Prikazani su postovi s oznakom zločini protiv čovječnosti. Prikaži sve postove
Prikazani su postovi s oznakom zločini protiv čovječnosti. Prikaži sve postove

petak, 6. travnja 2012.

Linkovi - uglavnom Sirija, Hrvatska...


PALESTINA/IZRAEL:
Günther Grass: Izrael kao prijetnja svjetskom miru
Njemački nobelovac Guenter Grass napao je u srijedu Izrael kao prijetnju svjetskom miru i kazao da toj državi ne smije biti dopušteno da napadne Iran... Grass (84), iskusni ljevičarski aktivist i kritičar zapadnih vojnih intervencija poput one u Iraku, također je osudio njemačku prodaju oružja Izraelu u pjesmi pod naslovom "Što se mora izreći" objavljenoj u srijedu u nekoliko novina u Njemačkoj te u New York Timesu i talijanskoj Republici.
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HRVATSKA:
Protiv privatizacije
Web stranice inicijative "Protiv privatizacije"
Protiv privatizacije je inicijativa čiji je cilj stvaranjem pritiska odozdo kroz različite direktne akcije pokušati spriječiti privatizacije koje je u 2012. najavila nova vlada. Privatizacija i deindustrijalizacija uz stvaranje nove kapitalističke elite (Tuđmanovih “200 obitelji”), kojoj je društvena imovina predana na lijepe oči, jedan je od glavnih uzroka većine današnjih hrvatskih ekonomskih problema. Mnoga uspješna poduzeća, poput Hrvatskog telekoma ili banaka, prodana su u bescjenje (često nakon namjernog sustavnog upropaštavanja) i putem njih se danas izvlače golemi profiti iz zemlje. Mnoga nekoć uspješna poduzeća, poput Plive, privatizirana su i svedena na sjenku svoje nekadašnje moći. Nova vlada je samo nastavila takvu štetnu politiku te ju dapače pokušava dotjerati do i u svijetu nezamislivih granica najavljujući postupnu i djelomičnu privatizaciju čak i škola, zatvora, staračkih domova, nacionalnih parkova, najavljujući davanje autocesta u koncesiju… Ukratko – potpuna rasprodaja i nastavak bezumne politike koja nas je u ovaj položaj i dovela. Među ostalim, najavljuje se i privatizacija Hrvatske poštanske banke (koja je lani ostvarila dobit od 87,7 milijuna kuna), Croatia osiguranja (lani dobit od 104,7 milijuna kuna) i kutinske Petrokemije (lani dobit od 107,8 milijuna kuna). Ako se gledaju interesi društva, riječ je o potpuno bezumnim potezima kojima će se nakratko zakrpati rupe u proračunu, ali će se dugoročno izgubiti profitabilna poduzeća koja svake godine vraćaju novce u proračun. Problem je u tome što ova vlada, kao ni prethodne, ne radi u interesu 99% ljudi u Hrvatskoj, nego u interesu 1% političko-gospodarske “elite” i stranih vjerovnika kojima treba vratiti dugove.
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Divovski promašaj
Država uporno nije željela prepustiti brodogradilišta na upravljanje osobama koje bi se nametnule stručnošću i osvjedočenim zalaganjem za javni interes, nego je tamo namještala stranačke pomazanike. Tako je postupala – i to svaka vlast kroz dva protekla desetljeća – i s drugim državnim i javnim poduzećima. U svima njima, osim Uljanika kao izuzetka, korupcija je nesmetano cvala do enormnih razmjera, a privatni kooperanti su iznosili sav mogući profit i državi ostavljali gubitke i dugove. Na dičnoj hrvatskoj brodogradnji, baš kao i na cestogradnji, recimo, obogatio se mnogi dotadašnji mali obrtnik. I sad, uvjeravaju nas, ništa logičnije se ne da smisliti doli prepuštanja brodogradnje takvim nekim brižnim privatnicima, jer je država, vele, više nego očito – najgori gazda. Na jednako logično pitanje, zašto se ne bi makar sad škverovi povjerili struci, odnosno samim njihovim radnicima, zagovornici privatizacije unisono odgovaraju kako država više nema prostora za novo zaduživanje i novi poslovni rizik. Za radnike ne, za privatnog kupca da. Ipak, premijer Zoran Milanović najavio je novu turu pregovora s Europskom unijom, koja inzistira na svršetku ove priče, kako bi se iznašlo neko rješenje za 3. maj te Brodotrogir. Da bismo shvatili s kojih pozicija će Milanović tom zgodom pohoditi Bruxelles, prisjetimo se njegovih prigovora otprije neki dan, povodom gašenja Kraljevice, a na račun posrnule brodogradnje. Škverovi su, govori on, ugrađivali previše uvoznih dijelova. Baš kao da su škverovi krivi za temeljito uništenje gotovo kompletnog ostatka hrvatske industrije i svega onog što se ugrađuje u brod, od metala, plastike, drva, gume i tekstila. Tako zatvaramo krug i dolazimo do temeljne zamjene teza u hrvatskoj ekonomskoj politici. Nema što više Milanović pregovarati s Europskom unijom, dok i on i ona poriču odgovornost elite za uništavanje proizvodnje i samim tim radničkih pozicija, u korist globaliziranog krupnog kapitala te financijaškog i trgovačkog biznisa. A privatizacija ama baš svega je njima cilj, nikakva posljedica niti gruba neminovnost.
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SIRIJA:
HRW: "We Live as in War" Crackdown on Protesters in the Governorate of Homs
Witnesses also reported security forces' use of heated metal rods to burn different parts of the body, use of electric shocks, use of stress positions for hours or even days at a time, and the use of improvised devices, such as car tires (locally known as the dulab), to force the bodies of detainees into positions that make it easier to beat them on sensitive parts of the body, like the soles of the feet and head. ... Syria remains off-limits to international journalists and human rights groups, and communications are often interrupted in affected areas. However, an expanding network of activists grouping themselves in local coordination committees and making extensive use of the Internet and social groups have compiled a list of 3,121 civilians dead, including 232children, as of November 2, 2011. On October 14, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay deplored the "devastatingly remorseless toll of human lives" in Syria and said the death toll had exceeded 3,000 people. ... "As we were burying the dead, I suddenly heard gunshots. Four pick-up vehicles with people in uniforms, helmets, and body armor drove up, shooting at the people with their automatic guns and guns mounted on the vehicles. We started running away. The mother and brother of one of the dead were killed next to his coffin. ..." ... "... Then two cars showed up suddenly and opened fire, targeting people even as they were ducking and lying on the ground. They were white Kia Cerato cars with tinted windows, like those used by Air Force intelligence. The guns were machine guns. ... In all, I saw four people killed, all by machine guns from those two cars. I don't know their names, but one was pregnant, one was about a year-and-a-half old, one was 30 years old, and one was 25 years old." ... According to the witness accounts, most of the violence was perpetrated by mukhabarat forces or shabeeha militias. In at least one case, in Tal Kalakh on May 14, a witness said that mukhabarat forces shot to death an army officer for refusing to open fire on protesters. ... a mukhabarat officer who defected told Human Rights Watch that a high-ranking mukhabarat officer ordered the soldiers to fire on the protesters holding a sit-in in the New Clock Tower Square in Homs on April 19, even though they knew that the protesters were unarmed. ...: "... At around 3:30 a.m., we got an order from Colonel Abdel Hamid Ibrahim from Air Force security to shoot at the protesters. We were shooting for more than half an hour. There were dozens and dozens of people killed and wounded. Thirty minutes later, earth diggers and fire trucks arrived. The diggers lifted the bodies and put them in a truck. I don't know where they took them. The wounded ended up at the military hospital in Homs. And then the fire trucks started cleaning the square." ... One local activist explained to Human Rights Watch that since June, army defections had increased and that many neighborhoods had about 15-20 defectors who would sometimes intervene when they heard gunfire. ...: "There was a huge protest. Thousands of protesters marching from three mosques eventually joined at a roundabout near Brazil Street. Security forces first fired teargas. Then they opened fire with blanks, before they started using live fire. About seven protesters were injured. At that point, several defectors showed up on motorcycles and killed 14 or 15 members of the security forces using Kalashnikovs and pump-action shotguns. By the time the security forces returned with reinforcements, the protesters had dispersed." ... "... When they returned him to the cell two hours later, he was half-dead. No matter where you touched his body, he screamed in pain. He had black-and-red marks from electric shocks on his hands, legs, and back. They pulled out nails on his hands. The interrogators also used an electric drill on him – he had holes from the drill on his hands, hips, knees, and feet. He was bleeding profusely. We asked the guard to give him medical assistance, but they refused. ..." ... "After the nurses stitched my wound without applying any anesthesia, the guards took me into a detention facility in the hospital, threw me on the ground, and started beating me. I told them I was injured and cried, asking them not to beat me, but they didn't stop. They put me on a bed, and when they removed my blindfold, I saw five other detainees, all with gunshot wounds, on the beds around me. Two hours later one of the guards came in, and beat me again. Then I saw him heating up a metal rod on a gas heater. I was terrified that he would use it on me, but instead he walked up to another man – he was naked, and his hands were cuffed. The guard put the red-hot metal rod to his testicles. The man screamed, saying he was innocent. The guard then beat him with the same rod, and then heated it up again, this time burning his feet." ... "A week after he was detained, his body was returned to his parents. I saw the body when it was brought in. It was covered in bruises and oval red and blue marks that seemed to be from electric shocks, mostly on his back. His ribs were broken – some of the ribs were sticking out of his body. His father said that he had been called into the central facility of the Military Intelligence in Homs and made to sign a statement saying that Ahmad had been killed by “extremists.” He said the security forces threatened to otherwise not only keep the body but also "go after his daughters." So he had no choice but to sign it." ... Residents of Homs interviewed by Human Rights Watch repeated allegations that mutilated bodies of people who had previously been detained were dumped in public gardens and other areas in the city. ... Human Rights Watch believes that the nature and scale of abuses committed by the Syrian security forces across the country, and in Homs Governorate, indicate that crimes including murder, torture, unlawful imprisonment, and enforced disappearances, amounting to crimes against humanity, have been committed. The similarities in the apparent unlawful killings, including evidence of security forces shooting at protesters without any warning in repeated instances, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances, and torture, indicate the existence of a widespread or systematic attack against the civilian population, which has the backing of the state. Unlike war crimes, crimes against humanity can also be committed during times of peace, if they are part of a widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population. ... Because crimes against humanity are considered crimes of universal jurisdiction, all states are responsible for bringing to justice those responsible. International jurisprudence and standards establish that persons responsible for crimes against humanity, as well as other serious violations of human rights, should not be granted amnesty for those crimes. ... Human Rights Watch supports the call by the High Commission for Human Rights for a referral to the International Criminal Court (ICC). Human Rights Watch believes that in the current situation the ICC is the forum most capable of effectively investigating and prosecuting those bearing most responsibility for any crimes committed and offering accountability to the Syrian people. In the absence of the government of Syria ratifying the Rome statute, or referring the situation itself to the ICC, the Court requires a referral by the Security Council to be seized of the matter. However in the event of continued stalemate at the Security Council, Human Rights Watch recalls that crimes against humanity may also be subject to universal jurisdiction, and urges other countries to consider the exercise of universal jurisdiction for crimes committed in Syria.
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Human Rights Watch reporting on Syria
Stranica Human Rights Watch-a s izvještajima o kršenjima ljudskih prava i zločinima protiv čovječnosti počinjenim u Siriji.
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AI: HEALTH CRISIS: SYRIAN GOVERNMENT TARGETS THE WOUNDED AND HEALTH WORKERS
In Homs, one of Syria's major cities and governorates, government security forces have obstructed ambulances on their way to pick up wounded people and when ferrying the wounded to hospital, threatened Syrian Arab Red Crescent (SARC) workers with violence or detention and interrogated wounded patients while they were still being conveyed in ambulances. ... The security forces have regularly entered state hospitals in search of people injured during the protests, who are liable to be arrested, detained incommunicado and subjected to torture or other ill-treatment. In consequence, unsurprisingly, many people are now reportedly avoiding state-run hospitals if they or their relatives have been wounded during the protests and unrest, and turning instead to private hospitals where they may obtain treatment without exposing themselves to likely arrest or to the makeshift field hospitals that have been set up by some local communities to treat people shot or otherwise wounded by the army and security forces. These private and field hospitals, however, face problems in obtaining adequate medical supplies, including blood for use in transfusions, which they can obtain only from the Central Blood Bank controlled by the Ministry of Defence. ... Many know that the security forces have raided hospitals in which they believed wounded unrest victims were being treated and are probably aware that a number of health professionals have been detained, and in some cases tortured, for seeking to protect patients in their care. ... "... Among them was a boy, aged around 15, injured in his foot. We, the doctors, were attending to more serious injuries as he waited on a bed… I remember hearing shrieks of pain, so I walked towards the voice and saw a male nurse hitting the boy hard on his injury and swearing at him as he poured surgical spirit on the injured foot in an act that clearly intended to cause the boy additional pain... ..." ... "I stood at the door of the emergency room while [“Ahmed”] was unconscious as he was being stitched. There were around seven or eight security men, some carrying rifles, and nurses wearing white robes crowded around him. He opened his eyes and said: ‘Where am I?’ They all suddenly jumped on him and started beating him and hitting him, including a nurse wearing a white robe and a security man with a stick. They shouted foul language at him and said: ‘You pig, you want freedom, eh?’..." ... "Ahmed" told him he had been beaten mercilessly, particularly on his stomach, by both security officials and male nurses at Tell Kalakh hospital. Then he was taken to the military hospital in Homs because his head wound started bleeding, only to be beaten and verbally abused again, though doctors did re-stitch his wound. He was moved to Military Security as a detainee, interrogated for several hours despite his injuries, and reportedly given electric shocks to his testicles, chest and neck. Next day, he was again interrogated from around 9am until the evening and was seen by other detainees to be in a very bad condition when returned to his cell. He said he had been forced into a stress position for a prolonged period and tortured with electric shocks. His fellow detainees asked a guard for anti-inflammatory pills and painkillers for him but were told there were none. ... "We were not treated like humans; it was like we were animals… for four days, I was cuffed to the bed by my feet and hands and it was hard to move… without food or water. Once I asked [the sergeant] for water, so he said: ‘Okay, I will give you water,’ and he peed on me… We were not allowed to use the toilet… we did it on the bed… sometimes as I closed my eyes to sleep, [the sergeant] would hit me with a baton made of wire cables… Nurses and doctors wearing white robes would come to the room, share a laughter with [the sergeant]… one told him that it was enough that we were beaten, he didn't have to pee on us… another came and watched us and then shouted that we deserved what we're going through because we were animals… Female nurses would come to the room at different times just to poke us with needles. I was poked by at least four nurses on around five different occasions to my face, feet and abdomen." ... For example, in two separate incidents at the Military Police facility, a wounded man and a wounded woman were tortured with a heated iron skewer placed on their genitals. ... Soldiers stabbed 21-year-old "Samer" twice in the buttocks with a bayonet during his arrest on 17 May 2011 in a town in the governorate of Homs. He was taken to Homs military hospital's morgue to identify bodies of men from his home town. "I was blindfolded and my hands were tied behind my back. The security man wrapped a mask over my mouth and took me to a very cold room. I wasn't told what it was. Then the security man ordered another man, who apparently worked at the hospital, to show corpse number one. He removed the blindfold and told me not to dare to raise my head. 'Don't look up, I will kill you. Just look where I direct you,' he told me. They opened a black nylon sack and I could see a corpse from the head to the chest. It was the corpse of X. I told him who it was. He wrote down the name on a piece of paper and tagged the corpse. His right eye was stitched, he was hit with bullets on the right shoulder and what appeared to be a stab to the chest. I remained composed but was crying deep inside me. Then he made me stand back and put the blindfold on my eyes again, and ordered the hospital worker to bring corpse number two. They showed me only the face and neck and I saw Y. It was as if they have burned his hair and beard, and his neck seemed to be broken because it was loose. Then I was told to stand back and he said: bring corpse number three. It was Z and his neck looked black and his teeth were black and his face was a bit disfigured, specifically his right eye and his chest as if they had stabbed him with a bayonet on the chest two or three times. There were maggots on the left side of his stomach. Again, he tagged the name I gave him on the corpse. Corpse number four was so disfigured that I couldn't recognize it. It was as if one side of his face had melted. I said: 'Sidi [sir], I don't know him.' So he started moving his face right and left but I just couldn't tell who he was. He showed me other corpses and I think the total was 10 corpses. I said I didn't know any of them. He got angry and said: 'So, you don't know them, eh? Okay, they will introduce themselves to you!' He opened the morgue door, blindfolded me again and pushed me inside and I fell face down on what I could feel was a body. I got up with difficulty as I was wounded in my backside, blindfolded and my hands tied. As I pulled myself up to stand up because I didn't want to lie down between the bodies, I tried to avoid stepping on any of the bodies. I finally stood up… I started praying silently so that God will make things easier for me. I then tried to put my mind off the fact that I'm confined in the morgue, and I started thinking about my family and friends, anything in the outside world that will make me forget where I was. After around one or two hours, I felt so cold deep in my bones and couldn't stop shivering… my bones were shivering, so I shouted to them: I beg you; I swear to God I now know them… I know them all. So they opened the door and dragged me. He ordered me to kneel down. I told him I was wounded but he forced me to kneel. He removed the blindfold and asked me to raise my head and then poured an entire bottle of surgical spirit over my head. I first thought it was water, but then realized it was medical alcohol from the smell and its burning effect. He wiped my eyes and then brought a small digital photo camera… he showed me photos of the same corpses that I saw earlier, and I repeated the names of the first three, and then recognized another two. The rest, I couldn't recognize… but didn't dare to say so, so I just came up with names of people I know from our town. I had to save myself. I was taken blindfolded but able to look from under it in a bus and they threw me on the bus floor and men there were stepping on me and hitting me. I told them I was wounded, they asked where? And when I pointed to the injury, they beat me hard on it. Then I started bleeding and someone ordered them to stay away from me. So they started spitting and swearing at me. We arrived at the Branch [probably Military Security], and were taken to the interrogators. They removed the blindfold and asked me to keep my eyes on the floor. Then one brought a camera and showed me the same corpses and every time I gave the name of a corpse, he would put an electric taser on me. It made my voice shiver. When I reached the last corpse, I couldn't remember the name I gave earlier, and came up with another name. So he put the electric taser on my left leg and kept it there for a while and then asked the guard to take me away." "Samer" was released in the first week of June after putting his thumb print to documents he says he was not permitted to read. ... However, when the ambulance had picked up the wounded person at about 10.35pm, it came under fire, apparently from the security forces as it took the alternative route from Haret al-Hameediye to Abu al-Hol Street. Three SARC volunteers were injured, including Mohamed Hakam Durraq al-Siba'i who died eight days later. ... on the night of 5-6 August at 12.30am, SARC was called to help an injured 14-year-old girl in Hayy al-Fakhoura in Homs. The ambulance was stopped at three security checkpoints on al-'Adawiyya, around a 2km-long street. ... the officer decided to keep the other five IDs to make sure that the ambulance returned to his checkpoint, warning the crew that if they did not return after five minutes, he would consider the ambulance stolen and it would be hit "with a propelled grenade". Fortunately, the girl was conscious and could walk, despite injuries to the pelvis, and the ambulance returned to the checkpoint within the five-minute deadline. ... The officer who initially had stopped them entered the ambulance holding his rifle – a clear breach of SARC rules – and questioned the girl. When she explained that she had been shot while in her grandfather's garden, the officer accused her of lying. ... With mistrust deepening about government-run hospitals, a growing number of wounded people and their families and friends have been opting to find treatment in less well equipped private hospitals or makeshift field hospitals. In response, the authorities have restricted the medical care that such facilities can offer. ... "He was bleeding heavily and shrieking from pain… we had no anaesthetics and no blood units, and all we could do was clean his wound, and provide him with painkillers and serum… What we needed were blood units, an anaesthetic, and a surgeon, and all are usually available at al-Bassel Hospital. But it was impossible to take Majed there because the army and security occupied the hospital and snipers positioned on its rooftop shot at anyone in their line of vision." ... Mohamed Majed al-Akkari died two days later. Video footage was taken of his body on the floor of a house. Two ice blocks had been put on top of him as it was too dangerous to take his body to the hospital morgue, which had been taken over by the army. He was eventually buried in the garden. ... "Communications and electricity were cut off, so we couldn't use essential medical equipment such as the XRay machine, which we desperately needed to locate the bullets lodged in the body… We had to perform clinical examinations without any diagnostic investigations." Private hospitals and health professionals working in them suspected of treating the wounded without informing the authorities and providing blood units from a source other than the Central Blood Bank have been targeted by government forces. The medical care of patients has also been compromised during security raids of hospitals after which wounded people have been taken away against medical advice. In at least one case, security forces stormed an operating theatre while a patient was undergoing surgery. ... he was in pain throughout and unable to stand after sustaining an abdominal wound and being tortured at the National Hospital in Banias. His interrogator allowed him to sit while being questioned, blindfolded and with his hands cuffed, but neither he nor the two other wounded detainees were examined by a doctor or treated for their injuries. Following this, "Mohamed" was moved to "Branch 235", a security installation in Damascus where he was subjected to further torture and abuse but received no medical care throughout the 17 days that he was held there. Boiling water was poured onto his neck, armpit and the soles of his feet and he and other detainees were whipped by guards. He told Amnesty International that he had feared to ask for access to a doctor. ... Medical staff have been among the thousands of people who have been arrested and tortured by the security forces since the current unrest began in March. Some have been detained for treating people injured during the unrest without reporting them to the authorities, others because of their participation in anti-government demonstrations or because they are suspected of providing information about human rights violations by Syrian security forces. ... "We were blindfolded with our hands tied behind our backs, and they swore at us and beat us badly. One of the doctors was wearing his white robe when he was arrested, and he was picked on a lot. They would say: 'So you're the one who treats the wounded, aren't you?' He attracted the attention of all the security personnel, and no one missed beating him. We were taken to the Military Security in Homs where we were welcomed with kicks and slaps to the face, and then placed in an overcrowded room… ... my colleagues, two doctors and the head of nursing, were beaten up badly… At the late stage of our detention, I was taken to an investigating judge and he told me that I had confessed to protesting and rioting. I said that I hadn't and that they forced me to sign a document that I had not read because I was blindfolded. I was released in late August on bail along with my colleagues and now face charges of protesting and damaging the image of the state… Since it would be improper to put us on trial for treating the wounded, they came up with such charges." ... He and the others were taken to the local sports stadium where there were hundreds of men, including some elderly men and a number of boys, who had been detained during the crackdown. They were blindfolded and had their wrists secured with plastic ties. ... "Soldiers and security would come in turn, and ask: 'Where is the doctor? Where is the doctor?' Then they would beat him very hard… They would taunt the nurse, ["Ihab"], saying: 'Look how beautiful he looks, wearing green!' Then I could hear a loud collision of the thick wooden baton against his body followed by "Ihab's" loud shrieking... As they hit him, they would say: 'You were at the hospital, weren't you? Treating the wounded, weren't you?'"
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ponedjeljak, 26. ožujka 2012.

Peticija za procesuiranje sirijskih zločina protiv čovječnosti na Međunarodnom kaznenom sudu


Izvor i link na peticiju: Arrest Syria's torturers

Na linku možete potpisati peticiju svim članicama UN-ovog Vijeća sigurnosti i Arapske lige kojom tražimo da odgovorni za zločine protiv čovječnosti počinjene od strane sirijskog režima budu procesuirani na Međunarodnom kaznenom sudu.

Hrvatski prijevod teksta peticije:
Svim članicama UN-ovog Vijeća sigurnosti i Arapske lige:
Pozivamo vas da zaustavite ubojiti teror u Siriji na način da odmah uputite slučajeve protiv sirijskog režima Međunarodnom kaznenom sudu. UN-ovo Vijeće za ljudska prava i novi Avaazov izvještaj pronašli su dokaze da su Assadovi viši dužnosnici i sigurnosne snage počinili zločine protiv čovječnosti. Došlo je vrijeme da se zaustavi ova ubojita brutalnost i zaštiti sirijski narod koji riskira sve kako bi se izborio za svoja prava i dostojanstvo.

Potrebno je u odgovarajuća polja upisati Ime i prezime (Name), Email adresu (Email), odabrati svoju Zemlju (Country), upisati Poštanski broj (Post code), te potom kliknuti na SIGN.


Na ovom linku možete također pronaći razne načine kako poslati dodatne poruke ruskim vlastima i od njih zatražiti da poduzmu potrebne korake kako bi zločine počinjene od strane Assadovog režima mogao procesuirati Međunarodni kazneni sud.


Izvor i link na peticiju: Arrest Syria's torturers

nedjelja, 25. ožujka 2012.

Linkovi - Sirija, SAD


SIRIJA:
Witnesses Describe Idlib Destruction, Killings, One Year On, Indiscriminate Attacks Inflicting Heavy Toll
Syrian activists have compiled a list of 114 civilians killed since the current assault there, which began on March 10, 2012. Five witnesses, including three foreign correspondents, gave separate accounts to Human Rights Watch that government forces used large-caliber machine-guns, tanks, and mortars to fire indiscriminately at buildings and people in the street. After they entered Idlib, government forces detained people in house-to-house searches, looted buildings, and burned down houses, the witnesses said. ... The attacks on Idlib follow months of atrocities that both the United Nation's Commission of Inquiry and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights have described as crimes against humanity. The large-scale military operation on Idlib on March 10 began at around 5 a.m. ... Three children – two girls and one boy – and their father had been killed. One of the girls had fallen from the building so she was lying in the street. The other members of the family were injured as well. It looked like the building had been hit from the roof. There was no particular reason for the army to attack this building. They just shot at everything. They are crazy. They have no particular targets. "Hassan", a journalist with significant experience working in war zones, told Human Rights Watch that one of the people extracting the wounded and killed from the building on Ajama street brought him remnants of the shell used to attack the building. Hassan identified the remnant as a mortar. ... Many of the wounded and killed were brought to a hospital in the old city, which was quickly overwhelmed by the number of casualties. ... At least 20 killed people were brought to the hospital the first day. There were more the second day – at least 30. The third day was terrifying. I don't think anybody was keeping lists at that point. Wounded people kept arriving all the time. Medical personnel were trying to revive and attend to the wounded on the floors in the corridors because there was no space. Doctors were doing surgery without the proper equipment. They were doing their best, but they were really exhausted. ... The hospital was in total chaos. They couldn't cope with the number of killed and injured. The dead were buried right away in a nearby park. But by Sunday [March 11] they had run out of space in the park and the park and school behind it were also being attacked so they had to bury the dead wherever they could. ... There were women, children and elderly among them. Most of the civilians were wounded or killed because of shelling. As government forces moved in to occupy areas of the city, they frequently looted shops and apartments, and deliberately burned down houses of suspected activists, the witnesses said. ... The witnesses interviewed by Human Rights Watch said that it is very difficult for people to leave the city as the highway encircling Idlib, forming a belt around the city, is controlled by the Syrian army. Landmines planted by government forces along the border with Turkey have made it even more difficult for people to flee the government's onslaught. Hassan estimated that 85 percent of Idlib's population is still in the city. ... One year after the uprising began in Syria, security forces have killed at least 8,000 civilians according to lists compiled by local activists. Vetoes by Russia and China have prevented the Security Council from taking any action on Syria despite evidence that crimes against humanity are being committed. ... The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights has, on multiple occasions, recommended that the Security Council refer the situation to the court. Similarly, a growing number and wide range of countries have voiced their support for an ICC referral. On March 13, during a session at the UN Human Rights Council, Austria delivered a cross-regional statement on behalf of 13 countries supporting the High Commissioner's call for a referral. Human Rights Watch urged others to join the mounting calls for accountability by supporting a referral to the ICC as the forum most capable of effectively investigating and prosecuting those bearing the greatest responsibility for abuses in Syria.
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The Syrian authorities must reveal the fate of Mazen Darwish and SCM staff
Since their detention almost a month ago, Mr. Mazen Darwish and eight other men have been held in incommunicado detention at the Air Force Intelligence detention center located in El Mezzeh, Damascus. They have no access to any of their colleagues, family members or their lawyers and so far no official charges have been pressed against them. ... According to the Violations Documentation Center, a Syrian network of activists, at least 386 detainees died in custody since the start of the uprising on March 15, 2011.
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Amnesty International: 'I WANTED TO DIE' SYRIA'S TORTURE SURVIVORS SPEAK OUT
According to the many testimonies gathered and received by Amnesty International over the past year, people are almost invariably beaten and otherwise tortured and ill-treated during arrest, often during the subsequent transportation to detention centres, and routinely upon arrival at the detention centres and afterwards. Among the victims are children aged under 18. The torture and other ill-treatment appear intended to punish, to intimidate, to coerce “confessions” and perhaps to send a warning to others as to what they may expect should they also be arrested. In almost all cases the detainees are held in incommunicado detention, often for lengthy periods, with no access to visits from their families or lawyers in conditions which all too often amount to enforced disappearance. In scores of cases, the torture or other ill-treatment is so severe that victims have died in custody, leading to a staggering rise in the number of such deaths reported. Amnesty International documented this disturbing trend in its report Deadly detention: Death in custody amid popular protest in Syria, published in August 2011. Since then, the number of reported deaths in custody has continued to rise and at the time of writing had reached 276. Given the number of people believed to be held in conditions amounting to enforced disappearance in Syria whose families have had no information concerning their fate for months, the true figure is likely to be higher. Individuals are particularly at risk of arbitrary detention and torture and other ill-treatment if they take to the streets to protest or in any other way promote protests, record or disseminate information about them, or document government violations. Others run the risk of such abuses if they try to provide medical assistance to people shot by the security forces or otherwise injured in the protests. Others still are at risk for their real or suspected support of the FSA or other armed opposition groups. Torture and other ill-treatment continue to be routinely practised by all the various security forces, whether Air Force Intelligence, Military Intelligence, Political Security, General Intelligence (which is usually referred to as State Security), Criminal Security or the armed forces. Air Force Intelligence – currently headed by Major General Jamil Hassan – has the most feared reputation. Even in hospitals, individuals injured in the protests needing medical assistance may suffer torture and other ill-treatment; some are even killed or are subjected to enforced disappearances. Amnesty International documented how the Syrian authorities have turned hospitals and medical staff into instruments of repression in its October 2011 report Health crisis: Syrian government targets the wounded and health workers. The report also documents how medical staff who defy the government may themselves face arrest, incommunicado detention, torture or other ill-treatment and other prosecution for their attempts to carry out their obligation to put their patients' welfare first. ... “During one of those night-beating sessions a guy had his ribs broken in front of me. Another had his back broken but they did not take him to hospital. A young man from Homs was beaten in one of those sessions with metal pipes. His neck was broken and he died on the spot. I don't know where they took him.” ... “We were carrying two injured people when Military Intelligence caught us. They shot dead with revolvers the injured on the floor. They tied my hands behind my back and blindfolded me… They took me to Military Intelligence in Kafr Sousseh… In the car they beat me, punched me in the head and pulled my hair… I was beaten so much with fists, sticks, kicks. I lost consciousness. I lost sense of time. I came to in a tiny cell. I was in terrible pain, badly bleeding, with bad back pain.” ... In use over many years, although less frequently reported in recent years, is the “German Chair” torture method which involves the detainee being tied by their arms and legs to a metal chair, the back of which is moved backwards, causing acute stress to the spine and severe pressure on the neck and limbs. In the past, detainees tortured by this method have suffered permanent damage to the spine and paralysis. “I was hanged from the metal handcuffs on my hands attached to the wall. This hugely strained my hands and was very painful. I also suffered the 'German chair' torture method and while in that position I was given electric shocks. I was also hanged from the window and my feet did not reach the ground for a few days… By the end of it, I lost my sense of pain – even that caused by electric shocks.” ... “I also was taken to the electric chair – there were three chairs in the torture room, metal, with straps for the wrists and lower legs. A switch is pulled for a few seconds and the electricity surges. Some people lose consciousness immediately. If you don't, they do it again, about three seconds a time. Your mouth fills with saliva, gunk and dribble. You pee. They do it until you collapse. Some go straight to hospital.” ... “The following day at noon they brought a group of detainees, 28 people, to the cell and the corridor adjacent to the cell. All of them were blindfolded and handcuffed. I was forced to look at the security forces while they were beating these detainees. They were kicking them and beating them with thick wooden sticks focusing on their heads for two hours. One man had his shoulder broken in front of me. Another man was my nephew whom I could not see but I identified his voice. I was screaming the whole time and asking them to stop...” ... “The following day I was blindfolded and handcuffed and taken to the interrogation room again. They forced me to kneel and put a stick in my mouth horizontally and tied it up behind my head. Then they brought my dad and started beating him in front of me with their wooden and electric prods for almost 45 minutes.” ... “They used to take eight or nine of us to interrogation, where around 25 to 30 people would be beating us… During one session I saw the death of a crucified man because they slashed his body with a blade. One of the slashes was deep and near his heart causing his death.”
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Revealing the Scale and Horror of Assad's Torture Chambers: An Avaaz Brief on the Locations and Conditions of Syria's Detention Facilities
More than 617 people have been confirmed killed under torture by regime forces since the crackdown started on March 15 of last year. Bashar al-Assad's crackdown on Syria's popular uprising has claimed at least 6,874 victims and seen a further 69,000 people detained over the course of the last nine months. Of the 69,000 detained since March, over 37,000 people remain in detention and some 32,000 people have been released, many of them bearing scars from torture and violence. ... "... I was chained to the bed, but when the door of the room was open, I could see that there was a room across the corridor that was locked for 15 days. When I got transferred to the Airforce Intelligence Branch after the hospital, I met the detainees held in that room. They had started out as 20 people in that room, but some had died. They had not been fed for the entire duration of their detention. In the room where I was held, an injured man on the bed next to me was beaten at least once a day. His leg wasn't treated. I could see the worms and small insects crawling in and out of the wound with my own eyes. In the same hospital, they would use a drill to gouge out eyes. They also used an iron welder to burn the flesh off your body as you are awake. In some cases also, they would use brute force to pull your hair out. At the hospital, they also used the method of hanging you upside down. They kept people hanging like that for days. Sometimes they changed the method of torture according to your "crime". For photographers and videographers, they broke their arms, their wrists, and individual fingers. They also gore their eyes out." ... "In this branch, one of the techniques is that they put the head of someone and squeeze it between two iron walls, and this sometimes smashes their heads in -- some people have died from that. Another is a wooden bed of two pieces that folds together at the middle. It's called the German Chair. Sometimes they put you on your stomach and they fold it so that your legs reach your head and your spine is broken and you are paralysed. ..." ... "... There are elderly men held there – a 70-year-old man was humiliated and his sons were with him. He was punished before his sons. It was a painful scene for us. To see your dad being tortured because he is old. He gets hit on his way to the bathroom because he can't run fast enough and he can't go fast enough. And it hurts you to see your elderly father suffering from hunger. This branch is specialised for defected soldiers. Sometimes even before you defect, even if you show a sign of remorse about shooting demonstrators you are imprisoned and taken to this place. ..." ... "... "The way I got out was that the judge saw my confession, and he saw my body and that my nails were removed. And he realised, and I told him, that I was innocent and had confessed under torture so he let me out. My ribs have been broken also. So I confessed that I killed security forces which is not true. ..." ... There is a building south of the main Adra Prison building which has been converted into a prison for political detainees, where the worst forms of torture have been documented. Avaaz has confirmed 14 cases of execution; bodies are buried in the prison yard. ... Mohammad Mefleh is reportedly responsible for the June 3rd "Friday of the Freedom of the Children" massacre where the recorded number of deaths was 78, but activists believe the casualty toll to be far higher. ... "... It's very normal to see people with broken arms and jaws that are untreated there for weeks. ..." ... Numerous Syrian regime officers were named as being involved in ordering, directing or overseeing torture. A list of 13 of these individuals, named by at least 11 sources, is provided below ... Major General Ali Mamlouk ... General Zuhaier Al Hamad ... General Nazih Hasoun ... General Thair Al Omar ... General Hafiz Makhlouf ... Major General Abd Al Fatah Qudsia ... General Ali Younis ... General Adnan Assi ... General Mohamed Makhlouf ... General Fouad Fadel ... Major General Gamil Al Hassan ... General Adib Salamah ... Major General Mohamed Deeb Zaitoun...
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SAD:
Video: Left Forum Panel on Stopping the US Drone War
Under the US global war of terror, 40% of the US budget goes to preserve and expand the US empire, killing people in the Middle East to protect a global system of exploitation. As an integral part of the terror program, drones are a weapon of choice. The Obama administration is coordinating drone strikes in at least six countries: Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan. In fact, these drones are being used eight times more by the Obama administration than by the Bush regime, in programs run by the military and the C.I.A. Obama's Office of Legal Counsel argues that such strikes are legally justified under international law, basing its argument on the Bush doctrine of borderless, endless “war on terror.” On an almost daily basis, drones circle miles above Earth, following targets. The pilots may live and work out of Colorado or on a base in upstate NY or even in some other part of the world. In this new warfare, the pilot does his killing and then goes home for dinner with his family, remaining removed and aloof from the death and destruction caused by his work. When a home or other location is targeted, the drone cannot tell if there are civilians or insurgents in the vicinity – yet everyone who's killed is called an insurgent.
Click to watch...

četvrtak, 22. ožujka 2012.

Linkovi - Palestina/Izrael, svijet, Sirija

PALESTINA/IZRAEL:
Public appeal to international writers: do not partake in celebrating apartheid Jerusalem!
Your participation would function as a whitewash of Israel s practices, making it appear as though business with Israel should go on as usual. Concretely, Israel routinely violates Palestinians' basic human rights in some of the following ways:
1. Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip live under a brutal and unlawful military occupation. Israel restricts Palestinians' freedom of movement and of speech; blocks access to lands, health care, and education; imprisons Palestinian leaders and human rights activists without charge or trial; and inflicts, on a daily basis, humiliation and violence at the more than 600 military checkpoints and roadblocks strangling the West Bank. All the while, Israel continues to build its illegal wall on occupied Palestinian land and to support the ever-expanding network of illegal, Jewish-only settlements that divide the West Bank into Bantustans. The International Court of Justice in its historic 2004 advisory opinion concluded that Israel's wall and colonies built on occupied Palestinian land are illegal. [8]
2. Palestinian citizens of Israel face a growing system of Apartheid within Israel's borders, with laws and policies that deny them the rights that their Jewish counterparts enjoy. These laws and policies affect education, land ownership, housing, employment, marriage, and all other aspects of people's daily lives. In many ways this system strikingly resembles Jim Crow and apartheid South Africa.
3. Since 1948, when Zionist militias and later Israel dispossessed more than 750,000 Palestinian people in order to form an exclusivist Jewish state, Israel has denied Palestinian refugees their internationally recognized right to return to their homes and their lands. Israel also continues to expel Palestinian communities from their lands in Jerusalem, the Jordan Valley and the Naqab (Negev). Today, there are more than 7 million Palestinian refugees still struggling for their right to return to their homes, like all refugees around the world.
4. In Gaza, Palestinians have been subjected to a criminal and immoral siege since 2006. As part of this siege, Israel has prevented not only various types of medicines, candles, musical instruments, crayons, clothing, shoes, blankets, pasta, tea, coffee and chocolate, but also books from reaching the 1.5 million Palestinians incarcerated in the world's largest open-air prison. [9]
With Israel's continued disregard for international law and the basic rights of the Palestinian people, the kind of solidarity we expect from people of conscience around the world is to heed the Palestinian civil society call for BDS against Israel and its complicit institutions, as international artists and cultural workers did in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa.
In heeding the Palestinian call for boycott, you will be joining the increasing number of international writers including John Berger, Arundhati Roy, Alice Walker, Judith Butler, Iain Banks, Naomi Klein, Ahdaf Soueif, Eduardo Galeano, among others, who have in recent years refused to engage apartheid Israel and who have chosen not to cross the Palestinian picket line.
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SVIJET:
Dražen Šimleša: Četvrti svjetski rat je pred nama
Danas je i više nego jasno tko su napadači na život, na koji način je život ugrožen u cijelom svijetu. Znači, riječ je o globalnom napadu. Kad kažem život, mislim na sve ono što on predstavlja, sve ono što čini osnovu života, a to su zrak, tlo, biljke i voda. Paralelno s tim događa se napad i na osnovu kvalitete života u našim društvima, pa se napada pravo na obrazovanje, zdravstvenu skrb, ljudska prava, demokraciju, javne prostore i slobodno vrijeme. Napad se događa na ljude, druga živa bića i svijet oko nas, na cijeli planet. Napadamo sadašnjost i time gazimo budućnost.
Pročitajte više...

Goran Jeras: Demokratičnost planiranja i upravljanja u postojećim poslovnim organizacijama
Trenutna svjetska gospodarska kriza možda je i najbolje pokazala prednosti kooperativnog ekonomskog modela u kojem je jasno naznačeno da stvaranje profita nije primarni cilj tih organizacija, već da je to kvaliteta života članova kooperativa te vrijednosti koje kooperativa donosi zajednici. Takav koncept pokazao se iznimno otporan na učinke krize; u trenutku najveće nezaposlenosti u Španjolskoj od 1994. godine, broj zaposlenih u radničkim kooperativama porastao je 7,2 % u zadnjem kvartalu 2011. godine. Iako u javnosti to uglavnom nije tako percipirano, produktivnost radnika u radničkim kooperativama se pokazala višom od produktivnosti radnika u klasičnim organizacijama te i unutar kapitalističkog sustava i tržišnog gospodarstva mnoge radničke kooperative uspješno posluju i kontinuirano rastu. Najtipičniji primjer je baskijski multinacionalni div Mondragon koji je ustrojen kao federacija radničkih kooperativa i koji danas zapošljava preko 80 000 ljudi u 17 država te posluje s godišnjim prihodom od preko 14 milijardi eura. Trend osnivanja radničkih kooperativa prisutan je u cijelom svijetu, a osobito u državama Latinske Amerike (s naglaskom na Venezuelu gdje je to dio službene vladine politike), Kanadi, Španjolskoj, Francuskoj, Italiji i Portugalu.
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SIRIJA:
Years of Fear: The Forcibly Disappeared in Syria
The story of those missing in Syrian prisons is the story of a country that has devoured its own sons. The enforced disappearances of oppositionists and the impunity of the perpetrators is the price paid for the “Kingdom of Silence” established by the authoritarian and abusive Syrian regime. Among the portfolio of human rights violations in Syria, the issue of persons forcibly disappeared in particular has become a national disaster. While the missing number in the thousands, deleterious effects extend to hundreds of thousands of Syrian citizens who were stripped of their political and civil rights. The phenomenon has led to the psychological, social, and economic destruction of many Syrian communities for more than 30 years.
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New report finds systemic and widespread torture and ill-treatment in detention
The scale of torture and other ill-treatment in Syria has risen to a level not witnessed for years and is reminiscent of the dark era of the 1970s and 1980s. ... Many victims said beating began on arrest, then they were beaten severely - including with sticks, rifle butts, whips and fists, braided cables - on arrival at detention centres, a practice sometimes called the ‘haflet al-istiqbal’ or ‘reception’. Newly-held detainees are usually stripped to their underpants and are sometimes left for up to 24 hours outside. ... Several survivors told of their experience of the dulab (tyre), where the victim is forced into a vehicle tyre - often hoisted up - and beaten, including sometimes with cables or sticks. Amnesty International said it had observed an increase in the reported use of shabeh -where the victim is suspended, from a raised hook, handle or door frame, or by manacled wrists, so that the feet just hang above the ground or so the tips of toes touch the floor. The individual is then often beaten. Eighteen-year-old “Karim”, a student from al-Taybeh in Dera'a governorate, told Amnesty International that his interrogators used pincers to remove flesh from his legs when he was being held at an Air Force Intelligence branch in Dera’a in December 2011. Electric shock torture appears to be widely used in interrogations. Former detainees described three methods: dousing the victim or cell floor with water, then electro-shocking the victim through the water; the “electric chair”, where electrodes are connected to parts of the body; and the use of electric prods. Gender-based torture and other crimes of sexual violence appear to have become more common in the last year. "Tareq" told Amnesty International that during his interrogation at the Military Intelligence Branch in Kafr Sousseh, Damascus in July 2011 he was forced to watch the rape of another prisoner called "Khalid": "They pulled down his trousers. He had an injury on his upper left leg. Then the official raped him up against the wall. Khalid just cried during it, beating his head on the wall." ... Amnesty International said that the testimonies of torture survivors presented yet more evidence of crimes against humanity in Syria. The organization has repeatedly called for the situation in Syria to be referred to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) but political factors have so far prevented this happening, with Russia and China twice blocking weakened UN Security Council draft resolutions that made no reference to the ICC. In light of the failure to secure an ICC referral, Amnesty International said it wanted to see the UN Human Rights Council extend the mandate of the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria and reinforce its capacity to monitor, document and report, with a view to eventual prosecutions of those responsible for crimes under international law and other gross violations of human rights. The organization also said it wanted to see the international community accepting its shared responsibility to investigate and prosecute crimes against humanity in their national courts - in fair trials and without recourse to the death penalty - and called for the formation of joint international investigation and prosecution teams to improve the chances of arrest. "We continue to believe that the ICC represents the best option of securing real accountability for those responsible for the grave crimes that have been committed against people in Syria," said Ann Harrison. "But while politics makes that prospect difficult in the short term, Syrians responsible for torture – including those in command - should be left in no doubt that they will face justice for crimes committed under their watch. ..."
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Deadly Detention in Syria (video)

Eyes on Syria: One year on (video)

Syria: Campaign to silence protesters overseas revealed
In many cases, the organization found that protesters outside Syrian embassies were initially filmed or photographed by officials then subjected to harassment of various kinds, including phone calls, emails and Facebook messages warning them to stop. Some activists say they were directly threatened by embassy officials. Naima Darwish, who set up a Facebook page to call for protests outside the Syrian embassy in Santiago, Chile, was contacted directly by a senior official who asked to meet her in person. "He told me that I should not do such things,” she told Amnesty International. “He said I would lose the right to return to Syria if I continued." A number of Syrians found that their families back home were targeted by security forces, apparently to deter them from their activities overseas, with potentially devastating consequences. Imad Mouhalhel's brother Aladdin was detained in Syria for four days in July. After apparently being tortured, he was shown photos and videos of protests outside the Syrian embassy in Spain and told to identify Imad among the participants. On 29 August, Aladdin was re-arrested and apparently forced to phone Imad to ask him to stop going to the protests. Imad and his family have not heard from Aladdin since then and have grave fears for his safety in detention. After Malek Jandali, a 38-year-old pianist and composer, performed at a pro-reform demonstration in front of the White House in July, his mother and father, aged 66 and 73 respectively, were attacked at their home in Homs. Malek told Amnesty International his parents were beaten and locked in a bathroom while their flat was looted. The agents told his parents: “This is what happens when your son mocks the government.”
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Syria: Campaign To Silence Protesters Overseas (video)

Neil Sammonds Interview on Syrian Crackdown (video)

Amnesty International Germany - Syrien: Blutvergießen stoppen! (video)

Amnesty International Croatia - Syria Public Action (video)

Razan Zaitouneh from Syria Wins 2011 Anna Politkovskaya Award (video)


ponedjeljak, 19. siječnja 2009.

Izrael je prekršio primirje 04. studenog


Vidim da na svim medijima (slušala sam sad jedan austrijski) procionistički propagandisti opsjednuto guraju laž da je Hamas započeo ovu „krizu“ (jer im je to još jedina slamka za koju misle da se mogu uhvatiti budući da cijela njihova strategija poricanja i prikrivanja cionističkih zločina protiv čovječnosti i agresije u Gazi počiva na laži da se Izrael „brani“).

Ja imam hrpu izvora, a od kojih ih je nekoliko bilo postano već na blogu, (od palestinskih, izraelskih do izvora poput BBC-a i Guardiana, pa i priznanje glasnogovornika izraelske vlade, te mišljenje uglednih međunarodnih pravnih stručnjaka i sl. – izvori daleko kredibilniji i stručniji od procionističkih pajdaša koji su svoju poziciju zlorabili kao poligon za lansiranje cionističkih laži) u kojima jasno i bez ikakve dvojbe stoji da je Izrael 04. studenog 2008. prekršio primirje (čije odredbe ionako nije u potpunosti poštivao i za čije vrijeme trajanja je Izrael samo u Pojasu Gaze ubio više od 20 ljudi, dok Palestinci iz Pojasa Gaze nisu ubili nikoga na izraelskoj strani). Konačno i sama sam pratila vijesti tog dana i zabilježila incident na svom blogu (ja već od 04. studenog znam da je Izrael prekršio primirje). I izraelski cionisti znaju da je Izrael prekršio primirje, ali onda, kako se oni time konstantno bave, više paze što govore, pa kažu: „to smo učinili da bismo spasili primirje“ ili „imali smo dojavu da nam prijeti napad blablabla“ – i dalje laži, ali ne do te mjere podcjenjivačke da je dovoljno otići na google i vidjeti da te mediji i državne institucije bezočno lažu čak i oko činjenica koje i malo dijete može provjeriti.

Ali u medijima se nastavlja trubiti da je Hamas „kriv“ za izraelske zločine protiv čovječnosti u Gazi (iako kao što rekoh, Hamas je daleko manja teroristička organizacija od Olmertove vlade ili stranke). Uostalom, kad bi Hamas i bio kriv za prekid primirja, i dalje ne bi bio odgovoran za izraelske zločine protiv čovječnosti za koje je odgovorna izraelska vlada i vojska. Hamas je odgovoran za svoja kršenja međunarodnog i ljudskih prava. Pro-cionisti stalno sami sebi skaču u usta, jer se izmišljotine koje ponavljaju temelje na rasističkoj diskriminaciji i dvostrukim mjerilima i u pravilu u potpunosti ignoriraju međunarodno i ljudska prava. Kad bi Hamas bio odgovoran za zločine protiv čovječnosti izraelske vlade, onda bi i izraelska vlada bila odgovorna za Hamasove zločine protiv čovječnoti, jer bi Hamasu svojim postupcima dala izgovor da namjerno ubija izraelske civile. Ali da, zaboravila sam, pa izraelska vlada je namjerno ubila više civila od Hamasa; možda sad žele da se njima sudi za Hamasove zločine, a Hamasu za zločine izraelske vlade.

Naši (tu mislim na zapadne+sateliti, a ne samo hrvatske) mediji i političari lažu nam i dezinformiraju nas svjesno, namjerno i na očigled, za korist onih koji su ih prisilili ili potplatili da lažu. Zbog ove izdaje hrvatskih građana i njihovog temeljnog interesa i prava da budu na vrijeme i kvalitetno informirani, moramo ih sve smijeniti i promijeniti. Počnimo s gašenjem medija koji nas lažu (evo ja sam odmah prebacila s FM4 gdje sam u vijestima čula cionističku laž na zagrebački 101, čula da tamo pametuje procionistička Zrinka i sad slušam Jefferson Airplane i mogu vam reći da nam danas zahvaljujući internetu uopće ne trebaju kokodakala koja nama besramno manipuliraju i gaze preko mrtve djece u Gazi da bi njima samima bilo bolje) i biranjem onih političara koji ne lažu hrvatskim (i drugim) građanima za cionističke i imperijalističke interese i koji se ne boje javno osuditi izraelske ratne zločine i zločine protiv čovječnosti.

Gadno je živjeti pod sanaderom, HDZ je destruktivna stranka nesposobnjakovića, ali ja i dalje neću glasati niti za jednu stranku koja ne osuđuje cionizam kao rasističku i zločinačku ideologiju koja podrazumijeva etničko čišćenje, aparthejd, a sada i genocid. Pa ako trebamo proći kroz još 4 godina sranja, nema frke, kaj se mene tiče i država može propasti, niti jedan procionist neće dobiti glas. Glasat ću za stranku koja želi Izraelu nametnuti sankcije zbog njegovog nepoštivanja međunarodnog prava i uspostaviti sud za ratne zločine i zločine protiv čovječnosti počinjene na prostoru Palestine/Izraela.


Dva linka:
Otvoreno pismo CMS-a
Centar za mirovne studije studije upozorava Vladu RH da Izrael krši rezoluciju Vijeća sigurnosti i poziva na djelovanje kako bi se implementirala rezolucija. U pismu se također poziva vlada RH da pokrene inicijativu za osnivanje Suda za ratne zločine počinjene na području Palestine/Izraela. U potpunosti podržavam ovo pismo. Da se već osnovao sud za ratne zločine zbog Libanona i Gaze 2006. Olmert u protekla 3 tjedna ne bi mogao pobiti više od 1200 Palestinaca, jer bi bio iza rešetaka gdje mu je i mjesto. Nažalost, kad je Izrael u pitanju „međunarodna zajednica“ ne da ne pokušava suditi brojnim ratnim zločincima za njihove zločine, već se prečesto ponaša kao da nikad nije čula za međunarodno i ljudska prava.
Centar za mirovne studije ovim putem upozorava Vladu RH da Vlada države Izrael već osmi dan krši rezoluciju Vijeća sigurnosti kojom se 8. siječnja 2009. pozvalo na potpuno povlačenje izraelske vojske iz Gaze. Očito je da se izraelska vojska nije povukla iz Gaze već je nastavila s vojnim operacijama. Prema informacijama koje dolaze putem medija i nevladinih organizacija s područja sukoba, najveća žrtva sukoba ponovno je civilno stanovništvo. Brojka poginulih civilna narasla je iznad 1000, a neprihvatljivo je nazivati ih kolateralnom štetom. ... Zbog svega navedenog, tražimo da Republika Hrvatska hitno poduzme diplomatske akcije u Vijeću sigurnosti koje će uistinu prisiliti zaraćene strane na potpunu implementaciju rezolucije. Također tražimo da odmah hrvatskoj javnosti predstavite sve aktivnosti koje RH poduzima kako bi se okončao sukob, te da nas izvijestite o tome da li je RH poslala bilo koji oblik humanitarne ili medicinske pomoći žrtvama sukoba. ... predlažemo da RH unutar Vijeća sigurnosti pokrene inicijativu o pokretanju ad hoc Međunarodnog kaznenog suda za područja Izraela i Palestine koji bi istražio navode o kršenjima ratnih prava i ratnim zločinima i sankcionirao počinitelje.

Još slika sa sarajevske šetnje za Gazu – subota 17. siječanj 2009.