Peace, Earth & Justice News - PEJ News
 PEJ News Home - Peace | Earth | Justice | Events | Blogs - Feb 09, 2010 @ 06:14 AM - International | USA | Canada | BC | Victoria | Vancouver    
Main Menu
· About PEJ News
· PEJ Radio
· PEJ Video
· Archives to 1996
· World Chat
· Contact-Volunteer
· Donate-Advertise
· Email Subscribe
· Fair Use Notice
· Feeds: RSS XML
· Links for PEJ
· Recommend Us
· Search Advanced
· Second Life
· Statistics PEJ.org
· Top Stories - Index
Great Sites
Currently Online
There are 221 guests and 1 member on PEJ.org right now.

Welcome Guest. Sign in to submit news or comment.

Login
 Username
 Password
 Remember me


 Log in Problems?
 New User? Sign Up!
Top PEJ Headlines
EU Commission must end forcing biodiesel from palm oil on EU countries.
NATO operation Moshtarak .... Orwell is ever present in Afghanistan ---Peace is war.
Rest in Peace, Freya Milne
Tomgram: Pratap Chatterjee, Destabilizing Pakistan
Dick Cheney’s message has been received: Saudi Arabia and Israel prepare for Nuclear War while Iran tries to broker peace
Protest tht Olympic Torch as it Parades through Vancouver's City Streets.
The Brothel Project Review
What An Attack on Iran Really Means: Gwynne Dyer’s Secret
Muslim-American political cartoonist weighs in on Danish caricatures controversy
The wrong message is communicated through the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver
Peace, Earth and Justice TV - PEJ Television
VANOC (Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic) Evicted from Office in Victoria
Paying for the Crime: Poison Legacy in Vietnam
More Info on Gordo's Dreadful Bill 30
Animal tests: A choice we can’t live with
Hey! Here's a Job For You!
Time to Donate to PEJ News or Advertise?
PEJ Radio News - Free
Tories to hire "green" adviser: let's all apply
Scientists create cells that can harness sun's rays
Is there a way to wash the pesticides off fruits and vegetables before we eat them?
Torture Never Stopped Under Obama
Climate Change/ Quebec continues to shame Ottawa: Canada has become an International Pariah
Stop carping: Fish farms are the real problem
How Did an Idealistic President Become a Champion of Nuclear Power and By Default, Weapons Proliferation?
Is Contempt of Parliament and Parliamentary Committees “sufficient cause” for suspending, removing or jailing Harper and impugned ministers?
The Purposes of Prometheus Institute
Foreign News Channels Drawing U.S Viewers
Who's Who - Contact Peace, Earth & Justice News Volunteers
The Coming U.S. Budget Attack
Links for Peace, Earth & Justice
Harper, and his regressive policies on climate change, are even out of sync with the World Economic Forum
Climate Action Network undermines strong resolve of developing states
Spanish judge to probe Guantanamo Torture claims
Saving the planet one meal at a time
A Complementary Solution for Production of Medical Isotope
Obama Provokes War Against China and Iran
Mining our own business: Canada’s secret war
Have a Koch and a Smile
Bolivia says: The Copenhagen accord will cause the temperature to rise to between 3º and 4º C
PEJ News Feeds - RSS, Atom, XML and AvantGo for PDA
Tories stand pat on Omar Khadr
Do Harper’s Christian Evangelical beliefs explain his unconditional support on Israel?
Is Canada Guilty of Climate Negligence?
Parents Beware: Hermit Crabs Make Bad Pets
Dolphins in tanks: Cruel confinement
US interpretation of Article 13 of UN Security Council Resolution 1441 may have influenced Goldsmith
About the Peace, Earth & Justice News
Terrorism Soft and Hard, Big and Small
Blair’s interrogation before Chilcot Inquiry into the Iraq war: no matter what Blair says; the invasion was an illegal act
 
spacer.gif
spacer.gif   Unity in Lebanon the "Only Resistance"
Posted by: lex on http://PEJ.org Monday, July 24, 2006 - 11:08 PM
3064 Reads
  spacer.gif
 
Justice News
Unity in Lebanon the "Only Resistance"

The Indepedent
- Robert Fisk -  They are in the schools, in empty hospitals, in halls and mosques and in the streets. The Shia Muslim refugees of southern Lebanon, driven from their homes by the Israelis, are arriving in Sidon by the thousand, cared for by Sunni Muslims and then sent north to join the 600,000 displaced Lebanese in Beirut. More than 34,000 have passed through here in the past four days alone, a tide of misery and anger. It will take years to heal their wounds, and billions of dollars to repair their damaged property.

http://news.independent.co.uk.


Robert Fisk: A war crime?

Robert Fisk 

The Independent
July 24, 2006 
[Republished at PEJ News without express author permission.]


This mother and son were in a convoy fleeing danger yesterday
when the Israeli air force bombed the rear minibus, causing carnage.



And who can blame them for their flight? For the second time in eight days, the Israelis committed a war crime yesterday. They ordered the villagers of Taire, near the border, to leave their homes and then - as their convoy of cars and minibuses obediently trailed northwards - the Israeli air force fired a missile into the rear minibus, killing three refugees and seriously wounding 13 other civilians. The rocket that killed them is believed to have been a Hellfire missile made by Lockheed Martin in Florida.

Nine days ago, the Israeli army ordered the inhabitants of a neighbouring village, Marwaheen, to leave their homes and then fired rockets into one of their evacuation trucks, blasting the women and children inside to their deaths. And this is the same Israeli air force which was praised last week by one of Israel's greatest defenders - Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz - because it "takes extraordinary steps to minimise civilian casualties".

Nor have the Israelis spared Sidon. A heap of rubble and pancaked walls is all that is left of the Fatima Zahra mosque, a Hizbollah institution in the centre of the city, its minaret crumbled and its dome now sitting on the concrete, a black flag still flying from its top. When Israeli warplanes came early yesterday morning, the 75-year-old caretaker had no time to run from the building; he died of his wounds hours later. His overturned white plastic chair still lies by the gate. The mosque is unlikely to have been used for military purposes; a school belonging to the Hariris, Sidon's all-powerful Sunni family, stands next door; they would never have allowed weapons into the building.

Not that Hizbollah - which killed two more Israeli civilians with their rockets in Haifa yesterday - have respected Sidon, whose population is 95 per cent Sunni. They tried to fire Iranian-made missiles at Israel from the seafront Corniche and from beside the city slaughterhouse last week. On both occasions, residents physically prevented them from opening fire.

The multimillion-dollar Hariri Foundation - created by the former prime minister, Rafik Hariri, who was assassinated last year - has helped 24,000 Shia refugees out of the south and on to Beirut but its generosity has not always been happily received. One group of refugees sheltering in a technical school in Meheniyeh punched and taunted Hariri workers. Elsewhere, the foundation's staff have been cursed by fleeing families. "They are telling us that we are working for the Americans and that this is why we are taking them out," said Ghena Hariri - Rafik's niece and a Georgetown graduate. "It is something that drains our energy. We are working 24 hours a day and at the end of the day they curse us. But I feel so sorry for them. Now they are being told by the Israelis to leave their villages on foot and they have to walk dozens of kilometres in this heat."

It's not difficult to see how this war can damage the delicate sectarian framework that exists in Lebanon. One group of Shia families - housed in a school in the Druze mountains of the Chouf - tried to put Hizbollah's yellow banners on the roof and members of Walid Jumblatt's Druze Popular Socialist Party had to tear them down. Their act may have saved the refugees' lives.

Yet many of the Shia in this beautiful Crusader port have learnt how kind their Sunni neighbours can be. "We are here - where else can we go?" Nazek Kadnah asked as she sat in the corner of a mosque which Rafik Hariri built and dedicated to his father, Haj Baha'udin Hariri. "But they look after us here as their brothers and sisters and now we are safe."

These sentiments provoke some dark questions. Why, for example, can't these poor people be shown the same compassion from Tony Blair as he supposedly felt for the Muslims of Kosovo when they were being driven from their homes by the Serbs? These thousands are as terrified and homeless as the Kosovo Albanians who fled to Macedonia in 1998 and for whom Mr Blair claimed he was waging a moral war. But for the Shia Muslims sleeping homeless in Sidon there is to be no such moral posturing - and no ceasefire suggestions from Mr Blair, who has aligned himself with the Israelis and the Americans.

And what exactly is the purpose of driving more than half a million people from their homes? Many of these poor people sit clutching their front-door keys, just as the Palestinians of Galilee did when they arrived in Lebanon 58 years ago to spend the rest of their lives as refugees. Yes, the Shia Muslims of Lebanon probably will go home. But to what? A war between the Hizbollah and a Western intervention force? Or further bombardment by the Israelis?

The Sidon refugees now have 36 schools in which they can shelter - but they are the lucky ones. Across southern Lebanon, the innocent continued to die. One was an eight-year-old boy who was killed in an Israeli air raid on a village close to Tyre. Eight more civilians were wounded when an Israeli missile hit a vehicle outside the Najem hospital in Tyre. And during the morning, one of Lebanon's journalists, Layal Nejib, a photographer for the magazine Al-Jaras whose pictures were also transmitted by Agence France Press, was killed in her taxi by an Israeli air strike near Qana, the same village in which 106 civilians were massacred in a UN base by Israeli artillery shells in 1996. She was only 23.

In her marble-walled home above Sidon, Bahia Hariri - Ghena's mother, the sister of the murdered former prime minister and a local member of parliament - sat grim-faced, scarcely controlling her fury. "We are in this terrible situation but we haven't any window to resolve this situation," she said. "Rafik Hariri is no longer with us. The international community is not with us. Who is with us? God. And the old Lebanese. And the Arab world, we hope, will help us. The only resistance we can show is to be a united Lebanon. But we have only a small margin in which to dream."

They are in the schools, in empty hospitals, in halls and mosques and in the streets. The Shia Muslim refugees of southern Lebanon, driven from their homes by the Israelis, are arriving in Sidon by the thousand, cared for by Sunni Muslims and then sent north to join the 600,000 displaced Lebanese in Beirut. More than 34,000 have passed through here in the past four days alone, a tide of misery and anger. It will take years to heal their wounds, and billions of dollars to repair their damaged property.
And who can blame them for their flight? For the second time in eight days, the Israelis committed a war crime yesterday. They ordered the villagers of Taire, near the border, to leave their homes and then - as their convoy of cars and minibuses obediently trailed northwards - the Israeli air force fired a missile into the rear minibus, killing three refugees and seriously wounding 13 other civilians. The rocket that killed them is believed to have been a Hellfire missile made by Lockheed Martin in Florida.

Nine days ago, the Israeli army ordered the inhabitants of a neighbouring village, Marwaheen, to leave their homes and then fired rockets into one of their evacuation trucks, blasting the women and children inside to their deaths. And this is the same Israeli air force which was praised last week by one of Israel's greatest defenders - Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz - because it "takes extraordinary steps to minimise civilian casualties".

Nor have the Israelis spared Sidon. A heap of rubble and pancaked walls is all that is left of the Fatima Zahra mosque, a Hizbollah institution in the centre of the city, its minaret crumbled and its dome now sitting on the concrete, a black flag still flying from its top. When Israeli warplanes came early yesterday morning, the 75-year-old caretaker had no time to run from the building; he died of his wounds hours later. His overturned white plastic chair still lies by the gate. The mosque is unlikely to have been used for military purposes; a school belonging to the Hariris, Sidon's all-powerful Sunni family, stands next door; they would never have allowed weapons into the building.

Not that Hizbollah - which killed two more Israeli civilians with their rockets in Haifa yesterday - have respected Sidon, whose population is 95 per cent Sunni. They tried to fire Iranian-made missiles at Israel from the seafront Corniche and from beside the city slaughterhouse last week. On both occasions, residents physically prevented them from opening fire.

The multimillion-dollar Hariri Foundation - created by the former prime minister, Rafik Hariri, who was assassinated last year - has helped 24,000 Shia refugees out of the south and on to Beirut but its generosity has not always been happily received. One group of refugees sheltering in a technical school in Meheniyeh punched and taunted Hariri workers. Elsewhere, the foundation's staff have been cursed by fleeing families. "They are telling us that we are working for the Americans and that this is why we are taking them out," said Ghena Hariri - Rafik's niece and a Georgetown graduate. "It is something that drains our energy. We are working 24 hours a day and at the end of the day they curse us. But I feel so sorry for them. Now they are being told by the Israelis to leave their villages on foot and they have to walk dozens of kilometres in this heat."

It's not difficult to see how this war can damage the delicate sectarian framework that exists in Lebanon. One group of Shia families - housed in a school in the Druze mountains of the Chouf - tried to put Hizbollah's yellow banners on the roof and members of Walid Jumblatt's Druze Popular Socialist Party had to tear them down. Their act may have saved the refugees' lives.
Yet many of the Shia in this beautiful Crusader port have learnt how kind their Sunni neighbours can be. "We are here - where else can we go?" Nazek Kadnah asked as she sat in the corner of a mosque which Rafik Hariri built and dedicated to his father, Haj Baha'udin Hariri. "But they look after us here as their brothers and sisters and now we are safe."

These sentiments provoke some dark questions. Why, for example, can't these poor people be shown the same compassion from Tony Blair as he supposedly felt for the Muslims of Kosovo when they were being driven from their homes by the Serbs? These thousands are as terrified and homeless as the Kosovo Albanians who fled to Macedonia in 1998 and for whom Mr Blair claimed he was waging a moral war. But for the Shia Muslims sleeping homeless in Sidon there is to be no such moral posturing - and no ceasefire suggestions from Mr Blair, who has aligned himself with the Israelis and the Americans.

And what exactly is the purpose of driving more than half a million people from their homes? Many of these poor people sit clutching their front-door keys, just as the Palestinians of Galilee did when they arrived in Lebanon 58 years ago to spend the rest of their lives as refugees. Yes, the Shia Muslims of Lebanon probably will go home. But to what? A war between the Hizbollah and a Western intervention force? Or further bombardment by the Israelis?

The Sidon refugees now have 36 schools in which they can shelter - but they are the lucky ones. Across southern Lebanon, the innocent continued to die. One was an eight-year-old boy who was killed in an Israeli air raid on a village close to Tyre. Eight more civilians were wounded when an Israeli missile hit a vehicle outside the Najem hospital in Tyre. And during the morning, one of Lebanon's journalists, Layal Nejib, a photographer for the magazine Al-Jaras whose pictures were also transmitted by Agence France Press, was killed in her taxi by an Israeli air strike near Qana, the same village in which 106 civilians were massacred in a UN base by Israeli artillery shells in 1996. She was only 23.

In her marble-walled home above Sidon, Bahia Hariri - Ghena's mother, the sister of the murdered former prime minister and a local member of parliament - sat grim-faced, scarcely controlling her fury. "We are in this terrible situation but we haven't any window to resolve this situation," she said. "Rafik Hariri is no longer with us. The international community is not with us. Who is with us? God. And the old Lebanese. And the Arab world, we hope, will help us. The only resistance we can show is to be a united Lebanon. But we have only a small margin in which to dream."

? 2006 Independent News and Media Limited


Stay informed.Subscribe and get the best of PEJ News by email. Free.

Prometheus Institute does not endorse any article or comment that is published on PEJ.org. The opinions expressed in all articles and comments are those of the authors and not of Prometheus Institute or the Peace, Earth & Justice News.


 
spacer.gif
spacer.gif spacer.gif spacer.gif spacer.gif
Search PEJ.org
 

Peace, Earth & Justice News - PEJ News

Over 500,000
Pages Viewed
Every Month

Advertise
Support PEJ News

Prometheus Institute

PEJ.org   info@pej.ca
Box 8307
Victoria BC
V8W 3R9 Canada
Past Articles
Friday, February 05
·Chevron Facing Free Speech Problems In U.S. Over Defense of $27 Billion Ecuador Lawsuit 
Thursday, February 04
·China's Slave Wages For U.S. Workers 
·Do Harper’s Christian Evangelical beliefs explain his unconditional support on Israel? 
·European Firms See Windfall in Renewable Energy 
Wednesday, February 03
·Hyper-militarisation of development assistance to Haiti. 
·How Did an Idealistic President Become a Champion of Nuclear Power and By Default, Weapons Proliferation? 
·Climate Change/ Quebec continues to shame Ottawa: Canada has become an International Pariah 
·Tories stand pat on Omar Khadr 
·Is Canada Guilty of Climate Negligence? 
·Rest in Peace, Freya Milne 
Tuesday, February 02
·Obama Provokes War Against China and Iran 
·The Drone Surge: Today, Tomorrow, and 2047 
·Spanish judge to probe Guantanamo Torture claims 
Monday, February 01
·A Global Push for Clean Energy: The International Renewable Energy A Global Push for Clean Energy: The International Renewable Energy 
·Campaign to confront corporate divine right to rule 
·Foreign News Channels Drawing U.S Viewers 
Sunday, January 31
· A Complementary Solution for Production of Medical Isotope 
·Dolphins in tanks: Cruel confinement 
Saturday, January 30
·Climate Action Network undermines strong resolve of developing states 
·Harper, and his regressive policies on climate change, are even out of sync with the World Economic Forum 
·Local Leaders Shut Out of Military-Run Relief Efforts in Haiti 
Friday, January 29
·Pacific Islanders & climate change: leading the fight, feeling the heat 
·Blair’s interrogation before Chilcot Inquiry into the Iraq war: no matter what Blair says; the invasion was an illegal act 
Thursday, January 28
·Sued by the forest: Should nature be able to take you to court? 
·Vandenberg Missile Test: "Dangerous, Destabilizing and Provocative". 
·Public not Private Procurement for Sewage treatment in the Capital Region District Victoria B.C. 
·US interpretation of Article 13 of UN Security Council Resolution 1441 may have influenced Goldsmith 
Wednesday, January 27
·2010 World Economic Forum in Davos – Harper the “New Human Welfare Czar” ? 
·January 27 2010 Obama’s State of the Union Address; Change is not to do things the way they were done before 
·No more new licenses or expansion for BC fish farms 
Tuesday, January 26
·Torture Never Stopped Under Obama 
·January 21, 2010 Supreme Court decision on corporate “rights” also ignores international consequences 
·Forsey offers "Prorogation Questions & Answers" 
·Uvic Exhibit And Film Events Jan 26, 2010 
Monday, January 25
·World Social Forum 2010 | Urgent Need to Revisit Article 6 of World Social Forum Charter 
·Parliament Locked; Opposition Parties are ready for work: Parliament must be Summoned. 
·Grassroots Communities Mining Mini-Grant Program 
Saturday, January 23
·Canadians Against Proroguing Parliament (CAPP) Rallies across Canada: We’re not Going to take This Any more 
·Supreme Court Corporation Madness 
·Governments Are Corrupting Climate Data 
Friday, January 22
·End Prorogue of Canada's Federal Parliament 
·Happy anniversary of Roe v. Wade! January 22 
·Nuclear ‘Renaissance’ or ‘Retreat’? France is not the Example 
·No Island Light Rail 
·Left Coast Events - Jan 2010 
Thursday, January 21
·Change war resister rules, MP urges 
·US Department of Defense “Clarifies” Doctrine on Psychological Operations 
Wednesday, January 20
·A Mockery of Justice: Conservatives should be prosecuted not rewarded for their violation of the Elections Act. 
· Mining our own business: Canada’s secret war 
Related links
· More about Justice News
· News by lex


Most read story in Justice News:
Crack'd Media: Hate Hysteria Sign of the Times

Stories, Features, Opinion and Analysis :: Peace, Earth & Justice News   

PEJ News-- This free service serves up daily news, opinion and analysis of peace, environment and justice issues. Stay informed with web and email stories often days, weeks and months ahead of the mainstream media. Peace, Earth & Justice News is produced entirely by volunteers and is a project of the non-profit Prometheus Institute based in Victoria, Canada.

PEJ.org-- is a project of Prometheus Institute.  Prometheus Institute does not endorse any article or comment that is published on PEJ.org. The opinions expressed in all articles and comments are those of the authors and not of Prometheus Institute or the Peace, Earth & Justice News 

PEJ.org  - Founder Al Rycroft
Who's Who Volunteers
Webmaster: freshchange[at]gmail.com

 PEJ News Home -- Peace News | Environment News | Justice News | PEJ Calendar of Events | PEJ Blogs -- World News | US News | Canadian News | British Columbian - BC News | Victoria and Island News | Vancouver and Lower Mainland News

About PEJ.org | My AccountPEJ News Archives | AvantGo Feed - Atom Feed | Banner and Link Ads AvailableChat Around the World | Contact our Volunteers | Copyright Information | Donations Online | Email Subscriptions or New SubscriberFair Dealing and Fair Use Notice | Index of all News | Login Sign InLogout Logoff |  PEJ Links | Public Domain | Recommend Us To A Friend | Register New UserRSS Feed | Search Advanced | Submit News Must First Login or Register | Subscriptions by Email or New SubscriberTraffic Stats | Volunteer with PEJ | XML Feed