person:folke bernadotte

  • Israel’s forgotten hero: The assassination of Count Bernadotte - and the death of peace
    He was charged by the UN with bringing peace to Palestine– but died at the hands of Jewish assassins. Now, 60 years after his death, the memory of the Swedish aristocrat Folke Bernadotte is dividing Israel.
    Donald Macintyre | @indyvoices | Thursday 18 September 2008
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israels-forgotten-hero-the-assassination-of-count-bernadotte-and-the-
    https://static.independent.co.uk/s3fs-public/thumbnails/image/2008/09/17/20/54569.bin

    Sitting in the back seat, the blue-blooded Swedish aristocrat and the decorated French hero of two world wars had begun to relax from the tension of the journey as the big Chrysler, the last of a three-car convoy, started its final ascent up the narrow road through the now Jewish-occupied district of Katamon, towards Rehavia and the house of the Jerusalem military governor. No one in the first car, a DeSoto, least of all the Israeli captain assigned to escort the VIPs, showed much concern when a new-looking Israeli army jeep slewed across the road to bring the convoy to a halt: just another temporary checkpoint. As three soldiers in standard Israel Defence Forces khaki shorts, fingers on triggers, approached the DeSoto; the three young Swedes and a Belgian in the passenger seats, groped for their papers. “It’s OK boys,” the Israeli officer explained. “Let us pass. It’s the UN mediator.”

    At that moment, one of the three men ran to the Chrysler, pushed the barrel of his German-made Schmeisser MP40 sub-machine gun through the open rear window, and pumped six bullets into the chest, throat and left arm of the aristocrat and another 18 into the body of the French colonel sitting on his left. Rushing out of the first car, the Israeli captain, Moshe Hillman, ran back to the Chrysler. Aghast at the sight of the copiously bleeding bodies he kept repeating: “My God, oh my God,” before jumping in beside the driver, a UN security man recruited from the FBI, and telling him to head straight for the Hadassah hospital. But Count Folke Bernadotte, the UN mediator officially charged with bringing peace to a Holy Land at war, and his chief UN observer Colonel Andre Serot, who had only swapped places with Hillman at the last minute so that he could personally thank the count for saving his wife from a Nazi concentration camp three years earlier, were dead on arrival.

    The assassination of Bernadotte by Jewish militants disguised as regular soldiers on 17 September 1948, was commemorated in a series of Swedish and UN ceremonies in Jerusalem, Stockholm and New York yesterday. But no blue Israeli plaque marks the spot, as it does for so many military and Jewish underground exploits of the period. (...)

  • Vil kjempe til døden for et nytt Norden - Dokumentar

    https://www.nrk.no/dokumentar/xl/vil-kjempe-til-doden-for-et-nytt-norden-1.13810278

    Le truc effrayant du jour. Des journalistes de la NRK ont suivi pendant deux ans le mouvement néonazi scandinave pour essayer de comprendre la psychologie des membres, qui ils sont et ce qu’ils veulent. Essentiellement des portraits, des portraits qui tous, sans exception respirent la mort.

    Vil kjempe til døden for et nytt Norden

    Nasjonalsosialister marsjerer igjen i gatene. NRK Brennpunkt har fulgt den nazistiske organisasjonen som kaller seg « Den nordiske motstandsbevegelsen » i to år, for å forstå hvem de er, og hva de ønsker å oppnå.

    #extrême_droite #néonazis #scandinavie #suède #norvège

    • C’est le genre de reportage où les journalistes norvégiens excellent. Ça mériterait que je fasse une traduction, en réalité, mais en réalité, là je cours après le temps et je n’ai pas le temps ! Cela dit, s’il y a un plébiscite, je peux faire une effort :) C’est une plongée en apnée dans le monde néonazi scandinave, et c’est très bien fait : les journalistes commentent peu, ils sont très distant par rapports aux protagonistes, et ils ont bien pris soins de n’adjoindre aucun élément spectaculaire dans la narration, ce qui d’ailleurs rend le bouzin encore plus puissant. Moi, la lecture m’a vraiment effrayée.

    • J’ai pris la grand-mère (il y a 2-3 mots que je n’ai pas compris, mais je crois que l’essentiel y est)

      Il est dimanche matin dans la ville médiévale de Vadstena et Vera Oredsson se prépare pour sa visite hebdomadaire à l’église.

      Dans le national-socialisme, il n’y a pas vraiment de place pour le religion, mais je sais que Jésus-Christ n’était pas juif ; il est donc possible d’être national-socialiste et chrétien, dit cette femme de 89 ans.

      Mme Oredsson est née à Berlin en 1928 d’un père militaire allemand et d’une mère suédoise. À disant elle est inscrite aux Jeunesses hitlériennes. Ses parents ont divorcé pendant la guerre. Sa mère et elle se sont réfugiées en Suède avec les « Bus blancs » en février 1945.

      Son appartement est rempli de livres, de souvenirs et de photos de sa longue vie. Dans sa chambre un grand portrait d’Adolf Hitler

      Pourquoi avez-vous cette photo d’Adolf Hitler dans votre chambre ?
      Pourquoi ne l’aurais-je pas, répond Mme Oredsson, j’ai toujours eu une photo du Führer au dessus de mon lit, même quand j’étais enfant. Avec une telle image au dessus de mon lit, je me sens en sécurité.

      Sous l’image d’Adolf Hitler se trouve une croix gammée en perles. C’est un cadeau de Noël qu’a fait son petit-fils à elle et son mari.

      il a commencé le cadre rouge au jardin d’enfants, mais il a terminé le reste à la maison avec son père, on ne le lui laissait pas le faire au jardin d’enfants.

      Des réflexions sur la biologie raciale ont conduit Vera Oredsson à fonder le Nordiska Rikspartiet avec son mari Göran Oredsson en 1956. Fortement inspiré par Adolf Hitler, le parti veut unir les pays nordiques en un Reich racialement pur.

      le Mouvement de résistance nordique a le même projet. C’est un modèle important.
      Elle est un lien avec l’époque précédant la fondation du Mouvement de résistance nordique, depuis son retour d’Allemagne jusqu’à aujourd’hui. Elle représente une grande source d’inspiration pour nous dit Simon Lindberg


      Objet en perles réalisé par son petit-fils au jardin d’enfants pour le cadre, avec son père pour le motif…

      =========== Notes =========

      Bus blancs — Wikipédia
      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_blancs

      L’expression Bus blancs fait référence à une opération humanitaire de la Croix-Rouge, à la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, dont les fers de lance furent le comte suédois Folke Bernadotte et Felix Kersten. Elle permit de sauver des milliers de Scandinaves, ainsi qu’un grand nombre de Juifs, des camps de concentration allemands. Le nom de « bus blancs » provient de ce que les véhicules avaient été peints en blanc avec des croix rouges sur les côtés et le toit afin qu’aucune confusion ne soit possible avec des véhicules militaires.

      En mars et avril 1945, quelque 15 000 prisonniers Scandinaves et d’autres nationalités furent soustraits à l’emprisonnement et au confinement imposés par les nazis, puis conduits en Suède. Le programme continua après la capitulation allemande, rapatriant encore 10 000 ex-prisonniers vers la Suède.

      WP[en] pas trouvé en français https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_Resistance_Movement

      The Nordic Resistance Movement (Swedish : Nordiska Motståndsrörelsen ; NMR, Norwegian : Nordiske motstandsbevegelsen ; NMB, Finnish : Pohjoismainen vastarintaliike ; PVL, Danish : Nordiske modstandsbevægelse ; NMB) is a Nordic Neo-Nazi movement.

  • Assassinat du comte Bernadotte en 1948 : C’était bien un crime d’Etat - Le blog de Gilles Munier
    http://www.france-irak-actualite.com/article-assassinat-du-comte-bernadotte-en-1948-c-etait-bien-u

    L’écrivain Göran Burén a effectué des recherches dans les archives nationales suédoises déclassifiées en 2000. Il révèle dans The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (1) que le comte Folke Bernadotte, médiateur de l’ONU pour la Palestine en 1948, a bien été assassiné à Jérusalem avec la complicité du gouvernement israélien.

    En 1948, le comte Bernadotte – neveu du roi de Suède - tentait d’instaurer un cessez-le-feu entre les troupes arabes de libération et l’ex-Haganah, milice sioniste devenue Armée de défense d’Israël, nouvel Etat créé par les Nations unies, quelques mois plus tôt, sur le territoire palestinien (2). Il condamnait « le pillage sioniste à grande échelle et la destruction de villages sans nécessité militaire apparente » (3) et proposait un plan de partage du territoire palestinien qui ne convenait pas aux dirigeants israéliens de l’époque et encore moins aux groupes sionistes extrémistes Lehi et Irgoun.
    (...)
    Le 17 septembre 1948, une embuscade fut tendue au médiateur de l’ONU dans le secteur juif de Jérusalem. Ce jour-là, le comte était accompagné par le colonel français André Sérot , héros de la Première guerre mondiale, chef des observateurs de l’ONU à Jérusalem.

    “““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““

    Swedish National Archive Documents Shed New Light on Bernadotte Assassination
    By Göran Burén
    http://www.wrmea.org/wrmea-archives/551-washington-report-archives-2011-2015/september-2013/12171-swedish-national-archive-documents-shed-new-light-on-bernadotte-assassi

    #André_Sérot

  • Rogue State: Israeli Violations of U.N. Security Council Resolutions
    by Jeremy R. Hammond
    January 27, 2010

    Following is a list of United Nations Security Council resolutions directly critical of Israel for violations of U.N. Security Council resolutions, the U.N. Charter, the Geneva Conventions, international terrorism, or other violations of international law.

    Res. 57 (Sep. 18, 1948) – Expresses deep shock at the assassination of the U.N. Mediator in Palestine, Count Folke Bernadotte, by Zionist terrorists.

    Res. 89 (Nov. 17, 1950) – Requests that attention be given to the expulsion of “thousands of Palestine Arabs” and calls upon concerned governments to take no further action “involving the transfer of persons across international frontiers or armistice lines”, and notes that Israel announced that it would withdraw to the armistice lines.

    Res. 93 (May 18, 1951) – Finds that Israeli airstrikes on Syria on April 5, 1951 constitutes “a violation of the cease-fire”, and decides that Arab civilians expelled from the demilitarized zone by Israel should be allowed to return.

    Res. 100 (Oct. 27, 1953) – Notes that Israel had said it would stop work it started in the demilitarized zone on September 2, 1953.

    Res. 101 (Nov. 24, 1953) – Finds Israel’s attack on Qibya, Jordan on October 14-15, 1953 to be a violation of the cease-fire and “Expresses the strongest censure of that action”.

    Res. 106 (Mar. 29, 1955) – Condemns Israel’s attack on Egyptian forces in the Gaza Strip on February 28, 1955.

    Res. 111 (Jan. 19, 1956) – Condemns Israel’s attack on Syria on December 11, 1955 as “a flagrant violation of the cease-fire” and armistice agreement.

    Res. 119 (Oct. 31, 1956) – Considers that “a grave situation has been created” by the attack against Egypt by the forces of Britain, France, and Israel.

    Res. 171 (Apr. 9, 1962) – Reaffirms resolution 111 and determines that Israel’s attack on Syria on March 16-17, 1962 “constitutes a flagrant violation of that resolution”.

    Res. 228 (Nov. 25, 1966) – “Deplores the loss of life and heavy damage to property resulting from the action” by Israel in the southern Hebron area on November 13, 1966, and “Censures Israel for this large-scale military action in violation of the United Nations Charter” and the armistice agreement between Israel and Jordan.

    Res. 237 (Jun. 14, 1967) – Calls on Israel “to ensure the safety, welfare and security of the inhabitants where military operations have taken place” during the war launched by Israel on June 5, 1967 “and to facilitate the return of those inhabitants who have fled the areas since the outbreak of hostilities”.

    Res. 242 (Nov. 22, 1967) – Emphasizes “the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war”, emphasizes that member states have a commitment to abide by the U.N. Charter, and calls for the “Withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories occupied” during the June 1967 war.

    Res. 248 (Mar. 24, 1968) – Observes that the Israeli attack on Jordan “was of a large-scale and carefully planned nature”, “Deplores the loss of life and heavy damage to property”, “Condemns the military action launched by Israel in flagrant violation of the United Nations Charter and the cease-fire resolutions”, and “Calls upon Israel to desist from” further violations of resolution 237.

    Res. 250 (Apr. 27, 1968) – Considers “that the holding of a military parade in Jerusalem will aggravate tensions in the area and have an adverse effect on a peaceful settlement of the problems in the area” and “Calls upon Israel to refrain from holding the military parade in Jerusalem which is contemplated” for May 2, 1968.

    Res. 251 (May 2, 1968) – Recalls resolution 250 and “Deeply deplores the holding by Israel of the military parade in Jerusalem” on May 2, 1968 “in disregard of” resolution 250.

    Res. 252 (May 21, 1968) – “Deplores the failure of Israel to comply with” General Assembly resolutions 2253 and 2254, considers Israel’s annexation of Jerusalem “invalid”, and calls upon Israel “to rescind all such measures already taken and to desist forthwith from taking any further action which tends to change the status of Jerusalem”.

    Res. 256 (Aug. 16, 1968) – Recalls Israel’s “flagrant violation of the United Nations Charter” condemned in resolution 248, observes that further Israeli air attacks on Jordan “were of a large scale and carefully planned nature in violation of resolution 248”, “Deplores the loss of life and heavy damage to property”, and condemns Israel’s attacks.

    Res. 259 (Sep. 27, 1968) – Expresses concern for “the safety, welfare and security” of the Palestinians “under military occupation by Israel”, deplores “the delay in the implementation of resolution 237 (1967) because of the conditions still being set by Israel for receiving a Special Representative of the Secretary-General”, and requests Israel to receive the Special Representative and facilitate his work.

    Res. 262 (Dec. 31, 1968) – Observes “that the military action by the armed forces of Israel against the civil International Airport of Beirut was premeditated and of a large scale and carefully planned nature”, and condemns Israel for the attack.

    Res.265 (Apr. 1, 1969) – Expresses “deep concern that the recent attacks on Jordanian villages and other populated areas were of a pre-planned nature, in violation of resolutions” 248 and 256, “Deplores the loss of civilian life and damage to property”, and “Condemns the recent premeditated air attacks launched by Israel on Jordanian villages and populated areas in flagrant violation of the United Nations Charter and the cease-fire resolutions”.

    Res. 267 (Jul. 3, 1969) – Recalls resolution 252 and General Assembly resolutions 2253 and 2254, notes that “since the adoption of the above-mentioned resolutions Israel has taken further measures tending to change the status of the City of Jerusalem”, reaffirms “the established principle that acquisition of territory by military conquest is inadmissible”, “Deplores the failure of Israel to show any regard for the resolutions”, “Censures in the strongest terms all measures taken to change the status of the City of Jerusalem”, “Confirms that all legislative and administrative measures and actions taken by Israel which purport to alter the status of Jerusalem, including expropriation of land and properties thereon, are invalid and cannot change that status”, and urgently calls on Israel to rescind the measures taken to annex Jerusalem.

    Res. 270 (Aug. 26, 1969) – “Condemns the premeditated air attack by Israel on villages in southern Lebanon in violation of its obligations under the Charter and Security Council resolutions”.

    Res. 271 (Sep. 15, 1969) – Expresses grief “at the extensive damage caused by arson to the Holy Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem” on August 21, 1969 “under the military occupation of Israel”, reaffirms “the established principle that acquisition of territory by military conquest is inadmissible”, “Determines that the execrable act of desecration and profanation of the Holy Al-Aqsa Mosque emphasizes the immediate necessity of Israel’s desisting from acting in violation” previous resolutions and rescinding measures to annex Jerusalem, calls on Israel “to observe the provisions of the Geneva Conventions and international law governing military occupation”, and condemns Israel’s failure to comply with previous resolutions.

    Res. 279 (May 12, 1970) – “Demands the immediate withdrawal of all Israeli armed forces from Lebanese territory.”

    Res. 280 (May 19, 1970) – Expresses conviction that “that the Israeli military attack against Lebanon was premeditated and of a large scale and carefully planned in nature”, recalls resolution 279 “demanding the immediate withdrawal of all Israeli armed forces from Lebanese territory”, deplores Israel’s violation of resolutions 262 and 270, “Condemns Israel for its premeditated military action in violation of its obligations under the Charter of the United Nations”, and “Deplores the loss of life and damage to property inflicted as a result” of Israeli violations of Security Council resolutions.

    Res. 285 (Sep. 5, 1970) – “Demands the complete and immediate withdrawal of all Israeli armed forces from Lebanese territory.”
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    Jeremy R. Hammond is an independent political analyst and a recipient of the Project Censored Award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism. He is the founding editor of Foreign Policy Journal (www.foreignpolicyjournal.com) and can also be found on the web at JeremyRHammond.com. His new book, “Ron Paul vs. Paul Krugman: Austrian vs. Keynesian economics in the financial crisis”, is now available at Amazon.com. Read more articles by Jeremy R. Hammond.
    http://www.jeremyrhammond.com

    http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2010/01/27/rogue-state-israeli-violations-of-u-n-security-council-resolut