Category: Israel

  • Israeli raid on Gaza-bound flotilla remembered

    Israeli raid on Gaza-bound flotilla remembered

    (CNN) — On the first anniversary of the Israeli raid on a flotilla headed to Gaza, organizers of another flotilla planned for June held a news conference Monday that concluded with a minute of silence for the nine activists killed in that raid.

    Palestinians rally Monday off the coast of Gaza City to mark the first anniversary of a deadly Israeli raid on a Turkish flotilla
    Palestinians rally Monday off the coast of Gaza City to mark the first anniversary of a deadly Israeli raid on a Turkish flotilla

    Palestinians rally Monday off the coast of Gaza City to mark the first anniversary of a deadly Israeli raid on a Turkish flotilla

    The event was held on the Mavi Marmara, the ship that was the scene of the raid, which led to the deterioration of relations between Israel and Turkey, its once strong Muslim ally.

    Mavi Marmara — owned by the Turkish Humanitarian Relief Foundation, or IHH — and five other ships were on their way to Gaza carrying humanitarian aid and about 700 activists from various countries when Israeli soldiers swarmed aboard it in international waters on the night of May 30-31, 2010.

    Eight Turks and one American of Turkish origin died. Istanbul pulled its ambassador from Israel after the incident and the post has remained vacant.

    Huseyin Oruc, an executive from IHH, said Monday the flotilla that will set out in the last week of June in an attempt to break the Israeli blockade will consist of 15 ships and about 1,500 participants from 100 countries.

    The ships will carry a wide variety of humanitarian aid for Gaza, ranging from children’s toys to construction and medical supplies. They will be leaving from a variety of Mediterranean ports.

    At the news conference, Evangelos Pissias of Greece read out a joint statement on behalf of the international flotilla organization welcoming the recent decision of Egypt to open the Rafah border crossing into Gaza.

    However, he said, “We must continue to challenge this blockade. We call on all states, the United Nations and international organizations to support our action and demand that Israel refrain from attacking our vessels.”

    Egypt opened its border crossing into Gaza on Saturday. It had been mostly kept closed after Hamas, an Islamic militant group, got control of Gaza in June 2007.

    Asked if the flotilla organizers are taking any measures to protect the people on board the ships in case of an Israeli raid, Ann Wright, representing the American boat that will be a part of this year’s flotilla, told CNN, “There is not much we can do. They have got the weapons. We have no weapons. We don’t want weapons. We are going non-violently.”

    The news conference ended with prayer and the minute of silence.

    Monday evening in Istanbul, anger spilled out as several thousand Turks gathered in the city’s central Taksim Square to mark the anniversary.

    Chants of “Damn Israel” were interspersed with Arabic- and Turkish-language Islamic music as people waved Palestinian and Turkish flags at the event, which also was organized by the Turkish Humanitarian Foundation.

    The crowd, including men, women and children, carried banners saying “Support Gaza,” “Mavi Marmara martyrs are our honor” and “Palestine will win.” They also sent Chinese lanterns into the sky and lit flares in red and green.

    There was a moment of prayer. The crowd got loudest when chanting “Allahu Akbar.”

    One of the participants in the rally, Rabia Demirci, has registered to take part in the next flotilla. “I don’t think (Israel) will attack after this,” she said. “The Rafah crossing is open, too. God willing, it won’t. But if it attacks, we will continue on our path again, saying on with resistance. No obstacle can block our path.”

    Palestinians also marked the day, with many taking to small boats off the coast of Gaza City.

    via Israeli raid on Gaza-bound flotilla remembered – CNN.com.

  • Turkey Israel’s 3rd largest export market in Q1

    Turkey Israel’s 3rd largest export market in Q1

    Politics aside: Turkey rose from ninth place in the corresponding quarter of 2010.

    30 May 11 14:05, Tal Moise

    Notwithstanding political tensions between Israel and Turkey, Turkey rose to Israel’s third largest export market in the first quarter from ninth place in the corresponding quarter of 2010, the Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute reports today. Exports of goods (excluding diamonds) to Turkey totaled $500 million in the first quarter, 73% more than in the corresponding quarter.

    The US is still Israel’s largest export market, with exports to that country totaling $3 billion

    Exports to Turkey rose more than exports to other countries. According to Export Institute figures, most of the growth is thanks to to a 57% increase in exports of chemicals and refined oil products to $260 million in the first quarter.

    China is Israel’s fifth largest export market, and the largest export market in Asia. Exports to China totaled $443 million in the first quarter, 12% more than in the corresponding quarter. Exports to India fell 6% to $336 million, putting it in eighth place, mainly due to unusually heavy exports to it in the corresponding quarter. Exports of avionics were affected by a single deal in 2010, and fell from $100 million to zero.

    Israel’s top ten export markets are, in order, the US, the Netherlands, Turkey, Germany, China, Italy, the UK, India, France, and Canada.

    Published by Globes [online], Israel business news – www.globes-online.com – on May 30, 2011

    © Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2011

    via Turkey Israel’s 3rd largest export market in Q1 – Globes.

  • Turks Sailing Again for Gaza Chart Collision Course With Israel

    Turks Sailing Again for Gaza Chart Collision Course With Israel

    May 30 (Bloomberg) — In an Istanbul dockyard, workers are outfitting the Mavi Marmara, the ship on which Israeli commandos killed nine Turkish activists a year ago, to lead a second attempt to break Israel’s embargo of the Gaza Strip.

    The first voyage ended when soldiers rappelled from helicopters and opened fire after the ship, part of a six-boat flotilla, refused to stop. Israel says people onboard shot first and attacked with iron bars, a charge they deny. This time, activists plan to sail 15 vessels loaded with cargo and pro- Palestinian supporters, setting them on a collision course with Israel’s military.

    Their goal is to defy and undermine the blockade of Hamas- ruled Gaza next month by delivering aid to the enclave without permission. At stake are two often conflicting aims: Israel’s stated desire to limit and monitor cargo going into Gaza to prevent weapons from entering and Palestinian demands for self- determination and improved living conditions.

    “For the flotilla’s organizers and supporters, including Turkey, it’s a win-win situation, in which they either secure humanitarian passage perceived to be alleviating suffering in Gaza, or are assaulted and perceived to be the victims of state- sponsored violence,” said Shashank Joshi, an associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London.

    Turkey withdrew its ambassador after the raid and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan demanded an apology and compensation before relations are fully restored. The attack prompted UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to call the blockade “unsustainable and wrong” while U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the deaths a “tragedy.”

    Shekel Weakened

    The day after the May 31 raid, the shekel weakened to an almost 10-month low while the benchmark TA-25 stock index posted a two-day drop of 2.6 percent amid concern that criticism over the raid would spur investors to sell. The stock index has since rebounded 15 percent.

    “The flotilla’s purpose was to embarrass Israel, complicate Israel’s situation regionally and internationally, and this definitely was achieved,” said Alon Liel, former director-general of Israel’s Foreign Ministry. “Israel has to treat this very seriously.”

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on May 17 said he delivered “serious warnings and messages” to Israeli Ambassador Gabby Levy that “Turkey expects the incident won’t be repeated.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says his country’s response was justified and warned on April 1 that “Israel is obligated to act aggressively against the flotilla.”

    U.S. Plea

    Thirty-six members of the U.S. Congress have signed a letter asking Erdogan to stop the convoy, calling it a “provocation.”

    “The question is whether Israel can prevent the transfer of goods and perhaps weapons to Gaza, and continue the isolation of Hamas without hurting its international image even further,” Gerald Steinberg, a political scientist at Bar-Ilan University near Tel Aviv, said in a phone interview.

    Israel imposed the embargo after the Islamic Hamas movement seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007, ending a partnership government with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas a year after winning parliamentary elections. Hamas is considered a terrorist group by Israel, the European Union and the United States; not by Turkey. The two Palestinian groups signed a reconciliation agreement in Cairo on May 4.

    Unemployment in Gaza stands at about 37.4 percent, the World Bank said in April. Per capita gross domestic product in the Palestinian territory is about $775, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. By comparison, Israel’s GDP per capita is about $30,000, according to its Central Bureau of Statistics.

    Blockade Loosened

    via Turks Sailing Again for Gaza Chart Collision Course With Israel.

  • Cameron drops Israel ‘racist’ charity

    Cameron drops Israel ‘racist’ charity

    DavidCameronStop the JNF Campaign: Media Release

    27 May 2011 – Prime Minister David Cameron has quietly terminated his status as an Honorary Patron of the controversial Jewish National Fund (JNF).  His office confirmed he had “stepped down”. For many years leaders of all three main political parties became Honorary Patrons of the JNF by convention.  According to Dick Pitt, a spokesperson for the Stop the JNF Campaign, “Cameron was the only leader of the three major parties remaining as a JNF Patron.  This decline in political support for the JNF at the highest levels of the political tree may be a sign of the increasing awareness in official quarters that a robust defence of the activities of the JNF may not be sustainable.”

    The news of Cameron’s move has reached Palestinians in refugee camps,  people whose land is under the control of the JNF.  Salah Ajarma in Bethlehem’s Aida Refugee Camp was “delighted to hear the news that the British Prime Minister has decided to withdraw his support for this sinister organisation involved in ethnic cleansing. My village, Ajjur, was taken by force from my family and given to the JNF who used money from JNF UK to plant the British Park on its ruins. For the Palestinians who were evicted from their villages and have been prevented from returning, Cameron’s withdrawal is another victory on the road to achieving justice and freedom for the Palestinians”.

    The JNF chairman Samuel Hayek defends the work of the organisation saying, “for over 100 years we have had one mission: to settle and develop the Land of Israel” as pioneers of the “historic Zionist dream”.  The registered charity claims their work, especially in the Negev region of Israel, deals with “the rising demographic challenges faced by Israel”.  In recent months the JNF’s activities in the Negev have received extensive international media coverage, linking them to the demolition of Palestinian Bedouin villages and confiscation of the land of the village.  Campaigners report that “even Israeli courts have criticised the JNF as an organisation that discriminates against non-Jews and there is mounting evidence of the JNF’s involvement in Israel’s programme to change the ethnic composition of areas inside 1948 Israel as well as in Jerusalem and the Occupied Territories.  It is not acceptable that such an organisation is allowed to operate in the UK, much less to enjoy charity status”.

    Michael Kalmanovitz, UK co-ordinator of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, said “Cameron’s patronage of the JNF lent parliamentary credibility to a criminal organisation backed by a highly-equipped occupying army and masquerading as a ‘humanitarian charity’.  Now parliamentarians who are ‘Friends of Israel’ must consider how much longer they can defend Israeli apartheid and worse.“

    Pressure has been mounting on Cameron and the JNF.  An Early Day Motion in the Westminster Parliament highlighted the Prime Minister’s status as honorary patron and claimed that “there is just cause to consider revocation of the JNF’s charitable status in the UK”.  UK and international JNF fund-raising events increasingly face protests due, campaigners argue, to “a shift in public opinion on Israel generally”.  In 2007, the American JNF application for consultative status on a key UN committee was rejected because delegates were unable to distinguish between the activities of the US Branch and those of the JNF in Israel whose activities the UN’s Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination expressed concerns about.

    The Stop the JNF Campaign has workshops planned in London on 4 June 2011 and protests against JNF fundraising activities will be organised throughout the coming year.

    ENDS


  • Helen Thomas tells Playboy: Jews ‘control’ White House

    Helen Thomas tells Playboy: Jews ‘control’ White House

    Ex-dean of Washington press corp: ‘Everybody is in pocket of Israeli lobbies’

     


    By Drew Zahn
    © 2011 WND

    Helen Thomas, the former “dean” of the White House Press Corps who lost her position over a string of anti-Semitic comments, is interviewed in the April issue of Playboy, renewing her criticism of Israel and Jews in “control” of America. 

    Helen Thomas
    Helen Thomas

    “[The Jews are] using their power, and they have power in every direction … power over the White House, power over Congress,” Thomas told Playboy Contributing Editor David Hochman. “Everybody is in the pocket of the Israeli lobbies, which are funded by wealthy supporters, including those from Hollywood. Same thing with the financial markets. There’s total control.

    “It’s real power when you own the White House, when you own these other places in terms of your political persuasion. Of course they have power,” Thomas continued, then addressed Hochman: “You don’t deny that. You’re Jewish, aren’t you?”

    The 90-year-old journalist was a correspondent with United Press International for 57 years, an opinion columnist with Hearst Newspapers for 10 years and the senior White House reporter, covering every president since Eisenhower, until damaging comments last year pushed her to retirement.

    Thomas resigned in June after telling a rabbi on camera that Israelis should “get the h— out of Palestine” and “go home” to “Poland, Germany and America and everywhere else.”

    Though Thomas published an apology for her statements last year, writing, “I deeply regret my comments,” Thomas expressed a different sentiment in her interview with Playboy:

    “I knew exactly what I was doing – I was going for broke. I had reached the point of no return. You finally get fed up,” she told the magazine. “I finally wanted to speak the truth.”

    Part of that “truth,” Thomas told Playboy, is her claim that Israel is perpetuating its people’s victim-of-the-Holocaust status to escape criticism over wrongdoing against the Palestinians.

    “The slaughter of Jews stopped with World War II. … They were liberated since then. And yet they carry on the victimization,” Thomas told the magazine. “American people do not know that the Israeli lobbyists have intimidated them into believing every Jew is a persecuted victim forever – while they are victimizing Palestinians.”

    She continued, “Sure, the Israelis have a right to exist – but where they were born, not to come and take someone else’s home. I’ve had it up to here with the violations against the Palestinians. … [The Palestinians] are incarcerated and living in an open prison. I say to the Israelis, ‘Get out of people’s homes!’ … I mean, they’re living there and these people want to come and take their homes and land and water and kill their children and kill them.”

    Still, Thomas insists, she doesn’t hold any hatred for the Jewish people.

    “Oh, I know what they’re going to say: ‘anti-Semite.’… The truth is, I don’t hate anybody. I care deeply about people. I care for the poor, the sick, the lame, the harmed, those who’ve been treated unjustly,” she told Playboy. “I think [the Jews] are wonderful people. They had to have the most depth. They were leaders in civil rights. They’ve always had the heart for others but not for Arabs, for some reason.

    “I’m not anti-Jewish,” she explained, “I’m anti-Zionist.”

    Thomas, therefore, explains why she blames Israelis for Palestinian terror attacks:

    “Of course I don’t condone any violence against anyone. But who wouldn’t fight for their country? What would any American do if their land was being taken? Remember Pearl Harbor,” Thomas told Playboy. “The Palestinian violence is to protect what little remains of Palestine. The suicide bombers act out of despair and desperation. Three generations of Palestinians have been forced out of their homes – by Israelis – and into refugee camps.”

    Following her comments last year, made on the White House lawn during American Jewish Heritage month, President Obama criticized Thomas’ statement, supporting her departure from the White House press corps.

    “Her comments were offensive,” Obama said. “It’s a shame because Helen’s someone who has been a correspondent through I don’t know how many presidents, was a real institution in Washington, D.C. But I think she made the right decision. I think those comments are out of line, and hopefully she recognizes that.”

    Earlier this week, however, Editor & Publisher reports, Thomas told a national conference of campus journalists from College Media Advisers, “I want an apology from the president.”

    “I also heard from Jimmy Carter,” Thomas revealed. “He called a few weeks later. Basically he was sympathetic. He talked about the Israelis in the Middle East, the violations. It was very nice of him to call, but I don’t want to get him into trouble.”

    She also reiterated her statements that Israelis should leave homes occupied by Palestinians prior to 1948, only this time suggesting they come to the U.S., rather than “go home” to “Poland, Germany and America and everywhere else.”

     

  • Israel Matzav: Knesset preparing to slap Turkey across the face

    Israel Matzav: Knesset preparing to slap Turkey across the face

    armenian genocideThe Knesset is preparing to give the Turkish government a smack across its arrogant face. With Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan making false accusations against Israel, the Knesset looks like it will finally fight back. After years of succeeding Israeli governments avoiding giving it recognition, the Knesset is on the verge of officially recognizing the Armenian genocide (Hat Tip: Joshua I).

    Shortly before the one year anniversary of the Free Gaza Flotilla that marked a low point in Israel-Turkey relations, the Knesset made history Wednesday afternoon when it held its first open discussion on recognition of the Armenian genocide.

    With a number of Armenian religious and lay leaders watching in the visitors’ gallery, MKs ranging from Shas to Meretz took the stand to speak in favor of officially recognizing the series of massacres and deportations that killed an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in the years during and shortly after World War I.

    For years, consecutive governments had blocked attempts by MKs to raise the subject of recognizing the genocide out of concern that such recognition could damage relations with Ankara. This year, however, the government did not block the hearing.

    MKs voted by a unanimous vote of 20-0 following the hearing to refer the subject for a further hearing to the Knesset’s Education Committee, a hearing that will also be broadcast, at least via Internet. In contrast, any previous discussions concerning the genocide had been held exclusively behind the closed doors of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.

    Isn’t this great? In one move, we’re doing the right and moral thing and b**ch-slapping a government that has become a bitter rival.

    Here’s hoping the Mavi Marmara sinks the day after Israel officially recognizes the Armenian genocide.

    Labels: Armenian genocide, Mavi Marmara, Turkish obsession with Israel

    posted by Carl in Jerusalem @ 1:23 PM

    via Israel Matzav: Knesset preparing to slap Turkey across the face.