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Gaza invasion starts: Refugee camp with ISMers in it shelled by tanks

Johnny Mathis | 03.01.2009 20:44

Ground operation started an hour ago. IMC users fone Gaza. IMSers drive ambulances under shrapnell fire.

At 20:19 a blogger on IMC Germany called his friends in Gaza (Beit Hanoun in the North) as the tanks were moving in, the invasion had just begun and then the line went dead. All other fones he tried down.

Other user called ism in Jabalya, Gaza approx twenty Minutes ago. Jabalya under fire by tanks from outside border. Jabalya is refugee camp 2 qkm, ca. 100 000 inhabs.

No calls possible to ) Beit Janoun and Beit Lahiya.

From 18:14 h:

Activists ask to spread to public that they are accomp ambalances. Ambulances get shelled. Shrapnell into Red Crescent station Djabalja.

Among helpers are following ISM activists:
Alberto Acre (Spain)
Sharon Lock (Australia)

Please notify public that foreign human rights activists drive ambulances.

Johnny Mathis

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

save HAARETZ ..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

03.01.2009 21:05

different day .. same sheet..
different day .. same sheet..

Haaretz a Newspaper Without a Country
By Christoph Schult
Its lonely fight against the occupation of the West Bank made Israeli newspaper Haaretz internationally famous. At home, the paper is fighting for survival.The irreverence of the Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz is visible from the first moment a visitor enters the paper's editorial headquarters. There in the foyer hangs an open pig's carcass, looking just as it would in a slaughterhouse. This one, however, is reproduced in pieces of candy -- red ones for the muscles, and yellow for the innards. The building's doorman is on hand to help interpret this installation. The sculpture, he says, is like the land of Israel itself: "Beautiful on the outside, rotten on the inside." Amos Schocken, publisher of Israeli newspaper "Haaretz.""The land" is also the translation of the name Haaretz, and the newspaper's problems are indeed linked with those of the country. What the paper offers in abundance -- a willingness to compromise with the Palestinians -- has once again become a fairly unpopular stance in Israeli society. One floor down from the foyer is the conference room. It's a windowless space and looks a bit like the nerve center of a war cabinet. This afternoon, Defense Minister Ehud Barak is here to visit the newspaper. What follows is a vigorous exchange of views. On one side is the country's most critical editorial department; on the other, the politician who has shifted the traditionally left-wing Labor Party to the right, to the point where Barak's opinions sometimes seem to hardly differ from those of nationalist Benjamin Netanyahu, leader of the center-right Likud Party.Barak, a retired general, presents himself as a hardliner and quickly wears the journalists down. The louder he speaks, the more the editors lose any desire to ask him questions. The minister bellows. He pounds his right fist on the table. Even the croissant he casually stuffs into his mouth can't stop the flow of his words. In the end, the editor-in-chief observes with some bewilderment "that just now we didn't interrupt you for 20 minutes."
Struggle for Survival
And so the contemplative Left has again lost to the noisy mainstream. It's a symbol for the newspaper's struggle to survive in its ever-more-lonely position as a well-respected daily. Abroad, Haaretz is known for its strong position against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories. Its English-language Web site registers a million users each month. At home, however, only 66,000 Israelis buy the paper. Founded in 1919, the paper was acquired in 1935 by Salman Schocken, a businessman who had fled Nazi Germany, where he had owned a department store chain and a publishing company. From 1939 on, Schocken's son Gustav shaped the paper's liberal, left-wing bent. Schocken's grandson Amos has been chief executive of the Haaretz group since 1990.
His father, says Amos Schocken, 64, was still able to take more interest in the editorial aspects than in the finances of the paper. But times have changed, the founder's grandson says: "The paper has to make money." And that's not easy. In 2006 the family sold 25 percent of its shares in the newspaper to Cologne-based publisher Alfred Neven DuMont. At the time of the sale, Schocken handed the new investor a sheet of paper outlining the newspaper's editorial principles. The German publisher read the list and then pointed to the last item: "'Haaretz supports efforts to achieve peace with Israel's Arab neighbors." That, DuMont said, is especially important.The only problem is that actively advocating peace negotiations is a fairly unpopular position in Israel at the moment. Shortly after the end of the Six Day War in 1967, Haaretz was already promoting the return of the occupied territories in exchange for peace. With the 1994 Oslo Accords, majority Israeli opinion also began to swing in this direction. But the happy marriage between the newspaper and prevailing public opinion didn't last long. With the beginning of the second Palestinian intifada in 2000 and the accompanying suicide attacks in Israeli cities, the land and "The Land" once again went their separate ways.Subscribers began to abandon the paper in droves. The most common reason given by readers who canceled their subscriptions was one journalist, Gideon Levy, the country's most radical commentator. Once a week in his "Twilight Zone" column, Levy writes about the fate of Palestinians. He writes about taxi drivers whose vehicles were destroyed by Israeli soldiers or about a man whose wife was delayed at a checkpoint while having an acute heart attack for so long that she died. "If we change this newspaper's DNA," Levy warns, "we won't survive."

gar
- Homepage: http://garizo.blogspot.com/2009/01/happy-new-year-butsave-haaretz.html


Why Post this here ?

03.01.2009 22:28

This is an interesting article, there's a lot more in it than the original posting, why post it as a comment to an article that is not really relevant ? Post it as an article in it's own right ..

Champions Lodge


@gar Question 4 U/// ashamed of the German Left

03.01.2009 23:41

1.) Gar,

any demo at Athens Israel embassy`? reports?

2.) Keep up the protests in Britain. I´´m ashamed of the German left, they let the palestinians completely down. I feel very upset and lonely.

Know their mindset:

(bottom of posting  http://de.indymedia.org/2009/01/238114.shtml some 1 says:)
"Straßenkampf in Gaza-Stadt
antifa 03.01.2009 - 22:14
Straßenkampf in Gaza-Stadt,
Antifa mach die Hamas platt!"

Translation:

"Street fighting in Gaza Town
Antifa flatten Hamas down!"

and at  http://de.indymedia.org/2009/01/238157.shtml
"Palis übern Jordan!
antifa 03.01.2009 - 23:48
Für jeden gekillten Pali gibts ein Freibier!"
TransLation:
"Palestinians over the Jordan (means also to kill s´one)
A free beer for each killed Palestinian"

Lon Lee


Haaretz

04.01.2009 20:46

The circulation figure for Haaretz is higher than the Guardian per capita, and is far higher than the Jerusalem Post. What is interesting about the Israeli media is how different in tone the domestic Hebrew media is from the English-language Israeli press.

Daniel


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