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Shock Horror! Oldham Voters Defy Our Great British Press

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First Write the Headline then Report the News - How the Press Got Oldham Wrong

The Times writes the headline first and then gathers the news!

It wouldn’t have made such a good headline, but at least it would have been more honest for once if the headlines had read 'Voters Defy the Press'.   A more truthful headline would have been on the lines of ‘Labour holds Oldham with increased majority despite vitriolic Press attacks on Corbyn’ or ‘British Press Gets It Wrong Again’.  But they would not have been such good headlines, even if they would have been more truthful.

Despite the predictions that terrorist loving, baby-eating communist leader of Labour would scare the voters into voting for UKIP , voters in the Oldham by-election defied the predictions and gave Labour an increased share of the vote in the by-election.

Roy Greenslade’s enjoyably mischievious article in The Guardian The Times Counts the Cost of Spinning Against Labour in Oldham’ captured it perfectly.  On Friday morning the first editions of The Times appeared with the headline ‘Labour is counting the cost in Oldham’ with the successful UKIP candidate and Nigel Farage pictured together.  Later we were told by The Times that Corbyn wasn't an issue in the by-election, despite this being the focus of Ukip's campaign!
The Times plays the racist card - it was all the fault of those Muslims
The only problem was that the electorate begged to differ.  So the fall-back position of reporter Callum Jones was that Labour was predicted to hold the seat with a reduced majority despite Jeremy Corbyn as leader.  When the result was actually announced the headline was changed again to ‘Labour holds on to Oldham with ease.’  and they then fell back on Farage's excuse - the Muslims.  It was all the fault of the 25% of the electorate which is Asian.  And then Farage will no doubt tell us that because they have a few token Asians, UKIP isn't racist!
Nor was The Times the only culprit.  The Telegraph ran with ‘Even if it holds Oldham Labour has no answer to the UKIP squeeze’’.  The Sun played it both ways – its headline was that it was a two horse race between Labour and UKIP but the sub-headline announced that 'Rod Liddle had paid Oldham a visit and it was clear that Oldham was ‘the rock solid Labour seat, where voters are ditching Corbyn’s barmy army in favour of UKIP’s dark horse.’ 

The Sun had, of course, substituted its own fervent wishes for those of the electorate who weren't as stupid as the Sun clearly wished they were.

Even the Labour supporting Daily Mirror went wobbly.
The once great Conservative Spectatorspeculated predicted, in the form of a question ‘Is UKIP on course to win the Oldham West and Royton by-election?’.  The Express, which is of course known for the accuracy of its predictions, headlined on ‘Oldham by-election:  'Tax scandal rocks Labour’s Jim McMahon’ Perhaps slightly more accurate was its headline ‘Express: Entertain the Whole Family’ Certainly what its coverage lacked in information it makes up for in entertainment.

The Mail’s Robert Hardman, a know Labour supporting paper, confidently announced that ‘The greatest threat to Labour’s hold on Oldham?  Jeremy Corbyn!  ROBERT HARDMAN visits Oldham West as UKIP surges before today’s Oldham by-election.’

Maybe the Guardian reported it most honestly:  ‘Shock all round as Labourstrolls to Oldham byelection victory.’

Why was it a shock that Corbyn, who had thousands attending his hustings meetings in northern working-class cities over the summer, had not deterred Oldham’s voters?  Because the papers have been engaged in such a vitriolic poisonous campaign against Corbyn – from the quality Guardian to the Murdoch Sun and Times, that they couldn’t believe that the voters had defied them.
Labour-Tory MP Simon Danczak doing his best to attack Jeremy Corbyn in the Tory press
And therein lies the lesson.  The press are not invincible, despite the Tory cuckoo in Labour’s nest, Simon Danczuk predicting in his favourite paper, the Daily Mail, that only a ‘moderate’ Labour candidate could have won.


Tony Greenstein 

Geoffrey Alderman and Gerald Kaufman –Jewish Chronicle Columnist’s Exercise in Hypocrisy

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Alderman Calls Out Kaufman for Committing the Same ‘Crime’ as He has Perpetrated!

A week ago I wrote a post on how Sir Gerald Kaufman MP had been traduced by a number of Zionist activists and MPs such as John Mann MP, the so-called Campaign  Against Anti-Semitism’, the Jewish Chronicle and in particular its columnist Geoffrey Alderman.  They all claimed that a few ill chosen words by Kaufman to the Palestine Return Centre were the worst anti-Semitic crime since the Czarist Secret Police had set about forging the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion.
Gerald Kaufman is an even greater threat to British Jews than Jeremy Corbyn - he merits no less than 6 CAS search results.
The CAS in particular has been running a veritable campaign around Gerald Kaufman.  Searching on ‘Kaufman’ on their web site turned up no less than 6 results.  Searching on the English Defence League and British National Party turned up 1 result for each.  Even more mysteriously the search words didn’t actually appear in the latter 2 articles.  So we can only conclude that the major fascist and anti-Semitic threat to Jews today comes not from the BNP or EDL but an elderly Jewish parliamentarian, the Father of the House of Commons!
Jeremy Corbyn according to the 'Campaign Against anti-Semitism' is one of the greatest anti-Semitic threats to British Jews.   He merits no less than 5 searc results.
I sent my original article to Geoffrey Alderman, as I was sure that this voluble man would have something to say about his hypocritical attack on Kaufman, given that he himself had not only excused quite virulent anti-Semitism but had used the term ‘Jewish money’ in his own articles.  Surprise, surprise – Alderman’s response was  - complete silence. 
The English Defence League turns up 1 result on the CAS site, which  actually doesn't mention the EDL.  Presumably actual holocaust deniers are not a threat to British Jews!
As I noted when I first wrote to him, hypocrisy is the tribute that vice pays to virtue and there is no greater vice than a Zionist hypocrite.
Below is my letter to the good doctor and academic, a regular JC columnist:
Dear Geoffrey Alderman,
If there is one thing you are not renowned for, it is a reticence to answer your critics.  Indeed your one-man instant reaction unit is something which you have, until now, taken pride in.  You add the last vestiges of academic legitimacy to the Editor of the JC, Stephen Pollard's plunge downmarket.
It is therefore with some pained surprise that I note that I have had no response to the email I sent you last week.  This is most unlike you.
Although I am sure you will recall its contents, a number of those who I have blind copied may not be fully aware of what I am talking about.
Kaufman apparently said that '“It’s Jewish money, Jewish donations to the Conservative Party – as in the general election in May – support from the Jewish Chronicle, all of those things, bias the Conservatives.” 
They are not the wordsI would have chosen to use but nor are they particularly heinous.  As I pointed out in a blog postThe Witchhunt of Gerald Kaufman - Crucified for Supporting the Palestinians
there are two uses of the term 'Jewish money'.

http://www.azvsas.blogspot.co.uk/2015/11/the-witchhunt-of-gerald-kaufman.html
One which is anti-Semitic is to claim that there is a Jewish conspiracy in which Jews, via their money and wealth, control and influence the world behind the scenes.  It is integral to the world Jewish conspiracy theory.  The other use is simply a short-hand, i.e. money that Jews donate for various purposes, including of course, control and influence over political processes.  Of course the two uses get conflated but it is undoubted that Jews themselves use the term 'Jewish money' regularly themselves, often to boast of their influence.
What is equally clear is that self-interested Zionist groups like the so-called Campaign Against Anti-Semitism, which are not at all interested in opposing anti-Semitism per se, are happy to use the charge of 'anti-Semitism' as a means to defame those who support the Palestinians.  There is no doubt that this is what has happend to Gerald Kaufman.
A search on the Jewish Chronicle site turns up some 590 uses of the term 'Jewish money'
As a little experiment I conducted a search on the Jewish Chronicle archives using the phrase 'Jewish money' and came up trumps 590 times.  Now I know the JC is a reactionary paper but I didn't realise it was that anti-Semitic!
Add caption
Alderman uses the term '‘the fact that Jewish money, albeit American-Jewish money...' and then calls for someone else to be sentenced to banishment for the same offence
Even worse I came across an article A man who deserves banning by one Geoffrey Alderman, who I believe is your good self, the Jewish Chronicle's resident columnist and someone who was once a faint critic of the Jewish establishment.  Indeed I once remember Geoffrey Alderman exiting the Board of Deputies with boos ringing in his ears, described as a 'communal gadfly' by the same JC.  The man Geoffrey wanted to ban was the said Gerald Kaufman on account of what he had said about Jewish money. 

Very principled and consistent I thought.  But surely this wasn't the same Geoffrey Alderman who wrote, in an article
Obama’s false  Iran Alternative (14.8.15) of ‘the fact that Jewish money, albeit American-Jewish money – is being used to this end has led the president to adopt an unfortunate and worrying rhetoric.  Israel and its supporters are warmongers and American-Jewish money is being used to drag America into war.’ 
Puzzled at what seems an obvious example of political hypocrisy, I wrote to Geoffrey Alderman asking for elucidation.  To date none has arrived.  

What puzzles me even more is that Geoffrey Alderman, who is so hot on anti-Semitism, wrote defending one David Whelan owner of Wigan Athletic football club against the charge of anti-Semitism. [This football fuss is a bit rich (5.12.14.)]  Whelan was subject to widespread criticism, not least from the Football Association and was in the end forced to relinquish control over Wigan Athletic.
Add caption
Mr Whelan had said that he saw nothing wrong in what someone else had allegedly said, viz. that  '‘there is nothing like a Jew who sees money slipping through his fingers’ and when challenged by the Guardian responded that ‘I think they [Jews] are very shrewd people…. I think Jewish people do chase money more than everybody else.  I don’t think that’s offensive at all.’ 

What was Alderman’s take on this?  Surely nothing less than the modern day equivalent of crucifixion?  Maybe a little water boarding?  Good gracious no.  Geoffrey's response was that Whelan had already been crucified at the modern day equivalent of Calvary.   Whelan was the victim of 'a sad and miserable tale of political correctness taken to new depths of absurdity'.  Surely Geoffrey must have taken to heart Jesus's injunction to love one's enemy as oneself.   Such forgiveness would never come from a Rabbi!

It was ‘a sad and miserable tale of political correctness taken to new depths of absurdity.’  Geoffrey wrote.  He went on to declare that 'In my view there is nothing remotely anti-Semitic in what Whelan is alleged by the Guardian to have said about Jews.'  Indeed Geoffrey defended, indeed took pride, in the description of Jews as shrewd.  As for chasing money, well there'd been no academic research into this allegation therefore he couldn't comment.
When it came to Sir Gerald's comments, which are grounded in fact, Geoffrey was all for expelling him from the Jewish community, indeed expelling him by declaring a cherem.  Kaufman had 'crossed a red line'and 'defamed the whole Jewish people.'  Despite decrying the suggestion that this was connected with criticism of Israel, one cannot but suspect that someone who glorified in the murder of an Italian member of the International Solidarity Movement in Gaza is motivated by nothing other than Zionist convictions.  http://azvsas.blogspot.co.uk/2011/05/jewish-chronicle-columnist-geoffrey.html

I await some clarification but I fear that none will arrive.  After all, when you write for a publication whose editor, Stephen Pollard, is even more fond http://azvsas.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/jedwabne-polish-village-where-up-to-900.html of defending anti-Semites http://azvsas.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/stephen-pollard-jewish-chronicle-editor.htmlthan Geoffrey (as long as they are also Zionists such as Members of the European Parliament Michal Kaminski & Robert Zile) what can one expect? 

Yours as ever,

Tony Greenstein

Sack Hilary Judas Benn from the Shadow Cabinet

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Benn’s War Mongering is in Stark Contrast to the Anti-War Record of Tony Benn

According to The Telegraph, Hilary Benn is 'the poster-boy for war in Syria and David Cameron’s favourite Labour MP'
Corbyn speaks to anti-war demonstrators

Whilst his father, the great socialist and anti-war campaigner, Tony Benn was spinning in his grave, the Tories were in raptures over Hilary Benn’s vacuous and emotive speech.

Dianne Abbot Interviewed by Piers Morgan

It is no surprise that Benn’s speech in favour of bombing the people of  Syria received a rapturous response from the Tory Press and the so-called Liberal Press too.According to The Observer‘Jeremy Corbyn critics fear ‘revenge reshuffle’ after electionboost’ 

Judas Benn Speaks for the Tories

Murdoch’s Sunday Times reports that Benn talked his way into being Labour’s white knightand Adam Boulson reported that, ‘The applause after Hilary Benn’s speech in favour of extending RAF bombing into Syria was unprecedented, running in a Mexican wave from the Tory benches, around the horseshoe of the chamber’. 

Cameron - transfixed by Hilary Benn's speech in favour of an imperialist war

The Sunday Times also informed us that Corbyn angers MPs with anti-war dinner and like The Observer reports that

Dianne Abbott - the most consistently loyal member of  Corbyn's Shadow Cabinet

‘JEREMY CORBYN is thought to be planning a “revenge reshuffle” to purge his shadow cabinet of MPs who voted for airstrikes on Syria, senior Labour sources fear.

Tristram Hunt - ex-Etonian War Mongering New Labourite
…. Among the key targets would be Hilary Benn, the shadow foreign secretary, whose rousing 15-minute speech in the House of ­Commons in favour of airstrikes was seen as having stiffened the resolve of MPs opposed to Corbyn’s resistance to bombing.

Corbyn faced calls from John Ross, an influential ­supporter with links to key members of his inner circle, to remove Benn.’

One should though make an exception for the right-wing eccentric, Peter Hitchens, of the Mail On Sunday, who summed up Benn’s speech beautifully:  ‘if Hilary Benn’s politically illiterate, factually challenged and emotive diatribe was a great speech, then we have indeed fallen on hard times.’

Hitchens is right.  Hilary Benn’s speech was dishonest and disingenuous.  He first summoned that gang of cutthroats, otherwise known as the United Nations, in support.  The same United Nations that has elected Saudi Arabia to the Human Rights Council and as Chair of a  Human Rights Panel.  

At a Washington State Department Press Conference, one questioner asked about the United State’s reaction to the fact that Saudi Arabia was named to head the Human Rights Council in view of the fact that they had just announced that they were about to behead a 21-year-old Shia activist named Muhammed al-Nimr.
A Mr Toner, spokesperson for the State department was quite explicit:I don’t have any comment, don’t have any reaction to it. I mean, frankly, it’s – we would welcome it. We’re close allies. If we’  

That is the reality of the ‘anti-fascist’ alliance that Benn conjured up in order to gain support for the murder by  bombing of Syrian civilians.  Apparently the cause of ISIS’s barbarities is that ‘they hold us I contempt, our values and tolerance in contempt, our democracy in contempt, fascists need to be defeated.’ 

Like the vacuous George Bush, they hate us because of our freedoms.  Perhaps it might have something to do with the fact that we bomb them!

Although it is easy and lazy to describe ISIS as fascist, it is not a fascist movement.  It is an extremely reactionary, murderous group that has grown up as a result of previous western military adventures, notably in Iraq.  It is not the product of an industrial society and the need to destroy working-class organisations, which is the classic hallmark of fascism.  Nazi Germany was one of the world’s foremost industrial powers.  Italy was heavily industrialised.  Spain had a militant working-class and so on.  Isis is a nasty and reactionary group but to call them fascist is incorrect.  It is a movement that grew up in opposition to imperialism but reflect all the savagery and more of imperialism.

But even if we accept that Isis’s mindset is close to or akin to that of fascists, then is it seriously suggested that Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Jordan are also anti-fascist allies?  How does the cutting off of heads by Saudi Arabia differ from that of Isis?  Is the proposed stoning of a young Sri Lankanhousemaid by Saudi Arabia also part of this socialist alliance?    As for our ‘sister socialist party in France’ it has introduced a 3 month state of emergency which renders illegal all public demonstrations.  This is an administration which had already outlawed Palestinian protests and has now presided over the tear gassing of a Climate Change protest.  Hollande is no different from Tony Blair in his politics.  There is nothing whatsoever socialist about this bankrupt government.

The comparison with the International Brigades, who went to fight Franco in the 1930’s was positively shameful.  They fought for a Republican Government which was starved of weaponry and support by Britain and the western powers, thus handing victory to General Franco.  The same Tory Party whose MPs applauded Benn last week were the ones who supported Franco in the 1930’s. 

The reality of the situation is that the United States, Britain and France have pursued, for the last 30 years a policy of using Political Islam to destroy secular and left-wing opponents in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East.  Isis is a product of that strategy.   They came into being as Al Qaeda in Iraq and were funded by Saudi Arabia and provided with weapons, an oil trade, banking and much else by Turkey.  That is why Turkey shot down a Russian plane. 

Yet we are in alliance with the Erdogan regime in Turkey which has launched a bitter and murderous war on the only secular force in the region, the Kurdish PYD/PKK.  It has openly provided a base for ISIS and threatened the Kurdish forces fighting Isis.  Like Saudi Arabia and Qatar it also supports the ‘moderate’ terrorists of al-Nusra (Al Qaeda) and other Jihadist groups.

It has to be accepted that the anti-war position of Jeremy Corbyn and his allies was not based on an anti-imperialist position that the West has no right to be in the region at all, but on arguments that bombing would make the situation worse or not achieve its objectives.  It didn’t challenge the fundamental problem, namely that it is western interference that has created the problem in the first place.  That is why Jeremy Corbyn and the Labour Left suffered a heavy defeat last week.

Below is a good article by John Ross, who has been demonised in some of the papers today:

Even the Labour right should accept that Hilary Benn's position is unviable

Posted: 06 Dec 2015 03:21 AM PST

The Sunday newspapers are carrying stories presenting Orwellian 'double speak' on the situation in the Labour Party - that is words which are the exact opposite of their real meaning (in Orwell's 1984 the Ministry of Peace carried on war).

Hilary Benn's position supporting bombing Syria is rejected by Labour members as all polls show, by the majority of the PLP as shown in the vote in the House of Commons, by the majority of the Shadow Cabinet as also shown by that vote, and by the Labour Party leader.
As bombing Syria is by far the most important foreign policy issue of the day it is not viable that a person whose view is rejected by every body of the Labour Party that has shown its position should be Shadow Foreign Secretary. It is necessary to have a Shadow Foreign Secretary who is line with and expresses Labour Party policy.

But some people in the Labour right are ridiculously trying to claim that removing someone from a position where they disagree with Labour Party positions is 'revenge' - for example see the article in the Guardian"Jeremy Corbyn critics fear ‘revenge reshuffle’ after election boost".

Having a Shadow Foreign Secretary who represents Labour Party policy is not 'revenge' it is the most elementary Labour Party democracy. Even the Labour Party right should realise that - even if they refuse to acknowledge it publicly. They should have a quiet word with Hilary Benn and point it out.

Hilary Benn should ask to be reassigned to a domestic portfolio, or if he refuses to do that he should retire to the backbenches.

The correct and normal thing would be for Hilary Benn to resign because he does not support Labour policy. Robin Cook resigned when he could not support the Iraq war.
Labour Party members should point out it is unacceptable and indefensible to have a Shadow Foreign Secretary who does not agree with or express Labour Party foreign policy on the key issues. If Hilary Benn does not resign he should be replaced by Jeremy Corbyn - the timing of that replacement being purely a question of tactics.

Hilary Benn could represent Labour on some domestic issues but he cannot be Shadow Foreign Secretary.

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This article by John Ross, on the unviability of Hilary Benn’s position, was originally published on Facebook.

Hilary Benn’s fake struggle against ISIS

Posted: 03 Dec 2015 04:45 AM PST
December 2nd in the House of Commons saw one of those pantomimes that if it did not result in the death of thousands of people could form the basis of a Whitehall farce.

The centre piece of this farce was, of course, the ‘historic speech’ – articles praising the speech’s ‘historic character’, ‘extraordinary eloquence’ etc were incidentally prepared for the media before the speech was delivered or anyone knew what was in it. The figure chosen to deliver said ‘historic speech’ was Hilary Benn – although any other gullible person could have served the Tory media and Cameron equally well, and would have been equally praised for their 'historic stature', 'capturing the mood of the nation', 'historic speech' etc.

Performing to the pre-written script, Tory ranks in Parliament rose to a person to cheer and applaud the deliverer of the ‘historic speech’ – they had received special coaching from elderly Pharisees who had carried out the same performance when Judas was given the thirty pieces of silver.

Let us now examine the content of this ‘historic speech’. Its first task was to achieve the extraordinarily challenging intellectual task of convincing people that ISIS were a vile load of murdering scum who deserved to be removed from the planet. Given the huge amount of evidence to the contrary – burning people alive, beheadings, selling of thousands of Yazidi women into sexual slavery, attempted genocide against Yazidis – it took an intellectual giant of Hilary Benn’s stature to establish these facts which of course have never been reported in the media.

But the crucial point is that the ‘historic speech’ contained not a single practical proposal actually capable of achieving the goal of defeating ISIS. In short the ‘historic speech’ was a total fake – it is immaterial whether it was fake because it was intended to be so or because the person delivering it was incapable of understanding what is necessary to defeat ISIS.
Bombing will not defeat ISIS - nor does a single serious military figure believe it. What sustains ISIS is its supply routes from Turkey and its financing from Saudi Arabia. To quote what was written here on 29 November under the title ‘How to really defeat ISIS’:
‘The effective measures that would really defeat ISIS are very simple…

‘1. Turkey should be told it must close within 24 hours the main supply route across its border to ISIS at Jarablus and at other border crossings. If it does not a UN Security Council Resolution will be adopted imposing financial sanctions on Turkey, as with Iran and North Korea, and the UN Security Council will authorise coalition bombing for 5km inside the Syrian border with Turkey to cut supply routes to ISIS from Turkey.

‘2. Saudi Arabia should be told it must cease all transfers of money to ISIS. If proof is found of any further such transfers a UN Security Council Resolution will be adopted imposing financial sanctions on Saudi Arabia as with Iran and North Korea.

‘If these measures are adopted they would, unlike Cameron's bombing, lead to the crushing of ISIS. …If Cameron refuses to adopt this policy it shows he is not in fact trying to defeat ISIS.'

None of the measures capable of actually defeating ISIS were proposed in the ‘historic speech’ This is why Hilary Benn’s campaign against ISIS, including the ‘historic speech’ itself, was a fake – to repeat it is not important whether it was deliberately fake or because Hilary Benn is not able to understand what is necessary to defeat ISIS.

The right of Hilary Benn to deliver said ‘historic speech’ was established by two things. First his proven track record in supporting the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and bombing Libya – all remembered as triumphs of British military intervention leading to the complete eradication of jihadism in the countries concerned. Second his suitable gullibility was proven by the fact that this new war was motivated by Cameron on the basis of a straightforward falsification that there are 70,000 moderate members of the FSA in Syria - but despite this lie being on the scale of Blair’s notorious ‘WMD ready in 45 minutes’ Iraq one, Hilary Benn did not see through it.

However this lie is the key to Cameron’s whole position. Because if the real situation in Syria were admitted – that the ‘opposition’ is controlled by fanatical jihadists supported by Saudi Arabia – then Cameron’s real goal of removing Assad resulting in these fanatical jihadists coming to power would be rejected by the British population.

What was the role of most [not all] of the ‘incisive’, ‘investigative journalists’ and ‘commentators’ confronted with this pantomime? It was not to point out that Cameron’s position was a lie and that Hilary Benn was totally gullible to believe it, but to play their pre-assigned role in praising like parrots the ‘historic speech’. A far better job was done by Gerald Kaufman, someone not usually right on international questions, who even if he did not understand the situation fully at least partially hit the nail on the head: ‘I will not be a party to killing innocent civilians for what will merely be a gesture.'

What is it that so many members of the ‘commentariat’ now wish to conceal? That despite the ‘historic speech’, Hilary Benn’s position was shown to be opposed by all polls of the Labour Party membership, the majority of the PLP, and even the majority of the Shadow Cabinet – not to speak of the Labour Party leader. In short the ‘historic speech’ failed to convince any significant body of the Labour Party.

As Hilary Benn’s position on the most important foreign policy issue of the day is opposed by every single major section of the Labour Party you would think a number of giants of ‘incisive journalism’ would point out that his position as Labour’s Shadow Foreign Secretary is totally unviable.

However such a blindingly obvious conclusion escapes a number of members of the commentariat who are attempting to pretend - or are perhaps too dense to realise - that the really unacceptable ‘bullying’ that is going on is about the Syrian people and children who are about to be blown to pieces or hideously disfigured for life, not about MPs receiving emails urging them to vote against war.

And that the bombs dropped by Cameron’s orders are not to defeat ISIS but to conceal that he refuses to take the effective measures to defeat ISIS because he is in alliance with Saudi Arabia and Turkey who are the main supporters of ISIS.

But of course Arab children being killed is not as important for some journalistic giants to write about as white British MPs receiving rude or even pleading emails.

Where does this leave the situation in the Labour Party after the pre-arranged charade of the ‘historic speech’? It leaves two of Labour’s former leadership contenders, Liz Kendall and Yvette Cooper, having voted for war and thereby fortunately eliminating their chances of ever becoming Labour leader – as well as being on the list of 66 Labour MPs voting for war who deserve to be deselected not as an example of ‘bullying’ but because they have the wrong policies on a literal matter of life and death.

Andy Burnham voted against the war, which is to his credit, and it is not interesting to try to work out whether this was from conviction or because it left his hat in the ring as a viable candidate in any future leadership contest. On such a vital matter as war people should be given the benefit of the doubt. But Andy Burnham, nor any member of the Shadow Cabinet, cannot be taken to really stand for Labour Party democracy or policy unless they have a quiet (or public) word with Hilary Benn that his current position is unviable as his policy on the most vital foreign policy issue of the day is opposed by the major representative bodies of the Labour Party.

They should urge Hilary Benn be asked to be ‘redeployed’ to some domestic portfolio, or if he refuses to accept this he can retire to the backbenches. Perhaps Hilary Benn can start preparing his evidence for Chilcott 2 when it is set up to establish what went wrong in Syria and why no lessons were drawn from the disasters of Iraq and Libya? A Shadow Foreign Secretary who actually expresses Labour Party policy is necessary.

Although it is very far from the most important point Hilary Benn, as much as the Royal Family, is conclusive disproof of any ‘genetic’ theory of talent. To have a giant of a father did not stop the gullibility of a son. The compensation is that Tony Benn really will be remembered by history, whereas yesterday’s ‘historic speech’ will be forgotten as soon as it has served its purpose for warmongers and the Tory Party.

To return to the starting point all this pre-arranged charade could be treated as a farce if it were not for the fact that thousands of people in Syria, and very probably hundreds in Europe due to terrorist attacks, were about to die as a result of it.

Meanwhile the fight for the real measures that would defeat ISIS, as opposed to Hilary Benn and Cameron’s fakery, goes on.

This article by John Ross, on how to defeat ISIS, was originally published on Facebook.

Caroline Lucas Green MP Resigns from Stop the War Coalition

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An Act of Surrender to Media and Tory/New Labour Pressure


In happier days
Caroline Lucas, the only Green MP, has bowed to intense media and Tory/New Labour pressure and resigned as a patron of Stop the War Coalition.   Her purported reasons include 2 articles on the StWC website, which were subsequently taken down and the apparent refusal to allow pro-war Syrians to speak at a meeting at the House of Commons.
Caroline Lucas speaking in parliament
StWC was set up by the Socialist Workers Party and is now, effectively controlled by the Counterfire group (which was expelled from the SWP or resigned – Linday German and John Rees) and supporters of the Communist Party of Britain such as Andrew Murray.
I have a number of political differences with StWC, not least over their crass refusal to allow Hands Off the People of Iran, an anti-imperialist group, to affiliate to them.  Coupled with their tacit support for the Iranian regime and their failure to give any solidarity with the oppressed of Iran.  No doubt much the same method is true with respect to Syria.  But Caroline Lucas has always been a member/patron regardless of this, including being its Vice-President.
racist German Greens
StWC is an anti-war group above all.  It is there to oppose western and in particular British involvement in the war in Syria and the pretext of bombing Isis, which is really about the reconfiguring of Syria in the West’s image, i.e. a confessional fragmentation of Syria.  It is this which accounts for the failure to speak out about Russia’s bombing.  Russia’s actions in defence of the Assad regime, are aimed at keeping Syria united.  Britain, France and the USA are happy to see a fragmented Syria to accompany a de facto fragmented Iraq.
Beck prefers to defend paedophiles than Palestinians
What is particularly shameful about Caroline Lucas’s actions is that StWC has been coming under severe criticism in recent months because its previous Chair, Jeremy Corbyn, has become leader of the Labour Party.  Nonentities like Tristram Hunt MP have called on Jeremy not to attend its fundraising dinner.
Stop the War Coalition Have Refused to Criticise the Iranian Regime Which is Executing Up to 1,000 prisoners this year - Caroline has always remained silent over this
The excuses Caroline has given for resigning as patron and thereby dissociating herself from the organisation were an article saying that the West and France were reaping in Paris what they had sown with their bloody wars in Syria.  Seems reasonable to me.

Another article comparing Isis to those who fought with the Spanish republicans was crass and has fortunately been taken down.  Neither are resigning matters though.

Mistakes such as these are no reason for Caroline’s act of cowardice.  It  echoes what Die Grunen the German Green Party has done.  They first presided over the use of German troops in a war, the first time ever since WW2, in Afghanistan.   And today they are the most Zionist party of all in the German Bundestag.  See Germany’s Racist Green MP Volker Beck Calls for theRepression of Palestinian supporters


In Germany Beck called on the German state to investigate supporters of BDS for ‘anti-Semitism’.  To their credit, Angela Merkl’s admiinstration refused.

Volker Beck - Die Grunen's racist Zionist member of parliament
The Greens are a petit-bourgeois party.  They are not, contrary to many people’s belief socialist.  They don’t oppose capitalism or the market economy.  Rather they believe capitalism can be tamed and ‘greened’.  A nicer capitalism.   A less exploitative capitalism forgetting that if capitalism isn’t exploitative it isn’t capitalism!

It is no surprise therefore that the Greens, who are really Green Liberals, buckle under pressure and that Caroline has dissociated herself from StWC.  We saw exactly the same thing under the Green administration in Brighton & Hove.  Despite having the best policy of any party on Palestine, when Palestine Solidarity Campaign called on the Green Party to twin Brighton & Hove with a Palestinian city they ran a mile.  That is the price of running a small part of the capitalist state.

As the Tory Guido Fawkes site said, this is a Body blow for STW, which will now up the pressure on Corbyn to distance himself too…’  

Tony Greenstein 

Press Statement from Caroline Lucas

Caroline and the Stop the War Coalition


"I listened carefully to the Prime Minister make his case for why the UK should join the bombing campaign against Isis. The debate in the House of Commons was thorough, and the horror and revulsion at recent atrocities in Syria, Paris, Beirut and elsewhere is shared by MPs from across the political divide.

"Yet I have still to see any evidence to suggest that UK bombing Isis targets in Syria is likely to increase our security here in Britain or help bring about a lasting peace in the region in question - to the contrary, the evidence appears to suggest it would make matters worse."


A spokesperson for Caroline Lucas MP said:

“Caroline stepped back from the Stop the War Coalition a few weeks ago. Her busy parliamentary and constituency schedule means that she doesn’t have time to fully engage with the role of a Patron and, in light of some recent StWC positions that she didn’t support, she felt standing down was the responsible thing to do. Like the Stop the War Coalition, Caroline is opposed to British bombing in Syria because it will neither keep Britain safe nor help bring about a lasting peace in Syria.”

The Spokesperson went on to say:

“Caroline was specifically troubled by some Stop the War Coalition statements after the Paris atrocities. Though the pieces were subsequently taken down she felt unable to associate herself with them.  

“She was also concerned that some Syrian voices were not given an opportunity to speak at a recent meeting organised by the StWC in Parliament.

“StWC has played an important role in building the anti-war movement in Britain, and Caroline will continue to work in support of peace.”

Below is one of the 2 articles that led Caroline Lucas to resign.  It seems a perfectly good and incisive article to me.  I can’t imagine why StWC panicked and took it off its site.

Age of Despair: Reaping the Whirlwind of Western Support for Extremist Violence


Published: 14 November 2015

We, the West, overthrew Saddam by violence. We overthrew Gadafy by violence. We are trying to overthrow Assad by violence. Harsh regimes all — but far less draconian than our Saudi allies, and other tyrannies around the world. What has been the result of these interventions? A hell on earth, one that grows wider and more virulent year after year.

Without the American crime of aggressive war against Iraq — which, by the measurements used by Western governments themselves, left more than a million innocent people dead — there would be no ISIS, no “Al Qaeda in Iraq.” Without the Saudi and Western funding and arming of an amalgam of extremist Sunni groups across the Middle East, used as proxies to strike at Iran and its allies, there would be no ISIS. Let’s go back further. Without the direct, extensive and deliberate creation by the United States and its Saudi ally of a world-wide movement of armed Sunni extremists during the Carter and Reagan administrations (in order to draw the Soviets into a quagmire in Afghanistan), there would have been no “War on Terror” — and no terrorist attacks in Paris tonight.

Again, let’s be as clear as possible: the hellish world we live in today is the result of deliberate policies and actions undertaken by the United States and its allies over the past decades. It was Washington that led and/or supported the quashing of secular political resistance across the Middle East, in order to bring recalcitrant leaders like Nasser to heel and to back corrupt and brutal dictators who would advance the US agenda of political domination and resource exploitation.

The open history of the last half-century is very clear in this regard. Going all the way back to the overthrow of the democratic government of Iran in 1953, the United States has deliberately and consciously pushed the most extreme sectarian groups in order to undermine a broader-based secular resistance to its domination agenda.

Why bring up this “ancient history” when fresh blood is running in the streets of Paris? Because that blood would not be running if not for this ancient history; and because the reaction to this latest reverberation of Washington’s decades-long, bipartisan cultivation of religious extremism will certainly be more bloodshed, more repression and more violent intervention. Which will, in turn, inevitably, produce yet more atrocities and upheaval as we are seeing in Paris tonight.

I write in despair. Despair of course at the depravity displayed by the murderers of innocents in Paris tonight; but an even deeper despair at the depravity of the egregious murderers who have brought us to this ghastly place in human history: those gilded figures who have strode the halls of power for decades in the high chambers of the West, killing innocent people by the hundreds of thousands, crushing secular opposition to their favored dictators — and again, again and again — supporting, funding and arming some of the most virulent sectarians on earth.

And one further cause of despair: that although this historical record is there in the open, readily available from the most mainstream sources, it is and will continue to be completely ignored, both by the power-gamers and by the public. The latter will continue to support the former as they replicate and regurgitate the same old policies of intervention, the same old agendas of domination and greed, over and over and over again — creating ever-more fresh hells for us all to live in, and poisoning the lives of our children, and of all those who come after us.


Zionist Racism at its Finest – Only the Killers of Jews are Terrorists

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The Murderers of the Dawabsheh family Are not Terrorist According to Betzalel Smotrich – Jewish Home MK

Family photos lie in the remains of the Dawabsha home in the West Bank village of Duma, after it was firebombed by suspected Jewish extremists on July 31, 2015. The family’s 18-month-old baby was killed in the attack and his father died of his injuries eight days later, on August 8, 2015. 
According to Betzalel ‘Beelzebub’ Smotrich MK, the murderers of the Dawabsheh family on July 31st, when settlers threw a firebomb in the house, killing 18 month old Ali and his parents, with just Ahmed, who is 4 years old, surviving. 
Betzalel Smotrich MK - anti-gay bigot and settler racist
Smotrich is of the opinion that 

“Terror is exclusively violence by an enemy as part of a war against us [us being Jews - TG], and only this justifies the harsh steps taken [by the security forces] that would not be used in a normal situation. All the rest are serious crimes, loathsome crimes, nationalistic crimes, but not terror,” 

According to The Times of Israel, Smotrich said that Shin Bet “crossed all red lines” in recent weeks, in an apparent reference to the Duma investigation. Smotrich lamented that settlers and others could be punished for association with suspects, with police measures used against Palestinians also being meted out against Jews.  Note the impeccable ‘logic’ which  Smotrich employs.

“If ‘price tag’ attacks are ‘terror,’ then the families of the suspects are ‘the families of terrorists’ and the residents of their settlements and officials there are ‘a terror-supporting population,'”  Smotrich continued. Therefore, “you can hold youths in detention for over two weeks without letting them meet their lawyers, or even seeing a judge to extend their remand. You can prevent them from putting on their phylacteries, praying or lighting Hannukah candles.”
Naftali Bennett
Smotrich accused the government of “demonizing” the population of Israeli settlers, maintained it was violating the rights of the suspects to exact a confession by force, and appeared to insinuate that the government was driving the perpetrators to commit anti-Arab attacks. 
Saad and Riham Dawabsha, with baby Ali. All three died when the Dawabsha home in the West Bank village of Duma was firebombed, by suspected Jewish extremists, on July 31, 2015 (Channel 2 screenshot)
According to  Smotrich, a government that “treats the most moral population in the State of Israel as a terror-supporting population loses its right to exist.” “When you push an entire community up against the wall, treat its [members] like terrorists, demonize it, trample on its rights, it ultimately explodes. Let no one be surprised when this should happen, when more and more people will be pushed, against their will, to carry out actions that are forbidden.”

“A system that does not make this simple and especially moral distinction between enemy and and citizen — even if he is a criminal — raises questions about the justification to give it so much power and authority, with so little oversight and supervision, even if in most cases it uses its powers correctly against terror.”

But we should not condemn Smotrich.  He says aloud what others say behind closed doors.  Mr ‘Beelzebub’ Smotrich is a member of the far-right settler party, Habayit Hayehudi.  When he says that it’s no big deal to set fire to Arabs what difference is there between him and his party leader Naftali Bennett who also boasts of killing  Arabs.  ‘I’ve killed lots of Arabs in my life – and there’s no problem with that.”  

After all, wasn’t it Defence Minister Yalon who said that the security forces knew who had set fire to the Dawabsheh’s home but that in order to ‘protect sources’ they couldn’t prosecute?    Didn’t it take judicial review applications by Joint List MKs before the announcement of prosecutions?

The Israeli state has always differentiated between Zionist and Arab terror.  It is, after all, a state born in terror, from Deir Yassin and the bombing of the King David Hotel to the use of barrel bombs in Jaffa etc. etc.  The Hagannah even killed 270 Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany in November 1940 (the Patria Affair) in order to prevent people being sent to Mauritius.

But let us understand the real meaning of Beelzebub’s comments.  He is denying that what happened is terrorism because this is not as serious a crime as a Palestinian attack on a Jew.  That is his meaning.  And he is right.  In Zionist terms of course it’s not as serious a crime.  The Talmud is explicit that Jewish life is worth more than non-Jewish life, hence why capital punishment is reserved only for the taking of Jewish not non-Jewish life.  Or as that well-know rabbinical sage, the Chief Rabbi of the settlers, Dov Lior once said, ‘A Jewish fingernail is worth a thousand non-Jewish lives.’

Contrast this with the treatment meted out to Haneen Zoabi, the Balad MK.  When 3 Jewish settler youth were killed last year, she said it wasn’t necessarily an act of terrorism.  By that she meant that it may have been the act of a criminal rather than someone with political motivation.  Nonetheless the Zionist world came down upon her and she ended up suspended from the Knesset for 6 months.  No prizes for guessing that Belzeebub Smotrich will face no such penalty and why?  Because he’s Jewish silly.

The Northern Islamic League, a mass organisation of Palestinian Israelis, which has said nothing remotely racist as Belzeebub or his mentor, Naftali Bennett, has been made illegal at a stroke of Netanyahu’s pen.  Nothing will happen to Jewish Home because they are a good Zionist party.

Sheikh Raed Salah has been sentenced to 11 months imprisonment for incitement to racial hatred.  A trumped up charge if ever there was one.  He was acquitted at the original Jerusalem magistrates court but convicted on appeal by the District Court.  In other words there is extreme doubt that what he said even referred to Jews.  He claims the ‘’blood libel’ remarks were directed at the practices of the Spanish Inquisition.  But he will go to prison but open Zionist racists will never do so.  That is what a Jewish state is about.

The Threat to Lebanon from Isis and Imperialism

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Lebanon is another country which has benefited from imperialism.  Not.  The French bequeathed to it a sectarian structure whereby the positions of office from President down are held by particular confessionalist groups.  This was the root cause of the Lebanese civil war from 1977-1990 when the left tried to get rid of this.

It was the invasion of Lebanon by the Syrian military, with the blessing of the United States and Israel which led to the defeat of the Lebanese National Movement.  The Syrian army came in on the side of the Phalangists, who represented most of the Christian community.  One consequence of this was the massacre at Tel al Zatar refugee camp when up to 3,000 Palestinians died.

Within a year or so, as imperialism shifted in its attitude to the Syrian presence and as Israel chafed under having Assad’s troops in Lebanon the Syrian military shifted towards the Muslim fighters but it did nothing to eradicate the sectarian nature of the state.  In 1982 Israel invaded and it was that which led directly to the creation of Hezbollah, which in 2000 forced the evacuation of the Israeli forces from Southern Lebanon and the collapse of  their quisling South Lebanese Army under first Major Saad Haddad and then General Antoine Lahad.


By Soud Sharabani  
December 09, 2015 
Syrian and Hezbollah forces assault rebel positions in Syria, along the Lebanon border. (MrPenguin20)
Lebanon’s stability is hanging on by a thread. There is war raging on its border; Syria, the economy has all but collapsed, the central government is extremely weak, and there are over 2 million Syrian and Iraqi refugees. So when ISIS attacked the Bourj al-Barajneh district in southern Beirut recently, it is just one more problem that the Lebanese have to deal with.
Hezbollah fighters repelled an attack by Islamic State (Isis) jihadists on the Lebanon-Syria border
I spoke with Andre Vltchek about the present and the future of Lebanon. Andre Vltchek is a writer and a journalist who has written extensively about the Middle East, and who was actually present in Lebanon during the recent ISIS attack. – Souad Sharabani
***
Souad Sharabani: until recently, relatively to the rest of the Middle East, Lebanon has been calm Do you agree with that?

Andre Vltchek: No, Lebanon was tremendously affected by the wars in Iraq and Syria. It has over two million Syrian and Iraqi refugees. Not to mention the Palestinian refugees. Two million new refugees is an enormous toll for such a small country. European Union is claiming they cannot coop with a million refugees in the entire continent.
Lebanon: Tripoli keeps its distance from ISIS
You know those terrorist cells were dormant for months and years, in the capital of Beirut. Although Hezbollah was fighting ISIS in the northern border, the northern front. But the rest of those terrorists like ISIS were sitting dormant all over the country and in particular in Beirut, and they were waiting for the opportune moment to strike. ISIS did strike Lebanon in 2012 and 2013 but nothing as horrific as we have witnessed recently.
Lebanese Sunni gunmen attend the funeral procession of Sgt. Ali Sayid, who was beheaded by Islamic militants last month. With all eyes on the Islamic State 
Souad Sharabani: Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s leader, sent troops into Syria to fight on the side of Assad’s Army. Why did he do that?

Andre Vltchek: Hezbollah fighting ISIS is something very ideological, since Hezbollah’s followers see the destabilization of Syria as yet another imperialist act of the West. As you know Hezbollah was fighting the Israeli invasion into Lebanon in 2006. Furthermore, Hezbollah is very much opposed to the hegemony of Saud Arabia in the region. So it is logical to see Hezbollah fighting against the Wahhabi movement that is supported both by the Gulf and the West.

Lebanese soldiers help an elderly Syrian refugee near the town of Arsal, Lebanon, where Sunni extremists spilling over the Syrian border have clashed with the military. Credit Hassan Abdallah/Reuters       
Souad Sharabani: Who is supporting ISIS in Lebanon?

Andre Vltchek: You have a sector of the population who believe that the radical approach is the only future for Lebanon. Furthermore, the destabilizing of Syria and destabilizing of the Middle East from Iraq, to Libya, to Syria, is sending millions of refugees all over the region. Among the displaced Syrian and Iraqi refugees there is a very small percentage of Jihadists, that hide among the refugees and they join the dormant Lebanese cells. These cells stay dormant for a long time. They wait for the moment that they can perform a spectacular action from their point of view meaning inflict as many casualties as possible.
ISIL plans to invade Lebanon, declare emirate, report says
Again this situation did not come out of the blue. It was expected that Western support of Syrian oppositions against Assad, and also supporting many Jihadist groups. Arguably they were making life of ISIS very easy by supplying them directly or in directly in Turkey and also in Jordan.

Souad Sharabani: We know about the wars in Iraq, in Syria, in Libya and now possibly in Lebanon. What are the benefits for Israel, and the West in destabilizing the region?
ISIS Controls Area Five Times That Of Lebanon In Syria
Andre Vltchek: at best it is a perpetual conflict because it feeds its military complex and its desire to control. The never-ending conflicts in the Middle East are benefiting its military production and its military complex.

Souad Sharabani: Let’s talk about Saudi Arabia; We know they have been arming and giving financial aid to Jihadist groups in Iraq, Syria, fighting the Shiites ethnic group in Yemen, but are they also willing to see the destabilization of Lebanon?

Andre Vltchek: Saudi Arabia is very involved in Lebanon financially and in many other ways. What we do know there is a link between the terrorist organizations and Wahhabist teachings that comes from Saudi Arabia. There are fractions of the Lebanese government that are very closely linked to Saudi Arabia, as there are fractions of the government that are closely linked to Iran.
But the recent bombing of the suburb of Beirut did not come directly from Saudi Arabia. ISIS has been pounded by the Russian air force, and the Syrian government forces are gaining ground. Russians are intensely trying to get rid of ISIS. And as a result ISIS feels threatened. So they are panicking that they will lose in Syria, they would like to have another geographic location where they will be able to hold power and that is in Lebanon, or at least northern Lebanon.

Souad Sharabani: If ISIS starts getting stronger in Lebanon, do you think Iran would be drawn into the conflict because of the Shiite population and Hezbollah?

Andre Vltchek: No I don’t think so. But Iran is already very closely allied to several political factions inside the political establishment in the Lebanese government and of course it is closely allied to Hezbollah.

Now we have to remember, in the West, Hezbollah is portrayed as a terrorist organization mainly because of its decisive stance against Israel. But Hezbollah is the only inclusive force in Lebanon. By inclusive I mean they do not only assist their supporters, the Shiites, they extend help to other Muslims and to Christians.

You know Lebanon is absolutely a destabilized country economically. And Hezbollah is the only social force in the country that helps the people. Hezbollah is an extremely respected force even among Christians. When you talk to Ashrafiya or to most people even if they do not support Hezbollah they respect them tremendously for the things they are doing. They are a pure socialist movement that acts by its strict socialist doctrine. It is not the perfect force, but the only one in Lebanon that works for the good of the people.

The West and Israel do not want you to know that about Hezbollah. They want you to believe that Hezbollah is a fundamentalist terrorist movement. So Hezbollah is a sore in the eyes of the West and Israel.

Souad Sharabani: So now what is next? What is going to happen in Lebanon?

Andre Vltchek: What is going to happen in Lebanon is not yet certain. Very disturbing things are happening there and people are fed up. They do not want sectarianism they want unity. Most Lebanese do not want to be seen as Sunni, or Shiite or Christians or Druze. They want to be seen as Lebanese. They are fed up with the present economic system when everything is collapsing in a country that prides itself as being Paris of the Middle East yet its is sinking socially and economically. The Country is producing almost nothing. You are talking of a country, which lives from remittances, that lives from direct and indirect foreign aid, and from the production of narcotics. We just had a situation, which I wrote an article about, where one of Saudi Arabia’s Princes tried to smuggle two tons of narcotics out Rafic Hariri international airport. This was at the end of October so imagine the entire Bekaa Valley is producing drugs. Everyone talks about it. It is not a secret.
So people are fed up in Lebanon. It is not only the issue of ISIS, or other terrorist groups like al-Nusra, which is armed, helped and supported by Turkey and other NATO countries and western alliances. So Lebanon could collapse. It is a very volatile and dangerous situation.

I don’t really know what the future of Lebanon will be. But what I can see clearly is the more the Russians squeezed ISIS out of Syria, the more panic we see amongst ISIS, and they will install themselves in Lebanon. The Lebanese will inherit them from Syria and the devastation we saw in Syria will come to Lebanon. It would be very easy to destabilize a much smaller country than Syria with a weaker central government than in Syria.

Souad Sharabani: It feels like wherever you turn in the Middle East there is more destruction and there is no end in sight to the destruction and suffering.

Andre Vltchek: There is no Middle East any more. We are talking about the oldest and the greatest cultures of the world with great humanist traditions, not only religion. There is nothing left, a complete devastation. Totally uprooted. You have people who are running the Gulf countries and the Middle East who are basically criminals. Basically, there is nothing left there except confusion.

As one of the greatest Turkish writer said to me. In Turkey and in all the Middle East
People are very smart and they know perfectly well what is going on but they are all feeling helplessness hopelessness’ and full of cynicism. Because you either accept the game and try to get ahead, or you will be crushed. And Lebanon is a great example of this. You go to Beirut and you see the unimaginable contrast between the rich and poor. If you go to Abu Dhabi after Zaitunay Bay in Beirut, Abu Dhabi bay would look pathetic. Zaitunay Bay has all these yachts and speedboats; Ferraris and Maseratis racing in the middle of the night, but there is no public transportation during the day. You cannot even move because of the total collapse of public transportation. You see the mansions and skyscrapers going up everywhere but when you look around there is misery and no one wants to deal with it. It is all show. This is what the Middle East is. Their leaders with the encouragement of the West have injected the lowest type of consumerism, of capitalism.

Souad Sharabani: You left us on a very low note with no hope for the future of the Middle East and more specifically of Lebanon.

Andre Vltchek: Before we leave it on this hopeless note. I think there are still many positive elements. People in Lebanon are educated. Lebanon has great artists great filmmakers, musicians and writers. All are watching the world and they follow closely what is happening in the world. I believe it has hit rock bottom and it can only go up from here. It is going to prevail.

Souad Sharabani: I hope so.

Soud Sharabani for 30 years has been a freelance radio journalist based in Toronto Canada. She has worked for the CBC and BBC, as well as for PEN INTERNATIONAL.

BBC Forced to Accept that Once Again, John Humphrys & Today are Biased on Palestine

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BBC Radio 4 report on Israel breached accuracy guidelines 

Guardian 8th December 2015

On Radio 4’s flagship programme, Today, there was a short 3 minute exchange between John Humphrys, the presenter and Kevin Connolly, the BBC’s Middle East correspondent.  Even by the BBC’s shoddy and biased standards, the banter between them was shocking in its ignorance and bias.  I was one of a number of people who wrote in to complain.  The complaint has been upheld in one part, the most indefensible part, but my complaint was far wider than the grounds which the BBC have conceded on:
Danny Cohen - Director of BBC Television Signed Letter Opposing Cultural Boycott of Israel

The BBC conceded that the reference to 50 dead now, in the context of only Israelis having been killed would lead to the obvious and clear inference that those who had been killed were all Israeli Jews whereas, of course it was mostly Palestinians who were dead.   But this was just one element of the exchange between John Humphrys [JH] and Kevin Connolly [KC].
Brighton PSC Demonstration outside local BBC Radio Sussex 
In its provisional findings there was no comment on or mention even of the bulk of my complaint:

i.               The Humphrys-Connolly [HC] banter took place in the context of an assumption that Israel’s Occupation was completely normal, that the Palestinian response was a bnormal and that the situation was one of criminality and law and order.  The Palestinians, of course, being the criminals.  There was no suggestion that the violence that was occurring might have something to do with racism, oppression and occupation.
Brighton PSC Demonstration outside local BBC Radio Sussex
ii.             KC reported the killing of an Israeli soldier at Beersheva bus station, whilst omitting to mention the lynch-mob killing of an Eritrean refugee, who was first shot by security guards and then kicked and beaten to death by a mob of Israelis, including security personnel.  The refugee beaten to death had nothing to do with the killing of the soldier.  It was reported widely by the Israeli and international press but the BBC chose to keep silent.
Humphries at work defending Israel
iii.           KC stated that ‘'individuals are taking the decision to stage these attacks for reasons which we are often left to guess at.’  If KC really doesn’t have any idea about the reasons for the attack then he would, as I suggested, be better suited to covering the Chelsea Flower Show.  The reasons for the upsurge in Palestinian violence are so obvious that they barely need stating.  The eviction of Palestinian families in Jerusalem to make way for settlers intent on Judaising the city.  The Occupation and all that goes with it from checkpoints to wanton and random killings. Settler violence and the confiscation of land.    Only an abysmall ignorant BBC correspondent, which is what KC is, could fail to understand the motivation behind the attacks.
I have also subsequently complained about the fact that the Controller of BBC Television, Danny Cohen, put his name to a letter ‘Israel needs cultural bridges, not boycotts in the Guardian of 22nd October condemning the Cultural Boycott of Israel.   Apparently he only signed the letter in his personal capacity.  Nothing to do with heading BBC TV of course.
I also made another complaint relating to a raid by Israeli soldiers on Hebron’s hospital on 12thNovember.  On the BBC website there was an article headlined: “Israelis shoot dead Palestinian in Hebron hospital raid.”
It was a straightforward headline which summed up the story. But soon a different headline appeared above the report, reading: “Israelis in disguise raid Hebronhospital, seizing suspect.” 

The emphasis had changed from the unprovoked murder of a hospital visitor to the Israeli’s pretext for staging the raid.  Just another, small, example of the BBC’s relentless bias.

John Humphry's - Zionist bias is notorious
Transcript 20.10.15. Today Programme 6.39 a.m.

Humphries – 21 minutes to 7 - Yet another attack on Israelis last night.  This time an Arab man with a gun and a knife killed a soldier & wounded 10 people.  The number is mounting, it’s about 50 now isn’t it? 

No mention that 40 of them Palestinians – including executions

Kevin Connolly:We think about 50 in the past month.  Sharp uptake of violence – Not just that attack in Beer Sheba inside Israel itself.  On Saturday a wave of stabbing attacks in Hebron& Jerusalem.  No sign that this wave of rising tension & rising casualties is going to abate.  The Israeli government frankly is casting about for a convincing answer because the nature of the acts of violence still appears to be random and spontaneous.  The decisions of individuals at a given moment to stage an attack are not the work of organised extremist groups. For that reason it’s been very tough to formulate a convincing security answer

Humphries It is not Intifada is it?

Kevin Connolly:        It’sa very difficult question part of the problem is that media organisations begin asking that question very early in these upsurges of violence.  Whatever we call it, it’s an extraordinarily difficult situation for the Israeli government to deal with because its own people look to it for security.  That very random and spontaneous nature of the attack has left many Israeli citizens feeling that any Palestinian passing them in the street might be carrying a knife, might be planning to attack them and any passing car might at any moment be used as a vehicle against Israeli civilian pedestrians. So although it’s not at all at the level of critical mass of violence that you would need to use the word Intifada, it doesn’t have the leadership perhaps that an Intifada might require it has achieved an extraordinary change in the atmosphere of daily life here, hence the political urgency for the Israeli government.

Humphries: There is talk of more powers for the Police to stop and search but that seems to be fairly inadequate in a way doesn’t it?

Kevin Connolly:  I think that is true.  They are reviving a plan which existed a few years ago to expand stop and search powers so the Police wouldn’t need reasonable suspicion that a crime was being committed before they stopped and searched somebody. I think that was actually originally formulated to deal with a wave of night club stabbings.  So they have that on the books, they have erected a concrete screen between an Arab and Jewish area of Jerusalem, not far from where I’m talking to you, that also has a bit of an ad-hoc feeling to it and they also of course have armed reinforcements in the West Bank. You have Police reinforcements here in Jerusalem.   So they are doing what they can with visible security.  But you can’t get away from the fact that they are struggling with the nature of this upsurge of violence. And that’s also a problem for the politicians.  Because you will be having Benjamin Netanyahu meeting John Kerry later this week.  Probably Kerry also meeting Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority.  So the big politics is beginning to kick in here.  But it’s hard to see where the connecting wheels are between those big political meetings and the fact that individuals are taking the decision to stage these attacks for reasons which we are often left to guess at.  Because the attackers often die in the course of the attack.

Humphries:  Kevin, many thanks. 

It’s 17 minutes to 7. 19th October 2015

Grounds for Complaint by Tony Greenstein
My initial complaint, which was confined to 2,000 characters was thus:
Humphries interview with Kevin Connolly re violence in Israel.  Mentions 50 dead but not that 40 are Palestinians.  No mention mob violence against Palestinians or  murder of Fadi Alloun, chased by lynch mob, executed by Police. No background to events eg firebombing of Dawabshe family in Duma.  3 dead.  No prosecutions - culprits known.  No mention that West Bank is Occupied.  No mention of 'Death to Arabs' marches in Jerusalem.  And no mention of murder of Eritrean refugee last night though other reporters picked it up.  All of these are documented by video footage Connolly doesn't report.

Connolly says 'individuals are taking the decision to stage these attacks for reasons which we are often left to guess at.'  Let me see, what might be the reasons:

i.  An occupation for 48 years.  ii.  settler violence that is abetted by Military.  iii.   That this is not a question of law and order but one where the law is in the hands of one party which deprives the other party of basic human rights.  iv.   Israel is in breach of perpetual breach of international law.  vi. The attack by Police on the Al Aqsa mosque and the Temple Mount Institute and similar messianic groups which openly call for the Mosque's demolition, its replacement by 3rd Temple.  Groups r funded by Israeli gov.  Connolly mentioned Hebron, where violent settlers repeatedly attack Palestinian civilians.  No mention of death of Hadeek al-Hashlamon last month killed by army. 
In other words a complete lack of context

Needless to say, my initial complaint was rejected with a pro-forma response.  Likewise my follow-up was also rejected and I then submitted the following to the BBC’s Editorial Complaint Unit, the second rung of their torturous complaints procedure:

1st November 2015
Reference CAS-3535889-VXORCY

To ecu@bbc.co.uk

Dear ECU,

I wish to appeal against the dismissal of the complaint which I submitted to you on 20th October 2015 concerning John Humphries conversation with Kevin Connolly on the upsurge in violence in Israel.

My appeal in respect of your response is:
i.               The unnamed person who responded from Today is either hopelessly biased or is simply incapable of understanding the complaint.  S/he says:
‘Kevin was reporting on the security situation inside Israel. The attack at Beersheba bus station attack was the latest in a serious of attacks by Palestinians in Israel.’ 
This precisely sums up what my complaint is about.  What actually happened at the Beersheba bus station was not just an attack by a lone Palestinian but also the lynching of an Eritrean refugee.  KC failed to make even a cursory mention of the fact that an Eritrean refugee, guilty of nothing other than being in the despise category of refugee in Israel, (Israel doesn’t admit refugees as a matter of policy, they are called ‘infiltrators) was murdered.  Shot by a security guard and then kicked and beaten until he died.  Not one word of this lynching passed KC’s lips. 
By way of contrast the on-line version of Israel’s largest daily paper, Yediot Aharanot, on 18th October, managed to include in its report both the killing of an Israeli soldier andthe murder of a refugee.  Perhaps you could explain such an omission – bias or just ignorance? 
ii.             You say that ‘We talked about the attacks and the security measures being taken to counter them by Israel security agencies.’  That is indeed the problem.  It is just a security situation, what is happening is simply a matter of individual criminality.  There is no recognition that what is happening is a reaction, on an individual level, to a harsh military occupation of the West Bank and Jerusalem, to say nothing of the nakedly racist treatment of Israel’s own Arab citizens.  It’s just a situation of law and order, so the BBC avoids all context.  It is a continuation of your bias against understanding.
iii.           The response to that part of my complaint relating to the suggestion that those who were killed were treated as being solely Israelis (i.e. Israeli Jews) is incomprehensible.  You simply deny what is plain and evident from the transcript.  Like Humpty Dumpty words mean what you want them to mean.
JH says:  “Yet another attack on Israelis last night” and you comment on this saying that ‘this was one of a number of similar attacks recently so I think that is fair.’   You then say that ‘The other exchange was;
JH : “The number is mounting now isn’t it Kevin. it’s about 50 now isn’t it?”
KC “we think around 50 dead over the last month or so in this sudden, sharp, uptick in violence”
You assert that ‘At no point did either John or Kevin say that it was solely Israelis dead in this period of violence.’
The reference by JH and KC was solely to Israelis and yet most of the dead were Palestinians.  So even at the most basic level it was wrong.  There was no mention of Palestinians other than as attackers.  Hence it would have been reasonable for viewers to conclude that the only people who were dead were Israeli Jews. 
Of course you could have mentioned the fact that there have been a number of attacks on Palestinians by Israeli Jews and even attacks by Jews on Jews, who were mistaken for Arabs.  These are dressed up as retaliations, for example the murder of Fadi Alloun.  For example the online news magazine +972 carries the video of his shooting plus an accompanying article. New video shows accused stabber posed nothreat when shot 
In Jerusalem there are regular attacks by Jewish mobs on individual Palestinians led by groups such as Lehava, which target Arabs in ‘Jewish’ areas.  Their favourite chant is ‘death to the Arabs’ [Mavet La’aravim]  But this phenomenon has never been reported on by the BBC.  Fadi Alloun is believed to have been targeted  by just such a group and executed by the Police who only asked questions afterwards.
There have been a number of other such shootings for example of an Arab woman in Afula bus shelter who it was later admitted had not been trying to stab anyone.  Israeli Arab Woman Shot in Bus Station Not a Terrorist, ConcludeSecurity Services  Of course since the BBC never seems to manage to report on such things they didn’t happen.  It’s a vicious circle which maintains the constant bias that you indulge in.
iv.           You said that
‘Kevin states that the most of the motives are unknown, because in the context of recent history, they are. This nature of these attacks, and the fact the attackers often die in the attacks mean they cannot be investigated, therefore the precise motivation is unknown. We think anyone listening to the piece will understand that Kevin was talking about why this form of violence is happening now. The wider causes and context of the Israel/Palestinian conflict are frequently discussed across the BBC.’
This is totally absurd.  It is as if you have compartmentalised the knife attacks and associated violence on the one hand and the Occupation on the other, ne’er the twain do they meet.  Are you really saying that it has never occurred to your correspondent in Israel, KC, that there might, just might, be a connection between the random violence of individual knife attacks and the fact of the Occupation?  Does he not consider that the daily ritual humiliations of being harassed by the security forces, stopped at check points, subject to random violence by unaccountable border police, living in an uncertain situation where land confiscation takes place all around you, where your residency rights in Jerusalem can be withdrawn at a moments notice etc. etc. might just have some connection with the violence that arose?  If KC really does not appreciate these things, perhaps you might consider transferring him to report on the Chelsea Flower Show?
v.             You talk about how ‘this subject inspires real passion on both sides’.  That is a convenient way of dismissing a complaint but my concern is not passion but accuracy or the lack of it and now dissembling by the Today team.
vi.           You also state that ‘we remain committed to impartial reporting on all controversial issues’.  RT and Al Jazeera have reported tonight on the attacks on Palestinian and Lebanese journalists by the Israeli para military Border Police.  Nothing on BBC.  No doubt if Israeli journalists were being attacked in an Arab country, it would be headline news.  Bias by omission is another facet of your coverage.  Your commitment to reporting on all controversial issues is therefore just a pious statement of intent rather than an established practice.
I also note the  signing of a letter in the Guardian last week by Danny Cohen, the Director of BBC Television.  This no doubt is another example of your commitment to impartiality.
I therefore do not find your handling to date of the complaint as satisfactory.
Yours faithfully,
Tony Greenstein
On 2ndDecember Fraser Steel, head of Editorial Complaints responded thus:

Dear Mr Greenstein

Today, Radio 4, 19 October 2015

I’m writing to let you know the provisional outcome of the Editorial Complaints Unit’s investigation into your complaint about the above programme.

You expressed concern about an exchange between John Humphrys and Kevin Connolly on the deaths arising from recent violence in Israel and the West Bank:

JH: Yet another attack on Israelis last night – this time an Arab man armed with a gun and a knife killed a soldier and wounded ten people. Our Middle East correspondent is Kevin Connolly. The number is mounting, isn’t it Kevin? It's about fifty now, isn’t it?

KC: We think about fifty dead over the last month or so, John – this sharp uptick of violence – not just that attack on the bus station in Beersheba, in Israeli itself but also on Saturday a wave of stabbing attacks in Hebron and Jerusalem.

I have no doubt that “about fifty” was intended to refer to the total number of deaths in the “sharp uptick of violence” which lay behind the story. However, in the context of a discussion of violence initiated by Palestinians, and in the absence of clarification on the point, I think the natural inference for listeners was that it referred to the number of Israeli dead – which, in view of the actual incidence of mortality, would have been misleading.
To that extent, the report did not meet the BBC’s editorial standards regarding accuracy and I am proposing to uphold this part of your complaint. As you know from Richard Hutt’s earlier email, however, our remit prevents us from investigating your more general concerns about the BBC’s coverage, including stories you believe the BBC ought to have reported on – or reported on differently. Decisions about what material to cover, or what aspects of a story to focus on at a particular time, fall under the legitimate exercise of editorial judgement on the part of programme-makers.

This is a provisional finding, and I’ll be happy to consider any comments you may wish to make so long as you can let me have them by 16 December. Meanwhile, I’d like to thank you for giving us the opportunity of investigating your concerns, and I hope you’ll accept my apologies, on behalf of the BBC, for the breach of editorial standards which you identified.

Yours sincerely

Fraser Steel
Head of Editorial Complaints

Although partially upholding the complaint, Fraser Steel manages to avoid the meat of the complaint.  I therefore submitted a response to these provisional findings:

Reference CAS-3535889-VX0RCY

Dear Mr Steel,

Thank you for your email of 2nd December 2015.

I am pleased to accept your decision relating to the upholding of that part of my complaint which related to the failure to mention that some 40 of the 50 people who had died recently in Israel had been Palestinians not Israeli Jews. 

I do however wish to refer back to you two sections of my complaints which you did not deal with in your letter in addition to considering the overall point I made relating to systematic and institutional bias which lies behind individual complaints such as mine. 

The first section I am referring back relates to Anna Sweeney’s previous finding that:

1.             ‘Kevin was reporting on the security situation inside Israel. The attack at Beersheba bus station attack was the latest in a serious of attacks by Palestinians in Israel.’ 
I responded that:
‘This precisely sums up what my complaint is about.  What actually happened at the Beersheba bus station was not just an attack by a lone Palestinian but also the lynching of an Eritrean refugee.  KC failed to make even a cursory mention of the fact that an Eritrean refugee, guilty of nothing other than being in the despise category of refugee in Israel, (Israel doesn’t admit refugees as a matter of policy, they are called ‘infiltrators) was murdered.  Shot by a security guard and then kicked and beaten until he died.  Not one word of this lynching passed KC’s lips.
I also pointed out that:
‘By way of contrast the on-line version of Israel’s largest daily paper, Yediot Aharanot, on 18th October, managed to include in its report both the killing of an Israeli soldier andthe murder of a refugee.  Perhaps you could explain such an omission – bias or just ignorance? http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4712997,00.html
You state that:
‘our remit prevents us from investigating your more general concerns about the BBC’s coverage, including stories you believe the BBC ought to have reported on – or reported on differently. Decisions about what material to cover, or what aspects of a story to focus on at a particular time, fall under the legitimate exercise of editorial judgement on the part of programme-makers.’
As a general point this may be true, though when a persistent pattern of not reporting certain facts or always putting a particular slant and gloss on stories when they are covered, then the question arises as to whether this constitutes a breach in the BBC’s duty to maintain impartiality.  Are you saying that the question of impartiality is not part of ECU’s remit?  If so then the complaint must be escalated to the BBC Trust.
By your own admission, Kevin Connolly had reported on what had happened at Beer Sheva bus station but he had completely omitted the lynching of an Eritrean refugee who was mistaken for a Palestinian.  This took place at the same time.  I pointed out that this lynching had been widely covered in the media in Israel and I find it inconceivable that Kevin Connolly was unaware of this story.  To take one murder and fail to cover another which took place at the same time, because the second killing was that of a refugee is unforgiveable.  It displays such obvious bias that I am surprised that you fail to recognise it.  If it is not bias then it is incompetence.  I’m  not sure which is worse but it is nonetheless lamentable and I would expect you take this seriously.  You chose the material, I’m not complaining about a story that you didn’t cover but the selective and partial report which led to an unbalanced and biased report.
2.             The second section of my complaint that you failed to address was where you stated that:
‘Kevin states that the most of the motives are unknown, because in the context of recent history, they are. This nature of these attacks, and the fact the attackers often die in the attacks mean they cannot be investigated, therefore the precise motivation is unknown. We think anyone listening to the piece will understand that Kevin was talking about why this form of violence is happening now. The wider causes and context of the Israel/Palestinian conflict are frequently discussed across the BBC.’
I responded that:
‘This is totally absurd.  It is as if you have compartmentalised the knife attacks and associated violence on the one hand and the Occupation on the other, ne’er the twain do they meet.  Are you really saying that it has never occurred to your correspondent in Israel, KC, that there might, just might, be a connection between the random violence of individual knife attacks and the fact of the Occupation?  Does he not consider that the daily ritual humiliations of being harassed by the security forces, stopped at check points, subject to random violence by unaccountable border police, living in an uncertain situation where land confiscation takes place all around you, where your residency rights in Jerusalem can be withdrawn at a moments notice etc. etc. might just have some connection with the violence that arose?  If KC really does not appreciate these things, perhaps you might consider transferring him to report on the Chelsea Flower Show?’
I still find this reporting inexplicable.  Other news organisations have interviewed friends and family members of the Palestinians shot dead in order to try and gain an understanding of why they did what they did. Why is this beyond Kevin Connolly, and why does he, and the BBC, give up so easily in trying to understand Palestinians?
Al Jazeera for example did an article Portraits of Palestinian Knife Attackers http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/11/portraits-palestinian-knife-attackers-151106093509929.htmlin which family members explain it was the pressure of the occupation which led their loved ones to violence. Such interviews are basic journalism, but Connolly failure to do even a basic investigation suggests that he is almost wilfully not wanting to gain an understanding of Palestinian motivation.
This relates to the whole manner of your reporting.  You treat the whole question of Palestinian violence in the way you would report the commission of crimes in Britain.  Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem is treated as normative.  It is not seen as violent in the same way as Palestinian reactions are.  It is as if the Occupation is a peaceful affair that only a few disturbed elements might object to rather than seeing the violence that erupts reflecting a wider dissatisfaction with the existing Occupation.  This leads to wholesale bias across all of your reporting.  Your inability to deal with this point isn’t simply a matter of lack of comprehension.  It suggests institutional and ingrained bias, of which this and I have no doubt many other complaints are but symptoms. 
I would therefore like you to address this aspect of my complaint too.
Yours sincerely,

Tony Greenstein

Disappearances in Egypt & Torture by a Good and Faithful Ally

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Joint press statement

On Human Rights Day

 Torture - not an isolated incident


On Human Rights Day, the undersigned organizations condemn increasing 
violations by the Ministry of Interior in a manner that indicates they have been given free reign to abuse citizens using extralegal practices such as torture, enforced disappearance, and other arbitrary measures and systematic infringements of citizens’ fundamental rights and liberties, which have recently led to several deaths in places of detention. 

Some of the undersigned organizations have documented recent cases of torture in police stations, including the Matariya station, the Luxor station, and the Shubra al-Kheima 2 station, some of which ended with the death of the detainee  in a one-month period in October and November 2015. In the month of November alone, the Nadim Center for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence and Torture recorded 49 cases of torture, including 9 cases of death in custody. Other organizations have similarly documented cases of death in detention facilities and received complaints of detainees subjected to beating, degrading treatment, or torture in the same time period. The Nadim Center also recorded two additional deaths among 54 cases of torture in the month of September and 4 death in custody cases out of 57 torture cases in August. 

The undersigned organizations fear that the actual number of torture cases that occur far exceeds those documented or reported in the media because victims or their families often chose not to make their case public for fear of reprisal by police officers or because they have lost all trust in the justice system. 

The organizations therefore call for an urgent, independent inquiry into the alarming and growing use of torture against male and female detainees in prisons and police stations. In most of these cases, the perpetrators have not been held to account, while the Interior Ministry has repeatedly denied allegations of torture, often calling such cases “isolated incidents.”

In many of the cases documented by the undersigned organisations, police abuse follows a pattern: often, a person or group of people is arrested pursuant to a report of theft or on suspicion of a minor crime. In most cases, these arrests are conducted in an arbitrary manner that at times involves verbal or physical abuse, after which the suspect is taken to the police station, where he is beaten during questioning. The process may end with the suspect exiting the interrogation room as a corpse or bearing the traces of beating or sexual assault and humiliation, as documented in the following cases, offered as examples, not an exhaustive list: 

•        A death in custody case on October 22 in the Matariya police station: the victim, Adel Abd al-Sami, a 22-year-old carpenter, was detained at the station on October 4 on suspicion of stealing a mobile phone. His family said they saw traces of blood on his clothing when, just after his arrest, the police brought him to his home to search it. He was then taken to Matariya police station and detained there the entire time. His family visited him over the following period and said they could see that he had been beaten and tortured and his health deteriorated markedly. Adel’s mother said that in one visit, he was unable to speak due to beatings. On October 24, his family learned that he was taken to the hospital. When they arrived, they were told that he had reached the hospital dead on arrival. He bore traces of burns on his hands and injuries to the head and various parts of his body.

•        A death in custody on November 25 in Luxor: a police force stopped Talaat Shabib in the Hawamdiya area of Luxor near a coffee shop to examine his personal identification, during which time an officer verbally assaulted the suspect, cursing and insulting him. When Talaat objected to the insult—saying, “No insults, sir, you’re my son’s age”—a physical altercation ensured and he was taken to the police station. There he was beaten for two hours, after which he died. The prosecution’s investigation in the case, which sparked broad controversy and demonstrations in Luxor, found that police investigators at the station attempted to conceal the fact that Talaat died during interrogation by having him placed in the holding room as a detainee until an ambulance arrived. However, the person in charge of the holding area refused to admit him, saying he was already dead at the time. The preliminary medical report also confirmed 
that the victim reached the hospital already deceased. 
•       
 Another incident of torture in the Matariya police station targeted Mohammed Abduh Muawwad, a suspect in case no. 18932/2015/Matariya misdemeanor. One of his relatives said that he was beaten after his feet were bound and kicked in the stomach and chest at the police station, causing bleeding in his mouth and nose. Mohammed’s family filed a complaint about the incident and the prosecution is currently investigating, but the victim has not yet been brought before the medical examiner. His brother has also received anonymous phone threats warning him of dire consequences if he does not withdraw the complaint. 

In a related context, the undersigned organizations also condemn the continued practice of enforced disappearances. Many of us have received complaints and reports of citizens disappearing after their arrest by police, including for example the case of Hani Saad Mohammed Abd al-Sattar, who was arrested by police from the Nasr City 1 police station, along with his boss Hisham Mohammed Ahmed, and others, and taken to an undisclosed location. They have been disappeared since August 10. 

The undersigned organizations emphasize the danger these practices pose to the life of these citizens, particularly considering the numerous stories of the torture of disappeared persons who later appear in detention facilities bearing signs of physical torture and assault. 

We further stress that Egyptian prisons are subject to no genuine oversight and do not permit independent organizations or lawyers to visit them. Nor are they subject to periodic inspection by an independent judicial body, although this right is enshrined in law and the constitution (under Article 55 of the 2014 constitution, Articles 85 and 86 of the prisons law, and Article 27 of the judiciary law, which states that prosecutors and the heads and deputy heads of first-instance and appellate courts have the right to inspect prisons located in their jurisdictions). Moreover, under general directives to prosecution offices, a routine inspection of prisons should occur at least once a month, with reports filed on observed infractions. Nevertheless, there have been no announcement of the investigation of any Prisons Authority officials in connection with repeated reports of abuses in prisons.

At the same time, the state continues to harass and prosecute independent lawyers and judges who advocate the reform of anti-torture legislation. Judges Assem Abd al-Gabbar and Hisham Raouf and attorney Negad al-Borai are currently under investigation after they submitted a draft law to combat torture as part of an experts workshop organized by the United Group, which al-Borai heads, on March 11, 2015. From October 2013 to August 2014 the United Group filed 163 reports of 465 allegations of torture in detention facilities, none of which were addressed by the Public Prosecution in a timely manner. As a result, the United Group submitted several complaints to the Judicial Inspection Directorate to ensure timely investigations. Nevertheless, the sole diligent, timely investigation conducted in this period was into the two judges who helped draft the proposed anti-torture law and al-Borai himself. This suggests that timely investigations only take place when directed at those seeking to improve the Egyptian legislative environment, while torturers remain safe from punishment. Apparently the state, first and foremost the judicial establishment, sees no crime in law-enforcement officials torturing, but instead in filing reports of torture or offering legal remedies to end the crime of torture, which under the constitution is not subject to any statute of limitations.

On Human Rights Day, we reiterate our commitment to justice and affirm
the universal obligation to respect it, which is particularly incumbent on state agencies. In this respect the undersigned organizations recommend the following:

Regarding torture in places of detention:

•        Amend the current legislative framework (Article 126 of the Egyptian Penal Code), which limits the definition of torture to an act committed against a suspect with the purpose of forcing him to confess to a charge. This definition ignores other forms of torture included in the UN Convention Against Torture, such as intimidating citizens or taking hostages—who are typically women and children from the suspect’s family—or punishing persons who challenge absolute police authority or demand to see judicial orders or official arrest or search warrants.

•        Amend Egyptian law to allow victims of torture to directly sue the 
perpetrators of torture. Currently Egyptian law prohibits this, leaving it to the discretion of the Public Prosecution, which has ignored formal complaints filed by victims to open investigations into their torture. Even in the rare instances that prosecutors have referred officers to trial on torture charges, the Interior Ministry has not suspended the officers from active duty or transferred them pending investigation and trial. On the contrary, the police officers have been allowed to harass their victims, who in some cases were again arrested and subjected to further torture in an attempt to compel them to withdraw their complaints.

•        Adopt a law that fully criminalizes torture and imposes stiffer penalties on offenders,in accordance with the Egyptian constitution and Egypt’s international obligations. Although Article 52 of the 2014 constitution states that “torture of all types is a crime not subject to a statute of limitations,” security forces continue to torture prisoners and detainees in ways that recall the practices of the Mubarak regime. 
•   
     Immediately investigate allegations of torture and refer offenders to trial; diligently investigate complaints filed with the Public Prosecution against public servants; and refer victims to the medical examiner to document injuries, in a manner consistent with the principles of 
transparency and accountability.

•        Form an independent commission to investigate all cases of death and serious injury at the hands of police personnel. The commission should be composed of independent members who are not affiliated with the judicial, executive, or legislative arms of the state. The commission should investigate the legality of the use of force and firearms and be given full investigative powers. It should cooperate with the Public Prosecution if its finds that a criminal investigation is warranted in any incident.
•       
 Issue a witness protection law as part of the legal framework to combat 
torture. 
•   
     Establish a judicial police force subordinate to the Public Prosecution, independent of the Interior Ministry.
•      
 The prosecution should carry out its obligation to conduct periodic, 
surprise inspections of detention facilities, in accordance with the constitution and the Code of Criminal Procedure. This entails giving prosecutors the right to visit general and district prisons and police detention facilities, examine records, and accept complaints from detainees. Such unannounced inspections should take place at least once every month as set forth in Article 1744 in the Book of General Directives 
to Prosecution Offices on Criminal Matters.

•  Form an independent commission dedicated to conducting periodic, 
unannounced inspections of detention facilities around the country. The commission should consist of independent members unaffiliated with the judicial or executive authorities with expertise in law, medicine, psychiatry, and other fields. The commission should possess the authority to receive complaints from detainees, review records, and directly offer recommendations to officials in detention facilities and the House of Representatives. 
• 
       Equip detention facilities with surveillance cameras and allow them to be regularly reviewed by the district summary court in each jurisdiction.

Regarding enforced disappearance

•        Establish a clear definition of enforced disappearance in Egyptian law as 
well as clear mechanisms to ensure redress for victims of this crime. 

•        Enforce the law to require the Interior Ministry to immediately investigate any report of a citizen’s disappearance, setting a deadline by which time it must notify the family of the disappeared of the findings of the investigation; establish mechanisms and rules that enable the families of victims to obtain information about the fate of their disappeared family members. 
•        Sign the UN Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance and initiate any necessary constitutional and legal amendments in domestic legislation to make it compliant with the convention. An Interior Ministry leader asserted that Egypt has in fact already signed the convention, but this is false. 

•        Form an independent commission, while defining its authorities and prerogatives, to include members of the Public Prosecution, the National Committee on Human Rights, rights associations, and representatives of families of the disappeared. The commission should receive reports of cases of enforced disappearance to review them in a timely manner and disclose its findings to the public by a set deadline; if any public official is found to be involved, he shall be immediately subject to accountability.

•        Expand the prerogatives and authorities of the National Council on 
Human Rights to allow it to monitor state agencies’ implementation of international human rights conventions and treaties and their respect for human rights principles. The members of the council should be authorized to conduct inspections of prisons, police stations, and detention facilities to assess their compliance with the law and their respect for human rights. 

Signatory organizations
Arab Network for Human Rights Information
Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression
Alhaqanya Center for Law and Legal profession
Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies
Center for Egyptian Women’s Legal Assistance
Egyptian Commission for rights and freedoms
The Egyptian Association for Community Participation Enhancement
The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
The Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights
Hesham Mobarak Law Center
Masryoon Against Religious Discrimination (MARED)
Nazra for Feminist Studies
National group for human rights and law
United-Group, Attorneys at Law, Legal Researchers and Human Rights Advocates

El-Nadeem Centre for the rehabilitation of victims of violence and torture

Mary Seif

Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
T/F: +(202) 279-60197 / 279-60158
M:01066686814
A: 14 Fouad Serageddin Street (formerly al Saray al Korbra), 
Garden City,Cairo-Egypt

Videos from Egypt prisons paint bleak picture

Videotaped testimonies of prisoners currently held in Egyptian jails are painting a picture of arbitrary arrest, torture, forced confessions and cramped prison cells.

The videos – recorded on mobile phones, smuggled out of prison and obtained by journalists – were the first to show current detainees giving an account of prison conditions from within their cells.

"They tortured me in ways I can't describe. They started making me memorise confessions, they told me, 'You're going to stand before someone and you have to say what we tell you word for word,'"said one young man who claimed to be a university student.

Al Jazeera is withholding the names of the men who appear in the videos for their own safety.
"They were questioning me about things I have no idea about, and about people I don’t know… They said they would bring my mother here and rape her in front of me. Because of all the torture and the threats they made, I told them I will say whatever you want,"said the prisoner.

He said he was beaten whenever he refrained from answering.

Torture in prisons 'impossible'

Approached by Al Jazeera, both the ministries of interior and information refused to comment.
However, Minister of Interior Mohamed Ibrahim has denied claims of torture. Interviewed in a talk show on a privately owned channel on 20 February Ibrahim said, "It's impossible that any form of torture is taking place in Egyptian prisons".

He also affirmed that no one is arrested arbitrarily in Egypt; they were either participants in "non-peaceful protests or possessed weapons".

In one of the leaked accounts, a prisoner describes how he was arrested last November.

"I saw a man dressed in civilian clothing. I asked him, 'What's going on? He asked me to which organisation I belonged. I told him I don’t belong to anyone,"he said in this video.

"He then pulled out a baton and beat me. He forced me on my knees, and as I turned my face the other way I saw one student fall to the ground as he get shot in the face with birdshot. His friend who was walking with him had his face covered in blood too, but the police still beat him,"the prisoner added.

Al Jazeera was unable to verify the authenticity of the accounts, but they corroborate testimonies of former prisoners who spoke to Al Jazeera about their arrests and dire conditions in Egypt's incarceration centres.

According to Wiki Thawra, an initiative by the Egyptian Centre for Social and Economic Rights to document events in Egypt since the revolution of 25 January 2011, more than 21,317 people were detained or faced arrest by Egyptian security forces between July and December 2013.

As anti-coup protesters, mostly supporters of ousted President Mohamed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood, continued to stage daily protests in the capital and elsewhere, the government vowed to get tough with what it saw as threats to national security.

The Muslim Brotherhood was designated a terrorist group on 25 December, and more people were brought to prison. This, along with an anti-protest law that drove liberal opposition members to the streets, has been the pretext for many political prisoners to land in Egypt's more than two-dozen confinement camps, as well as police stations.

A decree issued by interim President Adly Mansour last September said that any suspect charged with crimes carrying the death sentence or life imprisonment can be locked in pre-trial detention indefinitely. This decision, seen by human right groups as punitive detention, has also contributed to the inflation in the number of political prisoners.

According to Wiki Thawra, 4,809 were arrested during the one-year tenure of Morsi. No records were available for any previous years.
Overcrowded cells
In another video, a young prisoner describes how he was convicted.
Taken to the State Security headquarters, he said that he and 16 other prisoners were asked to confess to "which organisation we belong".

After extending their detention for 15 days, "they took us to prison, and there we stood trial. It was a kangaroo court, there was no evidence presented, no witnesses, not even prosecution witnesses were present.

"The judge handed us a verdict of two-and-a-half years. I appealed the verdict, but three months have passed now and I’m being punished for nothing whatsoever,"he said.

All prisoners testifying on camera described how cramped their cells are.

"The cell I am in is tiny, despite the large number of inmates that are jailed here. We sleep with our feet over each other,"said an older captive.

Political prisoners report that they are being held in the same cells as criminals. "We were put into a holding cell with around 70 or 80 other inmates. It was filled with smoke, we couldn’t breathe any clean air," said one detainee.

"We were inhaling cigarette smoke and hashish and marijuana smoke - drugs that I had never inhaled or even seen before in my life."

"It was a very strange experience because I got to know every single type of drug there is in Egypt,"he said.

"Every type of drug that is dealt in Egypt exists inside police cells and under the nose of the Interior Ministry."

See also:

Human rights group says Egyptian authorities tortured and sexually abused 52 youths who "peacefully" demonstrated.



Caroline Lucas MP - A response to my blog

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Caroline Lucas - Did she resign as a patron of StWC under pressure or was it all a coincidence?

Three days ago I posted a blog on Caroline Lucas's decision to resign as patron of the Stop the War Coalition.  In it I made it clear that in my view this decision was as a result of the political atmosphere and pressure on Jeremy Corbyn to dissociate himself from StWC.  That is still my view.  Caroline disagrees and she sent me an email in response.  I post it below and leave readers to judge accordingly.

Tony Greenstein
Jeremy Corby -- right in 2003 and right now

'My decision (to resign as patron of StWC) was not the result of me being put under pressure' Caroline Lucas

On 9 Dec 2015, at 19:19, Tony Greenstein wrote:
If Corbyn had been a guest speaker at a British arms manufacturer's dinner the Labour right would have applauded

19:01 
Dear Caroline,
as someone who voted for you in the last election and as someone who has always respected you, I am astounded at your decision to resign from the Stop the War Coalition. 
There has been a barrage of attacks on opponents of war in the past week.  MPs who resent being held accountable, false tales of mobs besieging an MP Stella Creasy's home, Tom Watson shooting from the mouth and then having to recant. 

The Daily Mail doesn't like saying that the French state bore any responsibility for Isis's murder rampage in Paris.  It is like blaming the Jews for Hitler.  The Mail obviously forgets the time when it attacked Jewish refugees and asylum seekers and praised Hitler!
The anti-Labour Daily Mail just loves John Woodcocks asinine comment

Stop the War Coalition is the major anti-war group in this country.  Not surprisingly, given Jeremy Corbyn's links to the group, it has come under heavy attack including for a post re the Paris massacre when it said that France had reaped the whirlwind of its actions in Lebanon.
It is clear and obvious that StWC did not support the actions of ISIS in any form and whether its choice of words was clumsy or not is a matter for debate.
None of this excuses a decision to withdraw support for them at this point.  It is an act of cowardice.  Now is the time to give them support not to withdraw under fire.  I have previously written to you about the support for Israel and Zionism by the  Green Party in Germany and in particular its racist Bundestag member Volker Beck.  I'm not aware of you having  issued any statement concerning this.
I truly hope you reconsider your action, and reverse what you have done.  When the anti-war movement is under attack that is not the time to run away.  Either you identify with the allies of Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the other butchers, which is what those who voted for war last week did or you identify with the anti-war movement, which in this country is represented by StWC.  There is no other choice.
I am deeply disappointed by your actions and hope you are brave enough to recant.
Regards

          Tony Greenstein
Unfortunately progressives covers a multitude of sins
Jeremy Corbyn speaking on the StWC platform and defying the Labour warmongers' demands to resign
On 10 December 2015 at 14:44, LUCAS, Caroline <caroline.lucas.mp@parliament.uk> wrote:

Dear Tony,

Thank you for making me aware of your concerns about my resignation as a patron of Stop the War Coalition.

You raise a number of points in your email thread, many of which are about wider foreign policy issues. We may not always agree on the details, but I am surprised that you are questioning my commitment to opposing military strikes on Syria. Have you read my contribution to the parliamentary debate? You can do so here:  I think it’s important that such decisions are evidence based and that includes evidence about the West’s motivation, their historical role in the Middle East and the impact on their ongoing decisions.

I see from your blog that you have read my statement about the decision to resign as a patron and am unclear why you have taken that to assume anything more than it says. I stood down a month ago and very much regret the way this information was put into the public domain. It didn’t come from me and, indeed, I very deliberately didn’t publicise it because I knew detractors would seek to use it to attack both StWC and Jeremy Corbyn. I have spoken on StWC platforms since my resignation and want to assure you the decision was not the result of me being put under pressure. On the contrary, it was a considered move that genuinely reflects the demands I have on my time and a long standing principle that, if I am going to take on such roles, I should do so only if I have time to be actively engaged in the workings and decisions of the organisation in question.

The right wing media have misrepresented this decision and I am saddened that you have fallen for that- not least because it means you have become party to their narrative - and not taken the time to confirm the facts before writing your blog.

Best wishes, Caroline

Caroline Lucas, MP for Brighton Pavilion
House of Commons
London SW1A 0AA

Tel: 020 7219 7025
Email: 
caroline.lucas.mp@parliament.uk


On 10 December 2015 at 17:57, Tony Greenstein wrote:

Dear Caroline,
thank you for this clarification.  I have not doubted your opposition to the bombing of Syria but I have criticised the arguments you used for coming to this decision.  Namely that you haven't seen evidence to suggest it would achieve its objects, which does tend to suggest that if there had been such evidence available then you might have voted differently.
This isn't a question of hairsplitting.  Your argument assumes that the West has an inherent right to intervene even if, in this instance it shouldn't.  I am arguing that there is no such right.  The very presence of the West militarily in the Middle East is the problem.  Everywhere it goes it supports and upholds tyranny and sectarianism and confessionalism.  Its only duty is to get out of the area and if it is so concerned about Isis, which I doubt very much given the nature of its alliances, then it can supply weaponry to progressive groups like the Kurds.
I am happy to take on board your assurances that you weren't responsible for the leaking of your decision to quit as a patron and that you are still speaking on its platforms and regret any suggestion to the contrary.
If you have no objections I will put on my blog your letter and my response.

Best wishes
tony

December 12th 2015

Dear Caroline,

Further to my previous email, I would like to make some additional points.

I will also assume, in view of your non-response to my previous letter, that you have no objection to my posting your response on my blog.

1.    I have never doubted your opposition to the bombing of Syria but what I do question are the grounds that you base this on.  Your opposition to the bombing is not based on the principle of non-interference by the West in the affairs of the Middle East and Syria in particular, but on the particular merits of whether to bomb in this case.  In other words they are not based on anti-imperialism.

2.  I watched much of the debate and saw you speak so I don't need to delve into Hansard!

3.  I agree that we can't disregard evidence but that evidence is damning.  We are allied with Saudi Arabia, the largest funder of Jihadist groups and with Turkey, which is guilty of genocide against the Turks, both in the past and today, as well as act ing as Isis's rear supply base and conduit for its oil trade.  Coupled with recently released Defence Intelligence Agency memos in the USA, this would suggest that there is  far more at stake than simply the defeat of Isis. 

4.  Re your decision to stand down as a patron of StWC.  I accept that you have spoken on their platforms since your decision to stand down as a patron and I hope you continue to do so, but given that there has been a consistent campaign, far longer than a month, to pressurise Jeremy Corbyn to dissociate himself from StWC then I still find your decision inexplicable.  It cannot be seen as anything other than a concession to these same pressures.  My understanding is that it related to two articles, both of which were taken down on the StWC web site as well as the question of whether Syrians who supported the bombing should speak at the House of Commons.
I have reposted one of the articles Age of Despair: Reaping the Whirlwind of Western Support for Extremist Violence  on my blog.  I can see nothing wrong with its analysis.  Chris Floyd states the obvious which is that attacks in the West and Paris in particular are a consequence of our activity in the Middle East, not least the creation of Isis.  I don't know whether you actually read the article, but Chris Floyd say that:

'I write in despair. Despair of course at the depravity displayed by the murderers of innocents in Paris tonight; but an even deeper despair at the depravity of the egregious murderers who have brought us to this ghastly place in human history'.  I cannot see anything wrong with this.


Apparently there was another article which compared Isis to those who believe in international solidarity.  If true this is crass and absurd and of course the article should have been taken down but it wasn't written on behalf of StWC.
The proper response would have been to point the finger at those who criticise StWC and who are entertained, wined and dined by the arms lobby in this country.

5.  Yes the right-wing media have used your decision for their own purposes.  That was eminently forseeable.  Regardless of the reasons for your decision and only you know what they are, it should have been obvious to you, coming at the time that it did, that your decision would be used to put pressure on Jeremy Corbyn to break his links with StWC.  You are not a political virgin.  You have been an MEP and now an MP for 16 years.  You must have known that your decision would leak out.  How could it have been otherwise?

I therefore don't accept that I have become a party to the right-wing's narrative.  What I have tried to do is to ensure that that narrative doesn't go unchallenged.  I am not aware that you have challenged it.

I think it is incumbent upon you to make it clear, publicly, that regardless of any  political differences with the leadership of StWC, that you support what is the major anti-war organisation in this country.

Best wishes

Tony

How Cute – Israeli Soldiers Risk Their Lives to Rescue Al-Qaeda Fighters

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Since Al-Qaeda=ISIS=Hamas=Hezbollah – When is Israel Going to tend to the Wounded of Hamas and Hezbollah?

According to Netanyahu - Hamas, al-Qaeda and IS are all the same
Indeed.  Why are Israeli commandos risking their lives for Al Qaeda militants?  Pure humanitarianism of course!!
Unconscious: A wounded Syrian Islamic militant receives urgent medical treatment from Israeli troops at the Syrian border. The commandos are seen administering 'tracheal intubation' by forcing a tube down the man's throat to prevent asphyxiation
Add caption
You will forgive me if I sound slightly confused.  But according to Benjamin Netanyahu who, as we all know, always speaks the unvarnished truth, Hamas & Hezbollah are the same as ISIS and Al Qaeda.  They are all Islamic and therefore, by definition, equal to each other. 
Safe: The stabilised casualty is stretchered out of the vehicle outside the hospital, where he will be handed over to the surgical team
In much the same way as Nazi ideology held that all Jews were much the same, regardless of their ideological differences, which were just a pretence for the benefit of the goyim (non-Jews) so it is with Islamists.
Emergency: The militant is very close to death and requires expert medical attention from the team, including a complex blood transfusion

Nervous: A treated Syrian militant is wheeled out of a civilian ambulance a mile from the Syrian border in order to be taken back to Syria

Wounded: The commandos must stabilise the casualty as soon as possible and rush him to hospital so that his wounds can be treated

Mission accomplished: The armoured car, filled with heavily armed commandos and the patched-up militant, leaves for the Syrian border

Of course there are no doubt cynics who will suggest that Israel is doing this for its own motives but I refuse to believe it.  I am sure that Israel is acting out of the best humanitarian motives.  That is why the Jewish State is a ‘light unto the nations’.  Only a few Palestinian enemies, who speak no good of anyone, would cast doubt upon the motives of the Israeli state and Bibi.
So maybe someone can answer the following question.  If Israel takes in al-Nusra fighters, who are al-Qaeda’s group in Syria, and other Islamists too, why is it that Israel doesn’t provide similar facilities for members of Hamas and Hezbollah?  Instead of murdering and imprisoning Hamas and Hezbollah militants, perhaps we will see Israel offering the best hospital care that Israel can provide and then returning them, gun in hand, to Gaza in order that they can resume the struggle!
Danger: Israeli commandos are carrying out similar rescues every night - but their government's motive for authorising the extraordinary missions is unclear

Recovering: Mohammed, 20, a Syrian militant, receives medical care in Israel after his leg was almost destroyed by heavy machine gun fire

Of course if anyone can answer explain all this to me I shall be immensely grateful.


Tony Greenstein 
Transfer: The militant is taken on a stretcher to the waiting armoured vehicle for the short journey back to Syria, where he will be collected

A Tragic Accident – Israeli Settler Stone Throwers Hit Jewish Car by Mistake

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Jewish rock-throwers who injured Jewish toddler released

Police say suspects admitted to targeting Palestinian cars along West Bank highway, hitting Israeli car by mistake


A terrible mistake which is quite easy to make - the stone throwers hit an Israeli Jewish car instead of an Arab one
Car whose window was shattered
 It was a tragic accident.  It’s easily done.  Settler youth were happily throwing stones at Palestinian cars when they hit an Israeli Jewish car by mistake and injured a Jewish child.  Fortunately he was alright and it was so obviously a case of mistaken identity that it is understandable that the rock throwers were released within a day.  No doubt with a warning to be more careful in the future.  If they were going to throw a stone make sure that it’s a Palestinian who’s in the car.
Fortunately it wasn't a terrorist incident - just a tragic accident.  Perhaps the Israeli court will sentence them to a mandatory course where they can improve their  stone throwing aim?
Of course this poses a problem.  How can you be absolutely sure that you don't injure a settler or a Jew?  Of course you could mount a roadblock, check the identity of the driver and then throw the stone if it is an Arab, but the stone wouldn’t have the same impact as hitting a moving car and in any case there would be less chance of the car crashing.
Of course Palestinians can face up to a decade and more in prison
One can only hope that the Israeli scientific genius will come up with a handheld machine which can tell in an instant whether the car is Jewish or Palestinian.  It should not be too difficult.  After all Arabs and Jews carry different ID cards so it should be possible to insert a micro chip in the Arab ID card which could tell a stone thrower instantly, by emitting a bleep, that the driver is a Palestinian and then they can throw the stone.

Of course some of you will be asking why it is that Jewish stone-throwers aren’t handed out minimum 3 year prison sentences for throwing stones.  But you don't understand.  Arabs who throw stones hate us, they are terrorists and deserve all they get, including a bullet.  Whereas Jewish stone throwers are defending the state and lobbing stones at potential terrorists.  It's just not the same and it would be terrible to confuse the two.

As Adam Chandler explained The Atlantic, Tossing the Book at Palestinian Stone-Throwers,  http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/09/israel-palestine-rock-throwers/407278/ 
'Israel has imposed mandatory prison sentences in an effort to stem a wave of rock-throwing'.

December 13, 2015) reported that 

'Two Israeli Jewish teens who inadvertently injured a 4-year-old Jewish toddler in a rock throwing attack aimed at Palestinian cars, were released from IDF custody Sunday morning after testifying to their involvement in the attack near the West Bank city of Hebron Saturday night.

Israel Police spokesperson Luba Samri said the initial investigation identified the attackers as residents of the nearby settlement of Kiryat Arba who, prior to the attack, were holding a demonstration near Route 60, a major West Bank thoroughfare.

Samri said the investigation into the incident is ongoing, but police expect to make a number of arrests in connection to the attack.

The teenagers were arrested hours after the attack by IDF soldiers whom they told they had sought to stone Palestinian cars.’

The 4-year-old boy sustained light injuries by glass shards from the car’s shattered window.’


Of course, if they were Palestinian stone throwers they would have been detained indefinitely, beaten up and tortured into making confessions.  They would be looking at possibly a decade in prison since they injured a Jewish child.  But as it was a Jewish stone thrower it clearly wasn’t a crime of terrorism but one of mistaken identity and possible negligence.

Israeli Military Court Gaols Khalida Jarrar, an elected Palestinian parliamentarian

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If you want to know why Israel is not, contrary to its claims, a democracy, then the case of Khalida Jarrar says it all.  Khalida, a secular and left-wing Palestinian, a member of the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, is an elected member of the Palestinian legislative assembly.

But she is a member of an ‘illegal organisation’ presumably the PFLP and therefore she is imprisoned by a military Tribunal, another quaint example of Israeli democracy.  Settlers are subject to normal Israeli public law.  Khalida, being a Palestinian


under occupation, is subject to Military Law, which of course lacks even the slightest element of justice.  Military courts have a conviction rate of over 99%.


A good leading article by Israel's only sane newspaper, Ha'aretz.

Tony Greenstein

 Haaretz Editorial               Dec 09, 2015

Khalida Jarrar was sentenced to 15 months in prison this week for membership in an illegal organization and incitement, but was her trial in a military court just?

Khalida Jarrar is a political prisoner. The Ofer Military Court, which on Monday sentenced the Palestinian parliamentarian to 15 months in prison for membership in an illegal organization and incitement, is a political court that punished her for her political activity, and for that alone. Thus Israel, which pretends to be a democracy, has political prisoners, political arrests and political prison sentences, at least in the occupied territories.
Jarrar’s trial once again proved the intolerable contradiction between the rule of law and the principles of justice, on one hand, and the military justice system on the other. The latter has no relationship to the former.
Jarrar was arrested at her home in Al-Bireh in April. The defense establishment claimed at the time that the reason for the arrest was her violation of a military order that allowed her to live only in the Jericho area, far from her home. No other crime was mentioned. Later, she was indicted on 12 different counts, some of them ridiculous and even outrageous, like attending a book fair and paying condolence visits. In the end, she was convicted on two counts in a plea bargain. 

One military court judge ordered her freed long ago; another ordered her kept in prison until the end of her trial; and the military prosecutor threatened her – and essentially the court as well – by saying that if she were released, she’d be thrown in jail without trial, in other words placed in administrative detention. This is not how the legal system of a properly run state conducts itself.

Even the fact that Jarrar is a legislator, a member of parliament, an elected representative of her people – a post that ought to grant her immunity from political charges – didn’t give her a moment’s protection. Israel treated her brutally, just as it treats every Palestinian it deems suspect. 

First it tried to keep her away from her hometown with a draconian military order. Then it tried to put her in administration detention, which is no less arbitrary. Finally, and only after public and international pressure for her release had intensified, members of the military justice system were forced to fabricate an indictment against her – most of which, as noted, collapsed. Essentially, this was a Band-Aid, based at least in part on dubious evidence, including vague hearsay evidence and testimony obtained under pressure.


The fact that Jarrar was thrown into prison because of her political activity on behalf of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine is first and foremost an indictment of the State of Israel, which puts politicians on trial because of their legitimate opposition to the occupation and even sentences them to jail. Jarrar and her attorneys decided to accept the plea bargain in order to shorten her trial, and thereby the length of her detention until the end of proceedings. But the black flag that flies over the shameful imprisonment of a Palestinian member of parliament will continue to fly over the State of Israel, tarnishing her jailers and, above all, those who are responsible for them.

The Fake Fight Against Jihadism

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At this time when the United States and its satellites in Europe are embarking on new foreign adventures in Syria it is useful to remind oneself of the history of such interventions.  Today it is the battle against Jihadism and ISIS.  Yesterday the Jihadists were our friends in the war against the Soviet Union.  Our friends and allies change but the aim remains the same, the domination of other peoples’ countries.  Despite social democratic fools like Hilary Benn believing that an alliance with Saudi Arabia represents an anti-fascist alliance, our purpose is to divide and rule those we conquer.  In Syria this means the fragmentation of the country into its confessional components.

Tony Greenstein

A Special Relationship The United States Is Teaming Up With Al Qaeda, Again

By Andrew Cockburn

One morning early in 1988, Ed McWilliams, a foreign-service officer posted to the American Embassy in Kabul, heard the thump of a massive explosion from somewhere on the other side of the city. It was more than eight years after the Russian invasion of Afghanistan, and the embassy was a tiny enclave with only a handful of diplomats. McWilliams, a former Army intelligence operative, had made it his business to venture as much as possible into the Soviet-occupied capital. Now he set out to see what had happened.

It was obviously something big: although the explosion had taken place on the other side of Sher Darwaza, a mountain in the center of Kabul, McWilliams had heard it clearly. After negotiating a maze of narrow streets on the south side of the city, he found the site. A massive car bomb, designed to kill as many civilians as possible, had been detonated in a neighborhood full of Hazaras, a much-persecuted minority.
Afghan mujahedeen move toward the front line during the battle for Jalalabad, Afghanistan, March 1989 © Robert Nickelsberg
McWilliams took pictures of the devastation, headed back to the embassy, and sent a report to Washington. It was very badly received — not because someone had launched a terrorist attack against Afghan civilians, but because McWilliams had reported it. The bomb, it turned out, had been the work of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the mujahedeen commander who received more CIA money and support than any other leader of the Afghan rebellion. The attack, the first of many, was part of a CIA-blessed scheme to “put pressure” on the Soviet presence in Kabul. Informing the Washington bureaucracy that Hekmatyar’s explosives were being deployed to kill civilians was therefore entirely unwelcome.

“Those were Gulbuddin’s bombs,” McWilliams, a Rhode Islander with a gift for laconic understatement, told me recently. “He was supposed to get the credit for this.” In the meantime, the former diplomat recalled, the CIA pressured him to “report a little less specifically about the humanitarian consequences of those vehicle bombs.”

I tracked down McWilliams, now retired to the remote mountains of southern New Mexico, because the extremist Islamist groups currently operating in Syria and Iraq called to mind the extremist Islamist groups whom we lavishly supported in Afghanistan during the 1980s. Hekmatyar, with his documented fondness for throwing acid in women’s faces, would have had nothing to learn from Al Qaeda. When a courageous ABC News team led by my wife, Leslie Cockburn, interviewed him in 1993, he had beheaded half a dozen people earlier that day. Later, he killed their translator.
In the wake of 9/11, the story of U.S. support for militant Islamists against the Soviets became something of a touchy subject. Former CIA and intelligence officials like to suggest that the agency simply played the roles of financier and quartermaster. In this version of events, the dirty work — the actual management of the campaign and the dealings with rebel groups — was left to Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). It was Pakistan’s fault that at least 70 percent of total U.S. aid went to the fundamentalists, even if the CIA demanded audited accounts on a regular basis.

The beneficiaries, however, have not always been content to play along with the official story. Asked by the ABC News team whether he remembered Charlie Wilson, the Texas congressman later immortalized in print and onscreen as the patron saint of the mujahedeen, Hekmatyar fondly recalled that “he was a good friend. He was all the time supporting our jihad.” Others expressed the same point in a different way. Abdul Haq, a mujahedeen commander who might today be described as a “moderate rebel,” complained loudly during and after the Soviet war in Afghanistan about American policy. The CIA “would come with a big load of ammunition and money and supplies to these [fundamentalist] groups. We would tell them, ‘What the hell is going on? You are creating a monster in this country.’ ”

Fighters with Jabhat al-Nusra search residents at a checkpoint in Aleppo, Syria, October 2013 © Molhem Barakat/Reuters
American veterans of the operation, at the time the largest in CIA history, have mostly stuck to the mantra that it was a Pakistani show. Only occasionally have officials let slip that the support for fundamentalists was a matter of cold-blooded calculation. Robert Oakley, a leading player in the Afghan effort as ambassador to Pakistan from 1988 to 1991, later remarked, “If you mix Islam with politics, you have a much more potent explosive brew, and that was quite successful in getting the Soviets out of Afghanistan.”

In fact, the CIA had been backing Afghan Islamists well before the Russians invaded the country in December 1979. Zbigniew Brzezinski, Jimmy Carter’s national-security adviser, later boasted to Le Nouvel Observateur that the president had “signed the first directive for secret aid to the opponents of the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul” six months prior to the invasion. “And that very day,” Brzezinski recalled, “I wrote a note to the president in which I explained to him that in my opinion this aid was going to induce a Soviet military intervention.” The war that inevitably followed killed a million Afghans.

Other presumptions proved to be less accurate, including a misplaced faith in the martial prowess of our fundamentalist clients. As it turned out, the Islamists were really not the ferocious anti-Soviet warriors their backers claimed them to be. McWilliams, who left Kabul in 1988 to become special envoy to the Afghan rebels, recalled that Hekmatyar was more interested in using his U.S.-supplied arsenal on rival warlords. (On occasion, he tortured them as well — another fact the envoy was “discouraged” from reporting.) “Hekmatyar was a great fighter,” McWilliams remembered, “but not necessarily with the Soviets.”

Even after the Russians left, in February 1989, the agency’s favorite Afghan showed himself incapable of toppling the Soviet-supported regime of Mohammad Najibullah. Hekmatyar’s attack on the key city of Jalalabad, for example, was an embarrassing failure. “Oakley bragged in the weeks leading up to this offensive [that] it was going to be a great success,” said McWilliams, who had passed on warnings from Abdul Haq and others that the plan was foolhardy, only to be told, “We got this locked up.” To his disgust, the Pakistani and American intelligence officials overseeing the operation swelled its ranks with youthful cannon fodder. “What they wound up doing was emptying the refugee camps,” McWilliams told me. “It was a last-ditch effort to throw these sixteen-year-old boys into the fight in order to keep this thing going. It did not work.” Thousands died.
Anxious as they might have been to obscure the true nature of their relationship with unappealing Afghans like Hekmatyar, U.S. officials were even more careful when it came to the Arab fundamentalists who flocked to the war in Afghanistan and later embarked on global jihad as Al Qaeda. No one could deny that they had been there, but their possible connection to the CIA became an increasingly delicate subject as Al Qaeda made its presence felt in the 1990s. The official line — that the United States had kept its distance from the Arab mujahedeen — was best expressed by Robert Gates, who became director of the CIA in 1991. When the agency first learned of the jihadi recruits pouring into Afghanistan from across the Arab world, he later wrote, “We examined ways to increase their participation, perhaps in the form of some sort of ‘international brigade,’ but nothing came of it.”

The reality was otherwise. The United States was intimately involved in the enlistment of these volunteers — indeed, many of them were signed up through a network of recruiting offices in this country. The guiding light in this effort was a charismatic Palestinian cleric, Abdullah Azzam, who founded Maktab al-Khidamat (MAK), also known as the Afghan Services Bureau, in 1984, to raise money and recruits for jihad. He was assisted by a wealthy young Saudi, Osama bin Laden. The headquarters for the U.S. arm of the operation was in Brooklyn, at the Al-Kifah Refugee Center on Atlantic Avenue, which Azzam invariably visited when touring mosques and universities across the country.

“You have to put it in context,” argued Ali Soufan, a former FBI agent and counterterrorism expert who has done much to expose the CIA’s post-9/11 torture program. “Throughout most of the 1980s, the jihad in Afghanistan was something supported by this country. The recruitment among Muslims here in America was in the open. Azzam officially visited the United States, and he went from mosque to mosque — they recruited many people to fight in Afghanistan under that banner.”
The view through the scope of a weapon that belongs to a member of Ahrar al-Sham, Idlib, Syria, March 2015 © Khalil Ashawi/Reuters
American involvement with Azzam’s organization went well beyond laissez-faire indulgence. “We encouraged the recruitment of not only Saudis but Palestinians and Lebanese and a great variety of combatants, who would basically go to Afghanistan to perform jihad,” McWilliams insisted. “This was part of the CIA plan. This was part of the game.”

The Saudis, of course, had been an integral part of the anti-Soviet campaign from the beginning. According to one former CIA official closely involved in the Afghanistan operation, Saudi Arabia supplied 40 percent of the budget for the rebels. The official said that William Casey, who ran the CIA under Ronald Reagan, “would fly to Riyadh every year for what he called his ‘annual hajj’ to ask for the money. Eventually, after a lot of talk, the king would say okay, but then we would have to sit and listen politely to all their incredibly stupid ideas about how to fight the war.”

Despite such comments, it would seem that the U.S. and Saudi strategies did not differ all that much, especially when it came to routing money to the most extreme fundamentalist factions. Fighting the Soviets was only part of the ultimate goal. The Egyptian preacher Abu Hamza, now serving a life sentence on terrorism charges, visited Saudi Arabia in 1986, and later recalled the constant public injunctions to join the jihad: “You have to go, you have to join, leave your schools, leave your family.” The whole Afghanistan enterprise, he explained, “was meant to actually divert people from the problems in their own country.” It was “like a pressure-cooker vent. If you keep [the cooker] all sealed up, it will blow up in your face, so you have to design a vent, and this Afghan jihad was the vent.”

Soufan agreed with this analysis. “I think it’s not fair to only blame the CIA,” he told me. “Egypt was happy to get rid of a lot of these guys and have them go to Afghanistan. Saudi Arabia was very happy to do that, too.” As he pointed out, Islamic fundamentalists were already striking these regimes at home: in November 1979, for example, Wahhabi extremists had stormed the Grand Mosque in Mecca. The subsequent siege left hundreds dead.

Within a few short years, however, the sponsoring governments began to recognize a flaw in the scheme: the vent was two-way. I heard this point most vividly expressed in 1994, at a dinner party on a yacht cruising down the Nile. The wealthy host had deemed it safer to be waterborne owing to a vigorous terror campaign by Egyptian jihadists. At the party, this defensive tactic elicited a vehement comment from Osama El-Baz, a senior security adviser to Hosni Mubarak. “It’s all the fault of those stupid bastards at the CIA,” he said, as the lights of Cairo drifted by. “They trained these people, kept them in being after the Russians left, and now we get this.”

According to El-Baz, MAK had been maintained after the Afghan conflict for future deployment against Iran. Its funding, he insisted, came from the Saudis and the CIA. A portion of that money had been parked at the Al-Kifah office in Brooklyn, under the supervision of one of Azzam’s acolytes — until the custodian was himself murdered, possibly by adherents of a rival jihadi. (Soufan confirmed the murder story, stating that the sum in question was about $100,000.)*

*Azzam was assassinated in 1989 in Peshawar, Pakistan, by a sophisticated car bomb. Though there was a wide range of credible suspects, his widow was convinced that the CIA had commissioned the killing.

A year before my conversation with El-Baz, in fact, the United States had already been confronted with the two-way vent. In 1993, a bomb in the basement of one of the World Trade Center towers killed six people. (The bombers had hoped to bring down both structures and kill many thousands.) A leading member of the plot was Mahmud Abouhalima, an Afghanistan veteran who had worked for years at the recruiting center in Brooklyn. Another of Azzam’s disciples, however, proved to be a much bigger problem: Osama bin Laden, who now commanded the loyalty of the Arab mujahedeen recruited by his mentor.

In 1996, the CIA set up a special unit to track down bin Laden, led by the counterterrorism expert Michael Scheuer. Now settled in Afghanistan, the Al Qaeda chief had at least theoretically fallen out with the Saudi regime that once supported him and other anti-Soviet jihadis. Nevertheless, bin Laden seemed to have maintained links with his homeland — and some in the CIA were sensitive to that fact. When I interviewed Scheuer in 2014 for my book Kill Chain, he told me that one of his first requests to the Saudis was for routine information about his quarry: birth certificate, financial records, and so forth. There was no response. Repeated requests produced nothing. Ultimately, a message arrived from the CIA station chief in Riyadh, John Brennan, who ordered the requests to stop — they were “upsetting the Saudis.”

Five years later, Al Qaeda, employing a largely Saudi suicide squad, destroyed the World Trade Center. In a sane world, this disaster might have permanently ended Washington’s long-standing taste for mixing Islam with politics. But old habits die hard.

In the spring and summer of last year, a coalition of Syrian rebel groups calling itself Jaish al-Fatah — the Army of Conquest — swept through the northwestern province of Idlib, posing a serious threat to the Assad regime. Leading the charge was Al Qaeda’s Syrian branch, known locally as Jabhat al-Nusra (the Nusra Front). The other major component of the coalition was Ahrar al-Sham, a group that had formed early in the anti-Assad uprising and looked for inspiration to none other than Abdullah Azzam. Following the victory, Nusra massacred twenty members of the Druze faith, considered heretical by fundamentalists, and forced the remaining Druze to convert to Sunni Islam. (The Christian population of the area had wisely fled.) Ahrar al-Sham meanwhile posted videos of the public floggings it administered to those caught skipping Friday prayers.

This potent alliance of jihadi militias had been formed under the auspices of the rebellion’s major backers: Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Qatar. But it also enjoyed the endorsement of two other major players. At the beginning of the year, Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri had ordered his followers to cooperate with other groups. In March, according to several sources, a U.S.-Turkish-Saudi “coordination room” in southern Turkey had also ordered the rebel groups it was supplying to cooperate with Jaish al-Fatah. The groups, in other words, would be embedded within the Al Qaeda coalition.

A few months before the Idlib offensive, a member of one CIA-backed group had explained the true nature of its relationship to the Al Qaeda franchise. Nusra, he told the New York Times, allowed militias vetted by the United States to appear independent, so that they would continue to receive American supplies. When I asked a former White House official involved in Syria policy if this was not a de facto alliance, he put it this way: “I would not say that Al Qaeda is our ally, but a turnover of weapons is probably unavoidable. I’m fatalistic about that. It’s going to happen.”

Earlier in the Syrian war, U.S. officials had at least maintained the pretense that weapons were being funneled only to so-called moderate opposition groups. But in 2014, in a speech at Harvard, Vice President Joe Biden confirmed that we were arming extremists once again, although he was careful to pin the blame on America’s allies in the region, whom he denounced as “our largest problem in Syria.” In response to a student’s question, he volunteered that our allies were so determined to take down Assad and essentially have a proxy Sunni-Shia war, what did they do? They poured hundreds of millions of dollars and tens, thousandsof tons of weapons into anyone who would fight against Assad. Except that the people who were being supplied were al-Nusra and Al Qaeda and the extremist elements of jihadis coming from other parts of the world.

Biden’s explanation was entirely reminiscent of official excuses for the arming of fundamentalists in Afghanistan during the 1980s, which maintained that the Pakistanis had total control of the distribution of U.S.-supplied weapons and that the CIA was incapable of intervening when most of those weapons ended up with the likes of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. Asked why the United States of America was supposedly powerless to stop nations like Qatar, population 2.19 million, from pouring arms into the arsenals of Nusra and similar groups, a former adviser to one of the Gulf States replied softly: “They didn’t want to.”

The Syrian war, which has to date killed upwards of 200,000 people, grew out of peaceful protests in March 2011, a time when similar movements were sweeping other Arab countries. For the Obama Administration, the tumultuous upsurge was welcome. It appeared to represent the final defeat of Al Qaeda and radical jihadism, a view duly reflected in a New York Times headline from that February: as regimes fall in arab world, al qaeda sees history fly by. The president viewed the killing of Osama bin Laden in May 2011 as his crowning victory. Peter Bergen, CNN’s terrorism pundit, concurred, certifying the Arab Spring and the death of bin Laden as the “final bookends” of the global war on terror.

Al Qaeda, on the other hand, had a different interpretation of the Arab Spring, hailing it as entirely positive for the jihadist cause. Far from obsessing about his own safety, as Obama had suggested, Zawahiri was brimful of optimism. The “tyrants” supported by the United States, he crowed from his unknown headquarters, were seeing their thrones crumble at the same time as “their master” was being defeated. “The Islamic project,” declared Hamid bin Abdullah al-Ali, a Kuwait-based Al Qaeda fund-raiser, would be “the greatest beneficiary from the environment of freedom.”

While the revolutions were ongoing, the Obama Administration settled on “moderate Islam” as the most suitable political option for the emerging Arab democracies — and concluded that the Muslim Brotherhood fitted the bill. This venerable Islamist organization had originally been fostered by the British as a means of countering leftist and nationalist movements in the empire. As British power waned, others, including the CIA and the Saudis, were happy to sponsor the group for the same purpose, unmindful of its long-term agenda. (The Saudis, however, always took care to prevent it from operating within their kingdom.)

The Brotherhood was in fact the ideological ancestor of the most violent Islamist movements of the modern era. Sayyid Qutb, the organization’s moving spirit until he was hanged in Egypt in 1966, served as an inspiration to the young Zawahiri as he embarked on his career in terrorism. Extremists have followed Qutb’s lead in calling for a resurrected caliphate across the Muslim world, along with a return to the premodern customs prescribed by the Prophet.

None of which stopped the Obama Administration from viewing the Brotherhood as a relatively benign purveyor of moderate Islam, not so different from the type on display in Turkey, where the Brotherhood-linked AKP party had presided over what seemed to be a flourishing democracy and a buoyant economy, even if the country’s secular tradition was being rolled back. As Mubarak’s autocracy crumbled in Egypt, American officials actively promoted the local Brotherhood; the U.S. ambassador, Anne Patterson, reportedly held regular meetings with the group’s leadership. “The administration was motivated to show that the U.S. would deal with Islamists,” the former White House official told me, “even though the downside of the Brotherhood was pretty well understood.”

At the same time that it was being cautiously courted by the United States, the Brotherhood enjoyed a firm bond with the stupendously rich ruling clique in Qatar. The tiny country was ever eager to assert its independence in a neighborhood dominated by Saudi Arabia and Iran. While hosting the American military at the vast Al Udeid Air Base outside Doha, the Qataris put decisive financial weight behind what they viewed as the coming force in Arab politics. They were certain, the former White House official told me, “that the future really lay in the hands of the Islamists,” and saw themselves “on the right side of history.”

The Syrian opposition seemed like an ideal candidate for such assistance, especially since Assad had been in the U.S. crosshairs for some time. (The country’s first and only democratically elected government was overthrown by a CIA-instigated coup in 1949 at the behest of American oil interests irked at Syria’s request for better terms on a pipeline deal.) In December 2006, William Roebuck, the political counselor at the American Embassy in Damascus, sent a classified cable to Washington, later released by WikiLeaks, proposing “actions, statements, and signals” that could help destabilize Assad’s regime. Among other recommended initiatives was a campaign, coordinated with the Egyptian and Saudi governments, to pump up existing alarm among Syrian Sunnis about Iranian influence in the country.

Roebuck could count on a receptive audience. A month earlier, Condoleezza Rice, the secretary of state, testified on Capitol Hill that there was a “new strategic alignment” in the Middle East, separating “extremists” (Iran and Syria) and “reformers” (Saudi Arabia and other Sunni states). Undergirding these diplomatic euphemisms was something more fundamental. Prince Bandar bin Sultan, who returned to Riyadh in 2005 after many years as Saudi ambassador in Washington, had put it bluntly in an earlier conversation with Richard Dearlove, the longtime head of Britain’s MI6. “The time is not far off in the Middle East,” Bandar said, “when it will be literally God help the Shia. More than a billion Sunnis have simply had enough.” The implications were clear. Bandar was talking about destroying the Shiite states of Iran and Iraq, as well as the Alawite (which is to say, Shia-derived) leadership in Syria.

Yet the Saudi rulers were acutely aware of their exposure to reverse-vent syndrome. Their corruption and other irreligious practices repelled the jihadis, who had more than once declared their eagerness to clean house back home. Such fears were obvious to Dearlove when he visited Riyadh with Tony Blair soon after 9/11. As he later recalled, the head of Saudi intelligence shouted at him that the recent attacks in Manhattan and Washington were a “mere pinprick” compared with the havoc the extremists planned to unleash in their own region: “What these terrorists want is to destroy the House of Saud and to remake the Middle East!”

From these statements, Dearlove discerned two powerful (and complementary) impulses in the thinking of the Saudi leadership. First, there could be “no legitimate or admissible challenge to the Islamic purity of their Wahhabi credentials as guardians of Islam’s holiest shrines.” (Their record on head-chopping and the oppression of women was, after all, second to none.) In addition, they were “deeply attracted toward any militancy which can effectively challenge Shia-dom.” Responding to both impulses, Saudi Arabia would reopen the vent. This time, however, the jihad would no longer be against godless Communists but against fellow Muslims, in Syria.

By the beginning of 2012, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, and the United States were all heavily involved in supporting the armed rebellion against Assad. In theory, American support for the Free Syrian Army was limited to “nonlethal supplies” from both the State Department and the CIA. Qatar, which had successfully packed the opposition Syrian National Council with members of the Muslim Brotherhood, operated under no such restrictions. A stream of loaded Qatari transport planes took off from Al Udeid and headed to Turkey, whence their lethal cargo was moved into Syria.
“The Qataris were not at all discriminating in who they gave arms to,” the former White House official told me. “They were just dumping stuff to lucky recipients.” Chief among the lucky ones were Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham, both of which had benefited from a rebranding strategy instituted by Osama bin Laden. The year before he was killed, bin Laden had complained about the damage that offshoots such as Al Qaeda in Iraq, with its taste for beheadings and similar atrocities, had done to his organization’s image. He directed his media staff to prepare a new strategy that would avoid “everything that would have a negative impact on the perception” of Al Qaeda. Among the rebranding proposals discussed at his Abbottabad compound was the simple expedient of changing the organization’s name. This strategy was gradually implemented for the group’s newer offshoots, allowing Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham to present themselves to the credulous as kinder, gentler Islamists.
The rebranding program was paradoxically assisted by the rise of the Islamic State, a group that had split off from the Al Qaeda organization partly in disagreement over the image-softening exercise enjoined by Zawahiri. Although the Islamic State attracted many defectors and gained territory at the expense of its former Nusra partners, its assiduously cultivated reputation for extreme cruelty made the other groups look humane by comparison. (According to Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a senior fellow with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, many Nusra members suspect that the Islamic State was created by the Americans “to discredit jihad.”)

Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, driven principally by its virulent enmity toward Iran, Assad’s main supporter, was eager to throw its weight behind the anti-Assad crusade. By December 2012, the CIA was arranging for large quantities of weapons, paid for by the Saudis, to move from Croatia to Jordan to Syria.

“The Saudis preferred to work through us,” explained the former White House official. “They didn’t have an autonomous capability to find weapons. We were the intermediaries, with some control over the distribution. There was an implicit illusion on the part of the U.S. that Saudi weapons were going to groups with some potential for a pro-Western attitude.” This was a curious illusion to entertain, given Saudi Arabia’s grim culture of Wahhabi austerity as well as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s flat declaration, in a classified cable from 2009, that “donors in Saudi Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide.”

Some in intelligence circles suspect that such funding is ongoing. “How much Saudi and Qatari money — and I’m not suggesting direct government funding, but I am suggesting maybe a blind eye being turned — is being channeled towards ISIS and reaching it?” Dearlove asked in July 2014. “For ISIS to be able to surge into the Sunni areas of Iraq in the way that it’s done recently has to be the consequence of substantial and sustained funding. Such things simply do not happen spontaneously.”  Those on the receiving end of Islamic State attacks tend to agree. Asked what could be done to help Iraq following the group’s lightning assaults in the summer of 2014, an Iraqi diplomat replied: “Bomb Saudi Arabia.”
Asked what could be done to help Iraq following the group’s lightning assaults in the summer of 2014, an Iraqi diplomat replied: “Bomb Saudi Arabia.”
However the money was flowing, the Saudis certainly ended up crafting their own Islamist coalition. “The Saudis never armed al-Nusra,” recalled the Gulf State adviser. “They made the calculation that there’s going to be an appetite for Islamist-leaning militias. So they formed a rival umbrella army called Jaish al-Islam. That was the Saudi alternative — still Islamist, but not Muslim Brotherhood.”

Given that Jaish al-Islam ultimately answered to Prince Bandar, who became the head of Saudi intelligence in 2012, there did not appear to be a lot of room for Western values in the group’s agenda. Its leader, Zahran Alloush, was the son of a Syrian religious scholar. He talked dutifully about the merits of tolerance to Western reporters, but would revert to such politically incorrect themes as the mass expulsion of Alawites from Damascus when addressing his fellow jihadis. At the same time, Saudi youths have poured into Syria, ready to fight for any extremist group that would have them, even when those groups started fighting among themselves. Noting the huge numbers of young Saudis on the battle lines in Syria, a Saudi talk-show host lamented that “our children are fighting on both sides” — meaning Nusra and the Islamic State. “The Saudis,” he exclaimed, “are killing one another!”

The determination of Turkey (a NATO ally) and Qatar (the host of the biggest American base in the Middle East) to support extreme jihadi groups became starkly evident in late 2013. On December 6, armed fighters from Ahrar al-Sham and other militias raided warehouses at Bab al-Hawa, on the Turkish border, and seized supplies belonging to the Free Syrian Army. As it happened, a meeting of an international coordination group on Syria, the so-called London Eleven, was scheduled for the following week. Delegates from the United States, Europe, and the Middle East were bent on issuing a stern condemnation of the offending jihadi group.

The Turks and Qataris, however, adamantly refused to sign on. As one of the participants told me later, “All the countries in the room [understood] that Turkey’s opposition to listing Ahrar al-Sham was because they were providing support to them.” The Qatari representative insisted that it was counterproductive to condemn such groups as terrorist. If the other countries did so, he made clear, Qatar would stop cooperating on Syria. “Basically, they were saying that if you name terrorists, we’re going to pick up our ball and go home,” the source told me. The U.S. delegate said that the Islamic Front, an umbrella organization, would be welcome at the negotiating table — but Ahrar al-Sham, which happened to be its leading member, would not. The diplomats mulled over their communiqué, traded concessions, adjusted language. The final version contained no condemnation, or even mention, of Ahrar al-Sham.

Two years later, Washington’s capacity for denial in the face of inconvenient facts remains undiminished. Addressing the dominance of extremists in the Syrian opposition, Leon Panetta, a former CIA director, has blamed our earlier failure to arm those elusive moderates. The catastrophic consequences of this very approach in Libya are seldom mentioned. “If we had intervened more swiftly in Syria,” Gartenstein-Ross says, “the best-case scenario probably would have been another Libya. Meaning that we would still be dealing with a collapsed state and spillover into other Middle Eastern states and Europe.”

Even as we have continued our desultory bombing campaign against the Islamic State, Ahrar al-Sham and Nusra are creeping closer and closer to international respectability. A month after the London Eleven meeting, a group of scholars from the Brookings Institution published an op-ed making the case for Ahrar al-Sham: “Designating [the] group as a terrorist organization might backfire by pushing it completely into Al Qaeda’s camp.” (The think tank’s recent receipt of a multiyear, $15 million grant from Qatar was doubtless coincidental.)

Over the past year, other distinguished figures have voiced support for a closer relationship with Al Qaeda’s rebranded extensions. David Petraeus, another former head of the CIA, has argued for arming at least the “more moderate” parts of Nusra. Robert Ford, a former ambassador to Syria and a vociferous supporter of the rebel cause, called on America to “open channels for dialogue” with Ahrar al-Sham, even if its members had on occasion slaughtered some Alawites and desecrated Christian sites. Even Foreign Affairs, an Establishment sounding board, has echoed these notions, suggesting that it was time for the United States to “rethink its policy toward al-Qaeda, particularly its targeting of Zawahiri.”

“Let’s be fair to the CIA,” said Benazir Bhutto, the once and future prime minister of Pakistan, back in 1993, when the consequences of fostering jihad were already becoming painfully clear to its sponsors. “They never knew that these people that they were training to fight Soviets in Afghanistan were one day going to bite the hand that fed them.”

Things are clearer on the ground. Not long ago, far away from the think tanks and briefing rooms where policies are formulated and spun, a small boy in the heart of Nusra territory was telling a filmmaker for Vice News about Osama bin Laden. “He terrified and fought the Americans,” he said reverently. Beside him, his brother, an even smaller child, described his future: “To become a suicide fighter for the sake of God.” A busload of older boys was asked which group they belonged to. “Al Qaeda, Al Qaeda,” they responded cheerfully.


Andrew Cockburn is the Washington editor of Harper’s Magazine and the author, most recently, of Kill Chain: The Rise of the High-Tech Assassins.

Abbas Takes Exception to Satirical Depiction of the PA’s Relationship to Israel

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It would seem that the Prison Authority of the West Bank, presided over by the Quisling Abbas, has taken exception to the cartoons of the ‘virulently anti-Israel’ (according to The Times of Israel) Baha Yassin.

Clearly his cartoons depicting the relationship of the PA with Israel, in sexual terms, were too close for comfort.
In this cartoon, Al-Ali comments on sectarianism. The image shows a man asking another man: “Are you Muslim or Christian? Sunni or Shiite? Druze or Alawite?
There was another cartoonist, the great Naji al Ali who drew a cartoon that was unflattering towards a female friend of Yasir Arafat.  A few weeks later, 22ndJuly 1987, Naji al Ali was assassinated on the streets of London.

See Najial-Ali: The timeless conscience of Palestine

Tony Greenstein

PA seeks arrest of Gaza cartoonist over drawing of ‘sex’ with Jews

Abbas sucking on Zionism's teat




Virulantly anti-Israel caricaturist Baha Yassin accused of insulting Palestinian women after depicting intercourse between Fatah leaders and Israel
By Lee Gancman December 14, 2015, 12:50 am 8

Cartoon by Bahaa Yassin accuses the West Bank and its security agencies of collaborating with Israel (Bahaa Yassin/courtesy/Palestinian Media Watch)

The Palestinian public prosecutor in the West Bank recently issued an arrest warrant for Gaza-based cartoonist Baha Yassin, in response to complaints that he insulted the Palestinian flag and women in one of his recent pieces.
Although the arrest warrant was issued on December 1, reports of the move only emerged Sunday when a copy of the document was given by one of the plaintiffs to Palestinian media.
Naji al Ali depiction of Menachem Begin with Pyramids for muscles
Known for his political, often violent caricatures, Yassin sparked public outcry last June when he posted a picture on his Facebook page depicting the West Bank as a woman dressed in yellow — a color associated with Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah party — engaged in sexual intercourse with a stereotypical ultra-Orthodox Jewish man, symbolizing Israel.
The image, which accused the Fatah party of collaborating with the Jewish state, was considered insulting by many Palestinians across the political spectrum, who objected to its overt sexual imagery.

Yassin’s caricatures commonly portray intense violence and openly advocate for the killing of Israelis. He is known for praising terrorist attacks in his drawings, such one he posted in November 2014 following a terror attack on worshipers at a Jerusalem synagogue that left five men dead.
In the wake of the negative reaction, Yassin took down the caricature and replaced it with one of a West Bank woman standing proud with a bloodied knife after having stabbed a Jew and rebuking another lady representing Fatah saying “I will avenge my children and avenge you, O [Palestinian] Authority of shame!”
Bahaa Yassin’s modified cartoon (Bahaa Yassin Facebook page)
At the time, Hamas’s interior ministry spokesman, Iyad el-Bozom, panned the first cartoon on Facebook and said Gaza rulers intended to take legal action against the artist for “offending our people, their resistance and their struggle.”
Naji al Ali with his famous trade mark character '‘Hanthalah'
In the end Hamas seems to have not followed through with its threats, but that did not stop a group of three particularly incensed West Bank residents taking on the case.

One of the plaintiffs, Hassan Salim, told Al-Watan news on Sunday that they filed the initial complaint against Yassin because his drawings “insulted Palestinian women” and “show contempt for the Palestinian flag.”
The latter refers to an image posted by Yassin on his Facebook page of a donkey combined with the Palestinian flag. “The Palestinian flag is a symbol for freedom for every Palestinian and free man in the world. These drawings belittle the Palestinian flag and damage its symbolism and sacredness,” Salim said.
An image created by Palestinian cartoonist Bahaa Yassin showing a donkey combined with the Palestinian flag (Facebook)


According to Salim, the district court in Ramallah held a session last Thursday where they demanded Yassin’s referral to the Palestinian Public Prosecutor’s office for trial. According to Salim, Yassin is to be arrested if he enters any area under Palestinian Authority sovereignty and if he does not do so he is to be tried in absentia.

The woman represents the first intifada
Luckily for Yassin, the arrest warrant issued bears little weight as the Ramallah court does not have jurisdiction in the Hamas controlled Gaza strip where he resides.

Poland's New anti-Semitic Government - Israel Keeps Silent

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Although Poland’s Michal Kaminski has now deserted Law & Justice for the right-wing Civic Platform party, the differences between the two parties are marginal.  Both oppose abortion and the right of women to control their own bodies, both are homophobic and anti-gay rights, both oppose same sex marriages, euthenasia and the decriminalisation of soft drugs.  Both are free-market parties that support privatisation and liberal economics and of course both are virulently nationalist.

Kaminski led the campaign against a national Polish apology for the burning alive of up to 900 Jews in Jedwabne by Poles in 1941 (see )  Kaminski was formerly a member of the fascist National Revival of Poland Party. 
Kaminski paying the ritual visit to Yad Vashem - an obligatory stop for racist visitors to Israel
Kaminski was also the Zionists’ favourite anti-Semite, being a guest of honour in Israel at the Global Counter-Terrorism Conference in Herzliya, Israel, September 2009.  He also paid his respects to the dead of the holocaust at the Yad Vashem propaganda museum, following in the wake of former Nazi John Vorster and others.
However, according to the far-right Zionist editor of the Jewish Chronicle Stephen Pollard, "Far from being an anti-Semite, Mr Kaminski is about as pro-Israeli an MEP as exists."  Poland's Kaminski is not an antisemite: he's a friend to Jews’.    Indeed Kaminski is ‘one of the greatest friends to the Jews in a town [Brussels] where antisemitism and a visceral loathing of Israel are rife.’ 
 In other words his Zionism shielded his anti-Semitism.  And Pollard wasn’t the only one.   Rabbi Schochet, member of the virulently racist Lubavitch sect, of Mill Hill synagogue, invited Kaminski to his synagogue explaining that“We are intending to host Michal Kaminski at an evening open to the entire community once his itinerary is confirmed. It is hoped to hold this event in liaison with Conservative Friends of Israel and I personally hope to host him in a private capacity on a Friday night.’
“I decided to extend the invitation precisely because of the ambiguity surrounding him. Mr Kaminski is known to have a colourful past but is presently a strong supporter of Israel and is leading a lobby against the anti-shechitah parties.”   JC 3.11.10.

A ‘colourful past’ is certainly one way of describing being a member of an openly anti-Semitic and fascist organisation, wearing fascist insignia and being a homophobe (among other sins). 

The following article in the liberal Jewish magazine Forward describes the anti-Semitic tendencies of Poland’s new Law & Justice Party.  It describes how in Wroclaw, a demonstration against Muslim refugees ended up burning an effigy of a Hasidic Jew, demonstrating if any proof were needed, that racism against Muslims will inevitably cross over into anti-Jewish racism.  Of course Israel has not criticised Poland’s new government.  Why should it?  They are both Islamaphobic and racist and in any case, anti-Semitism in Poland can only result in emigration to Israel, which is something that Netanyahu always welcomes.

Tony Greenstein

Poland Turns Hard to Right — and Jews Wind Up in Crosshairs


When some 50,000 people turned out in Warsaw recently to protest a plan by Poland’s ruling party to pack the nation’s constitutional court, the hard right-wing political faction responded quickly with a counter-demonstration of its own. Its counter-protest featured, among other things, a placard that mocked those claiming to defend democracy as “the committee to defend Jewish-Communist wealth.

At around the same time in Wroclaw, Poland’s fourth largest city, crowds at a parallel demonstration to support the recently elected Law and Justice party shouted, “Wroclaw is being de-Polanized as the Jews are buying up homes in the city.”

At another Wroclaw demonstration, held November 18 to protest a European Union plan that would see Poland admit some 7,000 Syrian refugees, demonstrators denounced the proposed immigrants as Islamists — and to somehow add to this point, they set fire to a previously prepared effigy of a Hasidic Jew holding the E.U. flag.

Image: Reuters:  Rage and a Non Sequitur? To protest against the immigration of Muslims and Syrian refugees, demonstrators in Wroclaw on November 18 burn an Orthodox Jew in effigy.
“God, Honor and Fatherland,” the crowd then chanted.

Since the October 25 elections that gave the strongly nationalist Law and Justice Party an absolute majority in parliament, Poland has been a nation in crisis. Like several other countries in Europe, the right-wing party’s rise back to power after eight years in opposition was fuelled in part by anti-immigrant furor, but also anger with the corruption of the government led by the incumbent Civic Platform party. A backlash from rural Poles who feel left behind by the country’s free-market reforms also played a big role. But critics charge that Law and Justice is now using its absolute majority to implement anti-democratic measures they denounce as “Putinist.”

And amid all this, somehow, Jews have become a focus of ire among the party’s defenders in the country whose huge Jewish population was decimated in the Nazi Holocaust.

“This government harbors anti-Judaic sentiment which can easily become anti-Semitism,” said the Rev. John Pawlikowski, professor of social ethics and director of the Catholic-Jewish studies program at the Catholic Theological Union, in Chicago.

Among other things, Law and Justice, known also by its Polish acronym, PiS, has failed to denounce the effigy burning in Wroclaw. The party also has appointed a defense minister who’s made anti-Semitic comments and has, via its culture minister, Piotr Glinski, threatened to sue those it believes guilty of “defamation against Poland.”

Image: Getty Images:  See You in Court: Piotr Glinski (center), Poland’s minister of culture, has threatened to sue those he believes guilty of defaming his country.
“It reminds me of the Communist takeover in the 1940s,” said Andrzej Zoll, a former ombudsman for the constitutional court.

David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee, will soon visit Warsaw to discuss the current situation with members of the new government. In a telephone interview December 1, Harris told the Forward that any move away from the full throttle of democracy that Poland has experienced since 1989 would be a very disturbing development.

Harris cited AJC’s partnership with the Forum for Dialogue, the largest Polish nongovernmental organization dealing with Polish-Jewish relations, which has sponsored wide-ranging Polish-Jewish dialogue since 1996.

“If the forum continues to flourish, it will be a good and welcome sign,” Harris said. “If this is not the case, everyone should be concerned, and it will be a good litmus test.”

AJC has been involved in Poland for 26 years. “We will continue to remain involved with democratic forces there,” Harris said.

Many see the new government’s drumbeat for Polish patriotism as cause for concern.

Barbara Engelking, director of the Polish Center for Holocaust Research at Warsaw University, said she saw the form of national identity that PiS promotes as an immature and simplistic model that constitutes a setback in Polish thinking about the past.

Citing historical research in recent years that deals with Polish crimes against Jews, such as the 1941 massacre at Jedwabne and the murder of Jews elsewhere during the German occupation, Engelking said she had hoped this research would give the national discussion a deeper dimension that would force serious reflection and help build a mature, complex national identity with an awareness not just of Polish victimhood, but also of the crimes that Poles have committed against Jews.

Jan Zaryn, a PiS senator, disagrees. During a phone interview, he denied that nationalists were rewriting history. “We do not have to lie about our history, because it’s beautiful,” he said, citing the valor of the Polish underground during the German occupation and the loss of 3 million non-Jewish Polish lives under the Nazis, the same as the number of Polish Jews. Zaryn also denied that there is deeply rooted anti-Semitism in Poland.

Polish prosecutors are considering a libel suit against Jan Gross, a Polish-born Princeton University professor who recently wrote an opinion piece that appeared in the German newspaper Die Welt, in which he claimed Poles killed more Jews than they killed Germans during the German occupation. Gross is the author of several books about Polish atrocities during World War II, including “Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne,” about the 1941 Polish massacre of Jews.

The Polish American Congress, representing 9.5 million Polish Americans, doubts that its countrymen murdered between 350 and 1,000 Jews, as generally estimated by historians, in Jedwabne then. Frank Milewski, who is in charge of documenting Holocaust information for the organization, said German bullet casings were found in the barn where the Jews were burned to death. He said no conclusions could be reached unless the bodies were exhumed. Frank Spula, president of PAC, declined comment.

In America, the Anti-Defamation League has expressed concerns about the government not taking the opportunity to distance itself from expressions of anti-Semitism and anti-Semitic acts. Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski responded to a call by the ADL on the government to condemn the burning in effigy of a Hasidic Jew at the November 18 Wroclaw protest by invoking “the Jewish lobby” and calling for Poland to create its own lobby and narratives.

At a November 17 conference in the Presidential Palace, called by President Andrzej Duda, representatives from Polish museums and other cultural institutions were told to galvanize Polish nationalism and to discard narratives that brought Poland shame. Glinski told the gathering that building a national identity was an important component in the PiS philosophy of government.
Notably, there was no E.U. flag in the conference room. According to Marcin Zyla, an editor at the Krakow-based liberal Catholic weekly Tygodnik Powszechny, the absence of the E.U. flag was a symbolic rebuke to the secular Western European community, which PiS sees as an existential threat to Catholic Poland.

The push to create a bright image abroad is not new, but this government is promoting PiS policy much more brazenly and aggressively,” said Jan Grabowski, a Polish-born professor of history at the University of Ottawa, in Canada.

Polish xenophobia was very much evident during the November 18 demonstration in Wroclaw, when demonstrators demonized Muslim refugees, warning that the refugees were not welcome in Poland.

“Raped, beaten and murdered by the Islamic savages,” the crowd shouted. “Do you want it on our streets?” But what was the connection there between that and the burning in effigy of the Hasidic-looking Jew holding an E.U. flag, an action that Poland’s B’nai B’rith was quick to denounce?
The Jew has always been portrayed in Polish folk culture as an eternal threat and a stranger,” said Piotr Pazinski, editor in chief of Midrasz, a Jewish cultural magazine in Warsaw. “Holding an E.U. flag fortifies their racist belief that Jews are orchestrating an E.U. plot to destroy white Catholic Poland.”
Image: Getty Images:  Powerful Pair: Poland’s new defense minister, Antoni Macierwicz (left) has suggested that the anti-Semitic Protocols of the Elders of Zion may be valid. Prime Minister Beata Szydio (right) has rebuffed demands to revoke his appointment.
So far there has been no official government denunciation of the Wroclaw incident.

“The silence of the government is deafening,” said Michael Schudrich, chief rabbi of Poland, although he believes the Wroclaw demonstration consisted of a small group of marginal people.
But some Jews outside Poland with years of philanthropic investment in the country are reluctant to stigmatize the new government. Sigmund Rolat, a Holocaust survivor and funder of Warsaw’s new Museum of the History of Polish Jews, which also receives government support, urged caution.

Remember, everything is relative,” he said. “We know about the threat to Jews in Western Europe. By comparison, Poland is a safe haven for Jews. The mayor of Wroclaw has ordered an investigation of the incident, and they know who set the fire.”

Rolat has played a major role in the success of the annual Jewish Culture Festival in Krakow and is an honorary citizen of his hometown, Czestochowa, for his contributions to cultural life.

The museum’s director, Dariusz Stola, a history professor, stressed that he does not expect any pressure from the government to change the museum’s portrayal of Polish behavior during World War II. “The museum is a huge success,” Stola said.

Repeated efforts to reach philanthropist Tad Taube, whose foundation is a major supporter of Jewish life in Poland, were unsuccessful.

But the xenophobia and bigotry evident in the comments of government officials and in public behavior at pro-government rallies has left many observers pessimistic about the prospects for civil liberties and democratic values in Poland.

In an article in Foreign Affairs magazine, Mitchell Orenstein, a University of Pennsylvania history professor of Slavic studies, wrote “goodbye to gay rights, in-vitro fertilization, abortion in the case of potential harm to the mother, and other liberal policies.”

As for the future of the 10,000 members of Poland’s organized Jewish community (estimates of the total number of Jews in Poland beyond that core range up to 20,000), Konstanty Gebert, a columnist and veteran of the underground fight against communism, said: “If this democracy is curtailed, Jewish life will shrivel. We are too few to hunker down and weather the storm. Our future may well be on the line.”



The Israeli Communist Party (Maki):

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I am posting this important analysis of Israel’s Communist Party (Maki) by a veteran Israeli anti-Zionist Tikva Honig-Parnass.  The Israeli Communist Party, in the form of its electoral front Hadash, has 5 out of the 13 seats of the Jewish-Arab Joint List in the Knesset.

This is an important article because Maki is a major component within the Joint List.  It has traditionally been the largest party representing the Arab sector in the Knesset although not an Arab party.  Maki is not, contrary to many peoples' beliefs, an anti-Zionist party.  It is wedded to the two state formula, which means that it accepts the existence of a Jewish state.  It also means it accepts an imperialist settlement of the conflict in Israel/Palestine which it defines as a conflict of two nationalities rather than seeing it as the outcome of a settler colonial movement which established a state which continued to colonise and settle the land, treating the indigenous population as tolerated guests at best.  Although undoubtedly Maki has fought a brave fight against the attacks of Zionism against Israel's  Arab population and has stood alone in this for many years, especially under the Labour Zionist governments up till 1977, it has never rejected Zionism per se.

Tony Greenstein

The Israeli Communist Party (Maki):
DESIGNATING A STRATEGY FOR CHANGE WITHOUT CHALLENGING ZIONISM
By Tikva Honig-Parnass
Arab members of Maki, the “Israeli” Communist Party (a descendant of the Palestine Communist Party) in 1949. In 1965 the party split into two factions, one Zionist and the other anti-Zionist. The Zionist faction retained the name Maki, while the anti-Zionist faction named itself Rakah. The Soviet Union recognized Rakah as the official communist party in Palestine quickly after its formation. Rakah still exists today, and ironically, it has renamed itself Maki, while the original (Zionist) Maki has been disbanded.
The Israeli Communist Party, Maki, which is represented by Hadash in the Arab-Jewish Joint List in the Knesset and which has 5 out of the 13 seats that the Joint List holds, has had a chequered history.  Its leader in 1948  Meir Vilner signed the Israeli Declaration of Independence and it followed Stalin in Moscow in recognising the Zionist state.  In 1965 Maki split and the Jewish section led by Moshe Sneh moved off in a Zionist direction.  The largely Arab part  went on to form Rakah which  became with the alliance with other small groups like the Black Panthers, Hadash.

Tikva Honig-Parnass was raised in the Jewish community of pre-state Palestine, fought in the 1948 war and served as the secretary of the then Radical Left Zionist Party of Mapam (The Unified Workers Party) in the Knesset ( 1951-1954). In '60 she definitively broke with Zionism and joined the ranks of the Israeli Socialist Organization, known as "Matzpen". Since then she has played an active role in the movement against the '67 occupation as well as in the struggle for the Palestinian national rights. She co-editedBetween the Lines with Toufic Haddad
Uri Avneri at Hadash Demonstration Against the Lebanon War 1982
At the Marx Conference which took place on November 27, MK Dov Khenin, a leader of the Israeli Communist Party(Maki) gave a lecture named :"But the point is to change it" (Published in Hagada Hasmalit , November 28, where the entire sentence from the Theses on Feuerbach was posted: "The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it") The struggle against Zionism and its embodiment in the settler colonial state of Israel is fundamental to any strategy aiming at a thorough change of Israel and the entire region.
However, Dov Khenin presents his suggested road to change without uttering the word Zionism nor relating to the need to dismantle the Zionist colonial state as a necessary condition to his strategy for change.

Some would argue against my going back to the "original sin" of the old Stalinist Maki of 1948* for tracing today's Khenin and his Party's political positions. I refer to the old Maki ( The Israeli Communist Party) which was a signatory (through its leader Meir Vilner) of the infamous "Declaration of Independence". It took place on May 14 ,1948 when occupations of Palestinian towns and villages and the and brutal expulsions of their residents were already in full volume. Maki trailed the Soviet Union support for the 1947 UN Partition Plan which recognized a Jewish state and confirmed the Zionist claim for historic rights in Palestine, as emphasized in the Declaration.
Judaism & Communism
Indeed the Israeli Communist Party of (Maki) of today is not the same as the 1948 Maki from which it split during the '60 and later assumed its name. The present Maki heads the political alliance known as Hadash- actually, the heiress of Rakah- formed after split between a largely Jewish faction led by Moshe Sneh. Still, I mention the 1948 signature because the Israeli Communist Party , until this day has not made a true criticism of its conduct during all the years of Soviet rule nor has it examined its traditional position on the partition plan or its present form of 2 states solution .The different suggested border does not change the essence of this solution which in the long run does recognize a Bantustan state alongside a Jewish state. 

** Thus, even if the present positions of Maki don’t derive directly from the 48' Stalinist pro-Zionist stance, the latter still echoes in Maki's lack of explicit self criticism and its self definition as "non Zionist ".

Maki's continued support for it's main faults of the past, is reflected in Dov Khenin's article: He Ignores the colonialist nature of Israel as a central characteristic that should be the starting point and base of any analysis of Israel's political regime and its class struggle. Hence, Maki's claim of adhering to Marxism-Leninism for designing its "strategy for change", appears to be but somewhat empty words as long as its political positions are not placed within the framework of Israel as a settler colonial state.

Dov Khanin presents the fronts and blocks which workers' parties created in the October and Chinese Revolutions ( as well as Gramsci's writings) as models on which "the class project should be based" :"The common denominator of these examples"he says, "is that revolutionaries' seek to see in their societies the " actual lines of collisions and thus create a power that can advance the revolutionary change."

This is how Khenin applies these examples to in his analysis of Israeli society today and the strategy for its change:  Israel is prey to one of Late Capitalism characteristics, namely the way in which it "dismantles social structures with the aid of Globalization and its economic and ideological hegemony."Hence, "We should do today what Marx[ists?] did then- to trace the subjects for change in our society. Of course the working class is such a subject. But the Israeli working class is complex and weak. It is very large but fragmented.[..]

The challenge is to crystallize a new historic block in which "the working class is significant but not exclusive."  This Block should include all the oppressed groups in Israeli society which "more than any other society in the world suffers from a lot of deep and true wounds beyond the class dimension."

These wounds include : "THE NATIONAL wound of the Palestinians, and also of the Jews, the ETHNIC [MIZRAHI] wound which stems from the melting pot[The false declared policy aimed at creating one homogeneous people out of the variety of immigrant Jews) that erased traditions and cultures, GENDER wounds which stems from a patriarchal society, etc."

The Task of Maki is to understand the concrete political role of these wounds which are exploited as a mechanisms for preserving the system".  Khenin presents the "Mizrahi wound"as an example: "[It} has been formed against the establishment elites of the labor movement'and thus became "the base for the historic block which keeps the rule of the Right."

According to Khenin another essential problem of "this land" [in addition to its "wounds "] is the weakness of the class struggle. The labor movement (Mapai and Labor) is historically responsible for it, since "Like any other Social Democracy it evaporated the idea of class struggle."

The use of the term the "national" wound which Khenin uses for "Palestinians and also Israelis", echoes the Zionist left conception of a "national conflict"between two peoples who have right one land, rather than seeing the conflict as that between colonizers and colonized. Hence, Khenin is carefyl not to point to the source from which the "national wound"stems as he does for the other two- the Mizrahi and gender wounds. Further, The national issue is reduced to just one of the many "identity wounds"which characterize Israel as if it is just another Nation-state which the examples of the October or China revolutions rather than the anti colonial liberation movements apply to it.
Elaborating on the "national wound"would have required Khenin to explicitly express his position towards Zionism and Israel as a settlers colonial state and society which dictates the nature of its class struggle and the real strategy for its revolutionary change - dismantling the Zionist apartheid state.
Furthermore, in accord with Maki's traditional support of 2 states solution Khenin ignores the fact that Israel already rules the entire historic Palestine and would continue ruling it for many years to come. No doubt this is an additional factor which necessitates a re-thinking of the nature of the class struggle out side the box of pre '67 Israel to which Khenin limits his analysis. To be on the safe side he does not mention even the '67 occupation and focuses his proposal for political strategy on 'Israel proper' alone.***

All in all the communist Party in Israel has not passed through a significant radical change towards an anti Zionist stance which derives from a solid Marxist, anti Imperialist and class perspective. The need of such a revolutionary party is at present acute more than ever.

*   Maki was a descendant of the Palestinian Communist Party (PCP), which changed its name to MAKEI (the Communist Party of Eretz Yisrael) after endorsing partition in 1947, and then to Maki. Members of the National Liberation League, an Arab party that had split off from the PCP in 1944, rejoined Maki in October 1948, giving the party both Jewish and Israeli Arab members

**   Israel Poterman: The Soviet Union Support for the Partition Plan- vision and Reality, Hagada Hasmalit January 31 2004).


***   Ill spare the reader from a detailed report on Khenin's pathetic self appraisal experience in creating the right block in "A Town For Us"– a list which ran in the elections to Tel Aviv municipality in 2008 and 2013.( It yielded 5 and 3 out of 31 members in the Tel-Aviv Municipality Council, respectively.)

When Jews Supported a Boycott Campaign

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Comparisons between the Boycott of Israel and the Boycott of Nazi Germany

In 1933 the Zionist Movement's Trade Agreement (Haavarah) Betrayed German Jews

In 2005 dozens of Palestinian organisations called for the implementation of a Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign.  A year later the Boycott  took off in Britain when the Association of University Teachers, now the University College Union, passed a Boycott policy by a small majority at their national conference.
All sorts of mainstream bourgeois politicians protested.  All in the name of ‘academic freedom’ of course.  The fact that Israel’s universities were complicit in supporting Israel’s military machine, to the extent that Ben-Gurion university in the Negev withdrew an invitation to an anti-Zionist Jewish academic, Yigal Arens, at the instigation of the military, passed them by.

Today nearly all trade unions in Britain support the Palestinians.  One of the main planks of the Zionist campaign has been to compare the Boycott of Israel with the Nazi ‘boycott’ of Jewish shops and businesses on 1stApril 1933.  In fact the Nazi ‘boycott’ was not so much a boycott as an SA siege of Jewish shops.  As such it bears more than a passing resemblance to that other boycott -  the Israeli blockade of Gaza, which these self same politicians are completely unconcerned about.  Boycotting Palestinians and starving them out is perfectly acceptable.  Boycott Israel is of course illegitimate, ‘anti-Semitic’, etc.
This is but one example of the hypocrisy of the politics of imperialism.
I thought it would be useful to do a little research in the Jewish Chronicle so that people could get some idea as to the massive support that Boycott of Nazi Germany had amongst the vast majority of Jews.  I say the vast majority of Jews because there were opponents of a Boycott of Nazi Germany.  In Britain and the United States there were two opponents.  The first was the bourgeois Jews – the American Jewish Committee and Bnai Brith and in Britain the Board of Deputies which turned its face against any effective anti-fascist activity.  In 1936 it called for Jews to keep their heads down and stay indoors when Moseley announced his intention in October 1936 to march through the East End.  The Jewish workers ignored the Board and 100,000 people, Jewish and non-Jewish workers, in particular the Catholic Irish dockers of the East End, turned out to oppose Moseley in what became known as the Battle of Cable Street. 
The second Jewish group that opposed Boycott and there was of course an overlap with the first group was the Zionist movement.  The Zionists fought tooth and nail against Boycott.  The reason?  Because they entered into a trade agreement with Nazi Germany in August 1933.  It was called Ha’avara.  It’s purpose was to ‘save the wealth’ of the German Jewish community.  It enabled German Jews to liquidate their wealth in Germany and put it into a special account controlled by the Zionist Paltreu in Germany, they were called ‘frozen marks’ and Ha’avara Ltd. in Palestine was then able to put in orders for German machinery and goods which were paid for with these marks.  It enabled German production to keep up and more importantly it was an essential indeed vital element in the defeat of the Boycott campaign.
You had to be rich to take advantage of Ha’avara as you need to be able to take, after taxes, the equivalent of £1,000 out of Germany.  This was the sum needed to get into Palestine without an immigration certificate, and the Zionists lobbied furiously to ensure that German Jews could only go to Palestine.
The Zionists acted, as Baruch Vladeck, editor of the Jewish paper Forward, as scab agents of the Nazi regime.  The articles from the Jewish Chronicle illustrate the depth of opposition in the Jewish community to Ha’avara. Even the Jewish Chronicle opposed it!

I am therefore posting a selection of  articles from the Jewish Chronicle so that people may gauge for themselves the support of Jews for a Boycott.  Ignoring Zionist hasbara and their usual attempt to smear anti-Zionists, the  Boycott has always been a weapon of the oppressed.  From the Boycott of slave grown sugar in the West Indies, to the boycott of Captain Boycott by his Irish tenants in Ireland to the Boycott of South Africa, Boycott has always been a peaceful method of combatting the violence of the racist and the oppressor.  

It's also interesting to see how a Cultural Boycott of Nazi Germany was also vigorously supported.  In Paris Jewish teenagers disrupted the showing of German films.  Arturo Toscanini, the world famous Italian conductor personally led the boycot of Nazi Germany.  How things change and also how they remain the same.

Tony Greenstein





























The ‘Only Democracy in the Middle East’ Steps Up Hate Campaign Against Breaking the Silence & Israeli Human Rights Organisations

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As the Israeli state makes giant strides from a Jewish state to a Jewish Police State, so left-wing Israelis demonstrate in Tel Aviv.  There is no doubt that the Israeli left, the anti-war left, is extremely isolated today. 

When the Israeli Labour Party/Zionist Union leader, Isaac Hertzog, asked Benjamin Netanyahu to condemn incitement and threats against the Israeli President Rivlin, who is a Likud right-winger who supports the settlements and opposes giving back any land or a 2 state solution but nonetheless believes that Arabs are human beings and opposes racism,  Netanyahu responded by saying that Herzog should condemn ‘Breaking the Silence’.


Ha’aretz reported that Netanyahu's response was that Herzog, should "get up on this stage and condemn Breaking the Silence, an organization that is slandering IDF soldiers to audiences around the world and is working to tie the hands of the State of Israel from defending itself."At this point lawmakers began applauding.’  Herzog Calls on Netanyahu to Defend Rivlin During Fiery Knesset Session 'Slandering' the State of Israel can be translated as telling the uncomfortable truth about what the Israeli army does as opposed to the fairy tales about it being 'the most moral army in the world.'

‘Breaking the Silence’ is not an anti-Zionist group.  Indeed most of its members would identify as Zionists.  They are former soldiers who have come out to tell of their experiences in the Israeli Occupation Forces.  They describe the beatings, the killings, the wanton disregard for Palestinian life.  That is enough to make them an object of hatred for Netanyahu’s government.  

The leader of the Zionist 'left' Yesh Atid, Yair Lapid 
Netanyahu’s coalition government has actively attempted to stop the funding of Breaking the Silence and other human rights organisations such as Btselem by outside organisations such as the New Israel Fund.  But it is not only Zionist right-wingers who are guilty of trying to suppress the truth.  The 'centrist' Zionist member of Israel's 'Opposition' - Yair Lapid - has just announced that he is going to sponsor legislation to prevent what he terms 'BDS supporters' from funding groups like Breaking the Silence.  
'Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid said Sunday that he was planning to sponsor legislation to ban Israeli nonprofits that he said “vilify” the state from being funded by organizations that support a boycott of Israel.  
Appearing at a press conference alongside a group of reserve IDF officers and combat soldiers, Lapid singled out the controversial Breaking the Silence NGO, which gathers testimonies from IDF troops about alleged human rights abuses by soldiers. 
We will lead legislation to prevent BDS [boycott, divestment and sanctions organizations] from funding NGOs in Israel that help to vilify Israel,” Lapid said. 
Lapid bids to stop BDS-backers from funding groups like Breaking the SilenceAnnouncing planned legislation, Yesh Atid leader singles out IDF-bashing NGO Breaking the Silence for crossing ‘red line from criticism into subversion’ 
Religious nutcase Hotoveli - Israel's Deputy Foreign Minister - hates Arab-Jewish relatinships  - she was responsible for the funding of the fascist Lehava group dedicated to oppose mixed race sex
It’s ok for right-wing Zionist organisations to be funded by United State billionaires such as Sheldon Adelson but not human rights groups).  Tsipli Hotoveli, the far-right religious wingnut and Deputy Foreign Minister has been waging a fierce campaign to persuade European governments and other bodies to withdraw funding from Israeli groups that are critical of Israel's brutal occupation and human rights record.  


'Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely (pictured) has begun a series of consultations with European foreign ministers, their deputies, and ambassadors of several European countries, in which she is presenting evidence that their governments provide financial assistance to NGOs that support boycotts against Israel.'  Apparently these organizations 

“actively blacken Israel’s name around the world, accuse it of ethnic cleansing, apartheid, and war crimes; deprive the Jewish people of their right to self-determination, call to prosecute Israel in the International Criminal Court at The Hague, and support the right of return”, she said.'

Hotoveli made a special effort, unsuccessful it should be added, to persuade Switzerland to pull the plug on an exhibition put on by Breaking the Silence.  Perhaps Hotoveli imagined that Switzerland was also a police state or perhaps that it was an Israeli satellite:

It's not for nothing that Israel is known as ‘the only democracy in the Middle East’

The demonstration was made up of left-Zionists and anti-/non-Zionists as far as I can tell.  People like Yariv Oppenheimer, leader of the Peace Now organisation.  Oppenheimer posted on his facebook page earlier this year that he had done his military service in the Occupied Territories on the ludicrous grounds that if the 'left' did their duty then when the time comes the army will also obey orders and transfer the settlements into the hands of the Palestinians.  In fact what the Zionist left does by these actions is to reinforce the Israeli state in its brutalities by legitimising it.  A 'left' that is complicit in colonialism is no left and that is the achiles heel of Oppenheimer and most of Meretz.  They want a nicer Zionist state but that is not an option.  Zionism is red in tooth and claw.

Tony Greenstein


+972 Magazine     By Haggai Matar
|Published December 20, 2015

Demonstrators took the streets of central Tel Aviv to show their support for Israeli human rights organizations under attack by right-wing incitement over the past weeks. Breaking the Silence executive director: ‘We were born into the occupation, we can be the ones to end it.’
Photos by Oren Ziv / Activestills.org
Israeli left-wing activists march to protest the recent incitement against “Breaking the Silence” and other left wing NGOs, in central Tel Aviv, December 19, 2015. (photo: Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)
Over a thousand Israelis marched Saturday night in Tel Aviv to demonstrate against incitement and occupation, and in support of Israeli human rights organizations, peace, equality, and social justice.
The protest was organized by the group “Omdim Beyachad” (Standing Together) in response to the recent incitement by far-right group Im Tirzu and government ministers against Breaking the Silence and other human rights organizations last week.
Israeli left-wing activists march to protest the recent incitement against “Breaking the Silence” and other left wing NGOs, in central Tel Aviv, December 19, 2015. (photo: Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)
The demonstrators gathered at Gan Meir in central Tel Aviv and headed toward the Likud headquarters just across the street. There a few short speeches were delivered on “the incitement that begins in the government offices,” which then turned into a march on King George Street, ending in the monument for slain Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. The protesters chanted slogans such as “Jews and Arabs refuse to be enemies,” and “The occupation is a disaster — only peace will bring security.”

Two separate counter protests also took place, which included swearing at left-wing protesters and calling out “Kahane lives.” Likud MK Oren Hazan, who previously tried to deceive Breaking the Silence by submitting a fake testimony, was one of the participants. One right-wing protestor threw a bottle at the march and was arrested.

Likud MK Oren Hazan takes part in a right-wing counter protest against leftists demonstrating against incitement coming from the Right against human rights organizations, central Tel Aviv, December 19, 2015. (photo: Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)
Representatives of Israel’s peace camp, including Peace Now stalwart Yariv Oppenheimer, MK Dov Khenin (Joint List), MK Ilan Gilon (Meretz) and Breaking the Silence’s Executive Director Yuli Novak, spoke at the Rabin monument. “The incitement and threats do not stop with human rights organizations or the Left, they reach the President,” said Oppenheimer, in reference to the campaign of incitement against President Reuven Rivlin taking place since he participated in the Haaretzconference in New York last week, where members of Breaking the Silence also spoke. “We are in a struggle for Israeli democracy and we have no choice but to win.”
Meretz MK Ilan Gilon speaks during a demonstration against right-wing incitement, central Tel Aviv, December 19, 2015. (photo: Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)
This week saw the release of a devastating poverty report. We saw a devastating gas deal being signed. And now they are trying to blame everything on Breaking the Silence?” asked Khenin. “We see that an occupying nation cannot be free, and that the struggles for democracy, peace, and social justice are connected to one another. We will not give up on our home.”

“We love this country more than the settlers, we are willing to compromise over it,” added Gilon. “What kind of love is greater than that of compromise over this land and the people who live in it?”

Breaking the Silence Executive Director Yuli Novak speaks during a protest against right-wing incitement, central Tel Aviv, December 19, 2015. (photo: Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)
Novak, who was welcomed with thunderous applause, lauded the many soldiers who have broken 
their silence over the past week — following attacks by the Right — and described what they went through during their service in the occupied territories. “This situation is not predetermined. We are a generation that was born into the occupation, we are the generation that can end it,” she said.

The police, who accompanied the protest in big numbers, were on higher alert than usual. Many police officers walked around with their fingers on the trigger of their guns, while officers with police dogs encircled the protesters the entire way. The police also shined flashlights on the balconies of all the homes above the route of the protest. I cannot recall this kind of police activity in any protest. The police did their job and allowed the march, as well as the counter protests, to take place safely. How unfortunate that we have reached a point that threats against nonviolent demonstrators in central Tel Aviv have become so tangible.

Grovel Dead – Good Riddance to a Man without a Single Redeeming Feature

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Janner's Death Cheats his Victims of Justice
It’s normal to be kind to the departed of this world, even if you couldn’t stand the sight of them whilst they were alive.  Such are the accepted proprieties of capitalism.  This was why the BBC and bourgeois opinion was so horrified when people celebrated Thatcher’s demise and when a single, margaret thatcherdies ding dong the witch is dead topped the charts, Brixton held a party and the former actress Glenda Jackson MP paid a notable tribute to her much to the outrage of Tory MPs.
Greville Janner - a Serial Child Abuser
As The Independent reports concerning Janner's demise:

 ‘Liz Dux, a specialist abuse lawyer at Slater and Gordon, who represented six of Lord Janner’s alleged victims, said: “[His victims] have waited so long for his case to get to court … The opportunities to bring him to justice when he was younger were well documented.” However, she said a civil case seeking compensation from Lord Janner’s estate would now proceed.

Ms Dux believed that the allegations against the peer were of the “utmost severity”. She said: “He abused his position of trust as a local MP and preyed on those who were the most vulnerable. They were all boys from Leicestershire care home who’d had very, very disturbed and difficult live. He behaved in a sadistic and cruel manner, exploiting children at their most vulnerable.”
An article in the  Brighton Argus concerning the late Bishop of Gloucester, George Bell
His family believes he will be missed.  They are wrong.  Greville Janner was a worthless man about whom it is impossible to find a single good thing to say.  I say this advisedly.  When it was reported that the Church of England had paid compensation to someone that the late Bishop George Bell had allegedly molested I wrote a Comment piece in the local Brighton Argus saying that he should not just be remembered for this but also his anti-Nazi activities.  There are very few people of whom it can be said that they have done nothing good or worthwhile in their life.

Greville Janner however is one such person.  He spent most of his life defending the indefensible, namely the State of Israel.  No matter how many Palestinians it killed or made into refugees, no matter how great the injustice, in Janner's eyes it could do no wrong.

Janner also, as we were to find out later, had an arrangement with Frank Beck, the manager of a  children's home in Leicester,  which enabled him to rape and sadistically abuse unknown numbers of children.  The fact that 9 separate people were going to come forward in a trial of the facts, which unfortunately will not now happen, speaks volumes.  In fact there were far more children who were abused but who weren't going to be called to give evidence, who would have said that they were abused in their childhood.  The mere fact that so many people were willing to relive their traumas and come forward is convincing proof that Janner was guilty as he should have been charged.
Janner with a child he didn't abuse
Janner cheated a court of law by virtue of senile dementia however he won't cheat the judgement of history.  This former President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews is someone that the even the Zionist movement will prefer to forget.

Free Kaya NOW - The Canine Hero of the Palestinian Revolution - from Adminstrative Detention

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Bibi’s Dog Achieves More with One Bite than Mahmoud Abbas (Another Dumb Mutt) Ever Will

Jewish Chronicle 18.10.15.
Kaya, the pet dog of Benjamin Netanyahu, has been put in Administrative Detention (they call it quarantine but we know what means) for 10 days.  There are great fears for her safety given the record of the Israeli prison service and we urge people to deluge the Zionist state calling for Kayas's immediate release.
Kaya and her dumb mutt of an owner
As Netanyahu himself said of Kaya, a pet dog that his son Avner rescued, ‘How much light Kaya has brought into our home.’  He continued in the same vein:  ‘If you want a canine, find an adult dog to rescue.  You won’t regret it.’
John Kerry is believed to have escaped being bitten
Clearly Netanyahu has begun to regret it.  Firstly the clever doggy gave Netanyahu a well deserved bite (we don’t know where!) and then at a Chanukah party at Netanyahu’s residence she took a dislike to some of his other guests.  First she sunk her teeth into Likud MK Sharren Haskel and then had a bite out of Or Alon, the husband of Tzipi Hotoveli, the Deputy Foreign Minister and religious wingnut and racist who wants to demolish the Al Aqsa Mosque.  Hotovelli it is who obtained a grant for the Israeli fascist group Lehava because they campaign against mixed race sexual relations between Arabs and Jews.
Kaya and her unfortunate new family
We understand that Kaya made determined efforts to take a chunk out of Tzipi too but was violently prevented from doing so.
Sharren Haskall - Likud MK received a well deserved bite
Say what you will about Kaya’s owner, Benjamin Netanyahu, there can be no doubt that when it comes to dogs he made a wise, anti-Zionist choice.

Kaya, a 10 year old hound, of the female gender, has achieved what Abbas and the Palestinian Authority can only dream of.  She made a distinct impression on some of the villains of the Zionist state.  Indeed just think how much the Palestinian revolution would advance if Kaya was to replace Mahmoud Abbas as ‘President’ of the PA.

This blog is therefore launching a ‘Free Kaya’ now campaign as part of a Kaya for Israeli Prime Minister campaign.  Even in the darkest of times there is light at the end of the tunnel.


Tony Greenstein 
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