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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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

301.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 15 Jan 2009 Thu 10:52 pm

As Israeli Forces push deeper into gaza, unleashing the heaviest onslaught on the densely packed neighbourhoods since the military operation began nearly three weeks ago ~ aid, once again has been suspended in Gaza after the U.N Headquarters was set ablaze by what appeared to be phosphorus shells, destroying thousands of pounds of food and humanitarian supplies intended for Palestinian refugees. Three people were wounded.

White phosphorus is a controversial material used to create a smokescreen for advancing troops.

Under the International rules of war it can only be used in open spaces away from large civilian populations.

However ~ There have been repeated allegations in Gaza that civilians have suffered disfiguring burn injuries after being hit by white phosphorus.

A UN spokesman said the organisation was in contact with the Israeli army to request a local ceasefire to allow the U.N fire to be put out ~ Alas...Without success.

Last week deliveries stopped temporarily after Israel killed a UN fork lift truck driver moving bags of supplies.

The UN secretary general, Ban Ki~moon, expressed "strong protest and outrage" and demanded an investigation into why there was an attack on the compound of the UN Relief and Works Agency [UNRWA], a well~known location in Gaza marked with blue UN flags.

The number of casualties in the Gaza Strip, has now reached 1,055 ~ half of them civilian, according to local UN officials, and has "reached an unbearable point", Ban added. Gaza health official Dr. Moaiya Hassanain said at least 70 people were killed or died of wounds throughout Gaza yesterday.

Israel´s prime minister, Ehud Olmert, told Ban later that troops shelled the building in response to Hamas gunfire coming from within, but nonetheless said it should not have happened.

U.N officials inside the building are calling ´Bull~shit!!´ on Olmert.

Reports are also coming in that the al Quds, al Fata, al Wafa hospitals along with Shifa, Gaza City´s biggest hospital are also under Israeli shell bombardment. Fires are breaking out.

A tower block housing various media groups including the Gaza offices of Reuters was shelled, injuring two employees of an Arabic television network.

The French government issued a forthright condemnation of Israel´s actions.

"We condemn in the strongest terms the bombings this morning by the Israeli army of several hospitals and a building housing international media in Gaza city,´´ Eric Chevallier, spokesman for the French foreign ministry in Paris, said.

"We condemn with equal strength the bombing that hit the headquarters of the UN in Gaza, injuring three staff members.

Israel´s envoy Amos Gilad flew to Cairo today for talks with Egyptian mediators. He will not meet any of the Hamas representatives who are also in Egypt´s capital.

The Egyptian plan appears to begin with a ceasefire of a week or 10 days, during which all fighting would stop but Israeli troops would remain on the ground in Gaza. Talks would then be held on the more difficult questions of stopping the smuggling of weapons to Hamas and lifting Israel´s long economic blockade of the Gaza Strip.

However, it is thought Hamas´s conditions for any deal would probably include an immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces the moment a ceasefire started.

Source The Guardian. Huffy Post. The Telegraph

 



Thread: Archaeological delight

302.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 15 Jan 2009 Thu 09:00 pm

Here it is: I remember adding the link before ..................oh, well..............here it is again

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7820924.stm



Thread: Archaeological delight

303.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 15 Jan 2009 Thu 08:08 pm

Digging through thick mud and an ancient swamp of black clay, archaeologists in Istanbul have discovered a grave that proves the city is 6,000 years older than they previously thought.

The skeletons of two adults and two children lie curled-up, perhaps to save space. Alongside them are pots: gifts placed in the grave to use in the afterlife.

The ancient family was unearthed at the site of a 21st Century rail project.

"We found the grave, pots and other artefacts. There were signs of houses made of tree-branches and next to the settlement was a swamp where we found small tools, wooden pieces and bones," explains Ismail Karamut, head of the Istanbul Archaeology museum, which is leading the dig.

Neolithic skeleton
Neolithic graves were unearthed at the site

"It all shows there was a Neolithic settlement here in the historic peninsula of Istanbul where people lived, farmed and fished," he adds.

Historians had believed modern-day Istanbul was first settled around 700 BC. The discovery of the skeletons has revealed far deeper roots.

The Neolithic era - when man abandoned the nomadic, hunting lifestyle and settled to farm the land and raise cattle - began east of here, gradually carrying the foundations of "civilised" life west, to Europe. The new find in Istanbul helps map that transition.

"Neolithic culture changed as it moved west. Not all of what we call the ´Neolithic package´ was transferred," explains Professor Mehmet Ozdogan of Istanbul University.

"Domesticated animals and some of the cereal crops came, but mud brick became wooden architecture, settlements were re-organised. The transformation is important to understand the Neolithic culture in Europe. Every new site adds data to the picture."

Past and present

Neolithic remains were discovered in two Istanbul suburbs in the 1950s and 1980s, but this is the first such find in the toric heart of the city. That has created a stir the other sites never managed.

Marmaray dig site
Archaeologists worked in shifts, covering 24 hours a day

Prof Ozdogan believes the Yenikapi settlement dates from between 6400BC and 5800BC - long before the Bosphorus Strait had formed and in the days when the Marmara Sea was a small, inland lake. Istanbul´s first inhabitants appear to have lived on both sides of a river that flowed then through Yenikapi.

The excavation of Istanbul´s first settlement is taking place at the site of a state-of-the-art train station on the multi-million dollar Marmaray rail project. The line will link Europe and Asia with the world´s deepest underwater tunnel, 56 metres beneath the Bosphorus. The last sections of underwater tubing were joined in October.

The project has been delayed, but it´s important to discover the culture here
Yasar Anilir,

Chief archaeologist at the dig

But above ground, the revolutionary project has been held up by history.

Scheduled to last six months, Yenikapi archaeological dig is still going strong four years later. The Marmaray is now expected to open in 2011 at the earliest.

"Of course the project has been delayed, but it´s important to discover the culture here," argues Yasar Anilir, chief archaeologist at the dig.

"But if there was no Marmaray project we would not have been digging at all. This requires a lot of labour and money."

Archaeological delight

The team´s first major discovery was a section of the first city walls, believed to date back to Constantine I.

As anticipated, they also uncovered a 4th Century port - once the busiest in Byzantium - and the stunningly well-preserved remains of more than 30 wooden ships, many wrecked in storms in the 10th and 11th centuries.

Unearthing the Neolithic settlement was an unexpected archaeological delight.

Under pressure to complete their excavations and let-in the construction workers, archaeologists have at times worked in shifts, digging 24 hours a day. The cost of the delay to construction has not been calculated yet.

"The Marmaray project is very important, but you cannot sacrifice our cultural heritage," says Ismail Karamut, who insists his team has not compromised on the quality of their work. "We´re trying to reconcile both demands - to help the project, and protect the heritage."

The Yenikapi dig has now reached bedrock, so archaeologists don´t expect any more major discoveries. They´re still working through piles of ancient swamp mud though, which has preserved some of the oldest wooden artefacts ever found.

Marmaray skeletons
Skeletons and gifts for the afterlife were found

On the far side of the site, beyond the Marmaray station, excavation work will continue alongside construction.

"We´re expecting to find more - maybe a small settlement," Yasar Anilir explains. "We have to remove the Byzantine ships first, then we can complete our dig."

This experience should be a lesson to the authorities, according to Prof Mehmet Ozdogan, who says there have been no archaeological digs for purely scientific purposes in Istanbul since the 1960s.

"Of course a city should live, you can´t turn it into a museum. But we should not wait for construction projects to learn the history of a town. We should dig on purpose, just to learn," the professor argues.

"Once the past is destroyed, it´s irreversible."

 



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

304.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 15 Jan 2009 Thu 01:20 am

Azade, unfortunately history repeats itself.  You have to  realize man is basically an animal.

Israel Is Committing War Crimes

  

Hamas´s violations are no justification for Israel´s actions

 By GEORGE E. BISHARAT

Israel´s current assault on the Gaza Strip cannot be justified by self-defense. Rather, it involves serious violations of international law, including war crimes. Senior Israeli political and military leaders may bear personal liability for their offenses, and they could be prosecuted by an international tribunal, or by nations practicing universal jurisdiction over grave international crimes. Hamas fighters have also violated the laws of warfare, but their misdeeds do not justify Israel´s acts.
The United Nations charter preserved the customary right of a state to retaliate against an "armed attack" from another state. The right has evolved to cover nonstate actors operating beyond the borders of the state claiming self-defense, and arguably would apply to Hamas. However, an armed attack involves serious violations of the peace. Minor border skirmishes are common, and if all were considered armed attacks, states could easily exploit them -- as surrounding facts are often murky and unverifiable -- to launch wars of aggression. That is exactly what Israel seems to be currently attempting.


Israel had not suffered an "armed attack" immediately prior to its bombardment of the Gaza Strip. Since firing the first Kassam rocket into Israel in 2002, Hamas and other Palestinian groups have loosed thousands of rockets and mortar shells into Israel, causing about two dozen Israeli deaths and widespread fear. As indiscriminate attacks on civilians, these were war crimes. During roughly the same period, Israeli forces killed about 2,700 Palestinians in Gaza by targeted killings, aerial bombings, in raids, etc., according to the Israeli human rights group B´Tselem.
But on June 19, 2008, Hamas and Israel commenced a six-month truce. Neither side complied perfectly. Israel refused to substantially ease the suffocating siege of Gaza imposed in June 2007. Hamas permitted sporadic rocket fire -- typically after Israel killed or seized Hamas members in the West Bank, where the truce did not apply. Either one or no Israelis were killed (reports differ) by rockets in the half year leading up to the current attack.
Israel then broke the truce on Nov. 4, raiding the Gaza Strip and killing a Palestinian. Hamas retaliated with rocket fire; Israel then killed five more Palestinians. In the following days, Hamas continued rocket fire -- yet still no Israelis died. Israel cannot claim self-defense against this escalation, because it was provoked by Israel´s own violation.
An armed attack that is not justified by self-defense is a war of aggression. Under the Nuremberg Principles affirmed by U.N. Resolution 95, aggression is a crime against peace.


Israel has also failed to adequately discriminate between military and nonmilitary targets. Israel´s American-made F-16s and Apache helicopters have destroyed mosques, the education and justice ministries, a university, prisons, courts and police stations. These institutions were part of Gaza´s civilian infrastructure. And when nonmilitary institutions are targeted, civilians die. Many killed in the last week were young police recruits with no military roles. Civilian employees in the Hamas-led government deserve the protections of international law like all others. Hamas´s ideology -- which employees may or may not share -- is abhorrent, but civilized nations do not kill people merely for what they think.
Deliberate attacks on civilians that lack strict military necessity are war crimes. Israel´s current violations of international law extend a long pattern of abuse of the rights of Gaza Palestinians. Eighty percent of Gaza´s 1.5 million residents are Palestinian refugees who were forced from their homes or fled in fear of Jewish terrorist attacks in 1948. For 60 years, Israel has denied the internationally recognized rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes -- because they are not Jews.
Although Israel withdrew its settlers and soldiers from Gaza in 2005, it continues to tightly regulate Gaza´s coast, airspace and borders. Thus, Israel remains an occupying power with a legal duty to protect Gaza´s civilian population. But Israel´s 18-month siege of the Gaza Strip preceding the current crisis violated this obligation egregiously. It brought economic activity to a near standstill, left children hungry and malnourished, and denied Palestinian students opportunities to study abroad.
Israel should be held accountable for its crimes, and the U.S. should stop abetting it with unconditional military and diplomatic support.
Mr. Bisharat is a professor at Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco.

Wall street Journa



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

305.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Jan 2009 Wed 10:32 pm



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

306.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Jan 2009 Wed 10:22 pm

Genia, pls. send me the link



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

307.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Jan 2009 Wed 10:17 pm

Kucinich criticizes Israel´s killings


"The perpetrators of attacks against Israel must also be brought to justice, but Israel cannot create a war against an entire people in order to attempt to bring to justice the few who are responsible. The Israeli leaders know better," Kucinich said .

http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=79889&sectionid=3510203

 

 

Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld should be  tried  for war crimes. All have blood on their hands.



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

308.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Jan 2009 Wed 09:35 pm

http://windowintopalestine.blogspot.com/2009/01/picture-is-worth-thousand-wordsthe-gaza.html

 

<a href= Let me tell you about Palestine" width="197" height="320" />



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

309.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Jan 2009 Wed 09:30 pm

I have no words, Lieberman´s abhorrent statement: http://uprootedpalestinians.blogspot.com/2009/01/lieberman-calls-for-nuking-gaza.html



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

310.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 14 Jan 2009 Wed 09:27 pm

The Nazi tactics of the Zionists in Isreal

 

[angeli2qk7.jpg] 



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