31 March, 2010 — Eyal Sivan’s Films
The film is a political essay excavating the entwined visual and political history of that famous citrus fruit originating in Palestine and known worldwide as the ‘Jaffa Orange’.

31 March, 2010 — Eyal Sivan’s Films
The film is a political essay excavating the entwined visual and political history of that famous citrus fruit originating in Palestine and known worldwide as the ‘Jaffa Orange’.
Many American and British soldiers who have returned from Iraq are complaining about Depleted Uranium-related illnesses. They accuse both the Pentagon and the UK Ministry of Defense of covering up. Poison Bullets follows doctors and experts as they voice their opposing views in the DU controversy and travels to the US, Great Britain, Jordan, Iraq and Spain, where we meet many of those who are victims of both DU-related diseases and the indifference of government officials.
http://widgets.vodpod.com/w/video_embed/Groupvideo.5219797
30 March, 2010 — www.uruknet.info
U.S. Army Counterterrorism issued a report that said WikiLeaks is a threat to U.S. security, particularly in Afghanistan. The report says that the organization should be destroyed and offered a plan. Does the government really think it can destroy WikiLeaks or is the leaked report part of a plan to smear the organization so badly, it will lose supporters and money?
Since its launch three years ago, WikiLeaks has produced more scoops than the Washington Post has in the past thirty years according to a report by The Guardian. The web based service was ‘founded by Chinese dissidents, journalists, mathematicians and start-up company technologists, from the US, Taiwan, Europe, Australia and South Africa’ according to their ‘About’ page. WikiLeaks targets oppressive regimes throughout the world, as well as regimes seeking to repress information on illegal and unethical government actions and policies.
30 March, 2010 — Palestine Think Tank
On 30th March each year, the Palestinian people commemorate the anniversary of Land Day, the day in March 1976 on which the Zionist occupation government confiscated thousands of dunums* of Palestinian land in the Galilee, leading to the displacement of the Palestinian people living inside the 1948 occupied territories (so-called Israel). A general strike and peaceful demonstrations ensued in various villages as the Palestinian people began to defend their confiscated land. Six Palestinians were killed, 100 were wounded [and hundreds of others arrested].
The strategic plan of all Zionist governments has been to confiscate the land, isolate the Palestinian people into limited zones and complicate their situation in an effort to force them to emigrate.
In east Jerusalem, 34% of the land was directly confiscated, 52% was considered a green zone, an area in which it was forbidden for Palestinians to build, even as they were forced to pay high annual taxes to the Zionist municipality for their unused land. If they failed to pay the required taxes, the municipality sold it. The buyers, of course, were always Zionist settlement organizations.
Thirty-four years have passed since the first Land Day event, and the confiscation of Palestinian land continues, and an independent state for the Palestinian people remains a dream.
* A dunum (or ‘dunam’) of land equals 1000sq. meters.
31 March, 2010 — HLLN
Recommended HLLN Links: The Quake – PBS Frontline Watch it on-line to.pbs.org/aFRNYT
The PBS series FRONTLINE airs The Quake to.pbs.org/9jXGvB
In this post
– Ezili Dant Note: On the March 31st UN pledging session
Another worthless UN donor pledging session set for March 31st in New York
It is the big world charity industry and security consultancies that make out like fat rats in every Haiti crisis, not the little Haiti town mayor who wants a cut of the trickle down…
If one just looks back at the flooding of Gonaives, Haiti in 2004 and 2008, just at that one Haiti example, and calculate how much money was raised by the World Relief Organizations, the NGOs, the UN, US State Department consultancies, the European Union, Canada, et al, in the name of rebuilding and bringing relief to the people of Gonaives, in those two instances combined, you’ll see that conservatively more than $3 billion dollars were collectively raised by these Internationals, their NGOs and private US charities to reconstruct and provide hurricane relief, flood rebuilding, food, water, medicine and shelter to the people Gonaives, Haiti. Today, the people of Gonaives are still walking on muddy roads. Little was rebuilt and the people will tell you they mostly got no help other than food and water in the first couple of weeks when the media cameras where on. (HLLN To-Tell-The-Truth-About-Haiti Forum (Excerpt – bit.ly/cSpvDp)
26 March, 2010 — Solidarity Economy
Solidarity as Economic System for Dealing with Social Crisis
“If it weren’t for solidarity, Haiti wouldn’t be alive today,” is an expression commonly heard here since the earthquake of January 12.
Haiti’s history is based on sharing and cooperation—expressed with gifts and solidarity toward those surviving on the margins. These displays usually go unnamed and unnoticed.
Some are formalized systems. One is called konbit—collective work groups in which members of the community labor without any expectation of compensation or even return. Konbit is the equivalent of a barn-raising, an option for those without enough hands to accomplish the task by themselves or enough money to hire labor. The cooperation of konbit has allowed farmers to harvest their fields and engage in other major work projects from time immemorial.
31 March, 2010 – www.freegaza.org
Yesterday the Free Gaza Movement bought a 1200 tonne cargo ship at an auction in Dundalk, Ireland.
The vessel had been impounded a year ago following an inspection by the International Transport Federation (ITF) which found that its owners had exploited its Lithuanian crew members- not paying their wages and subjecting them to humiliating treatment.
ITF Inspector and SIPTU organiser Ken Fleming said, We are pleased to announce that this vessel which was used to subject workers to modern day slavery, will now be used to promote human rights for the people of Palestine.
The Free Gaza Movement now owns four ships including three passenger vessels.
Free Gaza’s ships will take part in an international flotilla taking humanitarian aid to the besieged Gaza strip this May. Passenger and cargo ships are also being organised by the Turkish humanitarian organisation I.H.H., and by groups in Greece, Sweden, Malaysia and Belgium.
Free Gaza has launched eight missions to Gaza over the past two years. Five were successful. The last two were violently stopped by the Israeli Navy.
The Irish ship will be taking 500 tons of cement, as well as medicines, medical equipment and educational materials to the people of Gaza.
Derek Graham of the Free Gaza Movement said, We have international law and the conscience of the people of the world on our side. We know the Irish people will not stand by and let the people of Gaza be starved and punished by Israel any longer.
In preparation for the launch of the Irish ship, hospitals, trade unions, churches, mosques, families and community groups are being invited to sponsor bags of cement to help the people of Gaza to rebuild.
Caoimhe Butterly of the Free Gaza Movement said We call upon the Irish people and government to support the safe passage of our mission. The siege is a form of collective, sustained and devastating punishment. Supporting the flotilla is a way for the people of Ireland to show direct solidarity with the 1.5 million Palestinians trapped in Gaza as they attempt to pick up the shattered pieces of their lives.
The vessel, the MV Linda, will be re-named the MV Rachel Corrie, in memory of the 23 year old solidarity activist crushed to death in 2003 by an Israeli bulldozer as she attempted to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian home in Gaza. The Free Gaza Movement pays tribute to Rachel and the thousands of Palestinian men, women and children killed, wounded or imprisoned under Israeli Occupation.
END
31 March, 2010 — The Real News Network
Duménil: Neoliberal trends setting up a terrible future of inequality and exploitation for the workers
http://therealnews.com/permalinkedembed/mediaplayer.swf
Bio
Dr. Dumnil is one of the worlds foremost theorists of neoliberalism and economic crisis and is the author of numerous influential books, many of which have been translated into several languages. These include Capital Resurgent: Roots of the Neoliberal Revolution (2004) and his forthcoming The Crisis of Neoliberalism: from the subprime to the great contraction.
Transcript follows
31 March, 2010 — http://azvsas.blogspot.com/
Below is a link to a further article on the disruption of the Jerusalem Quartet concert.
It focuses on an argument which was prevalent at the time of the Anti-Apartheid Boycott (South Africa version) and is going to be heard increasingly from faint-hearted liberals who would like any struggle to be conducted within the bounds of normal, polite discourse (i.e. don’t mention the Arabs). I have therefore dug around a little regarding the antecedents of the JQ, just in case we had been unfair to them. In fact, if anything, we’ve been too kind by half. They are almost-certainly paid ambassadors on behalf of the Israeli Occupation Forces and as such are eminently suitable targets for boycott.
And just to emphasise once again – we didn’t carry out this action because we aimed to win the minds and hearts of those inside. A minority have undoubtedly been affected and one woman came over to us to give us her support but as with all Apartheid, if you wait for the consent of the beneficiaries you will be waiting forever.
It should also be emphasised that despite this having been Palestine Solidarity Campaign’s Week of Boycott, they lent no support whatsoever and didn’t even know the concert was happening!
Tony Greenstein
Home page: www.statewatch.org/
Statewatch European Documentation Centre (SEMDOC): www.statewatch.org/semdoc/
Sitemap: www.statewatch.org/sitemap.htm
1. EP: Surveillance of the sea external borders with the involvement of Frontex
2. MALTA: Grupp29: Stop the criminalisation of art Maltese authors and artists
3. EU: Council: rights to interpretation and to translation in criminal proceedings
4. EU-ISRAEL: Should the EU subsidise Israeli security?
5. EU: ECRE: European Commission Proposal to recast the Qualification Directive
6. Belgium: Ministry of justice and prison service under fire for arbitrary refusal
7. EU: Data Protection Supervisor: Guidelines on Video-surveillance
8. ITALY: Amnesty International report argues that the “nomads plan” is the wrong answer
9. DENMARK: Danish Rebellion Spokesman Convicted in Terror-Liberation Case
10. ITALY: GENOA: G8 appeals: longer prison terms for demonstrators, more officers convicted
11. Fighting anti-Muslim racism: an interview with A. Sivanandan
12. EU: Rules and general principles concerning mechanisms for implementing powers
13. EU-JAPAN:Customs Cooperation: European Data Protection Supervisor: Opinion
14. UK: Undercover policeman reveals how he infiltrated UK’s violent activists
15. EU: Commission proposal: right to interpretation and translation in criminal proceedings
16. EU-USA: Presidency wants EU-USA agreement on digital health-care
17. EUUSA: Question: MEP (ALDE): Council pushing for healthcare records share with the US?
18. ECJ: EDPS welcomes strengthening independent position of data protection authorities
19. EU Security Research: BAE Systems awarded EU contract to develop organised crime database
20. Italy: NGOs criticise Italian government stance on harm reduction drug policies
21. UK: Home Affairs Select Committee report: The National DNA Database
22. Italy: Harassment against migrants and Roma people
23. Spain/France: In-depth reports on the situation in detention centres for foreigners
24. UK: Home Office: What perceptions do the UK public have concerning the impact of counter-terrorism?