Israele si trasforma in una superfortezza
- Details
- Category: Politiche israeliane
- Published on Sunday, 03 February 2013 06:12
- Written by Francesca La Bella
Dopo aver costruito un muro intorno a Gaza e uno in Cisgiordania, Tel Aviv ha iniziato ad innalzare barriere anche sulle linee con Libano, Egitto e Siria.
17 gennaio 2013
Roma, 17 gennaio 2013, Nena News - Israele è quasi completamente isolato dal mondo arabo. Non stiamo, però, parlando di isolamento diplomatico, né di frizioni con i Paesi confinanti, ma di un blocco fisico che impedisce la libera circolazione di merci e persone tra Israele e i vicini d'area. Dopo aver costruito un muro intorno a Gaza per controllare gli accessi alla Striscia ed uno in Cisgiordania per attestare l'esistenza di un controverso confine tra territori israeliani e territori palestinesi, Tel Aviv ha iniziato ad innalzare barriere anche sui confini che dividono il Paese da Libano, Egitto e Siria.
Israel’s Palestinians are not a minority
- Details
- Category: Opposizione israeliana
- Published on Sunday, 03 February 2013 06:09
- Written by Amira Hass
Haaretz, January 15, 2013

Like Canada’s First Peoples, the Palestinians’ nationhood cannot be measured in numbers.
One should not use the phrase "extinct nations" within earshot of indigenous people in Canada. I learned this about a year and a half ago from a French-speaking friend from Quebec with whom I visited the Mohawk village of Kanesatake. In 1990, the village embarked on a struggle to prevent the nearby town of Oka from taking over its lands, including a burial site, to expand the town's golf course. Apparently thanks to the presence of that friend, who had participated in the village's land struggle about 20 years ago, I was not asked to leave after uttering that hurtful phrase. (...)
In Israel, advocates of peace are viewed as extremists
- Details
- Category: Opposizione israeliana
- Published on Saturday, 02 February 2013 05:47
- Written by NEWS SOURCES
January 28, 2013
In an interview with Haaretz, Eldar says:
A few days after the end of Operation Pillar of Defense [November, 2012], I gave a talk at a Herzliya high school. The children, who said they came from good homes, told me we have to kill all the Arabs, including the Israeli Arabs, because where do they get off thinking they will get control of the country. Their ideal is to go into the army and kill as many Arabs as possible. That’s one side of the picture, Israeli youth, the new generation, living in an atmosphere of demonizing the Palestinians − which is something the Israeli media are responsible for in no small measure. The other side of the picture is the young generation in Gaza, a child of five or nine. Let’s say he is not wounded, but a four-ton bomb landed next to his house. Do you know that in Operation Pillar of Defense, not one pane of glass remained intact in the whole of Gaza? It’s a tactic of creating sonic booms to frighten people without hurting them. A child who has a bomb like that land next to him can’t hear anything for the next three days. What does he think about the Jews afterward? And where will we end up, if this is how Jewish youngsters think about Arabs?
Read more: In Israel, advocates of peace are viewed as extremists
Bab Al Shams: Abdallah Abu Rahma (English) - Video
- Details
- Category: Società civile palestinese
- Published on Friday, 01 February 2013 22:34
- Written by invictapalestina
28/01/2013
Read more: Bab Al Shams: Abdallah Abu Rahma (English) - Video
A silent Palestinian voice amid the din of the Israeli election
- Details
- Category: Opposizione israeliana
- Published on Monday, 28 January 2013 23:50
- Written by Gideon Levy
Haaretz, 20.01.13

Samir Awad won't be voting on Tuesday because he was shot dead from close range last week by Israel Defense Forces soldiers: one bullet in his head, one in his back and one in his thigh. The soldiers who shot him will vote on Tuesday, because democracy is like that.
Read more: A silent Palestinian voice amid the din of the Israeli election
