Israeli-Palestinian conflict (44 Viewers)

Is Hamas a Terrorist Organization?

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ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #8,661
    Student Injury at Protest Leads to Battle in Israel


    JERUSALEM — A macabre legal wrangle is under way over who should pay the hospital bill for an American art student who lost an eye after being struck by a tear-gas canister fired by an Israeli border police officer at a Palestinian-led protest in the West Bank.

    The student, Emily Henochowicz, 21, was injured on May 31 after she joined Palestinian and foreign activists protesting that morning’s deadly raid by Israeli naval commandos on a Turkish boat trying to breach the blockade of Gaza. Israeli security forces fired tear gas to disperse the demonstration after a few Palestinian youths threw rocks.

    Witnesses at the protest, by the Qalandiya checkpoint near Ramallah, said that a border police officer had fired the tear-gas directly at the demonstrators, rather than into the air in line with regulations. The Israeli police have begun a criminal investigation.

    But the lawyer representing Ms. Henochowicz, Michael Sfard, recently received a letter from the Israeli Ministry of Defense rejecting any demand for compensation or payment of hospital costs. The reason, the ministry stated, was that the protest was violent and that the tear-gas canister was not fired directly but had ricocheted off a concrete barricade.

    Ms. Henochowicz, who is Jewish and is a student at the Cooper Union in New York, arrived in Israel in February for what was supposed to be a six-month student exchange. Her father was born in Israel to Holocaust survivors whom he described as “ardent Zionists.”

    Speaking by telephone from her home in Potomac, Md., this week, Ms. Henochowicz said it was “upsetting, when someone gets an injury, not only to have to deal with the physical consequences of something you did not do to yourself, but the economic consequences as well.”

    Ms. Henochowicz, who was treated at Hadassah University Medical Center in Ein Kerem, had her left eye removed and suffered fractures that required the insertion of titanium plates. She returned to the United States in early June, where she is continuing to visit doctors and specialists.

    But more than the cost of the treatment in Israel, which amounted to about $10,000, there are clearly legal principles and interests at stake.

    The student’s father, Dr. Stuart Henochowicz, said by telephone that he had not yet explored the question of whether his daughter’s insurance would cover the bill, because he was under the impression that it would be paid by the Ministry of Defense.

    On Tuesday, the ministry stated that according to preliminary checks, the border police dealt lawfully with the “violent protest at Qalandiya,” and that the firing of tear gas was justified. While expressing sorrow over Ms. Henochowicz’s injury, the ministry added that it did not cover hospitalization expenses in circumstances such as these.

    The ministry said it had acted similarly in the case of Tristan Anderson, an American severely wounded by a tear-gas projectile in 2009. The ministry said that Mr. Anderson had filed a suit in the Tel Aviv District Court, where the issue of hospital expenses would be settled.

    Mr. Sfard, the lawyer, said that from the start he told Dr. Henochowicz, who flew to Israel from the United States to be at his daughter’s bedside, “not to touch his wallet or to sign any check.”

    In a letter to the ministry, Mr. Sfard wrote, “It is insolent and preposterous to expect someone who was shot by the security forces, whether unintentionally, negligently or with criminal intention, to fund her own medical treatment.”

    Yuval Weiss, the director of the medical center in Ein Kerem, said the hospital was “not a party to the argument.”

    “It makes no difference to us who pays, as long as somebody does,” he said. “We cannot work for free.”

    After her arrival in Israel, Ms. Henochowicz, who came to Jerusalem’s Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, got involved with the pro-Palestinian International Solidarity Movement after meeting activists at a demonstration in Sheikh Jarrah, an East Jerusalem neighborhood where settlers have won court cases and evicted several Palestinian families from their homes.

    From Sheikh Jarrah, Ms. Henochowicz frequented the regular Palestinian protest spots in the West Bank like Bilin, Nilin and Nabi Saleh. The late May protest was her first at Qalandiya. “I did not know what it would be like,” she said.

    The demonstration came hours after Israel’s raid on an aid flotilla. Violent clashes broke out on the Turkish boat and nine activists — eight Turks and an American-Turkish youth — were killed.

    Ms. Henochowicz said she was not standing near the stone throwers. She was holding a Turkish and an Austrian flag when she was struck.

    Avi Issacharoff, an Israeli journalist from the newspaper Haaretz, was watching the demonstration. “The police fired a tear-gas grenade, and then another and another,” he wrote in June “I remember that what surprised me was the volley of grenade fire directly aimed directly at the demonstrators, not at the sky. After the fourth grenade, if I am not mistaken, a shout was heard about 100 meters away.”

    Unusual for a foreign activist in a conflict where battle lines are often starkly drawn, Ms. Henochowicz says she feels a certain affinity with both sides. She said she had wanted to help the Palestinians, but because of her background, she said she also felt “very attached” to Israel “in lots of ways.”

    She added, “If I did not really care about what was happening in the country, I would have hung out on the beach all day.”

    Dr. Henochowicz said he found the whole episode “hurtful,” and was upset that no Israeli officials made any contact with him or his daughter during the five days they were at the hospital.

    Israel’s ambassador to Washington, Michael B. Oren, has since visited the family’s home in Maryland, Dr. Henochowicz said.

    If it was an accident, “Why didn’t they come to the hospital and talk to me?” he asked.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/28/world/middleeast/28israel.html?_r=1
     

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    OP

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #8,662
    Activists Dror Feiler, Vangelis Pissias, Huwaida Arraf and Mattias Gardell attend a press conference held in Stockholm yesterday. The organisers of an aid flottilla to Gaza said in Stockholm they would make a new attempt to reach the Palestinian territory before the end of 2010.
     

    Fred

    Senior Member
    Oct 2, 2003
    41,113
    ميكائيل بيرك;2620417 said:
    I read and just saw that it was declared by the UN or someone that it was on Israel's side.
    Mate its the Lebanese army, no way would they deliberately start shit with Israel if it weren't for good reason. Again, its the Lebanese army we're talking about.
     
    OP

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #8,664
    These pics are from another desperate attempt to block the work on building the separation barrier near Bethlehem yesterday:



























     

    Bjerknes

    "Top Economist"
    Mar 16, 2004
    116,244
    Debka isn't a reliable source. They're like the disinformation arm of Mossad, except probably not affiliated with Mossad at all, and just a semi-tinfoil site.
     
    OP

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #8,669
    It is so hot in Gaza these days. Almost 40 degrees.

    These pics are from Gaza city last night where another power cut took place because Israel does not allow diesel fuel to get into Gaza as a step in its siege policy.







     
    Jul 2, 2006
    19,448
    Turkish bomb squads are in the process of inspecting three ships that have been docked at the Mediterranean port of İskenderun since Saturday in order to defuse any possible bombs or unexploded devices that may have been left on board.

    The three Turkish ships were seized during a deadly Israeli raid of a six-ship aid flotilla carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza to break an Israeli blockade on May 31. The attack by Israeli naval commandos left eight Turkish citizens and one American dead and more than 30 people injured, which caused international outrage.

    Following the inspection of the Mavi Marmara, Defne-Y and Gazze by bomb disposal units, the Turkish Atomic Energy Agency (TAEK) will also measure the level of radioactivity on the ships. The inspections are being carried out under high security.

    Meanwhile, deputy chair of the Humanitarian Aid Foundation (İHH) and chief organizer of the flotilla Hüseyin Oruç, assistant to the chair of the İHH Ahmet Sarıkurt, captain of the Mavi Marmara Mahmut Tural, Defne-Y engineer Rıfat Lüleci, lawyer Ramazan Arıtürk and other officials came to the port to see the vessels. Security did not allow them to enter the area where the ships were docked.

    Oruç said they would be able to board the ships once the inspections are completed. When asked why bomb disposal units were sent to inspect the vessels, he responded, “Anything is to be expected of those who killed nine people.”

    Oruç noted that there are several inspections that must be completed, including one related to the technical condition of the ships and whether or not they are seaworthy. “They may be put in dry dock if necessary,” he said, “We will make sure they operate again.”

    10 August 2010, Tuesday
    TODAY’S ZAMAN İSTANBUL
     

    Bjerknes

    "Top Economist"
    Mar 16, 2004
    116,244
    It doesn't make any sense, they hate the Taliban.

    Funding terror is kind of vague anyway. We have been funding the Jundallah in Iran, which is quite silly because they are extremists.
     

    Bjerknes

    "Top Economist"
    Mar 16, 2004
    116,244
    There isn't a single good reason to be in any of these places. The Afghanis are siding with the Taliban because they don't want foreign occupation. With every single day we are there, along with Pakistan, we create more enemies. Predator drones killing innocent people in Pakistan is why that one guy tried to bomb Times Square.

    If this continues, there will only be more terror attacks that will kill innocent Americans.

    It's like our nutjob leaders are hell-bent into running our country into the ground.
     

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