Friday 25 July 2014

It Turns Out Hamas Didn’t Kidnap and Kill the 3 Israeli Teens After All.

               BS Post: 117 , Dated :  July 26, 2014 


The recent explosion of violence in Gaza may have been initially sparked by false or inaccurate claims, according to Israeli police.
The ongoing conflict began last month when three Israeli teenagers were kidnapped from a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank. Their bodies were later discovered in a field outside the city of Hebron. Before police were able to determine who was responsible, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu placed blame for the tragic deaths squarely on Hamas, Gaza’s elected political leadership—an accusation that may prove to be false.
On Friday, Chief Inspector Micky Rosenfeld, foreign press spokesman for the Israel Police, reportedly told BBC journalist Jon Donnisonhe that the men responsible for murders were not acting on orders of Hamas leadership. Instead, he said, they are part of a “lone cell.” Further, Inspector Rosenfeld told Donnison that if Hamas’ leadership had ordered the kidnapping, “they'd have known about it in advance.”
Naftali Fraenkel, 16, Gilad Shaer, 16, and Eyal Yifrah, 19, were kidnapped on June 12 from Gush Etzion, an Israeli settlement south of Jerusalem. After an exhaustive search that lasted over two weeks, security forces discovered the boys’ bodies in a field just north of Hebron, close to where they were abducted. The night of their disappearance, one of the boys called a police hotline and whispered, “They kidnapped me.” Police speculate that he may have been caught, leading the perpetrators to kill the teenage boys.
Husam Dofsh, a former member of Hamas, was arrested on suspicion of his involvement on July 5. After learning that he was a suspect, Dofsh called the Times of Israel and insisted he’d taken no part in the kidnapping. “I saw online, and people also told me, that I was tied to the mess, but I did not kidnap and didn’t do anything. I just want to continue my life,” Dofsh told reporters.
During the course of Israel’s investigation, some 400 Palestinians were arrested and up to 10 others were killed. Among those detained were Aziz Duwaik, the speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council and West Bank-based member of Hamas; and Mahmoud al-Khatib, a Hamas legislator was also reportedly abducted by the IDF during a dawn raid in the city of Bethlehem.
Israel's crackdown in Gaza instigated Hamas to begin firing rockets into Israel—a move that quickly escalated the conflict.
In early July, several members or activists connected to Hamas were killed, including a 14-year-old boy, which led the group to intensified their rocket attacks. Although there were no resulting deaths, the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) began successive airstrikes on the Gaza Strip.
“Hamas is responsible, and Hamas will pay,” Netanyahu said in reference to the kidnapping. However, Inspector Rosenfeld’s statements, along with a number of reports concerning the identities of known police suspects, seem to indicate that Hamas leadership was not involvement in the vicious crime.
The two more-likely suspects are Amer Abu Aysha and Marwan Kawasme, who have been missing from their homes since the night of the kidnapping. Police found cellphones and prepared food caches in their homes. Both had recently opened bank accounts in their wive's names. Palestinian security forces reported that Abu Aysha and Kawasme were missing to the Israelis the day after the kidnapping occurred, according to Al Monitor.
“That was the first clue in the investigation and the reason why Israel pointed an accusatory finger at the Hamas infrastructure in Hebron,” wrote Shlomi Eldar, a veteran journalist who has covered the Palestinian Authority for the past two decades.
Abu Aysha and Kawasme are known members of the Qawasameh tribe, according to Palestinian security forces. While members of Hebron-based Qawasameh clan identify with Hamas, they have a history of undermining its efforts to end violent conflicts with Israel. In 2003, for instance, the family sent two suicide bombers to blow up a bus in Jerusalem after a tahadiyeh (ceasefire) had been successfully negotiated between Israeli and Palestinian fighters, which was endorsed by Hamas founder Ahmed Yassin.
At the time of writing, a reported 848 Palestinians and 35 Israelis have been killed, including 208 children in Gaza, since July 8 when Israel launched Operation Protective Edge.
A number of Middle East journalists have written articles accusing the Israeli government of politicide—launching Israel into renewed conflict with Hamas in order to sabotage the formation of the unified Palestinian government that it so adamantly opposed. Vanetia Rainey, a Lebanon-based correspondent for The Week, wrote: “Israel must have known that [the] Palestinian Authority would not want to be seen to condone violence and would have to cooperate with the campaign of raids, something Hamas has been sharply critical of, calling it ‘harmful to Palestinian reconciliation’.”
This week, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas backed Hamas’ conditions for a ceasefire.
"The Gaza demands of stopping the aggression and lifting the blockade in all its forms are the demands of the entire Palestinian people and they represent the goal that the Palestinian leadership has dedicated all its power to achieve," he said.
The killing of 15 women and children by the Israel Defense Force at a UN elementary school in Beit Hanoun appears to be unifying Palestinians, but not through a shared interest in diplomacy. Roughly 10,000 protesters in the West Bank marched on Jerusalem Thursday after the school bombing. Two were killed and hundreds injured when the march clashed with Israeli police near the Qalandiya refugee camp. 
On Friday, Hamas called for a third intifada and Abbas called for a “Day of Rage” marked with increased protests. “This is your opportunity,” a Hamas spokesperson said in response to the protests.
If the reported findings of the Israeli Police hold up and Hamas is officially cleared of any wrongdoing in the case of the three kidnapped Israeli teens, Netanyahu and the Israeli government may have to explain why a massive military operation, with an 80 percent rate of civilian casualties, was instigated under a false premise. And if violence in the West Bank continues to spread, the IDF may find itself divided on two fronts.

Thursday 24 July 2014

At a time when Israel is continuously bombing the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, a 28-day film festival in Bangalore, jointly organised by the Israeli consulate, the Suchitra Film Society, and Bangalore Cultural Partners from Thursday to July 31.

 BS Post: 116 , Dated :  July 25, 2014 

By: Marcy Newman
Bangalore Mirror Bureau 

Bangalore moves forward with its month-long 'Israel 66 Film Festival' amidst the collective 'punishment' of Palestinian civilians living in a hermetically sealed, open-air prison from which they cannot flee

Whether it was the East India Company-induced famine of Bengal in 1769 or the Jalianwala Bagh massacre in 1919, it is clear that the British Empire employed collective punishment to control and discipline its subjects. Of course, this was long before the 1949 Geneva Convention rendering it illegal under international law. 

Just as India experienced collective punishment under colonialism, so too do the Palestinians whether in Gaza, the West Bank, or Israel. In each setting, a civilian population is targeted by Israelis fueled by racism. Last month when three Israeli settlers in the West Bank went missing, the Israeli military launched a massive assault on Palestinians in the Hebron area—even though they had already found their bodies. Palestinians were subjected to a military closure of their city, nine Palestinians were killed, and 500 arrested. In Jerusalem, a Palestinian sixteen-year-old, Mohammad Abu Khdeir, was burned alive by Israelis seeking revenge. His cousin, Tarek Abu Khdeir, a fifteen-year-old Palestinian American visiting his family in Jerusalem, was savagely beaten by Israeli police. 

Israel claims Hamas is responsible for the death of these settlers, but they have not revealed any evidence. Instead, seven days after they made public the teenagers' murders, Israel began carrying out an extensive air, land, and sea military bombardment of the Gaza Strip. After one week, Israel has killed 172 Palestinians, 34 children, and 28 women in Gaza and wounded many more. Eighty percent of all these casualties are civilians. But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blames the victims for their own demise to rationalise targeting civilian infrastructure. 

In the midst of this collective punishment of Palestinian civilians living in a hermetically sealed, open-air prison from which they cannot flee, Bangalore moves forward with its month-long "Israel 66 Film Festival" as a part of the Bangalore International Film Festival (BIFFes). While this event was likely planned some time ago, it is not a coincidence that such an event coincides with an Israeli massacre of Palestinians. After killing 1,391 Palestinians in Gaza during "Operation Cast Lead", Israel sent out a wide array of cultural ambassadors to various countries to conceal its war crimes. 

Most of the time these "ambassadors" are supported financially by the Israeli government; often a local consulate promotes their work. This is certainly the case of the "Israel 66 Film Festival", which the Consulate General of Israel in Bangalore is sponsoring. The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel's (PACBI) guidelines asks people of conscience to boycott such cultural programs that are "funded by the Israeli state or colluding institutions specifically to help with the state's propaganda or 'rebranding' efforts aimed at diluting, justifying, whitewashing or otherwise diverting attention from the Israeli occupation and other violations of Palestinian rights and international law". 

There are many Indians, even those who consider themselves to be Palestinian allies, who believe that art should be above the political fray because it enables us to share our common humanity. But when art deliberately distracts us from the reality of life and death in order to humanise the coloniser and dehumanise the colonised, do we still share a common humanity? Menahem Kanafi, Israel's Consul General in Bangalore, told The Hindu last week, that he hoped the film festival would "point out universal connections between Israeli and Indian art and life". These films help audiences to identify with their Israeli subjects and see a commonality between them, promoting the notion that Indians and Israelis share a kinship. 

These cultural ties between Indian and Israeli institutions help to normalise a relationship that extends beyond the cultural realm. Just last week Defence Secretary R K Mathur visited Tel Aviv to discuss deepening their collaboration; India is already one of Israel's largest weapons importers. It seems odd that a country that knows what it means to endure a military occupation by a foreign people would readily agree to engage in this type of relationship. 

Just as Indians fought their British occupiers with whatever means at their disposal—at times weapons and at times boycott—Palestinians, many of whom are inspired by India's history of freeing itself from British rule, aspire to achieve liberation through boycott. Equally moved by the South African struggle against apartheid, Palestinians extended their boycott campaign to the realm of culture because so much Israeli culture, including its film industry, is state-funded. 

In 2012 I saw Susan Youssef'sHabibiat BIFF, which was the first feature film to be filmed in Gaza. Is it too much to ask that we view such films so we can consider the common humanity we share with Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel? Is it too much to empathise with a population that is continually subjected to military invasions without anywhere to flee because its air, land, and sea borders are militarily controlled by the occupying power bombarding it? Is it too much to ask BIFF to screen Palestinian films like Anne-Marie Jacir's When I Saw You or Hany Abu-Asad's Oscar-nominated Omar? Or do we want to be complicit in financially supporting government-produced film festivals that are created for the sole purpose of whitewashing their war crimes? 


Marcy Newman is a Bangalore-based independent scholar and author of The Politics of Teaching Palestine to Americans and a founding member of the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel.


http://www.bangaloremirror.com/columns/views/Bring-up-the-bodies-BIFFes/articleshow/38495518.cms

Tuesday 22 July 2014

Shortage of Passport Booklets Figures in Rajya Sabha

 BS Post: 115 , Dated :  July 23, 2014 

NEW DELHI: The issue of shortage of blank passport booklets leading to inordinate delay in issuance of passports today figured in Rajya Sabha with members demanding immediate intervention of the government.
Raising the issue during Zero Hour, P Rajeev (CPI-M) said "Thousands of Indian citizens are waiting for their passports... The passport offices are not ready to accept applications even under Tatkal schme where it is mandatory to issue passport in three days as blank passport booklets are not available."
Rajeev said people are forced to apply through normal route where they are kept waiting for months due to shortage of booklets.
He said according to reports the India Security Press in Nashik, which prints currency notes and blank passport booklets, is running on half of its capacity leading to non-avaialability of booklets.
"This has led to severe hardships to thousands of people who have put on hold their plans to travel aborad beside creating problems for job aspirants abroad," Rajeev said.
He said the government should immediately intervene and ensure timely delivery of passports to people.
A large number of members associated themselves with the demand.

PTI Stories

Friday 11 July 2014

Dr Swati Vijay Kulkarni is new RPO in Mumbai.

 BS Post: 114 , Dated :  July 11, 2014 

Photo Dated : March 13, 2014
SOURCES : FB page CGI - CT SA
The Ministry of External Affairs has deployed Dr. Swati V. Kulkarni (IFS:1995) as Regional Passport Officer Mumbai, on her return from Consul General of Cape Town, South Africa.

This is the first time a Joint Secretary level officer has been posted as Regional Passport Officer. She took charge on 7th July 2014.

Dr. Swati Vijay Kulkarni is a career diplomat who holds M.B.B.S. (Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery) degree from the prestigious Government Medical College, Nagpur in India. She joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1995.

Prior to her appointment as the Regional Passport Officer of Mumbai Passport Office, She served as Consul General in CGI, Cape Town- South Africa (2012-2014), and before Cape Town, She served as Deputy Head of Mission in Muscat, Oman (2008-2012).


Dr. Kulkarni’s previous overseas assignments were First Secretary in High commission of India, London (2005-2008), where she successfully worked as a nodal officer for preventing discrimination for Indian Medical Graduates after the implementation of new UK Immigration rules; First Secretary in the High Commission of India, Port Louis, Mauritius (2001-2003); and as a Third Secretary (Language Trainee) in Embassy of India, Spain (1997-1998).


At Headquarters, Dr. Kulkarni worked as an Additional Private Secretary to the External Affairs Minister and later deputed as Regional Passport Officer, Pune, Maharashtra (1998-2001) and as Under Secretary looking after Austria, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia, Switzerland, Liechtenstein & Holy See, Malta, Portugal, Ireland and Spain (2003-2005).


Dr. Kulkarni is married to Mr. Vijay Jayant Kulkarni who is a Merchant Mariner by profession and has two daughters.

Her interests include study of developmental issues, swimming, and tennis.



SOURCES : FB CGI, CT - SA.

Wednesday 9 July 2014

After Aadhar Card Enjoy with New Multi-Purpose Identity Card, by the National Democratic Alliance Government.

 BS Post: 113 , Dated :  July 09, 2014 

Bangalore: Forget Aadhar card prepared by Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to enrol and collect biometrics details of 600 million people of the country. Now, it is the Multi-purpose National Identity Card (MNIC) which will be issued to all citizens. 

The federal Home Ministry is working towards reviving an earlier project which was stalled following differences between the Registrar General of India and Unique Identification Authority of India. 

A central public undertaking will be preparing the card which will carry at least 16 details of an individual and a unique national identity number assigned to each citizen. The Home Ministry has prepared a cabinet note and is awaiting nod from Home Minister Rajnath Singh to be put up for approval before the Prime Minister Narendra Modi. 

The cards would be prepared after getting details required about individuals that would be recorded in the National Population Register. The card would roll out a scheme beyond 1.2 million citizens who had got the identity cards in the first phase of the project that covered 12 states and one union territory. 

Those who have attained the age of 18 and above would be entitled to receive the card. The latest move by the National Democratic Alliance government also demonstrates that the UIDAI, which was raised under the Planning Commission with prominent entrepreneur Nandan Nilekarni as its head, is likely to lose currency it enjoyed during former prime minister Manmohan Singh's tenure. The government had then clarified that the Aadhaar is actually a number, not an identity card, linked to that number is a biometric record. 

The Home Ministry has asked the UIDAI to transfer whatever data collected to the RGI and the authority to continue to generate merely the numbers. 

Sources said that MNIC will be priced between Rs 32 and Rs35 which is cheaper when compared to Aadhar cards. The tamper-proof smart card will be embossed with at least 16 personal details of an individual that would be collected during the exercise of preparing national population register. 

SOURCES : T O O, I July 04,2014 By. Aftab h. Kola