Responses to the Bush-Sharon peace + update
Responses to the Bush-Sharon peace + conscience
update
comments on Bush speech [1] How Sharon and Bush made peace between them - Gush statement to appear in the weekend Ha'aretz (16.4) [2] Too big a victory? - Dan Margalit in Ma'ariv [3] Palestinian comments
prisoners of conscience update [4] Vanunu, harsh restrictions after release next Week (Yediot) [5] "It is my moral duty – not my choice, but my duty – to refuse" Daniel Tzal - on the way to the military prison [6] Justice may be blind to selective refusal - Yuval Yoaz Ha'aretz Extensive report on Laura Milo's High Court case
òáøéú áàúø / Hebrew on the website www.gush-shalom.org
SHARON AND BUSH MADE PEACE BETWEEN THEM.
BUT ISRAEL MUST MAKE PEACE WITH THE PALESTINIANS.
To help us place such ads please write a check to: Gush Shalom P.O.Box 3322, Tel-Aviv 61033, ***
[2] Too big a victory? - translated from Dan Margalit in Ma'ariv
[we didn't find it on the internet Hebrew and English editions]
(...) As of this moment Sharon is the big victor. He got from the Americans far more than the sceptics thought he would. Were the Likud Party referendum held today he would reap the full benefit. But nothing is definite yet. The Europeans will rise up against the Americans. The Arab World will refuse to accept it. The crescendo of Bush and Sharon is so deafening that Abu Ala will not be able to endorse Sharon's unilateral withdrawal from Gaza, as he intended to do. If these developments will cause the renewal of Palestinian terrorism with all its might - because the Bush declaration seems so pro-Israeli that nobody in Ramallah and Gaza will dare to stand in the way of the suicide bombers - Sharon's victory might turn out to be a Phyrric one. Too big a success, at too heavy a price to the other side carries within it the seeds of failure. But not yet, so far the celebrations are going on. To sum up: a great achievement for Sharon - with a lot of question marks already for the near future. ***
[3] Palestinian comments
[The Bush-Sharon pact is especially a blow for the non-violence Palestinians. With Hamas saying that this is the end of "illusions that there can be a U.S.-sponsored political settlement" what can they answer - now that Bush overstepped all limitations which there are to peace-brokers?]
------- Forwarded message follows ------- From: "ghassan_andoni"
Bush: No Return of Refugees, No Return to pre 1967 Borders I MEMC & Agencies, April 15, 2004
The American President George W. Bush denied the Right of Return of Palestinian Refugees to their land expelled from in 1948 and said no Israeli pullout to the 1967 borders.
"In light of new realities on the ground, including already existing major Israeli population centers, it is unrealistic to expect that the outcome of final status negotiations will be a full and complete return to the armistice lines of 1949," Bush told reporters after the meeting the joined him with the Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in the White House Wednesday. Bush said the Palestinian refugees would not return to their lands, but to the future Palestinian State.
Bush's statements enraged the Palestinians who consider both, Right of Return and the Independent Palestinian State on the West Bank with the Borders of pre 1967 as red lines that can not be crossed.
The Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei rejected Bush's statements and told reporters outside his office in Ramallah Wednesday, "He [Bush] is the first president who has legitimized the settlements in the Palestinian territories when he said that there will be no return to the borders of 1967," he said. "We as Palestinians reject that, we cannot accept that, we reject it and we refuse it."
Palestinian Minister for negotiations affairs Dr. Saeb Erekat also dismissed Bush's statement. "This is like someone giving a part of Texas' land to China," he said, adding that over the years, U.S. administrations have assured the Palestinians that issues like borders and settlements would be handled in negotiations between the two sides.
Yasser Abed Rabbo, a former minister of Information also slammed Bush Statements said "Bush and Sharon are trying to protect each others' political future but are endangering the political future of Israel, the Palestinians and the whole region."
Further more, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan criticized Bush for ignoring the Palestinians' wishes in recognizing Israel's claim to major West Bank settlements. UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said, the secretary-general reiterated his position that unresolved details of a final Middle East peace deal "should be determined in negotiations between the parties, based on relevant Security Council resolutions," "He strongly believes that they (Israelis and Palestinians) should refrain from taking any steps that would prejudice or preempt the outcome of such talks," Dujarric added.
Khaled Mashaal the leader of the Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas, said Bush's policy marked the end of "illusions that there can be a U.S.-sponsored political settlement" between the Israel and the Palestinians. "This stance proves that resistance is the only way," Meshaal told Reuters. ***
[4] Vanunu, harsh restrictions after release next Week (Yediot)
------- Forwarded message
follows ------- Date sent: Thu, 15 Apr 2004 14:24:40
-0700 From: Rayna Moss
[Translated from Yediot
Ahronot, April 15, 2004] Harsh Restrictions to be Imposed
on Vanunu After His Release Next Week Vanunu's Relatives
Enraged: We Won't be Able to Meet Him The prisoner told
his brother yesterday, that he won't be allowed to meet
foreign nationals, go near air or sea ports and foreign
embassies, possess a cellular phone or surf the internet.
His adoptive parents: This is an absurd decision. Vanunu
will appeal to the High Court of Justice against the
restrictions immediately after his release. By Tsadok
Yechezkeli and Anat Tal-Shir "I can't believe what
they've decided to do to my life after I've spent 18 years
in prison," Mordechai Vanunu told his brother yesterday,
during their last meeting in Ashkelon Prison before his
release next Wednesday. "Up to the last minute I still
thought that they would let me go away from here." Vanunu
was referring to the document that he had received shortly
earlier from security agents, which contained a full
description of the restrictions that will be imposed on him
during the first months of his life as a "free" person,
mainly, a prohibition on leaving the country and an absolute
prohibition on meeting with foreign nationals. Vanunu told
his brother yesterday, that he will be prohibited from
leaving the country for a period of 12 months (after which
the prohibition will be reconsidered), from meeting with
foreign nationals and media persons from abroad. In
addition, he will be prohibited from going near air and sea
ports and foreign embassies, from possessing a cellular
phone and from surfing the internet. Vanunu will even have
to inform the police 24 hours in advance if he decides to
go from one city to another. The sense of shock that
Vanunu gave out yesterday also reflected the harsh
atmosphere among his relatives and his many supporters, some
of whom have already arrived in Israel to welcome him at
the moment of his release after 18 years, of which he spent
11 years in solitary confinement. The list of restrictions -
and mainly the absolute prohibition on meeting with foreign
nationals - was received with amazement and rage, since it
effectively erases from Vanunu's life all contact with his
many supporters around the world, some of whom are the
people closest to him. "This is a destructive decision for
Mordechai," Vanunu's adoptive mother, Mary Eoloff, said
yesterday with undisguised anger. She and her husband
Nicholas arrived from the U.S. yesterday. The couple, who
adopted Vanunu several years ago, dreamed of leaving the
country together with him and thereby realizing his dream of
emigrating to the U.S. and opening a new chapter in his
life. Yesterday they found it hard to digest the news, that
Vanunu would not be able to leave the country and would even
be forced to accept life under harsh restrictions. "The
terrible thing is, that the State is denying basic human
rights to a person who has already completed his sentence,"
Mary Eoloff stated angrily in an interview with Yediot
Ahronot. "They are assuming in advance, that he will use his
freedom of speech to speak out against Israel. He has the
right of expression just like any citizen, and that cannot
be taken away from him." Eoloff, who lives with her husband
in Minnesota, called the prohibition on meeting with
foreign nationals that was imposed on Vanunu "absurd". "We
are his legal parents and we intend to see him. Tomorrow
(Thursday) we are going to meet him in prison. So is it
conceivable, that we will be forbidden to be with him when
he is freed? It is possible, that we are not included in
that prohibition, but we don't know anything any
more." The prohibition on meeting with foreign nationals
has put pressure on Vanunu's many supporters. A delegation
of about 80 of his supporters, including British Members of
Parliament, Nobel Peace Price Laureates and cinema stars,
will be landing in Israel over the next few days. Many of
them have kept in touch with Vanunu by means of letters. Now
they fear, that if they meet with him, they will cause him
to violate the restrictions, thereby giving the security
forces a pretext to re-arrest him. "This is a terrible
scandal," said Peter Hounam, the Sunday Times reporter who
exposed the Vanunu affair and who arrived in Israel to meet
him after 18 years. "We don't want to cause him any
problems. If I reach the conclusion that I am putting him at
risk - I'll give up on the meeting. But this is an outrage.
Imagine, I won't even be able to shake the man's
hand." Vanunu has been given the right to appeal against
the restrictions by next Sunday, and he intends to do so. He
has empowered the Association for Civil Rights in Israel to
petition the High Court of Justice against the restrictions
on his behalf, and the petition will be made to the Court
immediately after his release next week. - END - [Two
boxes also appeared on the same page - one about Susannah
York and the other about the Anglican Church in Israel
offering Mordechai a job as a history teacher at one of the
church's schools. Rayna Moss] *** [5] "It is my
moral duty – not my choice, but my duty – to refuse"
Daniel Tzal - on the way to the military prison Yesterday
morning (Tuesday, April 13), the 18-year old Daniel Tzal of
Jaffa arrived at the induction center at Tel-Hashomer and
informed the recruitng officers of his refusal to obey his
call-up order and enlist in an army of occupation. He was
immediately sentenced to a 14 days' imprisonment and sent to
Military prison 4 at Tzrifin. From the experience of
previous refusers, this is likely to the prelude to a long
series of repeated detentions and imprisonments – and if
persisting in his refusal to serve the occupation, Tzal may
eventually face a court martial which could impose a year's
term or more. He had taken his step with the full knowledge
that this could well be the outcome. Daniel Tzal was
accompanied up to the military gates by some sixty
solidarity demonstrors, including several youths whose own
call-up dates are due later this year and who also intend to
refuse. The army's "Conscience Committee" Three months
ago, Tzal had written to the army"s "Conscienc Committee",
asking for an exemption on grounds of conscience – but the
committee refused was unwilling even to hear his arguments.
In a letter sent to the Minster of Defence, Daniel Tzal
wrote: "The principles of `the only democracy in the Middle
East' have become totally devoid of any content when the
country is engaged in the systenmatic trampling upon the
basic rights of three million people, which undemines the
basic principles upon which the state of Israel was supposed
to be founded. In historical times such as the present, a
sane person must rebel against the system which perpetuates
the opression. It is my moral duty – not my choice, but my
duty – to refuse to take part in the occupation and struggle
against the institutions which try to abolish basic human
rights. A sane person, who was not yet overcome by racism
and by fear, bears the basic human duty of refusing to take
part in a system of occupation and opression such as the IDF
has become. *** [6] Justice may be blind to selective
refusal - Yuval Yoaz Ha'aretz Extensive report on
Laura Milo's High Court case Justice may be blind to
selective refusal By Yuval Yoaz (Ha'aretz, 14.4) "The
court is actually encouraging non-involvement of citizens,"
said Leora Milo, a conscientious objector to IDF service,
whose petition to overturn the IDF Conscience Committee's
refusal to grant her an exemption was heard
yesterday. Full text
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/415040.html [On
the day itself we saw it also in Hebrew on the internet as
well as printed edition; didn't catch it in time.]