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UN security council stops short of full condemnation

Submitted by on June 1, 2010 – 9:07 am31 Comments
UN security council stops short of full condemnation

The Guardian: UN security council stops short of full condemnation

The UN security council has called for an impartial investigation into Israel’s botched assault on a flotilla carrying aid supplies to the Gaza Strip, but it stopped short of an outright condemnation of the attack.

In a carefully worded compromise statement drafted after ten hours of debate, the security council also called for the immediate release of hundreds of civilians held after the raid.

After a 10-hour emergency meeting that stretched into the earlier hours of today, the 15 council members agreed on a presidential statement that was weaker than that initially demanded by the Palestinians, Arabs and Turkey.

They had called for condemnation of the attack by Israeli forces “in the strongest terms” and “an independent international investigation”.

But the statement said: “The security council deeply regrets the loss of life and injuries resulting from the use of force during the Israeli military operation in international waters against the convoy sailing to Gaza. The council, in this context, condemns those acts which resulted in the loss of at least 10 civilians and many wounded, and expresses its condolences to their families.”

The deaths and injuries were condemned by the UN, EU and other countries. The US, in contrast, was restrained in its response, expressing regret and saying it was “currently working to understand the circumstances surrounding this tragedy”.

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  • afzaalkhan says:

    The council, in this context, condemns those acts which resulted in the loss of at least 10 civilians and many wounded, and expresses its condolences to their families.”

    acts denotes that aid convey was guilty too. Once again USA saves Israel.

  • afzaalkhan says:

    Dun forget the complicity of Egypt in this fiasco, now they lifting the blockade, hai os zood pasheemaan ka pasheemaan hona

    ARY: Egypt lifts its side of Gaza blockade for aid

  • afzaalkhan says:

    ARY: Comments from activists on Gaza aid convoy

    ISTANBUL: Israel detained some 700 activists, ensuring no immediate contradiction of its version of events. Israeli officials said the nine activists were killed when commandos storming the cruise ship opened fire in self-defence.

    But some of the activists who were on board the ships are now returning home. Below are comments describing their experience when Israeli troops descended on the flotilla.

    MIHALIS GRIGOROPOULOS (to reporters at Athens airport)

    “They (Israelis) came down from helicopters and threw ropes from inflatable boats, climbing aboard. There was teargas and live ammunition.

    “I was steering the ship, we saw them capture another ship in front of us, which was the Turkish passenger vessel with more than 500 people on board and heard shots fired.

    “We did not resist at all, we couldn’t even if we had wanted to. What could we have done against the commandos who climbed aboard? The only thing some people tried was to delay them from getting to the bridge, forming a human shield. They were fired upon with plastic bullets and were stunned with electric devices.

    “There was great mistreatment after our arrest. We were essentially hostages, like animals on the ground.

    “They wouldn’t let us use the bathroom, wouldn’t give us food or water and they took video of us despite international conventions banning this.”

    ARIS PAPADOKOSTOPOULOS (to reporters at Athens airport)

    “We took part in the mission ‘one ship for Gaza’, carrying humanitarian aid … wheel chairs, pharmaceutical supplies, building materials and nothing else.

    “When the assault took place we were 70 nautical miles from the Gaza shores.

    “The Turkish passenger ship ahead of us suffered a terrible attack from everywhere, from sea and air, with gunshots.

    “Ours was the last ship to be attacked.

    “The action of Israeli commandos was pure piracy in international waters. The international community must condemn this and react. We cannot allow Israel to play the role of the policeman in the area.”

    NILUFER CETIN (to reporters at Istanbul airport)

    “We stayed in our cabin and played games amid the sound of gunfire. My son has been nervous since yesterday afternoon … I did not need to protect my son. They knew there was a baby on board. I protected him by staying in my cabin, then went to the bathroom. I put a gas mask and life jacket on my son. We did not experience any other problems on board, only a water shortage.

    “We took walks on the deck, played games with my son. The curtains were drawn, so I did not see not the raid as it was happening. I only heard the voices. There are lightly and heavily wounded people.

    “There are thousands, millions of babies in Gaza. My son and I wanted to play with those babies. We planned to deliver them aid. We wanted to say ‘Look, it’s a safe place, I came here with my baby-son’. I saw my husband from a distance, he looked OK. The ship personnel was not wounded, because they (the soldiers) needed them to take the ship to port. I will go again if another ship goes.”

    BAYRAM KALYON (to reporters at Istanbul airport)

    “The captain of the vessel Mavi Marmara told us ‘They are firing randomly, they are breaking the windows and entering inside. So you should get out of here as soon as possible.’ That was our last conversation with him.”

    NORMAN PAECH, German former Left party lawmaker

    “That was not an act of self defence. That was a war crime … To talk about self defence is a mockery.” He personally saw “two and a half” wooden blocks which activists used. He did not see any knives. He did not rule out that activisits used metal rods, but he did not see them.

    YOUCEF BENDERBAL, a French member of pro-Palestinian charity

    “We knew we were taking risks. But we did not expect an assault in international waters. It was purely and simply an act of piracy… It happened quickly.”

    He was not on board the Turkish ship, but on another with about 50 people which had sailed from Greece.

    “Masked commandos took possession of the ship. They went straight for the captain’s cabin.” When the captain tried to stay in the commands of the ship, the Israeli soldiers dragged him away. Some of the crew were injured, he said without giving more details.

    “From the start, we had instructions to not provoke anything, even if Israelis boarded the ship. We did not go looking for a fight, we were attacked. There were only pacifists on board.”

  • afzaalkhan says:

    AAJ Tv: Talat says will show real face of Israel

    AMMAN : Executive Director News and current affairs of Aaj News Talat Hussain has said that he will show the real face of Israel by releasing the footage of Israeli commandos assault, Aaj News reported.

    Talking to Aaj News after his arrival in Jordan, Talat said that they were remained in Israeli custody for three days.

    While expressing gratitude to the nation, Talat Hussain said that the prayers of the nation make him possible to sustain in tough days.

    Answering the question about the assault, he said at least 60 Israeli commandos attacked the flotilla vessel, adding that he witnessed the deaths of four mates.

    About his return to Pakistan, Talat said that he will arrived back home on Thursday’s evening.

  • afzaalkhan says:

    IDF Released Several Faked Photos – How Can They Be Trusted in ANY Investigation?

    Proof has surfaced today that many of the so-called “evidence” photographs being distributed by the Israeli government as examples of terror weapons on board the Gaza aid flotilla date back years:

    The bulletproof vest photos on the Israeli flickr page are dated February 2006.

    The axe photo was taken in 2003.

    The pepper spray photos – 2003

    The iconic pictures of knives and other weapons on the Saudi flag and other stuff:

    Hi. Just to confirm that the EXIF metadata points to this photo being taken in 2006:
    barney@benchwood:~$ identify -verbose farm5.static.flickr.com/4047/4662965686_a91f8 bab2e_o_d.jpg | grep Date
    exif:DateTime: 2010:06:02 10:38:47
    exif:DateTimeDigitized: 2006:02:07 05:52:19
    exif:DateTimeOriginal: 2006:02:07 05:52:19

    And on and on…..

    Absolutely, this is strong evidence that by allowing the Israeli government to be trusted in any aspect of the investigation of these high seas crimes will be foolhardy and negligent.

    The most recent evidence we have of how the Israeli government deals with crime scenes where American lives have been put in jeopardy is in the ongoing civil suit brought by Rachel Corrie’s family against the Israeli government. Testimony will resume some time – or not. The Israeli government is trying to stop the trial. But so far, here’s some of what has come out that reflects on the ability of the Israeli government or military to conduct honest investigations:

    • taukeer says:

      I think the Israelis have finally scored an own goal!!! The world public opinion has lost any sympathy with the fascist state. The official support in the west is really wearing thin.

      They might have done what the Palestinians could not achieve in the past 40 if not more years.

  • taukeer says:

    Israel as a Strategic Liability?
    By Anthony H. Cordesman
    JUN 2, 2010

    America’s ties to Israel are not based primarily on U.S. strategic interests. At the best of times, an Israeli government that pursues the path to peace provides some intelligence, some minor advances in military technology, and a potential source of stabilizing military power that could help Arab states like Jordan. Even then, however, any actual Israeli military intervention in an Arab state could prove as destabilizing as beneficial. The fact is that the real motives behind America’s commitment to Israel are moral and ethical. They are a reaction to the horrors of the Holocaust, to the entire history of Western anti-Semitism, and to the United States’ failure to help German and European Jews during the period before it entered World War II. They are a product of the fact that Israel is a democracy that shares virtually all of the same values as the United States.
    The U.S. commitment to Israel is not one that will be abandoned. The United States has made this repeatedly clear since it first recognized Israel as a state, and it has steadily strengthened the scale of its commitments since 1967. The United States has provided Israel with massive amounts of economic aid and still provides enough military assistance to preserve Israel’s military superiority over its neighbors. The United States has made it clear that any U.S. support for Arab-Israeli peace efforts must be based on options that preserve Israel’s security, and its recent announcements that it will consider “extended regional deterrence” are code words for a U.S. commitment that could guard Israel, as well as its neighbors, against an Iranian nuclear threat.
    At the same time, the depth of America’s moral commitment does not justify or excuse actions by an Israeli government that unnecessarily make Israel a strategic liability when it should remain an asset. It does not mean that the United States should extend support to an Israeli government when that government fails to credibly pursue peace with its neighbors. It does not mean that the United States has the slightest interest in supporting Israeli settlements in the West Bank, or that the United States should take a hard-line position on Jerusalem that would effectively make it a Jewish rather than a mixed city. It does not mean that the United States should be passive when Israel makes a series of major strategic blunders–such as persisting in the strategic bombing of Lebanon during the Israeli-Hezbollah conflict, escalating its attack on Gaza long after it had achieved its key objectives, embarrassing the U.S. president by announcing the expansion of Israeli building programs in east Jerusalem at a critical moment in U.S. efforts to put Israeli-Palestinian peace talks back on track, or sending commandos to seize a Turkish ship in a horribly mismanaged effort to halt the “peace flotilla” going to Gaza.
    It is time Israel realized that it has obligations to the United States, as well as the United States to Israel, and that it become far more careful about the extent to which it test the limits of U.S. patience and exploits the support of American Jews. This does not mean taking a single action that undercuts Israeli security, but it does mean realizing that Israel should show enough discretion to reflect the fact that it is a tertiary U.S. strategic interest in a complex and demanding world.
    Israel’s government should act on the understanding that the long-term nature of the U.S.-Israel strategic relationship will depend on Israel clearly and actively seeking peace with the Palestinians—the kind of peace that is in Israel’s own strategic interests. Israelis should understand that the United States opposes expansion and retention of its settlements and its efforts to push Palestinians out of greater Jerusalem. Israeli governments should plan Israeli military actions that make it clear that Israel will use force only to the level actually required, that carefully consider humanitarian issues from the start, and that have a clear post-combat plan of action to limit the political and strategic impact of its use of force. And Israel should not conduct a high-risk attack on Iran in the face of the clear U.S. “red light” from both the Bush and Obama administrations. Israel should be sensitive to the fact that its actions directly affect U.S. strategic interests in the Arab and Muslim worlds, and it must be as sensitive to U.S. strategic concerns as the United States is to those of Israel.
    The United States does not need unnecessary problems in one of the most troubled parts of the world, particularly when Israeli actions take a form that does not serve Israel’s own strategic interests. This Israeli government in particular needs to realize that as strong as U.S.-Israel ties may be, it is time to return to the kind of strategic realism exemplified by leaders like Yitzhak Rabin. No aspect of what happened this week off the coast of Gaza can be blamed on Israeli commandos or the Israel Defense Forces. Israel’s prime minister and defense minister had full warning about the situation, and they knew the flotilla was deliberately designed as a political provocation to capture the attention of the world’s media in the most negative way possible. They personally are responsible for what happened, and they need to show far more care and pragmatism in the future.
    Anthony H. Cordesman holds the Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

  • taukeer says:

    Press TV showing the London Protest Live. Large crowd.

  • taukeer says:

    Tariq Ali now speaking. Calling on Turkey to demonstrate its resolve in deeds. He is condeming the Dead Farooh Husni Mubarik.

  • taukeer says:

    Text “LIFT” to 70066 for Oxfam’s call to Lift the Siege of Gaza

  • taukeer says:

    New American Century Project

    ESTABLISH FOUR CORE MISSIONS for U.S. military forces:
    • defend the American homeland;
    • fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theater wars;
    • perform the “constabulary” duties associated with shaping the security environment in
    critical regions;
    • transform U.S. forces to exploit the “revolution in military affairs;”

    http://www.newamericancentury.org/RebuildingAmericasDefenses.pdf

  • taukeer says:

    The link gives the details of Land distribution between Jews and Palestinians in 1947. What an equitable distribution the “UN” Declaration for Jewish homeland was based on.

    http://www.palestineremembered.com/Acre/Maps/Story571.html

  • afzaalkhan says:

    Thanks 4 update tauqeer was bz at gazaflotilla website

  • taukeer says:

    A US war veteran said he was among the activists who overpowered three Israeli soldiers.

    ”They [the soldiers] looked at us … They thought we would kill them, but we let them go,” said Kenneth Nichols O’Keefe.
    turkishactivist-420×0.jpg

  • afzaalkhan says:

    Talk abt bias media, I mean BBC should be ashamed.

    BBC: Israel ‘foils scuba dive attack’

    Israel’s navy has shot and killed four Palestinians wearing diving gear off the Gaza coast, officials say.

    The Israeli military says it believes those on board were planning a “terrorist attack”.

    Hamas officials in Gaza say four bodies have been recovered and two people are missing.

    Israel controls and occupies the sea off the coast of Gaza despite having withdrawn its forces from the territory in 2005.

    The country’s Haaretz newspaper quoted an Israeli army source as saying the incident took place at about 0430 local time (0130 GMT) and that the boat was heading north to Israel from waters off the Nusseirat refugee camp in central Gaza.

    The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) said there were no Israeli casualties.

    The BBC’s Jon Donnison, in the West Bank town of Ramallah, says it is not yet clear exactly what has happened.

    But it is not uncommon for the Israeli navy to open fire on fishing boats it feels are too far out at sea, he adds.

    The latest incident comes in a week where the Israeli Navy’s actions have been under close scrutiny after nine people were killed in a raid on a flotilla of ships carrying pro-Palestinian activists trying to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza.

    There has also been sporadic rocket fire out of Gaza into Israel since that raid a week ago.

  • taukeer says:

    GEORGE GALLOWAY at it yet again! God I wish I had the eloquence of this great man!

  • taukeer says:

    NATO convoy attacked on the motorway near Islamabad. Retaliation begins!

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