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Transcript: Sen. Chris Dodd on ‘FNS’

Posted in Uncategorized on March 14, 2006 by Sohail

Monday, March 13, 2006

The following is a partial transcript of the March 12, 2006, edition of “FOX News Sunday With Chris Wallace”:

CHRIS WALLACE, HOST: With Republicans fighting amongst themselves, do Democrats have their house in order to take back Congress this fall? We want to talk about that with one of their key leaders, Senator Chris Dodd.

And, Senator, welcome back to “FOX News Sunday”.

SEN. CHRIS DODD, D-CONN.: Good to be with you, Chris.

WALLACE: I want to start with something that General John Abizaid, head of U.S. Central Command, said this week about the opposition to the Dubai ports world deal. Here it is.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

GEN. JOHN ABIZAID, COMMANDER, U.S. CENTRAL COMMAND: I’m very dismayed by the emotional responses that some people have put on the table here in the United States that really comes down to Arab and Muslim bashing that was totally unnecessary.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

WALLACE: Wasn’t there a good deal of demagoguery by Republicans and Democrats in opposing this ports deal?

DODD: Not necessarily. This hit a very, very responsive nerve, Chris, in the country. This didn’t go away. This issue wasn’t going to disappear. Some issues like this do after a few days.

When you have after — and now we’re almost five years after 9/11, where still almost 90 percent, or more than 90 percent, of our ports are being controlled by foreign entities, less than 5 percent of the cargo coming in, year after year after year — Congress has tried to have better port security, going back to Fritz Hollings, my former colleague from South Carolina.

I’ve offered on four different occasions the Rudman report recommendations on port security, been defeated every time. Even in this budget, we’ll be voting on this week, there’s no separate line item, despite the glaring problems we have on port security in the country.

You know, you could argue some of the — I’m not going to say that every member of Congress who spoke on the issue, Republican or Democrat, necessarily chose words that I would choose, but it was indicative of the public feeling about this issue. And I don’t think you can dismiss that.

WALLACE: But, Senator, does the United Arab Emirates represent a security threat? Over the years, we look back at your record, you have voted to sell UAE jet fighters, missiles. Since 9/11, they turned over the mastermind to the USS Cole. They allow our warships to use their ports. They allow our warplanes to use their bases.

I mean, did the UAE deserve this?

DODD: Well, I don’t think they did. But I think I’d begin discussing this with the administration’s failure to recognize that this is a country, again, that has some serious issues and problems. You just heard Duncan Hunter talk about some of the history here.

Remember, we had a very good relationship with a guy named Saddam Hussein not many years ago, either, in that part of the world. And today, of course, we have a very different situation on our hands.

I didn’t like to hear some of the rhetoric I did, but the fact of the matter remains this is a country that has a very spotty record when it comes to national security issues. And the world did change on 9/11.

Now, my hope is that we’ll deal with this issue more thoroughly and step back from it. And again, I point out, the administration should have set up at least a 45-day examination period here and didn’t do that.

Now we need to look at this Committee for Foreign Investment. We need to have the CIA representative on that committee, the national intelligence director on it. There should be a pause when you have a foreign government going to operate a port at least to examine the national security implications today. That didn’t happen at all.

So we need to reform that process. So not necessarily pointing a finger at the UAE or other countries here, but today to take a closer look at how these ports are being operated.

WALLACE: You have been in the Senate — I hope you won’t mind me saying this — for a quarter century now.

DODD: Yes. A very young man I am.

WALLACE: What does it tell you about this president’s standing when members of his own party desert him the way they did in the past couple of weeks?

DODD: Well, it’s not unique. I’ve seen it happen over the last 25 years in Congress, Democrats and Republicans, particularly in the second term. But again, I think they get lazy, I think what happens. You know, the term limits — they’re not going to run again. And so people begin to let down their guard.

Bob Kim — and I have a great deal of respect for — who’s the undersecretary of treasury, who is in charge of the CFIUS program — why didn’t someone raise their hand in that room and say wait a minute, here’s a country with a record that’s a little spotty, they want to operate six or seven major ports in the country, a $7 billion deal, shouldn’t we check with the boss on this one?

I think the laziness of it, not paying attention — the cabinet secretary should have been on there, much better prepared for that kind of a thing. So this happens, and clearly the Republicans are getting ready for 2006 elections. They’re worried about issues like this, and so they’re going to distance themselves.

WALLACE: But let’s talk about your party…

DODD: Sure.

WALLACE: … because according to the polls, this should be a good election year for Democrats, but a number of top Democrats are worried. And in fact, when asked about the health of the Democratic Party about a month ago, you said this — and let’s put it up on the screen — “A lot worse than it should be. We seem to be losing our voice when it comes to the basic things people worry about.”

DODD: Well, again, at that point here, I was concerned we were going off on some tangents here and not coming back. But just recently, you’ll see the kind of unity the Democrats have shown, just last week, on the issue of bringing up the lobbying reform, ethics reform package — dealing with this issue, allowing one of our colleagues to be able to offer an amendment or work out some time agreement to do so.

I think Democrats on issues of national security, support for our troops, for educating our children, health care, energy policy, are standing for progress for the future and for a better future — a better chance for people in this country.

WALLACE: But, Senator, your party keeps promising to put out a plan, an affirmative agenda of what Democrats stand for. They promised to put it out in November. They promised to put it out in January. They’ve promised to put it out this spring.

Now we still don’t know when it’s going to come out. What’s the problem?

DODD: Well, no, they are doing it. I think we are doing it on issue by issue as they come along here. And again, you’re going to see more of that in the coming days. But remember, we don’t control either the Senate, the House of Representatives or the presidency.

WALLACE: But you control your own party. You can put out your own plan.

DODD: Well, and we are laying out these issues and we’re doing it in a united way. Remember, we’ve got 45 Democrats in the Senate. You’ve got around 200 in the house — governors.

Putting all of that together with one coherent plan all the time is not necessarily easy, particularly when you’re battling upstream as we are in the House, the Senate and dealing with the president every day.

WALLACE: Is it enough for Democrats simply to oppose the president?

DODD: Well, again, I don’t think you can do that alone. I think people do want to hear proactive, positive ideas. And I think we’ve done that — again, I emphasize to you — on things like national security and support for our troops, a number of issues coming along — on energy policy, and education, on health care.

You’re watching a very united Democratic Party here.

WALLACE: Not on Iraq. You’re all over the place.

DODD: Not necessarily. There are some differences here, but basically people want to see us succeed.

WALLACE: Well, stay in, leave. I mean, that’s a pretty big difference.

DODD: Well, I think generally, people want us to succeed. But also, again, we’re not setting the policy. And again, you know, the president — again, look at some of the lead editorials today. This is cratering.

We’re now three months since the elections and still no government in Iraq. And what we’re saying is here this government has to get its act together. These people have to get their act together — certainly, the leaders of the Shias and the Sunnis. And if they don’t, then nothing we’re going to be able to do is going to save that country. That’s really their responsibility.

WALLACE: Senator, I want to put up an article written by the editor of Slate Magazine, a magazine that’s generally pretty friendly to Democrats, about three leaders of your party, House leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate leader Harry Reid, and Party Chair Howard Dean.

Here’s what it said. Under the title The Three Stooges, it says, “The three of them have shown themselves to be somewhere between useless and disastrous as party leaders. Individually they lack substance and party smarts — Pelosi — coherence and force — Reid — and steadiness and mainstream appeal — Dean. Collectively, they convey an image of liberal elitism, disarray and crabbiness.”

Other than that, Senator, I think he was a big fan. Doesn’t he have a point?

DODD: No, not at all. Listen, in this day and age, with the ability to transmit information like that around — that’s mild what you get sometimes. Get back to the major point here.

WALLACE: Well, I want to ask you about that, though. Are you really…

DODD: I totally disagree with that. Nancy Pelosi has been a wonderful leader in the House. Harry Reid is doing a great job of uniting Democrats, as I mentioned, on these issues I’ve talked about. And certainly, Howard Dean — they bring different perspectives.

And the party is not a party that’s homogeneic in that sense. There are differences within our party. But that’s one of the strengths of the Democratic Party. And each of these leaders I think brings that strength to this party.

That’s one of the reasons why I think we’re going to be very successful, and most people do as well, in the November elections, winning back the House, winning back the United States Senate, and setting itself in a very strong position to win the presidency in 2008.

WALLACE: But do Democrats have — pardon the expression — a Newt Gingrich, who in 1994 was so successful in setting out a vision, an affirmative plan that connected with the country and helped persuade them to vote for change — in that case to push out the Democrats who were in the majority in the House and the Senate?

Who’s your messenger and what’s your message?

DODD: Well, again, I’ll tell you, in 1994, I watched those elections very carefully. The problem was less about Newt Gingrich as it was with — the president was in the mid part of that first term, and there were serious problems. The president’s numbers were very, very low, not unlike the president’s numbers today.

I think that probably had more to do with why the Congress went the different direction it did politically than Newt Gingrich, with all due respect. So I don’t necessarily see that as the key to success in 2006.

The key is going to be a continued failure by this administration, its leadership in Congress, to provide an alternative sound idea of where we need to go as a people, and alternatively for Democrats to lay out some good ideas — is exactly what I think we’re doing.

WALLACE: And finally, and we have about a minute left, lobbying reform. There was a period right after the 1st of the year where the Abramoff scandal — when it looked like this was a big, hot issue. There’s a general feeling on Capitol Hill it’s losing some steam.

DODD: Well, I’m worried about that, and I’m hoping that Bill Frist will bring this matter back up again. He could have the other day. We had a unanimous vote out of the Senate Rules Committee…

WALLACE: But didn’t Senator Schumer put an amendment on?

DODD: That’s very legitimate in the United States Senate. And the Democratic leader, Harry Reid, said by the way, we’ll take this amendment off, give us a time certain for a one-hour debate, or a two- hour debate, after the consideration of this bill, and we’ll take the amendment down and get back to lobbying reform.

And the Republican leader refused to do that. Now, my hope is we get back to this issue. It’s up to the Republican leadership to set that back up on the agenda again. I’m not convinced they’re going to do that. That would be a great mistake.

WALLACE: Senator Dodd, we’re going to have to leave it there. Thank you…

DODD: Thank you, Chris.

WALLACE: … as always, for joining us.

DODD: Thank you.

WALLACE: Always a pleasure to talk to you.

DODD: Good to be with you as well.

Source: FOXNews.com
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,187590,00.html

A US itinerary for action in Pakistan

Posted in Uncategorized on March 3, 2006 by Sohail
Bush should make the effort to connect with Pakistani groups intent on democracy.

By Teresita C. Schaffer and Karl F. Inderfurth
March 01, 2006 edition

WASHINGTON – President Bush says that he has never thought about canceling his trip to Pakistan this week despite widespread outrage and violent protests in several cities over the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad.

That decision is the right one. Few of his travels as president could prove to be as important as this one. As National Intelligence Director John Negroponte recently told Congress, Pakistan is the place where “many of our most important interests intersect.”

It is also the case that US policy toward Pakistan is under attack from several quarters. Critics say that the administration has pursued a largely one-issue agenda with Pakistan, focusing its high-level attention on the operational aspects of the fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban, to the exclusion of other important US interests in the country.

Pakistanis note, some of them with considerable anguish, the contradiction between Mr. Bush’s stirring statements about US support for democracy in his 2005 inaugural address and the US government’s lack of serious interest in Pakistan’s democratic institutions.

Critics also say that the administration has become overly dependent on the president’s relationship with Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf. It is natural for our leaders to develop a personal equation with those of other countries, and Mr. Musharraf’s leadership is critical as Pakistan navigates difficult waters. But there is more to Pakistan than Musharraf, and the US will still have important interests there even when Musharraf is no longer president.

Bush’s visit will provide him the opportunity to respond to these criticisms, especially on the democracy front. He has already taken the first step by stating in his predeparture speech to the Asia Society that the national elections scheduled for next year “will be an important test of Pakistan’s commitment to democratic reform.”

Those words in support of democracy in Pakistan should be reinforced by his actions during his visit. We recommend these steps:

Address the Pakistani parliament. The United States needs to give visible support to Pakistan’s political institutions, chiefly the parliament and political parties. This is the most meaningful tool we have to encourage an eventual return to real democracy. Bush should take time to meet with leaders of the political opposition, including the Islamist party coalition, the MMA, and secular parties.

Meet the press. Although there are government attempts to manipulate and place certain restrictions on Pakistan’s press, it is freer now than it was during many previous governments. This would argue for a joint press conference, or better yet, for a meeting between the president and a small group of Pakistani editors including those from the major local language press.

Engage civil society. Pakistan’s civil society needs visibility and support if it is to play its role in laying the groundwork for a more democratic society. Nongovernmental organizations such as the Aga Khan Foundation and the Pakistan Center for Philanthropy have been pioneers in Pakistan in microcredit and rural development. Bush should meet with a group of activists and philanthropists who have a track record of practical action.

Encourage Pakistani women’s organizations. Even more important than general purpose civil society organizations is US support for Pakistani women, and women’s groups; this should be a central feature of the meeting with civil society. The government was embarrassed by the gang rape of Mukhtaran Mai, but its initial attempt to limit her visibility and travel unfortunately compounded the horror of the initial assault. Bush needs to meet with those individuals who have made a real contribution to improving the lives of Pakistan’s poorest and most vulnerable women.

Drop by a school with Musharraf. Musharraf, like Bush, sees himself as an “education president” and education is one of the most central issues determining Pakistan’s future. Revival of the public schools, including those functioning in rural environments, is both more doable and more important than madrassah (“religious school”) reform. Bush should announce a doubling in the $66 million per year the US is currently providing Pakistan in assistance in the education sector.

With a little creativity, all these events could fit inside a one-day itinerary for Bush in Pakistan, and still leave time for other, vital discussions with Musharraf. Doing so would also underscore a pledge the president made in his Asia Society speech: “The United States will continue to work with Pakistan to strengthen the institutions that help guarantee civil liberties and help lay the foundations for a democratic future for the Pakistani people.”

Teresita C. Schaffer, a former US ambassador in South Asia, is director of the South Asia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Karl F. Inderfurth served as US assistant secretary of State for South Asian affairs (1997-2001) and is a professor at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University.

Source: Christian Science Monitor
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0301/p09s02-coop.html

Worlds apart

Posted in Uncategorized on February 28, 2006 by Sohail

Israelis have always been horrified at the idea of parallels between their country, a democracy risen from the ashes of genocide, and the racist system that ruled the old South Africa. Yet even within Israel itself, accusations persist that the web of controls affecting every aspect of Palestinian life bears a disturbing resemblance to apartheid. After four years reporting from Jerusalem and more than a decade from Johannesburg before that, the Guardian’s award-winning Middle East correspondent Chris McGreal is exceptionally well placed to assess this explosive comparison. Here we publish the first part of his two-day special report

Chris McGreal
Monday February 6, 2006

Guardian

Read the second part of Chris McGreal’s report

Said Rhateb was born in 1972, five years after Israeli soldiers fought their way through East Jerusalem and claimed his family’s dry, rock-strewn plot as part of what the Jewish state proclaimed its “eternal and indivisible capital”. The bureaucrats followed in the army’s footsteps, registering and measuring Israel’s largest annexation of territory since its victory over the Arab armies in the 1948 war of independence. They cast an eye over the Rhateb family’s village of Beit Hanina and its lands, a short drive from the biblical city on the hill, and decided the outer limits of this new Jerusalem. The Israelis drew a line on a map – a new city boundary – between Beit Hanina’s lands and most of its homes. The olive groves and orchards were to be part of Jerusalem; the village was to remain in the West Bank.

The population was not so neatly divided. Arabs in the area were registered as living in the village – even those, like Rhateb’s parents, whose homes were inside what was now defined as Jerusalem. In time, the Israelis gave the Rhatebs identity cards that classified them as residents of the West Bank, under military occupation. When Said Rhateb was born, he too was listed as living outside the city’s boundaries. His parents thought little of it as they moved freely across the invisible line drawn by the Israelis, shopping and praying inside the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City.

Four decades later, the increasingly complex world of Israel’s system of classification deems Said Rhateb to be a resident of the West Bank – somewhere he has never lived – and an illegal alien for living in the home in which he was born, inside the Jerusalem boundary. Jerusalem’s council forces Rhateb to pay substantial property taxes on his house but that does not give him the right to live in it, and he is periodically arrested for doing so. Rhateb’s children have been thrown out of their Jerusalem school, he cannot register a car in his name – or rather he can, but only one with Palestinian number plates, which means he cannot drive it to his home because only Israeli-registered cars are allowed within Jerusalem – and he needs a pass to visit the centre of the city. The army grants him about four a year.

There is more. If Rhateb is not legally resident in his own home, then he is defined as an “absentee” who has abandoned his property. Under Israeli law, it now belongs to the state or, more particularly, its Jewish citizens. “They sent papers that said we cannot sell the land or develop it because we do not own the land. It belongs to the state,” he says. “Any time they want to confiscate it, they can, because they say we are absentees even though we are living in the house. That’s what forced my older brother and three sisters to live in the US. They couldn’t bear the harassment.”

The ‘apartheid wall’
There are few places in the world where governments construct a web of nationality and residency laws designed for use by one section of the population against another. Apartheid South Africa was one. So is Israel.

Comparisons between white rule in South Africa and Israel’s system of control over the Arab peoples it governs are increasingly heard. Opponents of the vast steel and concrete barrier under construction through the West Bank and Jerusalem dubbed it the “apartheid wall” because it forces communities apart and grabs land. Critics of Ariel Sharon’s plan to carve up the West Bank, apportioning blobs of territory to the Palestinians, draw comparisons with South Africa’s “bantustans” – the nominally independent homelands into which millions of black men and women were herded.

An Israeli human rights organisation has described segregation of West Bank roads by the military as apartheid. Arab Israeli lawyers argue anti-discrimination cases before the supreme court by drawing out similarities between some Israeli legislation and white South Africa’s oppressive laws. Desmond Tutu, the former archbishop of Cape Town and chairman of South Africa’s truth and reconciliation commission, visited the occupied territories three years ago and described what he found as “much like what happened to us black people in South Africa”.

As far back as 1961, Hendrik Verwoerd, the South African prime minister and architect of the “grand apartheid” vision of the bantustans, saw a parallel. “The Jews took Israel from the Arabs after the Arabs had lived there for a thousand years. Israel, like South Africa, is an apartheid state,” he said. It is a view that horrifies and infuriates many Israelis.

A prominent Israeli political scientist, Gerald Steinberg, responded to an invitation to appear on a panel at a Jerusalem cultural centre to debate “Is Israel the new apartheid?” by denouncing the organiser, a South African-born Jew, for even posing the question.

“As you are undoubtedly aware, the pro-Palestinian and anti-semitic campaign to demonise Israel focuses on the entirely false and abusive analogy with South Africa. Using the term ‘apartheid’ to apply to Israel’s legitimate responses to terror and the threat of annihilation both demeans the South African experience, and is the most immoral of charges against the right of the Jewish people to self-determination,” he replied.

Many Israelis recoil at the suggestion of a parallel because it stabs at the heart of how they see themselves and their country, founded after centuries of hatred, pogroms and ultimately genocide. If anything, many of Israel’s Jews view themselves as having more in common with South Africa’s black population than with its oppressors. Some staunch defenders of Israel’s policies past and present say that even to discuss Israel in the context of apartheid is one step short of comparing the Jewish state to Nazi Germany, not least because of the Afrikaner leadership’s fascist sympathies in the 1940s and the disturbing echoes of Hitler’s Nuremberg laws in South Africa’s racist legislation.

Yet the taboo is increasingly challenged. As Israel’s justice minister, Tommy Lapid, said, Israel’s defiance of international law in constructing the West Bank barrier could result in it being treated as a pariah like South Africa. Malaysia’s prime minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, has called for a campaign against Israel of the kind used to pressure South Africa.

“Like the struggle against apartheid, the struggle of the Palestinian people against Israeli occupation of their country enjoys enormous support from the global community,” he said. “Therefore a more concrete expression of this support by global societies to this campaign is timely and fitting.”

Anglican, Presbyterian and other churches have backed sanctions against Israel. Last year, one of the UK’s university teaching unions endorsed a boycott of two Israeli universities, before reversing its decision amid a torrent of criticism over the reasoning behind the move.

The Israeli government has condemned boycotts as anti-semitism and an attempt to “delegitimise” the Jewish state. It asks why only Israel, a democratic country, is singled out for sanctions. A few protests are not a bandwagon, but underpinning Israeli hostility is a fear, expressed in a secret Israeli foreign ministry report, that Israel’s standing abroad could sink so low in the coming years that it might find itself on a collision course with Europe which could see Israel as isolated as the apartheid regime and with serious economic consequences.

Ariel Sharon’s withdrawal of Jewish settlers from the Gaza strip last year, and the relinquishing of direct Israeli control over that territory, temporarily dampened some of the criticism. But even as the Gaza pullout was under way, Israel was entrenching its control of those parts of the West Bank it wants to retain, using the barrier to mark out an intended future border that would carve up the territory, and expanding Jewish settlements it intends to annex – a strategy that, if carried through by Sharon’s successors, is likely to strengthen the comparisons with apartheid and fuel calls for sanctions.

Israelis are genuinely bewildered that anyone might see similarities between their society and the old South Africa. Where, they ask, are the signs directing “Jews” and “non-Jews” to match the “petty apartheid” of segregated buses, toilets and just about every other facility in Pretoria and Johannesburg.

There are conspicuous differences, of course. Arab Israelis have the vote, although they were prevented from forming their own political parties until the 1980s. They are mostly equal under the law and these days the Israeli courts generally protect their rights. Jews are a majority in Israel; white South Africans were a minority. And Israel spent the first decades of its existence fighting for its life.

But for some of those with a foot in both societies, the distinctions are blurred by other realities. Some Jewish South Africans and Israelis who lived with apartheid – including politicians, Holocaust survivors and men once condemned as terrorists – describe aspects of modern Israel as disturbingly reminiscent of the old South Africa. Some see the parallels in a matrix of discriminatory practices and controls, and what they describe as naked greed for land seized by the fledgling Israeli state from fleeing Arabs and later from the Palestinians for the ever expanding West Bank settlements. “Apartheid was an extension of the colonial project to dispossess people of their land,” said the Jewish South African cabinet minister and former ANC guerrilla, Ronnie Kasrils, on a visit to Jerusalem. “That is exactly what has happened in Israel and the occupied territories; the use of force and the law to take the land. That is what apartheid and Israel have in common.”

Others see the common ground in the scale of the suffering if not its causes. “If we take the magnitude of the injustice done to the Palestinians by the state of Israel, there is a basis for comparison with apartheid,” said the former Israeli ambassador to South Africa, Alon Liel. “If we take the magnitude of suffering, we are in the same league. Of course apartheid was a very different philosophy from what we do, most of which stems from security considerations. But from the point of view of outcome, we are in the same league.”

Perhaps the real question is how Israel came to be in the same league as apartheid South Africa, whether by mirroring laws and political strategies, or in the suffering caused. And how it is that the government of a people who suffered so much at the hands of discrimination and hatred came to secretly embrace a regime led by men who once stood on the docks of Cape Town and chanted: “Send back the Jews.”

Torn between two struggles
In 1940, an Afrikaans-speaking Jewish boy called Arthur Goldreich was living in Pietersberg, the brutally intolerant capital of the Northern Transvaal. Goldreich was 11 and South Africa was at war with Nazi Germany.

One morning, his secondary school headmaster announced that students would be learning a foreign language, German. The implication was clear: many Afrikaners, including some of their political leaders, hoped and believed that Hitler would win the war. When Goldreich’s teacher distributed the German “textbook”, the Jewish boy found himself staring at a Hitler Youth magazine. He balked and wrote to the prime minister, Jan Smuts, refusing to learn German and demanding to be taught Hebrew. Goldreich got his way and was headed on a path that tore his life between two struggles; against white domination in South Africa, and for the survival of the Jewish state in Israel.

In 1948, both of Goldreich’s worlds were transformed within a few days of each other. Israel declared its independence on May 14, a fortnight before the apartheid Nationalist party won South Africa’s election and the men who backed Hitler came to power. Goldreich had already determined to go to Israel and fight to save it from strangulation at birth. “The reason I went was the Holocaust and the struggle against British colonialism but, of course, the Nats winning the election left me in no doubt about what I had to do,” he says.

Goldreich returned to South Africa in 1954 to join his other struggle. After a few years of political agitation, he became an early member of the African National Congress’s military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe, led by Nelson Mandela. Goldreich wasn’t known to South Africa’s security police, so he was installed with his family as the tenant of Lillieslief farm in Rivonia, north of Johannesburg, where the underground leadership of the banned ANC met secretly.

Mandela wrote in his autobiography how he turned to Goldreich as one of the few in the ANC’s nascent guerrilla army who knew how to fight. “In the 1940s, Arthur had fought with the Palmach, the military wing of the Jewish National Movement in Palestine. He was knowledgeable about guerrilla warfare and helped fill in many gaps in my understanding.”

In July 1963, the police raided the farm and captured a slew of wanted men, including Walter Sisulu, the ANC leader, and Goldreich. Five of the 17 arrested at Rivonia were white, all of them Jewish. The captured men and Mandela, who was already in detention, were charged with sabotage and plotting violent revolution, which carried the death penalty. efore he could be tried, Goldreich broke out of a Johannesburg jail and eluded a much publicised nationwide hunt by fleeing to Swaziland disguised as a priest. Goldreich now lives in the affluent and tranquil city of Herzliya on Israel’s Mediterranean coast. There was a time when he believed the young Jewish state might provide the example of a better way for the country of his birth. As it is, Goldreich sees Israel as closer to the white regime he fought against and modern South Africa as providing the model. Israeli governments, he says, ultimately proved more interested in territory than peace, and along the way Zionism mutated.

Goldreich speaks of the “bantustanism we see through a policy of occupation and separation”, the “abhorrent” racism in Israeli society all the way up to cabinet ministers who advocate the forced removal of Arabs, and “the brutality and inhumanity of what is imposed on the people of the occupied territories of Palestine”.

“Don’t you find it horrendous that this people and this state, which only came into existence because of the defeat of fascism and nazism in Europe, and in the conflict six million Jews paid with their lives for no other reason than that they were Jews, is it not abhorrent that in this place there are people who can say these things and do these things?” he asks.

Goldreich went on to found the architecture department at Jerusalem’s renowned Bezalel Academy, from where he saw architecture and planning evolve as tools for territorial expansion after the 1967 war. “I watched Jerusalem with horror and great doubt and fear for the future. There were those who said that what’s happening is architecture, not politics. You can’t talk about planning as an abstraction. It’s called establishing facts on the ground,” he says.

Beyond the green line
There was a part of Johannesburg that most residents of the apartheid-era city never saw. By the 1970s, the bulk of the black population was already forced out under the Group Areas Act, which defined living areas by race. The Sophiatown neighbourhood, once a thriving corner of black life, was bulldozed and replaced by rows of dreary bungalows for whites. But several hundred thousand black people remained in Alexandra township, close to Johannesburg’s most affluent neighbourhood, Sandton. The traffic out of Alexandra was one-way. Its residents left each day to work in the mines and shops or to clean homes in Sandton. Whites rarely ventured the short drive off Louis Botha avenue into the overcrowded, often squalid, unpaved back streets of an Alexandra deprived of a decent water supply, adequate schools and refuse collection.

The contrast between West and East Jerusalem is not as stark, but the disparities between Jewish and Arab neighbourhoods are underpinned by attitudes, policies and laws similar to those used against Johannesburg’s black population. Most of Jerusalem’s Jews never cross the “green line” – the international border that divided the city until 1967 – and many of those that do go only as far as the Wailing Wall to pray. If more Israelis were to travel deeper into the city they claim as their indivisible capital, they would encounter a different world from their own, a place where roads crumble, rubbish is left uncollected and entire Palestinian neighbourhoods are not connected to the sewage system.

According to the Israeli human rights group, B’Tselem, Jerusalem’s Jewish population, who make up about 70% of the city’s 700,000 residents, are served by 1,000 public parks, 36 public swimming pools and 26 libraries. The estimated 260,000 Arabs living in the east of the city have 45 parks, no public swimming pools and two libraries. “Since the annexation of Jerusalem, the municipality has built almost no new school, public building or medical clinic for Palestinians,” says a B’Tselem report. “The lion’s share of investment has been dedicated to the city’s Jewish areas.”

Take the interior ministry offices on each side of the divide. In the west, Jewish residents face a relatively short wait in an air-conditioned hall. In the east, Palestinians begin queueing in the middle of the night, or pay someone else to do so, to stand a chance of being served. Once the sun comes up, they wait for hours in the heat in front of an iron-grilled gate on the street for identity documents, or to register the birth of a child or the death of a parent. In Johannesburg, white people and black people were directed to different entrances of the home affairs ministry and afforded service – or not – according to their skin colour.

There is many a city in other parts of the world where minorities are forced into poor, underfunded neighbourhoods and treated as unwelcome outsiders. Where Israel’s self- proclaimed capital differs is in policies specifically designed to keep it that way, as in apartheid Johannesburg. In Jerusalem and other parts of the occupied territories, Palestinians face a myriad of discriminatory laws and practices, from land confiscations to house demolitions, de facto pass laws and restrictions on movement. “The similarities between the situation of East Jerusalemites and black South Africans is very great in respect of their residency rights,” says John Dugard, the international law professor widely regarded as the father of human rights law in South Africa and now the UN’s chief human rights monitor in the occupied territories. “We had the old Group Areas Act in South Africa. East Jerusalem has territorial classification that has the same sort of consequences as race classification had in South Africa in respect of who you can marry, where you can live, where you can go to school or hospital.”

Palestinians in East Jerusalem, often the city of their birth, are not considered citizens but immigrants with “permanent resident” status, which, some have found, is anything but permanent. In the old South Africa, a large part of the black population was treated not as citizens of the cities and townships they were born into but of a distant homeland many had never visited. “Israel treats Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem as immigrants, who live in their homes at the beneficence of the authorities and not by right,” says B’Tselem. “The authorities maintain this policy although these Palestinians were born in Jerusalem, lived in the city and have no other home. Treating these Palestinians as foreigners who entered Israel is astonishing, since it was Israel that entered East Jerusalem in 1967.”

Israel says it has offered citizenship to anyone born in Jerusalem and that few Palestinians take it up because doing so implies recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the entire city. The government says that by choosing not to become citizens, Jerusalem’s Arabs subject themselves to restrictions.

After the entirety of Jerusalem was brought under Israeli rule, the Jewish state annexed about 70 sq km of Palestinian territory and incorporated it within the new municipal boundaries – sometimes taking land from villages such as Said Rhateb’s, but leaving the people and their homes outside the city. Israel then wrote laws to permit the government to confiscate property wholesale with one purpose: to transfer land and homes from Arabs to Jews.

Laws of division
“Planning and urban policy, which normal cities view as this benign tool, was used as a powerful partisan tool to subordinate and control black people in Johannesburg and is still used that way against Palestinians in Jerusalem,” says Scott Bollens, a University of California professor of urban planning who has studied divided cities across the globe, including Belfast, Berlin, Nicosia and Mostar. “In South Africa there was ‘group areas’ legislation, and then there was land use, planning tools and zoning that were used to reinforce and back up group areas. In Israel, they use a whole set of similar tools. They are very devious, in that planning is often viewed as this thing that is not part of politics. In Jerusalem, it’s fundamental to their project of control, and Israeli planners and politicians have known that since day one. They’ve been very explicit in linking the planning tools with their political project.”

At the heart of Israel’s strategy is the policy adopted three decades ago of “maintaining the demographic balance” in Jerusalem. In 1972, the number of Jews in the west of the city outnumbered the Arabs in the east by nearly three to one. The government decreed that that equation should not be allowed to change, at least not in favour of the Arabs.

“The mantra of the past 37 years has been ‘maintaining the demographic balance’, which doesn’t mean forcing Palestinians to leave,” says Daniel Seidemann, a Jewish Israeli lawyer who has spent years fighting legal cases on behalf of Jerusalem’s Arab residents. “It means curtailing their ability to develop by limiting construction to the already developed areas, by largely preventing development in new areas and by taking 35% [of Palestinian-owned land in greater East Jerusalem] and having a massive government incentive for [Jews] to build up that area.”

The political decision to discriminate against Arabs was an open but rarely acknowledged secret. The authors of a 1992 book on Jerusalem, Separate and Unequal, laid bare the policy. The writers, two of whom were advisers to the city’s mayors, said that Israeli policy since 1967 was “remorselessly” pursued with four objectives: to expand the Jewish population in the mainly Arab east of the city; to hinder growth of Arab neighbourhoods; to induce Arabs to leave; and to seal off Arab areas behind Jewish settlements.

In 1992, Jerusalem’s deputy mayor, Avraham Kahila, told the city council: “The principle that guides me and the mayor is that, in the Arab neighbourhoods, the municipality has no interest or reason to get into any kind of planning process. Thus, we encourage the building of Jewish neighbourhoods in empty areas that have been expropriated by the state of Israel. But so long as the policy of the state of Israel is not to get involved in the character of existing Arab neighbourhoods, there is no reason to require plans.”

The mayor at the time, Teddy Kollek, was so identified with the city that he was known as Mr Jerusalem. Talking in 1972 about East Jerusalem, Kollek’s adviser on Arab affairs, Ya’akov Palmon, told the Guardian: “We take the land first and the law comes after.”

At a city council meeting two decades later, Kollek was confronted by a lone councillor outraged at the evident discrimination in limiting Arab housing development. According to an Israeli newspaper report at the time, Kollek responded that the council was adhering to a policy “followed by all governments since 1967″ of restricting the growth of Palestinian neighbourhoods.

By then, discrimination was so entrenched that Kollek’s statement drew almost no attention, let alone criticism.

Of the 70 sq km of annexed Arab land around Jerusalem, the state expropriated more than one-third to build homes for Jews without constructing a single house for Palestinians on the confiscated land. The Jewish population of East Jerusalem had fled or been driven out in 1948. A gradual return after 1967 turned to a flood as the settlements ate into the east of the city. Today, the population of Jewish settlements in and close to East Jerusalem has grown to nearly two-thirds that of the Arab neighbourhoods.

“Houses were built for Israelis, but the lands were overwhelmingly taken from Palestinians,” says Seidemann. “This was the tool by which Israel was able to consolidate its hold over East Jerusalem. This was based on the law of expropriation for public purposes, but the public bearing the brunt of this was always Palestinian and the public benefiting from this was always Israeli.”

One method of preventing further construction by Arabs in the east of the city has been to declare many open areas to be “green zones” protected from building. Bollens says about 40% of East Jerusalem is designated as a green zone, but that this is really a mechanism for land transfer. “The government calls it a green zone to stop Palestinians building homes there, and then when the government wants to develop an area [as Jewish] it lifts that green zoning miraculously and it becomes a development place.”

Jerusalem’s mayor, Uri Lupolianski – who chaired the city’s planning and zoning committee in the 1990s – declined to be interviewed in person on these issues, but responded to written questions. “We have to keep a reasonable balance between residential areas and open green zones. We’ve designated green zones in all parts of Jerusalem, not just the eastern one,” he wrote. “We’re keeping the green zones in the entire city free from construction, and we plan to keep it this way. We believe that the development of parks and green zones in eastern Jerusalem will improve the quality of life of the people living there.”

During the 1990s, about 12 times as many new homes were legally built in Jewish areas as in Arab ones. Denied permission to build new homes or expand existing ones, many Palestinians build anyway and risk a demolition order. Israel’s former prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, routinely defends the demolitions by arguing that any civilised society enforces planning regulations. But Israel is the only western society to deny construction permits to people on the grounds of race. Until 1992, so did South Africa.

Land confiscation
Israeli law also restricts where non-Jews may live. “Muslims and Christians are barred from buying in the Jewish quarter of the old city on the grounds of “historic patterns of life of each community having its own quarter’,” says Seidemann, in a phrase eerily reminiscent of apartheid’s philosophy. “But that didn’t prevent the Israeli government from aggressively pursuing activities to place Jews within the Muslim quarter. The attitude is: what’s mine is exclusively mine, but what’s yours is mixed if we happen to target it.”

Israeli law permits wholesale confiscation of property inside Israel or Jerusalem that is owned by Palestinians who live in areas defined as “enemy territory”, including the West Bank, which was occupied by Jordan until it lost the war against Israel in 1967. “Any Palestinian who was at any point in ‘enemy territory’ after 1967, forfeits his property,” says Seidemann. “But enemy territory includes the West Bank. It’s a remarkable situation. Any property that was ever ‘abandoned’ by any Palestinian becomes state land and is then ‘turned over to the Jewish people’. Any property that once belonged to a Jew is ‘recovered to the Jewish people’ and turned over to the settlers.”

“I hate the term ethnic cleansing in the context of this,” he says, “because of the connotations of rape and pillage, which this is not. But there was and is an active government effort using procedures such as this to rid targeted areas of its Palestinian residents and turn it into an exclusively or predominantly Jewish area. And I say, with regret, that the efforts have been moderately successful.”

The law is not applied in reverse: Jews who go to live in West Bank settlements do not lose property they may own in Tel Aviv. Last year, Sharon’s government quietly confiscated thousands of acres of Palestinian-owned lands within greater Jerusalem without compensation, after a secret cabinet decision to use a 55-year-old law on abandoned property against Arabs separated from their olive groves and farms by the West Bank barrier. Previous governments decided not to apply this law to East Jerusalem and the Sharon administration was embarrassed enough to expropriate the lands in secret before dropping the policy after an international outcry when it came to light. The Palestinians called the confiscations “legalised theft”.

“What stands out for Jerusalem and Johannesburg is that it was and is such a prolonged use of planning in pursuit of a political objective,” says Scott Bollens. “One distinction with South Africa is the racial identifiers and the racial rhetoric was so blatant, and it was so visible and it was so much part of apartheid South African language. But, despite the difference in rhetoric, the outcomes are very, very similar and the urban landscape Israel has created in the Jerusalem region is just as unequal, just as subjugating of the Palestinians as the ‘group area’ planning was in South Africa for the blacks.”

In 2004, Jerusalem’s council approved the first new masterplan for the city since 1959. The plan acknowledges some of the injustices and problems in East Jerusalem, provides for greater construction of homes in some Arab areas, and criticises Jewish settlement in the east of the city. But critics say that at its core is the same obsession with demography and what the plan describes as “preserving a firm Jewish majority in the city”.

A former Jerusalem city councillor, Meir Margalit, says the process was flawed from the start because the steering committee of 31 people who put the plan together included only one Arab. “It is characteristic everywhere of colonial regimes which believe that the ‘natives’ are worthy neither of suitable representation nor of being masters of their own fate. The planning team apparently sets out from the assumption that, in any case, one is dealing with a Jewish city and therefore there is no reason to ask the opinion of anyone who does not belong to the Jewish people,” he says.

‘Grey racism’
“One cannot but receive an impression that behind the document lies an attempt to restrict the natural increase of the Arabs in the east of the city. With their historical experience, the planning team understands that this cannot be achieved through doing away with all the firstborn sons, but the plan assumes that by restricting the Arabs’ living space, they will be compelled to leave the city and move into places in the periphery where they will be able to build without restriction.”

Margalit says that the measures used to bring this about, including restrictions on Palestinians travelling into Jerusalem and preventing women who marry men from the east of the city from moving there, amount to “grey racism”.

“This, in fact, is the strength of municipal racism. It is neither brutal nor openly visible, preferring to take cover behind apparently neutral formulations. Thus it is always carefully concealed behind consensus-oriented wording, hidden beneath a thick layer of cosmetic liberal language,” he says. “This is how a unique term which does not exist in the professional literature was born in our country: ‘grey racism’. This is not a racism stemming from hatred of the ‘other’, but a ‘lite racism’ rooted in a Zionist ideology which strove to be democratic but, in giving priority to Jewish interests, inevitably deprived others of their rights. When there is no equality, there is bound to be discrimination, and when all those discriminated against are of the same nationality, there is no alternative but to call it what it is – ‘national discrimination’ – which belongs to the same family as the infamous racial discrimination.”

Over the years since the 1967 occupation, Palestinian residents of Jerusalem have made it easier for the Israelis by refusing to vote in city council elections on the grounds that this would amount to recognition of Israel’s claim over the entire city. Uri Lupolianski, the mayor, says that maintaining the demographic balance is no longer as crucial under the new masterplan, but he acknowledges that Arab neighbourhoods are disadvantaged. “The situation in eastern Jerusalem does leave a lot to be desired. However, during the last two years, we’ve taken significant measures to improve it and separate the needs of the residents from political issues,” he wrote. “A new central bus station was opened, as well as the biggest Arab school in Israel. I’ve ordered a new plan to rebuild the roads in those neighbourhoods. Also, we’ve expanded the route of the light train that’s currently in construction to include Arab neighbourhoods. The largest Arab cultural centre in Israel is being planned in the area.

“In the new masterplan, we have designated a wide area in eastern Jerusalem for construction for the Arab residents. There are more than 10 building plans, initiated by the municipality, currently in the works for eastern Jerusalem.

“There’s no basis for comparison with South Africa. We do not separate racially between the Jews and Arabs. We do, however, acknowledge the fact that different areas are populated by different groups, and we meet the needs of all groups. We keep the building and zoning laws completely separate from any political issues.”

According to the municipality’s most recent annual figures, the council issued 1,695 building permits in the city in 2004. Of these, 116 went to Arab parts of East Jerusalem and, of those, 46 were to build new homes. The balance was for extensions to existing houses. In 2004, a total of 212,789 sq metres was built in all of Jerusalem; 7% was in Arab neighbourhoods. Several months ago, Israel’s cabinet minister for Jerusalem, Haim Ramon, described the 33ft-high wall dissecting Arab neighbourhoods – which the government has insisted is purely a security measure with no political intent – as having the added advantage of making the city “more Jewish”.

The mask of equality
Israel’s one million Arab citizens are on a firmer footing. They can vote – the primary evidence, for many angered by the apartheid analogy, that Israel is not the old South Africa – at least, within Israel’s recognised borders. But the Jewish state has long viewed its remaining Arab population with suspicion and hostility, and even as the enemy within, through the country’s wars for survival against hostile neighbours and in the competition for land. Until 1966, Israeli Arabs lived under “military administration” which allowed detention without trial and subjected them to curfews, restrictions on jobs and where they could live, and required them to obtain passes to move around the country.

Israeli governments reserved 93% of the land – often expropriated from Arabs without compensation – for Jews through state ownership, the Jewish National Fund and the Israeli Lands Authority. In colonial and then apartheid South Africa, 87% of the land was reserved for whites. The Population Registration Act categorised South Africans according to an array of racial definitions, which, among other things, determined who would be permitted to live on the reserved land.

Israel’s Population Registry Act serves a similar purpose by distinguishing between nationality and citizenship. Arabs and Jews alike can be citizens, but each is assigned a separate “nationality” marked on identity cards (either spelled out or, more recently, in a numeric code), in effect determining where they are permitted to live, access to some government welfare programmes, and how they are likely to be treated by civil servants and policemen.

Ask Israelis why it is necessary to identify a citizen as a Jew or Arab on the card and the question is generally met with incomprehension: how can it be a Jewish state if we don’t know who the Jews are? The justification often follows that everyone in Israel is equal, so it does no harm. Arab Israelis will tell you differently.

Generations of Israeli schoolchildren were imbued with the idea that Arabs did not belong on the land of Israel, that they were somehow in the way. In the mid-1980s, the military was so concerned at the overt expressions of racism and anti-Arab hatred from within its ranks, sometimes cast within the context of the Holocaust, that it thought to re-emphasise “moral values”.

In 1965, the government declared some lands on which Arab villages had stood for decades, or even centuries, as “non-residential”. These “unrecognised” villages still exist but they are denied basic services, and subject to periodic demolitions and land confiscations.

The US state department’s annual human rights report – not a document known for being hostile to Israel – concluded that there is “institutionalised legal and societal discrimination against Israel’s Christian, Muslim and Druze citizens”. “The government,” it says, “does not provide Israeli Arabs, who constitute 20% of the population, with the same quality of education, housing, employment and social services as Jews.”

Unequal education
In the 2002 budget, Israel’s housing ministry spent about £14 per person in Arab communities compared with up to £1,500 per person in Jewish ones. The same year, the health ministry allocated just 1.6m shekels (£200,000) to Arab communities of its 277m-shekel (£35m) budget to develop healthcare facilities.

Five per cent of civil servants are Arabs, and a high proportion of those are hired to deal with other Arabs. The foreign and finance ministries employ fewer than a dozen Arab Israelis between them, when their combined staff totals more than 1,700 Jews. Until recently, the Bank of Israel and the state electricity company did not hire a single Arab.

Dan Meridor, a former cabinet minister in several governments and a one-time rival to Ariel Sharon for the leadership of the Likud party, blamed social factors and years of conflict – not an intent to discriminate – for the low representation of Arabs in the civil service. “I don’t have the figures, but I think generally speaking it may be true. One has to check whether it relates to the level of education. If, for example, people in the government civil service are of higher education than the general public and the Arab population are generally lower in education than the general public, it may explain some of the differences,” he says.

“Some jobs may be less accessible. Not officially, but in fact. Take the number of workers in, say, the electricity company that are Arabs and it is much much smaller than the proportion in the country. There’s a historical reason for that. Jews fighting Arabs and Arabs fighting Jews was not only with weapons. There were two communities fighting for hegemony and power in the very broad sense of the word. This is the ethos of the Jews versus Arabs in the electricity company, on the land, in the labour market, in the building industry. Generally speaking, there has been improvement, but there is still, I think, in some areas, a lot to be done. Not on the legal basis – legally, everyone is equal – but on the opportunity basis.”

Arab Israelis who fail to find employment in the civil service because of a lack of education say that this is the result of government policy. Israel maintains separate schools for Arabs and Jews on the grounds of language differences, but many Israeli Arab parents say this is a cover for systematic discrimination against their children.

Separate and unequal education systems were a central part of the apartheid regime’s strategy to limit black children to a life in the mines, factories and fields. The disparities in Israel’s education system are not nearly so great and the intent not so malign, but the gap is wide. The Israeli education ministry does not reveal its budget for each of the two systems, but 14 years ago a government report concluded that nearly twice as much money was allocated to each Jewish pupil as to each Arab child.

A Human Rights Watch report two years ago said the situation has not significantly changed and there remain “huge disparities in education spending” and that “discrimination against Arab children colours every aspect” of the education system. The exam pass-rate for Arab pupils is about one-third lower than that for their Jewish compatriots. In 2004, a threat by angry Arab Israeli parents in Haifa to register their children in Hebrew-language schools so shocked Jewish parents that the authorities quickly took steps to improve Arab schools there.

The suspicion with which the state still regards its Arab citizens was displayed by the recent revelation that the Shin Bet security service places Jewish teachers into Arab-language schools to monitor the activities of the other teachers. A Shin Bet official is also a member of the committee appointing teachers.

Israel’s education ministry failed to respond to requests for an interview. Approached individually, a senior politician who formerly had responsibility for education and who has acknowledged that discrimination exists, and spoken against it, declined to be interviewed, saying he did not wish to criticise his former ministry.

Asked for an interview to respond to specific allegations of discrimination in the civil service, education and housing, the government replied through the deputy director general of the Israeli foreign ministry, Gideon Meir. He conceded that there had been de facto discrimination but said it was rooted in historic conflicts and suspicions, not an intent to subjugate.

“There was never an intention because if we really wanted to create apartheid we could have done it. The fact is we have never done it, there was never even a thought about discriminating,” he said. “Yes, during certain years there were less funds given to the Arabs. There were also years after 1948 when the Arabs were under military control. Slowly, slowly the Arabs made their way up. The Arabs today can go into the civil service. The foreign ministry opened to Arabs only in 1989. It took time to build trust. I have in my department today a Bedouin.

“The fact is that Arabs were always members of the Knesset, even those who were delegitimising the Jewish state. They can participate. Is it enough? No, it’s not enough. Can we do more? Yes, we can do more. But ask the Arabs who live in Israel if they want to be part of a Palestinian state and they say no, they prefer to remain where they are. Why?”

Sharon laws
Under Sharon’s tenure as prime minister from 2001, new forms of discriminatory legislation were passed, including the now notorious Nationality and Entry into Israel Law, which bars Israelis who marry Palestinians from bringing their spouses to live in the country. The legislation applies solely to Palestinian husbands or wives. Hassan Jabareen, a lawyer and director general of Adalah, the Legal Centre for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, challenged the law before the supreme court. He told the judges there was a parallel with a landmark case in 1980s South Africa – the Komani case – which successfully challenged the pass laws that broke up black families by preventing spouses from joining their husbands or wives in towns.

“As a constitutional lawyer, I find myself bringing landmark cases from the apartheid era before the Israeli supreme court because comparative cases from modern and democratic countries are not that helpful. You have to bring harsh cases in order to warn the supreme court about racist laws; not discriminatory, but racist,” said Jabareen. “We had a case two years ago which essentially said Arabs would receive lower child-support allowances. We compared it to laws of economic discrimination in apartheid South Africa. In the end, the Knesset scrapped the law.”

Justice was also not always blind to the difference between Arab and Jew. In June 1986, 18 months before the outbreak of the first Palestinian uprising (intifada), a Tel Aviv judge drew protests for sentencing a Jewish Israeli to six months’ community service for killing an Arab boy. But the present supreme court has proved more willing than its predecessors to confront discrimination. It has yet to rule on the Nationality and Entry Law, but the then Labour interior minister in the coalition government, Ophir Pines-Paz, called it “draconian and racist” and pressed parliament to amend the legislation. The Israeli parliament responded by extending the regulations. In the past few days alone, the police have arrested eight women, the Palestinian wives of Arab Israelis, in the Israeli village of Jaljulya and deported them to the occupied territories. Among women living under the threat of future deportation is the wife of an Israeli football player. MPs say the law has nothing to do with discrimination and everything to do with the security threat posed by Palestinians.

Its backers question how anyone can accuse them, as Jews at the end of a long line of persecuted generations, of racism, or in any way of resembling the old Afrikaner regime. But for years, much of South Africa’s Jewish population and successive Israeli governments made their own pact with apartheid – a deal that exchanged near silence by most South African Jews on a great moral issue for acceptance, and clandestine cooperation between Israel and the Afrikaner government that drew the two countries into a hidden embrace.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006

http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,,1703245,00.html

Double Standards on Foreign Owners

Posted in Uncategorized on February 27, 2006 by Sohail

Amdocs vs. DP World

By LILA RAJIVA

In December 2001, Fox TV broadcast a four part investigation on Israeli espionage by Carl Cameron, which the Israeli embassy in Washington, JINSA (Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs), and AIPAC (American Israeli Political Action Committee) immediately denied and attacked. (1)

One and a half days after its posting, all the material related to the investigation was taken off the Fox website. The facts stayed alive thereafter only on the Internet.

Forget the Israeli art student espionage story which Cameron unearthed and which has never been seriously investigated. Forget any of the other highly credible accounts of Israeli espionage before and during 9-11 which have been conveniently reclassified without investigation as urban legends.

Focus only on what Cameron reported on Amdocs, a company which has contracts with the twenty-five largest telephone companies in the US to handle all their directory assistance, calling records, and billing work. This gives Amdocs access to data on nearly every telephone call dialed in the country. According to Cameron, Amdocs has been investigated on several occasions for suspected ties to the Israeli mafia and for espionage.

Reportedly, in 1999 a Top Secret Sensitive Compartmentalized Information report (TS/SCI) warned that records of calls in the US were getting into foreign hands, Israeli in particular.
Yet this story garnered nary a peep from the mainstream media, so vocal in free-speech defense of race-baiting cartoons.

And it got not much more even in the alternative press, daintily leery of being branded anti-Semitic.

And it got nothing at all from grandstanding pols like Chuck Schumer, waxing indignant today about DP Worlds:

“America’s busiest ports are vital to our economy and to the international economy, and that is why they remain top terrorist targets,” quoth Schumer. “Just as we would not outsource military operations or law enforcement duties, we should be very careful before we outsource such sensitive homeland security duties.” (2)

Indeed.

Of course, it could be argued that Israel is such a close ally that its ownership does not count as foreign ownership.

And it could be argued that numerous US government officials in the highest and most powerful positions in the land including–but not limited to–Michael Chertoff (Homeland Security chief), Paul Wolfowitz (former Deputy Defense Secretary), Richard Perle (former head of the Defense Policy Board), Douglas Feith (former Undersecretary for Defense) and Dov Zakheim (former Comptroller for Defense), (reportedly) hold both US and Israeli citizenship……. and what’s wrong with that? (3)

Some of the dual citizens have even worked in both the Israeli and US government.
In fact, in both US and Israeli defense.

And it could be argued–what’s wrong with that, either?

It could also, of course, be argued that the CIA and the Mossad are not really distinct at all and that Israeli interests are locked in impassioned coitus with US interests.

Those certainly are valid arguments.

But if so, aren’t they arguments that someone ought to have made openly to the American public by now?

Or what’s a first amendment for?

Lila Rajiva is a free-lance journalist and author of “The Language of Empire: Abu Ghraib and the American media,” (Monthly Review Press). She can be reached at: lrajiva@hotmail.comNotes
(1) Carl Cameron Investigates: Israel Is Spying In and On the US?” Parts 1-4, Carl Cameron, Fox News, December 12, 2001. Another company Cameron was investigating was Comverse Infosys, a subsidiary of an Israeli-run private telecom that works closely with the Israeli government and has offices all over the U.S. Comverse provides wiretapping equipment to law enforcement and under some programs, gets funded for its R&D by the Israeli Ministry of Industry and Trade. DEA, INS and FBI personnel all told Fox that to even imply Israeli spying through Comverse would end their careers. The pages removed from the Fox site can be viewed cached at http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/

(2) United Arab Emirates Firm May Oversee 6 U.S. Ports, Ted Bridis, Associated Press, February 12, 2006. I am indebted to CP-er Niranjan Ramakrishnan for pointing out Schumer’s quote, http://njn-blogogram.blogspot.com/2006/02/starboard-side.htmland also other Israeli communications firms in sensitive operations. Quote:

“Abramoff also allegedly convinced Congressman Robert Ney, House Administrative Committee chairman, to award a contract worth $3 million to a startup Israeli telecommunications firm called Foxcom Wireless. The contract was for the installation of antennas in House of Representatives buildings to improve cell-phone reception. Not surprisingly, such equipment can be designed to have what is known as a ‘back door’ to enable a third party, in this case Mossad, to listen in.”

(3) On dual citizenship, “Accountability: Why Not Start at the Top?” Michael Scheuer, Antiwar, March 17, 2005. Scheuer points out the unconstitutionality of dual citizenship and claims that a conflict of interest in inevitable. That might be debated but where is the transparency needed for a debate?

Source: Counterpunch.com
http://www.counterpunch.com/rajiva02272006.html

Germany denies handing US Saddam’s war plan

Posted in Uncategorized on February 27, 2006 by Sohail

By Noah BarkinMon Feb 27, 9:08 AM ET

Germany denied on Monday that its intelligence officials obtained a copy of Saddam Hussein’s defense plan for Baghdad and passed it on to U.S. commanders a month before the 2003 Iraq invasion.

The allegation that two German spies operating in the Iraqi capital before the war provided key military information to the United States — at a time when the Berlin government was voicing strong public opposition to a U.S. invasion — appeared on Monday in an article in the New York Times.

The report suggests that German intelligence officials offered much more significant assistance to the United States than their government has publicly acknowledged.

But German government spokesman Ulrich Wilhelm and the country’s BND foreign intelligence agency said key details in the report were incorrect. Wilhelm declined to respond to repeated questions about whether its general thrust was accurate.

“The allegation that two BND agents had Saddam Hussein’s plan for defending the Iraqi capital and, one month prior to the start of the war, passed it on to the United States — as described in the New York Times today — is false,” Wilhelm told a regular government news conference. “The BND and the government had up until now no knowledge of such a plan.”

A BND spokesman was even more categorical: “I would say the article is incorrect on all points.”

Any evidence that German agents provided key military information to Washington would be a major embarrassment for officials in the government of Gerhard Schroeder, who was chancellor at the time.

Schroeder lost last year’s election to conservative Angela Merkel, but some of his Social Democrats hold important positions in her governing coalition. Current Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier was Schroeder’s chief aide, responsible for overseeing the security services.

According to the New York Times report, the Iraqi defense plan provided the American military with an extraordinary window into Iraq’s top-level deliberations, including where and how Saddam planned to deploy his most loyal troops.

The paper said its report was based on a classified military study prepared in 2005 by the U.S. Joint Forces Command.

RISK OF INQUIRY

The German government has said it had two BND agents in Baghdad during the war, but it has insisted it provided only limited help to the U.S.-led coalition.

In a report released last week, the government said the agents supplied U.S. officials with information on civilian sites that should be avoided in bomb raids.

But it also acknowledged they forwarded descriptions of the Iraqi army and police presence in Baghdad, including in some cases the geographic coordinates of military forces.

The 90-page report is part of a larger text given to a parliamentary oversight committee that has been investigating reports the BND helped the United States select sites to bomb during the U.S.-led invasion.

The Greens, junior partners in Schroeder’s government at the time of the invasion, and the Left Party have called for a parliamentary inquiry which would require current and former German government officials to testify under oath.

But for that to happen, Germany’s other main opposition party, the Free Democrats (FDP), would need to join them.

“If this information is confirmed, it would of course be a dramatic twist,” Max Stadler, legal expert of the FDP, told Deutschlandfunk radio.

The New York Times, citing the study, said that after the German agents obtained the Iraqi defense plan, they sent it up their chain of command.

The paper said that in February 2003, a German intelligence officer in Qatar provided a copy of the plan to an official from the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency who worked at the wartime headquarters of General Tommy Franks.

The Iraqi plan called for massing troops along several defensive rings near Baghdad, including a “red line” that Republican Guard troops would hold to the end, the paper said.

(Additional reporting by Mark Trevelyan)

Source: Reuters via Yahoo News

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060227/ts_nm/iraq_usa_germany_dc

Rumsfeld: Planting Stories Under Review

Posted in Uncategorized on February 21, 2006 by Sohail

By ROBERT BURNS, AP Military Writer2 hours, 1 minute ago

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Tuesday that the Pentagon is reviewing its practice of paying to plant stories in the Iraqi news media, withdrawing his earlier claim that it had been stopped.

Rumsfeld told reporters he was mistaken in the earlier assertion.

“I don’t have knowledge as to whether it’s been stopped. I do have knowledge it was put under review. I was correctly informed. And I just misstated the facts,” Rumsfeld said at a Pentagon news briefing.

Rumsfeld had said in a speech in New York last Friday and in a television interview the same day that the controversial practice had been stopped.

He said that Gen. George Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, was reviewing the practice. Previously, Casey has said he saw no reason to stop it.

Rumsfeld saluted members of the U.S. military participating in relief efforts in devastating mudslides in the Philippines.

“These efforts are an indication of the organizational talents of the United States military,” Rumsfeld said.

Some 5,000 U.S. military members were in the Philippines at the time, most of them on training exercises, said Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Rumsfeld also addressed mixed signals coming from Iraqi leaders over the type of government they’d like to eventually see take shape in Iraq.

“Iraqis are going through a political process,” Rumsfeld said. “Until they agree on who their new leadership should be, you’re going to see a lot of public statements by a lot of people … reflecting a lot of different views.”

Iraqi political parties have run into major obstacles in talks on a new national unity government. Any major delay would be a setback to U.S. hopes for a significant reduction in troop levels this year.

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said earlier Tuesday in Baghdad that the results of the Dec. 15 parliamentary elections showed the Iraqi people want a “broad government of national unity” to bring together “all the different elements” of Iraqi society.

He spoke after meeting with Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari and other Iraqi leaders.

Al-Jaafari has said formation of the government was more complicated “because this time the Arab Sunnis are participating in the political process.”

Rumsfeld also said he had no problems with a deal permitting a United Arab Emirates company to take over operations at six major U.S. seaports, a plan that has encountered stiff political opposition in Congress.

He called the UAE a good military partner in the war on terror.

“Nothing changes with respect to security under the contract. The Coast Guard is in charge of security, not the corporation,” Rumsfeld said.

Earlier Tuesday, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said Rumsfeld had been incorrect in saying on Friday that the practice of paying for positive stories in the Iraqi media had been halted in the wake of negative publicity in the United States.

An official inquiry into the program by Navy Rear Adm. Scott Van Buskirk has been completed but its results have not been publicly released.

In his speech to the Council on Foreign Relations, a foreign-policy think tank, Rumsfeld raised the issue as an example of the U.S. military command in Baghdad seeking “nontraditional means” to get its message to the Iraqi people in the face of a disinformation campaign by the insurgents.

“Yet this has been portrayed as inappropriate — for example, the allegations of someone in the military hiring a contractor and the contractor allegedly paying someone to print a story — a true story — but paying to print a story,” he said during his speech.

“The resulting explosion of critical press stories then causes everything — all activity, all initiative — to stop, just frozen,” he added.

In an appearance Friday on PBS’ “The Charlie Rose Show,” Rumsfeld said he had not known about the practice of paying for news stories before it became a subject of critical publicity in the United States.

“When we heard about it we said, ‘Gee, that’s not what we ought to be doing,’ and told the people down there,” he said.

Although “it wasn’t anything terrible that happened,” Pentagon officials ordered a halt to the practice and “they stopped doing it,” he added, according to a transcript provided by the show.

Source: AP via Yahoo! News
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060221/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/rumsfeld

Popularity of Indian cricketers up in Pakistan

Posted in Uncategorized on February 21, 2006 by Sohail

MUMBAI: A top Pakistani security official, who travelled with the Indian team for 45 days, says the enthusiasm for the cricket series was not the same as last time but the popularity of the Indian team had certainly gone up among ordinary Pakistanis.

“The popularity of the Indian cricketers surely went up compared to the Indian team’s tour of Pakistan in 2004, the first full-fledged one after almost 15 years,” Sohail Khan, a senior superintendent of police with Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency, said in Karachi before the team’s departure for Mumbai.

Khan, who had come to see off the Indian team at the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi on Monday, travelled to the seven cities visited by the team – Lahore, Karachi, Faisalabad, Multan, Islamabad, Rawalpindi and Peshawar.

Khan is a competent authority to comment as he had also travelled with the team during their 38-day tour of Pakistan in March-April 2004, and closely co-ordinated the security arrangements for both series.

“It was evident that their popularity has risen. People sought more autographs and they had become household names and they were talked about by many more people,” said the Lahore-based Khan, a cousin of the legendary Imran Khan.

“However, the enthusiasm of the people for an India-Pakistan series has gone down a bit compared to the 2004 series.”

This could be due to the fact that India and Pakistan have now played three series within two years, two in Pakistan and one in India. Some experts said that it was an overdose of the premium series and it should be spaced out more.

Khan was satisfied that the series passed off peacefully without any major incident, especially considering the nationwide protests over the publications of cartoons related to the Prophet Mohammed.

“Yes, the series passed of without a major incident, and the protests had no effect on the security of the team as such,” he said, looking a bit tired after the hectic travelling and liasing with the local and other security agencies at all seven cities.

There was one small incident when someone from the crowd threw a small nut that hit Irfan Pathan’s temple during the first one-day international at the Arbab Niaz Stadium in Peshwar.

But Khan laughed the incident off, saying that the player did not get hurt.

It was also during this match that a spectator broke the security cordon and ran to the pitch to shake hands with Sachin Tendulkar after he scored a century.

Earlier, during the team’s stay in the Pearl Continental Hotel in Lahore, a Lahore police personnel tried to get an autograph from Tendulkar for one of his friends and was suspended for “dereliction of duty”.

Apart from this incident, the players were happy with the tight security arrangements made for the high profile series.

Source: Times of India
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1422389,curpg.cms

‘Bush visit to change India’s political landscape’

Posted in Uncategorized on February 21, 2006 by Sohail

WASHINGTON: US President George W. Bush’s visit to India on March 1-3 can be compared to the historic visit of President Richard Nixon to China in 1973 and could “alter the strategic landscape” to make India a major global player, according to Newsweek magazine.

In an article entitled “Nixon to China, Bush to India,” Newsweek International editor Fareed Zakaria said Washington has had “remarkably little discussion” regarding this visit, which, if successful, “could well alter the strategic landscape, bringing India firmly and irrevocably on to the world stage as a major player, normalising its furtive nuclear status and anchoring its partnership with the United States.”

Writing in the February 27 issue of Newsweek , Zakaria – who met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi last week – compares Bush’s visit to India with the historic visit president Nixon made to China in 1973. He also quotes Under Secretary for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns as telling him that just the loose ends of the civilian nuclear agreement with India needed tying up.

Zakaria argues for far-sightedness on both sides, saying the benefits to the US and to the world “are real”.

More lecturing was not going to stop India’s nuclear programme and that is something recognised even by the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohamed El Baradei, Zakaria points out. He accuses the Indian bureaucracy of being stuck in worn-out ideas of non-alignment and the Left parties in reflexive anti-Americanism.

Calling the separation of civilian and military nuclear facilities a largely technical issue that could be sorted out, Zakaria quotes Burns as saying, “We’ve got just 10 per cent to go”, and while it was a complicated negotiation between “two equal parties”, both are committed to it.

The Bush administration has also seen India’s vote in Vienna to send Iran to the Security Council as having already crossed what the US Congress saw as a hurdle to bringing the July 18, 2005, Bush-Manmohan Singh deal to fruition.

His views are echoed by South Asian expert Stephen Cohen who feels Bush has been ahead of his administration so far as his India initiative is concerned.

Cohen, of the leading Washington think tank, the Brookings Institution, said about the president’s upcoming India visit in early March: “Bush wanted to make this trip long ago.

“He saw India as a rising power and has been a leading advocate of India in the US. He’s the first president after John F. Kennedy who was ahead of his government.”

Cohen said the July 18 agreement last year between President Bush and visiting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was such a surprise that there might be another surprise in store during this visit.

“Maybe there could be some major purchases of military equipment or my guess is Bush will want to have the nuclear agreement to take to Congress and might have some waiver capability such as fuel for Tarapur.”

Source: Times of India
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1422462.cms

Related: Fareed Zakaria: Nixon to China, Bush to India

GOP Governors Threaten to Block Port Deal

Posted in Uncategorized on February 21, 2006 by Sohail

By WILL LESTER, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 25 minutes ago

Two Republican governors are threatening legal action to block an Arab company from taking over operations in major U.S. ports and some GOP lawmakers say the deal should be closely examined.

In the uneasy climate after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Bush administration decision to allow the transaction is threatening to develop a major political headache for the White House.

New York Gov. George Pataki and Maryland Gov. Robert Ehrlich on Monday voiced doubts about the acquisition of a British company that has been running six U.S. ports by Dubai Ports World, a state-owned business in the United Arab Emirates.

The British company, Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co., runs major commercial operations at ports in Baltimore, Miami, New Jersey, New Orleans, New York and Philadelphia.

Both governors indicated they may try to cancel lease arrangements at ports in their states because of the DP World takeover.

“Ensuring the security of New York’s port operations is paramount and I am very concerned with the purchase of Peninsular & Oriental Steam by Dubai Ports World,” Pataki said in a news release. “I have directed the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to explore all legal options that may be available to them.”

Ehrlich, concerned about security at the Port of Baltimore, said Monday he was “very troubled” that Maryland officials got no advance notice before the Bush administration approved the Arab company’s takeover of the operations at the six ports.

“We needed to know before this was a done deal, given the state of where we are concerning security,” Ehrlich told reporters in the State House rotunda in Annapolis.

The arrangement brought protests from both political parties in Congress and a lawsuit in Florida from a company affected by the takeover.

Public fears that the nation’s ports are not properly protected, combined with the news of an Arab country’s takeover of six major ports, proved a combustible mix.

Republican Sen. Lindsay Graham of South Carolina said on Fox News Sunday that the administration approval was “unbelievably tone deaf politically.” GOP Rep. Tom Davis of Virginia said on ABC’s “This Week,” “It’s a tough one to explain, but we’re in a global economy. … I think we need to take a very close look at it.”

Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey said Monday that he and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., will introduce legislation prohibiting the sale of port operations to foreign governments.

At least one Senate oversight hearing was planned for later this month.

Critics have noted that some of the 9/11 hijackers used the UAE as an operational and financial base. In addition, they contend the UAE was an important transfer point for shipments of smuggled nuclear components sent to Iran, North Korea and Libya by a Pakistani scientist.

The Bush administration got support Monday from former President Carter, a Democrat and frequent critic of the administration.

“My presumption is, and my belief is, that the president and his secretary of state and the Defense Department and others have adequately cleared the Dubai government organization to manage these ports,” Carter told CNN. “I don’t think there’s any particular threat to our security.”

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff made the rounds on the talk shows Sunday, asserting that the administration made certain the company agreed to certain conditions to ensure national security. H said details of those agreements were secret.

During a stop Monday in Birmingham, Ala., Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said the administration had a “very extensive process” for reviewing such transactions that “takes into account matters of national security, takes into account concerns about port security.”

___

Associated Press writers Devlin Barrett in Washington, Matthew Verrinder in Newark, N.J., and Tom Stuckey in Annapolis, Md., contributed to this story.

Source: AP via Yahoo! News
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060221/ap_on_go_co/port_security

Pharmaceutical Adoption Of RFID Slower Than Expected: Report

Posted in Uncategorized on February 20, 2006 by Sohail

By Rick Whiting
InformationWeekTue Feb 7, 5:21 PM ET

Adoption of radio frequency identification technology by the pharmaceutical industry may not be happening as quickly as once forecast, according to a report released this week.

Given the high cost of drugs and the growing problems of drug counterfeiting and theft, expectations were high in 2004 and 2005 that the number of drugs tagged with RFID transponders to ensure their pedigree (the ability to trace a drug shipment’s custody through a supply chain) would grow rapidly. Those expectations were fueled by a number of high-visibility RFID trials in the last 18 months involving drugs such as OxyContin and Viagra.

In December Pfizer began putting RFID tags on all Viagra shipments in the U.S. The drug maker is spending about $5 million on the project, using technology from Alien Technology to tag cases and pallets, and from Tagsys to tag individual bottles of drugs.

But a study of RFID tracking in the pharmaceutical industry by ABI Research concludes that no more than about 10 medications will be tagged on a large scale this year. ABI attributes the slower adoption rate to the cost of RFID, a retreat from earlier hype about the technology, and the desire by many pharmaceutical companies to develop small-scale pilot projects before committing to large-scale deployments.

Another issue, according to ABI, is uncertainty concerning the current state of federal and state drug-pedigree legislation. There has been a moratorium on enforcing the Prescription Drug Marketing Act of 1988 because drug makers were not ready to meet its requirements. That moratorium doesn’t expire until January 2007. Several states, including California and Florida, have enacted their own pedigree laws, but ABI says many pharmaceutical companies plan to use barcode technology to meet those requirements.

Source: TechWeb via Yahoo! News
http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/20060208/tc_cmp/179101539&printer=1;_ylt=Aj1gfjQKGII6I66ZU_vhRbg4k4gC;_ylu=X3oDMTA3MXN1bHE0BHNlYwN0bWE-

ADL: Stop building over Muslim graves

Posted in Uncategorized on February 20, 2006 by Sohail

The Anti-Defamation League’s Israel office has called on the Wiesenthal Center to “pause” in its construction of a Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem over land that contains a recently discovered Muslim burial site.

“The ADL believes that a Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem can be an important institution for educating against bias and for respect and understanding. We trust that the same tenets that undergird [sic] the museum’s mission will be applied to finding a resolution to address the concerns of the Muslim community and the families of those whose graves have been discovered,” the ADL said in a statement released to the press.

The High Court of Justice is slated to hand down its decision in the coming days on whether the Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) may continue building its planned Center for Human Dignity, Museum of Tolerance Jerusalem complex following public protests and two petitions by Israeli Arabs.

The $150 million complex off Jerusalem’s Rehov Hillel, designed by prominent American architect Frank Gehry, would include a museum, conference and education centers, a library and a theater, all dedicated to promoting tolerance in Israel and abroad, the SWC says. If work continues as planned the museum is expected to open by 2008.

The SWC said it had been told by the government and the Jerusalem Municipality five years ago that the three-dunam plot was not defined as a cemetery, but as “public open space” and gave it the necessary permits to build on the site. It said the government based its decision on a 1964 Shari’a Court (the highest Muslim court in Israel) ruling that allegedly nullified the sanctity of the graveyard and permitted use of the land.

Rabbi Marvin Hier, the dean and founder of SWC, quoted the ruling as declaring “The cemetery’s sanctity has ceased to exist and it is permitted to do whatever is permitted in any other land which was never a cemetery.” The 1964 document was included in the SWC response to the petition.

“We encourage a temporary cessation of construction until the issue is resolved in a respectful way acceptable to all parties. To do less would weaken the foundation upon which a museum of tolerance stands,” the ADL said Sunday.

SWC head Rabbi Marvin Hier told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday that the center would not stop its plans to build the museum at the site, unless ordered to by the High Court.

A spokesman for the museum, Charley Levine, blasted the ADL’s statement.

“It is most unfortunate that the ADL Israel Office did not have the patience to allow allow justice to take its course, feeling the need to weigh in on a sensitive situation about which it lacked detailed understanding. In doing so, it joins with extreme elements whose sole objective is to permanently stop the construction of the MOT in the heart of Jerusalem,” Levine told the Post.

“The Wiesenthal Center has made its case to Israel’s Supreme Court and awaits the decision from that institution. We are fully committed to finding an acceptable solution that will assure that all remains will be reinterred according to the highest norms of Judaism and Islam. The SWC has offered three specific compromise measures to the Court to achieve this goal,” Levine said.

Source: Jerusalem Post
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1139395445518&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Copyright 1995-2006 The Jerusalem Post

Carter: Don’t punish Palestinians

Posted in Uncategorized on February 20, 2006 by Sohail

Former US President Jimmy Carter has urged Israel and the US not to punish the Palestinians for giving Hamas a victory in parliamentary elections.

The two allies have already taken steps to withhold funds from a government led by the militant Islamist group, which they brand a terror organisation.

“The likely results will be to alienate oppressed and innocent Palestinians,” Mr Carter wrote in a US newspaper.

Hamas took 74 out of 132 seats in polls for parliament in January.

Hamas leaders are set to begin talks on the composition and programme of the new Palestinian government later on Monday.

Israeli-US collusion to punish the Palestinian people could be counterproductive and have devastating consequences
Jimmy Carter

Officials from the group will meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and representatives from other parties.

Mr Carter’s human rights organisation was one of a number of groups that monitored the poll. As president in the 1970s he worked on the breakthrough Camp David accords – the first peace treaty between Israel and an Arab country, Egypt.

‘Tacit collusion’

Mr Carter’s article in the Washington Post argues that despite the Hamas success, Mr Abbas retains considerable constitutional control in the political and security spheres.

He is also optimistic that Hamas will appoint moderates or technocrats to the cabinet and prime ministership and focus its influence on the legislature.

Turning to Israel and the United States, Mr Carter demands that they play positive roles during this fluid period in Palestinian politics.

“Any tacit or formal collusion between the two powers to disrupt the process by punishing the Palestinian people could be counterproductive and have devastating consequences,” he says.

“Unfortunately, these steps are already underway.”

Israel has moved to withhold about $50m per month paid to the PA in customs and tax revenues.

It is also determined to hinder movement of elected Hamas MPs through the 100-plus military checkpoints it maintains in the occupied West Bank.

US officials meanwhile have announced that all its funding for the new government will be withheld, including money that would go to pay schoolteachers, police and hospital staff.

Mr Carter criticises Washington for not agreeing to bypass the government and allow funds be channelled through NGOs.

Punishing ordinary Palestinians will increase alienation, incite violence and – far from inducing Hamas to moderate its anti-Israel stance – will actually increase its influence and reputation, Mr Carter argues.

He also indirectly criticises Israel for avoiding peace talks not just with Hamas, but with past leaders who did recognise Israel’s right to exist.

“The election of Hamas candidates cannot adversely affect genuine peace talks, since such talks have been non-existent for over five years,” he writes.

But if Israel is willing to include the Palestinians, he argues, Mr Abbas could still play the negotiating role – as Yasser Arafat did before him – in his role of leader of the Palestine Liberation Organisation.

Source: BBC NEWS
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/4732308.stm

Published: 2006/02/20 13:07:23 GMT
© BBC MMVI

Row over Israeli “tolerance museum” on a Muslim cemetery

Posted in Uncategorized on February 20, 2006 by Sohail
By Martin Patience
BBC News website, Jerusalem

For the last 40 years Mohammed Hamdi Bader has left his tailor’s shop in the Old City once a month and taken a short walk to the heart of west Jerusalem where he prayed close to his grandfather’s grave.

But the 49-year-old Palestinian father-of-five can no longer reach the grave and he’s furious about it.

The Maamam Allah cemetery, which is at least 1,000 years old, has become a building site.

The Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Centre is constructing a Museum of Tolerance on the cemetery. The centre says the museum will seek to promote “unity and respect among Jews and between people of all faiths”.

The project has raised the ire of the Muslim community in the city. There have been accusations that exhumed remains have been damaged.

Despite a temporary injunction on work at the site issued by the Islamic Court – a division of the Israeli justice system – Israeli archaeologists and developers have continued excavating remains at the cemetery, says Durgham Saif, a Palestinian lawyer.

‘Absurd’

On Wednesday Mr Saif took the case to the Israeli Supreme Court in the hope of strengthening the Islamic Court’s injunction. The supreme court’s verdict is still pending.

Standing in his tailor’s shop beside an old hoarding advertising “London styles”, with drawings of men in suits, raincoats and bowler hats from the 1930s, Mr Bader says he thinks a museum of tolerance is a good idea.

“But you can’t build this museum on any graveyard, regardless of religion,” he adds.

The discovery of human remains on building sites in this part of the world is highly sensitive, for both Jews and Muslims.

The Mufti of Jerusalem, Ekrema Sabri, says that Muslim religious authorities were not consulted about digging at the site.

Sitting in his office in the al-Aqsa Mosque, the mufti also says that the museum’s claim to promote tolerance is absurd.

“How can a museum carrying the name of tolerance be built on a graveyard?”

Smashed skull

Durgham Saif, the lawyer who brought the Islamic petition to the Israeli Supreme Court, says that bones have already been removed to boxes and that one skull has been smashed.

But Charles Levine, spokesman for the new museum, accused Palestinian and Muslim groups of exploiting the issue for political gain.

“Why didn’t they protest when the car park was built?” asks Mr Levine, referring to the part of the cemetery converted into a car park 20 years ago and now part of the site for the museum.

“Wherever you dig in Jerusalem you are going to find graves and archaeological sites. We are fully committed to resolving this issue in a respectful manner.”

Heavily guarded

Californian governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Ehud Olmert, now acting Israeli Prime Minister, attended a ceremony in 2004 to lay the Museum of Tolerance’s foundation stone.

Plans for the $150m museum, designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry, include a theatre complex, a conference hall, an education centre and a library.

It is expected to be completed in 2009.

For now, the cemetery is patrolled by security guards and is surrounded by a four-metre-high metal fence and razor wire.

Through the cracks of the padlocked gates, you can see diggers and bulldozers. White tents, housing skeletal remains, are also visible.

Inside one of these white tents, Mr Bader says, lie the mortal remains of his grandfather.

Source: BBC NEWS
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/4721336.stm

US asks Palestinians to return $50 mil. in aid

Posted in Uncategorized on February 17, 2006 by Sohail

By Sue Pleming 57 minutes ago

The United States has asked the Palestinian Authority to return $50 million in U.S. aid because Washington does not want a Hamas-led government to have the funds, the State Department said on Friday.

The money was demanded as part of a full review of all U.S. aid for the Palestinians that began soon after the militant group Hamas’ surprise victory in elections last month. A Hamas-led parliament was set to be sworn in on Saturday but it could take several weeks for a Cabinet to be formed.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the caretaker government of President Mahmoud Abbas agreed to return the money, given last year for infrastructure projects after Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza and parts of the West Bank.

“In the interests of seeing that these funds not potentially make their way into the coffers of a future Palestinian government (made up of Hamas) … we have asked for it to be returned and the Palestinian Authority has agreed,” McCormack told reporters.

A Palestinian official confirmed Washington had asked for $50 million in aid to be returned. “The Palestinian Authority promised to comply,” the official said.

Over the past decade, the United States has given about $1.5 billion in aid to the Palestinians, mostly through aid groups.

McCormack reiterated U.S. policy that aid could not go to Hamas, which is classified as a terrorist group, but he said the United States was looking at ways of ensuring humanitarian assistance could reach the Palestinians.

For a Hamas government to get direct aid, it would have to renounce violence, recognize Israel, disarm militias and agree to past Israeli-Palestinian agreements.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will be visiting Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates next week to discuss, among other issues, how to deal with Hamas and to convince those nations not to fill any funding gap.

The mediating powers in the Middle East — the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia — issued a statement last month in which they said Hamas must reject violence and recognize Israel or risk losing aid.

HUMANITARIAN CONCERNS

Several aid groups want the U.S. government to grant a waiver for humanitarian assistance to enable them to communicate with a new Palestinian government.

Elizabeth Sime, country director for CARE’s program in the West Bank and Gaza, said world donors must understand that getting aid to the Palestinians required cooperation at least “on a technical level” with the Palestinian Authority.

McCormack told Reuters it was premature to talk about a waiver, adding it would be a few weeks before the review was completed.

Peter Gubser, president of American Near East Refugee Aid, said he feared his charity’s school program might be affected by an aid cut because the group had to deal with Palestinian ministries.

Like many others, his group was looking at how to shift aid in a way that complied with U.S. law. A school program that would require dealings with the Palestinian Authority may be curbed and so his group might, for example, put more funds in their milk program for Palestinian preschoolers.

InterAction, an umbrella group representing about 160 aid groups, said there was concern any sharp cut in foreign assistance would create more unrest and hurt the weakest.

The group’s president, Mohammad Akhter, said it was possible to work with civil society groups not linked in any way to Hamas. He pointed out the United States had given food aid to the North Koreans even though it opposed their polices.

Source: Reuters via Yahoo! News

Australian TV Defends Abuse Broadcast

Posted in Uncategorized on February 16, 2006 by Sohail

By ED JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer 48 minutes ago

An Australian television network on Thursday defended airing graphic images of abuse at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison, amid U.S. concerns the photographs could heighten anti-U.S. sentiments in the Middle East and endanger the lives of American troops.

Mike Carey, senior producer of the Special Broadcasting Service’s “Dateline” program, said the images appeared to show new cases of mistreatment that should trigger a fresh investigation by U.S. authorities.

“It is a quantum leap in terms of the seriousness of the apparent abuse. It does add a lot to what we know was going on there,” Carey told The Associated Press.

Many of the images broadcast Wednesday by SBS were more graphic than the photos published in 2004 that prompted worldwide outrage and resulted in the prosecution of several American soldiers.

One video clip depicted a group of naked men with bags over their heads standing together and masturbating. The network said they were forced to participate. Other images showed what appear to be wounded people and the corpse of a man SBS said was killed during a CIA interrogation. SBS has refused to say how it obtained the images, and their authenticity could not be verified independently.

After they were broadcast, U.S. Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman said the images were part of material that had already been investigated by U.S. authorities. Nine American soldiers were convicted in the abuse and sentenced to terms ranging from discharge from the Army to 10 years imprisonment.

Whitman said more than 25 people have been held accountable for criminal acts and “other failures” at Abu Ghraib.

Carey conceded that many of the hundreds of photographs in SBS’s possession appeared to have been taken at the same time as the previously published photos that showed naked detainees stacked in a human pyramid and being intimidated by guard dogs, as well as a hooded man standing on a crate with electrodes attached to his fingers.

But he said many of the images — such as the apparent photos of dead detainees — raised fresh questions about what occurred in the notorious Baghdad jail. He queried whether all the incidents of abuse depicted in the photos had been investigated.

“Maybe the Pentagon has investigated them all but it certainly, as far as I am aware, has not explained them publicly to the American people,” he told the AP. “We felt a responsibility … to broadcast them. It is a matter of free speech.”

Officials in Iraq and the United States have expressed concern that the images could enflame public anger already running high over footage of British soldiers beating youths in southern Iraq.

In Baghdad, Iraq’s prime minister condemned the latest abuse images. “The Iraqi government condemns the torture practices revealed through the recent pictures that show Iraqi prisoners being tortured,” a statement issued by Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari’s office said.

The abuse images were widely reported in news pages across Asia, though official reaction to their broadcast was muted. Anger in Muslim countries in Asia remained focused on the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, with continuing demonstrations in Pakistan and further denunciations by officials in Malaysia.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard said Thursday that SBS had the right to decide whether to air the images, but suggested that if the photos showed acts that have already been exposed and prosecuted, there was no reason to publish them.

Howard, a strong ally of President Bush in the Iraq war, defended U.S. efforts to punish those behind past abuses at Abu Ghraib.

“In the end we are a democracy,” Howard said, conceding that “once a journalist gets photographs of that kind, the reality is they are going to publish them.”

Australia’s opposition Labor Party said it was crucial to determine whether the abuse shown in the newly published images had been carried out by offenders who had already been punished, or whether there were other perpetrators that must be brought to justice.

“One of our strongest weapons in the fight against terror is our commitment to uphold the rule of law,” said Robert McLelland, Labor’s defense spokesman.

He said the U.S. Army should carry out a fresh investigation and urged Howard to raise the issue with Washington.

Australia has about 1,320 troops in Iraq and the Middle East. Despite widespread public opposition to the war, Howard has repeatedly refused to set a deadline for pulling Australian troops out of Iraq.

Source: AP via Yahoo! News


Related: Iraq Prisoner Abuse Slideshow (Yahoo! News)