April 30, 2004
A better class of torture
War of words
April 29, 2004
Ilan Pappe : As long as the plan contains the magic term 'withdrawal', it is seen as good
Ilan Pappe is definitely one of the good guys in Israel. He is one of the original supporters of the academic boycott of Israel and he is calling for sanctions in the London Review of Books article above.
ADL gives the game away
"An Anti-Defamation League report on Monday said anti-semitic views were on the wane in most EU states, but distrust of Israel was rising." So there we have it. Anti-Semitism is in decline but Israel's conduct is earning it public disapprobation. So why are we wasting time, money and newsprint on conferences "on" anti-Semitism?
April 28, 2004
Bring back our hypocrisy say former diplomats
I can't understand why George Bush openly describing American Middle East policy since 1967 is considered a setback. The Sharon "plan" doesn't seem to differ from what the Clinton-Barak axis was offering back in Setember 2000? Then Clinton blamed Arafat for rejecting the proposals which left illegal settlements in tact and refugees displaced. So what are these ex-diplomats beefing about? Did they really take their absurd wranglings over the last 50 odd years seriously?
April 27, 2004
My MP signs EDM on Palestine
"That this House expresses strong concerns about the comments of President George W. Bush on 14th April, endorsing Ariel Sharon's proposed Disengagement Plan; notes that the partisan nature of President Bush's comments have undermined the Road Map and believes that his uncritical approach has emboldened Israel to continue with its policy of assassinations which is not only illegal but sets back the cause of peace; further notes that the 14th April exchange of letters between President Bush and Ariel Sharon prejudices the Road Map's stipulation that final status issues including Jerusalem, refugees, borders, settlements and water should be matters for joint agreement between the parties rather than imposition by Israel; further notes that the US President's comments contradict international law and existing UN resolutions on the illegality of Israeli settlements and the rights of Palestinian refugees; welcomes, however, the Israeli Government's decision to remove its settlements from the Gaza Strip and calls on Israel also to withdraw its military presence, arranging these withdrawals through proper negotiation with the Palestinian Authority; and further calls on the quartet of the UN, EU, Russia and USA to reassert its collective responsibility for the Road Map and to take immediate steps to secure the implementation of UN resolutions to achieve Israeli withdrawal from all territories it illegally occupies, justice for the refugees and security for Israel alongside a viable and independent Palestinian state."
Reading it now I'm not sure it's worth the candle. It's yet another plea for an unviable Palestinian state on 22% of Palestine. Still it discomfits that imbecile Blair so it's not all bad.
Robert Fisk: A Warning to Those Who Dare Criticize Israel in the US
Robert Fisk is a wonderful, if a tad over-emotional, commentator on the Middle East. The bit about Webster's, the official American-English dictionary, defining anti-Semitism as:"opposition to Zionism: sympathy with opponents of the state of Israel" is particularly scary. If someone in a pub told me this I would accuse them of reading too much "protocols". But, alas, it's true. The Zionists have tampered with Webster's. Be afraid, be very afraid.
April 26, 2004
Q.Why are there still hostilities between Arabs and Israel?
Well that's according to Conal Urquhart in today's Guardian.
I thought it might be the Zionist movement's ethnic cleansing of the Arabs of Palestine, the establishment of an apartheid state in their place and relentless aggression to the natives and neighbours (especially the Lebanese) of Palestine. Lucky I read The Guardian. to keep me on the liberal straight and narrow.
April 25, 2004
Who is a Jew?
Dame Porter finally pays (a pittance)over votes scandal
April 24, 2004
Hooray for Hollycaust: Ronald Harwood
Holocaust movies are mere Zionist propaganda says Zionist propagandist: Ronald Harwood, as reported in this week's Jewish Chronicle. Obviously Israel has no right to exist on the basis of ethnic cleansing and apartheid laws; no state does. It can't use national. self-determination arguments: Jews come from many countries, speak many different languages and enjoy different cultures. So the Zionists have to fall back on the "where else can Jews live" argument. That's still not a very good one considering that a good two thirds of the world's Jews come from outside of Israel and most Israelis weren't born there. So, according to The Pianist. screenplay writer, Ronald Harwood, Zionists have to keep making Holocaust movies like The Pianist. and Schindlers' List . Hooray for Hollycaust, there's no business like Shoah business, etc. Any more? There will be.
How hopes of peace are undermined
April 22, 2004
Weapon of mass distraction and it's coming our way
In The Guardian
Tony Blair sets a hare running about a referendum that may or not happen in a couple of years. Gears grind, Tories gibber impotently, and news of his disastrous adventures in Iraq disappears into an inside page. Who's a clever boy?
Peter Dunn
Bridport, Dorset
In The Independent
Sir: When Blair was in trouble earlier over WMDs, Campbell diverted attention with the BBC row. After a disastrous meeting with Bush, the Middle East Road Map in tatters and Iraq in a mess, Blair steps off the plane and diverts our attention with the referendum show. Don't be fooled again. Keep your eyes on the ball.
R A STEEL
Caxton, Cambridgeshire
Now See Martin Rowson 3 days ago in The Guardian or "Condi" or "U-turn" below.
April 21, 2004
"Attacking Jews is mainstream" says Independent's Marie Woolf
Anti-Semitism is 'infecting' British politics, MPs warn
By Marie Woolf, Chief Political Correspondent
21 April 2004
MPs have warned that the "virus" of anti-Semitism is beginning to infect mainstream politics in Britain, as figures show a record number of attacks on Jews last year.
The former cabinet minister Stephen Byers said yesterday that the "line is now being crossed from legitimate criticism" of the Israeli government into "demonisation, dehumanisation of Jews and the application of double standards". [how about explaining what or where the line is?]
In a debate in the House of Commons, James Purnell, chairman of Labour Friends of Israel, criticised caricatures and cartoons of Jews in the media as dangerous. He said: "Today overt anti-Semitism is still taboo, but anti-Semitism is a virus that once again has started to infect our body politic." [Did he give any examples?]
The warnings come after an unprecedented number of attacks on Jews in Britain last year, including desecration of synagogues and cemeteries. [not true. The high point, going by Community Security Trust stats was 2000. But please look at their stats - I'm not linking to their site. Google them - one category is "suspicious behaviour". There were 94 cases of people behaving suspiciously anti-Semitically. How do people do that?] Jewish women walking down the street have been attacked by strangers, and Jewish schools and community centres have been put on a high state of alert. [a high state of alert, but what actually happened?]
Mike Whine, of the Community Security Trust, which defends Jews against attacks in Britain, [not very successfully according to itself.] said: "We have seen a year-on-year rise since September 2000 of anti-Semitic incidents and, unfortunately, also an increase in violent attacks against both religious institutions and persons. The Jewish community has been at a high level of security since the threat to attack Jewish communities announced by al-Qa'ida two years ago. Increasingly, anti-Semitic discourse is influenced by the Middle East and the anti-Zionism of the far left."
There were 375 attacks in Britain last year, [see above] part of a rising number of anti-Semitic incidents within Europe which has been blamed [without any evidence] on the far right and Islamic extremists. The attacks have been linked [without evidence] to unease about Israel's policies towards the Palestinians and its campaign of assassinations and enforced curfews.
Yesterday, MPs warned that anti-Israeli feeling should not spill over into
criticism of Jews in general, [it usually doesn't, but is anti-Semitism really what is on the agenda here?] many of whom do not support the policies of the Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon [, or Zionism, or the right of Israel to be a Jewish state rather than a democratic secular one].
Stephen Byers, a former transport secretary [resigned for dishonesty] who chairs the committee on anti-Semitism, said that anti-Israeli criticism should not be used as "a cloak of respectability" for racist views. [it rarely is] He said there was the danger of the development of an "intellectual argument" bolstering anti-Semitic feeling. "We need to be robust on confronting anti-Semitic views wherever these may occur," Mr Byers said.[uh-oh. Is he talking censorship?]
Mr Purnell said memories of the Holocaust had largely inoculated Europe
against anti-Semitism for 60 years, but some people on the extreme left had
allowed themselves to find "some extremely strange bedfellows" in their criticism of Israel. [name some names] "During the anti-war protests there were some really terrifying pictures of individuals dressed up as suicide bombers holding banners with the Star of David and an equals sign to a swastika," he said. "This apparent embrace of such symbols by the anti-war left is absolutely astounding." [The comparison of the Nazis to any aggressor is routine among demonstrators since World War II. This is particularly true of racist states based on ethnic cleansing like South Africa, Rhodesia and, yes, Israel. The equation of the Swastika with the Israeli or Zionist flag is the continuation of an anti-racist, anti-colonial, and anti-war tradition. Nothing astounding there except the fact that MPs are spending lots of time on what seems to be another tedious and transparent Zionist propaganda stunt.]
Vanunu release today...maybe
Reality television?
April 20, 2004
A touch of the Balfours
Sir: On 25 March 2003, Jack Straw stated: "Our policy remains that clearly laid down in [UN] resolutions... a [Palestinian] state based on the 1967 borders, an end to the [Israeli] settlements, ...a solution to the refugee problem." (Hansard, column 143) Last week, when the Prime Minister acquiesced to the Bush-Sharon deal, he unilaterally abandoned all three principles. Can the Prime Minister remind us when he announced to Parliament this fundamental change in long-standing British policy? I cannot seem to find a reference anywhere in Hansard?
MIKE GWILLIAM
London E3
So now what do I conclude? The Independent is a mainstream newspaper and its editor - Simon Kelner - is Jewish. So what's wrong with my MP? Is he not worried that the Zionist movement and occasionally the world get told of profound policy changes before the party or Parliament? Apparently not.
Abdullah says "not now George..not yet"
If you can't beat 'em
Ronan Bennett asks "Who will speak out" about Falluja (Comment, April 17)? Answer: none of them! They are a shower of spineless bastards. Edit that how you like.
Stuart Parker
Aughton, Lancs
Well done that man!
April 19, 2004
Who is a Jew?
Blair changes mind about U-turn
Condi raises terror alarm: They may strike in U.S. before elections
April 18, 2004
Victory for Sharon?
The third most hated country in the world
Weasel words of loyal courage?
Blair's ludicrous claim that 'dictators would rejoice' if the occupation forces left Iraq is belied by events in other parts of the world.
The only head of state to be exiled since Saddam was toppled is Haiti's Aristide who was elected. Also, while Gadaffi has abandoned the WMD he didn't have and renounced terrorism abroad, he is still a dictator at home, now with the blessing of Blair.
Mark Elf
April 17, 2004
Israel assassinates Hamas leader Rantissi
Who will speak out?
Busy day today what with a well attended demonstration at Downing Street. In the wake of US massacres in Falluja, where, asks Ronan Bennett, are MPs of conscience?
What does it take to get a New Labour politician to speak out on Iraq? I'm not talking about the likes of Blair, Hoon and Straw - key players so deeply implicated in the cruel tragedy of conquest and occupation that they have no option but to stay the course, even as it spirals into slaughter and chaos. But there are ministers and backbenchers with a history of commitment to human rights. What does it take to shock them out of their baffling silence?
Not the 600 or 700 Iraqis killed over the last fortnight in Falluja, it seems. Perhaps they believe, like the prime minister, that those attacking coalition troops are Saddam loyalists, al-Qaida fighters or religious fanatics, and deserve everything they get. Perhaps they have been reassured by General John Abizaid, head of the US Army's central command, who spoke of the coalition's "judicious use of force". Maybe they accept the reassurance of the commander of the US marines besieging the city that his men are "trained to be precise in their firepower", and that "95% of those killed were legitimate targets".
Let's accept for the moment that the commander is right and accept that the AC-130 gunships and F16 fighter-bombers unleashed against the people of Falluja are precise, that the 500lb bombs falling on the city come under the definition of judicious. Let's look at just a handful of the 5% of civilian casualties the Americans concede they have inflicted.
These include the mother of six-year-old Haider Abdel-Wahab, shot and killed while hanging out laundry; his father, shot in the head; Haider himself, and his brothers, crushed but dug out alive after a US missile struck their house. They include children who died of head wounds. They include an old woman with a bullet wound - still clutching a white flag when aid workers found her. They include an elderly man lying face down at the gate to his house - while inside terrified girls screamed "Baba! Baba!" They include ambulance crews fired on by US troops - and four-year-old Ali Nasser Fadil, wounded during an air strike. The New York Times reporter who found the infant in a Baghdad hospital described him lying in bed, "his eyes wide and fixed on a spot in the ceiling". His left leg had been crudely amputated. The same reporter found 10-year-old Waed Joda by the bedside of his gravely wounded father. "American snipers shot at us as we were trying to flee Falluja," said Waed.
Every one of these incidents has been documented by journalists, aid workers or medical staff. And there are plenty more. Even allowing for casualties caused by the Iraqi resistance, the dread catalogue of American-inflicted suffering and death is long and undeniable. At this point it's worth reminding ourselves that 5% of 600 is 30. But the evidence of the bodies alone gives the lie to the American account: at least 350 of the dead in Falluja have been women and children.
The Americans say they are engaged in a mission to bring to justice the perpetrators of the four security contractors - or mercenaries - killed and mutilated in the city on March 31. Locals see it differently. They describe their occupation, initially by troops of the US 82nd Airborne, as oppressive from the start. Almost as soon as they arrived, in April 2003, US soldiers killed 18 protesters during a demonstration. After six months of occupation, the 82nd Airborne had killed at least 40 civilians and police in the city.
In March, the 82nd Airborne were replaced by a Marine Expeditionary Force and, shortly afterwards, an American soldier was killed. On March 27, marines undertook a "sweep" through the city, described as "revenge" by Mohammed Albalwa, president of the city council. At least six Iraqi civilians, including an 11-year-old boy, were killed. It was in this heightened atmosphere that the mercenaries met their grisly deaths. No one can pretend that the assault on Falluja is anything other than retribution for the mercenaries - even members of the hand-picked Iraqi governing council accept it as such.
On all of this - a shameful and deafening silence. Politicians are not usually so tongue-tied. Remember Peter Hain, leader of the House, after bands of landless black poor invaded white-owned farms in Zimbabwe? The number of white farmers killed was a fraction of the toll of civilians who die every week in Iraq at the hands of coalition forces. Hain was swift to denounce Zimbabwe's government as "uncivilised". He spoke of his "horror" at the killings. Tyranny, he said, was "running riot in Zimbabwe" and "disfiguring the whole of the southern African sub-continent". So far, Hain has been silent about the horror wreaked by US firepower in Falluja and the disfigurement of Iraq by what has by any reckoning been a massacre.
And what about Chris Mullin, a former Tribune editor and now junior minister at the Foreign Office? Best remembered for his campaign to free the Birmingham Six, Mullin is frequently described as a friend of the underdog, with a commitment to human rights. Sadly, these qualities have not been much in evidence recently. Last summer Mullin defended to me the kangaroo courts held in Belmarsh prison, at which anonymous witnesses testify against men imprisoned by the home secretary without charge ("Better than sending them back to their countries of origin where they would be killed," he said). And though he was outraged by the denial of justice to the Birmingham Six, Guantánamo does not disturb him ("September 11 changed everything"). The underdogs of Falluja have yet to move Mullin.
Then there's Hilary Benn, international development secretary, who has spoken of Britain's responsibility to get Iraqi schools and hospitals up and running, to ensure a future for Iraqi children. But it isn't easy to square the rhetoric of international development with that of military occupation: the promise of a good education doesn't mean much to parents dodging US snipers to dig a hole in a sports field in order to bury their child.
The list of the shameful silent could go on: Angela Eagle, a longstanding leftwinger? Silent. Harriet Harman and Patricia Hewitt, former stalwarts of the old National Council for Civil Liberties? Silent. Oona King, who in her maiden speech cited the 1880 Match Girls' strike, has spoken passionately about the 35,000 children who die every day from preventable diseases and denounced the "slaughter and oppression" of the Palestinians in Jenin. Silent. Joan Ruddock, former chair of CND. Silent. Ann Clwyd, defender of the Kurds and the Marsh Arabs, who wrote: "Some will continue to argue that internal repression is not a matter of legitimate concern for other countries. I disagree. There are basic human rights that must be defended." Are we to take it, then, that external repression is acceptable? That the human rights of the inhabitants of Falluja are not worth defending? What has happened to these people? Many of them don't even have ministerial jobs to protect. I have yet to hear any of them acknowledge that what is going on in Falluja is wrong. That killing children is wrong, blasting their houses is wrong, blowing up mosques is wrong, burying a family under a ton of rubble is wrong.
Today the siege of Falluja continues. US troops are massing outside the holy city of Najaf. In the south, the situation has been further inflamed by the British Army shooting 15 people dead in Amara on April 6 (silence there, too). In Baghdad's Sadr City, camouflaged Humvees tour the streets with loudspeakers warning people not to leave their homes. No one seriously believes things are improving in Iraq under occupation. How long before our MPs speak out?
April 16, 2004
Ruby Wax update
April 15, 2004
Bin Laden's latest tape
End of the two state "solution" - Beginning of the end for Zionism
Another "was I wrong? no I wasn't!" comment
April 14, 2004
Terry Jones: Tony really must try harder
The Guardian is so good today I might even go and buy a copy. Terry Jones runs a spoof comment on Tony Blair's "historic struggle" essay that appeared in sunday's Observer.
"Dear Mr and Mrs Blair,
I have just had to mark Tony's essay, Why We Must Never Abandon This Historic Struggle in Iraq, and I am extremely worried.
Your son has been in the sixth form now for several years, studying world politics, and yet his recent essay shows so little grasp of the subject that I can only conclude he has spent most of that time staring out of the window.
His essay, of course, is written with his usual passion and conviction, but, in the real world, passion and conviction do not count for many marks.
Crucially, Tony does not seem to have read any of the first-hand accounts that are easily available and describe what is really going on in Iraq. On the recent escalation in violence, for example, he writes: "The insurgents are former Saddam sympathisers ... terrorist groups linked to al-Qaida and, most recently, followers of ... Moqtada al-Sadr." This is simply not good enough. Tony ignores the multitude of reports indicating that revulsion against the occupation is now widespread among ordinary people."
Devastating intellect from Paul Foot
"Mote and beam, Sir" was a cheeky riposte in a winning sketch in the 1960s satire show Beyond the Fringe. It was a reference to a biblical warning to pompous critics of their fellows. Such critics should, the Bible warns, consider first the beam (great big splinter) in their own eyes before criticising the mote (tiny speck) in other peoples' eyes.
The mote and beam comparison keeps making imbeciles of the dwindling band of ministers and functionaries who seek to defend the military invasion and grisly occupation of Iraq. Paul Bremer is the blinkered reactionary in charge of the administration of that country. Bremer was described in a special Financial Times profile last week as "an imposing figure with a devastating intellect".
Last week, in the middle of the growing chaos in Iraqi cities, Bremer savagely denounced groups "who think power in Iraq should come out of the barrel of a gun". He was not apparently referring to the US and British armed forces who seized power in Iraq (and put him into his powerful post) entirely and exclusively by sustained use of the barrels of thousands of guns, not to mention helicopter gunships, guided missiles, cluster bombs and weapons of people destruction of every conceivable kind. Bremer, in short, is an "imposing figure" in Iraq only because he was able to rely on the greatest firepower on earth.
Again last week, during the uprising in Falluja, Bremer became very annoyed with the insurgents, led, he alleged, by Sheikh Moqtada al-Sadr. On Tuesday last week I turned on the television to see Bremer angrily protesting that Sadr "basically tried to take control of the country". In an attempt to apply Bremer's "devastating intellect" to that sentence, I would define "the country" as Iraq, Sadr as a man who lives in that country, and Bremer, a career diplomat who lives in the US, as a man who not only tried but succeeded in taking over Iraq by force of arms without recourse to the people there (or even the United Nations).
What advice can we offer Bremer and his fellow imperialists, who keep denouncing Iraqi resistance to the invasion and occupation of their country for the violence and duplicity that they themselves regularly deploy? The mote and beam story appears twice in the New Testament, and each time the advice is spot on: "Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye, and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote in thy brother's eye."
April 13, 2004
Tariq Ali: The Iraqi Resistance: a New Phase
TINA to Tony: Martin Kettle in The Guardian
Breathtaking stuff by Martin Kettle today. He says that regardless of the rights or wrongs of the war we should support Blair in Iraq now. Some quotes from the article are magnificent: "He [Blair] was never fully honest about what he was doing and why he was doing it".[biggest understatement since Noah said "hmm looks like rain"] "But strip away the self-indulgent grandiosity, and the current core messages are still surely right" [no; strip away the "self-indulgent grandiosity" and there's nothing left]. "For what is the alternative to the current policy of achieving the best and most secure transition to Iraqi self-government that can be managed in the circumstances? Not even the most uncompromising of Blair's critics have much of an answer to that question." [really? what about those who criticise a constitution that avoids majority rule and guarantees foreign, certainly private, ownership of the bedrock of the economy?] "In most of Iraq, life goes on without lethal violence." This has been true of most of the whole world since the dawn of written history. Most places on earth are not afflicted with with lethal violence, but Iraq, and let's face it Palestine, have more than their fair share. "The only practical and principled course is to back him, though without illusions" [well I'm thinking about it..... Nope chuck him out and get the troops out of Iraq]
Kick Ken out again
April 12, 2004
Guardian daily comment | It's time to judge the pundits
Roy Greenslade, in his haste to condemn (It's time to judge the pundits, April 10), has forgotten to mention the Guardian's own David Aaronovitch, who was also "generously given space" for his pro-war stance.
Alison David
London
April 11, 2004
The Observer jumps through hoops to defend the occupation
Editorial, Aaronovitch and even Blair himself are mobilised for a defence of the war on Iraq. Editorial blames banditry, Blair invokes the facing down of dictators and Aaronovitch says "all Iraqis (and Palestinians and Arabs generally) are liars". Well almost - but see for yourselves.
April 10, 2004
CNN doesn't bow to Israeli pressure says CNN (so it must be true)
If CNN doesn't bow to Israeli pressure then it must already be a full-blown Zionist organisation that doesn't need any Israeli pressure. CNN has run a special web page detailing suicide bombings and it has covered up the killing of its own staff by Israel. Its founder Ted Turner once said that Israel and the Palestinians are terrorising each other before apologising for conveying the impression that Israeli violence equates to Palestinian violence.
April 09, 2004
Ruby Wax regrets....
David Aaronovitch was right! Says he.
For the second time since the invasion of Iraq, David Aaronovitch has been given space to wonder whether he was right to support the invasion. Guess what. He was right! Just as he was in February '04. The uprising isn't a principled resistance to a bad constitution. No it's a handful of Shia extremists jockeying for position. And when Naomi Klein said that US trained troops had fired on unarmed demonstrators she was wrong because an unnamed British journalist said so. But wait there's more. The sanctions against Iraq were an earnest attempt to doslodge Saddam. Read it yourself, Aaronovitch says that. OK here I'll copy and paste: "But this is a people who we have (and please excuse my language here) fucked up for a long time now. We colonised them, then neglected them, then interfered out of our own interests, not theirs. We tolerated Saddam and - somewhat later - even supported him. We waged war on him, but refused to help liberate his people. Instead we hit them with sanctions which the regime (which we wrongly believed would fall[maybe Aaronovitch thought so but the "Allies" - US/UK didn't]) ensured caused the maximum damage to the people. We and the Russians and the French, and the UN, and the Turks and the other Arabs, permitted millions of people to die or be reduced to misery and pauperdom.
So, of all the things we have done, the invasion may be bloody appalling, but it is the least bloody appalling thing of all. And the only thing that has offered hope. " Can you believe the chutzpah of this guy? The sanctions were a way of reducing Iraq to a wreck of a place without running the risk of a people led "regime change". Hence the let-down of resistance after the first Gulf war. America even allowed Saddam to keep his helicopter gunships to put down the rising. The worst part of this puff piece for the war is the timing. He must have filed it within 24 hours before or after the American missile attack on the Abdul-Aziz al-Samarrai mosque compound killing forty civilians. Aaronovitch isn't responsible for the timing but what's The Guardian's excuse? Still, in the interests of balance, the main section has Sami Ramadani providing a welcome antedote to Aaronovitch with facts, wit and the concept that Aaronovitch always avoids: context. Aaronovitch does have some support though. Check out "instapundit".
April 08, 2004
Linda Grant tells more tales
"Late last year, the award-winning novelist Linda Grant moved to Tel Aviv for four months. How could people bear to live there, she wanted to know, amid daily reports of violence, corruption and despair? What she discovered was a society in a state of profound denial - and the horrifying possibility that there may be no solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict " .
This is truly terrible, I mean how on earth did a colonial settler state, conceived in Switzerland in the 1890s, based on an ethnic cleansing campaign mooted for fifty years before it actually began in earnest in November 1947 and maintained by an array of apartheid laws and relentless aggression to the natives and neighbours of Palestine, ever degenerate into "violence, corruption and despair"? Well in between the mealy mouthed hand-wringing we find that Linda has no solution for the problem in Palestine but she does identify the problem. It's the suicide bombings. Yes, those nasty atrocities that began about one hundred years after the Austrian Theodor Herzl "founded the Jewish state" and first floated the idea of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine's Arabs to make way for the co-ethno-religionists of Linda Grant and me. (Mark Elf)
April 07, 2004
Where would we be without scripture? Welcome return to Private Eye of the Book of Sharon. But it gets better. Hackwatch is a regular feature usually singling out one "journalist" for scrutiny. This edition exposes those journalists who ran with stories (literally) from the so-called Iraqi National Congress. And guess who ran with the most INC planted stories: take a bow, Christopher Hitchens. But wait it gets even better still. You'd expect the Evening Standard to run with INC/CIA planted guff, but one of Hitchens's pieces was in .......(you've guessed already).....The Guardian. What were they thinking of? The worst part of this is that the reason for this appearing now in Private Eye is that the INC have been "justifying" the $4,000,000 per annum they get from the CIA by reference to the false reports they plant in the western media. It has to be admitted, Christopher Hitchens fooled a lot of people. We thought he made up his own lies. Private Eye's a bit skimpy on line so you might want to shell out the ?1.30 cover price or steal a copy.
April 06, 2004
April 05, 2004
The worrying thing about Ottolenghi is that he is a Research Fellow at Oxford University. It's extremely galling that such a prestigious house of learning can offer cover to an apologist for racist war criminals. Check out this article arguing that "anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism" to see how disingenuous he can be. At one point he says that Noam Chomsky doesn't actually believe in his own criticisms of Israel, he is simply trying to ingratiate himself with leftist gentiles. Then see Michael Rosen's response. Michael Rosen of course is a Jewish anti-Zionist so perhaps he's just trying to ingratiate himself with his SWP comrades.
April 04, 2004
April 03, 2004
Ruby Wax raises £30 k for ethnic cleansing.
The Jewish National Fund, a "charity" registered in London, is the main beneficiary of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine, which began in earnest in November 1947. The racist organisation had a fundraising event in Glasgow last Sunday. Apparently police kept demonstrators well away from the hotel where the event was being held but a fire alarm sent the ethnic cleansing enthusiasts out on to the street where the demonstrators were ready to jeer them. Whether Ruby Wax was paid or not has not been reported. However, when former US President Bill Clinton appeared on the same platform in 2001, he was reported to have been paid £200,000. No wonder he blamed Arafat for the collapse of the Oslo "peace" process.
April 01, 2004
The largest rise in anti-Semitic violence was in France, where incidents rose six-fold in 2002 compared with 2001. Of the 313 racist, xenophobic or anti-Semitic incidents reported in 2002, 193 were directed at the Jewish community.
In the UK, statistics showed 350 reported anti-Semitic incidents in 2002, a 13 per cent rise from the previous year. Figures for the first quarter of 2003 showed a 75 per cent increase in incidents compared with the same quarter of 2002.
Now check the Metropolitan police's statistics. The latest information I could find was for the year 2000 when there were over 23,000 racial incidents in the Greater London area alone. I haven't seen a breakdown of these figures, nor have I seen a police definition of "incident". Even so, the total figure for race attacks in Belgium put at 313 seems extremely low. And the fact that 193 of these were on Jews is very strange given that most Jews are well assimilated in western Europe. The problem here is that we can expect an increase in reports on anti-Semitism whenever Israel behaves badly. Couple that with the fact that a straight forward report on war crimes committed by the last of the colonial settler states is recorded as being anti-Semitic and we find it almost impossible to establish whether anti-Semitism is an issue or not. And if it is, should it be treated differently from other forms of racism?