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Palestinians in Gaza to mark 45th anniversary of Naksa Day

People in the Gaza Strip are set to hold the 45th anniversary of the Naksa Day, which marks the displacement of Palestinians from their homeland following the 1967 Six-Day war by Israel.

Israel occupied the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and East al-Quds (Jerusalem), the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, and the Golan Heights from Syria following the Six-Day war.

Palestinians mark the Naksa Day (the day of the setback) on June 5.

Joe Carton, an American activist in Gaza, told Press TV on Monday that Israel’s claim that it “no longer occupies the Gaza Strip is completely spurious.”

He said the Tel Aviv regime “continues to exercise direct control over its (Gaza’s) borders, airspace, seaways, population registry, electromagnetic spectrum, passport system, taxation and countless other aspects of daily life here.”

Israel has built a separation wall between the occupied West Bank and al-Quds (Jerusalem) and continues to build illegal settlements in the Palestinian territory.

Mukhaimer Abu Seda, a political analyst from Gaza, also told Press TV that since the “Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories on June 5, 1967, Israel has made every possible [effort] to kill any possibility for the creation of a Palestinian state on the West Bank and Gaza through the expansion of its settlements in circumvent of East [al-Quds] Jerusalem and also the construction of the separation wall.”

Israel denies about 1.7 million people in Gaza their basic rights, including the freedom of movement and the right to decent living, work, health and education.

(www.presstv.ir / 05.06.2012)

UK to set up camps inside Syria to help rebels

Syrian rebels (File Photo)

Syrian rebels
Britain is reportedly planning to set up refugee camps inside Syria under the pretext of saving civilian lives but in reality to help armed rebels fighting against the government.

According to a report published in Daily Star, British Special Forces would set up camps along Syria’s borders with Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon and that Special Air Service (SAS) troops and MI6 agents will help the rebels if civil war breaks out in the country.

They also have ­hi-tech satellite computers and radios that can instantly send back photos and details of events unfolding in Syria.

”There are guys in the communications unit who are signalers that can go right up front and get ­involved in close-quarter fighting,” Daily Star quoted a senior Whitehall source as saying.

The British troops would be part of an international force ­including French and Turkish soldiers and possibly Americans.

A senior Whitehall source said that London is preparing for the move with the full knowledge that setting up camps inside Syria would be an invasion of the country.

The camps are expected to be set up around areas that are easily ­accessible and even within walking distance of trouble spots. Among them is Krak des ­Chevaliers, a medieval castle about 25 miles west of Homs close to the Lebanon border, Al-Suwayda, near the border with Jordan and Jisr al-Shughour near the Turkish border.

The British claim that Syrian forces would not dare to come that close to the border.

Israeli intelligence news agency, Debkafile, had earlier reported that British troops are already in Syria leading armed groups in the crisis-hit city of Homs and that the MI6 has established four centers of operation in the city.

Syria has been experiencing unrest since mid-March 2011 and many people, including hundreds of security forces, have been killed in the country over the past 15 months. While the West and the Syrian opposition say the government is responsible for the killings, Damascus blames “outlaws, saboteurs and armed terrorist groups” for the unrest, insisting that it is being orchestrated from abroad.
(www.presstv.ir / 05.06.2012)

Israel approved more than 4,300 new illegal settlement units last month

The monthly report issued by the PLO’s Department of International Relations has revealed that Israel approved the construction of more than 4,300 new illegal settlement units in May.

“A people under occupation” also gives details of Israeli violations against the Palestinian people and their property, which are ongoing. It says that the occupation army and illegal Jewish settlers uprooted 1,024 olive trees; demolished 37 houses and buildings belonging to Palestinians; and arrested 240 citizens during the month.

The DoIR told Quds Press that Israel has renewed or imposed administrative detention on more than 40 prisoners, including five detained MPs. A further 25 prisoners who were freed under the prisoner exchange deal eight months ago have been rearrested. “This,” claimed the Department, “is another violation of the agreement brokered by the Egyptians last year.”

(www.middleeastmonitor.org.uk / 05.06.2012)

Geld voor boerka-tip in België

BRUSSEL – Iedereen die in België een vrouw met een boerka ziet en deze aangeeft bij de politie, kan een premie opstrijken van 250 euro.

Steden tegen Islamisering, een Belgische organisatie waarvan Filip Dewinter, voorman van Vlaams Belang, voorzitter is, looft de premie uit.

De 250 euro wordt echter alleen overgemaakt als de politie de vrouw in kwestie ook daadwerkelijk oppakt, zo is dinsdag te lezen op de website van de organisatie.

Arrestatie

In België geldt een verbod op gezichtsbedekkende kleding, zoals een boerka. Afgelopen weekeinde leidde de arrestatie van een gesluierde vrouw tot ongeregeldheden in de Brusselse gemeente Molenbeek.

Dewinter bespeurt een terughoudendheid bij de politie om op te treden tegen vrouwen met een ”rondwandelende gevangenis van textiel”. ”Indien de politie hier niet tegen durft op te treden, is de intimidatie door de radicale moslims geslaagd en halen ze hun slag thuis.” Met deze actie wil hij hier een stokje voor steken.

(Facebook / 05.06.2012)

Palestinian Abbas urges Israel to accept 2-state deal

(Reuters) – Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas urged Israel on Tuesday to accept a two-state solution based on 1967 borders, warning that the opportunity “may not stay on the table for a long time” given the political upheavals caused by the Arab Spring.

Abbas set out the Palestinian case for statehood and full U.N. membership at a World Economic Forum conference in Istanbul, stressing that membership of the United Nations should not prejudice negotiations with Israel.

“I would like to address our Israeli neighbors and say we are seekers of peace and freedom and our people made a major sacrifice when they accepted establishing their state on less than a quarter of the area of historical Palestine,” Abbas said.

“So do not turn your backs on this opportunity … this opportunity may not stay on the table for a long time because the region is witnessing rapid developments,” he said.

During the past year popular revolts have ousted Arab autocrats and dictators across North Africa and the Middle East, upset the U.S. foreign policy equation in the region and further isolated Israel.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told the conference the Palestinian issue remained the “the most important problem threatening peace and stability in the region”, and said there was mounting anger with Israel over its policies.

Erdogan became a hero for many Arabs for publicly upbraiding Israeli President Shimon Peres at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2009 over the killing of civilians in an offensive on the Palestinian Gaza enclave, and he again highlighted the plight of Palestinians living there under an Israeli blockade.

“People are being held captive in the world’s largest open air prison and at the same time on the other side a large-scale rage is being pumped across the whole region,” Erdogan said.

The Palestinian Authority wants its state firmly in the context of territory seized by Israel in the 1967 Six Day War as this would provide clear terms of reference and would mean Israel could no longer call the land “disputed.”

In a dramatic move last September, Abbas submitted a U.N. membership application for a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with East Jerusalem as its capital, despite strong opposition from Israel and the United States, which say Middle East peace can come only through Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.

The application was held up at the committee stage, and the Palestinians have not so far requested a formal vote in the Security Council.

One of the biggest stumbling blocks to Palestinian-Israeli negotiations has been the issue of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, and Abbas called on U.N. Security Council members to exert pressure on Israel to stop building settlements.

(www.reuters.com / 05.06.2012)

Security source: Bedouin, police clash in Sinai, 1 dead

An Egyptian soldier stands guard at the Egyptian Rafah crossing, north of Sinai, on Aug. 22, 2011.
CAIRO (Reuters) — One policeman was killed and six were wounded in two separate clashes on Monday between Bedouin tribesmen and security forces at two police posts in the southern area of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, security sources said.

Armed Bedouin in vehicles attacked a police checkpoint, killing one policeman and wounding three, in the Wadi Firan area in South Sinai, the sources said.

Three policemen were wounded in an exchange of fire with Bedouin at a police station in the same area, they added.

It was not immediately clear what sparked the assaults.

Bedouin tribesman in Sinai, where many people are armed, have long complained of neglect by the state and have in the past clashed with police, who they accuse of heavy-handed tactics against their tribes.

(www.maannews.net / 05.06.2012)

Israel detention ends Gaza soccer player’s dream

Mahmoud al-Sarsak’s relatives walk near a poster bearing his picture outside his family’s home in Rafah in southern Gaza on June 4.

GAZA CITY (Reuters) — Palestinian footballer Mahmoud al-Sarsak left the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2009 to play soccer in the West Bank. But he never reached his goal.

He was arrested by Israeli security and, after three years of detention without trial, al-Sarsak is on hunger strike.

His current term of detention term ends on Aug. 22 but there is no guarantee that it will not be renewed for a further six months, as it has been before, his family and lawyer said.

“The entire family and friends are afraid for Mahmoud’s life and the worry is killing us,” said al-Sarsak’s older brother, Emad.

The 25-year-old is in an Israeli jail on secret charges that he is an “unlawful combatant,” an allegation he denies.

Al-Sarsak had joined the local soccer team in his Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip at 14, becoming the youngest footballer to play in the Palestine Liga A at the time. The midfielder attracted the attention of a German coach while playing for the Palestine national team in Norway.

“He always dreamed of playing outside the country, to represent Palestine through playing for an Arab or an international team, and he was talented enough,” Emad said.

The first step was to play for a team in the West Bank. But Israeli security arrested him on July 22, 2009, at the Erez crossing from the blockaded Gaza enclave, the only route to Palestinian territory in the occupied West Bank.

“Mahmoud would not have tried to cross through Erez if he had anything to fear. He belonged to no (militant) faction and he had done nothing wrong,” Emad, 36, told Reuters.

Mahmoud began his strike on March 19, demanding an end to his “unjustified” detention.

“The prisoner has been on an intermittent hunger strike and is receiving medical care in a Prisons Service medical facility,” Israel’s Prison Service said in a statement in response to queries. “As in the past, he will be transferred to hospital as required.”

On May 14, Israel struck an agreement with representatives of 1,600 Palestinian prisoners to end a 27-day hunger strike, agreeing to stop solitary confinements, allow family visits and improve detention conditions.

But it did not promise to end administrative detention, a practice whereby secret information can put a person in jail for months or years. It did, though, agree that future extension of such terms would require a court order and list of charges.

“It seemed the Israelis cheated and the Egyptians (mediators) did not deal with Mahmoud as an administrative detainee. So Mahmoud pursued his hunger strike demanding his freedom,” said the brother, a civil servant in Gaza.

No trial

Lawyer Mohammed Jabarin said Israel introduced the law allowing it to detain “unlawful combatants” without trial following its withdrawal from Gaza in 2005.

“The danger of such a law is that as long as Israel sees the situation as a war situation it allows itself to keep some people in prison. It is more serious than administrative detention,” he told Reuters by phone.

He said al-Sarsak had lost at least 10 kilograms and recently began having injections and solutions of salt to combat pain, weakness and deteriorating eyesight.

Jabarin said there were talks with the Israeli prison authorities over al-Sarsak’s hunger strike but there was no official promise by Israel it would not renew his detention.

He said Israel’s security holds al-Sarsak on suspicion of having ties with the Islamic Jihad group, but had failed to make formal charges.

The al-Sarsak family wants Palestinian factions and leaders to show more public support for Mahmoud.

“Standing by Mahmoud is a national duty. The family urges leaders and human rights groups to pressure Israel to release our son whose life is in danger at the moment,” Emad said.

“Sport was everything he admired and embraced in life,” said his mother. “We miss him every moment, every time we gather for a meal or to drink tea. I urge him to pursue his strike and remain steadfast until they meet his demands.”

(www.maannews.net / 05.06.2012)

Prisoner Held in Administraive Detentin for Two Years Continues Strike

RAMALLAH, June 5, 2012 (WAFA) – A Palestinian prisoner arrested in Israel in 2010 has been on hunger strike for 15 days to protest his administrative detention since his arrest, Jawad Boulus, an attorney for the Palestinian Prisoner’s Club (PPC), said on Tuesday.

He said Samer al-Baraq, from the village of Jayyous, near Qalqilia, has been on hunger strike since May 22, less than 10 days after more than 2000 prisoners have called off their month-long hunger strike, to protest his detention for around two years without charge or trail.

Baraq, who lived in Pakistan until 2003, returned to Jordan and was arrested, prosecuted and imprisoned for five years.

After his release in 2008, he worked in Jordan as a teacher until he was rearrested in 2010 for 77 days. He was turned over to Israel where he was detained for no clear charges.

Baraq was assured by leaders of the striking prisoners that he will be released soon, however his administrative detention order was renewed for another three months forcing Baraq to resume his strike.

Boulus said Israel demands Baraq to provide official papers to prove Pakistan is willing to allow him to enter the country in order to live with his Pakistani wife.

Baraq was admitted to Ramleh prison clinic after a significant deterioration in his health due to the hunger strike.

Head of PPC Qaddoura Faris said that Israel cannot continue to detain Baraq after he completed two years in Israeli jails without any charge and called for immediate intervention to release him.

(english.wafa.ps / 05.06.2012)

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