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Another Violent Attack on a Palestinian by the Israeli Occupation Forces Goes Unpunished

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Video of brutal and wrongful arrest

Annie Robbins on October 24, 2015



Soldiers beat Ansar Aasi, 25. el-Bireh, Palestine Oct.6, 2015

At 1:15 p.m. on the afternoon of October 6, Ansar Aasi, 25, was stocking supplies at the cleaning products company where he was employed in al-Bireh, a Palestinian city adjacent to Ramallah. Watch at 22 seconds into the video, as Aasi begins to exit the warehouse; taking one step onto the street he then cautiously retreats into the enclosed storage facility. Pensively he waits and watches the street. Ten seconds later Aasi raises his open palms. He has been spotted and targeted for arrest by Israeli soldiers ostensibly on the hunt for Palestinian stone throwers. In the scene that follows Aasi is violently mauled by a group of soldiers as one stands guard outside.

By 55 seconds, four soldiers are inside the warehouse with Aasi and one outside. Aasi is offscreen with one of those soldiers – backed into a corner – we can’t see him. At 1:21 two of the soldiers are offscreen with Aasi as a 5th soldier enters the warehouse. At 1:36 the sixth soldier enters. By 2:09 one of the soldiers pulls another soldier off Aasi — but it is not clear why nor what the soldiers are doing huddled around Aasi’s form. Aasi’s leg is seen protruding from the mass and a soldier is yanking at it and then begins kicking him at 2:43. At least 4 soldiers are offscreen and they drag Aasi out by the legs. One soldier snaps a photo, another rams his rifle into Aasi (4:26) 6 or 7 times as he squirms on the ground. Another soldier kicks Aasi in the head repeatedly.

The next day Ansar ‘Aasi was admitted into Hadassah Ein Karem hospital for treatment of wounds he sustained. In total he spent 5 days incarcerated before he was released.


‘Aasi was held in detention for two days before even being taken for interrogation at the Binyamin police station. Police interrogators there told him that three soldiers identified him as a stone thrower. In spite of his denials, the police did not bother to check his alibi claim, in spite of the existence of footage. Only following an arrest extension hearing at the Ofer military court, was the police willing to view the footage, which was brought to them on Friday,9.10.2015. ‘Aasi was released unconditionally on Sunday, 11.10, after five days in wrongful detention.

B’Tselem does not know whether the soldiers who arrested ‘Aasi were held accountable for assaulting him and making up false charges.


And yet, Aasi is a lucky guy. Why? Because the day before, in another case of ‘mistaken identity’, Israeli forces shot 13-year-old Abed Obeidallah in the chest, killing him almost instantly. Because Aasi’s violent arrest and abduction, caught on camera, confirmed his alibi. How rare, how rare indeed.

How the BBC Erased All Trace of Saudi Support for Al Qaeda in Syria

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An interesting example of how the BBC does its best to promote the foreign policy interests of British capitalism and the current government by doctoring its news stories.  In this case it is subscribing to the line that the ‘moderates’ that Saudi Arabia are supplying are not in fact the Al Qaeda group, al-Nusra.  In this case they tripped over their own lies in their efforts to cover up what the Saudi regime was doing.
Cameron fighting for human rights
 Unlike Jon Snow’s demolition job on David Cameron regarding US support for Saudi membership of the UN Human Rights Council, the BBC does its best to cover up the government’s support of this obnoxious regime.

Tony Greenstein 

BBC Protects U.K.’s Close Ally Saudi Arabia With Incredibly Dishonest and Biased Editing


By Glenn Greenwald

October 26, 2015 "Information Clearing House" - "The Intercept" - The BBC loves to boast about how “objective” and “neutral” it is. But a recent article, which it was forced to change, illustrates the lengths to which the British state-funded media outlet will go to protect one of the U.K. government’s closest allies, Saudi Arabia, which also happens to be one of the country’s largest arms purchasers (just this morning, the Saudi ambassador to the U.K. threatened in an op-ed that any further criticism of the Riyadh regime by Jeremy Corbyn could jeopardize the multi-layered U.K./Saudi alliance).
How the Chair of the UN Human Rights Council Defends Human Rights
Earlier this month, the BBC published an article describing the increase in weapons and money sent by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf regimes to anti-Assad fighters in Syria. All of that “reporting” was based on the claims of what the BBC called “a Saudi government official,” who — because he works for a government closely allied with the U.K. — was granted anonymity by the BBC and then had his claims mindlessly and uncritically presented as fact (it is the rare exception when the BBC reports adversarially on the Saudis). This anonymous “Saudi official” wasn’t whistleblowing or presenting information contrary to the interests of the regime; to the contrary, he was disseminating official information the regime wanted publicized. This was the key claim of the anonymous Saudi official (emphasis added):
The Zionist and Saudi flags
The well-placed official, who asked not to be named, said supplies of modern, high-powered weaponry including guided anti-tank weapons would be increased to the Arab- and western-backed rebel groups fighting the forces of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad and his Russian, Iranian and Lebanese allies.
One of the quainter practices of this esteemed member of the UN Human Rights Council
He said those groups being supplied did not include either Islamic State (IS) or al-Nusra Front, both of which are proscribed terrorist organizations. Instead, he said the weapons would go to three rebel alliances — Jaish al-Fatah (Army of Conquest), the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and the Southern Front.
So the Saudis, says the anonymous official, are only arming groups such as the “Army of Conquest,” but not the al Qaeda affiliate the Nusra Front. What’s the problem with this claim? It’s obvious, though the BBC would not be so impolite as to point it out: The Army of Conquest includes the Nusra Front as one of its most potent components. This is not even in remote dispute; the New York  Times’ elementary explainer on the Army of Conquest from three weeks ago states:

Who are its members?
Reagan & Saudi Ambassador
The alliance consists of a number of mostly Islamist factions, including the Nusra Front, al Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate; Ahrar al-Sham, another large group; and more moderate rebel factions that have received covert arms support from the intelligence services of the United States and its allies.
Israeli & Saudi Spy Chiefs
The Telegraph, in an early October article complaining that Russia was bombing “non-ISIL rebels,” similarly noted that the Army of Conquest (bombed by Russia) “includes a number of Islamist groups, most powerful among them Ahrar al-Sham and Jabhat al-Nusra. Jabhat al-Nusra is the local affiliate of al-Qaeda.” Even the Voice of America noted that “Russia’s main target has been the Army of Conquest, an alliance of insurgent groups that includes the al-Nusra Front, al-Qaida’s affiliate in Syria, and the hard-line Islamist group Ahrar al-Sham, as well as some less extreme Islamist groups.”
In other words, the claim from the anonymous Saudi official that the BBC uncritically regurgitated — that the Saudis are only arming the Army of Conquest but no groups that “include” the Nusra Front — is self-negating. A BBC reader, Ricardo Vaz, brought this contradiction to the BBC’s attention. As he told The Intercept: “The problem is that the Nusra Front is the most important faction inside the Army of Conquest. So either the Saudi official expected the BBC journalist not to know this, or he expects us to believe they can deliver weapons to factions fighting side by side with an al Qaeda affiliate and that those weapons will not make their way into Nusra’s hands. In any case, this is very close to an official admission that the Saudis (along with Qataris and Turkish) are supplying weapons to an al Qaeda affiliate. This of course is not a secret to anyone who’s paying attention.”
Charles & Camilla Royally Defending Human Rights  
In response to Vaz’s complaint, the BBC did not tell its readers about this vital admission. Instead, it simply edited that Saudi admission out of its article. In doing so, it made the already-misleading article so much worse, as the BBC went even further out of its way to protect the Saudis. This is what that passage now states on the current version of the article on the BBC’s site (emphasis added):
He said those groups being supplied did not include either Islamic State (IS) or al-Nusra Front, both of which are proscribed terrorist organizations. Instead, he said the weapons would go to the Free Syrian Army and other small rebel groups.
Bush & a Saudi Prince
So originally, the BBC stated that the “Saudi official” announced that the regime was arming the Army of Conquest. Once it was brought to the BBC’s attention that the Army of Conquest includes the al Qaeda affiliate Nusra Front — a direct contradiction of the Saudi official’s other claim that the Saudis are not arming Nusra — the BBC literally changed the Saudi official’s own statement, whitewashed it, to eliminate his admission that they were arming Army of Conquest. Instead, the BBC now states that the Saudis are arming “the Free Syrian Army and other small rebel groups.” The BBC simply deleted the key admission that the Saudis are arming al Qaeda. As Vaz told The Intercept:

This is an incredible whitewashing effort! Before they were directly quoting the Saudi official, and he explicitly referred to “three rebel alliances,” including “Jaish al-Fatah” [Army of Conquest]. There is no way a journalist was told “other small rebel groups” and understood what was written before. In their reply to my complaint they said the mistake was an “editorial oversight,” which is truly laughable. What we saw was a prestigious western media outlet surrendering the floor to an anonymous official from the most medieval of regimes, the official pretty much saying that they were going to supply (more) weapons to an al Qaeda affiliate, and instead of pointing this out, the BBC chose to blur the picture and cover the terrorist-arming/funding activities of the Saudis/Qataris/Turkish.
Kerry & King Salman
I personally don’t view the presence of al Qaeda “affiliated” fighters as a convincing argument against supporting Syrian rebels. It’s understandable that people fighting against an oppressive regime — one backed by powerful foreign factions — will align with anyone willing and capable of fighting with them. Moreover, the long-standing U.S./U.K. template of branding anyone they fight and kill as “terrorists” or “al Qaeda” is no more persuasive or noble when used in Syria by Assad and the Russians, particularly when used to obscure civilian casualties. And regarding the anti-Assad forces as monolithically composed of religious extremists ignores the anti-tyranny sentiment among ordinary Syrians motivating much of the anti-regime protests, with its genesis in the Arab Spring.
But what this does highlight is just how ludicrous — how beyond parody — the 14-year-old war on terror has become, how little it has to do with its original ostensible justification. The regime with the greatest plausible proximity to the 9/11 attack — Saudi Arabia— is the closest U.S. ally in the region next to Israel. The country that had absolutely nothing to do with that attack, and which is at least as threatened as the U.S. by the religious ideology that spurred it — Iran — is the U.S.’s greatest war-on-terror adversary. Now we have a virtual admission from the Saudis that they are arming a group that centrally includes al Qaeda, while the U.S. itself has at least indirectly done the same (just as was true in Libya). And we’re actually at the point where western media outlets are vehemently denouncing Russia for bombing al Qaeda elements, which those outlets are  manipulatively referring to as “non-ISIS groups.”

It’s not a stretch to say that the faction that provides the greatest material support to al Qaeda at this point is the U.S. and its closest allies. That is true even as al Qaeda continues to be paraded around as the prime need for the ongoing war.

But whatever one’s views are on Syria, it’s telling indeed to watch the BBC desperately protect Saudi officials, not only by granting them anonymity to spout official propaganda, but worse, by using blatant editing games to whitewash the Saudis’ own damaging admissions, ones the BBC unwittingly published. There are many adjectives one can apply to the BBC’s behavior here: “Objective” and “neutral” are most assuredly not among them.

A Commitment by UK Scholars to the Rights of Palestinians

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A Fitting Response to J K Rowling, Eric Pickles  and the Culture 4 Colonialism Gang
The advert below supporting an Academic Boycott, appeared in the Guardian of 27th October 2015.   It was signed by over 350 academics.  You can link to it at

Did the leadership of Palestine Solidarity Campaign Aid the Police in Harrasment of Palestine Activists?

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Police Arrest and Impose Draconian Bail Conditions on Activists for Flying the Hezbollah Flag

I was sent this letter, signed by Ilan Pappe, the Israeli historian of the Nakba and author of The Ethnic Cleansing of the Palestinians, relating to a demonstration organised by Palestine Solidarity Campaign on Saturday 17 October. 
Hezbollah Flag
Police moving in to prevent flag being flown and to arrest two solidarity activists
It relates to the arrest of two Palestinians for flying the flag of Hezbollah at the demonstration.  PSC asked that only Palestinian flags should be flown but those around a group called ‘Inminds’ also wanted to fly Hezbollah’s yellow flag.  Hezbollah is the only Arab resistance group which has been able to defeat Israel militarily.  In 2000 it forced Israel to withdraw from South Lebanon and bring to an end its quisling entity in South Lebanon, allied to the so-called South Lebanese Army under a Lebanese General Lahad.  In 2006 it repulsed an Israeli invasion of Lebanon with heavy Israeli casualties and Israel has been seeking revenge ever since.
one of those arrested
I have therefore signed the letter and Brighton PSC has asked national PSC for clarification as to what actually happened.  In particular Brighton PSC is concerned about the arrest of Abbas, who runs the Inminds web site and his subsequent mistreatment by the Metropolitan Police.  We have therefore asked the officers and executive of national PSC to answer several questions about their actions on the day, and about possible links between their actions and the arrests. There have been conflicting accounts of what happened, so Brighton PSC is not prejudging what actually occurred. We also believe that national PSC should also be briefing local PSC branches on what they think happened and why they acted as they did.
Inminds stall outside Labour Party conference
As I see it, the main issues are:

1.  The co-operation by PSC, which seems to me to be very clear, with the Police in getting a Hezbollah flag lowered.  Sarah Colborne, in her statement to Inminds, refers to opposition to all forms of racism, including anti-Semitism.  I am not aware that Hezbollah is an anti-Semitic organisation though it is an Islamic organisation.  Hamas too, since the question of their flag has arisen, has made anti-Semitic statements, not least in its charter but I don't consider it, contrary to Israeli and Zionist propaganda as an anti-Semitic organisation so much as a backward organisation politically.  That is almost certainly true of Hezbollah.
2.  The key issue, indeed the only issue, is whether we should co-operate with the Police in enforcing a rule that only Palestinian flags should be flown.  It is reasonable to ask that only Palestinian flags should be flown on our demonstrations but it is unacceptable that Police should be asked to enforce this especially since the question of enforcing anti-terrorist legislation becomes an issue.
Inminds G4S protest outside Labour Party Conference - PSC nationally withdrew support
3.  The anti-terrorist legislation is an affront to any notion of civil liberties.  It criminalises a person's thought.  It can mean and would have meant, at a time when some of us were involved in supporting Republican activities in Ireland in the 1970's and 1980's having our activities criminalised on the grounds that it was effectively in support of banned organisations.  This is unacceptable.  PSC should never ever be seen to be in support of legislation which defines certain forms of speech as 'terrorist' whilst at the same time refusing to arrest fascist demonstrators and EDL supporters when they engage in anti-Islamic race hatred (or anti-Jewish race hatred).
Inminds stall in support of Palestinian prisoners outside Labour Party conference
4.  The question that has been brought up by a spokesperson for Scottish PSC, Mick Napier, of Hezbollah's support for the Assad regime is irrelevant.  We each have our own view of Russia's intervention and bombing campaign and Hezbollah's tactical alliance with the Assad regime because they deem it in their interests to maintain a regime in Syria that allows Iran to supply it with weaponry. 
PSC demonstration in London
I take the view of Robert Fisk, viz. that there are no easy choices in a situation where the most reactionary Arab states - the Saudis and Quataris and Gulf States support the Jihadists and seek to overthrow Assad.  The United States has got itself into a position where it is on both sides of the civil war - opposing ISIS and Assad.  My support would be for the Kurds and their liberation struggle.  The Assad regime is a detestable police state but the question is whether one would like to see it replaced by an ISIS regime given there is no alternative and the FSA is little more than a flag of convenience for al-Nusra, the al-Qaeda group.  The only saving grace of the Assad regime is that it is a secular regime whereas an ISIS regime would be one in which genocide could and would occur. 
Placard of Palestinian prisoner outside Labour Party conference
5.  The Palestine solidarity organisations should make our position clear that we reject the proscription of either Hamas or Hezbollah.  There is no record of either group having engaged in terrorist activities in this country or abroad.  The war fought in 2006 and in the successive attacks on Gaza were terrorist wars by Israel.  Israel is the terrorist state.  The victims are not terrorists.  We should therefore challenge these proscriptions as being arbitrary and not based on any actual or real activity.

6.  In any event  the political wing of Hezbollah is not proscribed and so the flag itself should not be seen as support for a terrorist organisation though obviously this is something that counsel for the accused will present in court.
7.  The activists arrested are supporters of the Palestinians and Palestinian prisoners in particular.  The Police have, as we would expect, imposed conditions of bail which prevents their engaging in this activity.  This is not what PSC should be lending its name to.  Anti-terrorist legislation is not concerned with preventing actual terrorism but in preventing political activities that is deemed to be supportive of terrorism. 

8.  We should be clear as to who the actual terrorists are and not aid the state in its definition of who is an 'extremist' or indeed have anything to do with the Prevent agenda.

The incident at about 1.13.20 on the film. 

Open Letter to PSC and others

We the undersigned are deeply concerned about events at last Saturday’s demonstration called by yourselves.

It is reported that two long-time activists were harassed by other protestors, and ultimately arrested after being told by the police that the organisers and others had complained to them about the flag they were carrying. This came after:

•   organisers had called from the stage for all flags other than Palestinian flags to be lowered;
•   various persons were sent on behalf of the organisers to ask the activists to remove the flag;
•   and some protestors it would seem, emboldened by the organisers’ call, harassed both activists in a manner bordering on violence (one protestor was seen shouting abuse and breaking the flagpole used by one of the men eventually arrested).

The flag in question was the Hizbullah flag. At the time of writing we know that both of the protestors have been bailed pending a decision by the CPS on whether to charge them with supporting a proscribed organisation and encouraging others to support a proscribed organisation.  When arrested they were questioned upon arrest by SO15 (the Counter Terrorism Command).
It has also been reported that police were asked by PSC to ask one of the men to remove banners in support of Palestinian prisoners from a previous demonstration.

As you are aware the anti-terrorism laws and regime are not only unjust, they have been used to target Muslims, and demonise some liberation movements, including some associated with the Palestinian struggle.  This vicious curtailment of civil liberties, the removal of Muslims from equality before the law and the demonisation of political causes that run counter to UK foreign policy, are all surely things that PSC should at the very least eschew and at most actively oppose.

If these arrests have come as a result of the organisers’ request to the police, it is a matter of great shame for PSC.  Those involved in making those calls from the platform and contacting the police should resign their positions forthwith.

As a note, it is worth recognising that the two men arrested have spent every other week over the last three years holding vigils for Palestinan prisoners.  The conditions of their bail - of extraordinary disproportionality - prevent them from contacting each other, forbid them from going to demonstrations and require them to sign at a police station three times a week.  It is truly disgusting that such committed pro-Palestinian activists and their activities have been stopped in their tracks.  Whilst there is no legal case to charge and convict them under anti-terorrism laws, the threat that hangs over them is a form of harassment that has already had the effect of closing down regular pro-Palestinian protests organised by one of these men.  As you are doubtless aware one of these men was one of the pioneers of BDS some fifteen years ago, and has suffered many threats and abuse from pro-Israel groups and indviduals.

Both these men should have been supported in their work by the organisers, not targeted.  This sorry state of affairs has come through some level of instigtaion by the organisers.  At the very least PSC must campaign for these two men.  Please advise as to how you will be proceeding.

With deep regret,

-       Ilan Pappe

https://ssl.gstatic.com/ui/v1/icons/mail/images/cleardot.gif
An e-mail sent out by Inminds 23 October 2015
I am one of the activists mentioned in the open letter. Unfortunately I cannot elaborate in detail as the case is on-going and I have a hearing on 20th Nov (I have been told that if things don’t work out I could face 5 years imprisonment).

The flag pole in question can be seen in this photo (unfortunately my own photos, cameras, videos including the flagcam have all been taken by the police). The flagpole had two large 8ft Palestinian flags and one small 3ft Hizbullah flag flying on it.

We were part of the main demonstration until one of the protestors attacked us after PSC had hounded us from the podium and in person several times to remove the flag. The attack resulted in a section of the flag pole being broken -  the photo Tapash has selectively shared was taken just after the flag pole had been ripped from the hands of one of us and he is seen trying to retrieve it. After that incident we moved away from the 'PSC protest', across the road to the other side. This did not however stop PSC from continuing to hound us from the podium to remove the flag. The police used this along with complaints from the organisers and others as excuse to arrest us. I explained to the police that we had every right to our flags be they Palestinian, Hizbullah or Inminds as did the PSC to their flags be they Palestinian, PSC, FOA, or any other factions they supported. We had moved away from 'their' protest and had an equal right to protest against Israeli war crimes as they did. If our location was a problem then they should find us another spot to protest. But the police weren’t interested and arrested us (initially for breach of the peace as we had refused the organisers’ instructions to remove the flag - this they said would likely lead to a breach of the peace, and later followed by terror related charges).

On the RT video you can clearly see the police stop talking to us and push us into the car park grabbing our flag and arresting us in direct response to them hearing PSC podium demand other flags be lowered (the policeman mentions this in the video):

Salim’s claim that stewards were instructed not to ask police to intervene is at odds with the police's account. Normally I would not put any weight to police claims but this is not the first time the PSC has sought police help to silence other activists voices. Just last month at the demonstration outside Downing street protesting against Netanyahu's visit the PSC tried to get the police to remove our banners. We had reached Downing Street about 45mins before the main protest was kicking off and started setting up. I attached our 'For justice in Palestine boycott Israel' Palestinian flag banner to the railing and was about to start attaching sticks to our placards when a member of the PSC executive MK demanded I remove our 'crappy banner' from 'their railing'. I explained that it was a public railing and besides there was plenty of free railing for their banners - well over 10 metres of empty railing and wall! But PSC still insisted on us removing our banners, this time the PSC director also joining in. They said it was their protest as they had paid for it and spent months organising it and that they will call the police if we dont remove our banner (PSC executive MK said this). I was bewildered as to what they had paid for.. in any case I refused to remove the banner and PSC called the police liaison officer to get us to remove it. The police told us that the organisers are asking us to remove the banner so we must remove it. In reply I asked if we were legally obliged to remove our banner from a public railing to which they admitted that they were not ordering us but requesting us to remove the banner. So the banner stayed (that banner can also be seen in the photo above - its basically a Palestinian flag with writing on it taken from the Irish PSC campaign stickers).

Another recent example of PSC colluding with higher powers against activists is what happened at the Labour Party conference in Brighton a few weeks ago. There is an ongoing campaign to persuade the Labour Party to stop hiring G4S to provide security at their conferences due to G4S's complicity in torture and caging of Palestinian prisoners. As part of our prisoners campaign we organised a protest outside the conference :

There was a PSC stall inside the conference where Brighton PSC had planned to ask delegates to sign a petition asking the Labour party to end its G4S contracts. But at the last minute PSC central office did a u-turn, apparently due to pressure from their funders, and refused to allow the petition against G4S on their stall. The petition which they had initially created was no longer welcome. This lead to the bizarre situation of members from Brighton PSC asking  us if we could include the PSC petition on our table outside the conference entrance as they were prevented by PSC from displaying it on the PSC stall inside the conference. We of course welcomed the petition.

Inminds has organised 27 protests so far this year, the main focus being Palestinian political prisoners but also protests for cultural boycott and many others. The draconian bail conditions stipulate that we cannot participate in any demos until the next hearing on 20th Nov when depending on the outcome the conditions could continue until trial. The SO15 counter terror officer insisted on it, saying to the custody sergeant, who was still deciding if it was too harsh, that he should take into consideration that the situation in Palestine is currently inflamed and that could spill over into the streets of London so he didn’t want me doing any more protests. The police also raided our homes and took all Inminds PCs / servers / backups - everything - about 18 years worth of campaigning - all the research and files on individual prisoners and material provided by their families to help our campaign to free them, 18 years of photos and videos from hundreds of demos and other functions.. all gone. It’s shameful that our work has been severely jeopardised not by zionists whose attacks we take in our stride, but at the instigation of fellow campaigners for Palestine. Whilst as activists we will disagree with each other on the tactics of the struggle, but what is unacceptable is for one group to use the police to criminalise another group.

Abbas Ali
Inminds.com

Two arrested after refusing to take down Hezbollah flag at Palestine demo


Posted by 5Pillars

Two men were arrested at a pro-Palestinian demonstration in front of the Israeli embassy in London on Saturday after they refused to take down a Hezbollah flag they had hoisted on a pole.

Abbas Ali and Antonio Maniscalco were warned by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (which was one of the organisers of the demonstration against Israeli brutality in the occupied territories) that only Palestinian national flags would be welcome at the protest.
Police arrested the pair after they refused to take down the Hezbollah flag for disrupting the peace and for supporting a proscribed terrorist organisation.

The pair spent around 15 hours in custody at Belgravia police station where they say they were questioned by counter-terrorism officers before being released without charge

They are now on police bail and are not allowed to associate with each other or attend any further demonstrations until November 20th when they must report to the police again.

Abbas Ali is a veteran pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel campaigner who runs the Inminds website. He told 5Pillars that he had hoisted the Hezbollah flag because he supports a political party that campaigns for justice in Palestine. He added that he had been asked to move other anti-Israel banners at a previous protest organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign.

“There were other flags at the demonstration such as pro-Morsi and Hamas symbols and someone actually broke our flagpole but the police didn’t do anything to them,”he said.

“After we were initially told to take down the flag by people on the podium and by someone at the demonstration we moved across the road. We also told the police that we were in a public place so we saw no reason to take down the flag – we had as much right to protest as anyone else but the police kept hounding us.”

Ali said that the police had also raided his house and taken PCs, laptops and memory cards. Mr Maniscalco’s residence was also raided.

He added: “I think we were targeted by people in the crowd who had a sectarian agenda or who were upset because of the situation in Syria. I’m not saying they were from the PSC but I do believe we were targeted. But if the PSC called the police on us they should recognise they should not have done that. A broad range of people support the Palestinian cause and they have the right to express themselves.”

Hezbollah

Hezbollah has historically been viewed in the Middle East as a Lebanese resistance group which has fought Israeli aggression on several occasions. It even succeeded in driving Israel out of the vast majority of Lebanon in 2000 and again fought a war with it in 2006.

However, Hezbollah – which adheres to the Shia branch of Islam – has played a controversial role in the current Syrian conflict where it has supported President Bashar al Assad.

Those who support Hezbollah say they are fighting an existential war against sectarian terrorists and their Gulf/Western backers who would destroy the region, but the group’s detractors say that it is propping up a murderous tyrant who is killing and oppressing the Syrian people.

In Britain, the military wing of Hezbollah is proscribed but there is some doubt as to whether the Hezbollah flag represents the military or political wing (which isn’t proscribed) or both.

Meanwhile, on social media Mr Maniscalco said he had a “right to freedom of expression and speech.” He acknowledged that the organisers had the right to administer their own protest but they did not have the right to tell people what to do on a public street.

He said: “I believe we all have the right to protest against occupation and Zionists in every way we all feel necessary… as activists for Palestine and human rights we all have different opinions in several matters but the bottom line is to respect each and everyone wish to express themselves.”

Palestine Solidarity Campaign

Saturday’s protest, which was attended by around 2,000 people, was organised by Friends of Al-Aqsa, the Palestinian Forum in Britain, the Muslim Association of Britain, Islamic Forum of Europe, the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, FOSIS and the Stop the War Coalition.

The PSC’s Sarah Colborne told 5Pillars that the organisers of the event had clearly made a request before the demonstration for only Palestinian flags to be raised. This was also made a number of times from the platform during the protest.

However, she did not conform or deny if any of the organisers had alerted the police to Mr Ali and Mr Maniscalco’s actions.

She also sent 5Pillars a pre-event statement which read: “We have come together to unite for Palestine. We have come together to unite for peace, freedom, and justice. To unite against hatred, intolerance and racism…

We welcome all who stand with us in our opposition to all forms of racism, including antisemitism and Islamophobia. Supporters of Palestinian rights encompass all faiths and none. Muslim, Jewish, Christian, Atheist, religious and non-religious people all stand together on this protest.
“We condemn antisemitism, Islamophobia or any form of racism. Palestinians have seen their lives destroyed by the horrific scourge of Israeli racism, colonialism and apartheid. We stand with Palestinians in their struggle for a future free of racism, colonialism and apartheid. There is no place for racism in a progressive movement fighting for justice and human rights.

“The organisers ask that those present respect the Palestinian national flag, and use only this flag, showing our steadfastness, unity and solidarity with Palestine.”

French Supreme Court Makes Free Speech Illegal If It Concerns Israel

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French Boycott Poster
Whereto Liberty Fraternity and Equality now?  In reality it never existed as the French revolution was coterminous with the existence of the most profitable slave colony of all, Santa Domingo/Haiti. 

The actions of the French Supreme Court, which has effectively outlawed support for BDS in France, at the same time as it turns a blind eye to the attacks of the JDL on Palestinian supporters, is an outrage and almost certainly a breach of the European Convention on Human Rights.  Whether that is the road that the BDS campaign in France will take remains to be seen but as Glenn Greenwald says, how come one can support a boycott and sanctions of every country in the world bar Israel?  What is it that makes the ‘Jewish’ State different?  The fact that it is the most racist state in the world?

Glenn Greenwald  2015-10-27

Israel was furious when French Bank BNP Paribas pulled out of Israel

French BDS Poster
The post-Charlie Hebdo “free speech” march in Paris was a fraud for multiple reasons, as I wrote at the time. It was led by dozens of world leaders, many of whom imprison or even kill people for expressing prohibited views. It was cheered by many Westerners who feign upset only when free speech abridgments are perpetrated by Muslims, but not — as is far more common — by their own governments against Muslims.

Worst of all, the march took place in a country that is one of the most hostile to free speech rights in the West, as France quickly demonstrated in the days after the march by rounding up and prosecuting Muslims and other anti-Israel activists for the political views they expressed. A great, best-selling book by French philosopher Emmanuel Todd released this year argues that these “free speech” marches were a “sham,” driven by many political sentiments — nativism, nationalism, anti-Muslim bigotry — that had nothing to do with free speech.

The absurdity of France’s celebrating itself for free expression was vividly highlighted by this week’s decision from that nation’s highest court, one that is a direct assault on basic free speech rights. The French high court upheld thecriminal conviction of 12 political activists for the “crime” of advocating sanctions and a boycott against Israel as a means of ending the decades-long military occupation of Palestine. What did these French criminals do? This:
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The individuals arrived at the supermarket wearing shirts emblazoned with the words: “Long live Palestine, boycott Israel.” They also handed out fliers that said that “buying Israeli products means legitimizing crimes in Gaza.”
An Egyptian wears a T-shirt with a logo of BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions), a campaign started by Palestinian activists to boycott Israel and Israeli-made goods, April 20, 2015. Photo: Amr Nabil/APIn 

France — self-proclaimed Land of Liberté — doing that makes you a criminal. As The Forward reported, the court “cited the French republic’s law on Freedom of the Press, which prescribes imprisonment or a fine of up to $50,000 for parties that ‘provoke discrimination, hatred or violence toward a person or group of people on grounds of their origin, their belonging or their not belonging to an ethnic group, a nation, a race or a certain religion.'” Because BDS is inherently “discriminatory,” said the court, it is a crime to advocate it.
Successful picket of Ahava shop in Covent Garden
The French court ruling is part of a worldwide trend. As more and more people around the world recognize the criminal and brutal nature of the Israeli government, its loyalists have been increasingly trying literally to criminalize activism against the Israeli occupation. For that reason, “pro-Israel” activists this week celebratedthis French assault on basic free speech rights.
Pascal Markowicz, chief lawyer of the CRIF umbrella organization of French Jewish communities, published this celebratory decree (emphasis in original): “BDS is ILLEGAL in France.” Statements advocating a boycott or sanctions, he added, “are completely illegal. If [BDS activists] say their freedom of expression has been violated, now France’s highest legal instance ruled otherwise.”

Joel Rubinfeld, co-chair of the European Jewish Parliament and president of the Belgian League Against Anti-Semitism, told Haaretz last February that he wanted other countries to follow the French model of criminalizing anti-Israeli-occupation activism. After a French lower court convicted the BDS activists, Rubinfeld gushed: “The French government and judiciary’s determination in fighting discrimination, and the Lellouche law especially, are exemplary for Belgium and other nations where discriminatory BDS is happening.”

As Haaretz detailed in that February article, the “Lellouche law” held up by Rubinfeld is “named for the Jewish parliamentarian [in France] who introduced it in 2003,” and “the law is among the world’s most potent legislative tools to fight the growing Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, or BDS, and has catapulted France to the forefront of efforts to counter the movement through legal means.” Prior to this latest criminal case, there have been “approximately 20 anti-Israel activists who have been convicted under France’s so-called Lellouche law.”

The odious campaign to outlaw activism against the Israeli occupation extends well beyond France. In May, CBC reported that Canadian officials threatened to prosecute BDS activists there under “hate speech” laws, and after those officials denied doing so, we obtained and published the emails proving they did just that. The February Haaretz article described this troubling event in the U.K.: “In 2007, the British University and College Union said it would drop plans to boycott Israeli institutions after legal advisers said doing so would violate anti-discrimination laws.” In 2013, New York City officials joined an (ultimately failed) Alan Dershowitz-led campaign to threaten the funding of Brooklyn College for the crime of hosting pro-BDS speakers.

Indeed, an outstanding Washington Post op-ed this week by a former IDF soldier, Assaf Gavron, documents how such attacks on Israel critics now extend to Israeli citizens themselves. Gavron describes how “the internal discussion in Israel is more militant, threatening and intolerant than it has ever been,” and “those few dissenters who attempt to contradict it — to ask questions, to protest, to represent a different color from this artificial consensus — are ridiculed and patronized at best, threatened, vilified and physically attacked at worst.”

Israel defenders love to equate “criticism of Israel” with “anti-Semitism” and then sanctimoniously deny that anyone does that. But criminalizing BDS advocacy — threatening people with large fines and prison terms for protesting the polices of the Israel government — is as clear of a case as it gets. As Haaretz put it, “The dragnet has also swept up BDS protesters whose actions have targeted Israel, not Jews.”

Ponder how pernicious this is. It is perfectly legal to advocate sanctions against Iran, or Russia, or Sudan, or virtually any other country. Indeed, sanctions and boycotts against those countries are not only frequently advocated in the West but are official policy. But it is illegal — criminal — to advocate boycotts and sanctions against one country: Israel. It requires sky-high levels of authoritarianism, even fascism, to abuse the criminal law to outlaw advocacy of policies and activism when it involves one country, and one country only. In response to the celebrations over this ruling from one popular-on-Twitter Israeli extremist, Avi Mayer, I repeatedly asked this question but never received an answer:

@AviMayer You believe the law should allow a person to advocate boycott/sanctions for Iran & Russia, but make it illegal for Israel?

— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) October 26, 2015

@AviMayer Why can't you answer what I asked? Should it be legal to advocate boycott/sanctions for Iran & Russia but not Israel?

— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) October 26, 2015

@AviMayer 1) Should it be legal for me to advocate a boycott or sanctions on Israel? 2) Legal to do so for Iran and/or Russia? Answer that.

— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) October 26, 2015


It should go without saying that one’s opinions on the desirability or validity of BDS as a policy are totally irrelevant to this discussion. It’s self-evident that a belief in “free speech” compels one to defend with equal vigor the right to express views with which one agrees and those with which one vehemently disagrees. The issue here, obviously, is not whether BDS is a persuasive policy but whether people should be criminalized for advocating it. As extremist and oppressive as it is, the criminalization of BDS activism is increasing in multiple places around the world.

Where are all the newfound free speech activists who insisted after the Charlie Hebdo murders that a defense of free expression was so vital to all that is good and just in the Western world? Why isn’t the #JeSuisBDS hashtag trending in defense of these activists who have been persecuted — prosecuted — by France for their political views? The answer is clear: Many who reveled in wrapping themselves in the “free speech” banner earlier this year — beginning with France itself and extending throughout the West — have no genuine belief in that right. That’s why these countries not only stand silent in the face of such a fundamental assault on free speech, but aggressively perpetrate those abuses.

Open Letter to J.K. Rowling

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Abandon Your Support for Israel’s Death Eaters

@jk_rowling

J.K. Rowling, c/o Bloomsbury Publishing, 50 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP
Israeli artists with mouths sealed to represent the decision of the Israeli Government to cut the funding of artists who oppose the Occupation of the West Bank and the settlements
J K Rowling - a Betrayal of Palestinian children
Dear Ms Rowling,
Unlike many of the signatories to the letter to the Guardian of October 22nd [Israel needs culturalbridges, not boycottsyou are seen as someone who is politically progressive and who still remembers when she was a single person dependent on welfare benefits. 

Michal Kaminski -  the anti-Semitic neo-fascist Polish MEP that Eric Pickles defended
That in itself should have given you pause for thought before signing a letter alongside people like Eric Pickles MP, the former Cabinet Minister who has devoted his life to making the poor poorer and the rich richer.  Your co-signatories include a roll call of the Conservative Friends of Israel [CFI]; Members of Parliament - Guto Bebb, Bob Blackman, David Burrowes, Oliver Dowden, John Howell, Andrew Percy, Mike Freer, Matthew Offord, Andrea Jenkyns, Dame Angela Watkinson,  Chloe Smith, Heather Wheeler.
The Bradford Bigot and Former Tory Cabinet Minister - Signed the letter calling for 'dialogue'

There are also a host of other reactionary figures in the British Establishment such as Telegraph journalist Norman Lebrecht, Tory imperialist and historian Andrew Roberts and Sir Anthony Seldon, Vice-Chancellor of Britain’s only private university,  Buckingham.
Miri Regev - Israeli 'Culture' Minister who cut off funding to Israeli artists opposed to the Occupation.  Once called asylum seekers 'cancer' and then apologised to cancer patients for having compared them to asylum seekers

The idea that Pickles, CFI’s Chairman or these Establishment figures are in the slightest bit concerned with dialogue and greater understanding of the plight of the Palestinians living under military occupation, beggars belief.  Pickles was only recently instrumental in pressurising Southampton University to cancel a conference on ‘International Law and the State of Israel’ http://www.jewishnews.co.uk/pickles-to-southampton-uni-avoid-one-sided-diatribe/
Eric Pickles - racist MP, former Cabinet Minister and Chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel - co-sigantory to letter with J K Rowland
 Pickle’s opposition to applying international law in Palestine however, didn’t prevent him from defending the link up in the European Parliament’s Conservatives and Reformists Group between neo-fascist and anti-Semitic MEPs Michal Kaminski of Poland’s Law & Justice Party and Robert Zile of Latvia’s LNNK and the Conservative Group.
Michal Kaminski - the hapless fascist and anti-Semitic MEP that Picles defended - seated in front of an appropriate fascist symbol

As David Miliband observed:  “Eric Pickles, the Chairman of the Conservative Party, explained without a hint of shame that we should not condemn one of their new allies, the ‘For Fatherland and Freedom’ party, who every year celebrate the Latvian Waffen SS with a march past of SS veterans, because they were only following orders.’ 

You say that the true human cost of the Palestinian conflict was seared in your consciousness by the ‘heart-splitting poetry of Mahmoud Darwish.’    Mahmoud Darwish was a victim of the ‘dialogue’ you espouse, driven from his village of al-Birwa in 1948 and then denied the right to live in Israel.  His poetry is, to this day, banned from the curriculum of the Israeli state education system.

Instead of targeting the Cultural Boycott of Israel your Cultural Co-existence group should direct its attention to the withdrawal of funding by Israeli ‘Culture’ Minister Miri Regev from any Israeli group critical of the Occupation.  Israel's Minister of Culture Miri Regev vows to withhold funds from artists who 'defame'the state  This is the real boycott.

Another target for your group is Israel’s repeated and consist boycott of Palestinian culture, not only educationally but by, for example, its Police physically preventing the Palestinian national cultural festival taking place in Jerusalem in 2009 and subsequently.

You say that ‘ It would indeed have been a fool’s errand to try and talk Voldemort or Bellatrix Lestrange into laying down their wands for love of their fellow humans’ Why Dumbledore went to the hilltop.  Yet that is what you ask of the Palestinians, that they should abandon the one weapon that the Zionists fear.  A weapon used by the oppressed and dispossessed throughout the ages.

Boycott has a long pedigree, taking its name from the campaign of Irish peasants against Captain Boycott in Ireland.  In 1791 there began a Boycott of Slave Grown Sugar in the West Indies.  Sales dropped by a third and by 1792 some 400,000 people were boycotting sugar or buying it from the East Indies.  For some strange reason, those who advocated abolition didn’t call for ‘dialogue’ with the slave owners!  In 1933 there began a Jewish and Labour Movement boycott of Nazi Germany, which at one point threatened to topple the Hitler regime.  Again dialogue with Hitler wasn’t considered an option.  Unfortunately the Zionist movement decided to conclud a trade agreement with Nazi Germany (Ha'avara) which broke the boycott.  60% of capital investment in Jewish Palestine between 1933 and 1939 came from Nazi Germany. 

You will be aware of the crucial part played in the overthrow of Apartheid in  South Africa by the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions movement.  That is one reason why people like Ronnie Kassrils, the former ANC Minister, who is himself Jewish, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu are so vociferous in their support of BDS.  I first became politically active in 1970 in the Stop the Springboks Tour.  Pressure on Apartheid rather than dialogue was rightly seen as more effective.

You say thatWhat sits uncomfortably with me is that severing contact with Israel’s cultural and academic community means refusing to engage with some of the Israelis who are most pro-Palestinian, and most critical of Israel’s government.  A cultural boycott places immovable barriers between artists and academics who want to talk to each other, understand each other and work side-by-side for peace.’ 

You are wrong.  An advert in the Guardian (27 October) from 343 academics supporting an academic boycott made it clear that the Boycott was of institutions, not individuals.  The cultural boycott, as the PACBI Guidelines make clear, is about boycotting arts groups that are sent abroad as part of the Israeli government’s ‘Brand Israel’ campaign.  It is not about boycotting individual Israeli artists or groups, even those which receive Israeli funding without political conditions attached.

The letter you signed stated that ‘cultural boycotts singling out Israel are divisive and discriminatory’ and that ‘Open dialogue and interaction promote greater understanding’.  What is divisive and discriminatory is the situation where for example half of Israel’s Arab villages are ‘unrecognised’, liable to be demolished at any time.  There have been 67 years of such dialogue.  Discrimination has intensified and racism is thriving in Israeli schools and society.  ‘Death to the Arabs’ marches are a regular feature of Jerusalem’s political life.  Dialogue has failed precisely because it hasn’t been backed up by sanctions. 
You say that you ‘do not believe that a cultural boycott will force Mr Netanyahu from power’.  Perhaps not, but it will contribute, as it did in South Africa, to the process of forcing Israelis to face up to the consequences of their own actions, including voting for Netanyahu.
Throughout ‘Harry Potter’ there is the contrast between the ideology of racial supremacy, as expressed in the term ‘mud bloods’ and those who were muggle-born.  Pure Bloods represents the ideology of Jewish supremacy in Israel.  That is what a Jewish state means.  It means, for example the government funded group Lehava picketingthe wedding reception of a ‘mixed couple’ i.e. a Jewish and Arab couple.    It means that Eli Dahan, the Deputy Defence Minister, in charge of the Civil Administration in the West Bank, can say with impunity of the Palestinians ‘To me, they are like animals, they aren’t human.” and that ‘“A Jew always has a much higher soul than a gentile, even if he is a homosexual,”   New deputy defense minister called Palestinians ‘animals’ 

You have signed a letter with those who, like Pickles and the CFI, oppose an arms embargo on Israel.  That is the real ‘dialogue’ that they believe in.  Arms which helped murder over 2,000 Palestinian civilians in Gaza last year in Operation Protective Edge, including over 500 children.
Not one signatory to your letter was a Palestinian, the very people with whom you profess to want to establish a dialogue with.  I suggest you read the Open Letter of a Palestinian teenager Mia Oudeh who expresses her disappointment with your actions, which she feels, quite rightly, is a betrayal of her and other Palestinian children. 

It would also appear that your own literary agent, Neil Blair, is one of the driving forces behind Culture for CoexistenceHarry Potter fans “heartbroken” as author urges engagement with Israel Blair is also on the board of the UK branch of the Abraham Fund, which is sponsored by Hapoalim, an Israeli bank that financesthe construction of Jewish-only settlements in the occupied West Bank.

On 21 October, the UK Friends of the Abraham Fund announced as its new Chairman  Alex Brummer, a journalist with the reactionary and racist Daily Mail.   A recent statement on the Abraham Fund’s Facebook page calls for Arab society in Israel to ‘unite against the attacks and stabbings of Jews and prevent the incitement which is encouraging these acts.”   It seems oblivious to violence against Palestinians.

It is to be hoped that you will rethink your position on a Cultural Boycott and abandon your support for Israel’s Death Eaters.

Yours sincerely,


Tony Greenstein

A Glimpse into the Soul of Israel - the Spirit of Zionism

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The article below speaks for itself.  How the fascist dross that constitute Israel's growing neo-Nazi milieu gloats over the death of an Israeli, Richard Lakin, who was stabbed by a Palestinian.  Lakin was someone who was involved in various Israeli-Palestinian initiatives and therefore a 'leftist' in the eyes of Israel's fascists.  

To those who say that this is just a tiny fringe, my response is this.  If Israeli Arabs went on Facebook to gloat about the death of an Israeli who had been stabbed they would be arrested for incitement and be facing a year in gaol at the minimum.  Why does the Israeli state do nothing about far-Rightists who do the same?  The answer is obvious - they operate within the Zionist concensus today against leftists and 'Arab lovers' [it used to be 'Jew lovers''nigger lovers' etc.]

Tony Greenstein

Israeli Rapper, The Shadow, and Fans Celebrate Jewish Dead

Jewish neo-Nazi Rapper
 by Richard Silverstein on October 28, 2015

Facebook page defiling the memory of Israeli-American terror victim, Richard Lakin

In Hebrew, the word for “victim” is korban, which has a strong religious connotation akin to a ritual sacrifice.  The term conveys the sense that the victim offered up his or her life on the altar and it’s meant to ennoble their suffering and sacrifice.  One would expect this term to be used reverently regarding Israelis murdered in the current round of terror attacks.  But not so.
Shurat Hadin's Facebook Lawfare Page
For some Israelis, dying in a terror attack is not enough to establish your bona fides as a decent human being worthy of mourning.  About a week ago, there was a terror attack on a public bus in which two Israelis were killed and several were injured.  Among the most seriously injured was Israeli-American, Richard Lakin, age 76.  He was a retired school principal who made aliyah in the 1980s, opened a school to teach Israelis English, and engaged in Israeli-Palestinian education initiatives.  He volunteered with Yad B’Yad, the school which wastorched by Israeli settlers about a year ago.
The Shadow in all his glory
Lakin died yesterday of his wounds.  His body wasn’t even cold before Shurat HaDin signed him up as the lead plaintiff in its Facebook lawfare lawsuit. I’m not certain how an ambulance chaser like that signs up a man who is near death for a lawsuit.  But presumably, his family had power of attorney and signed on his behalf.  It’s terribly disconcerting that a man who dedicated his life to promoting peace will be exploited for political purposes by right-wing Israelis who despise Palestinians.  I can’t help but believe that Lakin would not have approved.  But clearly his surviving family do.
The Shadow in all his Judeo-Nazi rapper glory


When the Israeli gutter-classes on Facebook learned about Lakin’s “extreme leftist” views they lit up with hatred and venom that is almost too difficult to believe and too painful to read.  The level of brutalism is beyond belief.  The Judeo-Nazichorus was led, as usual, by the Uber-Juden rapper, The Shadow (aka Yossi Eliassi).  Another Israeli rapper known for his racist-populist views
Subliminal, called for burning Palestinians alive.  It appears the murdering Jewish thugs who burned down the Dawabsheh home a month ago, killing all but a little boy who survived, were inspired by Subliminal’s moral example.  And the next Israeli “leftist” murdered by his fellow Jews will have The Shadow to thank.

While in other western countries there is always an alternative music scene representing progressive artistic political values, in Israel music is dominated by crude, violent, nationalist hate.  So what else is new?

Here is a sampling of the rapper’s Facebook page:

The Shadow: Today Richard Lakin died of wounds suffered in the bus attack.  He was an English teacher and extreme-leftist activist with Tag Meir (a group against “Jewish terror”).  Which shows you it doesn’t matter how many leftists there are.  They will work for the Arabs, sell us out, and betray us in the name of Englightenment.

When the terrorist arrives, all your activism won’t do you any good.  The only thing he will see is a Jew.  For him, your blood is just the same for him as that of an Orthodox Jew or a settler sitting by your side.

I hope that his death will be a slap in the face that will wake them up to the part they play and shake them out of their illusion in which they’re living and cause them to take account of their beliefs.  May his memory be for a blessing.

Yuvi Mouada: May his memory be for a blessing??  May his memory be erased!

Noam Shaharabani: It seems that Arabs do good things once in a while.

Yuval Segev: Don’t say his memory is for a blessing.  A disgusting human being and it’s good he died.  And don’t say I’m too extreme because that’s the only way the disgusting Left will understand…

Shahar Peretz: In short, another terrorist died.

Eviad Magidish: I don’t feel even a small bit of sadness.  A leftist is just like a terrorist to me.

Mendi Mifi: An auspicious hour.

David Kadosh: In this case, the terrorist did the State of Israel a favor.

Rafael Dadon: Only in this way, when extreme leftists start dying in terror attacks, will they get some sense.

Bar Cohen: We need a “Super Like” button for events like this.

Malka Shelech: Great, one less leftist!

Miki Dahan: One less leftist to burn in Hell!

Efrat Stern: Irony–at first there was sorrow [at the death of the Jewish victims], but now it brings a smile to my face because this should be the fate of all leftists to watch as their illusions explode in their faces.  I’m really not sorry.  Not even sorry that he was a Jew or that he died.

Tair Tadona: At first I was sorry when I heard he died in the hospital of his wounds.  But now I have a smile on my face–that this should be the fate of every deluded leftist alive.

Chen & Amir Kalkabani: May his death be for a blessing!

Eitan Zina: May they all die.  They have it coming.  I wish them what I wish every terrorist.

Neria Ivgy: Serious question–does this leftist teacher get to sleep with the 72 virgins?

Itzik Azoulay: The Shadow, you’re the pride of the Jewish people!

The irony of all this hate and incitement on this pro-Israel Facebook page is that Shurat HaDin is sueing the same company for allegedly encouraging Arabs to kill Jews.  The hypocrisy of it all boggles the mind!

But I’m not finished yet.  Alas there is more.  Ten days ago, a Palestinian youth was walking down the street in Hebron.  He was accosted by a settler who began screaming at him.  He then pulled out a gun and shot the boy dead.  After the murder, this is how the victim’s cousin described the scene:
Abed Sharbati, nephew of the eyewitnesses, added that after the attack, settlers set up tables on the spot where Quwamseh was killed and distributed food and drinks, “as if in celebration” Sharbati told MEE. This was still going on at the time of writing.

Nor is this an unusual occurrence.  Rabbis for Human Rights describes the scene in Hebron in 1994, only a few hours after Baruch Goldstein committed mass murder (on the Jewish holiday of Purim), murdering 29 Palestinians:

Several hours after the massacre, Knesset member Hanan Porat showed up in Qiryat Arba and blessed the participant with a “Happy Purim” in front of the cameras. He even reminded them that “it is a duty to be happy in Purim”. Porat, among the settlement founders of the Yesha council, served at that time as the a Knesset member on behalf of the Mafdal (National Religious Party). The cheers of joy of Hanan Porat in the presence of the television cameras were interpreted as cheers of joy and admiration for the massacre that recently happened in the holy Cave of the Patriarchs.

So the next time you hear hypocrites like these whine about Palestinians who purportedly celebrate the death of Jews remember this lyric from the Broadway musical: “Anything they can do we can do better!”

My final word on this: I’ve written a number of times here when faced with such Israeli abomination that I’m really not sure a nation of such people deserves to survive.  Even if it does, I’m not certain there’s enough humanity among those who aren’t infected with this cancer to carry on.

When Herzl devised the idea of a Jewish homeland he never told us that Israel must live at all costs. That Israel, in order to survive, is permitted to lapse into grotesqueness and horror.  Would he ever have imagined that the Altneuland would be a cesspool of genocidal and even fratricidal rage?

Human beings live for a reason.  They live for values.  They live because life means something transcendent.  Is life that is shorn of all humanity worth living?  Is a nation shorn of all decency worth surviving?

The Nazi tactics of the ‘most moral occupation in the world’

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Israeli Border Patrol Threatens to Gas Palestinians in Aida Refugee Camp Until Everyone is Dead


Israeli military vehicles invaded Aida refugee camp and used loud speakers to leave the Palestinians a message.. 

Watch, listen and share..
(English subtitles)
 
see Border cop suspended for threatening to ‘gas’ Palestinians - Probe launched over video of officer allegedly vowing to ‘slaughter’ families, children in Bethlehem if stone-throwing continues

Echoing Nazi Tactics, IDF Patrol Threatens to Exterminate Palestinian Refugee Camp with “Gas”


Is Netanyahu Mad or is it the Politics of the Madhouse?

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Below is an article by Uri Avneri, an Israeli peace activist, former member of the Knesset and someone who is on the fringes of Zionism but one of its most strident critics, having fought in the Israeli war of independence and having also been a former member of the Irgun.

My own view is that you can’t explain Netanyahu’s comments, especially about the holocaust, by reference to mental instability.  Whilst it is undoubtedly true that he suffers from some form of psychopathic condition and possibly manic depression, his utterances are, in the parallel universe of Zionism, quite logical.  The Arabs are the quintissential enemy.  The Nazis are past history and no longer enemies.  Clearly it would be immensely helpful if the guilt that attaches to the holocaust could be transferred to the Palestinians, then Israel could just have one enemy rather than two, especially as one cannot do anything with the old enmity with the Nazis whereas it is extremely useful in attacking the Palestinians.

There is certainly method in Bibi’s madness!

Tony Greenstein

Adolf, Amin and Bibi


Uri Avneri
31/10/15
 
Uri Avneri
mad or normal in a mad society?
IT IS not very pleasant when serious people around the world – historians, psychiatrists, diplomats – ask themselves if my prime minister is completely sane.


But this is happening now. And not only abroad. More and more people in Israel are asking themselves the same question.
The Zionists said this highly flattering picture was anti-Semitic!
All this is the result of one event. But people are now looking at many other events - past and present – in a new light.

Until now, many strange actions and utterances by Binyamin Netanyahu have been seen as the manipulations of a clever politician, a talented demagogue who knows the soul of his constituents and supplies them with ample lies.
Uri Avneri on a demonstration in support of Palestinian prisoners
Not anymore. A troubling suspicion is getting around: that our prime minister has serious mental problems. Is he losing his marbles?

IT ALL started two weeks ago, when Netanyahu made a speech to a world-wide Zionist assembly. What he said was shocking.
The infamous picture of the British/Zionist appointed Grand Mufti meeting Hitler
Adolf Hitler, he pontificated, did not really want to exterminate the Jews. He just wanted to expel them. But then he met the Mufti of Jerusalem, who convinced him to "burn" the Jews. Thus the Holocaust was born.

The conclusion? Hitler was not so bad after all. The Germans are not really to blame. It was the Palestinians who were the instigators of the murder of six million Jews.

If the subject had been different, this speech could be considered as one of the usual lies and falsifications typical of Netanyahu. Hitler was really not so bad, the Palestinians are to blame, the Mufti was the forerunner of Mahmoud Abbas. Just a routine piece of political propaganda.

But this concerns the Holocaust, of the most atrocious events of modern times, and by far the most important event in modern Jewish history. This event has a direct bearing on the lives of half the Jewish population of Israel (including myself) who lost their relatives in the Holocaust, or are themselves survivors.

This speech was not just a minor political manipulation, one of those we have become accustomed to since Netanyahu became prime minister. This was something new, something awful.

ALL AROUND the world there was an outcry. There are many thousands of experts on the Holocaust. Innumerable books have been written on Nazi Germany (including one by me). Every single detail has been researched over and over again.

Holocaust survivors were shocked, because Netanyahu was really absolving Hitler, and the Germans in general, of the main blame for the horrendous crime. So Hitler was not so bad, after all. He just wanted to expel the Jews, not to kill them. It was the evil Arabs who induced him to commit the atrocity of atrocities.

Angela Merkel did the decent thing and issued an immediate denial, assuming again the total blame of the German people. Thousands of furious articles appeared around the world, many hundreds of them in Israel.

This particular utterance of Netanyahu's was not just stupid, not just ignorant. It borders on the insane.

A MUFTI is a religious scholar, a high ranking authority in an Islamic society, well above a mere judge. A Grand Mufti is the highest local religious authority. In Islam there is no pope.

The Grand Mufti in this story is Hajj Amin al-Husseini, who was chosen by the British authorities in Palestine for the office of Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. As it turned out, this was a grave mistake.

The man who made the mistake was a Jew – Herbert Samuel, the first High Commissioner of the British Mandated territory of Palestine after World War I. Young Hajj Amin was already known as a firebrand, and Samuel followed the well-established colonial practice of appointing enemies to high office, to quiet them down.

The Husseini family is the foremost Hamula (extended family) in Jerusalem. It has some 5000 members and occupies an entire neighborhood. It is one of the three or four most distinguished families in town, and for many generations a Husseini has been either the Mufti, the mayor or another dignitary in Arab Jerusalem.

Hajj Amin (hajj is the appellation of a Muslim who has made the obligatory pilgrimage to Mecca) was a trouble-maker right from the beginning. He saw early on the danger of the Zionist immigration for the Arab community in Palestine, and several times incited anti-British and anti-Jewish riots. 
These came to a head in the Great Rebellion of 1936 – known to the Jews as "the events"– which shook the country for three years, until World War II.

During "the events", many Jews and many British were killed, but most of the victims were Arabs. The Mufti (as everybody called him) used the opportunity to have all his rivals and competitors killed off. For the Jews in Palestine he became the symbol of evil, the object of intense hatred.

By now, the British, too, had had enough of him. They chased the Mufti out of the country. He went to Lebanon, but when this country was occupied by the British in World War II (to drive out the troops of the French Vichy regime) the Mufti fled to Iraq, which was in the hands of anti-British and pro-Nazi rebels. When the British re-conquered Iraq, the Mufti fled to Italy, which was leading the Fascist "Axis" effort to win over the Arabs. The Mufti, whose main enemies were the British, acted upon the theory that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. (At the same time, a leader of the Jewish underground in Palestine, Abraham Stern, acting upon the same theory, also sought contact with the Italians and Germans.)

It seems that the Italians were not too keen on having Hajj Amin around, so the Mufti moved to Nazi Germany. At the time, the SS was trying to enlist Muslim volunteers for the war against Russia, and somebody had the bright idea that a picture of the Grand Mufti with Hitler might be useful.

Hitler did not like the idea at all. He was a true believer in the race theory, and the Arabs are Semites – an inferior and detestable race, just like the Jews. But in the end he was weighed upon to receive this Arab refugee for what we now call a "photo opportunity". A picture was taken – the only picture of the only meeting between these two persons. (There are also photos of the Mufti with Muslim Bosnian SS volunteers).

The meeting was short, a perfunctory protocol was taken, the Jews appear nowhere in it. The whole episode was insignificant. Until Netanyahu.

It is ridiculous to crown the Mufti as the father of the Palestinian nation. In all my hundreds of meetings with Palestinians, from Arafat down, I have never heard a good word about Hajj Amin, not even from the wonderful Faisal al-Husseini, a remote relative. They unanimously described him as a real Palestinian patriot, but a person with limited education and narrow-minded outlook, who bears part of the blame for the disaster that befell the Palestinian people in 1948. The bloodbath he carried out among the Palestinians in the 1936-1939 rebellion weakened the Palestinians so much, that when the crucial test came – the 1947 partition of Palestine and the 1948 war – the nation was devoid of any effective leadership.

The idea that the mighty Fuehrer needed or heeded the advice of a fugitive Semite in order to decide on the Holocaust is preposterous. Indeed, it is crazy.

Also, the dates don't jibe. The photo-meeting took place at the end of 1941. The extermination started immediately after the conquest of Poland in 1939, and took on its monstrous dimensions with the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in the middle of 1941. It acquired its final, industrial format when Heinrich Himmler, the SS chief, decided that "one cannot demand of a decent German" to shoot all this Jewish scum. The Mufti had absolutely nothing to do with this, and the very idea is insane.
Until 1939, Hitler did indeed further the expulsion of the Jews, because physical extermination in a peaceful Europe was unthinkable. But once the war broke out, he saw at once the chance for mass extermination – and said so quite openly.

SO HOW did this son of a "renowned historian" come to say this crazy thing?). (This appellation of Ben-Zion Netanyahu is now de rigueur in the Israeli media, though I never met anyone who has read his work on the Spanish inquisition.)

Perhaps he heard it from some crackpot hired by Sheldon Adelson – but even so, the fact that he did not reject it outright shows not only that he is a complete ignoramus about the most important chapter in modern Jewish history, but also that he may have some mental problem.

In this light, many others of his decisions now look different, including this week's decision to take measures to cancel the "inhabitant" status of tens of thousands of Arab Jerusalemites. When East Jerusalem was annexed by Israel in 1967, the inhabitants were not granted Israeli citizenship, only reduced resident's rights, which deny them the right to vote for the Knesset. They were graciously allowed to apply for citizenship individually, but, of course, almost nobody did, since this would mean recognition of the annexation.

Now I am afraid. If indeed we are governed by a man with mental problems – just where is he leading us?

A Day in the Life of Jerusalem's Magistrates Court

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The Folly of Israeli Apartheid Knows No Boundaries


Police arrest International at Nabi Saleh protest
A post by Miko Peled, an Israeli anti-Zionist, on a day in the life of the Jerusalem Magistrates Court. As one can seen, lying in court is a ritual that Israeli police and military engage in as a matter of course.  Almost certainly Miko will be convicted because the word of a military liar is valued more highly than a civilian demonstrator.  As the magistrate makes clear, he cannot understand why the Nasser el-Din, the Arab collaborator is lying because acceptance of the good intentions and the role of the army is part of the normal state of affairs in Israel.  It is the foundation stone of society and therefore Mick Peled, in denying the allegations is challenging the Zionist political status quo.

By   Miko Peled

October 25, 2015
Brave Zionist soldier detains boy with broken arm
The aim of the resistance is to free Palestine and to give Palestinians the rights they deserve, says Miko Peled.

The courtroom in Jerusalem was small with whitewashed walls and a few simple, uncomfortable wooden benches. The air conditioner didn’t work well, so the room was either too cold or not cool enough. The atmosphere was very causal. No one announced or stood when the judge entered. The prosecution and the defense council were too busy with their papers, and the defendants—me among them—were caught by surprise as the door to his chambers opened and the judge entered and sat in his chair.
Brave Zionist soldier being attacked by cowardly Palestinian girl and women - Israeli 'culture' Minister said soldier should have shot his attackers to avoid 'Jewish humiliation'
Under the circumstances, the whole thing seemed a waste of time. There I was, along with two other defendants, charged with participating in disturbances in a protest in the village of Nabi Saleh in the West Bank in 2012. Considering that during the month of October, armed Israeli vigilantes and soldiers have been killing and injuring young Palestinians wholesale and getting away with it, our trial seemed beyond petty—it was stupid.
Jerusalem District Court
The main witness for the prosecution was Yousef Nasser el-Din, a Palestinian Druze collaborator who serves as an officer in the Israeli Border Guards, or “Magav.” He is tall and fit-looking, with handsome features. He came wearing the distinctive olive green uniform of the Border Guards and he was carrying a loaded pistol on his belt.
Peaceful demonstration at Nabi Saleh
Officer Nasser el-Din told the judge about the “Tsambar” hill where we were gathered. I had never heard this term prior to the trial; it is a Hebrew acronym that stands for “burning tires.” According to him, we stood on that hill, which the name suggests is used to roll burning tires down onto the main road, and onto advancing soldiers. The mob was calling out slogans in Arabic that were meant to incite for violence. “I understand and speak the Arabic language,” he reminded the court.
Protesting outside the courts of injustice
By the time it was my turn to testify, my attorney, Gabi Laski, looked like she was suffering from hypothermia. Someone asked to lower the air conditioner and the judge apologized, pointed the remote toward the air-conditioner and turned it off.
Tariq abu Kheideir, boy of 16 beaten by Israeli police - his brother was burned alive by settlers
“What do you say to these accusations of mob-like disturbances that the previous witness described?” Ms. Laski challenged me.

“I am afraid the time allotted for this hearing will not allow me to recount all the lies told by Officer Nasser el-Din,” I replied.
Tariq abu Kheideir led into court, having been badly beaten by police
When I was done answering, the judge, Ohad Gordon, looked at me closely. I was standing behind the small lectern that served as a witness stand, just a few feet from him. He leaned over, his face almost too young for his salt-and-pepper hair.
soldiers attacking haim schwarczenberg
“I want to make something very clear,” he said. “On the one hand, we are hearing descriptions of an unruly riot, stones hurled at the security forces and incitement for violence. You are describing a completely pastoral environment, people marching peacefully and then the army, for no apparent reason, shooting. You see, there is a problem here.”
Tariq abu Kheideir led into court
I looked back at the judge, who seemed to me to be sincere.

“Your honor, you described it exactly as it is,” I said. “People marching peacefully and then the army, for no apparent reason, shooting; not only the place and the time we are discussing, but at every place and at every time, every Friday in the various villages in the West Bank. The attempt to paint the Palestinian popular resistance as a violent mob is deceitful, it is dishonest, it is a lie. People from around the world come to these villages to participate because the popular resistance is committed to nonviolence just as it is committed to resistance and freedom. Palestinian villages have become the international ‘Meccas’ for nonviolent activists. Again I say, your honor, you could not have described it better.”
Police tear gas demonstration at Nabi Saleh
The officer-collaborator, Nasser El-Din, also described the goals of the popular resistance in terms that are congruent with general Israeli thinking.

“The villagers are protesting because of a dispute surrounding who owns the rights to the spring at the foot of the village,” he said.

Free Palestine

The Israeli town of Halamish, where some of the most vicious fanatic Israelis live, has taken much of Nabi Saleh land, including the small spring. But Officer Nasser El-Din is a fool if he thinks Palestinians in Nabi Saleh or any other village are putting their lives on the line for a spring, or a well or even a settlement here or there.

The resistance is here to free Palestine and to give Palestinians the rights they deserve. And it will not end until this is achieved.

It is the same folly that leads Israeli security officials to think that more soldiers, more police, more checkpoints and walls will keep Israelis safe from the consequences of the occupation. If every inch of every street of every city and town were lined with soldiers, Israelis would still not be safe.
It is also the same folly that leads Israeli lawmakers to think they can legislate against the resistance. Legislating against the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, legislating against stone throwing, legislating to loosen the shoot-to-kill guidelines, legislating to keep Palestine supporters out of the country. One wonders what they may think of next.

But the fact remains that you cannot legislate to end the resistance any more than you can legislate to legalize the crimes of Israel. Killing Palestinians in cold blood is a crime even if it is legal in Israel. The Palestinian resistance is legal and moral even if Israel calls it illegal.

But if there is one thing unique about Israel, it is that it’s stupid. Israeli governments always deal with small irrelevant issues that are devoid of context and avoid the real problems. Much like my trial, where they tried to place my co-defendants and I in the midst of an angry mob by showing a video where two young boys throw rocks at an advancing infantry platoon. Where, in fact, we were in the midst of a peaceful protest until the army came and all hell broke loose. But that is neither important nor relevant.

What is relevant and important is to end the siege on Gaza immediately and without conditions; to release all Palestinian prisoners immediately and unconditionally; and to dismantle the military apparatus that has been maintaining the apartheid regime in Palestine for close to 70 years.
Back to my court hearing, the young prosecutor, his black hair cropped short, seemed at a loss. He kept scratching his head until finally he looked at me and asked: “Why would the army attack, just like that with no reason?”

“That’s an excellent question,” I replied. “I suggest you ask the army.”

A final hearing and verdict will take place in a few months

JK Rowling Responds to Palestinian Fan - Mia Oudeh

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JK Rowling responds to fans using her Harry Potter characters to make points about Israeli cultural boycott

JK Rowling and Palestinian music teacher Mia Oudeh
After the letter this week from 150 people, including JK Rowling and 13 Tory MPs calling for 'cultural co-existence' i.e. breaking the Cultural Boycott of Israel, Miah Oudeh, a Palestinian fan of JK Rowling penned an open letter to her taking issue with the letter she signed. JK Rowling has responded to Miah who has followed up with a second open letter.
Dumbledore's relationship with Severus Snape is used as metaphor for opposing BDS


Many people were very disappointed with J K Rowling for having signed the original letter, a letter alongside a large number of outright bigots, racists and Israel Firsters, J K Rowling herself does not share these politics, belonging to the social democratic part of the political spectrum. Her signing of the original Zionist letter has provoked mass fury amongst her many fans, hence her response.


Although people were disappointed with J K Rowling for having signed the original letter, what has transpired since is very positive because JK Rowling has accepted as a given the fact that,

'The Palestinian community has suffered untold injustice and brutality.’  She went on to say that ‘I want to see the Israeli government held to account for that injustice and brutality. Boycotting Israel on every possible front has its allure. It satisfies the human urge to do something, anything, in the face of horrific human suffering.'


Those are pretty clear and explicit damnations of what Israel has done. They don't of course go to the root of the problem, the nature of the Israeli state as a settler colonial state.  What Rowling disagrees with is the tactic of Boycott but she is on weak ground when she says that:
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'What sits uncomfortably with me is that severing contact with Israel’s cultural and academic community means refusing to engage with some of the Israelis who are most pro-Palestinian, and most critical of Israel’s government. Those are voices I’d like to hear amplified, not silenced. A cultural boycott places immovable barriers between artists and academics who want to talk to each other, understand each other and work side-by-side for peace.'

In fact she is wrong. The Boycott explicitly doesn't prevent communication with pro-Palestinian Israeli activists, quite the contrary. Many of those activists support the Boycott from Within movement, knowing of course the inherent contradictions in such a position.

Nonetheless the debate is an extremely positive one.

Tony Greenstein

A Harry Potter fan has called out JK Rowling in the bestway possible


A music teacher from Dunfermline has crafted a Facebook post to one of her favourite authors, JK Rowling, calling her out over her support of the Guardian's "Culture for Coexistence" letter.
Seeing the news on her Facebook of Rowling's support, 25-year-old Mia was shocked and upset, and posted her reaction on social media. 

The open letter was written in the hope of JK Rowling spotting it and responding to her long-term fan. 


Dear J. K. Rowling,

I am an avid fan of yours, and have continuously read your Harry Potter books non-stop since the age of 11. My whole house is splattered with memorabilia, and I have just returned from visiting Harry Potter World which was one of the most amazing trips of my life. I'm 100% obsessed with your books, and frequently dream about them - in particular, the Battle of Hogwarts, where my sub-conscious always brings in my own personal battle, but a battle in which I think everyone should be taking part.

I am writing to you in response to your public support for Israeli-Palestinian dialogue and opposition to the BDS movement in the Guardian's "Culture for Coexistence" letter. As a Palestinian, I have to say that I was completely disappointed when I read about this, because your books have been the very source of all the hope I have for peace and justice in my homeland someday. You see, my Battle of Hogwarts dreams have always had the death eaters as Zionists, and Harry and his peers as Palestinians. Knowing that the idea for your epic novels was from World War II and the Nazis, I naturally drew parallels between the books and Zionist Israel and Palestine. I am therefore entirely confused and heart broken at your support for this letter, because to me, as a Palestinian Potterhead, it does not quite make sense.

The letter in question states,

"Cultural boycotts singling out Israel are divisive and discriminatory and will not further peace ... Open dialogue and interaction promote greater understanding and mutual acceptance ... Cultural engagement builds bridges, nurtures freedom and positive movement for change. We wholly endorse encouraging such a powerful tool for change rather than boycotting its use.”

I feel that this letter has not contextualised the grim reality of Israel/Palestine, and is paradoxical in its nature. In this response to your support of the letter, I will be drawing parallels between the Harry Potter world and the Palestinian world in order to demonstrate my confusion.

Firstly, "boycotts singling out Israel are divisive and discriminatory," is a ridiculous sentence in itself. I'm not sure whether you know the history of Israel, but it did not exist before 1948. It is a settler-colonial state which operates on the apartheid of an indigenous people and has broken international law and UN resolutions every single day since its existence.  The practices Israel enforces in its culture and every day functioning are in themselves divisive and discriminatory. No cultural engagement between Palestinians and Israelis will ever build bridges, because rather than the "two sides are to blame" argument the letter you signed endorses, there are no two sides.

When the death eaters take over the Ministry of Magic and begin to run the magical world, would you have placed them in an equal side to the Potter trio? I definitely would not; the death eaters ran a ministry of oppression - from the "Magic is Might" statue of the naked muggles being used to support the robed wizard, to the brutal treatment of muggle born students at Hogwarts. Additionally, the death eaters had the advantage of fighting together using the Unforgivable Curses, having an army of brutal magical creatures including giants and dementors, having magical spells to track the Potter trio's movements and having full control of the magical world through their position of power.

In contrast, Harry was working in isolation with the support of his two friends. His "side" were terrorised families who could not step one foot out of line in fear of being tortured and/or killed, or who were in hiding and on the run. It was a completely uneven distribution of power and most definitely not two sides. It was a case of the oppressor and the oppressed.

Now let's consider this in the Israel/Palestine context. How can we, as Palestinians, sit and conduct peaceful dialogue with Israelis, as equal sides, both to blame for a "conflict", when there is also an uneven distribution of power?

Israel has the fourth largest army in the world and receives $10.2 million in military aid daily from the U.S.. Palestine has no army and receives no money for military aid. When you look at news articles and pictures of the so-called "conflict", you can see the Israeli Defence Forces kitted out in uniform, armed with guns and helmets and tanks and illegal chemical weapons and f16s and drones. In contrast, you see Palestinians with rocks and handmade weapons, if they are lucky enough. You can see the damage made with something like drones or white phosphorous in contrast to the damage of "Hamas rockets" (the media's favourite phrase). This very example shows the uneven distribution of power, and sets the base for why it is argued that Israel and Palestine are not two sides, but the oppressor and the oppressed.

In the magical world, the muggles and muggle borns were completely exploited and ridiculed by the death eaters. Muggle borns were named the derogatory name "Mudblood"and were accused of "stealing magic"if they could not provide proof of magical relatives. Muggle-born students were singled out in Hogwarts when the death eaters started teaching there, and some muggle borns had to go on the run and were often rounded up by Snatchers. The death eaters' hatred and discriminatory practices against the muggle borns were not a secret; they were plain for everyone to see, much like the treatment of the Palestinians by Israel.

How can we talk about cultural bridges when Israelis live in illegal settlements (under international law) with unlimited supplies of running water and electricity, whilst meters away Palestinian villages have one of the worst droughts in the world? As one of my dear friends so aptly put, will these bridges of peace bridge the Palestinians who are literally fenced into ghetto villages by an 8m concrete wall, checkpoints and watch towers (which eerily look like the watch towers of Nazi concentration camps) to the land they have been cut off from, which Israelis can access at any time? Will our cultural bridge of peace bridge Shuhada street in Hebron, where Palestinians literally have to use a specific walkway separate to Israelis (much like the bus services around the country)? Shall we invite the Israelis, who are off-duty from their military tasks in for a cup of tea before they return to bombing us with one of the world's most advanced armies? Maybe when they come over they can wear their t-shirts depicting pregnant Palestinian women, saying "1 shot 2 kills"and talk about how distressed they feel as their leaders are celebrating their regime saying "we are the masters".

Have you ever even looked at the type of Zionist statements made against Palestinians? For example, just two weeks ago 13 year old Ahmad Salih Manasra was shot and a video taken of the scene documented Israeli onlookers shouting, "Die, son of a whore!"and ordering police to "Give him one in the head"whilst he lay bleeding and struggling to breathe on the floor [8]. Perhaps Ahmad would like to have those onlookers as visitors at the hospital he's now recovering in - they can bring in flowers, see how he's doing and he can listen to how threatened they felt watching him be attacked.

The suggestion of dialogue is as absurd as an oblivious muggle who has no awareness or willingness to understand of the context between a death eater and muggle born. It's like Vernon Dursley shaking his head, saying that we're all being foolish and peace will come if only Dean Thomas, whose father was killed because he refused to serve the death eaters, and Antonin Dolohov sat together and "talked it out". Of course, that would never happen because Dolohov was outwardly for the expulsion of anyone against Voldemort, and could have been the very person who plotted and killed Dean's dad. How could Dean ever contemplate sitting with someone who's colleagues killed his father, who was actively seeking out his peers from school, and who was torturing and maiming people for their identity?

How about, when the death eaters storm and wreck Xenophilius Lovegood's house looking for Harry in false exchange for Luna, they all pause their "conflict" and talk to each other about how all of this is making them feel. Because, the death eaters' feelings are just as valid as Xenophilius'. Because there are two sides to every story.

Just like Palestinians when they face daily military incursions, house arrests and house demolitions. I'm sure the families in Sheikh Jarrah (East Jerusalem) would love to talk to the Israelis who made them homeless by illegally kicking them out of their houses so that they can use them as holiday accommodation, and who force them to pay for their water, gas and electricity bills even though they don't have access to them. Or perhaps my friends in Susiya village, who have had their homes and temporary tent shelters demolished time and time again, would love to invite the illegal Israeli settlers who stole their farm and the Israeli soldiers responsible for their demolitions over for some dinner. Because the illegal holiday making settlers who thieved their homes and farms, and the Israeli soldiers who order house demolitions on tent shelters have feelings just as valid as the families whom they stole their homes from. Two "sides" to every story.

I have a feeling, with all due respect, that you have never spoken to a Palestinian before. Your signature on this letter seems to be made from a judgement purely based on privilege and monetary benefits. I therefore welcome you to come visit me and talk to my family about whether they would like to have some dialogue with Israelis and build a cultural bridge of peace.

Maybe you could ask my father, who lived through three wars before the age of 25; who grew up with drones flying over his head during his early childhood; who lost contact with his parents, siblings and family whilst he was at university because Israel expelled them from their home; and who was banned from returning to his home because he "willingly left" to go study in Egypt and could therefore not return to search for his family. Or you could ask my mother, who has not been allowed to even visit her birth city in over 40 years.

How about talking to all 6 million Palestinian refugees who are dispersed all over the world, waiting with their keys from when they left their homes in 1948 to go back to their still-intact houses; waiting for the promise of their return (granted by the British) to be acted upon at last; waiting for Israel to comply to UN resolution 194 (III) which states "that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible"; 
waiting for the international community to stop preaching about "two sides" and "dialogue" and to recognise that the state of Israel has been guilty of consistently breaking international law from its creation. 

Sure, they would love to talk to every Zionist out there who is actively contributing to their displacement. I for one just love to read about American Jews who have no genetic ties to Israel but want to move there because they just love it there, meanwhile if I try to visit I am strip searched, interrogated and shot at even though my parents were born there. Yeah, let's have some dialogue - it'll solve everything!

The letter you signed is a prime example of the "good, unbiased Westerner approach" which actively ignores international law violations, dehumanises the indigenous Palestinians, and lazily sweeps Western responsibility under the carpet. The elephant in the room that we all need to talk about is: none of this would be happening if it weren't for Britain who gave the land to Israel in the first place, with no consultation from the indigenous population.  No, let's ignore history and statistics and daily reports of atrocities and say, "you both need to calm down, let's all sit at a table like we've been doing for the past 60 years and talk about your feelings and find some shared experiences from perspectives." How dare anyone, who has not picked up a book or watched a documentary on the subject, who has never even spoken to a Palestinian about their life tell them what to do when they have no idea how it feels to be oppressed; to be cut off from your homeland whilst international settlers take up camp there; how it feels to see pixelated images of your friends' dead, mutilated bodies appear on your computer screen through a news report whilst people tell you to "stay calm"; how it feels to stay up all night worrying for 8 months straight whilst the love of your life has been subjected to torture methods in solitary confinement and administrative detention without trial or charge?

Can you imagine someone sitting Hermione and Bellatrix down, after Bellatrix has tortured Hermione, to talk things out? Perhaps Neville could join them, and report back to his deranged parents the success of their dialogue. Intergenerational trauma is one of the most prevalent mental illnesses in the Palestinian community, with PTSD being the most common disorder in Palestinian children.  Every family living in Palestine has had at least one member of their family arrested under administrative detention and tortured by soldiers for information. Why should a Palestinian who has been subjected to extreme means of psychological and physical torture sit across from an Israeli to hear their perspective? That's like a cancer patient listening to someone who is completely healthy complaining about a bruise on their leg.

"Ah," I can hear you say, "But what about the Israelis suffering?", and in response to that I would say please study the published statistics on those killed in the "conflict" and recognise that you cannot even begin to compare the number of deaths of Israelis to Palestinians. Millions have been massacred and murdered, thousands incarcerated in jails without trial or charge. For you, you hear the words "Israel" and "Palestine" maybe once or twice a year, but I hear them every day when my friends tell me of the news coming from there. Additionally, Israel does not limit its atrocities to Palestinians; in this month alone there have already been reports of a British man, Rabbi and Israeli being attacked by Israeli soldiers.

Like the propaganda created to argue that muggle borns stole magic, propaganda is dispersed everywhere to paint Palestinians as terrorists, and Israelis as victims. Harry was depicted as dangerous and mad, like a terrorist, to the wizarding community - much like the Palestinians you will see flickering on your tv screen. But, as Hermione might suggest, sources mean everything, and I only hope that you have not taken your information from the Zionists' version of the Daily Prophet, but rather the Palestinians' version of Potterwatch. Because just like your novels show, the best way to get information is to go straight to the source instead of a mass media production site. Rita Skeeter herself demonstrated the dangers of reporting and spreading biased and exaggerated news articles, and although I'm extremely certain nobody would trap you in a jar as a beetle, I'm sure that one day you will have to backtrack your arguments.

I honestly think you are one of the most creatively intelligent writers we have, and up until now you have inspired me beyond belief. I would hate to think that you knew all of this previously before signing that letter, because by signing it you have automatically signed up to Netanyahu's inner circle of supporters - the same man who regularly denied that Palestine ever existed and referred to Palestinians as "Arabs" to strip them of their racial identity who has just said that the genocide of the Jews in World War II wasn't actually from the Nazis but from the Palestinians themselves (yes, he used the 'P' word showing that his consistent denial of Palestine was a political tactic).

To the Palestinians, many of whom rely on Harry Potter as a means of inspiration and escapism, you have outed yourself as a sympathiser of today's present-day Nazis who are conducting ethnic cleansing as we speak. I only hope that now I've highlighted my concerns that you might withdraw your signature and realise that a peaceful, practical approach to fighting apartheid is to endorse BDS until Israel complies with international law. It worked with South African apartheid, which I'm sure you never supported, and it will work with Israeli apartheid too.

So many intellectual academics, scholars, musicians, artists, novelists, scientists and performers have spoken out for their support of BDS. It is the only logical way that this madness will stop. We have spoken until our tongues have dried out - dialogue is a method that has gone stale. We need action and that action is BDS until Israel recognises international law, like every country on this planet should.

The letter you signed uses the word "coexistence" in its title - but "coexistence" will never be reached until the lives of every single person is treated with dignity and respect. Somehow, I don't think sitting down and talking is going to teach the IDF or Israeli settlers to start respecting Palestinian life, because they are so indoctrinated into a culture of brain washed military life. For example, they have been recorded watching the bombing of Gaza as though it were a movie at the cinema. Coexistence will happen once this culture is torn down, and I am so sure that if Harry could defeat Voldemort, Neville could behead Nagini, and Snape could be good, that Palestine will be free and we will all live as one people on this Earth.

I hope that this letter is shared as widely as possible so that you may see it, and that I can hear your reply."

JK Rowling Replies:

'Why Dumbledore went to the hilltop', Rowling took to Twitter to post her response. 

I've received a lot of messages over the past few days that use my fictional characters to make points about the Israeli cultural boycott. This isn't a complaint: those characters belong to the readers as well as to me, and each has their own life in the heads of those who have read them. Sometimes the inner lives of characters as imagined by readers are not what I imagined for them, but the joy of books is that we all make our own mental cast. I've always enjoyed hearing about versions of Potter characters that exist in heads other than mine.

Many of the messages I've received in the last few days have included variations on the theme 'talking wouldn't stop the Wizarding War' and as far as that goes, it's true. Talking alone would not have stopped the Wizarding War and talking alone didn't. Voldemort believed that non-wizards were subhuman, so it's valid to draw comparisons between Voldemort and any real human being who regards other races, religions or sexualities as inferior. It would indeed have been a fool’s errand to try and talk Voldemort or Bellatrix Lestrange into laying down their wands for love of their fellow humans. They have no love of humanity and they wanted domination, not peace.

I said above, and I stand by it, that every reader has the right to his or her own version of my characters. However, there is one central point about the Potter stories that is not negotiable: we can't pretend that it isn't there, or that it doesn't matter, when it is the crux of the books and in many ways the key to the story. It is also a point that to my knowledge (I get a lot of messages, so I cannot swear to it) has been lost in the many comparisons of Israel to Death Eaters.

In the final book, Deathly Hallows, when many hidden things come to the surface, there is a scene on a windy hilltop. Dumbledore has been summoned by a Death Eater, Severus Snape. At that point, Snape is a subscriber to the inhuman philosophy of Voldemort. He is probably a killer, certainly a betrayer of two of the people Dumbledore loved most, and the man who had sent Voldemort after an innocent child in the knowledge that Voldemort would kill him.

Again, to my knowledge (my memory isn't infallible, so forgive me if you did), nobody has ever asked me: why did Dumbledore go when Snape asked him to go, and why didn't he kill him on sight when he got there?

I think readers assume that Dumbledore is wise enough, knowledgeable enough and compassionate enough to sense that Snape, though he has led a despicable adult life, has something human left inside him, something that can be redeemed. Nevertheless, wise and prescient as Dumbledore is, he is not a Seer. At the moment when he answers Snape's call, he cannot know that Snape isn’t going to try and kill him. He can’t know that Snape will have the moral or physical courage to change course, let alone help defeat Voldemort. Yet still, Dumbledore goes to the hilltop.

I'm going to digress very slightly here, but there is a related point that bears making. Among the messages drawing parallels between the Potter books and Israel have been quite a few saying that 'Harry would be disappointed' or 'Harry wouldn't understand' my position. Those people are right, but only up to a clearly defined point. The Harry of six and a half books might not understand. Harry is reckless and angry for a considerable portion of those six and a half books and he has my whole-hearted sympathy. He has lost his family, he has had burdens put upon him that he never wanted, and he has been stigmatised all through his adolescence for carrying a scar left on him by a killer.

There comes a moment in the final book, though, when Harry, whose natural inclination is to fight, to rush to action, to lead from the front, is forced to stop and consider the cryptic message the dead Dumbledore has left him. Unfortunately, this message runs against counter to everything that Harry believes is necessary to win the war. He wants to race Voldemort to a deadly weapon, but Dumbledore has arranged things so that, while Harry will know that the weapon exists, he will also suspect that taking the weapon is the wrong thing to do. Harry cannot understand why using that weapon would be harmful, yet – grudgingly - he decides to act against his own instinct, and according to what he believes are Dumbledore’s wishes. The decision sits uncomfortably with him. He remains doubtful about it almost up to the point where he comes face-to-face with Voldemort for their final encounter.

Unlike Harry, Dumbledore was not acting against his own nature when he chose to meet Snape on the hilltop. Dumbledore, remember, is not a politician; the Ministry is weak and corrupt, it enabled Voldemort’s rise and is now doing a poor job of fighting him. Dumbledore is an academic and he believes that certain channels of communication should always remain open. It was true in the Potter books and it is true in life that talking will not change wilfully closed minds. However, the course of my fictional war was forever changed when Snape chose to abandon the course on which he was set, and Dumbledore helped him do it. Theirs was a partnership without which Harry's willingness to fight would have been pointless.

The Palestinian community has suffered untold injustice and brutality. I want to see the Israeli government held to account for that injustice and brutality. Boycotting Israel on every possible front has its allure. It satisfies the human urge to do something, anything, in the face of horrific human suffering.

What sits uncomfortably with me is that severing contact with Israel’s cultural and academic community means refusing to engage with some of the Israelis who are most pro-Palestinian, and most critical of Israel’s government. Those are voices I’d like to hear amplified, not silenced. A cultural boycott places immovable barriers between artists and academics who want to talk to each other, understand each other and work side-by-side for peace. I believe in the power of projects like this http://ow.ly/TSYCp and this http://ow.ly/TSZYx and this. I think it is a tragedy when medical research like this is prevented.

I genuinely don’t take it in ill part when you send me counterarguments framed in terms of the Potter books. All books dealing with morality can be picked apart for those lines and themes that best suit the arguer’s perspective. I can only say that a full discussion of morality within the series is impossible without examining Dumbledore’s actions, because he is the moral heart of the books. He did not consider all weapons equal and he was prepared, always, to go to the hilltop. 

Palestinian Harry Potter fan has called out JK Rowling for the SECOND time

A music teacher from Dunfermline has followed up from on her original viral letter to famous author JK Rowling. 

25-year-old Mia's orginal letter, which The Herald published on Tuesday,  challenged JK Rowling’s stance on Israel using plots from the Harry Potter series. 

The viral letter promoted a response from JK Rowling, and Mia has responded to the letter on her Facebook page.


Thank you so much to everyone who shared my letter - whether you are a social media user, journalist reporter or just through word of mouth! If you haven't heard already, we have a reply! Thank you for taking your time to write back to us, J K Rowling.

A lot of you have been asking me what I think of the reply, and as promised, here are my thoughts ...
Initially, I was so happy to hear that she had replied - because it proved that, as ever, Rowling is committed to her fans. But, as I read what was written, I began to wonder if she fully understood anything I'd addressed. I have no doubt that J K Rowling wants justice for the Palestinians - especially as she wrote in her reply,



"The Palestinian community has suffered untold injustice and brutality. I want to see the Israeli government held to account for that injustice and brutality..."

But, in the rest of her response, she never acknowledged the argument that dialogue with the Israeli state is a non-effective method. Instead, she focused on her rejection of BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions), and reading what she has said, I don't think she comprehends what BDS actually is. Additionally, although she has spoken against the Israeli government, the signature on her letter suggests otherwise.

The 'Culture for Coexistence' letter Rowling signed was partly organised by Neil Blair, Rowling's literary agent who is on the board of the UK Friends of the Abraham Fund. This is a normalisation group which is sponsored by the Israeli bank 'Hapoalim' which funds the construction of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank (thus breaking UN resolution 446 and the Fourth Geneva Convention, article 49). So even though Rowling has spoken out against the Israeli government, and discusses why she thinks dialogue would promote peace, she has signed a document proposed by someone who is sponsored by a group involved with breaking international law and the occupation.

It's a no-brainer why this letter opposes BDS when it was put forward by Zionist sympathisers. Why does it oppose BDS? Because BDS is a legitimate threat to the ambitions of the Zionist state. By signing this letter but publicly criticising Israel, J K Rowling has yet again shown the dangers of passing judgement and making conclusions without proper research.

Whilst, as a Palestinian, I fully appreciate Rowling voicing that she wants the Israeli government to be held accountable for their war crimes, I think I speak for Palestinians worldwide when I say that we are tired of people passively making statements. If writing sentences like, "I want to see the Israeli government held to account for that injustice and brutality," worked, then we wouldn't have an on-going occupation and ethnic cleansing program of 67 years and counting.

As Palestinians, an oppressed people, we do not need empty words. We need action and we are calling for BDS, the most effective, non-violent tool we have to fight apartheid. But instead of listening to us, we have an author, who is respected by millions throughout the world, telling us that our method is wrong and thus, undermining our intellect and our movement. Again, I echo what I wrote in my previous letter,

"How dare anyone, who has not picked up a book or watched a documentary on the subject, who has never even spoken to a Palestinian about their life tell them what to do..."

This is a case of the 'good, unbiased Westerner' author telling us that *even* our non-violent resistance is not good enough, but where there is no alternative solution offered.

Every other action available for the international community to get involved with has failed - how many petitions and letters to politicians have we sent? How many demonstrations have we held? What else is there that we, as an international community, can do to help?

To explain BDS in a different way, for people who do not understand what it is (J K Rowling included), I am going to make a final Harry Potter analogy.

In the Harry Potter world, Voldemort and his death eaters would frequently use the Unforgivable curses without a bat of an eye or anyone holding them accountable for their actions. Instead of retaliating and using the curses back, Harry sticks to his favourite disarming spell as his weapon. And although Harry used the curses a few times, it was Expelliarmus which ultimately brought down Voldemort and, consequently, his death eater followers.

Now let's compare this to Israel/Palestine. The methods of apartheid and ethnic cleansing Israel uses is most definitely the real equivalent to the Unforgivable curses. Examples such as wiping out over 400 entire villages  and families, military invasions on refugee camps  and the Dahiya Doctrine strategy (a system using disproportionate force against civilians to inflict mass casualties), are just some of the illegal acts Israel imposes - which we can call the Unforgivable curses of Zionism. The Palestinians, in response, have called for BDS - a non-violent response to the occupation, in which we financially isolate Israel until it gives way to global pressure and complies with international law and UN regulations. It is our version of disarming Israel of its apartheid weapons. By endorsing BDS, we are brandishing our wands, shouting "Expelliarmous" and disarming one of the most brutal, racist states in the world.

But what is BDS - in particular the cultural boycott which J K is so against?
Well, let's firstly consider how Israel validates its existence as "just another, normal country" - at how its violations of international law and war crimes have been consistently ignored by so many.
The Israeli government deliberately employs and funds artists and academics to take part in a normalisation project called the Brand Israel Campaign. An example of this is the Batsheva dance group who collaborate with the Israeli Government and this campaign. This program is used as a whitewashing, normalising prop in order to say, "Hey, we're just another country existing on this planet and yes we may be actively oppressing people based on their ethnic background and constantly breaking international law BUUUUT look at our talent, we are people too!"

When we talk of an academic and cultural boycott of Israel, these are the kind of things we are challenging. Israel is intentionally employing academics and artists for acceptance by the international community, and is exploiting their art for its own political gain. Why should we have agents of the Israeli government, who are complicit in war crimes, come along and distract us from their apartheid, ethnic cleansing and occupation with pirouettes and paint brushes?

J K Rowling says, "some of the Israelis who are most pro-Palestinian, and most critical of Israel’s government.,"and talks about Snape as an individual who was a death eater. But, BDS and cultural boycott are not about ignoring individuals - there is absolutely nowhere that states this. It is about isolating the state of Israel. The argument Rowling presents in her letter suggests that she has not fully understood what BDS means.

It must be a common misconception that BDS is a purely Palestinian movement. But, in actual fact, there are Israelis who are for BDS - the Boycott from Within group is a great example of this. There is also an article by the Washington Post, which shows even self-proclaimed Zionists are for BDS too. So, not only is the Palestinian call for BDS being debased, but the Israeli one is too. If BDS was about isolating the Snapes of Israel, then why are Israelis backing the movement also?

Of course we support the Snapes of Israel. These Israelis have denounced their government, and have thus been imprisoned for refusing to serve in the IDF, are disowned by their family and friends, and have left the country because they refuse to contribute to their state anymore. And yes, when these people are artists who aren't employed by Israel then of course they should absolutely be celebrated - but only when they explicitly state that they are challenging their government and are opposed to the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians. Great examples of these are the Activestills collective and Israeli film maker Lia Tarachansky. Also, purely on a side note, Alan Rickman (the actor who played Snape) directed the West End production of 'My Name is Rachel Corrie' so even our 'real' Snape has acted out against Israeli apartheid. 

So, yes, Dumbledore as an academic would absolutely meet Snape on the hilltop. But he would also understand the legitimacy of the BDS movement - he was a part of the Order of the Phoenix, and was therefore a part of the movement against the oppressors of the wizarding world.
The other perspective of a cultural boycott is challenging international artists who visit Israel. Take for example, Enrique Iglesias who is due to play in Tel Aviv later this year. What is surreal about this concert, is that not only is it taking place on a city built upon colonisation, but also that whilst he's jamming out on stage, just a few kilometers away there is an entire population blockaded into Gaza who are denied basic human rights such as freedom of movement and medical supplies; where only one home out of the thousands destroyed from last year's "Operation Protective Edge" has been fully restored, whilst the rest of the 13,167 refugee families remain displaced, with their homes still in rubble. 

So whilst Enrique is partying with his audience (some of whom undoubtedly will be serving in the IDF, and therefore may well be those who bombed those homes and wiped out at least 89 families completely , or people who work in the government or Zionist media), there are still people fighting for freedom and basic human rights a short distance away. Additionally, there are still a Palestinian diaspora around the world who are denied to go home, or to even visit their homeland on a tourist visa, waiting for UN resolution 194 (III) the "Right of Return" - many of whom would be returning to what is now called Tel Aviv. In other words, Enrique will be entertaining an audience who live a life of privilege, and may be complicit in war crimes, whilst the indigenous people are either refused their right to go home or boxed into tiny open-air ghetto prisons. Somehow, that does not seem ethical to me.

I don't think I've ever met a person who has opposed the concept of world peace. It's something that everyone prays and wishes for. It is very easy to condemn war in countries, the use of weapons and the oppression of people by account of race, sexuality, gender etc. But, how do we engage in movements towards world peace, and secondly, actually partake in critically analysing the best step forward to achieving world peace?

When the Israeli president calls BDS a "strategic threat" in an "emergency" meeting about academic boycott, you can tell that BDS is as much a stressor to the Zionists, as Dumbledore's Army and the Order of the Phoenix were to the death eaters. J K Rowling's criticism of BDS is criticising the movement of the DA, the Order and Harry's choice in the disarming spell. She is telling the Palestinians, "don't use your last non-violent alternative, just talk to the perpetrators of your oppression and hope for a solution." Although, as I've analysed her reply and investigated her political alliances further, it is becoming more and more apparent that despite Rowling wanting peace, she does not appear to understand or know much about BDS. If you want to hold the Israeli government accountable for its atrocities, then why not research what they are worried about, and use it against them?

Many people are angry at J K Rowling for her support on the 'Culture for Coexistence' letter. Whilst we speculate whether this is an incredibly misunderstood act or not, I don't agree with anyone arguing to "boycott" Harry Potter and future Rowling projects; it's not going to solve anything. I spoke to my friend earlier in the week about this, and we discussed how even though her arguments are endorsing the oppression of myself and my people, the hope and comfort that the Harry Potter series give me will never be taken away. Those of you who are commenting on my posts who are saying that you will be boycotting J K Rowling, please redirect your focus and energy to what we really need to be doing as a global movement: BDS.

I really hope that my letter was not another 3-day internet sensation like the ice water bucket challenge or bare face challenge. This is real life - it is happening, and we need everyone to engage. If we can do it with South African apartheid, we can absolutely do it with Israeli apartheid. When Israeli politicians (the very people in the government J K Rowling wants to be held accountable) are fearing the progress of BDS, you know that it is working and that it will dismantle Zionism all together.
By endorsing BDS, we are taking part in the final Potter-Voldemort duel; sending out that red spark from our wand and holding it against Zionism's green flash of light, creating 'Priori Incantatem' until the Zionism wand succumbs and the illegal state of war crimes ceases to exist. Then we can live in one country, all together, with no labels, no stigma, no discrimination. We can go home, and live freely, at last.

To J K Rowling and anyone else, I hope that this has cleared up any confusion about the BDS movement. To my favourite author, J K Rowling, now that I've clarified what BDS is, and how it can confront the Israeli government on its crimes, would you support your statement of holding the Israeli government accountable by withdrawing your signature from the letter? To everyone else, let's show our support for J K Rowling to do this by signing this petition:

In the last 30 days, 68 Palestinians have been killed, demonstrating how urgent and current this issue really is. I truly believe that we all have the power to save lives - let's use it."

see JK Rowling responds to Palestinian girl’s letter using Dumbledore

Cold Blooded Murder in Hebron

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Below are two horrifying videos showing the cold-blooded execution of a wounded Palestinian in Hebron by Israel’s Border Police.  No doubt there will be an ‘investigation’ but I won’t be holding my breath as to the outcome.

Tony Greenstein

Israelis execute injured Palestinian — video and eyewitness


Mourners in Qabatiya, near the West Bank city of Jenin, carry the body of Ahmad Kamil, shot dead by Israeli forces after allegedly trying to stab one of them at Jalameh checkpoint, during his funeral on 30 October.  Nedal Eshtayah APA images
Warning: This article contains graphic video and images of violence.

Israeli occupation forces executed an injured Palestinian in Hebron on Thursday, an eyewitness has told The Electronic Intifada.

Video corroborates this clear case of extrajudicial execution, a war crime and part of a pattern of such killings of Palestinians by Israeli forces.

Five Palestinians have been killed since Thursday, bringing the total this month to 71, according to the Palestinian Authority health ministry.

This number includes five Palestinians who died as a possible result of tear gas inhalation, delayed medical treatment due to checkpoints and medical neglect by prison authorities.

Fifteen of the dead are children.

Nine Israelis were slain in the same period.
More than 1,200 Palestinians, including at least 256 children, have been injured by Israeli forces in the West Bank and Gaza Strip since 20 October, the United Nations monitoring group OCHAreported.
This video published at the Facebook page “Ramallah Mix” shows the injured al-Muhtasib lying on the ground.

 Summary execution

Mahdi Muhammad Ramadan al-Muhtasib, 23, was killed by Israeli soldiers in Hebron on Thursday after he allegedly lightly injured an Israeli soldier at a checkpoint with a knife.

An Israeli soldier stands at a distance of several meters. Al-Muhtasib moves and the soldier, still at a distance of several meters, aims his rifle at him and fires. Al-Muhtasib continues to writhe on the ground as the soldier moves around him.

Two more soldiers then approach al-Muhtasib but at no point is he provided medical assistance.
The one-and-a-half minute video shows one shot clearly being fired at the already injured and immobilized al-Muhtasib, but an eyewitness told The Electronic Intifada that many more shots had been fired.

Isa Ajlouni, who lives in an apartment building next to the checkpoint, told The Electronic Intifada that he heard approximately five shots in close succession. “I went to the window and saw the young man wounded, lying on the ground,” he said.

He added that he looked around and saw an Israeli soldier walk over to al-Muhtasib’s fallen body. The soldier stood right above al-Muhtasib, who was still moving, and fired six bullets into his body.
Ajlouni said that he also saw a bleeding Israeli officer by the checkpoint.

A second video, publishedby the Hebron group Youth Against Settlements, shows al-Muhtasib lying on the ground with soldiers milling around him. It then shows another close-up of al-Muhtasib, but this time he is covered in much more blood. Israeli personnel then drag his body, put it on a stretcher, photograph and cover it.

It also clearly shows the faces of soldiers and officers involved in this slaying. The soldiers are wearing vests that identify them as belonging to Israel’s paramilitary Border Police.

After al-Muhtasib’s killing, youths began throwing stones at the checkpoint and Israeli forces opened fire. Throughout the day, the Israeli military fired sound grenades, tear gas and rubber-coated bullets at protesters in the Old City of Hebron.

On 27 October, Amnesty International saidit had documented at least four other recent instances “in which Palestinians were deliberately shot dead by Israeli forces when they posed no imminent threat to life, in what appear to have been extrajudicial executions.”

Three of the killings were in Hebron and one was in occupied East Jerusalem.

Hisham Sharabati, a field researcher with the human rights group Al-Haq, told The Electronic Intifada that he believes Israel’s shoot-to-kill policy is intended to deter Palestinians from resisting.

Another factor, he said, is that Israeli soldiers at the checkpoints are trigger happy, a situation likely made worse by the inciting portrayals of knife-wielding Palestinians in the Israeli media.

Human rights groups have condemnedtop Israeli police and political leaders for inciting summary executions.

On Wednesday, Israeli authorities announced that Isra Abed had not attempted, and had no intention, of stabbing anyone before she was shot multiple times and seriously injured in Afula, a city in the north of present-day Israel, earlier this month. The Palestinian citizen of Israel from Nazareth will be released without charge.

Meanwhile, Israel has charged13-year-old Ahmad Manasra with attempted murder for his part in an alleged stabbing attack at an Israeli settlement in East Jerusalem earlier this month. Mansara was seen in a video lying on the ground covered in blood as Israelis shouted obscenties at him and told him to die.

His 15-year-old cousin Hasan Khalid Manasra was shot dead by police during the incident.

Hebron youth slain

Later on Thursday, Israeli forces in Hebron shot dead 19-year-old Farouq Abdulqadir Omar Sidr near the Beit Hadassah settlement.

Israel claimed he tried to stab a soldier at a checkpoint.

A Palestinian woman in the area at the time told the Ma’an News Agency that she “heard gunshots and saw Israeli soldiers and settlers firing at a young Palestinian man while he was walking down a staircase,” adding that she did not see anything in his hands.
Israeli forces stand near the body of Farouk Sidr, who allegedly tried to stab a soldier at a Jewish settlement in the center of Hebron on 29 October.  Yotam Ronen ActiveStills
Today, Amnesty International called on Israel to “protect Palestinian civilians from attacks by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank and ensure effective investigation of all attacks.”

It noted in particular the killing of 18-year-old Palestinian Fadil Qawasmi by a settler in Hebron on 17 October.

“Settlers have long attacked and harassed Palestinians in Hebron and the rest of the occupied West Bank with impunity, and sometimes with the apparent assistance or acquiescence of Israeli forces,” 
Amnesty said.

International activists reported Friday that Israel has declared the Tel Rumeida neighborhood in Hebron’s Old City a closed military zone to Palestinians, except for residents who will have to register with the army in order to access their homes.

Baby suffocates

On Friday, Israeli forces shot dead two Palestinians and an infant died after inhaling tear gas.
Eight-month-old Ramadan Muhammad Faisal Thawabta died after inhaling tear gas fired by the Israeli military at nearby protestors in Beit Fajjar, a village south of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank, Palestinian health ministry sources said.

Israeli forces and emergency personnel stand next to the body of a Palestinian man who was shot dead after allegedly trying to stab Israeli police south of the West Bank city of Nablus on 30 October.  Nedal Eshtayah APA images
Earlier on Friday, at a checkpoint near Nablus in the northern West Bank, Israeli forces shot two Palestinians after they allegedly tried to stab a Border Police officer.

Qasim Mahmoud Sabaneh, 20, was immediately killed, while another youth was left in critical condition. The name of the injured youth was not immediately available, but Palestinian media reportedthat he was 17 years old.

After noon prayers the same day, Israeli forces shot Ahmad Hamada Qneibi, 23, after he allegedlytried to stab an Israeli near a light rail station outside the French Hill settlement in East Jerusalem.
Israeli police later announcedthat the critically injured Qneibi died after they took him into custody.

Children’s bodies returned

Thousands of Palestinians gathered in Hebron on Friday evening as the bodies of five slain Palestinian children, which had been withheld by Israeli forces, were transferred.

The teenagers, all killed by Israeli forces this month in apparent extrajudicial executions, were Dania Irsheid, 17, Bayan al-Esseili, 16, Tariq Ziyad al-Natshe, 16, Husam Ismail al-Jabari, 17, and 15-year-old Bashar Nidal al-Jabari. They will be buried on Saturday.

Children in “administrative detention”

In an escalation of its crackdown on Palestinians, Israel has reintroduced administrative detention, incarceration without charge or trial, for children.

In the early hours of 19 October, Israeli forces arrested Fadi Hasan Abassi, 17, and Muhammad Saleh Ghaith, 17, from their homes in the Silwan neighborhood of occupied East Jerusalem, accordingto Defence for Children International – Palestine.

A third boy, Mahmoud Sbaih, 17, was seized at his home in a predawn raid on 16 October in the city’s Jabal al-Mukabir neighborhood. All three youths are to be held for three to six months without trial on the orders of Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon, allegedly for throwing stones.
Israel currently holds hundreds of Palestinian adults in administrative detention, a practice widely condemned by human rights groups.

It has not been used against any Palestinian children in the occupied West Bank since 2011, according to Defence for Children International – Palestine.

The children’s rights group says it has no record of administrative detention ever being used against children in East Jerusalem, part of the West Bank that Israel purports to have annexed in violation of international law.

The UN also noted this week that investigations by several human rights organizations regarding an Israeli airstrike in Gaza on 11 October that killed a pregnant Palestinian and her baby had “found that the missiles had directly hit the victims’ home, not weapon production sites belonging to members of armed forces,” as Israel had previously claimed.


Charlotte Silver reported from Hebron.

Turkey holds elections amid murder and intimidation by Erdogan's AKP and the Deep State

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As Turks go to the polls tomorrow, Turkish tyrant Erdogan is hoping that the failure of his AKP party to obtain a majority in the parliamentary elections earlier this year will be remedied. 

There have been wave of bombings, including the recent one in Ankara that killed over 100 people, the war against the Kurds and the PKK and a crackdown on the media.

The big question will be whether the pro-Kurdish HDP party, which includes feminists and gays, will surmount the 10% hurdle for a second time.

Tony Greenstein

Erdoğan says Turkey may hit US-backed Syrian Kurds to block advance


Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan speaks to the media during a news conference in Ankara on Oct. 13. (Photo: AP)
October 29, 2015, Thursday/ 10:15:53/ REUTERS WITH TODAYSZAMAN.COM / ISTANBUL

Turkey will "do what is necessary" to prevent US-allied Syrian Kurds from declaring autonomy in the town of Tel Abyad near the Turkish border, which includes conducting further military operations, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said on Wednesday.
PKK pick up truck
NATO member Turkey is part of the US-led coalition fighting the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants in Syria, but it sees advances by autonomy-seeking Kurds, led by the Democratic Union Party (PYD), as a threat to its own national security, fearing they could stoke separatism among Turkish Kurds.
PKK & PYD
Turkish jets recently hit the Syrian Kurds' armed People's Protection Units (YPG) targets twice after they defied Ankara and crossed west of the Euphrates River.

"This was a warning. 'Pull yourself together. If you try to do this elsewhere -- Turkey doesn't need permission from anyone -- we will do what is necessary,'"Erdoğan said, signaling that he could defy Washington's demand that Ankara avoid hitting Syrian Kurds and focus his military might on ISIL targets.
Erdoğan, in remarks broadcast live on the Kanal 24 television station, also accused the PYD of carrying out "ethnic cleansing" in the area and said that Western support for the Syrian Kurdish militias amounted to aiding terrorism.

Backed by US-led air strikes, YPG fighters captured Tel Abyad in June from ISIL and this month a local leadership council declared the town part of the system of autonomous self-governing "cantons" run by the Kurds.
PKK & PYD
"The PYD is committing ethnic cleansing here [of] Arabs and Turkmens,"Erdoğan said. "If the Kurds withdraw and don't form a canton, there's no problem. But if the mindset continues, then what is necessary will be done or we will face serious problems.

"We are determined to [combat] anything that threatens us along the Syrian border, inside or out."
PYD-Kobani
Turkey does not want to see an autonomous Kurdish entity resembling Iraqi Kurdistan emerging on its southern flank, said Erdoğan, speaking days before a Turkish parliamentary election that has aggravated political and security tensions. Western allies are now arming the Kurds, he added.
Demonstration two weeks after bomb in Ankara
"They don't even accept the PYD as a terrorist organization. What kind of nonsense is this?"he said. "The West still has the mentality that 'My terrorist is good, yours is bad.'"

Within Turkey, the armed forces have resumed their 30-year fight with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has close links with their ethnic brethren across the border in Syria.
Erdoğan said 1,400 PKK militants were fighting alongside the YPG in Syria.

The US and Europe, like Turkey, classify the PKK as a terrorist organization but regard the Syrian and Iraqi Kurdish groupings as valuable allies in the fight against ISIL and other jihadists.

Netanyahu – Bad, Mad or Both

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Bad or mad?
Below is an article by Uri Avneri, an Israeli peace activist, former member of the Knesset and someone who is on the fringes of Zionism but one of its most strident critics, having fought in the Israeli war of independence and having also been a former member of the Irgun.

My own view is that you can’t explain Netanyahu’s comments, especially about the holocaust, by reference to mental instability.  Whilst it is undoubtedly true that he suffers from some form of psychopathic condition and possibly manic depression, his utterances are, in the parallel universe of Zionism, quite logical.  The Arabs are the quintissential enemy.  The Nazis are past history and no longer enemies.  Clearly it would be immensely helpful if the guilt that attaches to the holocaust could be transferred to the Palestinians, then Israel could just have one enemy rather than two, especially as one cannot do anything with the old enmity with the Nazis whereas it is extremely useful in attacking the Palestinians.

There is certainly method in Bibi’s madness!

Tony Greenstein

Is Netanyahu Mentally Unstable or Politics the Politics of the Madhouse? 
Adolf, Amin and Bibi


31/10/15

IT IS not very pleasant when serious people around the world – historians, psychiatrists, diplomats – ask themselves if my prime minister is completely sane.
Hitler's meeting of 28.11.41. with al-Husseini
But this is happening now. And not only abroad. More and more people in Israel are asking themselves the same question.

All this is the result of one event. But people are now looking at many other events - past and present – in a new light.
Uri Avneri on a demonstration
Until now, many strange actions and utterances by Binyamin Netanyahu have been seen as the manipulations of a clever politician, a talented demagogue who knows the soul of his constituents and supplies them with ample lies.

Not anymore. A troubling suspicion is getting around: that our prime minister has serious mental problems. Is he losing his marbles?

IT ALL started two weeks ago, when Netanyahu made a speech to a world-wide Zionist assembly. What he said was shocking.
Netanyahu - enaged in is favourite pastime - building settlemetns [for some reason the Zionists called this cartoon anti-Semitic]
Adolf Hitler, he pontificated, did not really want to exterminate the Jews. He just wanted to expel them. But then he met the Mufti of Jerusalem, who convinced him to "burn" the Jews. Thus the Holocaust was born.

The conclusion? Hitler was not so bad after all. The Germans are not really to blame. It was the Palestinians who were the instigators of the murder of six million Jews.

If the subject had been different, this speech could be considered as one of the usual lies and falsifications typical of Netanyahu. Hitler was really not so bad, the Palestinians are to blame, the Mufti was the forerunner of Mahmoud Abbas. Just a routine piece of political propaganda.
But this concerns the Holocaust, of the most atrocious events of modern times, and by far the most important event in modern Jewish history. This event has a direct bearing on the lives of half the Jewish population of Israel (including myself) who lost their relatives in the Holocaust, or are themselves survivors.

This speech was not just a minor political manipulation, one of those we have become accustomed to since Netanyahu became prime minister. This was something new, something awful.

ALL AROUND the world there was an outcry. There are many thousands of experts on the Holocaust. Innumerable books have been written on Nazi Germany (including one by me). Every single detail has been researched over and over again.

Holocaust survivors were shocked, because Netanyahu was really absolving Hitler, and the Germans in general, of the main blame for the horrendous crime. So Hitler was not so bad, after all. He just wanted to expel the Jews, not to kill them. It was the evil Arabs who induced him to commit the atrocity of atrocities.

Angela Merkel did the decent thing and issued an immediate denial, assuming again the total blame of the German people. Thousands of furious articles appeared around the world, many hundreds of them in Israel.

This particular utterance of Netanyahu's was not just stupid, not just ignorant. It borders on the insane.

A MUFTI is a religious scholar, a high ranking authority in an Islamic society, well above a mere judge. A Grand Mufti is the highest local religious authority. In Islam there is no pope.
The Grand Mufti in this story is Hajj Amin al-Husseini, who was chosen by the British authorities in Palestine for the office of Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. As it turned out, this was a grave mistake.
The man who made the mistake was a Jew – Herbert Samuel, the first High Commissioner of the British Mandated territory of Palestine after World War I. Young Hajj Amin was already known as a firebrand, and Samuel followed the well-established colonial practice of appointing enemies to high office, to quiet them down.

The Husseini family is the foremost Hamula (extended family) in Jerusalem. It has some 5000 members and occupies an entire neighborhood. It is one of the three or four most distinguished families in town, and for many generations a Husseini has been either the Mufti, the mayor or another dignitary in Arab Jerusalem.

Hajj Amin (hajj is the appellation of a Muslim who has made the obligatory pilgrimage to Mecca) was a trouble-maker right from the beginning. He saw early on the danger of the Zionist immigration for the Arab community in Palestine, and several times incited anti-British and anti-Jewish riots. These came to a head in the Great Rebellion of 1936 – known to the Jews as "the events"– which shook the country for three years, until World War II.

During "the events", many Jews and many British were killed, but most of the victims were Arabs. The Mufti (as everybody called him) used the opportunity to have all his rivals and competitors killed off. For the Jews in Palestine he became the symbol of evil, the object of intense hatred.

By now, the British, too, had had enough of him. They chased the Mufti out of the country. He went to Lebanon, but when this country was occupied by the British in World War II (to drive out the troops of the French Vichy regime) the Mufti fled to Iraq, which was in the hands of anti-British and pro-Nazi rebels. When the British re-conquered Iraq, the Mufti fled to Italy, which was leading the Fascist "Axis" effort to win over the Arabs. The Mufti, whose main enemies were the British, acted upon the theory that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. (At the same time, a leader of the Jewish underground in Palestine, Abraham Stern, acting upon the same theory, also sought contact with the Italians and Germans.)

It seems that the Italians were not too keen on having Hajj Amin around, so the Mufti moved to Nazi Germany. At the time, the SS was trying to enlist Muslim volunteers for the war against Russia, and somebody had the bright idea that a picture of the Grand Mufti with Hitler might be useful.

Hitler did not like the idea at all. He was a true believer in the race theory, and the Arabs are Semites – an inferior and detestable race, just like the Jews. But in the end he was weighed upon to receive this Arab refugee for what we now call a "photo opportunity". A picture was taken – the only picture of the only meeting between these two persons. (There are also photos of the Mufti with Muslim Bosnian SS volunteers).

The meeting was short, a perfunctory protocol was taken, the Jews appear nowhere in it. The whole episode was insignificant. Until Netanyahu.

It is ridiculous to crown the Mufti as the father of the Palestinian nation. In all my hundreds of meetings with Palestinians, from Arafat down, I have never heard a good word about Hajj Amin, not even from the wonderful Faisal al-Husseini, a remote relative. They unanimously described him as a real Palestinian patriot, but a person with limited education and narrow-minded outlook, who bears part of the blame for the disaster that befell the Palestinian people in 1948. The bloodbath he carried out among the Palestinians in the 1936-1939 rebellion weakened the Palestinians so much, that when the crucial test came – the 1947 partition of Palestine and the 1948 war – the nation was devoid of any effective leadership.

The idea that the mighty Fuehrer needed or heeded the advice of a fugitive Semite in order to decide on the Holocaust is preposterous. Indeed, it is crazy.

Also, the dates don't jibe. The photo-meeting took place at the end of 1941. The extermination started immediately after the conquest of Poland in 1939, and took on its monstrous dimensions with the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in the middle of 1941. It acquired its final, industrial format when Heinrich Himmler, the SS chief, decided that "one cannot demand of a decent German" to shoot all this Jewish scum. The Mufti had absolutely nothing to do with this, and the very idea is insane.
Until 1939, Hitler did indeed further the expulsion of the Jews, because physical extermination in a peaceful Europe was unthinkable. But once the war broke out, he saw at once the chance for mass extermination – and said so quite openly.

SO HOW did this son of a "renowned historian" come to say this crazy thing?). (This appellation of Ben-Zion Netanyahu is now de rigueur in the Israeli media, though I never met anyone who has read his work on the Spanish inquisition.)

Perhaps he heard it from some crackpot hired by Sheldon Adelson – but even so, the fact that he did not reject it outright shows not only that he is a complete ignoramus about the most important chapter in modern Jewish history, but also that he may have some mental problem.

In this light, many others of his decisions now look different, including this week's decision to take measures to cancel the "inhabitant" status of tens of thousands of Arab Jerusalemites. When East Jerusalem was annexed by Israel in 1967, the inhabitants were not granted Israeli citizenship, only reduced resident's rights, which deny them the right to vote for the Knesset. They were graciously allowed to apply for citizenship individually, but, of course, almost nobody did, since this would mean recognition of the annexation.

Now I am afraid. If indeed we are governed by a man with mental problems – just where is he leading us?








Why Netanyahu’s Claim that there is no threat to the status quo situation on the Temple Mount is a lie

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The Challenge to Palestinian Rights Over the Temple Mount is Political not Religious

The Dome of the Rock 


The central point of this article from Al Jazeera is correct.  The battle over the ‘right’ of Jewish nationalists to pray at the Al Aqsa mosque is not a religious battle but a nationalist one.  Religion is simply  the form the war takes.  As the article in the Jerusalem Post makes clear, Chief Rabbis reimpose ban on Jews visiting Temple Mount Orthodox Jews have always been prohibited from going onto the Temple Mount for fear of trespassing on the Holy of Holies, where the High Priest of the Temple used to hang around with god.

Those who are pushing for the right to  pray on the Temple Mount and in Al Aqsa mosque are the Jewish nationalists whose religion is defined and determined by their nationalism.  Nationalism harnessed to religion is a heady brew and has always manifested itself in a racist and chauvinist manner.  That was as true of the Crusades, nearly a thousand years  ago as it is of Zionism  Jewish nationalism today.  It can be no other since it posits a particular religion as the badge of identification of racial supremacy.  This is manifested as a perversion of the Chosen People concept.  The religion of the nationalists consists of the worship of the Land of Israel at the expense of the people of Israel.  It is is of course a form of idolatory.  Hence why they disregard the injunction not to go on to the Temple Mount since they are Messianists who wish to build a Third Temple.

Police invade the Mosque of al-Aqsa attacking worshipers and causing damage

Ever year in Jerusalem the Temple Mount Faithful stage a reenaction of the scane they wish to carry out when al-Aqsa mosque is razed to the ground and their Third Temple is built.  This year it was accompanied by the ritual sacrifice of a lamb and  the whole performance is funded by the Jerusalem city council.  Temple Mount Faithful sacrifices lamb in pre-Passover ritual 

Al Aqsa Mosque

The Temple Institute, another group dedicated to the demolition of the Golden Dome and the Mosque of al-Aqsa, is funded by the Israeli government.  So much for the claim that the govt  is committed to no change to the status quo

Tony Greenstein

Yehuda Glick - one of the most assiduous of the Temple Mount Faithful - was nearly assassinated recently

Israeli rightists push for takeover of Al-Aqsa compound

Right-wing Jewish organisations are advocating for an increased Israeli presence at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound

Patrick Strickland | |
Protests across occupied Palestinian territories have been triggered by increased Israeli incursions Al-Aqsa Mosque compound [Ammar Awad/Reuters]

Right-wing political leaders and groups have called for Israel to exercise control over the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound as the Israeli government takes harsh measures to quell ongoing Palestinian unrest. 

Returning to the Mount, a hardline right-wing Zionist organisation, announced this week that it would pay 2,000 shekels ($516) to Jewish-Israelis detained while praying at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, the third holiest site for Muslims. 
Jewish groups refer to the site as the Temple Mount and their increased incursions into the mosque compound have triggered Palestinian protests across the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip. 
Although formally banned from praying there, Israeli activists enjoy police escort when they venture into the compound. 

Speaking to Israel's Channel 2 on Tuesday, Raphael Morris, head of Returning to the Mount, accused the Israeli government of imposing "ruthless restrictions" on Jewish Israelis.

"We are not prepared [to let] the situation deteriorate."
"We must act not only to end the slide, but moreover for the addition of rights for Jews on the mount, the first of which is prayer,"Morris said, as reported by the Times of Israel website.  

The group's Facebook is full of posts calling for Israel to destroy the Al-Aqsa Mosque and raise a Jewish temple in its place. 

These fever-pitch calls come at a time when Palestinian protests against Israel's ongoing occupation and harsh policies are growing in frequency in Palestinian communities in Israel and in the West Bank and Gaza. 

Protesters have been met with force, with Israeli soldiers using live ammunition, rubber-coated steel bullets, tear gas and stun grenades. 

Since October 1, Israeli forces or settlers have killed 66 Palestinians, including unarmed protesters, bystanders and alleged attackers.

More than 1,000 Palestinians, among them children, have been arrested this month, according to the Palestinian Prisoners Club. 

During that same period, nine Israelis have been killed by Palestinians in stabbing or shooting attacks. 

Also on Tuesday, Israeli Deputy Minister Tzipi Hotovely - a member of the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's ultra-nationalist Likud party - referred to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound as "the centre of Israeli sovereignty, the capital of Israel".

"It is my dream to see the Israeli flag flying"over Al-Aqsa, she told Knesset TV, the Israeli parliament's television channel.   

In response, Netanyahu's office later that night put out a statement saying that "non-Muslims visit the Temple Mount [Al-Aqsa compound]" but are not permitted to pray there. 

Biblical claims

Hotovely was criticised in May when she cited religious texts as justification for Israeli settlement expansion. Citing medieval Jewish scholar Rabbi Shlomo Ben Yitzhaki, she said that "the creator of the world"took the land from Palestinians "and gave it to us". 

More than 530,000 Israelis live in Jewish-only settlements - considered illegal by international law - across the West Bank, according to the Israeli rights group B'Tselem.  

Right-wing protesters from the 'Students for the Temple Mount' group call on Israeli security forces to let them into the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on August 9 [Abir Sultan/EPA] 

Last month, the Temple Mount and Eretz Yisrael Faithful Movement, a hardline Israeli organisation that advocates removing the Al-Aqsa Mosque, organised a march as tensions soared. 

The group published a statement calling on Jews to protect the Temple Mount, which is "in the hands of Israel's enemies". 

"We will stop the Islamisation of the Temple Mount and the construction of more mosques,"it read, adding that Israeli police forces will provide the marchers with protection. 

According to Al-Shabaka: The Palestinian Policy Network, a research group, Israeli leaders intentionally attempt to portray the ongoing unrest as a religious conflict in order to justify using force against anti-occupation protests and to deflect criticism of harsh policies.

"Israel's framing of the conflict along religious lines is an attempt to decontextualise the clashes that have been happening between Palestinians and Israeli settlers," Nur Arafeh, a policy fellow at Al-Shabaka, told Al Jazeera. 
Arafeh said that Palestinian "resistance to a settler-colonial and apartheid" are time and again "distortedly linked to religious fervour". 

"While Netanyahu claims that he has no intention to change the status quo, Israeli settlers have strong and deepening ties with Israeli authorities that have been providing them with financial, political, and legal assistance and coverage." 

Several senior officials of the Israeli government and high-ranking members of Netanyahu's Likud party are committed supporters of Temple Mount movements and have attempted to advance their programme in the Knesset, according to a December 2014 report by the Jerusalem based group Ir Amim. 

The report found that Netanyahu has "refrained from confronting them publicly or from commenting on the destructive impact of their actions". 

Between May 2013 and October 2014, the Knesset Interior Committee held 14 discussions about Jewish access to the mosque compound, as compared to four meetings in the decade prior. 

Ir Amim describes these discussions "as a central stage for backing extreme right Temple movement activists"and "a platform for right-wing Knesset members to level criticism at authorities responsible for security"at the holy site. 

Some 27 right-wing Jewish movements advocate for an expansion of Israel's presence at the compound, according to the United Temple Mount Movement, an umbrella group that represents the organisations. 

While many only publicly focus on increasing Jewish prayer at the site, they all maintain the messianic view that the mosque will be replaced with a Jewish temple, according to another Ir Amim report published in October 2014. 

'Intense incitement'

In recent months, however, security forces have imposed tighter entry restrictions to the Al-Aqsa area on Palestinians, often placing arbitrary age restrictions on male worshippers. 

Earlier this month, Netanyahu banned all Knesset members from visiting the holy site, including Palestinian legislators in the Israeli parliament.

While Netanyahu has been mostly quiet about right-wing Jewish groups pushing for an Israeli takeover of the holy site, he has lashed out at Palestinian legislators who defy his order.

Most recently, Bassel Ghattas, a legislator in the Knesset and member of the Balad political party, defied the ban and visited the mosque to show solidarity with worshippers on Wednesday. 

Emphasising that Ghattas is a Christian, Netanyahu accused him of attempting to "provoke"an escalation and "inflame the situation". 

Yousef Jabareen, a Knesset member from the Arab-majority Joint List electoral coalition, said that Netanyahu and his political allies "are the ones who have been inciting". 

"We have been witnessing intense incitement by Netanyahu and his allies against Palestinian Knesset members,"he told Al Jazeera. 

"The idea is to delegitimise our role in Israeli politics,"he said. "I believe that this incitement serves Netanyahu to go ahead with his discriminatory policies"against Palestinians in Israel and the occupied territories. 

After an increasing number of religious people ignore rabbinate's ruling, chief rabbis reiterate their stance.

Chief rabbis David Lau and Yitzhak Yosef have signed a declaration reiterating the Chief Rabbinate’s opposition to Jews visiting the Temple Mount.

The Chief Rabbinate has – since its inception under Rabbi Avraham Yitzhak Hacohen Kook in 1921 – banned Jews from visiting the site out of a concern they may inadvertently step into an area which, in Jewish law, it is forbidden to enter unless one is ritually pure. It is not possible to perform the purification ceremony today for various halachic reasons.

In their signed declaration, Lau and Yosef said they were repeating the prohibition first issued by Kook against going up to the Temple Mount.

“In light of [those] neglecting [this ruling], we once again warn that nothing has changed and this strict prohibition remains in effect for the entire area [of the Temple Mount],” the chief rabbis wrote.

The declaration, which was promoted and advanced by senior national-religious leader Rabbi Shlomo Aviner, was also signed by several other leading rabbis, including former chief rabbis Shlomo Amar and Bakshi Doron, Rabbi Tzvi Tau, dean of the haredi-Zionist Yeshiva Har Hamor, and others.

In recent years, increasing numbers of religious people have ascended to the site, largely due to the activities of several religious organizations which promote Jewish rights and Israeli sovereignty over the Temple Mount complex.

Their activities have been given religious sanction by several leading national-religious rabbis, who rule that it is possible to visit the Temple Mount without entering the prohibited areas.

Rabbi Dov Lior, the chief rabbi of Kiryat Shmona and Hebron, and one of the most respected national-religious authorities in Jewish law, reiterated his position recently in the Shabbat pamphlet Gilui Da’at that it is halachically permissible to visit the Temple Mount.

The increasing number of people visiting the site and the increasingly vocal campaign insisting on the right of Jews to visit and pray there have led to increased tensions at the Temple Mount and intense political opposition from Arab MKs.

In a Knesset committee hearing on the issue in November, MK Jamal Zahalka of Balad accused Bayit Yehudi lawmakers who are supportive of Jewish rights on the Temple Mount of being “pyromaniacs,” telling them “you’re playing with fire and you’re starting an inferno.”


Appeasement is no way to fight the Labour Right

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An article of mine was published in the Weekly Worker a week ago on the situation, as I see it, facing Jeremy Corbyn.  

 Labour Turned Upside Down

Snatching Defeat From the Jaws of Victory

The election of Jeremy Corbyn opens up significant possibilities for the left to advance a socialist agenda in Britain, but it also lays the basis for a possibly terminal defeat for the left in the Labour Party if the wrong strategy is adopted.   The danger is that the far left will retreat behind sterile slogans about the Labour Party and the limitations of a reformist or bourgeois workers party without analysing the uniqueness of the present situation.  That is the method of the SWP which views everything through the prism of recruiting opportunities.

People need to understand what has happened and the limits of what is possible.  Since the General Election over 150,000 people have joined the Labour Party.  Revolutionaries should be joining the party.  The idea of affiliation of groups to the Labour Party in this situation is irrelevant.  It bypasses peoples’ consciousness.  The election of Corbyn has taken place in the absence of any significant working-class mobilisation or a mass movement against the decimation of the steel industry, local government cuts or the housing crisis. 

Politically the mass media has embarked on a concerted attack on Corbyn and there is a danger of wide-scale demoralisation amongst those who voted for him.

For the first time in over 30 years the Left has achieved a significant political victory, almost in spite of itself.  The far Left in Britain has never been very good when it comes to strategy or forward planning.  It has been bedeviled by sectarian impotence, the belief that differences between groups are more important than what unites them.   Since the 1960’s the socialist left has gone backwards as the working-class has suffered successive defeats. 

As one of the few people to predict an outright Tory victory in May,  I suggest that the first thing to do is to understand why Corbyn, as near to the far-Left as any candidate could get in the Labour Party, came from being a 100-1 outsider to winning the leadership with 60% first preference votes.  All talk of infiltrators from the massed ranks of the far-left disappeared with the result.  Can the British left, for once in its history take advantage of what has happened or will it continue to plough the same furrows of irrelevance?

After its General Election defeat, the reaction of New Labour was that Labour had lurched too far to the left.[Miliband made 'terrible mistake' in ditching New Labour, says Mandelson]  Who can forget the distilled wisdom of Tristram Hunt that Labour had to appeal to the “John Lewis community”, the aspirational Waitrose shopper.  In fact Labour had actually gained 1.4% of the vote nationally and 3.6% in England, compared to the Tories 0.8%.  New Labour’s ideologues comprehensively misread the popular reaction to the Tory victory and their candidate, Liz Kendall paid the price.

The nomination of Corbyn by right-wing Labour MPs was not merely fortuitous.  Thousands of people, via social media, including my 13 year old son, bombarded Labour MPs demanding that they lend Corbyn their nomination.  Undoubtedly this created an atmosphere in which MPs were pushed into accepting the need for a contest where the Left wasn’t excluded.

The primary reasons for Labour losing the election in England were the 16% drop in the Lib Dem vote coupled with the 10.7% increase for UKIP.  In addition the Green Party gained 3.2%.  The Tories gained 21 compared to 15 seats for Labour in England.  In Scotland the SNP took 10 seats from the Lib Dems.  It had no effect on whether there would have been a Labour government (assuming an arrangement had been reached with the SNP).


From the first declaration in Sunderland, where UKIP gained around 8,000 votes, it was clear that UKIP would make a heavy inroads into Labour’s northern working-class vote.  The mistake was in writing off such a vote as racist or chauvinist.  When people mentioned ‘immigration’ what they were really doing was looking for an explanation for job insecurity, low wages, housing and poverty.  In the absence of any class alternative UKIP’s scapegoating provide an alternative.  In these same northern cities Corbyn was speaking to meetings of 1,000+.  Those who voted UKIP also support rail renationalisation, rent controls and many other socialist and radical demands.

They are not revolutionary demands but we are not in a revolutionary situation.  Nationalisation is a progressive demand because it poses a collective solution to the fragmentation and profiteering of private capitalism.  To dispense with transitional demands is to dispense with any notion of how to change society.

Appeasement

Corbyn is in a distinct minority in the Parliamentary party.  Unfortunately his strategy appears to be one of feeding the lions rather than shooting them.  Appeasement is rarely a successful strategy.  At best it buys time.  As soon as sufficient time has elapsed, the Labour right is going to go in for the kill. 

Far from giving the green light to MPs to rebel over the bombing of Syria, the sole purpose of which is to make it clear that in foreign policy bipartisanship rules, a three line whip should be issued opposing all military action.  Instead it seems that Corbyn is contemplating supporting a ‘safe haven’ which can only be enforced militarily.  No serious strategist believes that Britain will succeed where the US has failed in bringing ISIS to heel.  The only American success was in Kobani where the Kurds were on the ground. 

Appeasing the right can have only one outcome.  The removal of Corbyn when the time is right, probably 18 months at the maximum.  Having betrayed most of his promises there will be no one left to fight for him.

The omni-shambles represented by MacDonald’s about turn on supporting Osborne’s fiscal statement betrays a Labour left that talks anti-austerity but refuses to adopt, even within capitalism, an economic policy that rejects the framework of reducing the deficit.  If the State is in deficit others are in surplus.  If the state is in surplus savings are run down and deflation stalks the land.  That by any definition is austerity. 

We are seeing a slow motion replay of Syriza, except that Labour is not even in government.  The left inside and outside the Labour Party will pay the price for abdicating its responsibilities.  The Labour Right would prefer a Tory to a left-labour government.  Blair wasquite explicit‘I wouldn’t want to win on an old fashioned leftist platform. Even if I thought it was the route to victory, I wouldn’t take it.’  It is the job of the Left is to draw the appropriate conclusions.  Instead Corbyn has adopted a trappist silence, giving the Right in the shadow cabinet its head.

Whilst Corbyn had little alternative but to appoint members from the Right as members of the shadow cabinet, it was a crass political mistake to appoint a supporter of NATO and Trident to the post of Shadow Defence Secretary.  The resignation of Lord Warner as a Whip in the House of Lords begs the question as to why was this advocate of introducing charges in the NHS and a consultant to private healthcare firms ever appointed?  Whilst Corbyn is making a virtue out of necessity, in turning the other cheek, he should remember that even Jesus used whips to drive the money lenders out of the Temple.  Corbyn’s experiment in the ‘new politics’ is simply postponing the inevitable whilst the Prince of Darkness (Mandelson) plots away.    

The Achilles heel of past Labour governments, even of the reforming kind, has been the bipartisanship relationship with America on foreign policy.  That is the real meaning of Trident. The idea that the ability to incinerate millions of people contributes to Britain’s ‘security’ is self-evidently absurd.  Not only is it not independent of the USA, but it makes it that much more likely that Britain would be a primary target in the event of war between Russia and the USA. 

Having been the subject of the Kinnock purges in the early 1990’s and having participated in the Socialist Alliance, Left Unity and TUSC, it is clear that efforts to organise outside the Labour Party have been a failure.  Thousands of socialists have now joined the Labour Party and the urgent need is to provide a leadership in the fight with a Right determined to save Labour for capitalism. 
That means drawing up our own red lines.  Trident, the bombing of Syria, rail and utilies nationalisation, rent controls and security of tenure, abolition of the benefits cap, Council Tax Benefit and the bedroom tax, tuition fees and grants.  If that means the resignation of shadow cabinet members, then so be it.  Higher corporate taxation and an end to corporate welfare and to multi-nationals tax avoidance, as well as the repeal of the anti-trade union laws should be part of a minimum programme. 

What we are talking about is a left reformist government.  Socialism is not on the agenda but a left Labour government would represent a very distinct advance in the fight for socialism.
The temptation is for Corbyn and MacDonald to continue to appease the Right.  Having promised to abolish tuition fees and reinstate grants, Corbyn is now backing down on this.  In the face of steel closures the SNP has called for nationalisation.  Labour has said nothing.  

A major factor in Corbyn’s election was housing, rent levels and security of tenure.  Tory policies of using housing price inflation to stimulate the economy are leading to a situation where key workers can’t obtain affordable housing.  A policy of taking housing out of the market, reducing the price of housing and rent levels coupled with a right to buy at a discount in the private sector and repeal of the right to buy social housing would bury the buy to let sector. 

There is one other question on which socialists needs to take a stand.   Proportional Representation.  To have a political system that accords one seat to a party with over 4 million votes is grotesque. 
Reform of internal party structures are crucial.  The abolition of the National Policy Forum and the reintroduction of Conference sovereignty, coupled with the abolition of the requirement to obtain 15% of MPs as nominees for the leadership is the minimum.  The one measure that will put the frighteners on right-wing MPs will be mandatory reselection coupled with the right of recall.  To abjure this is not to strengthen but to weaken Corbyn’s position. 

The Labour Party has always accepted the British state uncritically.  They are literally Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition.  A refusal by Corbyn to defend his republican beliefs and to pretend they are ones of private conscience is part of the fundamental political weakness of the Labour left.  The Tory press fulminated but the majority of people were unpersuaded by the necessity to doff the cap and sing the anthem.  A programme to reform the feudal British state should include the royal prerogative, the Privy Council and a referendum on abolition of the Monarchy. 

MacDonald’s craven apology for having said that the IRA were brave wasn’t simply embarrassing.  Did MacDonald forget the origins of the Northern Ireland state or its existence as a Protestant supremacist police state for half a century or that when the RUC and B-Specials invaded Derry’s Bogside in 1969, the IRA stood for I Ran Away.  Instead MacDonald apologised and emphasised his allegiance to the British security state. Thus we see a Sir Stafford Cripps in the making.

Corbyn has been involved in Palestine solidarity for as long as he has been an MP yet he is now retreating to a position of ‘dialogue’ which conveniently omits the question of who is the oppressed and who is the oppressor.  Would he have called for dialogue to resolve Apartheid in South Africa?   Those who possess privilege rarely give it up of their own accord.

Working in the Labour party will not be easy.  Electoralism has its own rhythms.  Corbyn and MacDonald are prisoners of their own shadow cabinet.  Our job is to free them.  The victory of Corbyn gives the socialist left opportunities it has rarely had.  The question is whether they will instead allow the Right to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat?

Tony Greenstein





The United States Enabled Radical Islam

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 How the CIA, George W. Bush and many others helped create ISIS


We have tried to harness the power of radical Islam for our own interests for decades. ISIS is partially on America

By Abdel Bari Atwan

October 18, 2015 "
Information Clearing House" - "Salon" -  Since 1980, the United States has intervened in the affairs of fourteen Muslim countries, at worst invading or bombing them. They are (in chronological order) Iran, Libya, Lebanon, Kuwait, Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Sudan, Kosovo, Yemen, Pakistan, and now Syria. Latterly these efforts have been in the name of the War on Terror and the attempt to curb Islamic extremism.
Yet for centuries Western countries have sought to harness the power of radical Islam to serve the interests of their own foreign policy. In the case of Britain, this dates back to the days of the Ottoman Empire; in more recent times, the US/UK alliance first courted, then turned against, Islamists in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria. In my view, the policies of the United States and Britain—which see them supporting and arming a variety of groups for short-term military, political, or diplomatic advantage—have directly contributed to the rise of IS.
Supporting the Caliphate

The Turkish Ottoman Empire was, for centuries, the largest Muslim political entity the world has ever known, encompassing much of North Africa, southeastern Europe, and the Middle East. From the sixteenth century onwards, Britain not only championed the Ottoman Empire but also supported and endorsed the institution of the caliphate and the Sultan’s claim to be the caliph and leader of the ummah (the Muslim world).

Britain’s support for the Ottoman Caliph—a policy known as the Eastern Question—was entirely motivated by self-interest. Initially this was so the Ottoman lands would act as a buffer against its regional imperial rivals, France and Russia; subsequently, following the colonization of India, the Ottoman territories acted to protect Britain’s eastward trade routes. This support was not merely diplomatic; it translated into military action. In the Crimean War (1854–56), Britain fought with the Ottoman Empire against Russia and won.

It was only with the onset of the First World War in 1914 that this 400-year-old regional paradigm unraveled. When Mehmed V sided with the Germans, Britain was reluctantly excluded from dealing with the caliphate’s catchment of over 15 million Muslims, reasoning that “whoever controlled the person of the Caliph, controlled Sunni Islam.” London decided that an Arab uprising to unseat Mehmed would enable them to reassign the role of caliph to a trusted and more malleable ally: Hussein bin Ali Hussein, the sherif of Mecca and a direct descendant, it is claimed, of the Prophet Muhammad. The British employed racism to garner support for the uprising, appealing to the Arabs’ sense of ownership over Islam, which had originated in Mecca and Medina, not among the Turks of Constantinople. A 1914 British proclamation declared, “There is no nation among the Muslims which is now capable of upholding the Islamic Caliphate except the Arab nation.” A letter was dispatched to Sherif Hussein, fomenting his ambition and suggesting, “It may be that an Arab of true race will assume the Caliphate at Mecca or Medina” (Medina being the seat of the first caliphate after the death of the Prophet). Again, the British were prepared to defend the caliphate with the sword, promising to “guarantee the Holy Places against all external aggression.” It is a strange thought that, just 100 years ago, the prosecutors of today’s War on Terror were promising to restore the Islamic caliphate to the Arab world and defend it militarily.

The Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire, fomented by the British, got underway in 1916, the same year that the infamous Sykes-Picot Agreement was made in secret, carving up between the British and French the very lands Sherif Hussein had been promised. Betrayal, manipulation, and self-interest were, and remain, the name of the game when it comes to Western meddling in the Middle East. The revolt would last two years and was a major factor in the fall of the Ottoman Empire. At the same time, the British Army and allied forces, including the Arab Irregulars, were fighting the Ottomans on the battlefields of the First World War. A key figure in these battles was T. E. Lawrence, who became known as Lawrence of Arabia because of the loyalty he engendered in the hearts of Sherif Hussein and his son, Emir Faisal. He was given the status of honorary son by the former, and he fought under the command of the latter in many battles, later becoming Faisal’s advisor. When the Ottomans put a £15,000 reward on Lawrence’s head, no Arab was tempted to betray him.

Sadly this honorable behavior and respect were not reciprocated. In a memo to British intelligence in 1916, Lawrence described the hidden agenda behind the Arab uprising: “The Arabs are even less stable than the Turks. If properly handled they would remain in a state of political mosaic, a tissue of small jealous principalities, incapable of cohesion . . . incapable of co-ordinated action against us.” In a subsequent missive he explained, “When war broke out, an urgent need to divide Islam was added. . . . Hussein was ultimately chosen because of the rift he would create in Islam. In other words, divide and rule.”

Oil Security and Western Foreign Policy

Let us fast-forward to the 1950s and ’60s, by which time oil had become a major factor in the West’s foreign policy agenda. Again, the principle of “divide and rule” was put to work: a 1958 British cabinet memo noted, “Our interest lies . . . in keeping the four principal oil-producing areas [Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran, and Iraq] under separate political control.” The results of this policy saw the West arming both sides in the Iran-Iraq war—which brought both powers to the brink of total destruction in the 1980s—and then intervening militarily with a force of almost 700,000 men in the First Gulf War (to prevent Iraq annexing Kuwait) in 1990–91.

The United States, UK, and European powers were also deeply troubled by the cohesive potential of Arab Nationalism, a hugely popular movement led by Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser and his (at that time) mighty allies in Iraq and Syria. The idea of these three huge, left-leaning regional powers becoming politically and militarily united was unacceptable in the Cold War context and remained so after the fall of the Soviet Empire because of the regional threat to Israel. To counteract the rise of pan-Arabism, the West began to support Islamist tendencies within each country—mostly branches of the Muslim Brotherhood—and also worked hard in the diplomatic field to create strong and binding relationships with Islamic, pro-Western monarchies in Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, and Jordan. These relationships endure to this day.

The most extreme manifestation of radical Sunni Islam was Saudi Arabia’s Wahhabism, which it had started to disseminate via a string of international organizations and its self-designated Global Islamic Mission. In 1962, Saudi Arabia oversaw the establishment of The Muslim World League, which was largely staffed by exiled members of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood. The Muslim Brotherhood’s relationship with the West (and with the Gulf monarchies) has always been inconsistent and entirely selfish. In the run-up to, during, and after, the 2011 “Arab Spring” revolution against Hosni Mubarak, the United States and UK were actively supporting the Muslim Brotherhood as the most credible (or only) experienced political entity. In 2014, both countries came under pressure from the Saudis to declare the Muslim Brotherhood a terror group: though neither has yet gone that far, the UK duly launched an official investigation into the group, headed by UK Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Sir John Jenkins, while in the United States a bill was introduced in Congress, the Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Designation Act of 2014.

The House of Saud itself feared an “Arab Spring” revolution and encouraged and applauded the June 2013 coup that deposed the Brotherhood’s legitimately elected President Morsi; Saudi King Abdullah phoned coup leader al-Sisi (now the Egyptian president) within hours to congratulate him on his success. Egypt under al-Sisi would prove a better friend to Israel and, like Saudi Arabia, would brutally extinguish any new uprisings, giving the kingdom moral support in its own battle for survival. Saudi political pragmatism (or, as some might frame it, hypocrisy) has been progressively informed by its close relationship with the United States and UK— and is now one of the most significant drivers of the Middle East’s present chaos, including the emergence of ISIS.

Communism: The First Public Enemy Number One

From the 1950s on, the Muslim Brotherhood was supported and funded by the CIA. When Nasser decided to stamp out the movement in Egypt, the CIA helped its leaders migrate to Saudi Arabia, where they were assimilated into the Wahhabi kingdom’s own particular brand of fundamentalism, many rising to positions of great influence. While Saudi Arabia actively prevented the formation of a home-grown branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, it encouraged and financed the movement abroad in other Arab countries. One of the most prominent leaders of the Western-backed Afghan Jihad (1979–89) was a Cairo-educated Muslim Brotherhood member: Burhanuddin Rabbani, head of Jamaat-i-Islami ( JI).

America and, to a lesser extent, Britain fretted about the rise of communism, which was perceived and portrayed as the “enemy of freedom”—a term that would later be applied to the Islamic extremists. In geopolitical terms, by the end of the Second World War, the Soviet Union comprised one-sixth of the world’s land mass and was a superpower capable of mounting a devastating challenge to the United States. The White House was also concerned about the future alignment of China, where the Chinese Communist Party had seized power in 1949. Communism was enthusiastically embraced by millions of idealistic post-war Americans and Europeans, posing a perceived domestic political threat. Meanwhile the West observed with horror the increasing popularity of communism and socialism in the Middle East; revolutionary, pro-Soviet, Arab regimes would create an enormous strategic disadvantage and threaten oil security.

For the West, radical Islam represented the best way to counter the encroachment of Arab nationalism communism.

Following the Six-Day War in 1967, US and UK governmental planners noted with satisfaction that Arab unity and sense of a shared cause were finding expression in a revival of Islamic fundamentalism and widespread calls for the implementation of Sharia law. This revival continued through the 1970s and, by the end of the decade, produced the pan-Arab mujahideen that would battle the Soviet armies in Afghanistan for the next ten years.

As in Syria and Iraq, the Sunni jihadists were not alone in the insurgency. There were seven major Sunni groups, armed and funded (to the tune of $6 billion) by the United States and Saudi Arabia, as well as the UK, Pakistan, and China. Abdullah Azzam’s Maktab al-Khidamat (the Services Office), which included bin Laden and from which al Qaeda would emerge, was at this point only a sub-group of one of these, the Gulbuddin faction (founded in 1977 by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar). Often overlooked in retelling the story of this particular Afghan war is the fact that the insurgency was pan-Islamic: there were eight Shi‘i groups, trained and funded by Iran.

Of the Sunni entities it was backing, the CIA preferred the Afghan-Arabs (as the foreign fighters from Arab countries came to be known) because they found them “easier to read” than their indigenous counterparts. In 2003, Australian-British journalist John Pilger conducted research and concluded, “More than 100,000 Islamic militants were trained in Pakistan between 1986 and 1992, in camps overseen by the CIA and MI6, with the SAS training future al Qaeda and Taliban fighters in bomb-making and other black arts. Their leaders were trained at a CIA camp in Virginia.” That Western interference in Afghanistan actually precedes the Soviet invasion by several months is rarely acknowledged. In the context of this book it is worth tracing the motives and methods employed by foreign powers to further their own ends in that territory, as these have been repeated and modified in Iraq and Syria.

Afghanistan’s location and long borders with Iran and Pakistan make it a strategic prize, and rival powers have often fought to control it. A coup in 1978 (the third in five years) brought the pro-Soviet Muhammad Taraki to power, setting off alarm bells in Islamabad, Washington, London, and Riyadh. The Pakistani ISI first tried to foment an Islamist uprising, but this failed owing to lack of popular support. Next, five months before the Soviet invasion, President Jimmy Carter sent covert aid to Islamist opposition groups with the help of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Carter’s National Security Advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, wrote in a memo to his boss that if the Islamists rose up it would “induce a Soviet military intervention, likely to fail, and give the USSR its own Vietnam.” Another coup in September 1979 brought Deputy Prime Minister Hafizullah Amin to power; Moscow invaded in December, killing Amin and replacing him with its own man, Babrak Karmal. Brzezinski then sent Carter a memo outlining his advised strategy: “We should concert with Islamic countries both a propaganda campaign and a covert action campaign to help the rebels.”

On December 18, 1979, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher enthusiastically endorsed Washington’s approach at a meeting of the Foreign Policy Association in New York, even praising the Iranian Revolution and concluding, “The Middle East is an area where we have much at stake. . . . It is in our own interest that they build on their own deep, religious traditions. We do not wish to see them succumb to the fraudulent appeal of imported Marxism.”

Because IS is a product of Western interference in Iraq and Syria, none of the powers that backed the Afghan mujahideen anticipated the emergence of alQaeda, with its vehemently anti-Western agenda and ambition to re-establish the caliphate. Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf wrote in his autobiography, “Neither Pakistan nor the US realized what Osama bin Laden would do with the organization we had all allowed him to establish.”

Defining Extremism: The Western Dilemma

In the course of the 1990s, radical political Islam became more extremist—a shift that was encouraged and funded by Saudi Arabia. The star of the Muslim Brotherhood began to wane as its leaders were castigated for being too “moderate” and for participating in the democratic process in Egypt; standing as “independents” (since the Muslim Brotherhood was banned), its candidates fared well, becoming the main opposition force to President Hosni Mubarak. There was another reason for the Muslim Brotherhood falling out of favor with Riyadh—it had supported Saddam Hussein’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait. The House of Saud now linked its survival with the rise of the Salafi-jihadist tendency, which was consistent with its own custom-fit Wahhabi ideology.

The West viewed this shift into a more radical gear with some alarm as the Salafists’ battle became international: Arab jihadists traveled to Eastern Europe to fight with the Bosnian Muslims from 1992; New York’s World Trade Center was first bombed by radical Islamists in 1993; and in 1995, North African jihadists from the al Qaeda–linked GIA (Armed Islamic Group, Algeria) planted bombs on the Paris Metro, killing 8 and injuring more than 100.

The United States and UK adopted a remarkably laid-back approach to this new wave of radical Islam. The UK government and security services did not consider that the extremists presented a real danger, allowing the establishment of what the media labeled “Londonistan” through the 1990s. It could be argued that this was a successful arrangement in that, in return for being allowed to live in the British capital and go about their business in peace, the jihadists did not commit any act of violence on British streets. The Syrian jihadist Abu Musab al-Suri (aka Setmariam Nasar) was a leading light among the Londonistan jihadist community, which also included Osama bin Laden’s so-called ambassador to London, Khalid al-Fawwaz. Al-Suri confirmed to me that a tacit covenant was in place between M16 and the extremists.

Saudi entities and individuals funded al Qaeda and other violent Salafist groups to the tune of $300 million through the 1990s, and the United States and UK remained stalwartly supportive. A year after Margaret Thatcher left parliament for good, she told a 1993 meeting of the Chatham House international affairs think tank, “The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is a strong force for moderation and stability on the world stage.” When challenged on Riyadh’s appalling human rights record—which included (and still includes) public executions, floggings, stonings, oppression of women, the incarceration of peaceful dissidents, and violent dispersal of any kind of demonstration—she retorted, “I have no intention of meddling in its internal affairs.” Later, Tony Blair would talk of the Middle East’s Axis of Moderation, meaning Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, Turkey, the Palestinian Authority, and Israel.

The First Gulf War brought two changes into play. The first was that Saudi Arabia now became completely dependent, militarily, on the United States for its survival. The second was that, in an attempt to weaken Saddam Hussein, the CIA encouraged Shi‘i groups in southern Iraq to rebel, resulting in thousands of Shi‘a being slaughtered by regime helicopter fire. George H. W. Bush spent $40 million on clandestine operations in Iraq, flying Shi‘i and Kurdish leaders to Saudi Arabia for training, and creating and funding two opposition groups: the Iraqi National Accord, led by Iyad Alawi (who would collaborate in a failed coup plotted by the CIA’s Iraq Operations Group in 1996) and the Iraqi National Congress, led by Ahmad Chalabi (who was close to Dick Cheney when he was Defense Secretary). And yet, for the next twelve years, Saddam Hussein remained in power despite the punitive sanctions regime.

Washington and London continued to believe that an alliance with “moderate” Islam was key to defeating the extremists. A 2004 Whitehall paper by former UK Ambassador to Damascus Basil Eastwood and Richard Murphy, who had been assistant secretary of state under Reagan, noted: “In the Arab Middle East, the awkward truth is that the most significant movements which enjoy popular support are those associated with political Islam.” For the first time, they identified two distinct groups within the political Islamists: those “who seek change but do not advocate violence to overthrow regimes, and the Jihadists . . . who do.”

This new paradigm gained traction. In 2006, Tony Blair made it clear that the coming fight in the Middle East would be between the moderate Islamists and the extremists. The West, he told an audience in the World Affairs Council in Los Angeles, should seek to “empower” the moderates. “We want moderate, mainstream Islam to triumph over reactionary Islam.” Blair enlarged on the economic benefits this would accrue to the large transnational enterprises and organizations he championed: “A victory for the moderates means an Islam that is open: open to globalization.”

The West continues to behave as if Saudi Arabia can deliver the world from the menace of extremism. Yet the kingdom has spent $50 billion promoting Wahhabism around the world, and most of the funding for al Qaeda—amounting to billions of dollars—still comes from private individuals and organizations in Saudi Arabia. The Sinjar Records (documents captured in Iraq by coalition forces in 2007) provided a clear picture of where foreign jihadists were coming from: Saudi nationals accounted for 45 percent of foreign fighters in Iraq. They swell the ranks of IS today.
The Arab revolutions muddied the waters even more, particularly in Libya and Syria, making it almost impossible to distinguish between moderates and extremists. In Libya the West’s intervention strengthened the radicals and liberated stockpiles of Gaddafi’s sophisticated weapons, which were immediately spirited away by the truckload to jihadist strongholds. In the light of that error, President Obama dithered in Syria, much to the fury of his Saudi allies, allowing the most radical of the extremists to prevail: Islamic State.

Excerpted from “Islamic State: The Digital Caliphate” by Abdel Bari Atwan. Published by the University of California Press. Copyright © 2015 by Abdel Bari Atwan. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.

‘The Most Moral Occupation in the World’ Launches Military Operation Against Palestinian Hospital in Jerusalem

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It is almost surrealistic.  Israeli paramilitary police raid the Makassed hospital in Arab East Jerusalem firing rubber bullets, sound grenades and tear gas.  Can you imagine t his scene happening to a Jewish hospital in Israel?  If you expecting to see this on the BBC don’t hold your breath.  Only Palestinian violence is newsworthy.

Tony Greenstein
Allison Deger on October 31, 2015 5 Comments

Israeli border police enter Makassed hospital in East Jerusalem. (Photo: al-Ray)
Amid weeks of violence in Jerusalem, Israeli police and special forces raided an East Jerusalem hospital for a third day in a row on Thursday and fired tear gas, sound grenades and rubber bullets into the medical compound, injuring three patients.


Israeli police first burst into Makassed hospital in the Mount of Olives neighborhood on Tuesday with a court order to confiscate the medical records of a 16-year old patient who was treated on October 13th for injuries from a gunshot wound.

“They were not trying to confirm that he was shot—because they have him [the patient] in custody and so they know he was shot and they can confirm the bullet wound, but they wanted to see who was with him, who came in with him to the hospital,” said Dr. Rafiq Hussein, the director of Makassed hospital, who questioned why police undertook a militarized operation inside of his facility. “They were after not a dangerous person, or a wanted person, only a file,” he noted.

The following day police returned to the hospital in increased numbers. Hussein said hospital staff were unable to tend to patients as 40 to 50 masked officers again ran into the hospital seeking security footage and interviews with the staff who treated the injured minor.

“They stopped what they were doing because police had come into the middle of the hospital. There was almost a clash between the staff and the Israeli police, because this is a hospital and they [the police] should not have been here,” Hussein said.

Two doctors were taken to a nearby police station where they were questioned about the individuals who accompanied the wounded 16-year old patient, according to Hussein. Police requested an additional four nurses report for interviews over the weekend. Several medical staff were questioned inside of the hospital.

“They have asked about he shifts and the name of everyone who was on the shifts, their ID number and telephone numbers,” Hussein said. “They confiscated the hard disk of the camera system, they took it, and they now asked for interrogations with our nurses.”

On Thursday doctors and nurses held a demonstration in the gated courtyard of Makassed hospital in protest of the police entry, which they said disrupted their ability to care for patients.  Hussein indicated all hospital personnel complied with the court order, appearing for depositions and turning over the requested file and security footage.

Amid weeks of violence in Jerusalem, Israeli police and special forces raided an East Jerusalem hospital for a third day in a row on Thursday and fired tear gas, sound grenades and rubber bullets into the medical compound, injuring three patients.

Israeli police first burst into Makassed hospital in the Mount of Olives neighborhood on Tuesday with a court order to confiscate the medical records of a 16-year old patient who was treated on October 13th for injuries from a gunshot wound.

“They were not trying to confirm that he was shot—because they have him [the patient] in custody and so they know he was shot and they can confirm the bullet wound, but they wanted to see who was with him, who came in with him to the hospital,” said Dr. Rafiq Hussein, the director of Makassed hospital, who questioned why police undertook a militarized operation inside of his facility. “They were after not a dangerous person, or a wanted person, only a file,” he noted.

The following day police returned to the hospital in increased numbers. Hussein said hospital staff were unable to tend to patients as 40 to 50 masked officers again ran into the hospital seeking security footage and interviews with the staff who treated the injured minor.

“They stopped what they were doing because police had come into the middle of the hospital. There was almost a clash between the staff and the Israeli police, because this is a hospital and they [the police] should not have been here,” Hussein said.

Two doctors were taken to a nearby police station where they were questioned about the individuals who accompanied the wounded 16-year old patient, according to Hussein. Police requested an additional four nurses report for interviews over the weekend. Several medical staff were questioned inside of the hospital.

“They have asked about he shifts and the name of everyone who was on the shifts, their ID number and telephone numbers,” Hussein said. “They confiscated the hard disk of the camera system, they took it, and they now asked for interrogations with our nurses.”

On Thursday doctors and nurses held a demonstration in the gated courtyard of Makassed hospital in protest of the police entry, which they said disrupted their ability to care for patients.  Hussein indicated all hospital personnel complied with the court order, appearing for depositions and turning over the requested file and security footage.  “We were protesting because of the two-day of incursions by the police, so then police came in. They started to shoot tear gas, sound bombs and rubber bullets inside of the hospital premises,” Hussein said. “There were a couple of patients who were hit by rubber bullets actually.”

Palestinian media reported that three patients not participating in the medical staff demonstration were shot with rubber bullets during the demonstration.

“This is the first time in a long time that they police enter in large number, masked, with guns to look for information,” Hussein said, “Well of course this was carried out during the Intifada [Palestinian uprising], it was the same, but now this is new to East Jerusalem.”
Hospital staff protest Israeli border police entering Makassed hospital in East Jerusalem, October 29, 2015. (Photo: Dr. Rafiq Hussein)
Israeli police also erected a checkpoint last week outside of Makassed hospital’s sister facility, Augusta Victoria hospital, located a half-mile away on the Mount of Olives. The crossing is one of more than a dozen new checkpoints built across East Jerusalem neighborhoods in recent weeks, during which Israeli forces have killed more than 60 Palestinians, and Palestinians killed ten Israelis in attacks.
Hospital staff protest Israeli border police entering Makassed hospital in East Jerusalem, October 29, 2015. (Photo: Dr. Rafiq Hussein)
A group representing six East Jerusalem hospitals said  in a statement last week that the checkpoints prevent ambulances from leaving and entering the facility with speed and are “a major obstacle to the medical and humanitarian work.”

“These concrete barriers/roadblocks have led to major delays in the arrival of patients and their companions to their hospitals’ destination, employees and medical staff such as doctors and nurses, as well as to the disruption and delay of the patients’ movement from one hospital to another,”said the East Jerusalem Hospitals Network.


Meet Chelsea Fox - the Violent Zionist Transexual

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ZIONISTS BEHAVING BADLY 
Chelsea Fox - A Peacenick from Sussex Friends of Israel

We can't bring you the professionally made video we did of CFI's founder member and stalwart, Simon Cobbs but we can show you the raw, uncut, bad behaviour of one Chelse Fox who went round trying to intimidate members of the Sodastream picket in Brighton.



It was all to no avail I'm happy to say as the shop closed down.  Indeed the Zionist counter-demonstrators were probably more effective in turning people away than we were as they were so obnoxious!  We don't hold anything against Chelsea because she is a transexual but we do wonder how she managed to keep company with the bigots around her, not least Julie Burchill, who made some appearances alongside the Zionists,

For those who don't remember her famous rant against transexuals in the Observer, later published on the Telegraph blog, let me remind you: transexuals are:

'a bunch of dicks in chick’s clothing' 
'a bunch of bed-wetters in bad wigs' 
and in a somewhat longer diatribe, Burchill explained how :

'To have your cock cut off and then plead special privileges as women – above natural-born women, who don’t know the meaning of suffering, apparently – is a bit like the old definition of chutzpah: the boy who killed his parents and then asked the jury for clemency on the grounds he was an orphan.'  

Ms Fox mixes in strange circles!

The Most Moral Occupation in the World or

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Why Israel is a Vibrant & Thriving Democracy Which Upholds the Freedom of the Press

There are of course a few people, anti-Semites naturally, who make wild and scurrilous accusations about how Israeli soldiers behave.  Some even allege that they assault and attack people for no reason, but as the video below shows, they are a model of politeness and self-discipline, even when sorely provoked.

Tony Greenstein

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