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Mayor of Island of Maio in Cabo Verde visits New Bedford – SouthCoastToday.com

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Cabo Verde mayor salutes fallen Cape Verdean American veterans

Mayor Miguel Rosa of Maio, Cabo Verde, pays respects to fallen Cape Verdean American veterans while visiting New Bedford on Thursday, July 28.

Standard-Times

NEW BEDFORD Dozens gathered at the Cape Verdean American Veterans Hall on Purchase Street Thursday to greet a delegation from the Cabo Verdean island of Maio.

Miguel Rosa, the mayor of Maio, visited as part of a tour of local Cape Verdean communities.

"You guys just received us with what in Portuguese we call calor humano(human warmth or affection)," he said. "We are here and we are learning so much from you."

The ceremonies began around 6:45. with a ceremony at the memorial stele to Cape Verdean Americans who have fallen in U.S. wars.

Rosa presented a bouquet for the stele before both the U.S. and Cabo Verdean national anthems were sung by Andrea Charpentier and Candida Rose respectively.

Once inside, city councilors Shane Burgo and Derek Baptiste, both of Cabo Verdean descent, shared some opening remarks before opening the buffet line.

"We have to have more togetherness with Cape Verdeans from the islands and Cape Verdeans from America," Baptiste said. "If we don't, we're going to lose our community and our culture."

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Cabo Verdeans have had a presence in New Bedford since the 19th Century, when whaling vessels would often stop by the archipelago then under Portuguese rule to pick up new crew members.

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A brisk trade between the islands and New Bedford then ensued. After the archipelago's independence from Portugal in 1975, the connections continued.

Rosa said that keeping those connections alive was a major motive behind his visit.

"We need to keep in touch with our diaspora," he said. "We know that there's a lot of people who are third generation now and it's so important to talk to the diaspora not just for money but to visit [Cabo Verde].

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"People from different walks of life in the diaspora have massive amounts of knowledge in nursing, teaching, engineering, architecture ... We need these experts and guys who can help us down in our island.

On Wednesday, Rosa visited the Cabo Verdean community in East Providence, Rhode Island, and met with that city's mayor, Robert DaSilva.

Rosa also visited Brockton before coming to New Bedford.

Contact Kevin G. Andrade at kandrade@s-t.com and follow him on Twitter: @KevinGAndrade. Support local journalism and subscribe to the Standard-Times today!

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Mayor of Island of Maio in Cabo Verde visits New Bedford - SouthCoastToday.com

Clever ways Kenyans in the diaspora are investing back home – The Standard

Posted By on July 31, 2022

You have probably come across stories of Kenyans in diaspora (or summer bunnies as you like to call them) sending money to friends or family to invest, only to jet back home to zero investment, millions of excuses and a very plump cousin.

Well, I have heard quite a number of those and to say I now have serious trust issues would be a massive understatement.

Just the other day my neighbour came back home from the US and quite literally lost his mind. Completely bananas.

His mother, believe it or not, would take photos of some random construction site. She would then share that and lie that everything was running smoothly... Tupo site, she said.

Based on the photos, he estimated that his dream house would be ready just in time for Christmas.

Owe unto him when he came back home and found that it was all a ploy.

So when my cousin who leaves in Australia asked for tips on how she can invest back home, I immediately told her the story and said, 'with the current economic times, I would advise you not to tempt even the born again'

In a bid to save her from falling for the 'tupo site' prank, I decided to do some digging on some of the clever ways the Kenyans in diaspora can invest back home.

It is here that I came across Co-operative Bank's online facility where Kenyans abroad can create an account, save money, buy property and/or invest in SMEs.

Whether land or residential areas, the bank does its due diligence, involving its lawyers, to ensure that the property has proper documents.

Additionally, the site offers an array of property which is tailored to suit individual needs.

For example, for residential houses, there are those that are located on the outskirts of Kenyas capital, Nairobi, or those in quieter regions.

Co-operative Bank also offers land deals as well as fully furnished homes and offices.

In terms of business investments, the bank has offered loans to entrepreneurs interested in boosting their Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).

Weeks after recommending the service, my cousin has commenced on her first house (she calls it her summer house), I even went to the site myself and confirmed that work was in progress and for sure "mafundi wako site."

-Written by Stephanie Wangari

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Clever ways Kenyans in the diaspora are investing back home - The Standard

Turning Passion into Reality – St. Lucia News From The Voice – The Voice St. Lucia

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Meet Saint Lucian author Mandy Preville-Findlay: an educator, development facilitator and community collaborator who lives in London.

Co-founder of the community group, BEYOND IYANOLA, which she developed with her husband Marlon Findlay, she believes in collaborating for development. Her community group is a diaspora-focused organisation that identifies, amplifies and celebrates the brilliance of the diaspora, globally. To this end, Preville-Findlay engages agencies and personnel around the world to enhance development in Saint Lucia, including the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), Global Diaspora Confederation (GDC) and International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD).

You can find out more about BEYOND IYANOLA and read their publications by searching for @BEYONDIYANOLA on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Issuu.

Preville-Findlay has always had a love for all things literary and nurtured her love for writing by filling many notebooks with ideas and stories. With an overwhelming passion to tell the world about her homeland, mingled with her innate education development focus, she wrote Azani Runs to bridge the gap between celebrating the uniqueness of Saint Lucia and the reality of family life. She sees this as the perfect platform to bring the island to homes around the world through early education.

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Preville-Findlay attributes her drive, to connect the diaspora and provide an avenue for storytelling, to her parents: Jonathan Preville (retired lecturer from SALCC) and Sylvia Preville (deceased insurance broker from GTM) to whom her book is dedicated. Along with her army of supporters in addition to her siblings and family members including Kendel Hippolyte and Judelia Medard-Sebastien.

As a native Saint Lucian, Preville-Findlay is keen to include aspects of her identity in all of her books. Azani Runs is her first childrens book and the first in A Family Movement and Discovery Series, inspired by her nephew Azani and her over 20 years of working with children of all ages.

Young children are sometimes told to stop doing one thing or the other, restricting their ability to learn through exploration, this book celebrates the joy of movement and discovery. Preville-Findlay is also using this as an opportunity to get lesser acknowledged names in print. She firmly believes that every child deserves to be the lead in their own story and see their name in print.

Whats next?

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The writer is currently writing a story for each of her nieces and nephews. Look out for more of her stories about dinosaurs, vehicles and dancing. She aspires to use the coming years to publish books from a range of genres (fiction and non-fiction) for young readers, middle grade readers and adults.

Inspired by the visionary Kathy Birch-McDiarmed, Librarian at SALCC who is already working to upgrade the status of libraries and reading in Saint Lucia, Preville-Findlay aims to work collaboratively to support this focus.

She said: I can still remember my summer vacation being spent in the Central Library, participating in one programme or the other. In fact, I am sure I still have a certificate from one of these sessions somewhere. Reading was a major part of life growing up and I cant imagine a greater gift to share.

Preville-Findlays mantra Everyone has a story that someone, somewhere needs to hear.

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Turning Passion into Reality - St. Lucia News From The Voice - The Voice St. Lucia

Saving women from the men they leave – The Statesman

Posted By on July 31, 2022

She was from a small city in a southern state. Sania Khan, a Pakistani-American woman killed in a murder-suicide by her ex-husband Raheel Ahmad, had just moved to Chicago last year. Khans divorce from Ahmad was finalised in May of this year. On her TikTok profile Khan, herself a professional photographer, was documenting her journey healing from the painful divorce. Apparently, her public statements about her relationship and the South Asian communitys response to it bothered Ahmad so much that he drove from Georgia where he lived all the way to Chicago. Then he went to Khans condominium and killed her. Ahmad appeared to have stayed in the condominium until he heard the police arrive. Officers at the scene reported hearing a gunshot and the sound of a man groaning.

Inside, they found Khans body lying in the entrance; there was a gunshot wound to the back of her head. Ahmad was in another room with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Next to him was a suicide note. There is no doubt that Sania Khan was living a complicated life. According to her TikTok posts, her mother had stayed in an abusive marriage because she feared backlash from the South Asian community in Tennessee. In other posts, Khan described the threats made to her by community members who opposed her divorce. In some videos, she spoke about the constant moral judgements by community members about anyone not following the rules of an obedient wife. Khan had decided to abandon all these strictures so she could wear what she wished and create a new identity for herself.

Even though she had obtained a restraining order against her ex-husband, he was able to get to her and murder her. Khans murder tells a sordid story of South Asian diaspora communities in the West. Chattanooga, where Khan grew up, is a small city: its chief tourist attraction is a park called Rock City that is full of strange rock formations. Pakistani diaspora communities in small places tend to be the most rigid. Since the number of families is not very large, everyone is stuck with everyone else. Even worse, like other diaspora communities, the morals and ethos tend to follow norms that are at least 20 years old when most families migrated to America. Unlike actual Pakistani culture which has progressed in the past two decades, diaspora families are used to raising children according to dated norms and exerting judgement on any families that divert from them even a bit.

Divorce is taboo so women have to choose between whether they want to end a bad marriage and face extreme ostracism and exclusion from the community or stay in the marriage and bear the abuse with community membership and support. Khan had chosen divorce and rebellion. On her TikTok profile, she posted just the sort of risqu videos and photos that upset the self-styled guardians of morality in the diaspora Pakistani communities. She spoke openly about the depression that accompanies divorce and how hard it actually is to heal from it. It seemed that she had finally broken away from a relationship and a community that did not allow her to live the life she wanted. Working as a professional photographer doing shoots of weddings, graduations, marriage proposals and other happy occasions, she was supporting herself and realising her dreams as a newly single woman.

All of it, visible on TikTok, seemingly enraged her ex-husband so much that he decided to kill her. In the aftermath of Khans murder there has been a focus on the Pakistani communitys unwillingness to confront issues of abuse within their circles. Time magazine even chose to include South-Asian communities engage in self-reflection as part of the title of an article about the incident. The premise of it was that Pakistani communities promote a retrogressive version of marriage which demands that wives be subservient to their husbands and constantly at their beck and call. The insinuation is that Khan would still be alive today if the community was more supportive of women and less so of men like Ahmad who abuse and exploit women. South Asian communities intransigence on the issue of divorce (which they bizarrely understand as a very American concept rather than a universal one) is undoubted.

At the same time, it is true that Khans murder is also distinctly American. In the US, the likelihood of a woman being murdered is the highest after she leaves a relationship. Intimate partner violence of the sort that killed Khan is the number one cause of death in women under 35. Add to this the fact that one out of five American women report being victims of domestic violence. If these numbers arent damning enough, there is the corollary issue of gun violence. The ease of procuring guns makes it very simple for wouldbe wife murderers to obtain lethal weapons for their nefarious plans. Perhaps if it were not so easy to obtain a weapon as it currently is in the US, Khan may have been alive today. Femicide sadly is a universal phenomenon. Such is the hold of patriarchal norms that no one seems to know how to protect young women that leave abusive relationships.

In the week since Khans murder there has already been at least one more murder-suicide in the US. This past weekend a soldier chased his wife into a mall where he killed her and then himself. From all these examples and from Khans tragic death, it appears the world needs to focus on how to save women from bloodthirsty male egos which will stop at nothing to eliminate women who have dared to leave them.

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Saving women from the men they leave - The Statesman

Woman ‘hit over head with stick’ as attacker yells ‘it’s because you’re a Jew’ – My London

Posted By on July 31, 2022

A Jewish woman was assaulted outside a London Underground nation in North London amid a spate of anti-Semitic attacks across London in recent days. A spokesperson for a local neighbourhood watch team in Haringey said that a woman was hit over the head with a wooden stick in a targeted attack on Thursday afternoon (July 28).

Her attacker reportedly shouted: "I am doing it because you are a Jew" - before throwing a liquid over the victim. A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police told MyLondon : "Officers were called at around 3.45pm on Thursday, July 28 to reports of a woman assaulted by another woman close to Seven Sisters Underground station, N4.

"The incident happened around 30 minutes prior to the call. The victim was not seriously injured during the incident. Due to comments made during the assault, this is being treated as a hate crime. No arrests have been made in connection with the incident, and enquiries continue into the circumstances."

READ MORE: Hammersmith rapist who left woman fearing for her life says 'I'm the victim'

It comes amid a spate of alleged attacks against the Jewish community across the capital over the past few days. Yesterday (July 29), the Metropolitan Police received a report of a racially-aggravated assault that was reported to have occurred in High Road, N15, less than half-a-mile away from the scene of the first incident.

A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police confirmed that a 29-year-old woman was sprayed with a liquid and threatened by another woman. No injuries were reported, and enquiries are ongoing to establish the full circumstances.

One eyewitness alleged that a "mum and baby were attacked by a serial racist", with the offender throwing a substance over the baby before chasing them down the street - all while "brandishing a stick and shouting".

On the same day, officers received a report of another racially-aggravated assault that was reported to have occurred in Manor Road, Hackney (N16). It was reported a 13-year-old boy was assaulted. A spokesperson for a local anti-hate crime group said that the teenager was attacked by three youngsters who threw his hat off & shouted "F***** Jew".

He was not injured, and enquiries to establish the circumstances of the incident are ongoing. Officers say that they have arranged to take a statement from the informant.

Anyone with information about the attack near Seven Sisters Tube station should call 101 or tweet @MetCC quoting CAD reference number 4820 of July 28.

Do you have any stories that you think we should be covering? Get in touch by contacting sam.ormiston@reachplc.com

Do you want the latest news in your area sent straight to your inbox? It only takes a few minutes! Click here.

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Woman 'hit over head with stick' as attacker yells 'it's because you're a Jew' - My London

Photos That Helped to Document the Holocaust Were Taken by a Nazi – The New York Times

Posted By on July 31, 2022

AMSTERDAM On June 20, 1943, bewildered and terrified families, laden with baggage and branded with yellow stars, were forced into Olympiaplein, one of this citys most recognizable public squares. Few knew where they were going, or for how long, so they wore their winter coats despite the blazing sun as they registered with the Nazi authorities.

A Dutch photographer, Herman Heukels, moved through the crowd, taking pictures of people who would soon be deported to concentration camps. His images would be the final portraits of many of these people, who were among 5,500 sent that day from Amsterdam to Westerbork transit camp, and then on to the east. The vast majority would never return.

Heukelss photos are some of the strongest visual evidence used by historians to illustrate the Holocaust in the Netherlands, which took the lives of more than 102,000 of the estimated 140,000 Jewish civilians who lived in the country before World War II.

Yet despite their ubiquity in books and films, few people outside of scholarly circles know that these images were actually taken by a Dutch Nazi. He intended to depict Jews in a demeaning light. Instead, he ended up paying stark witness to the atrocities of the Third Reich.

These are very famous photos, some of the most requested photos in our archive from across the whole world, said Ren Kok, a researcher at the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies in Amsterdam. The institute holds an archive of about 30 original Heukels photos from the Dutch Ministry of Justice, which confiscated them as part of his postwar collaboration trial.

In recent months, a deeper sense of Heukelss beliefs and motivations has emerged from a biography published in Dutch this spring that reveals how an ordinary young man from Zwolle became radicalized as a member of the Dutch Nazi party. The book, by Machlien Vlasblom, a Dutch World War II historian, provides new insights into how Heukels betrayed Jewish people from his town, looted their businesses and property, and recorded their history as a press photographer for the Dutch S.S.

He captured them at their weakest moments, Vlasblom said in an interview, and the way he acted there was rude and brutal. Of course, he put the Nazi ideology into these images.

How does this new information change the way we might look at these photos? Or how historians might use them, or contextualize them in the future?

The photos are quite exceptional, said a NIOD researcher, Kees Ribbens, a professor of Popular Historical Culture and Mass Violence at Erasmus University Rotterdam, because they show the Holocaust taking place in a very well-known place in the center of Amsterdam. They show how the whole bureaucracy of deportation worked.

Yet, these are not innocent images, said the Amsterdam-based Israeli artist Ram Katzir, who recently used one of Heukelss pictures as the foundation for a memorial he created for the site of deportations. The artwork, Shadows, unveiled on the 79th anniversary of the raid in June, reproduced the shadows of the deportees from the photos, in the exact locations on Olympiaplein where they were last documented alive.

We had no names of any of the victims, said Katzir, so he deliberated a lot about whether to include Heukelss name on the information plaque. In the end, he decided to do so. Its a double-edged image; and if you hide that, you hide the role of the collaborator.

Katzir added, When you look at the information plaque, youre standing exactly where the photographer stood.

In fact, a majority of the surviving images of Jewish persecution in the Netherlands were made from the point of view of the persecutor, Ribbens said. These include those by Bart de Kok, a member of the Dutch Nazi Party, known as N.S.B., and a German press photographer, Franz Anton Stapf, who captured some of the last images of Amsterdams Jewish community before it was decimated.

Janina Struk, author of the 2005 book Photographing the Holocaust: Interpretations of the Evidence, said that in the postwar period, photos taken by bystanders, perpetrators and victims were all kind of mixed together, and hardly anyone asked who had shot the photos or for what purposes.

Until quite recently, historians have not really been so concerned about who took the pictures, and why they took them and what they were for, she said. Its been rather historians using pictures as illustrations of a text, rather than being a text themselves.

In recent years, she added, there has been a greater emphasis on contextualizing the images, explaining how they were made, so that viewers have a better understanding of what theyre looking at and so people can make better ethical choices about how to present them.

Ribbens said that in learning that Heukelss aim was to publish his photos in Storm S.S., a Dutch Nazi propaganda weekly (they were never published there), we can think about what he chose to leave out of the frame. In his series, he said, we dont see the Nazi officials or the Dutch police who were forcibly rounding up civilians.

It doesnt automatically raise the question: Who organized this, who is responsible for this persecution? he said. People show up, and its not clear what kind of stress theyre under, why theyre sent here, what choice did they have in leaving their homes, why they didnt find a hiding place? What was so threatening about it?

The official policy of the German occupiers was that no images of Jewish people could be published in the legal Dutch press, explained NIOD researcher and photography expert Erik Somers. Propaganda newspapers, however, could print such images alongside articles with expressly antisemitic content.

As a result, a high proportion of Holocaust images, both in the Netherlands and elsewhere, were taken by Nazi-endorsed propaganda photographers who had explicit permission to carry cameras, Struk said. Other images came from German soldiers who specifically sought out souvenir images of Jews who they thought fit a physical stereotype.

We know that the Germans used photography as a weapon, and they invested a great deal in propaganda photography, said Sheryl Silver Ochayon, program director for Echoes & Reflections, an educational arm of Yad Vashem World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Israel.

Photographs never killed anyone, she added, but what photographs can do is they can justify an ideology. If you present your victims as low or passive, or like vermin, you can justify a genocidal plan of action, as the Germans did.

Vlasblom began her research when a friend from church, Gerard Visser, asked her to look at a box of family letters he had inherited. Although he knew the papers concerned his two great-uncles, Herman Heukels and Jan Heukels, who was also a Nazi collaborator, he said in an interview, I didnt really know the family structure, so I didnt know who sent what to whom or why.

Not everyone in Vissers family is pleased that Vlasbloms book, We waren supermannen (We Were Supermen), which also includes information about Jan Heukels, called attention to these two ancestors who were collaborators.

You hear all the heroic resistance stories from Holland, Visser said, but there are people like the Heukels, who really did bad things. I felt that part of a countrys history should also be told.

Does knowing more about Herman Heukelss personal biography imply that historians should use these photographs in a different way or even use them less often?

Somers from the NIOD, the Dutch archive, said these images continue to be a valuable historical source, but the Heukelses story underscores the importance of providing context to pictures.

You have to find out from the beginning the elements of those photos, he said, who made the photo and for what purpose, and in what context?

Struk added, We need to move away from the idea that a photograph is just a window on the world. It isnt. Its a very edited version of what the photographer chose to photograph.

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Photos That Helped to Document the Holocaust Were Taken by a Nazi - The New York Times

UN Palestine relief agency forced to cut doctor visits to three minutes amid UK budget cuts – iNews

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Palestinian refugees are facing three-minute doctor consultations and classes of up to 50 children as the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) struggles to meet a $100m (82m) funding shortfall after cuts to UK aid budgets.

We are in the danger zone, says Philippe Lazzarini, UNRWA commissioner general. It would be a mistake to believe that because we have coped with the crisis we will avoid a situation where we have to stop our activities.

Such an outcome would be devastating for many of the 5.8 million refugees that rely on the agencys services. Since 1949, UNRWA has fulfilled several functions of government for stateless Palestinians across the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria.

UNRWA is the primary health care provider for around two million Palestinians, and more than 500,000 children are educated in its schools. The agency provides welfare services, skills training, and humanitarian relief, providing a lifeline to victims of war, famine, and displacement.

Mr Lazzarini spoke to i in London between meetings with British MPs, diplomats, and NGOs. His primary mission is to convince politicians to reverse cuts to the Governments contributions to UNRWA which threaten its ability to deliver vital services. The UK has reduced its funding from 70.6m in 2018 to 28.6m in 2021 as the Government slashed the overseas aid budget.

The UK is not alone. Under President Donald Trump, the US cancelled its support to the agency having been the single largest contributor. Funding has been only partially restored under Joe Biden. Another leading donor, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), has sharply reduced its contributions.

The cuts have already bitten deep, says Mr Lazzarini. UNRWA health centres are now limited to providing three-minute consultations. Schools teach classes of up to 50 children. The agency has made sweeping redundancies to its workforce of around 30,000, and struggled to pay the salaries of those that remain. With a budget shortfall of $100m the future looks bleak.

In the next phase, if the crisis continues, it could lead to the interruption of services, says Mr Lazzarini, estimating the crunch will arrive in October.

Several factors have contributed to the crisis. We suffer from political indifference, he says. As the peace process has stagnated with little prospect of a resolution to the conflict, the commissioner general suggests it has been deprioritised by international partners with UNRWA suffering collateral damage.

The agency has also come under sustained fire from Israel and its supporters at home and abroad. Pressure groups have lobbied donors to defund UNRWA, alleging it uses school textbooks that promote terrorism and anti-Semitism. The Trump administration ended US contributions to the agency alongside a legislative effort to reduce its mandate by stripping most Palestinians of refugee status, which entitles them to the right of return under UN Resolution 194.

Both moves were supported by Israels then-prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. UNRWA is an organisation that perpetuates the Palestinian refugee problem (and) the narrative of the right of return, said Mr Netanyahu in 2018. UNRWA needs to pass from this world.

An EU-funded investigation into the textbook issue concluded that the books adhere to UNESCO standards and that Israeli allegations were exaggerated. The conversation with Mr Lazzarini takes place shortly after nine European governments rejected Israeli terror charges against six Palestinian NGOs, which the commissioner general suggests have become an occupational hazard for relief workers in the Palestinian territories.

There is less credibility to these claims than there used to be, says Mr Lazzarini. For international partners with concerns the first thing I say is to visit our schools, interact with the children and teachers. It is usually an eye-opener and the opinions after are very different.

The director-general mounts a robust defence of his agencys record. We promote gender parity. We have a human rights curriculum and a school parliament. We are promoting critical thinking. To critics who suggest the agency provides life support rather than life chances, Mr Lazzarini points to success stories. Nowras Mahal, an UNRWA student in Syria, who went on to work on the development of Covid-19 vaccines. A tech start-up in Gaza now provides IT services to the wider UN network.

A cessation of services would come at a devastating human cost and exacerbate security concerns, he says. I believe it will further fuel the level of despair and distress in the camps and the feeling that people have very little to lose any more. My advice is we should not test it.

Link:

UN Palestine relief agency forced to cut doctor visits to three minutes amid UK budget cuts - iNews

Palestinian Authority arrest campaign one of the worst in years – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Ramallah, occupied West Bank The Palestinian Authority (PA) is carrying out one of the largest political arrest campaigns in years against Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, with at least 94 people arrested over the past two months.

Those arrested include university students and journalists, with at least 20 still in detention, according to the Ramallah-based Lawyers for Justice group. None were charged with any offences, and most were released after 10 days in prison.

This is one of the most major campaigns since at least 2012, Muhannad Karajeh, the head of Lawyers for Justice, told Al Jazeera, adding that a sizeable number of detainees reported maltreatment and torture in detention.

Karajeh said the majority of those arrested were Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) activists as well as, to a lesser extent, individuals affiliated with the PAs governing party Fatah, and the left-wing Palestinian Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).

We receive new cases every day, Karajeh, whose firm represents political detainees, said.

The lawyer also noted that a large portion of the people being arrested were imprisoned in Israeli jails in the past, making their detention by the PA more controversial for Palestinians.

The majority were interrogated about their political activism, for example about their participation in elections whether as candidates or as supporters of certain lists and others, like students, about their student union activities, said Karajeh.

The PA and its security forces are frequently criticised by rights groups over what they refer to as the systematic arrest and torture of dissidents, including students, journalists and political activists.

In a joint United Nations submission by Lawyers for Justice and Human Rights Watch earlier this month, the groups said such practices amount to government policy and are used to punish and intimidate critics and opponents, including those detained for social media posts, critical journalism, or membership in rival political movement or student groups.

Talal Dweikat, spokesman for the Palestinian security services, acknowledged that the PA has been conducting a campaign of arrests recently, and justified it as necessary.

There are strong instructions from the president Abu Mazen [Mahmoud Abbas] on the security level, for all the security services in their different branches, on the importance of exerting all the pressure possible to address all manifestations of chaos and disorder in the Palestinian street, he told Al Jazeera.

Dweikat added that the security services intend to continue their work, the main goal of which is to provide security and safety for every Palestinian citizen.

The case of one current detainee, Ahmad Hreish, made headlines after he reported that he had been tortured in detention.

The 28-year-old has been held in a solitary cell for more than 50 days in Jericho prison, dubbed locally as the slaughterhouse notorious for being the place where political detainees are sent and tortured.

He has yet to be charged with any offences.

His sister, Asmaa, was present at the Jericho Magistrates Court hearing for Hreish on June 13.

She said her brother appeared extremely tired and broke down in tears when he spoke about the torture he was exposed to, including shabeh (strappado) and beatings with sticks and rubber ropes. Al Jazeera also received a transcript of the court hearing.

Hreish, who was previously imprisoned by Israel, told the court multiple times that he had not been interrogated, despite his detention being extendedseveral times.

There is something you cannot comprehend, that your countryman is imprisoning a fellow countryman, and not just that, that they are torturing him, 29-year-old Asmaa told Al Jazeera.

Its difficult to explain the pain were going through, she continued, adding that it had been particularly stressful for his wife, who is nearing the full term of her pregnancy.

Karajeh said he believes this latest campaign of arrests is basically a message sent through the power of the security grip that the PA enjoys, against its enemies.

The PA has long persecuted members and supporters of its main rival political group, Hamas, which has been the de facto ruler in the besieged Gaza Strip since 2007 when it defeated Fatah in parliamentary elections. Fatah was driven out of the Strip as it attempted a preemptive takeover, which resulted in several weeks of violent fighting.

The two parties have governed the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank respectively ever since, with internal division deeply plaguing Palestinian politics.

In June, Hamas, which has also been accused of arresting and torturing critics, said in a statement that it strongly condemns the political arrests carried out by the PA security services, which, it said, serves the interests of the [Israeli] occupation and does not contribute to the unity of the national front.

A number of Hamas-affiliated student groups have released similar condemnations of the targeting of students at different universities recently.

Several developments indicate that the PA is tightening its clampdown on growing opposition in the occupied West Bank, particularly after the beating to death of a prominent critic by the security services last year.

In May, the first student elections to be held since 2019 at Birzeit University near Ramallah, the Hamas-affiliated al-Wafaa Islamic Bloc won in a landslide victory, securing 28 out of 51 seats in the student union, beating the Fatah-affiliated Martyr Yasser Arafat Bloc (referred to as Shabiba), which won 18.

The results of the election, which have historically been regarded as reflective of wider Palestinian public opinion, were unprecedented. In 2019, the Hamas and Fatah-affiliated groups had secured an equal number of seats.

Earlier this month, the former head of the PAs intelligence, and current member of the Fatah executive committee, Tawfiq Tirawi, said Fatah had appointed him to look into the reasons behind the Shabibas loss.

Tirawi said on Palestine TV that Hamass plan today is a soft coup in the West Bank, to take control of institutions and universities.

In June, plain-clothed Palestinian security officers attacked a peaceful protest by the Hamas-affiliated student movement at Najah University in Nablus. Officers beat students and professors, causing several serious injuries, used pepper spray on them and fired shots into the air, causing outrage.

With internal division continuing to grow, and authorities using ever more forceful means to stay in power, many Palestinians feel they are being made to pay having differing views.

They are targeting freed political prisoners in this latest campaign honourable and liberated men, said Asmaa. You feel injustice. It is very difficult.

Originally posted here:

Palestinian Authority arrest campaign one of the worst in years - Al Jazeera English

Enough Is Enough: Palestine Accused Of Systematic Torture Before The International Criminal Court – Daily Caller

Posted By on July 31, 2022

An Israel-based legal group brought accusations of torture against the Palestinian Authority (PA) before the International Criminal Court (ICC) on July 18, the first request of its kind, ahead of a United Nations report scheduled for release Friday.

The International Legal Forum (ILF) requested the ICC to investigate President Mahmoud Abbas, now in his 18th year in office after canceling numerous scheduled elections, and the PA for rampant, wide-spread and systematic torture against Palestinian and Israeli nationals, ILF Chair and CEO Arsen Ostrovsky told the Daily Caller News Foundation. The investigation was launched a day before a separate UN body opened an inquiry into Palestine for similar allegations and is scheduled to publish its conclusions Friday.

The Palestinian Authority are yet to be held accountable under the law for committing such grave crimes as torture. We say enough is enough and seek to change that, said Ostrovsky.

Examples include Palestinian human rights activist Nizar Banat, who criticized the PA and died after being beaten in the custody of the Palestinian security services in 2021, The New York Times reported. A trial against the officers responsible for his death has not yet concluded, with Banats family calling the trial a farce,according to Al-Araby.

The PA also claims jurisdiction over Hamas-controlled territory in Gaza, where the recognized terrorist group took two mentally-ill Israelis, Hisham al-Sayed and Avera Mengistu, hostage after they inadvertently crossed into Gaza in 2014 and 2015, respectively, and refused to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross access to them. Hamas said in June that the health of one of its Israeli prisoners has deteriorated after releasing a video of al-Sayed hooked up to an oxygen mask, The Times of Israel reported.

The ongoing detention incommunicado of Mengistu and al-Sayed constitutes the grievous crime of torture, pursuant to the Rome Statute, said Ostrovsky.

The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, which Palestine acceded to in 2015, prohibits crimes against humanity.

On July 20, The United Nations Committee Against Torture questioned Palestinian representatives on conditions in detention centers and the authoritys lack of clear legislation on torture in its first-ever review of Palestines torture record, according to a committee meeting summary, while headlining with praise over progress on violence against women.

The Palestinian delegation said the government had plans to revise torture legislation, including a draft law that more explicitly defined torture and banned it, even when ordered by a superior.

Delegation head Ziyad M. M. Habalreeh said that Palestine abhorred torture and would not allow it to happen. Habalreeh said Israels occupation of territory also claimed by Palestine interfered with day-to-day operations. (RELATED: Houston Funnels Tax Dollars To Palestine Film Festival Featuring Film Glorifying Terrorist Who Murdered US Army Officer)

ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda opened an investigation into war crimes committed by Israeli forces, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups in February 2021 on behalf of various groups of victims. However, Ostrovsky told the DCNF that, to his knowledge, he was not aware of complaints against Abbas and Palestinian Prime Minister Shtayyeh for the crime of torture brought to the ICC.

Ostrovsky explained that, while many governments and international organizations are quick to condemn Israel for alleged human rights violations, the PA is often treated more favorably. We seek to also shine a light to this hypocrisy, he said.

It was the Palestinian Authority who sought to exercise lawfare (weaponizing the law against Israel) by first initiating proceedings against Israel before the ICC. Therefore, it was the PA themselves who opened this door, and we are making sure they will now pay the consequences of that decision, said Ostrovsky.

Rights advocacy group Human Rights Watch documented instances of torture by the PA and Fatah in 2018.

The submission comes as President Biden acknowledged friendship with Abbas during his trip in July and announced an additional $300 million in aid.

The ICC declined to comment. The prime ministers office did not respond to the DCNFs request for comment, and the president could not be reached.

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Enough Is Enough: Palestine Accused Of Systematic Torture Before The International Criminal Court - Daily Caller

STAND UP AND SPEAK OUT! – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on July 31, 2022

On April 11, 1944, a young Anne Frank wrote in her diary:

Who has made us Jews different from all other people? Who has allowed us to suffer so terribly until now? It is God Who has made us as we are, but it will be God, too, who will raise us up again. Who knows it might even be our religion from which the world and all peoples learn good, and for that reason and that reason alone do we now suffer. We can never become just Netherlanders, or just English, or representatives of any other country for that matter. We will always remain Jews.

Anne Frank was on to something. The Talmud asks, from where did Har Sinai derive its name? After offering a few alternatives, the Talmud suggests that Har Sinai comes from Hebrew word sinah which means hatred, because the non-Jews hatred of the Jews descended upon that mountain when the Jewish people received the Torah there. Torah demands a moral and ethical lifestyle, an attitude of giving rather than taking, a life of service rather than of privilege, that has revolutionized the world.

The Jewish people have been charged to be the moral conscience of the world, a mission they have not always succeeded at, but that nevertheless drew the ire, anger and hatred of so many. For two thousand years the Jews were bullied and persecuted simply because of their Jewishness and all that stands for. After the Holocaust, the world gave the Jews a reprieve from their hatred, becoming instead beneficiaries of their pity. But looking at events around the world, it is rapidly becoming clear that the last 75 years was an aberration. We have witnessed the rise of anti-Semitism around the world as the world reverts back to its ageless pattern and habit.

The Midrash (Eichah Rabbah 1) teaches that three prophets used the term eichah o how! In Devarim, Moshe asks: Eichah, how can I alone bear your troubles, your burden and your strife? (Deut. 1:12) In the Haftorah for Shabbos Chazon, the Prophet Yeshayahu asks: Eichah, how has the faithful city become like a prostitute? Lastly, Yirmiyahu begins the Book of Eichah: Eichah, how is it that Jerusalem is sitting in solitude! The city that was filled with people has become like a widow Eicha How? How is it that anti-Semitism persists? Why must they rise up against us in every generation?

On Tisha BAv we will sit on the floor and wonder aloud, eicha? How could it be Jews have to fear for their lives yet again? Eicha how could it be that today, with all the progress humanity has made, more than a quarter of the world is still holding anti-Semitic views?

Rabbi Soloveitchik tells us that though the Midrash identifies three times the word eicha is used, in truth there is a fourth. When Adam and Chava fail to take responsibility, God calls out to them and says ayeka, where are you? Ayeka is spelled with the same letters as eicha, leading Rabbi Soloveitchik to say that when we dont answer the call of ayeka, when we dont take personal responsibility for our problems and blame others, we will ultimately find ourselves asking eicha, how could it be?

We can ask eicha, how could all of these terrible things be, but we may never have a definitive answer. Our job is to make sure we can answer the call of ayeka, where are you? Are you taking responsibility? We may not be able to fully understand why anti-Semitism exists, but we can and must remain vigilant in calling it out, confronting it and fighting it. We must remain strong in standing up for Jews everywhere. We must confront evil and do all we can to defeat it.

And, we must do all that we can to take personal responsibility to fulfill the Jewish mission to bring Godliness into the world. If individual Jews were hated for being the conscious of the others, all the more so does a Jewish country generate hate for being the moral conscious of the whole world, held to higher moral standards than any other country or state.

Our job is not to be discouraged by asking eicha, but to ensure that we can answer the call of ayeka. Anti-Semitism will not come to an end by assimilating and retreating. It will come to an end when we can positively answer the question that the Talmud tells us each one of us will be asked when we meet our Maker: did you long for the redemption and did you personally take responsibility to do all that you can to bring the redemption? Did you truly feel the pain of exile and feel the anguish of the Jewish condition in the world? Do you truly and sincerely care? Did you anxiously await every day for Moshiach to herald in an era of peace and harmony, an end to anti-Semitism and suffering?

It is not enough to long for Moshiach, we must bring him. It is not enough to hope for redemption, we must be the catalyst for it. It is not enough to be tired of eicha, we must answer ayeka. If we want to get up off the floor and end the mourning, if we want to finally end anti-Semitism, it is up to us to do what is necessary to heal our people, to repair the world, to love one another, and to earn the redemption from the Almighty.{Reposted from Rabbi Goldbergs site}

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STAND UP AND SPEAK OUT! - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com


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