BBC Panorama - A Walk In The Park [ Part 1/3 ]
Labels: News, Video - فيديو
مدونة اخبارية، ثقافية، فنية، علمية شاملة
There is a place of strange quiet in the cramped and crowded Gaza Strip.Labels: News
Jared Malsin, the editor of the English edition of Maan News Agency, has been detained by Israeli authorities.
Malsin, a Jewish-American who lives and works in the West Bank, was picked up on Tuesday at Ben Gurion International Airport, as he and his partner returned from vacation in the Czech Republic. After being subjected to eight hours of interrogation, Malsin was deemed a security threat and was slated to be deported to Prague Thursday morning.
Why?
Maan states: Hebrew-language interrogation transcripts obtained by Ma'an reveal that Malsin was deemed a security risk on the apparent basis of his political beliefs. Interrogators gathered online research into the journalist's writing history, which the transcripts indicate included news stories "criticizing the State of Israel," among other allegations that he "authored articles inside the territories."
Although Bethlehem-based Maan is identified as a Palestinian news service, it is widely known as an independent media outlet--free of political agendas and noted for its unbiased reporting. As such, it is attracting a steadily growing readership, receiving over 3 million visitors a month.
Malsin appealed the deportation order and was scheduled to stand before a judge in Tel Aviv on Thursday morning. But according to Maan's lawyer, Castro Daoud, the hearing has been delayed until Sunday for unknown reasons.
In the meantime, Daoud says, Malsin remains in the custody of Israeli authorities.
Since his detainment, which Israeli officials initially denied, Malsin has had little contact with the outside world. Daoud has had only one brief meeting with his client and Malsin has made a short phone call to Maan staff writer and sub-editor, George Hale.
Speaking to The Huffington Post, Hale reports that Malsin was shocked by the detainment. Malsin was also surprised that Israeli security officials were questioning him about the International Solidarity Movement, an activist group that Malsin has no affiliation with.
"He [Malsin] is the last person who would be involved with the ISM. He is a journalist," Hale says, "and his reporting is impartial."
Hale adds: "I think that there are a lot of assumptions about Maan and the people who work here--that we're here to demonize Israel. We're not."
Despite the fact that the Israeli Government Press Office [GPO] refuses to issue press passes to Maan employees, Hales says that both Malsin and Maan enjoy good working relationships with the Israeli Defense Forces [IDF] and other governmental bodies.
"We [Maan] talk to the IDF and include the Israeli point of view [in our articles]," Hale says, "Destroying our English department is destroying [that] side of the story."
Hale states that Malsin's partner, Faith Rowold, who does not have legal representation, was deported to Prague.
When considered within a larger context, Malsin's detention seems to point to a government intent on silencing dissent.
In September, the prominent Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions [BDS] activist Mohammed Othman was picked up by the IDF as he attempted to enter the West Bank via Jordan. Othman was returning from a visit to Norway, a country whose government had recently divested from an Israeli corporation directly involved in the occupation. Othman was widely credited as having been a crucial player in Norway's decision to divest.
After months in administrative detention without charges, held on the basis of evidence that neither Othman nor his lawyer was allowed to see, Othman was finally released yesterday, January 13.
Recently, the IDF has also arrested various leaders of non-violent grassroots movements against the separation barrier. In December, Abdallah Abu Rahmah, coordinator of the Bil'in Popular Committee Against the Wall was arrested on charges of incitement and stone throwing. Abu Rahmah is also accused of arms possession for displaying empty tear gas canisters and discharged rubber bullets--both shot at him and other protestors during the weekly non-violent demonstrations held in his village.
On January 12, Ibrahim Amirah, the coordinator of the Ni'ilin Popular Committee Against the Wall was arrested. Amirah has been detained and released without charges twice in the past.
Additionally, the IDF conducted a night raid on the West Bank home of the ISM's media coordinator, Eva Novakova. While Novakova was arrested and deported on the grounds that she had overstayed her visa, critics of her deportation point out that it's unusual for the IDF to go to such lengths due to an expired visa.
Hale says that, to the best of his knowledge, Malsin has a valid Israeli visa. Malsin's detention is "arbitrary," Hale says. "It's a violation of press freedom."
Labels: News
Palestinian-Israeli lawmaker Ahmad Tibi on Monday alleged that the Israeli military trains dogs to attack anyone saying Allahu Akbar, Arabic for “God is great.”Labels: News
On International Human Rights Day in last year, my husband Abdallah Abu Rahmah was in Berlin receiving a medal from the World Association for Human Rights. This year on the same day, December 10th, Abdallah was taken away at 2am by Israeli soldiers who broke into our West Bank home. Abdallah was arrested for the same reasons he received the prize - his nonviolent struggle for justice, equality and peace in Israel/Palestine.
Labels: News
London, December 28, 2009 (Pal Telegraph) - Al Jazeera English broadcasted a news report yesterday, 27th December 2009, on the first anniversary of Gaza War. Ayman Mohye El Din, Al Jazeera reporter in the Gaza Strip who covered the last war and worked there over the past 2 years, prepared a news report from Gaza.Labels: News
A British court reportedly issued an arrest warrant for Israel's former foreign minister on charges relating to Israel's 22-day war on Gaza, before apparently withdrawing it after it was found she was not in the country.Labels: News
Israel has confirmed that its forensic scientists in the 1990s took organs from dead bodies, including those of Palestinians, without their families’ consent, an Israeli television report said.
Labels: News

“Shame”, “Holocaust”, “Islamophobia”, “humiliation” – words that have appeared regularly in Arab press since 57.5 per cent of Swiss voters said yes on November 29 to a ban on the construction of minarets.
Most commentators wondered what could have pushed the Swiss to vote as they did, and what the consequences would be for a country that found itself attracting criticism from all sides, including from the United Nations and the European Union.
The Qatari newspaper Al-Raya was amazed at the voting behaviour of a country known for its freedom of speech and democratic principles.
According to the Assabah newspaper in Tunisia, “the stigmatisation of Islam in the West is no longer a question of mere media provocation – from now on it genuinely threatens the Muslim minority”.
Al-Quds Al-Arabi, edited in London, observed: “If Switzerland – known for its neutrality, quality of life and very high levels of education – is foundering with Islamophobia, one can no longer blame certain other European countries which appear sensitive because of unemployment and the financial crisis.”
The Kuwaiti daily Al-Watan said the vote was the sign of “European mental regression, a return to the Middle Ages and a desire to eliminate others”.
For a columnist in Egypt’s Al-Ahram, everything being said about creeping Islamicisation and the introduction of sharia law was “pure fantasy”.
The comments of Al-Shourouq in Algeria were hardly more flattering. Under the headline “Four minarets rock Switzerland and tear down its neutrality”, it blamed the Swiss government for allowing the vote to be put to the people. It also placed responsibility on Swiss Muslims, “who failed to unite and speak under one banner and let themselves be distorted”.
Some media called for a boycott of Switzerland or other sanctions. The Palestinian website Dounia Al-Watan demanded rich Arabs withdraw their money from Swiss banks.
Al-Dostour in Egypt drew comparisons between Islamophobia and anti-Semitism and pointed out how the hatred of Jews slowly gained ground in Germany, resulting in the Holocaust.
Alam Al-Akhbar, an Arab site in Turkey, invited Muslims to deposit their money in Turkish banks.
In London Al-Sharq Al-Awsat believed there was a connection between the minaret vote and the two Swiss businessmen sentenced to 16 months in prison three days later by a Libyan court for visa irregularities and tax evasion.
Less harsh words were found on the London-based Elaph website, which wondered whether the Swiss vote was not ultimately linked to the poor image offered to the West by Muslims in Western countries.
Similarly Al-Ittihad, a newspaper in the United Arab Emirates, said one shouldn’t “insult” a democratic and sovereign country which was free to adopt whatever measures it deemed necessary.
It added: “Maybe [the Swiss voted like that] because they fear for their Christianity?”
The Moroccan daily Al-Alam asked whether the vote didn’t throw back into question the issue of interreligious dialogue – precisely what Al-Watan in Kuwait was calling for, suggesting conferences to fight Islamophobia.
The appeal for dialogue was also made on IslamOnline, a moderate site that recognises a serious crisis between the West and Muslims.
The problem, it said, “is the absence of a reasonable voice ... it falls to Arabs and Muslims to be responsible for preventing problems and protecting their beliefs and customs”.
Abdelhafidh Abdeleli, swissinfo.ch (Translated from French by Thomas Stephens)
Labels: News
Intel has unveiled a prototype chip that packs 48 separate processing cores on to a chunk of silicon the size of a postage stamp.
Certainly the situation on the border hasn't changed in the slightest: for aid, all of which, despite assurances to the contrary, is still rotting in El Arish; for Palestinians, most of whom cannot pass, or can pass with difficulty - see below; and for exports, which are simply not allowed. Pity that the Egyptians only want to keep the parts of agreements that don't involve doing nice things to Palestinians.
Every day hundreds of Egyptians pay large amounts of money to smugglers to embark on an often perilous journey in unseaworthy boats to Europe, mainly via Libya.Some never make it to their final destination, perishing at sea because the overcrowded boats capsized or sank in bad weather.
Yet despite the dangers many people don't seem to be put off. Some who made it to Europe but were later deported have even tried going back again. In fact, according to a recent study by the Earth Centre for Studies almost half a million (460,000) Egyptians have successfully entered Europe illegally in the last decade, and 90,000 live in Italy alone. Another study into attitudes towards migration by the Arabic Labour Organisation is equally revealing.
It found that 50% of students who take up postgraduate studies in Europe or the United States don't return to Egypt, meaning the country is losing some of its brightest and most talented pupils. Two thousand young people took part in the study and when asked whether they would like to live and work abroad, 50% said yes.
Rasha Mohammed, an unemployed law graduate, does not think she will find work any time soon. "Jobs are very scarce and if you want to work you have to know someone important," she says. Ms Mohammed has set her sights on working in another country. "Saudi Arabia would be a good place,'' she says. "Or maybe London."
She admits that she is afraid of living on her own in Europe. But she would still go if the chance arose, despite the fact that the British economy is still in recession. Read more @ BBC
Labels: News
Israël limite sévèrement l'accès à l'eau dans les territoires palestiniens "en maintenant un contrôle total sur des ressources communes", selon un rapport d'Amnesty International rendu public mardi 27 octobre. L'organisation internationale appelle d'ailleurs Israël à "mettre fin à ses politiques discriminatoires et à lever immédiatement toutes les restrictions imposées aux Palestiniens".Labels: News
Israel is denying Palestinians access to even the basic minimum of clean, safe water, Amnesty International says.Labels: News
We see it happening every few months. An amazing Jerusalem ritual; glorious haredi pyromania – burning down the house.
They are quite good at it, especially the residents of the Mea Shearim and Geula neighborhoods, aged 7 to 70, including – on the sidelines, of course, and separately – their modest wives.
In the spectrum of their reactions, burning down the house is the decisive answer; the first and second blow; the beginning and end of the dialogue; a shining negotiations session.
It starts with announcements posted on walls, urging the public to join. This week it was about the starving mother – whose son’s shocking photograph, all skin and bones, was published by Yedioth Ahronoth Thursday.
They say she “treated him with such great devotion that her hands swelled up.” The announcement was signed by the “Association for Curbing the Persecution of the Haredi Public,” a heart-breaking text pertaining to the terrible injustice done to the mother, the result of a blood libel concocted by the welfare department, which along with the medical establishment “experiments on humans.”
The Orthodox public – “a handful of radicals” as some of their functionaries claim – is well practiced. Within minutes, all the garbage in the neighborhood is gathered for the sake of the cause. The skilled youngsters – there is no replacement for experience acquired under fire – turn municipal garbage dumpsters into a glorious arsenal of weapons. A flammable combination of homemade garbage and public waste: Plastic bags, paper bags, cardboard boxes, Styrofoam cups, leftovers from breakfast-lunch-dinner, eggshells and rotten vegetables.
A little drop of fuel and it goes up in flames. The fire of God that blinds everyone.
While doing that, a moment after the police and firefighters and municipal inspectors arrive, we see a little fridge flying down and landing on top of a fire truck, along with leftovers from the Shabbat meal, glass bottles, stones, and fruit that withered in the heavy heat.
So much depression hides there. So much anger, fury, and self-righteous rage that burns anything in its course. Residents of the haredi state hit the streets time after time to desperately fight the Zionist state, by burning its green garbage dumpsters. Read more
Ariella Ringel-Hoffmanynetnews.com
Labels: News
Who should pay for dramatic rescues? Werner Greiner, who returned to Switzerland on Tuesday after being held for six months in Mali, is hoping it's not the victim.Labels: News