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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, October 3, 2016
President Obama: ‘Patron’ of the Israeli Occupation
Hundreds of Israeli officials, intellectuals and artists signed an open letter to Jews worldwide to oppose the occupation. The 470 signatories, including high-ranking officers of the Israel Defense Forces, ambassadors, ministers, high government officials and members of the Knesset, wrote: “The prolonged occupation is inherently oppressive for Palestinians and fuels mutual bloodshed. It undermines the moral and democratic fabric of the state of Israel and hurts its standing in the community of nations.”
( October 1, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) President
Barack Obama has agreed to give Israel a record $38 billion in military
aid over the next 10 years, cementing his legacy as the strongest
financial supporter of Israel ever to occupy the White House. Obama,
whom Israeli journalist Gideon Levy calls “the patron of the
occupation,” increased the amount of money the U.S. provides Israel each
year from $3.1 to $3.8 billion.
Although the corporate media portray the relationship between Obama and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as chilly, Obama put his money
where his heart apparently is with the unprecedented allocation of
military assistance to Israel.
Netanyahu, who described the increase in U.S. monetary aid as “unprecedented” and “historic,”
characterized it as “the greatest accomplishment since sliced bread,”
according to Aaron David Miller, vice president of the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars. “The bond between the United States
and Israel is unbreakable,” Obama declared on Sept. 21 as he shook hands
on the deal with Netanyahu.
The annual $3.8 billion, more money than the U.S. gives to any other
country, will fund the continuing Israeli military occupation of
Palestinian lands, now in its fifth decade.
Israel exercises complete control over every aspect of Palestinian life
in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza. That includes borders,
airspace, ingress and egress of people and goods, and the seashore and
waters off the coast of Gaza. The occupation violates fundamental human
rights of the Palestinians.
Two years ago, 60 Israeli youths signed an open letter to Netanyahu
announcing their refusal to serve in the Israeli military because of the
dehumanization of Palestinians living under occupation. In the occupied
Palestinian territories, they wrote, “human rights are violated, and
acts defined under international law as war-crimes are perpetuated on a
daily basis.” The signatories cited “assassinations (extrajudicial
killings), the construction of settlements on occupied lands,
administrative detentions, torture, collective punishment and the
unequal allocation of resources such as electricity and water.”
Flavia Pansieri, former United Nations deputy high commissioner for
human rights,said last yearthat human rights violations “fuel and shape
the conflict” in the occupied Palestinian territories, adding, “[h]uman
rights violations in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are both
cause and consequence of the military occupation and ongoing violence,
in a bitter cyclical process with wider implications for peace and
security in the region.”
Israel took over the West Bank and East Jerusalem by military force in
1967 and has held it under military occupation ever since. U.N. Security
Council Resolution 242, passed in 1967, refers to “the inadmissibility
of the acquisition of territory by war” and calls for “withdrawal of
Israel armed forces from territories occupied in the recent conflict.”
Yet Israel continues to occupy the Palestinian territories it acquired
in the Six-Day War between Israel and nearby Arab countries that year.
Since 1967, Israel has transferred more than half a million of its own
citizens into the Palestinian territories. It persists in building
Jewish settlements in the West Bank, which is occupied Palestinian
territory.
But a state that is occupying territory that is not its own cannot build
settlements on that territory and transfer its own citizens into them.
Under Article 8.2(b)(viii) of the International Criminal Court’s Rome
Statute, such action constitutes a war crime.
In criticizing Israel’s building of Jewish settlements on Palestinian
lands, Secretary of State John Kerry said that since Obama was
inaugurated in 2009, the number of Israelis in the West Bank and East
Jerusalem has grown by 95,000, including 15,000 during the past year
alone. Israel plans to build 2,400 new housing units in the settlements
as it demolishes more and more Palestinian homes.
Kerry’s criticism rings hollow as the Obama administration consistently
uses its veto in the Security Council to block the Palestinians’
campaign to block illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Obama is
reportedly considering a council resolution to set the parameters for
an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement, although the powerful pro-Israel
lobby opposes such a move.
As this article is being written, the Women’s Boat to Gaza, with 13
women aboard, is sailing to Gaza to protest Israel’s blockade of what is
often called the world’s largest “open-air prison.” In Gaza, 1.8
million people live on a 140-square-mile strip of land. It is one of the
most densely populated areas in the world. Gazans cannot enter or leave
without Israeli permission. They cannot import or export goods without
Israeli permission. They cannot fish in their own waters without Israeli
permission.
In July 2014, Israel invaded Gaza and killed 2,251 Palestinians, the
majority of them civilians. The number of Palestinians wounded was
11,231, including 3,540 women and 3,436 children. On the Israeli side,
six civilians and 67 soldiers were killed and 1,600 were injured. Tens
of thousands of Palestinians lost their homes, and the infrastructure
was severely damaged. Numerous schools, U.N.-sanctioned places of
refuge, hospitals, ambulances and mosques were intentionally targeted by
Israel.
Israel used the “Dahiya doctrine” to apply “disproportionate force” and
cause “great damage and destruction to civilian property and
infrastructure, and suffering to civilian populations,” as defined in
the 2009 U.N. Human Rights Council (Goldstone) report. These acts
constitute evidence of war crimes under Article 8 (2)(a) of the Rome
Statute.
U.S. political leaders and the corporate media portray a false
equivalence of firepower between Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza. But
Israel’s use of force greatly exceeds that of the Palestinians.
The White House and Congress condemn the rocket fire into Israel by
Hamas and the “deliberate targeting of civilians.” But Washington says
Israel has a right to defend itself, justifying Israel’s bombing
campaign in Gaza and blaming Hamas, while minimizing Israel’s role in
creating and escalating the violence.
Israel’s overwhelming use of military force constitutes collective
punishment, which is a war crime. The laws of war, also known as
international humanitarian law, are primarily found in the Geneva
Conventions. Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, to which Israel
is a party, specifically forbids collective punishment. It says, “No
protected person [civilian] may be punished for an offense he or she has
not personally committed. … Reprisals against protected persons and
their property are prohibited.”
The U.N. secretary-general characterized Israel’s blockade of Gaza as “a
continuing collective penalty against the population of Gaza.”
“Israel is able to act with utter impunity because of the military,
economic and political support it receives from governments around the
world,” according to Zaid Shuaibi, a spokesman for the Palestinian BDS
(Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) National Committee. Israel would be
unable to carry out its policies of aggression in Gaza without the
support of the United States.
Actress Lisa Gay Hamilton, who is on the Women’s Boat to Gaza, wrote,
“I’m here because I’m concerned about the effects of war and blockade on
the women, as schools, hospitals, and homes have been periodically
destroyed and sources of power and water compromised. … I’m here because
my president just increased U.S. military aid to Israel from $3.1 to
$3.8 billion per year over the next 10 years, with … no mention of the
situation in Gaza.”
Fifty-seven percent of Democrats and 40 percent of Republicans think the increase in military aid to Israel is too high.
Hundreds of Israeli officials, intellectuals and artists signed an open
letter to Jews worldwide to oppose the occupation. The 470 signatories,
including high-ranking officers of the Israel Defense Forces,
ambassadors, ministers, high government officials and members of the
Knesset, wrote: “The prolonged occupation is inherently oppressive for
Palestinians and fuels mutual bloodshed. It undermines the moral and
democratic fabric of the state of Israel and hurts its standing in the
community of nations.”
In his Sept. 20 farewell speech to the U.N. General Assembly, Obama
appeared to oppose Israel’s permanent occupation and settlements,
saying, “Surely Israelis and Palestinians will be better off if
Palestinians reject incitement and recognize the legitimacy of Israel …
(and if) Israel recognizes that it cannot permanently occupy and settle
Palestinian land.”
But Obama’s actions speak louder than his words. Although he has the
power to condition U.S. aid to Israel on ending the occupation and
ceasing construction of Jewish settlements on Palestinian land, Obama
has chosen instead to serve as “patron of the occupation.”
Marjorie Cohn is professor emerita at Thomas
Jefferson School of Law where she taught from 1991-2016, and a former
president of the National Lawyers Guild. She lectures, writes, and
provides commentary for local, regional, national and international
media outlets. http://marjoriecohn.com