All posts in category 'Politics'

Le Devoir: U.S. Attempt for Hegemony in the Middle East

July 24th, 2007 | Posted in Corporate Media, Hezbollah, Iran, Politics

    Édition du mardi 24 juillet 2007. Hoda Asmar, Historienne.
    Membre de Tadamon! Montreal.

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    Photo: U.S. military unit near Safwan Hill, Iraq
    during the U.S. military invasion of 2003.

    Réponse à la libre opinion du consul général d’Israël,
    «La tentative iranienne d’exercer une hégémonie régionale au Moyen-Orient».

Le 20 juillet, dans les colonnes du Devoir, M. Attali, consul général d’Israël à Montréal, pose la question suivante: «Quel est le point commun entre les nombreuses turbulences que traverse le Moyen-Orient actuellement, qu’il s’agisse de la prise de contrôle de la bande de Gaza par le Hamas, de la lutte pour le pouvoir du Hezbollah au Liban, de l’agitation qui secoue l’Irak ou de l’acquisition prochaine de l’arme nucléaire par une dictature radicale? La réponse est l’Iran.» En réalité, cette réponse serait plutôt: les États-Unis. Lorsqu’on connaît les projets américains de «nouveau Moyen-Orient», agiter la «menace iranienne» constitue une stratégie de diversion qui ne résiste pas à l’examen des faits.

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Lebanese refugee camps as space of exception

July 23rd, 2007 | Posted in Palestine, Politics

    By Sari Hanafi, Wednesday, July 18, 2007. The Daily Star.

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    Photo: Palestinian Children from Nahr el Bared seeking refuge
    in the nearby Beddawi Camp, Tripoli, Lebanon, May 2007
    Tayna Traboulsi

The battle between the Lebanese Army and Fatah al-Islam inside the Nahr al-Bared camp has lasted 40 days so far, resulting in huge destruction and displacing 30,000 people to the other camps. In Ein al-Hilweh, many arguments lead to clashes between armed young men. Some other camps are besieged in an attempt to control human and arms flows to the camps.

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Stop Trying To ‘Save’ Africa

July 20th, 2007 | Posted in Darfur, Politics

    By Uzodinma Iweala, Washington Post, Sunday, July 15, 2007.

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    Photo: Refugee from Darfur in Sam Ouandja, UNHCR

Last fall, shortly after I returned from Nigeria, I was accosted by a perky blond college student whose blue eyes seemed to match the “African” beads around her wrists.

“Save Darfur!” she shouted from behind a table covered with pamphlets urging students to Take Action Now! Stop Genocide In Darfur!

My aversion to college kids jumping onto fashionable social causes nearly caused me to walk on, but her next shout stopped me.

“Don’t you want to help us save Africa?” she yelled.

It seems that these days, wracked by guilt at the humanitarian crisis it has created in the Middle East, the West has turned to Africa for redemption. Idealistic college students, celebrities such as Bob Geldof and politicians such as Tony Blair have all made bringing light to the dark continent their mission. They fly in for internships and fact-finding missions or to pick out children to adopt in much the same way my friends and I in New York take the subway to the pound to adopt stray dogs.

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Major British workers’ union joins moves to boycott Israel

July 10th, 2007 | Posted in Boycott, Politics, Resistance

    By Haim Bior, Haaretz Correspondent

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    Photo:`Isawiya, East Jerusalem. June 2005. Photo by: Shabtai Gold.

Britain’s Transport and General Workers’ Union has called upon its 800,000 members to boycott Israeli-made products based on what they term Israel’s “criminal policies in Palestinian territories.”

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Nablus Situation Report

March 7th, 2007 | Posted in Palestine, Politics, Repression

OCHA: U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Occupied Palestine

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February, 28th 2007: At approximately 02:30 on 28 February, a large force of IDF soldiers and Israeli Border Police re-entered Nablus. This latest incursion marks the continuation of Operation “Hot Winter”, the largest military incursion in three years in Nablus city.

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One narrative of the Arab world’s encounter with modernity

March 7th, 2007 | Posted in Culture, Politics
    Samir Kassir’s ‘Being Arab’ – last testament of an engaged intellectual

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    By Jim Quilty, Daily Star, Thursday, March 8th, 2007

BEIRUT: Before he was assassinated in June 2005, columnist and academic Samir Kassir completed a slim book in French called “Considérations sur le malheur arabe” He promised an Arabic edition and in late 2006 “Being Arab,” an English-language version of his work, appeared.

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Israeli Apartheid: Echoes in Academia

March 7th, 2007 | Posted in Palestine, Politics, Solidarity

 

 

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Satisfaction, frustration and pride

March 7th, 2007 | Posted in Other, Politics
    Kaelen Wilson-Goldie, the Daily Star. Wednesday, March 7th, 2007

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Three elements of collaboration between two artists who happen to be mother and son

BEIRUT: Nothing encourages artists to produce better work than competition. Last summer, for 34 days straight, two artists – one holed up in Achrafieh and the other holed up in Sin al-Fil – made drawing after drawing. When the power supply was on, they posted their pieces online, filling their respective blogs with diary-like accounts of living through the war in Lebanon.

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Israeli Arab group proposes new ‘multi-cultural’ constitution

March 2nd, 2007 | Posted in Palestine, Politics
    By Yoav Stern, Haaretz.

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A proposed constitution written by the Israeli Arab advocacy center, Adalah, states that Arab Knesset members will be able to bring about the disqualification of bills that impinge on the rights of Arabs, and classifies the State of Israel as a “bilingual and multicultural” country rather than a Jewish state.

The proposal, entitled “The Democratic Constitution,” also calls for majority and minority groups to split control of the government in such a way that will strengthen the Arab minority on issues relating to the character of the state.

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New Yorker Magazine: The Redirection.

March 1st, 2007 | Posted in Corporate Media, Imperialism, Politics

Is the Administration’s new policy benefiting our enemies in the war on terrorism?
by SEYMOUR M. HERSH

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In the past few months, as the situation in Iraq has deteriorated, the Bush Administration, in both its public diplomacy and its covert operations, has significantly shifted its Middle East strategy. The “redirection,” as some inside the White House have called the new strategy, has brought the United States closer to an open confrontation with Iran and, in parts of the region, propelled it into a widening sectarian conflict between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.

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