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Posts Tagged ‘Israel’

Max Blumenthal: Feeling The Hate In Tel Aviv: The Sequel To The Censored Video

On May 27, journalist Jesse Rosenfeld and I set out on the streets of Tel Aviv to probe the political opinions of young local residents….

Micky Louis Mayon, Senior KKK Member, Arrested In Israel

A high-ranking white supremacist on the run from US federal authorities was arrested on Monday night in a south Tel Aviv hideout.

33-year-old Micky Louis Mayon, one of America’s 100 Most Wanted criminals, and a member of the Ku Klux Klan, was…

Rep. Steve Israel: Roll Back the Darkness in a Sustainable, Cost-Effective Way

One of the smartest foreign assistance initiatives the United States could undertake is to jump-start promising solar-powered efforts around the world.

Cheney ‘hid plans to kill al-Qaida’

• Ex-CIA officials say foreign leaders were also in dark
• Investigation demanded into post-9/11 strategy

Dick Cheney, the former vice president, ordered a highly classified CIA operation hidden from Congress because it pushed the limits of legality by planning to assassinate al-Qaida operatives in friendly countries without the knowledge of their governments, according to former intelligence officials.

Former counter-terrorism officials who retain close links to the intelligence community say that the hidden operation involved plans by the CIA and the military to launch operations, similar to those by Israel’s Mossad intelligence service, to hunt down and kill al-Qaida activists abroad without informing the governments concerned, even though some were regarded as friendly if unreliable.

The CIA apparently did not put the plan in to operation but the US military did, carrying out several assassinations including one in Kenya that proved to be a severe embarrassment and helped lead to the quashing of the programme.

A former intelligence official said the plan was hatched in the cauldron of the September 11 attacks when officials were pushing various forms of unilateral action and some settled on the Israelis as an example.

“One of the most sensitive areas has been what we do in friendly countries that don’t want to co-operate or maybe we don’t have enough confidence to entrust them with information. If you have an al-Qaida guy wandering around certain bits of the world we might decide that we need to deal with that ourselves, directly, without making a lot of noise,” he said. “There was a plan to deal with that. It was much talked about in the CIA and the military had its own operation.”

Another former senior intelligence official responsible for dealing with al-Qaida said that assassination plans were reined in after similar covert operations by the military were botched and proved to be embarrassing, particularly the killing in Kenya. He did not give details of the operation.

The official said he believes from conversations with serving members of the CIA that the area of real concern in Congress is that the planned operations may also have involved the covert surveillance of American citizens.

There appears to be common agreement among knowledgeable former intelligence officials that the controversy goes beyond the immediate question of assassination and capture of al-Qaida operatives as there have been numerous killings and detentions since the 9/11 attacks.

One former official said that the Bush administration discussed assassinations in the context of a ban introduced in the 1970s that responded to several failed CIA attempts to murder Fidel Castro, and concluded that as the US had declared itself at war with al-Qaida and the Taliban, this ban did not apply.

Peter Bergen, a senior security analyst at the New America Foundation, said that the secret operation must have gone further than that to have created such a backlash in Congress: “If it’s an assassination programme of al-Qaida leaders that is hardly surprising. Clinton had an assassination programme against bin Laden. There have been 27 drone missile strikes against al-Qaida alone this year.”

The CIA has declined to comment and members of Congress who were finally briefed about the issue by the CIA director, Leon Panetta, last month are bound by confidentiality.

Some former intelligence officials and Republicans have attempted to portray the programme as barely getting out of the planning stages but others in the intelligence community have said it is highly unlikely that the CIA would have kept such an operation going for eight years without advancing it.

The evident anger in Congress is fuelling demands for a full blown investigation in to the CIA’s failure to disclose the programme and Cheney’s role in the cover up. The Senate majority whip, Dick Durbin, said the programme could have been illegal: “The executive branch of government should not create programs like these programs and keep Congress in the dark. To have a massive program that was concealed from the leaders in Congress is not only inappropriate, it could be illegal.”

Anna Eshoo, a senior Democrat on the House of Representatives intelligence committee, is also calling for a probe. “We, by no means, have the full story. We don’t know who gave the order. We don’t know where the money came from. We don’t know all the people who were involved,” she told Politico. “We need a full investigation. My preference is that we hire an attorney to come in and run this, someone that is known for their prosecutorial knowledge as well as their knowledge of this particular area of the law.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Israel Arms Licenses Revoked By Britain

JERUSALEM — Britain has revoked several licenses granted to British companies to sell weapons parts to Israel because of concerns over their use in Israel’s recent war in the Gaza Strip, British and Israeli officials said Monday.

The de…

UK revokes licences for Israeli navy guns

Exports of spare parts halted in response to Gaza Strip attacks in December-January

Britain has revoked export licences for weapons on Israeli navy missile boats because of their use during the offensive against the Gaza Strip.

The licences apparently covered spare parts for guns on the Sa’ar 4.5 ships, which reportedly fired missiles and artillery shells into the Palestinian coastal territory during the three-week war, which started in late December.

Israel’s foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, shrugged off what he called one of “many embargoes”. The foreign office in London insisted the rare move did not constitute an embargo but was the application of normal UK and EU export licensing criteria. Still, it linked the decision directly to Operation Cast Lead – the Israeli codename for the attacks – and described it as similar to action taken against Russia and Georgia after their conflict last year.

A spokesman for Amnesty International, citing the “weight of evidence” that Israel had committed war crimes in Gaza, said: “It’s a step forward but it doesn’t go nearly far enough.”

Israel’s defence ministry made no comment but Lieberman told state radio: “We’ve had many embargoes in the past. This shouldn’t bother us.”

Israel gets the bulk of its military requirements from the US, more than 95% according to some estimates. The UK accounts for less than 1% or about £30m worth of exports a year.

The decision came after a review of UK defence exports to Israel announced in April by David Miliband, the foreign secretary. Israel’s London embassy ascribed the revocation of the licences to pressure from MPs and human rights organisations, the Ha’aretz newspaper reported.

Israeli officials confirmed the UK had reviewed 182 export licences, including 35 for exports to the navy. It decided to cancel five, all relating to spare parts for Sa’ar weapons. The arms involved include anti-ship and surface-to-air missiles, cannons and heavy machine guns.

Israel launched its Gaza attack after the expiry of a ceasefire put in place to halt the firing of missiles into Israel, and as part of a strategy to weaken the Islamist movement Hamas. More than 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed.

Ha’aretz said the British decision was not expected to have any impact on the navy’s operational capability. But it added: “It has great political significance and could encourage other countries to halt defence exports to Israel. The country considered most likely to be next is Belgium, which sells Israel equipment used to disperse demonstrations.”

Amnesty had previously highlighted Britain’s role in supplying engines for Hermes drone aircraft. In another report this month, it detailed how Israeli forces killed hundreds of unarmed Palestinian civilians and destroyed thousands of homes in attacks that breached the laws of war.

“Amnesty has uncovered evidence of war crimes committed by both sides in the conflict,” it said. “We are calling on all countries to suspend all transfers of military equipment, assistance and munitions, to Israel, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups until there is no longer a substantial risk that it will be used for serious violations of human rights.

“We will also be monitoring closely to ensure that the UK does not renege on its promises. In the past we have seen a tightening of restrictions against Israel in the wake of a major offensive, only for them to be loosened again once the issue falls out of the public eye.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Karina Ioffee: Russian Jews Face Continued Challenge As Country Seeks To Be A Global Player

Russia, a country of 140 million, is trying to reinvent itself to become a global player. But it’s also an Orthodox Christian country. That makes carving out a space for Jewish life a continual challenge.

Israel to replace Arabic and English road signs with Hebrew

Israeli trilingual road sign for Nazareth

Israeli transport chiefs have unveiled a plan to replace traditional Arabic and English place names on road signs, keeping only their Hebrew versions.

It means biblical locations such as Nazareth and Caesarea will come to be identified as Natsrat and Kesriya.

The Transport Ministry planners said a lack of uniform spelling on road signs caused confusion for drivers.

Israeli Arabs said it is an attempt to erase the Arabic language and heritage which predates the modern Israel.

"[Transport Minister Yisrael] Katz is mistaken if he thinks that changing a few words can erase the existence of the Arab people," said Arab MP Ahmed Tibi.

Currently most Israeli road signs are written in Hebrew, Arabic and English, using the traditional names in each language.

Jerusalem is identified as "Yerushalaim" in Hebrew, "Jerusalem" in English, and "al-Quds" in Arabic (along with "Yerushalaim" written in Arabic script).

Under the new policy the Holy City will only be identified as Yerushalaim in all three languages.

Jaffa, near Tel Aviv, which still has a sizeable community of Arabs who trace their ancestry to pre-1948 Palestine, will in future be written as Hebraised Yafo.

Not allowed

"The lack of uniform spelling on signs has been a problem for those speaking foreign languages, citizens and tourists alike," said Yeshaayahu Ronen, of the Transportation Planning Department.

"Some Palestinian maps still refer to the Israeli cities by their pre-1948 names. I will not allow that on our signs."

Transport Minister Yisrael Katz

However, speaking to the Ynet news website, Transport Minister Yisrael Katz hinted that there might indeed be an underlying political motive for the plan.

"Some Palestinian maps still refer to the Israeli cities by their pre-1948 names" [before Israel was founded], said Mr Katz.

"I will not allow that on our signs. This government, and certainly this minister, will not allow anyone to turn Jewish Jerusalem to Palestinian al-Quds."

He said areas in the occupied West Bank where Israel exercises civil control would keep their Arabic road signs, so Nablus would not become the Hebrew Shechem.

A right-wing coalition came to power in April including ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party, which has demanded Israel’s Arab minority demonstrate greater loyalty to the Jewish state.

Israel’s one million Arab citizens make up about one-fifth of the population and they frequently complain of being marginalised and discriminated against by the Jewish-majority state.

The Transport Ministry said changes would be gradual, and no existing sign would be changed unless it needs replacing due to wear.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Robert Wright: Why the “New Atheists” are Right-Wing on Foreign Policy

It must strike progressive atheists as a stroke of bad luck that Christopher Hitchens, leading atheist spokesperson, happens to have hawkish views on foreign policy. After all, with atheists an overwhelmingly left-wing group, what were the chances that the loudest infidel in the western world would happen to be on the right? Actually, the chances were pretty good. When it comes to foreign policy, a right-wing bias afflicts not just Hitchens’s world view, but the whole ideology of “new atheism.”

UK cuts Israel weapons contracts

Israeli gun boat

The UK has revoked five export licences for equipment to the Israeli navy because of actions during Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in Gaza this year.

The British Foreign office said the exports would now contravene its criteria for arms sales, but denied that it had imposed a partial embargo.

The UK says it does not sell weapons which might be used for internal repression or external aggression.

Israel says its troops complied fully with international law during missions.

The 22-day operation which ended on 18 January has been widely condemned as disproportionate by critics.

UK sued over Israel arms sales

Amnesty details Gaza ‘war crimes’

Israelis followed law in Gaza

Israeli air strike near Rafah, 13.01.09

The British government has been challenged by human rights groups and members of the UK parliament over concerns raised by Amnesty International that British-made equipment was used illegally in Gaza.

Amnesty says both Israel and Hamas committed war crimes during the conflict.

In April, the British government issued a statement saying it had not contravened its own guidelines, which it described as "stringent", but said it was was reviewing existing licences.

On Monday, the Foreign Office said in a statement that it had conducted the review, and found "in a small number of cases Israeli action in Cast Lead would result in the export of those goods now contravening the… criteria".

An unnamed Israeli official said five of 35 contracts for naval equipment had been cancelled.

Media reports quoted Israeli officials as saying these all related to the Saar 4.5 gunboat.

‘Not bothered’

In April, the British Foreign Office said there were "credible reports" that the vessels had been used in a "naval fire support role" during Operation Cast Lead.

DIFFERENT DEATH TOLLS
Palestinians killed during Israeli military offensive in Gaza, 27 Dec to 18 Jan – Palestinian claims followed by Israelis claims:

  • Total dead: 1,434 / 1,166
  • Fighters: 235 / 710-870
  • Non-combatants: 906 / 295-460
  • Women: 121 / 49
  • Children under 16: 288 / 89

Sources: Palestinian Centre for Human Rights and Israeli Defence Intelligence Research Dept

The British Foreign Office said future decisions would "take into account what has happened in the recent conflict".

"We do not grant export licences where there is a clear risk that arms will be used for external aggression or internal repression," it said.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told Israeli public radio: "We’ve had many embargoes in the past… We can manage. This shouldn’t bother us."

Palestinian rights groups say about 1,400 Palestinians died during the operation.

Thirteen Israelis died during the conflict, nine of them were soldiers serving in Gaza.

Israel said its operation aimed to reduce rocket fire from Gaza aimed at its southern towns.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Israel FM queries Abbas authority

President Mahmoud Abbas

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has questioned the authority of Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in an escalating Israeli-Palestinian war of words.

Mr Lieberman said Mr Abbas "was not exactly legitimate" and was therefore in no position to make demands on the Israeli leadership.

A day earlier Mr Abbas had called him a bad choice as Israeli foreign minister.

The two sides have been unable to agree terms for restarting peace talks since the Israel government came into office.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has been in power since 1 April, on Sunday urged Mr Abbas to restart peace talks immediately.

"There is no reason Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas and I should not meet, anywhere in this country, to advance the political process," Mr Netanyahu told the weekly meeting of his cabinet.

Mr Abbas has refused to meet Mr Netanyahu and on Sunday reiterated his stance in a radio interview that, for negotiations on the key issues to resume, there must be "a complete halt" to Israeli settlement activity in the occupied West Bank.

Separately in the Egyptian weekly, October, he said that Mr Netanyahu had backed himself into a corner on the Palestinian track, and he would face fierce opposition from Mr Lieberman if he tried to emerge from it.

Mr Abbas said things would be better if the former Israeli foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, had been reappointed instead of the current incumbent.

‘Blessing’

The outspoken Mr Lieberman said he took such comments from Mr Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, as a "blessing".

"As Abu Mazen’s authority or legitimacy deteriorates or declines, he raises his demands and toughens his position.

"There are no middle-ground solutions for the settlement issue: either settlement activity stops or it doesn’t"

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat

"Abu Mazen isn’t exactly legitimate, hence neither is his new demand, or suggestion, to replace Lieberman with Tzipi Livni," he said in an interview on Israel radio.

"I see such advice as a blessing. His demand to cease settlement construction is nothing more than an expression of his distress and incompetence."

He said that with Gaza under control of the Hamas militant group, Mr Abbas represented "at best, half of the nation".

Also on Sunday, Mr Netanyahu insisted the Palestinians "must finally abandon" the right of return for Palestinian refugees since 1948, which if realised would facilitate the arrival of millions of displaced Arabs to areas that currently have an Israeli Jewish majority.

He reiterated demands for Palestinians to explicitly recognise Israel as a Jewish state, calling this "the key to peace."

The Palestinians say it is tantamount to legitimising their own displacement in past wars with Israel.

They have also rejected any potential deal between Israel and its main backer, the US, to allow limited Jewish settlement activity in the occupied West Bank.

"There are no middle-ground solutions for the settlement issue: either settlement activity stops or it doesn’t," negotiator Saeb Erekat told Voice of Palestine radio.

Some 500,000 Israelis live in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, areas captured by Israel in 1967. Israel wants to be able to keep building within existing communities there, although all such work is illegal under international law.

"If settlement continues, Israel will be allowed to build 1,000 units here and 2,000 units there, which will lead Arabs and Palestinians to believe the US administration is incapable of swaying Israel to halt its settlement activities," Mr Erekat said.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Nazi guard’ Demjanjuk is charged

John Demjanjuk (2005)

Prosecutors in Germany have formally charged alleged Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk with 27,900 counts of being an accessory to murder in World War II.

The prosecutors’ office in Munich said the charges had been filed on Monday.

There was no immediate word on when the trial of the 89-year-old retired car worker, who was deported from the United States in May, might begin.

Mr Demjanjuk has denied accusations that he was a guard at the Sobibor death camp and helped murder Jews.

He says he was captured by Germans in his native Ukraine while fighting for the Red Army and kept as a prisoner of war.

Deportation

The formal filing of charges on Monday came 10 days after medical experts at Munich’s Stadelheim prison declared that Mr Demjanjuk was fit to stand trial, provided that his questioning in court was limited to two 90-minute sessions per day.

"We hope that the trial itself will be expedited so that justice will be achieved and he can be given the appropriate punishment"

Efraim Zuroff
Simon Wiesenthal Centre

Mr Demjanjuk’s family have said he is too frail to stand trial because he suffers from kidney disease, cancer and arthritis. In May, he was admitted to hospital for three days after developing gout.

Efraim Zuroff, the top Nazi-hunter at the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, which considers Mr Demjanjuk the world’s most-wanted suspected Nazi war criminal, welcomed the move by German prosecutors.

"This is obviously an important step forward," he told the Associated Press. "We hope that the trial itself will be expedited so that justice will be achieved and he can be given the appropriate punishment."

"The effort to bring Demjanjuk to justice sends a very powerful message that the passage of time in no way diminishes the guilt of the perpetrator."

Mr Demjanjuk arrived in the US in 1952 as a refugee, settling in Cleveland, Ohio, where he worked in the car industry.

DEMJANJUKCASE TIMELINE

  • 1952: Gains entry into the US, claiming he spent most of the war as a German prisoner
  • 1977: First charged with war crimes, accused of being "Ivan the Terrible"
  • 1981: Stripped of US citizenship
  • 1986: Extradited to Israel
  • 1993: Israeli Supreme Court overturns conviction, ruling that he is not Ivan the Terrible
  • 2002: Loses US citizenship after a judge said there was proof he worked at Nazi camps
  • 2005: A judge rules in favour of deportation to his native Ukraine
  • 2009: Germany issues an arrest warrant for him; deported by US; formally charged with 27,900 counts of accessory to murder

Profile: John Demjanjuk

In 1988 he was sentenced to death in Israel for crimes against humanity after Holocaust survivors identified him as the notorious "Ivan the Terrible", a guard at the Treblinka death camp.

But Israel’s highest court later overturned his sentence, after documents from the former Soviet Union indicated that "Ivan the Terrible" had probably been a different man.

Mr Demjanjuk returned to the US, but in 2002 had his US citizenship stripped because of his failure to disclose his work at Nazi camps when he first arrived as a refugee.

In 2005, a US immigration judge ruled that he could be deported to Germany, Poland or Ukraine.

And in March 2009, prosecutors in Munich issued a warrant for his arrest, accusing him of being an accessory in the deaths of Jews.

They said they had documents proving his Nazi background, including an SS identity card which showed he had been a guard at Sobibor between March and September 1943, and many witness testimonies.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Netanyahu Invites Abbas To Talk Peace

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday invited the Palestinians to sit down immediately to talk peace, but the Palestinian leader maintained his demand that first Israel must halt all West Bank settlement constru…

Steven Crandell: Is the World Getting Saner? Consider These Rational International Developments

There is no doubt that the time is right for our President to assert the importance of working through global cooperation to achieve the mutally-desirable goal of planetary survival.

Robert David Jaffee: Punting On Israeli Army Boot Camp

Inside a firing simulator, someone says that I am shaking my head. I am, not because I am afraid of shooting but because I am convinced that nearly all of the guys are against me.

Back on side

Iraqi football fans at the match in Irbil, 10 July

By Neil Arun
Irbil

Iraq thrashed Palestine 3-0 in a football match that will be remembered less for its scoreline and more for celebrations better suited to the lifting of a siege.

Forced by violence at home to play all its games abroad, the Iraqi national side ended its six-year exile on Friday in the northern city of Irbil.

Fans who had followed the fortunes of their team on TV roared deliriously as they saw the first players jog on to the pitch.

Chants of "Iraq, Iraq" rang through stands which felt, in the blazing afternoon heat, like the rim of an exploding volcano.

"Sport was under sanctions," yelled Iraq’s most famous football fan, a man from Baghdad known only by one name, Khaddouri. "Now the embargo has been lifted."

Before kick-off, scores of white doves were released. They swirled around the stadium, unwilling to leave. Heavily armed soldiers shooed them off the pitch.

Welcoming the Palestinians

Iraq’s national team is a regional superpower. Traditionally one of the strongest sides in the Middle East, in 2007 they were crowned Asian champions after defeating Saudi Arabia.

Palestine player Amar Abu Salil (L) vies for the ball against Iraqi player Hawar Mulla Muhammad in Irbil, 10 July

The victory coincided with the climax of the sectarian conflict that engulfed Iraq after the US-led invasion in 2003. Fans celebrated in the streets, briefly defying the threat of bombings that had become a daily norm.

The Palestinian team is one of the weakest in the region. It has developed fitfully, with the movements of its players constantly curtailed by the conflict with Israel.

At the game in Irbil, no Iraqi fans commented on the footballing disparity between the two teams. Instead, they focused on what they saw as a bond with the Palestinians – another Middle Eastern society brutalised by violence.

As the visiting team stepped on to the turf, the stadium loudspeakers urged the crowd to welcome them. The stands obliged, erupting in passionate cries of "Long Live Palestine!"

Parts of Iraq may now be safe enough to host a foreign team but the Palestinians’ home is not. Like the Iraqi side a few years ago, the players must ply their trade abroad.

With few away fans accompanying them, they rely on charitable cheers from the home crowd.

Adjusting the Palestinian scarf around his neck, veteran Iraq fan Khaddouri said: "The Palestinians are our brethren. If they can send their team to Iraq, so can everyone else."

Kurdish scorer

The first goal came in the 30th minute of the first half, scored off a corner kick. The stadium erupted.

The scorer was Hawar Mulla Mohammed, a Kurd. In Irbil, capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, Hawar is a local hero.

He gives the Kurds a strong reason to support the largely Arab Iraqi team at a time of rising tensions between Baghdad and Irbil, most notably over Kirkuk, a violent, oil-rich city claimed by both Kurds and Arabs.

Another two goals followed in the second half. The Palestinians defended gamely, stifling the Iraqi strikers’ more flamboyant efforts.

Khaddouri stalked the sidelines as if squaring up for a fight. He exhorted the crowd with his arms.

The chant came back from the stands for a man as famous as the players themselves: "Khaddouri! Khaddouri!"

Outside the stadium, traffic came to halt. Horns blared and young men leaned out of cars and pick-up trucks, draped in Iraqi flags or the Kurdish region’s distinctive tricolour.

They lingered in the streets long after the game ended – like the doves, unwilling to leave. A few soldiers tried half-heartedly to usher them away.

Neil Arun is based in Iraq as an editor for The Institute for War and Peace Reporting.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Obama Suggests Sanctions For Iran: Analysis

WASHINGTON — After a half-year of extending patient feelers to Iran, President Barack Obama has set a timeline _ warning Tehran it must show willingness to negotiate an end to its nuclear program by September or face consequences.

If th…

Echoing lands

Palestinian author Raja Shehadeh has walked in the Scottish Highlands every summer for 17 years, drawn by their beauty and by unexpected parallels with his homeland

I come from a land of hills full of stories that the lingering ghosts of those who once lived there want to tell. I did not know the same was true of the Scottish Highlands. I still remember my first encounter with the Highland moors. It was the autumn of 1992. My wife, Penny, and I had booked at the Inveroran Hotel in Glen Orchy near the bridge with the same name. We had chosen this hotel because Wordsworth and his sister, Dorothy, had stayed there when they visited the Highlands in 1803. We thought we could trust the great romantic poet to lead us to a beautiful place to walk. And so it happened that my first encounter with the unique and peculiar land in the north of Scotland had to be through an Englishman.

We took the train from Edinburgh to the Bridge of Orchy station. I was relishing the ride, not having done much travelling by rail. The opportunity of travelling within Palestine or to the surrounding countries by train had ended in 1948. The establishment of Israel in that year severed the lines of communication between the different parts of the Arab lands in the Levant and beyond it to the Hijaz and North Africa.

At the station I had my first experience of midges, pests the likes of which I had never encountered anywhere else. At first I thought there was something wrong with me. Why was I itching all over my face, neck and hands? I did notice flying around me the flimsiest of creatures; surely they couldn’t be responsible? The more I flailed my arms in the air the more they assaulted me. I could stand it no longer. I ran out of the station as fast as I could, dragging my bag behind me pursued by a cloud of irritating midges. Later, after having enjoyed the unspoiled nature of the Highlands, I was not sure whether or not to agree with the Highlander who was grateful for the midges for keeping tourists away. “Except for them,” he told me, “tourists would have long since spoiled this place.”

Arriving at the hotel, we wasted no time. We decided to use the few hours of daylight left to walk. It was the first time in my life that I found myself in the middle of a moor. Once there I felt a deep silence descend upon me, unlike any I have known. It was not characterised by the absence of sound, for the moor seemed to breathe, emitting deep sighs as the low wind swept through the water-soaked grass, weeds and bracken. I am used to the silence of the Palestinian hills near Ramallah, my hometown, where I often sit in the shade of a pine tree enjoying the rustle of the wind passing through the fragrant needle leaves. This fitful percussive sound overhead is hardly ever sustained. In contrast, the moan of the wind in the moor is continuous and deep, giving the impression of having travelled long distances to give life to an ancient, desolate terrain. It starts at a lower point, almost level with the ears, sweeping continuously over the flat land, loud then faint then loud again unobstructed by trees. There was sadness in that sound. It was like a wail.

The sweeping of the wind was punctuated only by the sound of water dripping in the undergrowth. The closest landscape to this that I could think of was a glacier with water streaming beneath it which, if one listened intently enough, one could hear. Once while walking in the Swiss Alps I was tempted to trudge over such a glacier. When I later asked a Swiss-Italian ski instructor whether it would have been safe to do this, she warned: :No. No! Crevasses! You fall in and then finito.”

Both terrains and the atmosphere they engendered were unfamiliar to me. Here the colours were muted, so unlike the stark unmitigated glare of the Palestinian hills. The water-saturated air was heavier and fresher, in contrast to the light dry air of the Ramallah hills made fragrant by the numerous herbs that grow there. The clouds moved fast, the sun made brief appearances. When it shone through the thick clouds, the hills were reflected in the lochs. There was more uniformity in our hills, their dry river-beds reflecting nothing. I could not imagine two landscapes more different than the Scottish and the Palestinian. One stretches open and drenched with water, the other lies fragmented by roads and Jewish settlements and for six months of the year is bone-dry. My lack of familiarity with the moor made me cautious. I could not be sure what would become of me if I were to leave the road and venture into it. Would my unsuspecting feet step on some soft bottomless bog that would suck me down like quicksand in the desert?

At dinner that night sitting at a table in the very middle of the room was a stately woman whom the waiter mockingly referred to as The Lady. She was a widow who, as we soon learned, was celebrating on this occasion her 80th birthday.

We later learned that she was from the seaside town of Helensburgh, and had been coming to this hotel for many years. The sole waiter, a frail man of 40, was utterly drunk yet still managed to put on an air of mock-deference for the benefit of The Lady. Perhaps too much so, bending and bowing in such an exaggerated manner that he ended up spilling food from a serving plate on to the white tablecloth. In her high-handed manner the Lady scolded him. He rushed to the kitchen and came back with a bottle of vintage red wine which he announced was the gift of the management for her birthday. She received it with great style and proceeded to sip it, becoming more garrulous in the process.

“Where are you walking tomorrow?” The Lady asked Penny.

“In the glen, taking the path along the river.”

“I only like the tops,” The Lady declared. “My husband, when he was alive, would make it halfway up then I would leave him behind and go up on my own. I’m a woman of the tops,” bragged the old lady, who now could hardly walk.

This ended the conversation. Clearly not being “people of the tops,” like her, we were deemed unworthy and had fallen in her eyes.

“Careful, the plate is very hot,” warned the voluptuous woman who was serving our breakfast and whom we had not seen at dinner. I ordered the full Scottish vegetarian breakfast and ate every morsel. I felt totally fortified for a long walk. As the matronly waitress was picking up the dirty plates I struck up a conversation. It began with the kinds of dogs her family owned. I was surprised when she said they had five shepherd dogs.

“Why so many?” I asked.

“To handle the sheep. My husband has 500 of them,” she announced proudly. “Then you must be rich,” I said.

“O no! They’re not ours. My husband is just the shepherd.”

It was this woman’s passing comment that induced me to read more about the history of the Highlands and learn about the great tragedy that had afflicted the people living there in the 18th and early 19th centuries, leaving behind those ghosts with their many stories waiting to be heard.

A year later we came back to Glen Orchy for another walking holiday. This time the weather was kinder to us. We started on the Old Military Road. Walking by the cultivated forest, the river Kinglass ran to our left. It was wider here and flowed slowly. Its shallow bed was full of shiny round stones. I stopped to take in the view. What superb country this is. The river flowed in an open expansive glen with hills to the right, and along our path as far as the eye could see lay more lochs with a track that would take days to walk.

I thought of Palestine’s main river, the Jordan, and how it was impossible to take such a walk along its banks, for the river is caged in barbed wire from the point where it leaves Lake Tiberius until it flows into the Dead Sea. The smooth contours of the green hills here reminded me of the Galilee hills in spring. Not long ago I walked in them searching for the villages that a great-great-uncle of mine used as hiding places when he was on the run to escape arrest by Ottoman forces during the first world war. Those villages were all destroyed in 1948 when Israel was established. Cleared of its former inhabitants, the land is now used to plant barley and wheat. I had tried to imagine what it must have been like over 60 years ago when it was alive with the labour of simple farmers, their lowing animals and active village life. Now the land lay silent except for the whisper of the wind among the wheat stalks. A silence not unlike the quiet pervading these Highlands which, as I now know, had been inhabited until the early 19th century when greedy landlords decided it was more profitable to raise sheep and forced the tenants out of the land.

Unlike the Scottish Clearances (the very word, which came into use long after the events it describes, is offensive – implying that human beings can be “cleared” like weeds or rubble) Palestine’s Nakba took place during the lifetime of a generation that is still alive today. But time is not the only factor. Palestinians, not unlike the Scots, have long memories.

As I was beginning to get carried away with the resemblances in history and nature between the land I grew up in and this Scottish land, I reached the top of Aonach Eagach. The Lady would be proud of me. I had assumed that one would only be able to see more hill tops from that high vantage point. But ahead of me there was yet another lochan, one that seemed so idyllic, couched in the cusp of the hill fed by a small river that then left it to proceed further to another glen and another loch.

It lay there, silent and remote, a place on which I could project other thoughts and feelings and test myself against what was remote enough for me to represent the wild. Palestine/Israel is too small to have places of real escape like this. In the Highlands the loss of that way of life was not replaced by another. The landlords who evicted the farmers did not bring their own people to replace them. The land returned to what it had been: empty glens, rivers and lochs offering hikers a superb view of an exquisite land that seems to be there for their sole enjoyment.

This beautiful land spread before me. I thought of the many ways in which the history of my people in Palestine makes me angry and, without a solution in sight, continues to be a source of fury. Even as I walk I carry so much baggage that wears me out and weighs me down. All along the way in this beautiful glen and up these hills I had been identifying and unburdening myself of one cause of anger after another arising from the effect of living under a foreign occupation in a land that was becoming out of reach to the non-Jewish inhabitants. Along the path I continued to shed them, so that by the time I reached the top of this hill, panting and short of breath, I felt that I had disposed of so much of the baggage I had been carrying that when I finally paused to rest, breathing deeply, I felt light headed and unburdened. The long climb had helped chase the angry thoughts away.

As I stood there relieved and refreshed I thought of what Robert Macfarlane wrote in The Wild Places: “We are fallen in mostly broken pieces, but the wild can still return us to ourselves.” Over the years I’ve returned to the Highlands to do exactly that.

• Raja Shehadeh is the author of Palestinian Walks and Strangers in the House (out this week, £8.99), published by Profile Books. A longer version of this piece will appear in A Wilder Vein, an anthology of wild places of the British Isles, published in the autumn by Two Ravens Press (tworavenspress.com).

Where to stay

Rooms at the Inveroran Hotel in Glen Orchy (01838 400 220, inveroran.com) start at £40pp; breakfast £6. Special offers available out of season.

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Jersualem braces for Saturday car park protests

Ultra-orthodox activists claim opening of parking space near holy sites desecrates Jewish holy day of the Sabbath

Police in Jerusalem were preparing for fierce clashes tomrrow, as ultra-orthodox Jewish demonstrators threatened to escalate protests over a car park, which they say desecrates the Sabbath.

The religious protesters have hurled rocks, set fire to rubbish bins and denounced the police as “Nazis” who would “burn in hell” during demonstrations over the past few weeks against the city council’s decision to provide free municipal parking near Jerusalem’s Old City for tourists on Saturdays.

Protesters have blocked roads and disrupted traffic, while the city’s secular mayor, Nir Barkat, has received death threats, according to a police spokesman.

A few weeks ago, the controversy attracted 30,000 ultra-orthodox residents to pray in protest at the new car park. The weekend before last saw 57 people arrested, most of whom were subsequently released, although a number have been charged with assault.

The row has also prompted counter-demonstrations from secular residents urging Barkat not to cave in to “religious coercion”.

The ultra-orthodox sector – also called “Haredi” or God-fearing – adheres to strict religious codes, of which observing the Sabbath is a central tenet.

They view the decision to open a municipal parking lot as a move that sanctions driving, and indirectly promotes trading on Saturdays – both forbidden according to ultra-orthodox practice – and hence considers it to be a city-wide cancellation of the Sabbath.

“Our struggle is not over a car park, but about the character of Jerusalem,” said Shmuel Poppenheim, of the ultra-religious Eda Haredit group, which has organised most of the protests.

“If the mayor decides today that he can open a car park on a Saturday, who knows what he will decide to do tomorrow.”

City council representatives have said that the decision to open the parking lot was in response to a chronic shortage of weekend parking.

The new car park was approved, officials say, in response to police reports that increasing numbers of tourists and day-trippers were depositing dangerously parked cars around the Old City.

Barkat, who was elected mayor last November, sees attracting tourism as part of his economic growth plan for the city, where the usually low-income ultra-orthodox sector is expected to form the majority of the Jewish population within the next decade.

The car-park clashes are seen to represent a stand-off between the mayor and Jerusalem’s growing ultra-religious community. Members of this sector have said that the issue is a “cultural war”, through which Barkat seeks to turn Jerusalem into another Tel Aviv – where numerous businesses, including shops, cafes and car parks, remain open on Saturdays.

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UN hearing broadcasts Gaza war stories

• Inquiry held by Jewish South African judge
• Israeli witnesses to attend next round in Geneva

The UN has held an unprecedented public hearing in Gaza to broadcast live witness accounts from Palestinians who described seeing their relatives killed and injured during Israel’s January war.

One after another, they detailed Israeli rocket strikes and artillery shelling near a mosque, a UN school and on several homes across Gaza during the three-week war. The two-day hearing is part of an inquiry by the UN human rights council into the war led by the respected South African judge, Richard Goldstone.

Israel has refused entry for the inquiry team, accusing the UN council of an anti-Israel bias even though Goldstone himself is Jewish. But another round of hearings will be held in Geneva next week, for which some Israeli witnesses are expected to be flown in. They may include residents of Sderot, near Gaza, which has suffered repeated Palestinian rocket attacks.

“The purpose of the public hearings in Gaza and Geneva is to show the faces and broadcast the voices of victims – all of the victims,” Goldstone said last week. He had sat on South Africa’s constitutional court after the fall of apartheid and was a chief prosecutor on the UN criminal tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.

Yesterday’s public hearing was the first in a UN fact-finding mission, though there is little chance it will lead to prosecutions. Up to 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed during the war.

Mousa Silawi, 91, described an explosion at the entrance to a mosque in the Jabaliya refugee camp late on 3 January, which killed 17 people, including three of his sons and two grandchildren.

“After evening prayer a huge shell hit the mosque,” he said. “It was absolutely incredible. We starting screaming and calling for God.” Silawi, who is blind, was led away to safety and was then told that his sons had died. “Where is law? Where is justice? I have lived 91 years. I have seen everything, but nothing of this sort. It was such a catastrophe,” he said. His son, Moteeh, the mosque’s sheikh, said there had been no warning before the missile struck. “People came to the mosque for safety and we saw bloodshed,” he said. “I was leading my father out when my own foot stepped on the head of a small child,” he said. “I saw people carrying decapitated heads and parts of bodies. I cannot describe what I saw … What crime did the children commit?”

In another case Ziad al-Deeb, a university student, described how an Israeli shell struck in the courtyard of his family home in Jabaliya on 6 January. The blast killed 11 of his relatives and sliced off both his legs. First he heard an explosion just outside the wall of the house and then moments later a second shell landed in their yard.

“In a single instant we had all of our joys replaced with blood,” he said. “There was a severe whistling in my ears and a pillar of smoke and dust and that obliterated what happened. When I looked up I found I had lost both my legs. I was sprawled over the body of my own brother. I looked for my father and others, and I found them motionless. Most of them were dead.”

He lost his father, grandfather, two brothers and a sister in the blast, which was one of several mortar shells that fell in quick succession that afternoon near a UN prep school being used as a shelter for those fleeing the fighting. Between 30 and 40 Palestinians were killed near the school. An earlier UN inquiry has already found Israel responsible for the shelling.

After hearing his evidence, Goldstone said: “We extend our deep condolences to you and your family for your terrible loss and it makes your coming here all the more painful for you.”

Yesterday’s hearing was held at a UN office in Gaza City and then broadcast live to a hall at a nearby cultural centre, deserted save for a handful of journalists. However, the hearing was broadcast on some television stations, including one al-Jazeera channel. The UN inquiry team will issue a final report in August.

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