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The Independent: Love on the brain

Posted by evdomada on October 4, 2010

This is not one of the more usual articles for evdomada.net as there isn’t the usual Hellenic connection to the news story. However Greeks are always preoccupied with the notion of love and lust … so I thought it might be an interesting read.

Read more …

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Guardian: China’s premier, Wen Jiabao, pledges support for euro

Posted by evdomada on October 4, 2010

Monday 4 October 2010

The country vows it will not reduce its holdings of European government bonds, and will double trade with Greece.

“Wen, who offered on Saturday to buy an unspecified amount of Greek government bonds when debt-laden Athens resumes issuing, said he was glad Greece was starting to emerge from the shadows of its debt crisis. Wen vowed to double trade with Greece to $8bn (£5bn) within five years and provide a $5bn credit line to Greek shipowners buying Chinese-built vessels.”

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Robert Fisk: Why do they hate the West so much, we will ask

Posted by evdomada on January 9, 2009

January 7, 2009

Robert Fisk: Why do they hate the West so much, we will ask

So once again, Israel has opened the gates of hell to the Palestinians. Forty civilian refugees dead in a United Nations school, three more in another. Not bad for a night’s work in Gaza by the army that believes in “purity of arms”. But why should we be surprised?
A child injured in the Israeli bombardment of a UN school yesterday is taken to Shifa hospital in Gaza City

A child injured in the Israeli bombardment of a UN school yesterday is taken to Shifa hospital in Gaza City

Have we forgotten the 17,500 dead – almost all civilians, most of them children and women – in Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon; the 1,700 Palestinian civilian dead in the Sabra-Chatila massacre; the 1996 Qana massacre of 106 Lebanese civilian refugees, more than half of them children, at a UN base; the massacre of the Marwahin refugees who were ordered from their homes by the Israelis in 2006 then slaughtered by an Israeli helicopter crew; the 1,000 dead of that same 2006 bombardment and Lebanese invasion, almost all of them civilians?

What is amazing is that so many Western leaders, so many presidents and prime ministers and, I fear, so many editors and journalists, bought the old lie; that Israelis take such great care to avoid civilian casualties. “Israel makes every possible effort to avoid civilian casualties,” yet another Israeli ambassador said only hours before the Gaza massacre. And every president and prime minister who repeated this mendacity as an excuse to avoid a ceasefire has the blood of last night’s butchery on their hands. Had George Bush had the courage to demand an immediate ceasefire 48 hours earlier, those 40 civilians, the old and the women and children, would be alive.

What happened was not just shameful. It was a disgrace. Would war crime be too strong a description? For that is what we would call this atrocity if it had been committed by Hamas. So a war crime, I’m afraid, it was. After covering so many mass murders by the armies of the Middle East – by Syrian troops, by Iraqi troops, by Iranian troops, by Israeli troops – I suppose cynicism should be my reaction. But Israel claims it is fighting our war against “international terror”. The Israelis claim they are fighting in Gaza for us, for our Western ideals, for our security, for our safety, by our standards. And so we are also complicit in the savagery now being visited upon Gaza.

I’ve reported the excuses the Israeli army has served up in the past for these outrages. Since they may well be reheated in the coming hours, here are some of them: that the Palestinians killed their own refugees, that the Palestinians dug up bodies from cemeteries and planted them in the ruins, that ultimately the Palestinians are to blame because they supported an armed faction, or because armed Palestinians deliberately used the innocent refugees as cover.

The Sabra and Chatila massacre was committed by Israel’s right-wing Lebanese Phalangist allies while Israeli troops, as Israel’s own commission of inquiry revealed, watched for 48 hours and did nothing. When Israel was blamed, Menachem Begin’s government accused the world of a blood libel. After Israeli artillery had fired shells into the UN base at Qana in 1996, the Israelis claimed that Hizbollah gunmen were also sheltering in the base. It was a lie. The more than 1,000 dead of 2006 – a war started when Hizbollah captured two Israeli soldiers on the border – were simply dismissed as the responsibility of the Hizbollah. Israel claimed the bodies of children killed in a second Qana massacre may have been taken from a graveyard. It was another lie. The Marwahin massacre was never excused. The people of the village were ordered to flee, obeyed Israeli orders and were then attacked by an Israeli gunship. The refugees took their children and stood them around the truck in which they were travelling so that Israeli pilots would see they were innocents. Then the Israeli helicopter mowed them down at close range. Only two survived, by playing dead. Israel didn’t even apologise.

Twelve years earlier, another Israeli helicopter attacked an ambulance carrying civilians from a neighbouring village – again after they were ordered to leave by Israel – and killed three children and two women. The Israelis claimed that a Hizbollah fighter was in the ambulance. It was untrue. I covered all these atrocities, I investigated them all, talked to the survivors. So did a number of my colleagues. Our fate, of course, was that most slanderous of libels: we were accused of being anti-Semitic.

And I write the following without the slightest doubt: we’ll hear all these scandalous fabrications again. We’ll have the Hamas-to-blame lie – heaven knows, there is enough to blame them for without adding this crime – and we may well have the bodies-from-the-cemetery lie and we’ll almost certainly have the Hamas-was-in-the-UN-school lie and we will very definitely have the anti-Semitism lie. And our leaders will huff and puff and remind the world that Hamas originally broke the ceasefire. It didn’t. Israel broke it, first on 4 November when its bombardment killed six Palestinians in Gaza and again on 17 November when another bombardment killed four more Palestinians.

Yes, Israelis deserve security. Twenty Israelis dead in 10 years around Gaza is a grim figure indeed. But 600 Palestinians dead in just over a week, thousands over the years since 1948 – when the Israeli massacre at Deir Yassin helped to kick-start the flight of Palestinians from that part of Palestine that was to become Israel – is on a quite different scale. This recalls not a normal Middle East bloodletting but an atrocity on the level of the Balkan wars of the 1990s. And of course, when an Arab bestirs himself with unrestrained fury and takes out his incendiary, blind anger on the West, we will say it has nothing to do with us. Why do they hate us, we will ask? But let us not say we do not know the answer.

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SMH: Shocking cynicism of a poisoned homeland

Posted by evdomada on January 8, 2009

Sydney Morning Herald – Sara Dowse – January 8, 2009

It has taken me days to begin writing this, so horrified have I been by Israel’s latest actions. My sense of justice, however – as a mother, a Jew, and above all as a human being – impels me to try.

The massacre in Gaza has its roots in virulent European anti-Semitism and the 1917 Balfour declaration, when the British government promised Zionists that Jewish people would have a homeland in Palestine if Britain was victorious in World War I.

The key word here is homeland, and it should be remembered that the promise was qualified by the condition that such a homeland would “not be to the detriment” of the Palestinians. The steady increase in Jewish immigration under the British mandate provoked riots and protests, but Palestinians were still in majority until, in the aftermath of the Holocaust, the Zionists unilaterally declared an Israeli state.

Despite the suffering of the Palestinians, whose land was taken from them, for many years the sympathy of the developed world was with Israel, refuge for the survivors of the Nazi slaughter of European Jews, and beleaguered by surrounding hostile Arab states.

With the 1967 occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, Israel could no longer be accepted as a victim. Yet it has continued to play on the sympathies of Western governments, most particularly the US, and Jews of the diaspora. In reality, Israel has been a colonising state, masquerading as the most democratic, most humane, most modern nation in the region. It has served the Western powers to have such a proxy in the Middle East, and most recently, under the Bush Administration and in concert with the Israelis, they have played a cynical game of divide and rule, encouraging the Israelis in their blind refusal to negotiate with Hamas, just as for years Israel refused to negotiate with the Palestine Liberation Organisation, the forerunners of Fatah, whom they now support.

Hamas is not a terrorist organisation, but the legitimate, democratically elected government of the Palestinian Authority. We may not like what it stands for, but that is no reason for sidelining it. Undermining that government by Israel and the West is but one of a string of cynical actions on their part.

The rationale that Hamas has refused to accept Israel’s existence or to eschew violence is yet another example of how the truth has been twisted. What Hamas rejected was the continued, barbaric Israeli occupation of the West Bank, and the laying down of arms against an aggressive military occupation. I have heard with my own ears the Hamas Prime Minister, Ismail Haniyeh, say exactly that. Is he to be trusted? It would have been worth a try.

And who now would trust Israel?

So here we have it: a tough, technocratically savvy, nuclear power with the backing of the largest military power the world has known, bombing, then invading, a territory the size of a small city, with a population of 1.5 million, most of whom are civilians, to “defend our citizens”.

The ceasefire was meant to lift the Israeli blockade on Gaza, but it didn’t. It was meant to facilitate the release of Palestinian prisoners, many of whom were members of the elected Hamas Government, but it didn’t.

Israeli planes raided southern Gaza in November. The Hamas rockets continued. Which side broke the ceasefire? Hamas may not be blameless, but the situation is far more complex than Israel claims. The fact that more than 600 people have died because in a couple of weeks the US will have a new government and next month Israel will have an election, is the most shocking form of cynicism the Palestinian people have yet faced.

Since the 2006 invasion of Lebanon I have undergone what for me, as a Jew, has been an agonising realignment of my feelings about Israel. I have come to believe that a specifically Jewish state has been a terrible mistake.

A homeland is different from a state. There have been examples throughout history and there are in our own time polities with mixed ethnic populations and official sanction for their living in harmony together. Australia is one.

I don’t know how it will come about – I hope with as little bloodshed as possible – but I look forward to the distant day when the land becomes a multicultural country again, perhaps as a federation, perhaps in another form, but similar to what it was before it was destroyed with the poison of ethnic territorial nationalism.

Sara Dowse is an author who wrote Sapphires, a novel about three generations of Jewish women.

Source: www.smh.com.au

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What’s going on in Gaza?

Posted by evdomada on January 7, 2009

I will admit to the fact that I have not investigated in detail what has been going on in Gaza between the Israeli’s and the Palestinians.

At a high level the “popular” media sources have reported that Hamas rocketed missiles into Israel between 27th and 29th December.  In response to these attacks Israel decided to commence an operation aimed at disabling Hamas’ capability to fire missiles into Israel.  The response has been fierce resulting in many Palestinian deaths, among them many children.

Instead of me providing the commentary, I recommend that you click on the link below.

It’s a great commentary post that has gathered reports globally that are covering the events in Gaza.

“This is an all-out war against the civilian Palestinian population in Gaza” 06Jan09

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Romania Urged to Drop ‘Happy News’ Law

Posted by evdomada on July 9, 2008

VIENNA (Reuters)

Europe’s leading human rights watchdog, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), urged Romania’s president yesterday to veto draft legislation that would require radio and television stations to air more “happy” news. Under a bill which still needs the approval of President Traian Basescu, broadcasters will have to give equal time to “positive” and “negative” issues in their newscasts. The bill’s sponsors say too much gloomy news is making people ill. “Prescribing, or even defining good versus bad news, is a severe political intrusion into editorial freedom,” said Miklos Haraszti, media freedoms monitor for the 56-nation OSCE.

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PM briefs President on Ankara visit

Posted by evdomada on February 3, 2008

Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis leaving the Presidential mansion on Friday 1 February 2008 ANA-MPA/ALEXANDROS BELTESPrime Minister Costas Karamanlis on Friday dismissed rumors, mostly aired in the opposition press, of early elections, speaking to reporters after a meeting with President of the Republic Karolos Papoulias.

The government has a “fresh and strong” popular mandate, Karamanlis said, adding that “we have much work ahead of us, and are moving forward with consistency in the materialisation of the reforms”.

The purpose of his meeting with Papoulias was to brief the president on his recent visit to Turkey, Karamanlis explained, adding that Greece steadfastly supports Turkey’s European course, although the neighbouring country is obliged to maneuver within the framework of (EU) principles and reforms it itself has accpted. He also stressed that the issues of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Halki School of Theology are included this framework.

On his meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Karamanlis said that “we reaffirmed our volition for, and are working in the direction of, full normalisation of Greek-Turkish relations”.

“For Greece, the sole criterion is respect of International Law and the international treaties,” Karamanlis stressed.

With respect to the Cyprus issue, Karamanlis said “we are prepared for discussion on finding a just and viable solution”, adding that “the government knows that the effort for normalising Greek-Turkish relations is a long and difficult one”.

Karamanlis was also due to meet afterwards with Economy and Finance Minister George Alogoskoufis.

Source: ANA-MPA

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Violent Incidents in Central Athens

Posted by evdomada on February 3, 2008

02 Feb 2008
Sources: ΝΕΤ-ΑNA-ΝΕΤ 105,8

Athens Riots

Athens city center turned into a battlefield today. Incidents started at 11:00 in Stadiou Street between police, protestors and supporters of extreme right and leftist parties that had organized rallies. Far-right supportrs members of “Chrisi Avgi” organization had originally planned a rally at Kolokotroni Square at 19:00 on Saturday to mark the “anniversary of Imia”. Extreme right wing supporters had gathered at Kolokotroni Square while other leftist groups had gathered at Klathmonos Sqare. At around 14:00 police clashed with left-wing, anti-establishment youths that had set up road blocks and cut off traffic on Panepistimiou Street.

Police forces used tear gas and arrested suspects. At around midday, the situation had calmed down. The far-right supporters departed from the area after talking with the public prosecutor. Anti-establishment groups also left and came down to Athens Propylaia and Ipokratous St.

How the Incidents Began

The incidents began a little after 11:00. A group of far rightist youths, most of which were in uniforms and with helmets on had staged a sit-in at Kolokotronis Square early in the morning, on the occasion of the rally, commemorating the Imia anniversary scheduled by nationalists and members of the far right organization “Chrysi Avgi” for 19:00 Saturday. Meanwhile, dozens of bodies and organisations, including ADEDY (Supreme Administration of Greek Civil Servants Trade Unions) and OLME (Greek Federation of State School Teachers of Secondary Education) had programmed an anti-fascist event in the same spot for 14:00. However, the far rightists arrived early and occupied the square to prevent leftists and anarchists from occupying the area.

The anarchists, from their side gathered at the Propylaia, where tensions ran high. Two groups from both sides clashed on the Stadiou-Omirou junction, while the police used tear gas to disperse them. After the groups dispersed, it was discovered that an anarchist had been hit on the head from a stone, while as per information he had sustained knife injuries. Two people were injured as they were hit by stones and a third was stabbed with a knife. All three are now treated in “Evangelismos” hospital.

Situation Has Calmed Down

Now, the situation has calmed down. Traffic in the city center is conducted normally. In Exarchia area sporadic small incidents are reported. According to police, leftist supporters who had entered University Campus have left. It must be reported that during the clashes 5 bank buildings and a store were damaged. PASOK spokesman Mr. Ragousis among other statemnts added: “The police was absent and Athens was an unfortified city today.” SYN in its announcement calls on the police “to stop acting as an anti-state group of the 60s.” LAOS condemns the violence no matter where it is derived from.

Source: news.ert.gr

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To Taze or Not to Taze?

Posted by evdomada on September 21, 2007

A journalism student at the University of Florida had begun asking John Kerry a few questions.  He did seem a bit excited while he was putting forward his questions and a bit over the top.  I think the sight of the University of Florida police enclosing on him had something to do with his questioning style.

You may have seen other youtube footage or news footage of the student being “tazed” but I liked this one as it has a bit of commentary from the MSNBC journos.

Click here for the youtube video

There are questions that need to be asked …

Was all that force necessary?  Could he have finished his questions and sat down with no commotion? Did he break any laws or really cause any public offence?

If he was allowed to finish his question and sit down, the Kerry gathering may not have even made the news.

Could it have been a publicity stunt???

In any case we are always told about the virtues of democracy and the need to spread it to the rest of the world.  I was sure that one of the key elements of democracy is freedom of speech.  The capability to get on your soap-box and tell the world what your thoughts are … especially in a democratic country.

It’s a never ending debate with no answers.

Posted in General Discussion, News | Leave a Comment »

Greece’s Election Results

Posted by evdomada on September 17, 2007

As at 11:30am (AEST) ert.gr reported that 91.73% of the votes had been counted for the Greek elections that took place on Sunday 16th.

The results put the Nea Dimokratia party back in power with enough seats to have a majority government. Kostas Karamanlis graciously accepted the victory and has a clear mandate to continue the work that ND have undertaken since the previous election victory in 2004.

PASOK lost ground in the results and the leadership of Giorgos Papandreou will need to be tested this week by the party. Papandreou conceded defeat and will also be putting his leadership to the test with his party’s members. It is planned to have the vote of confidence this week so that the party can get straight to rebuilding itself.

It should be pointed out that both major parties lost seats in the elections – ND have lost 12 seats and PASOK 14 seats. The biggest winners from these elections have been the minor parties with the Greek Communist Party KKE who have gained 9 seats; the left-wing SY.RI.ZA who gained 7 seats; and LA.OS who now have 10 seats and were not previously represented in parliament. Note that SY.RI.ZA was previously known as Synaspismos but is still led by Alekos Alavanos.

Below is a summary of the results I compiled showing the change of seats at these elections

results.jpg

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