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Thursday, August 19, 2010

Quds Day (yaumul quds)

officially International al-Quds Day, is an annual event
on the last Friday of Ramadan,expressing solidarity with the Palestinian people
and opposing Zionism as well as Israel's control of Jerusalem (both West Jerusalem and
occupied-East Jerusalem).Anti-Zionist  demonstrations are held on this day in
some Muslim and Arab countries, and by Muslim and Arab communities around the world.
Participation in protests on Quds Day is particularly strong in non-Arab Iran,
where Ayatollah Khomeini first introduced the event.The Iranian government sponsors and
organizes the day's parades within Iran.

    Quds Day is a day Muslims from all around the world show their support
for the oppressed Muslims of the world and in particular Palestine.
Rallies are held in every capital of the world.

Gaza conflict 2006

Israeli-Palestinian conflict in Gaza Strip 2006
(25th June 2006 - )
The conflict began on June 24, 2006, when in light of ongoing Qassam rocket attacks on Israeli cities, Israeli operatives seized suspected Hamas members Osama and Mustafa Muamar in the Gaza Strip. On June 25, a Hamas attack in Israeli checkpoint resulted in the deaths of two Israeli soldiers and the capture of Israeli Corporal Gilad Shalit. In turn, Israel launched Operation Summer Rains on June 28.

Israel maintains that it mobilized thousands of troops in order to suppress Qassam rocket fire against its civilian population and to secure the release of Corporal Gilad Shalit. It is estimated that between 7,000 and 9,000 heavy Israeli artillery shells have been fired into Gaza since September 2005, killing 80 Palestinians in 6 months. On the Palestinian side, approximately 1,000 Qassam missiles are believed to have been fired into Israel.

Israel has stated that it will withdraw from Gaza and end the operation as soon as Shalit is released. The Palestinians say the assault is aimed at toppling the democratically elected Hamas-led government and at destabilizing the Palestinian National Authority, citing the targeting of civilian infrastructure such as a power station and the captures of government and parliament members.
Exchange of fire

After Israel's unilateral disengagement plan, pulling 9 thousand settlers from Gush Katif in the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2005, tensions had remained high in Gaza due to the continued shelling of areas in Israel with Qassam rocket attacks launched by Palestinians from Gaza into areas such as the Israeli city of Sderot, reported to have exceeded 800 rockets in the past seven months. Between the end of March and the end of May 2006, Israel fired at least 5,100 artillery shells into the Gaza Strip Qassam launching areas in an attempt to stop them from firing.

On June 9, during or shortly after an Israeli operation, an explosion occurred on a busy Gaza beach, killing eight Palestinian civilians.Other Israeli missile attacks included one on the Gaza highway on June 13 that killed 11 Palestinians and injured 30, and on June 20 that killed 3 Palestinians and wounded 15.

Hamas formally withdrew from its 16-month ceasefire on June 10, and began openly taking responsibility for the ongoing Qassam rocket attacks.
Raids and captures

On June 24, 2006, Israeli commandos entered the Gaza Strip in the first capture raid into the Strip since Israel pulled out of Gaza in September 2005. In the raid they captured two Palestinians, identified by neighbors as brothers Osama Muamar, 31, and Mustafa, 20, who Israel claims are Hamas militants. Noam Chomsky has claimed in a recent interview that these two Palestinians were civilians, a doctor and his brother. Chomsky claims not to know the fate the kidnapped men.

On June 25, 2006, armed Palestinians crossed the border from the Gaza Strip into Israel via a makeshift tunnel and attacked an Israel Defense Forces post. During the morning attack, two Palestinian militants and two Israel Defense Force soldiers were killed and four others wounded, in addition to Corporal Gilad Shalit, who suffered a broken left hand and a light shoulder wound. Hamas claimed that the attack was carried out in response to the death of the Ralia family on north Gaza beach a few weeks before.

Shalit's captors issued a series of statements demanding the release of all female Palestinian prisoners and all Palestinian prisoners under the age of 18. The statements came from Ezz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades (the military wing Hamas), the Popular Resistance Committees (which includes members of Fatah, Islamic Jihad and Hamas), and the Army of Islam. More than 8,000 Palestinians are held as prisoners by the Israel Defense Forces and Israel Prisons Service. Approximately two thirds of these prisoners were convicted in court, while around ten percent are held without charge.
Operation Summer Rains

Israeli forces entered Khan Yunis on June 28, 2006 to search for Shalit. In preparation for the Israeli operation, the government of Egypt announced it deployed 2,500 policemen to the border of Egypt and the Gaza Strip in order to prevent the possible transfer of Shalit into Egypt, as well as to prevent an influx of refugees out of the Palestinian territory.

In the early hours of the operation, several Palestinian civilian locations were targeted. Bridges were destroyed to effectively cut the Gaza Strip in half. Power was also cut to 65% of the Gaza Strip after Israeli planes fired at least nine missiles at Gaza's only power station. Israeli forces also occupied the Gaza International Airport. Airstrikes were carried out on Hamas training and munitions camps, though no casualties were reported.

In apparent response to this, the Popular Resistance Committees announced they had abducted an 18-year-old man from the West Bank settlement of Itamar, Eliyahu Asheri, and would kill him if the invasion continued. On 29 June, IDF combat engineers and Shabak agents, acting on intelligence, found Asheri's body in an abandoned car in an open field outside of Ramallah. The youth appeared to have been shot to death, and findings indicated that he may have been killed as early as Sunday, casting doubt on the PRC's earlier claims that he was alive and kept in captivity.

Although the Popular Resistance Committees said it was behind the attack, it became known that the kidnapping was planned and carried out by Fatah militants. Four suspects were captured by IDF forces for kidnapping and killing Asheri.

The al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades later announced that they had captured a third Israeli, Noach Moskovich from the central Israeli city of Rishon LeZion. However Moskovich was eventually discovered dead, apparently of natural causes, near the spot where he had last been seen.
Incursion into Northern Gaza

Israeli Merkava tanks on the north Gaza borderAs night approached 28 June, IDF troops and tanks massed on the Northern border of Gaza Strip, and prepared to take strategic positions in the second phase of the operation, which Israel claims targeted the Qassam rocket sites. Qassam rockets were continually fired into Israel, and during the early hours of 29 June, several Israeli naval vessels shelled Qassam locations.Thousands of leaflets advising civilians to leave their homes were dropped on inhabited areas in the northern Gaza Strip towns of Beit Lahia and Beit Hanoun which Israel had identified as frequent launch sites for Qassam rockets.

An explosion was reported in Gaza City, and eyewitnesses reported it was at the Islamic University. Witnesses reported Israeli tanks, soldiers, and bulldozers entering Northern Gaza. Following a plea from Egypt for more time for negotiations however, the IDF later announced it would put a hold on the second phase to give the militants a final chance to turn over Shalit.
Arrest of Hamas government members

On 29 June, Israel arrested 64 Hamas officials. Amongst them were Palestinian Authority cabinet ministers and members of the Palestinian Legislative Council. Eight Hamas government members (five of whom in Ramallah) and up to twenty Legislative Council representatives were detained in the operation.

Among those arrested are the Finance Minister Abed Razek; Labour Minister Mohammad Barghouti; Religious Affairs Minister Nayef Rajoub; East Jerusalem legislative council member and number two on Hamas list, Muhammad Abu Tir; as well as heads of regional councils, and the mayor of Qalqilyah and his deputy. At least a third of the Hamas cabinet have been detained and held by Israel. As a result, Hamas officials have gone into hiding.

August 6, Israeli forces detained the Speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council, Aziz Dweik, at his home in the West Bank. Dweik, who is regarded as a key member of Hamas, was apprehended after Israeli military-vehicles surrounded his home in Ramallah.
Bombardment phase

Beginning on 30 June, the IDF began to hit the Gaza Strip with a variety of targeted bombardments. Israeli warplanes struck more than a dozen times in Gaza in the hours after midnight, hitting a Fatah office and a Hamas facility in Gaza City as well as roads and open fields. Israeli Air Force aircraft struck the Palestinian Interior Ministry in Gaza City. The Israel Defense Forces confirmed its planes hit the office of Interior Minister Said Siyam. In a separate Israeli airstrike, three missiles hit the office of Khaled Abu Ilal, a Interior Ministry official, who also heads a pro-Hamas militia.

After Israeli warnings that the Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniya could be targeted for assassination if Corporal Shalit was not freed, Israeli aircraft hit the Prime Minister's office with two missiles in the early hours of 2 July.

On July 12, the IDF droped a 550lb bomb on a building in Gaza City, killing a family of nine. A spokesman for the Israeli army said they were trying to kill a group of Hamas militants led by Mohammed Deif, and did not know that a family was living inside the house when they bombed it.
Ground Operation in Northern Gaza Strip

On July 6, 2006, the IDF's Golani Brigade under the command of Colonel Tamir Yadai, backed by IAF jets and artillery fire, reoccupied the site of three former Israeli settlements of Dugit, Nisanit and Elei Sinai in the northern Gaza Strip. Additional forces entered the nearby Palestinian town of Beit Lahiya.
Impact on Gaza Strip residents

Palestinian officials say that it could take six months and some $15 million to repair the damage done to the destroyed power plant. According to the Palestinian Environmental NGOs Network, "The public health and safety and environmental hazards stemming from the damage caused to infrastructure as a result of this military operation include water shortages, contaminated remaining drinking water, uncontrolled discharge and untreated sewage flowing in the streets resulting in groundwater pollution, pollution of agricultural land which Gazans will now be unable to cultivate to harvest crops, negatively impacting their earning."

Early on, all border crossings in and out of Gaza were shut. Gas stations predicted petrol supplies would run out.

On Sunday July 2, Israel reopened Gaza's main cargo crossing — the Karni crossing, allowing 50 trucks with food, medical supplies and fuel, to travel from Israel to Gaza. Other trucks carrying fuel entered northeastern Gaza through the Nahal Oz border crossing. The next day, however, Israel once again closed the Karni crossing.

On July 14, 2006, Hundreds crossed the Gaza-Egypt border, into the Gaza strip from Egypt, after Palestineans blew a hole in the wall separating Gaza and Egypt.

On July 24, Israel partially re-opened the Karni corssing. Over month later, on August 25, for the first time in the two months since the conflict began, Israel opened the Rafah crossing for twenty four hours, with 2,500 people entering Gaza and 1,500 exiting.
Gilad Shalit

(Born 28 August 1986) is a corporal in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). He comes from Mitzpe Hila in the Western Galilee, and holds dual Israeli and French citizenship. Gilad is the first Israeli soldier captured by Palestinians since Nachson Wachsman in 1994.

As of 6 September 2006, Egypt was reported to be negotiating with Hamas on behalf of Israel for Shalit's release. A week later, Egyptian mediators received a letter written by Gilad himself in which he stated he was alive and well. The handwriting was confirmed to be that of Cpl. Shalit.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Gaza fight Result

The last Israeli soldiers in the Gaza Strip left Monday morning, officially ending Israel's nearly four-decade presence. Before dawn, thousands of Palestinians poured in to the settlement areas, celebrating the end of occupation. The withdrawal of six remaining Israeli army battalions, comprising between 5,000 and 6,000 soldiers, followed a twilight flag-lowering ceremony Sunday evening at the Israeli army's headquarters in the strip. In short speeches, Israeli officers paid tribute to the soldiers and Jewish settlers who died here since Israel occupied the territory in the 1967 war, and expressed hope that the Israeli departure would improve relations with the Palestinians.

The event near Neve Dekalim, once the largest of 21 Jewish settlements in Gaza, concluded an operation that in less than a month evacuated 8,500 settlers, razed communities of whitewashed homes and the military installations that guarded them.

While dissolving the military government in Gaza, the Israeli cabinet also voted 14 to 2 Sunday to leave the strip without demolishing synagogues inside settlement areas. Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, said the decision was designed "to poke us in the eye" and places Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in the difficult position of either protecting what many Palestinians describe as symbols of the occupation or demolishing religiously symbolic buildings. Israeli soldiers fixed signs onto the synagogues, cleared of their Torah scrolls, reading "Holy Place" in Arabic and English.

During morning celebrations punctuated by chants and gunfire, Palestinian youths set fire to at least four of the approximately two dozen synagogues left intact.

Palestinian officials were already angry over Israel's decision last week to close the only crossing between Gaza and Egypt for at least six months. International negotiators have been attempting to broker a deal under which Egypt, the Palestinians and a third party would control the Rafah crossing while Israel would monitor it from afar by camera.

Khaled meshal(1956)

Born: 1956 Birthplace: Near Ramallah, Palestine, father of four sons and three daughters, currently Hamas bureau chief in Damascus.

Born in Palestine, Mashaal's family was forced to relocate to Kuwait during the Israeli invasion of 1967. He was a Palestinian student leader at the University of Kuwait, where he graduated with a degree in Physics and eventually became a professor. With the Iraqi invasion in 1990, he fled again to Jordan, where he dedicated himself to Hamas. He survived an assassination attempt on 25-Sep-1997, in which agents of the Israeli Mossad injected him with an unknown chemical. Jordanian King Hussein I intervened on his behalf, citing a 1994 peace treaty, and Israel was forced to supply the antidote for Mashall and release Sheikh Ahmed Yassin from prison in exchange for the liberation of the two Israeli assassins. Soon after recuperating, Mashall was expelled to Qatar, from there he went to Damascus, where he worked as the local Hamas bureau chief.



Abdul Aziz Rantisi (1947 - 2004)

Co-founder and principal spokesman of Hamas. Became Hamas' leader in the Gaza Strip on the assassination of Ahmad Yassin, 22 March 2004. Married with six children; his base is the Shaykh Radwan area of Gaza City.

Rantisi was born October 1947 in Yibna, a small town between Ashkelon and Jaffa. When he was 6 months old, the family were made refugees from the 1948 war. They fled to Gaza , expecting to return at war's end. Settled in Khan Younis Refugee Camp (second largest refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, at that time under Egyptian rule), where their neighbors were the family of Mohammed Dahlan.

Grew up in extreme poverty, lived with parents, 8 brothers and 2 sisters in a tent for four years, then in an abandoned school building, before moving into an UNRWA mud house. Started working at age 6 to supplement father's income. An uncle was killed when Israel shelled Khan Younis Refugee Camp in the Suez crisis of October 1956.

Rantisi attended the UNRWA secondary school in Khan Younis. Graduated top of his class in 1965. Egypt at that time offered university education to exceptional Gaza students who were too poor to pay tuition, and Rantisi began studying pediatric medecine at the University of Alexandria that fall. Professed no political or religious interests at that time, his main interest was in becoming a doctor. At Alexandria, he ran into a familiar face, Sheikh Mahmoud Eid, who had been imam of the mosque in Khan Younis when Rantisi was a child. Eid introduced him to the Muslim Brotherhood.

Eid introduced him to the works of two Islamic scholars, Sheikh Hassan Banna, who founded the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt in 1929 and was its "Supreme Guide" until he was murdered 20 years later, and Sayyid Qutb, a theoretician and writer who was hanged in 1966 for allegedly plotting to assassinate Nasser.

Rantisi completed his degree and returned to Gaza in 1972, founded the Gaza Islamic Centre in 1973. The Strip was by this time under Israeli occupation, its refugees camps provided thousands of recruits for Fatah and the PFLP, and anarchy ruled on the streets, with PLO activists targeting Israeli soldiers and local Palestinian collaborators. In 1974 he returned to Alexandria for his two-years Masters in Pediatrics. He formally joined the Muslim Brotherhood on his return to Gaza in 1976. At that time he took up an internship at Nasser Hospital, the main medical facility in Khan Younis Refugee Ccamp. He was dismissed as head of Pediatrics there by the Israelis in 1983. He also joined the Faculty of Science at the Islamic University of Gaza, on its opening in 1978, teaching science, genetics and parasitology there.

The Camp David Accord of 1978 left the Palestinians under Israeli occupation with a toothless automony. Sadat sealed the Egypt/Gaza border, where there had previously been free passage, cutting Gazans off from higher education and employment. In Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood opposed the Accords, and Sadat expelled those who were known troublemakers into the sealed-off Gaza Strip. A number of them approached the Israeli administration there in 1978 for licenses to open a jama'ah (Islamic association), to build kindergartens, improve literacy, open stores. The movement began to flourish and branched out into building mosques.

Chief architect of the Islamic revival was Sheikh Ahmad Ismail Yassin, a Muslim scholar who did not disguise his belief that Israel was an illegitimate state, but urged his followers not to rush into a jihad before they could win. Instead he urged them to pursue (tarbiyeh) education and (da'wah) preaching. So when he approached the Israeli authorities, as the supreme leader of the Muslim Brotherhood in Gaza, to register charitable organizations to propagate Islam and to recruit supporters for the faith, the Israelis provided the appropriate tax-free licences.

A series of Islamic societies was licensed in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, the most important of which was Yassin's "Islamic Assembly" in Gaza, which had 2,000 members and effectively controlled Gaza's mosques. Within a decade, Yassin built the assembly into a powerful religious, economic and social institution in the Gaza Strip. He developed a welfare network around the mosques, many of which served also as community centres. The number of mosques in the Gaza Strip tripled from 200 to 600 between 1967 and 1987, while the number of worshippers doubled. In the West Bank, the number of mosques went from 400 to 750 in the same period.

With the Egyptian border sealed, only route out of the Occupied Palestinian Territories after 1967 was via the West Bank and the Abdullah Bridge into Jordan. The Muslim Brotherhood increasingly came into contact with, and under the influence of, Jordan instead of Egypt. They were courted by King Hussein because they were a counterbalance to the PLO. The Brotherhood used the money that flowed in from (primarily) Saudi Arabia and now the Jordanian monarchy to build up its network of mosques, cultural organisations and welfare services that were to provide a lifeline to the impoverished Palestinians.

In 1984, Israelis discovered the largest cache of weapons yet uncovered in the Palestinian Territories, in the hands of the Muslim Brotherhood. The weapons had been bought on the Israeli black market. The interesting thing from the Israeli perspective was that they had been in the Brotherhood's hands for over a year and not used. The entire Muslim Brotherhood leadership was jailed for lengthy terms, Yassin got 13 years.

In Yassin's absence, Rantisi stepped up to organise the Muslim bloc in student council elections at the Islamic University, where they won 80% of the vote. In Spring 1986, he launched largely successful campaign to rid the university of the PLO supporters. In the mid 1980's the al-Jihad al-Islami (Palestinian Islamic Jihad) became active in a different direction. They were opposed the Muslim Brotherhood's priorities, i.e. Islamization of Palestinians before the national liberation struggle. They felt that the Brotherhood was wasting its time fighting for control among Palestinian factions, that the priority was the liberation struggle and that Islamists should follow the example of the PLO's armed resistance, and even coordinate with them.

With the eruption of the first intifada erupted on 9 December 1987, it was apparent that quietist Islamization first, resistance second, was not a philosophy that appealed to the Palestinian street. On the first day of the intifada, Rantisi and six others (Yassin, 'Abdel Fattah Dukhan, Mohammed Shama', Dr. Ibrahim al-Yazour, Issa al-Najjar and Salah Shehadeh) established an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood to join in resisting the occupation. They named it The Islamic Resistance Movement (Harakat al Mukawwamah al Islamiyya), known by its acronym HAMAS, meaning "zeal". The intention in creating Hamas was to show that the Muslim Brotherhood was one of the initiators of the intifada.

The Hamas covenant (i.e. founding charter), published in August 1988, was a blend of nationalism and religion. It called for an exclusively Islamic Palestinian state, repudiating the PLO's formulation of a democratic secular state as anti-Islamic, and made territorial nationalism into a religious mission or jihad. It called for the destruction of the state of Israel. The charter explicitly rejected direct confrontation with the PLO, but refused to recognise the "sole representative status" of the PLO, positioning itself instead as an alternative leadership of the Palestinian people. To this end, Hamas organised independently of the intifada's unified leadership, issued its own leaflets, and called separate strikes, often on holy days.
Rantisi had been arrested in January 1988, accused of authoring Hamas' street pamphlets inciting support for the intifada. He was sentenced to 2 � years, which he served at Ansar III (Ketziot), Gaza Jail and Kfar Yonnah. He was released on 4 Sept 1990, and effectively led Hamas (with Zahhar) until rearrested for incitement in November 1990. He was sentenced to 12 more months, which he served at Ansar III, first in isolation with Yassin and subsequently in solitary. Released from jail, 12 December 1991. Joined Gaza Medical Association, February 1992. Represented Hamas in the July 1992 reconciliation accord that brought an end to intra-Palestinian infighting in the Gaza Strip. (Haider Abdel Shafi signed for the PLO).
In December 1992, Hamas killed six Israeli soldiers in one week. Israel responded by expelling 416 alleged Islamists to Marj al-Zuhur in south Lebanon, including Rantisi who acted as spokesman for the deportees. On his return, Rantisi was rearrested by Israel (in December 1993) and held until April 1997.
Relations between Hamas and the PLO deteriorated after the 1991 Gulf War. Hamas took an unequivocal stand against US/Soviet-sponsored peace negotiations and mounted several well-supported actions against the Madrid Conference, including shutting down Gaza with a three-day strike. Rantisi himself expressed doubt that the Oslo process would amount to anything, on the grounds that Israel would never allow through negotiations genuine Palestinian independence or statehood, only an autonomy that would perpetuate Israeli rule. He therefore opposed any negotiation with Israel. In 1994, Hamas allied with the Popular and Democratic Fronts to form the Damascus-based Palestinian Forces Alliance, an anti-Oslo coalition of 10 opposition groups. In 1993, it participated with these opposition groups in the Birzeit University student elections and defeated the pro-Oslo ticket.
Hamas was divided over whether to participate in the first PA elections of January 1996. Sheikh Yassin supported participation because it would "reassert the strength of the Islamist presence", but other members argued that participation would legitimise Oslo. Hamas did not stand in the end, although some Islamists did stand and win independently. Hamas indicated that it would stand however in local elections, which probably explains why local government minister Saeb Erekat declined to organize them.
In April 1998, Rantisi was arrested by the PA, after calling for the resignation of its leaders . He was held in custody without trial, for 20 months, accusing of involvement in the killing of Mohieddin Sharif. He was arrested again in July 2000, after calling the Palestinian participation in the Camp David talks an act of treason, but released in December 2000. Intermittently rearrested, e.g. April 2001, and in December 2001, when after public opposition the PA settled for holding him under house arrest.
Rantisi opposed the June 2003 hudna (one of the Phase One Road map obligations), although Hamas eventually joined it under Yassin's influence. Rantisi subsequently defended the hudna as a means to prevent the US forcing the PA into a civil war with Hamas.
On 10 June 2003, he survived an Israeli assassination attempt, which killed two bystanders and left 27 wounded (including one of Rantisi's sons, who was paralyzed). Rantisi himself was wounded by shrapnel in the chest and leg.
Following the attempt on his life, and the assassination of the leading Hamas Ismail Abu Shanab, Rantisi opposed attempts to bring Hamas into a second hudna. And as recently as January 2004, he spoke against Hamas joining a new Egyptian-sponsored ceasefire.
Rantisi was appointed head of Hamas in the Gaza Strip following the assassination of Ahmad Yassin on 22 March 2004. He knew that he was a marked man as soon as he took office, but declined to go underground and was philosophical about the prospect of assassination, It's death whether by killing or by cancer, it's the same thing."

Rantisi was assassinated in an Israeli helicopter missile strike, as he returned from a visit to his family on 17 April 2004.

In a statement, the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) called on Saturday the international community to move immediately to protect the Palestinian people and his leaders from the state terrorism practiced by Israel in order to �blow a deadly strike to the Palestinian people's steadfastness and oblige it to surrender to the Israeli occupation, settlements and arrogance."

The Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei' said that Rantisi's assassination was a "direct result" of encouragement from the United States.

"The Palestinian cabinet considers this terrorist Israeli campaign a direct result of American encouragement and the complete bias of the American administration towards the Israeli government," he said.

Dr. Sa'eb Erekat, Minister of Negotiations Affairs, condemned the killing of the Hamas leader as "state terrorism".

The Foreign Affairs Minister, Dr. Nabil Sha'th, also attributed the assassination of Rantisi to the forgiving American attitude toward Israel.

"Israel has been given a free hand [by the United States] to continue its policy of destruction, of siege, of assassination," said lawmaker Hanan Ashrawi.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan condemned Israel's killing of Hamas leader Abdel Aziz Al Rantisi on Saturday, saying the assassination could lead to more violence in the Middle East.

Hundreds of thousands of citizens, including prominent political figures, participated in the funeral procession of Hamas leader, Dr. Abdel Aziz Al Rantisi, and two of his bodyguards.

The body of the Hamas leader, who was extra-judicially executed yesterday night, was taken to the Al Omari Grand Mosque in the heart of Gaza City, where his body would be prayed on and sent to his final resting place.

During the procession, which started from the leader's home at the Al Sheikh Redwan suburb, citizens chanted slogans demanding revenge to Al Rantisi's killing and condemning the continuous Israeli military aggressions against the Palestinian people, as billowing banners of the different factions appeared throughout the procession.

The funeral procession witnessed also a massive attendance of representatives of national and Islamic factions, who expressed the unity of the Palestinian stance in the face of the Israeli conspiracies, asserting that the resistance would continue despite the Israeli strikes.

Meanwhile, symbolic funerals have been made for Dr. Al Rantisi throughout the cities, towns and villages of the West Bank, protesting such a horrendous crime, as leaders called to a three-day general strike, in which all shops, universities, schools and institutions would close its doors in mourning for the killing of Hamas leader.

Al Rantisi's car was pounded by an Israeli combat helicopter Saturday night, wounding him very seriously and instantly killing his two bodyguards. He was rushed to the local Al Shifa hospital, where he was pronounced dead shortly afterwards.

The Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas), named late at yesterday night secretly its new leader in Gaza Strip , following the extra-judicial execution of Dr. Abdulaziz Al-Rantisi by an Israeli combat helicopter.

A statement issued by Hamas,confirmed that the movement named a replacement secretly after its Hamas' Damascus-based leader Khaled Mash'al , had instructed that, in light of heightened Israeli escalation against the movement's operatives, the Gaza leadership to keep the identity of the new appointee secret.

Rajmohan Gandhi Commends Non-Violent Resistance

(April 7, 2010 by www.politicaltheatrics.net)

Rajmohan Gandhi ended his two-day visit to the West Bank on Monday, with a public lecture and discussion at the Friends Boys’ School, Ramallah. Gandhi, who is a research professor at the Center for South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Illinois, spoke on various issues related to Israeli occupation, which he had been able to witness firsthand whilst visiting. In particular, he spoke of the need to awaken the international community to the reality of life in the Occupied Territories.

           
I cannot disturb the Almighty”, he said, “but I can disturb the sleep of the international community.” A key theme running through his lecture was patience. He exhorted the Palestinian people not to become disheartened if occupation is not immediately overcome. “The Soviet Union crumbled, South African apartheid crumbled, and the occupation of Palestine will also crumble”, he said. He added that one must remember that it was not merely non-violence, but “non-violent struggle, non-violent resistance”, a difficult and time-consuming process.

He stressed the need for a positive process of development by the Palestinian people in the long term, as well as the short-term goal of ending the occupation. “With one hand, you must be fighting the occupation”, he said. “With the other, you must be rebuilding civil society.”
The grandson and biographer of Indian leader and peace activist Mahatma Gandhi, he reflected also on the parallels between the Palestinian cause and the Indian struggle for independence. In particular, he emphasized the need to unite the fragmented factions in Palestine, as his grandfather had done with the different castes in India. He also extended this theme of unity to those Israelis and Jews who are against the occupation. “I salute the people of Israel who support your fight,” he said. He later added that there was a pressing need to “rouse a sense of justice in Judaism”.

 Also speaking at the meeting was Palestinian National Initiative leader Mustafa Barghouthi. Barghouthi, a key figure in the non-violent resistance movement in Palestine, echoed the visiting professor’s calls for non-violent resistance. In particular, he stressed the need to continue with the strategy of Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS). He added, “Right is always stronger than military might. Justice is always stronger than oppression.”
The meeting was introduced by Mohammad Jaradat from the Badil Organization. After the speeches, questions from the audience were chaired.
Gandhi gave a press conference on Monday morning. He spent the previous day touring the West Bank with Mustafa Barghouthi, visiting Hebron and Bethlehem, and the villages Nilin and Bil’in, both epicentres of the popular resistance in the West Bank.
In Bil’in he was received by members of the local village council and the Popular Committee, and listened to a speech by committee member Muhammad al-Khatib highlighting its achievements. A short video showing the village’s non-violent struggle was also screened.
In comments to Maan News, Gandhi stated that “the whole world knows of Bil’in’s activists, and it is a model for modern popular resistance. There will come a day when the Israelis learn that their settlements and separation wall will vanish and will be destroyed as a result of the injustice and tyranny they practice.”


IMPORTANT LINK

Friday, August 13, 2010

Hamaas Leaders


Shaikh Ahmad Yaseen
Dr.Abdul Aziz Rantisi
Khaled meshaal

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Ramzan 2010 mubarak

Friday, August 6, 2010

Indian ship to join anti-Gaza blockade campaign

Posted: Mon Jul 26 2010, 09:19 hrs Jerusalem:
An Indian vessel is set to join a new international campaign named 'The Audacity of Hope' to press for an end to the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip, months after nine pro-Palestinian activists were killed in an attack on an aid ship bound for Gaza.
An e-mail circulated by pro-Palestinian activists in the US said an American ship named after US President Barack Obama's autobiography, will join a flotilla of other vessels from Europe, Canada, India, South Africa and the Middle East in an additional attempt to break the Israeli naval blockade in early autumn.
The new campaign comes amid an increased international hue and cry to force the Jewish state to lift its siege of the
coastal territory.
The effort is supported by several prominent figures, including Prof Rashid Khalidi, a well-known critic of Israel whose friendship with the US President has raised eyebrows here. 
Important link

India committed to Palestinian cause, says S.M. Krishna

2010-08-04 22:20:00
India on Thursday reiterated its commitment to the Palestinian cause and described it as "an important component of its long established foreign policy".
Stating in a written reply to a question in the Lok Sabha that India's commitment to the Palestinian cause is an important component of our long established foreign policy, Union External Affairs Minister S.M.Krishna said: "We share the perception that the conflict in West Asia is essentially political in nature and cannot be resolved by force."
"In line with our support for UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338, India supports a negotiated solution resulting in a sovereign, independent, viable and united State of Palestine living within secure and recognized borders, side by side at peace with Israel as endorsed in the Quartet Roadmap and UNSC Resolutions 1397 and 1515. India has supported the Arab Peace Plan, which calls for withdrawal of Israel to pre-1967 borders, along with recognition of Israel and the establishment of the State of Palestine with East Jerusalem as its capital," he stated.
"India has called for an early and significant easing of restrictions on the free movement of persons and goods within Palestine," he added.
During the visit of President Mahmoud Abbas of Palestine National Authority on 11 February 2010, Prime Minister had reiterated India's commitment to the Palestinian cause and urged concerted action for achieving a durable, just and comprehensive settlement of the Middle East conflict.
During the India-Brazil-South Africa Summit (IBSA) in Brasilia, the Ministers of IBSA issued a joint communiqué on 15 April 2010 on the situation in the Middle East that, inter alia, stated that concerned by the continuing deterioration of the humanitarian situation in Gaza, the Ministers called on Israel to alleviate circulation restrictions on the movement of people and goods, both in Gaza and in the West Bank.
"It is our firm conviction that lasting peace and security in the region can be achieved only through peaceful dialogue and not through use of force," stated Krishna in his reply. (ANI)
Important Link

Thursday, August 5, 2010

"Israeli Criminal Attack On Unarmed activists of Gaza Aid Ship in Inhuman"

(from Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO) websiteTuesday, 08 June 2010 04:01 administrator)

Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO) strongly condemn the recent terrorist attack of Israel on Gaza Aid Ship carrying aid to the war affected zone  and demand the Israeli government to stop its terrorist activities soon as possible. 
In a condolence message from Istanbul, SIO President Suhail KK said it's really  inhuman to kill 16 unarmed people by open fire  while activists in the Freedom Flotilla were from non-violent  groups like Free Gaza Movement or Turks.  He also appealed  all the peace loving nations,organisations to create pressure on Israel to stop all these  inhumane practices which are barbaric and brutal.Israel is not  allowing   humanitarian aid into Gaza but only about 15,000 tonnes per  week which is according to United Nations less than a quarter of what is needed.Countries must play active role in re-building war affected Gaza.
SIO believes Israel's continued violation of human rights is not possible without US support.In the Nehruvian era India was strong supporter of Palestinian freedom movement but now ignoring Mahatma Gandhi''s pro-Palestine policy, present Indian Government repeatedly failed  to convey it's reactions in the strongest terms to Israel after any attacks on Palestine. SIO is also worried about the growing politico-military  Indo-Israel nexuses.