Friday, February 17, 2012

Spain calls on Iraqi deaths related to camping

on 14 July 2011, last updated at 14: 11 Relatives of residents of Camp Ashraf during a hearing of the US House Foreign Affairs Committee on Capitol Hill (7 July 2011) relatives-of-ET from camp 3 500 for the press by A Spanish judge has summoned three Iraqi investigation officers of the security forces in Iraq raid through the housing on the Iranian exile group in the camp.

The UN says the 34 people died at Camp Ashraf, Diyala province, RAID April 2011.

Judge Fernando Andreu is summoned Gen Ali Ghaidan Majid, the head of the army, and two other officers appear.

He is investigating allegations that the crimes against the deck of the camp.

Research on the probe, there is a separate raid, which took place at the camp in July 2009, in which 11 people, the enlargement of the prosessoitiin.

General legal

The Spanish General legal doctrine, the blame for a fatal under the offence is committed in other countries.

The judge said that the Geneva Convention, Andreu, apply to the case, since it deals with the protection of civilians in wartime and of all those killed and injured, the attack was considered to be "protected persons" in accordance with the terms of the Convention.

According to the Madrid Court investigations, documents released to a total of 377 "protected persons" were injured on 8 April 2011, the RAID with the wounds of the bullet to 154.

Banned opposition group, the people of Mujahideen of Iran (PMOI), more than 3 000 members of the military in the United States, been confined to camp has since 2003 invasion.

The Group considered a terrorist group by us and Iran, had given shelter to Iraqi former President Saddam Hussein between the two countries, 1980- -88 during the war and have remained in the camp has since.

In January, the judge had said he will close the dossier, a part of the July 2009 attack on the Iraqi authorities have opened an investigation of its own.

Iraq responded by saying it had completed its own investigation into the legal, but this is not considered sufficient by the Spanish authorities.

Three Iraqi officers have been invited to appear at the hearing before the Court in Madrid on 3 October 2011.


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Thursday, February 16, 2012

From us boat to Gaza to Syntagma Square

By Donna Nevel

Political sensitivity and thoughtfulness, depth of knowledge and analysis, deep commitment and kindness is, in my view, a perfect combination to build a movement for Justice and create meaningful change.  These were characteristics, so moved and inspired me the last couple weeks as I spent time in Athens with two of the passengers from the American boat to Gaza-the Audacity of hope.  Let me add that while I concentrate in this very moment on two particular individuals, I had the privilege to meet and spend time with a number of wonderful, dedicated people of all ages, backgrounds and life experiences--were all passengers on U.S. boat, was a part of the international flotilla to break the siege of Gaza.

My first experience with these two individuals--Missy Lane, 32, from Washington, DC and Max Suchan, 22, from Chicago-was watching them interact with others.  They both seemed to listen carefully to all around them said and respond respectfully and kindly if they agreed or not.  They are a passionate energy and a desire to learn from and with others.  My first direct contact with them confirmed my initial comments.  In the next several days, continued my admiration for them to grow.

I appreciated in particular, how very aware they were of the importance of seizing this moment to bridging fighting in solidarity--, the movement to break the blockade of Gaza, which had brought them to Athens and protests taking place in Athens involving thousands and thousands of demonstrators on Syntagma Square.  As a result of this consciousness connected to the activists in Athens, which fought against the austerity measures threatening people's ability to survive.  In both cases, the civil society to take measures against oppressive and unjust Government and global actions and policies based on a total disregard for human rights and the right to self-determination.  From Gaza to Athens, has been growing resistance against injustice, rooted in people's stories, lived experience and courage.

One evening, they invited my husband, Alan, and me to join them on Syntagma Square, where they had stood in the evening after long and exhausting days of preparatory meetings for U.S. boat.  We saw immediately how naturally they were integrated into the life of movement there.  After meeting Missy in the square of a booth highlighted flotilla, we went with her to meet Max and other inspiring U.S. boat passages, Steve, who was sitting with several young Palestinian refugees staying in a tent in the square.  Max translated to us from Arabic to English as one of the Palestinian men described how he had been treated by the Greek police, who had told him to "go home"; It was made clear he meant for him to get out of Greece and go back to Palestine.  What irony--to be treated as an outsider in the country, he was living in, and knowing that, actually, as a result of the isrælske occupation, he could not return to its original home in Palestine!

I asked Max and Missy which compounds so they between these different appearances.  Missy replied that "it is quite simple."  She spoke on "the relations which exist between and among people and movements, as it is about human beings defy their Governments together."  Max spoke of "destructive role the u.s. Government, IMF and other global financial institutions that are responsible for some of the worst austerity measures, which the Greek people have had to endure."  He also talked about the responsibility for "to talk and take measures to support the Palestinian people and oppose the role of the United States Government directly funds the oppression they face everyday."  From Greece to Palestine, Max understood and articulated role and impact of oppression and exploitation.

Max also spoke about "compelling global spirit, inspiring people around the world," Noting that "people are seeking alternatives informed of this global context of the change happens everywhere.  It is people acting in solidarity with each other, occupying public spaces and opposition to "as they are fighting for justice.  This, he pointed out, the population of Athens in Syntagma Square; This is what the Palestinians are doing in Palestine with international aid in the form of the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) campaign and flotillas, for example; This is what people are doing in Cairo, Wisconsin, Barcelona, Tunisia, Bahrain and elsewhere.  This is the resistance; This is solidarity.

Who inspired these inspiring people?  Missy spoke about civil rights activist and freedom Rider Diane Nash, if interviews, she has read.  "Learning about her approach and vision of change made me more deeply consider how I look at the struggle and the concrete objectives we are trying to achieve.  Max pointed to the first intifada as "an incredible moment in time, there was overwhelming, characterized by a non-violent resistance movement, which included people form every walk of life."  He spoke on social transformation and people take fate into their own hands--fire resisting global oppression together as a community.

Both activists talk about the meaning of humanness.  "People are social creatures seek out each other, seeking educational institutions--as fundamental to humanity, '' Max said.  They both went back to the slogan for the flotilla's mission they were a part of--"live human"--and said that these words encapsulate what this mission has rooted for them.

Both are clearly inspired by love and a quest for dignity.  From Syntagma streets to Arab spring to fight for Justice in Palestine, Missy and Max undoubtedly continue to build connections and relationships with and among people and movements.  With humility and a sense of wisdom and expertise that those fighting for Justice bring with them the honour and connect all the brave fighters, offering their hearts and souls and editions to the worldwide movement for justice.

-Donna Nevel is a community psychologist, educator and organizer, whose work is rooted in Participatory action research and popular education.  She was a part of the media team in the American boat to Gaza. (This article was contributed to PalestineChronicle.com.)


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Boycott law: it can happen here!

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By Uri Avnery

Years ago I said that there are but two miracles in Israel: the Hebrew language and democracy.

Hebrew had been a dead language for many generations, more or less like Latin, when it was still used in the Catholic church. Then, suddenly, concurrent with the emergence of Zionism (but independently) it sprang back to life. This never happened to any other language.  

Theodor Herzl laughed at the idea that Jews in Palestine would speak Hebrew. He wanted us to speak German. “Are they going to ask for a railway ticket in Hebrew?” he scoffed.

Well, we now buy airline tickets in Hebrew. We read the Bible in its Hebrew original and enjoy it tremendously. As Abba Eban once said, if King David were to come to life in Jerusalem today, he could understand the language spoken in the street. Though with some difficulty, because our language gets corrupted, like most other languages.

Anyhow, the position of Hebrew is secure. Babies and Nobel Prize laureates speak it.

The fate of the other miracle is far less assured.

The future – indeed, the present – of Israeli democracy is shrouded in doubt.

It is a miracle, because it did not grow slowly over generations, like Anglo-Saxon democracy. There was no democracy in the Jewish shtetl. Neither is there anything like it in Jewish religious tradition. But the Zionist Founding Fathers, mostly West and Central European Jews, aspired to the highest social ideals of their time.

I have always warned that our democracy has very shallow and tender roots, and needs our constant care. Where did the Jews who founded Israel, and who came here thereafter, grow up? Under the dictatorship of the British High Commissioner, the Russian Czar, the Dictatorship of the Proletariat, the king of Morocco, Pilsudsky’s Poland and similar regimes. Those of us who came from democratic countries like Weimar Germany or the US were a tiny minority.

Yet the founders of Israel succeeded in establishing a vibrant democracy that – at least until 1967 – was in no way inferior, and in some ways superior, to the British or American models. We were proud of it, and the world admired it. The appellation “the Only Democracy in the Middle East” was not a hollow propaganda slogan.

Some claim that with the occupation of the Palestinian territories, which have lived since 1967 under a harsh military regime without the slightest trace of democracy and human rights, this situation already came to an end. Whatever one thinks about that, in fact Israel in its pre-1967 borders maintained a reasonable record until recently. For the ordinary citizen, democracy was still a fact of life. Even Arab citizens enjoyed democratic rights far superior to anything in the Arab world.

This week, all this was put in doubt. Some say that this doubt has now been dispersed, and that a stark reality is being exposed.

Charles Boycott, the agent of a British landowner in Ireland, could never have imagined that he would play a role in a country called Israel 130 years after his name had become a world-wide symbol.

Captain Boycott evicted Irish tenants, who defaulted on their rent because of desperate economic straits. The Irish reacted with a new weapon: no one would speak with him, work for him, buy from him. His name became synonymous with this kind of non-violent action.   

The method itself was born even earlier. The list is long. Among others: in 1830 the “negroes” in the US declared a “boycott” of slave-produced products. The later Civil Rights movement started with a boycott of the Montgomery bus company that seated blacks and whites separately. During the American Revolution, the insurgents declared a boycott on British goods. So did Mahatma Gandhi in India.

American Jews boycotted the cars of the infamous anti-Semite Henry Ford. Jews in many countries took part in a boycott of German goods immediately after the Nazis came to power in 1933.

The Chinese boycotted Japan after the invasion of their country. The US boycotted the Olympic Games in Moscow. People of conscience all over the world boycotted the products and the athletes of Apartheid South Africa and helped to bring it to its knees.

All these campaigns used a basic democratic right: every person is entitled to refuse to buy from people he detests. Everyone can refuse to support with his money causes which contradict his innermost moral convictions.

It is this right that has been put to the test in Israel this week.

In 1997, Gush Shalom declared a boycott of the products of the settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories. We believe that these settlements, which are being set up with the express purpose of preventing the establishment of a Palestinian state, are endangering the future of Israel.

The press conference, in which we announced this step, was not attended by a single Israeli journalist. But the boycott gathered momentum. Hundreds of thousands of Israelis do not buy settlement products. The European Union, which has a trade agreement that practically treats Israel as a member of the union, was induced to enforce the clause that excludes products of the settlements from these privileges.

There are now hundreds of factories in the settlements. They were literally compelled, or seduced, to go there, because the (stolen) land there is far cheaper than in Israel proper. They enjoy generous government subsidies and tax exemptions, and they can exploit Palestinian workers for ridiculous wages. The Palestinians have no other way of supporting their families than to toil for their oppressors.

Our boycott was designed, among other things, to counter these advantages. And indeed, several big enterprises have already given in and moved out, under pressure from foreign investors and buyers. Alarmed, the settlers instructed their lackeys in the Knesset to draft a law that would counter this boycott.

Last Monday, the “Boycott Law” was enacted, setting off an unprecedented storm in the country. Already Tuesday morning, Gush Shalom submitted to the Supreme Court a 22 page application to annul this law.

The ‘Boycott Law’ is a very clever piece of work. Obviously, it was not drafted by the parliamentary simpletons who introduced it, but by some very sophisticated legal minds, probably financed by the Casino barons and Evangelical crazies who support the extreme Right in Israel.

First of all, the law is disguised as a means to fight the de-legitimization of the State of Israel throughout the world. The law bans all calls for the boycott of the State of Israel, “including the areas under Israeli control”. Since there are not a dozen Israelis who call for the boycott of the state, it is clear that the real and sole purpose is to outlaw the boycott of the settlements.

In its initial draft, the law made this a criminal offense. That would have suited us fine: we were quite willing to go to prison for this cause. But the law, in its final form, imposes sanctions that are another thing.

According to the law, any settler who feels that he has been harmed by the boycott can demand unlimited compensation from any person or organization calling for the boycott – without having to prove any actual damage. This means that each of the 300,000 settlers can claim millions from every single peace activist associated with the call for boycott, thus destroying the peace movement altogether.

As we point out in our application to the Supreme Court, the law is clearly unconstitutional. True, Israel has no formal constitution, but several “basic laws” are considered by the Supreme Court to function effectively as such.

First, the law clearly contravenes the basic right to freedom of expression. A call for a boycott is a legitimate political action, much as a street demonstration, a manifesto or a mass petition.

Second, the law contravenes the principle of equality. The law does not apply to any other boycott that is now being implemented in Israel: from the religious boycott of stores that sell non-kosher meat (posters calling for this cover the walls of the religious quarters in Jerusalem and elsewhere), to the recent very successful call to boycott the producers of cottage cheese because of their high price. The call of right-wing groups to boycott artists who have not served in the army will be legal, the declaration by left-wing artists that they will not appear in the settlements will be illegal.

Since these and other provisions of the law clearly violate the Basic Laws, the Legal Advisor of the Knesset, in a highly unusual step, published his opinion that the law is unconstitutional and undermines “the core of democracy”. Even the supreme governmental legal authority, the “legal advisor of the government”, has published a statement saying that the law in “on the border” of unconstitutionality. Being mortally afraid of the settlers, he added that he will defend it in court nevertheless. The opportunity for this is not far off: the Supreme Court has given him 60 days to respond to our petition.

A small group of minor parliamentarians is terrorizing the Knesset majority and can pass any law at all. The power of the settlers is immense, and moderate right-wing members are rightly afraid that, if they are not radical enough, they will not be re-elected by the Likud Central Council, which selects the candidates for the party list. This creates a dynamic of competition: who can appear the most radical.

No wonder that one anti-democratic law follows another: a law that practically bars Arab citizens from living in localities of less than 400 families. A law that takes away the pension rights of former Knesset members who do not show up for police investigations (like Azmi Bishara.) A law that abolishes the citizenship of people convicted of “assisting terrorism”. A law that obliges NGOs to disclose donations by foreign governmental institutions. A law that gives preference for civil service positions to people who have served in the army (thus automatically excluding almost all Arab citizens). A law that outlaws any commemoration of the 1948 Naqba (the expulsion of Arab inhabitants from areas conquered by Israel). An extension of the law that prohibits (almost exclusively) Arab citizens, who marry spouses from the Palestinian territories, to live with them in Israel.

Soon to be enacted is a bill that forbids NGOs to accept donations of more than 5000 dollars from abroad, a bill that will impose an income tax of 45% on any NGO that is not specifically exempted by the government, a bill to compel universities to sing the national anthem on every possible occasion, the appointment of a Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry to investigate the financial resources of left-wing [sic] organizations.

Looming over everything else is the explicit threat of right-wing factions to attack the hated “liberal” Supreme Court directly, shear it of its ability to overrule unconstitutional laws and control the appointment of the Supreme Court judges.

Fifty-one years ago, on the eve of the Eichmann trial, I wrote a book about Nazi Germany. In the last chapter, I asked: “Can It Happen Here?”

My answer still stands: yes, it can.

- Uri Avnery is an Israeli peace activist and a former Knesset member. He is the founder of Gush Shalom. He contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.


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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

BDS: a Palestinian woman reaction on Isræls Naomi Chazan

By Samah Sabawi

Naomi Chazan, President of the new Israel (NIF) gave a speech in Marrickville NSW during her last Australian tour offers a criticism of the Palestinian civil society call for boycott divestments and sanctions (BDS) against Israel.

Although she presented herself as a veteran peace activist, isrælske Chazan's mission was here in Australia allegedly promoting NIF. This is important because everything she said about the BDS should be understood within the framework of her mission – to collect funds and support and convince the Jews of the need to continue to invest in Israel through the NIF in Australia. This clear conflict of interest makes Chazans criticism of BDS far less credible.

Chazan named six reasons why she believed BDS was harmful:

BDS is not effective, because Israel has a very strong economy: South Africa's economy also upturn when the movement a boycott against the regime began in the late 1950s. Decades later the movement succeeded in bringing down the South African apartheid regime.

Many isrælske leaders, including Ehud Barak, Ben-Eliezer, Shimon Peres and others have already said that BDS is a ' strategic threat; ' what they mean of course is that it is a serious threat to the Isræl's system of occupation, legalized racial discrimination (equivalent to the UN definition of apartheid) and Denial of refugee rights. We need only look at millions of dollars the isrælske lobby groups in Western Nations, including Australia spending in efforts to sabotage the movement to know that it is actually effective. The fact that Chazan focused so much on the BDS in her Marrickville speech confirms this.

There is other evidence BDSS efficiency.

Deutsche Bahn withdrawal from isrælske rail project linking Tel Aviv with Jerusalem has been a turning point for the movement. It was the first time that a German Government-owned company withdrew from a isrælske project over concerns for violation of international law. The French company Veolia losses of billions of dollars worth of contracts due to his participation in illegal Jerusalem Light Rail project points also impressive success of BDS campaign, especially in Europe.

The rapidly growing list of superstars and prominent music bands heeding boycott of Israel makes Tel Aviv is very similar to the South African resort of Sun City during apartheid. The city was a key objective of the cultural boycott then.
University Johannesburg severance bond with Ben Gurion University of the latter's complicity in violating Palestinian rights is the most concrete victory to date for an academic boycott campaign.

And who have radical Trade Union support for BDS in the United Kingdom, Brazil, Ireland, South Africa, Canada, France, Italy, Spain, Norway, Belgium, India, Turkey and elsewhere.

BDS undermines the existence of the State of Israel: Requirements are clear – full equality in Israel for the Palestinian citizens of the State, an end to the occupation and an achievement of Isræls commitment to the refugees. If these demands are threatening to put a stop to Isræls existence, we have to ask what this really says about Israel?

A State that is truly democratic and built upon a foundation of Justice and equality, would not be threatened by demands for equality and an end to the occupation. Boycott does not put an end to South Africa's existence, they did not destroy it and certainly not ' delegitimize ' white: they only destroyed South Africa's system of injustice, inequality and racial discrimination.

BDS is actually "a code word for the one State solution" who defies isrælerne and Jews the right to self-determination: BDS does not aim for either a one or two State solution, but for Palestinian rights. One of these rights is for the Palestinians to be free in their own country without the yoke of isrælske occupation and system of racial discrimination. Whether it is in one State for two Nations or two sovereign, democratic States side by side has yet to be adopted. The movement is consistently neutral in this, regardless of the different personal political positions held by its various spokespeople.

BDS is counterproductive because it entrenches the victim mentality of those in Israel who believe that the whole world is against them, which inevitably forces right wing in Israel at the same time weakening the left: Right now, fanatical right takes over the entire isrælske society, but when boycott begin damage Isræls carefully nurtured public image, dissenting voices will become much more vocal, as happened in South Africa. Then, the current consensus in support of apartheid and colonial regime crack.

BDS is against academic freedom and singles out isrælske academics: Chazan is deliberately misleading in this respect. Like any relatively well-informed observer will know after seven years of the Palestinian academic boycott campaign and hundreds of articles written on it, the academic boycott is institutional in nature and therefore has never targeted individual isrælske academics. BDS has consistently been aimed against academic institutions because of their persistent and serious complicity in the planning, implementation and justifying Isræls violations of international law.

Chazans claims that isrælske academics are progressive and against the occupation has absolutely no foundation. In 2008, a petition drawn up by the four Jewish-isrælske academics calls the isrælske army to allow access at checkpoints by Palestinian academics and students to reach their educational institutions were distributed to all 9,000 isrælske scholars in the hope that most would sign this minimal expression of respect for academic freedom: only 407 out of 9,000 academic actually did.

BDS singles Israel: This criticism is so often quoted, that one has to ask about Chazan and other contamination in it want more action on other grounds or silence on the Palestinian cause. At least people are rising up against the tyrannical regimes and seeks change in almost every Arab State in the "Isræls neighborhoods." Some of these Governments are now subject to international sanctions, so why not Israel, which has for decades had defied the United Nations and violated international law?

An equally important question to ask here is, why not go for Palestinian rights? Yes, why are the Palestinians will be identified as the only people that can not be defended? We can speak for all other problems, so it is tendentious to propose to speak of Palestinian rights singles Israel unfairly.

The principled isrælske left the camp, which respects the equal rights for all Palestinian refugees to the UN-sanctioned rights and an end to colonial oppression (2004) should – and actually doing — invest his time challenging dets Government apartheid policies and the repression of the Palestinians instead of criticizing the Palestinian non-violent resistance model, which includes the BDS.

Chazans efforts to undermine the BDS must be seen in context. At the end of the day, Chazan going to Israel, where she is a privileged Jewish citizen with all his rights intact. She is part of and an enabler of establishment denies the Palestinians their basic rights and freedoms, and as such, she in a position to dictate to the Palestinians their methods match or act as gatekeeper for the international solidarity movement, do not preach to them what is allowed and what is not in standing with the Palestinians. As in all human struggle for freedom, justice and equality, to the right are those living behind the walls of the prerogatives, hindered by checkpoints and kept in captivity for the siege and military repression.

-Samah Sabawi is public advocate of Australian advocacy group Australians for Palestine. She contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.


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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Embattled PM Egypt to team changes

on 17 July 2011, last updated at 06: 19, Protesters wave the Egyptian national flag as they perch on top of a street lamp in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, 15 July 2011 , ET Klimaflüchtlinge headed back Cairo's Tahrir Square, its own representation in the Prime Minister of Egypt, heard of Essam Sharaf has started his promised cabinet reshuffle, as protests continue over those political reforms.

Foreign Minister Mohammed al-Orabi's resignation, while the Prime Ministers of the two new Deputy Executive Director is appointed.

Among the demands of corrupt officials in the Klimaflüchtlinge, who served under President Hosni Mubarak, could be.

The General, who went to the Tahrir Square, the rebellion that toppled the heart had Mr. Mubarak demonstrators booed.

A new wave of protests of the intense pressure from Mr. Sharaf has initiated a sweeping his is expected to be in what the Government's amendments.

Official media say up to a maximum of 15 Cabinet Ministers are expected to be replaced in the reshuffle. It is considered to be Clear, those of Mr Mubarak, who was ousted in February of links.

Mr. Orabi is considered to be too close to the Mubarak-the system is, after the resignation of foreign minister in the post for less than one month.

He was going "to spare parts, the Prime Minister of ongoing changes in the level of Ministers of the negotiations for the embarrassment," Egypt's State-run Mena news agencies quoted him as saying.

Shoe protest

Mr. Sharaf, who heads the administration of the caretake and limited under the jurisdiction of the military rulers, has appointed two new Deputy Prime Ministers.

They are the Economist Hazem El Beblawi, 74, 75-year-old Ali al-Wafd party, Egypt, and Silmi's oldest political party Chief.

Essam Sharaf - file photo Mr. Sharaf took part in the protests, however, that Mr. Mubarak, yea

BBC Jon Leyne contact Cairo, that Mr Sharaf behind-the scenes of the battle with the Council, the military communities, the Cabinet changes have taken effect for more than a week, says.

In the meantime, the Council, the military reported that a lot of focus on restricting the opposition's hatred of the military courts to try civilians.

Many Egyptians are becoming impatient with a military Council, which shall be replaced by Mr Mubarak.

Major General Tarek el-Mahdi went to try to get some of the Tahrir Square Klimaflüchtlinge to put an end to the hunger strike on Saturday.

When he spoke to the podium, he was booed and had shaken him in contempt, shoes, forcing him to cut short his traditional visit.

The square was the uprising, which has been produced in Mr. Mubarak downfall and professional organisations in the middle of the trap.

Also been demonstrations in other cities.

Klimaflüchtlinge to the new Government, the military, the Council limited the powers of the military tried to courts and public trials of the former administration of rapid officials to release civilians.


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Thousands take part in the Syria

on 16 July 2011, last updated at 15: 49 Unverified photo said to show funeral protest in Kaboun, Syria (16 July 2011) -of-ET is the activists share photos of the crowds to said Syria has tens of thousands of people they have attended Friday's anti-government protests has been terminated.

Reports say some places security forces attempted to crowds who were chanting slogans break down in the streets of coffins.

At least one person was reported dead by security forces near the border in Iraq Protest shot.

As the opposition became Turkey to discuss the reunion of President expected Bashar al-Assad met.

One National Salvation Congress of Wael al-Hafiz leaders reportedly called for a campaign of civil disobedience.

At least 28 people died in Damascus and the other cities on Friday, said some of what was the largest protests since anti-government uprising began in March.

Opposition

The videos will be published on the Internet appears to Show the capital through the coffins carrying Klimaflüchtlinge Damascus Saturday, calling for the freedom of the streets and thousands.

We want peaceful confrontation between the intensity of the pay raise anti-social. "
End quote from al Hafiz of the Syrian opposition Wael, Director of the international journalists are denied access to Syria and figures may not be independently verified.

Activists said the security forces opened fire on the eastern border of the city, in protest, Albu, near the border in Iraq, Kamal killing one person and injury to other people.

"Military Intelligence patrols starts, the crowd is the main square," one witness told the Reuters news agency.

President Assad is opposed to the various groups, many of the Liberal, but in a earthly Islamists is not a General of the opposition leader has emerged.

On Saturday the Syrian opposition figures in the hundreds of meetings began in Turkey to discuss uniting against him.

"We want a peaceful confrontation between the intensity of the pay raise and anti-social system collapse economically and training practices of the State, which has at least harm," Mr. Hafez told a meeting in Istanbul.

But reports say exposed the divisions in a meeting with Kurdish activists, who have long complained of discrimination after-the other participants in marginalising them, accusing and of ignoring the problem of the Kurdish by dragging.

Hard to stop the demonstrators, and extracts

Prominent opposition figures, which were assembled by the Istanbul originally wanted to elect a cabinet, but the idea of the shadow was scrapped due to fears it will claim the opposition at the Center.

Unidentified Syrian opposition figures in Istanbul, Turkey (16 July 2011)The Syrian political opposition in the hope to unify against President Assad

Damascus in a parallel meeting to the authorities were broken, the activists said.

However, some of his address at the Conference were able to telephone.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is visiting Turkey, made no comments the opposition meeting, but called on the regime to enter into negotiations with the opposition.

"Hard to liquidate the demonstrators, and extracts," he said.

Turkey's Close ally of President Assad may be used, but it has recently joined calls for him to reform.

Human rights groups say that the approximately 1 400 civilians and security forces died in the four 350,000 months absurd.

The Government blames the unrest, "the armed criminal groups," a foreign conspiracy by borrowing.

An attempt was made to the Ministers of the civil unrest it's held for the two-day "national dialogue" in the recent judgment of the members of the Ba'th Party and its opponents.

However, many of the convictions, the Director of the opposition and Protest organisers refused to participate.


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Monday, February 13, 2012

The opposition Bahrain closes ', ' discussions

on 17 July 2011, last updated at 10: 29 Thousands of anti-government female protesters shout anti-government slogans during a gathering held in the village of Bilad al-Qadeem, south of Manama, by opposition party al-Wifaq, 15 July 2011 -of-ET, is the largest Shia community is in Bahrain long complained of discrimination in Bahrain Shiite opposition bloc Bahrain's, says it intends to pull out of the democracy protests in the wake of the determination of the Government-led Sunni debates.

The spokesman of the Group of al-Wifaq, said the national dialogue had not been serious, and they will not participate in Sunday's session.

Bloc appealed that the opposition had been granted too few seats in the talks.

The dialogue was launched on 2 July.

Al-Wifaq, the spokesman said the decision to abandon the national dialogue that would jeopardize the ratification-Wifaq.

"We have tried but without success, to serious dialogue," the spokesman told the French news agency AFP.

Announcing the talks Start earlier this month, King Hamad Bin Issa Al-Khalifa, said all options were on the table.

Discussions on the work of anti-government protests in the Gulf for months in the Kingdom, which left more than 30 people dead.

Hundreds of opposition supporters have been jailed.

Al-Wifaq has said, is not in the Government of Bahrain the largest Shia sought an invoice but it seeks to reform.


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