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Ethiopia rocked by massive Muslim protests

 

Hundreds of thousands of irate Ethiopian Muslims took to the streets of Addis Ababa this weekend – Africa’s biggest protests since Tahrir Square. They want the government to stop meddling in their religious affairs, and acknowledge that Muslims can’t remain a marginalised minority. Ethiopia’s Christian-led government better make some concessions quickly, or risk finding out exactly how many irate Muslims there really are. By SIMON ALLISON.

You would be forgiven for thinking that the tense, dramatic African Union elections were the most exciting thing to happen in Addis Ababa this weekend – but you would be wrong. While the diplomats were squabbling about procedure and protocol, in another part of the capital an altogether more serious situation was developing, at least as far as hosts Ethiopia are concerned.

While reports are hard to confirm, participants claimed that somewhere between 500,000 and one million Muslims gathered in and around one of the city’s main mosques in a blatant show of defiance against the Christian-led government, while smaller marches took place in other cities across the country. If these numbers are true, then the government of Meles Zenawi – who is currently in Brussels receiving medical treatment, adding to the uncertainty – should be gravely concerned. To put them in perspective, the marches on Tahrir Square which precipitated the Egyptian Revolution were of a similar size; demonstrations of this scale have not been seen in Africa since.

Sunday was the third consecutive day of protests and mosque sit-ins, and already hundreds are reported arrested or injured by the government response, which has definitely included the liberal use of tear gas and – again according to participant claims – live rounds.

Ethiopia is a historically Christian country, one of the oldest Christian countries in the world. But Islam too has deep roots there; it was the first place that persecuted Muslims sought refuge, fleeing Mecca to the kingdom of Axum where the Prophet Muhammad had told them they would be safe. The Axumite king, recognising that his Christianity and the exiles’ Islam shared the same Abrahamic roots, welcomed them. “Go to your homes and live in peace. I shall never give you up to your enemies,” he said.

Ever since, there has been a Muslim community in Ethiopia, and the two religions have co-existed relatively peacefully; both the Christian majority and Muslim minority generally treated with similar disdain by whatever emperor or government was in power, even though Ethiopia’s leaders have always been Christian.

Meles Zenawi’s government, however, is having to contend with a new threat. According to official statistics, Muslims make up 34% of the population; Ethiopian Orthodox Christians 44%; and various Protestant groupings another 17%. But the Muslim population is growing so quickly that, even taking these numbers at face value, Muslims are projected to become the majority in Ethiopia by 2050.

But Ethiopia’s Muslims say these figures have been twisted, and that they are already the majority. This is part of the rhetoric which underpins the current protests, and it’s not the first time I have heard this claim. Three years ago, in Addis Ababa, a diplomat who asked to remain anonymous told me that the results of the 2007 census had been delayed for months as the government struggled to deal with what that census revealed: that, in fact, there were more Muslims than Christians in the country. This posed an existential threat to Zenawi’s government, eroding its traditional support base, and the numbers were fixed – or so the story goes.

A more recent spark for the unrest has been the government’s perceived meddling in religious affairs by encouraging and supporting one minority Muslim sect over the more mainstream others. Terrified of the potential emergence of Al Shabaab-style fundamentalist Islam, Zenawi’s administration has promoted one particular sect of Islam, the Al Ahbash, which opposes ultra-conservative ideology and rejects violence. This has included appointing Al Ahbash clerics to lead the Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs, despite the fact that the Al Ahbash are pretty far from mainstream Islam – in Ethiopia and anywhere else. “It (Al Ahbash) has the right to exist in Ethiopia, but it is unacceptable that the Council tries to impose it on all members of the Muslim community,” Abubeker Ahmed, head of an independent Islamic arbitration committee, told Reuters.

All this takes place against the backdrop of a highly autocratic state. Meles Zenawi would describe it as a benevolent autocracy, but human rights watchdogs would beg to differ. “Ethiopian authorities continued to severely restrict basic rights of freedom of expression, association, and assembly. Hundreds of Ethiopians in 2011 were arbitrarily arrested and detained and remain at risk of torture and ill-treatment,” wrote Human Rights Watch in their World Report 2012.

Restrictions on journalists are particularly tight, making it very difficult to gauge accurately what’s going on in the country. Nonetheless, it’s a story that needs to be covered; it’s clear that the tinderbox of religious divisions, strong-arm responses from the state, historical inequalities and modern demographic shifts has the potential to turn ugly. A media source in Addis Ababa told the Daily Maverick that tensions were so high that the smallest spark could cause a conflagration. And with Zenawi out of action in Brussels, who is around to put out the fire?

(dailymaverick.co.za / 17.07.2012)

Ministry lawyer: Teen was hospitalized after ‘brutal arrest’

Mahmoud al-Badan, 17, from Tuqu village, was detained by Israeli forces overnight Saturday.

BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — A lawyer for the Palestinian Authority Ministry of Prisoners Affairs said Tuesday that a teen from a Bethlehem village was seriously injured two days ago when Israeli soldier beat him during an arrest raid.

The family of Mahmoud al-Badan, 17, from Tuqu village told Ma’an earlier that soldiers brutally beat him before blindfolding and handcuffing him, and taking him into custody overnight Saturday.

Lawyer Hussein al-Sheikh said after speaking with al-Badan that he was beaten with sharp objects and had to be taken to a nearby health center.

His condition was so serious he was transferred to Jerusalem’s Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital, where doctors found he was suffering from a broken jaw and bruising to the head.

Forces then brought al-Badan back into custody, Al-Sheikh said.

The lawyer said that he has consulted Doctors Without Borders, the Red Cross, and the ministry of prisoners about the incident.

(www.maannews.net / 17.07.2012)

Stop investeringen in leveranciers aan Syrisch regime!

Nederlandse bankgroepen en pensioenfondsen investeren miljoenen euro’s in twee bedrijven die het afgelopen jaar radioapparatuur aan de Syrische politie en een dataopslagsysteem voor internetcontrole aan de Syrische autoriteiten hebben geleverd. Dit blijkt uit onderzoek van IKV Pax Christi en Oxfam Novib.

Het betreft het Italiaanse Finmeccanica, dat in 2011 al in opspraak kwam wegens wapenleveranties aan Libië, en het Amerikaanse Netapp. Uit het onderzoek ‘Nederlandse investeringen in Finmeccanica en Netapp’, uitgevoerd door economisch onderzoeksbureau Profundo, blijkt dat veertien Nederlandse financiële instellingen in één of beide bedrijven investeren. De volgende bankgroepen hebben via hun vermogensbeheertak belegd in aandelen en/of obligaties van deze bedrijven: Aegon, Delta Lloyd, ING en ABN Amro (dochterbedrijf Neuflize), alsmede de pensioenfondsen ABP, BpfBOUW, Medische Specialisten, Metaal en Techniek (PMT), Metalektro (PME), Grafische Bedrijven (PGB), Spoorwegpensioenfonds, Huisartsen, Zorg & Welzijn en Shell Pensioenfonds.

Communicatieapparatuur als wapen

Bovendien bleek vorig jaar uit onderzoek van de Eerlijke Bankwijzer en RTL dat Finmeccanica wapens leverde aan de Libische dictator Kadaffi. Ook toen investeerden Nederlandse banken en pensioenfondsen in dit bedrijf.
Het Italiaanse wapenbedrijf Finmeccanica leverde tot en met mei 2011 mobiele communicatieapparatuur aan de Syrische politie. Dit was twee maanden nadat de volksopstand in Syrië losbarstte. In 2007 leverde Finmeccanica al een radarsysteem aan Syrië. In mei 2012 startte de Amerikaanse regering een onderzoek naar de levering van het dataopslagsysteem van het Netapp aan Syrië in 2011. Het systeem maakt deel uit van een omvangrijk internetcontrolesysteem waarmee alle internetbewegingen van tegenstanders van het regime worden gevolgd.
Miriam Struyk van IKV Pax Christi: “Ook communicatieapparatuur zoals geleverd door Finmeccanica en Netapp kan helaas een uitermate effectief wapen zijn om burgers te onderdrukken.”

Aanscherping en transparantie
IKV Pax Christi en Oxfam Novib roepen alle bankgroepen en pensioenfondsen die in genoemde bedrijven investeren op om deze investeringen van de hand te doen. Ook dienen zij hun beleid voor wapenhandel met repressieve regimes en levering van apparatuur die repressie kan versterken structureel aan te scherpen. Tenslotte is grotere transparantie over hun investeringen en over ‘engagement’ met (wapen)bedrijven nodig.

Lees hier het volledige onderzoek.

(www.ikvpaxchristi.nl / 17.07.2012)

Israel releases longest serving administrative detainee

Adnan Asfour.

NABLUS (Ma’an) — The longest serving Palestinian prisoner being held under administrative detention was released by Israel on Sunday, a Hamas statement said.

Adnan Asfour, 50, a senior figure within the Islamist movement, was detained by Israeli forces on March 9, 2009, and has been imprisoned for a total of six years during his life, having been arrested by Israeli forces on 16 separate occasions.

He had been held by Israeli authorities for over three years without being charged for a crime, director of Ahrar center for prisoners Fuad al-Khafsh said Saturday.

He participated in a mass hunger strike campaign by prisoners in April, when nearly 2,000 Palestinians in Israeli jails refused to eat in protest against prison conditions and administrative detention, al-Khafsh added.

Under Israel’s administrative detention policy, prisoners can be held without formal charges for renewable periods of six months. Defendants and their lawyers are not given access to the evidence used to imprison them.

There are at least 285 people, including 18 members of the Palestinian Legislative Council, currently being held under administrative detention, according to latest figures from Addameer prisoners group.

(maannews.net / 17.07.2012)

Israel’s environmental colonialism and eco-apartheid

 

The construction of Israel’s mammoth apartheid wall has separated Palestinian farmers from their fields and destroyed Palestinians’ legally owned fertile agricultural land.

By Ben Lorber

July 12, 2012 – Links international Journal of Socialist Renewal – Since the idea of Zionism first gripped the minds of a few intellectuals and the limbs of many agrarian pioneers in the early 20th century, the state of Israel has presented its settlement of the land of Palestine, and its uprooting of the Palestinian people, as a rejuvenation of the earth. By “greenwashing” the occupation, Israel hides its apartheid behind an environmentalist mirage, and distracts public attention not only from its brutal oppression of the Palestinian people, but from its large-scale degradation of the earth upon which these tragedies unfold.

Determined to “make the desert bloom”, an international organisation — the Jewish National Fund-Keren Kayemet LeYisrael (JNF-KKL, or JNF) planted forests, recreational parks and nature reserves to cover over the ruins of Palestinian villages, as refugees were scattered far from, or worse, a few hilltops away from, the land upon which they and their ancestors had based their lives and livelihoods.

Today, as Israel portrays itself as a “green democracy”’, an eco-friendly pioneer in agricultural techniques such as drip irrigation, dairy farming, desert ecology, water management and solar energy, Israeli factories drain toxic waste and industrial pollutants down from occupied West Bank hilltops into Palestinian villages, and over-pumping of groundwater aquifers denies Palestinians access to vital water sources in a context of increasing water scarcity and pollution.

Jewish National Fund

The Jewish National Fund (JNF), perhaps the first transnational environmental NGO, was established in 1901, as the first wave of Jewish immigrants were settling in Palestine under the banner of Zionism. Throughout the 20th century, as the indigenous Arab population of Palestine found itself either expelled from its homeland or oppressed under the hand of a foreign invader, the JNF succeeded in raising enormous amounts of money to acquire and develop land throughout the territory that, in 1948, would become known as the State of Israel. Distinct from other transnational Zionist fundraising and advocacy organisations, such as the Jewish Agency, the JNF portrayed itself, from the beginning, as an environmental organisation, serving, according to its website, to “protect the land, green the landscape and preserve vital ecosystems” by “planting seedlings, maintaining forest health, combating desertification, protecting watersheds and managing water flow … [and] balancing the phenomenal growth and development Israel has experienced in the last decade with the maintenance of an ecologically sound environment”.

Proud that “Israel is the only country in the world that will enter the 21st century with a net gain in numbers of trees”, the JNF credits itself with planting 250 million trees, building more than 210 reservoirs and dams, developing more than 250,000 acres of land, creating more than 1000 parks and providing the infrastructure for more than 1000 communities throughout Israel. Suiting a state constructed for a single cultural-religious group, the JNF promotes an exclusionary, discriminatory brand of environmentalism. From its inception in 1901 — when the JNF controlled but a single olive grove in a land where 94% of its neighbours were Arab — to today, working closely with the Israel government, the JNF directly owns 13% of Israel’s land and effectively controls another 80%. The JNF’s constitution has explicitly stated that its land cannot be rented, leased, sold to or worked by non-Jews.

Throughout the first half of the 20th century, the JNF– helping to exile hundreds of thousands of Palestinian families, bulldoze their homes and clear the land to make way for Jewish settlement — bought large tracts of land from absentee landowners, evicted local Arab tenant farmers, uprooted natural vegetation of olive, carob and pistachio trees, and planted throughout the land, in place of indigenous arboreta, vast swaths of Europeanpinera (conifers) and eucalyptus trees.

Forests, parks and recreational facilities were strategically placed atop the ruins of destroyed Palestinian villages, so that the fast-growing pines would erase the history of Palestinian existence and prevent refugees from ever returning to their homes. In addition, pine forests were planted to guard and expand settlements built atop stolen land and, after 1967, to seize and divide Palestinian territory within east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank.

The pines helped evoke images of a European wilderness, creating a familiar “natural” environment for the mostly European Jewish settlers, so much so that settlers affectionately nicknamed Carmel National Park, planted partially over the destroyed Palestinian village of al-Tira, “little Switzerland” for its resemblance to the Swiss Alps. Foreign species, these pine forests, then and now, often fail to adapt to the local soil and require frequent re-planting. As they age, they demand more water and become more prone to problems like pests, disease and conflagrations, such as the 2010 Carmel wildfire, deemed the worst in Israel’s history. As their fast-growing acidic pine needles fall to the ground, they destroy all other surrounding small plants, thus ruining the livelihood of Palestinian shepherds, whose animals depend on grazing land.

Clear-felling Palestinian villages

The JNF’s time-tested method of ethnically cleansing and then “greening” the desert continues to this day. An ongoing $600 million, 10-year JNF program called Blueprint Negev seeks to develop reservoirs, pine afforestation and water conservation programs in the Negev desert at the expense of more than 150,000 Palestinian Bedouin, whose “unrecognised” villages, as a direct result of Israel’s policies, already lack electricity, running water and sewage disposal.

Since 2010, the JNF has attempted to “green” the Negev by planting the 1 million-pine “GOD TV Forest” over the Palestinian village of Al-Araqib, which, as it steadfastly resists extinction, has been demolished eight times. GOD TV Forest is named after its proud sponsor, a far-right, pro-settler Evangelical Christian organisation whose stated purpose is “to plant a million trees to prepare the land for the return of [God's] son”. As GOD TV Forest and Blueprint Negev seek to flood the semi-arid Negev with the invasive European pine trees, Israel seeks to tear the historically semi-nomadic Bedouin from their ancestral grazing lands, and to herd them into unnatural, sedentary lifestyles in impoverished and isolated townships. Social strife and decay of traditional values inevitably accompany this forced acculturation process.

Growing up in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., my family, along with the larger middle-class Jewish community, was, knowingly or not, complicit in the JNF’s environmental colonialism. Nearly every room of our local synagogue and Hebrew School displayed the iconic blue, tin JNF donation box, where, by simply dropping a coin, one could affirm one’s ethnic nationalism by helping “plant a tree in Israel”. Throughout my early childhood, my mother worked at a local JNF donation office, helping US Jewish families “plant a tree in Israel” to commemorate the death of a loved one.

Today, after a century of expulsion, settlement, development and rapid industrialisation, indigenous arboreta make up only 11% of Israeli forests, and pre-1948 growth accounts for only 10% of Israel’s greenery. Jewish National Fund pine forests, parks and recreation areas blanket the hills of Israel, and tour guides, in the midst of a hike, dread the inevitable moment when someone asks “what is that old abandoned mosque doing in the middle of this forest?” The parallels with European colonisation of the American continent are obvious, and in a cruel twist of historical irony, the construction, by JNF Canada, of Israel’s Canada National Park, covering over the destroyed Palestinian village of ‘Imwas in the mid-1980s, was initiated as a simultaneous twinning project along with Toronto’s Downsview Park, which sits atop unacknowledged First Nations territory.

Zionist image

The actions of the JNF fulfil the Zionist desire to transform and control the land of Palestine, to shape its hills in the Zionist image. When the pioneer Zionist movement arrived from Europe in the late 1800s, they found themselves dissatisfied with the rocky, semi-arid eastern shore of the Mediterranean, and they sought to “make the desert bloom” as proof that the Jewish people, and not the indigenous Arabs, were the destined cultivators of “a land without people for a people without land”.

Bringing little agricultural experience from their mostly lower-middle class urban backgrounds, these pioneers first adopted local Arab small-scale dryland subsistence farming methods, producing mainly unirrigated wheat, barley, potatoes, grapes, olives and figs for domestic consumption. Soon, however, they dismissed centuries-old sustainable Palestinian agricultural practices as “undeveloped”, and, funded by French banker-philanthropist Baron de Rothschild, used sophisticated European steam engines, mechanised ploughs, reapers and threshers to develop capital-intensive vineyards and cash-crop plantations for commercial marketing.

The passionate attachment to the land evinced by these Zionist pioneers often concealed an anthropocentric kernel. Many of the first European Jewish immigrants struck the soil of Palestine with a devout and even mystical appreciation of nature, driven to escape the economic, industrial and social alienation of European society and, through the sweat of agricultural labour, to birth themselves, and the Jewish people, anew as an ecologically integrated, utopian socialist community. Living in collectivist communes called kibbutzim, their sense of destiny magnified by the redemptive, exalted status that the land beneath their feet held for thousands of years of Jewish cultural mythology, they filled their journals with passionate, sensual, ecstatic, mystical and sometimes erotic descriptions of the joys of the earth and agricultural labour. As Israel’s first president, Chaim Weizmann observed, “it seems as if God had covered the soil of Palestine with rocks and marshes and sand, so that its beauty can only be brought out by those who love it and will devote their lives to healing its wounds”.

At the same time, their ecological zeal betrayed a deeply colonial, anthropocentric desire, not to respect and adapt to the land, but to subjugate and transform it, to conquer it through the machinations of human development. “Where we modern ones appear with our auxiliaries”, announced Zionist prophet Theodore Herzl at the turn of the century, “we turn the desert into a garden”. The motif of “making the desert bloom” emphasises not the desert rocks, but the human agency which controls nature for its own purposes. In one fell swoop, the land of Palestine would be cleared, along with its people, the Arab Palestinians, who, Weizmann maintained, were no different than “the rocks of Judea … obstacles that had to be cleared on a difficult path”.

Green, racist capitalism

Today, thanks to decades of largely US aid, the old kibbutzim have become factory suburbs, and the small, start-up socialist Zionist experiment has ballooned into the fourth-largest arms exporter in the world, the privatised, globally competitive, hyper-militarised Israel that markets itself abroad as a model for 21st century green capitalism, while perpetuating widespread ecological devastation and blatant environmental racism on the ground. “What country would not experience environmental woes”, says Jewish eco-socialist Joel Kovel in his book, Overcoming Zionism, “with a sixfold population increase in half a century in a context of rapid industrialization?” Kovel describes the steady expansion of Israel’s infrastructure of occupation, and the irreversible build-up of its desert war machine, as an “eco-destructive accelerant”, wedding coloniser and colonised together in a “parasitic order” that “builds parallel systems, of roads, water and sewage, electrical networks… [that] both colonize and destroy the land of the Palestinians, while creating, necessarily, a myriad of spaces … chaotically thrown up and turning into sites of a proliferating set of ecological degradations”.

Today, Israel covertly transports waste products from its own country into dumps and quarries throughout the occupied West Bank, polluting the Palestinian earth and water supply, while Israeli settlers in the West Bank — who produce similar amounts of wastewater to the Palestinian population, despite being outnumbered more than six to one — deliberately poison the water, land and livestock of nearby Palestinian villages. Solid wastes from Israeli settlements and military camps throughout the West Bank are dumped without restriction on Palestinian land, fields and side roads, and industry regularly moves from Israel to the West Bank, where labour is cheaper, environmental regulations are lenient and waste products, generated from the production of aluminium, leather tanning, textile dyeing, batteries, fiberglass, plastics and other chemicals, can flow freely down to Palestinian villages in surrounding valleys.

At least seven industrial zones, and at least 200 factories, have either moved from Israel into the West Bank, or have been constructed by the Israel government, inside the West Bank, a blatant violation of international law.

After one such factory, Geshuri Industries, moved its pesticide, insecticide and fertiliser production from Israel, where it was declared a health hazard, into the West Bank in 1982, the owner began the courteous practice of closing the factory for the one month every year that a change in wind direction would blow its pollutants towards Israel.

The construction, beginning in 2002, of Israel’s mammoth separation/apartheid wall, while separating Palestinian farmers from their fields, has destroyed Palestinian legally owned fertile agricultural land, and has brought with it all the extensive contamination of natural habitats associated with the use of heavy machinery and millions of tons of concrete. The wall has isolated Palestinian communities from vital water sources, and has interfered with natural drainage systems in the West Bank, causing flooding and substantial environmental and agricultural damage in times of high rainfall.

West Bank and Gaza

The JNF’s “greening” of Israel does not extend to the West Bank and Gaza, where the infrastructure of occupation breeds widespread deforestation. While the JNF made the hilltops within the internationally recognised borders of Israel bloom with forests, parks, playgrounds and recreation areas so that, to quote its website, “the heroic men and women of the Israel Defense Forces can share precious time with their loved ones”, 95% of the forests of Gaza have disappeared between 1971 and 1999, due to the extensive spread of settlements and military bases alongside Israel’s pervasive bombing. Contrary to the JNF’s commitment to “combat desertification”, the threat of permanent desertification looms over the West Bank, as increasing illegal settlement expansion, facilitated by the JNF, steals large tracts of land traditionally used by Palestinian villages for grazing, leaving the few remaining grazing areas available to Palestinian pastoralists threatened by overgrazing.

For Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, the monitoring, maintenance and protection of natural ecosystems becomes impossible, as the Israeli occupation paralyses their sovereign ability to regulate usage of a contiguous piece of land. Restrictions on freedom of movement, such as road closures, checkpoints and permanent roadblocks, impede the collection, processing, treatment and disposal of waste products, which, when released into residential areas, agricultural land and groundwater aquifers, cause soil contamination and potentially irreversible ground water pollution.

Water

Israel’s discriminatory distribution of water is an instance of environmental racism at its worst. “Presently”, writes Joel Kovel, Israel “faces both an absolute shortage of water owing to persistent overconsumption, as well as persistent contamination of the existing water thanks to rampant ‘development’ and industrialization”. As population growth, combined with a rising standard of living, has led to an over-utilisation of renewable water sources, Israel embarks on costly cloud-seeding and desalination experiments to increase its water supply, while destroying the rain-water cisterns and wells of agrarian Palestinian villages.

The Jordan River, an international river basin unilaterally monopolised by Israel, has seen its average flow decrease from 1250 million cubic metres (mcm)/year in 1953 to 152-203 mcm due to two enormous reservoirs, and has become so polluted by Israeli settlement and industry run-off that, to the dismay of Christian pilgrims worldwide, the environmental group Friends of the Earth Middle East decreed it unsafe for baptism in 2010. As the Jordan River is drained to a trickle, the Dead Sea, also polluted, has shrunk into two separate, and rapidly drying, seas further downstream, as its salts are pumped by Israeli companies to flood the global market with exotic cosmetic products.

As over-pumping of regional underground aquifers, all monopolised by Israel, has lowered the groundwater table below sea level and caused saline water intrusion in many areas, growing water scarcity is used by Israel as a tool of oppression against the Palestinians. In the Jordan Valley, an oppressive matrix of checkpoints, closed military zones, army training grounds, nature reserves, settlements and settler-only roads striates the desert with the infrastructure of environmental racism, isolating Palestinian Bedouin villages from access to water sources.

Impoverished communities — 40% of whom consume less water than the minimum global standard set by the World Health Organization — must travel across a desert, criss-crossed with Israeli checkpoints, to bring overpriced and often unsanitary water tankers home to scattered villages of makeshift shacks and mud-brick houses. While the 56,000 Palestinian Bedouin in the Jordan Valley consume an average of 37 million cubic metres (mcm) of water per year, the 9400 Israeli settlers consume an average of 41 mcm.

Sustainable agricultural practices are made difficult because of water scarcity, and perishable produce, delayed for hours at Israeli checkpoints, often spoils on its way to market. While “unrecognised” Bedouin villages live in dire poverty, cut off from basic services such as health care, education and employment, and barred by Israel’s laws from building any permanent structure, be it a water well, an animal pen, a storage shed or a family home, 36 Israeli Jordan Valley agricultural settlements utilise state-of-the-art technology, along with an unlimited water supply, to grow a wide variety of genetically modified fruit and vegetable produce, propelling Israel into the international agribusiness industry as the world’s sixth-largest cultivator of genetically modified crops.

While Bedouin families see their makeshift structures demolished by Israeli bulldozers on a daily basis, every Israeli settler family in the Jordan Valley is given, in addition to an unlimited water supply, a free house, US$20,000, 70 dunnams (km2) of land, free health care and a 75% discount on electricity, utilities and transportation.

Lake Hula

The ethnic cleansing and ecological degradation of Lake Hula in 1950 provides a perfect example of the JNF’s catastrophic failure as an environmental organisation, and cruel success as a colonial enterprise. In 1933 the Palestine Land Development Corporation, using JNF and private funds, forcibly evicted the Ghawarani tribe from one of the oldest documented lakes and wetlands in history, the Huleh Valley in the eastern Galilee near Syria. Descendants of deserters from the invading Egyptian army in the 1830s, and Algerian refugees from the failed 1847 revolt against French rule, the Ghawarani had lived for two centuries in reed huts, mud-brick shacks and woollen tents, practicing reed basket and mat weaving, seasonal agriculture, fishing and the raising of livestock such as chicken, geese and water buffalo.

Echoing founder of Israel David Ben-Gurion’s 1944 proclamation that “we must conquer the sea and the desert, for those will provide us with room for new settlers and will serve as a laboratory for the development of new forms of economic and agricultural endeavor”, the JNF, anxious to form a buffer of agricultural expansion between Israel and Syria, drained Lake Hula in 1950 without a study of its ecological impact, ignoring the warnings of scientists that the peat soil under the swamps would not make fertile land.

Agricultural development of the exposed peat soils, weathered and eroded by wind without their vegetation cover, proved unsuccessful, and the reckless experiment destroyed a rich, diverse ecosystem of aquatic biota, flora and fauna unique to the region. Despite one JNF hydrologist’s certainty that “our peat is Zionist peat … our peat will not do damage”, the decomposing peat soils released nutrients and ground pollutants into the Jordan River and the entropic Lake Tiberius, creating crop-damaging black dust and making large tracts of land susceptible to damaging underground fires. The Hula Valley was left stagnant and largely depopulated, until a $23 million JNF re-flooding in 1996 created the smaller and shallower Lake Agmon, restoring a meagre portion of the area’s now-extinct wildlife.

Justice

As the dependence of the imperial West on Gulf oil increases precipitously, Israel’s occupation of Palestine becomes a crucial focal point for the global dominance of Empire, and a concentrated site of its cruellest eco-genocidal machinations. In Israel’s occupation of Palestine, we see how environmental devastation coincides with ethnic cleansing, and how the former is used to deepen the latter. The quest for justice in Palestine lies at the heart of anti-imperialist struggle worldwide, a struggle in defence of the Earth, and the dispossessed who wander upon it.

In the words of Coya White Hat-Artichoker, member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe in South Dakota and founding member of the LGBTQ Two Spirit First Nations Collective:

I see what is happening in Palestine as an indigenous struggle for sovereignty, at times, even the right to exist. It is also one of genocide… I see Israel’s systemic and intentional destruction and removal of Palestinian lives, homes, and communities as very similar to the destruction of communities, lives, and removal of Native people from their traditional lands. I no longer see terrorists there anymore; I see people resisting and fighting extinction… I believe that as people in the US who make these connections, it’s important to be thoughtful about what is happening, in our names and with the US government’s money.

[Ben Lorber is a journalist and radical activist who has worked extensively in the US and the Middle East. In 2011, he spent six months in Palestine, as an activist with the International Solidarity Movement in the West Bank and as a journalist with the Israeli-Palestinian Alternative Information Center in Jerusalem. His articles have appeared in the Electronic Intifada, the Palestine ChronicleMondoWeissCommon Dreams  and many other publications.]

(links.org.au / 17.07.2012)

Islamic official: Al Aqsa belongs to Muslims, not Israel

The Haram al-Sharif, containing the Al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock, is the third holiest site in Islam.

JERUSALEM (Ma’an) — An Islamic official in Jerusalem said Tuesday that a statement by Israel’s Attorney General that Israeli law must be applied to the sacred Al-Aqsa Mosque complex in Jerusalem is a “violation against Muslims and Palestinians.”

Yehuda Weinstein wrote to Israeli authorities in Jerusalem in recent weeks insisting that Israeli planning and antiquities regulations apply to the holy Haram al-Sharif compound, Israeli media reported.

However he asked authorities to be pragmatic in implementing the law, taking into consideration the site’s unique status, Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post reported.

Abdul Rahman Abbad, the head of Muslims scholars council in Jerusalem, told Ma’an: “Muslims are the only ones who own this mosque.”

He insisted religious authorities are not bound by Israeli decisions, and warned of Israel’s intentions in issuing such a statement ahead of the holy month of Ramadam, when Muslims flock to the Haram al-Sharif.

The compound, containing the Al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock, is the third holiest site in Islam and abuts the site where Jews believe the ancient Second Temple stood.

The flashpoint site is under the custody of the Islamic endowment authorities.

Israel annexed East Jerusalem after a 1967 war in a move never recognized abroad.

(www.maannews.net / 17.07.2012)

Action Alert: Free Akram al-Rikhawi

Contact your MP and tell them about the case of Akram al-Rikhawi, who has been on hunger strike for 96 days. Inform your MP that Israel is breaking international rights under Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) which says that no person should be “subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention”.

Ask your MP to write to the Foreign Secretary to ask him to formally condemn administrative detention and call for the immediate end of its use by Israel.

You can find your MP’s contact details here

Please cc: Alistair Burt MP, Foreign Office Ministerpsministerburtaction@fco.gsi.gov.uk

A Sample Letter

Dear (Name of MP)

I would like to bring to your attention and ask you to kindly intervene and save the life of Akram al-Rikhawi who is on the verge of death after 96 days of hunger-strike and is the latest of the recent Palestinian Political prisoner who is demanding justice and fairness from the Israeli Military occupation. I would very much like you to raise this urgent humanitarian issue.

Akram al-Rikhawi who is married with eight children, and also cared for his brothers five children after his brother’s death 22 yesrs ago, was sentenced to 9 years in prison by an Israeli military tribunal (these courts convict 99.74% of all accused Palestinians) Rikhawi was arrested on 7 June 2004, when Israeli Occupying Forces (IOF) arrested him at a Military checkpoint. In one of his first lawyer visits following his arrest, Akram reported that he had been subjected to ill-treatment. During his transfer to the detention centre, Israeli soldiers removed all his clothes and brought dogs to frighten and intimidate him.

Since being imprisoned he has been denied access to his medication which has led to severe health complications. He suffers from various chronic conditions, including diabetes, asthma, kidney problems, deterioration of eye lenses, high cholesterol, immune deficiency and osteoporosis. Rikhawi launched his hunger strike on 12 April, demanding that his medical condition and social circumstances be considered during the discussion of his request for an earlier release. Every prisoner is entitled to ask to be considered for early release when at least two thirds of the sentence has been served. In all discussions, these factors were disregarded and a file with ‘secret information’ was the only material considered.

Due to these pre-existing conditions Rikhawi’s hunger strike has been even harder on his body. He was already in fragile condition. Now he is in a coma and his condition is deteriorating fast. According to rights groups, an Israeli court on May 30 granted prison doctors 12 more days before allowing independent doctors to visit the prisoners, further prolonging their suffering and isolation.

This was the plea made by other prisoners recently in a similar condition and applies equally in this instance. As Sarsak said when he was on his hunger strike: ”there is still enough time and the support that comes late is better than that which does not come at all. It is better that you receive us alive and victorious rather than as lifeless bodies in black bags”.

As my MP I would like to request that you take immediate action on my behalf and write to the Foreign Secretary to avoid another wasted and avoidable death.

Yours Sincerely,

(www.foa.org.uk / 17.07.2012)

Groups: 2 prisoners join hunger strike in Israeli jail

Ayman Sharawna, 37, from Dura near Hebron, began refusing food on July 1 to demand his release from detention without charge, a prisoners group said.

RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — Two Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jail have started hunger strikes to protest Israel’s detention policies, prisoners groups said Tuesday.

They join three prisoners already refusing food, two months after mass hunger strikes in Israeli prisons ended in a deal expected to ameliorate treatment of Palestinian detainees.

Ayman Sharawna, 37, from Dura near Hebron, began refusing food on July 1 to demand his release from detention without charge, Addameer prisoners association said.

He had been released from Israeli custody under a prisoner swap agreement last October, but was rearrested on January 31.

Like four others recaptured by Israel after their release in the exchange deal, Sharawna is being held under a military order that allows him to remain in custody as long as a special committee is deliberating his case, after his amnesty under the exchange was canceled, Addameer says.

An Addameer lawyer who visited Sharawna earlier this week said he is being held in isolation in Ramon jail.

Meanwhile, the Palestinian prisoner society said sick prisoner Raed Gamal Ali Ahmad began a hunger strike on July 11 to protest what he describes as medical neglect by prison authorities.

Ahmad suffers from kidney disease, and says he has exhausted all possibilities in persuading prison officials to address his medical condition, according to the society, who visited him in Megiddo jail.

He has spent seven years in Israeli prison, after receiving a 16-year sentence.

Society head Qadura Fares said medical neglect in Israeli jail affects many prisoners who have health conditions.

Some 2,000 prisoners held an open hunger strike in April, before reaching a deal a month later which included allowing family visits for prisoners from the Gaza Strip and moving prisoners out of solitary confinement.

Prisoners say Israeli authorities have not kept all its terms, including renewing the administrative detention orders for prisoners and failing to improve living conditions.

One prisoner from the Gaza Strip has been on hunger strike for 97 days seeking an early release due to illness.

A diabetic, Akram al-Rekhawi, 39, has been held in a prison clinic since he was detained by Israeli forces in June 2004. He has served eight years of a nine-year sentence.

Another detainee, Samer Al-Barq, 36, is on his 57th day of hunger strike after his administrative detention was renewed.

Administrative detainee Hassan Safadi, 34, is on his 27th day of renewed hunger strike, after his detention without charge was renewed in violation of the agreement ending the hunger strikes in May, Addameer says. He was previously on hunger strike for 71 days.

(www.maannews.net / 17.07.2012)

Appreciating Women

muslim woman

As a Muslim, I feel that Muslim women should be encouraged more to achieve their full potential. They should be empowered to become successful and influential in every field of life.

We should encourage every Muslim woman to work to achieve Ihsan (excellence) in every field of endeavour, for example science, business, entrepreneurship, voluntary work; instead of trying to stifle the talents and contribution of women – who are half of the population, by asking women to stay at home.

Muslim women should be empowered and enlightened. The Prophet’s (pbuh) wife, Khadija pbuh was a successful and influential business woman. Aisha bint Abu Bakr ra, the wife of the Prophet pbuh taught Muslim scholars and made valuable contributions to Islamic thought and civilisation. These wonderful Muslim women are our role models.

In reference to the argument that women should stay at home to take care of their children and shouldn’t go out to study/work, it is important to note that being well educated and having a successful career will make you more capable of raising children who are higher achievers.

The Ummah and humanity need us to work very hard and contribute to human progress. Muslim women should bring pride and honour to Islam by their pursuit of excellence in every field.

It is quite ironic that a small minority of people still oppose womens’ right to work, learn and contribute to society through activism and voluntary work. The basis of their argument is that women shouldn’t mix with men and shouldn’t be faced with the hardships of life at work. This position is diametrically opposite to the evidence from Islamic history, where Muslim women were so active in the community in every possible way, to the extent that they accompanied armies to nurse the wounded and provide moral support. These Muslim women risked being murdered, tortured and raped if captured by the enemy. Their resolve comes from the inherent values of hard work and contribution in Islam.

Imagine a world where all of our Muslim women are excellent scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs etc. Muslim women are able to achieve the pinnacles of success while being modest. There is nothing wrong with Muslim women interacting with men at work, it can be done while remaining within the bounds of Islam. It is quite evident from the Prophet’s times that Muslim women interacted and were active in the community.

As for raising children, most women are able to balance their responsibilities, especially if they have a husband who helps her at home as the Prophet pbuh used to.

Unfortunately, the world has always been an unfair place for women. Women (whether Muslim or non Muslim) have always had to work harder than men and get less recognition. Women have to juggle the responsibilities of their careers, their family lives and their roles as mothers at the same time. It is difficult and challenging.

Women are so dedicated, selfless, patient, industrious, compassionate and intelligent.

‘He (God) it is he who did create you from a single soul and there from did create his mate, that he might dwell with her (in love ).’ (Quran 7:189)

Take a stand for women. Be the best you can be for all the women in your life. Give them the love, support and encouragement they need to excel and achieve everything they dream of for Islam and humanity. Syeda Aisha, the Prophet’s pbuh grand daughter was a vanguard in activism and voluntary work. Her husband and family supported her work and even financed her charitable establishments.

Empowering women is not merely empowering half of the population. Empowering women means empowering future generations. Today’s women are the mothers of tomorrow’s nation. Our women are our future.

The Prophet PBUH said: “The best among you is the one who is the best towards his wife.”

The Prophet pbuh Muhammad said: ‘Your Heaven lies under the feet of your mother.’ (Ahmad, Nasai)

A man came to the Prophet pbuh and said: ‘O Messenger of God! Who among the people is the most worthy of my good companionship?’ The Prophet said: ‘Your mother.’ The man said, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet said: ‘Then your mother.’ The man further asked, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet said: ‘Then your mother.’ The man asked again, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet said: ‘Then your father.’ (Bukhari, Muslim)

For all those who oppress women or fail to recognise womens’ contributions: shame on you.

A brief summary on Women in Islam. A library of free downloadable books for further reading in many languages.

(16 Sep 2011 / www.mpacuk.org / 17.07.2012)

‘Sheikh Nimr Tortured by Saudi Authorities’

Saudi activist assured that prominent cleric Sheikh Nimr Nimr was being tortured by the Saudi authorities.sheikh nimr nimr

Opposition activist Dr. Hamza al-Hassan said that the “health situation of Sheikh Nimr is not good,” adding that the Sheikh had facial bruise and his teeth were broken.

On his account on Twitter, Dr. al-Hassan said that some members of Sheikh Nimr’s family had visited him in his detention.
He added that the visit was after a call by the Saudi authorities. However it was brief in which the visitors could talk to him nothing but some general statements, al-Hassan said.

He noted that the authorities demanded that family of the Sheikh calm the angry protesters, adding: “this is the aim of the visit.”hamza hassan twitter

Meanwhile, the Saudi Rasid news network reported that Sheikh Nimr’s family had visited him in the military hospital of Zahran, where he is being treated after being injured by gunshots during detention last week.

The network quoted some visitors as saying that the Sheikh went under surgery in order to take out the bullet which was in his thigh, and adding that he was getting well.
According to Rasid, some observers said the Saudi authorities had permitted the visit, which they described as exceptional, in order to put an end to the rumors over the fate of Sheikh Nimr, especially after some photos were leaked, showing the Sheikh unconscious bloodstained.

(www5.almanar.com.lb / 17.07.2012)

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