Take Action: BDS Activists Arrested and Imprisoned Without Charge in Israel
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- Written by Birthright Unplugged Birthright Unplugged
- Published: 21 December 2009 21 December 2009
- Hits: 3015 3015
Dear friends of Birthright Unplugged,
As we recently wrote to you about in our Communiqué,
Mohammad Othman, a 33-year-old Palestinian activist, was arrested in September at
the Allenby Bridge crossing from Jordan into the West Bank. He has
subsequently been imprisoned by the Israeli government, and is currently being
held without charge or trial in what is known as “administrative
detention.” Mohammad was arrested upon his return from a trip to Norway
during which he met with senior Norwegian officials to discuss their recent
divestment from Elbit, an Israeli defense company
that manufactures the monitoring system installed on rural sections of the West
Bank Wall. Mr. Othman was arrested and is being imprisoned because of
his human rights work, and in particular his work on Boycott, Divestment, and
Sanctions against Israel (BDS).
We have recently learned that Jamal Juma’, coordinator
of the Palestinian Grassroots Anti-Apartheid Wall campaign, was detained for
interrogation by Israel on December 15th. The following day he was
arrested and imprisoned, and soldiers told his wife as they departed with her
husband that the only way she would see him next would be through a prisoner
exchange. Since the first Intifada, Mr. Juma’, 47, has focused on
grassroots activism. He has addressed numerous civil society and UN
conferences, where he has spoken on the issue of Palestine and the Apartheid
Wall. His articles and interviews are widely disseminated and translated into
several languages.
The arrest of Mr. Juma’ is the latest within an intensifying campaign of
repression of grassroots mobilization against the Wall and the settlements and
the BDS movement. Israel has also targeted members of the Popular Committee
organizing the non-violent resistance movement in Bil’in, including
Mohammad Khatib and Abdallah Abu Rahmeh. Overall, Israel is seeking to
criminalize Palestinian resistance and quash its movement for freedom.
We urge you to get involved with the campaigns being led in
support of Mohammad and Jamal.
Recommended Actions:
•
Encourage your community to join this campaign
through petitions, demonstrations and/or letter writing and phone calling.
Please provide them with contact information and details.
•
Urge your representatives at consular offices in
Tel Aviv and Jerusalem/Ramallah to advocate for the immediate release of Jamal
Juma’, Mohammad Othman and the other non violent activists. A template
letter can be found here: http://stopthewall.org/latestnews/2140.shtml
•
Let the Israeli Embassy in your home country
know that you are campaigning for the release of Jamal Juma’ and the
other anti-Wall prisoners:
http://www.embassiesabroad.com/embassies-in/Israel#11725
•
Bring the case of the anti-Wall prisoners to the
attention of local and national media outlets.
•
Follow the websites, blogs, and Facebook groups
regarding the issue:
http://freejamaljuma.wordpress.com/
http://freemohammadothman.wordpress.com/
Facebook: Free the Anti-Wall
Prisoners
Twitter: http://twitter.com/wallprisoners
There are at least 750 Palestinians in Israeli prisons being
held without charge or trial. To read more about Israel’s use of administrative
detention:
http://www.addameer.org/detention/admin_deten.html
All our best,
Dunya and Heike
Graphic novel on 'Israeli massacres' in Gaza to be released by Portland graphic novelist
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- Written by The Associated Press The Associated Press
- Published: 21 December 2009 21 December 2009
- Hits: 2967 2967
Fans say graphic novelist Joe Sacco has set new standards for the use of the comic book as a documentary medium. Detractors say his portrayals of the Palestinian conflict are filled with distortion, bias and hyperbole.
One thing is certain - the award-winning author of "Palestine" leaves few readers indifferent.
Sacco's work has more in common with gonzo journalism than your Sunday comic strip: He travels to the world's hot spots from Iraq to Gaza to Sarajevo, immerses himself in the lives of ordinary people, and sets out to depict their harsh realities - in unflinching ink and paper.
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One of his biggest supporters is award-winning Israeli filmmaker Ari Folman, who directed the 2008 Golden Globe winning cartoon ocumentary "Waltz for Bashir."
"Whenever I'm asked about animation that influences me, I would say it's more graphic novels. A tremendous influence on me has been Sacco's 'Palestine,' his work on Bosnia and then Art peigelman's 'Maus,'" he said in a telephone interview.
"His work quite simply reflects reality."
The American-Maltese artist's latest book, "Footnotes in Gaza," chronicles two episodes in 1956 in which a U.N. report filed Dec. 15, 1956 says a total of 386 civilians were shot dead by Israeli soldiers - events Sacco said have been "virtually airbrushed from history because they have been ignored by the mainstream media."
Israeli historians dispute these figures.
"It's a big exaggeration," said Meir Pail, a leading Israeli military historian and leftist politician. "There was never a killing of such a degree. Nobody was murdered. I was there. I don't know of any massacre."
Sacco's passion for the Palestinian cause has opened him up to accusations of bias.
Jose Alaniz, from the University of Washington's Department of Comparative Literature, said Sacco uses "all sorts of subtle ways" to manipulate the reader.
"Very often he will pick angles in his art work that favor the perspective of the victim: He'll draw Israeli soldiers or settlers from a low perspective to make them more menacing and towering."
Alaniz also said Sacco draws children "in such a way to make them seem more victimized."
Sacco himself admits he takes sides.
"I don't believe in objectivity as it's practiced in American journalism. I'm not anti-Israeli ... It's just I very much believe in getting across the Palestinian point of view," he said.
In "Palestine," which won the 1996 National Book Award, Sacco reported on the lives of West Bank and Gaza inhabitants in the early 1990s. "Safe Area Gorazde," which won the 2001 Eisner Award for Best Original Graphic Novel, describes his experiences in Bosnia in 1995-96.
Sacco has been lauded by Edward Said, the renowned literary scholar and Palestinian rights spokesman, who said in his foreword to "Palestine": "With the exception of one or two novelists and poets, no one has ever rendered this terrible state of affairs better than Joe Sacco."
"Footnotes" - to be released in the United States on Tuesday - sees Sacco's cartoon self, with the now trademark nondescript owlishly bespectacled eyes, plunge into the squalid trash-strewn, raw concrete alleys of Rafah, and its neighboring town of Khan Younis.
Sacco draws crowded narrow streets, full of prying schoolchildren and unemployed men. His desperate characters - fugitives, widows and sheiks - mix long past fact with fiction.
"What I show in the book is that this massacre is just one element of Palestinian history ... and that people are confused about which event, what year they are talking about," he said.
"Palestinians never seem to have had the luxury of digesting one tragedy before the next is upon them."
Sacco said in doing so he is trying to create a balance to what he calls the United States' pro-Israeli bias.
A scene in "Palestine" shows an Israeli woman asking: "Shouldn't you be seeing our side of the story?" Sacco's cartoon self replies: "I've heard nothing but the Israeli side most of my life."
Sacco says he puts himself into his comics because he wants his readers to see and feel what he does.
"I'm not pretending to be the all powerful, all knowing journalist god ... I'm an individual who reacts to people who are sometimes afraid ... On a human level, of course that colors the stories I'm telling."
Folman, who both wrote and directed the 2008 animated documentary film about a 19-year-old Israeli soldier still troubled by nightmares about the Lebanon War, says Sacco has brought something rare to the cartoon genre.
"The way he illustrates says everything about the writing ? it's so unique, there is nothing quite like him," he explained.
"I really admire the guy ... And I feel from his work that we share exactly the same opinions about what's happening in the Middle East ... The day will come when I will meet him and hopefully work with him."
Oybama
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- Written by Uri Avnery Uri Avnery
- Published: 20 December 2009 20 December 2009
- Hits: 3146 3146
It covers practically all possible areas. . . ."
Gaza must be rebuilt now
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- Written by Jimmy Carter Jimmy Carter
- Published: 19 December 2009 19 December 2009
- Hits: 3107 3107
We can wait no longer to restart the peace process. The human suffering demands urgent relief
The cries
of homeless and freezing people demand immediate relief.
This is a time for bold action, and the season for forgiveness, reconciliation and peace.
U.S.-Israeli Arms Cooperation Quietly Growing
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- Written by Nathan Guttman Nathan Guttman
- Published: 18 December 2009 18 December 2009
- Hits: 2899 2899
Joint Exercise: Israeli soldiers train near the coastal city of Ashdod in October, part of the largest missile defense dry run ever held. Some 1,400 American soldiers were also involved.
Israeli officials have been singing the praises of President Obama for his willingness to address their defense concerns and for actions taken by his administration to bolster Israel’s qualitative military edge — an edge eroded, according to Israel, during the final year of the George W. Bush presidency.
Among the new initiatives taken by the administration, the Forward has learned, are adjustments in a massive arms deal the Bush administration made with Arab Gulf states in response to Israeli concerns. There have also been upgrades in U.S.-Israeli military cooperation on missile defense. And a deal is expected next year that will see one of the United States’ most advanced fighter jets go to Israel with some of America’s most sensitive new technology.
Amid the cacophony of U.S.-Israel clashes on the diplomatic front, public attention given to this intensified strategic cooperation has been scant. But in a rare public comment in October, Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren praised the Obama administration’s response to complaints about lost ground during the close of the Bush years as “warm and immediate.”
“We came to the Obama administration and said, ‘Listen, we have a problem here,’” Oren, told a gathering of the National Jewish Democratic Council. “The administration’s reaction was immediate: we are going to address this issue, we are going to make sure that we maintain your QME [qualitative military edge].”
The warmth seems to stand in contrast to public opinion in Israel, which, according to a recent survey, is highly critical of Obama, seeing him as weak and naive. Bush is perceived as having been a much stronger ally.
But when the new administration settled in, it faced entreaties from Jerusalem to redress what Israeli officials saw as an erosion on the strategic side during the last stage of Bush’s tenure.
The Israelis cited Arab progress in replacing old Soviet weapons with new Western arms, and advances in the operational technology of weapons that has made Israel’s investment in human skills less significant.
But Jerusalem’s concerns, well-informed Israeli sources say, were also stoked by a massive $20 billion arms deal that the United States signed with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states during the Bush administration’s last year. In its attempt to counter Iran’s military buildup and nuclear ambitions, the former administration approved an arms contract that included upgrades of the Gulf countries’ air and naval capabilities, as well as advanced missile defense systems and modern satellite-guided bombs.
Israel, which sees Iran as its prime enemy in the region, initially accepted the Bush strategists’ rationale for the huge arms transfer. Jerusalem voiced only mild concern regarding some of the specifics, mainly the supply of precision bombs.
But in recent months, Israeli defense officials visiting Washington stepped up complaints about the Saudi deal. To the newly installed Obama administration officials, the Israelis argued that the usage and deployment of these arms breached earlier understandings and could tilt the military balance against Israel.
These complaints were met with what one Israeli diplomat called a “receptiveness” that was demonstrated in the new administration’s willingness to adjust the arms deployments to mitigate Israel’s concerns.
A former senior security official in the Bush administration said Bush’s guidance to all levels was to maintain Israel’s qualitative military edge. The ex-official, who would speak only on background, added that the arms sales to Gulf countries were done in light of the Arab world’s anxiety over Iran’s ambitions. “We saw it as a positive for all sides,” he said, adding Israel had no complaints against it “on the strategic level.”
According to Steve Rosen, a former lobbyist for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee who is now a private consultant, the Obama administration, and especially the Pentagon, is now more open to supplying Israel with cutting-edge technology in an attempt to ensure Israel’s confidence and possibly steer Jerusalem away from the idea of attacking Iran. “In an effort to give Israel a larger margin of safety, the U.S. is releasing technology that under other circumstances would have been seen as more sensitive,” he said.
The United States and Israel have also recently launched a new consultative mechanism for discussing and addressing issues relating to Israel’s qualitative military edge. This new process, involving key officials from the Pentagon and State Department on the American side and Israel’s Foreign and Defense ministries, is currently being applied to several outstanding Israeli concerns. Israeli defense officials and pro-Israel activists characterize this as a significant development in strategic consultations between the two countries.
America’s commitment to maintaining Israel’s qualitative military edge was codified directly into U.S. law via 2008 legislation backed by AIPAC. This legislation requires the president to report to Congress periodically on actions taken by the administration to ensure Israel’s advantage. A spokeswoman for the House Foreign Affairs Committee told the Forward that the White House provided its first report to Congress this past summer. The report was classified, and no information regarding its content has been released.
Long before the 2008 law, the Reagan administration promised that America would ensure Israel’s military advantage over its neighbors. And succeeding presidents have maintained this commitment. The commitment defined Israel’s strategic advantage as the difference between Israel’s military capabilities compared with each one of its Arab adversaries or with the combination of all adversaries.
“Originally, it was Israel’s way to overcome its numeric inferiority,” said Guy Ben-Ari, deputy director of the defense-industrial initiatives group at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. He explained that the notion has been held up by both sides, despite the fact that Israel’s main military challenges — confronting terrorism and Iran’s nuclear threat — are not issues determined by the size of its military. The Israelis stressed that what happened during the close of Bush’s tenure was an erosion of Israeli’s military edge, not a breach of the Reagan era commitment.
Beyond correcting the perceived imbalance that developed under Bush, Israeli officials have also praised the Obama administration for increasing cooperation about missile defense. A November joint American-Israeli exercise, codenamed Juniper Cobra, was the largest and most extensive missile defense dry run ever held, and involved 1,400 American servicemen simulating responses to a possible attack against Israel. “The size and the high profile [of the exercise] are a signal from the administration about its commitment to Israel’s security,” an Israeli diplomat said.
Another deal that is highly anticipated in Israel is the expected sale of the advanced F-35 fighter jets to Israel’s air force. The Pentagon has offered Israel a unique version of the radar-evading future aircraft for supply in 2015. A deal is expected to be signed early next year.
Still, Israeli officials and American lobbyists stressed that not all outstanding issues have been resolved. Supporters of Israel are now pushing for the administration and Congress to limit American arms sales to Lebanon because of the re-emergence of Hezbollah in Southern Lebanon on Israel’s northern border, and the failure of the central government in Beirut to disarm the group. Pro-Israel lobbyists cite their concern that American weapons might fall into the hands of Hezbollah, which is backed by Israel’s avowed enemy, Iran.