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Palestine Today 05 27 2010

IMEMC Audio Dept. | 27.05.2010 16:23 | Other Press | Palestine | World

Welcome to Palestine Today, a service of the International Middle East Media Center, www.imemc.org for Thursday, May 27th, 2010.

Israeli soldiers assaults a Palestinian family in the West Bank as settlement construction continues in the Jordan valley. These stories and more, coming up, stay tuned

The News Cast
Israeli soldiers assaulted on Thursday a Palestinian family in the Ramadeen village near Hebron, southern West Bank. Witnesses reported that a special military force stormed the house of Amro family, using tear gas and sound bombs, then assaulted the family members with batons causing injuries to all of them.

Tayseer Amro, 45, his wife and their six children were moved to a Palestinian medical center as they suffered tear gas inhalation and third degree burns in the face, doctors reported. According to the Israeli military, the family was hiding Palestinian workers who were trying to jump over the fence surrounding the village to enter Israel for work. The Israeli military reported no arrests of Palestinian workers form that house.

Elsewhere Israeli settlers resumed work in the settlement of Mskiut in northern West Bank, Palestinian sources reported on Thursday. Witnesses from nearby Palestinian villages reported that trucks loaded with construction materials arrived at the settlement since the early morning as construction resumed inside.

Head of the Settlement Watch Unit in northern West Bank, Ghassan Doghlas stated that this construction contradicts Israel’s claimed ten-month freeze of settlement construction announced earlier this year.

The Israeli government announced in February a ten-month construction freeze in West Bank settlements as a good-will gesture to the Palestinians in order to resume the stalled peace talks. There are half a million Israeli settlers living in West Bank settlements including east Jerusalem, which, according to international law, are all illegal as they are built on occupied Palestinian land.

In other news, the Israeli military announced on Thursday that navy forces will not allow the Free Gaza fleet to reach the Gaza Strip if not stopped by Israeli navy first for inspection. The eight ships convoy carrying 700 people and 2.5 million USD worth of aid supplies to the residents of the besieged costal enclave is expected to reach its destination on Saturday.

The Israeli Navy says, they will jam the Freedom Flotilla’s signals and communications in order to isolate those on board which will bar the world from witnessing what could become a prolonged naval stand-off.

According to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, the Israeli navy is ready to carry out the government's decision to prevent the ships from reaching the Gaza shore.

Conclusion
Thank you for joining us from occupied Bethlehem, you have been listening to Palestine Today from the International Middle East Media Center www.imemc.org. This report has been brought to you by George Rishmawi

IMEMC Audio Dept.
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Gaza aid convoy can unload cargo in Ashdod for inspection

27.05.2010 16:39

Israeli officials reiterate that there is no shortage of humanitarian aid in Gaza, but say that 10,000 tons of aid carried by ships will be transferred to Gaza after inspection.
By Barak Ravid and Yuval Azoulay
Israel on Thursday said a flotilla of activist aid boats bound for Gaza was an "outright provocation," saying however that the organizers of the aid convoy were invited to unload their cargo at the Israeli port of Ashdod, where it would be transferred to Gaza following an inspection.

The "Freedom Flotilla" consists of nine ships loaded with 10,000 tons of humanitarian aid and building materials, all headed toward Gaza in defiance of a three-year Israeli closure on the territory, home to 1.5 million Palestinians.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak spoke with the foreign ministers from several countries on Thursday, while the Director-General of the Foreign Ministry, Yossi Gal, individually summoned the representatives of the countries participating in the aid convoy. The two made it clear that there is no shortage in humanitarian aid to Gaza, as food, fuel and supplies are regularly transferred into Gaza by international organizations.

The defense minister told the foreign ministers that "Hamas, which rules Gaza, is a terror organization supported by Iran. It smuggles weapons and rockets with the sole purpose of harming Israelis, as it has done many times in the past."

The minister explained that Hamas has been holding Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit captive for four years, in complete isolation and in prevention of Red Cross intervention. "For these reasons Israel must oversee the waters in the area," Barak said.

The Israel Defense Forces announced that troops, especially the navy, have completed the preparations for the flotilla, which will likely arrive in the region over the weekend. The preparations included a compound at the Ashdod port consisting of air conditioned tents equipped with computerized stations, metal detectors, and seating for the activists manning the ships. The IDF is preparing for the arrival of some 800 peace activists. The IDF said that they were ready to carry out the government's decision to prevent the ships from reaching the Gaza shore.

Sources within the defense establishment said Thursday that the activists will be given the option of signing documents allowing Israeli authorities to deport them from the country. Israeli officials will escort them to buses that will take them to Ben-Gurion International Airport where they will be placed on planes to take them back to their countries of origin. However, the defense establishment believes that the operation will not go smoothly and that most of the ships' passengers will try to create provocations and confrontations. In case of violence, the Israel Prisons Service will jail the activists in Be'er Sheva and initiate the deportation process from there.

The IDF said Thursday that much thought was put into the preparations for the convoy's arrival. The plans include trained navy forces boarding the ships, with the aid of dogs, to search for weapons and explosives as well as wanted terrorists. The IDF said that they did not know whether the ships carried these items or people, but that they were preparing for any possible scenario to prevent potential catastrophes.

Free Gilad Shalit


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This posting has been hidden because it breaches the Indymedia UK (IMC UK) Editorial Guidelines.

IMC UK is an interactive site offering inclusive participation. All postings to the open publishing newswire are the responsibility of the individual authors and not of IMC UK. Although IMC UK volunteers attempt to ensure accuracy of the newswire, they take no responsibility legal or otherwise for the contents of the open publishing site. Mention of external web sites or services is for information purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation.

save your breath ...

28.05.2010 07:47

"Israeli officials reiterate that there is no shortage of humanitarian aid in Gaza, but say that 10,000 tons of aid carried by ships will be transferred to Gaza after inspection."

We simply do not believe this.

jackslucid


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