Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘human-rights’

Bibi: Abusisi is Hamas and He’s Spilling His Guts

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011


Bibi Netanyahu took the unprecedented step, one which I don’t ever recall a previous prime minister taking regarding a specific security detainee, of publicly defending Israel’s extraordinary rendition of Dirar Abusisi.  He did so deliberately according to Amir Oren in Haaretz in an interview filled with softball questions and self-serving, hasbarist answers before an international audience assembled by a Youtube program called World View.  Here is what he said about Abusisi:

Asked about a Palestinian engineer who disappeared in Ukraine and later surfaced in an Israeli jail, Netanyahu said, “He is a Hamas member, held legally in Israeli detention.” Netanyahu added, “He delivered important information,” without elaborating.

The prime minister is clearly bluffing his way through this exercise.  The only reason he’s taken this question is that he feels the need to justify the kidnapping, which no nation or international body outside Israel (and Ukraine and Jordan who are implicated as collaborators) considers justified.  There is some sort of brewing pressure against the Mossad adventure that has made him feel it necessary to explain Israel’s position, weak as it is, to the world.

Further, I believe he’s lying about Abusisi being a Hamas member and I strongly doubt the latter’s delivering any information of any value on any subject pertinent to Israel.

I’m not sure whether it’s the looming threat of formal complaints to UN bodies or Ukrainian legal action or the possibility that this will be followed by recourse to the European Court of Human Rights once Ukrainian jurisdiction is exhausted.  Whatever the reason, I think Bibi’s feeling the heat.  And the heat will only increase as the case continues.

Though the Abusisi question is being widely covered in world media, I could only find the question in the Hebrew language video above. It comes in the context of a question about what the government is doing to free Gilad Shalit. The interviewer allows Bibi to infer that the Palestinian’s kidnapping has something to do with freeing Shalit (which his attorney denied flat out yesterday). I’m guessing that Bibi’s press office deliberately translated this portion of the interview both to showcase what the government is allegedly doing on Shalit’s behalf and also to defend an act that threatens to become an increasing international liability to Israel.

ALERT: If you’re in Israel please rally on Dirar’s behalf at the Petah Tikvah regional court at 10:00AM.  Show the security apparatus that it cannot act with impunity.  It cannot violate international law and allow the rule of impunity.

Israel’s Attorney General Signals Dissatisfaction With Shabak’s Abusisi Interrogation

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Yossi Melman writes in today’s Haaretz that Attorney General Yehudah Weinstein appears dissatisfied with the results of the Shabak interrogation of Dirar Abusisi.  The reporter notes that Weinstein has told the security services to procure further evidence on eight subjects.  Given my experience following such security matters, something smells a little off about the government’s case.  It’s unusual in the Israeli legal system for a security suspect to be held longer than 30 days without filing charges.  They’ve had Abusisis for 34 days.  After that amount of time they still have eight areas in which the top government lawyer says he needs better evidence to prosecute.  What’s wrong with this picture?  The attorney general has also told Shabak that there is a wide gap between the claims levelled against the kidnapped Gaza engineer and the evidence he’s seen.  This does not sound like a happy prosecutor.

We’re talking about some of the best goons in the business here, in the Shabak.  They might be able to extract blood from a turnip or an Arab.  Yet either Dirar isn’t breaking as they anticipated or they simply have nothing against him and can’t build a credible case with what they’ve got.

To indicate just how sensitive the Shabak is to the publicity surrounding this case (and how important it is for us to do what we’re doing), Melman indicates Abusisi was introduced to the courtroom via a side entrance so the scores of journalists and photographers mingling about could not photograph him.

The Haaretz reporter also notes that for the first time the Ukrainian intelligence services have invited Veronika Abusisi to speak with them about her husband’s kidnapping.  Until now, they’ve been extremely reluctant to offer her any help whatsoever.  This would indicate that Ukraine is feeling a certain amount of pressure over the incident.

I note that Ukraine is a member of the Council of Europe and as such is bound by the following resolution which attacked the underlying premises of the Bush administration’s extraordinary rendition program.  If you change “United States of America” to “Israel” and “some Council of Europe member states” to “Ukraine,” then Abusisi’s predicament is just as relevant to this document:

The Assembly condemns the systematic exclusion of all forms of judicial protection and regrets that, by depriving hundreds of suspects of their basic rights, including the right to a fair trial, the United States has done a disservice to the cause of justice and has tarnished its own hard-won reputation as a beacon of the defence of civil liberties and human rights.

Some Council of Europe member states have knowingly colluded with the United States to carry out such unlawful operations; others have tolerated them or simply turned a blind eye. They have also gone to great lengths to ensure that such operations remained secret and protected from effective national or international scrutiny.

This collusion with the United States of America by some Council of Europe member states has taken several different forms. Having carried out a legal and factual analysis on a range of cases of alleged secret detentions and unlawful transfers, the Assembly has identified instances in which Council of Europe member states have acted in one or several of the following ways, wilfully or at least recklessly in violation of their international human rights obligations…

Secretly detaining a person on European territory for an indefinite period of time, whilst denying that person’s basic human rights and failing to ensure procedural legal guarantees such as habeas corpus;

Capturing and handing a person over to the United States whilst knowing that such a person would be unlawfully transferred into a US-administered detention facility;

Permitting the unlawful transportation of detainees on civilian aircraft carrying out rendition operations, travelling through European airspace or across European territory;

…The Assembly highlights the widespread breach of the positive obligation of all Council of Europe member states to investigate such allegations in a full and thorough manner.

The Assembly calls upon the member states of the Council of Europe to:

Ensure that unlawful inter-state transfers of detainees will not be permitted and take effective measures to prevent renditions and rendition flights through member states’ territory and airspace;

Ensure that no one is arbitrarily detained, secretly or otherwise, on a member state’s territory or any territory within the member states’ effective control;

…Ensure that all victims of rendition or secret detention have access to an effective remedy and obtain prompt and adequate reparation, including restitution, rehabilitation and fair and adequate financial compensation.

Is anyone home there, Ukraine?  You expect to host the Euro Cup next year and you can’t even abide by the basic human rights provisions of the Council of Europe.  As I wrote earlier, the nation is not yet ready for the prime time of European democracy.  Everything appears for sale there including justice.  I wonder what’s the price for a Gaza civil engineer?  Maybe a free trade agreement?  A few advanced Elbit weapons systems?

Israel Refuses to Charge AbuSisi, Extends Detention, Family to File European Court of Human Rights Complaint

Thursday, March 24th, 2011
free dirar abusisi poster

(poster-Michael Levin)

Today, the Israeli authorities held a hearing on the case of Dirar Abusisi, kidnapped by the Mossad from Ukraine last month, brought to Israel by rendition, and imprisoned there for unspecified reasons while being interrogated intensively by the Shabak.  Though Israeli media sources reported that the security services and prosecutor would announce charges against him “in the coming days,” they did not do so today.  Instead, after interrogating him for 34 consecutive days, they came to the court hearing with nothing.  Here is what his attorney, Smadar Ben Natan reports:

The state came today with a request to extend the detention in additional 8 days, this was supported by an approval of the senior state attorney, Shay Nitzan, and with the explanation that the prosecution went through the evidence material and asked for 8 additional actions in order to complete the investigation.

We argued that if the state does not have enough evidence after 34 days of interrogation, where they should have had evidence to justify the outrageous arrest even before [it occurred],  Derar should be released and returned to Ukraine. They were trying to justify the arrest by making him confess [to their] accusations.

The court allowed the detention until next Thursday.

Derar looked very tired and complained that he can’t stand it anymore and that they are just repeating the same questions over and over again, and trying to break him.


abusisi's attorneys

Abusisi's attorneys, Smadar Ben Natan on left (George Ginsburg)

Dirar has lost weight during his ordeal.  The food he is provided is unpalatable.  The questioning is abusive at the very least.

I would ask any supporter of Israel, including those who disagree with my views: what good can possibly come of an outrageous breach of human rights like this?  Is this the way you choose to allow your security services to operate?

So let’s say Dirar is the worst you can conceive.  If you want to kidnap him and render him to Israel wouldn’t you have a case against him before doing so?  In what kind of legal system do you arrest someone before having such a case built, and then attempt to figure out what to charge him with based on what he tells you during interrogation?

And let’s say he tells you something new you didn’t know during interrogation.  Surely, you can file a basic charge and then amplify it with what you learn later.  The fact that they have refused to file any charge at all is outrageous.  The fact that they come and demand an extension is equally outrageous.

I’m just attempting to understand (though it is difficult, admittedly) the thinking of the secret police and those who aid and abet them in the Israeli legal system.  Surely, this can’t be a model that any democratic country can hold up for praise.

I’ll tell you what all of this makes me believe: there is no case against Dirar.  At least nothing sufficient to the charges they’d prefer to bring.  Possibly Dirar is holding up better than they expected under the brutal forms of interrogation Shabak uses in such cases.  They may’ve expected him to give them enough to bring such charges.  At any rate, since you won’t charge him, free him.  That has to be our demand.

Even if Israel frees him and returns him to Ukraine, it can still request extradition from that country and then prosecute legally using legitimate evidence in a trial that features due process, unlike the charade currently on parade.  I’m sure Ukraine would be only too happy to oblige given their acquiescence in every Israeli depredation involving this case.

I urge the Israeli human rights community to protest outside Petah Tikvah court next Thursday to hold the security forces feet to the fire.  Demand accountability.  Deny impunity.  Smadar also told me that there was a huge press gaggle outside the courtroom and she was interviewed by CNN, which promised a story.  The Israeli press was out in full force and has finally decided it can cover a story it should’ve been aggressively pursuing a month ago.  All of this is good for Dirar.  As I’ve written here before, the security apparatus loves the dark and shuns the light.  Light sends them cowering back into the shadows.  Or at least forces a tactical retreat.

Veronika Abusisi, Dirar’s wife, who is in Ukraine, is pursuing legal remedies within that country, demanding that the government disclose what role it played in the kidnapping.  She plans to file a court case.  After the case goes through the rather discredited Ukrainian legal system, Yousef, Dirar’s brother, who is a Dutch citizen, would have recourse to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, where he plans to bring a complaint against Ukraine.

The Ukranian authorities might want to consider what impact this might have on their attempts to showcase their country as a model of European openness and accountability.  I’ve mentioned the European Cup championship to be hosted by that country in 2012 and the multi-million dollar ad campaign attempting to bring hundreds of thousands of soccer tourists to pump hundreds of millions of dollars into the local economy.  Trampling on the rights of foreign nationals who have come to Ukraine to apply for citizenship can’t help that process.

To rectify their misdeeds, I’d urge the Ukrainian Interior Ministry to approve Dirar’s application for citizenship and demand his return to Ukraine.  Then, as far as I’m concerned bygones can be bygones.

So far, the Ukrainian authorities haven’t acquitted themselves very well.  The Interior Ministry and security services rather lamely denied any knowledge or complicity in the kidnapping saying it was against Ukrainian law for any agent of the state to cooperate in such an action.  As if, that would prevent anyone from doing such given the right incentive, whether monetary or political.  A Ukrainian anti-immigrant crusader, Eduard Bagirov, who appears to be either an overt or covert mouthpiece of the authorities even posted the claim that Abusisi was really a Mossad double agent inside Gaza.  In order to protect him from exposure, the Mossad arranged for him to travel to Ukraine, took him, and brought him back to Israel.  A rather extraordinary level of imaginative powers is required to wrap one’s mind around that one.  But this tell you the level of desperation these people face in covering up their dirty deeds.

Please join the Facebook support group for Dirar.

Israel to Charge Abusisi ‘Within Days,’ Ukraine Denies Involvement in Kidnapping, Summons Israeli Ambassador

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

AbuSisi children's Gaza protest against father's kidnapping, rendition to Israel, and detention (AP/Adel Hana)

Perhaps in reaction to the damaging report from the Palestine Center for Human Rights that revealed previously unknown facts about his kidnapping, Israeli authorities have leaked to the press that they expect to charge Dirar Abusisi “within days.”  If you’re a student of the ways of Israel’s security establishment, it’s very much a tit for tat routine.  If the detainee manages to strike a blow for himself in the public domain, they are ready to cut him down to size and consider it their sacred duty as part of their eternal war against sedition and Arab hatred.

I also think the Israelis realize that the longer the case is in the news, the worse it will look for them and the more explaining they will have to do.  They believe that by putting forward a narrative that portrays Abusisi as a spy, terrorist or general bad seed, that they will be able to blunt the bad press.

And bad press there is.  Yossi Melman reports in today’s Haaretz that Ukraine has finally released a public statement by its intelligence services and Interior Ministry that it had nothing to do with the kidnapping.  They rather pathetically denied that they had any knowledge of how he was kidnapped and had “more questions than answers.”  Can you imagine the top intelligence and police officials of a country claiming after a foreign national is kidnapped on their own soil that they know nothing, hear nothing, see nothing.  What are they?  Monkeys or men?

Their claim of course is very likely to be a lie.  Can they explain how two men in Ukrainian military uniforms boarded a train, kidnapped Abusisi, took him to an apartment in Kiev, then to the airport, boarded a plane and took off from Ukrainian soil?  Did Israel do all this without even a whisper of knowledge or suspicion on the part of the Ukrainians?  If so, some heads should roll.  Ukraine’s security is in the hands of men even more incompetent than anyone would’ve thought possible.

Melman explains that the Ukrainians have released the statement in an attempt to take the heat off them generated by the strong statements of Ukrainian human rights organizations and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees representative in the country.  The reporter also notes that the explanations of responsible government agencies doesn’t seem to be satisfying anyone, which is to be expected.

Melman does however get one major fact wrong.  In saying that Ukraine has not explained what it intended to do to get to the bottom of the incident, he says that country has not yet said whether it will approach Israel for an explanation.  In fact, AFP says it has done precisely that, demanding a meeting with the Israeli ambassador to Ukraine.  This of course is laughable and reminds me of one of those Marx Brothers movies in which Groucho, Lord High Mucky Muck of Fredonia, meets with his opposite number and in solemn tones says something like this: “Mr. Ambassador, what could you have been thinking?”  To which the ambassador would reply: “My dear Lord High Mucky-Muck, what could YOU have been thinking??”

They either said something like that, or more likely they met simply to get their stories straight.  Like co-conspirators they no doubt have much to hide and need to coordinate so they do as little damage to their own reputations as possible in this affair–or at least don’t do even greater violence to their already poor reputations for upholding human rights.

Melman also mischaracterizes the visit of Ukrainian Prime Minister Azarov to Israel, claiming he never addressed the incident while in the country and refused to take questions about it.  In fact, an interview with him published I believe in Haaretz asked that question to which he replied in rather mealy-mouthed fashion that it would be inconceivable for any nation to have done what was claimed on Ukrainian soil.  But he did reply.

Melman also misses an important detail in his report, in which Abusisi claimed in his PCHR interview, that the Mossad plane that rendered him to Israel touched down in a third country before it reached there, thus potentially making this case even more problematic for Israel than it would otherwise be.

Abusisi’s Arrest in Own Words

Monday, March 21st, 2011

A lawyer for the Palestine Center for Human Rights visited Dirar Abu Sisi in his cell in Shikma Prison outside Ashkelon and received the most detailed account yet of his kidnapping in Ukraine and rendition to Israel.  The particulars as he recounts them are almost precisely as I portrayed them here in this blog.  What’s remarkable to me was that even though I didn’t know some of them, I was able to surmise and infer what is likely to have happened based on information I already knew or hints that had been offered by other sources.

The Israeli press is now reporting the story widely (no one crediting my work in breaking the story of course).  The gag will fall in a matter of time.  What we still don’t know though is why Israel wanted Dirar in the first place and why he was so important they went to all that trouble knowing that eventually their rendition crime would be exposed.  I suppose they believe that since Cheney and Bush got away with it that they could too.  But perhaps we’ll be able to make them pay a small price for their egregious violations of international law.

Here is the press release of PCHR.  Though the statement makes a blanket claim that the Mossad was the sole actor in his rendition, it becomes clear in the course of this account that it is likely the Ukrainian military or security agencies colluded as well:

…Abu Sisi told the PCHR lawyer that on 19 February 2011 he was travelling by train from Kharkov to Kiev to meet with his brother Yousef who was coming from the Netherlands.  Abu Sisi stated that three persons, two in military uniforms, entered his room on the train. They asked him to show his passport but he refused. Then they threatened him and forcefully took his passport. They forced him to get off the train at the nearby station of Poltava. At this time he was handcuffed and hooded. He was transported in a car to Kiev. Once in Kiev he was held in an apartment where there were another six persons who introduced themselves to be members of the Mossad.  Abu Sisi said that the Mossad members immediately questioned him and then flew him by plane.  The flight lasted between four and five hours before landing in a place unknown to him.  Approximately thirty minutes later, they took off again and the flight lasted for approximately one hour. Upon landing Abu Sisi found himself in Israel.  Abu Sisi told the PCHR lawyer that he was denied contact with a lawyer for fourteen days.  This denial was extended for another eleven days. He said that he was placed under intensive interrogations and that he was denied his legal rights.

It should be noted that the Israeli security authorities imposed a media blackout regarding the kidnapping of Abu Sisi and prevented lawyers from visiting him to check on his health and provide legal assistance during the second period.

After knowing the details from Abu Sisi, PCHR has doubts about whether there was collusion from international parties in the kidnapping.  Especially as Abu Sisi was not legally arrested by Ukrainian authorities and he did not have any appearances in domestic courts.  PCHR has concerns over the deterioration of Abu Sisi’s health and notes that he has cholelithiasis and he takes blood thinning medicines.  He is experiencing serious psychological problems after going into long and continued investigation sessions. PCHR calls for the immediate release of Abu Sisi.

All of which means the following: in addition to Israel and the Ukraine colluding in this major violation of international law, the territory of a third country was also involved as the rendition flight landed in a country approximately a one hour flight from Israel.  Readers may have additional ideas, but the countries I can think of that might be likely to have participated and are in that one hour zone would be Turkey (if the military cooperated without the knownledge of the political echelon), Cyprus or Bulgaria (possibly).  I doubt it could be a former Soviet Republic like Georgia, Armenia or Azerbijian as it would’ve had to have overflown enemy nations like Syria or Iraq.

In addition, this means that the Mossad either brought their own plane flown into a Ukrainian airport or leased one in Ukraine.  It’s more likely the former than the latter, which would mean an extraordinary level either of direct cooperation with Ukrainian authorities or secrecy hiding the identity of the plane.

Abusisi was denied contact with an attorney for a total of 24 days, a clear violation of his rights.

Though Veronika Abusisi, Dirar’s wife makes no direct claims of torture, this statement published four days ago at the Facebook group, Free Dirar, which I created and invite you to join, does give one grounds for concern:

Mikhal Dansiger [Dirar's former lawyer] told me in a telephone conversation today that Dirar saw a doctor today and that his health condition is better. Dirar would never go to a doctor on his own to “make …sure” that he is in good condition. Before we lost our sense of equanimity [before the arrest], my husband never complained about anything at all, all his tests were normal.  He always paid close attention to his health. But now after the “adventure” and “warm” conversation with “mild-mannered” Israeli secret service [interrogators], my spouse has heart problems, increased arterial heart pressure, stomach and gall bladder problems, kidney stone illness.

My love for my kids’ homeland [Gaza], my spouse, is unconditional.

 

Digital Activism in the Age of Revolution

Friday, February 18th, 2011

Remarks I’ll deliver tonight at a conference on the Egyptian Revolution at St. Mark’s Cathedral:

wael ghonim tweetI wanted to make a few remarks on the impact that the Egyptian Revolution will have on relations with Israel, and on Israel’s internal political dynamics, along with some thoughts on how this may impact the U.S. role in the Israeli-Arab peace process.  As a blogger, I also want to focus on the role of social networks, blogs and other forms of digital communication on these political developments.

Creating a non-violent political revolution in the age of the internet takes two forms.  In the pre-revolution period, activists are mostly in defensive mode.  You’re often trying to prevent the worst from happening.  You’re protecting democracy from the depredations of state intelligence, police and military forces.  You’re fending off attacks on free speech and the work of vital human rights NGOs.  You’re fighting what often seems like a hopeless, rear guard action.

To do this you use all the modes of digital communication available: YouTube, Facebook, Skype, Twitter, blogs, Instant Messaging and chats among activists.  You tell and show the injustices to as many as you can, hoping the message will resonate, and begin provoking questions and changing minds.

The beauty of these technologies is that they allow you to a greater or lesser degree to circumvent the strictures of the security state.  They allow you to cross borders to link individuals in the next block, neighborhood, city or nation.

Think about the beauty of Wael Ghonim, employee of a U.S. technology company for whom he worked in Dubai, playing an instrumental role in creating the Egyptian Revolution.  Or that the ideas of Gene Sharp, an 83 year-old American non-violent activist living in a working class neighborhood of Boston, inspired Egyptian youth to topple a dictator.   There are no borders, at least as far as technology and political change is concerned.

Returning to the specific modes of communication, what makes these especially powerful isn’t just the technology itself, but the substance of the communication, the message, the value you’re conveying.

Intelligence agencies and national security states have access to these tools in the same way activists do.  And they try, in their mostly feeble ways to exploit them to advance the interests of the state.  But the narrative they offer doesn’t sell.  The national security state, whether it be Mubarak’s Egypt, Ahmadinejad’s Iran or Bibi’s Israel, represents secrecy, fear and ignorance.  It sells security at the expense of all those values held dear by activists and common citizens alike: freedom, liberty, speech.

It secretly arrested the 16-year-old Israeli Palestinian, Ashraf al-Baladi and put him in Jalameh prison outside Haifa  under Shabak “interrogation” (i.e. torture).  It tied him to a chair, kicked over the chair, busted his head open, broke a rib and punctured his lungs.  It refused to send him to the hospital since he was under secret detention.  It killed him.  And no one in Israel knows except the source who told me and hoped I could spread the word.

Think of this, aside from my source, readers of my blog, and the Shabak, you are the only people in the world who know this happened.  Think of what this means.

Make no mistake, there is little difference between Egypt’s Mukhabarat and Israel’s Shabak or Mossad.  They are the flip side of the same coin.  One speaks with an Arabic accent, the other Hebrew.  But they say roughly the same things both to their victims and their fellow citizens.  They operate in darkness, thrive in secrecy, and die in the light.

To prove my point let’s compare:  Egypt offered the world the Facebook Revolution, Iran in 2009 offered the Twitter Revolution.  What has Israel offered?  The Stuxnet Revolution?  Israel uses technology as it did in the case of the viruses which penetrated the personal computers of Mahmoud al-Mabouh and the Iranian nuclear scientists, to kill.  ‘Nuff said.

What impact might the Egyptian Revolution have for Israel-Egypt relations?  Of course, Bibi Netanyahu, the Israeli right and their advocates here have been raising the specter of a radical Muslim takeover.  Of Iran on the Nile.  When the actual evidence of what happened in Egypt completely contradicts such expectations.  The movement that brought down Mubarak wasn’t especially Islamic.  It was a national political movement, not a religious one.  Of course, there are religious elements in Egyptian politics and the Brotherhood will play a role in any future government.  But they will not control such a government and could not even if they wanted to.

What Israel really fears is yet another independent Arab state on its borders, one that doesn’t take orders from Tel Aviv or Washington.  Israel relies on military power and its alliance with the U.S. to dominate the region and impose its will and agenda on its neighbors.  It sees what has happened with a moderate Islamist state like Turkey turning hostile toward its agenda and now foresees something like this happening in Cairo.  And the thought terrifies Israel’s military-intelligence strategists.

The fewer flunkies there are leading Arab nations, the more Israel may be forced to face the cold, hard facts of its brutal Occupation.  Hosni Mubarak was willing to enforce Israel’s siege on Gaza with a blockade from the Egyptian side.  But a future democratic government will likely not serve as Israel’s Arab enforcer against Hamas.  Mubarak was Israel’s bulwark against Islamic radicalism in Gaza.  Henceforward?  Not so much.

If things develop apace as they have in Tunisia, Egypt, now Bahrain, and possibly Yemen and Libya, then you may have the terribly awkward possibility of Arab nations that are freer and more democratic than Israel itself.  Then what happens to the brand: the Only Democracy in the Middle East?

Do you remember the image from Tahrir Square of an Egyptian Copt holding a cross and a Muslim holding the Koran, each of them carried aloft together?  If Arab nations transform themselves into tolerant, open societies in which basic freedoms of religion, assembly, speech and the press are guaranteed, imagine what impact this may have inside Israel?  There you have a dominant Jewish majority whose religion, ethnicity, language, culture, traditions and political power subordinate a Palestinian minority.  Palestinians represent where Egyptians were before the Revolution.  But when Palestinians see that their brothers and sisters in Cairo enjoy freedoms and opportunities they can only imagine, think of the message this will convey.

There could be fierce pressure on Israel to reform itself.  To become what Azmi Bishara called a “national of all its citizens.”

And this is where I wanted to talk about the offensive mode of bringing political change.  I talked earlier of activists mostly on the defensive, attempting to fend off the worst that the state has to offer.

But we’ve seen that events can bring change in the blink of an eye.  One moment you’re running from the police and dodging bullets, the next you’re surrounded by millions cheering your victory.  So my message to Israel is that you’re riding a tiger and there’s very little difference between being on his back one moment and inside his mouth the next.  Things change just that fast in this day and age.

Yes, we’ve had an Occupation since 1967.  Yes Palestinians suffered a Nakba in 1948 from which they’ve never recovered.  Injustices can last decades.  But they can be swept aside in the blink of an eye.  If a dictator can fall after 30 years in power in Cairo, there’s hope for the end to the Occupation regime in Israel.  For any detractors out there, note I did not say the’ end of Israel,’ which is not at all what I meant.

Lately, I’ve been thinking about the title of the Leonard Cohen song, Democracy is Coming to the USA.  I think it’s coming to Israel too, and Bahrain and Libya, and Yemen, and Saudi Arabia and Iran and Syria.  As for Israel’s transformation, it won’t be to the partial democracy enjoyed mostly by Israeli Jews and suffered by Israeli Palestinians, but the full-throated democracy of Egypt on February 11th.

Now, a word about U.S. policy.  Despite the hope many of us placed in Barack Obama to bring change to the region, he’s mainly been a bystander.  His approach to the Egyptian Revolution, which teetered on the brink of irrelevancy thanks to the pressure and blandishments of Saudi Arabia and Israel, finally came down on the right side of history.  But just barely.

Basically, we just don’t get it.  Things changed on February 11th.  And they’ll never be the same.  But we want them to go back to the way we were.  How else can you explain the U.S.’ unseemly bullying of the PA to withdraw its motion in the Security Council denouncing the settlements?  Imagine the U.S. threatening to veto such a resolution, which is totally consonant by the way with U.S. policy, if the Palestinians won’t withdraw it.  Who cares about the U.S. threat of a veto?  Let them veto a resolution that agrees with their own stated policy.  Imagine the egg that’ll be on their faces after they do that.

And we claim we want to be honest brokers.  We’re neither honest, nor brokers.  We’re carrying water for the old power brokers in Riyadh and Tel Aviv.  We’re preserving the status quo.  But how long can that last?  Especially in the aftermath of February 11th.

Salon Mazal Video Conference: Digital Activism in the New Middle East

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011

salon mazalTomorrow I’ll be talking to Salon Mazal in Tel Aviv about digital activism and the struggle for political change in Israel and the Middle East.  So much to talk about: the Egyptian Revolution, Facebook, the Green Revolution, Twitter, exposing the dark secrets of the national security state, afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted, etc.  I’ll be sharing some of the my latest scoops about Gabi Ashkenazi and Muhammad Danef, barring any intervention by the censor.  The talk itself will involve use of digital technology to reach across borders as I’ll be talking via video hookup.  I’m really looking forward to it.

If you live in or near Tel Aviv, the address is 32 Yitzhak Sadeh Street.

Here is a bit about Salon Mazal’s mission:

Salon Mazal is a unique center in Israel, spreading information and raising awareness of a wide variety of issues related to social change, including human rights, animal rights, the environment, globalization, social and economic oppression, consumerism, feminism and gender issues and many more.

Salon Mazal has a lending library, a shop and a space for meetings, lectures, workshops and film screenings. Salon Mazal is run by an open, non-hierarchical collective of volunteers.

Amnesty International Condemns Makhoul Sentence

Monday, January 31st, 2011

An Amnesty press release:

Amnesty International Calls Jailing of Human Rights Defender in Israel “Very Disturbing”

(London) — Amnesty International urged the Israeli authorities to end their harassment of Palestinian human rights activists after a veteran Palestinian campaigner was jailed for nine years earlier today and given an additional one-year suspended sentence.

Ameer Makhoul, a longstanding Palestinian activist, was convicted on various counts of having contact with enemies of Israel and espionage after a plea bargain agreement at his trial. He was originally charged with an even more serious offense, “assisting an enemy in war”, which could have carried a life sentence, but that was dropped by the prosecution when he agreed to a plea bargain.

“Ameer Makhoul’s jailing is a very disturbing development and we will be studying the details of the sentencing as soon as we can,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa deputy director.

“Ameer Makhoul is well known for his human rights activism on behalf of Palestinians in Israel and those living under Israeli occupation. We fear that this may be the underlying reason for his imprisonment.”

“We are also extremely concerned by allegations that he was tortured and otherwise ill-treated following his arrest on May 6 last year in a dawn police raid on his home in Haifa, by the fact that he was not permitted to see his lawyers for 12 days after his arrest, and by the gag order that prohibited media coverage on the case during this time.”

In the United States, Amnesty International USA urged President Obama to call on Israel to end the harassment of human rights defenders.

Under the Israeli penal code, people can be charged with “espionage” even if the information passed onto an “enemy agent” is publicly known and even if there is no intent to do harm through passing on the information.

The prosecution claimed that a Jordanian civil society activist who Makhoul was in contact with was a Hizbullah agent, and that he gave this person information on the locations of a military base and General Security Services offices.

The confession on which Makhoul’s conviction and sentencing were based was admitted as evidence by the court, despite allegations that this statement was made under duress and that he was tortured during his interrogation. It also appears that the information allegedly conveyed by Makhoul was publicly available.

Makhoul’s sentencing comes at a time when human rights activists are coming under increasing pressure in Israel and being accused by some in the government and by members of the Knesset of being “anti-Israel” and unpatriotic because of their reporting on and campaigning against human rights violations in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Makhoul is the director of Ittijah, the Union of Arab Community-Based Associations, based in Haifa.

Addameer, the Palestinian prisoner support group based in Ramallah called for the PA, EU and other western representatives to demand Makhoul’s release and to raise the prisoner-victim’s plight with Israeli officials at every meeting they hold.