person:alaa

  • Pourquoi les Palestiniens doivent repenser leur gouvernance
    Alaa Tartir, Middle East Eye, le 19 mai 2019
    http://www.agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2019/05/22/pourquoi-les-palestiniens-doivent-repenser-leur-gouvernance

    le peuple palestinien a besoin d’un comité de dirigeants élus – un petit groupe (idéalement quatre, représentant les deux genres) qui puisse former un bureau politique, chacun portant des responsabilités différentes mais complémentaires et un poids politique similaire. L’un pourrait s’occuper des affaires intérieures et sociales, l’autre des affaires extérieures et étrangères, l’un des affaires économiques et de développement, et l’autre des affaires concernant l’éducation et la jeunesse.

    Mais, un peu plus loin :

    Il est pourtant évident que, ni les modèles de gouvernance de l’OLP et de l’AP, ni le cadre des Accords d’Oslo, n’ont amélioré le sort du peuple palestinien – alors pourquoi continuer à manoeuvrer dans ces cadres là, en essayant de réparer l’irréparable ?

    #Palestine #Autorité_Palestinienne #Gouvernance

  • ’Walls Often Fail; They Have Unintended Consequences’

    Along the Iraq-Syria border, Iraqi patrol forces have swapped their hard tactical helmets for the warmth of beanie caps. The soldiers look out from their observation towers, across a stretch of desert into Syria.

    From this concrete tower on the border, you can almost see the Syrian city of Deir ez-Zor, where the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria has made its final stand. Over there, Syrian Democratic Forces—a Kurdish-led alliance dedicated to rooting out ISIS and backed by the US—have nearly liberated the city and its suburbs, and American troops are beginning a long-awaited drawdown. A plume of gray-white smoke breaches skyward as an artillery strike reaches the villages and towns near Deir ez-Zor. The horizon is a diaphanous blur of dark smoke.

    Between us and Syria is a fence. It is about 43 miles long, and a guard tower is located every few hundred feet, manned by squadrons from the Iraqi border security forces. The roughly 10-foot-tall chain-link barrier bucks and rattles in the wind. Barbed wire unspools along the top, and about 20 feet beyond the fence, on the Syrian side, there’s a ditch to stop explosive-laden ISIS vehicles that might charge the border. Beyond the ditch is a desiccated stretch of desert now mostly cleared of booby traps.

    The fence divides two villages, both called #Baghouz. The residents of Syrian Baghouz and Iraqi Baghouz once traveled freely between the towns, visiting with family and friends in a place where international borders are as hazy as the smoke between them. “It was normal for us to go to Syrian Baghouz,” says Alaa Husain, an Iraqi shepherd who has lived in this hamlet for 28 years.


    https://www.wired.com/story/the-wall-journey-across-divide-iraq-syria
    #murs #barrières_frontalières #frontières #Irak #Syrie #ISIS #EI #Etat_islamique

  • Egyptian pro-democracy activist free after 5 years in prison
    https://www.citynews1130.com/2019/03/28/egyptian-pro-democracy-activist-free-after-5-years-in-prison

    The lawyer and family of one of Egypt’s most prominent pro-democracy activists, Alaa Abdel-Fattah, say he has been released from prison after serving a five-year sentence for taking part in protests.

    His sisters, Mona and Sanaa Seif, posted on Facebook on Friday that “Alaa is out,” along with a video of him at home, playing with a dog.

    His lawyer, Khaled Ali, confirmed the release by posting: “Thanks God, Alaa Abdel-Fattah at home.”

    Abdel-Fattah was sentenced to five years for taking part in a peaceful demonstration in 2013 after the military’s ouster of Egypt’s freely elected but controversial Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

    His imprisonment was part of a wider crackdown on the pro-democracy movement that began with the 2011 uprising that toppled long-time President Hosni Mubarak.

    #égypte #alaa_abdel-fattah

    • Égypte : libération d’Alaa Abdel Fattah, figure de la révolution de 2011
      Par RFI Publié le 29-03-2019 - Avec notre correspondant au Caire,Alexandre Buccianti
      http://www.rfi.fr/moyen-orient/20190329-egypte-liberation-alaa-abdel-fattah-figure-revolution-2011

      Le militant de gauche et blogueur Alaa Abdel Fattah a été libéré dans la nuit de jeudi à vendredi, a annoncé sa famille. Il avait été arrêté en novembre 2013 lors d’une manifestation contre les militaires.

      « Alaa Abdel Fattah est sur l’asphalte. Mabrouk ! » C’est ainsi que des milliers d’internautes ont accueilli l’annonce de la libération du célèbre blogueur, toujours suivi par plus de sept cent mille personnes sur Twitter malgré des années de silence. Abdel Fattah avait été arrêté en novembre 2013 lors d’une manifestation pour abroger le jugement de civils par des tribunaux militaires dans le projet de Constitution. Libéré sous caution, celui qui avait remporté plusieurs prix internationaux, a été condamné à cinq années de prison en 2014.

  • عائلة علاء عبد الفتاح تستغيث بالنجدة بعد منعها من زيارته في « طرة » - رأي اليوم
    https://www.raialyoum.com/index.php/%d8%b9%d8%a7%d8%a6%d9%84%d8%a9-%d8%b9%d9%84%d8%a7%d8%a1-%d8%b9%d8%a8%d8%a

    Une des grandes figures de la révolution égyptienne, Alaa Abdel-Fattah, emprisonné quasi sans interruption depuis 2013 et condamné à 5 ans fermes en février 2015 est privé du droit à recevoir des visites de sa famille.

    #égypte

  • Jamal Khashoggi’s private WhatsApp messages may offer new clues to killing - CNN
    https://www.cnn.com/2018/12/02/middleeast/jamal-khashoggi-whatsapp-messages-intl/index.html

    Le téléphone de #khashoggi espionné grâce à un logiciel israélien.

    Abdulaziz first spoke publicly about his contact with Khashoggi last month after researchers at the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab reported his phone had been hacked by military-grade spyware.

    According to Bill Marczak, a research fellow at the Citizen Lab, the software was the invention of an Israeli firm named NSO Group, and deployed at the behest of the Saudi Arabian government.
    Marczak said at least two other Saudi dissidents have been targeted with NSO tools: an activist named Yahya Assiri and a staff member who had been involved in Amnesty International’s work on Saudi Arabia.
    Danna Ingleton, an Amnesty deputy program director, said its technology experts studied the staff member’s phone and confirmed it was targeted with the spyware. Amnesty is currently exploring potential recourse against NSO Group and last week wrote a letter to the Israeli Ministry of Defense requesting it revoke NSO’s export license, Ingleton said.
    On Sunday, Abdulaziz’s lawyers filed a lawsuit in Tel Aviv, alleging NSO broke international laws by selling its software to oppressive regimes, knowing it could be used to infringe human rights. “NSO should be held accountable in order to protect the lives of political dissidents, journalists and human rights activists,” said the Jerusalem-based lawyer Alaa Mahajna, who is acting for Abdulaziz.
    The lawsuit follows another filed in Israel and Cyprus by citizens in Mexico and Qatar.

    *#mbs #israël

  • Can Islamist moderates remake the politics of the Muslim world? - CSMonitor.com

    https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2018/0919/Can-Islamist-moderates-remake-the-politics-of-the-Muslim-world

    By Taylor Luck Correspondent

    AMMAN, JORDAN; TUNIS, TUNISIA; KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA
    Alaa Faroukh insists he is the future. After nearly a decade in the Muslim Brotherhood, he says that he has finally found harmony between his faith and politics, not as a hardcore Islamist, but as a “Muslim democrat.”

    “We respect and include minorities, we fight for women’s rights, we respect different points of view, we are democratic both in our homes and in our politics – that is how we honor our faith,” Mr. Faroukh says.

    The jovial psychologist with a toothy smile, who can quote Freud as easily as he can recite the Quran, is speaking from his airy Amman clinic, located one floor below the headquarters of the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood, the very movement he left.

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    “The time of divisive politics of older Islamists is over, and everyone in my generation agrees,” says the 30-something Faroukh. “The era of political Islam is dead.”

    Faroukh is symbolic of a shift sweeping through parts of the Arab world. From Tunisia to Egypt to Jordan, many Islamist activists and some established Islamic organizations are adopting a more progressive and moderate tone in their approach to politics and governing. They are reaching out to minorities and secular Muslims while doing away with decades-old political goals to impose their interpretation of Islam on society.

    Taylor Luck
    “The time of divisive politics of older Islamists is over, and everyone in my generation agrees. The era of political Islam is dead,” says Alaa Faroukh, a young Jordanian who left the Muslim Brotherhood for a moderate political party.
    Part of the move is simple pragmatism. After watching the Muslim Brotherhood – with its call for sharia (Islamic law) and failure to reach out to minorities and secular Muslims – get routed in Egypt, and the defeat of other political Islamic groups across the Arab world, many Islamic activists believe taking a more moderate stance is the only way to gain and hold power. Yet others, including many young Muslims, believe a deeper ideological shift is under way in which Islamist organizations are increasingly recognizing the importance of religious tolerance and political pluralism in modern societies. 

    Think you know the Greater Middle East? Take our geography quiz.
    While Islamist movements remain the largest and most potent political movement in the region, a widespread adoption of democratic principles by their followers could transform the discourse in a region where politics are often bound to identity and are bitterly polarized.

    “We believe that young Jordanians and young Arabs in general see that the future is not in partisan politics, but in cooperation, understanding, and putting the country above petty party politics,” says Rheil Gharaibeh, the moderate former head of the Jordanian Brotherhood’s politburo who has formed his own political party.

    Is this the beginning of a fundamental shift in the politics of the Middle East or just an expedient move by a few activists?

    *

    Many Islamist groups say their move to the center is a natural step in multiparty politics, but this obscures how far their positions have truly shifted in a short time.

    Some 20 years ago, the manifesto of the Muslim Brotherhood – the Sunni Islamic political group with affiliates across the Arab world – called for the implementation of sharia and gender segregation at universities, and commonly employed slogans such as “Islam is the solution.”

    In 2011, the Arab Spring uprisings swept these Islamist movements into power or installed them as the leading political force from the Arab Gulf to Morocco, sparking fears of an Islamization of Arab societies.

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    But instead of rolling back women’s rights, the Tunisian Islamist party Ennahda pushed through gender equality laws and helped write the most progressive, gender-equal constitution in the Arab world. The Moroccan Justice and Development Party (PJD) has played down its Islamic rhetoric, abandoning talk of Islamic identity and sharia and instead speaking about democratic reform and human rights. And the Brotherhood in Jordan traded in its slogan “Islam is the solution” for “the people demand reform” and “popular sovereignty for all.”

    The past few years have seen an even more dramatic shift to the center. Not only have Islamist movements dropped calls for using sharia as a main source of law, but they nearly all now advocate for a “civil state”­ – a secular nation where the law, rather than holy scriptures or the word of God, is sovereign.

    Muhammad Hamed/Reuters
    Supporters of the National Alliance for Reform rally in Amman, Jordan, in 2016. They have rebranded themselves as a national rather than an Islamic movement.
    In Morocco and Jordan, Islamist groups separated their religious activities – preaching, charitable activities, and dawa (spreading the good word of God) – from their political branches. In 2016, Ennahda members in Tunisia went one step further and essentially eliminated their religious activities altogether, rebranding themselves as “Muslim democrats.”

    Islamist moderates say this shift away from religious activities to a greater focus on party politics is a natural step in line with what President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has done with his Justice and Development Party in Turkey, or even, they hope, with the Christian democrats in Europe: to become movements inspired by faith, not governing through faith.

    “While we are a Muslim country, we are aware that we do not have one interpretation of religion and we will not impose one interpretation of faith over others,” says Mehrezia Labidi, a member of the Tunisian Parliament and Ennahda party leader. “As Muslim democrats we are guided by Islamic values, but we are bound by the Constitution, the will of the people, and the rule of law for all.”

    Experts say this shift is a natural evolution for movements that are taking part in the decisionmaking process for the first time after decades in the opposition.

    “As the opposition, you can refuse, you can criticize, you can obstruct,” says Rachid Mouqtadir, professor of political science at Hassan II University in Casablanca, Morocco, and an expert in Islamist movements. “But when you are in a coalition with other parties and trying to govern, the parameters change, your approach changes, and as a result your ideology changes.”

    The trend has even gone beyond the borders of the Arab world. The Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement (ABIM), founded in 1971 by Malaysian university students inspired by the Brotherhood and now one of the strongest civil society groups in the country, is also shedding the “Islamist” label.

    In addition to running schools and hospitals, ABIM now hosts interfaith concerts, partners on projects with Christians and Buddhists, and even reaches out to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender activists in its campaign for social justice.

    “We are in the age of post-political Islam,” says Ahmad Fahmi Mohd Samsudin, ABIM vice president, from the movement’s headquarters in a leafy Kuala Lumpur suburb. “That means when we say we stand for Islam, we stand for social justice and equality for all – no matter their faith or background.”

    *

  • Names and ages of Palestinians killed by Israeli troops in Gaza

    These are the names of the unarmed Palestinians shot dead by Israeli troops since Friday 30 March, 2018. They were protesting at the Gaza border for the right of return to their ancestral lands and homes, from which they were driven out in 1948. The list does not include the many thousands wounded by live fire.

    Name and age of victims :
    01. Omar Wahid Samour, 31 years old
    02. Mohammed Kamal al-Najjar, 25 years old
    03. Jihad Zuhair Abu Jamous, 30 years old
    04. Amin Mansour Abu Muammar, 22 years old
    05. Ibrahim Salah Abu Sha’er, 17 years old
    06. Nagy Abdullah Abu Hjeir, 25 years old
    07. Musab Zuhair Al-Soloul, 23 years old
    08. Abd al-Qader Mardi al-Hawajri, 42 years old
    09. Mahmoud Saadi Rahmi, 23 years old
    10. Mohammed Naeem Abu Amro, 26.
    11. Ahmed Ibrahim Ashour Odeh, 19.
    12. Jihad Ahmed Farina, 34 years old
    13. Abdel-Fattah Abdel-Nabi, 18 years old
    14. Bader Fayiq al-Sabbagh, 22 years old
    15. Sari Walid Abu Odeh, 27 years old
    16. Hamdan Isma’il Abu Amsha, 23 years old
    17. Fares Al-Ruqab, 29 years old
    18. Ahmad Omar Arafah, 25 years old
    19. Osama Khamis Qdeih, 38 years old
    20. Majdi Ramadan Shabat, 38 years old
    21. Hussein Muhammad Adnan Madi, 13 years old
    22. Subhi Abu Atawi, 20 years old
    23. Mohammad Said al-Haj-Saleh, 33 years old
    24. Sedqi Faraj Abu Atawi, 45 years old
    25. Alaa al-Din Yahya Ismail al-Zamli, 15 years old
    26. Hamza Abd al-Al, 20 years old
    27. Yaser Murtaja, 30 years old
    28. Ibrahim Al-‘ur, 19 years old
    29. Mujahed Nabil Al-Khudari, 25 years old
    30. Marwan Odeh Qdeih, 45 years old
    31. Mohammed Hjeila, 30 years old
    32. Abdallah Al-Shahri, 28 years old
    33. Tahrir Wahba, 17 years old
    34. Saad Abu Taha, 29 years old
    35. Mohammed Ayoub, 15 years old
    36. Ahmed Abu Hussein, 25 years old
    37. Abdullah Shamali, 20 years old
    38. Ahmad Rashad Al Athamna, 23 years old
    39. Ahmed Nabil Aqel, 25 years old
    40. Mahmoud Wahba, 18 years old
    41. Ahmed Dabour, 23 years old
    42. Ayed Hamaydeh, 23 years old
    43, Amjad Qartous, 18 years old
    44. Hesham Abdul-Al, 22 years old
    45. Abd al-Salam Bakr, 29 years old
    46. Mohammed Amin al-Maqeer, 21 years old
    47. Khalil Na’im Mustafa Atallah, 22 years old
    48. Azzam Oweida, 15 years old
    49. Anas Shawqi, 19 years old
    50. Jaber Salem Abu Mustafa, 40 years old
    51. Amin Mahmoud Muammar, 26 years old
    52. Hani Fayez al-Ardarba, 23 years old
    53. Mohammed Khaled Abu Reida, 20 years old
    54. Jamal Abu Arahman Afaneh, 15 years old
    55. Laila Anwar Al-Ghandoor, 8 months old
    56. Ezz el-din Musa Mohamed Alsamaak, 14 years old
    57. Wisaal Fadl Ezzat Alsheikh Khalil, 15 years old
    58. Ahmed Adel Musa Alshaer, 16 years old
    59. Saeed Mohamed Abu Alkheir, 16 years old
    60. Ibrahim Ahmed Alzarqa, 18 years old
    61. Eman Ali Sadiq Alsheikh, 19 years old
    62. Zayid Mohamed Hasan Omar, 19 years old
    63. Motassem Fawzy Abu Louley, 20 years old
    64. Anas Hamdan Salim Qadeeh, 21 years old
    65. Mohamed Abd Alsalam Harz, 21 years old
    66. Yehia Ismail Rajab Aldaqoor, 22 years old
    67. Mustafa Mohamed Samir Mahmoud Almasry, 22 years old
    68. Ezz Eldeen Nahid Aloyutey, 23 years old
    69. Mahmoud Mustafa Ahmed Assaf, 23 years old
    70. Ahmed Fayez Harb Shahadah, 23 years old
    71. Ahmed Awad Allah, 24 years old
    72. Khalil Ismail Khalil Mansor, 25 years old
    73. Mohamed Ashraf Abu Sitta, 26 years old
    74. Bilal Ahmed Abu Diqah, 26 years old
    75. Ahmed Majed Qaasim Ata Allah, 27 years old
    76. Mahmoud Rabah Abu Maamar, 28 years old
    77. Musab Yousef Abu Leilah, 28 years old
    78. Ahmed Fawzy Altetr, 28 years old
    79. Mohamed Abdelrahman Meqdad, 28 years old
    80. Obaidah Salim Farhan, 30 years old
    81. Jihad Mufid Al-Farra, 30 years old
    82. Fadi Hassan Abu Salah, 30 years old
    83. Motaz Bassam Kamil Al-Nunu, 31 years old
    84. Mohammed Riyad Abdulrahman Alamudi, 31 years old
    85. Jihad Mohammed Othman Mousa, 31 years old
    86. Shahir Mahmoud Mohammed Almadhoon, 32 years old
    87. Mousa Jabr Abdulsalam Abu Hasnayn, 35 years old
    88. Mohammed Mahmoud Abdulmoti Abdal’al, 39 years old
    89. Ahmed Mohammed Ibrahim Hamdan, 27 years old
    90. Ismail Khalil Ramadhan Aldaahuk, 30 years old
    91. Ahmed Mahmoud Mohammed Alrantisi, 27 years old
    92. Alaa Alnoor Ahmed Alkhatib, 28 years old
    93. Mahmoud Yahya Abdawahab Hussain, 24 years old
    94. Ahmed Abdullah Aladini, 30 years old
    95. Saadi Said Fahmi Abu Salah, 16 years old
    96. Ahmed Zahir Hamid Alshawa, 24 years old
    97. Mohammed Hani Hosni Alnajjar, 33 years old
    98. Fadl Mohamed Ata Habshy, 34 years old
    99. Mokhtar Kaamil Salim Abu Khamash, 23 years old
    100. Mahmoud Wael Mahmoud Jundeyah, 21 years old
    101. Abdulrahman Sami Abu Mattar, 18 years old
    102. Ahmed Salim Alyaan Aljarf, 26 years old
    103. Mahmoud Sulayman Ibrahim Aql, 32 years old
    104. Mohamed Hasan Mustafa Alabadilah, 25 years old
    105. Kamil Jihad Kamil Mihna, 19 years old
    106. Mahmoud Saber Hamad Abu Taeemah, 23 years old
    107. Ali Mohamed Ahmed Khafajah, 21 years old
    108. Abdelsalam Yousef Abdelwahab, 39 years old
    109. Mohamed Samir Duwedar, 27 years old
    110. Talal Adel Ibrahim Mattar, 16 years old
    111. Omar Jomaa Abu Ful, 30 years old
    112. Nasser Ahmed Mahmoud Ghrab, 51 years old
    113. Bilal Badeer Hussein Al-Ashram, 18 years old
    114. Unidentified
    115. Unidentified
    116. Unidentified

    –-> https://medium.com/@thepalestineproject/names-and-ages-of-palestinians-killed-by-israeli-troops-in-gaza-29bad3a12db6

  • Egypt Companions to the Israeli gas deal: Noble and Delek in talks to acquire East Mediterranean Gas pipeline | MadaMasr
    https://www.madamasr.com/en/2018/02/28/feature/politics/companions-to-the-israeli-gas-deal-noble-and-delek-in-talks-to-acquire-eas

    Sources close to the gas deal signed between Dolphinus Holdings, which is partly owned by Egyptian businessman Alaa Arafa, and Delek and Noble Energy, the lead partners managing Israel’s largest gas fields, say the latter companies are in talks with East Mediterranean Gas company (EMG) shareholders over acquisition of the company.

    The deal would give Delek and Noble a controlling share of EMG, the company that owns the natural gas pipeline running from Egypt to Israel, and would facilitate the use of the pipeline to transport the gas allocated for export in the deal signed last week.

    The source, who spoke to Mada Masr on condition of anonymity, says that a decision has been made to begin technical alterations to the pipeline to reverse its flow and allow operators to import gas into Egypt instead of having the country export gas to Israel, which was the previous arrangement according to a deal signed in 2008. 

    The pipeline was the target of successive militant attacks after 2011. In 2012, the Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company (EGAS) terminated its contract with Israel. The state-owned company attributed the decision to a breach of contract by EMG for delayed gas payments.

  • Qu’y a-t-il de si drôle avec l’occupation israélienne ? Demandez à ces humoristes
    Middle East | Eye Joe Gill | 15 février 2018
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/fr/reportages/qu-y-t-il-de-si-dr-le-avec-l-occupation-isra-lienne-demandez-ces-humo

    LONDRES – L’occupation israélienne ne vous fait pas rire ? Eh bien, c’est que vous n’avez pas encore vu Showtime From the Frontline, la création d’un nouveau trio dirigé par son trublion en chef, l’humoriste politique britannique Mark Thomas, et ses deux compères palestiniens, les comédiens Alaa Shehada et Faisal Abualheja, en tournée à travers la Grande-Bretagne depuis fin janvier.

    Le fait même que cette tournée ait lieu est en quelque sorte un petit miracle, étant donné les énormes obstacles que Faisal Abualheja et Alaa Shehada ont dû affronter uniquement pour quitter la Cisjordanie occupée et rejoindre le Royaume-Uni.
    (...)
    À mi-chemin des répétitions, les comédiens ne savaient pas encore clairement ce qu’ils étaient en train de créer. « Nous ne connaissons toujours pas le résultat, affirme Shehada. Mais ce que j’espère, c’est que nous briserons les stéréotypes qui entourent ce que signifie “réfugié”, ce que signifie “Palestinien”, parce que chaque fois que l’on voyage, que l’on va en Amérique ou au Royaume-Uni en tant qu’artiste, il y a tout à coup un stéréotype qui touche notre identité : on est soit un terroriste, soit une victime. »

    « C’est l’image que l’on a, alors nous essayons à travers ce spectacle d’humaniser cette histoire, de rappeler aux gens que nous, Palestiniens, sommes humains », ajoute-t-il.

    Shehada et Abualheja, deux réfugiés de Cisjordanie qui ont été formés au Théâtre de la Liberté de Jénine, ont travaillé avec le groupe international de clowns Red Noses International en Palestine ; il se rendaient alors dans des hôpitaux pour divertir les enfants malades.

    L’année dernière, Alaa Shehada et des partenaires ont lancé leur propre troupe appelée « Palestinian Laughter Liberation » (Libération du rire palestinien »), qui fait entrer l’humour dans le contexte politique des territoires occupés, explique-t-il.

    Faisal Abualheja voit le spectacle présenté au Royaume-Uni comme un moyen de créer un nouveau langage du rire pour surmonter les barrières entre les gens et la culture.

    « Dans ce spectacle, il y a différentes cultures, différentes histoires, différentes langues – cette rencontre, en tant qu’artistes, s’effectue peut-être comme si le rire était notre langue, comme si le théâtre était notre langue, soutient-il. Je pense que c’est cela qui est extraordinaire. »

    Le spectacle est joué en anglais et en arabe, avec surtitrage en anglais. (...)

  • $3.3 bn Disneyland-style theme park to open doors in Egypt - Egypt Independent
    http://www.egyptindependent.com/3-3-bn-disneyland-style-theme-park-to-open-doors-in-egypt

    Après trop de guerres et trop d’argent gaspillé en projets inutiles, on décide enfin de construire l’avenir du Moyen-Orient !

    Martouh Governor Alaa Abu Zeid signed on Thursday an investment contract with the Entertainment World Company, for a joint US-Saudi Arabian investment project to establish a Disneyland-style amusement park worth $3.3 billion.

    The park will be built on an area of 5,080 acres in the Sidi Henaish area, in the northwestern Egyptian governorate of Matrouh.

    Investment and International Cooperation Minister Sahar Nasr, Local Development Minister Abu Bakr al-Gendy, and Chairperson of the General Authority for Investment and Free Zones Mona Zobaa attended the signing ceremony between Abu Zeid and Lisa Marie Stephen, the managing director of Entertainment World in the Middle East and Africa.

    #égypte #disneyland

  • Bombardement israélien sur un tunnel près de Gaza : Le bilan s’alourdit à 7 morts
    AA/Al-Quds /Moamen Ghorab | 30.10.2017
    http://aa.com.tr/fr/titres-de-la-journ%C3%A9e/bombardement-isra%C3%A9lien-sur-un-tunnel-pr%C3%A8s-de-gaza-le-bilan-s-alourdit-%C3%A0-7-morts-/951927

    Le ministère de la Santé dans la Bande de Gaza a annoncé, lundi, que 7 palestiniens ont été tués et 11 autres blessés à la suite du bombardement israélien ayant ciblé un tunnel près de la frontière.

    Le porte-parole du ministère, Dr. Ashraf al-Qodra, a déclaré, brièvement à Anadolu, que « les équipes de secours ont récupéré les corps de six jeunes palestiniens du tunnel qui se trouve à l’est de contre l’est de (la ville) de Deir Balah ».

    Les Martyrs identifiés sont : Ahmed Khalil abu Ormana (25 ans) et Omar Nassar al-Falit (27 ans), Misbah Shobeir (30 ans), Mohamed Marwan al-Agha (22 ans), Arafat abu Morshid, Hasan abu Hassanin et Jihad Abdullah al-Samiri.

    Al-Qassam a annoncé que Misbah Fayeq Shobeir fait partie de ses membres.

    Il a indiqué dans un communiqué : « Le Chef Misbah Fayeq Shobeir de Khan Younès est tombé en Martyr à la suite de l’opération effectuée par les Moujahids d’al-Qassam au profit de leurs frères de brigades d’al-Quds (l’aile armée Jihad islamique palestinien (JIP), qui étaient détenus dans le tunnel ciblé à l’est de Khan Younes ».

    Malgré l’annonce antérieure des Brigades d’al-Qassam, les Brigades d’al-Quds n’ont rien annoncé concernant le tunnel détruit par l’armée israélienne, et par rapport au lien avec les morts et les blessés.

    Le porte-parole du JIP, Daoud Chihab, a déclaré à Anadolu « la vérification de l’appartenance des martyrs et des blessés au mouvement est en cours ».

    #Palestine_assassinée

    http://anadoluagency.com/fr/titres-de-la-journ%C3%A9e/bombardement-isra%C3%A9lien-sur-un-tunnel-pr%C3%A8s-de-gaza-8-morts-et-12-bless%C3%A9s/951976
    30 octobre 2017, 23h21

    • Publish Date: 2017/10/30
      At least seven Palestinians killed in Israeli strike at tunnel in Gaza
      http://english.wafa.ps/page.aspx?id=f1GPg4a92301005940af1GPg4

      GAZA, October 30, 2017 (WAFA) – Initial count of casualties from an Israeli strike at a tunnel in Khan Younis, south of the Gaza Strip, on Monday showed that at least seven Palestinians were killed and 14 injured, many in critical condition, according to the Ministry of Health.

      It said the number could rise significantly due to the large number of people still missing in the tunnel that was turned into rubble.

      Reports said Israel fired five missiles at the tunnel that was being dug east of Khan Younis and which Israel claims was leading to its territory,

      Medical reports in Gaza said most of those killed died after Israel fired missiles at the tunnel as rescuers were attempting to dig out those trapped inside. Some apparently died from inhaling poisonous gas reportedly fired by the Israeli air force at the tunnel.

      The attack came as Hamas, which controls Gaza since 2007, was getting ready to turn over power of the coastal enclave to the Palestinian government under Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah.

      M.K.

    • 7 Palestinians killed, 12 wounded in Israeli bombing of Gaza tunnel
      Oct. 31, 2017 7:34 A.M. (Updated : Oct. 31, 2017 7:34 A.M.)
      http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=779414

      GAZA (Ma’an) — At least seven Palestinians were killed, and 12 others were wounded after Israeli forces blew up an underground tunnel between the southern Gaza Strip and Israel on Monday, according to Palestinian and Israeli sources.

      The Palestinian Ministry of Health officially declared the death of seven Palestinians, all fighters in the armed wings of the Hamas and Islamic Jihad movements in Gaza.

      The killed fighters were identified as Hussam Abdullah al-Sumairi, 32, Muhammad Marwan Al-Agha, 22, Ahmad Khalil Abu Armaneh, 25, Omar Nassar al-Falit, 27, Hassan Aaba Hassanein, Mesbah Fayek Shbeir, and Arafat Abu Morshed.

      The Palestinian Civil Defense forces told Ma’an that rescue teams had saved a number of fighters who were trapped in the tunnel after the explosion, while the ministry of health said at the time that the number of wounded was around 12.

      Following the explosion, Israeli media reported that the Israeli army staged a “controlled detonation” in the area around the Gaza Strip, saying the activity was pre-planned.

      Despite killing seven and wounding more than a dozen others, the Israeli army spokesperson reportedly said that the army had “no intention of escalating matters," and that the tunnel had yet to become operational when forces blew it up, according to Ynet news.

      Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman stated that the tunnel “was a blatant violation of (Israeli) sovereignty and all acceptable rules between societies, countries and organizations that respect themselves.” He added that the recently built tunnel “proves that despite the Palestinian reconciliation, the Gaza Strip remains a kingdom of terrorism. As far as we’re concerned, the responsibility (for the tunnel) is without a doubt that of Hamas, which rules Gaza.”

      Meanwhile, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Hamas movement, released a statement following the attack, saying that “the blood of the martyrs would not be wasted, and that the Israeli occupation bears responsibility for the consequences of this aggressive escalation.”

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      traduction en français de l’article ci-dessus
      Gaza : Israël veut déclencher un nouveau massacre
      31 octobre 2017 – Ma’an News – Traduction : Chronique de Palestine
      http://chroniquepalestine.com/gaza-israel-veut-declencher-nouveau-massacre

    • Gaza : trois Palestiniens tués dans le bombardement israélien d’un tunnel
      Publié le : Lundi 30 Octobre 2017 - 16:44
      Mise à jour : Lundi 30 Octobre 2017 - 22:00
      [ une mise à jour dans l’article, mais pas pour le titre ]
      http://www.francesoir.fr/actualites-monde/gaza-trois-palestiniens-tues-dans-le-bombardement-israelien-dun-tunnel

      Sept Palestiniens ont été tués et 12 blessés lundi dans la destruction à l’explosif par Israël d’un tunnel reliant la bande de Gaza à son territoire, a indiqué un porte-parole du ministère de la Santé du Hamas, qui contrôle l’enclave.

    • Sept Palestiniens tués dans l’explosion d’un tunnel à la lisière de Gaza
      Par Cyrille Louis Publié le 30/10/2017 à 22:39
      http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2017/10/30/01003-20171030ARTFIG00336-sept-palestiniens-tues-dans-l-explosion-d-un-tunn
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      Au total, l’explosion provoquée par Israël a fait neuf morts. Trois Palestiniens restent portés disparus

      .
      06:50 - 31 oct. 2017
      https://twitter.com/cyrille_louis/status/925298984046006274

    • Gaza : des combattants de la résistance palestinienne tués dans la destruction d’un tunnel par Israël
      http://chroniquepalestine.com/gaza-combattants-resistance-palestinienne-tues-destruction-tunne
      Par Maureen Clare Murphy rédactrice à The Electronic Intifada | 30 octobre 2017 – The Electronic Intifada – Traduction : Chronique de Palestine

      (...) Martyrs de la résistance

      Arafat Abu Murshid , le commandant du Jihad islamique tué lors de la frappe de lundi, est le frère de Muhammad Abu Murshid, également commandant du groupe, qui a été assassiné par Israël en 2007.

      Une photo d’Abu Murshid a circulé sur les médias sociaux après sa mort lundi.

      Hasan Abu Hassanein , un commandant adjoint du Jihad islamique, avait survécu à plusieurs tentatives d’assassinat israéliennes avant sa mort lundi, et il aurait tiré la première roquette sur Tel Aviv durant les combats de l’été 2014.

      Une photo d’Abu Hassanein a circulé sur les médias sociaux après sa mort lundi.

      Le combattant du Jihad islamique, Ahmad Abu Aramana , âgé de 25 ans, aurait été tué deux heures avant que son épouse ne mette au monde son enfant dans le même hôpital où le corps d’Aramana a été déposé lundi. Le garçon nouveau-né a été nommé du même nom que son père.

      Misbah Shubeir, un commando naval dans la branche armée du Hamas, les Brigades al-Qassam, qui est décédé lundi, devait se marier le mois prochain.

      Un second commando naval des Brigades al-Qassam, Muhammad Marwan al-Agha , a également été tué.

      Ainsi que Omar Nassar al-Faleet , qui était un combattant dans la branche armée du Jihad islamique.

      Husam Jihad al-Samiri , un combattant du Jihad islamique, est également mort.

      Israël a-t-il gazé les combattants de la résistance ?

      Le ministère de la Santé à Gaza a déclaré que ceux qui avaient été tués et blessés dans l’explosion du tunnel avaient inhalé du gaz toxique et il appelé les autorités concernées à révéler les armes utilisées dans l’explosion.

      Benjamin Netanyahu, Premier ministre israélien, a déclaré qu’une « technologie révolutionnaire » avait contribué à la découverte du tunnel.

      Israël a construit un mur souterrain le long de sa frontière avec Gaza, au coût de 1,1 milliard de dollars. Les États-Unis ont financé les projets d’Israël pour développer des technologies de détection des tunnels, utilisant Gaza comme laboratoire, dans l’espoir que ces technologies puissent être exploitées plus tard le long de la frontière américano-mexicaine.

      D’autres parties de Gaza sont menacées

      Entre-temps, Israël a menacé des habitants de Beit Lahiya, une ville du nord de Gaza, affirmant avoir découvert deux tunnels et des infrastructures connexes sous une mosquée et un immeuble d’appartements.

      L’armée a fait un post sur Facebook en disant que la vie des civils vivant dans et autour de la zone étaient en danger à cause d’une frappe israélienne potentielle.

      Eyal Zamir, un commandant militaire de l’armée d’occupation, a averti que l’immeuble pouvait être considéré comme une cible légitime.

      Selon les groupes de défense des droits palestiniens Adalah et Al-Mezan, « Vingt et une personnes vivent dans le bâtiment, dont quatre femmes et douze enfants ».

      Les groupes de défense des droits humains ont déclaré : « Les affirmations israéliennes sur les tunnels ne justifient pas les menaces d’attaquer des civils et de détruire leurs maisons. »

      Adalah et Al-Mezan ont déclaré que certains des résidents du bâtiment menacé ont fui mais que d’autres sont restés parce qu’ils n’ont pas les moyens de se procurer un autre logement.

      Les groupes de défense ont déclaré que les menaces israéliennes contre les familles et leurs foyers, comme les attaques contre les civils en général « constituent des violations flagrantes du droit international ».

      Par ailleurs, l’UNRWA, l’agence des Nations Unies pour les réfugiés de Palestine, a rapporté samedi avoir découvert un tunnel sous l’une de ses écoles de Gaza le 15 octobre.

      L’agence a fermé le tunnel et les activités scolaires ont repris 10 jours plus tard, a déclaré l’UNRWA.

      « La présence d’un tunnel sous une installation de l’UNRWA, qui jouit de l’inviolabilité en vertu du droit international, est inacceptable », a déclaré l’agence.

      « Cela met en danger les enfants et le personnel des agences. »

    • Bodies of 5 Palestinian fighters found in Gaza tunnel, bringing death toll to 12
      Nov. 3, 2017 2:37 P.M. (Updated: Nov. 3, 2017 2:37 P.M.)
      http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=779433

      GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — The al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of the Islamic Jihad movement, released a statement on Friday declaring that five missing fighters belonging to the group in Gaza were dead.

      The five fighters had gone missing inside tunnels between southern Gaza and Israeli territory, after Israeli forces conducted explosions on the tunnels.

      After the first explosion, which buried the five Islamic Jihad fighters, several other fighters from the Islamic Jihad and Hamas movements entered the tunnels on a rescue mission. A second explosion then killed seven of the rescue fighters, and injured at least twelve more.

      In the statement on Friday, the Islamic Jihad movement said they had recovered the bodies, and identified the five slain fighters who had been missing since the first explosion as Badr Kamal Musbeh, Ahmad Hasan al-Sabakhi, Shadi Sami al-Hemri, Muhammad Kheir al-Din al-Buheisi and Alaa Sami Abu Ghrab.

  • On récolte ce que l’on sème (Bande d’annonce) on Vimeo
    https://vimeo.com/166213174

    http://www.cinemas-utopia.org/bordeaux/index.php?id=3981&mode=film

    On récolte ce que l’on sème est le second film documentaire du réalisateur palestinien Alaa Ashkar, dont on vous avait montré il y a deux ans le très beau Route 60 d’où émergeait, en filigrane, une prise de conscience de la politique de colonisation israélienne globale et ses effets sur la terre et les esprits des gens. Alaa Ashkar nous livre ici un témoignage passionnant, à partir de son histoire intime, sur la colonisation interne en Israël et ce qu’il reste dans le pays de la mémoire palestinienne, une mémoire souvent niée, un sujet qu’on n’aborde quasiment jamais.

    Le réalisateur vit aujourd’hui en France, et plus précisément à Bordeaux, mais retourne chaque année en Galilée pour des visites familiales. Il a ainsi constaté les évolutions rapides de l’espace urbain dans cette région et, avec le recul, l’influence de celles-ci sur son entourage proche. De sa caméra discrète, il nous propose un regard singulier sur la vie quotidienne des Palestiniens ordinaires en Israël, où tout semble paisible alors qu’en réalité, les habitants se trouvent assiégés par un processus discret de dépossession de leurs terres, de leurs maisons et de leurs identités. Le phénomène, qui a suscité en partie le projet du réalisateur, le conduit à mettre en lumière, au fil des observations, des conversations, des échanges intimes, l’irréductible spécificité de ces Palestiniens qui ont la citoyenneté israélienne sans toutefois pouvoir bénéficier de l’égalité des droits.

    #cinéma #documentaire #Israël #Palestine #identité

  • Egypt Suspends 8 Female TV Anchors, Saying They Are Overweight - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/18/world/middleeast/egypt-suspends-8-female-tv-anchors-saying-they-are-overweight.html

    Alaa el-Sadani, a commentator for Al-Ahram, said that she was “sickened by the disgusting and repulsive” appearance of the eight suspended anchors, and that she believed the rest of the country agreed with her.

    Fatma al-Sharawi, another Al-Ahram writer, welcomed the move as a way to improve the abysmal ratings of the state channels. “Is a ban for eight enough?” she asked.

    Viewership of state television, long dismissed by many Egyptians as a comically biased news source, fell significantly after the uprising that removed President Hosni Mubarak from power in 2011.

    “They don’t understand that people don’t watch them because they have no credibility, skills or quality,” said Mostafa Shawky, a free-press advocate with the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression. “It has nothing to do with looks. But it goes to show that actual skill is not something they care about.”

  • 16-year-old Palestinian shot dead during clashes in Hebron’s al-Arrub camp
    Feb. 10, 2016 12:59 P.M. (Updated : Feb. 10, 2016 2:09 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770218

    BETHLEHEM (Maan) — Israeli forces shot dead a 16-year-old Palestinian during clashes in the southern occupied West Bank district of Hebron’s al-Arrub refugee camp on Tuesday, medical sources told Ma’an.

    Doctors at al-Mizan hospital in Hebron said the boy, identified as Omar Madi , was shot in the chest during clashes in the camp and was evacuated to the hospital where he succumbed to his wounds.

    An Israeli army spokesperson said during “a routine security activity” Israeli soldiers “spotted a number of boys throwing stones at Israeli vehicles at route 60 near al-Arrub refugee camp,” adding that “the soldiers responded with riot dispersal means and shot one of the demonstrators with live fire.”

    Locals said Israeli forces shot tear gas, rubber-coated steel bullets and live fire during clashes in the camp, while youths responded with rocks and Molotov cocktails.

    Al-Arrub refugee camp lies along Route 60, a major West Bank road that Israeli settlers regularly use to reach a cluster of illegal Israeli settlements in Hebron, and the camp has been site to frequent clashes with Israeli military over the past several months.

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    Un jeune Palestinien tué par des tirs de soldats israéliens
    10 février 2016
    http://www.romandie.com/news/675199.rom

    Hébron (Territoires palestiniens) - Un jeune Palestinien de 15 ans a été tué mercredi par des tirs de soldats israéliens lors de heurts dans le sud de la Cisjordanie occupée, a annoncé le ministère palestinien de la Santé.

    Omar Jaoubreh a été atteint de plusieurs balles à la poitrine et à la tête dans le camp de réfugiés d’al-Aroub entre Bethléem et Hébron, et a succombé à ses blessures à l’hôpital, a ajouté le ministère.

    Une porte-parole de l’armée israélienne a indiqué à l’AFP que des soldats avaient tiré en direction d’un assaillant palestinien qui lançait des pierres vers des véhicules de civils israéliens près d’al-Aroub. Les militaires ont riposté à une menace immédiate, a-t-elle dit.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Autopsy: 16-year-old Palestinian died from bullet to chest
      Feb. 10, 2016 8:24 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 10, 2016 9:41 P.M.)

      HEBRON (Ma’an) — A report from an autopsy performed on a 16-year-old Palestinian killed when clashes broke out during an Israeli military raid Tuesday revealed the teen died from a bullet to the chest.

      Hebron’s District Attorney Alaa al-Tamimi told Ma’an Wednesday that Omar Yousef Madi al-Jawabreh died after being hit by a single bullet that entered his body from the right side of his chest.

      Al-Tamimi said the bullet penetrated the teen’s liver, kidneys, and spleen before exiting his body from the lower left side of his rib cage.

      The al-Jawabreh family is expected to hold a funeral on Thursday, Al-Tamimi added.

      The 16-year-old was shot when clashes erupted between residents and Israeli forces raiding al-Arrub refugee camp in the southern occupied West Bank district of Hebron, locals said.

      An Israeli army spokesperson said following the teen’s death that Israeli soldiers had “responded with riot dispersal means” to a “number of boys throwing stones at Israeli vehicles on Route 60,” hitting one “demonstrator” with live fire.

  • Netanyahou déclare que les propos de Wallström sont « scandaleux et injustes » | i24news - Voir plus loin
    http://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/israel/99161-160114-netanyahou-declare-que-les-propos-de-wallstrom-sont-scandaleux-

    Benyamin Netanyahou, s’est adressé aux journalistes lors d’un événement annuel organisé pour le Nouvel An du Bureau de presse du gouvernement (GPO) à Jérusalem, où il a déclaré que les commentaires de la ministre étaient « scandaleux, injustes et tout simplement faux ».

    « Je pense que ce qu’a dit la ministre suédoise des Affaires étrangères est scandaleux, je pense que c’est immoral, que c’est injuste et que c’est tout bonnement faux », a dit M. Netanyahou à la presse.

    "L’autre jour à Paris, un terroriste brandissant un couteau a été abattu, est-ce que ça, c’était une exécution extra-judiciaire ?

    OUI !

    • Yes, Israel Is Executing Palestinians Without Trial
      Gideon Levy Jan 17, 2016
      http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.697788

      We should call it like it is: Israel executes people without trial nearly every day. Any other description is a lie. If there was once discussion here about the death penalty for terrorists, now they are executed even without trial (and without discussion). If once there was debate over the rules of engagement, today it’s clear: we shoot to kill – any suspicious Palestinian.

      Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan outlined the situation clearly when he said, “Every terrorist should know he will not survive the attack he is about to commit” – and almost every politician joined him in nauseating unison, from Yair Lapid on up. Never have so many licenses to kill been handed out here, nor has the finger been so itchy on the trigger.

      In 2016, one doesn’t have to be Adolf Eichmann to be executed here – it’s enough to be a teenage Palestinian girl with scissors. The firing squads are active every day. Soldiers, police and civilians shoot those who stabbed Israelis, or tried to stab them or were suspected of doing so, and at those who run down Israelis in their cars or appear to have done so.

      In most cases, there was no need to shoot – and certainly not to kill. In a good many of the cases, the shooters’ lives were not in danger. They shot people to death who were holding a knife or even scissors, or people who just put their hands in their pockets or lost control of their car.

      They shot them to death indiscriminately – women, men, teenage girls, teenage boys. They shot them when they were standing, and even after they were no longer a threat. They shot to kill, to punish, to release their anger, and to take revenge. There is such contempt here that these incidents are barely covered in the media.

      Last Saturday, soldiers at the Beka’ot checkpoint (called Hamra by the Palestinians) in the Jordan Valley killed businessman Said Abu al-Wafa, 35, a father of four, with 11 bullets. At the same time, they also killed Ali Abu Maryam, a 21-year-old farm laborer and student, with three bullets. The Israel Defense Forces did not explain the killing of the two men, except to say there was a suspicion that someone had drawn a knife. There are security cameras at the site, but the IDF has not released video footage of the incident.

      Last month, other IDF soldiers killed Nashat Asfur, a father of three who worked at an Israeli chicken slaughterhouse. They shot him in his village, Sinjil, from 150 meters away, while he was walking home from a wedding. Earlier this month, Mahdia Hammad – a 40-year-old mother of four – was driving home through her village, Silwad. Border Police officers sprayed her car with dozens of bullets after they suspected she intended to run them over.

      The soldiers didn’t even suspect cosmetology student Samah Abdallah, 18, of anything. Soldiers shot her father’s car “by mistake,” killing her; they had suspected a 16-year-old pedestrian, Alaa al-Hashash, of trying to stab them. They executed him as well, of course.

      They also killed Ashrakat Qattanani, 16, who was holding a knife and running after an Israeli woman. First a settler ran her over with his car, and when she was lying injured on the ground, soldiers and settlers shot her at least four times. Execution – what else?

      And when soldiers shot Lafi Awad, 20, in his back while he was fleeing after throwing stones, was that not an execution?

      These are only a few of the cases I have documented over the past few weeks in Haaretz. The website of the human rights group B’Tselem has a list of 12 more cases of executions.

      Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallström, one of the few ministers with a conscience left in the world, demanded that these killings be investigated. There is no demand more moral and just than this. It should have come from our own justice minister.

      Israel responded with its usual howls. The prime minister said this was “outrageous, immoral and unjust.” And Benjamin Netanyahu understands those terms: That is exactly how to describe Israel’s campaign of criminal executions under his leadership.

  • 3 Palestinians shot dead after alleged Gush Etzion stabbing attempt
    an. 7, 2016 8:26 P.M. (Updated: Jan. 7, 2016 10:05 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769699

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Israeli forces shot dead three Palestinian cousins on Thursday night after they allegedly attempted to stab Israeli soldiers at the Gush Etzion junction in the southern occupied West Bank, Israeli and Palestinian sources said.

    An Israeli army spokesperson alleged that all three Palestinians were “armed with knives” and had attempted to “attack Israeli soldiers guarding the Gush Etzion junction.”

    She said Israeli forces “thwarted” the attack and “responded to the imminent danger” by opening fire on the Palestinians.

    While two of them were immediately confirmed dead, the Israeli army initially said that the third was being treated on site. However, an army spokesperson later confirmed he had succumbed to his wounds.

    A spokesperson for Magen David Adom confirmed that no Israelis were injured in the attack.

    Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Red Crescent said that their ambulance crews “were not allowed to get close to the scene.”

    The three Palestinians were later identified as cousins Ahmad Salim Abd al-Majid Kawazba, Alaa Abed Muhammad Kawazba, and Muhannad Ziyad Kawazba, all from the town of Sair northeast of Hebron.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • 4 Palestinians shot dead after alleged stabbing attempts in West Bank
      Jan. 7, 2016 8:26 P.M. (Updated: Jan. 7, 2016 11:02 P.M.)

      Shortly after the incident, another Palestinian from the same town, identified as 16-year-old Khalil Muhammad al-Shalaldah , was shot dead by Israeli forces after he allegedly attempted to carry out a stabbing attack at the Beit Einun junction northeast of Hebron.

      An Israeli army spokesperson said the teenager was “armed with a knife,” but that Israeli soldiers “thwarted the attack, and shot the assailant, resulting in his death.” There were no Israeli injuries reported.

      Since October, around 145 Palestinians have been shot dead by Israelis, the majority in the occupied West Bank.

    • Quatre Palestiniens tentent de poignarder des soldats israéliens avant d’être abattus
      http://www.romandie.com/news/664527.rom

      Jérusalem - Quatre Palestiniens ont été abattus jeudi par les forces israéliennes après avoir tenté d’attaquer des soldats dans deux incidents séparés en Cisjordanie occupée, a indiqué l’armée.

      Trois assaillants, armés de couteaux, ont tenté de poignarder des soldats qui gardaient le carrefour de Gush Etzion, a indiqué un communiqué militaire, ajoutant que les troupes avaient répondu à l’attaque en tirant sur les assaillants.

      Une source militaire a affirmé à l’AFP qu’ils étaient tous morts.

      Le carrefour du Gush Etzion, sur la route entre Bethléem et Hébron dans le sud de la Cisjordanie occupée, a été le théâtre de plusieurs attaques anti-israéliennes ces dernières semaines.

      Un peu plus tard, un Palestinien armé d’un couteau a tenté de poignarder des soldats israéliens au nord-est de Hébron, a indiqué un communiqué militaire. Les forces ont déjoué l’attaque et tiré sur l’assaillant, qui est mort.

      Les trois assaillants présumés de Gush Etzion ont été identifiés par les médias palestiniens comme Muhanad Kawazbeh, 20 ans, Ahmed Kawazbeh, 21 ans et Alaa Kawazbeh, 20 ans , tous originaires du village de Saïr au nord-est de Hébron.

      Ils seraient des membres de la famille de Ahmed Kawazbeh, 18 ans, tué mardi après avoir poignardé un soldat au carrefour de Gush Etzion également.

    • Killings of Palestinians in West Bank hit 10-year high
      Ali Abunimah Rights and Accountability 8 January 2016
      https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/killings-palestinians-west-bank-hit-10-year-high

      On Thursday evening, Israeli forces shot dead four Palestinians from the village of Sair, near Hebron in the occupied West Bank.

      Three cousins, Ahmad Salim Abd al-Majid Kawazba, 21, Alaa Abed Muhammad Kawazba, 17, and Muhannad Ziyad Kawazba, 20, were fatally shot near the Gush Etzion bloc of Israeli settlements north of Hebron.

      An Israeli army spokesperson alleged that all three were “armed with knives” and attempted to “attack Israeli soldiers guarding the Gush Etzion junction,” Ma’an News Agency reported.

      The Palestinian news site Quds quoted local sources who said the three young men all worked as laborers inside present-day Israel.

      A short time later, 16-year-old Khalil Muhammad al-Shalalda was shot dead by Israeli forces after he allegedly attempted to stab a soldier at the Beit Einoun junction near Hebron, according to Ma’an News Agency.

      No Israelis were reported injured.

      Khalil al-Shalada’s brother, Mahmoud, was fatally shot by Israeli occupation forces during confrontations near Beit Einoun junction on 13 November.

      As news of the killings spread, residents of Sair gathered at the family homes of the dead youths and confrontations broke out with Israeli occupation forces.

      Sair villagers have witnessed intense violence by Israeli forces in recent months. At least 10 villagers have been killed since the start of October, including the November execution in a Hebron hospital room of Abdallah Azzam al-Shalalda and the killing of a disabled father of a young baby in December.

      On New Year’s Eve, Israeli occupation forces seized a plot of land belonging to Sair villager Ismail Abed Rabbu al-Shalalda in order to set up a military post, a provocation likely only to further inflame tension.

      On Wednesday this week, thousands of people in Sair attended the funeral of Ahmad Younis Ahmad Kawazba.

  • The Face of Collateral Damage: Palestinian Student Killed by Israeli Forces - Gideon Levy and Alex Levac Dec 25, 2015 7:00 PM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.693675

    After Israel Defense Forces soldiers killed Samah Abdallah , the Israeli media did not even bother to mention that the 18-year-old was shot in the head while she was riding, along with other family members, in her father’s car.

    Samah Abdallah was a beautician and cosmetology student from a little-known Palestinian village, who was shot to death either on purpose or by accident – but most assuredly without any legitimate reason. Five or six bullets were fired at the car, fired by a soldier from a fortified watchtower nearby; one hit her directly in the head. Samah sustained mortal injuries, and died a few weeks later in an Israeli hospital.

    It all began on November 23, with a concerned and anxious father: Abed Abdallah, 42, worked in construction in Israel until recently. He did not want his daughter to use public transportation to get home from the Nablus school where she was studying with her younger sister Hanin, 17. Samah had been thinking of enrolling in university next year, in order to get a teaching degree.

    It has been an extremely tense few months on the roads of the West Bank, for Palestinian residents too, and Abed decided to pick up his two daughters that day, lest they run into trouble on the way home. He does this every so often, primarily when tensions run high.

    The family lives in one of the tiniest of villages – a hilly, remote place called Amoriya, with breathtaking scenery, southeast of Salfit and the settlement of Ariel.

    That morning, Samah and Hanin set out at 7:30 for school in a shared taxi. At noon, Abed left Amoriya together with his wife, Hala, and their son Ahmed, 15, to pick them up. The drive went without mishap, and took less than half an hour. The daughters got into the back seat, with Samah in the middle; their parents were in front.

    After passing the Hawara checkpoint, which was not manned at the time by IDF soldiers, they approached a bus stop. Abed noticed a teenage boy and a few soldiers there; he says now that he was certain the boy was a Jew. Worried that stones would be thrown at the car, Abed continued to drive and had gone a few meters when he heard gunfire.

    No one had ordered him to stop. In the rearview mirror, Abed saw the boy fall to the ground, bleeding profusely. He says he did not see a knife or any other weapon in the boy’s hands. Subsequently, it developed that the youth, Alaa al-Hashash, 16, from the nearby Balata refugee camp, had been shot dead by one of the soldiers at the bus stop. The death of Hashash was reported by the Israeli media in a single sentence, “Another attempted terrorist attack was thwarted today near the Hawara checkpoint.” That same day, there were two other such attempts at other sites, so perhaps the killing of the teenager was of no special interest.

    Soon after Abed saw the youth collapse, a hail of bullets hit his car. Abed shouted to his wife and children to get down, but the rear seat was crowded and Samah was unable to crouch low enough. The bullets came from the rear, fired by soldiers standing near the bus stop, but also from the front – from an army watchtower. The lethal bullet was fired by a soldier in the tower, penetrating the windshield and hitting Samah in the middle of her forehead before exiting through the back of her neck. Her face was covered in blood.

    “Father – there’s blood!” yelled Ahmed. Abed thought it was his son who had been hit. Getting out of the car, he discovered that his daughter had been shot. The terrified family pulled Samah out and lay her on the road. Abed says now that he was certain she was already dead. A Palestinian ambulance quickly arrived, and evacuated her to Rafidia Hospital in Nablus.

    The Abdallah family’s car. Alex Levac

    “Why did you do that?” Ahmed says he screamed at the soldiers who began to approach. “The soldier told me: You had a knife. I told him: There’s no knife. He said: There is. I said: There isn’t. I said: Where’s the officer? He said: There is no officer.”

    Abed says that a few minutes later, the same soldier admitted about the shots fired at Samah that, “It was a mistake.”

    Samah was rushed to Rafidia. When her parents arrived, they were informed that she was in critical condition. A few hours later, it was decided to transfer her to an Israeli hospital. After initial admission to to Schneider Children’s Medical Center, she was transferred to the neurosurgery department at nearby Beilinson Hospital.

    In her report, Dr. Gili Kadmon, a specialist in pediatric intensive care, wrote: “Patient was shot yesterday in the Nablus area, at a range of 10-20 meters. Entry hole in the frontal lobe and exit hole in the occipitoparietal lobe. Extensive cranial injury. Upon admission, patient was unconscious and artificially ventilated; opens her eyes at moments of pain and coughs in response to suction …”

    Samah’s mother accompanied her to the hospital in Israel and didn’t leave her for a moment. Abed joined them the following day, once he received an entry permit. Samah was hospitalized for over three weeks, during which she underwent two operations. Last Wednesday, she passed away, her parents at her bedside. She never reopened her eyes.

    Asked for comment by Haaretz, the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit released the following statement: “During the incident, in which a terrorist was running while brandishing a knife toward civilians standing at a bus stop, IDF forces opened fire to neutralize the threat and protect the civilians. From the shooting, injuries were apparently incurred by passengers in the car behind the terrorist. The IDF regrets any injury to uninvolved bystanders and acts to avoid this as much as possible. The incident has been investigated and the results are being examined by the military prosecutor’s office.”

    Note the evasive wording: “From the shooting, injuries were apparently incurred by passengers in the car behind the terrorist.” As if the dying Samah had not been transferred to Israel for medical care with the army’s approval, as if there was any doubt she was killed by IDF soldiers.

    Abed says that the soldiers didn’t only kill Samah: “They killed our entire family. The soldiers didn’t have to shoot. Why did they shoot? They also could have shot Alaa al-Hashash in his legs, without killing him. Salah happened to be there, without having done anything. Nothing justifies this shooting. She died for no reason.”

    ANo government or army official thought to telephone the family following Samah’s death. Now Abed is preparing to submit a claim for compensation from Israel. For that purpose, he approached attorney Ghaslan Mahajna from Umm al-Fahm.

    Posted on the outskirts of her village are photos of Samah, who was buried in the little cemetery across from the family’s home. Mourners are served the customary dates and bitter coffee.

    Parked outside is the rundown Opal Ascona. Pictures of Abed’s daughter are taped to the windows, and a single memorial poster has been placed in the middle of the backseat, the exact place where Samah Abdallah was sitting before being shot to death.

    Gideon Levy
    Haaretz Correspondent

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • After Israel Defense Forces soldiers killed Samah Abdallah , the Israeli media did not even bother to mention that the 18-year-old was shot in the head while she was riding, along with other family members, in her father’s car.

      “Why did you do that?” Ahmed says he screamed at the soldiers who began to approach. “The soldier told me: You had a knife. I told him: There’s no knife. He said: There is. I said: There isn’t. I said: Where’s the officer? He said: There is no officer.”

      Abed says that a few minutes later, the same soldier admitted about the shots fired at Samah that, “It was a mistake.”

  • 18-year-old dies weeks after being hit by Israeli crossfire in Nablus
    Dec. 16, 2015 2:16 P.M. (Updated: Dec. 16, 2015 2:16 P.M.)
    https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=769365

    NABLUS (Ma’an) — A 18-year-old Palestinian died on Wednesday after succumbing to wounds sustained from Israeli forces at a military checkpoint in Nablus in October, her family told Ma’an.

    Samah Abd al-Mumen was shot at the Huwwara checkpoint on Oct. 23 when Israeli forces opened fire on and killed Alaa Khalil Sabah Hashah, 16, after he attempted to stab a soldier.

    Her father told Ma’an that she died in Benlson Medical Center in Israel after being transferred from Rafidiya hospital in Nablus due to her critical injuries.

    Palestinian security sources told Ma’an at the time of her injury that Samah was shot in the head while sitting inside her car near where the incident occurred at Huwwara.

    The teen was apparently hit in the crossfire after the Israeli army said that 16-year-old Hashah “drew a knife and attempted to attack a soldier."

    Hashah was shot over ten times after the attempted stabbing, according to witnesses.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Les milices, désormais une force vitale pour le régime syrien - L’Orient-Le Jour
    http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/946053/les-milices-desormais-une-force-vitale-pour-le-regime-syrien.html

    « Il y a plus de 25 principales milices, de taille différente, qui combattent aux côtés de l’armée », a confié à l’AFP une source de sécurité, avec des effectifs se situant entre 150.000 à 200.000 combattants.
    Créées en 2012 après les revers de l’armée dans les provinces de Damas, Homs (centre) et Alep (nord), les Forces de défense nationale (FDN) sont la plus importante avec 90.000 combattants de toutes confessions sous commandement du général de brigade Hawach Mohammad.

    « Il n’y avait pas assez de jeunes pour faire face aux rebelles qui commettaient des massacres dans la province de Lattaquié (ouest) », fief à majorité alaouite du clan Assad, explique à l’AFP Assef Hamdouche, 28 ans, qui a rejoint les FDN. « On n’avait pas plus le choix : combattre ou mourir », assure cet étudiant.
    L’adhésion de son ami Karim, 31 ans, est plus prosaïque. « J’ai perdu mon travail, je n’avais plus les moyens de survivre qu’en portant les armes ».

    Car les miliciens perçoivent de relativement bons salaires, comparés à ceux des militaires. Ils se situent entre 100 et 300 dollars selon les groupes, tandis que la solde des conscrits n’est que de 10 dollars.
    « C’est ce qui a poussé beaucoup à fuir l’armée et à s’inscrire aux FDN », affirme l’avocat Alaa Ibrahim. « C’est pour cela que l’armée a interdit aux soldats de devenir membres de ces groupes et stipulé que combattre dans les milices ne dispensait pas du service militaire ».

  • And when Abbas goes?, by Nadia Hijab and Alaa Tartir
    http://mondediplo.com/blogs/and-when-abbas-goes

    The Palestinian National Council (PNC) is expected to meet this month in its first session since 2009 to accept the resignation of Mahmoud Abbas as chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), along with more than half the Executive Committee’s 18 members. The PNC does of course have the option of rejecting some or all of the resignations, and in any case Abbas still wears several hats: he remains head of state, President of the Palestinian Authority, commander-in-chief, and head of the Fatah political party. Moreover, all those who resign are free to stand again. [#st]

    http://zinc.mondediplo.net/messages/6941 via Le Monde diplomatique

  • Imprisoned activist Alaa Abd El Fattah speaks from Tora | Mada Masr

    http://www.madamasr.com/sections/politics/imprisoned-activist-alaa-abd-el-fattah-speaks-tora

    Alaa Abd El Fattah, outspoken software tecchie, blogger and political activist, has spoken to the media for the first time since he began serving his latest sentence at Tora Prison.

    Abd El Fattah is serving a five-year prison sentence for being at a civil gathering in front of the Shura Council in November 2013 to protest a constitutional provision allowing the military to court-martial civilians.

    The questions were sent by journalist Moataz Shams al-Din to Abd El Fattah’s mother, mathematics professor Laila Soueif, who put them to her son during a visit. On the way home she wrote down his responses and relayed them back to the journalist. No papers were exchanged between Alaa and his mother.

    Recently, the courts upheld a one-year sentence against Abd El Fattah for “burning down the headquarters of [presidential candidate] General Ahmed Shafiq.” The prosecution has also brought another case against him for “insulting the judiciary."

  • De prison, Alaa Abdel Fattah parle de la révolution et des islamistes : "Daech a été fabriqué de nos mains !

    Le groupe Etat Islamique (EI) ou #Daech est « un monstre formé et entretenu par nos sociétés depuis une longue période » a déclaré de sa prison l’activiste et blogueur Égyptien Alaa Abdel Fattah.


    http://www.huffpostmaghreb.com/2015/08/18/alaa-abdel-fattah_n_8001988.html?1439892329
    #ISIS #EI #Etat_islamique

  • De prison, Alaa Abdel Fattah parle de la révolution et des islamistes : "Daech a été fabriqué de nos mains !
    http://www.huffpostmaghreb.com/2015/08/18/alaa-abdel-fattah_n_8001988.html?ncid=fcbklnkfrhpmg00000005

    Le printemps arabe est mort et Daech est entrain de prospérer... A qui la faute ?

    Je ne sais pas, l’histoire peut-être.

    Quand les actions de différent mouvements en des lieu différents aboutissent au même résultat, c’est comme il y avait un déterminisme qui pousse ces forces sur une voie comme sur des rails, il ne te reste qu’à dire que c’est la responsabilité d’un tel ou d’un tel autre précisément.

    Cela est comparable à la montée du nazisme dans les années trente du siècle dernier en Europe, de nombreux facteurs ont alimenté ce courant pendant des années avant qu’il n’apparaisse au grand jour comme une menace imminente pour tous. C’est le cas aussi de Daech, un monstre que nos sociétés forment et entretiennent depuis une longue période.

    #Egypte #printemps_arabes #révolution #daech

  • Israel denies Gaza football team barred from West Bank
    Aug. 7, 2015
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=766914

    Players of Ahli al-Khalil attend a training session in Gaza City on August 5, 2015. (AFP/File Mohammed Abed)

    GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — Gaza-based football club Ittihad al-Shujaiyeh said Friday that Israeli authorities prevented players and staff from leaving the besieged enclave to face West Bank rivals Ahli al-Khalil, while Israel denied the allegations and blamed Palestinian Football Association President Jibril Rajoub.

    The Gaza-based team was scheduled to leave the coastal territory together with Hebron’s Ahli al-Khalil after having played an historic game a day earlier at the Yarmouk stadium in Gaza.

    But four of the players and three of the team’s staff were refused travel permits, club spokesperson Alaa Shamali said.

    The players were identified as Hussam Wadi, Maysara al-Bawwab, Omar al-Arier and Hashem Abed Rabbu.