Europe |
Turin Book Fair celebrates Israel's 60th anniversary - outrage ensues |
2008-05-07 |
Somewhere, Fallaci is smiling (ANSA) - Rome, May 6 - Political polemics and security concerns continued to mount on Tuesday ahead of this year's edition of the Turin Book Fair, which is commemorating Israel's 60th birthday with a celebration of its literature. Although a boycott of the fair in protest at Israel's treatment of Palestinians was planned months ago, tension has climbed a notch in recent days, ahead of the event's inauguration this Thursday. Last week, left-wing activists and the Free Palestine association burned two Israeli flags in a central Turin square, and on Monday, a leading Swiss Muslim academic, Tariq Ramadan, attacked Italian President Giorgio Napolitano for his involvement in the fair. Sun rises in the east ... Ramadan accused Napolitano, a former communist, of conflating criticism of Israeli foreign policy with anti-Semitism, and said the president's decision to inaugurate the fair was ''an extremely political act''. The president's office responded with a sharply worded statement underlining that Napolitano's attendance was routine at cultural events and dismissing as ''entirely false'' Ramadan's comments on anti-Semitism. ''Criticism of the Israeli government's policies is entirely legitimate, particularly its actions within Israel,'' the note said. ''What is not acceptable is any position that denies the legitimacy of the state of Israel, set up by the United Nations in 1948, and its right to exist in peace and security''. Long live Italy! On Tuesday, other political figures weighed into the debate, mostly expressing support for Israel and the president's decision to attend the fair despite the boycott. Rome's new right-wing mayor, Giorgio Alemanno, said the burning of Israeli flags was ''a disgrace'', adding that criticism of Israel was acceptable ''but no one can be allowed to question Israel's right to exist''. A group of MPs issued a cross-party statement of support for the president, describing it as ''a political and moral duty'' to attend the inauguration. The message, signed by members of Italy's main centre-right and centre-left parties, underscored the importance of protecting freedom of speech and ''condemning extremism in all forms''. Israel's ambassador to Italy, Gideon Meir, also discussed the boycott for the first time on Tuesday, saying it was an act by extremists ''who want to deprive Israel of its legal status''. Meanwhile, security preparations are being stepped up, amid fears about demonstrations planned in protest at the fair. A number of commentators have predicted a repetition of the disturbances that marred the 2001 G8 summit in Genoa. Between 300 and 400 officers will police a national pro-Palestine demonstration on Saturday, which hundreds are expected to attend, while the route of the march, originally scheduled to finish outside the Book Fair, has been altered. Security will also be tight at the inauguration of the fair but Turin's chief of police Paolo Padoin said the event would not be ''sealed off'' for Napolitano's visit. ''We are taking each day as it comes and we are feeling confident,'' he said, adding that his officers were working closely with police stations across Italy to prepare for Saturday's event. But the security arrangements have drawn criticism from those opposed to the Israeli focus, with complaints that police have shut off all access to protest. ''We don't want to create further aggravation or conflict but we must highlight the fact that the fair has effectively been sealed off,'' said the boycott's organizers. ''The police have banned leafleting or information stands in front of the fair, effectively creating a red zone''. Turin's International Book Fair, which runs until Monday, is the largest publishing event in Italy and the second largest in Europe after Frankfurt. |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Israeli PM has accepted cease-fire deal |
2006-08-11 |
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has accepted an emerging Mideast cease-fire deal and informed the United States of his decision, Israeli officials said Friday. Olmert will recommend that his government approve the deal in its meeting on Sunday, said Gideon Meir, a senior official in the Israeli Foreign Ministry. Meir said the military offensive in Lebanon would continue for the time being. It was not immediately clear if it would be halted after the U.N. Security Council vote on the cease-fire deal later Friday, or only after the Israeli Cabinet has endorsed it. |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
If you want to donate to Israel |
2006-07-21 |
I know some of you are interested in how you can help Israel as she fights the current battle in her war of survival. Here is an exerpt from an e-mail that arrived in my in-box this morning with some ideas from the Jewish National Fund. (The Jewish National Fund has been planting trees in Israel since the early part of the 1900s, and in latter years has branched out into other projects.) The web page has more information. Your donations are making a difference! Since our appeal on Friday afternoon, JNF has raised $514,534 for Operation Security Blanket. With an estimated 100,000 Israeli children currently living in bomb shelters, JNF is working to restore a sense of normalcy and calm for as many as possible by sending them to our summer camps in central Israel, out of range of rocket fire. Unlike the much touted Hamas and PLO/Fatah summer camps (presumably closed this summer) the children will do normal summer camp things, not be trained as soldiers and suicide bombers. Nes Harim, a JNF camp in Jerusalems American Independence Park, is working at full capacity to accommodate hundreds of children at a time for three-day stays. Israel's top youth movement, Chugei Sayarut, a division of JNF-KKL, is also retrofitting forest sites for summer camps throughout central Israel and the northern Negev for five- to seven-day stays. JNF is providing roundtrip transportation, food and activities, and security. Donations are going to help build security bypass roads by the Gaza border. Emergency response equipment, including bulletproof vests, helmets and personal safety kits for firefighters, is getting into the hands of rapid response workers. A $100,000 emergency response vehicle/fire truck has already been purchased through this campaign. In addition to donating online, you can also call your local office at 888-JNF-0099. On Friday, July 14th, Gideon Meir, Deputy Director General, Media and Public Affairs, Israel Foreign Affairs Ministry, spoke to top leadership of JNF on the current situation in Israel. Click to hear a recording of the conference. |
Link |
Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Syria 'ready for anything' |
2006-07-14 |
SYRIA is bracing itself for "any eventuality" as the regime nervously eyes a relentless Israeli operation over the border in Lebanon and faces up to increasingly hostile US rhetoric. "Syria is in confrontation with Israel. It is watching the situation and is ready to defend itself against any eventuality," said Elias Murad, editor of the ruling Baath party newspaper Al-Baath. He expressed fear of an "extension of the Israeli operation in the south of Lebanon or towards Syria," a move that would open a third front on top of Israel's continuing operations in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip. An irate Israel has lumped Damascus together in an "axis of terror" with Iran over their backing for Hezbollah, whose capture of two Israeli soldiers sparked the Lebanon offensive that has already left more than 60 people dead. The sabre rattling from Israel has been matched by comments from US President George W. Bush, already at odds with Damascus over its alleged role in the murder of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri. "Syria needs to be held to account" over the dramatic escalation of violence in the Middle East, Bush said in Germany on Thursday. "President (Bashar al-) Assad needs to show some leadership towards peace." The Syrian newspaper ath-Thawra wrote that the only way to resolve the crisis was for Israel "to accept the conditions posed by the resistance", referring to a prisoner exchange steadfastly rejected by the Jewish state. The dramatic escalation in Lebanon has sparked fears of an even wider conflict and fellow US arch-foe Iran lost no time in saying it would stand behind its under-fire Arab ally in the event of any attack. "If Israel commits another act of idiocy and aggresses Syria, this will be the same as an aggression against the entire Islamic world and it will receive a stinging response," said President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. "The Israeli aggressions are a result of the weakness of a puppet regime that is on its way towards disappearing," he told Mr Assad in a telephone conversation. Israel has vowed to break Hezbollah and is also in open conflict in the Gaza Strip with Palestinian militant group Hamas, many of whose key leaders, like political supremo Khaled Meshaal, have found sanctuary in Syrian exile. "The Hezbollah would not be able to operate in Lebanon without clear Syrian sponsorship," fumed Israeli foreign ministry official Gideon Meir, branding Iran the militia's "main benefactor". "Consequently, Israel views Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria and Iran as primary elements in the axis of terror and hate, threatening not only Israel but the entire world," Meir added. If Hezbollah has long-range rockets and "tries to hit Haifa with projectiles developed with Syria's help, Israel has no choice but to hit Damascus," Yuval Steinitz, the hawkish former chairman of the parliamentary defence and foreign affairs committee said. Last month, Israeli warplanes overflew Assad's palace in northern Syria while the president was inside, an operation Syrian state television called an "aggressive act and an unacceptable provocation". Israeli General Ido Nehushtan said that while Israel "cannot allow Hezbollah to continue to benefit from Syrian and Iranian support... for the moment we are concentrating on Lebanon because we were attacked from Lebanon." US Syria expert Joshua Landis said that for all the US frustration with Syria, Damascus is feeling more confident than it has for years with the United States bogged down in Iraq and apparently failing to make headway with Iran. "Syria is feeling strong. It can now go on the offensive. Damascus feels confident that Washington cannot counter-attack at this time. It has few arrows left in its quiver," said the University of Oklahoma professor on his website. |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Report: Mubarak demands Hamas be expelled from Syria |
2006-06-30 |
At least, I now know my surprise meter is still working.Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak demanded from his Syrian counterpart Bashar Assad to deport the Syrian-based Hamas leadership unless it agrees to release kidnapped IDF soldier Cpl. Gilad Shalit, Palestinian sources said on Friday. The demand was made in the context of a compromise that Egypt was attempting to draft between the Israel and Hamas, whose Damascus leader, Khaled Mashaal was demanding that thousands of Palestinian detainees, held in Israeli prisons, be released. Mubarak warned Mashaal that his position was leading the Palestinians to disaster, Israel Radio reported. According to the Palestinians, the Egyptian compromise calls for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip, as well as the release of prisoners who were already scheduled to be released within the next year. Meanwhile, Mubarak stated in an interview to Egypt's leading pro-government newspaper, Al-Ahram that Shalit's kidnappers have agreed to his conditional release, but Israel has not yet accepted their terms. Mubarak said, "Egyptian contacts with several Hamas leaders resulted in preliminary, positive results in the form of a conditional agreement to hand over the Israeli soldier as soon as possible to avoid an escalation. The president said he had asked Prime Minister Ehud Olmert "not to hurry" the military offensive in Gaza, but to "give additional time to find a peaceful solution to the problem of the kidnapped soldier." Egyptian Intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, was expected to go to Gaza on Friday, as Mubarak's representative, to advance the compromise. He was also scheduled to travel to Syria to meet Mashaal. MK Ephraim Sneh (Labor) dismissed the Egyptian initiative, saying "a diplomatic option is when someone brings about the unilateral, unconditional release of the kidnapped [soldier], not when someone serves as a mediator between us and the Hamas head in Gaza," Army Radio reported. Sources in Jerusalem stated that they had not yet received the details of the compromise. Moreover, the Prime Minister's Office insisted that it was not negotiating for Shalit's release. Israel suspended on Thursday a planned ground invasion of northern Gaza, giving diplomacy another chance to free Shalit, whom terrorists linked to Hamas kidnapped Sunday from an Israeli camp near Gaza. Mubarak's remark implied he was claiming a role in Israel's decision. In Jerusalem, a senior Israeli Foreign Ministry official, Gideon Meir, said Israel did not know of such an offer. Reached just after midnight on Friday morning, Meir told The Associated Press that Israel would have no comment until daybreak. "In general Israel's stance is, as the prime minister said earlier, that the soldier will only be released unconditionally and there will be no negotiations with a gang of terrorists and criminals who abducted a soldier from Israeli territory," Meir said. |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan | ||
2006-04-17 | ||
![]()
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, of the rival Fatah Party, condemned the bombing, calling it a "terrorist attack." Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Gideon Meir said Israel held Hamas ultimately responsible for such attacks because it is "giving support to all the other terrorist organizations. From our point of view it doesn't matter if it comes from Al Aqsa, Islamic Jihad or Hamas. They all come out of the same school of terrorism led by Hamas," he said. | ||
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Israel attacks 'axis of terror' |
2006-01-20 |
Israel has accused Iran and Syria of complicity in a suicide attack that injured at least 30 people in Tel Aviv. It "was financed by Tehran, planned in Syria and carried out by Palestinians," Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz was quoted by security officials as saying. Mr Mofaz was also quoted as blaming the attack on "the axis of terror that operates between Iran and Syria". Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad earlier said it carried out the attack near Tel Aviv's old bus station. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the US have condemned the bombing. It was the first bomb attack in Tel Aviv since February last year. Israeli newspaper Haaretz quoted Mr Mofaz as saying that Israel had "decisive proof" the Tel Aviv attack could be blamed on the "axis of terror". "Iran supplied the money, and [Islamic] Jihad's headquarters in Damascus directed the organisation's operatives in Nablus, giving operational orders and instructions," Mr Mofaz reportedly said. Israel's Army Radio said the minister had shared the evidence with officials in the US, Europe and Egypt. A spokesman for the Islamic Jihad's military wing - al-Quds Brigades - earlier named the bomber as 22-year-old Sami Abd al-Hafiz Antar, from the West Bank town of Nablus. A top official in the Israeli foreign ministry, Gideon Meir, said on Thursday the attack highlighted the consequences of the Palestinian government's failure to disarm militant groups. Mr Abbas said the bombing was meant to derail the Palestinian legislative elections on Wednesday, which Islamic Jihad is boycotting. "This is sabotage and aimed at sabotaging the elections, not only the elections, but also the security of Palestinians. The culprits must be punished." the Palestinian leader said. The attack took place at about 1530 (1330 GMT) on Solomon Street in Tel Aviv's commercial district. "The guy was standing at the corner of the street, looking like he was waiting for someone," Yehiel Ohana told the Associated Press news agency. "He swayed strangely. Then he went into the shwarma (food) stand, and two to three seconds later, we heard the explosion. Everything shuddered," he said. "We entered the shwarma stand, and we saw him lying on the floor, and then we understood he was a suicide bomber." The bombing took place on the same day as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad began two-day talks with Syrian counterpart Bashar al-Assad in Damascus, in what Mr Mofaz described as a "terror summit". It was the first suicide attack in Israel since 5 December, when five Israelis were killed by a suicide bomber outside a shopping centre in Netanya. |
Link |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Palestinian campaigners stopped in east Jerusalem |
2006-01-04 |
![]() It is still unclear whether Israel will carry out its threat to ban Palestinians from voting in Arab east Jerusalem in protest against the participation of candidates from the militant group Hamas. Dr Ashwari has said Israeli police immediately intervened when she arrived in the area carrying election posters. "The police came and the border guards, the Israeli police and the Israeli border guards, and they tried to prevent me and I told them, 'No, we have the full right to address our constituents, and they have the full right to hear us'," she said. "The police then attacked to take away our banners, so there was a scuffle, and they forcibly and repeatedly tried to take it. Finally they did succeed, of course - they're much stronger than I am." Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Gideon Meir says Palestinians have no right to be campaigning in east Jerusalem. "There is an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians, which was signed for the 1996 elections, as part of the Oslo agreement," he said. "Jerusalem is the undivided capital of the state of Israel - it's not part of any Palestinian territory because the only thing they can do there is vote in the post offices." |
Link |
Israel-Palestine |
PA jugs 3 in response to bombing |
2005-02-27 |
![]() Its Gaza-based leadership, who had earlier denied knowledge of the bombing and said it remained committed to a de facto truce called by Abbas, confirmed the claim. Israel and the United States said the bombing, the first suicide attack in the Jewish state since November, showed Abbas had to act more forcefully to salvage peace efforts. But Israeli officials said the Jewish state would show restraint for now. "We will not allow anyone to sabotage the goals and ambitions of our people ... We will bring them to justice," Abbas, elected last month, told reporters. Palestinian officials said three suspected Palestinian militants were arrested in the bomber's village, Deir al-Ghoson, near Tulkarm. Israeli troops arrested five others there, including two brothers of the bomber, during a raid. A senior Palestinian security official said inquiries indicated the hand of the Hizbollah guerrilla group, which denied any role and called the accusations a provocation by "the Zionist entity" (Israel). A video left by the bomber, Abdullah Badran, 21, showed him flanked by Islamic Jihad flags calling Israelis "enemies of God" and vowing to avenge the killings of Palestinians. He also accused the Palestinian Authority of "trading in the blood of the martyrs" by following U.S. dictates. The images of ambulances rushing to the popular Tel Aviv karaoke club and of the blood-stained pavement shook many Israelis, who had begun to believe they had put such scenes behind them. Israel demanded action instead of more talks, saying Abbas was wrong to think he could coax militants into a formal ceasefire from their de facto truce. "We must see arrests, collecting illegal weapons from those terrorist organizations," said Gideon Meir of the Foreign Ministry. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice demanded Palestinian leaders "send a clear message that terror will not be tolerated." Washington has stepped up efforts to revive the peace process after Abbas was elected following the death of Arafat, whom Israel and the United States saw as an obstacle. Militants say they are still not satisfied with Israeli confidence-building gestures, such as the release of 500 out of 8,000 prisoners and an end to army raids and assassinations. They also want a more sweeping Israeli pullback from Gaza and parts of the West Bank, which is due to begin on July 20. |
Link |
Africa North | |||||||||
Blast at Egyptian Hotel Causes at Least 100 Casualties | |||||||||
2004-10-07 | |||||||||
By SARAH EL DEEB, Associated Press Writer
From the radio : unconfirmed deathtoll is now at 23, blast is said to be a carbomb (israeli radio), while egyptian authorities speaks of an accidental explosion due to a gas leak
Not long after the Taba blast, two explosions rocked Ras Al-Satan, another resort area in the Sinai Peninsula. There is no word on how many casualties are at the scene. Unconfirmed reports based on Israelis in the area say seven Egyptians have been wounded in a blast in that area. Israel is asking permission from Egyptian authorities to land helicopters in Ras a-Satan Egyptian state reported that the whole western side of the hotel, including seven stories, collapsed. The building itself is in danger of collapsing and casualties are reportedly captured under the ruins. Israeli media reports said the explosion was caused by either a double suicide bombing or a booby-trapped car. However, Egyptian public television has reported that a gas leak was the cause. An eyewitness told Channel 1 TV that the explosion at the Taba Hotel did not occur near the Casino, contrary to media reports. The Hilton Hotel in Taba is frequented by Israelis traveling to Sinai and many Israelis arrived there over the past days of the Succot and Simchat Torah holidays. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon spoke with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and asked him to allow Israeli paramedics to enter Egypt and evacuate the wounded to Israel. Shortly after, Egyptian officials allowed Israeli ambulances to cross into Egypt. Israeli paramedics reached the Hilton Hotel and are currently assisting Egyptian rescue workers. The Israel Defense Forces dispatched medical crews and ground forces to the Taba terminal area. Two helicopters and a large plane have also been sent to Eilat to assist with transferring the wounded to hospitals across the country. Israelis returning from Sinai are reporting crowded conditions in the Taba crossing into Israel. Israel Radio reported Egyptian soldiers began shooting in the air to stop the pushing and shoving. The Eilat Municipality opened the city's Rabin School for Israelis returning from Sinai to spend the night. Officials in the Shin Bet told The Jerusalem Post that it is too premature to determine whether the explosion was caused by suicide bombers or a car bomb parked at the entrance to the hotel. The official stressed that for a number of weeks specific warnings were received of plans by terrorists to launch an attack against Israelis in Sinai. The Foreign Ministry issued a travel warning to Sinai shortly before the High Holy Days. Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz ordered OC Home Front Command Maj.-Gen. Yair Naveh to travel to Eilat with emergency squads to assist with the evacuations.
Egypt has informed Israel that it will do everything necessary to help Israel bring Israelis home from the Sinai, Channel 2 reported. Four hours after the blast, the Israel Defense Forces were in command of the scene, said the IDF spokesman, Brigadier General Ruth Yaron. Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom asked his Egyptian counterpart for permission to allow Israelis to pass through the border crossing without documentation checks and to fly rescue workers into the Sinai, Foreign Ministry spokesman Gideon Meir said. Shalom also said Israel wants to send between 20 and 30 buses to the Sinai to bring home the approximately 15,000 Israelis still in the Sinai.
Palestinian officials, however, denied any link to the explosions, but said Israeli repeated aggressions against their people could be a motive for revenge. "Our battle with Israel is limited to occupied Palestinian territories and no Palestinian (resistance) faction is behind the Sinai blasts," security consultant of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, General Jibril Al-Rajoub, said on Al-Jazeera. "Israeli continuous onslaughts and ignoring of all international resolutions lead to frustration and if these blasts were a revengeful act, only Israel has itself to blame." Following Israel's assassination Sunday, September 26, of a senior Hamas member in the Syrian capital Damascus, Hamas political leaders declared their war with Israel was limited to their Palestinian lands, rejecting Israel's attempts to a war outside the borders. Several observers, commenting on Sinai blasts on Al-Jazeera, agreed the Palestinian factions could never be behind the blasts, citing very good relations and close consultations with the Egyptian government. "No Palestinian faction could be implicated here, especially Hamas. They are too smart to risk losing a strong supporter like Egypt. It could be Al-Qaeda or any one else, but not Palestinians," Abdul Bari Atwan, Editor-in-chief of London-based Al-Quds Al-Arabi daily said. Israeli Foreign Ministry sources, on the other hand, were quick to put the blame on the Palestinians and a spokesman went even further by blaming Al-Qaeda. "These terrorist acts are committed by the Palestinians and by Al-Qaeda militants against Israeli citizens," Lieour Bindour, an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman told Al-Jazeera. He, however, refused to link the blasts to Israel's ongoing onslaught against Gaza, insisting the Palestinians needed no justification to attack the Israeli citizens. The spokesman further refused to answer a question on the reasons behind such attacks. Egyptian sources refused, however, to say anything decisive about the cause or responsibility of the blasts.
| |||||||||
Link |
Middle East |
Israel releases graphic aftermath video of bombing, catches flak |
2004-02-02 |
Hat tip: Drudge. Edited for brevity. The camera jostled past the crush of rescue workers, entered the bombed bus and paused on bloody pieces of flesh hanging from a twisted window frame. It moved to a severed right foot flung against a curb, then halted on an arm in the middle of the street. For the first time in more than three years and after scores of suicide bombings, the Israeli government has taken the horror and gore of a bus bombing directly to the public via the Internet, bypassing what one senior Israeli official called the "distorted" coverage of the international news media. "We decided this was the only way for us to bring our message to the world," said Gideon Meir, a senior foreign ministry officer. "It took us 3œ years to show these pictures." The decision to put the graphic five minute and 38-second video on the Israeli Foreign Ministry Web site just hours after Thursdayâs explosion, which killed 11 people and the bomber, has unleashed an emotional public debate in a nation weary of a conflict that has turned Israeli buses, cafes and public streets into targets and frustrated by political leadership on both sides that has not ended the violence. Foreign ministry official Meir said the agencyâs Web site had received 600,000 hits on the video as of Sunday night. On Thursday, the day of the bombing, the site temporarily collapsed under the volume of attempts to view the footage, which carried the understated warning â "Caution: Video contains very graphic footage." "Showing bodies or body parts . . . lying on the ground and using it for political ends is disgusting," said Jeff Halper, who heads the Israeli Committee Against House Demolition, an organization that monitors Israeli military actions against Palestinians. He accused the Israeli government of "trying to sell a certain political program, the wall, and to recruit the dead for this mission." "We should ignore the dead and maimed because it will help my political ends." The video footage on the government Web site, www.mfa.gov.il, was taken by Ilan Sztulman, 45, who heads visual productions for the ministry of foreign affairs. He said he arrived at the scene of the Thursday attack only minutes after the blast and the opening shots of the video show the jerky movements of a cameraman running toward the bus amidst a crowd of rescue workers. "I get to the zone much faster than any other photographers because I have special permission to go in," said Sztulman. "Most of the journalists cannot go in until the bomb officers declare the area is bomb-free." At Thursdayâs bombing, most journalists were kept more than 30 yards from the bus in the first minutes after the explosion. Many of the body parts video-taped by Sztulman had been collected by rescue workers by the time journalists were allowed to move closer. The 11th victimâs body was so mutlilated that the passenger, an Ethopian woman, was identifed only this weekend using DNA tests. |
Link |
Middle East | |||||
Hamas vows Dire Revenge™ | |||||
2003-09-06 | |||||
A senior Hamas official has vowed the Islamic group would react to Israel's botched attempt to kill its spiritual leader, Sheikh Ahmad Yassin. "The Palestinian people cannot remain silent to such aggressions," Osama Hamdan said, Hamas' representative in Lebanon. "Israel has crossed all red lines and they have opened the gates for a large escalation. This aggression will lead to a new turn of events that nobody can predict for the time being. This incident has also uncovered the bias of the world, which still did not denounce this aggression that also wounded 18 people, including 14 children."
| |||||
Link |