Showing posts with label Gaza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaza. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2009

To do this, Mr Obama should take advantage of the Arab peace initiative, proposed in 2002.

TO BE NOTED: From the FT:

"
Obama must build on Arab peace initiative

By Ghassan Khatib

Published: May 31 2009 22:17 | Last updated: May 31 2009 22:17

The positive atmosphere surrounding last Thursday’s meeting between President Barack Obama and Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, confirms the new US administration has changed the approach to the Middle East. This was already apparent in Mr Obama’s talks the previous week with Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, which were far from routine in spite of the long, close relationship between the two countries they lead.

Israel, under Mr Netanyahu, is no longer committed to the two-state solution that has underpinned the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians for the past 18 years. Mr Obama, meanwhile, seems to be moving towards substantive engagement in the peace process on the basis of the “land for peace” formula on which it was conceived. New pressure from Washington for Israel to comply with the nuclear non-proliferation treaty indicates that this engagement is strategic, not merely window-dressing.

The result is a collision waiting to happen. Mr Netanyahu seeks Palestinian “autonomy”, while Mr Obama has reiterated his commitment to a Palestinian state. The US president has also underscored Israel’s obligations under the ­Washington-brokered “road map” to stop building Jewish settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Half a million Jews live in more than 100 settlements in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, built since Israel occupied the area in the 1967 war. It is indicative of Mr Netanyahu’s policies that, only one day before the Israel-US summit in Washington, Israel announced bids for the construction of 20 new housing units in an illegal West Bank settlement in the occupied Jordan valley.

Mr Obama’s shift in policy is born out of the recognition that the main factor behind the radicalisation of Palestinian and Arab society is the failed peace process. The Palestinian public considers a peace process that continues the acquisition of Palestinian land through settlement construction to be no peace at all.

“Moderate” Arab leaders and governments allied with the US are losing ground against Islamist political opposition. Among Palestinians, continuing tension between Hamas and Fatah is a prime example. Fatah, which dominates the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, proposes achieving Palestinian aspirations of ending Israel’s occupation by peaceful and negotiated means. Hamas, which wrested control of Gaza from the Palestinian Authority in June 2007, argues that Israel understands only the language of force. The Islamist group points to Israel’s evacuation of southern Lebanon after armed resistance from Hizbollah and to the unilateral disengagement from Gaza after its own resistance.

By contrast, those who support negotiations lose ground when their opponents raise the issue of Israeli settlements. It is no surprise, then, that Hamas has been able to stand its ground in Gaza, despite a crushing Israeli blockade on the entry and exit of people and goods. Cairo is mediating between Fatah and Hamas to resolve the split but with little success to date.

Israel’s behaviour – specifically its expansion of settlements – alongside its new policy of rejecting the two-state solution, will only give Iran and allies such as Hamas a groundswell of support. A change in direction, on the other hand, meaning real progress in the Palestinian-Israeli political process, would contribute to achieving US objectives in the region, particularly improving its relationship with Iran.

Mr Obama faces an enormous challenge in reversing the trend of radicalisation. The damage caused by the previous US administration is deep and far-reaching. Two things are needed. The first is a focus on Israel’s illegal settlement activity, which is creating the kind of facts on the ground sure to pre-empt the vision of two states. The second is a credible negotiations process that will convince Israelis and Palestinians it is possible to end the occupation and achieve other legitimate objectives by peaceful means.

To do this, Mr Obama should take advantage of the Arab peace initiative, proposed in 2002. The Arab states promised Israel unanimous Arab recognition, security and regional integration if it were to end its occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and negotiate a solution for Palestinian refugees. Mr Obama needs to start work on such an approach when he meets Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak this week. Given the pressure moderate Arabs are under, there is no time to be lost.

The writer is a vice-president at Birzeit University and a former Palestinian Authority minister of planning"

Friday, May 8, 2009

investigators would take a "law-based approach", analysing alleged violations committed by both sides

TO BE NOTED: From Reuters:

"U.N. experts prepare to investigate war crimes in Gaza
08 May 2009 14:11:01 GMT
Source: Reuters
* U.N. investigators plan to travel soon to Gaza and Israel * Former war crimes prosecutor Richard Goldstone heads team GENEVA, May 8 (Reuters) - International human rights experts examining alleged war crimes in the Gaza Strip said on Friday they planned to visit soon, and renewed a call for Israel to support their investigation. An Israeli government official said last month that the Jewish state would not cooperate with the United Nations inquiry into violations by Israeli troops and Hamas militants during the Dec. 27-Jan. 18 offensive in Hamas-ruled Gaza. Former U.N. war crimes prosecutor Richard Goldstone heads the team of four investigators who were appointed last month and held their first closed-door meetings in Geneva this week. "In the course of its work, the mission intends to conduct visits to affected areas of southern Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories, including Gaza, and has requested the cooperation of the government of Israel in this regard," the team said a statement issued by the U.N. in Geneva on Friday. Goldstone stressed the investigators would take a "law-based approach", analysing alleged violations committed by both sides, rather than a political approach when they prepared a report for the U.N. Human Rights Council in July. "I believe that an objective assessment of the issues is in the interests of all parties, will promote a culture of accountability and could serve to promote greater peace and security in the region," the South African judge said. U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay has called for an investigation into whether Israeli forces committed war crimes in the coastal strip of 1.5 million people.She raised specific concerns about the Israeli shelling of a home that killed 30 Palestinian civilians and a lack of care for young, starving children whose mothers died in the attack. The New York-based group Human Rights Watch has said that the Israeli army unlawfully fired white phosphorus shells over densely populated areas of Gaza, needlessly killing and injuring civilians, and cited it as evidence of war crimes. Goldstone's fellow investigators are Pakistani human rights lawyer Hina Jilani, British international law professor Christine Chinkin and retired Irish colonel Desmond Travers. The Human Rights Council, which is dominated by Muslim countries and their allies, gave the U.N. inquiry team a broad mandate in a resolution adopted in January. The experts will look into violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law committed in the context of the December-January military operations. According to a Palestinian rights group, 1,417 Palestinians, including 926 civilians, were killed in the fighting. Israel disputes those figures. Militants fired hundreds of rockets into southern Israel during the period. (Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Laura MacInnis and Samia Nakhoul)"

Thursday, April 30, 2009

reported incidents of children being trained or used by Palestinian militant groups. Children should not be used for political or military purposes

TO BE NOTED: From Unicef:

"
Situation of children in Gaza remains precarious 100 days after end of conflict GAZA, 28 April 2009 – More than three months after the cessation of hostilities in Gaza, the Israeli blockade and inter-Palestinian tension are hampering recovery efforts.

“Although the conflict ended 100 days ago, children in Gaza continue to suffer, both physically and psychologically,” said Patricia McPhillips, UNICEF Special Representative to the occupied Palestinian territory. “It is critical that supplies and materials needed for recovery and rehabilitation are allowed in.”

Ten per cent of the population in Gaza remains without electricity and nine per cent with little access to safe water. UNRWA primary health clinics in the south are recording significantly higher prevalence of water and sanitation-related infectious diseases, including acute bloody diarrhea, over the same period last year. For many households, food, fuel and cash are in short supply. According to the latest figures, 65 essential drugs were out of stock at Gaza’s Central Store.

Five children have died in unexploded ordnance-related incidents since the end of the 22-day conflict and at least 14 were injured in related violence.

The fighting took a particularly heavy toll on children’s psychological wellbeing. A recent United Nations study reaffirmed that mental health, anxiety and stress are the main health problems in Gaza.

Working with partners, UNICEF is ramping up psychosocial support to children and young people, providing mine-risk education in schools and communities, supporting remedial education, and organizing vaccination campaigns.

To improve maternal, newborn and child health, UNICEF is also focusing on improving skills of health care providers and caregivers –particularly in relation to managing severe malnutrition, breastfeeding and early detection of childhood illnesses.

However, lack of access continues to hamper recovery efforts.

Gaza has been under a blockade for 22 months. In March, an average of 132 trucks entered Gaza every day, compared with 475 in May 2007, one month before the Hamas takeover.

Since the cessation of hostilities:

• Destroyed and damaged homes, schools and health facilities can not be reconstructed or repaired due to Israeli restrictions against cement imports.
• Damaged water and sanitation systems still lack repair materials.
• UNICEF educational supplies, including teacher training and early childhood development kits, as well as recreational material including music instruments, have not been allowed in.

Children have also been affected by internal Palestinian tensions. Of particular concern is a dispute since 22 March affecting medical referrals for urgent care not available in Gaza. According to the World Health Organisation, at least three patients have died while waiting to exit Gaza for medical treatment. UNICEF welcomed news on Monday of positive moves on the ground to resolve the crisis.

In addition, there have been reported incidents of children being trained or used by Palestinian militant groups. Children should not be used for political or military purposes.

“Children are the innocent victims of this conflict,” McPhillips said. “All parties to the conflicts must put children’s interests first.”

Israel’s military operation from 27 December to 18 January killed or injured one out of every 225 Gazans. Some 431 children were killed and 1,872 wounded, accounting for roughly a third of all casualties. Thirteen Israelis were killed, including three civilians."

Friday, April 17, 2009

Hamas’s popularity, even on the genteel and privileged campus of Birzeit, is on the rise

TO BE NOTED: From the FT:

"
Hamas gains ground in university poll

By Tobias Buck in Birzeit

Published: April 17 2009 18:21 | Last updated: April 17 2009 18:21

The main contenders in this week’s student elections at Birzeit University, a barometer for decades of Palestinian public opinion, marched into battle like rival armies.

First came hundreds of supporters of Hamas, the Islamist Palestinian group, lined up military-style in neat rows, and strictly separated into columns of men and women. Holding aloft a sea of bright green banners, the young Islamists chanted “Allahu akbar” (Allah is great) as they entered the University’s main square. Behind them marched an even larger contingent of students supporting the rival Fatah movement, waving yellow flags and chanting praise for Yasser Arafat, the former Palestinian leader.

Waiting in the midday heat were thousands of students ready to hear the final debate of a contest followed and analysed far beyond the confines of Birzeit’s campus. Located on a hilltop in the heart of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, the university is the closest thing to a Palestinian Harvard – a place of academic excellence and a training ground for the future Palestinian elite.

Followed closely by the media, the annual elections to Birzeit’s student parliament serve as a crucial test of Palestinian political sentiment. This year, they showed what pollsters have been predicting for months: that support for Hamas is once again on the rise.

Fatah went into the elections with a comfortable five-seat lead in the student parliament. A day after the debate, with the votes of almost 7,000 students counted, the secular movement came out on top once again – but its lead was cut. Of the 51 seats, Fatah now holds 24 and Hamas 22 – confirming the expectation that the Gaza war would boost the Islamists’ support.

Birzeit has held annual elections since its foundation in the 1970s, long before opinion polls and real parliamentary elections took hold in the occupied territories. Student politics at the university has provided a springboard for future Palestinian leaders such as Marwan Barghouthi, the jailed figurehead of the young Fatah guard. The student ballot “is probably the most free and democratic election in our country”, says Ghassan Khatib, a political analyst and vice-president of the university. He says it has a “unique position in the Palestinian movement”, not least by virtue of the university’s history as a hotbed of political activity. “People here have a long tradition of freedom of expression, so this is a real test of public opinion,” says Mr Khatib.

“All the people outside the university pay attention to see who will lead the student union. It indicates what is going on in society,” says information technology student Ahemd Zaytoun, 21.

For Hamas supporters such as Mr Zaytoun, the elections are also important for a different reason: in the West Bank, which is governed by the Fatah-controlled Palestinian Authority, there are precious few opportunities to fly the Islamist flag.

As the debate between candidates makes clear, this election is not about tuition fees or the quality of canteen food. Instead, it precisely mirrors the larger political rift between Hamas and Fatah – which broke out into bloody violence when Hamas fighters ousted the Fatah-led PA from the Gaza Strip almost two years ago.

Both parties are currently engaged in talks aimed at mending the schism and bringing in a new unity government. But, with the exception of a few places such as Birzeit, the crackdown on political activities by Hamas in the West Bank and Fatah in Gaza continues.

Najib Mafarjeh, the charismatic leader of the Islamist bloc, is the first to speak. He praises the stance of Hamas during the recent Gaza war, which will serve as a template for the group’s activities in the West Bank and Birzeit. “We won in Gaza,” he shouts, to wild cheers from his supporters. “We will win again here.”

Ahed Hamdan, his Fatah counterpart, hits back, insisting the “victory” was not one of Hamas, but of all Palestinian people. Neither he nor other speakers dare question whether the bloody three-week conflict was indeed a victory, least of all for Gaza’s battered people.

According to Mr Khatib, the results mirror closely the political sentiment among most Palestinians in the West Bank: Hamas’s popularity, even on the genteel and privileged campus of Birzeit, is on the rise."

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Israel's military assault on densely populated Gaza appeared to constitute a grave war crime

TO BE NOTED: From Reuters:

Photo
«»1 of 4Full Size

By Stephanie Nebehay

GENEVA (Reuters) - A United Nations human rights investigator said on Thursday that Israel's military assault on densely populated Gaza appeared to constitute a grave war crime.

Richard Falk, U.N. special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, said the Geneva Conventions required warring forces to distinguish between military targets and surrounding civilians.

"If it is not possible to do so, then launching the attacks is inherently unlawful and would seem to constitute a war crime of the greatest magnitude under international law," Falk said.

"On the basis of the preliminary evidence available, there is reason to reach this conclusion," he wrote in an annual 26-page report submitted to the U.N. Human Rights Council.

Falk gave the same death toll from Israel's offensive in December and January -- 1,434 Palestinians, including 960 civilians -- as the Palestinian human rights center.

Israel, which lost 13 people during the war, disputes the figures and has accused Hamas fighters in Gaza of using civilians as human shields during the conflict -- an allegation which Falk said should be investigated.

He called the Israeli attacks a "massive assault on a densely populated urbanized setting" in which the entire civilian population had been subjected to "an inhumane form of warfare that kills, maims and inflicts mental harm."

"As all borders were sealed, civilians could not escape from the orbit of harm," he said.

This denial of people's right to flee the war zone as refugees may also constitute a crime against humanity, he said.

WAR CRIMES PROBE

Falk called for an independent experts group to probe possible war crimes committed by both Israeli forces and Hamas. It should gather eyewitness testimony as well as explanations from Israeli and Palestinian military commanders.

Violations included Israel's alleged "targeting of schools, mosques and ambulances" during the offensive, which lasted from December 27 to January 18, and its use of weapons including white phosphorus, as well as Hamas's firing of rockets at civilian targets in southern Israel.

Falk said that Israel's blockade of the coastal strip of 1.5 million people violated the Geneva Conventions and this suggested further war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity.

The aggression was not legally justified and may represent a "crime against peace" -- a principle established at the Nuremberg trials of Nazi war criminals, according to Falk, an American law professor who serves as the Human Rights Council's independent investigator.

Falk, who is Jewish, suggested the Security Council might set up an ad hoc criminal tribunal to establish accountability for war crimes in Gaza, noting Israel has not signed the Rome statutes establishing the International Criminal Court.

He was denied entry to Israel two weeks before the assault started, forcing him to abort a planned mission to Gaza. In his report, he said that the refusal had set an "unfortunate precedent" for treatment of a special rapporteur.

On Monday, he is to present his report formally to the Human Rights Council, a 47-member forum where Islamic and African countries backed by China, Cuba and Russia have a majority. Neither Israel nor its chief ally the United States are members.

(Editing by Mark Trevelyan and Jonathan Wright)

Israeli forces killed Palestinian civilians under permissive rules of engagement and intentionally destroyed their property

TO BE NOTED: From Haaretz:

"
IDF in Gaza: Killing civilians, vandalism, and lax rules of engagement
By Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondent

During Operation Cast Lead, Israeli forces killed Palestinian civilians under permissive rules of engagement and intentionally destroyed their property, say soldiers who fought in the offensive.

The soldiers are graduates of the Yitzhak Rabin pre-military preparatory course at Oranim Academic College in Tivon. Some of their statements made on Feb. 13 will appear Thursday and Friday in Haaretz. Dozens of graduates of the course who took part in the discussion fought in the Gaza operation.

The speakers included combat pilots and infantry soldiers. Their testimony runs counter to the Israel Defense Forces' claims that Israeli troops observed a high level of moral behavior during the operation. The session's transcript was published this week in the newsletter for the course's graduates.


The testimonies include a description by an infantry squad leader of an incident where an IDF sharpshooter mistakenly shot a Palestinian mother and her two children. "There was a house with a family inside .... We put them in a room. Later we left the house and another platoon entered it, and a few days after that there was an order to release the family. They had set up positions upstairs. There was a sniper position on the roof," the soldier said.

"The platoon commander let the family go and told them to go to the right. One mother and her two children didn't understand and went to the left, but they forgot to tell the sharpshooter on the roof they had let them go and it was okay, and he should hold his fire and he ... he did what he was supposed to, like he was following his orders."

According to the squad leader: "The sharpshooter saw a woman and children approaching him, closer than the lines he was told no one should pass. He shot them straight away. In any case, what happened is that in the end he killed them.

"I don't think he felt too bad about it, because after all, as far as he was concerned, he did his job according to the orders he was given. And the atmosphere in general, from what I understood from most of my men who I talked to ... I don't know how to describe it .... The lives of Palestinians, let's say, is something very, very less important than the lives of our soldiers. So as far as they are concerned they can justify it that way," he said.

Another squad leader from the same brigade told of an incident where the company commander ordered that an elderly Palestinian woman be shot and killed; she was walking on a road about 100 meters from a house the company had commandeered.

The squad leader said he argued with his commander over the permissive rules of engagement that allowed the clearing out of houses by shooting without warning the residents beforehand. After the orders were changed, the squad leader's soldiers complained that "we should kill everyone there [in the center of Gaza]. Everyone there is a terrorist."

The squad leader said: "You do not get the impression from the officers that there is any logic to it, but they won't say anything. To write 'death to the Arabs' on the walls, to take family pictures and spit on them, just because you can. I think this is the main thing: To understand how much the IDF has fallen in the realm of ethics, really. It's what I'll remember the most."

More soldiers' testimonies will be published in Haaretz over the coming days."

Monday, March 16, 2009

investigation that looks at all alleged violations of international law - by Israel, by Hamas and by other Palestinian armed groups involved

TO BE NOTED: From AI:

"
UN urged to 'find truth' about Gaza conflict

Researching allegations of war crimes in Israel and Gaza

© Amnesty International

© APGraphicsBank">Aftermath of Israeli airstrike, Gaza Strip, 6 January 2009

Aftermath of Israeli airstrike, Gaza Strip, 6 January 2009

© APGraphicsBank


16 March 2009

A group of 16 of the world's leading war crimes investigators and judges - backed by Amnesty International - has urged the United Nations to launch a full inquiry into alleged gross violations of the laws of war committed by both sides during the recent conflict in Gaza and southern Israel.

An open letter - entitled 'Find the truth about Gaza war' - was sent to the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Monday. The letter's signatories include Archbishop Desmond Tutu, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson and judge Richard Goldstone, formerly Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda.

A UN inquiry is currently investigating attacks which were carried out against UN facilities and personnel in Gaza during the three-week conflict.

"The UN investigation is not sufficient as a response to the grave violations that were committed during the conflict. Hundreds of civilians were killed or killed, and it is vital that the circumstances in which they were attacked are fully investigated," said Malcolm Smart, Director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Programme.

"Those responsible for war crimes or other serious violations of international humanitarian law and human rights abuses must be held to account."

"What is needed is a comprehensive international investigation that looks at all alleged violations of international law - by Israel, by Hamas and by other Palestinian armed groups involved in the conflict."

The letter's signatories - who have led investigations of crimes committed in former Yugoslavia, Kosovo, Darfur, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, East Timor, Lebanon and Peru - say that they have been "shocked to the core" by events in Gaza.

They have urged world leaders "to send an unfaltering signal that the targeting of civilians during conflict is unacceptable by any party on any count."

The letter calls for the establishment of a UN commission of inquiry into the Gaza conflict that:
  • Has a mandate to carry out a prompt, thorough, independent and impartial investigation of all allegations of serious violations of international humanitarian law committed by all parties to the conflict
  • Acts in accordance with the strictest international standards governing such investigations
  • Can provide recommendations as to the appropriate prosecution of those responsible for gross violations of the law by the relevant authorities
Prof. William A. Schabas, former member of the Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation Commission, said: "The international community must apply the same standard to Gaza as it does to other conflicts and investigate all abuses of the laws of war and human rights."

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Both Israel and Hamas used foreign-supplied weapons to attack civilians according to fresh evidence released by Amnesty International.

TO BE NOTED: From AI:

"
Foreign-supplied weapons used against civilians by Israel and Hamas
© APGraphicsBank">Israeli artillery fires towards southern Gaza Strip, from Israel side of the border

Israeli artillery fires towards southern Gaza Strip, from Israel side of the border

© APGraphicsBank


© Amnesty International">Label on the remains of a missile that killed three paramedics and a child, Gaza, January 2009

Label on the remains of a missile that killed three paramedics and a child, Gaza, January 2009

© Amnesty International


© Amnesty International">Rocket remants collected at Sderot police station, Israel, 28 January 2008

Rocket remants collected at Sderot police station, Israel, 28 January 2008

© Amnesty International


© Amnesty International" style="display: none;">Phosphorous shell cases found in Khuzna, Gaza, 24 January 2009

20 February 2009

Both Israel and Hamas used foreign-supplied weapons to attack civilians according to fresh evidence released by Amnesty International.

Munitions from the USA, Israel’s main foreign arms supplier, were used by Israel forces during three-week conflict in Gaza and southern Israel. Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups fired hundreds of rockets that had been smuggled in or made of components from abroad at civilian areas in Israel.

Amnesty International has called on the UN to impose a comprehensive arms embargo on the parties to the conflict.

"Israeli forces used white phosphorus and other weapons supplied by the USA to carry out serious violations of international humanitarian law, including war crimes," said Donatella Rovera, who headed Amnesty International's fact-finding mission to southern Israel and Gaza.

"Their attacks resulted in the killing of hundreds of children and other civilians and massive destruction of homes and infrastructure. At the same time, the firing of rockets by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups, though far less lethal than the weaponry used by Israel, also caused several civilian deaths and constitute a war crime."

For many years, the USA has been the major supplier of conventional arms to Israel. Under a 10-year agreement to 2017, the USA is due to provide $30 billion in military aid to Israel, a 25% increase compared to the period preceding the Bush administration.

"To a large extent, Israel's military offensive in Gaza was carried out with weapons, munitions and military equipment supplied by the USA and paid for with US taxpayers’ money," said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's Director for the Middle East.

In Gaza, as the fighting ended, Amnesty International researchers found fragments and components from munitions used by the Israeli Army - including many that are US-made – littering school playgrounds, in hospitals and in people’s homes. They included artillery and tank shells, mortar fins and remnants from Hellfire and other airborne missiles and large F-16 delivered bombs, as well as still smouldering highly incendiary white phosphorus remains.

They also found remnants of a new type of missile, seemingly launched from unmanned drones, which explodes large numbers of tiny sharp-edged metal cubes, each between 2mm and 4mm square in size. These lethal purpose-made shrapnel had penetrated thick metal doors and were embedded deep in concrete walls, and are clearly designed to maximize injury.

In southern Israel, Amnesty International also saw the remains of "Qassam", Grad and other indiscriminate rockets fired by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups against civilian areas. These unsophisticated weapons cannot be aimed accurately and stand no comparison with the weaponry deployed by Israel but they have caused several deaths of Israeli civilians, injuries to others and damage to civilian property.

Even before the three week conflict, those who armed the two sides will have been aware of the pattern of repeated misuse of weapons by the parties.

"As the major supplier of weapons to Israel, the USA has a particular obligation to stop any supply that contributes to gross violations of the laws of war and of human rights," said Malcolm Smart. "The Obama Administration should immediately suspend US military aid to Israel.

"We urge the UN Security Council to impose an immediate and comprehensive arms embargo on Israel, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups until effective mechanisms are found to ensure that munitions and other military equipment are not used to commit serious violations of international law.

"In addition all states should suspend all transfers of military equipment, assistance and munitions to Israel, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups until there is no longer a substantial risk of human rights violations. There must be no return to business as usual, with the predictably devastating consequences for civilians in Gaza and Israel."

Friday, February 13, 2009

"What is needed is a comprehensive international investigation that looks at all alleged violations of international law "

TO BE NOTED:

"
UN urged to extend Gaza investigation
© APGraphicsBank">Aftermath of Israeli airstrike, Gaza Strip, 6 January 2009

Aftermath of Israeli airstrike, Gaza Strip, 6 January 2009

© APGraphicsBank


13 February 2009

United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has been urged to broaden an investigation of attacks on UN installations in Gaza so that it becomes a comprehensive inquiry into all alleged violations of international law by all parties to the conflict.

Amnesty International has described the planned investigation, announced on Tuesday, as "welcome yet insufficient".

"The UN's investigation must not be so limited as to look only at recent attacks by Israeli forces on UN schools, staff and property in Gaza. It is not only the victims of attacks on the UN who have a right to know why their rights were violated and who was responsible, and to obtain justice and reparation," said Secretary General Irene Khan.

"What is needed is a comprehensive international investigation that looks at all alleged violations of international law - by Israel, by Hamas and by other Palestinian armed groups involved in the conflict."

Amnesty International researchers, who visited both Gaza and southern Israel during the fighting and in its immediate aftermath, found compelling evidence of war crimes and other serious violations of international humanitarian law.

This included direct attacks by Israeli forces on Palestinian civilians and civilian objects in Gaza, attacks which breached the prohibition on disproportionate attacks. Amnesty International also witnessed the use of weapons, such as white phosphorus, which have indiscriminate effects when used in densely-populated civilian areas.

In the same period, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups fired hundreds of indiscriminate rockets into civilian population centres in southern Israel.

Amnesty International has urged the UN Security Council to support its call for a comprehensive investigation.

"The Security Council must live up to its responsibility to uphold international law and to ensure full accountability," said Irene Khan. "It should support a full and independent investigation that covers all attacks that may have violated the laws of war during the recent fighting in Gaza and southern Israel."

Amnesty International has also called on all UN member states to support the Secretary-General's initiative and to demand a comprehensive UN investigation into all alleged abuses of international humanitarian and human rights law during the conflict in Gaza and southern Israel.

"Long-term peace and security cannot be found in the Middle East unless accountability is established for crimes under international law and the cycle of impunity for serious violations perpetrated by all parties has come to an end," said Irene Khan."

Islamist regime has killed dozens and tortured others as 'collaborators' with Israel in war's aftermath

TO BE NOTED:

Hamas murder campaign in Gaza exposed

Islamist regime has killed dozens and tortured others as 'collaborators' with Israel in war's aftermath, Amnesty and Guardian sources say

Living in the rubble: a Gaza family left homeless by the war
Link to this video

New evidence has emerged revealing the extent of the crackdown by Hamas during and after Israel's war in Gaza last month.

Amnesty International said Hamas forces and militias were involved in a "campaign of abductions, deliberate and unlawful killings, torture and death threats against those they accuse of 'collaborating' with Israel, as well as opponents and critics". It said at least two dozen men had been shot by Hamas since the end of December and "scores of others" shot in the legs, kneecapped or beaten.Amnesty gave detailed accounts of some of the cases and said there was "incontrovertible evidence" that Hamas security forces and militia were "responsible for grave human rights abuses". Hamas officials have admitted hunting for suspected collaborators, but they have denied this campaign of attacks.

Hamas apparently fears it lost some of its control in Gaza during Israel's devastating three-week war and launched a new and violent crackdown to enforce its rule, targeting not only those suspected of giving information to the Israeli military but also escaped prisoners and all perceived internal opponents.

The new evidence corroborates witness accounts given to the Guardian, as well as an investigation by the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, based in Gaza City, that found 32 people had been killed by the Palestinian security services and other gunmen in Gaza since the war began, and that dozens more were shot or beaten.

In an interview today, one Palestinian working for a civil society organisation described how he was forced to leave Gaza because of the growing intimidation and threats. Mowaffaq Alami, 36, worked for the One Voice organisation in Gaza promoting grassroots discussions about Israeli-Palestinian peace proposals.

After Hamas took full security control of Gaza in June 2007, its forces raided the group's office and seized computers and other equipment. One Voice later closed its office, but the staff went on working from home. Then Hamas ordered all civil society groups to obtain its permission to continue their work. One Voice refused and six months ago halted all its work in Gaza.

"People are afraid to live normal lives, to express their opinions freely," Alami said. "There is no freedom of speech, of movement, of travelling or having real healthcare. Hamas is raising George Bush's policy: those not with us are against us." One of his colleagues was forced to leave Gaza after receiving threats from Hamas.

The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights said Hamas had tightened its restrictions on civil society groups, ordering them to inform the Hamas authorities before receiving or distributing aid and obtain Hamas approval before starting new construction or development work.

Alami, who secured a rare permit to leave Gaza a week ago with his family to live in the West Bank, said there were frequently differences between orders given by local Hamas commanders on the ground and the more senior leadership within the movement. Other small extremist movements were also beginning to return to force again – one prominent cafe in Gaza City was bombed last week.

He said many Palestinians no longer felt affiliated to any political group, either Hamas or Fatah, its West Bank-based rival. "Politicians and the media think that there is a simple division between Gaza and the West Bank, between Hamas and Fatah ... The majority of the Palestinian people today are with none of them."

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Humanitarian access to Gaza - immediately and without restrictions!

From Gush Shalom:

"Sunday 25/01/09

Humanitarian access to Gaza - immediately and without restrictions!( YES )

In the aftermath of the Israeli military operation in Gaza, it is critical that full and unhindered

humanitarian access to Gaza be granted immediately by all parties to the conflict. International

agencies have faced unprecedented denial of access to Gaza since 5 November.

On Friday morning a small group of international humanitarian workers were allowed to enter Gaza

for the first time in almost three months. Despite this positive step, humanitarian access remains

unreliable and needs to be granted every day without restriction. Before Friday, only a handful of

medical emergency staff had managed to cross into Gaza.

“The fact that some international staff entered Gaza yesterday is a positive step in the right

direction. However, we need constant and consistent, unfettered humanitarian access in order to

better help the desperate civilian families of Gaza who have lost their homes and businesses and

are struggling amid shortages of food, supplies, cash, healthcare and fuel. It is unacceptable that

staff of international aid agencies with expertise in emergency response are still not given full

access into Gaza, and that the crossings are not fully operational for humanitarian and commercial

flows of goods and people", said Charles Clayton, Chair of the Association of International

Development Agencies.

In the 23 days of conflict, Gaza has sustained severe and widespread destruction to its civilian

infrastructure. According to the Palestinian Bureau of Statistics, an estimated 21,000 homes have

been partially destroyed and 4,000 completely destroyed. In addition, there has been substantial

damage to schools, hospitals, clinics, water and sewage facilities, electrical lines and other public

facilities. These need to be repaired.

As of 23 January, over 8,500 people remained in temporary shelters such as the UNRWA schools,

and many more are lodged with family or friends. The United Nations says 100,000 people are now

homeless. The total number of people displaced who require assistance is still unknown. A recent

survey conducted by CARE shows that 86% of respondents have cash shortages and half say that

food is their most urgent need. To cope families are reducing food consumption. At the same

time, people do not have full access to very basic healthcare – such as antibiotics, medicine for

fever, diabetes, heart disease and hypertension. Young children, many already malnourished

before the conflict began, are extremely vulnerable to the lack of food, water and basic health

services.

All crossings into Gaza must be operational 24 hours a day in order to position the following items

in Gaza: spare parts and fuel for the power plant, hospitals and water and sewage treatment

facilities as well as tons of cement, sand and other construction materials to rebuild the destroyed

schools, hospitals, clinics and homes. At the moment roughly 120-125 trucks get into Gaza each

day through Kerem Shalom crossing. Only the Karni crossing has the technology and capacity to

help meeting the immense needs of the Gazan population.

Gaza needs a broad-based humanitarian response beyond providing medical aid, emergency

medical treatment and small-scale relief such as food and water. Humanitarian access is woefully

inadequate and we call for immediate action on the part of all parties to ensure that immediate

humanitarian assistance – people and goods – is allowed to enter Gaza freely and that it promptly

reaches those in need. Without adequate materials and cash, recovery efforts will be greatly

undermined, and the population of Gaza – already heavily reliant on international assistance as a

result of the 19-month blockade – will become completely dependent on aid.

For more information please contact:

Charles Clayton on +972 (0) 54 7749 503 or +972 (0) 2 628 1793

About AIDA

The Association of International Development Agencies (AIDA) is a membership body and

coordination forum of international non-governmental and non-profit organizations (INGOs) that

share a common interest in promoting appropriate development and humanitarian programs in the

occupied Palestinian territory (oPt). AIDA seeks to support the Palestinian people’s self-

development by providing a mechanism for member INGOs to work collaboratively. Its core

functions are networking the relief and development assistance community, facilitating information

-sharing, and promoting advocacy, security, and training.

AIDA has 75 members.

Sarah-Eve Hammond Media & Advocacy Officer Oxfam GB Jerusalem Office: +972 (0) 2 656-6234 Fax: +972 (0) 2 656-6236 Mobile: 057-553-8638 Back up: 052-621-6602 shammond@oxfam.org.uk

Oxfam works with others to overcome poverty and suffering.

Oxfam GB is a member of Oxfam International and a company limited by guarantee registered in

England No. 612172. Registered office: Oxfam House, John Smith Drive, Cowley, Oxford, OX4 2JY. A registered charity in England and Wales (no 202918) and Scotland (SCO 039042)"

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

"sought refuge in the UN compound or schools, believing that they were places safe from Israeli attacks. They were wrong."

From AI:

"
Amnesty International team reports from the rubble of Gaza
© Amnesty International">A wrecked a classroom in Gaza, 19 January 2009

A wrecked a classroom in Gaza, 19 January 2009

© Amnesty International


© Amnesty International">The rubble of the American School in Gaza, 19 January 2009

The rubble of the American School in Gaza, 19 January 2009

© Amnesty International


© Amnesty International">Smouldering food supplies in the main UNRWA Field Office in Gaza City, 19 January 2009, after it came under Israeli fire

Smouldering food supplies in the main UNRWA Field Office in Gaza City, 19 January 2009, after it came under Israeli fire

© Amnesty International


© Amnesty International" style="display: none;">An ambulance made into a roadblock by the Israeli army at the al-Quds Hospital, Gaza City

20 January 2009

The Amnesty international fact-finding team that arrived in Gaza City on Saturday, has continued to collect evidence of the extent of destruction in the area.

In a post on Amnesty International's Livewire blog, the team described how "previously busy neighbourhoods have been flattened into moonscapes," and "how there is no camera lens wide enough to embrace the sheer dimensions of the devastation."

The team also described how power lines have been torn down, and water mains ripped up. Gaza's infrastructure is now in dire condition. Prolonged blackouts are the norm, tens of thousands of people have no access to clean water and sewage is now flowing in the open from the broken conduits.

On Monday, the team learnt that during the past three weeks there was nowhere for people to go where they could feel safe. Schools, medical facilities and UN buildings all took direct hits from the Israeli army's indiscriminate shelling. Artillery shells for use on conventional battlefields, not for pinpoint targets, have been fired into dense residential areas.

In an UNRWA primary school in Beit Lahiya, where 1,898 people were sheltering from the fighting, an artillery shell hit a classroom on the second floor where 35 people were sleeping at 6am one morning. Two brothers, aged five and seven, were killed.

"Their 18-year-old sister was grievously injured and had to have her leg amputated. Their mother lost a hand and sustained a serious head injury. Twelve others were injured. Their relatives told us that they had fled their homes to escape the bombardments and had come to the school hoping to find safety."

By the rubble of the American School in Gaza, the team spoke to the father of school guard Mahmoud Mohammed Selmi Abu Qleiq, killed when Israeli F16 aircraft bombed the school campus. Gaza's only international school and "part of the vision for the future of Palestine", is now a huge mass of tangled wire and gigantic concrete slabs.

"The old man sat overlooking the rubble and explained how he tried to call his son's mobile phone when he heard the huge explosions, but he never answered… His son’s body was found 50 metres from the school."

The team also visited the UNRWA Field Office in Gaza City, which came under Israeli fire on 15 January. Warehouses full of food, medicine and other humanitarian aid were destroyed when white phosphorus and high explosive Israeli artillery shells hit the compound.

"Four days later, the fire is still burning – the charred and smouldering remnants of millions of dollars' worth of food and medicine all destroyed. The ground outside the warehouses is still slick with the thousands of litres of burning cooking oil that spilled out. Several UN vehicles were also destroyed in the attacks."

The al-Quds hospital in Gaza City was also hit in the attacks. Medical stores were burnt and Israeli tanks had crushed ambulances to make roadblocks.

"Hundreds of people from nearby buildings had taken shelter in the hospital buildings, just as others elsewhere in the city had sought refuge in the UN compound or schools, believing that they were places safe from Israeli attacks. They were wrong."

Monday, January 19, 2009

"At long last we have come to a moment of sanity"

From Gush Shalom:

Unilateral + Unilateral = Bilateral

"Every cease-fire has two sides" said today former Knesset Member Uri Avnery, Gush Shalom activist. "A unilateral arrogant proclamation by Olmert and Barak, in front of the TV cameras, did not stop the shooting of missiles at the Negev, and it still continued this morning. Only when Hamas added a unilateral cease-fire of its own was a bilateral cease-fire created in practice, enabling the shooting to stop in practice.

At long last we have come to a moment of sanity, an end to the terrible blood-bath which shocked people all over the world and aroused them to come out in protest on the streets of cities across the globe – including on the streets of Israeli cities. But the bloodshed might burst out, even more terrible, should the government persist in the folly of ignoring the main fact: Hamas was and remains the dominant power in the Gaza Strip, even when its military power was damaged – due to a strong base of support among the Palestinian population. There is no solution – either to the immediate and very urgent problems or to the longer range – without talking to Hamas, either through mediators or directly.

Israeli troops must be immediately removed from the Gaza Strip, the siege removed, and the passages between the Strip and the outer world opened widely. The inhabitants of Gaza, like those of every other place in the world, have the full right to leave their country and return to it by land, sea, and air, revive and develop their economy by exporting their produce and importing whatever they need, without asking for anybody's permission.

Accelerated negotiations must be opened in order to return swiftly to their homes and families the Israeli soldier Gilead Shalit, captured by Hamas, and a significant number of Palestinians prisoners in the Israeli prisons. The government must pay the price fixed long ago for the release of Shalit, and the entire terrible war in Gaza had not changed it. The hypocritical argument of "blood on the hands", raised against such a deal, must be removed from the vocabularies once and for all. At least half of the 1300 Palestinians killed by the State of Israel in the past weeks were unarmed civilians, including hundreds of children. From now on, the term "blood on the hands" in the mouth of an Israeli politician or military officer would be a sad mocker of simple effrontery".

Contact: Uri Avenry avnery@actcom.co.il Adam Keller adam@gush-shalom.org"

Sunday, January 18, 2009

"You're actually justifying the most brutal war Israel has ever fought and in so doing are complacent in the fraud "

From the Guardian:

"
Lull after the storm
Israel's declaration of a unilateral ceasefire is welcome but it still leaves open many crucial questions on the future of Gaz
a

After exactly three weeks of Operation Cast Lead, an Israeli unilateral ceasefire declaration came into effect on Saturday night. While that is a very welcome development, particularly for the civilians of Gaza, it leaves open as many question as it answers. The steps taken by a series of actors, including the combatants and their neighbours and supporters, will determine whether or not this actually leads to a de-escalation and end to hostilities to what has been to a horrendously bloody start to 2009.

Can the ceasefire work?

The unilateral nature of the Israeli declaration is no coincidence. In Saturday's declaration of a ceasefire, Israel is hoping to send the message that Hamas is not a legitimate actor.

So who is the ceasefire actually with? It is, not coincidentally, consistent to some extent with the Egyptian-Turkish-Hamas negotiations which called for a ceasefire for 10 days during which the parties would agree to border crossing mechanisms, followed by an Israeli withdrawal, and an opening of the borders to humanitarian and economic aid.

However, by making the ceasefire a unilateral affair, accompanied only by an arrangement with the US (with whom Israel signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on Friday regarding the prevention of weapons smuggling), Israel can continue its attempts to politically isolate and ostracise the Hamas government in Gaza.

That obviously serves the election campaign narrative of the Israeli governing coalition - yet if Hamas has no political stake in maintaining the ceasefire, it obviously will have little incentive to keep the peace. No one watching the news in the last weeks will have missed Hamas officials shuttling back and forth to Cairo and Doha for both the private and public relations component of preparing a ceasefire. There was a practical reason for the diplomatic activity that included them – they were the ones ruling Gaza.( TRUE )

The diplomatic challenge now will be to provide Hamas with its ladder to climb down – and the crucial ingredients of this are a short timetable for an IDF withdrawal from Gaza and guarantees regarding the opening of border crossings to Gaza in a predictable and ongoing fashion.

But there is also no third party mechanism on the ground to shepherd the two parties through this very dangerous period. A continued IDF presence in Gaza almost guarantees ongoing hostilities. Even if these are of a more sporadic nature then what we witnessed over the last three weeks, there will be a constant risk of escalation. There will be three necessary steps for securing the ceasefire: (1) getting both sides to immediately cease hostilities, (2) ensuring the IDF withdrawal and removing Israeli troops immediately from Palestinian population centres, (3) putting the broader ceasefire package in place which involves amongst other things, opening Gaza and preventing weapons getting in. Beyond that, of course, the underlying issues of the conflict and of the occupation will have to be addressed. ( OK )

What next for Gaza and a divided Palestinian polity?

The most immediate need is for a massive humanitarian effort to help the injured, the newly homeless and destitute, and to deal with the current health crisis( I AGREE ). Many of the some 5,000 injured may very well die in the coming days without immediate medical intervention. The international community will need to make this a priority or risk having the death toll continue to rise even after an end to the bombing.

But very early on, the question will arise of what is the governing address in Gaza, including who is to act as the interface for aid and assistance provision. Aid distribution and assistance will be made much more difficult by the fact that most of the institutional and physical infrastructure of Palestinian governance in Gaza has actually been destroyed or very badly damaged (ministry buildings, police stations, jails, even schools and hospitals). Much, but not all of this, can be channeled through UNRWA and other UN agencies. Still, any effort in Gaza will have to deal in some way with Hamas.( TRUE )

Hamas has been widely recognised since it took power as having provided an effective and functioning central government address, albeit a controversial one. Hamas has largely restored law and order and effectively imposed discipline (and imposed a ceasefire while it was in fact being honoured) on both its own militia and that of other factions- the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Popular Resistance Committees, and Fatah, although in the case of the latter this has taken the form of political suppression.

The question of acknowledging and dealing with the reality of Hamas versus attempting to forcibly remove it remains the same today as it has been since the Hamas election victory and its assumption of exclusive power in Gaza. The difference today is that this will now be played out against the backdrop of a devastated and enraged Gazan landscape, one in which the test-tube conditions now exist for al-Qaida-style jihadists to gain a stronger foothold.( I AGREE )

If the West continues with its current policy then the temptation will be to use donor reconstruction assistance as a stealth instrument to achieve regime change. The Palestinian Authority's President Abbas and prime minister Salam Fayyad do have a role in rebuilding Gaza but that can either be done as part of a genuine effort at national reconciliation or the continuation of a policy that has failed dismally.

As the West considers how to assist Gaza in its moment of most need, it must belatedly heed the advice of the likes of Israel's former Mossad chief Ephraim HaLevy, former US secretary of state Colin Powell, former Middle East envoy General Anthony Zinni, Sir Jeremy Greenstock and many others, and find direct and indirect ways to engage Hamas and encourage putting the Palestinian Humpty Dumpty together again (It's worth noting also that there is a sense in certain European quarters of Gaza and West Bank reconstruction assistance being a Groundhog Day budget, a request that keeps getting repeated after every round of destruction).

In many ways, this might be a decisive moment on the internal Palestinian front. The current Fatah leadership has been weakened in many Palestinian eyes by appearing to be an irrelevant bystander during this crisis. Indeed, there have been prominent voices of dissent from within Fatah, such as Marwan Barghouthi confidant Kadura Fares and former security chief Jibril Rajoub. There was even a joint statement by all Palestinian parliamentary factions criticising the Palestinian Authority's handling of demonstrations and opposition in the West Bank and its suppression of "freedom of expression and democracy." Will Fatah try to use this moment to forge a new unity government or will its supporters see this as an opportunity to try to replace Hamas politically?

Hamas too has its own internal calculations to make. As a political movement it has been strengthened even as it has been militarily weakened. But hard questions will be asked within the movement regarding the extent to which they share responsibility for what has happened in Gaza. It will not be surprising if Hamas enters into a process of consultation, rethinks and potential leadership shifts over the coming months.

As Israel focuses during the next week on its internal politics, so too might the Palestinians, this being perhaps one of the last chances to forge some unity and pull division back from the brink of being irredeemable. The more independent groups, such as Mustafa Barghouthi and his Mubadara party, as well as the more independent voices within Fatah and Hamas, and NGO and civil society leaders will need to rise to the occasion and take a lead role in this. This might well determine whether a potential US-led effort to forge a broad Middle East peace will have the advantage of a relatively unified Palestinian polity or whether a resolution will need to be promoted without true Palestinian representation.

The impact on Israel: war and elections (or why the two shouldn't mix)

In the lead-up to the ceasefire declaration, the government PR machine in Israel was working overtime, telling its citizens what a success this has been. A series of reports appeared about Hamas collapsing, of its poor performance in the fighting and of the regional and international support for Israel's actions. The conduct of this war and the election campaign which formed its domestic political backdrop have never been far apart. That campaign, nominally suspended for the three weeks of fighting, will now be rejoined in full force as the outcomes of Operation Cast Lead are dissected.

An unusual challenge that faced Israel's leadership from the moment it launched this campaign was the need to emerge with not just one but two Israeli victory narratives and victory photos – one each for the defence minister and foreign minister Ehud Barak and Tzipi Livni, who will lead their respective competing parties in the elections on February 10. That particular acrobatic feat was achieved when Livni could claim her supposed diplomatic victory and there being a ceasefire without Hamas alongside the more obvious and equally suspect claim of military victory for Barak.

Both, though, will share a message of this having been an effective campaign in downgrading Hamas, removing much of its missile threat, with minimal Israeli losses while sustaining strong support from Israel's allies and having the sound judgment to know when to call it a day and before resigning oneself to an indefinite reoccupation of Gaza.

Most of the push-back against that position will come from the right. They will argue that Israel did not go far enough, that the IDF was not allowed to finish the job and totally annihilate Hamas, that rockets were still being fired on the last day, that the hostage Gilad Shalit is still held captive, and of course, that this should all have been done a long time ago.

The Israeli left will offer a politically quieter, although morally more booming, critique that the war was unnecessary and its aims could have been achieved without fighting as they are the same that existed on December 19. Thus far, the Gaza war has significantly strengthened Barak and his Labour party but not enough to challenge the front-runners Netanyahu of Likud and Livni of Kadima with the former still maintaining a slight lead. Ultimately though, the world of political campaign rhetoric will look rather divorced from the real world implications for Israel of what has happened over the last three weeks. If one defines national security in an irresponsibly narrow way, then yes, Hamas does indeed now have fewer missiles overall and long-range missiles in particular, and a sense of deterrence, at least as far as the Palestinians are concerned, has been restored after the battles in Lebanon in 2006.

But at what costs?

Israel's allies have been weakened and a more hard-line, anti-Israel stance has found new resonance and new adherents. All this should matter to Israel's long-term security. Perhaps most disturbing has been the sense, amidst the civilian losses and suffering, of a deep absence of a moral compass, something that 41 years as an occupier can do to a country and that many feared would be the most harmful effect for Israel of this unresolved conflict. Israel's image internationally has not been at such a low point since Lebanon in 1982, and even Egypt's president excluded the Israeli leadership from its Sharm summit. The destruction has created new levels and new generations of hostility toward Israel.( TRUE )

The regional swing vote

While the Gaza crisis has been mostly about the local, immediate dimensions of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, it has fuelled region-wide tensions. While it is too reductionist to view this as a proxy war, it has certainly pitted two rival regional camps against each other. The two camps in the Arab and Muslim world have roughly divided into those who believe that Palestinian freedom can only be achieved through resistance, and those who believe that only diplomatic non-violent engagement will accomplish this aim. It may be a false choice in that neither has actually created a Palestinian state or created a peace agreement between Israel and her neighbours.

Nevertheless, those who have argued adamantly for a diplomatic approach have again been set back. The Arab world and its collective institutions, notable the Arab League, have been shown at their most dysfunctional. For three weeks, the Arab League failed to convene its leaders despite the events in Gaza dominating Arab media around the clock, and despite mass-street protests across the Arab world. America's government allies were caught between a rock and a hard place, being hostile to Hamas but unable to identify with Israel. They found themselves ever more alienated from their own public.

Even when key Arab leaders at the UN Security Council helped pass resolution 1860, little changed on the ground. Perhaps the most interesting aspect has been to follow what one might call the regional swing vote, actors that are not part of the Iran/Syria/Hamas/Hezbollah camp on the one hand or the Egypt/PA/Saudi/Jordanian camp on the other. The mood in the swing camp was summed up by Qatar hosting a consultative session of the Arab League on Friday in Doha with the Iranian and Syrian presidents and Hamas leader Khaled Mishaal in attendance, alongside Turkish, Lebanese, Algerian and Organization of Islamic conference senior representatives. This is indicative of where the popular mood has been with secular nationalists, reformists, and democrats siding with Islamists in their support for Hamas as the representative of the Palestinians in Gaza.

The US will be faced with the choice of either continuing this dichotomy, and the conflict which has so exacerbated regional tensions, or whether it will seek to shuffle the deck by addressing the conflict at its root while engaging region-wide to address the specific national interests of various parties consistent with its own national security interests.

The new Obama administration and the future of the peace process

While the Obama inauguration is probably not the only factor that determined the timing of this ceasefire, it is hard not to see a connection with Israel almost certainly not wanting an ongoing Gaza crisis to rain on Tuesday's parade and to force their conflict with the Palestinians any higher up the new administration's agenda than it already is( TRUE ). Nevertheless, solidifying the ceasefire and the aftermath of this conflict will exercise the Obama team from day one in office, forcing them to make early choices in how they will approach the Israel/Palestine issue. The Obama administration will likely have to ensure the full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, follow-up on US support for weapons smuggling efforts, while simultaneously taking a position on Gaza reconstruction efforts.

The backdrop will be whether US assistance will be used to build Palestinian internal reconciliation, to help with a broader effort to finally secure Israel's and America's security through a broad inclusive peace deal, or to continue the Bush policy of promoting divisions in the hope of continuing to help Israel manage the occupation at great cost to both American and Israeli national security interests.( I AGREE )

This much seems clear: the Annapolis approach is badly in need of a rethink. Indeed, the Annapolis process has been one of the less innocent victims of Operation Cast Lead. Beyond this immediate crisis, the bigger Israeli/Palestinian conflict looms.

A post-Gaza peace effort may not come with the hugs and handshakes of past deals. It may look more like a begrudging separation with hard borders, international guarantees, and even Nato forces deployed, as well as strong incentive packages for both sides. Rather than the friendly peace imagined by Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat on the White House lawn in 1993, the US may need to force a Kosovo or East Timor-style peace with reconciliation to come later. In either case, it will mean finally achieving de-occupation and Palestinian statehood along with a secure Israel and recognized borders. Crucially, it means moving beyond the neo-conservative dogma and the policy it represented that has so destabilised the Middle East for the last eight years( A DISASTER )."

And this, from Haaretz:

"Gideon Levy / An open response to A.B. Yehoshua


Dear Bulli,

Thank you for your frank letter and kind words. You wrote it was written from a "position of respect," and I, too, deeply respect your wonderful literary works. But, unfortunately, I have a lot less respect for your current political position. It is as if the mighty, including you, have succumbed to a great and terrible conflagration that has consumed any remnant of a moral backbone.

You, too, esteemed author, have fallen prey to the wretched wave that has inundated, stupefied, blinded and brainwashed us. You're actually justifying the most brutal war Israel has ever fought and in so doing are complacent in the fraud that the "occupation of Gaza is over" and justifying mass killings by evoking the alibi that Hamas "deliberately mingles between its fighters and the civilian population." You are judging a helpless people denied a government and army - which includes a fundamentalist movement using improper means to fight for a just cause, namely the end of the occupation - in the same way you judge a regional power, which considers itself humanitarian and democratic but which has shown itself to be a brutal and cruel conqueror. As an Israeli, I cannot admonish their leaders while our hands are covered in blood, nor do I want to judge Israel and the Palestinians the same way you have.

The residents of Gaza have never had ownership of "their own piece of land," as you have claimed. We left Gaza because of our own interests and needs, and then we imprisoned them. We cut the territory off from the rest of the world and the occupied West Bank, and did not permit them to construct an air or sea port. We control their population registrar and their currency - and having their own military is out of the question - and then you argue that the occupation is over? We have crushed their livelihood, besieged them for two years, and you claim they "have expelled the Israeli occupation"? The occupation of Gaza has simply taken on a new form: a fence instead of settlements. The jailers stand guard on the outside instead of the inside.

And no, I do not know "very well," as you wrote, that we don't mean to kill children. When one employs tanks, artillery and planes in such a densely populated place one cannot avoid killing children. I understand that Israeli propaganda has cleared your conscience, but it has not cleared mine or that of most of the world. Outcomes, not intentions, are what count - and those have been horrendous. "If you were truly concerned about the death of our children and theirs," you wrote, "you would understand the present war." Even in the worst of your literary passages, and there have been few of those, you could not conjure up a more crooked moral argument: that the criminal killing of children is done out of concern for their fates. "There he goes again, writing about children," you must have told yourself this weekend when I again wrote about the killing of children. Yes, it must be written. It must be shouted out. It is done for both our sakes.

This war is in your opinion "the only way to induce Hamas to understand." Even if we ignore the condescending tone of your remark, I would have expected more of a writer. I would have expected a renowned writer to be familiar with the history of national uprisings: They cannot be put down forcibly. Despite all the destructive force we used in this war, I still can't see how the Palestinians have been influenced; Qassams are still being launched into Israel. They and the world have clearly taken away something else from the last few weeks - that Israel is a dangerous and violent country that lacks scruples. Do you wish to live in a country with such a reputation? A country that proudly announces it has gone "crazy," as some Israeli ministers have said in regard to the army's operation in Gaza? I don't.

You wrote you have always been worried for me because I travel to "such hostile places." These places are less hostile than you think if one goes there armed with nothing but the will to listen. I did not go there to "tell the story of the afflictions of the other side," but to report on our own doings. This has always been the very Israeli basis for my work.

Finally, you ask me to preserve my "moral validity." It isn't my image I wish to protect but that of the country, which is equally dear to us both.

In friendship, despite everything"