Saturday, March 29, 2008

Israel seeking peace talks with Syria: minister

Jewish Prime Minister Ehud Olmert speaks at the Annual meeting with the Foreign Press Association on March 26, 2008 in Jerusalem.

Those who are truly your enemies will become small and those who one may have a misunderstanding with, may become your friends. -Deborah
28 March 2008

JERUSALEM (
Reuters) - An Israeli minister said on Friday that the Jewish state was trying to revive peace talks with Syria and that the price of a deal was the occupied Golan Heights.

The comments by Infrastructure Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer came after Prime Minister Ehud Olmert reiterated this week that Israel was willing to make peace with its Arab neighbor and hinted at behind-the-scenes talks.

"Every effort is being made to bring Syria to the negotiating table," Ben-Eliezer told Israel Radio.

"We know that sitting at the negotiating table is not to sing Hatikva (Israel's national anthem) but to sign an agreement, and we know very well the price of this agreement."

Asked if the price was to relinquish control of the Golan Heights, Ben-Eliezer said: "Exactly."

Israel captured the Golan, a strategic plateau, from neighboring Syria during the 1967 Middle East War and annexed it in 1981 in a move that has not been internationally recognized.

Peace talks between Israel and Syria collapsed in 2000 over the extent of a proposed Israeli withdrawal from the Golan. Tensions have risen since then with Israel accusing Syria of supporting the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah and Palestinian militant groups like Hamas.

Russia has offered to host a Middle East peace conference this year to try to relaunch talks between the two countries.

Olmert on Wednesday appeared to signal reluctance about attending such a summit but said Israel was willing to make peace with Syria and that he hoped the two sides would be able to hold talks.

That doesn't mean that when we sit together you have to see us," Olmert told foreign journalists in a news conference.

Israel has also raised concerns over Syria's close ties with Iran, the Jewish state's arch foe.

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Palestinians Watch on Arab Summit News


29 March 2008
A Palestinian woman with her daughter, clean vegetables in the living room of their home, in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
A television shows in the foreground, of Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi at the Arab Summit in Damascus, Syria.
Palestinian's are very interested towards the latest round of Arab diplomacy.

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Make Palestine Clean and Green

Palestinian looks for scrap metal amid an Israeli construction waste site.
Anyone that has ever been around me knows I am very adverse to damaging the earth, especially with any kind of trash, because we are caretakers of the earth for Allah and it benefits everyone, on the earth not only now, but for the future.

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Iran Deplores Human losses in US-UK air raids on Iraq

Iran deplores human losses in the current waves of US-UK air raids on civilians in Iraq, Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini on Saturday.

29 March 2008

Tehran-Iran deplores human losses in the current waves of US-UK air raids on civilians in Iraq, Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini on Saturday.

Fighting has intensified between Iraqi government forces and the militia in Basra and Sadr City after the US and British planes bombed suspected targets where at least 200 civilians were killed and 500 others have been wounded on the fifth day of crackdown Saturday.

Iran calls on Iraqi political parties to end fighting as soon as possible, Hosseini said adding that continued fighting in Iraq only serves the interests of the occupiers.

Hosseini made the remarks in response to a question posed by London based Arab-language daily 'Al-Sharq Al-Awsat'.

The Islamic Republic of Iran believes that Iraqi nation will suffer a lot from current escalation of fighting in the country and called for its swift halt.

Peace, stability and security in Iraq should be restored through negotiations in the war ravaged country, Hosseini said.

Iraq's problems would be resolved in a friendly and goodwill atmosphere, he said adding that it is advisable to Iraqi people to avoid any conflicts and help restore security in the country and do not give pretexts to occupiers to continue their illegitimate presence in the country.

Hosseini also expressed the hope that the Iraqi government would exercise wisdom, cooperation, mutual understanding, patience, calm and contacts with Iraqi political leaders to overcome the current critical period.

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Abbas slighted at Arab Summit?

(From L to R- front line): Mahmoud Abbas, Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and Libya's leader Muammar Gaddafi pose among other Arab leaderse at the opening of the Arab Summit on March 29, 2008 in Damascus, Syria.
Mahmoud Abbas (L) talks to Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika during the opening session of the Arab Summit in Damascus on March 29, 2008. Syrian President Bashar Assad, opened a boycott-hit Arab summit today.

Mahmoud Abbas (R) listens to a Palestinian legal government delegate at the opening of the Arab Summit on March 29, 2008 in Damascus, Syria.

Mahmoud Abbas illegally at the opening of the Arab Summit on March 29, 2008 in Damascus, Syria. The Arab summit will be held in the Syrian capital from March 29-30.
Abbas seems slighted, as he had called on the Syrian-hosted Arab summit, to propagate his collaborated initiatives towards Palestine and from the look on his face, they did not buy.

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U.S. Economy Pep Talk

President George W. Bush delivers remarks on housing Friday, March 28, 2008, at Novadebt in Freehold, New Jersey. White House photo by Chris Greenberg
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 29, 2008


THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. It's not every day that Americans look forward to hearing from the Internal Revenue Service, but over the past few weeks many Americans have received a letter from the IRS with some good news. The letters explain that millions of individuals and families will soon be receiving tax rebates, thanks to the economic growth package that Congress passed and I signed into law last month.

Americans who are eligible for a rebate will get it automatically by simply filing their taxes. If you are not a tax filer, you should visit your local IRS office to fill out the necessary paperwork so you can get your rebate on time.

The growth package also contains incentives for businesses to invest in new equipment this year. On Wednesday I visited a printing company in Virginia that has decided to use these incentives to purchase new software. As more businesses begin taking advantage of these incentives, investment will pick up and so will job creation. And together with the individual tax rebates, these incentives will help give our economy a shot in the arm.

For many families, the greatest concern with the economy is the downturn in the housing market. My Administration has taken action to help responsible homeowners keep their homes. In October, we helped bring together a private sector group called the HOPE NOW Alliance. HOPE NOW has helped streamline the process for refinancing and modifying mortgages, and it runs a national hotline to connect struggling homeowners with mortgage counselors.

On Friday, I visited an impressive mortgage counseling center in New Jersey. At the center, I met with homeowners who have been able to get help, thanks to HOPE NOW. One of them is Danny Cerchiaro. Danny owns a home in New Jersey that also serves as a studio for his movie production company. When Danny and his wife learned that their adjustable rate mortgage was resetting to a higher rate this past summer, they became concerned about their financial security. So Danny called HOPE NOW for help. Less than two months later, he was able to get a more affordable fixed-rate mortgage. And today Danny calls the mortgage counselor who helped him, "the magic lady."

Theresa Torres from Kansas City is another homeowner who has been helped. Theresa called HOPE NOW after she and her husband fell behind on their mortgage payments in December. A mortgage counselor helped Theresa modify her mortgage. Today she no longer worries about losing her home.

There are hundreds of thousands of homeowners like Theresa and Danny who could benefit from calling HOPE NOW. If you're a homeowner struggling with your mortgage, please take the first step toward getting help by calling the hotline at 888-995-H-O-P-E. That's 888-995-H-O-P-E.

HOPE NOW can help homeowners find the right solution for them. One solution for some homeowners is a new program we launched at the Federal Housing Administration called FHASecure. This program has given the FHA greater flexibility to offer struggling homeowners with otherwise good credit histories a chance to refinance. So far this program has helped more than 130,000 families refinance their mortgages. And by the end of the year we expect this program to have reached nearly 300,000 homeowners in all.

This is a good start, and my Administration is committed to building on it. So we're exploring ways this program can help more qualified homebuyers. The problems in the housing market are complicated and there is no easy solution. But by supporting responsible homeowners with wise policies, we'll help them weather a difficult period, we will help get our economy back on track, and we will ensure America remains the most prosperous Nation in the world.

Thank you for listening.

END

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Proclamation by the President To Modify the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States and for Other Purposes

President George W. Bush shakes hands with troops following his event in Freehold, New Jersey Friday, March 28, 2008, at McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey. White House photo by Chris Greenberg. (President Bush Discusses Housing, Economy)

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 28, 2008

A Proclamation by the President of the United States of America

1. Section 1205(a) of the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (the "1988 Act") (19 U.S.C. 3005(a)) directs the United States International Trade Commission (the "Commission") to keep the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS) under continuous review and periodically to recommend to the President such modifications to the HTS as the Commission considers necessary or appropriate to accomplish the purposes set forth in that subsection. In 2006, the Commission recommended modifications to the HTS pursuant to section 1205 of the 1988 Act to conform the HTS to amendments made to the International Convention on the Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System (the "Convention"). In Presidential Proclamation 8097 of December 29, 2006, I modified the HTS pursuant to section 1206(a) of the 1988 Act (19 U.S.C. 3006(a)) to conform the HTS to the Convention.

2. The Commission has recommended further modifications to the HTS pursuant to sections 1205(a) and (d) of the 1988 Act (19 U.S.C. 3005(a) and (d)) to alleviate unnecessary administrative burdens, and to ensure that the prior modifications proclaimed in Proclamation 8097 maintain substantial rate neutrality.

3. Section 1206(a) of the 1988 Act authorizes the President to proclaim modifications to the HTS based on the recommendations of the Commission under section 1205 of the 1988 Act, if he determines that the modifications are in conformity with United States obligations under the Convention and do not run counter to the national economic interest of the United States. I have determined that the modifications to the HTS proclaimed in this proclamation pursuant to section 1206(a) of the 1988 Act are in conformity with United States obligations under the Convention and do not run counter to the national economic interest of the United States.

4. Presidential Proclamation 7746 of December 30, 2003, implemented the United States-Chile Free Trade Agreement with respect to the United States, and Presidential Proclamation 7747 of December 30, 2003, implemented the United States-Singapore Free Trade Agreement with respect to the United States. In Presidential Proclamation 8097, I proclaimed modifications to the HTS that I determined were necessary or appropriate to continue to carry out the duty reductions proclaimed in Proclamations 7746 and 7747.

5. In Presidential Proclamation 8214 of December 27, 2007, I further modified the HTS pursuant to section 1206(a) of the 1988 Act to ensure the continuation of tariff and certain other treatment accorded originating goods under tariff categories modified in Proclamation 8097 and to carry out the duty reductions proclaimed in Proclamations 7746 and 7747. Technical rectifications to the HTS are required to provide the intended tariff treatment.

6. On August 5, 2004, the United States entered into the Dominican Republic-Central America-United States Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) with Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua. The Congress approved the CAFTA-DR in section 101(a) of the Dominican Republic-Central America-United States Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act (the "CAFTA-DR Act") (19 U.S.C. 4011).

7. Sections 321-328 of the CAFTA-DR Act (19 U.S.C. 4081-4088) authorize the President to take certain actions in response to a request by an interested party for relief from serious damage or actual threat thereof to a domestic industry producing certain textile or apparel articles. I assigned certain functions under these provisions to the Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements (CITA) in Proclamation 7987 of February 28, 2006.

8. Executive Order 11651 of March 3, 1972, as amended, established CITA, consisting of representatives of the Departments of State, the Treasury, Commerce, and Labor, and the Office of the United States Trade Representative, with the representative of the Department of Commerce as Chairman, to supervise the implementation of textile trade agreements. Consistent with 3 U.S.C. 301, when carrying out functions vested in the President by statute and assigned by the President to CITA, the officials collectively exercising those functions are all to be officers required to be appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate.

9. Section 604 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended (the "Trade Act") (19 U.S.C. 2483), authorizes the President to embody in the HTS the substance of the provisions of that Act, and of other Acts affecting import treatment, and actions thereunder, including removal, modification, continuance, or imposition of any rate of duty or other import restriction.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, acting under the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including but not limited to section 1206 of the 1988 Act, sections 321-328 of the CAFTA-DR Act, section 301 of title 3, United States Code, and section 604 of the Trade Act do proclaim that:

(1) In order to modify the HTS to conform it to the Convention or any amendment thereto recommended for adoption, to promote the uniform application of the Convention, to establish additional subordinate tariff categories, and to make technical and conforming changes to existing provisions, the HTS is modified as set forth in Annex I to this proclamation.

(2) In order to provide the intended tariff treatment to imports of originating goods from Chile, the HTS is modified as set out in section A of Annex II to this proclamation.

(3) In order to provide the intended tariff treatment to imports of originating goods from Singapore, the HTS is modified as set out in section B of Annex II to this proclamation.

(4) The CITA is authorized to exercise my authority under sections 321-328 of the CAFTA-DR Act to provide relief from imports that are the subject of a determination under section 322(a) of the CAFTA-DR Act, to the extent necessary to remedy or prevent serious damage and to facilitate adjustment by the domestic industry.

(5) The United States Trade Representative shall modify the HTS in a notice published in the Federal Register to reflect determinations pursuant to paragraph (4) of this proclamation by the CITA.

(6) Any provisions of previous proclamations and Executive Orders that are inconsistent with the actions taken in this proclamation are superseded to the extent of such inconsistency.

(7) The modifications to the HTS set forth in Annex I and Annex II to this proclamation shall be effective with respect to goods entered, or withdrawn from warehouse for consumption, on or after the respective dates specified in each section of such Annexes for the goods described therein.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-eighth day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand eight, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-second.

GEORGE W. BUSH

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The Weight of Slanderer

Legal Definition of Slander

A type of defamation. Slander is an untruthful oral (spoken) statement about a person that harms the person's reputation or standing in the community. Because slander is a tort (a civil wrong), the injured person can bring a lawsuit against the person who made the false statement. If the statement is made via broadcast media -- for example, over the radio or on TV -- it is considered libel, rather than slander, because the statement has the potential to reach a very wide audience.

What the Quran Says:


Woe to every slanderer and backbiter.
Al-Humaza 104:1

And whoever earns a fault or a sin and then throws it on to someone innocent, he has indeed burdened himself with falsehood and a manifest sin.
Al-Nisa 4:112

And obey not everyone who swears much, and is considered worthless,
A slanderer, going about with calumnies,
Hinderer of the good, transgressor, sinful,
Cruel, after all that base-born (of illegitimate birth),
Al-Qalam 10:13
He who commits slander will be tortured in their graves, (for slander is a major sin), because the person went about with calumnies (defamation [to make enmity between friends]).

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'Not everything is about the Shoah,' say volunteers working with survivors

28 March 2008

By
Ruth Sinai

The 14 young men and women who are doing their national service in a program to help elderly Holocaust survivors do not have an easy time of it. One survivor, for instance, gave volunteer Shira Nevo a blow-by-blow account of how the Nazis threw her mother into a crematorium. "All I wanted to do was run home and hug my mother," related Nevo. "It's emotionally exhausting. When they talk, I see everything in front of my eyes."

Some of the survivors tell her things they never told their own families, so as not to burden them, Nevo added.

Hinanit Yoel, another volunteer, stressed that "not everything is the Holocaust"; the subject arises only if some ordinary activity happens to remind the survivor of a Holocaust experience. Nevertheless, she said, when she hears their stories, she often wants to cry.

The volunteers received five days of training before starting, and every week they meet with a social worker to discuss issues that have arisen or might arise - for instance, how to cope with Alzheimer's and dementia.

But if the program has difficult moments, it also has pleasures. Chen Peretz said she has acquired three new grandfathers and two new grandmothers. Rina Ben Avraham said that one survivor she works with is trying to matchmake for her and another is giving her career advice. "They have enormous experience, and the wisdom that goes with it," she said. "I tell them things I don't tell my parents."

The volunteers consist of 11 women and three men. Six of the 14 are secular; seven of them are grandchildren of survivors. Each has five or six survivors that he visits twice a week. Some are helping the survivors document their Holocaust experiences.

The project was set up to combat the feelings of loneliness that the elderly often experience. Initially, it was difficult for the young volunteers, "and there were doubts about whether they would stick with it or abandon the elderly people," related Brachi Dalitzky of the Pensioner Affairs Ministry, which sponsors the program. "But today, all the elderly say it's a ray of light."

Eventually, Dalitzky said, she would like to have 350 volunteers. That would enable the project to reach far more than the 80 senior citizens it reaches today, and to include those who are not survivors as well. However, she said, it is hard to find the volunteers: Most would rather work with children.

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Value of Life

If one American soldier is killed, it is immediately known, but few bother about how many civilians or combatants are killed on the other side. All of the killed are persons, each valuing his own life. -Dalai Lama

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Growing Islamophobia in Europe

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Palestinian Dialogue


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Former Arafat Aide Under investigation for Embezzlement Allegations

29 March 2008

Ahmed Al-Mughani announced on Friday that he has met with the former Fatah economic adviser to the late Yasser Arafat, Khaled Salam, who is currently under investigation for financial irregularities involving money belonging to the illegal Palestinian Authority (PA).

Media outlets have recently reported that Salam is planning to invest 600 million US dollars in a construction project in the Jordanian Red Sea resort city of Aqaba.

The illegal PA Attorney General's is currently investigating whether Salam's money was stolen from the PA as he was formerly charged with managing the PA's investments and financial accounts.

Khalid Salam, also known as Mohammed Rashid, is suspected of having embezzled huge sums of money from the PA following Arafat's death in 2004.

In the Jordanian capital Amman on Thursday Salam presented the Fatah Attorney General with documents and contracts related to the project, which he says prove the funds for the project are from his own assets.

The Fatah Attorney-General said in an exclusive interview with Fatah news agency that after studying the documents he found that the project is being financed by a multi-investment share holder fund called "Joud Four," which is managed by Khalid Salam.

According to Fatah Attorney General, it is expected that the total financial investment for the project over eight years will total 600 million dollars.

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Monks Put Face on China's Tibet problem

A Chinese man walks past a police notice board which reads 'Who took part in March 14 riots, surrender yourself and ask people provide information about the rioters' on display in Lhasa, capital of China's Tibet Autonomous Region, Friday, March 28, 2008.(AP Photo/Andy Wong)

28 March 2008

By CHARLES HUTZLER

China's Tibet problem got a human face this week in images of crying, red-robed monks, giving international concern a new focal point just as Beijing gears up for the arrival of the Olympic torch.

The outburst by 30 monks at Lhasa's holiest shrine dealt a setback to the government's plans to use a three-day trip for foreign reporters to show that protests and deadly anti-Chinese rioting in the Tibetan capital two weeks ago had subsided.

"We are like prisoners here. There are soldiers all over the place," the monks shouted as officials tugged at the foreign reporters to leave the Jokhang Temple. The monks called for the return of the Dalai Lama from exile and an end to religious restrictions: "We want freedom."

With the Olympic torch coming to Beijing on Monday, the images of the monks in newspapers and on television the world over have further upset the communist government's plans to use the August games to showcase China as a confident, respected power.

"How many people watching these images in the West will buy China's story?" asked Steve Tsang, a China politics expert at Oxford University. "Instead, what you see are these heroic monks who are risking a lot for their cause. That's something your average Westerner is very sympathetic with."

The Jokhang monks are drawing critical attention to China just as the image of a lone man confronting a tank column came to embody world concerns over the crushing of the Tiananmen democracy movement in 1989.

U.S., British and other diplomats who flew into Lhasa on Friday for their own government-invited tour planned to ask their hosts about the monks. European Union foreign ministers gathering in Slovenia appealed to China to resolve the crisis peacefully.

President Bush and Australia's new prime minister, Kevin Rudd, said Friday they want Chinese leaders to meet with the Dalai Lama — Tibet's exiled but still revered leader — to defuse tensions.

"It is absolutely clear that there are human rights abuses in Tibet," Rudd told reporters after meeting with Bush in Washington.

Beijing does not have a public relations problem on Tibet with its own people. All media in China are state-controlled so most Chinese see the Tibet protests through reports that hew to the government line: lawless rioting aimed at Chinese and instigated by Dalai Lama supporters.

Chinese and foreigners living in China say Internet controls have ramped up, with Tibet reports on Google and Yahoo and other foreign news sites blocked and Tibet-related discussions on domestic chat sites censored.

The Olympics are overwhelmingly popular among Chinese. But the Lhasa protests, which spread to dozens of Tibetan communities across western China in one of the broadest challenges to Chinese rule in decades, have compounded Beijing's problems in rallying international public opinion ahead of the Olympics.

Already Beijing was struggling to counter foreign critics on human rights, media restrictions and China's relations with Sudan, where the Darfur region has been the site of a bloody conflict since 2003.

"They're not quite as skilled with the serve-and-volley as they could and should be. It's a skill they need to learn," said David Wolf, a business communications consultant in Beijing. "The question is: Are they going to learn quickly enough? It's crash course time."

Jitters over the situation in Lhasa were evident Friday — the last day of the foreign reporters' visit — and throughout the government tour.

Police closed lanes in the old Tibetan city leading to a mosque for Friday prayers, allowing only worshippers and residents in. The mosque and many Muslim-owned shops were targeted by rioters, apparently out of resentment for their prominence in business.

Officials took the reporters to interview injured soldiers and Chinese who were attacked or whose businesses were burned during the rioting. All of them had been screened and previously interviewed by state media. Reporters who attempted to report independently were followed.

At the same time, the fact that the trip happened at all was a sign that Beijing wants to appear responsive to international concerns.

Officials accompanying the reporters agreed to a request to interview Tibetans detained for rioting. They also tried to spin Thursday's Jokhang outburst, saying it signaled government tolerance.

"China is more open. You can see that in the Jokhang. The monks told you things that are not identical with the government," said Zhang Lizhong, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official posted to Lhasa to deal with visiting foreigners.

Yet the government also seemed intent on laying blame for the rioting on the Dalai Lama and his supporters without addressing grievances by Tibetans over the influx of Chinese migrants and, as with the Jokhang monks, religious restrictions.

"This incident started on March 10, and everyone knows March 10 is the day in 1959 that the Dalai Lama instigated a rebellion," Drubkang, a lama who heads Tibet's government-backed Buddhist Association, told reporters. "So this was premeditated."

It's a message that's a tough sell for Western publics that tend to see the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Dalai Lama as a spiritual figure of moral authority.

On Friday, the Dalai Lama reiterated that he supported Beijing's holding of the Olympics but decried state media's depiction of the protests, which has dwelled on violence against Chinese.

"The state media's portrayal of the recent events in Tibet, using deceit and distorted images, could sow the seeds of racial tension with unpredictable long-term consequences. This is of grave concern to me," he said in a statement from his base in exile, Dharmsala, India.

To many, the monks' outburst reaffirms what Bush, Rudd and other Western leaders have said — that China should open talks with the Dalai Lama to ease tensions in Tibet. It's a demand Chinese leaders have resisted so far.

"For people, in this case the monks, to disrupt a press conference, it's extremely bold and very unusual," said Rebecca MacKinnon, a journalism professor at Hong Kong University. "It shows how angry people are."

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Bush Press Conference with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd of Australia

President George W. Bush meets with Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd Friday, March 28, 2008, in the Oval Office. White House photo by Eric Draper

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
March 28, 2008


PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you all. Please be seated. Thanks for that rousing ovation. (Laughter.)

Mr. Prime Minister, welcome. Sure glad you're here. And, Therese, thank you for joining us, as well. Laura and I are thrilled to welcome you here to the White House. And I appreciate the opportunity to visit with a leader of one of America's closest allies and friends. And one thing is for sure, that friendship will strengthen and endure under the leadership of Kevin Rudd.

I have found him to be a straightforward fellow. Being from Texas, that's the way I like it. He is thoughtful, he is strategic in thought, and he is committed to the same values that I'm committed to -- rule of law, human rights, human decency. And we're sure proud you're here.

We spent a great deal of time talking about the economies. One thing we spent time on is talking about the benefits of trade between our two nations, and the benefits of a world that trades freely and fairly. And the Prime Minister was asking me about my views on Doha. I said it's possible to achieve a Doha round. He, too, believes we should work to achieve a Doha round. However, I informed him that it's -- we're willing to make serious concessions on the agricultural front, but we expect other nations to open up their markets on manufacturing, as well as services. And to this end, Prime Minister Rudd -- Kevin Rudd said that he would be more than willing to help. And that's -- very grateful.

On a bilateral front, not only is the free trade agreement working, but next Monday we'll be signing an Open Skies agreement that will further our friendship and further our commercial ties. And I think it's a great success of your administration, and ours, as well.

We talked about the environment and energy. Here's an interesting moment for all of us to recognize that we can become less dependent, in our case, on foreign oil, and at the same time, be good stewards of the environment. We talked about the need to work collaboratively to achieve an international agreement in which the United States is at the table, along with developing nations like China and India. In order for there to be an effective, international agreement, China and India must be participants.

We talked about the need to help developing nations improve their environment. And one way that we can do so is to commit ourselves to tariff-free trade and technologies that promote low carbon energy. This is something we're spending a lot of money on in the United States, and we'll continue to do so because I happen to believe technologies will enable us to be good stewards of the environment and change our energy habits, which we need to do here in the United States.

So I want to thank you very much for our discussions thus far on our economic interests and our responsibilities. But we also talked about freedom and the need to promote an ideology based on hope and decency, and that's an ideology of liberty. And I want to thank very much the Australian government and the Australian people for their willingness to help a young democracy such as Afghanistan. The Prime Minister and I discussed how Bucharest can become a success. And I can't thank you enough for going, and I appreciate very much your strong commitment to helping the Karzai government succeed and thrive. It's in our national interests that we do so.

I also want to thank you very much for being a good, loyal ally on Iraq. Obviously the Prime Minister kept a campaign commitment, which I appreciate. I always like to be in the presence of somebody who does what he says he's going to do. You know, oftentimes politicians go out there and they say one thing on the campaign trail, and they don't mean it. Well, this is a guy who meant it. But he also acted like you'd expect an ally to act -- and that is, he consulted closely with his friends. His military commanders consulted closely with our military commanders. But the commitment of Afghanistan is not to leave Iraq alone; it's to change mission.

And so he told me about an interesting story. He met with the Prime Minister, Maliki. Prime Minister Maliki says to Kevin Rudd -- or Kevin Rudd says to Prime Minister Maliki, what can we do to help you. It wasn't, what can we do to abandon you. He said, how can we help you? And he said, how about training some farmers in dry-land farming -- something we know something about in West Texas, by the way, Mr. Prime Minister. (Laughter.)

And I want to thank you for that. I want to thank you for stepping forward to help Iraq develop a civil society and a strong economy that will enable this young democracy to thrive and help yield peace. People -- I'm sure the press corps is going to say, well, aren't you mad at the Prime Minister for fulfilling his campaign pledge? And the answer is, no -- just so, you don't even need to ask the question now. (Laughter.)

We talked about Iran, and our joint commitment to continue to work together to see to it that the Iranians do not develop the capacity to develop a nuclear weapon. We talked about Burma. I want to thank you for your commitment to a free Burma. And, finally, we talked about North Korea and the six-party talks, and Australia's support for those six-party talks.

We're going to have a good lunch, too, and we'll continue our discussions on a variety of subjects. He's a easy man to talk to. I appreciate his visions. I particularly appreciate his consultations on China. He's an expert on China -- it's clear when you talk to him, he is an expert on China. And, all in all, we've had a good start to this important trip.

And we want to welcome you again, Kevin, to the White House. And the podium is yours.

PRIME MINISTER RUDD: Thank you. Thanks very much, George, and it's a pleasure to be here in Washington, with my wife, Therese. And it's great to be here at the White House. And thanks for your hospitality in having us at Blair House. We really appreciate that.

Our alliance doesn't simply reflect our shared past. Our alliance defines our common future as two of the world's great democracies. I was thinking about this, this morning, about the number of Presidents and Prime Ministers who have been party to this alliance, both Republican and Democrat, and both in our country, Labor and Liberal. This alliance has been supported by 12 American Presidents, Republican and Democrat. It's been supported by 13 Australian Prime Ministers, Labor and Liberal, and I'm the 14th.

And I'm confident that this alliance has a strong, robust future. And the reason I'm confident of that is because it's rooted in shared values. We actually take the ideal of democracy seriously. It's not a casual thought, it's not a -- it's just not a passing observation; it's something which is part and parcel of who we are as peoples. So when you have an alliance which is rooted in a common set of values, it tends to mean that alliance is going to last for a bit.

And there's the things we've done together right from the Second World War to the present, and there's been many of them. And we've been in the field together, and there are many other areas in wider foreign policy where we cooperate, as well.

Turning to the future, the President indicated we discussed the current challenges facing the global economy. And this is, for us in Australia, a global challenge. Obviously the United States, as the world's largest economy, is fundamentally significant in the way in which this thing plays out. But our response, and we discussed this at some length, is looking at how we can get some better transparency out there in financial markets on some of these particular product, which are causing problems around the world. There's an upcoming meeting of the International Monetary Fund, and we'll be working on our common positions towards that end.

As the President has just indicated, we also spoke about the Doha Round. My own view is that if ever the global economy needs a psychological injection of some confidence in the arm, it's now, and that can be delivered by a positive outcome on Doha. Takes more than two to tango. Takes a lot of people to tango when it comes to the Doha Round -- combination of ourselves and the Cannes Group, the United States, the Europeans, Brazil, India, others. But what we have agreed, again, as strong, long-term supporters of free trade around the world, as one of the best drivers of global economic growth, is to work very closely together in the months ahead to try and get a good, positive outcome for Doha -- good for our economy, good for the American economy, good for the global economy.

On foreign policy, the President and I also discussed, of course, Iraq and Afghanistan. I thank him for his remarks in relation to Iraq. And what he said is absolutely right in terms of my discussions with Prime Minister Maliki in Baghdad only in December. We -- I've confirmed today to the President, as we'll be confirming to the government of Iraq in Baghdad, an assistance package of some $165 million, a large slice of which will go to how we assist Iraqis train their people better in agriculture and in the wider economy.

Prime Minister Maliki said, this is a big need for us. We are a dry continent, we know a fair bit about dry-land farming. So we'll be spending a lot of money training a lot of Iraqi farmers and agricultural scientists in the year ahead.

On Afghanistan, I confirmed to the President that we're in Afghanistan for the long haul. It's a tough fight, but we intend to be there with our friends and partners and allies for the long haul. And I look forward to being with the President in Bucharest soon, so we arrive at a common civil and military strategy with our friends and partners in Europe and elsewhere.

On the other matters which were raised in our discussions, the President has run through them neatly; I won't elaborate on them. But I just conclude with this: It was reminding of me -- for me when I saw the guest book this morning at Blair House. And one of the first entries, back in 1944, was a page dedicated to the visit by Labor Prime Minister John Curtin to Blair House. FDR was President of the United States at the time. It goes back to remind me how much this alliance has been the product of common nurturing by Presidents and Prime Ministers for a long time.

Mr. President, you said that you had a warm regard for me because, from a Texan point of view, you found me to be a reasonably straight shooter. I therefore designate you as an honorary Queenslander. (Laughter.) In the great state of Australia, I come from the great state of Queensland. It may surprise you that it's bigger than Texas. (Laughter.) But can I say -- (laughter.) But can I say quickly -- (laughter.)

PRESIDENT BUSH: Can you recover nicely? (Laughter.)

PRIME MINISTER RUDD: Yes. The recovery point is this: Queenslanders and Texans have a lot in common, and they get on well. And so, from one Queenslander, one Texan -- one Australian to one American, I appreciate the relationship that we're forming, part and parcel of the relationship between two great democracies.

PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you.

A couple questions a side. John Yang.

Q Mr. President, thank you very much. I'd like to ask you about Iraq. Yesterday in Dayton in your remarks, you said that the Iraqi offensive against criminals and militants in Basra was a sign of progress. But it's also triggered clashes with supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr. And this morning, U.S. forces were again fighting the Mahdi Army in Sadr City. What does this say about progress in terms of reconciliation in Iraq among the various factions? And what can the United States do, what can you do, what can your administration do to help Prime Minister Maliki make progress in that area?

And, Mr. Prime Minister, if I could ask you, when you're in Bucharest next week at the NATO summit, what's going to be your message to the European allies to try to bring them along, to have the same sort of commitment you just stated here, and a commitment to have military operations with their forces in Afghanistan?

PRESIDENT BUSH: John, any government that presumes to represent the majority of people must confront criminal elements or people who think they can live outside the law. And that's what's taking place in Basra and in other parts of Iraq. I would say this is a defining moment in the history of a free Iraq. There have been other defining moments up to now, but this is a defining moment, as well. The decision to move troops -- Iraqi troops into Basra talks about Prime Minister Maliki's leadership.

And one of the early questions I had to the Prime Minister was would he be willing to confront criminal elements, whether they be Shia or Sunni? Would he, in representing people who want to live in peace, be willing to use force necessary to bring to justice those who take advantage of a vacuum, or those who murder the innocent? And his answer was, yes, sir, I will. And I said, well, you'll have our support if that's the case, if you believe in evenhanded justice. And his decision to move into Basra shows evenhanded justice, shows he's willing to go after those who believe they're outside the law.

This is a test and a moment for the Iraqi government, which strongly has supported Prime Minister Maliki's actions. And it is an interesting moment for the people of Iraq, because in order for this democracy to survive, they must have confidence in their government's ability to protect them and to be evenhanded.

And so -- the other that's interesting about this, by the way -- this happens to be one of the provinces where the Iraqs are in the lead -- Iraqis are in the lead, and that's what they are in this instance. And the United States, of course, will provide them help if they ask for it and if they need it. But they are in the lead. And this is a good test for them. And of course, routing out these folks who've burrowed in society, who take advantage of the ability to be criminals, or the ability to intimidate citizens, is going to take a while. But it is a necessary part of the development of a free society.

PRIME MINISTER RUDD: In answer to your question on Afghanistan, the message I would take to our friends and partners in Europe when we get to Bucharest is, all of us have got to share the burden. And it's build on an assumption that all of us share a common strategy. So the first message I think for all of our friends and partners there in Bucharest is, we need to sign up to a common script, both military and civil, in terms of how we actually prosecute and succeed in this conflict. And I believe we can. No point being there unless you believe you can.

And then the second thing is, once you've signed up to a common script, a common strategy, which has both civilian and military dimensions to it in an integrated fashion, to then say to all of our friends and partners, let's all step up to the plate to make this work -- and across the country of Afghanistan, not just in parts of it.

I'm optimistic that we're going to make some progress in Bucharest. I know the President has put in a lot of effort with a lot of European leaders up until now. We've been talking to some ourselves. And I think we should look forward to a good outcome because the people of Afghanistan deserve a good outcome.

If I could ask Mark Kenny for his question.

Q Mark Kenny from The Advertiser. Mr. President, both sides have stressed that the alliance is in perfect working order and good nick. But how can that be the case? How can the alliance remain unchanged, given that Australia has signaled new foreign policy with quite different positions from yours on things like Iraq, climate change and potentially over China?

PRESIDENT BUSH: I guess it depends if you're a half-glass empty guy or a half-glass full guy. It sounds like to me our foreign policy interests are aligned. You know, after all, we've committed to an international agreement that will be effective when it comes to greenhouse gases. The Prime Minister just defined his desire to help this young democracy in Iraq succeed. That's what we're for.

So I don't see differences when it comes to foreign policy. As a matter of fact, I see common agreement. And one reason why is, is we share the same values. And those values are more important than the people who actually occupy the office, by the way. Those are the values that allow 12 U.S. Presidents and 14 Australian Prime Ministers to be united in common goals. So I disagree with the assessment of whatever expert laid that out.

Steven Lee.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. I wonder if you could talk a little bit more about Iraq and how it's -- you mentioned criminal elements that are being fought against now. How concerned are you that the violence now reflects, in fact, a deepening political and civil, even ethnic conflict inside of Iraq? How much now are American forces being drawn into the fighting in the last just few hours even? And how is it going to affect your decision looming on the way ahead?

And if I could ask you both, please, to talk a little bit about the crackdown in Tibet and how you see that affecting relations with China. Thank you.

PRESIDENT BUSH: Any other subjects you want to wedge in there? (Laughter.) Repeat some of those things. You had about five different things. I'm getting old, Steven. Wait a minute, look -- yes, I talked about criminal elements. And one of those things that's been well known is that Basra has been a place where criminality has thrived. It's a port, a lot of goods and services go through there. And there was -- from the beginning of liberation, there have been criminal elements that have had a pretty free hand in Basra. It was just a matter of time before the government was going to have to deal with it.

And I haven't spoke to the Prime Minister since he's made his decision, but I suspect that he would say, look, the citizens down there just got sick and tired of this kind of behavior. Most people want to have normal lives. Most people don't like to be shaken down. Most mothers want their children to go to school peacefully, and yet that wasn't the case in Basra. And so I'm not exactly sure what triggered the Prime Minister's response. I don't know if it was one phone call. I don't know what -- whether or not the local mayor called up and said, help -- we're sick and tired of dealing with these folks. But nevertheless, he made the decision to move. And we'll help him.

But this was his decision. It was his military planning. It was his causing the troops to go from point A to point B. And it's exactly what a lot of folks here in America were wondering whether or not Iraq would even be able to do in the first place. And it's happening. Now, they're fighting some pretty tough characters, people who kill innocent people to achieve objectives. And, yes, there's going to be violence. And that's sad. But this situation needed to be dealt with, and it's now being dealt with -- just like we're dealing with the situation up in Mosul.

I have said in my remarks there's been substantial progress, and there has been. But it's still a dangerous, fragile situation in Iraq. And, therefore, my decision will be based upon the recommendations of Secretary Gates, the Joint Chiefs, as well as General Patraeus and Ambassador Crocker -- all aiming to make sure that we have enough of a presence to make sure that we're successful in Iraq.

And the reason why it's successful -- important to be successful in Iraq, because, one, we want to help establish a democracy in the heart of the Middle East -- the most volatile region in the world. Two, we want to send a clear message to Iran that they're not going to be able to have their way with nations in the Middle East. Three, that we want to make it clear that we can defeat al Qaeda. Al Qaeda made a stand in Iraq. They're the ones who said, this is the place where the war will take place. And a defeat of al Qaeda will be a major victory in this war against extremists and radicals. Four, we want to show what's possible to people. There are reformers all over the Middle East who want to know whether or not the United States and friends will stand with these young democracies.

And so this is vital for our national interests. And I'm confident we can succeed, unless we lose our nerve; unless we allow politics to get in the way of making the necessary decisions, which I have vowed to our military and our civilians in Iraq that that's not going to be the case so long as I'm the President. And I'm -- as I told you, this is a defining moment, and it's a moment of -- where the government is acting. And it's going to a while for them to deal with these elements, but they're after it, and that's what's positive.

Tibet -- he wants to talk to you about Tibet. (Laughter.)

PRIME MINISTER RUDD: I'll say one or two things about Tibet, and then we'll flick to an Australian. It's absolutely clear that there are human rights abuses in Tibet. That's clear-cut. We need to be up-front and absolutely straight about what's going on. We shouldn't shilly-shally about it. We've made our positions clear on the public record, the Australian government has, about the need for restraint in the handling of this. I think it would be appropriate for the Chinese government to engage the Dalai Lama or his representatives in a informal set of discussions about future possibilities, when it comes to internal arrangements within Tibet.

We recognize China's sovereignty over Tibet. But it is difficult, it's complex, and it will certainly be matters which I'll be raising when I visit China myself at the end of this visit abroad.

Q Mr. President, if I could --

PRESIDENT BUSH: Mr. Prime Minister, excuse me, Steven Lee is anxious on my view on Tibet. He couldn't have said it better, and that's exactly what I told Hu Jintao a couple of days ago, that it's in his country's interest that he sit down again with representatives of the Dalai Lama -- he, not personally, but to have his representatives do so -- and that we urged restraint. And I appreciate the Prime Minister's view and advice on dealing with this issue.

PRIME MINISTER RUDD: Paul Bongiorno.

Q Paul Bongiorno, Mr. President. As you noted, Australia will begin withdrawing 500 combat troops from southern Iraq. And I heard that you accept this decision, which did, as you say, play out in our election. But how does it fit with your view, expressed quite strongly again yesterday, that to withdraw troops at this time would be to retreat? And you've described our former Prime Minister as a "man of steel." I'm wondering how you'd describe Mr. Rudd.

PRESIDENT BUSH: Fine lad, fine lad. First of all, I didn't exactly say that. And by the way, we are withdrawing troops. It's called "return on success." And our intention is to have pulled down five battalions by July. Troops are coming out -- five brigades, excuse me -- troops are coming out, because we're successful. And so I would view the Australia decision as "return on success," returning home on success.

That's fundamentally different from saying, well, it's just too hard, pull them all out. That sends a different signal. This is a signal in which we're working collaboratively with the Iraqi government. They know our intentions, and they know we're not going to leave them.

In the very same speech, I talked about developing a long-term strategic relationship with Iraq, as well. And for those who didn't listen to the full speech, I will remind you that it's in our interests that we enter into such an arrangement. But a long-term strategic arrangement does not commit any future President to any troop level, nor does it talk about permanent bases. But it does talk about a joint strategic relationship to make sure that the Iraqi people know, and the Iraqi government knows that we're not going to leave them in the lurch.

And so we are taking troops out, just like the Australians are, because we're being successful. And his question -- Steven Lee's question was, well, are you going to bring any further out? Not, are you going to bring any out; are you going to bring any further troops out -- from that which we committed to do earlier. And the answer is, it depends on what our commanders say, and the folks in Washington say, and it depends upon conditions on the ground. His real question was, have the conditions changed such that you believe your commander is going to make a different recommendation that he might have two days ago? And I can't answer that question. I can only tell you what I'm going to do after we get back from NATO.

Thank you for coming. I've enjoyed it.

END

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Friday, March 28, 2008

Rally for Supporting Palestine

A Palestinian boy waves his national flag in front of huge portraits of leaders of the Palestine legal government during a rally in Gaza City on March 28, 2008.

Palestinians sit on the stairs of a building as they attend a rally in Gaza City on March 28, 2008.

Palestinian children sit in the trunk of a car in Gaza City on on March 28, 2008.

Palestinians attend a rally in Gaza City on March 28, 2008.

Thousands of people participated in today’s rallies in the Gaza Strip, where they were urging Arab leaders gathered in Damascus at the Arab League Summit to support Palestine.

Palestinian supporters shout slogans during a rally in Gaza City on March 28, 2008.
Palestinian supporters attend a rally in Gaza City on March 28, 2008.

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Wanted Terrorist in Syria

Mahmoud Abbas is received by Syrian President Bashar Assad March 28, 2008 in Damascus, Syria. Abbas will illegally attend the Arab Summit in Syria.

Looks like Abbas, is trying to shore up Riyad al-Malki red hands?

Abbas is wanted for global and domestic terrorism, among numerous other charges, like several counts of murder, attempting to overthrow a legal government, for example. He is highly dangerous and will do anything to get what we wishes, in collaboration with a foreign government.
Mahmoud Abbas is received by Syrian President Bashar Assad March 28, 2008 in Damascus, Syria.
Mahmoud Abbas is received by Syrian President Bashar Assad March 28, 2008 in Damascus, Syria. Syrian President Bashar Assad looks courteous but bored, over Abbas's usual flamboyance.

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Save Families, Build Homes

A view of Maskiot. (Archives)

Gaza evacuees in Maskiot can't build

28 March 2008
By
TOVAH LAZAROF

While the government is barring Gaza evacuees from building homes - even temporary ones - in this Jordan Valley settlement, the Interior Ministry has formally registered 12 people here as constituting Maskiot's official population.

Located in the isolated hilltops of the Valley, Maskiot, whose sole occupant until last year was a small religious pre-army academy, made headlines around the world in January 2007 when it was discovered that both the Prime Minister's Office and the Defense Ministry had agreed to allow some 30 Gaza evacuee families to move here.

But before the families could relocate from their temporary quarters in nearby Jordan Valley settlements, the approvals were rescinded in the face of international condemnation.

Nonetheless, six families from the former Gaza settlement of Shirat Hayam set up modular homes here with the help of private donors including the US-based One Israel Fund.

They started construction in November and six families moved into the large modular homes, known as caravillas, in January. Two other families had already relocated to two empty apartments in the school.

Spokesmen for the Prime Minister's Office, the Defense Ministry and the Civil Administration of Judea and Samaria have all said that any construction of private homes here, even modular ones, remains illegal.

The civil administration added that demolition orders have been issued against the six modular homes.

Still, in recent weeks, when the families went to register Maskiot as their legal address with the Interior Ministry, they encountered no problems. Clerks registered them as the official populace, because the site has been a legally registered settlement since the early 1980s, even though a permanent community never set down roots here.

And the Interior Ministry, which in 2006 made no mention of the settlement in its population count, has now listed it for the first time in its tally of people living in legal West Bank settlements. Unauthorized outposts are excluded from the list.

The site itself was empty until this winter, save for a dozen small white buildings that house the academy.

A Shirat Hayam spokesman, Yossi Hazzut, who now lives at Maskiot, said that while he had yet to register the community as his permanent address, other families had. "It was no problem," he said. "Maskiot is a legal address."

An Interior Ministry spokeswoman sounded surprised when asked by The Jerusalem Post why the settlement had been added to the list.

"It's a legal settlement. There is no reason why it can't be there," she said, adding that her office simply collected information it received.

A settlement cannot be on the list without the approval of the Prime Minister's Office, she said.

A spokeswoman for Ra'anan Dinur, director-general of the Prime Minister's Office, seemed similarly puzzled by the question about the presence of Maskiot in the population tables.

The Central Bureau of Statistics has always put Maskiot on its list but has never recorded that people live here on a permanent basis. Its data is one year behind that of the Interior Ministry.

Hazzut said he believed that the modular homes were legal because they were on land that was designated as school property.

He said he was not aware that there were demolition orders against the structures.

One Israel Fund executive vice president Scott Feltman, whose organization donated $10,000 to the modular homes project, said he believed it had legal approval and that he was unaware of any demolition orders.

A spokesman for the civil administration insisted that the orders had been issued, but refused to show a copy to the Post.

Jordan Valley Regional Council head Dubi Tal dismissed the demolition orders issue.

"There are many such orders in the Jordan Valley, mostly against the Palestinians. The civil administration is quick to issue them but slow to execute them," he said.

From his perspective, Tal said, the placement of the modular homes was legal because after the 2005 disengagement the project had been initially approved by both then-prime minister Ariel Sharon and then-defense minister (and current Transportation Minister) Shaul Mofaz.

Tal had previously told the Post the Maskiot project had gone through at least six phases of approval before it was halted in the winter of 2007.

It is possible that there are some minor technical legal problems with the homes, he said, which he assumed would get ironed out soon.

Should he be proved wrong and the civil administration or the government make an issue over the homes, the regional council would consider an appeal to the High Court of Justice to protect the families, Tal said.

"They have suffered enough," he said.

Hazzut added that the issue was not about permits and registration, but rather the lack of solutions for the Gaza evacuees, 31 months after they were forced to leave their homes.

"There is a personal story here of people who lost their homes," said Hazzut. "It's a 'mark of shame' for Israel as a nation that more then two years later most of the families still do not have permanent homes."

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Winger's terms of endearment focus on bilingual school

“Jews and Muslim’s are suppose to live together as friends and neighbors; we did this for thousands of years, until a war was waged against us from outside agitators‘. Now, we have a chance to live together like we should have in the first place, with a shower of blessings.”
-HRM Deborah

28 March 2008
By
DAVID BRINN

"When I come to Israel, I put on my cynic hat, so I don't stick out. But it's a little harder to do that here," said American actress Debra Winger Thursday while visiting the Hand in Hand Max Rayne Jerusalem School run by the Hand in Hand organization.

At the newly inaugurated sparkling Jerusalem campus - one of four Hand in Hand bilingual, multicultural schools in the country - the Academy Award-nominated actress, best known for her roles in 1982's Officer and a Gentleman and 1983's Terms of Endearment, sat in on a kindergarten class, joined students in folk dancing, and promoted the organization's efforts to bridge the gap between the Jewish and Arab population.

"It's facing the dilemma head on," said Winger, who was accompanied on her week-long visit to Israel by her 10-year-old son and her husband, actor, writer and director Arliss Howard.

"I was talking to one of the teachers at the Kfar Kara school and told him that must be changing the kids' lives. He said, 'They don't have to change, it's us that have to change, the parents have to change. The kids feel it to be totally natural.'

"And I think that's the beauty, when they start in kindergarten. I'm not here carrying a message. Every day when you see parents dropping their children off and saying good morning to each other and they leave their children here, I don't need anything more than that."

The 53-year-old Winger was first exposed to the Hand in Hand schools while giving a speech recently for the Jewish Federation in Florida. Asked to focus on the 60th anniversary of Israel, she spoke about her experience here during the Second Lebanon War when she was a judge at the Jerusalem Film Festival and the need of communication between the Jews and Arabs of the region.

"I was disillusioned and angry with both sides, and I decided to speak about that, even though I knew it could be last time I got a Federation gig," she told The Jerusalem Post in an interview after the tour of the school.

The speech was met with silence, except for one audience member who was standing and applauding, and trying to get others to join in. At the end, he approached Winger and introduced her to another speaker at the conference, Lee Gordon, who co-founded Hand in Hand 11 years ago.

"He told me that Lee has schools in Israel that deal with the very thing I was talking about," recalled Winger. "I took his card, and about a month later checked out the organization. Honestly, I thought 'It's another Jewish school that invited a few Arabs and, you know, Kumbaya… it will never really ultimately work.' But it looked different, so I e-mailed Lee and told him that someday it if worked out, I would like to visit. As it turned out in two weeks' time, my son was having a break, and Lee is a guy like 'now,' and so am I. And suddenly we were on a plane."

That impulsive quality to her character also contributed to Winger's decision to first visit Israel back in 1972 as a teenager.

"I had Orthodox grandparents and despite my parents being secular Jews, I had valued the rituals. I had always heard about Israel, but nobody in my family had ever gone, so I was really the one that went in 1972," said Winger.

"I was shocked - Israel was less Jewish than my parents… not true, seemingly less Jewish but it wasn't; it just had nothing to do with wearing a kippa."

Winger spent time on various kibbutzim and participated in a Gadna army preparation program designed for Diaspora youth. She then stayed on in Israel after her formal program was completed.

"I had my own experience, which was deeper I think. It made an impression. I was here five months and considered staying, but I really wanted to try this acting thing, and I wasn't fluent enough to dream I could be a Hebrew-speaking actress. So I had this dream to follow," she said.

Her next encounter with Judaism was not so pleasant, as she fell in love with a gentile, resulting in her grandmother disowning her.

"That's a pretty deep experience to have your grandmother sit shiva for you while you're still alive. It teaches you an aspect of the religion that's pretty tough," said Winger.

After years in the Hollywood spotlight, Winger has spent most of the last decade raising her children (she has two other sons, one with ex-husband Timothy Hutton). But she didn't see her break from her film career as a deliberate move.

"That's someone else's perspective that I walked away from something or made some big decision not to act. It's just that the movies were not particularly interesting to me. I think that if you look at that decade of films, I didn't miss all that much. I always say 'Tell me a film I should have been in?'"

Winger took to writing, and the stories she compiled will be published in June under the title Undiscovered. "They're stories from my life, observational essays," she explained.

While out of the public eye physically, Winger's name still drew headlines from the acclaimed 2002 documentary film by Rosanna Arquette - Searching For Debra Winger - in which Arquette talked to various actresses about the pressures they face as women working in the entertainment industry. Winger claimed that she's never seen the film and didn't know here name was going to be in the title.

"I really adore Rosanna and I respect what she did, although when she asked me for an interview for the film, she said it was going to be called State of the Art. When she finally called to tell me the title, I thought, 'I can't say no to her... and ultimately who's going to see it? It will be in a few festivals and go away," laughed Winger.

"I think it spoke to something that women in general are interested in. about aging and the different doors in your life that you go through, which is also what I wrote about in my book - accepting each transformation so you can enjoy it instead of always holding on to the last one."

Winger has slowly eased her way back into acting, just completing a role in a new Jonathan Demme movie called Here Today. She admitted that she's still getting used to working in a new environment which has changed since her heyday.

"Demme shot the film on digital video, a new way of working for me; I'm not sure I love it," said Winger. "You don't know what film he's making because it's really made in the editing room. There's no film, it doesn't cost anything to shoot, so they shoot a lot. It used to be holy between 'action' and 'cut.'

Now it's 'Okay, let's do another one.' There's a laziness that can be created in the acting that way. But it can also be a good thing by creating a casual quality."


Hand in Hand's Informational Video

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Palestine Military Keeping the Peace

Palestine military soldiers monitor a demonstration by Fatah terrorist and foreign activists about the separation barrier in the village of Al-Khader near the West Bank town of Bethlehem on 28 March 2008.

Palestine unified military is made of Muslims, Jews and Christians and how much they are appreciated.

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Throwing Stones at Glass Houses

Assaulting the Palestine Military

A Fatah terrorist demonstrator throws a stone at the Palestine military.
Fatah terrorist and foreign activists escape a cloud of tear gas thrown by Palestine military during a protest in Bilin, near the West Bank city of Ramallah on March 28, 2008.

A Fatah terrorist youth hurls a stone at Palestine military during a protest.
28 March 2008
The excuse this time is about the separation barrier in Bilin, near the West Bank city of Ramallah and to mark 'Land Day'.
'Land Day' commemorates the killing of six people during a 1976 protest against Israeli confiscations of land. This is nothing but reviving, old history to have a reason for terrorist actions?
While the issue of the separation barrier is resolved, except for the ongoing problem with Fatah’s continuous terrorist attacks that is actually keeping the wall up. Therefore, in this case, Fatah can kick themselves in the bottom.
As for Fatah and foreign activist attacking the Palestine military, I do not know of a single country in the world that would allow their military to be put under attack by not only terrorist, but also foreign activist committing crimes and working with a terrorist organization.

A Fatah demonstrator argues face-to-face with an Jewish Palestinian soldier apart of the Palestine military during the protest.
A Fatah demonstrator argues face-to-face with an Arab Palestinian soldier apart of the Palestine military during the protest.
Palestinian medics evacuate a wounded man during the protest, caused apparently from tear gas exposure.

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As a Page in History Being Rewritten

Synagogue restoration nears completion

29 March 2008

By ETGAR LEFKOVITS

It was a focal point of Jewish spiritual and cultural life in Jerusalem. It hosted the installation of the Ashkenazi chief rabbis of Palestine, and the historic addresses by Theodor Herzl at the turn of the century and by Rabbi Avraham Yitzhak Hacohen Kook over the fate of European Jewry before the outbreak of World War II.

And now, six decades after it was destroyed by the Jordanians in 1948, during the War of Independence, a page of Old City history is being revisited: the Hurva Synagogue is being rebuilt.

Shortly after the city's reunification in the Six Day War, the first in a series of plans was drawn up to create a new synagogue at the site. Deliberations dragged on for decades over a variety of building proposals, and a commemorative arch was constructed at the site in 1978, spanning the space where the Hurva once stood.

The 16-meter high stone arch - which became a prominent Jewish Quarter landmark as well as a great place to stop for photographs and a feature of many Jewish Quarter postcards - was a recreation of one of the four arches that originally supported the synagogue's monumental dome.

As a page in history is now being rewritten, the famed arch is being used in the reconstruction of the historic synagogue.

The Hurva once served as Jerusalem's main synagogue, and became the largest, grandest and most important synagogue in the Land of Israel.

Its Hebrew name, Hurva (ruin), marks its origins amid the ruins of an unfinished synagogue that had been destroyed at the site in 1721 by Arab creditors angered over an unpaid debt by the impoverished Jewish community.

The Hurva synagogue was built nearly a century and a half later by disciples of the prominent Jewish sage known as the Vilna Gaon.

Following its construction in 1864, the Hurva was the tallest building in the congested Jewish Quarter, its dome and that of the quarter's other main synagogue - Tifereth Yisrael - becoming a vivid and integral part of the city skyline in the second half of the 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries.

For the next 84 years, the structure became a center of Jewish spiritual and cultural activity, first under Ottoman and then under British rule.

Until the 1930s, most of the important events of the pre-state Jewish community in Israel took place in the Hurva, which maintained its place as Jerusalem's central synagogue.

It was also used for public assemblies and general celebrations, such as special prayers upon the coronation of King George V in 1910, and a public fast and day of prayer organized by hundreds of rabbis for the doomed Jews of Europe.

Ze'ev Jabotinsky organized a rally at the Hurva to enlist volunteers in the Jewish Brigade. It is also the place where the ceremony to hand over the flag of the Jewish Brigade was held on the day the British conquered Jerusalem in 1917.

Both the Hurva and Tifereth Yisrael were among 29 Old City synagogues demolished by the Jordanian Army during the 1947-1949 Arab-Israeli war.

The Jordanians blew up the Hurva two days after the Jewish Quarter fell into their hands.

"For the first time in 1,000 years not a single Jew remains in the Jewish Quarter. Not a single building remains intact. This makes the Jews' return here impossible," the Jordanian commander who led the operation reportedly told his superiors.

Sixty years later and after decades of planning and debate, the mammoth NIS 28 million building is expected to be completed by next year's High Holy Days, said Nissim Arzy, the director-general of state-run Company for the Reconstruction and Development of the Jewish Quarter, which is overseeing the project.

The plan to rebuild the synagogue, which received governmental approval in 2000, originally envisioned the state funding about 85 percent of the cost, or NIS 24m., with private donors footing the rest of the bill, Arzy said.

In the end, the government only paid NIS 11m., with the remainder of the funds donated by the Ukrainian Jewish leader Vadim Rabinovitch, a prominent businessman and philanthropist, who recently donated the golden menorah that now overlooks the Western Wall Plaza.

The reconstruction of the synagogue began at the end of 2005 after the state-run company received the required city building permits, and following the requisite pre-construction archeological "salvage excavation" at the site.

The dig uncovered finds dating back to the First Temple Period, as well as an underground ammunitions depot dating to the days and weeks before the synagogue's destruction in the War of Independence.

A closed tender was held among Israel's 10 biggest construction companies, and the company that submitted the most inexpensive offer was awarded the contract, Arzy said.

More than two years after construction got under way, the outside of the synagogue - including its famed dome - has been completed, almost exactly as it originally stood.

A ceremony marking the completion of the dome will be held at the site on April 15.

The reconstruction plan presented by the architect, Nahum Meltzer, stipulates rebuilding the Hurva Synagogue in its original format, almost stone for stone.

Previous proposals that were rejected included building a new synagogue with numerous modern architectural elements and whose dimensions were well beyond those of the original synagogue, as was a proposal to maintain the site in ruins as a memorial.

Workers will soon begin work on the interior, with everything from the prayer platform, or bima, to the Torah ark, windows, doors and chairs set to resemble the originals as much as possible.

"Obviously we understand that the chairs of today are more comfortable than how they were back then," Arzy said, saying that 21st century comforts would be taken into consideration.

"We want to make it an almost exact copy of what it was until 1948," he said.

When completed, the Orthodox synagogue will seat 200 people in the men's section, and 50-60 in the second-floor women's section.

Arzy said the goal was to make the Hurva synagogue not simply a place of worship but a center for world Jewry as it once was.

"We would like to see the Hurva back in all its former glory as both a synagogue and a center for World Jewry," he said.

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