Saturday 28 July 2012

Palestine Olympic Team in London

The Palestine Olympic team has been welcomed to London  in a ceremony at City Hall. The members of the team have travelled from Gaza, the West Bank and Jerusalem; and include a Palestinian refugee living in Egypt. They met for the first time in London a week before and are preparing to compete in swimming, judo and athletics.
The ceremony was attended by MPs Jeremy Corbyn and Andy Slaughter as well as Baroness Jenny Tonge, and PSC representatives. Getting to London is a victory for the team - Jeremy Corbyn MP said how inspired he was by Palestinian youth who train, and aim to make their mark, in spite of much adversity.

First published by Palestine Solidarity Campaign
Palestine Olympics

Monday 16 July 2012

Further isolation for Palestinians

OCHA: 23,000 Palestinians will be isolated when barrier is
completed

RAMALLAH 13 July -- The UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) last week issued a fact sheet about the
segregation wall being built by the Israeli occupation and the impact it is
having and will have on Palestinian lives when it is completed. According
to OCHA, 85% of the wall's route will run inside the West Bank rather than
along the Green Line, isolating 9.4% of the West Bank. "Around 7,500
Palestinians who reside in areas between the Green Line and the Barrier
(Seam Zone), excluding East Jerusalem, require special permits to continue
living in their own homes; another 23,000 will be isolated if the Barrier
is completed as planned," the report stated adding that those Palestinians
whose land lies behind the barrier have to have special permits to enter
their land.
http://www.palestine-info.co.uk/<http://www.palestine-info.co.uk/en/default.aspx?xyz=U6Qq7k%2BcOd87MDI46m9rUxJEpMO%2Bi1s7l06Vf8QkEXB7LLwGJ%2F7OjCV38JHCME%2FP34bszJC26VXhHgKhP%2FeDobWacYqUelYaYKScaK4IegND3X6ihA9Y4809Cw0O4ovpVknnTDuciHY%3D>
*Greater Israel watch ,Daily Beast 12 July by Andrew Sullivan
ctd.<
http://andrewsullivan.thedailybeast.com/2012/07/greater-israel-watch-ctd-1.html>
 --  Greater Israel Watch posted a photo
of the collection can of the Jewish National Fund, showing a map of Israel that shows no boundary between Israel and the occupied territories. Compare the two images after the jump:  jumphttp://andrewsullivan.thedailybeast.com/2012/07/greater-israel-watch-ctd-1.html

Saturday 7 July 2012

Slow-motion genocide


by  Stephen Lendman


Israel’s committing slow-motion genocide in Gaza.
Israel’s claimed easing is false. Besieged Gazans remain isolated. The Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) assessed conditions in January.
Except for limited amounts of agricultural products, Gaza’s export economy’s suffering. In addition, imports of basic needs and raw materials fall well below minimal needs.
Karm Abu Salem crossing was closed nearly 30% of the time. Incoming truckloads are 28.5% of pre-siege levels.
Out of 60 million flowers produced annually, export permission’s granted for only a tiny fraction. In 2005, 70 truckloads of agricultural products were exported daily. Now it’s a shadow of that amount.
Before June 2007, 570 average daily truckloads entered Gaza. Now it is around 150.
Karm Abu Salem crossing handles commercial traffic only. Currently, it doesn’t meet Gaza’s needs. Previously, goods entered through four crossings. In March 2011, Israel began demolishing the main al-Mentar (Karni) commercial crossing.
It once handled 75% of Strip needs. Its closure and dependence on Karm Abu Salem severely restricted movement of goods. Moreover, high transportation expenses increased import prices, and farmers incurred higher export costs.
Al-Mentar crossing opened in 1995. According to the 2005 Crossings Agreement, its operational capacity allowed 400 export trucks daily and 600 entering. Yet Israel’s bureaucracy prevented attaining these levels even before imposed siege restrictions.
Gaza’s commercial crossing is important. During Cast Lead it was destroyed. In addition, Private Transport Association secretary-general Jihad Salim said shipping a container from Ashdod, Israel to Gaza cost more than from China to Ashdod. It is because onerous import fees impose burdensome expenses.
Besides agriculture, Gaza’s export economy relies heavily on textiles and furniture. Producers are hard-pressed to survive. Many can’t and shut down.
In January, 2,800 tons of cooking gas entered Gaza. It represents less than half what’s needed. Israel permitted 330,000 litres of diesel and 70,000 litres of benzene. It is far less than what Gazans need. As a result, tunnel smuggling is essential.
A total ban on construction materials remains for private sector use. International organizations are permitted limited quantities, including 70,000 tons of construction aggregate, 7,400 tons of cement, and 1,435 tons of iron. Limited amounts of tar, other construction materials, plumbing tools, ceramics and marble were also allowed.
Vehicular traffic restrictions reduced entry to half its normal flow. An agreement to permit more wasn’t implemented.
Fewer patients were given travel permission to visit Israeli, West Bank and Jerusalem hospitals. The level represents half the early 2006 level. Certain categories were excluded altogether, including blind patients, those with amputated limbs, and others Israel won’t qualify as needing urgent treatment.
Under complicated bureaucratic procedures, 46 international journalists, 93 diplomats, and 548 international humanitarian organization workers entered after several days of delay.
Business people endured five border crossing closures. During the 26 open, 2,300 traders were let in. It represents half the June 2007 level.

For over 56 months, families of about 500 Gazans detained in Israeli prisons were prevented from visiting loved ones. No rational reasons were given. Doing so violates Fourth Geneva’s Article 116, stating:
“Every internee shall be allowed to receive visitors, especially near relatives, at regular intervals and as frequently as possible. As far as is possible, internees shall be permitted to visit their homes in urgent cases, particularly in cases of death or serious illness of relatives.” Rafah International Crossing Point conditions improved. About 15,760 entered Egypt. Another 774 returned. Palestinian males aged 18 to 40 are prohibited traveling either way. Opened five days a week, it’s closed on weekends and official holidays.
Beit Hanoun (Erez) Crossing handles pedestrian traffic. Israel closed it with few exceptions. They include patients with serious illnesses, Arabs with Israeli IDs, international journalists, international humanitarian organization employees, businesspeople, and persons traveling via al-Karama crossing. Even they endure burdensome delays.
Gaza’s siege is illegal. Isolation this long represents cruel and unusual collective punishment. Pressure’s vital to end it entirely, including for seaborne entry. Israel maintains it repressively, despite serving no useful purpose.
As a result, 1.7 million Gazans endure severe hardships. They’re suffocating because too few vital to life supplies enter. Others remain at Israel’s whim to curtail or cut off entry entirely for any reason or none at all. This must end.

Fourth Geneva’s Article 55 states:
To the fullest extent of the means available to it, the Occupying Power has the duty of ensuring the food and medical supplies of the population; it should, in particular, bring in the necessary foodstuffs, medical stores, and other articles if the resources of the occupied territory are inadequate.”“The Occupying Power may not requisition foodstuffs, articles, or medical supplies available in the occupied territory, and then only if the requirements of the civilian population have been taken into account.”
Under Article 1, Fourth Geneva’s “High Contracting Powers” are obligated to ensure implementation of the convention’s provisions to assure proper treatment for occupied people.
For nearly 45 years, Israel never treated Palestinians responsibly. As a result, they continue enduring appalling hardships, especially for besieged Gazans.

 At hundreds of checkpoints, Israel harasses Palestinians repressively. On January 25, Haaretz writer Amira Hass headlined, “New Israeli search method at West Bank checkpoint worries Palestinians,” saying:
According to international aid workers, “Israel Police have begun implementing a new method of searching Palestinian vehicles through use of (unknown, perhaps toxic) nausea-inducing chemicals at a Bethlehem checkpoint.”Cars are pulled over, then “passengers are asked to roll up all windows, apart from that of the driver — and exit the vehicle. Two tubes are then connected to the vehicle — one is connected to an air pump, the other, which passes through a tiny filter, is attached to the vehicle. A policeman with a stopwatch flicks the air pump switch.” 

One international user described the experience as follows:
“[T]he tube is left connected for approximately 10 minutes. Afterward, the filter is removed and taken to a nearby building. The worker says she was under the impression that some kind of chemical was disseminated into the vehicle, as she and another passenger began feeling nauseous and suffered from headaches several days afterwards. The worker has informed her country’s embassy.”
In combat, Israel tests new terror weapons in real time. Apparently Palestinians are test subjects to see how well or poorly they handle this substance, whatever it is. An Israeli official explained the procedure offhandedly, saying:
“(I)t must conduct arbitrary, rudimentary checks through use of sophisticated technological means, all the while alleviating the experience of those being checked.” No further explanation was given.
Begun in December, it continues. Palestinians with Israeli license plates and foreign residents are excluded. What’s used and its potential short or longer term effects aren’t known.
Israel’s unconcerned about Palestinians’ health and well-being. Gazans endure critical fuel and medical supply shortages. About 90% of Gaza’s water is unsafe, and raw sewage dumped into the Mediterranean poses serious health hazards.
In conflicts, illegal weapons, depleted uranium, and other toxins are used freely. What’s a dose of unknown gas besides all that. They add up and take a toll.
Reprinted from Occupied Palestine

Friday 6 July 2012

Freedom of movement: small concession from Israel

 Israel agrees to register 216 Gazans in West Bank
  
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=501345
RAMALLAH (Ma‘an) 4 July-- Israel has agreed to register 216 Palestinians
originally from the Gaza Strip as residents of the West Bank, a Palestinian
Authority liaison department said  on Wednesday. The Civil Affairs department,
tasked with coordinating the population registry with Israel, released the
names 
http://www.maannews.net/arb/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=501326  of
Palestinians who will now be able to reside in the West Bank without fear
of detention. It said the department would continue efforts to change the
residency status of all Palestinians from Gaza who are living in the West
Bank. Palestinians living in the West Bank whose registered address is in
the Gaza Strip have been detained by Israel as "illegal aliens." ... Israel
received an estimated 120,000 change of address applications that it did
not process between 2000 and 2005, according to Human Rights Watch.
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=501345

Monday 2 July 2012

Lifta: living history under threat - film-in-progress



The little town of Lifta is one piece of historical Palestine that has managed to remain more or less as it was before the 1948 Israeli war, but now its survival is threatened by the expansion of Israeli Jerusalem as over 250 luxury villas, shops and a hotel.  The Arab heritage, architecture and history are about to be erased by Jerusalem’s municipality.  Palestinian Arabs and Israeli Jews are standing together against this; the result of their solidarity could be the beginning of a reconciliation and a stronger, secure future for all.