Israel-Palestine

28 August 2012Letter

I was shocked by your glowing review of Gilad Atzmon’s book (PN 2545). His Wikipedia entry, for example, shows he doesn’t deserve coverage in Peace News.

Gilad has been persona non grata with the left in the UK for many years, since his criticism of Israel developed into anti-semitism. His latest book, The Wandering Who, borrows ideas from Zionism and Mein Kampf, claims a Jewish conspiracy runs the world, includes a side-swipe at feminism, heaps vitriol on…

2 July 2012Review

Trolley Books, 2012 256pp, £24.99.

In April 2003 Tom Hurndall, a 22-year-old British peace activist and photojournalist, was shot in the forehead by an Israeli sniper. Wearing bright orange jacket and trousers to identify him as a peace volunteer, and clearly unarmed, he was trying to rescue a Palestinian child pinned down by gunfire in the town of Rafah in the Gaza Strip. He died after nine months in a coma.

The Israeli marksman responsible, Taysir Hayb, convicted of manslaughter, obstruction of justice, incitement to…

2 July 2012Review

OR Books, 2012; 472pp; £12

In its 2010 report ‘Building a Political Firewall Against Israel’s Delegitimization’, the Tel Aviv-based Reut Institute speculated that ‘the Jewish world is growing more distant from Israel’ because ‘a growing number of Jews do not have enough historical knowledge’.

In his latest book, Norman Finkelstein argues persuasively that – at least in the case of the US – the reverse is true: namely, that a growing section of the disproportionately liberal US Jewish public (only African-…

2 July 2012Review

Asa Winstanley & Frank Barat, Corporate Complicity in Israel’s Occupation: Evidence from the London Session of the Russell Tribunal on Palestine Pluto Press, 2011; 232pp; £19.99 Tom Anderson, Therezia Cooper, Jack Curry, Georgia Clough & Pete Jones, Targeting Israeli Apartheid: A Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Handbook Corporate Watch, 2011; ; £9 + p&p, or download for free, from www.corporatewatch.org

Israel’s 45-year occupation of Palestine’s West Bank and Gaza Strip has witnessed its establishment as a ‘legitimate’ player in the global economy and its crippling of Palestinian livelihoods.  These two books explore this process of  ‘normalisation’ and the apartheid nature of the Israeli state.

The first draws its inspiration from Bertrand Russell’s 1966/67 investigation of the Vietnam War, and  contains evidence and testimonies from prominent activists, lawyers and human rights…

2 July 2012News in Brief

On 28 May, charges were at last brought for Israel’s May 2010 assault on a humanitarian flotilla bound for Gaza (PN 2523- 2524).

The indictments were laid at a Turkish court against four Israeli military leaders, the former chief of staff of the Israeli defence force and the former heads of military intelligence, the navy and the air force. They were indicted for incitement to murder the nine unarmed humanitarian volunteers killed during the assault, and incitement to torture others…

2 July 2012News in Brief

On 30 May, it was announced that Israel is to prosecute a Haaretz journalist, Uri Blau, who demonstrated that senior Israeli officers had authorised the targeted assassination of Palestinians.

Blau drew on 700 classified military documents leaked by Israeli soldier Anat Kamm, who was as a result sentenced to four-and-a-half years in prison last year (PN 2540-2541). 

Blau is charged with ‘aggravated espionage’, which carries a maximum sentence of seven years.

2 July 2012News

Palestinian prisoners still being held in solidarity confinement

In May, 1,600 Palestinian prisoners ended their hunger strike against detention without trial and against abusive treatment, in return for major concessions by the Israeli prison service (see PN 2546).

It seems the prison service is not keeping to the agreement. More than 320 Palestinians remain in indefinite detention without trial; 10 prisoners have had their indefinite detention renewed; some prisoners continue to be held in solitary confinement for prolonged periods; prisoners…

30 May 2012News

On 14 May, some 1,600 Palestinians held in Israeli prisons won major concessions from the Israeli prison service, leading them to end their mass hunger strike which started on 17 April (see PN 2545).

The 14 May written agreement, brokered by Egypt, commits the Israeli authorities to: re-starting visits from immediate family; ending ‘long-term’ solitary confinement; creating a prisoner liaison committee; and creating a new framework for Palestinians in ‘administrative detention’.

These 308 prisoners, held without charge or trial, will not be put under new detention orders when their current period of detention ends – unless the secret files on which their detention was based…

27 April 2012News in Brief

On 7 April, a British court lifted a home office ban on sheikh Raed Salah, leader of the largest Palestinian political party in Israel.

In June 2011, after entering the UK for a lecture tour, Salah was detained by British police and served with a deportation order on the grounds that he might incite racial hatred.

After three weeks’ detention, he was released on appeal but…

27 April 2012News in Brief

On 3 April, the international criminal court (ICC) finally decided that it could not decide whether Palestine could become a member nation of the court. The Palestinian Authority had filed a request three years earlier, in the aftermath of Israel’s assault on the Gaza Strip in Operation Cast Lead.

The ICC ruled it had no authority to decide the question of statehood, which was a matter for the UN general assembly.…

27 April 2012News in Brief

Some 1,200 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails began an open-ended hunger strike on 17 April.

They were protesting against what they call ‘humiliating’ measures in Israeli prisons, including strip searches of visiting family members and night searches of prison cells.

On 21 February, Khader Adnan ended a 66-day hunger strike after the Israeli prison authorities agreed that he…

27 April 2012News

Around 1,300 supporters of Palestinian human and national rights planned to arrive in Israel’s Ben-Gurion international airport on 15 April.

Their destination was the West Bank in occupied Palestine, where they planned to take part in a cultural project including the building of a school and repairing wells damaged by settlers.

Travellers to the occupied territories are forced to lie in order to pass through Israel, otherwise they are subjected to interrogation, detention and deportation. The ‘Welcome to Palestine’ mass fly-in was endorsed by Desmond Tutu…

1 April 2012Comment

A response to Operation Cast Lead

‘I created this image in response to Operation Cast Lead, the Israeli assault on Gaza in December 2008-January 2009. It is part of a two-minute film Breakfast in Gaza. Sadly the bombing and killing still continues and the soil and water in Gaza is contaminated.’

YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_kn6AqXx5w

31 March 2012News in Brief

Members of Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) in Hebron (known in Arabic as Al-Khalil) have been threatened with arrest and death by the Israeli army’s Golani Brigade.

Tensions have escalated since the publication of the CPT report, Under Attack: Golani Brigade’s war on the Palestinian population of Al-Khalil (Hebron), on 15 February.

On 25 February, a Golani soldier aimed his rifle at CPT and international observers, saying: ‘I want to shoot you through the head with a…

31 March 2012News in Brief

On 1 September 2011, ‘audience participation’ organised by the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel during a concert by the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra led to the concert’s live broadcast being terminated.

On 24 February, the Jewish Chronicle reported that there would be no prosecutions of those evicted because ‘no offences had taken place’; the Albert Hall would not assist the police.