Thursday, July 31, 2014

Anthony Albanese says Israel's Gaza assault is 'completely unacceptable'



Labor heavyweight Anthony Albanese has veered off his party’s script on the conflict in Gaza, declaring the “collective punishment” being endured by the people of Gaza “completely unacceptable”.


The Labor leadership has been trying to hold a centrist position on the conflict, apportioning blame between both Israel and Hamas and calling for UN intervention to achieve a ceasefire.


But Albanese, Labor’s transport spokesman, leftwing factional leader
and one-time leadership contender, used a breakfast television appearance on Friday to point the finger squarely at Israel.


“What we saw this week, the bombing of a school where people essentially had gone to seek refuge,” he said on the Nine Network. “That is unacceptable. It is unacceptable for Hamas to fire rockets into Israel, but the collective punishment is against all the rules of engagement and Israel must stop these actions. At the moment we are seeing a child killed every hour in Gaza.”


A number of leftwing Labor MPs have departed from the careful diplomatic formulation crafted over the past 24 hours by Bill Shorten and his deputy leader, Tanya Plibersek, and signed a statement calling “on all Australian politicians to condemn the ongoing Israeli military bombardment and invasion of Gaza”.


The separate statement, also signed by a number of Greens parliamentarians and the former prime minister Malcolm Fraser, says the conflict is lopsided.


“The rockets fired from Gaza are not in any way justified and insofar as they threaten and harm civilians are illegal under international law. However, these imprecise rockets cannot be compared with the broad-scale bombing of Gaza by Israel which has one of the world’s largest military forces,” it says.


The breakaway statement is consistent with the views expressed by Albanese on Friday morning.


The differences in tone and language reflect ongoing arguments within Labor about how to position the party’s policy concerning Australia’s relationship with Israel.


Many of those internal tensions were highlighted in the recent memoir published by the former foreign minister Bob Carr, which was critical of the influence of the “Israel lobby”.


Several senior figures in the NSW branch of the ALP believe Labor needs to take a step back from an overtly pro-Israel policy. Views in the Victorian branch are quite different.


Tony Abbott, meanwhile, welcomed news of the 72-hour ceasefire in Gaza, but continued his mildly pro-Israel stance, again pointing the finger of blame at Hamas for provoking the conflict.


The prime minister had called for a ceasefire in the conflict on Thursday, arguing that too many innocent people were dying in the bombardment.


On Friday, Abbott welcomed news of the 72-hour pause in hostilities. But he was again pressed by reporters for a response to accusations that the Israelis bombed a UN school, killing more than a dozen sleeping women and children.


When asked about the school bombing by reporters on Thursday, the prime minister reasoned that the Israeli government’s decision-making was not perfect, but that it had a right to defend its borders.


Abbott delivered much the same formulation on Friday.


Asked whether he deplored actions such as the school bombing that resulted in the indiscriminate death of civilians, Abbott first blamed Hamas, saying: “I deplore the indiscriminate rain of missiles from Gaza on to Israel.”


“I deplore any actions which result in civilian deaths and obviously we’ve seen far too much of that over the last few weeks,” he said.




Morning Mail: Gaza on a precipice; children in detention; investigators reach MH17; Ebola outbreak



Good morning folks, and welcome to the Morning Mail – sign up here to get it straight to your inbox before 8am every weekday.


Gaza


UPDATE: Gaza and Hamas have agreed to a 72-hour ceasefire.


The death toll in Gaza has topped 1,400, greater than in both previous rounds of fighting between Israel and Hamas; Israel has lost 56 soldiers and three civilians.


Two Palestinian journalists have also been killed; eight journalists have now died since the bombardment began.


The civilian death toll in Gaza has raised questions about Israeli military training and rules of engagement in such heavily populated areas.


UN spokesman Chris Gunness breaks down during interview on Gaza.

The US has issued its strongest condemnation yet of Israel , saying the shelling of a UN school which killed at least 15 people was “totally unacceptable”.


UN spokesman Chris Gunness broke down and wept on camera over the attack.


An air strike in a Gaza market next to an ambulance was caught on camera as a TV crew filmed a crowd.


We have live updates on events overnight, and from London, the Guardian view.


Australian news and politics


Dr Peter Young gives evidence on children in detention.

• The human rights commission inquiry into children in detention yesterday heard evidence that the immigration department has tried to cover up alarming rates of children’s mental health problems, and was given a litany of harrowing evidence of appalling conditions for children on Nauru.


• Two teenage asylum seekers reported to have escaped from Darwin detention centre were desperate and “scared for their lives”, according to their former school principal.


• The parents of a student who drowned during an excursion with the exclusive Sydney Scots College have been ordered to pay $7.7m in legal costs, dwarfing the $500,000 payout they were awarded after a 12-year legal battle. • WA premier Colin Barnett says the Coalition’s plan to force the unemployed to apply for 40 jobs a month won’t work.


• A man has been charged with the 1973 murder of teenager Bronwynne Richardson.


Ebola


Ebola virus spreads through west Africa.

The growing Ebola outbreak has sparked states of emergency in Liberia and Sierra Leone, which have both ordered the closure of schools and markets in an attempt to halt the spread.


No vaccine or drug treatment exists for the disease, and there are ethical questions over whether trials of treatments should be conducted during epidemics such as the current one.


The US Peace Corps has evacuated hundreds of volunteers from three west African countries, and two are under isolation after possible contact.


Australia’s chief medical officer says the virus is unlikely to reach this countrybut the authorities are well prepared if it does.


Around the world


MH17 crash site Ukrainian workers carrying a body near the wreckage of flight MH17 on 19 July. Photograph: Maxim Zmeyev/Reuters

• Australian and Dutch experts have finally reached the MH17 crash site in Ukraine, where they’re expected to focus on recovering the remaining bodies and collecting victims bodies.


• The CIA has admitted spying on US Senate staffers during an inquiry into CIA torture.


• The Guardian has a special report from inside the Syrian city of Homs.


• Europe has expanded a list of people subject to EU asset freezes and travel bans to include Putin’s inner circle, his aide and a Russian bank.


• Uganda’s tough anti-gay law is being challenged in the country’s constitutional court.


• The Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung has been hit by a massive gas explosion.


• Argentina has defaulted on its debt for the second time in 13 years, but has tried to play down the effects and claimed the situation was a conspiracy of international financial agents.


• French police have charged a father with child abuse after he posted a photo of his baby’s bruised face on Facebook.


• People in Poland have been mocking Russia’s ban on apple imports from the country by posting photos of themselves eating apples online.


• England has secured its first Test win in a year against India.


• We have live updates from the Commonwealth Games.


More from around the internet


Immigrant strawberry pickers gather at the court house after the court's decision to acquit farmers for last year's shooting. Immigrant strawberry pickers gather at the court house after the court’s decision to acquit farmers for last year’s shooting. Photograph: Menelaos Mich/Demotix/Corbis

• Among the most viewed on the Guardian this morning: a Greek court has acquitted farmers who shot 28 Bangladeshi strawberry pickers.


• Indonesia has demanded an explanation from Australia over a court order published by Wikileaks, reports Fairfax.


• Australian diver Melissa Wu scored zero points with her first dive after slipping on the platform at the Commonwealth Games, news.com.au reports.


• Khaled Sharrouf, a Sydney jihadist wanted on terrorism offences, has issued a statement threatening a terrorist attack on Australian soil, Fairfax reports.


• The Australian leads on Andrew Forrest’s welfare report, which suggests reducing the number of income support payments, banning young people accessing benefits unless they are in work or training, and the introduction of more income management.


• Wild weather began to hit last night as a cold snap brought winter back– 7News has images from Melbourne’s storms.


• An Australian couple has abandoned a baby with Down syndrome born to a surrogate mother in Thailand, who cannot afford his treatment, reports 9News.


• From today, Australians will no longer be able to pay for credit card purchases by signing, News Corp reports.


• There are 15 deaths and 430 hospitalisations caused by alcohol every day, according to the Conversation.


• The NT News brings us photographs of the “majestic sky penis” made of clouds.


One last thing


Artist Lucy Sparrow reads a felt edition of the Guardian newspaper. Artist Lucy Sparrow reads a felt edition of the Guardian newspaper. Photograph: Rosie Hallam/Barcroft Media

A British artist has made an entire corner shop out of felt.


Have an excellent day – and if you spot something I’ve missed or any errors, let me know on Twitter @newsmary and I’ll update this page.


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Gaza conflict: Israel and Hamas agree to 72-hour humanitarian ceasefire



Israel and Hamas have agreed to a 72-hour pause in their three-week conflict, the United States and the United Nations announced, allowing for both sides to begin talks on a longer-term ceasefire.


The truce will begin at 8am on Friday, local time, after which delegations from Israel and Palestine will convene in Cairo for negotiations to be mediated by the Egyptian government.


In a joint statement, UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon and US secretary of state John Kerry said the ceasefire would give “innocent civilians a much-needed reprieve from violence”. The pause would allow Gaza’s civilians to “bury the dead, care for the injured, and restock food supplies”, they said. Repairs would also be made to water and power infrastructure damaged in the 24 days of conflict.


However, “forces on the ground will remain in place”, meaning Israel had succeeded in its insistence that its troops continue to search for and destroy Hamas tunnels during any humanitarian pause.


“We urge all parties to act with restraint until this humanitarian ceasefire begins, and to fully abide by their commitments during the ceasefire,” the two top diplomats said.


“This ceasefire is critical to giving innocent civilians a much-needed reprieve from violence,” the statement continued. “During this period, civilians in Gaza will receive urgently needed humanitarian relief, and the opportunity to carry out vital functions, including burying the dead, taking care of the injured, and restocking food supplies. Overdue repairs on essential water and energy infrastructure could also continue during this period.”



Ban and Kerry, who have been at the forefront of efforts to seek an end to the conflict, said the UN’s representative in Jerusalem, special coordinator Robert Serry, had received “assurances that all parties have agreed to an unconditional humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza”.


Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said the group would abide by the ceasefire, Reuters reported. “Acknowledging a call by the United Nations and in consideration of the situation of our people, resistance factions agreed to a 72-hour humanitarian and mutual calm that begins at 8am on Friday as long as the other side abides by it,” he said. “All the Palestinian factions are united behind the issue in this regard.”


There was no immediate response from Israel, however a US official said the ceasefire would not have been released without firm assurances from both sides that there would be a pause in violence.


The US-UN statement added: “Israeli and Palestinian delegations will immediately be going to Cairo for negotiations with thegovernment of Egypt, at the invitation of Egypt, aimed at reaching a durable ceasefire. The parties will be able to raise all issues of concern in these negotiations.”


The ceasefire announcement followed mounting international outrage over the shelling earlier this week by Israeli forces of a UN school sheltering thousands of Palestinian families who had fled their homes after being warned by Israel to evacuate ahead of bombing. At least 15 people, including sleeping children, were killed and hundreds injured.


Ban condemned the attack as “outrageous and unjustifiable” and President Barack Obama’s press secretary , delivering an unusually forthright response, called the attack “totally unacceptable” and “totally indefensible”.


Previous unilateral ceasefires have been short-lived, with each side blaming the other for violations. This is the first time that both parties have agreed to a pause during which further negotiations will begin.


The Egyptian government made a similar proposal more than two weeks ago, which Israel agreed to, but Hamas rejected.


The ceasefire was first announced in New Delhi, where Kerry is currently on a diplomatic visit.




Gaza: White House calls UN school attack by Israel 'totally indefensible' video

The White House calls the shelling of a UN facility in Gaza this week by the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) 'totally unacceptable and totally indefensible', adding that Israel needs to do more to protect innocent civilians. Gaza health officials say more than 1,400 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed in territory. Israel says 56 of its soldiers and three civilians have been killed by rockets fired by the Hamas militant group





Gaza 'faces precipice' as death toll passes 1,400



The death toll in Gaza has topped 1,400, with more than 40 people dying after another day of intense Israeli bombardment from air, sea and land.


The toll is now greater than in both previous rounds of fighting between Israel and Hamas. Israeli military losses are also significantly higher.


Palestinian officials in Gaza said on Thursday that 8,200 people had been wounded in the four-week operation. Up to 80% of the Palestinian casualties were civilians, according to local non-government organisations and the UN.


Three civilians on the Israeli side and 56 soldiers have been killed so far.


In Gaza City, Abu Ahmed, 65, said the situation was the worst he had ever known. "I have experienced everything – the 1967 war, two intifada [uprisings]. By chance we are alive. But we don't know if we die now, today or tomorrow," the shopkeeper said.


Much of Gaza receives less than two hours of electricity a day, while medicine and safe water were increasingly scarce. Officials fear the development of health epidemics as sanitation systems break down. Some basic foodstuffs in Gaza City, such as tomatoes, now cost five times more than three weeks ago.


Valerie Amos, the UN's emergency relief coordinator, told the security council the world had watched "in horror the desperation of children and civilians that have come under attack". Philippe Krahenbul, the most senior official representing the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees, said Gaza was "facing a precipice" and "the illegal blockade of Gaza must be lifted".


The Israeli offensive, Operation Protective Edge, was launched with the stated aim of ending cross-border rocket fire from Gaza as well as destroying tunnels used by Palestinian militants to infiltrate Israel. During Operation Cast Lead in 2008-09, up to 1,400 people were killed in Gaza, according to Palestinian rights groups. In 2012's Operation Pillar of Defence, 133 Palestinians were killed.


Rockets continued to be fired from Gaza into Israel on Thursday, many originating from densely populated urban areas. Two people were wounded by rockets in the southern town of Kiryat Gat, Israeli media reported. Another eight Israelis were injured by mortar fire near the Gaza border, Haaretz reported. More than 2,800 rockets have been fired into Israel in recent weeks, according to officials. Most have been intercepted by the "Iron Dome" missile defence system.


Amos detailed attacks on more than 103 UN facilities, including one on a school on Wednesday that killed 19 people and injured more than 100.


The White House increased its public pressure on Israel to avoid further civilian deaths after concluding that its forces were likely to have been behind the shelling of a UN school full of refugees.


"The shelling of a UN facility, that is housing innocent civilians who are fleeing violence, is totally unacceptable and totally indefensible," Barack Obama's spokesman said. "It is clear that we need our allies in Israel to do more to live up to the high standards they have set themselves."


Israeli officials have said its forces were trying to avoid civilian casualties and blamed these on Hamas and other Palestinian factions who it said were embedded in urban areas. Israel said its forces were attacked by guerrillas near the UN school in northern Jabaliya and had fired back. In another incident on Wednesday, 17 people were killed in nearby Shujai'ya by what Palestinian officials said was Israeli shelling of a produce market. The Israeli military said it was investigating.


In central Gaza City on Thursday, three explosions destroyed the home of the Ramlawi family at around 3pm, where 50 refugees were crammed into its three storeys.


Rolling Israeli ground assaults on residential areas, preceded by mass warnings to evacuate, have displaced more than 200,000 of Gaza's 1.8 million Palestinians. Any accommodation away from the areas hit hardest by the shelling and bombing is packed with refugees.


An officer from the Israeli Defence Forces phoned Mahmud Ramlawi at about 2pm to warn him of the impending strike. The 20-year-old then received five successive calls from the officer, who called himself Musa, asking if the family had evacuated the premises. "We need more time," Ramlawi said as his brothers searched for valuables and documents."He was very cool, very calm. I argued with him, I asked: 'Why destroy my house?' He said he would call me afterwards and explain," the civil servant recounted.


A warning missile was fired at the house, followed by a final call came from the officer and three successive blasts which almost levelled the home Ramlawi's father had built over 20 years.


"Why have they destroyed our house?" asked Meher Ramlawi, 35, Mahmud's brother. "Were they scared of all our wives and daughters and sisters who live there?"


Meher, whose seven-year-old daughter is in a critical condition after being caught in shellfire earlier this week, said Palestinians and Israelis could not live together. "This is a war. One side has to finish the other."


Moshe Yaalon, Israel's defence minister, said on Thursday that progress towards military goals had been satisfactory: "We are completing our treatment of the terror tunnels.During the fighting, soldiers are finding new tunnel shafts, and they are also being neutralised."


Meher Ramlawi, whose daughter, 7, is in a critical condition after being caught in shellfire earlier this week, said Palestinians and Israelis "cannot live together" "This is a war. One side has to finish the other," he said.




Gaza civilian death toll raises questions among military training experts


Gaza City

Smoke rises after an Israeli strike on Gaza City. Photograph: Lefteris Pitarakis/AP




The persistently high civilian death toll in Gaza has raised questions among military analysts and humanitarian law experts over the quality of training of Israeli gunners and their rules of engagement in such heavily populated areas.


The questions were given new urgency after a UN-run school was hit by five artillery shells on Wednesday, killing 16 civilians and injuring 100 more, mostly women and children, and the deaths of 17 others in a crowded market, as the Israel Defence Forces' (IDF) Operation Protective Edge against Hamas entered its 24th day. The IDF has repeatedly cited targeting errors, and blamed Hamas for operating in civilian areas.


However, Andrew Exum, a former US army officer who has studied Israel's military campaigns, said the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) has a long history of mistakes causing large numbers of civilian casualties.


"Errant artillery and air strikes have unfortunately been something of a theme in Israel's conflicts in both southern Lebanon and Gaza over the past two decades. There are good strategic reasons to avoid using air power and artillery in these conflicts: they tend to be pretty indiscriminate in their effects and make it difficult for the population under fire to figure out what they're supposed to do to be safe," said Exum, who once served as a defence department special adviser on the Middle East.


"I'm not sure what the issue is. In 2006 and 2008, it was pretty clear the IDF's combined armed skills – their ability to integrate artillery and air power into ground campaigns – had atrophied since the withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000. But I don't know whether the issue remains poor training, a lack of forward observers talking to the artillery batteries and aircraft, or commanders who just don't think avoiding civilian casualties is a priority."


"When a stray shell killed 23 Palestinian civilians, including nine children, in Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza in November 2006, it was found it was caused by a faulty programming card in a counter-battery radar system, called Shilem, designed to track an enemy projectile's trajectory back to its point of origin and direct artillery fire back at that spot. The inquiry also found that the artillery crew had not recalibrated their weapons overnight and did not have spotters monitoring whether their fire was accurate, so 12 to 15 artillery shells were fired before it was realised they were hitting an apartment complex. It is not clear what changes the IDF made to its targeting methods as a result."


Retired Brigadier General Shlomo Brom insisted that there was no inherent problem in IDF training, saying: "The Israeli artillery corps has gone through the same development the Israeli Air Force has gone through, and most of the ammunition it launches, including shells launched by guns, is accurate guided ammunition, and there is no problem with the training of the crews.


"If there are problems of targeting it is probably the product of gaps in intelligence … and collateral damage that is caused by Hamas's use of the cover of the civilian population," said Brom, now a senior research associate at the Institute for National Security Studies, in Tel Aviv.


However, military analysts and human rights observers say the IDF is still using unguided, indirect fire with high explosive shells, which they argue is inappropriate for a densely populated area like Gaza – where 1.8 million people live in an area the size of the Isle of Wight. The biggest artillery weapon being used is a 155mm howitzer, mounted on tracks to make it mobile. It typically fires a fragmentation shell weighing 44kg that spreads shrapnel over a wide area. Such shells have a lethal radius of 50 to 150 metres and causes injury up to 300 metres from its point of impact. Furthermore, such indirect-fire artillery (meaning it is fired out of direct sight of the target) has a margin of error of 200 to 300 metres.


The use of indirect artillery fire in residential areas is not forbidden under international humanitarian law, but its legality depends on a balance between potential military gain against risk of harm to non-combatants. On that basis, Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International's senior crisis response adviser, said it was hard to see a military justification for its use in Gaza.


"The margin of error of an artillery shell is well known. If you are shooting into a civilian area, there is a high chance of hitting civilians and a low chance of hitting your military objective, unless your military objective is to terrorise and punish a population," Rovera said.


The IDF is reported to have a "safety zone", the closest an artillery target can be to civilians areas, of 100 metres. That is significantly less than the casualty radius of 155mm artillery shells, and Human Rights Watch found in a 2007 report that the rule appeared to be ignored in Gaza.


In cases where howitzers are used to strike back at missiles or mortars launched from inside Gaza, the guns are aimed with the help of the Shilem radar system and a linked, computerised fire direction centre. The coordinates for any protected building – the UN school for example – are supposed to have been fed into that computer database to block fire in that direction automatically. The UN says it had provided the coordinates of all its buildings, but it is not clear whether that data was incorporated into IDF systems.


The legality of Israel's indirect fire in response to Hamas's missiles also depends on the availability of more accurate alternatives. Israel has the option of aerial missile strikes but they are not as instantaneous, in response to enemy fire, as artillery. Tank fire, being direct, within sight of a target, should also be more accurate, but Rovera said there have been plenty of examples of sloppy aiming.


"Reckless targeting is a recurring problem, and the hand-wringing and words of regret no longer have any value. If you are making the same mistakes again and again, you would hope something is being learned," she said, adding there was no sign of any disciplinary action for IDF mistakes that kill civilians. "There is no pattern of anyone being held to account, and impunity just leads to more reckless behaviour."




'My Children are Hungry': Gazans Line Up for Food

Ayman Mohyeldin is outside one of Gaza’s busiest bakery where tensions are high and people wait for hours for a bag of bread.

The Guardians view on the killing of children in Gaza | Editorial



Wars kill people, including teachers in their classrooms, nurses in their hospitals, and farmers in their fields. But when children die in the hail of steel soldiers direct at one another there is a special kind of obscenity. Children have no agency, not even the slightest shred of the responsibility or complicity that adults to one degree or another may possess.


They know nothing of propaganda, they did not cheer in angry rallies, they did not send off their menfolk to fight with a blessing, they did not sit at meetings where the pros and cons of making war were gravely discussed by middle- aged men. No, they just die. Or lose their little legs, their arms, their eyes. The scenes at Jabaliya elementary school had seasoned United Nations officials, who have seen and endured much, in tears. The rapid transference of images to the world soon made this tragedy everybody’s property and everybody’s burden. Then, of course, a familiar game begins. Mournful spokesmen explain that the other side is to blame, because it has hidden its fighters, mortars and rockets in populated areas. They take great care, but mistakes can happen. They do not explain why that other side might be reluctant to put its fighters into, say, the local soccer stadium so that they could be mown down without risk to civilians. Hamas, meanwhile, attributes all civilian deaths to the malign intent of the Israeli enemy.


This is what the British general Rupert Smith calls “the reality in which the people in the streets and houses and fields – all the people, anywhere – are the battlefield”. The Israelis did not go into Gaza to kill children. But, as Jon Snow implied in his passionate video this week, they went in knowing that they would kill children because it is impossible in that crowded, chaotic territory to pursue their foes without massive collateral damage. The only way not to kill children would be not to go in at all. And that raises the most critical issue, which is why they went in. The immediate justification was that Hamas rockets and raiding parties entering through tunnels were a threat to Israeli civilians. One may quarrel with that, because this threat has been, so far, relatively limited. It might get worse in the future, but is a country justified in the use of force because of something that may happen rather than something that has happened? That threat might never fully materialise because of Israeli technical superiority or because political developments rendered it irrelevant.


The more fundamental reason why Israel went in is not related to what Hamas or Israel has done, but to what Israel has left undone. The distinguished Israeli writer David Grossman, addressing himself to Israeli leaders, asks: “How could you have wasted the years since the last conflict without initiating dialogue, without even making the slightest gesture toward dialogue with Hamas, without attempting to change our explosive reality? Why, for these past few years, has Israel avoided judicious negotiations with the moderate and more conversable sectors of the Palestinian people … Why have you ignored, for 12 years, the Arab League initiative that could have enlisted moderate Arab states with the power to impose, perhaps, a compromise on Hamas?” If you want peace, prepare for war, says the Roman proverb. But here it is the opposite: if you want to avoid war, prepare for peace. The Netanyahu government is paying the price for having sedulously avoided real negotiations with the Palestinians through a long series of subterfuges and distractions culminating in the recent barren passage that, over many months, wore down even the ever- patient and optimistic John Kerry.


The outside world must help devise a ceasefire which stops the killing and puts in place arrangements on access, a degree of demilitarisation and the return of the Palestinian Authority. But that will not last long if Israel simply sinks back into the limbo land most of its politicians have come to prefer, a land where peace can be constantly postponed, and Israelis, although occasionally surprised by bouts of nastiness, can go off to the supermarket as if they were in Denmark. David Grossman thinks he can discern beneath a superficial show of support for the Gaza operation a shift in Israeli opinion. If so, that would be reinforced if both the United States and the European Union made it clear that there must never be another Gaza operation. Not one more shell in a Gaza schoolyard, ever.


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Gaza conflict: US says Israeli attack on UN school was 'totally unacceptable'


The UN school in Jabaliya hit by multiple shells earlier this week

The UN school in Jabaliya hit by multiple shells earlier this week. Photograph: Sipa USA/REX




Israel has come under heavy pressure from the US to curtail civilian deaths after concluding that its forces were likely to have been behind the shelling of a UN school.


In what amounted to the strongest and most explicit condemnation of Israel since the Gaza conflict began, President Barack Obama's press secretary on Thursday called the attack "totally unacceptable" and "totally indefensible". He also said the administration was urging Israel to do more to avoid civilian deaths and said US officials were taking issue with "specific military decisions" by Israel. "It is clear that we need our allies in Israel to do more to live up to the high standards they have set themselves."


The EU issued a similar statement.


US officials had initially declined to apportion blame for the shelling, even though the UN said all of the evidence pointed to Israel. On Thursday, after Israel conceded it was operating in the area and said it was possible that "stray Israeli fire" hit the school and killed 16 Palestinians, the White House shifted its stance.


The angry words from Washington came as Palestinian leaders prepared to hold talks in Egypt on Friday on a short ceasefire they hope will help end the three-week Israeli offensive, which has now killed some 1,400 people in Gaza. Prospects for success look deeply uncertain but Israel signalled that it could stop fighting without any agreement.


Disagreements were reported on Thursday over the composition of a Palestinian delegation ahead of the negotiations in Cairo, with Hamas officials insisting that there would be no truce until it was agreed to lift the seven-year blockade of the coastal territory by Israel and Egypt.


But there were also signs of possible readiness for a deal as Mahmoud al-Zahar, a senior Hamas leader, declared: "The Palestinian people will be marking their victory in the very near future." Khalil al-Haya, another Hamas official, said that if Israel wanted a way out of the crisis it had to accept Palestinian terms.


The team is likely to be headed by Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, along with other officials of the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority. Islamic Jihad, another militant Gaza faction, will also be represented.


Al Sharq al-Awsat, a Saudi-owned paper, reported that the intention is to work towards a three or five-day ceasefire to be followed by negotiations in Cairo on a permanent agreement.


In Israel, attention focused on military operations in Gaza, the funerals of the latest of the 56 soldiers who have been killed, and the rockets which continued to be fired from the enclave despite Israeli claims that the Palestinian arsenal had now been heavily depleted.


And there was an uncompromising message about the terms of any truce. Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, said after a cabinet meeting that Israel would continue destroying the "terror tunnels" crossing from Gaza into Israel whether or not there was a ceasefire. "I will not accept any proposal that does not allow the army to complete this important mission for the people of Israel," Netanyahu said. It was the "first stage of the demilitarisation" of Gaza – a demand he claimed was supported by the US and EU.


Netanyahu's remarks came two days after Hamas released a video of fighters climbing out of a tunnel into Israel and attacking a base in a raid Israeli officials said claimed the lives of five soldiers.


Early on Thursday the army announced the call-up of another 16,000 reservists – despite calls for an immediate ceasefire.


Israeli officials briefed that a truce would have to be based on a proposal put forward by Egypt – suggesting that conditions proposed by Qatar and Turkey, both supporters of Hamas, would not be acceptable. Two senior Israeli security officials held consultations in Cairo on Wednesday, underlining close coordination between the two countries, but no details of their talks were released.


Israel Radio reported a senior army officer as saying that a ceasefire should allow Israel continued access to border areas of Gaza in order to allow it to destroy new tunnels dug once this bout of fighting was over. Tunnelling by Hamas had been set back five years, the unnamed officer claimed, adding that "scores" of its fighters were buried in tunnels that had been destroyed.


Hamas's tunnelling activities had gone on round the clock for months, he said. Israeli media also reported residents in communities near the Gaza border complaining that they had heard noises underground and reported them to the army but that investigations had not uncovered anything suspicious.


In New York, the UN security council was expected to call again for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza after the furious international condemnation of the attack on a UN school. Referring to that incident, and to a later attack, the EU said in a statement: "It is unacceptable that innocent displaced civilians, who were taking shelter in designated UN areas after being called on by the Israeli military to evacuate their homes, have been killed." The EU was "deeply concerned at the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza" and called on all sides to "immediately allow safe and full humanitarian access for the urgent distribution of assistance".


Navi Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights, said she believed Israel was deliberately defying international law and that world powers should hold it accountable for possible war crimes. "This is why again and again I say we cannot allow impunity; we cannot allow this lack of accountability to go on." Hamas had also violated international humanitarian law by firing rockets indiscriminately into Israel, sometimes from densely-populated areas, Pillay said.




Gaza: British MPs demand tougher action over Israeli bombardment


An Israeli soldier carries a tank shell onto a Merkava tank inside southern Israel, close to the Gaza Strip, 31 July 2014.

A soldier carries a tank shell on to a Merkava tank inside southern Israel, close to the Gaza Strip. Photograph: Jim Hollander/EPA




David Cameron and Ed Miliband have been urged by senior MPs within their own parties to demand more forcefully that Israel stops its bombardment of Gaza.


In a significant intervention, Margot James, a No 10 policy board adviser and parliamentary aide to William Hague, has written to the new foreign secretary, Philip Hammond, urging him to rethink the government's stance, calling Israel's actions disproportionate.


Stressing that she has been a firm supporter of Israel for many years, James wrote to Hammond: "I ask that the government rethinks policy towards the conflict in Israel and the Palestinian territories. The scale of suffering in Gaza is far too great, the loss of life, and particularly the lives of children and other vulnerable individuals, cannot be justified on the grounds of defence in proportion to the level of threat faced by Israel from Hamas."


So far, Cameron has stood up for Israel's right to defend itself and blamed Hamas for starting the conflict, while calling for an immediate ceasefire to end the bloodshed.


The former Northern Ireland minister Sir Peter Bottomley wrote to the chief whip, Michael Gove, criticising the "devastation and death" and arguing that most MPs in the centre of the Conservative party felt the same.


"We all know that Israel has the right to exist, we all know that the attacks on Israel should cease, we know that Israel's settlements and their treatment of Palestinians is provocative. That's the foundation. The issue now is if Israel is relying on other people to be silent, they'll go on with a lack of proportionality and the devastation and the death.


"Anyone who looks at the pictures of what's going on presently in Gaza must know that the Israelis know what they're doing and what they're doing is wrong," Bottomley told the BBC. "Many Israelis know it's wrong. [The prime minister Binyamin] Netanyahu may have support, but Israelis know that if you go killing people at this rate, the disregard for the life of Palestinians is going to show up in the world as a bad mark for Israel."


In contrast to the Conservatives, Labour opposes the invasion of Gaza.


Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary, said: "The growing number of Palestinian civilians being killed is rightly provoking international outrage, and the continuing incursion into Gaza risks further international isolation for Israel and further international condemnation of its actions."


However, Diane Abbott, a Labour MP and former shadow minister, said she would like to see Cameron, Miliband and the Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, do more to put pressure on the Israelis to stop the shelling.


"Leaders of all the parties need to be a great deal more emphatic in their condemnation of what's happening in Gaza," she told the Guardian. "Public opinion in all quarters, including Margot James who has always supported Israel, is horrified about what is happening. There is increasingly a consensus among ordinary people that they want to see the British political leadership speak out more emphatically. Part of it is people trying to keep in step with America, but things have gone so far, British leadership have to be prepared now to question America's support for what Israel is doing."


Several other senior Labour MPs had tweeted about the issue. Jon Trickett, a shadow cabinet office minister, wrote: "My mothers [sic] family were Jewish but what's happening in Palestine is #NotInMyName." Sadiq Khan, the shadow justice secretary, quoted the words of the UN's Ban Ki-moon, who said shelling of a school in Gaza was "Outrageous, unjustifiable and demands accountability and justice".



The US said on Thursday that casualties in Gaza were "too high" and Israel needed to do more to protect civilian life. However, the Foreign Office position remained the same. A spokesman said: "The UK is deeply concerned about the current situation in Gaza and the tragic loss of life on all sides. The foreign secretary has been absolutely clear that there needs to be an immediate and unconditional ceasefire to help alleviate the appalling humanitarian situation. All our efforts must be focused on achieving that ceasefire. Demands to take a different tack will simply dilute attempts to secure that."




American media's new pro-Israel bias: the same party line at the wrong time | Chris McGreal



Here are a few questions you won’t hear asked of the parade of Israeli officials crossing US television screens during the current crisis in Gaza:



  • What would you do if a foreign country was occupying your land?

  • What does it mean that Israeli cabinet ministers deny Palestine’s right to exist?

  • What should we make of a prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, who as opposition leader in the 1990s was found addressing rallies under a banner reading “Death to Arabs”?


These are contentious questions, to be sure, and with complicated answers. But they are relevant to understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict today. They also parallel the issues routinely raised by American journalists with Palestinian officials, pressing to consider how the US would react if it were under rocket fire from Mexico, to explain why Hamas won’t recognise Israel and to repudiate Palestinian anti-Semitism.


But it’s a feature of much mainstream journalism in the US, not just an issue of coverage during the last three weeks of the Gaza crisis, that while one set of questions gets asked all the time, the other is heard hardly at all.


In years of reporting from and about Israel, I’ve followed the frequently robust debate in its press about whether Netanyahu really wants a peace deal, about the growing power of right-wing members inside the Israeli cabinet opposed to a Palestinian state, about the creeping air of permanence to the occupation.


So it has been all the more striking to discover a far narrower discourse in Washington and the notoriously pro-Israel mainstream media in the US at a time when difficult questions are more important than ever. John Kerry, the US secretary of state, and a crop of foreign leaders have ratcheted up warnings that the door for the two-state solution is closing, in no small part because of Israel’s actions. But still the difficult questions go unasked.


Take Netanyahu’s appearance on CBS’s Face the Nation on Sunday. The host, Bob Schieffer, permitted the Israeli leader to make a lengthy case for the his military’s ground attack, guiding him along with one sympathetic question after another. Finally, after describing Netanyahu’s position as “very understandable”, Schieffer asked about dead Palestinian civilians – but only to wonder if they presented a public relations problem in “the battle for world opinion”.


As if Schieffer’s position wasn’t already blindingly clear, he went on to quote former prime minister Golda Meir’s line that Israelis can never forgive Arabs “for forcing us to kill their children”.


As way of balance, CBS followed with a short clip of an interview by Charlie Rose with the Hamas leader, Khaled Meshaal, who was pressed on his willingness to recognise Israel.


There has been fine reporting from on the ground in Gaza by courageous American journalists who have laid bare the price being paid by ordinary Palestinians. That, in turn, has prompted some stiff questioning in American TV studios of Israeli officials about the scale of civilian deaths and shelling of schools and hospitals. Some pro-Israel American pundits admit to have becoming “less pro-Israel”.


But the broader framework of how the conflict is presented in the US is more troubling.


rula jebreal ‘We have a media scandal that we need to expose,’ says Rula Jebreal. Still via CNN

Former MSNBC contributor Rula Jebreal drew widespread attention to the media divide when she condemned NBC News on air, on MSNBC, for pulling its only Arab-American correspondent, Ayman Mohyeldin, out of Gaza, only to reinstate him because of the backlash. “We are disgustingly biased on this issue,” she said.


She has a point.


An analysis by Punditfact of CNN coverage during the first two weeks of the latest Gaza crisis showed that appearances by Israeli officials outnumbered Palestinian officials by more than four-to-one. There were substantially more interviews with what Punditfact called Palestinian “laymen”, but they included the relatives of a Palestinian-American beaten by Israeli soldiers that offered little insight into the bigger picture.


All appearances by Palestinian officials were outnumbered by interviews with a single man: Israel’s former ambassador to the US, Michael Oren, whom CNN hired as a Middle East analyst earlier this year. The network presents Oren as a kind of neutral interpreter, when just a few months ago he was vigorously defending Israel on behalf of Netanyahu’s government. His limited value as an analyst was swiftly exposed by his assertion that Hamas was trying to get Israel to kill as many Palestinian children as possible as part of a media strategy.


The number of guests booked or sources quoted has never been balanced on this issue in the mainstream American press, but more important is the nature of interviews and the broader coverage when Israel and Palestine are not thrust into the news by a fresh surge in violence.


At one extreme is Fox News, where last week Sean Hannity shouted down a Palestinian guest, Yousef Munayyer, because he would not condemn Hamas as a terrorist organisation, then proceeded to terminate the interview.


Munayyer, director of the Jerusalem Fund in Washington, has appeared repeatedly on CNN where he is treated more respectfully. But he told me he is frequently brought on to answer accusations from the Israeli side, rather than explain the Palestinian perspective in the way that Israeli officials and commentators are allowed to lay out their case.


“Most of the time I go on it is to be put on the defensive, in response to a conversation that’s framed around Israel’s security concerns first and foremost,” Munayyer said.


Palestinians should face difficult questions about recognition of Israel, about Hamas’s policies and actions, about how peace would work in practice.


But on the other side, I’ve rarely seen a major channel match that kind of routine close questioning of Israeli officials about the position of a government packed with ministers hostile to a Palestinian state, who advocate annexation of much of the occupied territories and who propose second-class citizenship for Arabs.


Israel’s preferred representatives in the US media – Oren, plus the Israeli ambassador to the UN, Ron Prosor, and Netanyahu’s spokesman, Mark Regev – all project the country as a liberal democracy, an unwilling occupier that is thirsting for peace.


But that does not fit with the views of leading politicians back in Israel. Naftali Bennett, the economy minister and leader of the most powerful political party on the right, has said: “I will do everything in my power to make sure [the Palestinians] never get a state.”


Danny Danon, the increasingly powerful chairman of the central committee of Netanyahu’s Likud party, openly opposes a Palestinian state and has said the prime minister doesn’t believe in it either. “I want the majority of the land with the minimum amount of Palestinians,” Danon, whom Netanyahu just fired as deputy defense minister for being critical of opposition to a ceasefire, told me last year.


And Israel’s ultranationalist foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, wants a good chunk of Israel’s Arab population stripped of citizenship.


Perhaps none of these men will get what they want. But they hold important levers of power, and good journalism would seem to demand that probing questions get asked about where Israel is headed under such leadership.


That kind of piercing American journalism can be found, mostly in foreign-policy journals and long magazine articles, such as David Remnick’s insightful report in the New Yorker last year on the rising political power of Jewish settlers. But much of the press demonstrates a frightening lack of inquiry, and if the mainstream media won’t do it, others are increasingly willing to do it for them.


It’s no secret that younger Americans do not rely on the nightly news, cable networks or printed newspapers for information in the way many older people do. The internet has opened access to foreign news media, which often has a different take in Israel, and has opened up a stream of links to to first-hand accounts as well as writing by analysts and activists who offer insights and information wilfully ignored by the Bob Schieffers and Sean Hannitys of the world.


There is evidence of a shift in public opinion, mostly generational: a Pew poll this month showed falling support for Israel among younger Americans. Over 65s backed the Jewish state by 60% to just 9% support for the Palestinians. Among young adults, aged 18-29, just 44% were behind Israel with backing for the Palestinians rising to 22%.


As opinion shifts, it will be harder to go on presenting just one side of the story.


• Comments on this article are set to remain open for 24 hours from the time of publication but may be closed overnight (UK time)




UN spokesman Chris Gunness breaks down during interview on Gaza - video

Chris Gunness, a spokesman for the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees, succumbs to his emotions during a live interview with Al Jazeera. Gunness was being interviewed about an attack on a UN school shelter in which at least 15 people, mostly women and children, were killed. Gunness says 'What is happening in Gaza, particularly to the children, is an affront to the humanity of all of us'





Israeli polls show overwhelming support for Gaza campaign


Israel protest

Supporters of Israel's Gaza offensive demonstrate in Tel Aviv. Photograph: Reuters




Public support among Israeli Jews for the military campaign in Gaza has been overwhelming throughout its 24-day duration, with a recent opinion poll showing 95% of respondents believed the war was justified.


A survey conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute and Tel Aviv University on three separate occasions between 14 and 23 July, and published this week, found that only 3-4% agreed with a statement that the Israel Defence Forces had used excessive firepower in the conflict.


The findings were echoed in a separate poll, also published this week, in which 86% of Israeli Jews said they supported the war. Fewer than 10% agreed that it was time to stop, and 86.5% said military action should not cease until Hamas's rockets and tunnels had been dealt with and Hamas had surrendered.


Support is not universal, however. There have been anti-war rallies in most major cities, but they have attracted small numbers and have come under physical and verbal attack from rightwing activists. A protest in Tel Aviv last Saturday drew around 5,000, the biggest number to date by far.


Tamar Hermann, of the Israel Democracy Institute, said she was not surprised by the strength of support. "The majority of Israeli Jewish public see an existential threat in the rockets and tunnels," she said. "There is no pressure on people – this is authentic support. People think this is a just war."


Isaac Herzog, leader of the Labour party, said Israel was hardly a North Korea-style monolith. "Any issue in Israel is up for argument and debate, and the social networks are extremely active," he said. "But there is a national consensus [on the war]."


That consensus has been shaped in part by the media, which have largely focused on Israeli military casualties and rocket attacks, playing down Palestinian civilian deaths.


"The Israeli media is completely one-sided," said Orly Halpern, an Israeli journalist who writes the News Nosh, a daily review of the media for Americans For Peace Now. "You find references to Palestinian civilian casualties only deep in reports or on inside pages."


None of Israel's tabloid papers carried front-page reports of Wednesday's deadly attacks in Gaza – the shelling of a UN school sheltering refugees, and the bombing of a crowded market. The lead of the inside-page story in Israel's biggest-selling paper, Yedioth Ahronoth, read "Palestinian civilians continue to pay the price for Hamas aggression". Halpern said: "Even when Palestinian civilian casualties are mentioned, it's portrayed as Hamas's fault."


A notable exception is the left-leaning Haaretz, which carries reports of events in Gaza and commentary critical of the military operation. Its share of the market was less than 7% last year.


Israeli journalists have been forbidden from entering Gaza since 2008, which inevitably hinders reporting.


There have been several cases in recent weeks of workers being sacked or suspended for comments posted on Facebook and Twitter. A supermarket employee was fired for expressing joy over the death of Israeli soldiers. A bank employee was sacked after writing grossly antisemitic remarks on Facebook.


Some activists who have posted anti-war opinions, rather than outrageously offensive material, have complained of being vilified. "The strength of a democratic state lies in its enabling of free expression," said Sharon Abraham-Weiss, executive director of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel. "Free speech protections are designed specifically to cover outrageous and frustrating comments, from the left and the right. Employers that fire employees because of comments made on Facebook should be aware that they risk exposure to claims of discrimination."




Jon Snow Gaza video backed by Channel 4



Channel 4 has backed Jon Snow’s unusually direct and emotional online video about the Gaza conflict and revealed that it prompted one child to write to the UK defence secretary.


In the video, published on YouTube on Saturday and the Channel 4 News website the following day but not broadcast on TV, Snow speaks directly to camera about how what he saw in Gaza was “still etched in my mind” and appeals directly to viewers to take action to stop the conflict.


A viewer contacted Channel 4 to say that after watching Snow’s video on the children of Gaza her eight-year-old daughter had written to defence secretary Philip Hammond to express her concern.


“I think that it is sad that so many people in Gaza are being injured or dying, especially women and children. It’s our fault,” she wrote.


“We are killing the people of Gaza by giving Israel weapons. We need to take our part in it and stop giving Israel weapons or who knows how long this is going to go on for. I would appreciate it if you could talk to the government of Israel and try to stop this tragedy.”


The video, filmed in the Channel 4 News studio, is understood to have been shot on Friday after Snow returned to London from Gaza via Tel Aviv.


Snow spoke of his visit to Gaza’s al-Shifa hospital and the wounded children he had seen there, also quoting the official number of child casualties resulting from the conflict.


“That’s what makes this something that every one of us has to confront,” he said. “We have to know that in some way we share some responsibility for those deaths.”


Snow added: “We cannot let it go on… together we can make a difference.”


The video has notched up more than 1m views across various platforms, with more than 600,000 on the Channel 4 News YouTube channel alone.


A Channel 4 News spokeswoman said: “As part of our extensive coverage of the ongoing conflict, Jon Snow spent five days on the ground in Gaza witnessing for himself some of the harrowing events and human tragedies.


”He made this video blog for the Channel 4 News website after being deeply affected by what he saw first-hand. The feedback we have received has been overwhelmingly positive and we are extremely proud of the work our reporting teams have done and continue to do in very challenging conditions to cover this conflict.”


If the piece had been broadcast in a regular Channel 4 News bulletin on TV it may have fallen foul of media regulator Ofcom’s broadcasting code rules on due impartiality.


An Ofcom spokesman confirmed that the video fell outside its remit, as it had not been broadcast on linear TV.


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UN spokesman cries on camera over Gaza school attack







Link to video: UN spokesman Chris Gunness breaks down during interview on Gaza

It was an unexpected moment of anguish, never intended to be seen by anyone other than his close colleagues. But a video of a United Nations official sobbing, with his head in his hands, over the plight of children in Gaza has become one of the many memorable images of the war.


Chris Gunness, spokesman for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, was being interviewed by al-Jazeera Arabic on Wednesday about the shelling of one of the organisation's schools in Gaza, in which at least 15 people died and scores were injured. The school was crammed with families who had fled their homes after warnings from the Israeli military to leave or be bombed. The interview was one of dozens Gunness gave on the incident.


"It was a live interview, and I just about got through it, just about held it together," Gunness, 54, told the Guardian. "But what really makes my heart burst is the suffering of children, and I was so moved by the appalling attack on the school in Jabaliya that I couldn't control myself any longer."


Chris Gunness Chris Gunness at the end of the al-Jazeera Arabic interview

Gunness began sobbing after the presenter in Doha had signed off at the end of the live interview. Unknown to him, al-Jazeera's camera kept rolling, and the station later broadcast the entire segment. "For me, it was a moment of private grief. I had no idea it had been broadcast until friends started calling and texting me," he said.


But, he added, "if my tears focus attention on the wholesale denial of human dignity in Gaza, then I have no regrets."


Gunness, a former BBC reporter, has held his Jerusalem-based UNRWA job for more than eight years. In that time he has witnessed three wars in Gaza and has separately waged an energetic media campaign to draw attention to the siege of Yarmouk, a Palestinian refugee camp on the outskirts of Damascus whose inhabitants are trapped in the Syrian civil war.


Following Operation Cast Lead, the three-week war in Gaza in 2008-9, he wrote and performed in a play, I Am A Warehouse, about a storage facility that was repeatedly shelled. It was recently staged in Brighton.


Far from the image of a suited UN bureaucrat, Gunness is passionate about the issue of Palestinian refugees – "truly the dispossessed of the earth", as he described them. He offsets the emotional stresses of his job by running, playing the violin and hosting weekend brunches for friends and journalists in his tiny apartment.


"My tears pale into insignificance compared to those of the people in Gaza, who are suffering intolerably," he said. "But we have now reached a point of such profound tragedy that tears are more eloquent than words."




What Would the U.S. Do? Israeli Ambassador Asks

The Israeli ambassador to the United States continued to defend his nation’s military actions, insisting Thursday that Israel must strike back against Hamas rather than cowering in bomb shelters.

Brian Eno condemns Israeli action in Gaza as 'ethnic cleansing'


Brian Eno in his studio, London 10/10/12

Brian Eno, who has criticised Israel over its attacks on Gaza. Photograph: Martin Godwin for the Guardian




The producer and musician Brian Eno has penned an open letter addressing the current crisis in Gaza, which heavily criticises the US government's backing of Israel and asks the question: "Why does America continue its blind support of this one-sided exercise in ethnic cleansing?"


The piece, which was published on David Byrne's website, means Eno has joined the likes of Penélope Cruz and Javier Bardem, as well as as other high-profile Spanish film personalities including director Pedro Almodóvar, in condemning the recent Israeli attacks in Gaza.


His passionate plea, entitled Gaza and the Loss of Civilization, begins with an anecdote about a young Palestinian boy named Mohammed Khalaf al-Nawasra, who had been allegedly killed by an Israeli missile. He subsequently lambasts America's reluctance to sign up to an UN investigation looking into possible war crimes committed by Israel.


Eno then goes on to label Israel a "ragingly racist theocracy", and attacks the ideology behind Israeli 'settler militia' who target Palestinian homes. "Most of them are not ethnic Israelis - they're 'right of return' Jews from Russia and Ukraine... with the notion that they had an inviolable (God-given!) right to the land, and that 'Arab' equates with 'vermin'". Eno eventually compares America's financial support of Israel "like sending money to the Klan."


He ends his letter saying that "like it or not, in the eyes of most of the world, America represents 'The West'", and "despite all our high-handed talk about morality and democracy", the West continues to support a war that "has no moral justification".


He also received a response from a friend, Peter Schwartz, which was then published by David Byrne alongside the first letter. In his introduction to both pieces, Byrne writes: "What's clear is that no one has the moral high ground."


Eno, who has produced records for U2 and Coldplay alongside a series of often leftfield personal projects, has already co-signed a letter published in the Guardian condemning the Israeli action. His co-signatories included Desmond Tutu, Alice Walker, Noam Chomsky and Slavoj Zizek, and the group called for "a comprehensive and legally binding military embargo on Israel, similar to that imposed on South Africa during apartheid."




Two Palestinian journalists killed during Israeli attack on Gaza


Pal Journalists Sameh Al-Aryan (left) and Ramu Rayan, who were killed in the Israeli shelling of Shojayah market. Photo release by IFJ

Two Palestinian journalists were killed in Gaza yesterday, taking the journalistic toll to eight since the Israeli bombardment began a month ago.


According to an affiliate of the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), the Palestinian Journalists' Syndicate (PJS), the two journalists were killed in the artillery shelling of Shojayah market. A third journalist was seriously injured.


The two who died were Sameh Al-Aryan, 26, of Al-Aqsa TV, and photojournalist Rami Rayan, 25, who worked for the Palestinian Media Network. Photojournalist Hamed Shobaky, of Manara Media, was severely wounded in the same incident.


Ahed Zaqout, 49, a presenter on Palestine TV sport programmes, was killed in his apartment during an attack on the Italian tower in Gaza City.


Jim Boumelha, the IFJ president, said: "We express our anger and condemnation at the killing of these journalists, the latest victims in this ongoing cycle of intimidation, violence and murder against media workers in Palestine.


"We send our heartfelt sympathies to their family and friends and we offer our continued support and solidarity to our colleagues in the PJS and all media workers in Gaza as they continue to suffer through this appalling Israeli barrage.


"Enough is enough: the killing must end now and Israeli must be held accountable for these atrocities."


The IFJ is writing to Ban Ki-moon, the United Nations' secretary-general, to remind the organisation of its international obligation to protect journalists.

Source: IFJ




Penélope Cruz clarifies Gaza comments: 'I wish for unity, and peace'


Penelope Cruz

Penélope Cruz, who has clarified her comments on the Gaza conflict. Photograph: Canadian Press/Rex Features




Following a strongly-worded open letter in the Spanish press, condemning Israel's military action against Gaza, Penélope Cruz has clarified her comments, saying she was merely trying to promote peace in the region.


The letter, signed by Cruz along with her husband Javier Bardem, director Pedro Almodóvar, and a host of other Spanish film personalities, highlighted the "physical, moral, psychological" suffering of Palestinians as a result of shelling from Israel. It also called on the EU to condemn Israel's actions.


Cruz has now followed up the heavily partisan letter with another, softer statement, made to USA Today:



"I don't want to be misunderstood on this important subject. I'm not an expert on the situation and I'm aware of the complexity of it. My only wish and intention in signing that group letter is the hope that there will be peace in both Israel and Gaza. I am hopeful all parties can agree to a cease fire and there are no more innocent victims on either side of the border. I wish for unity, and peace... I believe in a civilization that can be capable of bringing the courage to have a world where humans can live side by side."



Bardem meanwhile has been more emphatically pro-Palestinian, writing in Spanish newspaper El Diario: "I cannot understand this barbarism, even more brutal and incomprehensible considering all of the horrible things the Jewish people have gone through in the past."




Gaza: Israel calls up more reservists after rejecting calls for ceasefire



Israel said on Thursday it was calling up another 16,000 reserves following a security cabinet meeting that decided to keep up military operations in Gaza, ignoring international pressure for an immediate ceasefire.


The move will allow the Israeli military to substantially widen its 23-day campaign against Hamas, which has already claimed more than 1,360 Palestinian lives – most of them civilians – and reduced entire Gaza neighbourhoods to rubble.


Fifty-six Israeli soldiers and three Israeli civilians have died in the campaign.


Israel has now called up a total of 86,000 reserves during the Gaza conflict. At least 19 air strikes were carried out overnight, officials said.


Against a background of heavy fighting in Gaza and the shelling of a UN-run school, the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, on Wednesday convened his senior colleagues in a security cabinet to discuss the crisis amid warnings that Hamas’s demands for lifting the siege of the Palestinian coastal enclave were a “non-starter” and stalling ceasefire efforts in Cairo.


Israel was not close to a ceasefire, the newspaper Haaretz quoted an unnamed senior official as saying after the five-hour cabinet meeting.


“When a ceasefire proposal that answers Israel’s important needs is laid on the table, it will be considered. The operation continues and the IDF [Israel Defence Forces] will expand its attacks against Hamas and the other terror organisations.” Temporary humanitarian ceasefires would continue, the official said.


The White House, which has been at odds with Netanyahu over efforts to secure a ceasefire, reacted to the shelling of the school by issuing an unusually firm condemnation of the incident and expressing serious concern that thousands of Palestinians taking shelter in supposed UN havens were now at risk.


The US condemned the attack but refused to apportion blame and, just hours later, confirmed it had recently provided Israel with a shipment of ammunition, after the country’s existing supplies appeared to be running low.


The provision of ammunition could prove controversial for Washington, which has expressed growing concern about the deaths of Palestinian civilians while maintaining support for its close ally.


“The US is committed to the security of Israel, and it is vital to US national interests to assist Israel to develop and maintain a strong and ready self-defence capability,” said Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby. “This defence sale is consistent with those objectives.”


The Israeli military requested the additional ammunition on 20 July. The US defence department approved the sale three days later, Kirby said.


In a later incident on Wednesday, Palestinian sources reported that 17 people had been killed and 200 injured in Israeli shelling in the Gaza City neighbourhood of Shujai’iya during a supposed four-hour humanitarian pause.


Israel said Gazan rocket fire also continued. It announced too that three more IDF soldiers had been killed in a booby-trapped building in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, bringing its total military fatalities to 56.


General Sami Turjeman, the head of Israel’s southern command, told Israel Radio that his forces would complete the destruction of cross-border tunnels in Gaza within a few days. “We have killed scores of Hamas’s best fighters,” he said. “With every day that passes we are getting closer to our goal of destroying the tunnels.” Israel’s media and public is focusing narrowly on military operations, casualties and achievements.


In New York, the UN security council met in special session to discuss the Gaza situation at the request of Jordan, but there was little sign of any imminent diplomatic breakthrough.


Haaretz reported that Israel was considering drafting a security council resolution containing its terms for ending the war.


Hamas has insisted that the blockade be lifted and prisoners released by Israel as its condition for ending rocket fire across the border. It dismissed Israel’s latest offer of a pause as a PR move, as operations in some areas of Gaza were exempted.


Hopes for progress lie in talks that are expected to take place in Egypt on Thursday involving Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president and chairman of the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority, at the head of a united Palestinian delegation.


“A representative from Hamas is part of the official Palestinian delegation and of course that’s a positive step,” said a Cairo-based diplomat. “This is more or less what should have been done from the beginning. If you want something sustainable, you need all sides represented.”


Abbas was reported to have spoken to Khaled Meshaal, the Hamas leader, who is based in Qatar, but there were signs of disagreement about the composition of the delegation and the terms of the talks.


Timeline

Turkish media reported that Hamas had agreed that the Palestinian Authority would represent it and negotiate on its behalf, but Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, complained of Egyptian pressure to agree to a ceasefire before any talks took place.


Diplomats said that Egypt felt under greater pressure to secure a deal during this round of negotiations in order to maintain its traditional role as broker, despite hostility between Egypt’s president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, and Hamas, which is close to the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.


Having previously appeared to rule out easing Gaza’s blockade along its own borders, Egyptian officials have been displaying increased willingness to put the issue on the table – a significant concession that in turn might help convince Hamas to lay down its arms.


“The Egyptians understand that the negotiations have already gone out of Cairo once,” said one informed source. “If they leave Cairo twice, they may not come back again.”


Israel, meanwhile, appeared to be trying to smooth over an ugly spat in its relations with the US. Ron Dermer, its ambassador to Washington, blamed Israel’s “very rambunctious democracy” for attacks on the US secretary of state, John Kerry, distancing Netanyahu from highly critical remarks that were reported in Israeli media.


“This is not coming from the prime minister,” Dermer said, defending what he called a just war in Gaza. “Hamas is no different than al-Qaida … You can imagine what the American people would want their government to do.” He also said 87% of the Israeli people opposed a ceasefire.


Israeli officials expressed anger that Kerry had consulted the foreign ministers of Qatar and Turkey over a Gaza ceasefire on the grounds that both countries are close to Hamas, though both are also close US allies.


“Qatar, financially and politically, diplomatically and through Al Jazeera, is supporting a terrorist group,” an Israeli official told the JTA news agency. “Instead of contributing to the development of the area, they are contributing to terror in the region.”




Gaza crisis: Israel calls up reservists as it maintains offensive - live coverage


  • Killing of sleeping children at school is a disgrace - UN

  • IDF calls up 16,000 more reservists

  • Military says it struck 110 terror sites in past 24 hours

  • US confirms it has restocked Israels ammunition

  • More than 140 rockets fired from Gaza in past 24 hours - IDF


8.21am BST


In the New York Times, David Kirkpatrick writes that, in a break from the past, Arab nations have effectively lined up with Israel in its fight against Hamas.


Aaron David Miller, a scholar at the Wilson Centre in Washington and a former Middle East negotiator under several presidents, told the NYT:


The Arab states loathing and fear of political Islam is so strong that it outweighs their allergy to Binyamin Netanyahu. I have never seen a situation like it, where you have so many Arab states acquiescing in the death and destruction in Gaza and the pummelling of Hamas. The silence is deafening.


7.56am BST


We struck 110 terror sites in Gaza in the past 24 hours, including 5 command centers.


The United States is committed to the security of Israel, and it is vital to US national interests to assist Israel to develop and maintain a strong and ready self-defense capability.This defense sale is consistent with those objectives.


Gaza terrorists fired more than 140 rockets at Israel over the past 24 hours. That's almost 1 rocket every 10 minutes.








Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Tony Abbott calls for Gaza ceasefire and two-state solution video

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has called for a ceasefire to be respected 'on both sides' in the conflict between Israel and Hamas. Responding to reports of a UN shelter being shelled in Gaza, Abbott told 3AW radio Israel is 'capable of making mistakes like everyone else is'. He reiterated his support for a two-state solution but said it must go 'hand in hand with the recognition of Israel's right to exist behind secure borders'





Camera captures moment of deadly Gaza air strike video

Israeli strikes have killed 17 people, authorities say, in a Gaza market as a TV crew was filming a crowd gathered around an ambulance. The area of Shejaia has seen some of the heaviest bombardments from Israeli forces with the declared aim of curbing rocket fire. Residents say shells and two missiles hit the area as a crowd gathered to observe a fire at a petrol station. In the footage, people can be heard praying to God in between the blasts which strew rubble across the area.

WARNING: This video contains images some readers may find distressing.





Australian PM calls for Gaza ceasefire immediately, by both sides



Tony Abbott has called for a ceasefire in Gaza “immediately, by both sides” but says Palestinians must accept Israel’s right to exist behind secure borders.


With Israel facing strong condemnation overnight over accusations that it bombed a UN shelter, killing 15 sleeping women and children, the Australian prime minister was asked on Melbourne radio 3AW whether it was time for Israel to back off.


Abbott said there needed to be a ceasefire “because plainly, too many people are dying”.


He said the conflict was “just wrong” and the world needed to work towards achieving a durable two-state solution “where the Palestinians do accept Israel’s right to exist behind secure borders”.


Abbott said the Australian government supported Palestinian statehood but that support had to go “hand in hand” with the recognition of Israel’s right to secure its borders. Australia, he said, supported Israel’s right to exist and its “right to self-defence”.


He suggested the Israeli government’s decision-making was not flawless, but contended that seemingly intractable opposition to the state of Israel was the source of the tension and conflict.


“The problem in the Middle East is that in the end so many people are not prepared to accept Israel’s right to exist.”


The communications minister, Malcolm Turnbull, also mounted a pro-Israel argument during a separate ABC radio interview.


Turnbull said he was not comfortable with the current conflict, but he argued Israel had no choice but to repel attacks in its territory. “Israel risks extinction, Israel faces an existential threat every day. Israel ... can barely afford to lose a battle let alone a war,” the communications minister said.


“The battle, the problems between Palestinians and Israel, are immense and complex, but right here and now the fundamental issue that Israel faces is its fights to defend the safety of its people,” Turnbull said on Thursday.


“As long as Hamas is firing rockets into Israel, the Israeli defence force has to defend its own population. I mean, that’s what we’d expect the Australian army to do for us.”


In Sydney, the Labor leader Bill Shorten also called for a ceasefire. He said the events overnight were “deeply disturbing”.


Asked whether Australia should use its position on the UN security council to push for a halt to hostilities, Shorten said the “government has had its hands full pursuing, appropriately, the disaster in Ukraine”.


Shorten later issued a joint statement with his deputy leader and foreign affairs spokeswoman, Tanya Plibersek, calling on the government to “use its position on the United Nations security council to push for an immediate ceasefire in Israel and the Palestinian territories”.


“With reports of more than 1,300 dead, including many children, the fighting must end now. Labor is appalled by the recent shelling of a UN school in a Gaza refugee camp, and attacks on similar facilities,” the joint statement said.


The statement said Labor deplored the “abuse of civilian facilities for military purposes, including a Gaza school that was used to hide rockets”. It called on both sides to cease hostilities and show restraint.


“The scale of human suffering has shocked the world. Australia needs to work urgently with the international community to bring this terrible conflict to an end.”




Morning Mail: Gaza school shelled; Ebola outbreak



Good morning folks, and welcome to the Morning Mail – sign up here to get it straight to your inbox before 8am every weekday.


Gaza


UN secretary-general Ban Ki-Moon on the shelling of a school in Gaza.

Israel has been accused of a serious violation of international law after shelling a UN school in Gaza that was being used to shelter Palestinian families in a refugee camp, killing at least 15 people.


Thousands of people had moved into the school for protection after Israel warned Palestinians to leave their homes or risk death.


Both Hamas and Israel have released video footage which they say shows activities in the tunnels which are the focus of Israel’s offensive.


We have live updates on the situation overnight.


Australian news and politics


• Jobseekers’ welfare payments will be cut if they spam employers with “unsatisfactory” applications, the Abbott government has warned.


• Asylum seekers in detention on Nauru have begin peaceful protests amid anger over the resettlement program.


• Australia’s top eight universities are pushing for higher fees and fewer students.


• The Abbott government says internet providers should take “reasonable steps” to punish illegal downloaders – including possible sanctions against offending customers.


• Journalism professor Martin Hirst has been saved from the sack with a letter from 150 academics, after a tweet which raised the ire of Herald Sun columnist Andrew Bolt got him suspended.


Ebola


Banner in Monrovia, Liberia, warns people to be cautious about the ebola virus Banner in Monrovia, Liberia, warns people to be cautious about the ebola virus. Photograph: Jonathan Paye-Layleh/AP

A pan-African airline has stopped flights to west African countries after the death of one of its passengers from Ebola.


Liberia has also taken steps to contain the outbreak, including shutting schools and markets as well as quarantining communities.


Infected Americans remain in a serious condition.


Our health editor answers key questions about the Ebola outbreak, and we have a country-by-country map of its spread.


Britain has held a Cobra meeting to consider the threat, and the European commission has allocated an additional €2m to fight the disease.


Around the world


Vladimir Putin Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin. Moscow dismissed western sanctions over Ukraine unveiled by Brussels and Washington. Photograph: Alexei Nikolsky/AFP/Getty Images

• Russia is taking a defiant stance in the face of EU and US sanctions, saying it will localise production, but analysts predict that its finance, defence and energy sectors will suffer.


• The vast majority of Russians believe Ukraine is responsible for downing MH17, a poll has found.


• US utility company PG&E has been charged with obstructing justice over a 2010 gas explosion which killed eight people, in a lawsuit which names NBNCo chief executive Bill Morrow.


• Chinese authorities are tightening security in the Xinjiang region after a spate of violence.


• Iran has been urged to release the Washington Post’s Tehran correspondent and his wife, who is also a journalist. The couple were arrested more than a week ago.


• We have live updates from the Commonwealth Games.


More from around the internet


• Among the most viewed on the Guardian this morning: 10 sexist scenarios that women face at work.


• Clive Palmer has hit out at the “failed” budget and challenged Tony Abbott to hold a double dissolution or implement a mini-budget, reports the Age.


• Mining magnate Andrew Forrest has proposed that welfare recipients should be forced into a cashless world where all their payments would be income managed and they would be banned from purchasing prohibited goods, the Australian reports.


• Athletics Australia has suspended head coach Eric Hollingsworth over criticism of team captain Sally Pearson, reports the ABC.


• People on the government’s work for the dole program may end up doing the same work as people completing court-ordered community service for breaking the law, Fairfax reports.


• In the SMH, Kate McClymont unravels the tale of Eddie Obeid.• Queensland’s chief justice Tim Carmody faces open revolt by Supreme Court justices, reports the Courier Mail.


• Treasury staff will have to apply for their own jobs in a “spill and fill” intended to sack about 40 public servants, the Canberra Times reports.


• SBS reports that the immigration department head will face the inquiry into children in immigration detention.


• A critical breeding program for Tasmanian devils faces financial crisis, the Mercury reports.


• Crikey’s Guy Rundle analyses the Coalition’s job application scheme and suggests it will cost businesses at least six hours a month.


One last thing


Weird Al Yankovic Weird Al Yankovic. Photograph: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

Hadley Freeman interviews Weird Al Yankovic.


Have an excellent day – and if you spot something I’ve missed or any errors, let me know on Twitter @newsmary and I’ll update this page.


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US issues unusually firm condemnation of shelling of UN school in Gaza



The White House reacted to the shelling of a United Nations school in Gaza that killed at least 16 Palestinians with an unusually firm condemnation on Wednesday, expressing serious concern that thousands of civilians sheltering at supposed UN havens are now at risk.


The girls’ elementary school, where 3,300 civilians were taking shelter after being told by Israel to leave their homes, was shelled earlier in the day in an attack that also injured about 100. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, which runs the school, said its initial assessment was that it has been struck by Israeli artillery.


“The United States condemns the shelling of a UNRWA school in Gaza, which reportedly killed and injured innocent Palestinians – including children – and UN humanitarian workers,” said Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the White House’s National Security Council.


“We are extremely concerned that thousands of internally displaced Palestinians who have been called on by the Israeli military to evacuate their homes are not safe in UN designated shelters in Gaza.”


Meehan and other US officials that condemned the attack did not specifically accuse Israel of responsibility for the shelling, saying there were conflicting reports about the circumstances of the incident that required further investigation. They did not specify the nature of those conflicting reports.


However Washington’s implied condemnation of Israel marked the strongest language used by the US since the conflict in Gaza began. The US also strongly criticised the hiding of weapons at UN facilities in Gaza, although officials acknowledged they did not know if rockets had been stored at the UNRWA school.


“All of these actions, and similar ones earlier in the conflict, are inconsistent with the UN’s neutrality,” Meehan said. “This violence underscores the need to achieve a ceasefire as soon as possible.”


At the same time however, there was little evidence of Washington using its leverage with Israel, including record levels of military aid, to apply pressure on Jerusalem to curtail its offensive. In Congress, both Democrats and Republicans were working on a package of additional military support for Israel’s “iron dome” security system.


There was an unconfirmed report by CNN that the US administration had agreed to re-supply Israel with ammunition, amid the possibility of depleting stocks. The White House, the Pentagon and State Department did not respond to requests for comments about the report.


Earlier, the White House had called for an “immediate and unconditional ceasefire”, however that position appears to have shifted since Monday, when Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, warned his country to prepare for a protracted conflict. Israel’s decision to press ahead with its offensive in Gaza despite a chorus of international condemnation was reaffirmed on Wednesday, following a meeting of the Israeli cabinet.


UNRWA said it was the sixth time one of its schools had been struck. “Last night, children were killed as they slept next to their parents on the floor of a classroom in a UN-designated shelter in Gaza. Children killed in their sleep; this is an affront to all of us, a source of universal shame,” said Pierre Krahenbuhl, commissioner-general.


“We have visited the site and gathered evidence. We have analysed fragments, examined craters and other damage. Our initial assessment is that it was Israeli artillery that hit our school, in which 3,300 people had sought refuge. We believe there were at least three impacts.”


Israel has repeatedly accused Hamas of using UN facilities as cover and UNRWA has discovered caches of rockets hidden at some of its schools.


A UN source said there was no evidence of militant activity inside the school attacked on Wednesday.


The state department withheld judgment on the UN’s assessment that Israel was behind the latest attack, saying there should be a more thorough investigation to establish culpability. While voicing mounting concern, US officials appeared reluctant to directly criticise its close ally after days of growing friction with Jerusalem that has occasionally surfaced in anonymous briefings in the press.


“We don’t know if there were rockets in the school,” said Marie Harf, a deputy spokeswoman at the state department, explaining Washington’s refusal to apportion explicit blame for the shelling. “We don’t know for certain who shelled the school.”


The UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon directly contradicted that position, saying the attack, which he described as “outrageous” and “unjustifiable”, had been perpetrated by Israel. Ban said that “all available evidence points to Israeli artillery
as the cause” of the pre-dawn attack, and he pointedly noted that Israeli military authorities had received the coordinates of the school from the United Nations 17 times, including on Tuesday night.


The Associated Press contributed to this report