• Israel uses foreign mercenaries in Gaza — Strategic Culture
    https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/04/27/israel-uses-foreign-mercenaries-in-gaza

    Des mercenaires kurdes à côté de l’ADI à Gaza ? (???)

    Intending to use them in tunnels of Hamas, Israel offers Kurdish PKK terrorists $ 2,200 to join the frontlines in its genocidal war against Palestinians with thousands of terrorists and mercenaries already transported to Israel.

    The Israeli government made a contract with PKK terrorists, with whom they agreed to a salary of 9 thousand Israeli shekels ( $2,200 ) in addition to $25,000 of compensation in case of death or injury.

    Israel intends to use PKK terrorists in its land attack on Gaza as it does not want to send its own soldiers into the tunnels of Hamas. Nearly 2,000 terrorists and mercenaries from Europe, Iraq, Syria and the US have moved into Israel. Peshmerga forces from northern Iraq have also been sent to the frontlines in Israel.

    Calls are being made to recruit militants to fight for Israel, and many organizations have been carrying out extensive activities, such as: the “Kurdish-Israeli Friendship Union” founded by Mordehay Zaken, the “Kurdish Institute” and the “Israeli Jewish Kurds” organization.

    Israeli organizations have been negotiating with Peshmerga to send Kurds from northern Iraq to Israel, reminding them of the support given by the Tel Aviv regime to them since 1958.

    In Ayn al-Arab, an Israeli colonel and his team of seven people have been carrying out activities to find people experienced in urban warfare. The mercenaries recruited from Iraq and Syria were given Israeli citizenship identities. These were then transported to Israel by three planes. The last flight took off on October 29 from Erbil. Eight of those whom Israel sent to the front were killed in Gaza.

    Kurdish singer and actor, Idan Amedi, who plays in the Netflix TV series “Fauda”, announced that he voluntarily joined the IDF and shared images from the Gaza Strip. The IDF are using social media influencers like Amedi. Images of Amedi calling Kurds to kill Palestinian are broadcast on Israeli television. Meanwhile, Duran Kalkan, one of the ringleaders of the PKK in Qandil, blamed Hamas and made statements in favor of Israel.

    There are a total of 4,600 foreign volunteers in the ranks of the Israeli forces, in addition to many dual citizens from all over the world, whether in active or reserve service.

    Israel relies on private security contractors, most notably the local company Global CST. The mercenaries working for this company are accused of committing crimes against humanity in the conflicts in which they participated in Latin America, South Ossetia and Africa.

    Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) said they have sent 2,000 mercenaries to Israel to fight in Gaza. The PKK is an international recognized terrorist organization which has killed over 30,000 people in Turkey over three decades.

    The IDF are afraid to enter the tunnels dug by Hamas, and fear that they will not emerge from the tunnels alive, and for this reason they use PKK and other mercenaries for this purpose, and mercenary fighters from European countries, Iraq, Syria, and America have arrived in Israel.

    The Kurdish PKK members sent to Israel are mainly from northern Iraq, and were sent with the help of Masoud Barzani. It is estimated that there are about 200,000 Kurdish Jews in the area, some of whom have been sent

  • The Curious Case of the Freedom Flotilla - Craig Murray
    https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2024/04/the-curious-case-of-the-freedom-flotilla

    In the 2010 Freedom Flotilla, the vessel Mavi Marmara was boarded by Israeli troops and ten aid workers were executed in cold blood. Just days before sailing, the Mavi Marmara had changed its flag from Turkey to the Comoros Islands.

    On a vessel at sea outside the twelve mile territorial limit of a state (as the Mavi Marmara was when boarded), the law that applies is that of the flag state. Had the vessel still been Turkish flagged, the murderers would have been within Turkish jurisdiction and subject to investigation by Turkey and prosecution in Turkish courts.

    I flew to Izmir to investigate the case and I concluded that it was Turkish security services who had obliged the change of flag to the Comoros Islands, thus facilitating the Israeli murderous attack.

    Plainly the Mavi Marmara incident should indicate to organisers of aid to Gaza the vital necessity of having a vessel registered to a flag state which would be able to react strongly to an attack by Israel on its ship, and indeed whose flag might deter Israel from such an attack.

    So it makes no sense to me that the organisers intended to proceed under the flag of Guinea Bissau.

    On 8 April I received a Whatsapp message from organisers asking me to publicise the flotilla. This was my reply.

    Hi Irfan and thank you. May I ask what are the flag states of the four vessels?
    This is extremely important.
    The Mavi Marmara organisers made the literally fatal mistake of allowing the ship to reflag to the Comoros Islands before sailing. Outside the 12 mile territorial sea the vessels are under the law of and entitled to the protection of the flag state

    After a holding reply I received

    Sorry for the late reply. It is still to be confirmed sir

    I reiterated

    OK, I am very keen that people understand that it is crucially important.
    I have always believed pro Israeli security services influenced the change of flag of the Mavi Marmara.
    Any Israeli forces boarding the ships beyond the 12 mile territorial limit are subject to the law of the flag state of the vessel. I should be grateful if you confirm to me the organisers fully understand this.

    The reply was simply

    Thank you sir

    I am therefore entirely perplexed that the organisers went with Guinea Bissau as the flag state rather than a state likely to stand up to Israel and the US. Of course it failed.

    Is the problem incompetence, or is it again security service influence?

    I should make plain that I absolutely support the aims and the strategy of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla. I have several friends on board, and I believe my good colleague Ann Wright is among the organisers. I am however intensely frustrated.

  • “These Thankless Deserts” - Winston Churchill and the Middle East : An Introduction
    https://winstonchurchill.org/publications/finest-hour/finest-hour-196/churchill-and-the-middle-east-an-introduction
    Voici le point de vue de la société Winston Churchill. A noter : La Déclaration Balfour de 1917 était le résultat d’une intrigue de Dr. Chaim Weizmann

    Wikipedia nous informe que
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%A9claration_Balfour_de_1917#Contexte_strat%C3%A9gique_internation

    Dès 1903 Herzl avait obtenu une lettre officielle du Foreign Office déclarant que la Grande-Bretagne acceptait un accord sur la création d’une colonie juive sous administration juive, document que Yoram Hazony juge « surpassant même la Déclaration Balfour ».
    ...
    Hazony (2007), p. 180 : « Lord Landsdowne est prêt à envisager favorablement ... un projet dont les caractéristiques principales sont l’octroi d’un vaste territoire, la nomination d’un responsable juif à la tête de l’administration (ayant) carte blanche en matière d’administration municipale, religieuse et purement intérieure » (voir lettre de Sir Clement Hill (en) à Leopold Greenberg (en), 14 août 1903. Repris in Die Welt, 29 août 1903)..

    Churchill étant proche des sionistes travaillait depuis ce moment et jusqu’à la fin de sa vie en faveur de la colonisation juive d’une partie du territoire arabe sous mandat britannique. L’article contient quelques éléments qui ont pu le motiver à prendre cette position.

    10.7.2023 by David Freeman - Finest Hour 196, Second Quarter 2022

    During the First World War, the United Kingdom went to war against the Ottoman Empire, which had allied itself with the Central Powers of Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The Ottoman Empire traced its origins and its name back to the thirteenth-century Turkish Sultan Osman I.

    Although once a great power controlling large sections of Europe, Africa, and Asia, the Ottoman Empire by the twentieth century had become known as the “sick man of Europe” and was much reduced in size. Nevertheless, the Turks still controlled nearly all of the lands of Arabia, including the Moslem Holy Cities of Mecca and Medina. For centuries, the office of Sultan had been combined with that of the Caliph, the spiritual leader of the Moslem world.

    All of this came to an end with Turkish defeat in the Great War. In 1915, the British attempted a quick thrust at the Ottoman capital of Constantinople (now known as Istanbul) with a plan strongly supported by First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill. The Dardanelles (or Gallipoli) campaign ended in failure. The British then turned to attacking the Turks from further out, along the frontiers of Arabia.

    In control of Egypt since 1882, the British used the ancient land to launch an offensive against Gaza, which lay in Turkish-controlled Palestine near the Sinai border with Egypt. At the same time, the British opened talks with Emir Hussein ibn Ali Al-Hashimi, the Sharif of Mecca. The Sharifate included Mecca and Medina, both located in the western regions of Arabia known as the Hejaz. Although an Arab, Hussein served the Turks, his title of Sharif indicating descent from the Prophet Mohammad.

    In 1916, the British induced Hussein to declare independence and establish himself as King of the Hejaz. In doing this, the British hoped to bring down the Ottoman Empire from within and minimize the resources they would need to commit to the region. The “Arab Revolt,” however, failed to attract the sort of support for which the British had been hoping.

    Much more powerful among the Arabs than Hussein was Abdul Aziz ibn Saud, the dominant chieftain in the Nejd, the large, barren region of eastern Arabia. Ibn Saud was much more concerned with defeating his chief rival in the Nejd than making war against the Turks. And so, in the end, the British had to do most of their own fighting in the Middle East, using forces from Britain, India, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand.

    Hussein had several sons. Of these, the one who worked most closely with the British during the war was Feisal, known variously as “Emir Feisal” and, after his father proclaimed himself king, “Prince Feisal.” In return for Arab support, the British made ambiguous promises about supporting the creation after the war of independent states, including the region of Palestine, which was vaguely understood to be the land around the Jordan River.

    In the search for victory, however, the British also made promises in other directions. In 1916, Britain and France entered into an agreement that became known as the Sykes-Picot Treaty. The two imperial powers decided to carve up the Arab lands once the Turks were defeated. The French would take the northern regions of Syria and Lebanon, which might include Mosul and parts of Palestine, but which would definitely include Damascus. The British would take most of Palestine and Mesopotamia.

    In 1917, the British entered into yet another potentially conflicting agreement. Even before 1914, the World Zionist Congress had begun to establish new settlements in Palestine, the ancient homeland of the Jewish people. During the war, Dr. Chaim Weizmann, a naturalized British citizen and a research chemist, provided vital assistance to the war effort as Director of the British Admiralty Laboratories (see FH 195). Weizmann skillfully used his influence to induce the British government to issue the Balfour Declaration, a letter from Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour to Lord Rothschild pledging support for the establishment “in Palestine for a national home for the Jewish people.”
    Churchill and the Middle East
    British map appended to 1921 Cabinet Memorandum showing proposed Mandates

    In the final year of the war, British forces made major progress against the Turks. Starting from Basra, at the head of the Persian Gulf, the British swept up the valley of Mesopotamia and captured Baghdad. Under the leadership of Gen. Sir Edmund Allenby, the British Army finally took Gaza and pushed through to Jerusalem. In the interior, meanwhile, Arab forces carried out a guerrilla campaign against the Turks, assisted to a degree by a young archaeologist turned intelligence officer turned commando, T. E. Lawrence (see FH 119).

    In the fall of 1918, the Ottoman Empire finally collapsed. Turkish forces remaining in Arabia hastily retreated, creating a vacuum. The Allies had not anticipated this, and Feisal seized the opportunity to establish himself in Damascus with the intention of ruling a new kingdom from the world’s oldest continually inhabited city. The French, however, insisted on their “rights” under the Sykes-Picot agreement, and the British had to acquiesce on the grounds that amity with the French was more important to the United Kingdom than amity with the Arabs.

    The French, however, were not to be altogether satisfied. President Wilson of the United States insisted that the Allies were to gain no territory from the defeated Central Powers. Instead the former colonies of Germany and Turkey would come under the authority of the League of Nations, which would assign the various territories to member states with a “mandate” to assist the native populations towards self-government. At least in theory, French and British authority in the Middle East was supposed to be only temporary.

    For the most part, the British were anxious to exit their mandates as soon as possible. British forces in Mesopotamia were made unwelcome by the locals, who were also bitterly divided against one another. Chaos prevailed, and British troops were regularly ambushed and killed in what Churchill called “these thankless deserts.” The cost of military operations became a primary concern to Churchill after the Armistice, when he became Secretary of State for War and was told by Prime Minister David Lloyd George that his paramount responsibility had to be reduction of expenditure.

    By 1920, Churchill came to believe that reducing military spending in the Middle East required the establishment of an Arab Department within the Colonial Office, which could work to settle the grievances of the Arabs and thereby reduce hostilities in the region. He lamented the price in blood and treasure that Britain was paying to be “midwife to an ungrateful volcano” (see FH 132). After Lloyd George agreed to Churchill’s proposal, the Prime Minister invited his War Secretary to move to the Colonial Office and supervise the settlement process himself.

    Churchill became Secretary of State for the Colonies early in 1921 and immediately called for a conference to take place in Cairo that March. Altogether forty key people involved with Britain’s Middle Eastern affairs gathered for what Churchill jestingly called a meeting of the “forty thieves.” Out of this emerged what became known as the “Sharifian” solution.

    Hussein would continue to be recognized as King of the Hejaz. His son Feisal, driven from Damascus by the French, would be set up in Baghdad as King of Iraq, as Mesopotamia was formally renamed. Palestine would be divided along the line of the Jordan. The eastern side, or “Trans-Jordania” (later shortened to Jordan), would become an Arab kingdom under Feisal’s elder brother Abdullah. Churchill argued that the advantage of this would be that pressure applied in any one of the three states would also be felt in the other two. Ibn Saud, to keep the peace, would be given a healthy subsidy by the British government.

    The western side of Palestine remained under British mandate authority so as to fulfill the pledge made by the Balfour Declaration. Although the Arabs of Palestine (i.e., the Palestinians) protested against this, Churchill curtly rejected their representations during a visit to Jerusalem after the Cairo Conference ended. Churchill did not foresee Jewish immigration overtaking the Palestinian population and naively believed that the two groups, along with Arab Christians, would work together to create a peaceful, prosperous, secular Palestinian state. Churchill was not always right.

    In June 1921, Churchill made a lengthy speech to the House of Commons in which he outlined his settlement and the reasons behind it (see p. 38). This would be the longest statement Churchill ever made about the Middle East and its peoples. Over the following year and a half, he supervised the implementation of the decisions made at Cairo and approved by Parliament. The process was not without incident—Feisal was in a precarious position in Baghdad and constrained to demonstrate his independence—but went generally according to plan before Churchill and his Liberal party were driven from power late in 1922.

    Churchill’s most dedicated period of involvement with the Middle East ended with his tenure at the Colonial Office, but he continued to monitor events. The short-lived Kingdom of Hejaz ended when it was overrun in 1924 by the forces of ibn Saud, who unified the region with the Nejd to create the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Hussein went into exile, later to be buried in Jerusalem. After returning to Parliament as a Conservative, Churchill remained a supporter of Zionism and strongly objected when the government of Neville Chamberlain acted to restrict Jewish immigration into Palestine, even as Nazi Germany was forcing Jews in Europe to flee for their lives.

    During the Second World War, the Middle East became a critical zone for the Allies. The Suez Canal linked Britain with India and the Antipodes, and Egypt was a base from which to fight the Axis powers directly when first Italy and then Germany began offensive operations in North Africa. As Prime Minister, Churchill travelled to Cairo several times during the war. In 1945 it was where he last met with President Roosevelt and first met with ibn Saud. After a cabal of pro-fascist army officers seized control of the government in Baghdad in 1941, Churchill supported a bold and successful move to reestablish an Iraqi government friendly to Britain.

    Although out of office when Israel declared independence in 1948, Churchill expressed the view to his old friend and fellow Zionist Leo Amery that it was “a big event…in history” and “all to the good that the result has come about by fighting” (see FH 178). It also pleased Churchill that Weizmann became the first President of Israel and that the nation’s leading technical university chose to name its auditorium for the former British Prime Minister who had supported Zionism at a crucial moment (see FH 195).

    One hundred years on, the decisions that Churchill made about the Middle East continue to affect the world today.

    #Grande_Bretagne #Empire_ottoman #Palestine #histoire #impérialisme #Déclaration_Balfour #Conférence_du_Caire_1943 #Égypte #Iraq #Mésopotamie #Moyen-Orient #Lawrence_d_Arabie #Israel

    • April 26, 2023
      Winston Churchill’s 1922 White Paper for Palestine
      Finest Hour 196, Second Quarter 2022
      Page 32 - By Sarah Reguer
      https://winstonchurchill.org/publications/finest-hour/finest-hour-196/we-tender-our-most-grateful-thanks/?highlight=Dr.+Chaim+Weizmann

      (...) At the end of 1921 Churchill did act on issues connected with the Palestine garrison, but High Commissioner Samuel kept writing about the need for a clear political policy, since the political status was still not regularized by a formal document, either a British one or one from the League of Nations.

      Memoranda arrived from Samuel, from leading members of the Colonial Office’s advisory board, from Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the World Zionist Organization, and from the Arab delegation. On 11 August, Churchill wrote an introduction to a Palestine memorandum that was not very encouraging nor optimistic. “The situation in Palestine causes me perplexity and anxiety,” he began.1 “The whole country is in a ferment. The Zionist policy is profoundly unpopular with all except the Zionists.” Both sides were arming, elective institutions were refused in the interests of the Zionist policy, “and the high cost of the garrison is almost wholly due to our Zionist policy.”2 Meanwhile, even the Zionists were discontented at the lack of progress and the “chilling disapprobation” of the British officials and the military. (...)

  • Israel rebukes US calls for investigation into mass graves in Gaza - POLITICO
    https://www.politico.com/news/2024/04/26/israel-mass-graves-gaza-00154696

    Israel’s military says it already looked into reports of mass graves and found no wrongdoing by its forces, even as the Biden administration calls for an investigation into the matter.

    Over the past few days, U.S. officials, including national security adviser Jake Sullivan, have called for Israel to “thoroughly and transparently” investigate reports of mass graves at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, which Israeli forces last raided in February. The State Department came under fire from advocates for refusing to call for an independent investigation, instead saying the U.S. will press Israel for information.

    When POLITICO asked Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Nadav Shoshani whether Israel plans on investigating, he at first waived off the question, calling the reports “fake news.”

    Asked if that means Israel won’t investigate the mass grave reports, Shoshani said: “Investigate what?” He then added that Israel has already looked into the matter and found that there was no wrongdoing. “We gave answers. We don’t bury people in mass graves. Not something we do.”

    Shoshani didn’t provide details of that investigation or who Israel provided answers to specifically.

    “The Israelis have told us privately what they’ve said publicly, that they totally reject the allegations,” said a U.S. official, granted anonymity to detail private conversations. “We aren’t in a position to validate that, and would like a thorough and transparent investigation into the reports.” The White House and the State Department declined to comment.

    At least two of the three burial sites were dug prior to Israeli troops arriving, The New York Times reported. But the Gaza Civil Defense said only about 100 people were buried in graves before the IDF raid, and a total of 392 bodies were recovered.

  • Lebanon: Ministerial Decision Advances Justice | Human Rights Watch
    https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/04/27/lebanon-ministerial-decision-advances-justice

    Lebanon’s Council of Ministers issued a decision on April 26, 2024, instructing the Foreign Affairs Ministry to file a declaration with the International Criminal Court (ICC) registrar accepting the court’s jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute crimes within the court’s jurisdiction on Lebanese territory since October 7, 2023.

  • Gaza, 1956 le constat du général Moshe Dayan. - Diversité performance
    https://diversite-performance.com/2024/03/30/gaza-1956-le-constat-du-general-moshe-dayan

    Pour ne pas risquer de tomber sous le coup de l’apologie du terrorisme, citez Moshe Dayan...

    “Ne blâmons pas ces meurtriers aujourd’hui. Que pouvons-nous dire à l’encontre de leur haine terrible envers nous ? Depuis huit ans maintenant, ils restent dans le camp de réfugiés de Gaza et nous voient transformer sous leurs yeux leur terre et leurs villages, où leurs ancêtres et eux-mêmes résidaient auparavant, pour en faire notre foyer.

    • https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moshe_Dayan

      Enfance

      Moshe Dayan naît dans le kibboutz Degania, situé en Palestine alors sous domination ottomane, non loin du lac de Tibériade. Ses parents, Devorah et Shmuel Dayan, étaient des juifs ukrainiens de Jachkiv, ville située alors dans l’Empire russe. À l’âge de 14 ans, il rallie la Haganah puis est affecté aux « Special Night Squads » dans les rangs desquels il sera marqué par l’influence du major Orde Charles Wingate, un officier britannique pro-sioniste, et qui instillera à l’embryon d’armée juive la doctrine visant à « porter le combat au cœur du secteur d’activité de l’ennemi » plutôt que de privilégier la « défense statique ».

      Premiers combats

      Au cours de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, il est intégré dans les forces britanniques durant deux ans, puis intégré dans la 7e Division d’infanterie australienne, qui combat les forces de Vichy en Syrie. C’est durant cette période qu’il perd l’usage de son œil gauche, par l’enfoncement du binoculaire de ses jumelles, atteint par une balle ennemie. Après cette blessure, il porte un cache-œil. Dayan est décoré à l’issue de la guerre, par l’armée britannique.

  • Lecture du journal d’un Gazaoui interdite par la Direction Académique du Gard | Le Club
    https://blogs.mediapart.fr/enerv/blog/270424/lecture-du-journal-dun-gazaoui-interdite-par-la-direction-academique

    Ainsi donc, la Direction Académique du Gard a décidé de priver les étudiants et les étudiantes du lycée hôtelier Marie-Curie de St-Jean-du-Gard, de la lecture d’extraits du journal de Hossam Al-Madhoun, publié sous le titre de Je vous écris de Gaza sous les bombes.

    Ainsi donc, cette Direction a estimé qu’un témoignage spontané, sans intermédiaire, d’un homme relatant ses souffrances, ses angoisses, son désespoir et souvent sa révolte devant le sort que lui, sa famille, sa femme, sa mère, sa fille subissent depuis 150 jours, sous les bombes qu’ils fuient par tous les moyens imaginables, ne devait pas être transmis à des jeunes gens et jeunes filles que l’Education nationale a pourtant la mission de former.

    Ainsi donc, le récit de la lutte opiniâtre au jour le jour, de cet homme pour survivre dans une guerre qu’il n’a ni engagée, ni voulue ne peut être porté à l’éveil et à la conscience d’élèves adolescents.

    Ainsi donc, relater les ravages de la barbarie, d’où qu’elle provienne, est proscrit ? On ne pourrait s’y attacher qu’en opposant et en mesurant des barbaries réciproques, équivalentes… peu ou prou justifiées ? Est-ce ainsi que les hommes vivent ? Est-ce ainsi qu’il faut faire l’impasse sur l’humanité ?

    Qui est Hossam Al-Madhoun ? Un intellectuel gazaoui d’une cinquantaine d’années, comédien, metteur en scène depuis des décennies, membre, avec son épouse Abeer, d’ONG qui s’attachent à apporter un soutien quotidien, psychologique et culturel à une jeunesse de Gaza confrontée, sans cesse, à des conditions de vie écrasantes.

    En soi, Hossam est un homme dont l’action, si elle se passait ici, en France, serait saluée, applaudie. C’est cet homme-là que la Direction Académique a décidé de censurer.

    Et au nom de quels arguments ?

    « De la délicatesse du sujet » !

    (...)

    Signataires :

    Jean Delval, Philippe Lefevre, Danièle Ricaille, Dominique Roland, René Vincendet

  • UK forces may be deployed on the ground in Gaza to help deliver aid
    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-68909511

    En toute innocence.

    British troops could be deployed on the ground in Gaza to help deliver aid via a new sea route, the BBC has learned.

    The US has said no American forces would go ashore and an unnamed “third party” would drive trucks along a floating causeway onto the beach.

    The UK is understood to be considering tasking British troops with this when the aid corridor opens next month.

    Whitehall sources said no decision had been made and the issue had not yet crossed the prime minister’s desk.

  • UK military support for Israel’s genocide was pre-planned
    https://www.declassifieduk.org/uk-military-support-for-israels-genocide-was-pre-planned

    Since the onslaught began, the Royal Air Force has flown dozens of spy missions over Gaza and at least six Israeli military personnel have received training in the UK.

    Nine Israeli military planes have visited Israel, with the British government refusing to say what is on board. Declassified has also found that the US military has been supplying weapons to Israel using the UK’s base on Cyprus.

    None of this has troubled the UK national media. But all of it is consistent with the pledges contained in the Roadmap.

    This month, the RAF even flew to Israel’s defence by shooting down drones from Iran – which were launched in retaliation for Israel’s illegal attack on Iran’s consulate in Damascus, Syria.

    In a separate section on Iran, the Roadmap states that “we work closely to counter the current threat from Iran” and that “we will seek to counter Iran’s destabilising regional activity”.

    “We will work to ensure Iran never has nuclear weapon capabilities”, adds the accord between the two nuclear weapons powers.
    Protecting Israel globally

    The 2023 Roadmap goes way beyond a previous memorandum of understanding between the UK and Israel signed in 2021.

    It explicitly states the two countries are “natural allies” – ignoring Israel’s pariah status among much of the rest of the world due its illegal occupation of the West Bank and “apartheid” system discriminating against Palestinians.

    Notably, the Roadmap has a section entitled “Antisemitism, delegitimisation, and anti-Israel bias” whose wording directly prophesies Britain’s extraordinary apologias for Israel’s Gaza atrocities in international fora.

    It calls for “tackling the disproportionate focus on Israel in the UN and other international bodies, including attempts to delegitimise it or deny its right to self-defence. All states have a duty to comply with their obligations under international law, but scrutiny must be measured, impartial and proportionate.”

    Since Israel’s attacks, British ministers have thoroughly put this into practice. They have consistently apologised for Israel’s atrocities in the name of “self-defence” and have repeatedly point blank refused to condemn Israel’s violations of international law.

  • Arrêter les abonnements aux revues scientifiques prédatrices...

    University of Lorraine (France), cutting ‘big deals’ with large commercial publishers & reinvesting the money saved in various open science / open access initiatives

    https://mastodon.social/@rmounce/112336634935584026
    #édition_scientifique #revues_prédatrices #abonnement #arrêt #ESR #recherche #universités #facs #coût #budget #université_de_Lorraine #Elsevier #Wiley #Springer

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur la #publication_scientifique :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1036396

  • The Coming Arab Backlash : Middle Eastern Regimes—and America—Ignore Public Anger at Their Peril
    https://www.foreignaffairs.com/israel/coming-arab-backlash

    Je n’ai repris que la fin de cet article exceptionnellement important. A mes yeux, Marc Lynch est un des tous meilleurs analystes étasuniens sur le monde arabe. Ces analyses sur les révoltes arabes de 2011 ont démontré leur pertince.

    The Arab media, which had been badly fragmented and politically polarized during the previous decade’s intraregional political wars, has largely reunited in defense of Gaza. Al Jazeera is back, reliving its glory days through round-the-clock coverage of the horrors there, even as its journalists have been killed in action by Israeli forces. Social media is back, too—not the corpse of Twitter or the woefully censored Facebook and Instagram, so much as newer apps such as TikTok, WhatsApp, and Telegram. The images and videos emerging from Gaza overwhelm the spin offered by Israel and the United States and easily bypass soft-pedaled coverage by Western news outlets. People see the devastation. Every day they confront scenes of unbelievable tragedy. And they know victims directly. They do not need the media to understand WhatsApp messages from terrified Gazans or to view the horrifying videos widely circulating on Telegram.

    Arab activists and intellectuals have been developing powerful arguments about the nature of Israel’s domination of the Palestinian territories and these are entering the Western discourse in new ways. The case South Africa brought to the International Court of Justice, alleging an Israeli genocide in Gaza, introduced many of those arguments into circulation across the global South and within international organizations. It did so by referencing not only the statements of Israeli leaders but also conceptual frameworks about occupation and settler colonialism developed by Arab and Palestinian intellectuals. The war of ideas that the United States sought to wage in the Muslim world after 9/11, claiming to bring freedom and democracy to a backward region, has reversed course, with the United States on the defensive because of its hypocrisy in demanding condemnation of Russia’s war on Ukraine while supporting Israel’s war on Gaza.
    A REGION ADRIFT

    This is all happening in an era characterized, even before the Israel-Hamas war, by the declining primacy of the United States and the rising autonomy of regional powers. Leading Arab states have increasingly sought to demonstrate their independence from the United States, building strategic relations with China and Russia and pursuing their own agendas in regional affairs. The willingness of Arab regimes to defy U.S. preferences was a hallmark of the previous decade, as Gulf states ignored American policies toward democratic transition in Egypt, flooded weapons into Syria despite Washington’s caution, and lobbied against the nuclear agreement with Iran. This willingness to flout the United States’ wishes has become even more apparent following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The past two years have seen most Middle Eastern regimes refusing to vote with Washington against Russia, and Saudi Arabia declining to follow the United States’ lead on oil pricing.

    Washington’s unblinkered support for Israel in its devastation of Gaza, however, has brought long-standing hostility toward U.S. policy to a head, and triggered a crisis of legitimacy that threatens the entire edifice of historic U.S. primacy in the region. It is difficult to exaggerate the extent to which Arabs blame the United States for this war. They can see that only U.S. weapons sales and United Nations vetoes allow Israel to continue its war. They are aware that the United States defends Israel for actions that are the same as those the United States condemned Russia and Syria for. The extent of this popular anger can be seen in the disengagement of a large number of young workers in nongovernmental organizations and activists from U.S.-backed projects and networks built up over decades of public diplomacy, a development cited by Annelle Sheline in her principled resignation from her post as a foreign affairs officer at the State Department in March.

    The White House is still acting as if none of this really matters. Arab regimes will survive, anger will fade or be redirected to other issues, and, in a few months, Washington can get back to the important business of Israeli-Saudi normalization. That is how things have traditionally worked. But this time may well be different. The Gaza fiasco, at a moment of shifting global power and changing calculations by regional leaders, shows how little Washington has learned from its long record of policy failures. The nature and degree of popular anger, the decline of U.S. primacy and the collapse of its legitimacy, and Arab regimes’ prioritization of their domestic survival, as well as regional competition, suggests that the new regional order will be much more attentive to public opinion than the old. If Washington continues to ignore public opinion, it will doom its planning for after the war ends in Gaza.

  • Free Speech on the Ropes : Legislation to Revoke Not-for-Profit Status of Organizations that Support Palestine Protests Passes in House | naked capitalism
    https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/04/free-speech-on-the-ropes-legislation-to-revoke-not-for-profit-statu

    Assez long article (au-delà de la sélection) expliquant les projets de loi aux USA pour supprimer le statut « d’organisation non lucrative » aux associations militant pour la Palestine.

    Chuck L alerted me to an important tweetstorm by Lara Friedman of the Foundation for Middle East Peace about legislation that is designed to drop a hammer on not-for-profits that are deemed to be supporting pro-Palestine protests by revoking their not-for-profit status. As Friedman explains, this bill, H.R. 6408, also removes pretty much all due process rights, so its targets have effectively no recourse. The pretext is that pro-Palestine protests are supporting terrorist organizations, as in Hamas.

    This measures is so far under the radar that so far, only Friedman and Matthew Petti at Reason seem to have noticed it. And Petti has pointed out that the Secretary of the Treasury can designate any organization to be “terrorist-supporting organization,” so the does not think, as Friedman seems to, that any other measures are needed to allow an Administration to try to financially cripple not-for-profits engaging in wrong speech.

  • Biden refuses to sanction Israeli units behind ’gross’ war crimes
    https://thecradle.co/articles-id/24597
    http://thecradle-main.oss-eu-central-1.aliyuncs.com/public/articles/f44d7d6a-03cd-11ef-8dfb-00163e02c055.webp

    he government of US President Joe Biden has decided against imposing sanctions on Israeli army units responsible for human rights violations against Palestinians, despite initial plans to do so.

    ABC News reported on 26 April that a government assessment determined that three battalions in the Israeli army committed “gross human rights violations” against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank “but will remain eligible for US military aid regardless because of steps Israel says it’s taking to address the problem.”

    The assessment, which has not been made public, was outlined in a letter written by US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken to House Speaker Mike Johnson, which the news network obtained.

    The rights violations committed by Israeli forces “will not delay the delivery of any US assistance and Israel will be able to receive the full amount appropriated by Congress.” Billions in US aid to Israel was approved by Biden just two days ago after passing in the Senate on Tuesday.

    The violations in question were committed prior to 7 October and took place in the occupied West Bank. They include the execution of Palestinians by Israeli border police, as well as torture and rape during interrogation.

    (...)

    Blinken’s letter states that four of the Israeli army units have undergone “remediation” steps, meaning that those within the units that are responsible for the crimes have been internally held accountable.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on 21 April: “If anyone thinks they can impose sanctions on a unit of the IDF, I will fight it with all my strength.”

    According to Hebrew news site Ynet, Israeli pressure on the US helped shape the decision not to impose sanctions on the units. “The reasonable estimate is that we will be able to convince the US not to impose these sanctions,” an Israeli official told the outlet.

    In addition to Netanyahu, opposition leaders Benny Gantz and Yair Lapid both called on the US not to proceed with the decision. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant reportedly promised Blinken that “steps” would be taken.

  • 200 jours de guerre israélienne contre Gaza et 200 gros titres blanchissant le génocide
    https://french.presstv.ir/Detail/2024/04/26/724391/200-jours-de-guerre-isra%C3%A9lienne-contre-Gaza-et-200-gros-titres-b

    Frenchpresstvest un site iranien qui ne fait pas toujours dans la dentelle ; Mais il propose ici une utile (et effarante) compilation de 200 titres de la presse internationale à propos de Gaza (il n’y a pas de lien vers les originaux malheureusement).

  • La Flotilla de la Libertad partirá el viernes desde Turquía hacia Gaza | Al Mayadeen Español
    https://espanol.almayadeen.net/noticias/politica/1849540/la-flotilla-de-la-libertad-partirá-el-viernes-desde-turquía

    La Flotilla de la Libertad partirá este viernes desde el puerto de Tuzla, en el oeste de Turquía, hacia la Franja de Gaza, con el objetivo de romper el asedio impuesto por la ocupación israelí.

    Su principal propósito es asegurar la entrega de ayuda humanitaria a la población gazatí, sometida desde hace más de seis meses a los rigores de una guerra de exterminio en múltiples facetas.

    Este convoy marítimo involucra a tres barcos, dos de los cuales transportan más de cinco mil toneladas de alimentos y ayuda médica, mientras el tercero estará destinado al traslado de los activistas.

    Según se espera, navíos de otros países se unirán a la flota, a pesar de las advertencias de la armada israelí y sus preparativos para enfrentarlos e impedir la entrega de ayuda a la población gazatí.

    En la iniciativa, supervisada por la Fundación Turca de Ayuda y el Comité Internacional para Romper el Asedio a Gaza, participan cientos de voluntarios procedentes de más de 30 países, entre ellos artistas, abogados, activistas de derechos humanos y políticos.

    La primera versión de la Flotilla de la Libertad partió hacia Gaza en mayo de 2010, con el objetivo de romper el asedio impuesto por la ocupación israelí desde 2007.

    Incluía entonces varios buques con alrededor de seis mil tonelada

  • مقابر جماعية إضافية على القائمة : مأساة « مجمع ناصر » تتكشّف
    https://al-akhbar.com/Palestine/381268

    Récit des recherches dans les charniers de Khan Younes... (trad automatique globalement compréhensible.)

    أمس، عثرت طواقم الدفاع المدني على العشرات من الجثامين المدفونة تحت أكوام التراب والنفايات، علماً أن بعضها سُرقت منها أعضاء و20 منها لأشخاص دُفنوا أحياء (باعتبار أنها غير مصابة)، وأخرى لأشخاص عبث الاحتلال في أجسادهم ثم ألبسهم أكفاناً من عدة طبقات لكي يخفي معالم جريمته.ليس سهلاً وصف ما يحدث في تلك المنطقة، إذ تجلس المئات من العائلات من شروق الشمس وحتى المغيب، في انتظار الوصول إلى جثمان قريب. يحدّق أفرادها في كل جثة متحلّلة، للبحث عن ملبس أو خاتم أو أي إشارة يستدلّون بها على أن الجسد الذي نال التراب والتحلّل من ملامحه هو لقريبهم. للفرح هنا طقوس أخرى، إذ يُطلق أحد الرجال تنهيدة مصحوبة بالحمد والشكر، إن هو عثر بعد أسابيع من الانتظار على جثمان نجله. يسجد على الأرض، يحتضن الجسد الحبيب، ثم يمضي به لدفنه مكرّماً في المقبرة، أما لماذا الفرح؟ فلأن الأب ستنتهي لديه الحيرة حول مصير نجله. ويقول والد أحد الشهداء لـ«الأخبار»: «كنا نتوقّع أنه استشهد. لكنّ دفْنه وتكريمه يطفئان النار المشتعلة في قلوبنا منذ شهرين، ويريحاننا من عذاب التفكير بمصيره، ويضعان حداً لمسلسل الرعب الذي نعيشه يومياً». ويضيف: «هل تعلم ما يعنيه أن تصحو يومياً وتأتي إلى هنا، وتكون لديك مهمة واحدة، هي تفحص الجثامين المتحلّلة، والنظر ملياً في الوجه، والتدقيق في لون الشعر، وتذكّر لون القميص الذي كان يلبسه نجلك، ثم تعود إلى بيتك خائباً، على موعد مع يوم آخر من ذات التفاصيل القاسية؟ (..) لأجل هذا سيفرح من يجد جثمان ابنه أو أخيه. سيعود إلى ممارسة ترف شقاء الحياة بعيداً عن الأموات».
    وآخر الإحصائيات التي قدّمها الدفاع المدني، تشير إلى أن نحو ألف نازح وجريح، كانوا في «مجمّع ناصر الطبي»، لا تتوافر أي معلومات عن مصيرهم. وتتزايد بشكل يومي أعداد المقابر الجماعية المكتشّفة في جنبات المستشفى ومحيطه، حيث زاد عدد الجثامين المنتشلة على 300 شهيد. أما عن الصورة التي يجدون عليها جثامين الشهداء، فتشير إفادات شهود عيان واكبوا الحدث اليومي، إلى أن جنود جيش العدو تفنّنوا في طرق القتل. ويقول محمد القطاطوة، لـ«الأخبار»: «وجدنا بعض الشهداء معصوبي الأعين والأيدي إلى الخلف، ومصابين بالرصاص، وآخرين يبدو أن جرافة دي أو دبابة جرفتهم وهم ينزفون وطمست ملامحهم تماماً، وثمة أيضاً من حفر من جنود العدو حفراً بعمق 3 أمتار لإخفاء جريمة قتلهم».
    الرقعة الجغرافية التي تنتشر فيها المقابر وطريقة الدفن، تشيران إلى أن جنود الاحتلال تصرّفوا وفق تعليمات تهدف إلى إخفاء معالم الجرائم قدر الإمكان، حيث وُجدت بعض المقابر في الأزقة، وبعضها الآخر تحت المتاريس والكثبان الرملية، وبعض ثالث أسفل أكوام القمامة. ويوضح القطاطوة: «وجدنا جثامين لشهداء في الممرّات والطرق التي سوّتها الجرافات بالأرض وصنعت منها ممرّات للعبور، أي في مناطق ليست متوقّعة. ما زالت مهمة الطواقم شاقّة، والمشكلة أن الاحتلال لم ينشر منذ بداية الحرب أي قوائم يعلن فيها عن الأسرى لديه. لذا، فإن مصير من كانوا في مستشفى ناصر، تراوح بين الإعدام والدفن ميدانياً، أو الاعتقال والتغييب في السجون».

    • Autre récit, tout aussi glaçant.
      https://www.raialyoum.com/%d9%87%d8%b0%d8%a7-%d9%85%d8%a7-%d8%ac%d8%b1%d9%89-%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%ae%d8

      نقلت وكالة أنباء “وفا” الفلسطينية عن طواقم الإسعاف أن جثامين ضحايا المقابر الجماعية المكتشفة في مجمع ناصر الطبي بخان يونس جنوب قطاع غزة، تحمل شبهات مؤكدة لتعرض بعضها لسرقة الأعضاء.
      وأشارت الوكالة إلى أنه جرى انتشال 392 جثمانا على الأقل من 3 مقابر جماعية تم اكتشافها في المجمع الطبي، بعد انسحاب القوات الإسرائيلية من مدينة خان يونس.
      ولفتت إلى أن بين الجثامين 165 مجهولة الهوية ولم يتم التعرف عليها بسبب قيام الجيش الإسرائيلي بتغيير مظاهر العلامات الخاصة لمنع التعرف على الجثث.
      وقالت الطواقم: “وجدت بعض الجثث مربوطة الأيدي، والبطن مفتوح ومخيط بطريقة تخالف الطرق الاعتيادية لخياطة الجروح في قطاع غزة، ما يثير شبهات حول سرقة بعض الأعضاء البشرية”.
      وأضافت: “تم أيضا رصد جثة لأحد المواطنين يرتدي ملابس عمليات ما يثير الشكوك حول دفنه حيا”.
      وتابعت: “تم رصد جثة لطفلة مبتورة اليد والرجلين، وكانت ترتدي ملابس غرفة العمليات ما يثير شكوك حول دفنها وهي على قيد الحياة”.
      كما أظهرت الجثامين تكبيل أيدي بعض القتلى وارتدائهم رداء أبيض استخدمه الجيش الإسرائيلي كملابس للمعتقلين في مجمع ناصر الطبي، وتوجد علامات إصابة بطلق ناري بالرأس، ما يثير الشكوك على إعدامهم وتصفيتهم ميدانيا.
      كما رصدت العديد من الجثث تم تغيير أكفانها ووضعها في أكياس نايلون بلاستيكية ألوانها أسود وأزرق تخالف الألوان المستخدمة في غزة، والهدف لرفع حرارة الجثث وتسريع عملية تحللها وإخفاء الأدلة. وتمت ملاحظة عمليات دفن لأعماق تزيد عن 3 أمتار، إضافة إلى تكدس الجثث فوق بعضها.

    • Les vols d’organes, cela fait 20 ans qu’on en entend parler après chaque passage de l’armée israélienne. C’est un complot antisémite ou bien c’est un vrai crime de guerre ? Et chez les russes et les ukrainiens, a-t-on le même genre de rumeurs ? Chez les soudanais, ou au coeur du Sahel, a-t-on les mêmes rumeurs ? Et pendant la guerre en Syrie, avait-on les mêmes rumeurs ?

    • Je dois l’avoir lu à l’époque. Déjà à l’époque, la malveillance infinie des sionistes était parfaitement documentée.

      Il y en a des qui s’étonnaient qu’en 2023, avant Octobre, on restait froid face aux imputations d’antisémitisme, sur la base d’une demi-strophe, ou d’un mot ou deux. Qu’on n’était pas assez sérieux sur le sujet. Pas assez matures. L’antisémitisme de gauche nous préparait des progroms contre les juifs, c’était certain, et il fallait s’auto-flageller, plutôt que de sur-réagir à ces palestiniens massacrés par des colons, chassés de leurs terres, ou, cette source, là, l’été dernier, qui était remplie de ciment, c’était un fait divers, et bon sang, fais gaffe, y-a Médine qu’est en train de te pondre dans la tête pour que toutes les troupes du SNU massacrent des juifs. Quel temps perdu, hier, aujourd’hui, et demain, évidemment, parce que tout cela va continuer. Et comme moi hier, qui ne me souvenais plus du billet de blog de Nidal en 2009, tous, on va oublier ce que nos fières valeurs auront commis comme massacres contre l’humanité ces derniers mois.

  • Prix de l’électricité : la France est l’un des pays les plus chers du monde
    https://rmc.bfmtv.com/conso/maison/electricite-et-gaz/prix-de-l-electricite-la-france-est-l-un-des-pays-les-plus-chers-du-monde

    La France figure à la 4e place parmi les grands pays qui payent le plus cher leur électricité.

    Les Français sont parmi ceux qui payent le plus cher leur électricité sur la planète. La France est le 4e grand pays le plus cher au monde pour les prix de l’électricité selon une étude réalisée par Verivox dans 147 pays avec les données de GlobalPetrolPrices. Avec 28,3 centimes le kwh pour les ménages français au premier trimestre 2024, c’est un peu moins qu’au Royaume-Uni et qu’en Allemagne, et nettement moins qu’en Italie, grand pays le plus cher de la planète à 41 centimes le kwh.

    Il ne vous aura pas échappé que les pays les plus chers sont les pays européens. L’électricité est nettement moins chère au Japon ou aux Etats-Unis, moins de 20 centimes le kwh, sans parler de la Chine évidemment (7 centimes). Parce que c’est en Europe que l’impact de la crise énergétique a été le plus fort.

    Le grand succès, donc, de la libéralisation de l’électricité (#AREN), ainsi que de l’énergie nucléaire (#EPR #EDF).

  • L’ordre mondial d’après-guerre est « au bord de la rupture » _ Rapport annuel d’Amnesty International - Le Télégramme 25/04/2024 (version papier)

    L’ordre mondial bâti après 1945 est « au bord de la rupture », alerte la secrétaire générale d’Amnesty International, qui a publié, mercredi, son rapport annuel sur les droits humains. Du Proche-Orient à l’Ukraine en passant par la Birmanie, le Soudan ou l’Éthiopie, où ont lieu des conflits accompagnés de violations massives des droits humains, « tout ce à quoi nous avons assisté au cours des douze derniers mois montre que le système international est au bord de la rupture », estime Agnès Callamard.
    « Ces six derniers mois, en particulier, les États-Unis ont protégé les autorités israéliennes de tout examen minutieux des multiples violations commises à Gaza », déclare-telle. « En utilisant leur veto contre un cessez-le-feu indispensable, ils ont vidé de son sens le Conseil de sécurité (des Nations unies) », accuse la secrétaire générale de l’ONG basée à Londres. D’autant qu’en parallèle, « de puissants acteurs », tels que la Russie et la Chine, « affichent leur volonté de mettre en péril l’intégralité des règles de 1948 », année charnière dans la construction du système international actuel, avertit-elle.

    L’état des droits humains en France se dégrade
    L’ONG n’épargne pas la France. « La situation des droits humains se dégrade. Il y a de plus en plus de discours de haine décomplexée », de « plus en plus de remises en cause du droit international », a ainsi résumé Jean-Claude Samouiller, président d’Amnesty International France. L’ONG s’inquiète également des coups portés, selon elle, à la liberté de manifester. Lors de rassemblements pour contester la réforme des retraites, le projet de mégabassines ou en soutien aux Palestiniens, les autorités ont recouru de façon « abusive à la force dans le maintien de l’ordre », déplore-t-elle.

    • Atteintes aux libertés de manifester et discrimination religieuse : Amnesty s’inquiète pour les droits humains en France Mercredi 24 avril 2024 – Par MEE et agences
      https://www.middleeasteye.net/fr/actu-et-enquetes/atteintes-aux-libertes-de-manifester-et-discrimination-religieuse-amn

      La situation des droits de l’homme en France a continué en 2023 son « érosion », dénonce mercredi 24 avril Amnesty International dans son rapport annuel mondial
      « La situation des droits humains […] en France se dégrade et la société civile doit être vigilante. Il y a de plus en plus de discours de haine décomplexés », de « plus en plus de remise en cause du droit international […] et c’est vraiment un signe mauvais pour l’avenir de notre pays », a résumé mardi à l’AFP Jean-Claude Samouiller, président d’Amnesty International France, en marge d’une conférence de presse organisée à Paris dans le cadre de la publication du rapport annuel mondial sur la situation des droits humains dans le monde.
      L’ONG basée à Londres s’inquiète notamment des coups portés selon elle à la liberté de manifester. Lors de rassemblements pour contester la réforme des retraites ou le projet de mégabassine (réservoirs d’eau) ou en soutien aux Palestiniens – quand ils ont été autorisés –, les autorités ont recouru de façon « abusive à la force dans le maintien de l’ordre », déplore Amnesty dans son rapport, citant « des dispersions violentes et des matraquages aveugles ». (...)

  • Campus Protests Over Gaza Intensify Amid Pushback by Universities and Police - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/24/us/college-protests-spread-austin-dallas.html

    Ca n’a pas l’air d’intéresser du tout Le Monde qui n’en dit mot ce matin :

    A wave of pro-Palestinian protests spread and intensified on Wednesday as students gathered on campuses around the country, in some cases facing off with the police, in a widening showdown over campus speech and the war in Gaza.

    University administrators from Texas to California moved to clear protesters and prevent encampments from taking hold on their own campuses as they have at Columbia University, deploying police in tense new confrontations that already have led to dozens of arrests.

    At the same time, new protests continued erupting in places like Pittsburgh and San Antonio. Students expressed solidarity with their fellow students at Columbia, and with a pro-Palestinian movement that appeared to be galvanized by the pushback on other campuses and the looming end of the academic year.

    Protesters on several campuses said their demands included divestment by their universities from companies connected to the Israeli military campaign in Gaza, disclosure of those and other investments and a recognition of the continuing right to protest without punishment.

  • Benjamin Netanyahu - בנימין נתניהו sur X : “Anti-Semitism on campuses in the United States is reminiscent of what happened in German universities in the 1930s. The world cannot stand idly by. https://t.co/oHlwig1vCl” / X
    https://twitter.com/netanyahu/status/1783191454308864300

    La ficelle devient de plus en plus grosse...

    Anti-Semitism on campuses in the United States is reminiscent of what happened in German universities in the 1930s.

    The world cannot stand idly by.

  • Lawyer fired from anti-war NGO for Gaza tweet – Middle East Monitor
    https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20240424-lawyer-fired-from-anti-war-ngo-for-gaza-tweet

    #chasse_aux_sorcières

    Lawyer Ousman Noor was fired from a high profile NGO job for tweeting about Gaza. The Stop Killer Robots campaign, supported by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty, is an anti-war NGO that advocates against the use of robotic and autonomous weapons. It would seem like exactly the sort of organisation that would be opposed to Israel using Palestinians as guinea pigs to test these weapons on but, as Noor discovered, criticism of Israel is off-limits in some anti-war NGOs.

    Noor believes his sacking speaks to a wider issue of NGOs like this that operate in the United Nations and rely on relationships with Western diplomats and officials who are, according to him, ‘ideologically pro-Israel’. Noor hasn’t stayed silent, however, and is taking Stop Killer Robots to court in Switzerland for unfair dismissal in order to make sure other pro-Palestine workers in the NGO community and beyond have the confidence to speak out.