Thursday, October 1, 2015

Crime, seen: a history of photographing atrocities

“We will give you undeniable proofs of incredible events,” announced Robert H Jackson, America’s chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials of Nazi war criminals, in 1945. What followed was unprecedented: a trial in which film was used as incriminating evidence, the screen placed at the head of the courtroom where the judge would usually sit.

Nazis in the dock at Nuremburg before a screening of footage from Concentration Camps, 29 November 1945.
Facing the evidence ... Nazis in the dock at Nuremburg waiting to watch footage of the concentration camps, 29 November 1945. Photograph: Chrisian Delage / Compagnie des phares et balise

The meticulously assembled images that appeared on that screen were made by a team of American film-makers led by John Ford and, as Jackson warned in his opening address, they made for difficult viewing. “Our proof will be disgusting and you will say I have robbed you of your sleep. But these are the things which have turned the stomach of the world and set every civilised hand against Nazi Germany.”

Within the context of an ambitious exhibition at the Photographers’ Gallery in London, Burden of Proof: The Construction of Visual Evidence, the film is doubly illuminating not only for what it shows, but for the ways in which the filmed evidence was created and presented. The filmmakers followed a set of specific instructions – “several photos should be taken of each body”, for instance, and they had to be taken “as close as possible” in order to “show, within the limits of the photograph, the entire body”. Alongside each image, detailed information had to be provided about the location, date, quality of film stock used and a written description of what had been filmed. For an image, whether moving or still, to work as evidence at Nuremberg, it needed to be forensic in descriptions of detail and context.

Related: ‘They were torturing to kill’: inside Syria’s death machine | Garance le Caisne

Burden of Proof is itself a forensic delineation of how photography has been used as evidence of war crimes and acts of violence against groups and individuals. In a way, it is not a photography show per se, more an investigation of the way in which photography has, almost since its inception, been used by experts in other fields: war crimes investigators, police forensic teams, scientists, historians, agents of the state and citizens campaigning for justice. It is a show that demands – and repays – attentiveness and a degree of steeliness, given that the photographic evidence on display includes often graphic still images and film footage as well as projections that catalogue the victims of state-sponsored purges, the uncovering of mass graves, as well as the effects of aerial bombardments and drone strikes.

It begins with the French police officer Alphonse Bertillon’s pioneering approach to crime-scene evidence, first used in 1903. Bertillon is now regarded as the inventor of “anthropometric description”, which entailed shooting the scene on a large overhead camera with a wide-angled lens and then presenting the images alongside an index of exact measurements that allowed the scene to be recreated in detail for police investigators, judges and jurors.

Death vision ... Alphonse Bertillon's Murder of Madame Langlois, 5 April 1905.
Death vision ... Alphonse Bertillon’s Murder of Madame Langlois, 5 April 1905. Photograph: Archives de la Prefecture de po/Archives de la préfecture de police

It is interesting to contrast Bertillon’s widescreen approach with that of his contemporary, the German-Swiss criminologist Rudolphe A Reiss, who homed in on specific details in a crime scene, objects or traces left by the criminal – fingerprints, tools, weapons (including a handkerchief used to strangle someone), and bloodstains – all of which he isolated and photographed against neutral backgrounds. Reiss, a chemist by trade, understood that photography could capture and preserve what the human eye was often incapable of seeing, calling it “humanity’s artificial memory”. The neutrality of his images is reminiscent of modernist art photography and brings to mind Irving Penn’s studies of discarded cigarette packets and butts.

The haunting, cumulative power of individual images is repeated with portraits of victims of the Great Terror in the USSR in the 1930s. Each of the accused, having often been tortured into confessing to thought crimes against the regime, were photographed in front and profile views before being executed. Their names were then written on to the negative or print for easy identification. At the height of the terror, around 50,000 executions a month were carried out, leaving behind a chilling record of systematic mass murder.

After life ... Richard Helmer's montage of the face and skull of Joseph Mengele, 1985.
After life ... Richard Helmer’s montage of the face and skull of Joseph Mengele, 1985. Photograph: Richard Helmer courtesy of Maja Helmer

Throughout the exhibition, curator Diane Dufour has chosen photographic evidence that identifies not only the dead, but their killers. Another filmed projection illustrates how Richard Helmer, a German pathologist and photographer, deployed his pioneering videographic technique – a video image of a photograph of a human face, placed over a video image of a skull – to determine “to the closest millimetre” that a corpse found in Sao Paolo in 1984 was that of Josef Mengele, the “executioner of Auschwitz”.

More recently, photographic evidence has been used to document attacks on civilian populations. The Gaza Book of Destruction, subtitled A Verification of Building-Destruction Resulting from Attacks by the Israeli Occupation, is a people’s archive in which every building destroyed or damaged has been chronicled. Though the images are often amateurish, they present a catalogue of destruction on a scale that even oral testimony cannot hope to equal. Like the portraits from the Great Terror, each photograph contains a catalogue number referencing the location by sector, neighbourhood, road and plot, but here the numbers were painted on to the building before the photograph was taken. An attendant written record describes the size, type and use of each building as well as the number of residents and whether it was destroyed by air or ground missile attack or armoured bulldozer.

In the past few years, the multidisciplinary body Forensic Architecture, whose investigations have provided evidence for international prosecution teams, NGOs and the United Nations,has turned its attention to drone strikes. Its video A Drone Strike in Miranshah remodels a deadly attack on 30 March 2012 in Waziristan, Pakistan, in which four people were killed. (You can see a version of it here under the heading Case Study 3.) The footage begins with a small hole in a roof left by the issile designed to do minimal damage to a building while killing its occupants.

Among the ruins ... Forensic Architecture's image of Miranshah, Pakistan, March 30, 2012.
Among the ruins ... Forensic Architecture’s image of Miranshah, Pakistan, March 30, 2012. Photograph: Forensic Architecture

It is an illuminating example of how the United States military has turned technology on its head in the interests of state secrecy. The director of Forensic Architecture, Eyal Weizman, points out that evidence of the effects of drone strikes is denied to us. “In their real optical and digital resolution, satellite images are available only to state agencies and the specifications are secret.”

Thus, he continues, “one of the foundational principles of forensics since the 19th century has been inverted: to resolve a crime the police should be able to see more, use better optics, than the perpetrator of the crime. Here, it is the state agencies that do the killing and the independent organisations the forensics. The differential in visual capacity to see is the space of denial.”

We may have come a long way since Alphonse Bertillon’s pioneering use of metric photography, but one wonders what he would have made of our current state of secrecy and denial. For today, state-of-the-art image-making technology is used in the concealment, as well as the uncovering, of evidence.

R

Israel Says 2 Killed in West Bank Shooting Attack

A Palestinian assailant shot and killed two Israelis driving along a West Bank road on Thursday, the Israeli military said, amid mounting tensions surrounding a Jerusalem site holy to both Muslims and Jews.

The military said forces were scouring the area, near the Palestinian village of Beit Furik, but did not immediately provide details of the attack. Israeli media reported the attacker fired from a passing car and said the Israelis killed were a couple. Media reported their four children were in the car during the attack and were lightly wounded.

"There was very, very massive fire," Eli Bin, the director of Israel's rescue service MDA, told Israeli Channel 2 TV news. "We didn't have much choice but to pronounce them dead on the spot."

The attack comes as tensions continue to flare between Israelis and Palestinians over the Jerusalem site known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary.

Over the past two weeks, Palestinian protesters have clashed with Israeli police at the hilltop compound and unrest has spilled over to Arab neighborhoods of east Jerusalem and the West Bank. In one incident in Jerusalem, an Israeli motorist was killed over the New Year holiday last month after his car was pelted with stones.

The compound in Jerusalem's Old City is a frequent flashpoint and its fate is a core issue at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Palestinians claim east Jerusalem, which was captured by Israel from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war, as their future capital.

Hurricane Joaquin Strengthens as It Approaches Bahamas

Hurricane Joaquin is strengthening as it approaches the Bahamas, with an eye on the United States East Coast.

The storm was upgraded to Category 3 with maximum sustained winds of 120 miles per hour, according to the National Hurricane Center.

At 2 a.m. the storm was located about 80 miles east-southeast of San Salvador, Bahamas, and is moving southwest at 6 mph.

Hurricane warnings have been posted for the central and northwestern Bahamas, and a hurricane watch is issued for Bimini and Andros Island.

Conditions in central and southeastern Bahamas are expected to worsen in the coming hours, with a storm surge raising water levels by as much as 5 to 8 feet above normal tide levels, according to NWS.

Some areas could receive up to 20 inches of rain due to Joaquin.

It is still too early to determine the exact impact that Joaquin may or may not have on the United States, but regardless of the final track that Joaquin takes – a surge of tropical moisture is expected to drench the East Coast, bringing several more inches of rain to an already soaked region.

Get real-time updates as this story unfolds. To start, just "star" this story in ABC News' phone app. Download ABC News for iPhone here or ABC News for Android here.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

The Latest: Joaquin Strengthening as It Approaches Bahamas

The latest on Joaquin, which is expected to pass near the Bahamas and head toward the East Coast of the U.S. (all times local):

1:45 a.m.

Hurricane Joaquin is expected to strengthen in the Atlantic as it heads toward the central Bahamas.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Joaquin was centered about 80 miles (125 km) east-southeast of San Salvador just before 2 a.m. Thursday. The Category 3 hurricane's maximum sustained winds had increased to 120 mph (195 kph). It was moving southwest at 6 mph (9 kph) and was expected to continue in that general direction for much of Thursday.

Additional strengthening is expected, with some fluctuations in intensity Thursday night and Friday.

A hurricane warning is in effect for the Central Bahamas, including Cat Island, the Exumas, Long Island, Rum Cay and San Salvador; and the Northwestern Bahamas, including the Abacos, Berry Islands, Eleuthera, Grand Bahama Island and New Providence.

Forecasters say hurricane conditions are expected to reach portions of the central Bahamas in the next few hours. That area could see total rain accumulations of 10 to 15 inches because of the storm.

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11 p.m.

Joaquin has strengthened into a Category 3 hurricane in the Atlantic, where much of the Bahamas is under hurricane watches or warnings.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Joaquin was centered about 90 miles (145 kms) east of San Salvador and about 170 miles (275 kms) east of the Central Bahamas late Wednesday. The hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 115 mph (185 kph) and was moving southwest at 6 mph (9kph).

A hurricane warning is in effect for the Central Bahamas, including Cat Island, the Exumas, Long Island, Rum Cay, and San Salvador; and the Northwestern Bahamas, including the Abacos, Berry Islands, Eleuthera, Grand Bahama Island, and New Providence. A Hurricane watch is in effect for Bimini and Andros Island.

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5 p.m.

People on the islands of the eastern Bahamas are getting ready for Hurricane Joaquin, removing stray coconuts and other debris from their yards and putting up storm shutters in blustery winds.

At 5 p.m. Wednesday, Joaquin was about 175 miles (282 kilometers) east of the central Bahamas and has winds of about 85 mph (137 kph).

Chris Gosling runs a volunteer ambulance service on Eleuthera, a narrow strip to the north of Cat Island. He says people aren't panicking too much. Islanders are preparing for heavy rains, strong winds and flooding.

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1:40 p.m.

Hurricane Joaquin has strengthened a little more as it heads toward the central Bahamas, and its maximum sustained winds are now 85 mph (137 kph).

The storm is on a projected track to move near or over parts of the central Bahamas on Wednesday night and Thursday. The islands are bracing for strong winds, heavy rain and coastal flooding.

Joaquin became a hurricane earlier Wednesday. Forecasters say it could become a major hurricane with winds of at least 111 mph (179 kph) over the next couple of days.

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12 p.m.

Hurricane Joaquin has strengthened a little as it heads toward the central Bahamas.

Joaquin's maximum sustained winds are 80 mph (129 kph). The storm is on a projected track to move near or over parts of the central Bahamas on Wednesday night and Thursday. The islands are bracing for tropical-storm-force winds, heavy rain and coastal flooding.

The storm is expected to head toward the East Coast of the U.S. early next week. The Hurricane Center says additional strengthening is expected over the next two days.

US Finds Kuwait Airline Discriminates Against Israelis

In a challenge to boycotts of Israel, the U.S. government has found that Kuwait Airways unlawfully discriminated against a passenger traveling on an Israeli passport by refusing to sell him a ticket for a New York to London flight.

Eldad Gatt, an Israeli citizen, complained to the Department of Transportation that in 2013 he was unable to buy a ticket from John F. Kennedy Airport to London Heathrow Airport through Kuwait Airways because the airline's online booking system prevented him from selecting Israel as his passport-issuing country.

The department investigated and initially rejected Gatt's discrimination complaint, according to a statement and letter provided by transportation officials. But when Gatt appealed the department's decision, the case was reopened and the department ultimately concluded that the airline had violated a different federal law than the one initially cited by Gatt.

"We considered Mr. Gatt's claim upon an alternative ground ... which holds that an 'air carrier or foreign air carrier may not subject a person, place, port, or type of traffic in foreign air transportation to unreasonable discrimination,'" Blane Workie, DOT's assistant general counsel for enforcement said in a letter to the airline.

By refusing to transport Israeli citizens to and from the U.S. and a third country that accepts Israeli citizens, in this case the United Kingdom, the airline is in violation of the law, the letter said. "We expect (Kuwait Airways) to sell tickets to and transport Israeli citizens between the U.S. and any third country where they are allowed to disembark based on the laws of that country," Workie said.

Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said the case is a warning that "any airline that wishes to operate in the U.S. should know that we will not tolerate discrimination of any kind in our skies."

The airline explained that it's against the law in Kuwait to do business with any Israeli citizen or company, and that punishment for a violation could result in imprisonment and hard labor, according to the department.

"We do not find the interest of Kuwait in the enforcement of its laws in this case to be greater than the interest of the United States in the enforcement of its laws," the letter said. "It is our view that the U.S. interest in providing nondiscriminatory access to air transportation to an individual traveling from the U.S. to a third country that allows that individual's entry is greater than Kuwait's interest in applying its economic boycott of Israel."

The department said it is aware of another, similar complaint.

The department has given the airline 15 days to respond. A range of enforcement actions are possible, beginning with civil penalties. Kuwait Airways officials didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press.

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Follow Joan Lowy on http://www.twitter.com/AP—Joan—Lowy

Hurricane Joaquin Intensifies on Way to Bahamas

Hurricane Joaquin Sets Eyes on Bahamas, Eastern Seaboard

Our tenth named storm of the season, Joaquin, has strengthened into a hurricane in the Atlantic Ocean. It currently has winds of 80 mph, located 215 miles east-northeast of the Central Bahamas and is moving southwest at 6 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center.

PHOTO: Over the next 48 hours The Bahamas will be affected by hurricane conditions from Joaquim.ABC News
Over the next 48 hours The Bahamas will be affected by hurricane conditions from Joaquim.

Hurricane warnings have been posted for the Central Bahamas, and a hurricane watch is issued for the Northwestern Bahamas. These islands can expect hurricane conditions starting by Thursday morning. A storm surge of 2 to 4 feet above sea level will occur, and waves will be large and dangerous along the coast. Five to 10 inches of rainfall can be expected over the central Bahamas, but some rain totals may reach 20 inches in the islands of San Salvador and Rum Cay, where Joaquin will sit over for the next two days. Lesser amounts of 2 to 5 inches will fall in the southeastern and northwestern Bahamas.

PHOTO: Hurricane Watches and Warnings have been posted for the Bahamas.ABC News
Hurricane Watches and Warnings have been posted for the Bahamas.

Joaquin is expected to linger over the eastern Bahamas through Friday as a hurricane. Overnight Friday into Saturday morning, the unusually warm waters is expected to allow Joaquin to strengthen into a category 3 hurricane with 115 mph winds as it starts to turn north. After this northerly turn, the path becomes uncertain through the rest of weekend as it interacts with a trough over the eastern United States.

PHOTO: Although forecast uncertainty remains, here is the path through Monday as of the 11AM Advisory on September 30.ABC News
Although forecast uncertainty remains, here is the path through Monday as of the 11AM Advisory on September 30.

"Confidence in the details of the track forecast late in the period remains low," the National Hurricane Center said. "A wide range of outcomes is possible, from a direct impact of a major hurricane along the U.S. East Coast to a track of Joaquin out to sea away from the coast."

PHOTO: Here are various models showing the predicted paths of Hurricane Joaquin.ABC News
Here are various models showing the predicted paths of Hurricane Joaquin.

It is still too early to determine the exact impacts that Joaquin may or may not have on the United States, but regardless of the final track that Joaquin takes, a surge of tropical moisture is expected to drench the East Coast, bringing several more inches of rain to an already soaked region.

Hurricane Warning Issued in Bahamas as Joaquin Approaches

A hurricane warning has been issued for the central Bahamas as Tropical Storm Joaquin approaches.

The storm's maximum sustained winds early Wednesday are near 70 mph (110 kph). The U.S. National Hurricane Center says strengthening is expected and Joaquin is forecast to become a hurricane later in the day.

The storm is centered about 240 miles (390 kilometers) east-northeast of the central Bahamas and is moving west-southwest near 6 mph (9 kph).

Meanwhile in the Pacific, Marty has weakened to a tropical depression as it moves away from Mexico's coast.

Marty's maximum sustained winds have decreased to near 35 mph (55 kph) and it's expected to weaken to a remnant low later Wednesday or on Thursday. The depression is centered about 115 miles (185 kilometers) south-southwest of Zihuatanejo, Mexico.

Hurricane Warning Issued in the Central Bahamas as Tropical Storm Joaquin Approaches

Israel Says It Strikes Gaza Following Rocket Fire

The Israeli military says it has carried out airstrikes in the Gaza Strip after a rocket was launched from the Palestinian territory toward Israel. No casualties were reported in the exchange.

The military says it targeted four "terror sites" in Gaza early Wednesday. Local media reports in Gaza said Israeli warplanes hit training sites belonging to the militant Hamas group that controls Gaza.

The strikes were in retaliation for a rocket launched at southern Israel late Tuesday. The rocket was intercepted mid-air by Israel's aerial defense system.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the rocket. Smaller militant groups in Gaza challenging Hamas' rule have claimed responsibility for sporadic rocket fire in recent months.

Army spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner says Israel holds Hamas responsible for attacks from Gaza.

Monday, September 28, 2015

Palestinians Clash With Israeli Riot Police at Holy Site

Palestinians clashed with Israeli riot police after barricading themselves in a mosque at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site, throwing firebombs and rocks at officers outside during a major Jewish holiday on Monday.

The hilltop compound in Jerusalem's Old City is a frequent flashpoint and its fate is a core issue at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It is known to Jews as the Temple Mount, site of the two biblical Jewish temples. Muslims revere it as the Noble Sanctuary, where they believe the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven.

Police said young protesters barricaded themselves inside the Al-Aqsa mosque at the site, despite an order permitting only men over the age of 50 from entering the compound for prayers. Israel has imposed the ban at times of unrest in the past as it is mostly young Palestinians who throw rocks at the holy site. Women of all ages are allowed to enter.

Spokeswoman Luba Samri said Palestinians stockpiled rocks and other projectiles at the Al-Aqsa mosque overnight.

She said police had tried to negotiate with the Waqf — the Islamic religious authority that oversees the compound — to call for calm, but talks failed and police entered the compound to seize the "dangerous devices intended to harm visitors to the site and police and endanger their lives."

Palestinians threw rocks, firebombs and firecrackers from within the mosque at police, Samri said, adding that the fire bombs sparked a fire at the entrance to the mosque. Waqf guards didn't prevent the "desecration of the sanctity of the place," she said.

Officers later managed to restore calm but sporadic Palestinian stone throwing persisted throughout the morning, she said.

It was the second day in a row of violence at the site. Monday's unrest occurred on the first day of Sukkot, a weeklong festival that celebrates the fall harvest and commemorates the wandering of the ancient Israelites through the desert following the exodus from Egypt.

In ancient times, Jews made pilgrimages to Jerusalem on Sukkot, and many Jews are expected to visit the city throughout the holiday period, raising the risk of further unrest.

Rumors have swirled among Palestinians that Jews are planning to take over the holy site, which has fueled tensions. Those rumors were exacerbated earlier this month by calls from a group of religious Jews to visit the site on the eve of the Jewish New Year.

Palestinians say in the last two months there has been a new development where Israel has intermittently restricted some Muslims from the compound when Jews visit. Israel says this is to reduce friction, but Palestinians claim that Israel intends to establish Muslim-free Jewish visiting hours, which they fear could upset the fragile arrangement in place.

Israel insists it will not allow the delicate status quo governing the site to be changed. But its actions have drawn criticism from Jordan, with whom it has a peace treaty, and other Arab countries. And the site is so sensitive that even rumors are enough to trigger unrest. Israel has also blamed Palestinian leaders for inciting the unrest.

Non-Muslim visitors are only allowed to enter the site at specific hours and are banned by police from praying there. However many Muslims view these visits as a provocation and accuse Jewish extremists of a plot to take over the site.

The hilltop compound is so holy for Jews that they traditionally have refrained from praying there, congregating instead at the adjacent Western Wall. Israel's chief rabbis, as well as the rabbi of the Western Wall, have issued directives urging people not to ascend the Temple Mount — arguing that Jews could inadvertently enter the holiest area of the once-standing temple, where it was forbidden to tread.

But there is a movement advocating the rights for Jews to pray at the hilltop. Some try and get around the ban on prayers by secretly mumbling the words.

The Temple Mount and Land of Israel Faithful Movement, a small group that seeks the construction of a new Jewish temple on the site, has called for a march to the compound on Wednesday — Israeli police have promised to prevent them from getting close to the site.

There were several days of clashes about two weeks ago, Muslim protesters barricaded themselves inside the mosque while hurling stones and fireworks at police. The unrest spread to Arab neighborhoods of east Jerusalem, where Palestinian protesters hurled stones at police and Israeli cars.

An Israeli died when Palestinians pelted his car with rocks and several others were injured in other incidents. Dozens of Palestinians were wounded in clashes with Israeli forces in violence that followed the Jerusalem unrest then.

Israel responded last week by approving harsher measures that would loosen the rules of engagement for police to respond to stone throwers.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Israel Strikes Syria After Rocket Fire

The Israeli military said Sunday it struck two Syrian army posts with artillery fire after rockets from the war-torn country landed in Israeli-controlled territory.

The military said the two rockets, which landed over the last two days, were errant fire from the Syrian conflict. They caused no damage or injuries.

Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, an Israeli military spokesman, said in a statement that Israel holds the Syrian military "responsible and accountable for any aggression emanating from Syria."

Rami Abdurrahman, the head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said a Syrian army position in the Quneitra region of the Golan Heights was hit at least four times by the Israeli military. Activists have reported intense fighting between Syrian troops and insurgents in the Quneitra area in recent days.

Israel has mostly stayed on the sidelines throughout the Syrian war. But the military has returned fire when rockets or mortar shells have strayed into Israeli-controlled territory. Israel has also carried out a number of airstrikes against suspected weapons shipments destined for its enemies.

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Associated Press writer Bassem Mroue in Beirut contributed to this report.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Israel Approves Tougher Laws to Combat Stone Throwers

Israel Eyes Hitting Rock Throwers' Parents in the Pocket

Israel Military Says It Is Coordinating With Russia on Syria

Israel has set up a joint mechanism with the Russian military to coordinate their operations in Syria and avoid any accidental confrontations, a senior Israel military official said Thursday.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of military regulations, said that teams headed by each of the militaries' deputy chiefs will hold their first meeting in two weeks and will discuss coordination of aerial, naval and electromagnetic operations around Syria.

Russia has backed the Assad regime throughout the nation's civil war, which has killed more than 250,000 people, and recently deployed forces there to help Syria in its battle against Islamic militants.

Russia has sought to cast arms supplies to Assad's government as part of international efforts to combat the Islamic State group and other militant organizations in Syria.

The United States and its allies see Assad as the cause of the Syrian crisis, and Washington has warned Moscow against beefing up its presence. But those warnings have been softer in tone, compared to the original American position that demanded Assad's ouster.

The joint mechanism is a result of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's meeting this week in Moscow with President Vladimir Putin, in which Netanyahu raised concerns over the new Russian involvement.

Israel has mostly stayed on the sidelines throughout the Syrian war, though it has returned fire when rockets or mortar shells have strayed into Israeli-controlled territory. Its primary concern has been the potential transfer of advanced weaponry to the Shiite Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon and Israel has occasionally carried out airstrikes against suspected weapons shipments.

Israel has no interest in seeing Assad, a long-time nemesis and key ally of Iran and Hezbollah, prevail. But before the civil war the Assad family maintained decades of relative quiet along the frontier, and Israel fears that if the government falls Syria could be overrun by Islamic extremists.

Israeli officials believe that Iran has recently sent hundreds of fighters into Syria to help Assad's beleaguered forces. Hezbollah forces, sent in from neighboring Lebanon, have suffered heavy losses.

Israel Bars Non-Muslim Prayer at Holy Site During Holiday

Israeli police say they have barred all non-Muslims from entering a sensitive Jerusalem site during a major Muslim holiday.

Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld says police decided to allow unrestricted Muslim prayer at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound for Thursday's Eid al-Adha celebrations and to bar all others from entering.

The site, known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, has been a flashpoint for violence in recent days.

Palestinians accuse Israel of restricting some access to the mosque while Jewish worshippers visited the site.

Tensions boiled over last week on the eve of the Jewish new year when Palestinians barricaded themselves inside the mosque and threw rocks and firecrackers at police. An Israeli man was also died in Jerusalem after Palestinians pelted his car with rocks.

Monday, September 21, 2015

Israeli Forces Shoot Palestinian After Stabbing Attempt

The Israeli military says troops have shot a Palestinian woman after she attempted to stab a soldier at a West Bank checkpoint.

The military says the attempted stabbing took place on Tuesday in the West Bank city of Hebron. The woman's condition was not immediately known. The soldier was not wounded.

Earlier in the day, the military says a Palestinian man was found dead in a village near Hebron allegedly after an explosive device he was handling went off. The military says it arrived in the area to respond to rock throwing. The Palestinians said the circumstances behind the man's death are unclear.

The violence comes amid rising tensions surrounding a Jerusalem site holy to both Jews and Muslims. Clashes have erupted in Jerusalem between Palestinian protesters and Israeli police.

Putin Seeks to Assuage Israel's Fears of Syrian Aggression

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and sought to assuage Israel's fears of a potential Iranian and Syrian aggression.

The West has been concerned over Russia's military buildup in Syria, which Moscow has said is aimed to help the Syrian government fight the Islamic State group. Russia, Syria's long-standing ally, has denied that it helps Syria militarily to support the regime of Bashar Assad.

Earlier this week, new satellite imagery showed the recent arrival of Russian tanks, armored personnel carriers and other military equipment at an air base in Syria's coastal Latakia province, confirming reports by U.S., Israeli and other officials of a Russian military buildup.

Netanyahu told Putin at the start of the meeting at his residence outside Moscow that Iran with the help of the Syrian army "is trying to set up a second terrorist front on the Golan Heights," which Israel captured from Syria and effectively annexed in 1981.

Putin told Netanyahu on Monday that his fears of a Syrian and Iranian aggression in the area are unfounded.

"We know that the Syrian army and Syria as a whole are in such a state that they have no time for a second front. They need to save their own state," Putin told Netanyahu in televised comments. "But still, I understand your concerns."

Monday, September 14, 2015

Israel PM to Hold 'Emergency Meeting' on Palestinian Attacks

Israel's prime minister will convene an "emergency meeting" over recent Palestinian attacks, an official at his office said Monday, hours after a man died in a crash after rocks were thrown at his car and violence broke out at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site for a second day in a row.

Benjamin Netanyahu will hold the consultations with top ministers Tuesday night after the Jewish new year holiday of Rosh Hashanah ends. "The prime minister views with great severity the throwing of rocks and fire bombs against Israeli citizens and intends to fight the phenomena by all means, including increasing punishment and enforcement," the official said anonymously according to protocol.

The announcement came several hours after a Jewish man died from wounds sustained when rocks were thrown at his car. Spokeswoman Luba Samri said the man was injured early Monday as his vehicle was attacked while returning from a meal marking the Jewish new year. She said the identity of the attackers is unknown but they are likely from a nearby Arab neighborhood.

Police said they are investigating all causes for the crash but would not elaborate. Israeli media reported the driver lost control of the wheel following a heart attack that might have been triggered by the rocks thrown at his car.

There has been a spike in Palestinian violence against Israeli civilians and soldiers over the past year that resulted in fatalities and casualties.

Palestinians have also been assaulted; in the deadliest incident a toddler was killed in an arson attack on a home in the West Bank in July. His parents later died of their wounds. That attack was widely condemned across the board in Israel and the government vowed to crackdown on Israeli extremists.

Earlier Monday, police and Palestinian stone throwers clashed for a second day in a row at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site.

The compound is holy to Jews as the Temple Mount, site of the two biblical Jewish temples. Muslims revere it as the Noble Sanctuary where they believe the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven. The fate of the site is a core issue at the heart of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

Spokeswoman Luba Samri said protesters threw rocks at officers who entered the area to ensure security. She said several masked Palestinians suspected of stone throwing were arrested. Police also arrested protesters who attacked a Jewish man, she said.

The holy site is a frequent flashpoint of violence. On Sunday, police clashed with Palestinians who barricaded themselves inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque and threw rocks and firecrackers. A Jewish man wearing a traditional prayer shawl was attacked as he passed through a nearby alleyway in the old city.

Since Israel captured east Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967, Jewish worshippers have been allowed to visit — but not pray — at the site.

The area is administered by Muslim authorities and is under Jordanian custody. Muslim authorities view the presence of Jewish worshippers and Israeli police as a provocation and accuse Jewish extremists of plotting to take over the site.

Israel has promised to ensure the status quo at the site.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Israeli Police, Palestinians Clash at Jerusalem Holy Site

Israel Police Clash With Palestinians at Jerusalem Holy Site

Israeli police say they have restored calm around Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site after early-morning clashes with Palestinian protesters.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld says police moved into the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound at around 7 a.m. Sunday. He says police had received reports that the protesters were planning to disrupt visits to the area by Jewish worshippers. The clashes took place hours before the onset of the Jewish New Year.

Israeli police say the protesters threw rocks and firecrackers at police as they barricaded themselves inside the mosque. There were no reports of arrests or injuries, though Rosenfeld says police may arrest protesters when they exit the building. The site was opened to visitors.

The hilltop compound is revered by both Jews and Muslims and is a frequent flashpoint of violence.

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Clarification: Israel-Christian Schools Story

In a story Sept. 6, The Associated Press reported that the Christian population of the Holy Land has shrunk over the decades. Since Israel's founding in 1948, the country's Christian population has grown, albeit at a lower rate than the Jewish and Muslim populations, and in part with a boost by immigration from the former Soviet Union, according to Israel's Central Bureau of Statistics. But the Christian community has dramatically shrunk in percentage terms when compared to other religions. According to the Vatican, Christians constituted 10 percent of the Holy Land's population before the war surrounding Israel's establishment. Today, they are just under 2 percent of Israel's population, according to official figures. The Vatican also estimates the Christian population in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to be below 2 percent of the overall population. The Vatican and Christian experts say the community has suffered from a lower birthrate than other sectors as well as emigration by people fleeing conflict or seeking better opportunities abroad.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Binyamin Netanyahu visits UK as protesters demand his arrest

Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, is flying into the UK for a highly charged visit, demanding that Europe treat Israel as a partner in the fight against the “medievalism” of militant Islam, rather than criticise it over its policies towards Palestinians.

Netanyahu’s spoke to reporters as he prepared to fly to London, while protesters demonstrated outside Downing Street against his visit and a petition for his arrest for alleged war crimes from last summer’s conflict in Gaza swelled beyond 100,000 signatures.

Speaking after meeting the European council president, Donald Tusk, Netanyahu said Europe “should support Israel – not pressure Israel, not attack Israel but support Israel, which is the only real shield that Europe and the Middle East have against extremist Islam, which is surging”.

Police officers separate rival protests in London
Police officers separate rival protests in London on Wednesday. Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

His two-day visit to London – during which he will meet the prime minister, David Cameron – comes against the background of mounting foreign policy problems for Netanyahu.

Those include his failure to block in US Congress the nuclear deal between world powers, including the UK, and Iran, and the threat by the EU to insist on labelling for products from Israeli settlements in the Occupied Territories.

Using confrontational language, Netanyahu added that Israel, like Europe, was under threat from violent Islam and the two needed to stand together.

“We’re challenged by the opposite of modernity, which is a barbaric mediaevalism, early mediaevalism, primitive, savage, murderous, that comes from the two sources of militant Islam,” he said, referring to Sunnis and Shias.

“We are ready to work together with Europe, Africa and other places in order to fight extremist Islam. But this necessitates a change in attitude, and this change will take time. But we will bring it about,” Netanyahu added.

Related: Binyamin Netanyahu's UK visit denounced

On the home front, he promised to toughen security measures on his return. “We need to fight radical Islam, not just within our borders, as we have been doing, but also within our territories,” he said.

“Once I return to Israel, I will hold an additional wrap-up meeting that will deal with reinforcing our security presence, bolstering enforcement of laws, instituting minimum penalties, destroying the homes of suicide bombers, and other steps that we are determined to carry out against anyone who tries to do us harm from within Israel.

“My policy is one of zero tolerance of terrorism, and that is what we will do.”

Critics in Israel of Netanyahu’s foreign policy say he has left the country increasingly isolated in the international community.

Since being re-elected earlier this year, Netanyahu has dispensed with a foreign minister and raised eyebrows by appointing an outspoken rightwing rival from his own party, Danny Danon, as UN ambassador. Danon has spoken in the past of his opposition to a two state solution.

In that context, his comments appeared to be an attempt to shift the focus of discussion away from the frequent talk of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, its restrictions towards the Gaza Strip and the need for a return to peace talks with the Palestinians, who seek statehood in the two territories.

Europe is pursuing plans to enforce the labelling of products made in Israeli settlements in the West Bank, to make clear they are made on occupied land rather than in Israel. That move has angered Israel, which believes Europe is applying double standards and sanctioning an important trade partner.

Netanyahu’s visit to the UK has already sparked protests. On Wednesday, about 300 demonstrators waving flags and “Free Palestine” banners staged a noisy protest that spilled on to the main road outside Downing Street in London.

Netanyahu is due to hold talks with Cameron on Thursday morning.

The British government has made clear that as a visiting head of state, Netanyahu has immunity from arrest and prosecution. On the issue of Gaza, it added in a statement: “We recognise that the conflict in Gaza last year took a terrible toll. However, the prime minister was clear on the UK’s recognition of Israel’s right to take proportionate action to defend itself, within the boundaries of international humanitarian law.”

One protester outside Downing Street, 21-year-old student Marion Tehami, said: “We’re here because we feel that Netanyahu should pay for his war crimes. We’re here to protest and let him know that he’s not welcome in our country.”

A short distance away, in a separate cordoned off area, about 50 pro-Israel demonstrators waved the Israeli flag.

What's the best bit of the UN? No 5: UNRWA

Unique among the main UN organisations, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency was set up to deal with what was then regarded as a temporary refugee problem, and an individual one at that: the plight of Palestinian refugees.

Established in 1949 the body was mandated to carry out relief and works programmes supporting about 750,000 Palestinians who had fled their homes in the conflict, which was triggered by the establishment of the state of Israel.

The UN general assembly, which mandated the UNRWA’s establishment, has continued to renew the organisation’s mandate in the absence of an agreed solution to the Palestinian refugee problem, both those who were internally displaced to camps in the West Bank and Gaza and to neighbouring countries such as Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.

By 1965 the UNRWA’s definition of whom it would serve had been changed, first, to the third generation of refugees – born after 14 May 1948 – and by 1982 to all generations of descendants, totalling upwards of 5 million people.

The agency’s main task is to maintain and provide services – including education and healthcare and relief during times of conflict – in the large network of camps, the most substantial of which are in Gaza. In particular UNRWA schools educate 500,000 pupils across the region.

The UNRWA has faced criticism from Israeli political figures and pro-Israeli commentators over a number of issues, most significantly whether its existence perpetuates the refugee problem and over issues of neutrality, to which it has always responded forcefully.

Its facilities in Gaza have been the target of Israeli military strikes, most recently during last summer’s conflict when UNRWA schools being used as shelters were struck, causing numerous fatalities.

In recent months the agency has faced a pressing new problem – its worst funding crisis . It was triggered by last summer’s conflict in Gaza and the continuing war in Syria, where it supports refugees in camps such as Yarmouk, which is suffering a typhoid outbreak. The agency’s costs have spiralled as a result.

In Gaza, the agency says, the long-term effects of the joint Israeli-Egyptian blockade have seen those going to the UNRWA for food assistance rise from 80,000 in the year 2000 to 860,000.

Despite announcing that it would be investing $750m in reconstruction in Gaza, the agency has received only a third of the amount promised by donors. It warned earlier this summer that it might not be able to run its schools.

The funding crisis has, in turn, created frictions with Palestinians. There have been demonstrations outside UNRWA offices, and the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, has been drawn in to help end the cash shortage from donors.

  • Now we want to hear from you. If you’ve been involved with the UN in some way, we’d like to hear about your experiences – or if you’d just like to share your views – then please use the form below. We will be using the most interesting contributions in our reporting.

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Israel’s important role in the Middle East | Letters

It’s sad that the anti-Israel lobby are doing all they can to demonise Israel and its elected leader Binyamin Netanyahu (Letters, 8 September), but their claims and hate-filled rhetoric are without substance. How low will they stoop in their malicious misrepresentation of Israel as the cause, and Netanyahu as the one to blame, for of all the world’s problems? According to their distorted worldview Israel is now responsible for the refugee crisis. I have no doubt that some innocent Palestinians have escaped the oppressive Hamas-led regime in Gaza. They may well have joined the vast groundswell of refugees from war-torn Syria. However, to link the current refugee crisis with Netanyahu’s trip to the UK and the Gaza conflict is a deliberate attempt to imply guilt independent of the facts.

The Syrian conflict has seen almost 200,000 people killed and over 10 million displaced. Nearly 4 million have sought refuge in other countries and now we are seeing a massive influx into Europe. The scale of this crisis is immense, and there are no easy answers to the problem. Indeed we need to pray for David Cameron and our government in how they address this heart-rending issue. It’s underhand that a human catastrophe of this magnitude should be used by the anti-Israel lobby as a battering ram against Netanyahu. Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East, and the UK should be fully supporting Israel as our only hope for security and stability in the region. Demands for sanctions and an arms embargo against Israel should be denounced. Israel supports freedom of religion whereas Christians in other parts the Middle East are among the most persecuted people on Earth. In Israel, Jews, Christians and Muslims coexist and have equal rights. We should applaud Israel for this religious freedom. We welcome Netanyahu to the UK and are pleased that our government recognises who our true friends are.
Des Starritt
Executive director, Christians United for Israel UK

The Jewish Leadership Council proudly welcomes Binyamin Netanyahu to the UK. His visit is particularly significant as our community enjoys great freedom and security here, and our deep and close relationship with the state of Israel plays an ever more important role in our culture and identity. It is for that reason that we are delighted to join members of our community in Whitehall to show solidarity with Prime Minister Netanyahu during his visit. I truly hope that Britain will continue to be at the forefront of protecting Israel, enforcing the provisions of the Iran agreement, if it is ratified, and standing against Iran’s dangerous destabilising policies in the Middle East. The success of UK-Israel trade and cultural ties are well known, and I hope the political link continues to emulate them.
Simon Johnson
CEO, Jewish Leadership Council

US-Israel Spat Over Iran Deal May Sideline Palestinians

In recent months, many in the Middle East had assumed — some in hope, others with concern — that once the Iranian nuclear issue was resolved, the United States would make another push for peace between Israel and the Palestinians. But the opposite seems more likely.

After a drawn-out confrontation with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the Iranian nuclear deal, the White House seems to have little appetite for what would almost certainly be a new round of tensions with the Israeli leader over the terms of Palestinian statehood. With the odds of success slim and U.S. elections approaching, President Barack Obama seems more interested in repairing his tattered relationship with Israel, leaving the Palestinian issue to his successor.

In recent comments, Obama has spoken of boosting security cooperation and providing upgraded military hardware to make up for Israeli misgivings over the nuclear deal. Speaking to the Jewish newspaper The Forward last week, he likened his differences with Israel to a disagreement inside a family and predicted relations would survive the test. "I think it is important for everybody to just take a breath for a moment and recognize that people on both sides of the debate love the United States and also love Israel," Obama said. He made no mention of the Palestinian issue.

A U.S. State Department official told The Associated Press that the U.S. is not planning any bold new diplomatic initiatives after the Iran deal makes its way through Congress. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

In Israel, there had been speculation that Obama might act otherwise. "Now that President Barack Obama has got his Iran deal ... he will likely also try, in the year and four months until the presidential elections, to turn his attention to other urgent regional issues, such as Syria, and the talks or lack thereof between Israel and the Palestinian Authority," Israeli commentator Avi Issacharoff wrote in the Times of Israel in July.

The Palestinians have also said they have received vague assurances from the U.S. that they have not been forgotten.

Several factors argue against another White House push to end Israel's half-century-old occupation of Palestinians.

First is Obama's apparent eagerness to make amends after a period of startling acrimony symbolized by Netanyahu's controversial speech to Congress in March, when he railed against the emerging nuclear deal. Netanyahu has only stepped up his criticism since the deal was sealed in Vienna in July, having his ambassador to Washington lobby against the agreement in meetings with American lawmakers. Even after Obama secured the needed support in Congress to uphold the deal last week, Netanyahu vowed to continue fighting it.

The U.S.-led deal gives Iran relief from economic sanctions in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program. Netanyahu, with widespread support among the Israeli public, believes Iran will use its newfound funds to promote violence in the region and says the deal will not prevent Iran from ultimately gaining the ability to produce nuclear bombs. Israeli media often depict Obama as naive or even hostile to the country.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Binyamin Netanyahu's UK visit denounced

A group of union leaders, Labour MPs and other prominent leftwingers has denounced Binyamin Netanyahu’s official visit to Britain this week, saying that as head of government the Israeli prime minister “must bear responsibility for war crimes identified by the UN human rights council in its investigation into Israel’s 2014 assault on Gaza”.

Related: Netanyahu deserves sanctions, not a welcome to the UK, say union leaders and others | Letter

In a joint letter, published in the Guardian, they say the Israeli government has created “hell” in Gaza, and that Palestinians fleeing the situation were among refugees who had drowned in the Mediterranean this year. “Our prime minister should not be welcoming the man who presides over Israel’s occupation and its siege on Gaza,” the letter reads.

The authors point to the results of a UN inquiry into the 2014 Gaza war that found both the Israeli armed forces and Hamas were responsible for possible war crimes. During the conflict in July and August of last year, Israel carried out 6,000 airstrikes and fired 50,000 tanks and artillery shells, killing 1,462 Palestinian civilians, a third of them children.

Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups fired 4,881 rockets and 1,753 mortar rounds towards Israel in July and August 2014, killing six civilians and injuring at least 1,600.

The international criminal court is conducting a preliminary investigation into the conduct of the war in the face of stiff Israeli opposition. Meanwhile, more than 105,000 Britons have signed an online petition calling for Netanyahu to be arrested on war crimes charges when he arrives, passing the 100,000-signature threshold required for parliament to consider a debate on the issue.

Israel’s foreign ministry has previously described the petition as “a PR exercise with no real meaning. Bilateral ties between Britain and Israel are closer than ever before, as evidenced by data on mutual trade, doubled in recent years, and by cooperation in academic studies, culture and science between the two countries.”

Netanyahu rejected the UN report at the time of its publication in June this year, describing it as biased. “The commission that wrote it is under a committee that does everything but protect human rights,” he said.

The letter protesting against his Thursday visit is signed by the leaders of Unite, the RMT, Aslef, and the TSSA unions; Labour MPs Jo Stevens and Cat Smith; and SNP MP Tommy Sheppard; as well as the film director Ken Loach, the poet Benjamin Zephaniah and the comedian Alexei Sayle.

Related: UN accuses Israel and Hamas of possible war crimes during 2014 Gaza conflict

“While Cameron continues to impose limits on the number of refugees who can take shelter in the UK, he is willing to welcome Netanyahu to our shores … We call on him to instead impose immediate sanctions and an arms embargo on Israel until it complies with international law and ends the blockade and the occupation,” the letter says.

The visit is expected to trigger widespread protests and stiff security measures. There was no immediate response to a request for comment from the Israeli embassy in London, or from Downing Street. However, in an earlier response to calls for Netanyahu’s arrest, a UK government statement said he would have immunity as a visiting head of government.

“We recognise that the conflict in Gaza last year took a terrible toll. As the prime minister said, we were all deeply saddened by the violence and the UK has been at the forefront of international reconstruction efforts,” said the statement. “However, the prime minister was clear on the UK’s recognition of Israel’s right to take proportionate action to defend itself, within the boundaries of international humanitarian law.”

Netanyahu deserves sanctions, not a welcome to the UK, say union leaders and others | Letter

This week, David Cameron is due to welcome the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, to the UK. As head of government, Netanyahu must bear responsibility for war crimes identified by the UN human rights council in its investigation into Israel’s 2014 assault on Gaza. And yet, while Cameron continues to impose limits on the number of refugees who can take shelter in the UK, he is willing to welcome Netanyahu to our shores.

Palestinians fleeing the hell that Israel has created in Gaza (Report, 3 September) are among the thousands of refugees who have drowned in the Mediterranean in the last year. Our prime minister should not be welcoming the man who presides over Israel’s occupation and its siege of Gaza. We call on him to instead impose immediate sanctions and an arms embargo on Israel until it complies with international law and ends the blockade and the occupation.

Len McCluskey General secretary, Unite the Union
Mick Cash General secretary, RMT
Mick Whelan General secretary, Aslef
Manuel Cortes General secretary, TSSA
Jo Stevens MP
Cat Smith MP
Tommy Sheppard MP
Baroness Jenny Tonge
Geoffrey Bindman QC
Hugh Lanning Chair, Palestine Solidarity Campaign
Bruce Kent CND
Professor Steven Rose
Professor Ilan Pappe
Professor Karma Nabulsi
Alexei Sayle
Bella Freud
Benjamin Zephaniah
Paul Laverty
Ken Loach
Victoria Brittain
Ahdaf Soueif

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Israel Building Syrian Fence, Won't Accept Refugees

Israel Starts Building Border Fence on Frontier With Jordan

Israel has begun building a fence along part of the country's eastern border with Jordan as Syrian civil war refugees and other migrants flee their countries.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday: "We see today what happens when countries lose control of their borders." He seemed to be referring to the massive influx of refugees from the war-torn Middle East and African migrants heading to Europe.

Netanyahu earlier bemoaned the "human tragedy" of Syria's civil war and said Israel has aided its victims. However, he said Israel is too small to take them.

Israel already built fences along its border with Egypt to stop African migrants and in the Golan Heights bordering Syria.

Opposition leader Isaac Herzog said Saturday that Israel should take in a limited number of Syrian refugees.

Netanyahu to Scrap Ban on Israeli Journalists Airing Views

Israel's prime minister says he will scrap a newly passed law banning journalists working for the country's public broadcast authority from expressing their opinions on air.

Benjamin Netanyahu's office did not say Sunday when the contested legislation will be reversed.

The law, passed early Thursday, drew criticism from journalists, who accused the government of trying to stifle dissent. The law said broadcasts should "avoid one-sidedness, prejudice, expressing personal opinions, giving grades and affixing labels."

The Israel Press Council urged parliament to cancel the law, saying it violates free speech.

Following Netanyahu's about-face, the Cabinet minister who pushed for the legislation resigned from his role overseeing public broadcasting. Ofir Akunis, one of Netanyahu's closest confidantes, says he couldn't keep functioning with such a "lack of backing."

The Latest: Israel PM Says Country Cannot Take Migrants

The latest news as countries across Europe cope with the arrival of thousands of migrants and refugees. All times local (CET):

———

10:00 a.m.

French mayors are offering to house refugees amid increasing concern for Syrians and others fleeing war and seeking haven in Europe.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said in a statement Sunday that several dozen mayors have offered to help in recent days, and convened a national meeting to organize refugee housing on Sept. 12.

France is trying to speed up the process for seeking asylum and to better welcome refugees, as the numbers coming to Europe this year have soared. Many asylum seekers in France have no place to live and sleep in make-shift camps, from Paris to Calais.

A grassroots French group arranging private housing for refugees has also seen a spike in offers in recent days, after the widely viewed photo of a drowned Syrian boy helped raise public awareness.

———

9:30 a.m.

On the Greek island of Lesbos, police have used batons to beat back a demonstration by some 300 migrants chanting "Athena, Athena" as they tried to come out of the port area. Several of the protesters were injured in the clash, with one taken away unconscious by an ambulance.

The migrants, mostly Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans, say that local authorities on the Aegean island are not processing them quickly enough so they can continue their journey to western Europe. They also complain that authorities on Lesbos are not offering them any help and that they are fast running out of money.

The clashes early Sunday were the third in as many days between migrants and police. The demonstration on Sunday was led by Afghans.

———

9:15 a.m.

Thousands of migrants and refugees have arrived by train and bus in cities across Germany overnight.

Police say a special train with 570 people on board arrived in the Thuringian town of Saalfeld late Saturday. More than half of them were taken onward to Dresden, where a school for German army officers has been cleared to provide temporary shelter for 350 newcomers.

Trains also took migrants to Hamburg in the north and Dortmund in the west of the country, while buses brought more than 300 people to the capital Berlin.

Thousands more people, mainly Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans fleeing war and persecution, are expected to arrive in Germany and Austria from Hungary on Sunday.

The refugees were allowed to leave Hungary Saturday after the country opened its borders with Austria.

Saturday, September 5, 2015

The Latest: Opposition Leader Urges Israel to Take Refugees

The latest news as tens of thousands of migrants pour into countries across Europe. All times local (CET):

11:20 a.m.

The first train carrying 167 migrants from Austria to Germany has arrived in Munich.

Police say the train arrived in the Bavarian capital at 10:25 a.m. (0825 GMT). The migrants were among a larger group who had traveled by bus from Hungary to Austria.

Federal police spokesman Simon Hegewald told The Associated Press that a specially chartered train from Salzburg, Austria, with several hundred migrants on board was expected in Munich around noon.

11:15 a.m.

Finnish Prime Minister Juha Sipila says he is ready to open his house for refugees, and they can move in on Jan. 1, 2016.

Sipila told Finnish broadcaster YLE Saturday morning that his family has a house in central Finland that they no longer use since moving to Helsinki.

Details of how to apply and how many people the house could accommodate weren't immediately available.

Last month, Finland's interior ministry said it expects that up to 15,000 people would apply for asylum in the country — 10,000 higher than previous estimates.

The leader of the Center Party, Sipila has been heading a center-right government since May.

9:00 a.m.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel says there is no legal limit to the number of asylum seekers her country can receive.

Merkel told the Funke consortium of newspapers in an interview published Saturday that "the right to political asylum has no limits on the number of asylum seekers."

She says that "as a strong, economically healthy country we have the strength to do what is necessary" and ensure every asylum seeker gets a fair hearing.

But Merkel repeated her government's position that those migrants who stand no realistic chance of getting permission to stay need to be returned to their home country.

Germany has seen tens of thousands of migrants arriving each month, many of them refugees fleeing war and persecution in Syria, Eritrea and elsewhere.

———

7 a.m.

More than 1,000 people from the Middle East and Asia, exhausted after breaking away from police and marching for hours toward Western Europe, have arrived before dawn Saturday on the border with Austria.

The breakthrough became possible when Austria announced that it and Germany would take the migrants on humanitarian grounds and to aid their EU neighbor.

In jubilant scenes on the border, hundreds of migrants bearing blankets over their shoulders to provide cover from heavy rains walked off from buses and into Austria, where volunteers at a roadside Red Cross shelter offered them hot tea and handshakes of welcome.

Many collapsed in exhaustion on the floor, smiles on their faces.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Israel Unveils 1,800-Year-Old Sarcophagus

Israel has unveiled an 1,800-year-old sarcophagus that workers found at a building site and initially tried to conceal.

The Antiquities Authority called the sarcophagus, which was shown to media Thursday, "one of the most important and beautiful" ever found in Israel.

The two-ton limestone coffin features a life-size carving of a human figure wearing a toga on the lid and designs around the sides, including a Medusa head. Archaeologist Gaby Mazor says the piece dates back to the 3rd century and was likely commissioned by a wealthy Roman family.

Antiquities Authority Spokeswoman Yoli Shwartz says it was damaged when workers unearthed it at a construction site. Contractors then hid the piece, fearing it would force them to halt work. She said legal action would be taken.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Gaza becoming uninhabitable as society and economy collapse – UN report

A United Nations report says Gaza could be “uninhabitable” in less than five years if current economic trends continue.

Findings by the UN Conference on Trade and Development point to the eight years of economic blockade of Gaza as well as the three wars between Israel and the Palestinians over the past six years.

The 2014 war displaced half a million people and left parts of Gaza destroyed.

Related: Hopeless in Gaza?

War “has effectively eliminated what was left of the middle class, sending almost all of the population into destitution and dependence on international humanitarian aid”, the new report says.

Gaza’s GDP dropped 15% in 2014 and unemployment reached a record high of 44%, while 72% of households were food insecure.

The wars had shattered Gaza’s ability to export and produce for the domestic market and left no time for reconstruction, the report said. It noted that Gaza’s “de-development” had been accelerated.

Israel and Egypt have maintained a blockade of Gaza since the Islamic militant group Hamas took control of the territory in 2007.

The report comes as Egyptian military bulldozers press ahead with a project that effectively would fill Egypt’s border with the Gaza Strip with water and flood the last remaining cross-border underground smuggling tunnels, which have brought both commercial items and weapons into Gaza.

The report calls the economic prospects for 2015 for the Palestinian territories “bleak” because of the unstable political situation, reduced aid and the slow pace of reconstruction.

Israeli Raid Ends With Gunbattle, Home Bulldozed

Trying to Rebuild Your House in Gaza Is a Nightmare

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Video Shows Palestinian Women, Israeli Soldier Scuffling

A video showing an Israeli soldier scuffling with Palestinian youths and women at a West Bank protest has been viewed more than 2 million times on Facebook, shining a light on Israeli military policies in the territory.

In the edited video, the masked soldier is seen holding a 12-year-old boy, his arm in a cast, in a chokehold in an attempt to arrest him. The soldier is swarmed by the boy's female relatives, including his mother and sister, who pull at his skin and uniform and slap him. The boy's sister, a 15-year-old sporting a blonde braid, is seen biting the soldier's hand. Bystanders yell, "He is a little boy. His arm is broken."

The soldier struggles with the boy, and then the female crowd, which ripped the mask off his face, for about a minute before a commanding officer arrives to assist him. The soldier then frees himself and releases the boy, angrily throwing a small stun grenade at a group of people as he walks away.

The original video, which was provided to The Associated Press by its creator, local activist and the boy's relative Bilal Tamimi, showed the same footage. Tamimi said Palestinians had hurled stones at the troops, but that he hadn't seen the boy throw stones, though photos broadcast on Israeli TV seemed to show the boy hurling a stone.

The skirmish took place Friday at a weekly protest in the West Bank village of Nebi Saleh, where Israeli troops and Palestinian protesters often clash. Villagers claim a nearby Jewish settlement has restricted access to a nearby spring.

The Israeli military said Sunday that a "violent riot" broke out at the protest and that it tried to detain the boy because he was throwing rocks. The military says the boy was released "to prevent an escalation of violence."

The video sparked accusations from critics that Israel is too heavy-handed in its confrontations with Palestinian protesters, especially minors.

In Israel, the video was seen as capturing the antagonism Israel's soldiers regularly face from stone-throwing Palestinian protesters and raised concerns for the soldiers' safety.

Israeli Channel 2 aired a recording of a man identified as the soldier's father who said he was proud his son showed restraint in the skirmish. Israeli Culture Minister Miri Regev called for the military to adopt a new policy that would have allowed the soldier to shoot the Palestinians who scuffled with him.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

The 20 photographs of the week

Obama: US-Israel Ties Will Improve After Iran Deal in Place

President Barack Obama is comparing tensions between the U.S. and Israel over the Iranian nuclear deal to a family feud and says he expects quick improvements in ties between the longtime allies once the accord is implemented.

"Like all families, sometimes there are going to be disagreements," Obama said Friday in a webcast with Jewish Americans. "And sometimes people get angrier about disagreements in families than with folks that aren't family."

The president's comments came as momentum for the nuclear accord grew on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers will vote next month on a resolution to disapprove of the deal. Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., became the 30th senator to publicly back the agreement, saying Friday that it was a good deal for America and for allies like Israel.

If Senate Democrats can amass 41 votes in favor of the deal, they could block passage of the disapproval resolution. Obama has vowed to veto the resolution if it passes, and Democrats could hold off Republican efforts to override his veto if they get 34 votes — just four more than they have now.

The looming congressional confrontation has sparked a summer of intense debate between supporters and opponents of the nuclear accord. The deliberations have also divided Jewish Americans, with leaders of many organizations expressing concern about long-term damage to the community.

The president encouraged skeptics of the agreement to "overcome the emotions" that have infused the debate and evaluate the accord based on facts.

"I would suggest that in terms of the tone of this debate everybody keep in mind that we're all pro-Israel," he said. "We have to make sure that we don't impugn people's motives."

While Obama was measured in his remarks Friday, he has spoken passionately about the nuclear accord in the past, accusing those who oppose the deal of supporting war over diplomacy. Earlier Friday, his spokesman equated an anti-deal rally Republican presidential candidates Donald Trump and Sen. Ted Cruz plan to hold next month to a "pro-war rally."

Obama also infuriated congressional Republicans earlier this month when he compared opponents of the agreement to Iranian hardliners who chant "Death to America" in the streets of Tehran.

Don Stewart, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Friday that Republicans were still waiting for the president to retract that assertion.

The U.S. negotiated alongside Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China for nearly two years before finalizing a landmark accord to curb Iran's nuclear program in exchange for billions of dollars in sanctions relief.

As he has in previous speeches and interviews, Obama sought to refute criticism of the accord point by point. He disputed the notion that Iran would funnel the bulk of the money it receives from the sanctions relief into terrorism, saying Iranian leaders are more likely to try to bolster their weak economy. He also said the agreement wasn't built on trusting Iran's government, which frequently spouts anti-American and anti-Israeli rhetoric.

"It's precisely because we're not counting on the nature of the regime to change that it's so important for us to make sure they don't have a nuclear weapon," he said.

Friday's webcast was hosted by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations and The Jewish Federations of North America. Organizers said thousands of people participated and questions submitted online were selected by the moderators.

Friday, August 28, 2015

Hopeless in Gaza?

The International Crisis Group has a deserved reputation for thorough and cool-headed analysis, and its latest report on the Gaza Strip, marking a year since the end of the last war, is a model of its kind. There’s no shortage of media coverage of this festering disaster at the heart of the Israeli-Palestine conflict, but the ICG goes beyond most reporting to highlight underlying themes that are often hard to pick out in the smoke and clamour of violent and terrible events.

Chief amongst these is the effective absence of a government running Gaza - meaning that its economy is a wreck and most of its 1.8m people have no access to the outside world. Israel has slightly eased its blockade since the ceasefire of last August 26, alleviating but not eliminating pressure. But even before Operation “Protective Edge” Egypt had blown up the cross-border tunnels that were the strip’s lifeline. It sees Hamas as part of the now-banned Muslim Brotherhood, the target of its implacable hostility since the overthrow of Mohamed Morsi in 2013. The Palestinian Authority in the West Bank town of Ramallah, which recognises Israel and negotiates with it, also wants nothing to do with its bitter rival, which does neither. (Hamas’s Arabic name means the Islamic Resistance Movement). Lip service is paid to the idea of Palestinian reconciliation though few either promote it or believe it likely to happen any time soon.

On the ground Hamas faces internal dissent and the rise of Salafi-Jihadi extremists with an alarming affinity for Isis. That is the background to recent exploratory ceasefire talks between Khaled Meshal, the Hamas leader, and Tony Blair. Israelis say they don’t actually want to topple Hamas – which took over Gaza from Fatah in 2007 - but fear that a deal with it would empower the Islamists in the West Bank as well as anger the PA and Egypt. Thus do Palestinian divisions and Arab self-interest, a wearily familiar combination, play into Israel’s hands and maintain what the IGC rightly calls a “disastrous status quo.”

Gaza’s plight serves no one, on pragmatic grounds, never mind moral or humanitarian considerations. “The policies of isolating Hamas and blockading Gaza,” the report argues, “have neither brought a political settlement closer nor dislodged Hamas. There is no reason to believe that their continuation will do so.” Per capita income is now 31% lower than in 1994, the year Yasser Arafat returned in triumph after the Oslo agreement. Conditions in Gaza are the worst since Israel occupied the territory in 1967; 100,000 people who lost their homes last year - the majority of them refugee families from the Nakba of 1948 - are still homeless. It has the highest unemployment of any economy in the world; infant mortality is rising. Of the 2,250 people killed in the 2014 war, 1462 were civilians, the UN says. Israel lost 66 soldiers and six civilians.

Fragile internal security constantly threatens to erode the ceasefire with Israel. Interestingly, the IGC finds “no shortage” of Israeli officials ready to negotiate a long-term truce and lift the blockade - the idea being to boost Israel’s deterrence by giving Hamas more to lose. That could include building a seaport which would help rid Israel of its responsibility for the territory. (It retains that under international law despite Ariel Sharon’s unilateral “disengagement” and the removal of illegal settlements in 2005). But Hamas is highly unlikely to accept demands for demilitarisation – armed resistance being its very essence. Israel also finds it conveniently easy to blame Egypt and the PA for blocking change in Gaza. Both fear that any further separation between Gaza and the West Bank will undermine the already slim prospects for a creating a unified, viable Palestinian state alongside Israel – the two-state solution to the conflict. Buried in the text is the intriguing line that Israel would gladly accept funding from Qatar – a loyal supporter of Hamas and strong critic of Egypt - for the Gaza government.

This is an intelligent and helpful document, packed with insights based on enviably good access to authoritative sources and sensible policy recommendations to all parties - an ICG speciality. Yet it conveys no sense of optimism that anything much is going to change for the foreseeable future. Its title is No Exit? Gaza and Israel between Wars. In the end you are left wondering about the question mark.

US Sanctions Chief Visits Israel Amid Iran Jitters

The U.S. Department of the Treasury's sanctions chief is visiting Israel amid concerns in Jerusalem over the nuclear deal with Iran.

It said in a statement that Adam Szubin, the Acting Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, will be meet senior Israeli officials during his four-day visit that begins Friday. It said he will discuss details of the deal signed by the U.S. and five world powers over Iran's contentious nuclear program.

The agreement seeks to keep Iran from building a nuclear bomb in exchange for international sanctions relief.

Israel adamantly opposes the deal and its objection has put it at odds with the U.S, its closest ally.

Critics say the Iran deal makes too many concessions and could eventually allow for a nuclear-armed Iran.

Tropical Storm Warnings in Dominican Republic, Bahamas

New tropical storm warnings have been issued for parts of the Dominican Republic and the Bahamas as Tropical Storm Erika approaches.

The deadly storm, which has been lashing Puerto Rico with heavy rains, has maximum sustained winds early Friday near 50 mph (85 kph).

The storm is centered about 155 miles (250 kilometers) east-southeast of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, and is moving west-northwest near 17 mph (28 kph).

Meanwhile in the Pacific, Jimena has strengthened to a hurricane with maximum sustained winds near 80 mph (130 kph). The hurricane is centered about 1,045 miles (1,680 kilometers) southwest of the southern tip of Mexico's Baja California peninsula and is moving west near 14 mph (22 kph). The hurricane doesn't currently pose a threat to any land.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

EU Envoy Warns of More Steps Against Israeli Settlements

The European Union's outgoing envoy to the Palestinian territories says the 28-nation bloc is moving forward with measures against Jewish West Bank settlements.

The envoy, John Gatt-Rutter, did not provide a timeframe. But his remarks to reporters Thursday underline European discontent with Israel's continued expansion of settlements in territory that Palestinians want for a future state.

Gatt-Rutter says "there is support within the union to go on." He says there are "more tools" the EU can use.

The EU, Israel's biggest trading partner, is exploring guidelines that would require Israel to label settlement products. It already bars goods produced in settlements from receiving customs exemptions given to Israeli goods.

Gatt-Rutter's remarks come as a grassroots movement promoting boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel is gaining steam.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Israel Releases African Migrants From Detention Center

Hundreds of African migrants have begun leaving a detention facility in southern Israel after the country's high court ordered their release.

An Israeli law permits the migrants' detention at the Holot facility without charge. The high court this month upheld the controversial law, but limited detention time to 12 months, effective Wednesday.

Some 1,200 people are set to be released from the remote desert holding facility. Migrants are allowed to leave Holot but must sign in several times a day and sleep there, making it impossible to stray far or hold jobs. Another 500 remain at Holot.

Israel's 50,000 African migrants, most from strife-ridden Eritrea and Sudan, say they are fleeing conflict and persecution and are seeking refugee status. Israel says they are economic migrants in search of work.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Ehud Barak's Iran Bombshell Could Shake up Israeli Politics

Former Defense Minister Ehud Barak's comments that Israel came close to ordering an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities but was thwarted by military men and cowardly politicians could shake up Israeli politics.

The leaked interview, in which Barak also described Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as indecisive and obsessively pessimistic, was the talk of the town Sunday in an Israel obsessed about Iran. But beyond the hand-wringing, the always calculating Barak may have been focused on the future, perhaps for a final run at the country's leadership.

Also a former prime minister, Barak enjoys respect as the last leader of the moderate Labor Party to win an election, defeating Netanyahu in 1999. But he also is seen by analysts as having squandered his opportunity, lasting just two years in a term that cemented his reputation as brilliant but arrogant, and prone to overcomplicated analysis and nonstop machinations.

Barak later returned to politics, serving as defense minister from 2007 to 2013, when he was aligned with a re-elected Netanyahu on the dangers of a nuclear-armed Iran. He left politics as the Labor Party was weak and torn between factions. Now 73, Barak may running out of chances for another comeback.

Barak's interview, leaked Friday to Israeli Channel 2 television coincide with the release of a new biography about him, immediately thrust him back in the limelight.

"I imagine he would like to return to politics," veteran commentator Rina Mazliach told the privately owned broadcaster. Barak wants "to return to the Israeli consciousness."

In the recordings, Barak addressed one of the country's deepest secrets — whether Israel really was prepared to take military action against Iran's nuclear facilities.

For years, both he and Netanyahu issued veiled threats to attack if the world did not take action. Those threats, while often dismissed by commentators as bluster, were widely seen as a key factor in rallying international sanctions against Iran.

Barak told his interviewer that both he and Netanyahu favored an attack in 2010, but the military chief of staff at the time, Gabi Ashkenazi, said Israel did not have the operational capability.

"You can't go to the Cabinet when the chief of staff will go and say 'Excuse me, I told you no,'" Barak said.

The following year, he said two influential Cabinet ministers had second thoughts and scuttled an attack. Then, in 2012, a joint military exercise with the U.S. and a planned visit by then-U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta got in the way, he said.

Channel 2 said Barak unsuccessfully tried to prevent it from airing the interview, but that the military censor's office permitted it. There was no comment Sunday from Barak, Netanyahu or Ashkenazi, the former military chief.

The Cabinet ministers singled out by Barak — Yuval Steinitz and Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon — also declined to comment.

Avigdor Lieberman, then-Israel's foreign minister, appeared to support Barak's version in an interview with Channel 2. "If a prime minister cannot pass through his Cabinet a decision that he wanted, probably there is a problem," Lieberman said Sunday.

Danny Dor, one of the authors of the new book, said Barak knew he was being recorded and that there was never any promise not to publish them. And few have seemed to question that Barak knew what he was doing in giving the interview.

Saturday, August 22, 2015

The children of Gaza who live with the legacy of war

For the past six months, I have been travelling, photographing people and recording stories for Legacy of War, a two-year project documenting the long-term impact of conflict on communities and individuals around the world. Lebanon, Jordan, Northern Ireland, the United States, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and Gaza are just some of the places I’ve visited, with many more to come.

My work is not focused on the histories of war, the facts and figures; the political rhetoric and diatribes that fuel them; the divides, fears or greed that start them. Those are important to understand the causes, but my interests lie in the consequences and legacies. The commonalities that often scar those who have lived through conflict. There are few places that have seen more conflict in recent years than Gaza and the resulting psychological impact on the civilian population, especially on the young, has been well recorded. Less well covered, though, are the effects on the estimated 3,000 children with autism living in the region. There are also many others with learning disabilities and mental health issues. The war and ongoing embargo have affected support networks of schools and outreach programmes for these children. This has put extra strain not just on those living with disabilities, but also on their families.

I had worked for five years as a carer for children with autism and so I’ve been particularly interested in seeing how those who see the world differently cope with the incredible challenges of living in a war zone. The collapse of routine, loss of familiar settings and the death of loved ones sadly cause many children to suffer from mental health issues; for those with already heightened sensitivities, the effects can be far more acute.

Some have been shaped by the conflict in Gaza before they were even born. On 21 November 2006, as Asma and her family sheltered together in a downstairs room of their house, they listened to the familiar sounds of fighting around them. The family lived near Beit Lahia, a small town in Gaza, just a few miles from the Israeli border; a proximity that meant their home was always in the front line when war broke out. That summer, their house had been in the middle of some of the fiercest fighting between the Israel Defence Forces and Hamas. Now, after a period of relative calm, Israeli troops had once more crossed the border and fighting had resumed. The day before, the IDF entered Asma’s home, occupying it and forcing the family into a single room. Israeli snipers had taken up positions on the roof, meaning Hamas was now targeting them with rocket-propelled grenades.

Maryam, in the arms of her grandmother, Manzuma. She is like a rag-doll with painfully sad eyes. Maryam, with her grandmother, Manzuma. The family of six live in one small room. The rest of the house was badly damaged by rockets during last year’s fighting. Photograph: Giles Duley

All the family could do was huddle together and wait, but for Asma it was particularly stressful – she was seven months pregnant. As the family listened to the blasts of gunfire and rockets outside, they heard a different noise. It was the sound of somebody knocking and the voice of an elderly woman calling their name, asking to be let in. The family, confused and fearful of moving, stayed put. They heard Israeli voices shouting from the roof, a small explosion and then the woman’s voice asking once more to be let in. Before they could reply, a huge blast ripped through the house. Smoke and gas filled the air; Asma was choking, struggling to breathe. She remembers the sense of suffocating, then nothing.

The woman outside had been Fatima Omar Mahmud al-Najar, a 64-year-old grandmother and suicide bomber. She had been sent by Hamas’s military wing to kill the snipers on the roof. Before she could enter the house to carry out her attack, the Israelis saw her and threw a stun grenade, so she detonated at the door, saving the family from the full impact.

The blast had, however, starved Asma of air and, struggling to breathe, she was rushed to Dar Al Shifa hospital where the decision was made to induce her child. Maryam was born that evening and stayed in hospital for a week.

When she came home, the family knew something was wrong: Maryam would scream constantly, slept for no more than an hour and seemed unresponsive. Then her epileptic fits started. Finally, a year later, Maryam was diagnosed as having severe hypotonic cerebral palsy, caused by the lack of oxygen when she was born. Asma was told her daughter would never walk, talk or even be able to feed herself – she would need constant care for the rest of her life. Maryam, who was born in the midst of war, would always live with its legacy.

Visiting Maryam is a difficult experience. She sits in the arms of her grandmother Manzuma, unable to hold up her head or control her limbs, she is like a rag doll with painfully sad eyes. Her brothers Muhammed and Juma sit on the floor, bathed in the flickering light of the television. Asma prepares coffee and cuts cake in the makeshift kitchen.

The family is living in one, sparsely furnished, room, forced there after their house was hit once more during the July 2014 Israeli offensive, Operation Protective Edge. Eight rockets were fired at the house; one hit the upstairs floor, setting it on fire, a piece of shrapnel injuring Maryam. The wound has healed, but her condition has worsened. Her father, Farah, tells me that since the night of the rocket attack her screaming has grown worse, her crying abnormal.

Maryam holds on to her father's finger. Maryam holds on to her father’s finger. ‘It was not until my final visit to Maryam’s family that I saw the photograph I had been looking for.’ Photograph: Giles Duley

“She is having more fits since the attack. After the crisis and her last injury, she screams all night. Before she was moving around a bit, but now she doesn’t move at all.” As I sit there drinking my coffee, I find it hard to imagine what life is like for Maryam. Her situation is desperate: the family home nearly destroyed; their income as farmers gone; a lack of psychological or physical support; and, hardest of all, no escape from the home that they know will be caught in the crossfire when war returns. Due to the lack of freedom of movement and financial constraints the family has no choice but to stay.

Later, Farah takes me on to the roof to show me where the rockets hit. “The problem,” he says pointing in one direction, “is that when those over there fire on those over there”, his arm swinging to point the opposite way, “then those over there fire back. We are in the middle.” It’s a simple illustration of the fate of so many families caught in conflicts around the world, though here in Gaza the situation is made worse by the Israeli blockade. There simply is no way to escape.

As a father, he says, he wants just one thing: to protect his family; to take them somewhere safe, somewhere where Maryam won’t be injured again. But he can’t.

As my photography matures, I find I spend more time with people and take fewer photographs. In a world where speed and efficiency seem valued above all else, I’ve made the conscious effort to slow down. Spending time with people, observing their daily life, sharing food and coffee, watching for small gestures and, most importantly, listening to their stories. Only then does the photography start.

Sitting with Maryam and her family, I’m struggling to find that moment. I can’t “see” the image that does justice to her story, it’s not coming to me. That day, I leave without having taken a single photograph. The evening is spent struggling with how to do the story justice, to retain the dignity of those I’m photographing.

The next day, I visit the offices of Handicap International, a charity that works to provide support for children with disabilities throughout Gaza, including those with intellectual impairments. Huha Skeikh is a Palestinian psychologist who has written extensively on how the conflict has affected those with learning disabilities and other disorders such as autism.

She takes me to meet a 14-year-old girl, Islam, who lives with her father and sister in Gaza City. When Islam was one and a half, she fell from the fourth story of her building and suffered a serious head injury that left her with learning disabilities. She struggled to concentrate at school, was aggressive and suffered from panic attacks. Eventually, her headmaster excluded her from school and she spent many months shut at home where her sense of isolation and anxiety grew.

Finally, when she was 11, Islam was enrolled in a specialised school and started seeing Huha for psychological support. “The reason for the psychological sessions was the increased anxiety she was facing because she had difficulty communicating with people and was used to staying at home, so school was a strange environment. She was very aggressive and could hit people, so we were trying to work with her and include her in the community.”

Working with Islam’s mother as well, Huha could see the progress she was making. Then on 21 July last year, as the war intensified, a shell hit Islam’s house. She was hit in the leg with shrapnel, but survived. However, four siblings, her grandmother and mother didn’t. She saw their bodies all around her.

“I was not able to reach Islam until the war was over,” recalls Huha. “[By then she had] developed a speech impediment as a result of the trauma. She has constant nerves and had constant voices, thoughts and pictures coming to her in a very insistent way. She used to have bad dreams and nightmares and would often wake up and go and stand behind the door, just waiting for her mother. She hears voices and has hallucinations. She would smell things that her mother used to do, like baking, but it doesn’t exist.”

Some of Islam's drawings showing the trauma of losing her family members in an Israeli attack. Some of Islam’s drawings showing the trauma of losing her family members in an Israeli attack. Giles Duley decided not to photograph Islam herself, owing to the sensitive nature of her condition.

Before we leave, I witness one of Huha’s sessions with Islam and one of her surviving sisters, Ruda. The pair are incredibly close. They have decorated a box with stickers of sunflowers and, as part of Islam’s therapy, they are placing their mother’s possessions in it.

“This is my mother’s scarf. She used to wear it when she went out,” Islam quietly says as she places a red scarf in the box. Outside it’s starting to rain heavily. There is no electricity and the room has grown dark.

“My mother used to wear this blouse and now I am wearing it.” She places more objects gently in the box. “This is my late sister Yasmin’s. These are pictures of my mother and two of my sisters.”

“Islam,” Huha says reassuringly, “you can keep this box with you all the time. Whenever you want to talk to your mother you can open it and take out the things that remind you of her, so your mother can always be around you. Islam, what would you like to say to your mother?”

There is a pause before Islam answers. “I love you, I miss you and please keep coming so we can remember you.”

Later, I speak to Rawya Hamam, a psychiatric nurse, and psychologist Dr Hasan Zeyada, who work at the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme, a charity that provides support across Gaza City.

“It’s not just children with special needs,” Rawya explains. “In the war, around one-third of those killed were children (561 children) and around 110,000 families were displaced from their homes. The basic psychological need for children everywhere is to feel secure but in this war, insecurity prevails.

“Trauma affects children on so many levels – cognitive, emotional