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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Israel-Palestine-Jordan
No law, no order, no beer
2006-01-10
In which a Telegraph reporter notices there's something missing in post-occupation Gaza...(via LGF)
I have always been reluctant to accept the Israeli statesman Abba Eban's observation that the Palestinians never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity. Arriving in Gaza yesterday, it had to be admitted that the man had a point. Four months ago, when I was last here, the place sparkled with optimism. With the hated Israelis gone, Gaza was going to show the world what Palestinians could do when left to their own devices.

The Strip's miles of golden sand were to become a sort of Islamic Miami Beach, minus the booze and bikinis. Maybe, a few diehard optimists dared to hope, Yasser Arafat's vision of Gaza as a Middle Eastern Singapore might at last start to be realised.

Yesterday, it felt more like the Wild West. The first sign of just how dodgy security has become came when Said Ghazali, The Daily Telegraph's local man in Jerusalem, and I arrived at the Palestinian side of the crossing to learn that our regular driver - stocky, dependable Ashraf - would not be there to meet us.

He had a reasonable excuse. He has the bad luck to belong to the Masri clan, who are currently engaged in a blood feud with their rivals, the Kafarnehs. The toll so far is five dead and 70-odd wounded. Yesterday a Kafarneh was injured in a shooting attack and Ashraf thought it prudent to leave his cab in the garage.

We found another driver and set off for Rafah, the scene of an extraordinary outbreak of anarchy last week. A mob killed two Egyptian border guards and bulldozed concrete walls in a successful attempt to force the authorities to release a man suspected of kidnapping the British aid worker Kate Burton and her parents. On the way, we passed through the town of Khan Younis. The main road was blocked by what I took at first to be an election rally.

Wrong. The Masri boys were at it again, this time wading into the Tahas, their sworn enemies in the southern end of the Strip. The action in the main street was confined to fists and boots, but, as we turned into a parallel street to detour round the mob, we ran into a gun battle, with the rivals trading Kalashnikov fire from opposing blocks of flats. The cars in front of us sped up a bit, but 50 yards from the shooting, life was going on as normal.

Most Gazans grew up with gunfire. Before, it was only the Israelis they had to worry about. Now they are shooting each other. The security forces are no help. Their rivalries are the cause of much of the bloodshed. Somehow, though, it is never all gloom in Gaza. Yesterday, pace Abba Eban, I saw one opportunity that the Palestinians have definitely not missed. On the site of what was once an Israeli army base, there now stands the Al Bashir Joy Land. Where once there were walls and watchtowers are slides, merry-go-rounds and swings.

At the end of a day like yesterday, I would normally retire to the UN Beach Club, a low-rise concrete joint whose seediness is more than compensated for by its views of the Mediterranean. And, of course, the fact that it is the only place in Gaza where you can get a drink. Over the years, thousands of Middle Eastern hands have had reason to remember it fondly. Yes, we often thought as the barman placed the first frosted glasses of Heineken before us on a scorching mid-summer evening, there is a point to the United Nations. Yesterday the Beach Club was still there. But the bar wasn't. Unknown saboteurs arrived at dawn a few days ago, tied up the guards and planted a bomb that reduced the interior to matchwood. The way things are going in Gaza, it seems unlikely that the dear old Beach Club will be re-opening its doors any time soon.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Kidnap Suspect Freed in Gaza After Deadly Border Clashes
2006-01-06
The Palestinian security forces yesterday freed a militant leader whose arrest over the kidnapping of three Britons sparked a series of armed protests in the Gaza Strip, his faction said. Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas meanwhile apologized for clashes Wednesday in which two Egyptian border guards were killed after the armed protesters bulldozed a concrete wall along the Gaza-Egypt border.
"Sorry 'bout dat..."
Alaa Al-Hams was released as part of a deal under which his Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades faction also agreed to halt its protests, said a spokesman for his cell of the militant group, which is an offshoot of Abbas’s own Fatah faction. “We have reached an agreement with the security services to cease all the protests,” the spokesman said.

Al-Aqsa gunmen stormed a string of government offices in the southern Gaza town of Rafah and then smashed down a concrete section of wall on the border with Egypt on Wednesday to protest Hams’ arrest over the abduction of British rights worker Kate Burton and her parents a week earlier.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Gaza chaos escalates as Egypt border blocked
2006-01-05
RAFAH, Gaza Strip -Security chaos in the Gaza Strip escalated further on Wednesday when gunmen loyal to the ruling Fatah faction barred access to the border with Egypt and tried to kidnap the parents of an American peace activist killed by an Israeli bulldozer three years ago.
Escalate further?
After taking over a series of government buildings in the city of Rafah, around 100 gunmen supposedly loyal to Fatah then took up positions at the entrance to the border crossing, which is Gaza’s only link to the outside world.

Witnesses said the gunmen had initially allowed civilians into the terminal after checking their identities, in a bid to stop only those affiliated with the Palestinian Authority. But they later prevented anyone from approaching the terminal, the second time in less than a week that the Rafah crossing has been forced to close.
Wonder if it's also closed to heavy weapons' smuggling?
Security sources and witnesses said the gunmen were demanding the release of a local leader of the radical Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, an armed offshoot of Fatah, who has been arrested over his alleged involvement in the kidnapping of Gaza-based British rights activist Kate Burton and her parents.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Paleos smash Gaza-Egypt wall
2006-01-04
A group of Palestinian fighters have seized bulldozers and smashed through the border wall between Gaza and Egypt, Aljazeera and agencies report quoting Palestinian security officials at the border. The fighters who stormed the border are said to be angry at the jailing of their leader by the Palestinian police.
When you're above the law, the law can just keep its fat mitts off you or suffer the consequences...
The men, from al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, an offshoot of the Fatah party, decided on Wednesday to attack the border wall hours after rampaging through Rafah, closing the border crossing and occupying four government buildings.
This is a condition known in the trade as "anarchy."
Soon afterwards, Egyptian security forces beefed up their presence at the site to prevent thousands of Palestinians who had gathered at the other side from crossing the border, Aljazeera reports. Witnesses said Egyptian security personnel fired into the air to force Palestinians back to the Palestinian side of Rafah.
I guess they haven't forgotten the Sudanese deaders yet. Give it another week...
The border drama began when about 50 al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades hard boyz cadres stormed the Rafah municipality headquarters and seized one of its bulldozers, Aljazeera's Gaza correspondent Wail al-Dahduh said.
Would that be the Rachel Corrie Memorial bulldozer?
One of the fighters then drove the bulldozer towards the wall separating the Egyptian and Palestinian sides of Rafah, while the rest of the fighters followed him, he said. The fighters then started ramming a section of this wall. Some of them were trying to smash other parts of the border wall, al-Dahduh reported.
They quickly discovered it works better when you have a bulldozer...
Another group of Brigades fighters closed the road leading to and from the Rafah terminal's outer gate, blocking traffic in the area. The fighters also planted explosives and placed mortar shells at the entrance of the crossing. Watching the operation was a large crowd of Palestinians, but Palestinian Authority security official personnel were conspicuous by their absence.
"Chief! Chief! There's a riot at Rafah Crossing!"
"Ummm... I got an appointment for a manicure..."
"Me, too!"
Hours earlier, Aljazeera's correspondent reported that gunnies fighters had blocked access to the Gaza-Egypt border and prevented travellers from reaching the crossing point. An estimated 40 masked snuffies fighters from the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades also stormed the headquarters of the Palestinian legislative council and the electoral central committee in Rafah.
"Youse can't come in here! We're makin' laws!"
"What're those?"
"Kinda like sausage. I think."
Before that, the armed group stormed the headquarters of the Interior Ministry in the city in protest against the arrest of their colleague by Palestinian security forces on Tuesday over suspected involvement in the abduction of three Britons last week. On Tuesday, Palestinian intelligence arrested Alaa al-Hams on suspicion he and his followers kidnapped human-rights activist Kate Burton and her parents for two days last week.
"Stick 'em up, Alaa! We suspect you kidnapped the crazy Brit lady!"
"Piss off, coppers!"
"Are those her underwear?"
"No! They're mine!"
The Burtons were among 19 foreigners abducted by Fatah fighters in Gaza in recent months. All have been freed unharmed.
But the al-Aqsa Martyrs did look very fearsome and got some of them on film for their folks to admire...
On Wednesday morning, some of the armed men took over the central election office in Rafah, the local branch of the Palestinian parliament, a local court and another government building. A truckload of armed men then drove to the nearby Rafah border crossing, Gaza's main gate to the world. Having gun sex Firing in the air, they closed the entrance gate to the crossing compound and told waiting travellers to leave the area.
"Beat it, youse travellers! We're in charge here and you're not! 'Cuz we got guns!"
One of the fighters, who gave his name as Ahmed, said the group was demanding al-Hams' release.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
'I feel like I've been stabbed in the back. I was here to help'
2006-01-03
Postcards from the road to hell...
THE British aid worker kidnapped and held for three days with her parents in Gaza, had a blazing row with her captors shortly before the family was released in a back street in the dead of night, she told The Times yesterday.
"Arseholes!"
"Bitch!"
As the two Palestinian gunmen who had abducted Kate Burton and her parents, Hugh, 73, and Win, 55, prepared to video their captives as a condition of their release, she burst into a tear-filled rage demanding they be set free. “The kidnappers were getting nervous and angry and started shouting at me,” she said. “They told me I was being disrespectful, despite all the food and blankets they’d given us. I got really mad. I screamed at him, ‘Do you want me to get down on my knees and say thank you, thank you?’
Probably. They're Paleostinians, y'know...
“I was exhausted and started blubbering crying and crying. I told them, ‘I came to work with these people and I feel like I’ve been stabbed in the back’.”
Whoa! That's never happened before, has it?
Her comments came in the first comprehensive interview she has given since spending 58 hours as a captive. After a further debriefing with British intelligence officers, Ms Burton, an Arabic speaker who had been working with a Gaza human rights group, described how her outburst had briefly delayed their freedom as the kidnappers did not want her to look bad in the video. Ms Burton, 24, continued to show mixed feelings for her captors, who had treated the hostages well and even proudly shared pictures of their own children.
"Yup. That's my boy, Mahmoud!"
"He looks like a dynamite kid!"
"Yup. He was."
“I can’t forgive them for what they did to me, but I think they will keep doing it in future. I feel sorry for these guys. Their lives are completely shattered. They’ve no freedom of movement; no family life. They can’t stay at home because they’re wanted by the Israelis and the Palestinian Authority.”
"Thre's no way they can control their violent instincts."
She described how the kidnappers, with whom she had long ideological discussions, pounced after tailing the family for an hour after they left a Gaza refugee camp on Wednesday. “It was very surreal,” she said. “It’s like you’re in a dream and you can’t quite believe this is going on. I felt embarrassed because I knew the risks and still took the chance. Perhaps it’s a feeling of shame, too. And guilt. Lots of things.
I always hate it when I prove I'm a dumbass, too.
“From the start they were saying, ‘Please don’t be frightened. Tell your parents not to worry.’ They kept saying we’d be freed in a few hours. But after a while we didn’t believe the guy because he said so many things.” The kidnappers soon tired of holding the family and simply wanted to be rid of them.
I guess "The Ransom of Red Chief" hasn't been translated into Arabic, huh?
Nonetheless, the hostage drama also generated moments of farce. After two days Mrs Burton demanded to wash her underwear and passed the wet garments to one of the gunmen to hang up to dry. “My mother went to wash her knickers and then brought them back to one of the guys just to embarrass him a little bit,” she said. “She asked him to hang them up on the line. He blushed a bit and put them up.”
Touched a woman's bloomers, did they? And an infidel's, to boot. They'll have to be killed, y'know...
Ms Burton expressed her own guilt at having taken her parents to Gaza, despite Foreign Office travel advice not to make such a visit. “I feel really, really guilty,” she said.
That's probably because you are, dumbass.
“I feel irresponsible. I’m the one who lives there and should have known better. I wanted them to see it was safe and feel a bit calmer about where I lived. But I’ve given them their worst Christmas and their worst holiday ever."
Gave 'em a pretty good taste of the calm and safety level of your neck of the woods, too...
“They were curious and they’d been aware of the risks. That’s why we’d kept it to a day at the end. But the last thing they said was, ‘We’re never coming back’.”
See? They're not crazy in the least.
However, Ms Burton, who also speaks Hebrew and worked on a kibbutz, plans to stay in the region and hopes to go on working for the Palestinian people. But she does not plan to return to Gaza.
"I'll see if I can manage to get kidnapped on the West Bank next..."
“I’m concerned about my own personal security,” she said. “I don’t know if my life would be at risk. I want to stay working with the Palestinian people. I think I couldn’t be anywhere else. I’d feel guilty if I turned my back on them.”
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Three British hostages freed in Gaza
2006-01-01
A 25-year-old British human rights worker and her parents have been freed in the Gaza Strip by the Palestinian gunmen who kidnapped them two days earlier. A previously unknown group calling itself Brigades of the Mujahideen-Jerusalem said it seized Kate Burton, her father Hugh and mother Helen to demand British and European pressure on Israel, and freed them as a gesture of goodwill.
Wasn't kidnapping them kinda the antithesis of good will?
The Burtons passed through Gaza City briefly before being whisked away towards Israel in diplomatic cars with darkened windows. "They are well and in good spirits. They are currently with officials from our Consulate General in Jerusalem," said a statement from the British Foreign Office. "She was not hurt, her parents were okay and she plans to visit Gaza next week," said Adnan Hajjar, a colleague of Burton's. "Kate said she was sorry that she could not make it to the hotel to greet everybody."
Afraid she was gonna take another trip in somebody's trunk?
In a video released to media, a masked gunman read out a message standing next to Kate Burton, who appeared with her hands behind her back. "We have decided to pardon the three Britons as a gesture of goodwill in return for a seriousness in answering our demands," the gunman said.
Somebody gave them money, I guess...
The political demands and Islamist tone of the captors were a marked departure from previous kidnappings in the Gaza Strip, whose perpetrators tended to be seeking jobs or the release of prisoners, and set free their hostages within hours. The fact the kidnappers made no contact for two days had raised concerns for the Britons' safety.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Three British hostages in Gaza freed
2005-12-31
GAZA CITY - A British humanitarian aid worker and her parents held hostage for two days were safely under consular protection in Israel early Saturday after being freed unharmed by their captors in the Gaza Strip, officials said.

A previously unknown group claimed responsibility for the kidnapping of Kate Burton and her parents Hugh and Helen, shortly after their release late Friday. The group, calling itself the Mujahadeen Bayt Al-Maqdes Brigades released a video showing a masked gunman reading a statement, with Burton, 24, standing silently next to him with her hands behind her back.
Another day, another name change.
“We have decided to pardon the three Britons as a gesture of goodwill in return for a seriousness in answering our demands,” the unidentified man said.

The Foreign Office in London confirmed early Saturday that the three Britons, taken hostage on Wednesday, had been released unharmed. In a statement, the Foreign Office said the Burtons were “well and in good spirits”. “We are pleased to confirm that Kate, Win (Helen) and Hugh Burton have been released unharmed. They are currently with officials in our consulate general in Jerusalem who are providing them with all necessary help and care,” it said.

“We condemn all kidnappings which can never be a legitimate means of achieving any objective.
Sure. Who are you releasing?
“Since we first heard of the Burtons’ abduction, the British government has worked closely with the Palestinian Authority and others. We would like to express our thanks and appreciation to all those who helped secure the release of the Burtons.”
Sure. Who are you releasing?
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
More details on the Gaza kidnap of UK activist & family
2005-12-29
British officials confirmed that the 24-year-old woman worked in Gaza for the Al Mezan Centre for Human Rights in Gaza City, which has criticised recent kidnappings of foreign nationals in the Palestinian territory.
I did a little looking at the Al-Mezan Center. Their name keeps coming up as the documenters of the Jenin 'massacre'.
Staff there named her as Kate Burton, the group's co-ordinator for international affairs, who began work for the centre when she arrived from Britain four months ago. Residents said Ms Burton had been showing her parents around town when they were seized by gunmen who approached their car at 4pm.
"... and over here, Mum, is the lovely tribute to Yasser -- HEY! Get your hands off of me! Hey! Stop that! Mum! Someone! Call the police! oh these are the police ..."
They were said to have been bundled into a white Mercedes security vehicle by the kidnappers who sped off northwards pursued by a security vehicle which provided cover. The car escaped and there was no immediate claim of responsibility.
"Wudn't us."
The co-ordinator of Al Mezan in Gaza City, Samir Zakout, said: "She knows the security situation in Gaza. It's strange she went alone [without Palestinian acccompaniment]. I think her parents arrived yesterday. They may have gone to Rafah to see demolished houses."
Hey Ma! Let's go look at some rubble!
Another Al Mezan spokesman said she had taken time off since Thursday to be with her parents: "Her parents were visiting her. She was taking them around to show them the area. We heard there had been a young person kidnapped and two older people with her. From the description it seems the one kidnapped is our employee. We are trying to communicate with police and the political parties, but we don't have any clear information about what's going on. We are trying to call her on her mobile but it's closed.
"We're sorry. The number you are calling has been abducted!"
"We are searching all the areas to find her and have her safe. You try to protect everybody here but sometimes you cannot control everything."
"In fact, in Gaza you cannot control anything."
Recent kidnappings of foreigners in Gaza have ended with hostages being released unharmed. In most cases, the kidnappers sought to pass the Paleo civil service exam jobs in the Palestinian security forces, the release of jailed relatives, or resolution of personal matters. But the kidnapping is another embarrassment for Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas.
Poor Mahmoud's lost track of his many embarrassments by now...
Is this an embarrassment or an accomplishment?
His critics have accused him of giving in to kidnappers' demands, and so encouraging more abductions. Gaza has seen a rash of kidnappings since Israel quit the coastal territory in September after 38 years of occupation, a move welcomed internationally as a potential spur to peace but which left the Palestinian Authority struggling for control.
Actually, it demonstrated that they're no more capable of governing anything than they are of sprouting wings and flying to Hoboken...
Recent kidnappings of foreigners have tended to end with the hostages freed within hours, usually for a ransom.
I'll bet there are guys sitting around in the hills of Yemen, scratching their turbans and saying "Damn! Those guys are primitive!"
The Foreign Office confirmed there had been a kidnapping but gave no details or hostages' identities. A spokesman said: "We confirm reports of three Britons missing in the Occupied Territories. At this stage we have no further details."
"We know nothing! No-thing! Tell them, Hogan!"
Palestinian security spokesman Adnan Barbach confirmed that the three were British. John Strawson, a reader in law at Birzeit University in the West Bank and a Middle East expert, said it was likely the trio would be released unharmed. "Unlike in Iraq, kidnappings are not so much aimed at the foreigners themselves as at embarrassing the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas and trying to show he has no control over the Gaza Strip," he said. "The main aim is just to demonstrate that no-one is safe. I suspect they will be released unharmed - it will be a big change to the situation if anything happened to them."
Well, it's not like the Euros would do anything about it.
Five days ago the Foreign Office tightened its travel advice against visits to the Gaza Strip after the kidnap of two westerners by gunmen. British nationals are "strongly advised" against all travel to the Gaza Strip. Earlier this month the Al Mezan Centre condemned the kidnapping of the principal of Gaza's American School and his assistant. In a statement the group said it considered the kidnapping of foreigners "a continuation of the state of insecurity and disrespect of the rule of the law" and said it reconfirmed its "condemnation of such incidents".
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