharett,” and that, like most of the older people in the camp, he misses the old, beautiful days of friendship with the Jews.

  • Une 3ème intifada ? La seule surprise est qu’il ait fallu l’attendre 10 ans | Gideon Lévy | « Middel East Eye » le 5 octobre 2015. | Pour la Palestine | Traduction par Mathieu Vigouroux pour « Arrêt sur Info » (amendée par Luc Delval)
    http://www.pourlapalestine.be/une-3eme-intifada-la-seule-surprise-est-quil-ait-fallu-lattendre-10-

    (...) Les dés sont déjà jetés car le comportement d’Israël, dans toute son insupportable arrogance et intransigeance, ne peut manquer de provoquer une nouvelle et terrible explosion.

    La Cisjordanie est paisible depuis près de dix ans, au cours desquels Israël a prouvé avec persévérance aux Palestiniens que la tranquillité ne pourrait s’accompagner que d’une intensification de l’occupation, de l’expansion des colonies, d’une augmentation des démolitions de logements et des arrestations en masse — dont des milliers de soi-disant détenus administratifs qui sont jetés en prison sans procès —, sans oublier la poursuite des confiscations de terres, les incursions et arrestations complètement inutiles, ces doigts que la gâchette démange et qui provoquent des dizaines de morts chaque année, et les innombrables provocations à al-Aqsa/Mont du Temple qui froissent la susceptibilité des musulmans.[*]

    Les Palestiniens doivent-ils accepter tout cela en silence ? Doivent-ils faire preuve de retenue lorsque la famille Dawabsha est brûlée vive à Duma et que personne n’est arrêté ni jugé par Israël, tandis que le ministre de la Défense Moshe Ya’alon fanfaronne en prétendant qu’Israël sait qui a commis ce crime scandaleux mais qu’il n’arrêtera pas les responsables pour préserver son réseau de renseignement ?

    Quel peuple pourrait donc faire preuve de retenue face à une telle succession d’événements, à l’arrière-plan desquels se trouve toute la puissance de l’occupation, sans espoir, sans perspectives, sans issue en vue ?

    ““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    Even Gandhi would understand the Palestinians’ violence.
    Gideon Levy • Haaretz • 08 Oct 2015 •
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.679268

    Through the haze of self-righteousness, media propaganda, incitement, distraction, brainwashing and victimhood of the past few days, the simple question returns in full force: Who’s right?

    There are no justified arguments left in Israel’s arsenal, the kind a decent person could accept. Even Mahatma Gandhi would understand the reasons for this outburst of Palestinian violence. Even those who recoil from violence, who see it as immoral and useless, can’t help but understand how it breaks out periodically. The question is why it doesn’t break out more often.

    From the question of who started it to the question of who’s to blame, the finger is rightfully pointed at Israel, at Israel alone. It’s not that the Palestinians are blameless, but the main blame lies on Israel’s shoulders. As long as Israel doesn’t shake off this blame, it has no basis for making even a scrap of a demand from the Palestinians. Everything else is false propaganda.

    As veteran Palestinian activist Hanan Ashrawi wrote recently, the Palestinians are the only people on earth required to guarantee the security of the occupier, while Israel is the only country that demands protection from its victims. And how can we respond?

    As Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has asked in a Haaretz interview, “How do you expect the Palestinian street to react after the burning of the teenager Mohammed Abu Khdeir, the torching of the Dawabsheh home, the settlers’ aggression and the damage to property under the eyes of the soldiers?” And what are we to answer?

    To the 100 years of dispossession and 50 years of oppression we can add the past few years, marked by intolerable Israeli arrogance that’s exploding once again in our faces.

    These were the years Israel thought it could do anything and pay no price. It thought the defense minister could boast he knew the identity of the Dawabsheh murderers and not arrest them, and the Palestinians would restrain themselves. It thought that nearly every week a boy or teenager could be killed by soldiers, and the Palestinians would stay quiet.

    It thought military and political leaders could back the crimes and no one would be prosecuted. It thought houses could be demolished and shepherds expelled, and the Palestinians would accept it all humbly. It thought settler thugs could damage, burn and act as if Palestinian property were theirs, and the Palestinians would bow their heads.

    It thought that Israeli soldiers could burst into Palestinian homes every night and terrorize, humiliate and arrest people. That hundreds could be arrested without trial. That the Shin Bet security service could resume torturing suspects with methods handed down by Satan.

    It thought that hunger strikers and freed prisoners could be rearrested, often for no reason. That Israel could destroy Gaza once every two to three years and Gaza would surrender and the West Bank remain calm. That Israeli public opinion would applaud all this, with cheers at best and demands for more Palestinian blood at worst, with a thirst that’s hard to understand. And the Palestinians would forgive.

    This could go on for many more years. Why? Because Israel is stronger than ever and the West is indifferent and letting it run wild as it never has. The Palestinians, meanwhile, are weak, divided, isolated and bleeding as they haven’t been since the Nakba.
    So this could continue because Israel can — and the people want it to. No one will try to stop it other than international public opinion, which Israel dismisses as Jew-hatred.

    And we haven’t said a word about the occupation itself and the inability to end it. We’re tired. We haven’t said a word about the injustice of 1948, which should have ended then and not resumed with even more force in 1967 and continued with no end in sight. We haven’t spoken about international law, natural justice and human morality, which can’t accept any of this in any way.

    When young people kill settlers, throw firebombs at soldiers or hurl rocks at Israelis, this is the background. You need a great deal of obtuseness, ignorance, nationalism and arrogance – or all the above – to ignore this.

    • La mère du bébé palestinien brûlé vif succombe à ses blessures
      ats / 07.09.2015
      http://www.romandie.com/news/La-mere-du-bebe-palestinien-brule-vif-succombe-a-ses-blessures_RP/627540.rom

      Riham Dawabcheh, la mère d’Ali Dawabcheh, un nourrisson palestinien de 18 mois brûlé vif dans l’incendie de leur maison imputé à des extrémistes juifs, a succombé à ses blessures. L’hôpital israélien où elle était soignée et sa famille l’ont annoncé tôt dimanche.

      Le 31 juillet, des hommes masqués ont jeté des cocktails molotov par les fenêtres de la maison des Dawabcheh dans le village de Douma, entouré de colonies dans le nord de la Cisjordanie occupée. Ali Dawabcheh, 18 mois, a été tué dans l’incendie. Huit jours plus tard, son père Saad Dawabcheh a succombé ses blessures. Ahmed, quatre ans, l’autre enfant de la famille, est lui toujours hospitalisé.

      « Riham Dawabcheh est décédée dans la nuit », a indiqué une porte-parole de l’hôpital Tel Hashomer de Tel-Aviv. La jeune institutrice de 26 ans y avait été admise avec des brûlures au troisième degré couvrant 80% de son corps.

      Depuis Douma, Anouar Dawabcheh, un membre de la famille des trois victimes, a confirmé avoir été informé de la mort de Riham Dawabcheh. Il a ajouté que les funérailles pourraient se tenir dans la journée de lundi à Douma.

      “““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
      Thousands of Palestinians mourn the death of slain infant’s mother
      Sept. 7, 2015
      http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=767488

      NABLUS (Ma’an) — Thousands of Palestinians took part in the funeral of Riham Dawabsha, 27, who died overnight Sunday after succumbing to wounds she sustained more than a month ago in an arson attack on July 31 that killed her husband and 18-month-old son.

      The funeral march set off from the entrance of Duma village in southern Nablus and proceeded to the village’s cemetery.

      Dawabsha was given a military funeral as members of the Palestinian Authority security forces headed the march.

      The 27-year-old mother of two was buried in the village’s cemetery, next to her husband and son who were laid to rest last month.

      Dawabsha died hours after her birthday, on Sept. 6, while her husband died on Aug. 8, the couple’s wedding anniversary.
      (...)
      Dozens of students from Jurish School for Girls, where Dawabsha worked as a mathematics teacher, took part in the funeral in addition to hundreds of teachers, as the Nablus Directorate of Education suspended the school day to give students and teachers a chance to take part.

      #Reham_Dawabsheh #Ali_Dawabsheh
      #Saeb_Dawabsheh #Duma

  • Israeli Terrorists, Born in the U.S.A. - The New York Times
    By SARA YAEL HIRSCHHORNSEPT. 4, 2015

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/06/opinion/sunday/israeli-terrorists-born-in-the-usa.html?smid=tw-share&_r=0

    Jerusalem — ON July 31, in the West Bank village of Duma, 18-month-old Ali Dawabsheh was burned alive in a fire. All available evidence suggests that the blaze was a deliberate act of settler terrorism. More disturbingly, several of the alleged instigators, currently being detained indefinitely, are not native-born Israelis — they have American roots.

    But there has been little outcry in their communities. Settler rabbis and the leaders of American immigrant communities in the West Bank have either played down their crime or offered muted criticism.

    It’s worth recalling the response of the former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin to another heinous attack two decades ago, when an American-born doctor, Baruch Goldstein, gunned down dozens of Palestinians while they prayed in Hebron.

    “He grew in a swamp whose murderous sources are found here, and across the sea; they are foreign to Judaism, they are not ours,” thundered Mr. Rabin before the Knesset in February 1994. “You are a foreign implant. You are an errant weed. Sensible Judaism spits you out.”

    The shocking 1994 massacre was, at the time, the bloodiest outbreak of settler terrorism Israelis and Palestinians had ever seen. Less than two years later, Mr. Rabin himself would be dead, felled by an ultranationalist assassin’s bullet.

    Suddenly, a group of American Jewish immigrants that had existed on the fringes of society became a national pariah. A former president of Israel, Chaim Herzog, labeled the United States “a breeding ground” for Jewish terror; the daily newspaper Maariv castigated American Jews who “send their lunatic children to Israel.” One Israeli journalist even demanded “operative steps against the Goldsteins of tomorrow” by banning the immigration of militant American Jews.

    But tomorrow has arrived.

    After years of impunity for settlers who commit violent crimes, Israel’s internal security agency, the Shin Bet, has now supposedly cracked down by rounding up a grand total of four youths believed to be connected to recent acts of settler terrorism — three of whom trace their origins to the United States.

    The agency’s “most wanted” Jewish extremist is 24-year-old Meir Ettinger, who has an august pedigree in racist and violent circles. He is a grandson of Meir Kahane, a radical American rabbi who in 1971 immigrated to Israel, established the Kach party and served as its lone Knesset member until it was banned in 1988. (Kahane was assassinated in New York in 1990, but his career laid the groundwork for ultranationalist and antidemocratic parties in Israel.)

    Another is Mordechai Meyer, 18, from the settlement of Maale Adumim outside Jerusalem. He is the son of American immigrants who claimed he simply wanted to study the Torah and have an adventure in the West Bank. Another American settler, Ephraim Khantsis, was detained for threatening Shin Bet agents in court. The fourth, Eviatar Slonim, is the child of Australian Jews.

    Mr. Ettinger, Mr. Meyer and Mr. Khantsis join a long list of settler extremists with American roots. A Brooklyn-born settler, Era Rapaport, played a prominent role in the car-bombing of the mayor of Nablus in 1980. In 1982, a Baltimore transplant, Alan Goodman, opened fire at the Dome of the Rock, killing two Palestinians and wounding 11. That same year, a former Brooklynite, Yoel Lerner, was jailed for leading a movement to overthrow the Israeli government and blow up the Temple Mount.

    These days, rabbis like the St. Louis-born Yitzhak Ginsburg, who heads a yeshiva in the radical settlement of Yizhar, are inculcating the next generation.

    Today, according to American government sources and several other studies, an estimated 12 to 15 percent of settlers (approximately 60,000 people) hail from the United States. This disproportionately large American contingent — relative to the total number of American-Israelis — has joined secular, religious and ultra-Orthodox Israelis, and other more recent immigrants. Few of them live in extremist hilltop outposts; a majority live in suburbanized settlements near Jerusalem, but they are considered among the most highly ideological.

    RATHER than quoting the Bible or rhapsodizing about a messianic vision, they tend to describe their activities in the language of American values and idealism — as an opportunity to defend human rights and live in the “whole land of Israel” — often over a cup of Starbucks coffee in their boxy aluminum prefab houses or in the mansions of settlement suburbia. To them, living in the West Bank is pioneering on the new frontier; it’s merely an inconvenience that they’re often staking their claims on private Palestinian land. And for a fanatical fringe among them, this Wild West analogy has extended to indiscriminate violence.