PALESTINE Omens of a third Intifada
ISRAEL-PALESTINE
Omens of a third Intifada
Analysis by Mel Frykberg Qalandia, West Bank, May 16 (IPS) - Israel miscalculated. He thought it would keep under control the day of the Nakba (catastrophe), commemorated with three days of demonstrations that culminated in The Long March, in memory of the mass displacement of Palestinians that 63 years ago marked the birth of the Jewish state.
Those three days of mourning, marked by protests, demonstrations, marches and riots, culminating on Sunday in the Long March. Thousands of unarmed Palestinian refugees marched through the borders of Israel from the West Bank, Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Egypt.
In Syria, tens managed to climb the border fence and cross into the Golan Heights, annexed by Israel. The Israeli army shot and killed about 14 demonstrators in Lebanon and Syria, accusing the Lebanese forces to be responsible for the deaths of their own countrymen.
These border crossings were taken by surprise intelligence officials and security of Israel. Waiting for mass demonstrations in the occupied territories and Israel itself, thousands of riot police were put on alert in areas where anticipated extreme fighting. Few soldiers were in charge of the northern borders.
security forces prevented Egypt and Jordan Hundreds of pro-Palestinian supporters from crossing into Israel. Egyptian police dispersal methods used against thousands of demonstrators in Alexandria and Cairo, protesting outside the embassy and the consulate of Israel.
Meanwhile, thousands of Palestinians wounded in West Bank and Gaza. Israeli troops fired their machine guns against hundreds of unarmed Palestinians, many of them women and children, as they approached the Erez crossing in northern Gaza Strip. A Palestinian was killed and dozens seriously injured. IPS
spent Sunday at the intersection of Qalandia, in occupied East Jerusalem. During the day, ambulances with their sirens blaring were a side to side as they struggled to negotiate the passage in the streets, where some 1,000 Palestinian youths clashed with hundreds of Israeli soldiers, as well as riot police and undercover.
burning tires off a black smoke was mixed with clouds of tear gas. Dozens of Palestinians were treated for complications resulting from inhaling the gas, and some doctors were attacked while commenting on the unusual intensity of the gas.
Dozens of other Palestinians were treated for injuries they received from the bullets of rubber-coated steel, fired from close range.
Qalandia Clashes, which continued into the evening, were marked by relentless waves of young men who approached the checkpoint until gas and rubber bullets made them retreat. Challenging atmosphere was characterized by what appears to be a new unity of purpose.
One of the masked protesters paused to eat a sandwich and drink some water, told IPS that the Israelis will fight to the end.
"They want to drive to my grandparents' home in Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem. Perhaps we should sit idly by do not think so," he told IPS.
As I watched the fighting, Yazen, shopowner windshield, told IPS that "another Palestinian uprising (Intifada) is coming. "
In the first Intifada, Yazen spent six years in an Israeli prison. His brother is currently serving a sentence of 17 years for armed resistance to occupation.
Activists from both major parties Palestinian Fatah and Hamas (the Arabic acronym for Islamic Resistance Movement) remained steady while busloads of Palestinians from other West Bank cities and villages joined them.
The businesses located along the street turned into makeshift clinics while Palestinian medical teams treated the wounded on the floor. The merchants, who decided no work that day, allowed the protesters refuge from the bullets and gas and gave them water and tissues.
Working at home handing out potatoes and chopped onions, antidotes against tear gas as protesters went to the aid of their wounded comrades.
Although the saturation of media coverage and other international hot spots Qalandia probably ensured that Israeli forces are contained in other areas further away from the media gaze were accused of using tactics of intimidation and vindictiveness in dealing with the demonstrators. On Friday, during protests against the wall separating the West Bank Israel in the village of Nabi Saleh, near Ramallah, a tear gas canister thrown at close range hit the head of a U.S. citizen. The fact seems to be a deliberate attack by Israeli forces.
The man was seriously injured by the blow and was taken to hospital. According to Israeli law, these high-speed vessels must be fired up, forming an arc, not less than 40 feet away, due to its lethal nature.
In recent years, several other U.S. citizens suffered brain damage and even lost an eye in the wake of similar attacks. Countless Palestinians have died or been injured in incidents identical.
An Israeli activist who broke his arm when Israeli soldiers fired at him, had to walk several kilometers on a rough terrain for medical treatment after the commanding officer of Nabi Saleh prevented ambulances were made to evacuate these the wounded.
Israeli intelligence had predicted that there would be riots on Sunday, but said in confidence that would be limited and would be beyond control.
however, seems to be wrong. Experts predict the possible outbreak of a third intifada (the first was in 1987 and the second in 2000) to September, when the Authority Palestinian submit its claim for an independent state before the United Nations Organization.
OFERTAS DE EMPLEO EN MÉXICO, Lerdo, Municipio, Ayuntamiento, Estado,
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Can You Dye The Bottom Of A Shoes?
Abbas declared three days of mourning and ordered the crackdown on pro-Palestinian marches
Abbas declared three days of mourning and ordered the crackdown on the massive pro-Palestinian marches
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Sunday three days of mourning and ordered the deaths of 15 Palestinian demonstrators in clashes with Israeli soldiers massive refugee marches across five borders of Israel to demand the creation of a state.
In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the performance of the Army and said his country wants peace with a Palestinian state who wants to end the conflict, not to continue, in a clear reference to the recent reconciliation and political pact between Abbas and the radical anti-Israel group Hamas.
marches on Sunday, the date recalls the uprooting of more than 750,000 Palestinians by the creation of the State of Israel, in 1948, came amid dissatisfaction with the Abbas government stalled efforts to create a state Palestinian expressed publicly on numerous occasions.
marches initiative, which is unprecedented, also coincides with an Arab world, emboldened by a wave of protests that covers much of the Middle East.
Abbas, who West considers a "moderate" and that has long been in search of alternative ways to achieve a Palestinian state, today condemned the killing of demonstrators who tried to violate the borders of Israel from the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.
"Your blood will not be spilled in vain, because his blood was shed for freedom and the rights of our people," said Abbas.
flags on public buildings of the Palestinian West Bank region were collected up to half mast.
The Israeli army said on Sunday that the demonstrations were prompted by Iran with the help of regional allies: Syria, the Islamist group Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Islamist movement Hamas in Gaza.
Abbas's government said it was a purely Palestinian initiative organized through Facebook by a group of activists, many of whom live in exile.
Authorities said at least 15 Palestinians, all refugees living in camps in southern Syria and Lebanon, were shot dead by Israeli soldiers. The Israeli army said it opened fire on "troublemakers" who violated the border and threw stones at soldiers.
Four of the deaths occurred in the Golan Heights, a territory occupied by Israel from Syria during the war Six Days, in 1967.
The White House yesterday supported the Israeli view that the facts were encouraged by Syria.
"We are deeply against the Syrian government's role in inciting the protests yesterday in the Golan Heights," said White House spokesman, Jay Carney.
"Such conduct is unacceptable and serves as distracting from the ongoing repression of the Syrian government demonstrations in their own country," Carney was quoted by CNN.
in Israel, and in a clear allusion to Hamas, Prime Minister Netanyahu told parliament that his country "can not make peace" with a government if it includes a group which, like the Palestinian Islamist movement aims at the destruction of Israel.
Netanyahu questioned the Palestinians' commitment to peace after the demonstrations and violence yesterday, and stressed that Hamas leaders call for end of the "Zionist enterprise."
The Israeli government also announced it planned to lodge a protest against Syria and Lebanon at the UN. In
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement Sunday that said he was "troubled" by violence and asked to avoid provocation, tension and civilian casualties.
yesterday agitation spread to Egypt, where police fired tear gas and shots into the air to disperse thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators who protested against Israel's embassy in Cairo.
Protesters burned an Israeli flag, chanted anti-Israel and demanded the expulsion of Ambassador cries of the Jewish state.
Twenty people were arrested and 353 were injured in clashes with police, Egyptian officials said.
The Israeli army stepped up its presence in the North, having been taken by surprise Sunday, according to military admitted Jews.
Israel expected any unrest on the anniversary of exile focus on mass Palestinian West Bank, as in previous years.
The Golan Heights, hundreds of Palestinian refugees crossed the Syrian border and infiltrated the territory, which Israel annexed after the 1967 war in a move not recognized by the international community.
Four infiltrators were killed in clashes with Israeli security forces.
limit in nearby Lebanon, at least 10 people were killed by fire from Israeli soldiers as they approached the border fence with Israel, Lebanon, officials said.
Another Palestinian, the fatality number 15, was fatally shot by an Israeli sniper when inattentive plant a bomb, Israeli military sources said.
In Jordan, the police clashed with Palestinians who tried to cross into Israel and said that 25 people, including 11 policemen Jordanians, were injured.
The outbreak of violence came at a critical moment for the peace process in the Middle East and in particular for the U.S. role, the main guarantor of all agreements signed.
George Mitchell, the Middle East envoy of President Barack Obama resigned Friday after more than two years of fruitless efforts, and the U.S. leader is scheduled to give a speech this week on the Middle East and receive Netanyahu at the White House .
In the absence of peace talks, Abbas plans to call a vote at the UN in September to recognize a Palestinian state, with or without prior agreement with Israel.
Abbas declared three days of mourning and ordered the crackdown on the massive pro-Palestinian marches
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Sunday three days of mourning and ordered the deaths of 15 Palestinian demonstrators in clashes with Israeli soldiers massive refugee marches across five borders of Israel to demand the creation of a state.
In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended the performance of the Army and said his country wants peace with a Palestinian state who wants to end the conflict, not to continue, in a clear reference to the recent reconciliation and political pact between Abbas and the radical anti-Israel group Hamas.
marches on Sunday, the date recalls the uprooting of more than 750,000 Palestinians by the creation of the State of Israel, in 1948, came amid dissatisfaction with the Abbas government stalled efforts to create a state Palestinian expressed publicly on numerous occasions.
marches initiative, which is unprecedented, also coincides with an Arab world, emboldened by a wave of protests that covers much of the Middle East.
Abbas, who West considers a "moderate" and that has long been in search of alternative ways to achieve a Palestinian state, today condemned the killing of demonstrators who tried to violate the borders of Israel from the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.
"Your blood will not be spilled in vain, because his blood was shed for freedom and the rights of our people," said Abbas.
flags on public buildings of the Palestinian West Bank region were collected up to half mast.
The Israeli army said on Sunday that the demonstrations were prompted by Iran with the help of regional allies: Syria, the Islamist group Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Islamist movement Hamas in Gaza.
Abbas's government said it was a purely Palestinian initiative organized through Facebook by a group of activists, many of whom live in exile.
Authorities said at least 15 Palestinians, all refugees living in camps in southern Syria and Lebanon, were shot dead by Israeli soldiers. The Israeli army said it opened fire on "troublemakers" who violated the border and threw stones at soldiers.
Four of the deaths occurred in the Golan Heights, a territory occupied by Israel from Syria during the war Six Days, in 1967.
The White House yesterday supported the Israeli view that the facts were encouraged by Syria.
"We are deeply against the Syrian government's role in inciting the protests yesterday in the Golan Heights," said White House spokesman, Jay Carney.
"Such conduct is unacceptable and serves as distracting from the ongoing repression of the Syrian government demonstrations in their own country," Carney was quoted by CNN.
in Israel, and in a clear allusion to Hamas, Prime Minister Netanyahu told parliament that his country "can not make peace" with a government if it includes a group which, like the Palestinian Islamist movement aims at the destruction of Israel.
Netanyahu questioned the Palestinians' commitment to peace after the demonstrations and violence yesterday, and stressed that Hamas leaders call for end of the "Zionist enterprise."
The Israeli government also announced it planned to lodge a protest against Syria and Lebanon at the UN. In
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement Sunday that said he was "troubled" by violence and asked to avoid provocation, tension and civilian casualties.
yesterday agitation spread to Egypt, where police fired tear gas and shots into the air to disperse thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators who protested against Israel's embassy in Cairo.
Protesters burned an Israeli flag, chanted anti-Israel and demanded the expulsion of Ambassador cries of the Jewish state.
Twenty people were arrested and 353 were injured in clashes with police, Egyptian officials said.
The Israeli army stepped up its presence in the North, having been taken by surprise Sunday, according to military admitted Jews.
Israel expected any unrest on the anniversary of exile focus on mass Palestinian West Bank, as in previous years.
The Golan Heights, hundreds of Palestinian refugees crossed the Syrian border and infiltrated the territory, which Israel annexed after the 1967 war in a move not recognized by the international community.
Four infiltrators were killed in clashes with Israeli security forces.
limit in nearby Lebanon, at least 10 people were killed by fire from Israeli soldiers as they approached the border fence with Israel, Lebanon, officials said.
Another Palestinian, the fatality number 15, was fatally shot by an Israeli sniper when inattentive plant a bomb, Israeli military sources said.
In Jordan, the police clashed with Palestinians who tried to cross into Israel and said that 25 people, including 11 policemen Jordanians, were injured.
The outbreak of violence came at a critical moment for the peace process in the Middle East and in particular for the U.S. role, the main guarantor of all agreements signed.
George Mitchell, the Middle East envoy of President Barack Obama resigned Friday after more than two years of fruitless efforts, and the U.S. leader is scheduled to give a speech this week on the Middle East and receive Netanyahu at the White House .
In the absence of peace talks, Abbas plans to call a vote at the UN in September to recognize a Palestinian state, with or without prior agreement with Israel.
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