Saturday, June 30, 2007

Israeli court demands Palestinian officials forgo their posts in order to secure their freedom

30 June 2007

Nablus
Ma'an – Palestinian sources said on Saturday that investigators from the Israeli interior intelligence service, Shin Bet, stated that the detained Palestinian ministers, Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) members and mayors must resign from their posts before they can be released.

The Israeli military court said that the Palestinian officials must sign a written obligation to resign, as a precondition for their release.

The Nafha society for prisoners' rights said in a statement, "This is an obnoxious measure intended to strip the Palestinian Legislative Council members of their posts."

PLC members described the act as a desperate attempt to eradicate the Palestinian legitimacy, steal the Palestinian right to choose political representatives and impose Israeli will on the Palestinian people.

The PLC members were also quoted as saying that they will never accept such a trade-off, even if they are forced to spend a lifetime in Israeli jails. The officials added that such a bargain would mean surrendering the confidence placed in them by the Palestinian people.

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Who Really Murdered Farfour?

Farfour, no longer among the living.


30 June 2oo7
While it is interesting that this derogatory story began from what I found from the Israeli news, YNetNews.com; it makes more of a wonder, of how Farfur really became another martyr in Occupied Palestine.
Using the word terrorist towards anyone you are in opposition with, is becoming an over used word, especially the West as well as the Israeli's that keep coining this word; it is starting to have the focus turned in a negative light towards them, like never before. For the inception of the word, “Terrorist” in modern terminology came from the West.
Especially when the "Tomorrow's Pioneers," in it's inception was mistranslated to defame the character of the program. While I may not have agreed to the reference of an MK-47, the program was retooled; but it would have been doomed anyway, unless it came from an Israeli or Western affiliate station.
Furthermore, what makes this whole scenario more interesting is the timing, when a portion of Fatah, Israel as well as the West wish the extermination of a portion of the Palestinian people that just happened to be with the Islamic Resistance group of Hamas. So did these people, take it out on a defenseless mouse or should we just chock up another one, for censorship?
Further Reading:

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What Does Islam Really Teach?

A look into Islamic beliefs from the Quran and the Sunnah.





While many speak opposition to Islam out of lack of true knowledge or have forgotten the core of true Islam for they are walking on the outside; may they gain understanding and renew that which is the truth.

For knowledge and purity is of Allah (God).

Salaam (Peace)

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The battle for Gaza's airwaves

Hamas fighters in the presidentialheadquarters in Gaza [Reuters]


29 June 2007

Our main story this week is the bitter power struggle in Gaza between Hamas and Fatah. Hamas may have gained the upper hand politically in this latest round of fighting, but has it made serious tactical errors in the media war?

Television footage of Hamas members lowering the Palestinian flag and raising the Hamas flag in its place shocked Arab viewers. And graphic pictures of the torture of Fatah leader, Sameeh Al-Madhun, dealt a further blow to Hamas' media campaign both in the Middle East and internationally.

Hamas fought back via sites it controls on the internet. On a website called The Voice of Palestine it directed viewers to videos showing Fatah security beating up Hamas members to make the point that Fatah is not the only victim in this war. But will this tactic be enough to salvage Hamas' tarnished media image?


Charles Taylor is the first African leaderto be tried in an international court [AFP]

Our other top story this week is the media coverage of the Charles Taylor trial at the Hague. The former Liberian dictator is the first African leader to be tried in an international court for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during Sierra Leone's decade long civil war. So far Taylor has failed to show up in court where he faces 11 charges, including murder, rape, mutilation, slavery and the use of child soldiers.

After a decade of civil war, Sierra Leone does not have a strong media infrastructure and it is not straight forward for local journalists to relocate to the Netherlands for a case that may last 18 months or more.

However, the West African journalists covering the trial are passionate about relaying the news back home and despite their own personal experiences of the war, they are determined to stay impartial.

In Newsbytes, we look at the other big media stories this week. In Pakistan, a radical cleric issued a fatwa against the editor and publisher of Pakistani fashion magazine, Octane. The June edition of the magazine ran an advertisement depicting two scantily clad models as Adam and Eve, which the cleric claimed was blasphemous. Editor Zubair Kasuri said he intended no offence to Islam and added that the advertisement had already run in other magazines.

US celebrity heiress Paris Hilton's release from jail unleashed a frenzied bidding war for her first interview. But one newscaster was not impressed with the story. MSNBC anchor Mika Brzezinski refused to read the Paris story on the network's morning show. When her producer insisted, she first tried to burn the script and finally put it through the paper shredder live on air.




Last but not least is our internet video of the week. With the release of the iPhone imminent, the battle between Mac and PC is heating up. Here is a rap parody of the war of the laptops.




Watch this episode of Listening Post here:

Part 1





Part 2




Update:

30 June 2007

In an attempt to link to “The voice of Palestine,’ so people could actually see this web site because it was included in the above story, I found the web site to be under and apparent internet attack.
While I have never been to this web site before, it is a sad day that people would attack anyone whether it is in person or on the net.
It is one thing not to agree with someone, but it is another thing to be an internet terrorist.

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Abbas Sold His People For 18 Piece's of Gold?



Abbas said on Friday that the deployment of foreign troops was necessary for early elections [AFP]



30 June 2007

The armed wing of Hamas has rejected calls by Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, for the deployment of international troops in the Gaza Strip, vowing to attack them like other "occupation forces".

The Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades said in a statement on Saturday: "We will only receive these forces with shells and rockets."

In talks on Friday with Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, Abbas had called for deployment of international forces into Gaza where Hamas routed his forces on June 15.

Early elections

Abbas had said that the deployment of foreign troops was necessary to provide security for early parliamentary and presidential elections that he plans to organise in the coming months.

Ghazi Hamad, a Hamas spokesman, said talks about elections at the present time will not solve the crisis facing Palestinians.

Hamad did however say that Hamas has no issues with holding elections if all Palestinian factions agree to it.

France backs Abbas

Meanwhile, France threw its unconditional support behind Abbas and said it hoped the crisis in Gaza would help reignite the stalled peace process.

"At this time we are standing alongside the Palestinian Authority, the only representative of the Palestinian people," Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister, said after talks with the visiting Abbas.

Kouchner did not say what role Hamas might play in any peace steps but Abbas appeared in no mood to talk to the Islamic movement.

"What happened in Gaza is a bloody and ferocious coup d'etat against Palestinian legitimacy," Abbas told reporters following an earlier meeting on Friday with Sarkozy.

"What I heard from president Sarkozy is support for a political solution on the basis of international legitimacy, the Arab initiative, and [US] President [George] Bush's vision," he said.


France announced this week it was releasing $15 million in funds for the Palestinian Authority and Kouchner said he believed the Israelis were shortly set to transfer "at least" $300 million to Abbas's new government.

Israel agreed last Sunday to hand over some of the Palestinian tax revenues it had collected but then withheld after Hamas won elections in 2006. However, details of the transfer have yet to be fully worked out.

Source

Further Reading:

Abbas to Meet With French Zionist President

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Blair the Peacemaker?


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Religious scholars in Gaza issue 'fatwa' ordering policemen to return to work

Palestinian national police in Gaza before Hamas' takeover (MaanImages)

29 June 2007

Gaza - Ma'an - The League of Palestinian Clerics, a body of Muslim scholars in the Gaza Strip, has called on the 40,000 policemen in the Gaza Strip to return to their jobs. The Muslim clerics issued a "fatwa" in which they said that the policemen are obliged to return to work.

Large numbers of the Palestinian police did not return to their jobs after the Hamas movement took control of the public institutions and security services in the Gaza Strip two weeks ago.

The Hamas movement promised all public servants that their rights would be preserved in full and that they would be treated fairly, assuring they would not be affected by what happened in the Strip.

The Palestinian police's hesitancy began when the West Bank-based presidency and police leadership, run and lead by Kamal Ash-Sheikh, dismissed 600 policemen in the Gaza Strip because they returned to their jobs after Hamas' "coup" there. The Gaza policemen were ordered not to return to work.

Now, since the religious scholars have issued this "fatwa", the employees and policemen are in a real dilemma. From one side, they receive orders from the Palestinian Authority and the security leadership in the West Bank telling them to stay at home, and, on the other, they receive a fatwa from the religious leaders in Gaza telling them that they are obliged to return to work; if not, receiving a salary would be considered 'haram' – religiously immoral and wrong – in the eyes of the Muslim clerics.

The Hamas movement has urged all public sector employees to return to their jobs after declaring a general amnesty and promising that none of the employees, in any sector, would be harmed.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum told Ma'an, "Hamas will never negatively affect the Palestinian society or the Palestinian citizens' lives; what we have done was to make the people's lives better and we will preserve the lives of our people and we will do our best to do so."

He also rejected the suggestions to withdraw the Hamas armed men from the security services' offices in order to facilitate and ease the return of the police forces to their jobs. "We insist on running these security offices by respectful people," said Barhoum. "We have no ambitions; our goal is just to serve our people."

"We will not work according to outside agendas," he stressed. "We are going to correct this trend within the security bodies."

Regarding the concerns of Fatah members about the general amnesty, Barhoum said such fears were "baseless."

"We have announced this amnesty and assure them that we will deal with them as brothers and sons," Barhoum assued. "However, those who have committed crimes and killings will be brought to justice," he warned, adding that "the amnesty also includes those who did not commit any crimes against our people."

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Got Any Work Boots?

The reason why worry kills more people than work, is that more people worry than work.
One who wants to leave foot prints in the sand of time, must wear work boots.

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Gaza Teenager Killings

A Palestinian boy looks at the body of Mohammed Abu Hashish, as he and other relatives wait for the prayers during his funeral in Beit Lahiya northern Gaza Strip , Monday Aug. 16, 2004. Israeli helicopters fired four missiles north of Gaza City near the border with Israel early Monday killing Abu Hashish and Moussa Abu Mashi, Palestinian hospital sources said. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

3 June 2007

Two 13-year-old boys have been shot dead, and another boy shot in the back by Israeli forces after taking a swim near a beach in the Beit Lahiya area of the Gaza Strip.

Report by Nour Odeh, Al Jazeera's correspondent in the Palestinian territories



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Enemy of the Sun


Their is more then one way, to resist!


They may have put us in bondage, but they can not take our soul.



I may, if you wish, lose my livelihood,
I may sell my shirt and my bed,
I may work as a stonecutter,
A street sweeper, a porter,
I may clean your store
Or rummage your garbage for food,
O enemy of the sun
But, I shall not compromise,
And to the last pulse in my veins,
I shall resist.

You may take the last strip of my land,
You may plunder my heritage,
You may burn my books and my poems,
Or throw my flesh to the dogs,
You may spread a web of terror,
On the roof tops of my village,
O enemy of the sun,
But, I shall not compromise,
And to the last pulse in my veins,
I shall resist.


You may put out the light in my eyes,
You may deprive me of my mother's kisses,
You may destroy my history,
You may curse my father, my people,
You may deprive my children of their smile
And of life's necessities,
You may fool my people with a borrowed face,
You may spread a wall of terror around me,
You may glue my eyes with humiliation,
O enemy of the sun,
But, I shall not compromise,
And to the last pulse in my vein,
I shall resist,
O enemy of the sun.


The decorations are raised at the port,
The exclamations fill the air,
The heart is a glow,
A sail is seen in the horizon,
Challenging the wind and the depths,
It is Homer,
Returning home from the sea of losses.
The sun has returned,
Together with my exiled ones,
For her sake, and his
I swear, I shall not compromise,
And to the last pulse in my vein,
I shall resist, I shall resist,
I SHALL RESIST!!!!

by Sameeh Al Qassem



We ask for water and are given sand.



We stand with hope and are given sorrow.

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Dedication to Life in Palestine


"Through the struggle, the glory, to the inevitable freedom."

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Friday, June 29, 2007

The Ever Controversial Blair Divides Palestinians

June 29, 2007

Palestinians as well as experts doubt Blair could do the job without involving Hamas, one of the two leading political and military powers in the Palestinian territories.

GAZA CITY — The appointment of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair as a special envoy Mideast envoy for the Quartet is seen as a further dividing force between Palestinians in Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip and Fatah-controlled West Bank.

"Perhaps he'll help people in the West Bank because they follow the Abbas government but there will never be any change for June 29, 2007 the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip because of the Hamas government," Moamar Lolo, a broker, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Thursday, June 28.

"All of this serves Israeli interests and perhaps to separate Gaza from the West Bank," agreed women's activist Ola al-Hilo, 24.

In his first comments since being named envoy for the Middle East Quartet, Blair said Thursday he plans to travel to the region next month.

"It is a huge challenge," he told the Northern Echo newspaper, which covers the Sedgefield constituency that Blair represented before standing down as prime minister and member of parliament Wednesday, June 27.

"I have to prepare the ground for a negotiated settlement, and the key to that is to prepare the Palestinians for statehood."

Blair's appointment by the Quartet -- comprising the United States, the United Nations, the European Union and Russia -- was hailed by both Israel and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

"The president, who was consulted on the matter, has given the assurance that he will work with Blair to arrive at a peaceful solution on the basis of two states," his chief negotiator Saeb Erakat told AFP.

"According to our experience at the time he was the prime minister of Britain he was not honest and was not helpful in solving the conflict in the Middle East," said Ghazi Hamad, the spokesman of the sacked national unity government.

He said Blair had constantly adopted "the American and the Israeli position."

Hamas, whose forces seized control of the Gaza Strip this month after routing rival Fatah fighters loyal to Abbas, condemned the Blair's appointment.

"He will not do anything to support the Palestinian interests but will do everything to support the Israeli occupation," spokesman Fawzi Barhum told AFP in Gaza.

"Blair isn't a welcomed character because he has never supported the Palestinian aspirations to end the occupation and free prisoners from Israeli jails."

Doubtful

Palestinians as well as experts doubt Blair could do the job without involving Hamas, one of the two leading political and military powers in the Palestinian territories.

"Blair's chance was in world politics and he didn't do anything," said Munzer, a 32-year-old doctor.

"He will have no effect because he won't deal with Hamas until the American government agrees to do so."

The US has led an international campaign to isolate Hamas ever since it assumed power following a sweeping victory in the parliamentary elections over Fatah last year.

Blair was largely seen as a major player in holding together the isolation campaign.

"When Blair was prime minister and one of the closest friends of George W. Bush he did nothing for the Palestinian cause," said Middle East political expert Oreib al-Rintawi.

"So what can he do now as the Quartet's envoy?"

Rintawi, head of the Al-Quds Center for Political Studies in Amman, said Blair's appointment would not serve the peace process as he was not a "neutral party".

"He is one of the architects of the Iraq war and one of the Western leaders who played a role in promoting the destructive policies of the American neo-conservatives in the Bush administration."

The Quartet has for years failed to advance the roadmap for peace on the basis of two states, Palestine and Israel, living in peace and security.

But the blueprint has languished and failed to meet a target of creating a Palestinian state living in peace with Israel by 2005 and Blair's predecessor, former World Bank chief James Wolfensohn, stepped down in protest in 2006.

"It doesn't seem that he is able to influence Israeli-US policy," said George Giacaman, a Palestinian academic and political commentator based in the occupied West Bank.

Unless Blair talked at the very least to elected Hamas officials, Giacaman added, "it will undermine his ability to work with both sides."

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Israel opens Gaza commercial crossing for trial run

Armoured Israeli military vehicles roll into Israel near the Karni Crossing, just outside the Gaza Strip, June 27, 2007. Israel opened part of a the Karni commercial crossing with Gaza on Thursday for the first time since the Islamist group Hamas seized control of the coastal strip two weeks ago, U.N. and Israeli officials said.
REUTERS/Amir Cohen

28 June 2007

KARNI CROSSING (Reuters) - Israel opened part of a major commercial crossing with Gaza on Thursday for the first time since the Islamist group Hamas seized control of the coastal strip two weeks ago, U.N. and Israeli officials said.

"There is a trial operation today. It's a small number of trucks today just to see that it works and hopefully we can do more tomorrow," said Major Peter Lerner, who is part of the Israeli force stationed at the Karni crossing near central Gaza.

Lerner said wheat was transferred to the Palestinian side through a small part of the crossing on conveyor belts.

The wheat, weighing about 5,000 tonnes, will be processed in mills in Gaza and then bought by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) to be distributed to some 860,000 Gazans, U.N. officials said.

"This is an important development for us at UNRWA because all of our materials come through Karni. We hope that this development today will lead to the permanent opening of Karni," said UNRWA spokesman Christopher Gunness.

Israel had closed Karni, Gaza's economic lifeline, in an effort to isolate Hamas after it ousted Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's secular Fatah faction.

Israel has allowed humanitarian aid into the territory through smaller crossings.

"We still cannot open the entire crossing due to security concerns," said Shlomo Dror, spokesman for Israel's coordinator for the Palestinian territories.

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High court to hear detainee case

Navy Lt. Cmdr. Charlie Swift, judge advocate general corps, right, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, June 26, 2007, before the House Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties subcommittee oversight hearing on habeas corpus and detentions at Guantanamo Bay. Listening at left is attorney William H. Taft IV. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)

29 June 2007

By PETE YOST

WASHINGTON -Rejecting Bush administration arguments, the Supreme Court reversed course and agreed Friday to review whether Guantanamo Bay detainees can use the civilian court system to challenge their indefinite confinement.

The justices made the highly unusual reversal without comment along with other end-of-term orders.

In April, the court turned down an identical request, though two justices indicated they could be persuaded otherwise.

"Despite the obvious importance" of the cases, it would be premature to intervene, Justices John Paul Stevens and Anthony Kennedy wrote April 2 when the case was initially refused.

At the time, three justices said they wanted to intervene immediately in the matter: Justices Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and David Souter.

The court did not indicate what changed the justices' minds about considering the issue. But last week, lawyers for the detainees filed a statement from a military officer in which he described the inadequacy of the process the U.S. military has been using for the past four years to classify the detainees as enemy combatants.

The Bush administration says that a new law strips civilian courts of their jurisdiction to hear detainee cases.

The move to grant a motion for re-hearing in a previously denied case is rare. Court observers pointed to a 1968 case as the closest parallel to what happened Friday.

Five of the nine justices must agree to take a case that previously has been denied a hearing, according to an authoritative text on the Supreme Court.

"This is a stunning victory for the detainees," said Eric M. Freedman, professor of constitutional law at Hofstra Law School, who has been advising inmates at the U.S. prison in Guantanomo Bay, Cuba. "It goes well beyond what we asked for, and clearly indicates the unease up there" at the Supreme Court.

Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council, said that "we did not think that court review at this time was necessary, but we are confident in our legal position."

The case is expected to be heard in the fall.

In February, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upheld a key provision of a law the Bush administration pushed through Congress last year stripping federal courts of their ability to hear the detainees' challenges to their confinement.

On April 2, the Supreme denied the detainees' request to review the February appeals court ruling.

The detainees then petitioned the court to reconsider its denial.

Dismissing the petitions would be "a profound deprivation" of the prisoners' right to speedy court review, lawyers for the detainees said.

The administration asked that the detainees' Supreme Court petitions be thrown out.

Many of the 375 detainees have been held at Guantanamo for five years.

In recent months, the main arena in the legal battle over the detainees has been the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

The appeals court is considering how to handle the detainees' challenges to tribunals that found them to be enemy combatants, leaving them without any of the legal rights accorded prisoners of war.

The detainees' attorneys want the appeals court to allow a broad inquiry questioning the accuracy and completeness of the evidence the Combatant Status Review Tribunals gathered about the detainees, most of it classified.

The Justice Department has been seeking a limited review, saying that the findings of the military tribunals are "entitled to the highest level of deference."

An Army reserve officer and lawyer who played a key role in the enemy combatant hearings at Guantanamo Bay says tribunal members relied on vague and incomplete intelligence while being pressured to rule against detainees, often without any specific evidence. The officer's affidavit, submitted to the Supreme Court last Friday, is the first criticism by a member of the military panels that determine whether detainees will continue to be held.

"I suspect that the disclosure about the corrupted CSRT proceedings and the very restrictive government view of what the detainees can do in the lower courts led the justices to conclude that they should take up these issues," said Washington attorney David Remes. Remes represents 18 detainees.

"The court's decision to hear the cases brings the detainees one step closer to receiving their day in court," said Remes.

The operation of Guantanamo Bay has brought global criticism of the Bush administration and condemnation from Democrats on Capitol Hill.

The cases are Boumediene v. Bush, 06-1195, and Al Odah v. U.S., 06-1196.

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Abbas to Meet With French Zionist President

President Sarkozy to restore France's direct aid to PA during meetings with Abbas Friday

Abbas arriving in the Elysee Palace, Paris (MaanImages)


29 June 2007

Bethlehem - Ma'an - French president Nicolas Sarkozy will receive Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the Elysee Palace in Paris on Friday. He is expected to announce direct aid to Abbas' emergency government.

This will be the first encounter between the two men since the right-wing French politician took office last month.

The visit is part of a series of visits and meetings Abbas is carrying out with many Arab and foreign leaders in order to bolster political and economic support for his emergency government. The discussions will also focus on the current Palestinian dilemma and other regional problems.

The spokesman of the French presidency, David Martinon, said, "Paris sees the PA's current situation as very fragile; that is why Sarkozy wishes to support Abbas through restoring direct aid to the emergency government."

He added that France and the president will support the Palestinians in order to achieve peace and build a Palestinian state, which he said the Palestinians are keen to achieve and have the right to do so.

Having successfully brokered a European deal with Poland, Reuters reported on Friday that Sarkozy is considering turning his diplomatic skills to bringing peace to the Middle East.

"President Sarkozy seems to have the Israeli authorities' confidence and, to my knowledge, he also has the same level of respect from Arab leaders," Martinon told Reuters.

French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner is also expected to meet Abbas separately on Friday.


Sarkozy will then meet Jordan's King Abdullah II and Israel's foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, separately on Wednesday, Reuters reported.

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Update:


Abbas Calls for Hamas Isolation

by Hisham Abu Taha & Mohammed Mar’i

GENEVA/GAZA CITY, 30 June 2007 — Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas yesterday called on Socialist leaders gathered in Geneva to support his attempts to isolate the Hamas movement, which has taken control of the Gaza Strip.

Abbas told the 400 delegates of the Socialist International that he was “determined to isolate the (Hamas) coup d’etat, delegitimize all militias, and enforce law and order over all parts of the Palestinian territory.”

He denounced the “bloody Hamas coup d’etat...which was accompanied by a series of crimes, murders and aggression against everything Palestinians stand for.” He also warned that “there are those in our region who support those who staged the coup d’etat with the objective of hindering any progress in our region toward balanced and genuine solutions to our problems.”

“I am confident in your continued support in all spheres, in order to defeat the objectives of the putschists,” Abbas said.

The beleaguered Palestinian president, who heads the Fatah movement, was greeted with a standing ovation by delegates, and went on to call for talks with Israel.

“I renew my message to the Israeli people, our hands are extended to you in order to achieve a just and comprehensive peace,” he said.

The biannual council of the Socialist International is being attended by other key figures from the Middle East, including Iraq’s President Jalal Talabani, Lebanon’s Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, and the head of Iraqi Kurdistan’s autonomous government Masoud Barzani.

In another development, Israeli troops killed a Palestinian fighter from Abbas’ Fatah movement yesterday on the second day of a large-scale military raid targeting armed loyalists of the Western-backed leader.

Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad has accused Israel of trying to undermine Abbas’ emergency Cabinet by conducting the raid despite the Palestinian leader’s vows to take his own steps to disarm gunmen.

Officials of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades of Fatah said the 28-year-old fighter belonged to their group, and that Israeli soldiers shot him as he fled arrest.

Meanwhile, Abbas sacked a senior officer in the National Security Force yesterday. Col. Hussein Awad Odeh becomes the latest casualty of Fatah’s military defeat to Hamas in the Gaza Strip, after the recent dismissals of the strip’s Presidential Guard commander and other Fatah commanders.

The presidential decree said that Odeh had not fulfilled his tasks properly to defend PA premises in the face of Hamas militias.

Meanwhile, Israel and the Palestinian Authority are discussing implementing a clause from a 2005 understanding whereby Israel would stop pursuing Palestinian suspects in the West Bank if they forswear violence, said Israeli officials.

The officials’ comments came as Israel went after Fatah gunmen in the West Bank city of Nablus.

“Even though Israel was making gestures to Abbas and his Fatah movement, it would continue to pursue those actively involved in violence, regardless of their organizational affiliation,” the officials said.

Ismail Haniyeh, who still considers himself as head of a unity government Abbas has sacked, condemned Israel’s raid in the West Bank and another in Gaza in which 12 Palestinians were killed on Wednesday.

Speaking as he left a mosque in Gaza City yesterday, Haniyeh urged Abbas to renew contacts with Hamas, saying “the Palestinian political system cannot live without” the Islamist movement.

Meanwhile, Israel’s disgraced President Moshe Katsav resigned yesterday after signing a controversial plea bargain that will see him convicted of sexual offenses but escape jail for initial rape charges.

The father of five, who suspended himself from duty in January over the worst scandal to befall an Israeli leader, sent a letter of resignation by courier to Parliament Speaker Dalia Itzik, a senior aide to Katsav told AFP.

His resignation will take effect in 48 hours, when Itzik will be named interim president and the state prosecution will indict Katsav.

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Is Abbas Decreeing Death to All Palestinians?





29 June 2007

Editorial

by Housewife4Palestine

The creation of any Palestinian resistance, was for the protection of the Palestinian people against occupation and the wonton extermination of the Palestinian people.

Their should never have been an occupation of this magnitude, to ever occur among human decency.

As for Abbas to create a decree that any resistance should lay down one arm is immoral, for the simple fact he will sign the death warrant for all the Palestinian people against those who wish the irradiation of the indigenous people of Palestine.

The only way their would be real peace in Palestine is for all Palestinians to unite, stop the collaboration with the enemy and for Israel in common agreement lay down their weapons, to actually signing a peace agreement that both sides can honestly live with.

As long as the Israeli lawlessness keeps occurring within the occupied area’s against the Palestinian populace, one can not see this happening because this just show’s that Israeli’s stance for peace, still doesn’t exists.

The Palestinian people are not inherently warmonger’s for this war has always been a sore within the hearts of each Palestinian, which has now gone on for generations.


While it appears and until this war ends, that the Israeli’s with their continuous barbaric actions, appears to enjoy the adage of inhumanity to man; may this one day change; for the good of all.

Furthermore, if Abbas thinks for one minute one bit of a security force can protect the Palestinian people he is greatly mistaken, it looks more like a Western Israeli open door policy for martyr’s.

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Israeli Troops Raid Nablus

by Mohammed Mar’i

RAMALLAH, West Bank, 29 June 2007 — In the largest Israeli military operation in the West Bank in months, Israeli troops yesterday opened fire at random, conducted house-to-house searches and blew open front doors in Nablus.

Palestinian fighters retaliated. They hurled four explosive devices at the Israelis, severely injuring two officers and lightly wounding six soldiers. Several Palestinians were arrested and taken for questioning. The incursion prevented dozens of Palestinian students from sitting school exams.

The operation came a day after 12 Palestinians were killed in twin Israeli operations in the Gaza Strip and was condemned by Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. “We condemn the Israeli military operation ongoing in Nablus, which was launched shortly after those in Gaza,” said Fayyad. “Here we see an Israeli attempt to sabotage our efforts toward restoring security.”

The Israeli raid comes two days after Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas signed a decree forbidding the brandishing of weapons without a license in the West Bank except for the official PA security services, a step that Palestinians consider will enforce law on Palestinian armed groups.


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Fatah-affiliated Al Aqsa Brigades reject decree of President Abbas

Members of Al-Aqsa Brigades trainingin Hebron (MaanImages)

29 June 2007


The Fatah-affiliated Al Aqsa Brigades refuse to dissolve or to disarm and reject the truce in the West Bank.

Bethlehem -
Ma'an Exclusive – The Fatah-affiliated Al Aqsa Brigades have announced that they have rejected the presidential decree regarding the disbanding of militia in the occupied Palestinian territories.

The spokesman of the brigades, Abu Oday, told Ma'an that, following consultations with the brigades' leaders in the West Bank, they have issued the following declaration:

First: the rejection of the dissolution of the brigades, "because they are a resistance group, and are defending the country and the dignity of the people".

Second: the refusal to disarm the group, "because it is a legitimate arm of resistance, and is the only weapon to remain to defend the Intifada ["Uprising"]."

Third: the rejection of the description of the brigades as 'militias', "which defame the Palestinians, and it is nonsense to describe the only remaining armed wing as a militia."

Fourth: the brigades support the presidents' decision to withdraw illegal arms used in the lawlessness, and announce that they stand with the security forces to stop the state of disorder.

Fifth: the brigades will "do their best" to aid the security forces, "and will be honored to stand beside the security forces to defend the country."

Sixth: the brigades will not be complacent before the crimes of the occupation, "and will retaliate for the crimes committed [by the occupying Israeli military], especially in the recent days in the [Gaza] Strip, Nablus and Jenin.

Seventh: the brigades reject the connection established between themselves and the current state of lawlessness, and confirm that they "were created to confront the occupation and its aggression against the Palestinian people".

Eighth: the brigades will not be committed to a truce with the Israelis, as long as the occupation continues the crimes and incursions against Palestinians and their cities.

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Democrats denounce desegregation ruling

Democratic Presidential hopefuls (L-R) Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, former Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. and Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio greet the audience before the televised Democratic presidential candidates debate at Howard University in Washington Thursday, June 28, 2007. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

28 June 2007

By
NEDRA PICKLER

Video

WASHINGTON- An historically diverse field of Democratic presidential candidates — a woman, a black, an Hispanic and five whites — denounced an hours-old Supreme Court desegregation ruling Thursday night and said the nation's slow march to racial unity is far from over.

"We have made enormous progress, but the progress we have made is not good enough," said Sen. Barack Obama, the son of a man from Kenya and a woman from Kansas.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, the first female candidate with a serious shot at the presidency, challenged those who would suggest otherwise. "There is so much left to be done and for anyone to assert that race is not a problem in America today is to deny the reality in front of our very eyes."

In their third primary debate, the two leading candidates and their fellow Democrats played to the emotions of a predominantly black audience, fighting for a voting bloc that is crucial in the party's nomination process. They stood united against the Supreme Court and its historic ruling rolling back a half-century of school desegregation laws.

Clinton said the decision "turned the clock back" on history.

Questions about AIDS, criminal justice, education, taxes, outsourcing jobs, poverty and the Bush administration's response to Hurricane Katrina all led to the same point: The racial divide still exists.

Clinton drew a huge cheer when she suggested there was a hint of racism in the way AIDS is addressed in this country. "Let me just put this in perspective: If HIV-AIDS were the leading cause of death of white women between the ages of 25 and 34 there would be an outraged, outcry in this country."

Delaware Sen. Joe Biden urged people to be tested for the virus, noting that he and Obama had done so. Cracked the Illinois senator: "I just want to make clear I got tested with Michelle," his wife, Obama said drawing laughter from the predominantly black audience.

While the first two debates focused on their narrow differences on Iraq, moderator Tavis Smiley promised to steer the candidates to other issues that matter to black America, including health care, education, police accountability, housing and voting rights.

The debate was held at Howard University, a historically black college in the nation's capital.

Black voters are a large and critical part of the Democratic primary electorate, making the debate a must-attend for candidates seeking the party's presidential nomination. Civil rights activist Al Sharpton and Princeton University scholar Cornel West were among those in the audience.

A half century of desegregation law — and racial tension — was laid bare for the Democrats hours before they met. In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court clamped historic new limits on school desegregation plans.

The conservative majority cited the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case to bolster its precedent-shattering decision, an act termed a "cruel irony" by Justice John Paul Stevens in his dissent. The 1954 ruling led to the end of state-sponsored school segregation in the United States.

Obama, the only black candidate in the eight-person field, spoke of civil rights leaders who fought for Brown v. Board of Education and other precedents curbed by the high court. "If it were not for them," he said, "I would not be standing here."

Biden noted that he voted against confirmation of Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the majority opinion. He said he was tough on Roberts. "The problem is the rest of us were not tough enough," he said, seeming to take a jab at fellow Democrats. "They have turned the court upside down."

All the Democratic candidates in the Senate opposed the confirmation of conservative Justice Samuel Alito, another of President Bush's nominees. Clinton, Biden and Obama voted against Roberts; Sen. Chris Dodd voted for his nomination.

The debate was an opportunity for Obama, who got mixed reviews from his first two debate performances, to stand out and share a bond with the audience. He is in a tight contest for the black vote with Clinton, who benefits from goodwill for her husband among blacks.

Segregation was not the only issue. In turn, the candidates discussed their hopes to stem poverty, close the economic gap between the rich and poor, fight AIDS and overhaul a judicial system that doesn't always seem colorblind.

"This issue of poverty is the cause of my life," said John Edwards, the 2004 vice presidential nominee.

Said Obama: "It starts with birth."

Obama criticized Bush's No Child Left Behind program. "You can't leave the money behind and that's what's been done," he said.

Clinton spoke of her efforts in Arkansas to raise school standards, "most especially for minority children."

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, the country's only black governor, introduced the candidates with a warning that a dispirited GOP "is not enough to elect a Democratic president nor should it be. We need to offer a more positive and hopeful vision ... to run on what we are for and not just what we are against."

Shouts of "Obama!" rang out amid the cheers for the eight candidates.

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Separating Peace From Freedom



You can't separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom.

Malcolm X (Prospects for Freedom Speech in 1965)

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Egyptian bank sues Israel for dividends

The King David Hotel in Jerusalem.Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski


27 June 2007

By ETGAR LEFKOVITS

A state-owned Egyptian bank is suing the State of Israel for $78 million in unpaid dividends for its investment seven decades ago in the company that built Jerusalem's landmark
King David Hotel, an attorney representing the bank said Wednesday.

The National Bank of Egypt claims that Israel's Custodian General expropriated shares that it purchased in the company seven decades ago, without ever sharing any profits or dividends with the bank, said attorney Jasser Ashraf, who filed the suit on behalf of the Egyptian bank in the Jerusalem District Court last week.

News of the unusual lawsuit was first reported in Yediot Aharonot.

The history behind the legal saga dates back to 1929, when Palestine Hotels Ltd. purchased 4.5 acres of land on Julian's Way in Jerusalem, which was later renamed King David Street, to build the luxury hotel.

Albert Mosseri, a wealthy Egyptian Jewish banker who was at the time director of the bank, paid about half of the construction costs, while another 46 percent was covered by other affluent Jews from Cairo.

The bank invested the remainder of the sum, purchasing 693 shares of Palestine Hotels Ltd. between 1934 and 1943, Ashraf said.

After the establishment of the State of Israel, Mosseri sold all his shares to Federmann Enterprises, which manages the Dan hotel chain, and in 1958, the bank's shares in the hotel were seized by the Custodian General.

Then, in 1993, the Custodian General sold the bank's stocks to private shareholders after the bank was declared a "missing" party, the attorney said.

In the lawsuit, the bank is asking the court to make Israel pay $78 million in damages, based on its initial investment in current values, and the compound interest over the last seven decades, Ashraf said.

The Justice Ministry referred all queries on the issue to the Finance Ministry.

"Neither the Finance Ministry nor the Custodian General has received this claim. We are not familiar with the subject," the Finance Ministry said in a statement.

"If and when such a suit will be received, we will study it and respond to the court."

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Loving Everyone...

Not only makes the world brighter, but makes life Beautiful for all.

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Thursday, June 28, 2007

Labels: Life is Like a Box of Chocolates...

28 June 2007

by
Housewife4Palestine

Seems these days people are great with labeling people and I am yet to understand why?

You have this political view, so you must be this…? Still trying to understand this one.


You believe in modest dress, so you must be an ‘extremist or a radical? What do you call the person in a mini skirt? All Knock-kneed or couldn't afford the other half of the skirt?



Your views are not mine so you must be Paranoid or Crazy? Always curious, of their state of mental health, as I have been checked and told I am very normal.



Your Palestinian, so you must be a terrorist? I have never terrorized anyone, not even my own family; they actually love me. *


And the label’s can go on…

The best Label, I can give myself, “I’M ME!”



...Never know what your going to get!


*(Palestinian women selling vegetables and herbs in front of Damascus Gate of the Old City of Jerusalem. )

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Torture is Legal for The United States?

Protesting Iraq War

October 20, 2006

For over 2 hours, almost every passing car honked and honked.

The young woman is a student at WWU in Bellingham, Washington, United States. This protest apparently lasted six days.

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Is Hamas Silent in the West Bank?

Secular Fatah's New Deadly Racism


A crackdown on Hamas in the West Bank has led to concerns that all religious activities and institutions like this soup kitchen in Hebron will face higher scrutiny and more difficulties.


Near Hawara village, an Israeli police officer stopped a bearded Palestinian man. Dozens of Hamas members have been arrested in the last week, and men with beards — the symbol of religious devotion.

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Reflection of the Days


28 June 2007

by Housewife4Palestine

I wonder if people understand that are not in the war, what it is like to face such devastation. At this time my adopted village is completely devastated as it lays in ruins as well as many of my family are now martyrs.

As I pray each day for the protection and safety of my children and my husband, I can not help thinking as long as Israel and the United States keeps the balloon of peace floating in the air for they do not really wish it to hit the ground for a lasting peace or justice in Palestine. As long as the balloon is in the air, they can keep pressure and corruption going, pitting Fatah against Hamas.

There is Palestinian’s that seem to think hope is diminishing, while this is not so or at least I have never felt this way as I have went through a multitude of hardships, that even I realize; would have broken some people. They only thing I am finding that trying to be strong does, is make it harder to cry over these injustice’s, instead it seems to be replaced at times with a type of anger; of how could people wish so much harm to another.

I will even admit, Abbas looks more like a man that need’s a lifebelt for a sinking ship, then to be able to legitimize what he is doing as a political puppet for the West.

As for Bush thinking of creating a Muslim envoy, to create better relations in the Middle East is like trying to find a band aid for a half amputated leg, for the simple fact of all their crimes towards so many Muslim countries. I am yet to wonder, if or how this type of situation can or is possible to ever be repaired.

As for Blair being the new Middle East envoy, just goes to show that him and Bush are still bed mates, what more is their to say here?

All that is coming out in the United States within their government towards discloser of documents, just makes me think they have something to hide, is this administration beginning to unravel or the snow ball is picking up speed as it rolls down the hill and collecting more snow?

Returning to Palestine, if the corruption would cease and the fractions actually united towards all of Palestine, only then I think we as Palestinians have a chance at a reality we can live with.

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Bush won't supply subpoenaed documents

Vice President Dick Cheney and President Bush stand in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington in this Nov. 9, 2006, file photo. The Senate subpoenaed the White House and Vice President Dick Cheney's office, Wednesday, June 27, 2007, demanding documents and elevating the confrontation with President Bush over the administration's warrant-free eavesdropping on Americans. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds, files)

28 June 2007

By TERENCE HUNT

WASHINGTON -President Bush, moving toward a constitutional showdown with Congress, asserted executive privilege Thursday and rejected lawmakers' demands for documents that could shed light on the firings of federal prosecutors.

Bush's attorney told Congress the White House would not turn over subpoenaed documents for former presidential counsel Harriet Miers and former political director Sara Taylor.

In reaction, Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy accused the administration of shifting "into Nixonian stonewalling" and revealing "disdain for our system of checks and balances."

"With respect, it is with much regret that we are forced down this unfortunate path which we sought to avoid by finding grounds for mutual accommodation," White House counsel Fred Fielding said in a letter to Leahy and the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. "We had hoped this matter could conclude with your committees receiving information in lieu of having to invoke executive privilege. Instead, we are at this conclusion."

Thursday was the deadline for surrendering the documents. The White House also made clear that Miers and Taylor would not testify next month, as directed by the subpoenas, which were issued June 13. The stalemate could end up with House and Senate contempt citations and a battle in federal court over separation of powers.

"Increasingly, the president and vice president feel they are above the law," said Leahy, D-Vt., after getting the news from Fielding in an early-morning phone call. "In America no one is above law."

In his letter, Fielding said Bush had "attempted to chart a course of cooperation" by releasing more than 8,500 pages of documents and sending Gonzales and other senior officials to testify before Congress. The White House also had offered a compromise in which Miers, Taylor, White House political strategist Karl Rove and their deputies would be interviewed by Judiciary Committee aides in closed-door sessions, without transcripts. Democrats Patrick Leahy of Vermont and John Conyers of Michigan, the chairs of the Senate and House Judiciary Committees, have rejected that offer.

On the other hand, Fielding said Bush "was not willing to provide your committees with documents revealing internal White House communications or to accede to your desire for senior advisors to testify at public hearings.

"The reason for these distinctions rests upon a bedrock presidential prerogative: for the President to perform his constitutional duties, it is imperative that he receive candid and unfettered advice and that free and open discussions and deliberations occur among his advisors and between those advisors and others within and outside the Executive Branch," Fielding said.

"The doctrine of executive privilege exists, at least in part, to protect such communications from compelled disclosure to Congress, especially where, as here, the president's interests in maintaining confidentiality far outweigh Congress's interests in obtaining deliberative White House communications," Fielding said.

"Further, it remains unclear precisely how and why your committees are unable to fulfill your legislative and oversight interests without the unfettered requests you have made in your subpoenas," Fielding said. "Put differently, there is no demonstration that the documents and information you seek by subpoena are critically important to any legislative initiatives that you may be pursuing or intending to pursue."

It was the second time in his administration that Bush has exerted executive privilege, said White House deputy press secretary Tony Fratto. The first instance was in December, 2001, to rebuff Congress' demands for Clinton administration documents.

Tensions between the administration and the Democratic-run Congress have been building for months as the House and Senate Judiciary panels have sought to probe the firings of eight federal prosecutors and the administration's program of warrantless eavesdropping. The investigations are part of the Democrats' efforts to hold the administration to account for the way it has conducted the war on terrorism since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Democrats say the firings of the prosecutors over the winter was an example of improper political influence. The White House says U.S. attorneys are political appointees who can be hired and fired for almost any reason.

Democrats and even some key Republicans have said that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales should resign over the U.S. attorney dismissals, but he has steadfastly held his ground and Bush has backed him.

Just Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee subpoenaed the White House and Vice President Dick Cheney's office, demanding documents pertaining to terrorism-era warrant-free eavesdropping.

Separately, that panel also is summoning Gonzales to discuss the program and an array of other matters — including the prosecutor firings — that have cost a half-dozen top Justice Department officials their jobs.

The Judiciary panels also subpoenaed the National Security Council. Leahy added that, like House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., he would consider pursuing contempt citations against those who refuse.

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Hamas critical of Blair envoy role

As special envoy of the Quartet, Blair seeks to find a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict [EPA]


28 June 2007

Hamas has condemned the appointment of Tony Blair as Middle East envoy after stepping down as Britain’s prime minister amid Israeli and some Palestinian support.

The Islamic movement which seized control of the Gaza Strip 12 days ago, criticised Blair's new role on Wednesday saying it was "not acceptable to Hamas nor to the Palestinians".

Blair will act as special envoy of the Quartet - the United States, United Nations, European Union and Russia - which seeks to find a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The post has been vacant since James Wolfensohn, the former World Bank chairman, left in frustration in May 2006.

'Not a man of peace'

In Gaza, Hamas voiced its concerns on the outgoing prime minister's new role.

Blair, who supported the American occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan, may not be a man of peace," Fawzi Barhum, the Hamas spokesman told AFP in Gaza.

"His appointment is not acceptable to Hamas nor to the Palestinians. He will not do anything to support the Palestinian interests but will do everything to support the Israeli occupation," he said.

On a trip to Amman, Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, greeted news of the appointment of Blair and pledged to work with Blair towards achieving peace, an official said.

"President Abbas welcomes the nomination of Mr Blair as envoy of the quartet," Saeb Erakat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, said.

"The president, who was consulted on the matter, has given the assurance that he will work with Mr Blair to arrive at a peaceful solution on the basis of two states," Erakat said.

He also said that Abbas was confident Blair’s appointment "will help boost the institutions of the Palestinian Authority and aid economic growth" .

'Capable man'

Meanwhile, George Bush, the American president, welcomed his closest ally to his new post.

"I am pleased that this capable man has agreed to continue his work for peace in the Middle East," Bush said in a statement.

"Tony will help Palestinians develop the political and economic institutions they will need for a democratic, sovereign state able to provide for its people and live in peace and security with Israel," Bush said.

Reaction from Russia was more guarded with Sergei Lavrov, the foreign minister, saying that Moscow would support Blair's appointment if the other members of the quartet were in favour.

"If the whole of the quartet is in favour, we are going to welcome Tony Blair's contribution to efforts to normalise the situation in the Palestinian territories," Lavrov said.

In Paris, Nicolas Sarkozy, France’s president applauded the appointment of Blair, lauding his "qualities as a statesman and his knowledge of the region".

Meanwhile back home, Gordon Brown, Britain's new prime minister, said he was "delighted", adding that his predecessor was "exceptionally well placed" to take on the role.


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