Thursday, March 15, 2018

Will Israel Change? | Roger Waters Sings for Darwish | Destroying Jerusalem | Hawking, Friend of Palestine | More ..

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EDITORIAL 

Will Israeli Policies Change if Netanyahu Leaves Office?


If scandal-plagued Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, exits his country's political scene today, who is likely to replace him? And what does this mean as far as Israel's Occupation of Palestine is concerned?
Netanyahu, who is currently being charged with multiple cases of corruption, misuse of government funds and public office, has, for years, epitomized the image of Israel internationally.
In Israel, Netanyahu has masterfully kept his rightwing Likud Party at the center of power. Even if as part of larger coalitions - as is often the case in the formation of most of Israeli governments - the Likud, under Netanyahu, has shaped Israeli politics and foreign policy for many years.
As Israel's Jewish population continues to move to the right, the country's political ideology has been repeatedly redefined in the last two decades.
Now, a negligible eight percent of Israeli Jews see themselves as leftwing, while a whopping 37 percent consider themselves rightwing. Although 55 percent see themselves as Center, the term itself does not represent what political centers traditionally do in other countries.
For example, it is quite acceptable to be a member of Israel's center and support the idea of forced expulsion of Palestinian Arab natives living in Israel.  48 percent of all Israeli Jews, in fact, do.
But what does all of this mean for the Palestinian people, for the Israeli Occupation and for a just solution to the ongoing suffering in Palestine?
Here are some characters that are seen as possible heirs to Netanyahu's political throne.
This should certainly not indicate that Netanyahu's political future is over. But due to the number and seriousness of the scandals surrounding him, Netanyahu's skills may no longer serve him.
Mindful of that possibility, some Israeli politicians, even in Netanyahu's own party, are ready to take the helm when the opportunity arises:
Minister of Education and leader of Bayit Yehudi (Jewish Home), Naftali Bennett is a rightwing, ultra-nationalist. He is vehemently opposed to any talks with the Palestinians and has long advocated the full annexation of all illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank.
In an interview with Israel's Army Radio on March 8, Bennett made it clear that he would run for the post of Prime Minister when Netanyahu "exits the political stage."
In recent remarks made at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) conference, Bennett, a champion of the settlers' movement, insisted that neither settlement blocs nor large sections of the Occupied West Bank will ever be relinquished.
He was quoted in the Washington Post as saying that any criticism from the West regarding the annexation of occupied land is likely to be fleeting. "After two months (of annexation) it fades away, and 20 years later and 40 years later it's still ours. Forever."
Head of the centrist party, Kulanu (All of Us) and the country's Finance Minister, Moshe Kahlon, is a vital member of Netanyahu's rightwing-extremist coalition.
He was a member of Netanyahu's Likud Party, and he merely differs with Netanyahu on some domestic issues.
Although Kahlon advocates the resumption of the so-called peace process, he, like Netanyahu, places the blame mostly on the Palestinian leadership, not on Israeli policies, predicated on the continued expansion of the illegal settlements.
If he is to become Prime Minister, he is likely to reproduce Netanyahu's political strategy, to keep his party as close to the right as possible, and to engender future coalitions with the country's ultra-nationalists and extremists.
Gideon Sa'ar is also an ex-Likud member. Despite his popularity in the party (as shown in the results of the 2008 and 2012 elections), he stepped down from politics in 2015 due to strong disagreements with Netanyahu. He had made it clear that his ultimate "goal is to lead the country in the future."
As he is now back in politics following Netanyahu's corruption scandals, Sa'ar is articulating his political programs in various media platforms. He dismissed the 'two-state solution' as a 'two-state slogan,' not because he is a believer in co-existence in one democratic state, but because the status quo suits Israel well.
Delighted by a decision made last December by US President, Donald Trump, to accept Israel's own definition of Jerusalem as the 'eternal capital of the Jewish people', he said, "understanding, as the US President has said lately, that this conflict is not the heart of the regional conflict, is crucial."
"It's a very, very small and marginal conflict in comparison to the multi-front regional war between Shiites and Sunnis."
One of the most outspoken rightwing, ultra-nationalists, known for her racially-loaded and often outrageous views is Ayelet Shaked.
She is a very influential member of Bennett's Jewish Home Party, serving as the Minister of Justice in Netanyahu's current coalition.
What is most problematic about her views is not simply her lack of interest in a Palestinian state, as she has repeatedly made clear, but rather her views on non-Jewish minorities in the country and on democracy as a whole.
"There are places where the character of the State of Israel as a Jewish state must be maintained, and this sometimes comes at the expense of equality," she said as reported by the Israeli daily newspaper, Haaretz.
"Israel is a Jewish state. It isn't a state of all its nations. There is place to maintain a Jewish majority even at the price of violation of rights."
And, finally, there is Avi Gabbay, who split from the Kulanu Party four years ago to run for, and eventually lead, the Labor Party, the leading 'left' party in Israel.
Gabbay's political views are, in fact, as hawkish as that of Netanyahu and other rightwing politicians regarding the Jewish settlements, as he understands that the most powerful political constituency in Israel is now that of the right.
He said in an interview, soon after taking over the Labor, that peace with the Palestinians does not necessarily require dismantling the illegal Jewish settlements.
Israeli politics can be complicated, as often displayed in their intricate government coalitions. However, when it comes to Israel's military Occupation of Palestine, leading Israeli politicians are, more or less, the same.
Regardless of Netanyahu's political future, Israeli policies towards Palestinians will remain unchanged, leaving Palestinians with the urgent responsibility of developing their own unified political strategy to counter the Israeli Occupation, human rights violations, and illegal Jewish settlements.
- Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor of Palestine Chronicle. His forthcoming book is 'The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story' (Pluto Press, London). Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies, University of California Santa Barbara. His website is www.ramzybaroud.net.
FEATURE

English Singer, Roger Waters Recites Verses by Mahmoud Darwish in New Song (VIDEO)


English singer and songwriter Roger Waters teamed up with Palestinian group Trio Joubran to record a new song rejecting US President Donald Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
The song, titled Supremacy, features a few verses from "The Red Indian's Penultimate Speech to the White Man," a poem written by national poet Mahmoud Darwish, and sung by the former Pink Floyd singer over oud music of the Nazareth-based Palestinian band.

"After the relics are gone/ Where, oh white master, are you taking my people ... and yours?" sings Waters. The song was recorded in Paris and London after Trump's declaration last December.Twitter Ads info and privacy
"On the surface, the poem narrates the last speech of the Native American to the white man, but it speaks also to Darwish's beloved Palestine and its indigenous people," Waters said in a statement. "In fact, it's relevant to all victims of settler colonialism everywhere, always."
Trio Joubran said in a statement that Trump's declaration endangers Palestinians in Jerusalem as they are being pushed out of there.
"We have been touring the world with our ouds for the past 15 years, taking with us - from city to city - a bit of Palestine," the band said in a joint statement.
"We honor the struggles of indigenous peoples across the globe, and through our art, affirm that the relationship between people, culture and their homeland survives history."
(Wafa, PC, Social Media)
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Israel Demolished 5,000 Homes in Jerusalem since 1967


A new Palestinian report reveals that Israel demolished five thousand homes in Jerusalem since 1967 as well as the demolition of neighborhoods in the eastern part of the city.
The report, issued by the Land Research Center (LRC), also noted that the 380,000 Jerusalemite Palestinians need 2,000 new housing units annually, and that half of them today live in unlicensed homes.
According to the report, Jerusalem's municipality has put in place a series of procedures that would make Palestinian construction in Jerusalem impossible.
According to UN data, Israel approved only 1.5 percent of all requests for building permits submitted by Palestinians between 2010 and 2014.
LRC also reported that only 12% of Palestinian land in East Jerusalem can be used for urban development, of which only 7% is zoned for residential housing.
An earlier report by the Israeli NGO B'tselem confirms those findings, saying that "some 15% of the land area in East Jerusalem (about 8.5% of Jerusalem's municipal jurisdiction) is zoned for residential use by Palestinian residents, although Palestinians currently account for 40% of the city's population."
As of 2017, more than 20,000 housing units have been built without permits in East Jerusalem.
The cost of a permit is estimated at $30,000 a home.
In 1948, Israeli forces demolished 39 villages around Jerusalem and displaced about 198,000 Palestinian residents.
The report also says that about 6,500 Jerusalemites left before the 1948 war and about 30,000 after the war.
16,000 Jews were housed in homes and dwellings whose Palestinian owners were expelled between September 1948 and August 1949.
In 1967, 70,000 Jerusalemites were displaced, including Jerusalemites who were outside the city and were prevented from returning to it.
Since 2000: According to the detailed report, Israel demolished 1,706 homes between 2000 and 2017, displacing 9,422 Palestinians, including 5,443 children.
(Aljazeera, PC, Social Media)
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