Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Columbia University: Still pushing to divest from Apartheid Israel.




"Turath event addresses divestment controversy with visiting student"


Columbia students listened intently as Jess Chilton McConnell, a junior from the University of Edinburgh, described her and her classmates’ six-day occupation of their school to call for its divestment from companies supporting the occupation of Gaza and limiting academic freedom for Palestinian students.


In a lecture sponsored by CU’s Turath and moderated by Matt Swagler, GSAS ’10, a member of the Columbia Palestine Forum and the Barnard-Columbia International Socialist Organization, McConnell spoke about their occupation of the George Square Lecture Theatre from Feb. 11 to Feb. 16 to encourage their school’s divestment from companies that are complicit with Israel’s actions in Palestine. Members of the Columbia Palestine Forum said they hope to use McConnell’s experience as a model for their own divestment campaign that began in early March.


Previously, around 30 universities had similar occupations, such as Oxford University and London School of Economics.


Among the many demands were requests to end relations with companies allowing the occupation, such as Eden Springs; provide scholarships for at least five students in Gaza; make donations such as textbooks, chairs, and computers to schools and hospitals in Gaza affected by the war; offer support for lectures and debates at Edinburgh concerning the conflict; and take no legal, academic, or financial actions against students participating in the occupation. All demands were met, as well as an opportunity to bring their case to the University Court.


“There were negative reactions but we weren’t disheartened. We couldn’t be disheartened by any accusation. We were excited about the debate we incited,” McConnell said.


She also addressed the controversy surrounding their use of the word “occupation” to describe their protest.


“There was some question about whether we should be using that word. ... We were occupying against the occupation in Gaza,” she said. “No one felt that it was too problematic.”


She insisted that the primary goal of the occupation was to push forth demands and respond to a specific event in Gaza.


In terms of the initial support for the occupation, she said that people in the UK felt that conditions were brutal in the Gaza Strip.


“There was a national understanding why the government wasn’t responding to the massive humanitarian, civilian death toll,” she said. “People were seeing what was going on every day on the BBC, nothing was being obscured. The national feeling was very angry. ... Things just snowballed.” As a result, students were eager to get involved.


She also addressed the issue of there being a lack of coordination on a national level, citing the spontaneity of the situation as a contributing factor.


“We just wanted to focus on the fact that this was the beginning of the campaign,” she said. “We didn’t want to get into people’s disagreements and divisions at the time.”


Students would come and go as the occupation progressed but towards the end, many were in attendance. They also garnered around 600 signatures.


“It was definitely a sign of the anger and desire to get the government or get someone to do something,” she said. “People were willing to put their name on this piece of paper to demand what were largely humanitarian demands. ... We didn’t polarize the issue.”


Students seemed impressed with McConnell’s occupation success and how it might pave the way for students at Columbia to take more action in support of academic freedom for Palestinian students.


“I thought Jess’ talk was excellent,” Michele Showman, a Teachers College student, said. “A great chance to hear about the occupations—to make political comparisons between thr overall environment in UK compared to here with respect to Zionism. It would encourage students to take action against Columbia.”


“The context in Columbia and England is very different,” Olivia Rosane, BC ’09, and a member of Columbia Coalition Against the War said. “She had some good strategies.”


“I think hearing from her experiences organizing is a huge resource for students in the US who are in the beginning stages of organizing—for shaping our campaign and organizing on campus,” Akua Gyamerah, Mailman School of Public Health ’10 and a member of the Columbia Palestine Forum, said. “It indicates that it is possible to actually win demands from the University.”


“Columbia has this legacy of students having occupations on their own campus—part of having Jess come was to talk about the possibilities of taking radical action on Columbia’s campus,” Swagler said. “Part of what made Jess’ stay so captivating is how natural it was for students to want to respond to human rights’ abuses that they saw.”


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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Billboard-- "Stop Killing Children; No More Military Aid to Israel".



Click on image to enlarge it.

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BILLBOARD CAMPAIGN-PRESS RELEASE

http://stop30billion.com/contentsindex.php?page=billboardpressrelease



Contact: Lori Rudolph, 505-550-9553, lorir@unm.edu
Rich Forer, 265-1898, rich_forer@yahoo.com
April 9, 2009

For Immediate Release


LOCAL GRASSROOTS COALITION CALLS ON CONGRESSMEN BINGAMAN, UDALL AND HEINRICH TO SUSPEND WEAPONS SALES TO ISRAEL


ALBUQUERQUE, NM - The Albuquerque-based Coalition to Stop $30 Billion to Israel issued calls today for a suspension of military aid to Israel in response to charges that Israel may have violated U.S. and International Law in its recent attack on the Gaza Strip. The Coalition is publicizing its message via 10 small billboards scattered across Albuquerque.

The billboards (image shown below) feature images of a young Palestinian girl and an Israeli tank along with the message: "Tell Congress: Stop Killing Children, End Military Aid to Israel." Billboard locations include 1415 Indian School NE, 5500 2nd Street NW, and 112 Coors NW.




According to fact sheets researched and compiled by the Coalition, the U.S. agreed to provide Israel with $30 billion in military aid over a ten year period. Israel received its first subsidy in 2008. The Coalition says the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) used some of this aid in its December 27, 2008 to January 18, 2009 assault against Gaza and may have committed war crimes.

More than 1,400 Palestinians, including over 300 children and 900 civilians were killed during the assault, dubbed Operation Cast Lead.

The military aid, which amounts to $3 billion per year of taxpayer money that Americans can ill afford, appears to be in violation of the Arms Export Control Act and the Foreign Assistance Act. The Coalition calls on the voters of Albuquerque to call or write Senators Jeff Bingaman and Tom Udall and Representative Martin Heinrich and demand that U.S. military aid to Israel be suspended. The Coalition also asks voters in Congressional Districts 2 and 3 to contact their representatives with the same message.


To download the full press release, click here.


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At UCLA, January 2009:

Chants of “Zionism is racism,” “Zionism is Nazism,” “Free, Free Palestine” and “F…, f… Israel.”


The truth is coming out, on the University of California campuses, both at Santa Barbara and at Los Angeles.

And a Zionist journal expresses a lot of upset about it, here:


"Santa Barbara professor compared Israelis to Nazis"


"The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles"

April 27, 2009

At:

http://www.jewishjournal.com/thegodblog/item/santa_barbara_professor_compared_israelis_to_nazis_20090427/


That journal felt compelled to share the following (very true) information provided by Professor William I. Robinson:



Photo

The journal was not happy to see these parallel images from UCSB professor William I. Robinson.







Professor Robinson, a USCB sociology professor, included that image in his course materials, under the heading “Parallel images of Nazis and Israelis,“ 42 side-by-side photos (like the one above.)


Here’s a portion of what Professor Robinson wrote, according to the same journal:


"I am forwarding some horrific, parallel images of Nazi atrocities against the Jews and Israeli atrocities against thePalestinians. Perhaps the most frightening are not those providing a graphic depiction of the carnage but that which shows Israeli children writing 'with love' on a bomb that will tear apart Palestinian children.


"Gaza is Israel’s Warsaw - a vast concentration camp that confined and blockaded Palestinians, subjecting them to the slow death of malnutrition, disease and despair, nearly two years before their subjection to the quick death of Israeli bombs. We are witness to a slow-motion process of genocide (Websters: 'the systematic killing of, or a program of action intended to destroy, a whole national or ethnic group'), a process whose objective is not so much to physically eliminate each and every Palestinian than to eliminate the Palestinians as a people in any meaningful sense of the notion of people-hood."


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The same journal is still upset about a UCLA symposium in January 2009, too...


From an article that Tom Tugend reported then:


"Symposium at UCLA pours on the anti-Israel hate",


In "The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles", February 12, 2009--


The final speaker was UCLA English literature professor Saree Makdisi, who stated that when Israeli forces withdrew from Gaza in 2005, the continuing blockade “made Gaza a prison and [Israel] threw away the keys.” He added that it was Israel’s “premeditated state policy” to kill Gazans and stunt the growth of their children.


While the four professorial talks were delivered and received quietly, interrupted only occasionally by applause, emotions escalated during the closing question-and-answer session.


Most of the questioners were adults, well beyond student age, and their softball questions about control of Washington by the Jewish lobby and how to divest from Israel were easily fielded by the speakers.


The mood changed when a few pro-Israel attendees got their chance, according to audience members. When Eric Golub asked Hajjar whether she would consider as prosecutable crimes Hamas’ murder of Fatah rivals, the use of civilians as human shields and recruitment of suicide bombers, the professor responded, “If you think I favor suicide bombings, then you have that Zionist hat on your head screwed on way too tight.”


Hajjar later retracted her comment, but her initial response was met by audience cheers and chants of “Zionism is racism,” “Zionism is Nazism,” “Free, Free Palestine” and “F…, f… Israel.”


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Sunday, April 26, 2009

"The motion... also demands that the Government bans arms sales to and economic support for Israel..."


"Expel Israeli ambassador, UCU Congress will demand"


THE TIMES HIGHER EDUCATION (London, U.K.)


21 April 2009



"...A motion due to be debated at the University and College Union’s annual Congress in May will call on the Government to expel the Israeli ambassador from the UK.


"The motion, put forward by the North West Regional Committee, also demands that the Government bans arms sales to and economic support for Israel, and asks it to 'support self-determination of the Palestinian people'..."


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This is "the third national union federation to sign on to the international BDS [boycott] campaign against Israel."


"Scottish unions, Nobel laureate condemn Israel"

by Stuart Munckton
25 April 2009

GREEN LEFT WEEKLY (Australia)

On the Web at:

http://www.greenleft.org.au/2009/792/40781



“The Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC), representing every Scottish trade union, voted overwhelmingly to commit to boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel”, the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign said on April 22.

Including federations in Ireland and South Africa, the STUC is the third national union federation to sign on to the international BDS [boycott, divestment, and sanctions] campaign against Israel.

“The vote followed a visit to Israel/Palestine by an STUC delegation in March which heard from a wide range of trade union and other bodies and returned with a unanimous recommendation that the parent body adopt boycotts, divestment and sanctions”, the statement said.

STUC General Secretary Grahame Smith said the federation supported the BDS campaign because of “Israel’s attacks on the human rights of Palestinian people and its breaches of international laws”.

Nobel peace laureate Mairead Maguire accused Israel of “ethnic cleansing”, an April 22 AFP report said. Maguire, who won the 1976 Nobel prize for efforts towards a peaceful solution to the violence in Ireland’s north, condemned Israel plans to demolish 88 homes owned by Arabs in occupied East Jerusalem.

Speaking in a protest tent erected by residents facing demolition, Maguire said: “I believe the Israeli government policies are against international law, against human rights, against the dignity of the Palestinian people.”

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Palestine in 1945.

This was before the Zionists stole it.




Click on the map to enlarge it.


This shows Palestine in 1945. You see that it's still overwhelmingly Palestinian.

This was despite years of brutal Zionist attacks on Palestinians, despite Zionist colonization efforts, and despite the Zionists' efforts to get the land any way they possibly could.

Source of the map: The Institute for Palestine Studies, at:

http://www.palestine-studies.org/enakba/Maps/Map%20III,%20Land%20Ownership,%201945.pdf


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Norwegian lawsuit aginst high Israeli officials for "practicing organized terrorism", and using white phosphorus against the people of Gaza.






"Norway's chief prosecutor considers Israeli war crimes case"

Friday, 24 April 2009

Published in "Watan", at:

http://www.watan.com/en/the-news/488-norways-chief-prosecutor-considers-israeli-war-crimes-case.html



OSLO, -- After the filing on Wednesday of a war crimes case against Israeli leaders by a group of Norwegian lawyers on behalf of people and families affected by the war on Gaza the chief prosecutor said the complaint will be studied.

"We will follow normal procedure, which means we will look through the complaint to determine whether or not to send it to the police to carry out a formal investigation," Siri Frigaard, chief prosecutor at Norway's National Authority for Prosecution of Organized and Other Serious Crimes, told Reuters on Thursday.


The complaint by Norwegian lawyers has been filed under a law which allows foreigners to be prosecuted in Norway over war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity even when the alleged criminal acts are committed outside the country.


The lawsuit which includes charges of practicing organized terrorism and using internationally banned weapons such as white phosphorus against Gaza people, asks for the arrest and extradition of former Israeli premier Ehud Olmert as well as his foreign affairs minister Tzipi Livni, and war minister Ehud Barak in addition to other senior Israeli military officers.

On Wednesday an Israeli report said that its internal investigations concluded that it did not violate international law during the war on Gaza but admitted that there was a very small number of "unfortunate incidents" such as the airstrike that killed 21 members of the same family which, the report said, was "unavoidable".


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