Sunday, October 21, 2012

TV show ‘Homeland’ irks Lebanese, Israelis

 This undated image released by Showtime shows actor Claire Danes as Carrie Mathison in a scene from the second season of “Homeland,” filmed in Israel. The scene from a recent episode of the hit series is supposed to be Beirut — but it was shot in Tel Aviv, Israel, which has some people irritated in both cities.

Bassem Mroue and Elizabeth A. Kennedy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIRUT — Militants carry­ing assault weapons clear the area around a street, shouting in Arabic for people to get out of the way. A jeep pulls up: The world’s No. 1 jihadi has arrived for a meeting with top Hezbollah commanders. On rooftops, U.S. snipers crouch unseen, the kingpin in their crosshairs at last.

The scene, from a recent episode of the hit U.S. Show­time series “Homeland,” is supposed to be Beirut. But it is really in Israel, a country sim­ilar enough in some areas to stand in for Lebanon, yet a world away in most other respects. The show about Arab terrorists and American turncoats has inadvertently become a tale of two cities. Some Beirutis are angry because the depiction of their city as swarming with militia­men is misleading and because they see Israel as the enemy. And in Israel, some are peeved that Haifa and even Tel Aviv — a self-styled nightlife capital and high-tech hub — apparently appear, to out­siders at least, to be Middle Eastern after all.

Lebanese Tourism Minister Fadi Abboud told The Associ­ated Press on Thursday that he’s so upset about the por­trayal of Beirut that he’s con­sidering a lawsuit.

“The information minister is studying media laws to see what can be done,” he said.

Abboud pointed to the scene with the snipers. Hamra Street in West Beirut is por­trayed as a hotbed of violence, but it is actually a lively neigh­borhood packed with cafes, book shops and pubs.

“It showed Hamra Street with militia roaming in it. This does not reflect reality,” he said. “It was not filmed in Beirut and does not portray the real image of Beirut.”

Twentieth Century Fox Television refused to com­ment.

Several Lebanese inter­viewed by the AP said they have never heard of the show. When a reporter described the plot and said it was shot in Israel, the reactions ranged from anger to blithe accept­ance that filmmaking is an imperfect art.

Hamed Moussa, an engi­neering student at the Ameri­can University of Beirut, said it’s not a problem that Israelis are portraying Lebanese. In fact, he said, Lebanese often play Israeli characters in Lebanese soap operas.

But Ghada Jaber, a 60-year­old housewife, said Israel should never stand in for Lebanon.

“It is very insulting,” she said as she walked along Hamra Street. “Israel destroyed our country. Israel invaded and occupied our country.”

A glimpse into the decades of anti-Arab, anti-Muslim pro-Israeli propaganda aimed at Americans and world audiences put out by Zionists at Fox Studios. 









Saturday, October 20, 2012

Israel Seizes Activist Ship en Route to Gaza Strip

By JODI RUDOREN
The New York Times

JERUSALEM — The Israeli Navy on Saturday seized a European ship headed to the Gaza Strip to try to break Israel’s maritime blockade against the Hamas-controlled region and diverted it to an Israeli port.

 The passengers on the ship, the Estelle, included five members of European parliaments and a former Canadian lawmaker, according to those involved in the campaign.

The Israeli military said that the ship had been seized without incident and taken to the port of Ashdod, in southern Israel, and that those on board would be turned over to the police.

A statement from an organization affiliated with the mission said that late Saturday morning, “Israeli warships surrounded the Estelle, and the assault on the peaceful ship started.” David Heap, an activist connected to the movement who was attending a conference in Gaza, said he had no information about what had happened aboard the Estelle as it was intercepted.

“The last contact we have from our people on board was that they were going to be boarded,” Mr. Heap said. “We have no confirmation from them of how they are, and we may not for some time hear directly from them.”

Israel imposed a naval blockade on Gaza in 2009, saying it was needed to prevent the smuggling of arms to the Palestinian enclave, which is governed by the Islamic militant group Hamas. Israeli officials were also worried about weapons being smuggled to other militant groups.

Mr. Heap said the Estelle was the latest of more than a dozen ships that had tried to break the blockade since 2010, when Israeli commandos killed nine pro-Palestinian activists after encountering resistance during a raid on a six-ship flotilla led by the Turkish vessel the Mavi Marmara.

After the Mavi Marmara raid, a United Nations panel found that Israel’s naval blockade was “legitimate self-defense and that Israel’s decision to intercept the flotilla was indeed legal under international law.” Activists have disputed the panel’s conclusion.

The episode led to some relaxing of the restrictions on imports to Gaza, but also caused a deep rift in relations between Israel and Turkey. A spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces, Eytan Buchman, said the Estelle was the third such ship the military had boarded in two years.

Among other things, the Estelle was carrying an anchor for a project called Gaza’s Ark, for which activists are building a boat intended to break the export curbs. “We carry humanitarian supplies,” Jim Manly, the former Canadian lawmaker who was on board, said in a statement posted online last week. “Our only ‘dangerous cargo’ is a cargo of hope.”

An Israeli statement said that the boarding “was carried out in accordance with international law” and after repeated attempts to deter the ship (through contact with passengers and diplomatic channels) were unsuccessful.

On Saturday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel issued a statement praising the operation and condemning the attempt to break the blockade.

“The people who were on the ship also know that there is no humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and they aim only to provoke and blacken Israel’s name,” the statement said. “If human rights were truly important to these activists, they would sail to Syria. We shall continue to defend our borders.”

Fares Akram contributed reporting from the Gaza Strip.

Tuesday, October 09, 2012

How the U.S. Is Hurting Innocent People in Iran

By Peter Coy on October 08, 2012

Sometimes the obvious needs to be said: The U.S. is hurting innocent people in Iran. American-led sanctions aimed at stopping Iran’s nuclear weapons program are badly damaging the economy of a nation of 75 million people. “Prices are climbing so fast that the price of milk jumped 9 percent in a single day last week,” Bloomberg reported Oct. 7. “Chicken has become so scarce that when scant supplies become available they prompt riots,” the Economist wrote in its Oct. 6 edition.

As hunger spreads, hope is dying. Bloomberg’s Yeganeh Salehi and Glen Carey recently reported on a retired supermarket clerk named Akbar Mohebi, who said that tougher times mean his son has to cancel plans to study abroad. “Yesterday, I told him forget about your dream,” Mohebi said. “Darker days will come to us.”

Officially the U.S. has no quarrel with the people of Iran. The sanctions, says the U.S. State Department, are intended simply to prevent Iran from acquiring the technology it needs to develop nuclear weapons. But much of the support in Congress for the sanctions comes from the belief that if the Iranian people are squeezed hard enough, they will rise up and stop their leaders from developing nukes.

“Critics also argued that these measures will hurt the Iranian people. Quite frankly, we need to do just that,” wrote Representative Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) in 2010 on The Hill’s Congress Blog.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stands by the argument than any suffering is the fault of the Iranian government, which is refusing to abide by the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. The harm of the sanctions “could be remedied in short order” if the government were willing to negotiate “in a sincere manner,” Clinton said last week.

Do the ends justify the means? Experts disagree. The answer depends on quantifying two hard-to-measure things—namely, how much suffering is really being inflicted and how much that suffering is moving the Iranian government to do the right thing, says Stephen Collins, a political scientist at Kennesaw State University in Georgia. On the positive side, Collins notes that Iran claims, as a “confidence-building measure,” to have recently converted more than a third of its enriched uranium into a powdered form for medical research that can’t easily be reprocessed into material for a nuclear weapon.

Gary Hufbauer, an analyst at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, says the sanctions “are exceptionally effective.” He defines sanctions broadly to include assassinations of nuclear scientists and sabotage of reprocessing machinery. Hufbauer says an overthrow of the Iranian regime is highly unlikely, but it’s possible that the sanctions will either induce the current leadership to rethink its weapons strategy, or stymie it until the current leaders die off and more moderate ones replace them.

Given how much pain sanctions cause, some people have said a surgical military strike would be preferable. But that might trigger a wider war that would cause even more harm than the sanctions, Hufbauer notes.

Meanwhile, the economic sanctions are reinforcing America’s image in the Middle East as a bully, says Robert McGee, a professor at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina who has studied sanctions. “Not every Iranian is bad,” says McGee. “It’s just some people in the leadership. The people you harm are a lot of times the least able to defend themselves. The poor and the working people: Their economic opportunities are evaporated.”

That’s the conundrum. “Iranians face a hard winter,” Canada’s Globe & Mail reported Oct. 3. The ends may justify the means. But Americans at least need to be aware of just how much harm they are doing to 75 million people, most of whom are entirely innocent.

Coy is Bloomberg Businessweek's economics editor.

One notes the cold-blooded response of Hilary Clinton. I think both Hilary and Obama have come to think of themselves as global players in a world at war and have forgotten their Democratic roots in the People who are People with the same physical needs all over the world.

Saturday, October 06, 2012

ELCA, other churches call for investigation of military aid to Israel

ELCA NEWS SERVICE
October 5, 2012

     CHICAGO (ELCA) - Concerned about the deteriorating conditions in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories and the commitment for a just peace, the Rev. Mark S. Hanson, presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), and other U.S. Christian leaders are urging Congress to conduct an investigation into possible human rights and weapon violations by the government of Israel.

     In an Oct. 5 letter to Congress, the religious leaders cited possible violations by Israel of the U.S. Foreign Assistance Act and the U.S. Arms Export Control Act, which respectively excludes assistance to any country that engages in a consistent pattern of human rights violations and limits the use of U.S. weapons to "internal security" or "legitimate self-defense."

     The leaders also urged Congress "to undertake careful scrutiny to ensure that our aid is not supporting actions by the government of Israel that undermine prospects for peace. We urge Congress to hold hearings to examine Israel's compliance, and we request regular reporting on compliance and the withholding of military aid for non-compliance."

     U.S. churches and religious organizations have been deeply involved in the pursuit of peace for both Israelis and Palestinians. The religious leaders shared in their letter that they have witnessed the pain and suffering of Israelis as a result of Palestinian actions and of Palestinians as a result of Israeli actions.
     "When as Lutherans we say that all the baptized will strive for justice and peace in all the earth, it means that we will be immersed in complex issues. While we do not all agree on the best way to establish justice and bring peace, we will be involved in lively, respectful, passionate conversations," said Hanson.
     In their letter, the U.S. Christian leaders were clear in their recognition that Israel faces real security threats and that it has both "a right and a duty to protect both the state and its citizens," but the "measures that it uses to protect itself and its citizens, as in the case with any other nation, must conform to international humanitarian and human rights law."

     The leaders further said it is unfortunate that "unconditional U.S. military assistance to Israel has contributed to (the) deterioration, sustaining the conflict and undermining the long-term security interests of both Israelis and Palestinians. This is made clear in the most recent 2011 State Department Country Report on Human Rights Practices covering Israel and the Occupied Territories, which details widespread Israeli human rights violations committed against Palestinian civilians, many of which involve the misuse of U.S.-supplied weapons."

     Examples of human rights violence related to U.S. military support were included as an annex to the letter and, in addition to specific rights violations, the Christian leaders expressed their concern that Israel continues to expand its settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, claiming territory "that under international law and U.S. policy should belong to a future Palestinian state."

     "From Palestinian Lutherans, I hear discouragement about the lack of progress and questions about where the voice is of American Christians," said Hanson. "Our letter seeks to be a partial answer to such questions, that we are clear in our resolve to continue to work for a just and lasting solution for Israelis and Palestinians."

     The U.S. Christian leaders wrote that it is "our moral responsibility to question the continuation of unconditional U.S. financial assistance to the government of Israel. Realizing a just and lasting peace will require this accountability, as continued U.S. military assistance to Israel -- offered without conditions or accountability -- will only serve to sustain the status quo and Israel's military occupation of the Palestinian territories."

     They requested that Congress hold Israel accountable to these standards by "making the disbursement of U.S. military assistance to Israel contingent on the Israeli government's compliance with applicable U.S. laws and policies. As Israel is the single largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid since World War II, it is especially critical for Israel to comply with the specific U.S. laws that regulate the use of U.S.-supplied weapons. We also encourage Congress to support inclusive, comprehensive and robust regional diplomacy to secure a just and lasting peace that will benefit Israelis, Palestinians, and all the peoples of the region and the world."

     Through an action, the 2001 ELCA Churchwide Assembly expressed concern over continued U.S. military aid to Israel.
- - -
About the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:

The ELCA is one of the largest Christian denominations in the United States, with 4.2 million members in 10,000 congregations across the 50 states and in the Caribbean region. Known as the church of "God's work. Our hands," the ELCA emphasizes the saving grace of God through faith in Jesus Christ, unity among Christians and service in the world. The ELCA's roots are in the writings of the German church reformer, Martin Luther.

HumanRights] Oil, Zionism and more


[
From: Mazin Qumsiyeh 

Sat, Oct 06, 2012 05:08 PM
Oil, Zionism and more
http://popular-resistance.blogspot.com/2012/10/oil-zionism-and-more.html

Recent discoveries show that the Eastern Mediterranean area has huge energy
fields which together with water resources could provide the impetus for
new conflicts/wars. The initial estimates is that the area in the sea
facing Palestine (present day Israel and the Gaza Strip), Lebanon, and
Syria holds 1.7 billion barrels of oil, 5 billion barrels of natural gas
liquids, and an astounding 122 trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural
gas. Already Israel uses nearly 10 times more of our water per capita than
we the native Palestinians use.  Already Israel controls most of the
lucrative tourism industry in Palestine and most of our agricultural lands
and other resources. Already Israel has very many millionaires and a few
billionaires while 25% of Israeli Children live in poverty (and nearly half
the Palestinian Children in Gaza and the West Bank). I guess there are
those chosen and those who are even more chosen.

Meanwhile, there were large demonstrations demanding the Palestinian
dueling authorities (in Ramallah and Gaza) stop political arrests.   And
while our people are busy with local municipal elections, the Zionists
intensify their assault on common decency.  Avigdor Lieberman and over 100
settlers came to my town of Beit Sahour Thursday wanting to build a new
colonial settlement in the area of Ush Ghrab to be called Shdema.  So now
the local committee is re-emerging to try to deal with this new challenge.
And today (Saturday) Israeli authorities discovered a fairly sophisticated
unmanned drone that apparently was hovering in the Neqeb (Negev) area and
shot it down.  That shook the Israeli public and showed that all the
sophisticated military gear in the world will not protect you from such
efforts.  The world is changing and only justice to the native Palestinians
can bring security and peace here.

In this week's compilation of links below: evaluation of Zionism versus
Judaism, BDS as key to just peace, Russell Tribunal on Palestine, Lutherans
look at Israeli military, 5 broken cameras, why I dislike Israel, and why
Oslo must go.

Very good analysis: A Basic History of Zionism and Its Relation to Judaism
By Hanna Braun.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article12666.htm

BDS key to a "just peace," says Palestinian Christian boycott activist .
Joe Catron
http://electronicintifada.net/content/bds-key-just-peace-says-palestinian-christian-boycot
t-activist/11727


Russell Tribunal on Palestine: Live proceedings from New York
http://www.russelltribunalonpalestine.com/en/sessions/future-sessions/videos/new-york-sess
iom-live-stream

 Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and other churches call for
investigation of military aid to Israel
http://www.elca.org/Who-We-Are/Our-Three-Expressions/Churchwide-Organization/Communication
-Services/News/Releases.aspx?a=5251

The documentary that should make every decent Israeli ashamed: No moments
of reprieve in the probing documentary by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi, "5
Broken Cameras," which chronicles the struggle in the West Bank Palestinian
village of Bil'in. By Gideon Levy
http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/twilight-zone/the-documentary-that-should-make-every-decent
-israeli-ashamed.premium-1.468409

Giraldi: Why I Dislike Israel
http://www.councilforthenationalinterest.org/news/opinion-a-analysis/item/2012-giraldi-why
-i-dislike-israel

Why Oslo Must Go
http://www.odsg.org/co/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2636:why-oslo-must-go&
catid=31:general&Itemid=41

Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD
Chair, Palestinian Center for Rapprochement Between People
Professor, occupied Palestine

Thursday, October 04, 2012

Devout Israeli Jews Moving to Arab-Jewish Cities

By AMY TEIBEL Associated Press
ACRE, Israel October 4, 2012 (AP)

Orthodox Jewish Israelis, the driving force of the West Bank settlement movement, have begun to turn their attention inward to Israel itself, moving into Arab areas of mixed cities in an attempt to cement the Jewish presence there.

Activists say that in recent years, several thousand devout Jews have pushed into rundown Arab areas of Jaffa, Lod, Ramle and Acre, hardscrabble cities divided between Jewish and Arab neighborhoods. Their arrival has threatened to disrupt fragile ethnic relations with construction of religious seminaries and housing developments marketed exclusively to Jews.

"Israel has to act as the state of its citizens," said Mohammad Darawshe, co-executive director of The Abraham Fund Initiatives, a nonprofit group that promotes co-existence between Jews and Arabs in Israel. "Ethnic preference is clearly inappropriate, violating the principles of democracy."

About 20 percent of Israel's citizens are Arabs. Most live in Arab towns and villages, with some notable exceptions, especially Haifa, the port city that is Israel's third-largest.

Before Israel's establishment in 1948, these mixed cities were populated by Arabs. Many fled or were expelled during the two-year war that followed Israel's creation. Arabs commemorate that as a "catastrophe."

 The Jewish move into Arab neighborhoods for ideological reasons echoes the nationalistic fervor of the first Israeli settlers in the West Bank in the late 1960s and early 1970s. They set up trailer camps and squatted in unoccupied houses, determined to hold on to the territory for religious and security reasons.

The settler movement has grown into a huge enterprise that, with government backing, has attracted more than 300,000 Israelis into the West Bank.

While the settlements are seen as an obstacle to peace talks and considered illegal by the Palestinians and most of the international community, the current campaign is taking place inside Israel's borders.

Still, the movement of religious, nationalist Jews into the mixed cities is promoted along the same pioneering lines as the original West Bank settlements. The settlers themselves don't make the distinction between the two sides of the line, claiming it should all belong to Israel.

The Israel Land Fund, one of the organizations promoting the move, helps Jews buy property in both Israel and the West Bank with the goal of "ensuring the land of Israel stays in the hands of Jewish people forever."

Its director, Arieh King, said the fund, with the help of a donor who contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars, was instrumental in bringing about 50 families into Jaffa, a mostly Arab town that is now part of Tel Aviv. He would not identify the donor.

"There are places in Jaffa where the Islamic Movement and other groups have been radicalized," King said. "People were afraid to fly the (Israeli) national flag for fear of how the Arabs would react." Now, he said, Jews feel more comfortable there.

The Israel Land Fund is seeking investors for a $16 million residential, hotel and country club project in the northern port city of Acre, where the mostly Arab Old City has been designated by the United Nations as a World Heritage Site.

"As always, the financial rewards are outweighed by the spiritual and ideological benefit of knowing that these projects will make a huge impact in the fight to keep Acre a Jewish city," the ad for the seafront project says.

Acre, a city of about 50,000, is 72 percent Jewish and 28 percent Arab. While relations are generally quiet, Acre was convulsed by bitter ethnic fighting three years ago after an Arab citizen drove through a mostly Jewish neighborhood on the holy day of Yom Kippur, when even secular Jews keep their cars off the streets.

The efforts to bring Jews to Acre have won praise from high levels of government. Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom hailed the establishment of a Jewish seminary in Acre last year a measure as "helping to strengthen the trend of Judaizing the Galilee."

"There's nothing to be ashamed of in that statement," he said at the time.

Acre's Arab deputy mayor, Adham Jamal, warned that the activists threaten to disrupt a fragile status quo.

The newcomers "don't understand the mentality of Jews and Arabs living together," said Adham, who serves under a Jewish mayor. "Those coming now aren't coming to live in Acre. They've come to kick out Arabs."

Acre's mayor, Shimon Lankri, insisted there is no policy of "Judaization," although he said he was sympathetic to a still-unapproved request to build a 100-apartment development for religious Jews in his city.

Such projects, where residents might be required to dress modestly and respect the Jewish Sabbath by not driving or blasting loud music, exist in many other communities in Israel.

 "Do I have a policy that discriminates, that favors Jews? There is no such policy," Lankri said. "I myself lived in a building with Arabs and Jews for five years." He maintained that Arab and Jewish residents receive equal services in his city.

Arab activists dispute that, saying they face discrimination in Acre and other mixed cities. Arab neighborhoods are often marred by dilapidated buildings and roads, plagued by a shortage of schools and social services.

Before the religious Jews started moving into Acre several years ago, Arabs were preoccupied with the lack of equality, said Adham. With the influx of the Jewish religious nationalists, "the main subject has become Arabs and Jews, and that's dangerous," he said. "The discourse is now about demographics."

Lankri estimated that 200 religious families have moved to Acre in recent years.

A similar process is under way in Lod, about halfway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.

Religious Jewish activist Aharon Atias said that after he and his wife married, their "first thought" was to move to a West Bank settlement. Then they came to the conclusion that they could transplant the settlement ethos to Atias' hometown.

He undertook to reverse a Jewish flight from his blighted hometown, which is about 25 percent Arab and 75 percent Jewish, by bringing in religious Jews. His project began with two families in the late 1990s, he said.

"Now, we're an empire," Atias said. He said 400 new religious families have moved in, and six day care centers, three schools, a seminary and a pre-military academy have been built for them. Another three projects for religious Jews are under construction, with about 660 units expected to be populated within the next two years, he said.

One development is in an Arab neighborhood, and the other two are in poor, mixed neighborhoods.

"We want to prevent Arabs from becoming the majority," Atias said. "The city of Lod, since 1948, and with God's help, has been a Jewish city where non-Jews live, and it has to remain that way."

Arab activists bridle at the notion that Jews must dominate.

"They're like a cancer that enters the body and doesn't leave," said activist Horia ElSadi, a Lod native, reflecting lingering bitterness over the establishment of a Jewish state. "They want to live alone. They want Lod to be a Jewish city."

Jewish racism. That's what we Americans are funding and arming. Jewish racists. Is this not against our Constitution's Separation of Church and State? Is this not against the 14th Amendment? Why are we allowing Jews to do this crime against humanity? Why won't our government stand for human rights when it comes to the victims of Jewish racism? The Jewish hold on America's government is a scary thing to behold but just imagine what it is like to be on the receiving end of America's aid to the Jewish racist imperialist mindset that has made Americans the biggest suckers in the world, willing to trade Christian feelings for Jews for hatred of Arabs promulgated by decades of Jewish racial profiling on TV and movie dramas, not to mention Muslims themselves adding to the overall stupidity of non-stop Abrahamic religious warfare that goes on year after year, century after century, millennia after millennia, Abrahamic religionists at war with each other or with non-Abrahamics. And this is the 21st Century? Looking more and more like the 12th to me..

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