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Buurthuis Ruma Khami, Adres Makassarpl
ein 1, 1095 RP Amsterdam -
Politiek Debat In het kader van de tweede kamer verkiezingen organiseert vereniging Assadaaka samen met verschillende maatschappelijk organisaties een politiek debat.
“ Naar een betere toekomst voor kwetsbare mensen in de samenleving”Tijdens deze politieke avond, die in het teken staat van crisis, wordt samen met burgers, (maatschappelijke) organisaties, politici en bestuurders over de toekomst van Nederland gesproken.U bent van harte welkom bij het politieke debat.
Kom en discussieer mee over onderstaande stellingen!Plaats Assadaaka, Buurthuis Ruma Khami
Adres Makassarplein 1, 1095 RP Amsterdam
Datum: vrijdag 7 september 2012
Tijd 19.30-21.30 uurTijdens het debat komen stellingen aan bod
• Waar geven we ons geld aan uit?
• Wie is eigenlijk de baas in Nederland?
• Hoe krijg ik iets op de politieke agenda?
• Zijn stemwijzers belangrijk? www.stemwijzer.nl
• Maak ook gebruik van Huis van de democratie in den haag.
www.democratie-rechtsstaat.nl Programma
Inloop / informeel koffie en thee : 19.00 – 19.30 uur
Openingswoord Ahmed El Mesri : 19.30 – 19.40 uur
Politiek debat : 19.40 – 20.40 uur
Vragen uit het publiek : 20.40 – 21.10 uur
Afsluiting / informeel koffie en thee : 21.10 – 21.30 uurKom en praat met ons over uw verwachtingen van de politiek voor een betere toekomst voor kwetsbare mensen in de samenleving.
beganegrond, toegankelijk, ruime WCVoor meer informatie kunt u contact opnemen met Ahmed El Mesri.
Contact: (020) 7525131 (06-47440672). E. info@assadaaka.nl – w. www.assadaaka.nl
Dagelijks archief: 19 augustus 2012
Nederlandse media aan leiband
“Soms moet je dingen zeggen, maar mag je het niet” (eigen quote).
Deze week kreeg ik het artikel “Wie bepalen het nieuws in Nederland?” zomaar voor ogen; een artikel van de site anarchiel.com over de connecties en de verbanden van de Nederlandse media. M.a.w. er werd in het artikel wat vraagtekens gesteld bij de onafhankelijkheid van de Nederlandse media, mede gezien het feit dat weinig mensen / organisaties de meeste media in handen hebben, die dan weer verbonden zijn met andere organisaties (commerciële bedrijven, investeerders etc.). Tevens werden hoge bomen binnen die organisaties geridderd en voorzien van allerlei lintjes (aan zich binden noemt men dat). Dit loopt van het nationale persbureau tot de commerciële zenders, van de wakkerste krant van Nederland tot lokale kranten. Aangezien ik steeds op zoek ben naar nieuws en bezig ben met wat onderzoek naar de onafhankelijkheid van de Nederlandse media, was ik geïnteresseerd in het artikel en plaatste het op mijn nieuwssites.
Onmiddellijk kreeg ik een Tweet op Twitter van het (lokale) geweten van het vrije woord (D66) – aangezien ik daar bekend ben onder de naam Moslimpartij – “Met het verwijzen naar dit artikel, heb je de Moslimpartij als eventueel serieus alternatief definitief geliquideerd “ . Het schijnt dus dat het geweten het niet zo heeft met het vrije woord. In Nederland mag je wel wat zeggen, maar als je wat zegt over mogelijke verbanden binnen de Nederlandse media, ben je onmiddellijk een paria; net zoiets als je vraagtekens zet bij de aanvallen van 9/11. Het mag niet dat je in Nederland een andere mening hebt, je moet in de rij lopen met datgene wat hier ‘normaal’ is. Wel, laat ik u dit melden, ik loop niet in die rij en zeker niet als ik dan vandaag het “Zwartboek Ramadan” weer voorbij zie komen op Facebook.
Dat soort gif haalt de media, maar als ik ga zoeken over de aanslagen op Moslims in Myanmar of vraag aan de media schrijven jullie daar niet over, dan krijg ik niets te horen of soms een antwoord in de geest van “we bepalen zelf wat we plaatsen” of “we hebben nog genoeg nieuws om te plaatsen” of ”pas op dat we u niet als spam gaan beschouwen”. Onafhankelijke media zegt u? Onafhankelijk van wie? Laat me niet lachen. Moslims die vermoord zijn in Myanmar: niets te vinden; in Pakistan aanslag op 22 Shia Moslims: ver te vinden; bomaanslag in Irak met ruim 120 Moslims vermoord, waar staat het?
Neen, ik ben blij met de Nederlandse media. Mooie berichten over het feit dat onze minister van Buitenlandse Zaken zich druk maakt over drie jonge vrouwen die dansen in een gebedshuis, maar zich druk maken over Palestina of Moslims in de wereld, een felicitatiegroet aan de Moslims in Nederland in het kader van het Suikerfeest? Ho maar of misschien heb ik het net gemist.
Ik ben blij dat onze minister prioriteiten stelt en dat de media meteen hierin meegaat: “RTL Nieuws – Rosenthal: veel te hoge straf voor Pussy Riot” . Absoluut zeer belangrijk nieuws ! Hulde.
Palestinian Hunger Strikes: Why Still Invisible?
When it is realized that Mahatma Gandhi shook the British Empire with a series of hunger strikes, none lasting more than 21 days, it is shameful that Palestinian hunger strikers ever since last December continue to exhibit their extreme courage by refusing food for periods ranging between 40 and over 90 days, and yet these exploits are unreported by the media and generally ignored by relevant international institutions. The latest Palestinians who have aroused emergency concerns among Palestinians, because their hunger strikes have brought them to death’s door, are Hassan Safadi and Samer Al-Barq. Both had ended long earlier strikes because they were promised releases under an Egyptian brokered deal that was announced on May 14, 2012, and not consistently implemented by israel. Three respected human rights organizations that have a long and honorable record of investigating Israeli prison conditions have issued a statement in the last several days expressing their ‘grave concern’ about the medical condition of these two men and their ‘utmost outrage’ at the treatment that they have been receiving from the Israeli Prison Service.
For instance, Hassan Safadi, now on the 59th day of a second hunger strike, having previously ended a 71 day fast after the release agreement was signed, is reported by Addameer andPhysicians for Human Rights-Israel, to be suffering from kidney problems, extreme weakness, severe weight loss, headaches, dizziness, and has difficulty standing. It is well established in medical circles that there exists a serious and risk of cardio-vascular failure for a hunger strike that lasts beyond 45 days.
In addition to the physical strains of a prolonged hunger strike, the Israeli Prison Service puts deliberately aggravates the situation facing these hunger strikers in ways that have been aptly described as cruel and degrading punishment. Such language is generally qualifies as the accepted international definition of torture. For instance, hunger strikers are punitively placed in solitary confinement or put coercively in the presence of other prisoners or guards not on hunger strikes so as to be taunted by those enjoying food. It is also an added element of strain that these individuals were given false hopes of release, and then had these expectations dashed without even the disclosure of reasons. Both of these strikers have been and are being held under administrative detention procedures that involve secret evidence and the absence of criminal charges. The scrupulous Israel human rights organization, B’Tselem, has written that the use of administrative detention is a violation of international humanitarian law unless limited to truly exceptional cases, which has not been the case as attested even in the Israeli press. Amnesty International has called for an international investigation of the treatment of Palestinian detainees and reassurances that Palestinians are not being punished because they have recourse to hunger strikes.
It is important to be reminded of the context of hunger strikes. Such undertakings require great determination of which most of us are incapable, and an exceptionally strong inner commitment that connects life and death in a powerful, almost mystical, unity. It is no wonder that Palestinian hunger strikers have been inspired by the 1989 Tiananman Square Declaration of Hunger Strikers: “We are not in search of death; we are looking for real life.” The ten IRA hunger strikers, led by Bobby Sands, who died in 1981 at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland transformed the British Government’s approach to the conflict, leading to establishing at last a genuine peace process that was climaxed by the Good Friday Agreement that brought the violence mostly to an end. Hunger strikes of this depth send a signal of desperation that can only be
Ignored by a mobilization of moral insensitivity generating a condition that
Is somewhere between what psychologists call ‘denial’ and others describe
as ‘moral numbness.’
So why has the world media ignored the Palestinian hunger strikers? Must we conclude that only Palestinian violence is newsworthy for the West?
Must Palestinian hunger striking prisoners die before their acts are of notice? Why is so much attention given to human rights abuses elsewhere in the world, and so little attention accorded to the Palestinian struggle that is supposed to engage the United Nations and underpin so much of the conflictual behavior in the Middle East? Aside from a few online blogs and the Electric Intifada there is a media blackout about these most recent hunger strikes, another confirmation of the Politics of Invisibility when it comes to Palestinian victimization.
After all, the United Nations, somewhat ill-advisedly, is one of the four parties (the others being the United States, Russia, theEuropean Union) composing The Quartet, which has set forth the roadmap that is supposed to produce peace, and should exhibit some special responsibility for such a breach of normalcy in the treatment of Palestinians detained in Israeli prisons. Addameer, al-Haq, and Physicians for Human Rights-Israel have called on three international actors to do something about this situation, at the very least, by way of fact-finding missions and reports—UN High Commissioner of Human Rights, the European Union, and the High Contracting Parties of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Is it too much to expect some sort of response? We do not expect the United States Government, so partisan in all aspects of the conflict, to raise its voice despite its protestations of concern about human rights in a wide array of countries and despite President Obama’s almost forgotten promises made in his June 2009 Cairo speech to understand the suffering of the Palestinian people and to turn a new page in Middle Eastern policy.
Since I have been following this saga of hunger strikes unfold in recent months, starting with Khader Adnan and Hana Shalabi in December 2011, I have been deeply moved by the consistently elevated human quality of these hunger strikers that is disclosed through their statements and interactions with family members and the public. Their words of devotion and loving solidarity are possessed of an authenticity only associated with feelings rarely expressed except in extreme situations when life itself is in jeopardy. This tenderness of language, an absence of hate and even bitterness, and a tone of deep love and devotion is what makes these statements from the heart so compelling. I find these sentiments to be spiritually uplifting. Such utterances deserve to be as widely shared as possible to allow for a better understanding of what is being lost through this long night of the soul afflicting the Palestinian people. Surely, also, the politics of struggle is implicit, but the feelings being expressed are at once deeply political and beyond politics.
I can only hope that informed and sensitive writers, poets, singers, and journalists, especially among the Palestinians, who share my understanding of these hunger strikes will do their best to convey to the world the meaning of such Palestinian explorations in the interior politics of nonviolence. These are stories that deserve to be told in their fullness maybe by interviews, maybe through a series of biographical sketches, maybe by poems, paintings, and songs, but they need to be told at this time in the same spirit of love, empathy, solidarity, and urgency that animates theses utterances of the Palestinian hunger strikers.
I paste below one sample to illustrate what I have been trying to express: a letter from Hassan Safadi to his mother written during his current hunger strike, published on July 30, 2012 by the Electric Intifada, translated from Arabic by a young Palestinian blogger, Linah Alsaafin, who contributed a moving commentary that is a step in the direction I am encouraging:
“First I want to thank you dear mother for your wonderful letter, whose every word penetrated my heart and immersed me in happiness, love and tenderness. I am blessed to have a mother like you. Please thank everyone who stood in solidarity and prayed for me.
What increased my happiness and contentment was you writing that you raise your head up proudly because of me…I hope your head will always be lifted high and your spirits elevated oh loved one. As for waiting for my release, I remind you mother we are believers.
We are waiting for God’s mercy with patience…as Prophet Muhammad related God’s words, “I am as my slave thinks…” As you await my release, think positively and God willing, God will not leave you and your work and He will not disappoint your expectations.
Thank God I have a mother like you, a patient believer who prays for me from her heart, and I thank you dear mother for the beautiful song you wrote that warmed my chest as I read the lyrics..
Congratulations to Nelli’s [his sister] twins…I pray to God they will be attributed to Muslims and to Islam and for them to receive the best upbringing, and for their time to be better than our time.
Say hello and salute Abu Jamal and thank him for his efforts and say hello to Ayah and Amir and tell them I miss them, tell everyone who asked about me I say hello, and pray for them.
How beautiful the last line in your letter is! “God is with you, may He protect you and take care of you…I leave you in His safe hands.”
Please mother, always pray for me using those words especially in the month of Ramadan, happy holidays.
Your son”
(richardfalk.wordpress.com / 19.08.2012)
Mursi offers Eid greeting to Haniyeh

Mursi told Haniyeh that Egypt will stand by Gaza, while Haniyeh thanked Egypt for its support to the Palestinian people.
Haniyeh stressed the importance of joint security cooperation with Egypt.
After gunmen killed 16 Egyptian border guards in August, Egypt closed its border with the Gaza Strip and sealed smuggling tunnels that provide a lifeline to the besieged territory.
Haniyeh and his government insist they have not seen proof that Gaza was connected to the attack, and have called for the border to be fully reopened.
Three Palestinian youth hospitalized after attack by Israeli lynch mob
In Jerusalem Friday, a mob of Israelis chanting ‘Death to Arabs’ attacked three young Palestinians, nearly killing one and severely wounding the other two.

Racist graffiti on Israeli school (image by uprootedpalestinians blog)
The attack took place in Zion Square, where three as-yet unidentified Palestinian youth were walking when the mob began beating them, chanting ethnic slurs including “A Jew is a soul and an Arab is a son of a b–”
One eyewitness reported on her Facebook page, “today I saw a lynch with my own eyes, in Zion Square, the center of the city of Jerusalem ….. and shouts of ‘A Jew is a soul and Arab is a son of a –,’ were shouted loudly and dozens (!!) of youths ran and gathered and started to really beat to death three Arab youths who were walking quietly in the Ben Yehuda street.”
According to the International Business Times, a paramedic with the Magen David Adom ambulance service named Amir Edri told reporters, “When we arrived at the scene we saw a 20-year-old man lying on the floor. He was unconscious and paramedics began performing CPR.” They could not raise a pulse, and while they were trying to revive the youth, were themselves attacked by the crowd, who accused them of attempting to “revive an Arab”.
The incident comes on the heels of a firebombing of a Palestinian taxi in Bethlehem by Israeli settlers Thursday, and a stoning attack on a Palestinian bus by Israeli settlers earlier this week.
Israeli politicians from various right-wing parties, including members of the Netanyahu administration, have issued sweeping anti-Arab statements in recent months, which some analysts have termed incitement. Israeli Knesset member Ben Ari recently held a media event in which he ripped a Bible apart and called it ‘trash’, at the same time that he is leading a legislative battle to imprison and deport African refugees in Israel.
At the same time, the Israeli government declined to press charges against Israeli Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira who published a book in 2009 calling for the killing of gentiles, particularly Arabs. In the book, which quotes Talmudic law and attempts to define itself as an authority on Jewish law, Rabbi Shapira wrote, “One must consider killing even babies, because of the future danger that will be caused if they are allowed to grow up to be as wicked as their parents.”
The Israeli government initially began an investigation of the Rabbi, then abruptly closed the investigation without explanation earlier this year.
A similar ‘lynch mob’ type incident took place in March in Jerusalem’s Malha Mall. Despite the submission of cell-phone video footage to the Israeli police to help identify the assailants, no investigation was done and no arrests were ever made. Instead, according to journalist Ali Abunimah, “Israel’s hasbara [propaganda] machinery jumped into action, denying there was a pervasive problem with racism. The Jewish Agency’s online hasbara chief Avi Mayer even mounted a publicity stunt where he went to Malha Mall to distribute candy.”
Israeli officials did not give any statement about Friday’s attack, and no arrests have been made.
(www.imemc.org / 19.08.2012)
Verkiezingen 12 september
Onderwerp: ISRAEL-PALESTINA
VVD: Het conflict moet tot een einde komen door middel van evenwichtige en rechtstreekse onderhandelingen, gericht op een oplossing die ruimte biedt voor twee staten.
PvdA: Nederland stopt met de eenzijdige steun aan Israël. We gaan weer in de Europese pas lopen en gebruiken onze goede banden met zowel Israël als de Palestijnse Autoriteit om het vredesproces te ondersteunen.
PVV: Israël verdient onze enthousiaste steun, ‘zeker nu het land steeds bedreigd wordt door de knotsgekke moellahs in Iran’. Het goedkope Israël-bashen van de gecombineerde krachten van islam en links moet worden tegengegaan; geen cent subsidie voor de anti-Israël-haatindustrie. Nederland geeft politieke steun aan de bouw van steden en dorpen in Judea en Samaria. De Nederlandse ambassade verhuist van Tel Aviv naar de hoofdstad Jeruzalem. Jordanië is Palestina;’Palestijnen’ verliezen hun vluchtelingenstatus. De VN-organisatie voor Palestijnse vluchtelingen wordt opgeheven.
CDA: Nederland zet zich in voor een alomvattend vredesakkoord. Het doel is een tweestatenoplossing, met als uitgangspunt de grenzen van 1967. Nederland werkt hier aan, zowel bilateraal als via het kwartet met onder andere de VN en EU.
SP: Israël heeft recht op erkende en veilige grenzen, de Palestijnse bevolking heeft ook recht op een eigen staat. Nederland zal de Palestijnse staat dan ook erkennen en zich hard maken voor hun VN-lidmaatschap. De resoluties van de VN-Veiligheidsraad moeten worden uitgevoerd. Nederland veroordeelt het bouwen van woningen in bezet gebied. Als Israël ermee doorgaat wordt het belastingvoordeel voor de export van het land naar EU-landen (associatieverdrag) stilgelegd en worden de Nederlands-Israëlische betrekkingen niet geïntensiveerd.
D66: Nederland werkt duidelijk aan een tweestatenoplossing, met respect voor de grenzen van 1967. Nederland werkt bilateraal en via het kwartet met onder meer de VN en de EU aan een vreedzame oplossing.
GroenLinks: Nederland zet zich in voor een rechtvaardige oplossing van het conflict, in lijn met het internationaal recht. De regering stelt schendingen van mensenrechten van beide zijden aan de kaak. Als Israël het internationaal recht en de mensenrechten blijft schenden dan probeert Nederland binnen de EU het associatieverdrag met Israël op te schorten.
ChristenUnie: Op Bijbelse gronden weten christenen zich met het Joodse volk verbonden. Nederland geeft politieke steun aan Israël, met inachtneming van internationale rechtsbeginselen. De Nederlandse ambassade verhuist van Tel Aviv naar de ongedeelde hoofdstad Jeruzalem.
SGP: Vrede zal van onderop moeten komen. Geen druk van boven voor een tweestatenoplossing. Nederland moet in de EU en in andere internationale verbanden Israël steunen, desnoods alleen. Het Uitgangspunt van alle gesprekken is het recht van de Israëlische bevolking om in eigen land veilig te kunnen wonen en werken. De Nederlandse ambassade verhuist van Tel Aviv naar de ondeelbare hoofdstad Jeruzalem. Nederland ondersteunt Israël om terroristische organisaties als Hamas en Hezbollah aan te pakken. Er mag geen Nederlands hulpgeld gaan naar de Hamasregering. Humanitaire hulp is uitsluitend bestemd voor de Palestijnse bevolking.
De Partij voor de Dieren heeft dit onderwerp niet opgenomen in haar programma.
#Sydney Muslims protest against #Syrian regime
Flag-waving protesters at Sydney’s Lakemba Mosque chanted and cried about the thousands that have been killed in the 17-month uprising in Syria.
Imam and president of the Lebanese Muslim Association, Samier Dandan, called for the end of president Bashar al-Assad’s rule.
Mr Dandan also highlighted the suffering of the Rohingya in Burma, telling the thousands congregated at the mosque that Burma’s Muslim minority continues to be persecuted.
Earlier, the New South Wales Premier was at the mosque where thousands of Australian Muslims were celebrating the Feast of Eid.
Barry O’Farrell joined thousands of worshippers marking Eid, which is the festival to mark the end of Ramadan.
During Ramadan Muslims fast for 30 days during daylight hours.
A street in Lakemba has been closed to cater for the thousands of people who have gathered to pray and hear a special message from the Imam.
German spies active in Syrian war

The BND is operating ships in Syrian waters that are designed to detect troop movements 600 kilometres (400 miles) inland. German agents then pass their findings onto US and British intelligence services, who then hand it over to Syrian rebel forces.
“No western intelligence service has such good sources inside Syria” as the BND,” Bild am Sonntag quoted an unnamed US official as saying.
A defence ministry spokesman told news agency AFP it was “correct that a ship is currently on an operation in the region that is due to last several months” but denied it was a “spy boat” as it has been presented in the German press.
“We do not give out information regarding operational details of the current mission,” the spokesman added.
But the role of the BND doesn’t end here. German agents are also stationed at the NATO base in the Turkish city of Adana, where they are active in helping the Syrian opposition movement.
“We can be proud of the significant contribution we are making to the fall of the Assad regime,” a BND official told the newspaper.
Germany doesn’t back foreign military intervention in Syria. But earlier this month Defence Minister Thomas de Maiziere said Germany can help to solve the crisis by providing humanitarian aid and logistical support.
Tunisian Salafis attack pro-Palestine march
Hardline Salafis attacked a peaceful pro-Palestine protest on Friday evening in the Tunisian city of Gabes.
Hundreds of people were marching in support of the Palestinian demand for statehood on the occasion of International Quds Day but were attacked, witnesses said.
In a telephone interview with UPI a protester said that about 30 people affiliated with the hardline Salafi movement “attacked participants in the march with sticks and batons on the pretext that they are Shia, and not allowed to display their beliefs in the town of Abu Lubaba Ansari.”
The witness, who requested anonymity, said that clashed between Salafis and the participants in the rally continued for more than an hour in the absence of security forces – resulting in a number of injuries.
The witness added that Salafis attacked participants with sticks and stones, and also burnt the Palestinian flag and hoisted black banners reading “there is no god but Allah.”
They also chanted slogans, including: “There is no god but Allah, and Shias are the enemies of God,” and others calling for the killing of Shias.
Tunisia has witnessed a number of aggressive moves moves by the Salafi movement in the past week.
On Thursday night the closing ceremony of the second session of the al-Aqsa festival in the city of Bizerte was interrupted by attacks in which five people were injured.
The festival was attended by Samir Kuntar, a Lebanese resistance figure formerly detained in Israel.
Militant Salafis stormed the concert hall and threatened the audience with swords and sticks on the pretext that Kuntar is Shia, despite him coming from a Druze background.
Extremist demonstrations in the name of Islam have become an increasing trend in Tunisia and security forces have been accused of turning a blind eye to such attacks.
(english.al-akhbar.com / 19.08.2012)
Ya’alon: Jerusalem, Judea & Samaria attacks against Arabs are terrorism
Jerusalem Mayor Barkat condemns violence and calls for co-existence. Vice premier attributes 2 incidents to a moral & educational failure. Ya’alon calls on elected officials to ensure “heinous” acts are not repeated.
Vice Premier Moshe Ya’alon Sunday described two violent attacks against Arabs over the weekend in Judea and Samaria and Jerusalem as “hate crimes” and “terrorist acts.” He called the attacks “totally unacceptable and outrageous” and ascribed their incidence to a moral and educational failure that goes against Jewish ethics and values.
Ya’alon wrote on his Twitter account that Israel cannot afford such phenomena and that it is the duty of elected officials to use all the tools at their disposal to fight an all-out war to ensure these “heinous acts” are not repeated.
In one attack on Thursday night, described as a “lynch situation” by a witness, Jewish teenagers targeted three Arabs in downtown Jerusalem’s Zion Square. The beating left a 20-year-old Arab man in critical condition.
A 19-year-old Jewish Jerusalem man was arrested on Saturday in connection with the attack. Police said they expect to make additional arrests in the case in the coming days.
Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat on Sunday came out strongly against violence in the nation’s capital, releasing a statement saying, “I unequivocally condemn any expression of violence, both verbal or physical, by any party.”
The mayor added that he is confident police will bring the attackers to justice, while calling for continued co-existence in the city.
In the other incident, also on Thursday, a Molotov cocktail was thrown at a Palestinian taxi outside the Gush Etzion settlement of Bat Ayin. Six people were lightly to moderately wounded, including two children.
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu vowed to bring to justice the perpetrators, relaying this in a rare phone call to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.
For his part, Abbas blamed settlers for the attack, which took “place under the eye of the Israeli army, which is not doing anything to stop them.”
The US State Department also issued a statement extending “our deepest sympathies to the victims, among them children, and we hope for their speedy recovery. We note that the government of Israel has also condemned this heinous attack and pledged to bring the perpetrators to justice. We look to Israeli law enforcement officials to do so expeditiously. We urge all parties to avoid any actions that could lead to an escalation of violence.”
(www.israelandstuff.com / 19.08.2012)
