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Obama envoy in Syria for peace talks

US special envoy George Mitchell tells Syrian president that US wants ‘truly comprehensive’ Arab-Israeli deal

The White House will step up efforts to revive the near-moribund Middle East peace process this week, with senior Obama administration officials deployed to seek progress between Israel, Syria and the Palestinians.

George Mitchell, the president’s special envoy, flew to Tel Aviv today after “candid and positive” talks in Damascus with President Bashar al-Assad, who is being wooed by Obama after being shunned by the Bush administration. Mitchell went straight into a meeting with Ehud Barak, Israel’s defence minister.

The US envoy said restarting talks between Israel and Syria was a “near-term goal” for Washington. “I told President Assad that President Obama is determined to facilitate a truly comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace,” he told reporters.

Indirect negotiations between Syria and Israel, mediated by Turkey and centred on the occupied Golan Heights, were suspended during Israel’s offensive against the Gaza Strip in December. Turkey said earlier this month it was ready to resume mediation efforts.

But there has been no public sign from Syria that Assad has agreed to influence Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist movement that controls Gaza, and the bitter opponent of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority. Hamas, listed as a terrorist organisation by the US and Britain, is based in Damascus.

The US is sending an ambassador back to Syria after withdrawing the previous incumbent in 2005 in protest at the Beirut assassination of Rafiq al-Hariri, the former Lebanese prime minister, which was widely blamed on Damascus, despite repeated denials.

Syria’s foreign minister, Walid al-Muallem, said in London on Friday that Damascus – Tehran’s only Arab ally – could help find a way out of the impasse over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, complicated by domestic turmoil since last month’s disputed presidential elections.

Underlining intensifying US diplomacy in the region, the defence secretary, Robert Gates, is also due in Israel tomorrow for talks with Barak and Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, on missile defence, Iran and bilateral security issues.

General Jim Jones, Obama’s national security adviser, and Dennis Ross, a senior Middle East and Iran expert, are also due to in Israel.

The flurry of high-level activity follows Obama’s long-heralded speech to the Arab and Muslim worlds in Cairo in June, when the president made clear his strategic commitment to working to achieve Middle East peace. These latest moves are intended to achieve concrete results.

Mitchell and Barak have been trying to agree a delicate compromise on freezing Israeli settlement activity in the West Bank – a hot potato in Israeli domestic politics but vital if Arab countries are to take any steps, at the urging of the US, to “normalise” relations with Israel.

Netanyahu has pledged not to build new outposts or expropriate territory in the West Bank. But he insists construction must continue to accommodate “natural” Jewish population growth. The precise definition of a moratorium has yet to be agreed, though Israeli officials speak of exempting 2,500 housing units that are still being built. Palestinians and Arabs say a total freeze is the minimum required and accuse Netanyahu of bad faith.

Mitchell is also due to see Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, at his Ramallah headquarters.

In London, meanwhile, the all-party Commons foreign affairs committee urged the British government to talk to moderates within Hamas. Russia is the only member of the Quartet of Middle East peace brokers – which also comprises the US, UN and EU – which talks to Hamas. “We conclude that there continue to be few signs that the current policy of non-engagement is achieving the Quartet’s stated objectives,” the committee said. “The credible peace process for which the Quartet hopes, as part of its strategy for undercutting Hamas, is likely to be difficult to achieve without greater co-operation from Hamas itself.”

Israel remains implacably opposed to any dealings with Hamas, but pressure has been growing elsewhere for change. In March, Britain changed tack by announcing that it would end its boycott of the political wing of Lebanon’s Iranian-backed Hezbollah – which is represented in the Lebanese parliament – but it remains opposed to talking to the Palestinian group.

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


Obama envoy in Syria for peace talks

US special envoy George Mitchell tells Syrian president that US wants ‘truly comprehensive’ Arab-Israeli deal

The White House will step up efforts to revive the near-moribund Middle East peace process this week, with senior Obama administration officials deployed to seek progress between Israel, Syria and the Palestinians.

George Mitchell, the president’s special envoy, flew to Tel Aviv today after “candid and positive” talks in Damascus with President Bashar al-Assad, who is being wooed by Obama after being shunned by the Bush administration. Mitchell went straight into a meeting with Ehud Barak, Israel’s defence minister.

The US envoy said restarting talks between Israel and Syria was a “near-term goal” for Washington. “I told President Assad that President Obama is determined to facilitate a truly comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace,” he told reporters.

Indirect negotiations between Syria and Israel, mediated by Turkey and centred on the occupied Golan Heights, were suspended during Israel’s offensive against the Gaza Strip in December. Turkey said earlier this month it was ready to resume mediation efforts.

But there has been no public sign from Syria that Assad has agreed to influence Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist movement that controls Gaza, and the bitter opponent of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority. Hamas, listed as a terrorist organisation by the US and Britain, is based in Damascus.

The US is sending an ambassador back to Syria after withdrawing the previous incumbent in 2005 in protest at the Beirut assassination of Rafiq al-Hariri, the former Lebanese prime minister, which was widely blamed on Damascus, despite repeated denials.

Syria’s foreign minister, Walid al-Muallem, said in London on Friday that Damascus – Tehran’s only Arab ally – could help find a way out of the impasse over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, complicated by domestic turmoil since last month’s disputed presidential elections.

Underlining intensifying US diplomacy in the region, the defence secretary, Robert Gates, is also due in Israel tomorrow for talks with Barak and Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, on missile defence, Iran and bilateral security issues.

General Jim Jones, Obama’s national security adviser, and Dennis Ross, a senior Middle East and Iran expert, are also due to in Israel.

The flurry of high-level activity follows Obama’s long-heralded speech to the Arab and Muslim worlds in Cairo in June, when the president made clear his strategic commitment to working to achieve Middle East peace. These latest moves are intended to achieve concrete results.

Mitchell and Barak have been trying to agree a delicate compromise on freezing Israeli settlement activity in the West Bank – a hot potato in Israeli domestic politics but vital if Arab countries are to take any steps, at the urging of the US, to “normalise” relations with Israel.

Netanyahu has pledged not to build new outposts or expropriate territory in the West Bank. But he insists construction must continue to accommodate “natural” Jewish population growth. The precise definition of a moratorium has yet to be agreed, though Israeli officials speak of exempting 2,500 housing units that are still being built. Palestinians and Arabs say a total freeze is the minimum required and accuse Netanyahu of bad faith.

Mitchell is also due to see Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, at his Ramallah headquarters.

In London, meanwhile, the all-party Commons foreign affairs committee urged the British government to talk to moderates within Hamas. Russia is the only member of the Quartet of Middle East peace brokers – which also comprises the US, UN and EU – which talks to Hamas. “We conclude that there continue to be few signs that the current policy of non-engagement is achieving the Quartet’s stated objectives,” the committee said. “The credible peace process for which the Quartet hopes, as part of its strategy for undercutting Hamas, is likely to be difficult to achieve without greater co-operation from Hamas itself.”

Israel remains implacably opposed to any dealings with Hamas, but pressure has been growing elsewhere for change. In March, Britain changed tack by announcing that it would end its boycott of the political wing of Lebanon’s Iranian-backed Hezbollah – which is represented in the Lebanese parliament – but it remains opposed to talking to the Palestinian group.

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


Christopher Herbert and Victoria Kataoka Rebuffet: Weekly Foreign Affairs Roundup

The Week’s Top Stories in Foreign Affairs :The Geopolitical Importance of Syria SI Analysis: Engagement with Syria seems to be a priority for many…

Gay ‘Olympics’ kick off in Copenhagen

Celebration of gay sport and culture with a focus on human rights in homophobic countries begins this weekend

There will be triathlon and handball – but also bridge and line dancing. Copenhagen is preparing for thousands of gay people from dozens of nations to descend this weekend for the Outgames, a nine-day sporting and cultural olympics for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

When the 5,500 participants are introduced on a catwalk in Copenhagen’s central square today, it will kickstart nine days of sport, arts and political debates with almost 100 nations represented in more than 30 events, traditional and improvised.

But the event is about much more than podium places. The Outgames has launched itself under the banner of sport, culture and human rights. Participants from a host of cities, including Tel Aviv and Mexico City, will take over public spaces throughout Copenhagen to showcase artists and performers.

At the centre of the political programme is a human rights conference, where speakers include the British basketball player and sports commentator John Amaechi, the first NBA player to have come out.

On the fringe of the games, the people of Copenhagen have been encouraged to embrace the event and play an active role. At the main library you can “take out a gay” for a half-hour chat after you’ve scanned his or her barcode, while many of the participants are staying in private homes throughout the city.

The director of the Outgames, Uffe Elbæk, hopes the Copenhagen event will attract people from countries where gay people still face imprisonment and the organisers have funded the journey to Copenhagen for 250 participants from Asia, Latin America and Africa.

“The world is coming to Copenhagen, and we have worked towards our goal of ensuring that participants from places such as Africa, Asia and not least the Middle East have the opportunity to come to Copenhagen for the Outgames,” he said.

Elbæk sees the games as not just a celebration for the LGBT community, but a global event, highlighting that gay people are still criminalised in a third of the countries represented.

“We want to make this top priority and put the focus on human rights,” he said.

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


Jews can now ‘tweet’ their prayers to ‘Twitter’s Western Wall’

Many who are unable to make it to the Western Wall in Jerusalem’s Old City can now have their prayers placed on the walls through an address on social networking site Twitter.com.
The Western Wall now has its own address on the social networking service, and it allows believers around the globe to have their prayers [...]

Language of hope

Yehuda Miklaf

As the community of Esperanto speakers prepares to mark the 150th anniversary of its author’s birth, the BBC’s Dina Newman looks at the continuing appeal of this language designed to foster harmony and coexistence – even in a troubled part of the world.

"Let’s say you go to a little village in the south of France," says Israeli Yehuda Miklaf. "You ask: Does anyone here speak English And they say: Henri does. So you go and say to Henri: Hi, I speak English. And Henri says: That’s nice.

"Then you ask: Who here speaks Esperanto They say: Pierre does. So you come up to Pierre and say: Hi, I speak Esperanto. Pierre says: Have you had lunch It really is like this."

There are currently believed to be about one million people around the world who speak Esperanto, devised in the 1880s by Dr Ludwig Lazar Zamenhof (1859-1917) whose 150th birthday is being marked this month by an International Esperanto Congress in his birthplace, Bialystok, Poland.

Ludwig Zamenhof

Language is identity, and Esperanto speakers have a strong sense of community, based on tolerance and equality.

"You’d have to be pretty weird not to be accepted in an Esperanto club," says Mr Miklaf who belongs to a group of speakers in Tel Aviv.

Some argue that this tradition of tolerance goes back to the original values of its founder.

"If I wasn’t a Jew from a ghetto, the idea of uniting humanity would either have never occurred to me, or it would have never taken such a firm hold of me throughout my life", wrote Zamenhof in 1905.

A resident of Warsaw, Zamenhof was alarmed at the growing wave of anti-Semitism throughout the Russian empire.

At first he was drawn to Zionism, the movement to resettle Jews in their own state in what was then Palestine – but then he turned against the idea.

"However attractive this dream seems…, the future Palestine would be very different from the idyllic Palestine of the past," he wrote in 1901.

"Jews will be living there as if on a volcano… conflicts and persecutions there will not stop until the Jews are expelled from there once again".

He suggested Esperanto as a neutral international second language, which would allow the Jews and other minority groups to retain their own cultural and linguistic identity and avoid both persecution and pressure to assimilate.

Easy learning

Zamenhof’s book Dr Esperanto (meaning Dr Hopeful) offered a simple grammar and a vocabulary of 900 words derived from Romanesque, Germanic and Slavic languages.

Through a system of suffixes and prefixes it had a built-in ability to generate new words.

ESPERANTO POETRY

La Lingvo de Espero
Ligighas mia vers’ al lingvo Esperanto
Se ghi ekzistos plu – do restos mia spur’;
Se mortos ghi – do mortos mia kanto.
Sed nun mi versu. Jughu la futur’.

The Language of Hope
My poems come together in Esperanto language.
If it continues to exist – so my trace will survive.
If it dies – so my song will die with it.
But for now, I shall write. Let the future judge.

By Mikhail Gishpling (Russian)

"Everyone who has learnt Esperanto knows the joy of using this flexible and witty language", says Esther Schor of Princeton University, who is writing a book on the history of Esperanto.

Zamenhof believed that his language was so simple that even an uneducated person could learn it in a week. This assessment was probably optimistic. But today most speakers would agree that a couple of months is sufficient to become fluent.

Prof Schor compares Zamenhof’s project to the revival of Hebrew which now serves as a common language to Jews who come to Israel from all over the world.

She also notes that Zamenhof spoke fluent Yiddish, which has a compilation of Hebrew, German and Russian words.

In fact, Zamenhof loved Yiddish and once attempted to reform it in order to make it "a cultivated language of Europe", but later abandoned the project and went back to the idea of a neutral language to unite humanity.

These days, Esperanto has gone far beyond being a purely Jewish, or minority, project.

Amina (not her real name), a young Jordanian woman from a conservative Muslim family in Amman, learnt Esperanto in secret so she could communicate with people in the outside world.

"It is hard to be different in our culture, she says. Sometimes I feel I don’t belong here. Esperanto became a kind of family for me, a nation, if you like.

"I cannot travel abroad by myself, so I can hardly meet my Esperanto friends. But I can write to people on internet," she says.

Strained history

Through Esperanto, Amina has made friends in Israel. But mostly, contacts between Jewish and Arab Esperanto speakers today are limited, though it has not always been so.

Tel Aviv Esperanto club

Back in 1924, the Esperanto club in Tel Aviv had both Jewish and Arab members.

One of the Arabs was called Arafat, and some modern members like to speculate whether he was a relation of Palestine Liberation Organisation chief Yasser Arafat.

Always keen to garner recognition from the outside world, the PLO issued a leaflet in Esperanto in the 1970s.

Before the first Arab-Israeli war of 1948-49, Esperanto speakers from Egypt and Palestine maintained regular links.

But after the creation of Israel contacts between Esperanto speaking Jews and Arabs in the Middle East came to a halt.

Today, very few Israeli Arabs learn Esperanto. Doron Modan has researched the history of Arab-Jewish Esperanto links and is now inspired, as he puts it, to realise Esperanto’s full potential.

"If we start a course for Jews and Arabs together, in a mixed environment, maybe in Jaffa or in Haifa, it can succeed. I can see it very clearly in my mind".

"We always have a right to dream. When I hear that Esperanto will never become an international language, I say – how do you know Are you going to be around for the next 200 years" </p


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

US fugitive is arrested in Israel

Micky Louis Mayon

A US fugitive has been arrested by Israeli immigration police after an international manhunt.

Alleged white supremacist Micky Louis Mayon, who was featured on the US TV programme America’s Most Wanted, was seized in a police raid in Tel Aviv.

He is wanted in connection with firearms-related offences in Steelton, Pennsylvania, dating back to 2007.

Israeli officials say they are now preparing to deport Mayon back to the United States.

The US marshals, who are responsible for catching fugitives who have fled abroad, said that after Mayon vanished in 2007, wanted posters had been issued worldwide via Interpol.

"The search for Mayon came to a successful conclusion… with the actions in Israel," said Marshal Michael R Regan in a statement.

"Locating and identifying Mayon in a foreign country sends a strong message that you can run, but you cannot hide. Even though Mayon had fled the country, US marshals and the Steelton police department did not stop in their pursuit of justice."

The statement said that Mayon was wanted in connection with a violent incident in Steelton in April 2007 after which he was charged with reckless endangerment and firearms-related offences.

Apartment raided

A spokeswoman for Israel’s interior ministry said immigration police raided Mayon’s apartment in south Tel Aviv following a tip-off from Interpol on Monday.

Sabine Haddad said he had arrived in Israel as a tourist in January 2008. He was issued with a one-month visa but stayed on illegally.

"US marshals are on the way here to escort him back to the United States," she said.

"He said… that he did not hold a job while in Israel but made some money by washing dishes and that his parents sent him money to make ends meet."

The website for America’s Most Wanted describes Mayon as a white power activist who attended rallies of the Aryan Brotherhood. It warns that he is dangerous and should not be approached.

It said that the incident in Steelton had involved a number of black men who Mayon claimed had been flirting with white women in a bar.

The website says Mayon is also suspected of setting fire to a judge’s car in Steelton.</p


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

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….

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.