Feature Archives
Sat Jul 22 2006 (Updated 07/23/06)
US rushes bombs to Israel and discourages cease-fire Lebanon buries its dead
The Bush administration is reportedly rushing a delivery of precision-guided bombs to Israel.
Citing senior US officials, the New York Times said the decision to ship the weapons quickly came after relatively little debate within the administration. While many in Israel are now speaking out against the war, the Democrats in the US are solidly pro-war.
On Sunday, July 23, Dianne Feinstein lead a noon rally in San Francisco supporting the destruction of Lebanon.
Green Party candidate for U.S. Senate Todd Chretien joined other anti-war activists who engaged in a counter-protest.
Photos
The total number of Lebanese deaths so far is not known; mounds of rubble sit undisturbed since rescue workers are too fearful of missiles to search for bodies. The number of confirmed civilian deaths in Lebanon is now over 380.
The total number of Lebanese deaths so far is not known; mounds of rubble sit undisturbed since rescue workers are too fearful of missiles to search for bodies. The number of confirmed civilian deaths in Lebanon is now over 380.
Thu Jul 20 2006 (Updated 07/21/06)
US And World Community Give Israel Free Reign To Kill Lebanese Civilians
The US is giving Israel a window of a week to inflict maximum damage on Hizbullah before weighing in behind international calls for a ceasefire in Lebanon, according to British, European and Israeli sources.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has also rejected calls for Israel to declare a cease-fire.
Canada’s Conservative government has responded to the murder of eight Canadian citizens in an Israeli air strike with a shrug of its shoulders.
The Canadians, four adults and four children aged from 1 to 7, were among eleven members of the Al-Akhrass family who were killed as the result of Israeli strafing of the south Lebanese village of Aitaroun. Of the three hundred people killed in the past eight days of fighting, the overwhelming majority have been, like Montreal pharmacist Ali Al-Akhrass and his family, innocent civilians.
While the US media seeks to present the current crisis in terms of equal suffering—Israeli civilians hit by Hezbollah rockets, Lebanese civilians hit by Israeli bombs—the reality is far different. More than 200 Lebanese have been killed and a billion dollars worth of damage inflicted on their country, compared to 24 Israelis killed, nearly half of them soldiers killed in combat against Hezbollah fighters.
Many Lebanese say the failure of the international community to resolve the crisis in their country is worsening the situation.
Arab countries are no longer interested in issuing a strong condemnation of Israel | A Letter to Canadian PM Stephen Harper | Resist at your peril | Security Council delays, awaits high-level UN team | Lebanese question world's silence | As Lebanese civilians killed en masse, US Senate expresses unanimous support for Israel | Blair rejects MPs' call for unilateral Israeli cease-fire | Ralph Nader: US Has "Inescapable Responsibility" for "Israeli Government's Escalating War Crimes" | Over 100 Palestinians Killed in Three Week Israeli Offensive | Peaceful Rally Calling for an Immediate Ceasefire Draws Large Crowd in Front of White House | US Buys Israel Time in Lebanon | Aid Trundles but Short of Aiding Lebanon | Protests denounce Arab leaders’ complicity in Israeli assault | The fear is growing in Beirut
While the US media seeks to present the current crisis in terms of equal suffering—Israeli civilians hit by Hezbollah rockets, Lebanese civilians hit by Israeli bombs—the reality is far different. More than 200 Lebanese have been killed and a billion dollars worth of damage inflicted on their country, compared to 24 Israelis killed, nearly half of them soldiers killed in combat against Hezbollah fighters.
Many Lebanese say the failure of the international community to resolve the crisis in their country is worsening the situation.
Arab countries are no longer interested in issuing a strong condemnation of Israel | A Letter to Canadian PM Stephen Harper | Resist at your peril | Security Council delays, awaits high-level UN team | Lebanese question world's silence | As Lebanese civilians killed en masse, US Senate expresses unanimous support for Israel | Blair rejects MPs' call for unilateral Israeli cease-fire | Ralph Nader: US Has "Inescapable Responsibility" for "Israeli Government's Escalating War Crimes" | Over 100 Palestinians Killed in Three Week Israeli Offensive | Peaceful Rally Calling for an Immediate Ceasefire Draws Large Crowd in Front of White House | US Buys Israel Time in Lebanon | Aid Trundles but Short of Aiding Lebanon | Protests denounce Arab leaders’ complicity in Israeli assault | The fear is growing in Beirut
Thu Jul 20 2006 (Updated 07/22/06)
Siniora: From Bush Ally To Victim of US Bombs
On July 18th, Israeli war planes struck Lebanese army targets in an overnight raid in which 11 troops, including four officers, were killed and 40 injured. The target wasn't a Hizbullah barracks, it was the regular Lebanese army, which Israel says it would trust to patrol the Lebanese border with Israel, and which they wish would take on Hizbullah.
Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora pleaded for an immediate internationally-sanctioned cease-fire on Tuesday, saying the international community must have been aware that Israel was committing massacres against Lebanese civilians, including children, women and elders. He said that Israel was acting to destroy "everything that allows Lebanon to stay alive".
Siniora came to power as part of an anti-Syrian political movement supported by the Bush administration, dubbed by the American press "the Cedar Revolution" and thought by some to be a CIA front. As recently as April of this year George W. Bush said about Siniora:
I told the Prime Minister that the United States strongly supports a free and independent and sovereign Lebanon. We took great joy in seeing the Cedar Revolution. We understand that the hundreds of thousands of people who took to the street to express their desire to be free required courage, and we support the desire of the people to have a government responsive to their needs and a government that is free, truly free . . . We talked about the great tradition of Lebanon to serve as a model of entrepreneurship and prosperity. Beirut is one of the great international cities, and I'm convinced that if Lebanon is truly free and independent and democratic, that Beirut will once again regain her place as a center of financial and culture and the arts.
There's no question in my mind that Lebanon can serve as a great example for what is possible in the broader Middle East; that out of the tough times the country has been through will rise a state that shows that it's possible for people of religious difference to live side-by-side in peace; to show that it's possible for people to put aside past histories to live together in a way that the people want, which is, therefore, to be peace and hope and opportunity.
On July 18th Bush warned Syria to stay out of Lebanon as he signalled to Israel that it would have more time to carry out its military campaign. He said Israel had been asked to ensure that the government of Fouad Siniora survived, but the White House declined to comment on repeated Israeli strikes against Lebanese army units.
Juan Cole: Bush to Siniora: Drop Dead | Is the Arab Spring turning to Dust under Israeli Bombardment? |
Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora pleaded for an immediate internationally-sanctioned cease-fire on Tuesday, saying the international community must have been aware that Israel was committing massacres against Lebanese civilians, including children, women and elders. He said that Israel was acting to destroy "everything that allows Lebanon to stay alive".
Siniora came to power as part of an anti-Syrian political movement supported by the Bush administration, dubbed by the American press "the Cedar Revolution" and thought by some to be a CIA front. As recently as April of this year George W. Bush said about Siniora:
I told the Prime Minister that the United States strongly supports a free and independent and sovereign Lebanon. We took great joy in seeing the Cedar Revolution. We understand that the hundreds of thousands of people who took to the street to express their desire to be free required courage, and we support the desire of the people to have a government responsive to their needs and a government that is free, truly free . . . We talked about the great tradition of Lebanon to serve as a model of entrepreneurship and prosperity. Beirut is one of the great international cities, and I'm convinced that if Lebanon is truly free and independent and democratic, that Beirut will once again regain her place as a center of financial and culture and the arts.
There's no question in my mind that Lebanon can serve as a great example for what is possible in the broader Middle East; that out of the tough times the country has been through will rise a state that shows that it's possible for people of religious difference to live side-by-side in peace; to show that it's possible for people to put aside past histories to live together in a way that the people want, which is, therefore, to be peace and hope and opportunity.
On July 18th Bush warned Syria to stay out of Lebanon as he signalled to Israel that it would have more time to carry out its military campaign. He said Israel had been asked to ensure that the government of Fouad Siniora survived, but the White House declined to comment on repeated Israeli strikes against Lebanese army units.
Juan Cole: Bush to Siniora: Drop Dead | Is the Arab Spring turning to Dust under Israeli Bombardment? |
Fri Jul 14 2006 (Updated 07/16/06)
July 15th 2006 -- Day of Action for Climate Justice
Russian social activists are calling upon the world to protest massive violations of basic freedoms in Russia that occurred in the leadup to the G8 meeting and on July 15th. They are asking for support for imprisoned activists and journalists.
On July 15th, the "Group of 8" (G8) richest industrialized countries began a three-day gathering in St. Petersburg, Russia to plot their continued commodification and domination of the planet. The intended focus of the gathering was "Energy Security," which promopted people to declare that July 15th would be an International Day of Direct Action against Climate Change and the G8. The Davis Anti-Biotech Coalition will be distributing info about SB 1056 at 9am on Monday, July 17th outside of the USDA building in Davis. Protests are also being held in London, Washington, DC, and Russia.
On July 15th, the "Group of 8" (G8) richest industrialized countries began a three-day gathering in St. Petersburg, Russia to plot their continued commodification and domination of the planet. The intended focus of the gathering was "Energy Security," which promopted people to declare that July 15th would be an International Day of Direct Action against Climate Change and the G8. The Davis Anti-Biotech Coalition will be distributing info about SB 1056 at 9am on Monday, July 17th outside of the USDA building in Davis. Protests are also being held in London, Washington, DC, and Russia.
Thu Jul 13 2006 (Updated 07/18/06)
Israel Goes to War with Lebanon as Violence Spreads
On Wednesday July 12th, Hezbollah abducted two Israeli soldiers on the Israel-Lebanon border. Israel responded with the heaviest bombing of Lebanon in 24 years and the imposition of a naval blockade. WIth over 50 civilians killed in the first day of bombings, outrage has spread throughout the Middle East and around the world. In San Francisco, a protest against Israel's actions was held in front of the Israeli consulate on July 13th.
Photos: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
|
5
|
Video
Photos: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
|
5
|
Video
Mon Jul 10 2006 (Updated 07/16/06)
"No to the Damn Fraud": López Obrador the Likely Winner in Mexico
The Mexican election of July 2 is the most contested presidential vote in Mexico’s history. At a massive demonstration in the capitol (the Mexican government estimated there were 280,000), protesters chanted “No to the damn fraud!” The candidate of the leftist PRD, Ándres Manuel López Obrador, likely beat the declared winner, Felipe Calderón of the PAN. López Obrador told the crowd, “We are confronting a powerful group, economically and politically, that are accustomed to winning at all costs, without moral scruples. If there is not democracy, there will be instability.”
Sun Jul 9 2006 (Updated 07/10/06)
CISPES Solidarity Demonstration
On July 7th, Bay Area CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) and supporters protested violence in San Salvador that led to the death of multiple people, along with dozens injured, which is being called the worst violation of human rights since the signing of the 1992 Peace Accords.
Photos
Photos
International:
57




