Monday, November 25, 2024

Canadian writer donates $25,000 prize to causes in Palestine and Lebanon

Canadian writer Madeleine Thien was awarded a $25,000 (CAD) prize by the Writers' Trust of Canada for her body of writing. To the audience's surprise, she announced she would 'return the prize money to the world', including part to the Palestine Children's Relief Fund and part to the Lebanese Red Cross.

November 22, 2024



Israel’s criminal responsibility is shielded by political complicity


Flag with the logo of the of the International Criminal Court (ICC) on March 29, 2022 in Den Haag, Netherlands [Alex Gottschalk/DeFodi Images via Getty Images]


MEMO

by Ramona Wadi
walzerscent

November 24, 2024 

It remains to be seen how world leaders of the 124 states that are party to the Rome Statute will comply with the international arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant. The ICC’s press release clearly states that both “bear criminal responsibility for the following crimes as co-perpetrators for committing the acts jointly with others: the war crime of starvation as a method of warfare; and the crimes against humanity of murder, persecution, and other inhumane acts.”

World leaders’ responses have varied from outright assertions of complying with the ICC arrest warrants, to calibrated replies and adamant rejection. Dutch Foreign Minister Caspar Veldkamp said that the Rome Statute would be implemented if Netanyahu sets foot in the country, as did Switzerland.

“Yes absolutely. We support international courts and we apply their warrants,” Ireland’s Prime Minister Simon Harris told RTE yesterday. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stated, “We stand up for international law, and we abide by all the rulings and regulations of the international courts.” Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayma Safadi insisted that the ICC warrants should be implemented.

Israel is painting the ICC decision as “the first time the ICC has ever issued arrest warrants against leaders of a democratic country”. However, although Israel describes itself as a democratic country, it is a settler-colonial enterprise founded upon ethnic cleansing and sustained by genocide.

BLOG: USAID’s guise is dismantled by Israel’s genocide in Gaza

“No outrageous anti-Israeli decision will prevent us – and it will not prevent me – from continuing to defend our country in any way,” Netanyahu stated. Gallant called the decision as “a dangerous precedent against the right to self-defence and moral warfare and encourages murderous terrorism,” while describing his role as a ‘”privilege”.

The US, of course, rejected the ICC decision. “Let me be clear once again: whatever the ICC might imply, there is no equivalence – none – between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security.”

Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban said he would invite Netanyahu to visit. “I will guarantee him that if he comes, the warrant will have no effect in Hungary”. Argentina’s Javier Milei rejected the ICC’s decision, stating that it “ignores Israel’s legitimate right to self-defence”.

Other countries adopted a cautious stance. Germany, for example, stated that it is “now examining what it means for us in terms of its international application”. France’s Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Christophe Lemoine described the ICC warrants as “legally complex” and said that France’s reaction would align with the principles of international justice. Austria described the arrest warrants as ludicrous but that the country would have to implement the ICC decision. Italy took a similar approach, saying that there is no equivalence between Netanyahu, Gallant and Hamas, but that the arrests would happen if either visited Italy.

“Australia respects the independence of the ICC and its important role in upholding international law,” Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong stated.

Ahead of the G7 meeting to be held next week in which the ICC arrest warrants are to be discussed, Italy’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani declared, “We respect and support the International Criminal Court, but we believe that its role should be legal rather than political.”

The ICC deals with criminal responsibility. However, the rhetoric of several leaders implies that a political stance will be influencing whether or not the ICC arrest warrants will be enforced if Netanyahu or Gallant visit the countries that are party to the Rome Statute. Almost all countries have prioritised their relations with Israel throughout the unfolding genocide in Gaza, and the ICC arrest warrants have only exposed the politics that underpin the overt or tacit support that Israel enjoys globally.

READ: Ex-France ambassador to Israel slams Germany’s refusal to comply with ICC arrest warrants

Countries that have stated they will implement the ICC’s decision could have taken a stance against genocide over a year ago. Yet, they waited until the arrest warrants to say they would comply with international law. What prevented these countries from abiding by international law prior to the ICC’s announcement?

As for the countries that attempted a neutral stance, the political deliberation is clear. Israel has committed genocide live-streamed. The criminal responsibility is clear – not only from the footage but also the constant incitement against Palestinians. Why does the G7 have to deliberate upon what action to take?

There is no unequivocal stance against genocide, but rather countries deciding upon opportune moments. What can be gleaned from most statements, including those that stated they would abide by the ICC’s arrest warrants, is that the purported political neutrality that supported Israel’s genocide in Gaza is still in full swing.

The ICC depends upon individual countries to enforce the arrest warrants. The Czech Republic, for example, described the ICC decision as “unfortunate” and said that the charges against Netanyahu and Gallant “should be substantiated by evidence”. What more evidence could the country possibly require to see the legitimacy in the arrest warrants? Why is genocide in Gaza still largely debatable, to the point that signatories to the Rome Statute are pondering their decision? Who is politicising the arrest warrants – the ICC or world leaders?

The European Commission has warned Orban over his stance, saying that refusing to implement the ICC decision would “breach international obligations”. True, but what of the EU’s obligations under international law. Why doesn’t the EC speak of genocide in Gaza? The reason, of course, is clear. The EC is beholden to Israel’s security narrative. Its stance merely reflects the positioning of one international entity reciprocating the status of another international entity. The politics, however, does not indicate a stance against the crime of genocide but merely compliance with the possibility of the ICC arrest warrants being activated, should Netanyahu visit any EU country that is bound by the Rome Statute.

It is likely that criminal accountability as the ICC seeks to establish will be thwarted by political interpretation of the arrest warrants. However, let us all keep in mind that Israel’s genocide in Gaza is marked by both criminal and political accountability. The ICC arrest warrants have exposed the latter, in light of the genocide, to the point that oblivion is no longer impenetrable.

Pentagon admits rejection of ICC arrest warrants has no legal basis

A Pentagon spokesperson admitted that the US's decision to reject the International Criminal Court's arrest warrants for Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu and former defence minister Yoav Galant are not grounded in law and reiterated that the US doesn't believe the ICC has jurisdiction over Israel and Gaza. Neither the US or Israel are member states of the ICC.

MEMO   November 22, 2024



Opinion

Genocide is not a grotesque game by numbers; it is the worst of crimes



A demonstrator holds a banner with the portrait of Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu next to list with dead Palestine people at Plaza de Mayo Square in Buenos Aires on 7 October, 2024 [JUAN MABROMATA/AFP via Getty Images]

by Yvonne Ridley
yvonneridley
November 24, 2024 



There is a tsunami of blood red ink gushing forth from the incredulous pens of angry far-right defenders of the Zionist State of Israel who are reeling from the shock of the unprecedented legal action taken against Israel’s leaders by the International Criminal Court: arrest warrants issued against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Defence Minister he sacked earlier this month, Yoav Gallant.

Such a response was as predictable as Netanyahu’s claim of “anti-Semitism” — as was the flow of whataboutery — as each tried to outdo the other in their efforts to justify Israel’s genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza. One desperate defender of all things Israeli has even plumbed the depths of depravity by calling out nations with “higher kill counts”.

Admittedly, when it comes to genocide whataboutery, there is one country in a league of its own: the United States of America. In recent centuries, European settlers have wiped out indigenous populations without so much as a by your leave. But this is a poor excuse for letting Israel act with impunity.

We must not forget that among the disappearing nations are the once proud Native Americans of North and South America, and Australia’s Aborigines, wiped out in their millions by Europe’s greed for land and resources. It’s a fact that whenever there is a genocide, European imperialists and colonial settlers are rarely far away, and the same is true in occupied Palestine. The numbers involved in such genocides far outweigh the industrial scale massacre of Palestinians since the Nakba. However, do the supporters of the Zionist state really expect us to sit idly by, and say and do nothing until Israel has killed enough Palestinians to join the major league of genocidal maniacs?


This is not a game of numbers.

Moreover, do the Zionist genocide apologists seriously expect the Palestinians to be sitting ducks instead of fighting for their very existence in the face of a brutal military occupation of their land? Resistance against occupation is their right under international law.

The number slaughtered in the Holocaust was six million, mostly Jews. Mercifully, the Nazi extermination programme was halted, thank God, because European, US and Soviet forces came together to stop the fascists in their tracks. What would those brave men and women think of today’s crop of right-wing extremists pulling the strings in Europe and the US to defend the neo-fascist Zionist state, I wonder?

OPINION: AIPAC-bought-and-paid-for moonbat calls for US to invade The Hague over arrest warrants

Lest the current crop of right-wing extremists forget, the International Court of Justice was formed post-World War II as a direct result of the Nazi war crimes and genocide committed in Europe against Jews and other minority groups. The ICC followed in 2002 to hold individuals, rather than states, to account.

The UN Charter was signed on 26 June, 1945, and the organisation came into existence a few months later on 24 October. It was established to protect millions of ordinary citizens and work to prevent future world wars. The initial membership has expanded from 51 nations in 1945 to 193 today. The UN has been hanging precariously since 7 October 2023, with its own employees targeted by Israel. At least 233 staff members of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) have been killed by Israel since 7 October last year. The agency has now been banned from working in the occupation state, which refuses to recognise the UN passports of its staff, and many UNRWA buildings and schools have been destroyed by Israeli bombs.

That a global force for good can be so publicly trashed and derided by Zionists speaks volumes about where “Western civilisation” stands today. For more than 400 days the world has watched, torn between shock and revulsion at what Israel has done to the Palestinians in the name of self-defence. The Gaza genocide has been (and still is) filled with truly shocking murders, prison rapes, torture and starvation as the Zionist State’s inhumanity has been broadcast in real time on social media.



Who can forget little Hind Rajab, the six-year-old who went missing in Gaza City in January?

Her fragile body was found in the family car alongside her aunt, uncle and three young cousins, as well as two paramedics who had tried to save her; all had been killed by the crew of an Israeli tank just metres away. Listen to the heartbreaking audio recordings of the call made by Hind to Gaza’s emergency services letting them know that she was the only one left alive in the car, hiding from Israeli forces among the bodies of her relatives. Israeli soldiers in a tank killed her mercilessly; a six-year-old child.

Two months later, we heard the testimony of Hadeel Al-Dahdouh, a 24-yeaar-old mother of two, who was beaten, tortured and buried alive by Israeli occupation forces.

Then just when we thought we could not be shocked any more, in July we heard that 24-year-old Muhammed Bhar, who had Down’s Syndrome, was found dead by his family a week after Israeli soldiers set a military attack dog on him in his home. He was savaged and left to die.

Throughout the past 400+ days we’ve been exposed to the crimes of Israeli soldiers which they felt empowered enough to film and share on Facebook and Instagram. The perverts dressed in the underwear and night clothes of their Palestinian female victims, laughing and joking for all to see, will, please God, come to regret their crimes. Others filmed themselves looting and pillaging the homes of their victims. All of these well-documented war crimes will, if there is any justice at all in this world, come back to haunt these soldiers, some of whom live in Europe and have been identified.

War crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed with apparent impunity, ordered and enabled from the very top of the occupation regime, hence the arrest warrants, a clear signal from the ICC that it doesn’t trust Israel’s corrupt legal system to be robust enough to bring the criminals to account. When it comes to genocide, “never again” must mean just that. Convictions at all levels of the Israeli hierarchy at The Hague will be a tribute to every single person around the world who has marched for justice for Palestine; for all the university students who set up peace camps; and for activists such as those working with Palestine Action who risked their own liberty to try to stop the war.

World leaders will ignore such movements at their peril in future. It might have taken a while for the Global North to wake up to what the Universal Declaration of Human Rights established on 10 December 1948 really means, but Israel — if it survives in its present form — will learn a lesson that no nation, state or people, is above the law, and nor are the so-called superpowers.

Might should never be right in a civilised world; justice has to be for everyone, including the Global South.

This means that the law cannot be applied according to some sort of grotesque numbers game. The Srebrenica Genocide in July 1995 saw Serb forces slaughter 8,000 Bosniak Muslim men and boys. While it is impossible to try to quantify 80 years of pain and suffering endured by the Palestinian people, there is no doubt that the number of civilians killed by Israel in Gaza is more than ten times that of the Bosnian genocide, with tens of thousands more wounded and missing, presumed dead. And yet, media commentators and talking heads such as Piers Morgan still cannot acknowledge that a genocide is taking place before our eyes in Gaza. He and those like him think that they know better than UN experts, lawyers and genocide scholars.

This is something he will have to live with as long as writers like myself are able to remind him. It would serve Morgan and his ilk well to remember how former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright came to her senses when being interviewed by Democracy Now! presenter Amy Goodman about her atrocious comment that the “price was worth it” when 500,000 Iraqi children died as a result of US sanctions.

The late Albright told Goodman in 2004: “I have said 5,000 times that I regret it. It was a stupid statement. I never should have made it. And if everybody else that has ever made a statement they regret would stand up, there would be a lot of people standing. I have many, many times said it, and I wish that people would report that I have said it. I wrote it in my book that it was a stupid statement.” Over to you, Piers.

Britain’s Guardian published an editorial this week pointing out that international law should not only apply to weaker nations. “The crimes at the centre of these [ICC arrest] warrants are among the gravest violations of international humanitarian law, including starvation as a weapon of war and deliberate attacks on civilians. When such acts are systematic and state-driven, they demand accountability. The ICC’s pursuit of justice tests the international community’s resolve to uphold these norms in the face of political resistance.”

The ICC arrest warrants are a victory for people power and the growing anti-war movement, but it is also a huge victory for the heroic Palestinians who have struggled so bravely to expose the crimes committed against them to a watching world which has been almost totally blind to Zionist cruelty. Indeed, if it wasn’t for the Palestinians we would never have known exactly how evil the Zionist State of Israel and its supporters really are.


The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.
A bright day in the history of the international humanitarian community



Pro-Palestinian protesters gather to show solidarity with Palestinians and protest against Israel’s ongoing attacks on Gaza, despite a ban on marches on International Holocaust Remembrance Day in Rome, Italy on January 27, 2024. [Riccardo De Luca – Anadolu Agency]

by Muhammad Jamil
November 23, 2024
MEMO

An earthquake shook the fascist entity after more than 400 days in which a genocide, the mother of all crimes, was being committed against the civilians in the Gaza Strip, including women, children and the elderly. The politicians of this entity believed they were immune from prosecution due to the unlimited support of the colonial West led by the United States.

The unanimous decision of the international Criminal Court Pre-Trail Chamber 1, which stipulated the approval of the arrest warrants of Netanyahu and Galant was a heavy blow that shook the entity and the supporting capitals, including members of the court who became helpless and regretted providing support for the crimes of the entity at all levels, military, political and economic.

The decision is of huge importance as it was issued unanimously by the highest international judicial body. This decision is the title of the truth, and it rebutted the Western narrative about the entity’s right to self-defence, as if the daily killings, destruction, and complete genocides were normal and accepted. The claims which the supporters of the entity and their media have been using regularly to deny the commission of Netanyahu and Galant of war crimes and crimes against humanity were thrown into the dustbin of history by a judicial blow. Those who provided support for Netanyahu’s crimes should lie low and watch their steps when it comes to future relationship with the entity.

The only decision-maker in the world, the United States of America, which is not a member of the International Criminal Court, stands alone and with complete impudence against this decision, claiming that the warrants were not issued in a way that followed the usual procedures in the court, as if the entity has means for prosecution, accountability and investigation of the alleged crimes. However, this position is not an unfamiliar one for a country that was founded after committing the first genocide in history against indigenous peoples and committed the most horrific crimes around the world.

As for the other countries, most notably the European countries and Britain, which are mostly supporters of the crimes of the occupation, they stand helpless now following this decision. Before this decision was issued, politicians fiercely denied the commission of the entity to any crimes and emphasised its right to self-defence. Today, after the issuance of the decision, they announce their respect to the decision and that they will arrest those who have warrants issued against them, should they set foot on the territories of any of these countries.




‘A war criminal’: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has blood on his hands – Cartoon [Sabaaneh/Middle East Monitor]Not only that, the 124 countries who are members of the International Criminal Court are obligated to implement this decision and cannot ignore it under any circumstances should the wanted persons dare to visit any of them, and even countries that are not members of the court are morally and legally obligated to arrest them. Those in Arab world who have normalised relations with the entity should reconsider their relationship with it, as it would be disgraceful to ignore a decision issued by the highest international judicial body.

Read: Are the ICC arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant a victory for Palestinians?

The current debates that only the states parties to the court are obligated to implement the decision are completely wrong. All 195 member states of the International Police Organization (Interpol) are also legally obligated to implement the decision. In 2004, the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court signed an agreement with Interpol stipulating comprehensive cooperation in prosecuting crimes specified in the Rome Convention.

More importantly, in Article 4 of the agreement, Interpol is obligated to circulate red notices with the names of the wanted persons upon the request of the Prosecutor.

Moreover, Interpol has made serious crimes stipulated in the Rome Convention a core part of its work. In 2014, it established a special unit to focus on war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in cooperation with member states and international courts concerned with these crimes.

The issuance of these warrants went through stages of unprecedented difficult throes, including spying on court employees and sending death threats to the prosecutor, judges and their families. However, all these efforts failed in preventing the issuance of the warrants that brought life again to international humanitarian law which had entered a state of clinical death due to the blows it constantly received over more than a year of genocide.

The office of the Prosecutor has a long way to go to prosecute many crimes, old and new, which were committed since Palestine was subjected to the jurisdiction of the court in June 2014. The most important ones of those crimes are the crimes of settlement, as the West Bank is on the verge of annexation, according to Smotrich. The list of perpetrators of crimes in occupied Palestine is long. If the prosecutor rolled up his sleeves, freed himself from the threats and pressures, and took the required measures, the entity will break the record in arrest warrants and will be marked as a rogue entity.

It is truly a black day in the history of the entity and a bright day in the history of the international humanitarian community which gave a glimmer of hope in the possibility of pursuing and holding accountable those who considered themselves above the law for decades, committed the most heinous crimes, and ignored all international resolutions and calls to stop the crime of genocide in the Gaza Strip.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.


Sunday, November 24, 2024

COP29

Cop climate talks give ‘crumbs’ to Global South

Cop’s own economists say the Global South needs 2.4 trillion dollars to cope with extreme weather and switch economies away from fossil fuels


A climate march in London as the Cop talks too place
 (Picture: Guy Smallman)


By Camilla Royle
Sunday 24 November 2024  
 SOCIALIST WORKER   Issue


The international Cop29 climate talks have once again abandoned the billions of people around the world facing an environmental catastrophe.

Last year was the hottest on record—and 2024 looks set to break this record again. This will lead to flash flooding, storms and droughts. Temperatures already exceeded the target that was agreed at the Paris climate talks in 2015—1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels—for part of this year.

This was meant to be the “finance Cop”. Global South countries have been asking for a trillion dollars per year from the Global North to help them deal with the effects of climate change.

Yet the richer countries only agreed to pay £238 billion and this would only be delivered by 2035. Panama’s lead negotiator Juan Carlos Monterrey Gomez said the amounts being offered were “outrageous, evil and remorseless”. He said, “They offer crumbs while we bear the dead.”

At one point, Global South delegates walked out of the talks in disgust. They included many representatives of small island states who fear being swamped by rising sea levels.

Cop’s own economists say the Global South needs 2.4 trillion dollars to cope with extreme weather and switch economies away from fossil fuels.

The Cop talks have provided an opportunity for oil-rich states to try to protect their domestic fossil fuel industries and water down agreements.

Last year the talks agreed to accelerate efforts towards “the phase-down of unabated coal power”. This came nowhere close to the rapid shutdown of all new fossil fuel extraction that is needed.

This year delegates have lobbied against even these weak proposals. Saudi Arabia opposed any inclusion of measures to “transition away from fossil fuels”.

Albara Tawfiq from the Saudi delegation said it “will not accept any text that targets any specific sectors, including fossil fuels”. Delegates from China also spoke out against specific pledges over fossil fuels.

Bolivia’s delegates opposed it on the basis that richer countries should cut their own emissions before telling the Global South not to develop fossil fuel industries.

A giant natural gas field has recently been discovered in Bolivia, which the country’s leaders hope will help revive the economy. But gas exploration in the Latin American country has angered environmental and indigenous groups.

Delegates from Colombia took a different stance. Susana Muhamad is the environment minister in the left wing government that came to office two years ago and pledged to phase out fossil fuel production. “What is the point of having an agreement and a convention if we cannot deal with the issue that creates the problem?” she asked.

The Cop talks took place in Baku in Azerbaijan, a centre of the fossil fuel industry. Azerbaijan plans to increase its exports of gas to countries in the West which no longer want to import gas from Russia.

But it also played a major role in supplying oil to the eastern Mediterranean via the BTS pipeline— including to Israel.

Labour energy secretary Ed Miliband gave a speech at the talks. He admitted that the Cop process is “imperfect” but added that it is “the best process we have got”.

Miliband said that an expansion of clean energy will lead to economic growth. He said, “It is right for tackling the climate crisis and for the face of future generations. And it is right economically for Britain because it will spur jobs and export opportunities and help businesses.”

The Labour government announced at the start of the Cop talks that it wants to cut emissions by 81 percent by 2035. That’s a slight increase on the 78 percent pledge from the previous Tory government. Miliband has said he wouldn’t issue new oil and gas licences to achieve this.

Yet while Labour make bold speeches about global ambition and deep emissions cuts, their plans involve massive investment in carbon capture and storage technologies. Experts say this will deepen Britain’s dependence on oil and gas.

And the government is committed to working with climate change denying United States president Donald Trump. Miliband has said that he wants to find “common ground” and “work with all countries to move forward on this really important issue”.

Labour is presiding over a fossil fuelled capitalist system that is driving us towards disaster.
WWIII

Labour opens Glasgow site to ramp up deadly arms race with China

The new site in Glasgow will help to supply Australia with nuclear submarines


The Aukus deal will develop nuclear submarines for Australia 
(Picture: NZ Defence Force)

By Tomáš Tengely-Evans
Friday 22 November 2024    
SOCIALIST WORKER Issue

The warmongers of the Labour Party have opened a new site in Glasgow as a “clear demonstration” of their “commitment to Britain’s nuclear deterrent”.

Labour defence minister Maria Eagle opened the Rolls Royce office near Glasgow Airport on Friday. It’s for specialists who will help to deliver the Aukus programme—a United States and British agreement to supply Australia with nuclear submarines.

Aukus is part of the deadly arms race between the West and China in Asia and the Pacific. Eagle said, “The opening of the new Rolls-Royce office in Glasgow is a clear demonstration of the government’s commitment to the UK’s nuclear deterrent.

“This investment is delivered alongside an important industry partnership and will support high-skilled jobs and economic growth that will benefit our prosperity and security for decades to come.”

Labour is pushing the lie that Aukus is good for working class people. Scottish Secretary, the odious Union Jack-waving Ian Murray, claimed, “Economic growth is the British Government’s top mission. I welcome the opening of this new Ministry of Defence funded office and the 120 high-skilled jobs it has created.”

Two of the biggest unions, Unite and GMB, go along with this pro-war, pro-arms argument. The STUC trade union federation’s conference in 2023 backed a motion slamming the Aukus deal as “heightening nuclear tensions in the Pacific”.

GMB opposed the motion saying Aukus would deter Chinese aggression, while Unite said it would put skilled jobs at risk. But the billions of pounds spent on Aukus could be invested into public services and green industries, as part of a just transition for workers in arms industries.

The British government has not provided an estimated cost of the Aukus programme, which will see submarines enter service in the late 2030s. But it did announce £3 billion in funding in March 2023. That’s a small fraction of what the final cost will be—yet this sum alone could pay for over 30,000 nurses.

The opening of the office came as the West ramps up tensions in Ukraine. Joe Biden authorised Ukraine to fire US-supplied missiles into Russian territory on Monday—and Keir Starmer quickly followed suit.

After Ukrainian forces fired the missiles, Russia bombed the country with an intercontinental ballistic missile—the sort that can carry nuclear warheads. President Vladimir Putin broadened the state’s nuclear doctrine, meaning Russian forces could use nuclear weapons if attacked by a non-nuclear power that’s backed by nuclear-armed states.

Imperialist rivalry between the West and Russia has torn Ukraine apart—and now threatens nuclear war. But, as the West pours fuel onto the fire, the Scottish National Party (SNP) first minister John Swinney said he “supports the steps taken” by the US and Britain.

Stop The War Coalition Scotland, the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the STUC has called a national demonstration in Glasgow on Saturday. Jeremy Corbyn is set to speak at the demonstration, and it is backed by the RMT, PCS, UCU, EIS and FBU unions, Scottish Lebanese Society and others.

As the West ramps up the drive to war in Ukraine and the Middle East, it’s vital to build the Palestine, anti-war and anti-imperialist movements.National demonstration: Stop all arms sales to Israel, Hands off Gaza and Lebanon, No war with Iran, Welfare not Warfare. Saturday 23 November, 11.30am, Glasgow Green
Why incinerators should be in the dustbin of history

Incinerators produce the same greenhouse gas emissions per unit of energy as coal power


A protest against a planned incinerator in Edmonton, north London 
(Picture: Socialist Worker)



By Camilla Royle
Friday 22 November 2024  
SOCIALIST WORKER Issue


Three waste incinerator projects are expected to go bust in the next few days. Investors have poured £480 million into these projects over the past eight years. One of Britain’s biggest pension funds, Aviva Investors, will now lose over £350 million of the money it has invested.

Incinerating waste is one of the most polluting ways of producing power. The number of incinerators in Britain started to expand 15 years ago—and there are now around 60 energy-from-waste plants.

They were painted as a win-win solution, producing electricity for households while disposing of their rubbish.

Yet these plants only account for 3.1 percent of Britain’s energy production. And, according to research from the BBC, they produce the same greenhouse gas emissions per unit of energy as coal power.

The government is shutting down coal fired power plants, but new incinerators are still being built.

Incinerators are often in urban areas and more likely to be built in poorer rather than richer neighbourhoods.

Residents in Edmonton, north London, have been campaigning for years against a planned new incinerator which was meant to open next year.

Edmonton is a working class area that already has air pollution levels that exceed European Union limits. People are concerned about the pollution, noise and smell from incinerators burning plastics and other household waste. And they don’t want more traffic due to trucks bringing waste to the plant.

Now the project is delayed due to high costs and labour shortages.

Waste bosses plan an incinerator in Portland. Dorset council rejected the proposals last year, but the Labour government overturned the planning decision.


Climate protesters rage against Israel’s occupation of Palestine
Read More

Annika from Weymouth is part of the campaign against the planned Portland waste incinerator in Dorset. “People have defied this for so long. Everybody thought it was not going to go ahead so we had to revive the campaign,” she told Socialist Worker.

“We want to make sure people haven’t given up. Other incinerators have gone bust. They are not making enough money so it doesn’t make sense to have this one. Dorset has got a really good record of recycling so it’s not even our waste they would be incinerating.

“Any population that lives near an incinerator faces health issues and some people are motivated to oppose it because of the effect on the local community. They do target the communities that are the most neglected.

“But it’s also the environmental impact. It’s the fact that it is bad generally with carbon dioxide emissions, it’s not just a local issue.

“We had a humongous protest last Saturday with up to 1000 people. Weymouth was full of people making a lot of noise.”

The three projects that Aviva is set to lose money on are based in Hull in Yorkshire, Boston, Lincolnshire and Barry in South Wales. The Hull and Boston incinerators have not produced enough energy to meet their targets. Vale of Glamorgan Council rejected planning permission for the Welsh project.

The solution is not just a massive expansion of waste recycling. We also need a complete overhaul of how we package and transport goods to cut down on the amount of plastic produced.

A collective crime

Mike Phipps reviews Loot: How Israel Stole Palestinian Property

by Adam Raz, published by Verso.

 

NOVEMBER 24, 2024

This is the first book whose primary focus is the plunder of Palestinian property, says the author says his Introduction. This looting was not out of compliance with some political order from above: “the looting of moveable assets was voluntary, and many people engaged in this criminal behaviour.”

While looting and theft are almost standard practice in wartime, the plundering that took place during the Independence War that created the State of Israel was different. The Jewish population plundered the property of neighbouring Arab inhabitants. “These were not abstract ‘enemies’… They were yesterday’s neighbours.”

The first half of the book documents in detail the scale of the looting of Palestinian property. In Tiberias, the fall of the city to the Zionist army meant the complete exodus of the Palestinian inhabitants, never to return. A huge amount of property was left behind and looting took place on a unprecedented scale. One Jewish National Fund official was appalled, writing in his diary: “Ten by ten, in groups, the Jews moved about and robbed Arab homes and stores… There was a competition between the different Haganah platoons… who arrived in cars and boats and loaded up all types of things… The soldiers assigned specifically to protect property ignored what was going on around them, and it is rumoured that they were accepting bribes. A moral collapse.”

Another observer noted: “‘These scenes were familiar to me, but I was always used to associating them with what others did to us during the Holocaust, during the world wars, and during all the pogroms…  And here – here we were doing these horrible things to others.”

Tiberias would serve as a model for other cities throughout the country. In Haifa, looters did not even wait for properties to be abandoned. A government minister reported that mostly Arab properties were targeted, but even Jewish homes were being attacked: “During the various home invasions, there were cases where the invaders used force, hit men and women, knocked down doors, gathered up the furniture that they removed from rooms, and took people from their homes and put them in the street… It is clear that the home invasions were organized by army officers. There were officers among the invaders who removed their rank insignia.”

Unrestrained looting also took place in Jerusalem. The pillagers had taken so much plunder from Palestinian homes that they needed to protect it from other Jewish civilians who had also come to loot: “Blood began to flow.” The plunder reportedly went on for days – even months – in both Arab and Jewish neighbourhoods. It stopped only when there was nothing left to steal. What could not be taken, or was considered valueless, was smashed up. Entire libraries were torched.

In Jaffa, it was British soldiers who began the looting of shops for days on end. Others soon joined them. Communist Party member Ruth Lubitz noted: “All along the way, there is not a home, a store or a workshop that has not had everything taken from it.” In a twelve-day period in June 1948, over 5,000 tons of goods were taken out of the city on trucks.

Around 550 Palestinian villages were conquered in the Independence War. In some, mass looting, involving “people from every social stratum”, took place. “Machines, work animals, homes, and granaries that could have been of use to the army itself and the state treasury were destroyed, killed, and burned,” complained one government department.

Mosques and churches were also targeted. Israel’s Foreign Minister, Moshe Sharett, described it in 1949 as “wild vandalism, desecration of holy sites worthy of savages, not Jews.” Notably, the Dormition Abbey of the Benedictine community, on Mount Zion, considered to be one of their holiest churches, was thoroughly looted. Monasteries and mosques were routinely destroyed.

A great moral failure

It could be argued that the stealing of furniture and household goods is trivial compared to the massacres perpetrated at the time, such as the execution of dozens of Palestinian prisoners in Ein Zaytun – an atrocity that was concealed for years. But the involvement of so many civilians – including children – in the pillaging had far-reaching consequences.

Some saw this: “I am afraid of the loss of innocence, the loss of the idea that man needs to live by his labour rather than by plunder and robbery, because there is something here that smacks of great moral failure.”

Another: “Booty does more than just destroy the victim. It damages the perpetrator’s soul; if its influence rears its head even slightly during wartime, much of its poison spreads through society’s arteries during subsequent times of peace.”

 Politically, the involvement of so many people in the pillaging was critical. It integrated them into a collective crime and made it easier to lock them into support for the ongoing atrocities committed by the nascent Zionist state. As Raz puts it, “It turned looters… into political collaborators.”  He goes on: “The plunderer became an unwilling advocate of a policy agenda that strove to create a condition of perpetual war between Israel and the Arab world.”

Moreover, inasmuch that the Israeli leadership appears to have ignored the warnings about mass looting expressed to it from within its own government and later granted a blanket amnesty, this may have been deliberate government policy: “It served Prime Minister Ben-Gurion’s policy of removing Arab residents from the State of Israel and helped him realize it.”

After the war, the Israeli Prime Minister appointed his Attorney General “to look into whether the army and its soldiers harmed the lives of Arabs in the Galilee and the south in ways that run counter to the rules of war.” To this day, the findings remain confidential. “Even though Israeli soldiers committed numerous atrocities,” notes the author, “only one, accused of murdering fifteen Arabs, was put on trial.” He received a one-year prison sentence and a short time later was pardoned.

Adam Raz has amassed an amazing amount of detail in his research of this subject. Given the ongoing efforts to erase Palestine’s past and conceal Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, this book is an important contribution to uncovering the reality on which the Zionist state was founded.

Mike Phipps’ book Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow: The Labour Party after Jeremy Corbyn (OR Books, 2022) can be ordered here.

NAKBA 2.0

West Bank Christian woman leads resistance to settlers' seizure of family's land


(RNS) — Alice Kisiya leads an interfaith effort to defend her family’s land against encroachment by Jewish settlers in the West Bank.


Israeli activists surround Alice Kisiya, center, as they try to enter her family's land, after the Palestinian family was forcefully evicted by Israeli settlers backed by soldiers who declared it a closed military area, in the West Bank town of Beit Jala, Friday, Aug. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

Heather M. Surls
November 18, 2024

AMMAN, Jordan (RNS) — A group of Israeli Jews said Sabbath prayers on a late October Friday as the sun set in Al-Makhrour, a valley outside of Beit Jala in the West Bank. Nearby, Palestinian Muslims faced Mecca and said their own magrib prayers.

After the prayers the two groups sat together on a woven plastic mat along with a few Christians and others, to share a meal, roast marshmallows and get to know one another in a peaceful vigil, joined by another 40 people online. They had all come to support Alice Kisiya, 30, whose family had been forcibly evicted from their 1.25-acre plot in July by Jewish settlers, backed by the Israel Defense Forces.

Walking through an olive grove, her face illuminated by her phone’s light in the darkness, Kisiya told the online attendees that IDF soldiers had come by earlier, but, apparently taken aback by the sight of Jews, Muslims and Christians picnicking in the middle of a war, they drove away. Evil, she said, fears unity

“An interfaith community is what this society needs to be united and to be strong to achieve justice and peace,” said Kisiya, a Palestinian Christian with Israeli and French citizenship. “Sharing different backgrounds and beliefs and learning how to love and accept each other is the way to a new age where everyone can live in peace and harmony.”

RELATED: How the Israeli settlers movement shaped modern Israel

A vast majority of the land in Al-Makhrour, known locally as “Bethlehem’s heaven,” is owned by Palestinian Christians, who comprise less than 2% of the West Bank’s population. Save Al-Makhrour, an online community that supports the Kisiyas’ cause, frames the family’s case as a fight for Christian presence in the Holy Land.


The Kisiya property in the West Bank prior to structures being demolished.
 (Photo courtesy Alice Kisiya)

“Christians in Israel and Palestine must stand together and not let families be picked off one by one,” read a Save Al-Makhrour statement. “Jews, Muslims and Christians must stand together for a vision of living in the Land alongside one another, thriving in freedom and equality.”

Civil Administration, Israel’s governing agency in the West Bank, began to threaten the Kisiyas shortly after Alice’s father, Ramzi, opened a restaurant on the land in 2002, she said. It hosted weddings and graduation parties as well as Christmas, Easter and Ramadan celebrations. The administration destroyed it in 2012, 2013 and 2015, always citing its lack of a building permit, though Alice Kisiya said the law didn’t require one since the restaurant, built from wood, was what she calls an “agricultural structure.” In 2019 the family’s home was jackhammered down too.

Kisiya said the family has legally owned the land since before Israel’s establishment in 1948, but in 2017, Himanuta, a subsidiary of the Jewish National Fund, claimed in court that it had bought the land in 1969. Recent reports by peace activists and in the Israeli press have called the JNF’s land acquisitions “dubious,” and the Kisiya family said a search of state archives turned up no sign of the transaction.

After their house was destroyed, the Kisiyas lived on the property in a tent until July 31, when a group of armed settlers supported by the Jewish National Fund barred the family’s entrance by installing a padlocked gate emblazoned with the Star of David. Asked for comment, the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories, a unit of the Defense Ministry of Israel, cited the disputed acquisition and said it backed the lockout due to “friction,” COGAT told RNS, “between settlers and the Israeli citizen who was ruled not to own the place.”


A couple of weeks later, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich announced Israel’s plan to build Nahal Heletz, a settlement adjacent to Al-Makhrour that would connect settlements southwest of Bethlehem with Jerusalem. The settlement will sit in Battir, which, with Al-Makhrour, was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2014. Currently, about 700,000 settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem live in settlements, which are considered illegal under international law.


The Nahal Heletz settlement site, red, within a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the West Bank. (Image courtesy Peace Now)

For now, the Kisiyas have rented an apartment in nearby Al-Walaja, and Alice, who has worked as a journalist and fitness trainer, has resolved that it’s her turn to lead the family’s struggle for their land. Believing that God placed her where she is for a reason, she plans to proceed through patient, nonviolent resistance. “My parents taught me a lot (about) how to be strong and how not to lose hope, and that by following Jesus’ teaching we shall overcome evil,” she said.

Ofer Cassif, a member of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, said such land grabs have become routine under the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In September, the International Crisis Group reported that settlement activity and settler violence had increased dramatically since 2022, when Netanyahu’s far-right government came to power. The report noted more than 1,000 incidents of settler violence since the war in Gaza began, including 21 fatalities and 643 injuries, 1,300 Palestinians driven from their homes and thousands of acres of West Bank land stolen.

In February, Cassif, the only sitting Jewish lawmaker in the Hadash-Ta’al Party, was nearly expelled from the Knesset for supporting South Africa’s genocide case against Israel. Last week, the body agreed to suspend him for six months. Sometimes, he said, death threats force him to stay home. Yet Cassif, who identifies as an atheist, said he walks in the footsteps of the Jewish prophets, who stood firm against evil.

“For me to struggle for the rights of the Palestinians is because it’s just and justice is universal. … I need not be a Palestinian to support Palestinian liberation,” he said.

In late September, an interfaith group constructed the tiny Church of Nations near the Kisiyas’ land. Among those who worked on the building was Munther Amira, a Palestinian Muslim activist recently released from administrative detention in an Israeli prison. Volunteers framed the 260-square-foot structure with raw beams and walled it in with wooden sheeting painted to resemble stones. A cross, crescent and Star of David were painted on an inner wall.

That evening a vigil took place in the church as IDF soldiers stood watch nearby. Attendees included the Rev. Munther Isaac, a Lutheran pastor and academic dean of Bethlehem Bible College, as well as representatives from Rabbis for Human Rights and the World Council of Churches.

Two days later, the IDF returned with an excavator to disassemble the church.


The Church of Nations is constructed in late Sept. 2024, near the Kisiya family land in the West Bank. (Photo by Ahmad Al-Rajabi)

On Nov. 3, Kisiya was arrested and briefly detained after settlers on the land accused her of hitting a settler and stealing something. A video shows one of the settlers attacking Kisiya inside her car and attempting to strangle her.

“If it’s happening with Alice today, it might happen to my neighbor tomorrow, and the next day it’s me,” said Haytham Salameh, a Palestinian university student and volunteer medic who has joined Kisiya’s supporters. A resident of Bethlehem, Salameh had only encountered Israelis at border crossings and checkpoints until he came to the campfire picnic. “If it’s not going to be us who stand up with and for Alice, who’s it going to be?”

The morning after the picnic, Kisiya and a dozen others walked to her family’s land, but before they reached the Kisiyas’ road, the IDF met them.

Amira Musallam, Kisiya’s sister-in-law whose 9-year-old son will eventually inherit rights to the family land, said that to deter their entrance, the soldiers presented the group with a map and an order designating the land as a closed military zone — the third such order. Musallam said the documents actually applied to a piece of land about 4 kilometers away.

“We can’t do anything about it,” Musallam said. “They are the IDF, they are in control. … Even if we want to go to court, the court will not help because now everything is under the war emergency time.”
RELATED: Israeli settlers ‘expelled’ from Gaza in 2005 say it’s time to return

Kisiya remains hopeful, convinced she will return to her land. She is planning an international solidarity campaign in which participants will plant trees in the name of Al-Makhrour — a riff on the Jewish National Fund’s popular tree-planting project, whose proceeds go to support settlers and settlement building.

She also dreams of building Al-Makhrour’s first church to replace the Church of Nations, where Christians of all denominations will be able to unite in prayer. When settlers steal land, she said, she’ll ring the bell to remind them she is still there.

“We will keep our faith and will not give up,” Kisiya posted on Instagram on Oct. 7. “We will be united and defeat the evil. Love will win and the light will rise over the darkness. Justice and peace are not earned, they are made, and we the people together — Christians, Muslims and Jews and non-believers who believe in humanity — will achieve that.”

 UK

If Keir Starmer wants to cut the benefits bill, he could crack down on service charge abuse



By the Social Housing Action Campaign

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has pledged to crack down on benefit fraud. In order to fulfil this promise, SHAC is urging him to eliminate the blank cheque that landlords are able to write when it comes to Housing Benefit (HB) in respect of service charges.

 Starmer is reported in the Mail on Sunday on government plans: “We will crack down hard on anyone who tries to game the system, to tackle fraud so we can take cash straight from the banks of fraudsters … There will be a zero-tolerance approach to these criminals. My pledge to Mail on Sunday readers is this: I will grip this problem once and for all.”

SHAC asserts that housing associations across the country are ‘gaming the system’ when it comes to the HB collected from its tenants.

Housing Benefit Service Charge Abuse

HB covers payments for both service charges and rents. For some renters, the cost of services such as communal cleaning is included in their rental payments. However, for a proportion of tenants, rents and service charges are billed separately and both can be covered by HB.

Housing associations collect around £1.7 billion in respect of service charges annually. Approximately half of this is paid through HB.

The Housing Benefits Bill

The housing benefits bill is at its highest level since records began, and is pushing overall government spending to record amounts. The distribution of housing spend between benefits and building and maintenance has also changed dramatically.

The UK Housing Review 2024 notes that government spending on housing in 2021/22 was £30.5 billion compared to £22.3 billion in 1975/76 (not adjusted for inflation). However, 88% of this is used to fund housing benefits, with only 12% of government spending used to build or improve homes.

• No-one is scrutinising the legitimacy of service charge demands from landlords in respect of tenants in receipt of HB.

 Scrutinising the service charges for a single resident in a single year involves hours of work, even when the landlord fully cooperates and provides the statement and an invoice pack.

 Akin to an audit, it requires the reconciliation of multiple invoices against statements in the service charge bill, and sometimes checks to identify whether works being invoiced have actually been carried out. It would be impossible for the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) or staff in local authorities to conduct the scrutiny needed for the hundreds of thousands of service charge payments made through HB annually.

• Service charge accounts are riddled with inaccuracies.

Over the last three years, SHAC has collated evidence to support this assertion. Recent media coverage such as the BBC’s The Leasehold Trap and The True Cost of Leasehold provides further validated case studies and quantitative analysis of this form of financial abuse. The First Tier Tribunal (Property Chamber)  also regularly rules in favour of tenants and residents (shared owners and leaseholders) who claim to have been overcharged by their landlords.

• Inaccuracies have been identified in the service charge accounts of members on mixed-residency estates, where some tenants are paying the charge directly, and others are paying via the benefits system.

Those who are paying directly are incentivised to challenge inaccuracies. By contrast, those whose charges are paid via benefits risk losing those benefits if they alert the DWP to the inaccuracies without the landlord acknowledging and removing overcharged items from their bills. Tenants are therefore left with a shortfall to cover. This makes it impossible for tenants in receipt of Housing Benefit to report inaccuracies even if they become aware of them.

 It is clear that the benefits system is being defrauded by millions of pounds annually through service charge abuse.

This is not an issue that can be addressed by individuals, or simply by cutting HB. This would penalise the victims of service charge abuse rather than the perpetrators. The Prime Minister needs to address the issue at source to prevent the inaccurate service charges. This issue demands a major inquiry into service charge abuse by councils, housing associations and private landlords.

SHAC is a campaign group linking tenants, renters, shared owners, and leaseholders living in homes owned by housing associations, councils, and private landlords. We campaign to improve housing conditions and to reduce the commercialisation of public housing. Web: www.shaction.org

Starmer vows ‘sweeping changes’ to tackle ‘bulging benefits bill’


Keir Starmer has vowed to implement “sweeping changes” to deal with the “bulging benefits bill blighting our society” in a move that could anger many MPs on the Labour left.

Writing in The Mail on Sunday, the Prime Minister pledged to clamp down on benefit fraud in what he says will be the “biggest overhaul of employment support in memory.”

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall is expected to announce a major overhaul to the benefits system this week. She told Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips that people who repeatedly refuse to take up training and work will face benefits sanctions.

It comes as the number of people claiming incapacity benefits is expected to rise over the coming decade in trends partly driven by a growing number of people out of work due to mental health conditions.

Starmer wrote: “In the coming months, Mail on Sunday readers will see even more sweeping changes. Because make no mistake, we will get to grips with the bulging benefits bill blighting our society.

“Don’t get me wrong – we will crack down hard on anyone who tries to game the system, to tackle fraud so we can take cash straight from the banks of fraudsters.

“There will be a zero-tolerance approach to these criminals. My pledge to Mail on Sunday readers is this: I will grip this problem once and for all.”

A benefit clampdown risks angering some MPs on the left of the parliamentary party, many of whom have already shown disgruntlement over the government’s reluctance towards reforms such as a scrapping the two-child benefit cap.