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Thread: the killing continues, GAZA

281.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 19 Jan 2009 Mon 12:19 am

´Tungsten bombs´ leave Israel´s victims with mystery wounds

 

 

As it declares a unilateral ceasefire, Jerusalem faces a UN call for a war crimes investigation

Two children were killed yesterday when Israeli tanks shelled a UN school in which families were sheltering, leading a UN spokesman, Chris Gunness, to say: "There has to be an investigation to determine whether a war crime has been committed." The call was dismissed by an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman, Yigal Palmor, who said: "These claims of war crimes are not supported by the slightest piece of evidence." But among numerous allegations of disproportionate use of force, questions are also multiplying about the use of unconventional weapons by Israel, including a new type of bomb that causes injuries that doctors have not seen before, and which they find impossible to treat.

The Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, claimed in a televised address last night that the military operation had "fully attained" its goals, "and beyond". Israel had declared the ceasefire in response to an appeal from the Egyptian President, Hosni Mubarak, but troops would remain for now in Gaza, and Hamas would be "surprised again" if it attacked.

But even though Mr Olmert said Hamas had been "beaten badly", rockets landed in Israel a few minutes before he spoke. Despite the desperate state of Gaza´s population, Hamas leaders said they would continue to fight for an end to Israel´s closure of crossing points into the territory and a withdrawal of the Israeli forces.

Mr Mubarak invited the Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, and the French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, to discuss Gaza in Sharm el-Sheikh today. The UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, said he might attend, and Gordon Brown is among other leaders due to take part.

Although Mr Olmert´s announcement was only a first step towards halting the conflict in Gaza, the UN is not the only international body insisting that inquiries must be held as soon as possible into the tactics and weapons used by Israel. Erik Fosse, a Norwegian doctor who worked in Gaza´s hospitals during the conflict, said that Israel was using so-called Dime (dense inert metal explosive) bombs designed to produce an intense explosion in a small space. The bombs are packed with tungsten powder, which has the effect of shrapnel but often dissolves in human tissue, making it difficult to discover the cause of injuries.

Dr Fosse said he had seen a number of patients with extensive injuries to their lower bodies. "It was as if they had stepped on a mine, but there was no shrapnel in the wounds," he said. "Some had lost their legs. It looked as though they had been sliced off. I have been to war zones for 30 years, but I have never seen such injuries before." However, the injuries matched photographs and de[script]ions in medical literature of the effects of Dime bombs.

"All the patients I saw had been hit by bombs fired from unmanned drones," said Dr Fosse, head of the Norwegian Aid Committee. "The bomb hit the ground near them and exploded." His colleague, Mads Gilbert, accused Israel of using the territory as a testing ground for a new, "extremely nasty" type of explosive. "This is a new generation of small explosive that detonates with extreme power and dissipates its power within a range of five to 10 metres," he said.

According to military databases, Dime bombs are intended for use where conventional weapons might kill or injure bystanders – to kill combatants in a house, for example, without harming people next door. Instead of being made from metal, which sprays shrapnel across a wide area, the casing is carbon fibre. Part of the motive for developing the bombs was to replace the use of depleted uranium, but Dr Fosse said the cancer risk from tungsten powde was well known. "These patients should be followed up to see if there are any carcinogenic effects," he said.

While the loudest controversy has been over accusations that white phosphorus was illegally used, other foreign doctors working in Gaza have reported injuries they cannot explain. Professor Mohammed Sayed Khalifa, a cardiac consultant from Sudan, said that two of his patients had had uncontrollable bleeding. "One had a chest operation, and continued bleeding even after having been given large quantities of plasma," he said. "The other had what seemed to be a minor leg injury, but collapsed with profuse bleeding. Something was interfering with the clotting process. I have never seen such a thing before."

Dr Ahmed Almi, an Egyptian cardio-thoracic consultant at al-Nasser hospital in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, said he had seen a number of patients with inexplicable injuries. A boy of 14 had a small puncture wound in his head, but extensive damage to his brain, making it impossible to save his life. "I don´t know the nature or type of these weapons that make a very small [entry wound] and go on and make massive destruction in the tissues," he said.

Israeli military representatives have refused to confirm or deny using specific weapons, but insist that all Israel´s weapons comply with international law. Neither white phosphorus nor Dime bombs are illegal, but campaigners say the way they have been used, especially in Gaza´s densely packed urban areas, could constitute a war crime.

 

A Palestinian woman with severe facial injuries from a Dime bomb

A Palestinian woman with severe facial injuries from a Dime bomb



Thread: BOUND FOR GLORY

282.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 19 Jan 2009 Mon 12:12 am

o.k. than delete my post, catwoman



Thread: BOUND FOR GLORY

283.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Jan 2009 Sun 09:22 pm

With White House as last stop, Obama rides rails into history.

 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-obama-train_5sjan18,0,893430.story



Thread: Turkish students hold a minute of silence for Palestinian childeren

284.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Jan 2009 Sun 09:11 pm

The United Nations´ most senior human rights official said last night that the Israeli military may have committed war crimes in Gaza. The warning came as Israeli troops pressed on with the deadly offensive in defiance of a UN security council resolution calling for a ceasefire.

Navi Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights, has called for "credible, independent and transparent" investigations into possible violations of humanitarian law, and singled out an incident this week in Zeitoun, south-east of Gaza City, where up to 30 Palestinians in one house were killed by Israeli shelling.

Pillay, a former international criminal court judge from South Africa, told the BBC the incident "appears to have all the elements of war crimes".

The accusation came as Israel kept up its two-week-old air and ground offensive in Gaza and dismissed as "unworkable" the UN security council resolution which had called for "an immediate, durable and fully respected ceasefire".

Protests against the offensive were held across the world yesterday just as diplomacy to halt the conflict appeared to falter.

With the Palestinian casualty toll rising to around 800 dead, including 265 children, and more than 3,000 injured, fresh evidence emerged yesterday of the killings in Zeitoun. It was "one of the gravest incidents" since Israel´s offensive began two weeks ago, the UN office for the co-ordination of humanitarian affairs said yesterday.

"There is an international obligation on the part of soldiers in their position to protect civilians, not to kill civilians indiscriminately in the first place, and when they do, to make sure that they help the wounded," Pillay told Reuters. "In this particular case these children were helpless and the soldiers were close by," she added.

An Israeli military spokeswoman, Avital Leibovich, said the incident was still being examined. "We don´t warn people to go to other buildings, this is not something we do," she said. "We don´t know this case, we don´t know that we attacked it."

Despite the intense bombardment, militants in Gaza fired at least 30 rockets into southern Israel yesterday. Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, told al-Jazeera TV: "This resolution doesn´t mean that the war is over. We call on Palestinian fighters to mobilise and be ready to face the offensive, and we urge the Arab masses to carry on with their angry protests."

Israeli officials said they could not be expected to halt their military operation while the rockets continued and said they first wanted an end to the rocket fire and a "mechanism" to prevent Hamas rearming in future.

"The whole idea that Israel will unilaterally stop protecting our people when Hamas is sending rockets into our cities to kill our people is not a reasonable request of Israel," said Mark Regev, spokesman for prime minister Ehud Olmert. Israel wanted security for its people in southern Israel, he said, and dismissed suggestions his military might seek to topple Hamas, saying they were "not in the regime-change business".

Israeli public opinion still strongly favours the war. One poll of Jewish Israelis yesterday, by the War and Peace Index, said 90% of the population supported continuing the operation until Israel achieved all its goals.

Olmert held a meeting of his security cabinet, and on the agenda was discussion about whether to intensify the offensive by launching a fresh stage of attacks in which Israeli troops would invade the major urban areas of Gaza as more reservists were called up. There was no word on the outcome.

So far 13 Israelis have been killed in this conflict, of whom three were civilians.

Another 23 Palestinians were killed by the Israeli military yesterday. Seven from one family, including an infant, died when Israeli jets bombed a five-storey building in Beit Lahiya, in northern Gaza. There was heavy aerial bombing and artillery fire across the territory.

More than 20,000 Gazans have fled their homes in the north of the strip and thousands more in the south. In some cases Israeli troops have told them to leave, or dropped leaflets warning them to evacuate their homes. Some are even dividing their families between different addresses for fear of losing them all in a single air strike.

"Many people are leaving their homes and moving to the centre of the cities," said Abdel Karim Ashour, 53, who works with a local aid agency, the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committee. He, his wife and their four children fled their house on the coastal road in northern Gaza on the third day of the conflict. He sent the four children to stay with his brother while he and his wife are staying at a friend´s house. "We were in an area of heavy shelling, so we left and I divided the family to try to reduce the victims if we face any trouble. We try and keep in touch by telephone but there are problems with the network," he said. "We´re just hoping for a ceasefire. If the fighting goes on there will be more victims."

 

 

 

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/10/gaza-schools



Thread: Turkish students hold a minute of silence for Palestinian childeren

285.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Jan 2009 Sun 09:08 pm

for months and months now:

Eyewitness: Gaza´s medical crisis

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7830302.stm



Thread: Modifying forum messages is temporarily disabled due to a technical issue.

286.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Jan 2009 Sun 07:26 pm

Need to modify, here is the link of my last post about Obama

 

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/1/18/worldupdates/2009-01-18T082345Z_01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-375088-1&sec=Worldupdates



Thread: Turkish students hold a minute of silence for Palestinian childeren

287.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Jan 2009 Sun 07:21 pm

Obama was accused by critics of siding with Israel with his silence or failing to stand with the Jewish state as it sought to repel rocket attacks from the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

Earlier this month, Obama broke his silence to call the loss of civilian lives in Gaza and in Israel a "source of deep concern."

WHAT MIGHT OBAMA DO?

Obama told a news conference on Jan. 6 he would be prepared to address Middle East peacemaking as soon as he takes office. Many U.S. presidents have addressed the complex issue only later in their terms.

"I am doing everything that we have to do to make sure that the day that I take office we are prepared to engage immediately in trying to deal with the situation there," Obama said. "Not only the short-term situation but building a process whereby we can achieve a more lasting peace in the region."

Analysts say Obama might name a special envoy to the Middle East shortly after his inauguration in a sign of the importance he attaches to peacemaking.

"What I am doing right now is putting together the team so that on Jan. 20, starting on Day One, we have the best possible people who are going to be immediately engaged in the Middle East peace process as a whole, that are going to be engaging with all of the actors there, that will work to create a strategic approach that ensures that both Israelis and Palestinians can meet their aspirations," Obama said in an ABC interview on Jan. 11.

WHAT ARE SOME OF THE PROBLEMS OBAMA FACES?

Given the political divisions on both sides, a resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- an issue that has bedeviled many U.S. presidents -- will be no easier for Obama.

The Palestinians are split between Hamas, which rules Gaza and remains officially committed to the destruction of Israel, and Fatah, which holds sway in the West Bank and whose leader, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, has spent more than a year engaged in U.S.-backed peace talks with Israel.

Israel holds an election on Feb 10, leaving it unclear who will lead the Jewish state and how committed the new leader may be to peace negotiations with the Palestinians.

Obama must decide how deeply the United States should get involved in peace moves and whether it should take a harder line toward Israel, for example on halting settlement building in the West Bank.

His nominee for secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, whose confirmation is expected next week, has been a staunch supporter of Israel, which may give her more latitude to persuade Israeli officials to make concessions.

(Washington Newsroom)

Copyright © 2008 Reuters



Thread: Turkish students hold a minute of silence for Palestinian childeren

288.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Jan 2009 Sun 07:19 pm

If the Israeli attack on Gaza that started 18 days ago was designed partly to send a message to the incoming Barack Obama, the United States Congress in the past week seems to have joined the battle to handcuff the new president and lay down the law for him, even before he takes office.

 

Obama has tried to remain aloof and stay out of the political battle over the Gaza war by making no substantive statements about it. Israel and its supporters in Washington have different plans. Obama has stayed away from the war, but they brought the war to him - shoving it down his throat as his first pre-incumbency lesson in how American presidents must behave with respect to Israel´s desires, if they wish to remain in power.

 

The House of Representatives voted last Friday by 390-5 for a resolution that backed Israel in its Gaza onslaught, affirming "Israel´s right to defend itself against attacks from Gaza." A day earlier, the Senate overwhelmingly supported Israel and its right to defend itself against terrorism.

 

Such extraordinary one-sided support for Israel by Congress mirrors the same position taken by the administration. Both President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice declared on Monday that Hamas was to blame for the current war and for the suffering of the Palestinians in Gaza, and that any ceasefire had to guarantee that Hamas stopped attacking Israel. They seemed incomprehensibly blind to Israel´s combined strangulation of and assault on Gaza.

 

This almost irrational absolute support for Israel in both the legislative and executive branches of the US government occurs amid a chorus of international condemnation of Israel for using excessive force. This includes calls by some United Nations officials and respectable non-governmental organizations to investigate whether Israel has committed war crimes.

 

Israel is using the two arsenals it is most comfortable with - military force to kill, injure, terrorize and displace thousands of Palestinian civilians; and the equivalent political overkill to bludgeon the American political establishment into total submission. After six decades of trying, Israel has been unable to turn Palestinians into vassals and subservient slaves - but it has succeeded in transforming an otherwise impressive American political governance system into a herd of castrated cattle who cower before the threats that Israel´s Washington-based henchmen and hit men direct at them. Gaza will get its ceasefire soon, but will Washington ever find relief from the stranglehold of Israel´s political thugs?

 

 

 

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=5&article_id=98991

 

 



Thread: the killing continues, GAZA

289.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 18 Jan 2009 Sun 01:16 am

Thursday 8 January 2009
 
 

May/June 1991, Page 17

Two Politically Motivated Decisions

 

Truman Adviser Recalls May 14,1948 US Decision to Recognize Israel

 

By Richard H. Curtiss

 

Brendan O’Neill

Who made Gaza into a bloody trap?


Blaming ‘Israeli insanity’ for imprisoning Gazans overlooks the central role of the polite, Western peace process.



Thread: Müslüm Baba - Müslüm Gürses

290.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 17 Jan 2009 Sat 08:05 pm

His music is loverly and inspiring

 

He was born in 1953 in Þanlýurfa, Turkey. He got married to Muhterem Nur in 1983.

He mostly sings Turkish folk and Ottoman classical music, with an arabesque style. His talent and his special style have put him to a different place among other folk singers. In his songs he mostly expresses sorrow and painful feelings. He is considered a cult figure in Turkish folk music and has a very dedicated group of fans, most of whom being young, low-income urban people. He is mostly called Müslüm Baba (means ´Papa Müslüm´ in Turkish) among them.

In recent years, he has also become popular in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Trinidad and Tobago, Syria, Brazil, Cuba and Iran.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQo3WGWgdWQ&feature=related



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