organization:palestine liberation organization

  • #US Begins Trial Against #PLO for Alleged Role in Decade-Old Attacks
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/us-begins-trial-against-plo-alleged-role-decade-old-attacks

    A US trial to decide the liability of the #Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and #Palestinian_Authority (PA) for several attacks against Israelis began on Tuesday, while the US continues to oppose Palestinian attempts to hold #Israel responsible for massacres that left thousands dead. Six men and six women were chosen as jurors to decide whether the defendants should pay up to $1 billion for what the plaintiffs’ lawyer Kent Yalowitz said was support for six shootings and bombings in occupied Jerusalem from 2001 to 2004. The attacks killed 33 and wounded more than 450. read more

    #second_intifada

  • Israel has detained 10,000 Palestinian children since 2000: PLO

    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israel-has-detained-10000-palestinian-children-2000-plo

    More than 10,000 Palestinian minors in the occupied West Bank and annexed Jerusalem have been held by the Israeli army for varying periods since 2000, a Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) official said Wednesday, adding that 20 percent of those detained since June of this year are minors. (...)

    Around 95 percent of detained children were subject to beatings and torture by Israeli security personnel while in detention, while many were forced to make confessions under duress and undergo unfair trials, Qaraqe said, adding that at least 300 children are still detained in Israeli jails on various charges.

    Violent practices by Israeli soldiers as well as settlers against Palestinian children is endemic and often abetted by the authorities.

    #Israël #Palestine #enfants #prison

  • Ten years since Arafat’s death: Lost hope as the illusion of temporary #occupation fades - Middle East Israel News | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/1.625283

    On Wednesday evening, as young Palestinians were sparring with the Israel Police in East Jerusalem neighborhoods, a documentary about the life of #Yasser_Arafat was being shown at the Mahmoud Darwish Museum in #Ramallah. The museum’s Galilee Hall was filled with members of the PLO and Fatah — high-ranking and lower-ranking, well-known and not so well-known, old and young. There were more men than women. They applauded when, on-screen, Arafat declared the establishment of a Palestinian state on November 15, 1988.

    The people in attendance, like the rest of the residents of the Palestinian Authority’s de facto capital, followed Wednesday’s events in East Jerusalem, “the capital of the Palestinian state,” 10 to 15 kilometers away. They “followed” the demonstrations and clashes as opposed to “participated” or “expanded” them to other areas of the occupied West Bank.

    This is because the identifying feature of Palestinian society today is the split into local units, where dramatic incidents that take place in some units — war in Gaza, mass arrests in Hebron, conflicts with the Palestinian police in Jenin — don’t affect the rest. The mental distance between one geographic unit and the next is several times greater than the physical distance — not only when it comes to Gaza and Jerusalem, where Israel’s policy of closure and movement restrictions cut people off physically from the West Bank, or in the villages behind the separation barriers such as Bart’aa, Nabi Samwil and Nuaman.

    The common objective reality — a foreign rule that the Palestinians experience as a colonialist system working to displace and dispossess them — is broken down into separate components with ostensibly different experiences for each.

    The choice of the anniversary of Arafat’s death to discuss the changes in Palestinian society contains the assumption that the presence or absence of the late PLO chairman had an effect on these changes. There is no doubt that Arafat, in going to #Oslo or signing the agreement for gradual progress toward a goal never explicitly defined with the occupying state, had a hand in creating the geographic #fragmentation that so profoundly affected the societal fragmentation (the West Bank’s temporary division into areas A, B and C, which became permanent).

    But in Arafat’s defense, let it be said that Israel began fragmenting Palestinian society in the territories that it occupied in 1967 even before the #Madrid Conference or the Oslo talks. The regime of movement permits that Israel created cut Gaza off from the rest of Palestinian society in January 1991; with East Jerusalem this process began in March 1993. Since then, the political, economic, religious and cultural Palestinian capital has undergone a process of withering, withdrawal and return to the un-national and segregating spheres of influence of the extended families.

    The sociologist Jamil Hilal says that had it not been for Arafat’s death, the political split between Gaza and the West Bank never would have happened, and two competing Palestinian governments would not have been created. If that’s true, this is an area where Arafat’s absence had a direct effect on the negative and far-reaching developments in Palestinian society.

    Hilal told Haaretz it’s very likely Arafat would not have agreed to hold the 2006 Palestinian election, based on the belief that the vote would have legitimized the occupation (which, according to the Oslo Accords, was supposed to have ended in 1999). Without an election, the deep sociopolitical split in Palestinian society never would have happened. With an election under Arafat, Hilal believes Fatah would have won because Arafat would have risen above the internal splits and rivalries.

    The geographic fragmentation has been complemented over the years by a process of atomization, or – in Hilal’s words - individualization.

    “The spread of individualism means that more and more Palestinians are legitimating, promoting, and protecting their personal interests and concerns above the collective interests and concerns of the community. This is the outcome of a number of factors,” Hilal wrote in an article asking what was stopping the third intifada. The article was published in May on the website of Al-Shabaka, an independent think tank of Palestinians without borders — in Palestine, in the diaspora and in exile.

    The PA (under Arafat and even more strongly after his death) adopted a neoliberal economic regime in which, Hilal writes, “the private sector was granted the determining role in shaping the Palestinian economy and the PA’s dependency on external aid and on Israeli tax transfers was cemented. This dependency has made the PA vulnerable to political pressure and made the employees of its large public sector wary of any change that could jeopardize their sources of livelihood.”

    The adoption of neoliberal thinking is not surprising, says Hilal: The PA was established at the peak of a global neoliberal era and was supported from the start by the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, donor countries and NGOs that themselves relied on donations from abroad.

    Another "factor related to the process of individualization has been the decline in the influence and credibility of political organizations and the buildup of the PA bureaucracy [and also that of Hamas] and formal institutions under the illusion that this would soon lead to an independent Palestinian state,” writes Hilal.

    “The largely egalitarian political culture ‘of brothers and comrades’ and the relatively easy access to leaders by the rank and file that existed before the Oslo Accords has been replaced by pseudo-state institutions with their rigid hierarchical structures and discourse. There are now ministers, director generals, and other civilian and military ranks, each with its own special privileges and job description.”

    Economic gaps have widened among the regions, cities, villages, refugee camps and extended families. Hilal told Haaretz that before the Oslo Accords, when the number of workers in Israel was high and movement into Israel was unrestricted, workers’ salaries were even higher than those of the middle class.

    In recent years, the middle class that is dependent on the PA, its security agencies and the private sector, which is motivated by profit, has expanded. The main interest of this class — represented by fairly strong professional associations, unlike the workers and the farmers, who are not organized properly — is not to rock the boat, not to break the status quo.

    The sociologist Hunaida Ghanem, who runs MADAR, the Palestinian Forum for Israeli Studies, described the Palestinian hierarchical structure as follows: “There is a small elite that established [the new Palestinian city of] Rawabi, and there are those who got rich from the Oslo process. There is the middle class of Ramallah, who live in a bubble and in an illusion that their situation is good because they live on bank loans. And there is the majority of the people, who don’t live in a bubble and suffer from the existing reality.”

    As Ghanem told Haaretz, “The middle class chases personal security and car loans — not even in Tel Aviv and New York do you see cars like the ones here in Ramallah. This is a middle class under occupation that lives in nonprofits, academia, the schools, the government ministries. It used to be the avant-garde of national action, of resistance and the national project. Now it is busy with repaying debts. Those who work in nonprofit organizations are busy with pleasing the donors.”

    The reality of the separate units, created when the Oslo process began, calls to mind the PLO’s experience in Jordan and Lebanon. There, too, it worked in a scattered Palestinian society that lacked space and territorial contiguity, but the common experience of being a refugee nation and the struggle overcame the lack of contiguity. So maybe that is why Arafat wasn’t worried by the imposed geographic fragmentation into areas A, B and C in 1995. He saw it as something that would end no later than 1999.

    “Arafat and many others in the Palestinian community bought the temporariness that Israel sold,” said Ghanem. “But Israel created the largest settlements under the umbrella of temporariness. Arafat, as a Ben-Gurionist, believed in his ability to maneuver what existed toward a defined goal: the establishment of a state in the West Bank and Gaza.”

    Arafat, said Ghanem, symbolized for the Palestinians hope, various possibilities and an alternative — if a given method failed. “During Arafat’s time, when people said ‘peace process,’ people trusted in his ability to lead to a breakthrough. They believed it wouldn’t be a static situation.” Today, without him, Palestinian society has lost its hope and horizon.

    Palestinians are well aware of the internal contradiction; this, too, is a prominent feature. On the one hand, as Hilal puts it, the Israeli occupation provides all the objective and unifying conditions for a third intifada. On the other, the reality of Oslo (which is part of those objective conditions) created subjective conditions of social stratification, economic disparities and discipline-imposing security agencies that are subject to the will of the donor countries. All this prevents or delays the next uprising.

  • Palestinian-Syrian refugees face hardship in Lebanon - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/11/palestinian-refugees-from-syria-to-lebanon-hardships.html

    Sahli believes that the PLO is responsible for the worsening suffering of displaced Palestinians as it failed to develop a contingency plan in conjunction with UNRWA to reduce their suffering.

    Moreover, the Palestinian factions have not seriously worked with the Lebanese government regarding promoting equality between the Syrians and Palestinians upon entering the crossing from Syria to Lebanon and vice versa. It also has not discussed the expensive residency permits that the displaced have to renew every three months.

    Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/11/palestinian-refugees-from-syria-to-lebanon-hardships.html#ixzz3IVdNhGM4

  • #film : #Evaporating_borders

    An essay in five parts, Evaporating Borders offers a series of vignettes, poetically guided by the filmmaker’s curious eye and personal reflections. Through the people she encounters along the way, the film dissects the experience of asylum seekers in Cyprus : A PLO activist and exile from Iraq is denied asylum within 15 minutes; neo-nazi fundamentalists roam the streets in an attack on Muslim migrants; activists and academics organize an antifascist rally and clash with the neo-nazis; 195 migrants drown in the Mediterranean.

    Originally from Yugoslavia and an immigrant to Cyprus, #Iva_Radivojevic investigates the effects of large-scale immigration on the sense of national identity in one of the easiest ports of entry into Fortress Europe. Poetically photographed and rendered, the film passionately weaves the themes of migration, tolerance, identity and belonging.


    http://www.evaporatingborders.com

    #réfugiés #asile #Chypre #migration #Forteresse_Europe

    cc @albertocampiphoto @wizo

  • 5 trucs que les #journalistes papier ne devraient plus jamais dire | Dans mon labo
    http://dansmonlabo.com/2014/10/03/5-phrases-que-les-journalistes-papier-ne-devraient-plus-jamais-prononce

    On peut être très attaché au #journal-qui-tache-les-doigts-avec-le-café-du-matin ou trouver sexys les hommes qui lisent Libération dans le métro, les faits sont têtus : quand même Le Canard enchaîné voit ses ventes baisser de 13 % en un an, il est temps de prendre cette histoire de « transition numérique » au sérieux.

    Pourtant, lorsque j’échange avec des collègues travaillant (uniquement ou principalement) pour la version papier de leur média, j’ai souvent l’impression d’une forme de déni rampant.

    #papier #web #plo

  • 7 fautes de #français qui n’en sont pas, en fait | Dans mon labo
    http://dansmonlabo.com/2014/09/11/7-fautes-de-francais-qui-nen-sont-pas-en-fait-190

    Vous pouvez passer vos soirées à apprendre la dizaine de pages consacrées à l’accord du participe passé des verbes pronominaux que compte le TOP. Ou bien vous pouvez décider que vous avez mieux à faire de votre vie.

    Mais le pire, c’est quand j’ai appris que certaines des règles que je chérissais tant étaient parfois discutables, d’autres fois à côté de la plaque. En voici un rapide florilège, que vous aurez sûrement à cœur de compléter ou de critiquer dans les commentaires.

    Et du coup, par contre n’est pas du tout une faute !

    #langue #sr #plo

    • PLO: 32 Palestinians killed in West Bank since June
      http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=724086

      BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — As the eyes of the world focused on Gaza in recent months, Israel stepped up a campaign of repression, detentions, and settlement building across the West Bank, the Palestine Liberation Organization said in a report released on Thursday.

      Thirty-two Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces in a two month period beginning on June 13, the report said, and 1,397 Palestinians were injured by Israeli fire.

      During the same period, 1,753 Palestinians were detained — an equivalent of 24 a day — while Israeli forces conducted 1,573 military raids across the West Bank, or an average of 21 a day.

      The PLO report — which was entitled “Business as Usual” — also highlighted that the construction of Jewish-only settlements built on lands confiscated from Palestinian locals in the occupied West Bank had surged during the same period, with three different projects having been announced on Aug. 25-26 just as the Gaza ceasefire was declared.

      The report said that over the summer so far, more than 1,472 settlement homes had been approved, slated to house around 6,000 Jewish settlers.

  • How Egypt Prolonged the Gaza War
    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/08/18/how_egypt_prolonged_the_gaza_war_israel_ceasefire

    This process has also shattered another myth — that the primary game in town is about how to achieve a two-state solution between Israel and the PLO. Today, two-state diplomacy seems to be at best in hibernation. The talks in Cairo, on the other hand, are substantial. They cover violence, security, reconstruction, living conditions in Gaza, movement and access to the territory, Hamas-Fatah reconciliation, and internal Palestinian governance.

    (...)

    There is one more troubling aspect of Cairo’s diplomacy that has largely escaped notice. While Egyptian mediators were forced in the end to deal directly with Hamas’s leadership in order to reach a cease-fire, they have tried to mitigate this unpleasant reality in two ways. They have not only been seeking to enhance the role of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas — something Mubarak always did in his day — but may also be flirting with Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), a group far more committed to violence against Israel than Hamas. PIJ leaders such as Khaled al-Batsh have been quoted in the Egyptian government-owned media recently insisting that no other state can take Egypt’s place as mediator.

    Egypt’s military-dominated regime, then, has proved that it is not against forging alliances with violent Islamists; its only feud is with those allied with the Muslim Brotherhood. The apparent Egypt-PIJ flirtation highlights how the country’s highly polarized politics might cause Cairo’s military-dominated leadership to cultivate clients that are hardly in the interests of the United States or Israel. An Egypt that looks and acts more and more like Pakistan is not something to celebrate.

  • Hamas pushes Abbas to join ICC
    http://middleeasteye.net/news/exclusive-hamas-pushes-abbas-join-icc-316559675

    The document already contains the signatures of the PLO executive committee, Fatah Central Committee and other PLO organisations such as the Popular Front and the Democratic Front. But Abbas himself is resisting, as a result of the forceful opposition of the United States and the European Union.

    A tape in which Erekat criticised Abbas’s refusal to join the ICC was leaked recently. In it, Erekat is alleged to have criticised Abbas for stalling on the question of the ICC. Since then, Erekat has been at the forefront of a campaign to force Abbas’ hand. The PLO held a meeting recently in which all Palestinian factions put their name to joining the ICC.

    Until now, Abbas has resisted pressure to sign the Rome Statute of 2002, the treaty that established the ICC, arguing that to do so would be to expose Palestinian militant groups to prosecution in the international court.

    The Hamas decision has obliterated this line of defence, informed sources told the MEE. A source said the movement decided it would not allow itself to be used as an obstacle to a prosecution against Israel for war crimes. Secondly, the source said, Hamas is confident it would be able to rebut a prosecution of war crimes in the ICC.

    ‘Netanyahu won’t act without a cane to his ass’ — Erekat says, urging ICC on Abbas
    http://mondoweiss.net/2014/06/netanyahu-without-urging.html

  • Erekat urges Palestinian factions to sign request for ICC membership -
    Palestinian Islamist groups might sign on too, even if this means cases at the ICC against them, not just against Israel.
    By Amira Hass | Aug. 5, 2014
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.608878

    Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat is urging the PLO and the various Palestinian factions to sign a document supporting a State of Palestine as a member of the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

    The signatories are members of the PLO Executive Committee, the Fatah Central Committee — including former Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia — and other heads of PLO organizations such as the Popular Front and the Democratic Front. Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki has also signed, sources in Ramallah say. Malki will visit the International Criminal Court in the Netherlands on Tuesday.

    According to the source, Erekat said that if Hamas and Islamic Jihad did not sign, he would demand that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas order the signing of the Rome Statute of 2002, the treaty that established the International Criminal Court.

    Abbas is known to staunchly oppose joining the ICC, both out of concern that steps would be taken against Palestinians and because of the strong opposition of the United States and European countries.

    Since the United Nations accepted Palestine as a nonmember state in 2012, Palestinian human rights organizations and political groups such as Mustafa Barghouti’s Palestinian National Initiative have urged membership in the ICC. They say this will help end what they consider Israel’s impunity.

    The many civilian deaths and destruction in Gaza have bolstered the Fatah grouping that has long supported joining the criminal court. But representatives of a number of European countries have expressed concerns about the latest move, a Palestinian diplomatic source said.

    According to that person, the effort clashes with a conference of donor nations to rebuild Gaza due on September 1. The source said the signers of the document saw no contradiction between the two efforts.

  • West Bank protests show that Abbas’ diplomacy has collapsed -

    By Amira Hass | Jul. 26, 2014 | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.607327

    Since Thursday evening, tens of thousands of West Bank Palestinians have taken part in demonstrations aimed at expressing rage, mourning and muqawama (resistance) — also the word used for the armed resistance to Israel in the Gaza Strip. Nine protesters have been killed and hundreds more wounded, hit by plastic-tipped or live bullets fired by Israeli troops.

    In the hospitals where casualties from the demonstrations have been treated, people say the scenes remind them of the first intifada. The mood is similar, too: grief and shock over the images from Gaza, next to a spiritual uplift and a sense that the barrier of indifference has been broken.

    Notably missing have been the field activists who could unite the Palestinian factions and direct the protests toward an action plan, the way activists from the PLO’s member groups did in the first intifada, leveraging demonstrations into a popular uprising. At a time when everyone is marveling about Hamas’ military planning in Gaza, the lack of political-civil planning among the various leadership groups is striking.

    Demonstrations and clashes with the Israel Defense Forces have taken place simultaneously over the past three days in Hebron, Beit Omar, the Aruv refugee camp, Beit Fajr, Al Walaja, Bethlehem, Jerusalem, Ramallah, Bil’in, Nebi Salah, Salfit, Qalqilyah, Tul Karm, Beit Furiq, Hawara, Nablus and Jenin. Only last week the Palestinian police used force in an attempt to keep protesters in a few cities from reaching army roadblocks in order to confront the soldiers.

    The anger with the police and the worry that protesters would demonstrate near the home of Mahmoud Abbas or other symbols of the Palestinian Authority made it clear to the president’s advisers that the balance of forces had shifted against him. Now it’s the PLO leaders who are calling for demonstrations against “the terror of the occupation.” The leaders did not take the lead, they were led.

    The West Bank protests say clearly that Abbas’ diplomatic concept has collapsed. His Fatah movement is headed for bankruptcy if it continues to be associated with the Palestinian security forces, which are seen as agents of Israel.

    The PLO and Fatah leaders are often big on making declarations about the need for national unity; that is, for determining strategy with the Islamic organizations not in the PLO. They do this to avoid a situation in which an armed group could impose its will on the entire Palestinian people without a mandate to do so, to allow for real debate on the failures of the diplomatic route over the past 20 years, and to officially end Abbas’ one-man rule.

    But this sort of unity now seems distant and all but unattainable. Hamas’ political voice is being silenced by its military voice, and the organization’s political goals and demands are unclear.

    Given this vacuum, the West Bank protests could go in either of two directions: a return to futility due to a lack of trust in the results and confusion about the aims, or the co-opting of the demonstrations by armed groups in an effort to “imitate” Gaza.

    In firing live bullets at the protesters immediately, and in the absence of a danger to soldiers’ lives, the IDF seems to be counting on suppressing the protests by force, until the next round.

  • #Fatah’s sudden volte-face
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/fatah%E2%80%99s-sudden-volte-face

    Palestinian Authority President #Mahmoud_Abbas adresses journalists as he meets with members of the #Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) on July 22, 2014 in the #west_bank city of Ramallah, after he prayed for the Palestinians who were killed during the Israeli military offensive in the #Gaza Strip. (Photo: AFP-Abbas Momani) #Palestinian_Authority President Mahmoud Abbas adresses journalists as he meets with members of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) on July 22, 2014 in the West Bank city of Ramallah, after he prayed for the Palestinians who were killed during the Israeli military offensive in the Gaza Strip. (Photo: AFP-Abbas Momani)

    The Resistance factions have pulled the rug from under the feet of the (...)

    #Articles #Hamas #Mahmoud_Habash #Muslim_Brotherhood #Riad_Malki #Yasser_Abed_Rabbo

  • Creating distraction-free reading experiences — azumbrunnen
    http://azumbrunnen.me/blog/creating-distraction-free-reading-experiences

    n the web, we are confronted with an unprecedented amount of #distractions that gave birth to various tools like #Readability, Instapaper, Adblocker, etc. Attention span shortens while the quality of reading experiences declines; ultimately leaving a lot of great content out there undiscovered, unloved, unshared and unread by most.

    This is not how we imagined the web to be.

    It’s our job as designers to bring clarity back to the digital canvas by crafting reading experiences that put readers first.

    #web_design #plo

  • PLO’s Hanan Ashrawi: ‘Deliberate Massacre’ in Gaza - ABC News
    http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2014/07/plos-hanan-ashrawi-deliberate-massacre-in-gaza

    When Macdonald asked Ashrawi if Palestinians plan to apply to join the International Criminal Court to bring war crime charges against Israel, she said they plan to take that step, but she’d like to see the situation addressed by the international community before a legal case is prepared.

    #Coincée

  • A return to “The Good Spy”: Mustafa Zein responds
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/return-good-spy%E2%80%9D-mustafa-zein-responds

    I was able to track down Mustafa Zein, who is a major character in Kai Bird’s “The Good Spy” and was a major source on the relationship between CIA’s Bob Ames and PLO’s Ali - Abu Hassan - Salameh (he was close to both and introduced them to one another). I introduced myself to Zein in the email two weeks ago as someone from the Lebanese city of Tyre (he also is from Tyre) and assumed that he must have known my father as he grew up in the city (it turned out that he knew of my father although Zein left Tyre to study in Saida at age 10). I asked him if I can interview him by phone but he declined on security grounds, but said that he would be willing to answer my written questions. I sent him a dozen questions but he answered only some of them. We went back and forth until he said politely (...)

  • #Abbas backs #Assad's « war against terrorism »
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/abbas-backs-assads-war-against-terrorism

    Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas said in a letter to Bashar al-Assad that his election as Syrian president will help to end the country’s three-year war, Damascus said on Wednesday. “Your election to the presidency of the Syrian Arab Republic guarantees #syria's unity and sovereignty, and starts of a countdown to the end of Syria’s crisis and its war against terrorism,” Abbas wrote, according to the Syrian presidency’s Facebook page. read more

    #PA #Palestine #PLO

  • Hamas seeks to reclaim political influence via PLO - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/06/hamas-gaza-political-influence-join-plo.html

    The PFLP’s leading official in Gaza, Jamil Mezher, welcomed the inclusion of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, boosting the “resistance’s ranks.”

    “Hamas and Islamic Jihad’s entry into the PLO will significantly boost the national resistance’s ranks in the PLO; for they form an integral and important part of the people, and of the Palestinian resistance movement. Their presence in the PLO will therefore be important, necessary, and will give the PLO strength to overcome challenges and face the occupation, as well as contribute to giving support to the resistance movement against the occupation,” he told Al-Monitor.

    Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/06/hamas-gaza-political-influence-join-plo.html#ixzz342N1Mkev

  • The fight against fundamentalist recruitment of Palestinian youth in Ain al-Hilweh | Al Akhbar English
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/20055

    n an attempt to stop the new generation from drifting away from moderate Palestinian movements, Munir el-Maqdah, senior commander of the Fatah movement in Ain al-Hilweh and the representative of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in South Lebanon, decided three months ago to revive the ancient Fatah youth movement known as the fighting Lion Cubs, or al-Ashbal.

    Maqdah sees little hope when it comes to enhancing the discriminatory laws and abolishing the bureaucratic hurdles in Palestinian employment and hence chooses to focus more on immediately “getting the children out of the streets.”

  • The Palestinian Dilemma: PLO Policy after Lebanon Author(s): Rashid Khalidi
    Reviewed work(s):
    Source: Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 15, No. 1 (Autumn, 1985), pp. 88-103 Published by: University of California Press on behalf of the Institute for Palestine Studies Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2536578 .
    http://www.palestine-studies.org/files/pdf/jq/11405.pdf

  • PFLP loses funding after lambasting Abbas | Al Akhbar English
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/pflp-loses-funding-after-lambasting-abbas

    The sources said the PFLP informed Abbas, Zaanoun and other Palestinian leaders of its categorical rejection of Abbas’ decisions describing them as a “cheap attempt to blackmail the organization in order to provide support for the futile negotiations with Israel and to carry on with this unilateral approach in dealing with the PLO’s institutions.” It also affirmed that the front’s positions are steadfast in this context and will not change.

  • Rai to meet South Lebanon Army collaborators while on pastoral trip to occupied Palestine
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/rai-meet-south-lebanon-army-collaborators-while-pastoral-trip-occ

    In Lebanon, both Lebanese and Palestinians are divided about Rai’s visit. PLO officials have welcomed the visit by the patriarch, while officials in other Palestinian factions have deemed the visit an act of normalization with the enemy. One Hamas official criticized Rai’s visit, saying that those who enter the West Bank are bound to visit the territory occupied in 1948 – i.e. Israel proper – and that there was a fatwa prohibiting visits to Jerusalem under occupation. A Fatah official rejected this view, however, saying that the visit helps Jerusalemites stay in their land, and confront the economic blockade they live under as a result of the efforts to Judaize East Jerusalem.

    Sources close to Hezbollah told Al-Akhbar that Patriarch Bechara al-Rai’s visit to occupied Palestine “will help legitimize the Zionist entity,” something that will be exploited by the Israelis to claim their state is religiously tolerant, and that the Lebanese Maronite cardinal visited Israel without harassment, as the sources said. The sources believe that emphasizing the pastoral character of the visit ultimately equates Israel with two Arab countries, Syria and Jordan, which have been included in visits Rai said were “pastoral” as well.

  • Where is it really better to be a Christian - #Israel or #Palestine?
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.590027

    Rarely has my email inbox come under great attack than in the run-up to Pope Francis’ visit. Israel’s multiple lobbyists have donned the mantle of Christian saviors. They highlight the safe haven Israel offers the Middle East’s – rather than “Arab”– Christians in contrast to their Muslim tormentors. Fleeing “persecution,” as one email put it, Palestine’s Christian population, they say, has fallen from 10 percent to 2 percent. Palestine’s Muslim masters pursue a program of Sharia-ization in the West Bank as well as Gaza, and the little Christian town of Bethlehem is now a Muslim morass.

    What they do not say is that Israel’s population of native Christians has fallen by roughly the same amount. From 8% in 1947 in all of mandatory Palestine, it numbered 4% in 1948, and is now less than two percent today. The reasons for the decline are largely the same. Jewish, as Muslim, birth-rates are much higher. More importantly, while many Palestinians long to escape the yoke of occupation, Christian-led administrations from Beirut to Bueno Aires, prioritize Christian applicants over Muslim ones.

    “Very few Christians are appointed to senior positions by the PA”, says one “briefing,”“in what is perceived as routine discrimination.” In fact, the PA’s record is far better than Israel’s. The president’s president’s spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, is a Christian. So are two cabinet members, for Finance and Tourism, and two members of the PLO’s executive committee. The deputy speaker of the Palestinian National Council, Qonstantin Qurmush, is a priest. Christians abound on boards of banks and chambers of commerce, and head its largest company, CCC. Despite their falling numbers, nine municipalities, including Ramallah and Bethlehem, stipulate their council should have a Christian majority and a Christian mayor. Christmas and Eastern are official Palestinian holidays. President Abbas attends three Christmases (the Greek Orthodox, Catholic and Armenian) in Bethlehem and would celebrate Easter in Jerusalem, if Israel let him in. On St. George’s Day, Muslims join Christians to commemorate his martyrdom at his shrine in al-Khadr, near Bethlehem.

    By contrast, in its 66 years, Israel has had no Christian presidential spokesman, government minister, or bank chairman. Where the Palestine has eight Christians in its parliament, Israel has two. Where Palestine has at least five ambassadors, including to London and Berlin, Israel has none (although its deputy ambassador to Norway is Christian). The Knesset bans Christmas trees which sprout all over Palestine from public display on its premises. Israel’s prime minister does not go to Church for Christmas, and in his first term in the late 1990s aroused Christian ire by backing construction of a mosque next to Nazareth’s Basilica of Annunciation, while his Palestinian counterpart, Yasser Arafat opposed it.

    For sure, some Palestinian movements claiming to represent the downtrodden deride the outsized role that Christians and Western powers wield over their economy and politics. In the early days of Hamas rule in Gaza, some militants firebombed a church and attacked its worshipers uncannily close to a police station. But the Islamists have since clamped down on their own; their prime minister, Ismail Haniya, pointedly attended church to honor a local Christian politician.

    Israel does give its Christian native citizenship, but when its leaders endlessly trumpet their status as a Jewish state, many feel it feel they have second class status. They are not spared strip-searches at Israel’s airports. Exacerbating Christian anxieties, hate-graffiti – such as “Mary is a prostitute” - is daubed on church doors, and increasingly rife. Priests in Jerusalem say spitting on their habits has become commonplace. The country’s most prominent Christian politician, Azmi Bishara, was hounded out of Israel amid cries of treachery after he dared to suggest that Israel should be a state for all its citizens. Ameer Makhul, founder of the Haifa-based umbrella group of NGOs, Ittijah, is in jail for spying for Lebanon’s Shia group, Hezbollah. Nervously, Christians in Israel as elsewhere in a region sunk in rampant religious nationalism look for surer climes.

    As they finalize plans for Pope Francis’ visit, there’s something slightly comical about both sides claiming Jesus as their own. Israel hails him as a Jew, the PLO proclaims him Palestinian, neither yet dare to muse that he might have been both. Palestine is preparing to greet him with hordes of well-wishers, Muslims and Christian alike, while Israel - less sure that Jews might not price-tag his convoy - is preparing to close the streets.

    So before those Israel lobbies send me another email celebrating Israel’s integration of Christians and Palestinian persecution of them, perhaps they might take a leaf out of the Gospels. “First cast the log out of your own eye, that you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s.” Or for those who find it hard to take non-Jewish scriptures seriously, try Proverbs – “Deceive not with thy lips.”

    Nicolas Pelham is a correspondent for The Economist based in Jerusalem. He has been based in Cairo, Rabat and Baghdad and is the author of A New Muslim Order (2008) and co-author of A History of the Middle East (2010).

    #propagande mensongère

  • Israeli forces attack #Gaza fishermen, raid #west_bank houses
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israeli-forces-attack-gaza-fishermen-raid-west-bank-houses

    Israeli forces on Thursday shot at fishermen and destroyed crops in the Gaza Strip, Ma’an news agency reported, one day after Hamas and the #Palestine Liberation Organization announced that they had signed a unity pact. Israeli troops also raided several homes in the West Bank overnight Wednesday and arrested four people. #Israel's navy opened fire at two fishermen off the coast of northern Gaza, locals said. read more

    #Top_News

  • Hamas, Fatah sign reconciliation agreement -
    By Jack Khoury and Barak Ravid | Apr. 23, 2014 |
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/1.586924

    Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah signed a historic reconciliation deal on Wednesday, nearly seven years after a schism between the rival Palestinian factions.

    The reconciliation deal is based primarily on the agreements signed by the factions in Cairo and in Doha.

    Addressing reporters in Gaza, Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh said he was “happy to declare the end of the period of inter-Palestinian division.”

    According to Haniyeh’s statement to reporters, under the deal the two sides must uphold past agreements, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will form an interim unity government within five weeks, followed by elections in six months.

    The vote for president, the legislative council and the Palestine Liberation Organization will take place at the same time, according to the deal. The final date of elections will be set by Abbas. A special PLO committee will meet within five weeks to discuss what is expected of the organization from the initiation of the agreement.

    The head of Fatah’s delegation for unity talks Azzam Al-Ahmad said, “We agreed to implement all the articles that were agreed in the past according to agreements in Doha and Cairo.”

    Earlier Wednesday, Mounib Al-Masri, a member of Abbas’ delegation in the Gaza Strip, said that the two sides had reached an agreement on all of the issues, including holding elections within six months.

    According to Palestinian sources, Abbas will publish two presidential decrees on Wednesday evening regarding the formation of the new government and the calling of elections. Sources in Ramallah say that Abbas will head the government and that his deputies will be Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah and Haniyeh. The possibility of an independent figure close to Hamas being tasked with forming the government has not been dismissed.

    The two sides have still not agreed on a few issues, including the future of Hamas’ security forces, which were created after the Islamist group seized power in a bloody 2007 coup in the Gaza Strip. It is not yet clear whether Hamas will agree to dismantle the forces or to allow them to be under the supervision and command of the Palestinian Authority’s security forces.