Wednesday 25 February 2009

UNRWA STAFF SELLING GOODS TO PRIVATE SECTOR


UNRWA staff selling goods to private sector


More good news on UNRWA from Maan News:


UNRWA employees were involved in bringing truckloads of goods into the Gaza Strip under title of the agency and selling them to the private sector Hamas.”


The cooperation of UNRWA with Hamas seems to be fruitfuller than ever.


taken from : Shimshon 9 (http://www.shimshon9.com/unrwa-staff-selling-goods-to-private-sector/)

IRAN HOLDS ENOUGH URANIUM FOR BOMB


Iran holds enough uranium for bomb


By Daniel Dombey in Washington

Published: February 19 2009 21:18 Last updated: February 20 2009 00:51


Iran has built up a stockpile of enough enriched uranium for one nuclear bomb, United Nations officials acknowledged on Thursday.


In a development that comes as the Obama administration is drawing up its policy on negotiations with Tehran over its nuclear programme, UN officials said Iran had produced more nuclear material than previously thought.


They said Iran had accumulated more than one tonne of low enriched uranium hexafluoride at a facility in Natanz.


If such a quantity were further enriched it could produce more than 20kg of fissile material – enough for a bomb.


“It appears that Iran has walked right up to the threshold of having enough low enriched uranium to provide enough raw material for a single bomb,” said Peter Zimmerman, a former chief scientist of the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency


The new figures come in a report from the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN’s nuclear watchdog, released on Thursday. This revealed that Iran’s production of low enriched uranium had previously been underestimated.


When the agency carried out an annual stocktaking of Natanz in mid-November Iran had produced 839kg of low enriched uranium hexafluoride – more than 200kg more than previously thought. Tehran produced an additional 171kg by the end of January.


“It’s sure certain that if they didn’t have it [enough] when the IAEA took these measurements, they will have it in a matter of weeks,” Mr Zimmerman said.


Iran’s success in reaching such a “breakout capacity” – a stage that would allow it to produce enough fissile material for a bomb in a matter of months – crosses a “red line” that for years Israel has said it would not accept.


UN officials emphasise that to produce fissile material Iran would have to reconfigure its Natanz plant to produce high enriched uranium rather than low enriched uranium – a highly visible step that would take months – or to shift its stockpile to a clandestine site.


No such sites have been proved to exist, although for decades Iran concealed evidence of its nuclear programme.


A senior UN official added that countries usually waited until they had an enriched uranium stockpile sufficient for several bombs before proceeding to develop fissile material. He conceded that Iran now had enough enriched uranium for one bomb.


“Do they have enough low enriched uranium to produce a significant quantity [enough high enriched uranium for a bomb]?” he said. “In theory this is possible, [although] with the present configuration at Natanz it isn’t.”

David Albright, the head of the Institute for Science and International Security, said: “If Iran did decide to build nuclear weapons, it’s entering an era in which it could do so quickly.”


Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009

AN ISRAELI AT THE GUARDIAN



The Guardian allows Uri Dromi - a former IDF spokesman - to present Israel's version of the use of various weapons in Gaza. By this stage of the story, this is no longer enough to exonerate the Guardian from the accusation of fomenting antisemitism and being antisemitic in their editorial line and ethos, though as I've said in the past, the Guardian is indeed better than the worst Jew haters in the Arab world: they live in a democracy and still go through the motions of allowing multiple voices.


The readers of CiF, however, have no such compunctions. If you want to plumb the cesspool of Western Jew hatred, the comments at Comment is Free is a fine place to start.


taken from : Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations (http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/)

ALISON DE FORGES



This obituary for Alison Des Forges shows what a real human rights activist does, in the parts of the world that really need them.


taken from : Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations (http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/)

BINIAM MOHAMED, LITMUS TEST



Binyam Mohamed is an Ethiopian fellow with a strange story. When in his teens he apparently entered the UK and requested asylum, was turned down, and stayed anyway. At some point he converted to Islam, and later on went to Pakistan and Afghanistan to see - if you wish to believe it - if the Taleban had managed in setting up a proper Islamic state. While there he engaged in something or other, perhaps joining an aid organization, perhaps recruiting in al-Qaida and being trained in ferociousness. It depends which version you choose to believe in, and I certainly can't say, not having been there at the time. By and by he was arrested boarding a plane to the UK with a false passport; this seems the last moment in the story all versions agree upon. He probably disappeared into a Moroccan interrogation center, where he says he was tortured - a credible tale in itself, given what is known about Moroccan police procedures: the last thing you'd want is to be treated to them. A year or two later he reached Guantanamo. So far as I can make out, the authorities there didn't have enough credible evidence to indict him, but nor could they set him free unless someone was willing to take him. Recently the British authorities have accepted him, and this week he was flown to London and set free, though he must come to a local police station regularly until the British authorities decide what to do with him.


All in all a pretty sorry tale for all involved. I suppose, if you were so inclined, you could see his lawyers as glorious champions of human rights, but I'm not inclined to. They're the people who invented for him words he never said, such as:


And I have to say, more in sadness than in anger, that many have been complicit in my own horrors over the past seven years...
I am not asking for vengeance; only that the truth should be made known, so that nobody in the future should have to endure what I have endured. Thank you.


Touching, isn't it. Eloquent, too. Christian-style noble, second-cheek-for-slapping sentiments, suffering so that humankind be redeemed. Almost exactly what you'd expect coming from a fellow with his story.


Anyway. The London Times has been following the story, and trying, it seems, to be factual. David Aaronovitch is less convinced, and suggests the treatment of Mr Mohamed is hard to condone, but not without losing his ability to recognize the reality it's part of; a reality in which even worse things are happening.


And then you have the Guardian. They offered Mr Mohamed to write an article about his thoughts, and his lawyers duly did so for him, as cited above. The whole issue has nothing to do with Israel or the Jews, so one might cite the cluelessness or the malice of the Guardian in this case as proof their general outlook is sick, but not antisemitic. It seems to me, however, as if the topics are connected, and together go part of the way towards creating a Weltanschauung, a totality of understanding the world which is broader than a mere ideology. In this Weltanschauung, the Islamists, their fellow travelers and anyone involved with them are thoughtful misunderstood and wronged souls; the power brokers in the West who confront them, meanwhile, are inexplicably evil, cruel, and generally reprehensible.
taken from : Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations (http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/)

BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL ATTCKS HONEST REPORTING

British Medical Journal Attacks HonestReporting
One of the most prominent weapons deployed by Israel's detractors is to accuse pro-Israel organizations and their supporters of being part of a shadowy and highly effective "Israel lobby". The charge of shutting down all criticism of Israel and destroying freedom of speech is usually deployed, however, precisely to delegitimize organizations such as HonestReporting and curtail their own right to respond to anti-Israel bias.
Needless to say, if an "Israel lobby" was so influential over the media, there would be no need for HonestReporting to exist. Yet as the Jerusalem Post reports:
The editors of the 'BMJ' (British Medical Journal)'s widely read print and Internet editions have declared that they will "ignore" all "orchestrated e-mail campaigns" related to politics, and have just published an article strongly criticizing the "pro-Israel lobby" for using this weapon in the form of "pornographic," "abusive" and "obscene" attacks - many by people "who have never read the original articles" they comment on.
In its latest edition, the BMJ devotes some five articles (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) reviewing the "perils of criticizing Israel" and a substantial amount of print is concentrated on attacking HonestReporting itself.
Chief amongst these is Karl Sabbagh's analysis of hundreds of e-mails sent to the BMJ in response to an article published way back in 2004. According to Sabbagh, "It seems likely that most of the hostile emails resulted from a request from HonestReporting, a website operated from the United States and Israel." Citing HonestReporting and holding it responsible for a number of abusive e-mails, he states:
There is nothing intrinsically wrong with organising an effective lobby group, but lobbying for Israel seems to be in a different category from, say, lobbies against fluoridation and MMR vaccine. The ultimate goal of some of the groups that lobby for Israel or against Palestine is apparently the suppression of views they disagree with.
We certainly concede that abusive e-mails are absolutely unacceptable from both a moral standpoint and because such responses to the media are entirely counterproductive. We would remind our subscribers to always write courteously and from an informed perspective. (Click here to see letter writing tips.)
HonestReporting is not trying to block people from expressing themselves. It only holds people accountable for their statements. This is how democratic discourse is advanced. In addition, HonestReporting is promoting, not stifling, debate by getting the public involved in the issue. Those who accuse the organization of stifling debate are actually the ones seeking to suppress the voices of our readers – the people who express themselves through emails to editors.
Indeed, the writer summarily dismisses the legitimacy or relevance of the hundreds of e-mails received by the BMJ from HonestReporting subscribers. It is easier to dismiss such people as deranged or part of an organized conspiracy than to actually deal with the content of their complaints, which the BMJ fails to do. HonestReporting stands by its original critique of Derek Summerfield's 2004 article that compared the IDF's acts to those of the 9/11 terrorists.
Also writing on this topic in the BMJ, Jonathan Freedland even states that "Derek Summerfield's mistake was to open his piece with a clear error, one that inevitably made his essay appear tendentious." So why shouldn't HonestReporting and our subscribers hold Summerfield and the BMJ accountable for such an error?
Is the BMJ's shot across our bows in preparation for upcoming articles that may be critical of Israel? Is this a pre-emptive strike meant to discredit us and our subscribers in order to make it harder to respond to the BMJ in the future? While we are not asking you to play into the BMJ's hands by responding to its latest articles, HonestReporting will certainly not be silenced if we feel that any future BMJ (or any other publication's) material deserves a response from you, our subscribers.
RESPONDING TO AMNESTY - RESOURCES
Powerful non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are able to push their agendas aided by the "halo effect", whereby, because of their humanitarian focus, they are insulated from scrutiny and are regarded as above reproach by the media. Amnesty International, as detailed by NGO Monitor, is one such NGO and has released a report, picked up by many media outlets, accusing Israel of committing "war crimes" in Gaza and calling on the US to suspend arms sales to Israel.
A Jerusalem Post editorial sums up the issue:
Yesterday, Amnesty International, the world's premier "human rights" brand, called for the destruction of Israel. We’re overdramatizing? Were AI to get its way, the UN Security Council would impose a comprehensive arms embargo on the world's only Jewish state - but not on any of the 22 member states of the Arab League, or on Iran. Over time, Israel would find it impossible to defend itself against conventional or WMD threats stemming from hostile states or Palestinian and Islamist terror organizations....
Either to simulate evenhandedness, or perhaps because it really is blinded by moral relativism, AI perfunctorily called for a weapons embargo against Hamas. It thus appears incapable of distinguishing between Israel and Hamas, between victim and aggressor - between an albeit imperfect Western nation which values tolerance, representative government, rule of law and respect for minority rights, and a medieval-oriented Islamist movement which mobilizes Palestinian masses to hate, teaches its young to glorify suicide bombers, and inculcates a political culture wallowing in self-inflicted victimization.
Criticism of AI's report also came from the Anti-Defamation League, while Uri Dromi puts the IDF's actions in Gaza into context on The Guardian's Comment is Free site.
Please use the resources outlined above to respond to Amnesty's flawed report and the publicity that it has generated in the media.
HonestReporting. com

Israel Matzav: Freeman's Bin Laden connection#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Freeman's Bin Laden connection#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Holocaust-denying Bishop scuffles with Argentine television reporter#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Holocaust-denying Bishop scuffles with Argentine television reporter#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Obama morphing into Chavez?#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Obama morphing into Chavez?#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: He was a prince#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: He was a prince#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Britain is too pro-Israel?#links#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Britain is too pro-Israel?#links#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Survivors of Jerusalem terror attack, families of Beirut terror victims seek to collect from Iranian relics#links#links

Israel Matzav: Survivors of Jerusalem terror attack, families of Beirut terror victims seek to collect from Iranian relics#links#links

Israel Matzav: Freeman officially nominated#links#links

Israel Matzav: Freeman officially nominated#links#links

Israel Matzav: It's 1938 again#links#links

Israel Matzav: It's 1938 again#links#links

Israel Matzav: Rachel Corrie's congressman wants to 'reassess' aid to Israel#links#links

Israel Matzav: Rachel Corrie's congressman wants to 'reassess' aid to Israel#links#links

Israel Matzav: Special lady pledges $900 million for Gaza Hamas#links#links

Israel Matzav: Special lady pledges $900 million for <strike>Gaza</strike> <i>Hamas</i>#links#links

Israel Matzav: The 'Palestinian' double standard#links#links

Israel Matzav: The 'Palestinian' double standard#links#links

Israel Matzav: NY Times: Anything to promote the anti-Israel agenda#links#links

Israel Matzav: NY Times: Anything to promote the anti-Israel agenda#links#links

Israel Matzav: Amnesty calls for arms embargo against Israel#links#links

Israel Matzav: Amnesty calls for arms embargo against Israel#links#links

Israel Matzav: Yizkerem - Music video in memory of the eight boys murdered at Mercaz Harav Yeshiva on Rosh Chodesh Adar - March 6, 2008#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Yizkerem - Music video in memory of the eight boys murdered at Mercaz Harav Yeshiva on Rosh Chodesh Adar - March 6, 2008#links#links#links

Israel Matzav: Hopenchange? Iranians to rebuild city destroyed by Iranian-armed militias#links#links

Israel Matzav: Hopenchange? Iranians to rebuild city destroyed by Iranian-armed militias#links#links

Israel Matzav: Proof: Obama administration doesn't understand Iran#links#links

Israel Matzav: Proof: Obama administration doesn't understand Iran#links#links

Israel Matzav: Realism or failure?#links#links

Israel Matzav: Realism or failure?#links#links

Israel Matzav: Jimmy Carter's second term#links#links

Israel Matzav: Jimmy Carter's second term#links#links

Israel Matzav: Obama administration's attendance in Geneva making things worse#links#links

Israel Matzav: Obama administration's attendance in Geneva making things worse#links#links

BOYCOTTING ISRAEL, AND NOT



The Forward has a story about a co-op in Brooklyn with 15,000 members, one of whom has proposed a boycott on Israeli products - it's a greengrocer's co-op. If you read the whole article you'll see the boycott will never happen:


Michael Barrish, a 48-year-old Web developer who was shopping on February 17, said the ban is absurd. He believes it would be shouted down by Jews who support Israel, and laughed at by those who find a ban of this nature preposterous. But, Barrish said, “I like being a member of a place in which you can propose what you believe.”


Meanwhile, as part of my other, professional, life, today I came across the interesting tidbit of information that the British Library (not a British library: THE British Library) not long ago migrated its many systems into a single one, the Israeli-made Aleph system. (You can see the marketing propaganda here, if you insist). This means that each and every time one of the Guardian types uses their national library for whatever purpose, including online, they're benefiting from... oy, I don't even want to complete the sentence.
taken from : Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations (http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/)

DURBAN 2



You might want to mark the date of the upcoming international hate fest: the so-called Durban 2 conference, scheduled for April 20th in Geneva. April 20th, as some people know, was Hitler's birthday, a national holiday in Nazi Germany, and a high-alert day for West German police forces after the war. The symbolism is apt.


According to this rather technical article, the Obama Administration has broken with the Bush Administration's admirable stand of having nothing to do with the event. The Obama people are participating in the preparations, and aren't even trying very hard to head off the damage.


I'm not an international diplomacy wonk, so I can't vouch for the details of the description, but it sounds pretty bad to me. Not that the conference will be all that important, mind you: the antisemites will celebrate, the others will avert their eyes, and the world will continue as before.
taken from : Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations (http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/)

JUDENSTAATREIN



Irwin Cotler, one of the more knowledgeable experts on human rights anywhere, has published a long but worthy article about the new form of antisemitism: denial of the Jew's right to have a nation state. The term Judenstaatrein seems to have been coined by Per Ahlmark, a former Swedish Deputy Prime Minister.


I'd have preferred the article to have been published in the NYT to the Jerusalem Post, which has a smaller and less influential readership, and also tends to hide articles after a few days, but I wasn't asked.


Cotler's article follows a meeting of the Interparliamentary Coalition for Combating Anti-Semitism (ICCA), a new organization which just had its first meeting in London. So far as I can tell from the Guardian search engine, they had one single article on the conference (did I mention it was in London, and was addressed by Gordon Brown?); it's an article by one Antony Lerman, and on its own offers a legitimate tone of caution of getting carried away when discussing antisemitism. Had his been one of three viewpoints, say, it wold have been fine. But it wasn't.


And then there are the responses of readers, the article having been posted at the Comment is Free (CiF) section of the Guardian's website. My favorite response (before I gave up) was this one:


I'm gonna be real careful today and not get anyone too angry with me. But couldn't some aspects of anti-semitism be caused by the part of the torah that says the Jews are gods chosen people, therefore making everyone else second class citizens? Doesn't racism breed racism ?
taken from : Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations (http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/)
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...