Sharon vil legalisere tortur igjen

From: Knut Rognes (knrognes@online.no)
Date: Tue Mar 13 2001 - 19:51:19 MET

  • Next message: asgeir.bjorkedal@hfstud.uio.no: "Heilt ufarlig, men...."

    Kk-Forum,

    og denne. Tortursaken er i siste del.

    Knut Rognes

    *******************
    >X-Sent: 13 Mar 2001 17:24:38 GMT
    >X-Sender: MERL@MiddleEast.Org
    >From: MER <MERL@MiddleEast.Org>
    >To: "MER" <MERL@MiddleEast.Org>
    >Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2001 12:23:30 +0000
    >Subject: Sharon Prepares To Take On USA
    >Reply-To: MER@MiddleEast.Org
    >Organization: MiD-EasT RealitieS
    >
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    >
    > U.S. MEDIA ESTABLISHMENT HELPS PREPARE SHARON'S WAY
    >
    > Palestinian Supporters Remain Weak, Co-opted, Mislead
    >
    >MID-EAST REALITIES © - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 3/13:
    > Sharon's PR people are working hard preparing his way for a triumphant
    >visit to the USA in a few days. They choose Lally Weymouth, long a
    "friendly
    >journalist", for one of his first major interviews -- published in Newsweek
    >this week. Actually, Weymouth is not quite a real journalist -- she's
    >really the somewhat eccentric daughter of Washington Post owner Katherine
    >Graham and owes her "job" to that simple fact of birth. Weymouth is
    extraordinarily
    >Israeli-biased and has traveled the world for many years now gaining access
    >because of her mother and wealth, few remembering that her interviews and
    >columns are only published in the Post-owned publications because years
    >ago she threatened to otherwise go work for the Moonie-owned Washington
    >Times. The major TV interview Sharon gave in advance of his American tour
    >was to another of the somewhat disguised Israeli-oriented journalists,
    >CNN's Wolf Blitzer. And here too few remember that Blitzer came to CNN
    >from being editor of the Israeli-Jewish lobby's newsletter, "Near East
    >Report", and correspondent for the Israeli newspaper, Jerusalem Post.
    > Meanwhile, Sharon is taking big steps to smash the Palestinian uprising.
    > He probably personally gave the orders to try to assassinate the head
    >of Fateh in the West Bank, Marwan Barghouti, yesterday -- the sniper missed,
    >killing someone next to Barghouti (maybe purposefully). Trenches now
    surround
    >Palestinian cities -- just as effectively as barbed wire, though that would
    >look too much like concentration camps in photos. More torture (literally
    >as well as collectively) and even more repression are on the way. Sharon's
    >plans to extinguish the Intifada in one way or another, then to impose
    >terms on the Palestinians, one way or another, with or without Arafat.
    > And the Israeli propaganda machine is more than alive and well than
    >ever. In fact it has been substantially beefed up and enhanced with the
    >coming of Sharon. Much money and many very competent people, p.r. firms,
    >and organizations are involved in coordinated efforts.
    > The Arabs and the Palestinians on the other hand remain light years
    >behind, continuing to busy themselves with misguided actions and continuing
    >to compliment themselves for doing little things that don't even begin
    >to keep pace with today's situation. For instance months ago Palestinian
    >supporters in the USA -- given the green light to focus on the general
    >theme of "Right of Return" but not on the crucial issues of the "peace
    >process" itself, the corruption of the Arafat "Authority", the weakness
    >of the Arab regimes, and the realities of their own co-opted organizations
    >-- set April 7th for a major demonstration in New York City. What they
    >should have done when they first learned the dates of Sharon's visit to
    >the US is quickly stepped up the date of their demonstration to coincide
    >with Sharon's visit and literally marched on his hotel and Embassy when
    >he is here. But they continue to be so badly lead, so continually
    manipulated,
    >and so pathetically confused that they are not capable of any serious,
    >sustained, and timely efforts -- and everyone, themselves included, knows
    >this. This is especially true of the ADC (American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
    >Committee) which has mislead and deceived so many for so long and whose
    >primary real goal is protecting the Arab regimes from criticism while
    continually
    >feeding themselves with more money and self-given awards.
    > Such is the situation in the opening months of 2001 with Ariel Sharon
    >about to make a triumphant visit to the modern-day Empire and then likely
    >to return to the once Holy Land to bleed and torture the Palestinians still
    >further into submission.
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > SHARON PREPARES TO TAKE ON AMERICA
    >
    > By Lally Weymouth
    >
    > NEWSWEEK - March 19,2001 Issue:
    > It wasn't long ago that Ariel "Arik" Sharon was
    > regarded as a has-been, an aging hawk who seemed
    > ill-suited to Israel's modern era of peace and
    > prosperity.
    >
    >THEN ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN tensions erupted in violence, and Israelis flocked
    >overwhelmingly to Sharon, who took office last week as the head of a broadly
    >based Israeli government. Soon after he was sworn in, the former general
    >granted his first interview to Lally Weymouth of The Washington Post and
    >Newsweek. "It's hard to be a prime minister," said a smiling Sharon, sitting
    >behind his desk in his first week on the job. Sharon started by volunteering
    >some information. "President Bush called me two days ago and invited me
    >to
    >visit him on March 20," he said. Excerpts from the conversation:
    >
    > Weymouth: You were elected to bring security to the people of
    >Israel. How do you plan to do that?
    > Ariel Sharon: I would like to negotiate with the Palestinians, but
    >this government will be different from the former one. It will not negotiate
    >under terror or violence...
    >
    > Reportedly, some of Arafat's own security apparatus is engaged in
    >terrorism. Is this so?
    > The Palestinian Authority does not take any preventive steps against
    >the infrastructure of the terrorist organizations. And Arafat's most loyal
    >forces, like the presidential guard and Force 17, are active participants
    >in
    >violence and terror.
    >
    > If the Intifada uprising gets worse, would you consider re-entering
    >Palestinian controlled areas on the West Bank?
    > Palestinian controlled areas? The answer is no. Areas that were
    >given
    >to the Palestinians-there, I think the situation is irreversible, and I
    >don'
    >t think we have to re-enter. That doesn't mean that Israel will not take
    >steps against people who find shelter there.
    >
    > Have you talked to Arafat?
    > About three weeks ago, Arafat called me and we had quite a long
    >conversation. I stressed that I would like to make a clear distinction
    >between terrorist organizations- against whom we have to take the necessary
    >steps- and, on the other hand, the Palestinian population, whose conditions
    >I would like to ease. I said I would like to start immediately by opening
    >the gates of the Palestinian Authority area to raw materials, [permitting]
    >their agricultural products to be taken out and increasing the number of
    >employees [allowed to come to Israel]. But a day or so later, a wave of
    >terror started and has continued right up to today.
    >
    > Do you believe Arafat has control?
    > He hasn't lost control.
    >
    > Does he have less control than six months ago?
    > No change.
    >
    > If Arafat wanted to stop the terror, could he?
    > Yes, he can stop it.
    >
    > When you spoke to Arafat on the phone, did he indicate he would
    >control the violence?
    > He listened, he did not answer.
    >
    > Did he call you or did you call him?
    > He called me. I said I would like to ease the conditions of your
    >people but in order to do so, steps should be taken to stop the violence.
    >
    > The U.S. is hoping you will turn over the tax payments to the
    >Palestinian Authority.
    > We shouldn't look at Arafat as someone who cannot pay his wages.
    >They
    >have property worth over a billion dollars all over the world.
    >
    > Do you have plans to meet with Arafat?
    > I'm ready to meet and negotiate with him but that cannot be done
    >under pressure of terror or violence. That is the difference between this
    >government and [Ehud] Barak's. Making those concessions weakened Israel.
    >
    > It's rumored that your government may close the Gaza airport so
    >that
    >Arafat's plane cannot take off.
    > I don't want to go into details. Because the Palestinian Authority
    >is
    >behind terror, the concept should be to ease the lives of ordinary citizens
    >and harden the lives of those in the Palestinian Authority.. Arafat agreed
    >to take the necessary steps but he freed many terrorists who are now
    >involved in terror. [In addition to]Hamas and Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah
    >is
    >involved in terror inside Israel. They are backed by Iran and have the
    >sympathy of Syria. Hezbollah has never had better relations with Syria
    >
    > Is that because Syria's new president, Bashar Assad, is more
    >sympathetic to them than his father?
    > I think the father, being more experienced, understood better.
    >Hezbollah also has support in Arafat's presidential guard. Ten days ago,
    >a
    >colonel in the presidential guard was killed by us: he was the liaison
    >with
    >Hezbollah.
    >
    > What are the targets of Islamic Jihad and company?
    > Their targets are Israeli and Jewish targets around the world.
    >
    > Do you have an interim plan because now that Barak's attempts at
    >a
    >comprehensive deal have failed?
    > Barak agrees he did not succeed. President Clinton called me and
    >said
    >Israel is free from what he calls "Clinton principles." He said he warned
    >Arafat many times that he was playing with terror. The former president
    >came
    >up with certain proposals. He said they failed because of Arafat. And
    >therefore Israel is no longer committed to this plan.
    >
    > Some say you plan to create a unilateral separation between Israel
    >and the Palestinian Authority.
    > One should look at realistic plans. The length of the border of
    >Judea
    >and Samaria 'til 1967 was 309 killometers, and we never managed to control
    >it. If we were to make the separation Barak mentioned, the length of the
    >border would be over 700 kilometers [435 miles]. Who could patrol this
    >border? It is not realistic. There should be an interim agreement or a
    >situation of non-belligerency. I know the Palestinians are suffering from
    >lack of contiguity. They don't want Israeli check points.
    >
    > Would you give the Palestinians contiguity?
    > Yes, and a road so they could travel freely from the north to the
    >south of Judea and Samaria. I have a plan so they don't need to cross check
    >points. Maybe that is the way to move forward to peace.
    >
    > Is the Palestinian Authority importing a lot of weapons and
    >ammunition?
    > The most dangerous equipment being smuggled in are arms they are
    >not
    >entitled to have [coming] from Sinai and by ship via Gaza's beaches. They
    >have to stop it.
    >
    > Do you think Iraq is a threat to Israel?
    > I think that the new administration rightly regards Iraq as a very
    >dangerous country. They have the know-how [to make] weapons of mass
    >destruction weapons. They have a very capable group of scientists. No doubt,
    >they they are making tremendous efforts to possess weapons of
    >mass-destruction. Therefore, we support the steps being taken [ in
    >Washington]. I think there is also a danger of Iran getting long-range
    >missiles, thanks to support from North Korea and Russia. The most dangerous
    >thing is that Iran has become the center of world radical Islamic terror.
    >
    >What are your other priorities?
    > To encourage immigration to Israel. We have to make a major effort
    >to
    >bring another million Jews from Russia, South America, Central America,
    >France, the Ukraine, from other places in the former Soviet Union. And,
    >of
    >course, we will make a major effort for American Jews to live here. I
    >believe that in the coming ten to 12 years we have to make an effort to
    >bring another million Jews here. We brought one million in the nineties.
    >I
    >want to bring another million Jews in the coming 10, twelve years. By the
    >year 2020, I hope the majority of Jews will be living here in Israel. We
    >also have to make a tremendous effort in education, here and abroad to
    >teach
    >Zionist values on the one hand and on the other hand, the most sophisticated
    >scientific technology. And then we must bring unity to the Israeli
    >citizens -between ourselves and the Jews around the world. I believe I
    >can
    >talk to the right and to the left, to the religious and the secular, to
    >the
    >ultra-orthodox, to the Arabs, to Jews in Israel and those in the Diaspora.
    >And then of course we must attract more investment. These are going to
    >be my
    >main goals.
    >
    >Is Israel at a crisis point?
    > The country is facing great dangers. On the other hand, there are
    >great hopes. It is a country of talent. I think that the idea is to contain
    >the dangers and to pursue the hopes.I believe I can do it.
    >
    > Are you going to try to do a deal with Syria?
    > It's very hard for this small nation to negotiate on two fronts.
    >And
    >besides, Syria at present is the main supporter of the Hezbullah. I think
    >first we have to deal with the Palestinians.
    >
    > Some say you'll be like the hardliner Richard Nixon who unexpectedly
    >opened America's relationship with China-that you'll be the hawk who's
    >able
    >to make peace with the Palestinians.
    > I believe I can make peace because I saw all the horrors of wars.
    >I
    >participated in all the wars and lost my best friends in battles. I was
    >seriously injured twice. Therefore, I understand the importance of peace
    >better than the politicians who speak about peace but never experienced
    >war.
    >
    > ----------------------------
    >
    >
    > SHARON SET TO LEGALISE TORTURE
    > Uzi Mahnaimi, Tel Aviv
    >
    >[The Sunday Times, 11 March]
    >
    >THE government of Ariel Sharon, meeting today for the first time, is to
    >urge
    >Israel's parliament to approve a law that would allow the security service
    >to torture Arab detainees.
    >
    >The use of "moderate physical pressure" during interrogation has been
    >oulawed by the high court and Yossi Beilin, the former Labour justice
    >minister, resisted demands by Shin Bet, the domestic security service,
    >for
    >its reintroduction.
    >
    >Political sources said Sharon's administration, which was sworn in on
    >Wednesday, was sympathetic to the demand and had enough support to push
    >the
    >measure through the Knesset.
    >
    >Shin Bet officers say force is justified in "time bomb" cases when a
    >prisoner is thought to have knowledge of a terrorist act that is about
    >to be
    >carried out.
    >
    >"We interrogate hundreds of Palestinians every day, all supected of
    >terrorism," said one Shin Bet source. "Last month we arrested a girl who
    >lured an Israeli boy via the internet to Ramallah, where he was brutally
    >murdered. It took us 30 days to get a confession out of her.
    >
    >"If we had been allowed to apply physical pressure she would have confessed
    >after a couple of hours. Physical pressure saves time and sometimes life."
    >
    >Force was routinely used by the security services until 1984, when two
    >Palestinians were murdered during a Shin Bet investigation. A commission
    >of
    >inquiry forbade further torture, but the continued use of "moderate physical
    >pressure" was permitted until September 1999.
    >
    >Political sources say the nation's mood has been changed by the tense
    >military situation and the government would probably succeed in pushing
    >the
    >measure through. At least 343 Palestinians, 65 Israelis and 13 Israeli
    >Arabs
    >have been killed since the beginning of the Palestinian uprising five months
    >ago.
    >
    >The move has come despite signs that the first meeting will soon take place
    >between Sharon and Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader. Sharon's son,
    >Omri, met one of Arafat's senior advisers secretly in Tel Aviv last week,
    >apparently to discuss the violence. The Palestinian cabinet later said
    >it
    >was extending the hand of peace to the new Israeli government - but also
    >called for an end to what it called Israel's policy of "siege and
    >destruction".
    >
    >In a concession, the Israelis yesterday allowed the Palestinian parliament
    >to hold its first full session since the beginning of the uprising. Two
    >members were barred from attending on the grounds that they had incited
    >violence against Israel.
    >
    >In a speech to the parliament, Arafat called for renewed peace talks -
    >but
    >only on the basis of "existing agreements and understandings".
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
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