26 fevereiro, 2011

Sextas-feiras da Liberdade, por Tariq Ramadan

Tariq Ramadan
February 25, 2011

Freedom Fridays

Today, more than ever, homage is due to the historical uprising of the Tunisian people. Millions of women and men overcame fear and faced down terror. The Egyptian people followed their example and brought down the despot.

While the regimes may still be in place, an irreversible, uncontrollable movement has begun. North Africa and the Middle East will never again be the same. Whatever the schemes of military and the Western powers for political, geopolitical and economic control, a new dynamic has been created. Non-violent, determined and courageous mass movements have shown that anything is possible, that History is now forging ahead in the Arab world and the Muslim majority countries. 

From now on, it will be impossible to silence the craving for freedom and to halt the onward march of liberation, even though setbacks and missteps may occur.

The people of Libya have now taken to the streets and, city after city, freed its country from the grip of the eccentric dictator of Tripoli. The despot’s madness, as cunning as it is unpredictable, has not yet spoken its last. But it is clear that he too will fall ; that Libya will be freed of the horrors of his long reign. 

He too stole, tortured, summarily eliminated, and lied. For more than forty years he cleverly manipulated, provoked and humiliated the Western powers. Today, his own people have courageously chosen to confront him empty-handed. 

It is a question of vital importance to salute them, encourage them, assist them and support them. 

There is little that can be done from outside. But the movement is gathering strength ; we must do all we can to convince our own authorities to take a clear and forthright position. It will not come a moment too soon ! For how dismal is the now-confirmed revelation of years of silence, hypocrisy and falsehood : the Orient now stands as a revealing and distorting mirror in which the craven policies of the United States, of Canada, of Europe and Australia are reflected. 

Today, the people in revolt are chanting not a word of reproach toward the West. It could do no better than shake itself out of its stupor, as the Arab world is now doing. Courageous self-criticism is worth far more than guilty silence. Wait not a moment longer !

In Yemen, Bahrain, and Iraq ; in Morocco, Algeria, Iran, and Jordan… peoples are calling out their desire for freedom and dignity. Expressed in their Friday gatherings, the power of the people defies description ; the symbolism is overwhelming, irresistible. Muslim women and Muslim men, praying together, give voice to the universal human aspiration for liberty, justice and dignity, for the power of sovereign people. 

For those who have, over the years, painted Muslims as impermeable to the ideals of liberty and democracy, and naturally inclined to violence—due to the very essence of Islam—the answer is clear-cut and unequivocal : tens of millions of Muslims, on these Fridays, have chosen the path of resistance, of sacrifice and of liberation in a spirit of non-violence, respect for life, without ever criticizing the West, its values and its betrayals. They have done so alongside Christians, Anglicans and Copts, alongside atheists, communists, and citizens of all beliefs and ideologies. What finer answer could there be to the simple-minded, racist analyses propagated by populist parties in the West? 

On Freedom Fridays, with its massive crowds coming together to pray in the name of resistance and liberty, we witness, in real time, Islam—and of Muslims—joining forces with liberty, justice and democratic principles. 

That the first European leader to have greeted the resisting peoples and called upon the dictators to leave was the Turkish Prime Minister should serve as a caustic reminder of the value of the short-sighted and tendentious analyses of the “Muslim world” that have long infested Western diplomacy and intellectual life.

The movement must not end here. We must hope that the peoples continue their onward march, that they completely free themselves from the yoke of the tyrants and complete their democratic revolution. 

The final word has not yet been spoken, either in Tunisia, Egypt or Libya or elsewhere, but the movement will surely prove stronger than those who are attempting to control it. Therein lies its power. 

It is essential that all the components of the pluralist opposition seize this historic occasion to dialogue, to establish common fronts representing civil society in order that army commanders do not turn the revolution to their advantage, or to the advantage of foreign political or economic powers. We must hope that governments pay heed. 

They must either implement thoroughgoing reform or leave the scene entirely, and make way for systems of government that respect the popular will, and that apply uncompromisingly the five basic and inalienable principles : the rule of law, equality of all citizens, universal suffrage, limited electoral terms (accountability) and the separation of powers. This is the imperative, and the minimum acceptable : without corruption, insider privilege, and in full independence.

We must hope that the movement continues to spread throughout North Africa and the Middle East…up to and including Israel, that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his racist foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman also be overthrown and with them, the interminable policy of colonization and non-respect of the dignity of the Palestinians and the Arab citizens of Israel.

On Freedom Fridays, everything is possible. Full of hope, with clear eyes, we must hail the march of the peoples and remind governments—whoever they may be, those of the tyrants or the shameless friends of those same tyrants—that nothing lasts forever, that despots and traitors can never be eternally shielded from their peoples, or from the judgment of History.

Um Profeta Louco, por Uri avnery

Uri Avnery
February 26, 2011


A Crazy Prophet

“WHY DON’T the masses stream to the square here, too, and throw Bibi out?” my taxi driver exclaimed when we were passing Rabin Square. The wide expanse was almost empty, with only a few mothers and their children enjoying the mild winter sun.

The masses will not stream to the square, and Binyamin Netanyahu can be thrown out only through the ballot box.

If this does not happen, Israelis can blame nobody but themselves.

If the Israeli Left is unable to bring together a serious political force, which can put Israel on the road to peace and social justice, it has only itself to blame.

We have no bloodthirsty dictator whom we can hold responsible. No crazy tyrant will order his air force to bomb us if we demand his ouster.

Once there was a story making the rounds: Ariel Sharon – then still a general in the army – assembles the officer corps and tells them: “Comrades, tonight we shall carry out a military coup!” All the assembled officers break out in thunderous laughter.

DEMOCRACY IS like air – one feels it only when it is not there. Only a person who is suffocating knows how essential it is.

The taxi driver who spoke so freely about kicking Netanyahu out did not fear that I might be an agent of the secret police, and that in the small hours of the morning there would be a knock on his door. I am writing whatever comes into my head and don’t walk around with bodyguards. And if we did decide to gather in the square, nobody would prevent us from doing so, and the police might even protect us.

(I am speaking, of course, about Israel within its sovereign borders. None of this applies to the occupied Palestinian territories.)

We live in a democracy, breathe democracy, without even being conscious of it. For us It feels natural, we take it for granted. That’s why people often give silly answers to public opinion pollsters, and these draw the dramatic conclusion that the majority of Israeli citizens despise democracy and are ready to give it up. Most of those asked have never lived under a regime in which a woman must fear that her husband will not come home from work because he made a joke about the Supreme Leader, or that her son might disappear because he drew some graffiti on the wall.

The Knesset members who were chosen in democratic elections spend their time in a game of who can draw up the most atrocious racist bill. They resemble children pulling off the wings of flies, without understanding what they are doing.

To all these I have one piece of advice: look at what is happening in Libya.


DURING THE whole week I spent every spare moment glued to Aljazeera.

One word about the station: excellent.

It need not fear comparison with any broadcaster in the world, including the BBC and CNN. Not to mention our own stations, which serve a murky brew concocted from propaganda, information and entertainment.

Much has been said about the part played by the social networks, like Facebook and Twitter, in the revolutions that are now turning the Arab world upside down. But for sheer influence, Aljazeera trumps them all. During the last decade, it has changed the Arab world beyond recognition. In the last few weeks, it has wrought miracles.

To see the events in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and the other countries on Israeli, American or German TV is like kissing through a handkerchief. To see them on Aljazeera is to feel the real thing.

All my adult life I have advocated involved journalism. I have tried to teach generations of journalists not to become reporting robots, but human beings with a conscience who see their mission in promoting the basic human values. Aljazeera is doing just that. And how!

These last weeks, tens of millions of Arabs have depended on this station in order to find out what is happening in their own countries, indeed in their home towns – what is happening on Habib Bourguiba Boulevard in Tunis, in Tahrir Square in Cairo, in the streets of Benghazi and Tripoli.

I know that many Israelis will consider these words heretical, given Aljazeera’s staunch support of the Palestinian cause. It is seen here as the arch-enemy, no less than Osama bin Laden or Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. But one simply must view its broadcasts, to have any hope of understanding what is happening in the Arab world, including the occupied Palestinian territories.

When Aljazeera covers a war or a revolution in the Arab world, it covers it. Not for an hour or two, but for 24 hours around the clock. The pictures are engraved in one’s memory, the testimonies stir one’s emotions. The impact on Arab viewers is almost hypnotic.

MUAMMAR QADDAFI was shown on Aljazeera as he really is – an unbalanced megalomaniac who has lost touch with reality. Not in short news clips, but for hours and hours of continuous broadcasts, in which the rambling speech he recently gave was shown again and again, with the addition of dozens of testimonies and opinions from Libyans of all sectors – from the air force officers who defected to Malta to ordinary citizens in bombed Tripoli.

At the beginning of his speech, Qaddafi (whose name is pronounced Qazzafi, whence the slogan “Ya Qazzafi, Ya Qazzabi” – Oh Qazzafi, Oh Liar) reminded me of Nicolae Ceausescu and his famous last speech from the balcony, which was interrupted by the masses. But as the speech went on, Qaddafi reminded me more and more of Adolf Hitler in his last days, when he pored over the map with his remaining generals, maneuvering armies which had already ceased to exist and planning grandiose “operations”, with the Red Army already within a few hundred yards from his bunker.

If Qaddafi were not planning to slaughter his own people, it could have been grotesque or sad. But as it was, it was only monstrous.

While he was talking, the rebels were taking control of towns whose names are still engraved in the memories of Israelis of my generation. In World War II, these places were the arena of the British, German and Italian armies, which captured and lost them turn by turn. We followed the actions anxiously, because a British defeat would have brought the Wehrmacht to our country, with Adolf Eichmann in its wake. Names like Benghazi, Tobruk and Derna still resound in my ear – the more so because my brother fought there as a British commando, before being transferred to the Ethiopian campaign, where he lost his life.

BEFORE QADDAFI lost his mind completely, he voiced an idea that sounded crazy, but which should give us food for thought.

Under the influence of the victory of the non-violent masses in Egypt, and before the earthquake had reached him too, Qaddafi proposed putting the masses of Palestinian refugees on ships and sending them to the shores of Israel.

I would advise Binyamin Netanyahu to take this possibility very seriously. What will happen if masses of Palestinians learn from the experience of their brothers and sisters in half a dozen Arab countries and conclude that the “armed struggle” leads nowhere, and that they should adopt the tactics of non-violent mass action?

What will happen if hundreds of thousands of Palestinians march one day to the Separation Wall and pull it down? What if a quarter of a million Palestinian refugees in Lebanon gather on our Northern border? What if masses of people assemble in Manara Square in Ramallah and Town Hall Square in Nablus and confront the Israeli troops? All this before the cameras of Aljazeera, accompanied by Facebook and Twitter, with the entire world looking on with bated breath?

Until now, the answer was simple: if necessary, we shall use live fire, helicopter gunships and tank cannon. No more nonsense.

But now the Palestinian youth, too, has seen that it is possible to face live fire, that Qaddafi’s fighter planes did not put an end to the uprising, that Pearl Square in Bahrain did not empty when the king’s soldiers opened fire. This lesson will not be forgotten.

Perhaps this will not happen tomorrow or the day after. But it most certainly will happen – unless we make peace while we still can.

25 fevereiro, 2011

Uma carta dos The Elders escrita por Gro Brundtland - Palestina, Chipre, Sudão alguns dos temas,



The Elders
Gro Brundtland
Dr Gro Brundtland

Dear friends,
What a momentous start to the year!
Who could have imagined that a wave of people power would topple leaders in Egypt and Tunisia in just a matter of weeks?
I have been so impressed to see young people across the Arab world seize the initiative and articulate their vision for a better future.
They have sounded a stark warning to their leaders: we have a right to demand change and we have the will to achieve it.
However we are also dismayed at the loss of life that has occurred, most recently in Libya, and remind governments, security services, political parties and citizens of the rights of people to campaign for change and reform in their own societies.
Middle East – we need a new and fairer peace process
As we watch men and women across the Arab world demonstrate for freedom and basic rights, we must point out that these matters are no less urgent in the West Bank and Gaza.
For the Palestinians and for Israel, the need for lasting peace, an end to occupation and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state cannot be ignored.

The Elders in Jerusalem
Elders Mary Robinson, Ela Bhatt and Jimmy Carter
in Jerusalem, October 2010
Not only did this resolution reflect global consensus, it was consistent with long-standing US policy on the incompatibility of settlement construction with efforts to advance peace.
Regrettably, the US vetoed the resolution, an action that stands in contrast to growing calls for freedom, justice and basic human rights echoing today around the Middle East and Maghreb region.
In our view, there is an urgent need for a new and fairer peace process. Only a principled stance by the entire international community is likely to bring about a just and secure peace for all Israelis and Palestinians.
Building a shared future in Cyprus
The Elders' Cyprus documentary
From The Elders' documentary,
"Cyprus: Digging the Past in Search of the Future"

Just a few weeks ago Desmond Tutu and I visited Cyprus and the UK.
We were there to launch a new Elders' documentary about the search for the remains of thousands of missing persons killed in conflict and violence in Cyprus during the 1960s and 1970s.
We were joined by four wonderful teenagers who appear in the film – two Turkish Cypriots and two Greek Cypriots – who grew up in separate communities, but have come together to try to understand the events of the past and build a better future.
It is not always easy for these students, who often face suspicion and even animosity about mixing with the 'other side'. Michael Panayi wrote a very moving blog where he talks frankly about the challenges he faces from people who don't think peace is possible.
As you can read in my own blog, we left Cyprus a little less optimistic about the current peace negotiations. However, meeting young people as articulate, thoughtful and committed as Thalia, Michael, Idil and Tayfun gives me genuine hope that people can succeed in bringing down barriers between the communities, even if their leaders are dragging their feet.
South Sudan – welcoming a new nation
In a historic referendum in January, the people of South Sudan voted to secede from the north of the country.
South Sudan – which will become Africa's newest country in July – will face many hurdles and we caution that much needs to be done to develop a country where a girl is more likely to die in childbirth than to learn to read or write.
As my fellow Elder Graça Machel stated:

South Sudan referendum
Elders Graça Machel and Jimmy Carter
in Sudan, October 2007
"It is now up to the leaders in the South to manage the immense expectations of the people for better schools, healthcare and infrastructure and greater economic opportunities, especially for women and youth."
Your messages
Thank you for all your thoughts and ideas. I particularly enjoyed reading a message from Chier from Sudan, who wrote to tell us how he felt as the people of South Sudan cast their vote after many years of war;
"It has been a very important moment after a long struggle... Today, the world has given Southerners a chance to determine their fate."
Best wishes,
Gro
Gro Brundtland signature

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The Elders Foundation, PO BOX 60837, London W6 6GS
Company limited by guarantee. Registered in England and Wales, Reg. No. 6317151.
Registered charity in England and Wales, Reg. No. 1132397.

Vencedor do "Project Reason 2011 Video Contest": "O novo dízimo"

O vencedor do Grande Prémio:

The New Tithe 


Mega-igrejas usaram a religião como instrumento de captação de fundos desde há muito. Enchem os seus seguidores de frases hipócritas e de seguida, clamam pelo seu dinheiro
Este vídeo incentiva uma nova definição do dízimo, ofertando-o a causas com responsabilidade.


* Project Reason é uma fundação sem fins lucrativos dedicada à difusão do conhecimento científico e dos valores laicos na sociedade.
A fundação recorre aos talentos dos pensadores mais importantes e criativos numa ampla gama de disciplinas para estimular o pensamento crítico e corroer a influência do dogmatismo, superstição e preconceito no nosso mundo.

24 fevereiro, 2011

Urgente: justiça britânica decide extraditar Assange : [Boletim Diplo] Outras Palavras - Boletim 28 - 24/2/2010

bibliotecadiplô e OUTRASPALAVRAS
Boletim de atualização de Outras Palavras e Biblioteca Diplô - Nº 28 - 24/2/2010

ESPECIAL: DOSSIÊ WIKILEAKS


Defesa do jornalista australiano recorrerá, mas ele pode ser enviado em dez dias à Suécia -- e de lá, aos EUA. Veja em nossos textos como as acusações são infundadas, e por que o Wikileaks desperta tanto ódio entre o poder



> SOBRE A FALSIDADE DAS ACUSAÇÕES:


Ampliam-se as evidências de que acusações são manobra pra extraditar criador do Wikileaks aos EUA (8/12/2010)

Jornalista sueco revela: depois de "violentada", acusadora foi ao Twitter e chamou "estuprador" de "um dos homens mais simpáticos do mundo". Dias depois, fez a denúncia e apagou os posts (9/12/2010)

> SOBRE A "REVOLUÇÃO WIKILEAKS:

 
Manuel Castells analisa: a novidade é que os governos já não estão seguros de que manterão seus cidadãos na ignorância (18/12/2010)

O que ocorrer com o direito à informação definirá a democracia no próximo século. Por isso o Wikileaks é importante (5/12/2010)

 
Vídeo da TV pública sueca relata a criação e revela o modo de agir do Wikileaks, esclarecendo em especial como opera sua rede de colaboradores (19/12/2010)

> SOBRE O QUE JÁ FOI DENUNCIADO PELO SITE E O QUE AINDA PODE SER


Como ferramenta colaborativa revelou o desastre militar de Washington e está perturbando poderes econômicos e políticos, ao divulgar seus segredos (27/10/2010)
 
O que mais enfurece o Pentágono é a revelação das mentiras de que todos suspeitávamos. Por Robert Fisk (25/10/2010)

Diretor de banco entrega a Assange dados de evasão de impostos que podem comprometer autoridades e multinacionais (18/1/2011)

> SOBRE OS MOVIMENTOS E PERSONALIDADES QUE DEFENDEM ASSANGE E O WIKILEAKS


Como o Anonymous tirou da internet Mastercard e Visa – e está reunindo milhares de hack-ativistas pela liberdade de expressão  (18/12/2010)


"É engraçado: prenderam o rapaz que denunciava a diplomacia americana e não vejo nenhum jornal defendê-lo" (9/12/2010)

Enquanto Washington amplia perseguições ao Wikileaks, pesquisador finlandês propõe proteger porta-voz do site, para evitar retrocesso político grave (27/1/2011)


A extradição não seria concedida de modo algum, se o caso acontecesse quando a Grã-Bretanha orgulhava-se de ser mais liberal — e nação soberana (17/1/2011)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Boletim de atualização dos sites Outras Palavras e Biblioteca Diplô. A reprodução é benvinda. Interessados em recebê-lo devem clicar aqui.

LIVE Webcast: HOJE, 24 February, 23:30-01:00: "Honouring the Past – Envisioning the Future for Women and Girls"


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Say No - UNiTE to End Violence Against Women


Dear Friends,

Join us TODAY for the LIVE webcast and Twitter discussion of UN Women's launch event at the United Nations Headquarters in New York!
Honouring the Past – Envisioning the Future for Women and Girls
Thursday, 24 February 2011, 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM, EST
Click Here to Watch the LIVE Webcast

Hosted by Emcee Christiane Amanpour and other distinguished speakers and performers


On January 1 2011, UN Women, the United Nations entity dedicated to gender equality and women's empowerment, started its work under the leadership of Executive Director Ms. Michelle Bachelet. It is a historic opportunity to make gender equality a lived reality.

Please spread the word among your friends and networks! Here are some sample tweets:

Watch the live #webcast and follow the tweeting from the @UN_Women launch event tonight at 6.30pm EST! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch #unwomen

Don't miss the @UN_Women launch event tonight at 6.30pm EST! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch #unwomen

Follow @UN_Women for live tweeting from the #unwomen launch event tonight at 6.30pm EST! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch

If you are on Facebook, you can post:

Don't miss the UN Women launch event with many distinguished speakers and performers tonight at 6.30pm EST via live webcast and tweeting from @UN_Women! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch

If you cannot watch the live webcast, visit the event page for the archived video and more information.

Sincerely,

Say NO Team, UN Women



Estimada/o Amiga/o:

Te invitamos a sumarte HOY a la transmisión en directo en el internet y a los tweets del evento de inauguración de ONU Mujeres en la Sede de las Naciones Unidas.
En honor al pasado, con visión de futuro para las mujeres y las niñas
Jueves 24 de febrero de 2011. 6:30 – 8:00, Hora Estándar del Este
Pulsa aquí para ver la transmisión multimedia EN DIRECTO
Evento presentado por Christiane Amanpour y otros destacados oradores y artistas

El 1 de enero de 2011, ONU Mujeres, la entidad de las Naciones Unidas dedicada a la igualdad de género y al empoderamiento de las mujeres, comenzó su labor bajo la conducción de la Directora Ejecutiva, Sra. Michelle Bachelet. Se trata de una oportunidad histórica para convertir la igualdad de género en una realidad tangible.

Pasa la voz entre tus amistades y redes. Aquí incluimos algunas muestras de textos para Twitter:

¡Ve la transmisión en directo del lanzamiento de @onumujeres a las 6.30EST y sigue @UN_Women en Twitter! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch #unwomen

¡No te olvides ver el evento de inauguración de @onumujeres esta noche a las 6.30EST! ¡Sigue @UN_Women! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch #unwomen

¡Sigue el tweeting de @UN_Women en directo del lanzamiento de @onumujeres hoy a las 6.30EST! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch #unwomen

Si estás en el Facebook, puedes difundir el mensaje siguiente:

¡No te olvides el evento de lanzamiento de ONU Mujeres con varios destacados oradores y artistas esta noche a las 6.30 EST! ¡Ve la transmisión en directo en la Web y sigue @UN_Women en Twitter! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch


Si no puedes ver la transmisión del evento en directo, visita la página del evento con el archivo del video y demás información.


Cordialmente,

El Equipo de Di NO, ONU Mujeres
 
 

Chères amies, chers amis,

Rejoignez-nous AUJOURD'HUI pour la retransmission en DIRECT sur internet et sur Twitter de la cérémonie de lancement d'ONU Femmes au siège des Nations Unies !
Honorer le passé – Envisager le future pour les femmes et les filles
Jeudi 24 février 2011 de 18h30 à 20h00, heure de New York
Cliquez ici pour regarder la diffusion en DIRECT sur le web
Présenté par la journaliste Christiane Amanpouret d'autres intervenant(e)s et artistes

Le 1er janvier 2011, ONU Femmes, l'entité des Nations Unies dédiée à l'égalité des sexes et à l'autonomisation des femmes, a débuté ses travaux sous la direction de la Directrice exécutive Michelle Bachelet. C'est une occasion historique de faire de l'égalité des sexes une réalité.

Faites passer le message à vos ami(e)s et à votre réseau ! Voici quelques exemples de messages pour Twitter :

Regardez la diffusion en direct du lancement d' #ONUFemmes à 18.30 (heure de NY) et suivez @UN_Women sur Twitter http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch

Ne ratez pas la cérémonie de lancement de @UN_Women ce soir à 18.30 (heure de NY)! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch #unwomen #onufemmes

Suivez @UN_Women pour la cérémonie de lancement d' #ONUFemmes sur Twitter ce soir à 18.30 (heure de NY)! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch

Si vous êtes sur Facebook, vous pouvez diffuser le message suivant:

Ne ratez pas l'événement marquant le lancement d'ONU Femmes avec de nombreux intervenant(e)s et artistes ce soir à 18.30 (heure de NY) ! La cérémonie est retransmise en direct sur internet et @UN_Women sur Twitter ! http://bit.ly/unwomenlaunch

Si vous êtes dans l'impossibilité de regarder la cérémonie en direct sur le web, rendez-vous sur la page consacrée à cet événement pour consulter la vidéo et avoir de plus amples informations.


Bien à vous.

Equipe Dites NON d'ONU Femmes

Say NO – UNiTE to End Violence against Women

Our mailing address is:

Say NO – UNiTE to End Violence against Women
304 East 45th Street, 15th Floor
New York, NY 10017 USA


Copyright (C) 2009 All rights reserved.

22 fevereiro, 2011

ELECTRONIC INTIFADA (Update 21.02.2011)

EGYPT-ISRAEL "PEACE TREATY" BROUGHT MORE WAR THAN PEACE
By Richard Irvine
The Electronic Intifada, 21 February 2011

In the wake of Egypt's revolution, Israeli and Western commentators have called the 1979 Egypt-Israel peace treaty "cornerstone" of regional peace and stability. That Israel always viewed the treaty as a blank check for war, however, is evident both in its behavior and in fears that the abrogation of the treaty might mean Israel will have to curtail its military interventions.

---------------------------------------------------------
AL-TUWANI CHILDREN'S STRUGGLE TO GO TO SCHOOL
By Samuel Nichols
Live from Palestine, 21 February 2011

On the afternoon of 7 February 2011, masked Israeli settlers from Havat Maon outpost chased a group of twelve Palestinian schoolchildren who were walking home from school in al-Tuwani village in the occupied West Bank's South Hebron Hills. The Israeli military had failed to arrive to escort the schoolchildren, forcing the children to take a longer path without the army's escort.

---------------------------------------------------------
FAMILIES FORCED OUT AS ARMY OCCUPIES JERUSALEM ROOFTOP 
By Jillian Kestler-D'Amours
The Electronic Intifada, 18 February 2011

For at least five months, Israeli military has been stationed on the roof of Abid Abu Ramuz's building -- which houses a total of 69 persons from seven separate families, as well as a mosque -- in the heart of Silwan's Baten al-Hawa neighborhood.

---------------------------------------------------------
ACTIVISM ROUNDUP: BILIN COMMEMORATES SIX YEARS OF PROTEST Report
The Electronic Intifada, 18 February 2011 

The Electronic Intifada brings you this roundup of recent activism news from across the globe, including disruptions by university students of speeches by an Israeli soldier and a politician in Massachusetts and in Scotland, a move to challenge Seattle's violations of free speech rights and a Palestinian youth group's demonstration against a settler-only marathon in the occupied West Bank.

--
ABOUT: The Electronic Intifada (EI), found at http://electronicIntifada.net, publishes news, commentary, analysis, and reference materials about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from a Palestinian perspective. 

EI is the leading Palestinian portal for information about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and its depiction in the
media. More information about our work can be found at http://electronicIntifada.net/v2/aboutEI.shtml

To find out about other EI/eIraq lists available, see: http://lists.electronicintifada.net/mail.cgi

SUPPORT OUR PROJECT: Our work needs funding. We accept donations via credit card and cheque. U.S. donations are tax deductible. 

More information can be found at: http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article2162.shtml

Sabbah Report

Link to Sabbah Report


Posted: 20 Feb 2011 12:03 PM PST
Of course this American veto is not some idiosyncratic whim, but is an expression of the sorry pro-Israeli realities of domestic politics, suggesting that it is Israel that is the real holder of the veto in this situation, and the U.S. Congress and the Israeli Lobby are merely designated as the enforcers.
Posted: 20 Feb 2011 11:10 AM PST
The resolution had over120 cosponsors (just about the entire non-Western world) and the support of every other member of the Security Council. The only thing wrong with it was that it singled out the Israelis as the culprits and was thus anathema to the politicians in Washington. For the Obama administration, it was a supremely embarrassing moment.
Posted: 20 Feb 2011 10:14 AM PST
Never before has an American President's fear of offending the Zionist lobby and its stooges in Congress been so exposed as it was by Obama's decision to veto the Security Council resolution condemning continued, illegal Israeli settlement activities on the occupied West Bank and demanding that Israel "immediately and completely cease" all such activities. In a different America – an informed America – some might think, I do, that Obama should be impeached. The charge? TREASON.
Posted: 20 Feb 2011 08:58 AM PST
On February 18, as expected, Washington vetoed a UN Security Council resolution condemning Israeli settlements as illegal under international law. The vote: 14 yes, America the sole no, isolating the US and Israel on this long festering issue. The measure had nearly 120 co-sponsors.