organization:knesset

  • Apartheid-building measures - Opinion - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/apartheid-building-measures.premium-1.531037

    For a few days, Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon held the title of the government’s chief spoiler, but he recently lost that honor to Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, who claimed (was he backed by the annual intelligence assessment?) that the Arab Peace Initiative was just spin.

    Danon started out modestly, focusing only on the Palestinians, but Ya’alon went big-time and included all Arabs. Then came Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, who mentioned a friend with shrapnel in his backside as an analogy to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He grabbed the title from Danon and Ya’alon. As my father used to say, “I’d laugh too if that idiot wasn’t one of mine.”

    While the Danon-Ya’alon-Bennett trio is pushing to the limit the public’s right to get tired of what this trio thinks, a strong right-wing axis is forming in the Knesset. It consists of around 40 MKs, most of them from the coalition, who aim to prevent Israel from making territorial concessions and to thwart any peace deal with the Palestinians.

    Although their leader has not yet been crowned, it seems the title must go to a tireless, soft-spoken legislator who makes the impression of a refined person who wouldn’t hurt a fly. His name is Yariv Levin, who chairs both the coalition and the Likud faction in the Knesset. Levin has a clear agenda: Legislation that supports the settlements and the settlers should be advanced, while legislation inimical to the settlements and the settlers should be blocked. The basic principle is that the Arabs, the converts and the migrant workers will have to fend for themselves on the other side of the fence.

    The Knesset’s main job is to pass legislation. In Levin’s book, the chief guideline is “Talk less and just pass more legislation.” If the left-wingers in academia and the courts consider such actions apartheid-building measures, let them suffer. The Land of Israel is acquired only with great pain.

    In the meantime, this approach is proving successful, and intervention from above rarely occurs. One of those rare occasions took place at the cabinet meeting this week, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu opposed branding people responsible for anti-Arab “price tag” attacks members of a terrorist group (as sought by Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch and the Shin Bet security service). Instead, Netanyahu said they should be regarded as part of a banned organization. How pleasant it is to wake up to “Good morning, Abu Ghosh” – the site of a recent price tag attack.

    In the previous Knesset, the moderate ministerial trio of Benny Begin, Dan Meridor and Michael Eitan were sent home when Likud thinned its ranks. These officials were members of the Ministerial Committee for Legislation. In contrast, the trio’s replacement, the quartet of Limor Livnat, Yuval Steinitz, Gideon Sa’ar and Gilad Erdan, are as fluid as butter on a hot summer’s day.

    And a little child shall lead them. Just go to Levin’s website and you’ll find the following headline: “The Ministerial Committee for Legislation has approved the bill proposed by the coalition chairman on prioritizing citizens who serve the state.” The law would favor such people in areas like jobs, rents and housing.

    Levin is the mover and shaker in the legislative coalition. His next project, subordinating democracy to Judaism in a Basic Law on the Nation-State, will be debated by the Knesset in the next few days. In the previous Knesset, he headed a special committee that considered a mechanism for a referendum to authorize or rule out conceding territory “under Israeli sovereignty.”

  • Netanyahu blocks bid for transparency in legislation process of Israeli government - National Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/netanyahu-blocks-bid-for-transparency-in-legislation-process-of-israeli-gov

    The chances of the public ever learning how cabinet ministers voted in the Ministerial Committee for Legislation have dropped considerably, after a legal opinion was issued stating that revealing this information will require the approval of the cabinet.

    The initiative to publicize how the ministers vote on the legislative proposals the committee debates came from Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, who views this as an important step toward transparency.

    The Ministerial Committee on Legislation determines which bills go to the Knesset plenum with government backing − which makes it almost certain they will pass into law − and which bills go nowhere. The panel’s debates are confidential; they are not transcribed and how the ministers vote is not documented. The lack of transparency makes it easier for interested parties to exert pressure, make deals, and stymie legislative initiatives without the public being able to monitor the process.

    Livni, who is chairman of the Ministerial Committee for Legislation, announced two months ago, at the current panel’s first meeting, “It would be proper for there to be transparency in the committee, and I plan to examine this.”

    Cabinet Secretary Avichai Mandelblit, however, delayed the move in order to check its legality, apparently with the backing of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is not very excited about Livni’s idea.

    The legal opinion was provided by the Prime Minister’s Office legal adviser, Shlomit Barnea-Fargo, and is being revealed here for the first time. The adviser determined that Livni does not have the authority to make the change she wants on her own, nor is the ministerial committee empowered to change the cabinet work regulations.

    Barnea-Fargo said that the authority to do so rests with the full cabinet. Livni has already asked the prime minister and cabinet secretary to bring the issue up for debate by the cabinet as soon as possible.

  • In Israel, a conversation about the future of occupation is part of the occupation | +972 Magazine
    http://972mag.com/in-israel-a-conversation-about-the-future-of-the-occupation-is-part-of-the-occupation/73537

    The Israeli political conversation has a strange sense of déjà vu these days: on Wednesday, during a panel organized by the think-tank Molad, Knesset Member Ofer Shelah of Yesh Atid warned that if Israel fails to disengage from the West Bank, it will face a similar fate to that of Apartheid South Africa. “The occupation,” said Shelah, “corrupts Israeli society. It corrupts the army, corrupts Israeli justice, Israeli media, Israeli psyche and Israeli language.”

    ...

    In fact, this debate began in the days following the Six-Day War.

    By now, almost half a century later, it’s obvious that an argument over the future of “the territories” has itself become an inherent part of the occupation. The conversation satisfies foreign observers (“the Israeli peace camp is back!”), while granting the status quo of ethnic control a feeling of a temporariness - that it will be resolved any day now.

  • Mossad, Shin Bet chiefs to Netanyahu: Foreign Ministry strike hurting national security - National Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/mossad-shin-bet-chiefs-to-netanyahu-foreign-ministry-strike-hurting-nationa

    Mossad chief Tamir Pardo, Shin Bet head Yoram Cohen and Defense Ministry director general Udi Shani have told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the Foreign Ministry diplomats’ strike was harming national security.

    According to a senior official, at a meeting on Thursday the three top security officials gave Netanyahu, who is also serving as foreign minister, and Deputy Foreign Minister Ze’ev Elkin, examples of the harm they said the strike had done in a few cases in recent weeks.

    The meeting took place at the end of another security discussion at the Prime Minister’s Office. The senior official who participated in the meeting said the security chiefs urged Netanyahu to intervene and find a solution that will end the workers’ strike.

    Over the past few days ties have become significantly more strained between Foreign Ministry diplomats and the security establishment. The Foreign Ministry’s workers committee has instructed Israeli diplomats to cease cooperating with the IDF and the Shin Bet, after members of those two bodies crossed the picket lines to help arrange Netanyahu’s visit to Poland. After hearing the officials, Netanyahu ordered that legal means be examined for ending the strike. The senior officials said one possibility being studied was to ask the National Labor Court to issue back-to-work orders.

    The Foreign Ministry’s workers’ committee said that if the security establishment is claiming harm to national security, then it was even more surprising that Netanyahu had not bothered to open a dialogue with the Foreign Ministry staffers to resolve the crisis.

    Although the diplomats have ratcheted up their sanctions in recent weeks, no talks are currently underway to end the dispute.

    A no-confidence motion is to be presented today in the Knesset by MK Isaac Herzog (Labor ) over the strike. On Tuesday morning, Foreign Ministry workers are planning a protest march to the Knesset gates. Shortly after the protest, a special discussion is scheduled of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on the matter of harm to the Foreign Ministry’s status. The diplomats began their sanctions in March, protesting erosion in their wages and what they say is the “dismantling of the Foreign Ministry.” They are protesting that no appointment has been made of a foreign minister and that the ministry’s powers have been relegated to several other ministers.

    Sanctions include the refusal to issue diplomatic passports to ministers, the halt to cable communications between Israeli diplomatic missions worldwide and the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem, and the refusal to help with arrangements for ministers visiting foreign countries.

  • Israel
    Nouvelle réflexion sur l’impossibilité de voir émerger un jour un Etat palestinien. Naomi Chazan, ancienne vice-président de la Knesset, est convaincue que si un Etat binational venait à voir le jour, il est douteux qu’Israël puisse continuer longtemps à se prévaloir d’être la seule démocratie du Proche Orient. D’ici là, la colonisation des territoires palestiniens - phénomène irréversible - aura contredit l’idéal sioniste fait de liberté, justice et paix. Le gouvernement Netanyahou prouve par sa politique que l’ultranationalisme juif et le post-sionisme sont les deux faces d’une même monnaie. Naomi Chazan énumère les techniques mis en œuvre par le gouvernement actuel pour consolider la domination juive sur l’ensemble de tous les territoires, israéliens et palestiniens.

    The Times of Israël
    http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/israels-new-post-zionists

    Israel’s new post-Zionists
    NAOMI CHAZAN June 2, 2013, 2:44 pm 14

    Forty-six years after the Six Day War of 1967, the continued Israeli occupation of the West Bank no longer appears temporary. These territories, with the exception of Jerusalem, have not been annexed; they have, however, gradually become an integral – albeit decidedly unequal – part of Israel. A one-state reality is taking shape: one which flies in the face of the democratic and Jewish values of the founders of the state. The present government is the first in the country’s history that, by its dedication to making the current situation permanent, is directly contravening the Zionist dream and replacing it with a messianic vision which leaves little room for “the precepts of liberty, justice and peace” or the ideals of “full social and political equality of all…citizens, without distinction of race, creed or sex,” embedded in Israel’s Declaration of Independence.

    The third government of Binyamin Netanyahu, sworn in a few months ago, is also Israel’s most avowedly nationalist. Both its composition (it includes all the parties on the right of the political spectrum) and personal make-up underline its ethnocentric orientation. The prime minister’s own Likud, virtually devoid of the liberal followers of Jabotinsky (such as Dan Meridor, Benny Begin and Michael Eytan), is now represented by the likes of Moshe Feiglin, Danny Danon, Tzipi Hotobeli and Miri Regev – all declared one-staters. Naftali Bennett and his Jewish Home alliance are committed to the retention of the entire Land of Israel. Even the seemingly moderate Yair Lapid is proving to be a sheep in wolves’ clothing. Together, under Netanyahu’s guidance, they are systematically demonstrating that Jewish ultra-nationalism and post-Zionism are two sides of the same coin.

    Five techniques are being used by the government and its allied institutions, think-tanks and NGOs to further the agenda which will solidify a Jewish-dominated bi-national reality. (…)
    #occupation, #one_state, #zionist-dream, #Netanyahu, #Meridor, #Begin, #Eytan, #Feiglin, #Danon, #Hotobeli, #Regev, #Bennett, #Lapid, #procrastination, #compartmentalization, #promotion, #vilification, #transformation #Peres, #World_Economic_Forum, #Kerry, #negotiations, #Arab_Peace_Initiative, #two_state_solution, #settlements, #self_determination, #zionism, #post_zionism

  • احمد الطيبي يجند 8 ملايين يورو من أبو ظبي لإقامة قصر الثقافة في الطيبة هو الأكبر في الدولة العبرية
    http://www.alquds.co.uk/?p=44991

    احمد الطيبي يجند 8 ملايين يورو من أبو ظبي لإقامة قصر الثقافة في الطيبة هو الأكبر في الدولة العبرية

    Huit millions d’euros du Fonds de développement d’Abu Dhabi ramenés par le député (palestinien) à la Knesset Ahmad Tibi. La somme est destinée à la construction d’un centre culturel à Tayibé, quasi sur la Ligne Verte...

    Que faut-il en penser ?

  • Feiglin: Israel misuses Holocaust for political reasons

    GIL HOFFMAN

    | JPost

    http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?ID=309051&R=R1

    Israel must stop using the Holocaust to score political points and should no longer bring foreign leaders and dignitaries to the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Museum, Deputy Knesset Speaker Moshe Feiglin (Likud) told The Jerusalem Post Sunday.

    In comments he originally make at a conference in Shoham Thursday, first revealed by Ma’ariv, Feiglin said that “Israel has wrongly used the Holocaust as a tool to justify our existence and sovereignty here.”

    “They have made it as if we have to have a Jewish state because of the Holocaust,” he told the Post. “When the diplomats are brought to Yad Vashem, they are speechless. But giving only security reasons for being here does not work with new generations in Europe who care about rights. The other side’s incorrect arguments about the land being theirs are more persuasive than the pragmatic arguments about what would happen if there were no Jewish state.”

  • Neuf mois off + un congé printemps d’un mois : le Parlement israélien en activité (très) réduite depuis près d’un an.

    One day after being sworn in, Israel’s MKs take spring break -
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/one-day-after-being-sworn-in-israel-s-mks-take-spring-break.premium-1.51056

    The Knesset has taken its spring recess, just one day after the new government ministers were sworn in. The MKs’ long vacation will last a month, and they are expected to return after Independence Day. Only then will the legislative and Knesset committee work get underway.

    Because of the elections, the Israeli legislature had almost stopped its activities in the nine months that have passed since it took its summer recess. “We came to work,” complained new MK Ronen Hoffman ‏(Yesh Atid‏), to the chairman of the Knesset, in a failed attempt to shorten the recess.

  • Plus de détail sur ce projet de loi diabolique.

    Dichter replaces ’Jewish identity’ bill with equally contentious draft law - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/dichter-replaces-jewish-identity-bill-with-equally-contentious-draft-law-1.

    On Monday, MK Avi Dichter (Kadima ) withdrew his controversial draft law that would subordinate democratic rule in Israel to the country’s role as a Jewish state. In its place he proposed a more moderate bill, which was met with harsh criticism.

    The scrapped bill had called for Jewish religious law to serve as inspiration for new legislation and for Arabic to be dropped as an official language of the state - albeit while granting it “special status.” In addition, it required the state to actively pursue Jewish settlement of all areas and dropped any government obligation to build for other communities living in the state.

    On Monday, Kadima, most of whose MKs signed off as sponsors of the original bill, forced Dichter to withdraw his draft law and imposed party discipline against the bill. After being criticized for allowing her party colleagues to introduce the proposal, Kadima chairwoman MK Tzipi Livni put all her political weight into thwarting it.

    Had the bill gone to a vote in the Knesset plenum it might well have been passed: One-third of the Knesset’s 120 members, including most Kadima and Labor MKs, signed the first rendition of what became known as Dichter’s Law. Livni publicly announced her opposition to it a few weeks ago. In a rare move, the Knesset’s legal advisor, Eyal Yinon, called for broad public and parliamentary debate on the bill, citing its broad implications for Israel’s constitutional status.

    After realizing that he could not bring the bill to a vote in its original form, Dichter introduced a toned-down iteration of his draft law, on Monday. The switch is expected to postpone the Knesset plenum vote by at least two months.

    The new version still makes Israel’s definition as a democracy subordinate to to its role as the state of the Jewish nation. But instead of clearly spelling this out, it features an opaquely worded paragraph that ostensibly folds the Declaration of Independence into the new Basic Law, in accordance with that document’s explicit definition of Israel as the state of the Jewish nation.

    In addition, the new bill describes Arabic as “a language of the state” rather than an official language, as it is today. Unlike Dichter’s original draft law, it does not include the reference to Arabic’s “special status.” The new version also makes no mention of Jewish religious law serving as the legislature’s inspiration.

    After studying the new version of the bill, a former senior official in the Justice Ministry told Haaretz, “I really don’t understand the changes that were made. Dichter left in the controversial clauses, which refer to changes to the balance of the character of the State of Israel and the subordination of democratic rule to the Jewish nation. He replaced his original proposal with one that is incomprehensible even on the level of its linguistic construction. It’s a mishmash of ideas that might be even worse than the original wording.”

    An official from Abraham Fund Initiatives, a nonprofit dedicated to advancing Jewish-Arab coexistence, said that even if the new bill is not as bad as the original, it too “violates the delicate balance between the Jewish component and the democratic component of the definition of the state and gives clear priority to the Jewish component.”

  • Un nouveau ministre du logement israélien qui roule pour les colons.
    Uri Ariel, whose minister of housing ? - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/business/uri-ariel-whose-minister-of-housing.premium-1.509628

    Uri Ariel, the Habayit Hayehudi Knesset member slated to become the housing minister, is a personality well known among West Bank settlers. In the last Knesset he belonged to several lobbies promoting settlements in the West Bank and his party was strongly supported by settlers by way of thanks.

    People in the political establishment now worry that he will focus his attention on his natural constituency, and less on the housing crisis facing the rest of the country.

    “Ariel is a bulldozer in terms of action and building, but mainly for the national-religious population,” says a former associate of his in Habayit Hayehudi’s previous incarnation as the National Religious Party. “He understands how things work, he’s knows the right people and has the ability to get a lot done. But his most significant history is over the Green Line so the assumption is that’s where he will invest most of his energy.”

    • Israel going for one million Jews in the West Bank http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/israel-going-for-one-million-jews-in-the-west-bank.premium-1.508510

      The election campaign season comes to its real conclusion this week with the formation of the government and an unadulterated victory for the right. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recovered from the blow he took at the ballot box and managed to extract the maximum out of the coalition negotiations he conducted with Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid and Habayit Hayehudi head Naftali Bennett. The old fox schooled the political greenhorns.

      Netanyahu began the negotiations after a month of futile idling that was meant to weaken his partners’ negotiating positions: the highly publicized tiff with Bennett, the crocodile tears over separating from his Haredi former coalition partners, the offer of the Finance Ministry to Labor Party leader Shelly Yacimovich and the promise of renewed talks with the Palestinians to Hatnuah leader Tzipi Livni. When all the political spin had settled, the dice came out in Netanyahu’s favor: Foreign and defense policy will remain in the hands of Likud-Yisrael Beiteinu, Lapid has been kicked over to the Finance Ministry and Habayit Hayehudi will be a junior coalition partner.

  • Vers une éviction totale des partis arabes en Israël ?

    Raising threshold for Israeli cabinet proposes challenge to Arab parties Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/raising-threshold-for-israeli-cabinet-proposes-challenge-to-arab-parties.pr

    The agreement reached among the major prospective coalition partners in the next government to raise the minimum percentage of the vote that parties would be required to get for representation in the Knesset could pose a major challenge to the country’s Arab parties.

  • Ultra-Orthodox to feel the blow as unprecedented power in Israeli government ends Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/ultra-orthodox-to-feel-the-blow-as-unprecedented-power-in-israeli-governmen

    Ultra-Orthodox Knesset members have been coalition partners in most governments since Israel was founded in 1948, and in almost every government since Likud first came to power in 1977. However, the Haredi presence in the government that ended Sunday was greater than them all.

  • LE Parti travailliste israélien, porte-parole de l’Autorité palestinienne ? Y a-t-il un véritable danger d’effrondrement de l’Autorité palestinienne ?

    PA Collapse Will Be ’Catastrophe,’ Says Knesset Labor Leader - Al-Monitor : the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/02/isaac-herzog-we-must-aim-for-an-interim-agreement.html

    You met last week with Salam Fayyad, and came back very concerned
    “I was the first Israeli statesman to go to Ramallah after the elections. We had a very deep conversation. We had talked for a long time about meeting. We know each other a long time. During the election campaign, it was less convenient. I assume that he wanted to exchange views and make himself heard regarding one substantive issue, before any talk regarding a diplomatic process. That issue is: the collapse of the Palestinian Authority. He told me, clearly and unequivocally, that ‘If we continue to be dependent every single month on the decision of Israel’s prime minister to free up our tax funds — we will collapse. Because we have responsibility over the territory and over people and it’s impossible to build it from hand to mouth, they suffer from great budgetary suffocation and the systems are collapsing.”
    Herzog adds, “I tell everyone — the collapse of the Palestinian Authority will be a catastrophe not only to the Authority, but to the Israelis and the entire peace camp. True, the delay in payment stemmed, first and foremost, from the unilateral Palestinian move in the United Nations, but at the end of the day Israel must coolly calculate its own interests. Israel should continue to observe the Paris Protocol and transfer the funds to the Authority. This is a burning issue, even before the diplomatic process.”

    Did Salam Fayyad ask you to transmit any kind of message?
    “Of course. This was one of them — to sound the alarm regarding the Authority’s collapse. That was, first of all, the public message, and I also transmitted other required information to the relevant entities. But it’s not about me vis-à-vis the prime minister. The issue is immediate, in other words if you bring President Obama and talk about a process, we need to determine what kind of process is the right one to take place now."

  • 2012 11 16

    Dernière dépêche sur le site de la chaine TV libanaise, Al-Mayadeen :

    http://www.almayadeen.net/ar/News

    La résistance palestinienne aurait lancé un missile en direction de la Knesset située à Jérusalem.

    Evidemment, c’est un tir symbolique mais qui met en pièces la doctrine stratégique du dôme d’acier dont les Israéliens n’ont pas cessé de parler depuis la guerre de juillet 2006 du Liban.

    la stratégie israélienne était entrée, avec la guerre du Liban de 2006, dans une crise profonde. Son paradigme constant depuis 1948 – le « mur d’acier » d’après la fameuse expression de l’ultrasioniste Zeev Jabotinsky en 1923 avait été remis en cause.

    La doctrine du dôme d’acier qui a pris le relais semble connaître même sort.

  • Likud MK warns ‘south Tel Aviv is on fire’
    http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?ID=271868&R=R1

    A Knesset Interior Committee meeting descended into a shouting match on Tuesday, as MKs competed over who can take a harder line on African migrants.

    The meeting on violence by migrants, was called by Likud MKs Danny Danon and Miri Regev, who participated in last week’s anti-migrant demonstration in south Tel Aviv.

    “People in Tel Aviv are under siege,” Danon said. “They feel like they live in a refugee camp!”

    Danon slammed the “bleeding hearts” who ask him how he dares suggest that migrants be deported, saying that forcing them to leave Israel is the real solution for the issue.

    The Knesset should pass a bill setting a minimum amount of migrants to be deported each month, he added.

    Y’a pas à dire : on vit vraiment une époque formidable.

  • #Israël dit stop aux mannequins trop maigres
    http://www.lesnouvellesnews.fr/index.php/civilisation-articles-section/civilisation/1779-israel-dit-stop-aux-mannequins-trop-maigres

    La Knesset, le parlement israélien, a adopté à l’unanimité, mardi 20 mars une loi bannissant les images de mannequins trop maigres.

    L’objectif affiché est de lutter contre les désordres alimentaires, comme l’anorexie, encouragés par la mise en avant de corps filiformes dans la publicité et les médias. Les modèles, hommes et femmes, présentant un indice de masse corporelle (IMC) de moins de 18.5 ne pourront plus apparaître sur les images publicitaires – photos ou vidéos. Ce seuil (qui correspond, par exemple, à 56 kgs pour 1m75) est celui qui détermine la « maigreur », selon l’Organisation mondiale de la santé.

    #pub #beauté #anorexie

  • Israël veut faire payer 300 milliards de dollars aux pays arabes

    http://oumma.com/11622/israel-veut-faire-payer-300-milliards-de-dollars-aux-p

    Selon le quotidien L’Expression la Knesset s’apprête à voter un projet de loi dans les prochains jours exigeant de 12 gouvernements arabes dont l’Algérie, des indemnités financières estimées à près de 300 milliards de dollars, c’est-à-dire une moyenne de 25 milliards de dollars pour chaque pays. Selon notre confrère arabophone, Wakt El Djazair, qui a repris l’information dans des journaux israéliens, cette « exigence » est venue suite au départ forcé des juifs dans ces pays. Selon Wakt Al Djazaïr, ces pays sont notamment, l’Algérie, l’Egypte, la Mauritanie, Le Maroc, La Tunisie, le Liban, la Syrie, la Libye, le Soudan, l’Irak, la Jordanie et le Bahreïn.

    Et quelle est la légitimité d’Israël à percevoir ses indemnités financières, si ce n’est une perception raciste (pro-juive) d’un crime contre l’humanité ? Reste à savoir si Israël représente vraiment les juifs ou si Israël ne représente que lui-même.

    #Israël

  • Vote préliminaire par la Knesset de l’interdiction de traiter les gens de « nazis ». Mais alors, comment on va pouvoir continuer à défendre Israël en traitant de nazis tous ceux qui critiquent sa politique ?

    Knesset passes laws prohibiting use of Nazi symbols - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/knesset-passes-laws-prohibiting-use-of-nazi-symbols-1.406725

    The Knesset plenum passed on Wednesday in a preliminary reading a series of controversial laws that would make it a crime to call someone a “Nazi” or wear a yellow star as a means of protest. The main bill was proposed by MK Uri Ariel (National Union) and was backed by the government and the coalition.

  • De Nidal sur le blog « Loubnan ya Loubnan »

    La flottille et l’escamotage de la question nucléaire

    http://tokborni.blogspot.com/2010/06/la-flottille-et-lescamotage-de-la.html

    Selon un principe énoncé par Chomsky, les faits importants ne sont pas « cachés », en ce sens qu’en cherchant, on les trouve dans la presse internationale. En revanche, ils sont minorés par la place qu’ils occupent dans l’espace médiatique : le commentaire est soit totalement orienté et/ou farfelu soit, pour les sujets vraiments importants, le commentaire est totalement absent. L’idée est que les décideurs (politiques et, surtout, économiques) ont besoin d’être informés pour prendre les « bonnes » décisions (selon leurs propres critères) ; l’info est donc largement publique et accessible. En revanche, pour éloigner les citoyens de décisions qui les concernent pourtant directement, cette information doit être diluée et traitée comme si elle n’avait aucun intérêt.

    Pour aller dans le même sens Le « flou nucléaire » israélien dans Le Monde Diplomatique d’août 2005

    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2005/08/ALGAZY/12416

    Deux chercheurs israéliens, Avner Cohen et Yoel Cohen, viennent de publier chacun un livre qui traite du « flou nucléaire » considéré comme un élément stratégique de la politique israélienne. L’un et l’autre soulignent que leur livre a été, avant publication, « traité » par la censure et que, comme il est d’usage dans ce pays, ils sont contraints d’affirmer que certaines informations sont fondées sur des sources étrangères.

    La principale thèse d’Avner Cohen est l’existence d’une "sainte trinité" du nucléaire israélien : le flou comme politique officielle, la censure comme pouvoir coercitif et le tabou comme attitude sociale. Non seulement cette « sainte trinité » a renforcé le secret sur la question, mais elle a légitimé l’absence de tout débat public. A partir du moment où Israël a eu recours au mensonge pour défendre ses secrets nucléaires vis-à-vis de l’étranger, il en a fait autant avec ses citoyens, y compris les membres de la Knesset, et même le gouvernement.

    #Israël, #nucléaire_israélien, #Stratégie_du_secret, #Avner_Cohen, #Yoel_Cohen

  • Ne jamais croire que Sarkozy est capable d’avoir une idée originale. Faire chier les turcs, c’est pas une idée à lui. Knesset discusses today Israel’s recognition of the "Armenian Massacre"
    http://www.middleeastmonitor.org.uk/news/middle-east/3218-knesset-discusses-today-israels-recognition-of-the-qarmen

    Israeli Parliament Knesset is discussing, in its meeting held on Monday (26/12), a bill on the Jewish state’s recognition of the “Armenian Massacre” which the Turks are accused of committing against the Armenian people during the First World War.

  • Hypocrisie flagrante : Salah Hamouri est également citoyen français !

    En mai 2011 la Knesset a adopté la fameuse « loi Shalit » qui a imposé des conditions plus sévères sur les prisonniers du Hamas dans les prisons israéliennes, dans une tentative d’exercer un chantage pour la libération du soldat captif Gilad Shalit. Ces changements comprennent l’option de recalculer arbitrairement les peines de prison en années civiles plutôt qu’en années administratives (l’année israélienne administrative est de 345 jours, donc plus courte de 20 jours.)

    Pour Salah Hamouri, cela signifie un emprisonnement supplémentaire de 140 jours appliqué rétrospectivement et sans possibilité d’appel, et ceci contrairement à la date de sortie apparaissant sur le jugement écrit.

  • Asserting control over ... JPost - Features - Insights & Features
    http://www.jpost.com/Features/InThespotlight/Article.aspx?id=242932

    “It’s really weird. The children are the core of every society and they are trying to deface their identity to alter their history and background. That is really dangerous,” Abukhater told The Media Line. “What I learned I will never forget. It is basic education and if you do this and alter their identity through textbooks they will grow up having a blind side and might be ignorant on many issues.”

    But the Knesset Education Committee, which ordered the textbooks used by public schools in east Jerusalem to be modified, says the books engage in incitement and intolerance.

  • Israel’s Dead Sea to get its first gender-divided beach - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
    http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/israel-s-dead-sea-to-get-its-first-gender-divided-beach-1.386157

    At the Zohar estuary on the southern shore of the lake, rabbis, cabinet ministers, Knesset members and their minions emerged from the cars.

    Everyone was effusive in their praise for the head of the Tamar Regional Council, Dov Litvinov, for his decision to establish a strictly separate bathing beach for men and women.

    La lecture de cet article a quelque chose de réjouissant. Les références bibliques de Silvan Shalom dans ce contexte sont carrément bienvenues.