Category Archives: Uncategorized

Clinton statement on Syria

Via BBC in Washington:

 

Press Statement

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State

Washington, DC

January 30, 2012

 

The United States condemns in the strongest possible terms the escalation of the Syrian regime’s violent and brutal attacks on its own people. In the past few days we have seen intensified Syrian security operations all around the country which have killed hundreds of civilians. The government has shelled civilian areas with mortars and tank fire and brought down whole buildings on top of their occupants. The violence has escalated to the point that the Arab League has had to suspend its monitoring mission. The regime has failed to meet its commitments to the Arab League to halt its acts of violence, withdraw its military forces from residential areas, allow journalists and monitors to operate freely and release prisoners arrested because of the current unrest.

The Security Council must act and make clear to the Syrian regime that the world community views its actions as a threat to peace and security. The violence must end, so that a new period of democratic transition can begin.

Tomorrow, I will attend a United Nations Security Council meeting on Syria where the international community should send a clear message of support to the Syrian people: we stand with you. The Arab League is backing a resolution that calls on the international community to support its ongoing efforts, because the status quo is unsustainable. The longer the Assad regime continues its attacks on the Syrian people and stands in the way of a peaceful transition, the greater the concern that instability will escalate and spill over throughout the region.

 

#Israel Supreme Court rules against Palestinian spouses settling in the Jewish State

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Taiseer Khatib is an Israeli Arab who lives with his family in Akko, the town where he grew up, on Israel’s Mediterranean coast. His wife, Lana was born in Nablus, a Palestinian city in the West Bank. Israel’s Supreme Court recently decided that Palestinian spouses of Israeli Arabs living in Israel will be banned from settling permanently in the Jewish State. Here’s some of what Taiseer had to say about the argument that’s often cited in support of the court ruling, and that is about Israel’s security. 

blog_taiseerkhatib.mp3 Listen on Posterous

Colliding values in Israeli Supreme Court decision on citizenship

Yossi Klein Halevi is an Israeli writer and a fellow of the “Engaging Israel Project” at the Shalom Hartman Center in Jerusalem. I called him up to talk about the recent Israeli Supreme Court decision that extended a 2002 law banning Palestinian spouses of Israeli Arabs from living in Israel. Halevi said he really did not want to do an interview about this subject. Because, he said, it’s such fraught issue. But he was gracious enough to go ahead and talk with me anyway. When he read the news about the court decision, Halevi said he felt “torn apart” by it. He knows Palestinians who will be affected by the ruling.  And yet, he said he still understood why the justices ruled the way they did. Halevi said security was not the biggest factor in the decision. It was demographics, he said. Here is Halevi’s response to the charge that the court ruling adds up to legally enshrined racism. 

blog_yossikleinhalevi.mp3 Listen on Posterous

ACRI denounces Israel Supreme Court decision on citizenship

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Hagai El-Ad is executive director of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel. He told me the recent decision by Israel’s Supreme Court that denies citizenship to most Palestinian spouses of Israeli Arabs is a blow to the country’s democracy.     

blog_hagaielad.mp3 Listen on Posterous

Verdict delayed

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Samira Ibrahim is suing the Egyptian military for subjecting her to torture, sexual abuse and “virginity testing.” Here is the radio story

Election day campaigning in Maadi. Taxi loudspeaker in trunk. #Egyelection

Matthew Bell
PRI’s The World
Sent from my iPhone

Long line to vote in Maadi neighborhood of Cairo

Matthew Bell
PRI’s The World
Sent from my iPhone

Thinking about buying one of these to get around Cairo

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Matthew Bell
PRI’s The World
Sent from my iPhone

Tahrir Square tonight

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Matthew Bell
PRI’s The World
Sent from my iPhone

View of Tahrir

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This was taken about 10 PM Cairo time. The square is closed off to cars, full of people, but not clear to me where the police who were clashing with demonstrators have gone to.