Fundamental Human Rights

The Right to a Sustainable Future [Filtered & blocked by Google!]

UN war crimes in Gaza Report: Balderdash!

Posted by terres on September 16, 2009

submitted by a reader

Ethnic cleansing in Gaza, NOT war

To call the ongoing genocide in Gaza ‘war Crimes,’ serves to hide the truth about ethnic cleansing and lend legitimacy to Israeli atrocities

When UN calls the ongoing ethnic cleansing in Gaza ‘war crimes,’ it subliminally establishes the falsity that what happened in Gaza was a “war” [sic.]

The audiences are left to conclude naturally [sic] that awful things can and do occur in wars. Further, it treats the Israeli military operations between December 27 and January 18, 2009 as one isolated incident, a make-believe that Israel committed no other atrocities, before or after the Gaza ‘war.’

Don’t let the UN report and its author fool you, despite its strong language! The Gaza massacre wasn’t just an isolated ‘war’; it was another shameful chapter in Israel’s ongoing genocide of Palestinians.

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Posted in Gaza massacre, Occupied Palestine, UN Gaza Report, UN report | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Another US-NATO Massacre Bloodies Afghanistan

Posted by terres on September 4, 2009

Another Dark Day for War Criminal Obama

Another NATO air strike kills 90 people, mostly civilians

Another NATO air strike blew up two fuel tankers hijacked by the Taliban in the northern province of Kunduz,  Afghanistan, killing 90 people, mostly civilians.

A spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) under NATO told AFP: “It was an ISAF airstrike.”

NATO dead-donkey AFP -DT
A dead donkey, plastic oil cans and debris lie scattered around the burnt-out oil tankers. Picture: AFP/GETTY. Image may be subject to copyright.

The governor of Kunduz told reporters that at least two tankers carrying jet fuel had been hijacked.

According to Witnesses, scores of villagers scavenging for fuel were killed in the air strike.

The district police chief told AFP news agency that Taliban insurgents tried to drive away a fuel tanker that they had earlier  hijacked.

“The fuel tanker got stuck in the river. There were local civilians with them as well. They  were bombed,” the police chief said.

Dozens of seriously wounded people with extensive burns are crowding a hospital in Kunduz, AFP reported.

Spoils of War:  ‘Free Fuel’

Wounded people with extensive burns crowded a hospital in Kunduz, the capital of the northern province which lies on a main supply line for the more than 100,000 foreign troops based in Afghanistan, an AFP reporter said.

Around 200 to 250 villagers were believed to have gathered to take free fuel from the tankers which had been hijacked by the insurgents, said health ministry spokesman Farid Rahid in Kabul.

“Unfortunately a big number of civilians were killed and wounded. The provincial health director can confirm that 12 wounded and one dead person were admitted to the provincial hospital,” he told AFP.

A witness told AFP that the militants had been trying to transport the tankers across a river to villages in Angorbagh.

“They managed to take one of the tankers over the river. The second got stuck so they told villagers to come and take the diesel,” he said.

“Villagers rushed to the fuel tanker with any available container that they had, including water buckets and pots for cooking oil.

“There were 10 to 15 Taliban on top of the tanker. This was when they were bombed. Everyone around the fuel tanker died.”

“Nobody was in one piece. Hands, legs and body parts were scattered everywhere. Those who were away from the fuel tanker were badly burnt.”

Afghan Nato air strike AFP
An injured person is carried into the main hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan. A NATO airstrike Friday destroyed a fuel tanker hijacked by Taliban insurgents, causing dozens of casualties including civilians, officials and witnesses said. Photo: AFP. Image may be subject to copyright.

“America’s entire war on terror is an exercise in imperialism. This may come as a shock to Americans, who don’t like to think of their country as an empire. But what else can you call America’s legions of soldiers, spooks and special forces straddling the globe?” —Michael Ignatieff, New York Times, July 28, 2002

More Photos

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Posted in Afghanistan, civilian casualties, fuel tanker airstrike, ISAF, Kabul, war crimes obama | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments »

CNN: The Zionist News Network!

Posted by terres on August 18, 2009

You might as well call it ZNN, for Zionist News Network!

While this article is about Wolf Blitzer, the CNN Fifth Column operative in the US, it would be appropriate to mention the spy network’s so-called Chief International Correspondent, Christian Amanpour, who ought to be nominated as the most biased, unprofessional, and pro-Zionist “reporter” of the year for her utterly false and dishonest coverage of the Georgian bombardment of Tskhinvali, the provincial capital of South Ossetia.

The following article is mirrored at ICH

Israel’s Fifth Column

By Jeff Gates

August 17, 2009 ” Khaleej Times” — In October 2007, Defense Secretary Robert Gates coined a generic term to describe the most challenging combatants when waging unconventional warfare. He called them simply “the people in between.” Those people, a dominant force in mainstream American media, comprise a fifth column in support of those skilled at waging war by way of deception.

The term ‘fifth column’ originated in the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s to depict forces that clandestinely undermine a populace — from within — to aid an external enemy. The term was later cited as a rationale for interning citizens during WWII, including Germans in the UK and Japanese in the US Israelis routinely refer to Arab-Israelis as a fifth column residing within what Tel Aviv describes as the Jewish state.

Though misapplied in practice, the term remains an apt depiction of how internal influence can be wielded by a hostile force. In the Information Age, this fifth column focuses on those ‘in between’ domains where modest numbers can wield outsized influence. Television news is optimal as modern-day media operates “in between” a populace and the facts they require for a system of governance reliant on informed consent.

The dominant influence of pro-Israelis in mainstream media is not the focus of this article. Here the focus is Wolf Blitzer at Cable News Network who typifies how “the people in between” manipulate public opinion in plain sight and, to date, with legal impunity.

While working as a Washington correspondent for Jerusalem Post (1973-1990), Blitzer served as an editor of Near East Report, a publication founded by Isaiah Kenen, a registered foreign agent of Israel, who also founded the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. AIPAC coordinates a network of transnational political operatives known loosely as “the Israel lobby.” Neither AIPAC nor Blitzer has yet registered as a foreign agent in the US.

The son of Polish Ashkenazi émigrés, Blitzer first emerged on the media scene in 1989 with the publication of Territory of Lies, an account of Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard that The New York Times obligingly included in its list of “Notable Books of the Year.” Reviewer Robert Friedman described Blitzer’s sympathetic treatment of Pollard’s treason (the theft of more than one million classified documents) “a slick piece of damage control that would make his former employers at AIPAC (not to mention Israel’s Defense Ministry) proud.”

As a writer for Hebrew language newspapers in the 1970s, Blitzer wrote under the name Ze’ev Barak—Hebrew for “wolf lightning.” The Blitzer media presence first emerged with his CNN coverage of the Gulf War in 1991 and the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Initially a military reporter for CNN, he became a fixture on television news as CNN’s Clinton-era White House correspondent until 1999 when he became a high profile CNN anchor.

Since August 2005, CNN (marketed as “the most trusted name in news”) has featured the former AIPAC editor broadcasting from a White House-associative studio set branded as “The Situation Room.” CNN colleague John King deploys a similar credibility enhancing set by broadcasting from “The State of the Union.”

On one key media principle US law is clear: the airwaves belong to the public. The nation’s Founders knew that the preservation of self-governance depends on an informed populace. That’s why modern-day lawmakers enacted legislation to ensure that media outlets are not concentrated in a few hands, enabling a fifth column to shape public opinion around a predetermined agenda. Little could America’s first lawmakers have known that an ideologically aligned few would concentrate broadcast media in the hands of those who share an undisclosed bias. When Likud Prime Minister Ariel Sharon fell ill in Israel, Blitzer’s broadcast originated from Jerusalem. Likewise, when Israel invaded Lebanon in July 2006. Blitzer again relocated to Israel to focus viewer attention on the situation there.

As Tel Aviv sought to expand the war to Iran, several anti-Zionist rabbis appeared in Teheran alongside Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who echoed their wish that Zionism be “erased from the pages of history” (widely reported as a wish to “wipe Israel off the map”). Rather than interview these dissident rabbis, Blitzer featured David Duke, a former head of the Ku Klux Klan. Rather than associate the Iranian president with anti-
Zionism, Blitzer used the Situation Room to associate him with racism and anti-Semitism.

Between the US populace and the facts they require for informed consent lies an “in between” domain. In that realm is found a network of like-minded fifth column operatives whose pro-Israeli bias works unseen — yet in plain sight — to shape public opinion around a predetermined agenda. That agenda-shaping “news” routinely features commentators from think tanks who share the same bias.

What is the reach of this media-induced corruption of informed consent? According to CNN’s August 2009 advertising in The New York Times, this cable network delivers trusted news to 70.6 million television viewers in the US. What’s been the cost in blood and treasure of this undisclosed bias — not just to the US but also worldwide?

The most trusted name in news featured National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice in September 2002 when she issued a fact-free warning about Iraqi WMD: “we don’t want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud.” From the Pentagon’s perspective, “the people in between” are waging unconventional warfare. From the perspective of this enemy within, the only unconventional aspect of their deception is the fact that a long-deceived public is now learning about it—many of them for the first time. The displacement of facts with what a populace can be induced to believe is the very threat to personal freedom that the Founders sought to escape. The only modern aspect of this ancient form of warfare is the reach of the media technologies with which such deception can now operate — as with CNN — on a global scale.

Jeff Gates is a widely acclaimed author, attorney, investment banker, educator and consultant to government, corporate and union leaders worldwide. See criminalstate.com

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Posted in Amanpour, Israel’s Fifth Column, Jewish state, Tskhinvali, Wolf Blitzer | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

“I WAS WRONG!”

Posted by terres on August 18, 2009

Jewish Mom realizes Zionist upbringing wrong

Also mirrored at ICH

rabbis sheep horn reuters
Rabbis blow rams’ horns known as shofars during a flight over Israel August 10, 2009. REUTERS/Yehuda Shlezinger/Israel Hayom. Image may be subject to copyright.

“Dozens of rabbis and Kabbalah mystics armed with ceremonial trumpets have taken to the skies over Israel to battle the H1N1 flu virus, Israeli media said on Tuesday.” Reuters.

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Posted in illegal occupation, occupied territories, palestine, Zionist ignorance, zionist state | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Indian Police Murders Unarmed Man in Custody

Posted by terres on August 15, 2009

This is the police; bang, bang, you’re dead!

Indian Police Murders Man in Broad Daylight!

The following photos show Indian police killing a hospital attendant in a market in Imphal, the capital of northeastern state of Manipur,  on the border with Myanmar (Burma).

The police had originally claimed that they shot dead Chongkham Sanjit, 27, after he fired on them as they chased him through the market, on July 23.

The Manipur police alleged that they had found a 9mm Mauser pistol on the dead man, whom they said was a member of an illegal group.

These photos, published by the investigative magazine, Tehelka, however show the special police force apprehending an unarmed Mr Sanjit, frisking him and taking him into a pharmacy as one of the  policemen reaches for his pistol.

The policemen are then seen dragging out the victim’s corpse and loading it on to the back of a pickup truck, next to the body of a pregnant woman, who was shot dead in the crossfire of an earlier police shootout.

The apparent summary execution occurred in Imphal, at about 10.30am barely 0.5 km from the state assembly building where the legislators were in secession.

The images may be subject to copyright. The caption were provided by Times Online, UK, with minor editing by Moderator.

Shoot first, don’t worry about answering any question later!

India police 1
Image # 1. Chongkham Sanjit, 27, is arrested by police commandos in a post office in the capital of Manipur, northeast India. The red arrow shows his short journey from arrest to the place of his daylight summary execution.

India Police 2
Image # 2. Mr Sanjit is apparently going willingly with the commandos who have arrested him. He does not appear armed, as was claimed by the officers after his death.

India-police 3
Image # 3. But an officer reaches for his pistol as Mr Sanjit is escorted. They are standing barely 500 meters from the state assembly. [It’s difficult to believe that this PREMEDITATED summary execution,  carried out in apparent cold blood, was anything but a shoot-to-kill policy, procedure which the police was AUTHORIZED  and INSTRUCTED to follow. Moderator.]

India-police 4
Image # 4. Then Mr Sanjit is dragged by the commandos into the pharmacy, where he is apparently killed.

india police 5
Image # 5. Mr Sanjit’s dead body is then thrown into a truck. On the left is the body of a pregnant woman caught in the crossfire of an earlier police shootout.

On behalf of the blog contributors and the readers, the Moderator has sent an email to the Dr Manmohan Singh, the Indian PM, demanding action to bring the criminal police officers to justice for the apparent summary execution of an unarmed man in their custody.

Text of the Blog Moderators message to Dr Manmohan Singh, the Indian Prime Minister :

Dear Prime Minister Singh

On behalf of our Human Rights Blog readers, contributors and moderators, I write to express our outrage at the apparent summary execution of an unarmed man by the Indian Police Commandos, while the victim was in their custody, in Imphal, the state of Manipur, on July 23, 2009.

The photographs of this highly distressing execution are posted at our blog Fundamental Human Rights at the following URL:

https://rtsf.wordpress.com/2009/08/15/indian-police-murders-unarmed-man-in-custody/

We anticipate an immediate investigation by your government leading to the arrest and prosecution of the cold-blood murderers.

Respectfully,

TERRES, The Blog Moderator

The response, if any, will be posted here later:


Posted in Dr Manmohan Singh, Indian democracy, Manipur police, shoot first, shoot to kill policy | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Murder in Baghdad’s Green Zone

Posted by terres on August 12, 2009

BORN TO KILL [anyone!] – Part 2

In Part I

BORN TO KILL [anyone!] Ticking Time Bombs

After a US soldier shot dead five of his colleagues at Camp Liberty, a base near the Iraqi capital Baghdad … You were asked to

See if you can work out the logic flow

i. Intelligent humans don’t kill other people
ii. Unintelligent people can and do kill
iii. Training and arming unintelligent people to kill turns them into assassination machines. They become a deadly threat to everyone!

In BORN TO KILL [anyone!] – Part 2, the logical fault line rears its ugly head [and tentacles] again.

The following news item from BBC on-line reveals yet another act of aggression by the “dogs of war” on their own pack. An employee of the UK mercenary company ArmorGroup Iraq,  British mercenary Danny Fitzsimons, murdered two of his mercenary-brothers-in-arms, Briton Paul McGuigan and Australian Darren Hoare on Sunday.

Guard family calls for fair trial

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/lancashire/8196208.stm
Tuesday, 11 August 2009 19:48 UK

Danny Fitzsimons

Danny Fitzsimons was working as a private security guard

The family of a man from Lancashire who has been arrested in Iraq over a double fatal shooting say they fear he may not get a fair trial.

Security guard Danny Fitzsimons is being held over the death of two contractors in Baghdad’s Green Zone.

UK company ArmorGroup Iraq said Briton Paul McGuigan and Australian colleague Darren Hoare were killed on Sunday.

Mr Fitzsimons’ father Eric and step-mother Liz say they want the former soldier to be tried in the UK.

He is currently being held in “pre-trial detention”, BBC correspondent Natalia Antelava said.

Mrs Fitzsimons, who lives in Whitworth, said: “If he has done this crime then obviously he has to stand trial but, we would just want him to stand trial here.

“Our legal system is fair and we feel he would get a better trial because there are other things to take into account in this.”

Embedded Media –>Mr Fitzsimons could face the death penalty if convicted of murder in Iraq.

He went to school in Royton, Oldham, and was in the army for eight years, serving in Afghanistan and Kosovo.

Mr Fitzsimons said he has been traumatised by his recent experiences in Iraq and had seen many people killed and injured by bombs.

He is also accused of wounding an Iraqi and is continuing to be questioned by Iraqi authorities.

A second British ArmorGroup employee was also questioned about the shooting but released later by police.

An Iraqi military spokesman said the incident “started as a squabble”.

A spokesman for ArmorGroup Iraq paid tribute to the dead men, describing them as “experienced, dedicated operators”.

Mr and Mrs Fitzsimons said their thoughts were with the men’s families.

“We do feel very very sorry and heartbroken for them… aren’t we?

“We’re not saying that Daniel doesn’t have to face what he’s done, he does. He does have to face that. And we know he does.

“But what we want is for it to be fair, and unfortunately where he is now, we don’t think it will be.”

A Foreign Office spokeswoman said the Iraqi police were investigating.

The Green Zone is a heavily protected region of Iraq’s capital city, which houses Iraqi government, coalition headquarters and most embassies. Copyright BBC

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Posted in ArmorGroup Iraq, baghdad's Green Zone, Danny Fitzsimons, Darren Hoare, Paul McGuigan | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

3 More Afghan Kids Killed in Nato Air Strike

Posted by terres on August 6, 2009

Mr President, how would you feel if they were your kids?

It’s totally unacceptable, a decade into the 21st century, for the military powers of the world to occupy defenseless countries, and massacre their populations at whim.

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the former Danish prime minister, who has been appointed the new Secretary-General of the illegal NATO,  visiting Kabul, declared that since the new orders were issued there has been “a drastic decline in the number of civilian casualties,” although he provided no figures. AP reported.

“It is our clear intention to do everything possible to reduce the number of civilian casualties to an absolute minimum,” Fogh Rasmussen said at a joint news conference with Hamid Karzai.

His speech came just hours after “outraged Afghan villagers said a pre-dawn airstrike had killed three children and a man in a southern village.”

An Associated Press reporter and photographer saw residents of Kowuk bring the bodies of three boys and a man to the guesthouse of the Kandahar governor from their village, which is 12 miles (20 kilometers) north of the provincial capital, Kandahar city. The angry villagers shouted “Death to America! Death to infidels!” as they displayed the corpses in the back of a pickup truck.

ADDITION Afghanistan
Afghan villagers look at the bodies of two children after they were allegedly killed in an airstrike by foreign troops in Kandahar, south of Kabul, Afghanistan, Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2009. Outraged southern Afghan villagers said Wednesday that a pre-dawn airstrike by foreign troops killed three children and a man in the latest case of civilian deaths at the hands of Western troops. The U.S. military said it had killed four insurgents on motorcycles in that area and could not confirm any civilian fatalities. The incident happened in the village of Kowuk, some 12 miles (20 kilometers) north of Kandahar city, said Abdur Rahim, a villager who said he lost three of his children in the bombing. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan). Image may be subject to copyright.

The U.S. military admitted killing four “insurgents on motorcycles” in that area, but refused to  confirm any civilian fatalities.

Abdur Rahim, the father of the boys and uncle of the slain man, told the AP that he heard a pair of helicopters circling over his compound at 1:30 a.m. Wednesday before they fired two missiles that hit his home. His brother and another son were wounded, he said.

“What was the fault of my innocent children? They were not Taliban,” Rahim said. “Did they come here to build our country or kill our innocent children?”

So, what about it, Mr President? Isn’t it time you withdrew American troops from Afghanistan, and put an end to the shameful butchery of the Afghan people?

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Posted in Anders Fogh Rasmussen, civilian fatalities, NATO, President Obama, village of Kowuk | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

Israel EXACTLY LIKE Nazi Germany

Posted by terres on August 3, 2009

Israel evicts nine Palestinian families living in occupied East Jerusalem

There’s literally NO difference between how the Israelis behave in the Jewish state today and how Nazis did in Germany 70 years ago.

The nine families’ belongings were thrown out on the street

MIDEAST ISRAEL PALESTINIANS
Israeli workers unload the belongings of a Palestinian family in a street after they were evicted from their house in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, Sunday, Aug. 2, 2009. Israeli police evicted two Palestinian families from an east Jerusalem neighborhood on Sunday, drawing condemnations from Palestinians and the United Nations. Israeli police cited a ruling by the country’s Supreme Court that the houses belonged to Jews and that the Arab families had been living there illegally. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner). Image may be subject to copyright.

Jewish settlers moved in almost immediately after the Gestapo-like Israeli military/police forces clad in black riot gear evicted the 53 Palestinians who had been living  in their two houses in occupied East Jerusalem since the 1950s.

MIDEAST ISRAEL PALESTINIANS
Israeli Jews enter a house after police evicted its Palestinian residents in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, Sunday, Aug. 2, 2009. Israeli police evicted two Palestinian families from an east Jerusalem neighborhood on Sunday, drawing condemnations from Palestinians and the United Nations. Israeli police cited a ruling by the country’s Supreme Court that the houses belonged to Jews and that the Arab families had been living there illegally. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner).

Israel occupied East Jerusalem in 1967 and later annexed it, in the face of the world community.

Senior Palestinian figure Saeb Erakat expressed outrage at the Israeli action.

“Israel is once again showing its utter failure to respect international law,” BBC reported him as saying.

“New settlers from abroad are accommodating themselves and their belongings in the Palestinian houses and 19 newly homeless children will have nowhere to sleep.”

“The operation to evict the Palestinians from the Sheikh Jarrah district of the city was carried out before dawn on Sunday by police clad in black riot gear.” BBC said.

“It followed a ruling by Israel’s Supreme Court that Jewish families [from New York] owned the land. Israel wants to build a block of 20 apartments in the area.”

“I deplore today’s totally unacceptable actions by Israel,” the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Robert H Serry said.

“These actions are contrary to the provisions of the Geneva Conventions related to occupied territory.

“These actions heighten tensions and undermine international efforts to create conditions for fruitful negotiations to achieve peace.”

Israel considers Jerusalem as the capital of the Jewish state

“Our sovereignty over it is unquestionable,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last month.

“We cannot accept the idea that Jews will not have the right to live and buy [homes] anywhere in Jerusalem.”

“The BBC’s Tim Franks in Jerusalem says the houses are in what is probably the most contested city on earth and the diplomatic ripples from the evictions will spread.”

An estimated 250,000 Palestinians live in East Jerusalem and Israeli authorities have encouraged so far up yo 200,000 Jews to move to the occupied area.

Why should the world treat Israelis differently to the Nazis?

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Posted in Benjamin Netanyahu, East Jerusalem, Jewish state, palestinian families evicted, Sheikh Jarrah | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Five rabbis arrested on money laundering

Posted by terres on July 24, 2009

40 people, including five ‘highly-placed’ rabbis, politicians and officials have been arrested on racketeering offenses and other charges

The five rabbis arrested on racketeering charges including international money laundering

  • Rabbi Eliahu Ben Haim, Deal, NJ
  • Rabbi Saul Kassin, Brooklyn, NY
  • Rabbi Edmund Nahum, Deal, NJ
  • Rabbi Mordechai Fish, Brooklyn, NY


Agents led suspects from F.B.I. headquarters in Newark on Thursday. The inquiry began with questions on money laundering. Photo:  Louis Lanzano/Associated Press. Image may be subject to copyright.


An unidentified rabbi is taken into custody Thursday, July 23, 2009, in Newark, N.J., outside FBI offices. (AP Photo/Mel Evans). Image may be subject to copyright.

NEWARK, N.J. (CBS/AP) Federal prosecutors now say 44 people have been arrested including three New Jersey mayors, two state legislators and five rabbis as part of a two-track federal investigation of public corruption and a high-volume, international money laundering conspiracy that used synagogues to clean up dirty money for fees, according to Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr.
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/07/23/crimesider/entry5182910.shtml

Rabbis and Mayors Arrested on Corruption Charges


Levi Izhak Rosenbaum, who is accused of attempting to broker a $160,000 deal for a kidney donation, is taken into the back of the federal courthouse in Newark on corruption charges. Mitsu Yasukawa/The Star-Ledger. Image may be subject to copyright.

Three mayors from the state of New Jersey and two members of the NJ state legislature were also among those arrested.

“Three hundred FBI agents raided dozens of locations in New Jersey and New York as part of a 10-year probe into corruption and money laundering.” BBC reported.

“Among the 15 are five rabbis, including the national leader of the Syrian Jewish community. They are alleged to have laundered more than $3 million in a “high-volume, international money-laundering conspiracy,” Marra said. Their alleged dealings stretched to Israel and Switzerland.” CNN reported (!)

“These complaints paint a disgraceful picture of religious leaders heading money-laundering crews, acting as crime bosses. They used purported charities … as vehicles for laundering millions of dollars in illicit funds,” Acting U.S. Attorney for New Jersey Ralph Mara said.

The Axis of Corruption

Israel-New York-New Jersey- Switzerland!

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Posted in AIPAC lobby, corruption, money laundering, official corruption, Ralph J. Marra Jr. | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Breaking Silence on Israeli War Crimes

Posted by terres on July 15, 2009

25 Israeli soldiers speak on Israeli war crimes in Gaza

GAZA WAR CRIMES
Source: BBC UK

Israeli soldiers denouncing Gaza war crimes, describe “the use of ‘permissive’ rules of engagement that cost civilian lives during the recent military campaign in Gaza.

israeli war crimes
Image Source

Following excerpts are from the same BBC report :

Israel soldiers speak out on Gaza

The troops said they had been urged to fire on any building or person that seemed suspicious and said civilians were sometimes used as human shields.

Breaking the Silence, a campaign group made up of Israeli soldiers, gathered the anonymous accounts.

Israel denies breaking the laws of war and dismissed the report as hearsay.

Breaking the Silence described most of the testimonies of soldiers who took part in Operation Cast Lead as “sober, regretful and shocked”.

Many of the testimonies are in line with claims made by human-rights organisations that Israeli military action in Gaza was indiscriminate and disproportionate.

According to testimonies from the 14 conscripts and 12 reserve soldiers:

  • Rules of engagement were either unclear or encouraged soldiers to do their utmost to protect their own lives whether or not Palestinian civilians were harmed.
  • Civilians were used as human shields, entering buildings ahead of soldiers
  • Large swathes of homes and buildings were demolished. Accounts say that this was often done because the houses might be booby-trapped, or cover tunnels. Testimony mentioned a policy referred to as “the day after”, whereby areas near the border where razed to make future military operations easier

According to various reports the overwhelming majority of Israeli troops are aggressive and poorly-disciplined, a fact that was confirmed in the latest “confessions.”

  • There was widespread vandalism of property of Palestinians
  • Soldiers firing at water tanks because they were bored, at a time of severe water shortages for Gazans
  • White phosphorus was used in civilian areas gratuitously and recklessly
  • Many of the soldiers said there had been very little direct engagement with Palestinian militants

The report says Israeli troops and the people who justify their actions are “slid[ing] together down the moral slippery slope.”

The report obviously assumes many of the readers are ignorant of the crimes of genocide and all other diabolical crimes against humanity committed by Israelis against Palestinians ever since the military occupation of Palestine began in 1947. This begs the question: since when did the Israelis occupy a high place above the “moral slippery slope?”

“This is an urgent call to Israeli society and its leaders to sober up and investigate anew the results of our actions,” Breaking the Silence says.

Israeli officials insist troops went to great lengths to protect civilians, that Hamas endangered non-combatants by firing from civilian areas and that homes and buildings were destroyed only when there was a specific military need to do so.

Israel said the purpose of the 22-day operation that ended on 18 January 2009 had been to end rocket fire from Gaza aimed at its southern towns.

Palestinian rights groups say about 1,400 Palestinians died during the operation. Thirteen Israelis died in the conflict, including 10 soldiers serving in Gaza.

According to the UN, the campaign damaged or destroyed more than 50,000 homes, 800 industrial properties, 200 schools, 39 mosques and two churches.

How did the Israeli military react to the report?

Israeli military spokeswoman Lt Col Avital Leibovich said: “The IDF regrets the fact that another human rights organisation has come out with a report based on anonymous and general testimony – without investigating their credibility.”

Dismissed the document as “hearsay and word of mouth,” she added:

“The IDF expects every soldier to turn to the appropriate authorities with any allegation,” Lt Col Leibovich added. “This is even more important where the harm is to non-combatants. The IDF has uncompromising ethical values which continue to guide us in every mission.”

[And if you don’t believe the Israeli Occupation Forces, ask the tens of thousands of slain Palestinians who would, no doubt, verify the Israeli claims.]

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See also:

Posted in human rights, human shields, Lt Col Leibovich, Operation Cast Lead, the day after | Tagged: , , , , | 5 Comments »

Illegal Occupation, Illegal Wall

Posted by terres on July 9, 2009

Rights without remedy: The impact of Israel’s illegal Wall in the occupied Palestinian territory on the human rights of the Palestinian people, five years after the Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice

Posted in collective punishment, freedom of expression, humanitarian law, Palestinian people, UNRoD | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Israel inflicted “wanton destruction”

Posted by terres on July 2, 2009

Perhaps “Slow Genocide” would have been a more appropriate term!

The following is a Reuters’ report concerning the latest Amnesty finding on some of Israeli crimes that are being committed in Gaza. Unfortunately, the report makes no mention of the atrocities committed by Israel before or after their 22-day bombardment of Gaza. Meanwhile, the slow genocide in Gaza continues …


A woman and a child made homeless after the destruction of their home, Gaza, January 2009 – © Amnesty International


The Abu ‘Aisha family home in Gaza City, bombed, 5 January 2009. ‘Amer Abu ‘Aisha, wife Naheel and three of four children died – © Amnesty International

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Amnesty says Israel “wantonly” destroyed Gaza

Thu Jul 2, 2009 5:58am EDT

http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE56118I20090702

JERUSALEM (Reuters) – Amnesty International said on Thursday Israel inflicted “wanton destruction” in the Gaza Strip in attacks that often targeted Palestinian civilians during an offensive in December and January in the Hamas-run enclave.

The London-based rights group, in a 117-page report on the 22 days of fighting, also criticized the Islamist movement Hamas for rocket attacks on Israel, which it called “war crimes.”

Among other conclusions, Amnesty said it found no evidence to support Israeli claims that Gaza guerrillas deliberately used civilians as “human shields,” but it did, however, cite evidence that Israeli troops put children and other civilians in harm’s way by forcing them to remain in homes taken over by soldiers.

Amnesty International said some 1,400 Palestinians were killed in Israel’s Operation Cast Lead, including 300 children and hundreds of innocent civilians, a figure broadly in line with those from the Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza and the independent Palestinian Center for Human Rights.

The Israeli military put the Palestinian death toll at 1,166 of whom 295 were civilians. Thirteen Israelis were killed, including three civilians, during the offensive Israel launched with the declared aim of curtailing cross-border rocket attacks.

Accusing Israel of “breaching laws of war,” Amnesty said: “Much of the destruction was wanton and deliberate, and was carried out in a manner and circumstances which indicated that it could not be justified on grounds of military necessity.”

Commenting on Amnesty’s allegations, the Israeli military said it operated in accordance with international law. It said the report ignored “efforts made by the Israel Defense Forces to minimize, as much as possible, harm to non-combatants.”

“In many cases, the Israel Defense Forces exercised measures of caution, including warning the civilian population before an attack,” the military said. “The Israel Defense Forces directed its attack only against military targets.”

A Hamas spokesman said the Amnesty report did not place enough emphasis on “crimes committed by Israel.”

“This report equates between the aggressor and the victim and ignores international laws that guarantee resistance against occupation,” the spokesman said.

U.N. INQUIRY

Israel and Hamas have both rejected accusations of war crimes during the Gaza fighting. Israel has refused to cooperate with a United Nations inquiry that is now gathering evidence, accusing the investigators of prejudice against it.

Amnesty said although rockets fired by Palestinian militants from the Gaza Strip rarely cause casualties, their use was “indiscriminate and hence unlawful under international law.” The rockets often sow fear and panic.

It also accused Hamas and other armed groups of endangering the lives of the Palestinian civilian population in Gaza by firing rockets and locating military equipment near homes.

The report however dismissed Israeli claims that Hamas had used Palestinian civilians as “human shields.”

Amnesty said it found no evidence that “Hamas or other armed groups forced residents to stay in or around buildings used by fighters, or that fighters prevented residents from leaving buildings or areas which had been commandeered by militants.”

But the report said in several cases Israeli soldiers used Palestinian civilians, including children, as “human shields, endangering their lives by forcing them to remain in or near houses which they took over and used as military positions.”

(Writing by Joseph Nasr; Editing by Dominic Evans)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

Posted in crimes against humanity, Gaza Strip, human shields, Israel's Operation Cast Lead, Occupied Palestine | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Gaza Masacres: An Unacceptable Image of 2009

Posted by terres on July 1, 2009

1.5 million Palestinians trapped in abject poverty and massacred a few dozens each time


A Palestinian girl stands in front of a destroyed house in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip June 29, 2009. Six months after Israel’s invasion of the Gaza Strip, 1.5 million Palestinians remain trapped in rising poverty, unable to rebuild their lives, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Monday. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa. Image may be subject to copyright.

Israeli drones killed civilians in Gaza

Israeli attacks with guided missiles fired from aerial drones killed civilians during the recent Gaza fighting in violation of the laws of war, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The attacks with one of the most precise weapons in Israel’s arsenal killed civilians who were not taking part in hostilities and were far from any fighting.

“The 39-page report, “Precisely Wrong: Gaza Civilians Killed by Israeli Drone-Launched Missiles,” details six incidents resulting in 29 civilian deaths, among them eight children. Human Rights Watch found that Israeli forces failed to take all feasible precautions to verify that these targets were combatants, as required by the laws of war, or that they failed to distinguish between combatants and civilians. Israeli and Palestinian human rights groups have reported a total of 42 drone attacks that killed civilians, 87 in all, during the fighting in December 2008 and January 2009.

“Drone operators can clearly see their targets on the ground and also divert their missiles after launch,” said Marc Garlasco, senior military analyst at Human Rights Watch and co-author of the report. “Given these capabilities, Israel needs to explain why these civilian deaths took place.” More …

“On December 29, the Israeli military struck a truck that it said was transporting Grad rockets, killing nine civilians. The military released video footage of the attack to support its case, but the video raises serious doubts that the target constituted a military objective – doubts that should have guided the drone operator to hold fire. The alleged rockets, the military later admitted, proved to be oxygen canisters.” More …

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Posted in Drone-Launched Missiles, Gaza massacres, Israeli Occupation Forces, Occupied Palestinian Territories, Operation Cast Lead | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Time to Abolish Thai Monarchy Has Expired!

Posted by terres on June 27, 2009

Overthrow Thai Monarchy!

Political activist tried secretly for insulting Thai royal pimps

A female activist who  arrested a year ago for attacking the monarchy in a political speech in Bangkok is being tried in secret for insulting the royal family.

The following news is mirrored from BBC in view of reader interest:

Concern at secret Thailand trial

By Jonathan Head
BBC News, Bangkok

King Bhumipol Adulyadej leaving Bangkok's Siriraj hospital - 7/11/2007

King Bhumipol is highly regarded [sic] in Thailand

The human rights group Amnesty International has condemned the secret trial in Thailand of a woman charged with insulting the royal family.

The woman was arrested a year ago after giving a speech in Bangkok in which she attacked the monarchy.

The start of her trial was delayed this week when her lawyer appealed against the decision to hold a closed trial.

Critics say strict laws against insulting the monarchy are being used to stifle discussion of its future.

Thailand concedes that the lese-majeste laws are imperfect, but says they protect the monarchy.

‘Popular revolution’

People in Thailand who have listened to the speech say they have never heard anything like it.

Daranee Charncherngsilpakul took to the stage at a protest in central Bangkok in June last year and sharply criticised the monarchy.

The Thai government will have a very difficult time explaining why the trial of someone charged with making an insulting remark could compromise Thailand’s national security
Sam Zarifi
Amnesty International

She even made personal attacks on the country’s revered King Bhumipol Adulyadej, warning him that the monarchy would be overthrown by a popular revolution.

Going by the nickname Dar Torpedo, she was already well known as an outspoken supporter of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

But the blunt language she used to criticise the King in a public arena, just a short distance from the palace, has shocked even those Thais who do not consider themselves ardent royalists.

‘Risk of injustice’

Given the severe penalties for insulting the monarchy in Thailand, no-one was surprised when Ms Daranee was arrested shortly afterwards.

Her trial, however, which started this week, has alarmed human rights groups.

Red-shirt protesters in Bangkok on 12 April 2009

Supporters of Thaksin Shinawatra say he was unjustly ousted

The presiding judge ordered hearings to be held in secret, citing national security concerns.

Her lawyer is appealing, on the grounds that Thailand’s constitution guarantees defendants the right to a public trial.

Sam Zarifi from Amnesty International has warned that “when a judge closes the doors on a trial it significantly raises the risk of injustice taking place.

“The Thai government will have a very difficult time explaining why the trial of someone charged with making an insulting remark could compromise Thailand’s national security,” he said.

Ms Daranee faces between nine and 45 years in prison if she is convicted.

Until recently the lese majeste law was rarely invoked in Thailand – but the number of cases has risen sharply during the political turmoil of the past three years.

A colleague of Daranee Charncherngsilpakul was jailed for six years last November.

Earlier this year a 34-year-old engineer was jailed for 10 years for posting a video deemed insulting to the monarchy on the website YouTube.

Neither trial was mentioned in the mainstream Thai media.

Republican sympathisers

In January this year an Australian man, Harry Nicolaides, was also jailed for three years over a novel he wrote four years ago in which he referred briefly to the scandalous private life of a Thai crown prince. He was later pardoned.

Police say they are now preparing to arrest several more anti-government activists on the same charge.

The pro-Thaksin red shirt movement is known to have a number of republican sympathisers and former communists in its ranks.

Mr Thaksin himself has been accused by his critics of harbouring plans to abolish the monarchy, accusations he has strongly denied.

The government has acknowledged that the lese majeste law has flaws – but says it is necessary to protect the monarchy.

Critics of the law argue that it is being used to stifle discussion of the monarchy’s future, at a time of heightened public anxiety over the succession, because of the King’s age and frail health.

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Posted in Daranee Charncherngsilpakul, King Bhumipol, Thai government, Thai media, Thailand's national security | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Carter Speaks the Truth on Palestine

Posted by terres on June 19, 2009

Palestinians are being “treated more like animals than human beings” —former U.S. president Jimmy Carter

On his visit to Gaza Strip , Carter condemned Israel’s January bombardment of the enclave and its continuing blockade of trade and humanitarian aid.


Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter gestures during his visit to the American International School in the northern Gaza Strip June 16, 2009. Isreali forces destroyed the school in prolonged bombardment of the area, killing 1,417 Gazans and injuring many more. Carter arrived in Gaza on Tuesday for a one-day visit. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem (GAZA POLITICS CONFLICT)

“I understand that even paper and crayons are treated as a security hazard,” he told Gazans gathered to meet him at a local UN office. “I sought an explanation of this when I met with Israeli officials and I received none, because there is no explanation.”

“Carter, 84 …  is easily the most outspoken former U.S. president on the Middle East conflict, and seen by many Israelis as a harsh critic.” Reuters reported.

“Israel tightened a blockade on Gaza in 2007 when Hamas took control after routing rival Fatah forces loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas, who favours a peace deal with Israel. In late December, Israeli forces bombed then invaded Gaza, devastating its already battered infrastructure.”

Israel has blocked imports of cement, steel and other building materials and goods to Gaza, literally holding its 1.5 million Palestinian population at a ransom,  saying that the items could be used for military purposes.

Carter toured the devastated area for himself, witnessing that virtually no reconstruction in Gaza had  taken place since the January Israeli bombings.

“Never before in history has a large community like this been savaged by bombs and missiles and then been deprived of the means to repair itself,” he said.


Fahad Rajabe, a 16 year-old Palestinian who sells bread, passes bread to a friend through a hole in the controversial Israeli barrier in al-Ram in the West Bank on the outskirts of Jerusalem June 14, 2009. REUTERS/Fadi Arouri. Image may be subject to copyright.

Carter denounced the situation as “a terrible human rights crime,” adding that the blockade forced Gazans to rely on smugglers for their daily needs.

“This abuse must cease. The crimes must be investigated. The wall must be brought down, and the basic right of freedom must come to you,” he said at a United Nations school during a visit to Gaza.

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Posted in Gaza blockade, Israel’s Scorched Earth Policy, Israeli terrorism, Netanyahu, Obama | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

 
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