Category: News

Select a news topic from the list below, then select a news article to read.

  • Access to more than 50 percent of West Bank restricted for Palestinians: World Bank

    Access to more than 50 percent of West Bank restricted for Palestinians: World Bank

    RAMALLAH, West Bank: A new World Bank report says the troubled Palestinian economy cannot recover unless Israel dismantles its web of physical and administrative obstacles to Palestinian movement in the West Bank. Here are some figures from the report.

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    Since Israel signed an agreement on improving movement and access for Palestinians in November 2005, restrictions have instead become tighter. Since the agreement, the number of physical obstacles in the West Bank increased by 44 percent, to 547.

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  • Negev desert nomads on the move again to make way for Israel’s barrier

    Negev desert nomads on the move again to make way for Israel’s barrier

    Security fence and spread of Jewish settlement risks way of life for thousands

    The bulldozers came for Hamid Salim Hassan's house just after dawn. Before the demolition began, the Bedouin family scrambled to gather what they could: a fridge, a pile of carpets, some plastic chairs, a canister of cooking gas and a metal bed frame.

    Now, with their house a wreck of smashed concrete and broken plastic pipes, Mr Hassan and his family are living in a canvas tent on a neighbour's land. Their possessions are piled outside, along with boxes of supplies, including washing-up liquid, toothpaste, corned beef, wheat flour and tomato paste, provided by the International Committee of the Red Cross.
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  • Venturing into the lion’s den: Carter to Discuss Book at Brandeis U.

    Venturing into the lion’s den: Carter to Discuss Book at Brandeis U.

    WALTHAM, Mass. (AP) – Venturing into the lion's den, Jimmy Carter headed Tuesday to Brandeis University, a historically Jewish college, to confront the furor over his new book on the Middle East, which has been attacked as slanted against Israel.

    The uproar has been going on for several months and recently prompted 14 members of an advisory board at the former president's international-affairs think tank, the Carter Center, to resign in protest over the book, “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid.''
    {josquote}Closing our eyes to injustice is not a Jewish value{/josquote}
    A tightly controlled discussion was planned, with 15 questions selected in advance. Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz had also hoped to debate Carter but was told he would not be allowed inside.

    Metal barricades were erected along the road leading to the athletic center, where Carter was to speak, and people entering the place had to go through a metal detector.
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  • A Freedom Ride

    A Freedom Ride

    Uri Avnery’s Column

    [Uri talks about the recent ruling, now delayed, that would have forbade Israeli drivers from giving a ride to Palestinian passengers.  Uri also talks about the use of the word Apartheid as attached to Israel and the dangers of applying the South African model to the Israel / Palestine situation]

    Mahatma Gandhi would have loved it. Nelson Mandela would have saluted. Martin Luther King would have been the most excited – it would have reminded him of the old days.

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  • It’s the little things that make an occupation.

    It’s the little things that make an occupation.

    Those seemingly minor inconveniences that make life hellish

    DURING 2006, according to B’tselem, an Israeli human-rights group, Israeli forces killed 660 Palestinians, almost half of them innocent bystanders, among them 141 children. In the same period, Palestinians killed 17 Israeli civilians and six soldiers. It is such figures, as well as events like shellings, house demolitions, arrest raids and land expropriations, that make the headlines in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. What rarely get into the media but make up the staple of Palestinian daily conversation are the countless little restrictions that slow down most people’s lives, strangle the economy and provide constant fuel for extremists.

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  • Israel’s ‘invisible hand’ in Gaza

    Israel’s ‘invisible hand’ in Gaza

    Although Israel withdrew from Gaza more than a year ago, its control over the lives of Palestinians there is in some ways even tighter than before, a new report by an Israeli human rights organisation says.

    In the days after Israeli troops and settlers pulled out of the territory, the then Israeli leader, Ariel Sharon addressed the United Nations.

    He declared “the end of Israeli control over and responsibility for the Gaza Strip”.

    But a study by Gisha challenges that claim. The organisation says it aims to “protect the fundamental rights of Palestinians living in the Occupied Territories by imposing human rights law as a limitation on the behaviour of Israel’s military”.

    “Israel continues to control Gaza through an ‘invisible hand’,” the organisation says, in a detailed, 100-page report.

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  • Iraqis will never accept this sellout to the oil corporations

    Iraqis will never accept this sellout to the oil corporations

    Today Iraq remains under occupation, and the gulf between those who profess to rule and those who are ruled is filled with blood. The government is beholden to the occupation forces that are responsible for a humanitarian catastrophe and a political impasse. While defenceless citizens are killed at will, the government carries on with its business of protecting itself, collecting oil revenues, dispensing favours, justifying the occupation, and presiding over collapsing security, economic wellbeing, essential services and public administration. Above all, the rule of law has all but disappeared, replaced by sectarian demarcations under a parliamentary facade. Sectarianism promoted by the occupation is tearing apart civil society, local communities and public institutions, and it is placing people at the mercy of self appointed communal leaders, without any legal protection.
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  • A Flag Blacker than Black

    A Flag Blacker than Black

    Palestinians are forbidden to travel in cars with Israelis.
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  • Israeli Apartheid

    Israeli Apartheid

    {mosimage}Imagine, if you will, a modern apartheid state with first, second and eleventh class citizens, all required to carry identification specifying their ethnic origin. First class citizens are obliged to serve in the armed forces, kept on ready reserve status until in their forties, and accorded an impressive array of housing, medical, social security, educational and related benefits denied all others.

    Second class citizens are exempted from military service and from a number of the benefits accorded citizens of the first class. They are issued identity documents and license plates that allow them to be profiled by police at a distance. Second class citizens may not own land in much of the country and marriages between them and first class citizens are not recognized by the state. Second class citizens are sometimes arrested without trial and police torture, while frowned upon and occasionally apologized for, commonly occurs.

    Citizens of the eleventh class, really not citizens at all, have no rights citizens of the first class or their government are bound to respect. Their residence is forbidden in nearly nine-tenths of the country, all of which they used to own.
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  • Friday’s “One Land, Many Voices” interview with Phyllis Bennis is available

    Friday’s “One Land, Many Voices” interview with Phyllis Bennis is available

    Friday's "One Land, Many Voices" interview with Phyllis Bennis is available at: www.pdxjustice.org Just scroll down to the KBOO programs and download or stream the mp3 file. – Will