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Aug 20, 2010
Jewish group adopts partial Israel boycott
STUDENT WORKSHOPS for the Palestinian Popular Conference, Oct. 29-31 in Chicago

The Conference’s primary goal is to empower our community in the US to assume a key role in reclaiming Palestinian human and national rights. As Palestinians, we have an obligation to become full participants in our people’s quest for freedom, self-determination and the return of Palestinian refugees to their original towns and villages. This is only possible is we collectively develop a principled, nonpartisan, and effective Palestinian student voice in the US.
There is a strong correlation between the effectiveness of Palestine-related political activism in the U.S., on the one hand, and the existence of vibrant and credible national Palestinian American institutions or networks, including student organizations.
The Palestinian Popular conference is a project that belongs to its participants; therefore we are soliciting student workshop proposals for the student track of the program.
Since our venue space is limited so is the number of workshops that we can accept.If you would like to lead a workshop at the national popular conference, please fill out the online form on our website, or complete the attached Word document and send it to students@palestineconference.
US Palestinian Community Network
Aug 19, 2010
Legal victory for BDS campaigners
Under international law, Israel's settlements on the occupied West Bank are illegal. The European Union, the United Nations and the International Court of Justice have all confirmed the illegality of the settlements, a position acknowledged by the majority of the world's nations. Given that well-established fact, it follows that companies which use illegally occupied land to produce and sell products of any kind are producing and selling illegal goods. It also follows that anyone buying such goods is helping to finance the ongoing illegal occupation of Palestinian land. This is the message that BDS campaigners have been trying to get across to the general public.
Every other weekend there is a small demonstration held outside Ahava, an Israeli-owned beauty and cosmetic store in London's trendy Covent Garden. It is held to protest against the sale of beauty products which are made in the illegal Israeli settlement of Mitzpe Shalem in the Occupied West Bank and made with mud taken from the Dead Sea near Kaliya. This happens without the permission of, or compensation for, the Palestinians to whom the land truly belongs.
In September and December 2009 four campaigners went into the Ahava store, tied themselves to two concrete filled oil drums and refused to leave. This resulted in the shop being closed down for several hours on each occasion. The "Ahava Four" were charged subsequently with two counts of trespass offences under section 68 and section 69 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994.
«هارفرد» تبيع أصولها في إسرائيل... ولا تقاطعها
أقدمت جامعة «هارفرد» الأميركية العريقة على بيع ممتلكاتها في إسرائيل، بما توازي نحو 40 مليون دولار. إسرائيل نظرت إلى هذه الخطوة على أنها مشاركة في حملة «تعريتها»، واستجابة من الجامعة لدعوات مقاطعة إسرائيل، رداً على جرائمها بحق الفلسطينيين والإنسانية عموماً. المتحدث باسم «هارفرد» جون لونغبرايك أكد لخدمة «ذي كايبل» التابعة لمجلة «فورين بوليسي» الأميركية أن هذه التغييرات «ليست سياسية البتة»، وإنما هي ناجمة عن «تغييرات في الممتلكات والأصول، وليست تغييراً في السياسة». وكانت الشركة التي تدير «هارفرد» أبلغت «الهيئة الأميركية للائتمان والتبادل المالي» أنها أقدمت على بيع كل أصولها وأسهمها» في الشركات الإسرائيلية، مثل شركة «تيفا» لصناعة الأدوية، وشركات تكنولوجيا مختلفة، خلال الربع الثاني من 2010، بما تقدر قيمته بـ39 مليون دولار. وتابع لونغبرايك إن «هارفرد» «لا تنأى بنفسها عن إسرائيل. ولكن الأخيرة لم تعد على لائحتنا للأسواق الناشئة، وإنما انتقلت إلى مؤشر أي.آيه.اف.اي، نتيجة النمو الناجح الذي حققته. وعليه أعدنا توزيع أسهمنا في تلك الأسواق الناشئة». وان قال «هارفرد» لا تزال تستثمر في إسرائيل، فإن لونغبرايك أحجم عن إعطاء تفاصيل، مكتفياً بالقول أن ما تم الحديث عنه «ليس سوى جزء بسيط من حجم أصول الجامعة المقدّرة بـ26 مليار دولار». ومع ذلك، رأت الجماعات المؤيدة للفلسطينيين داخل حرم الجامعة، والجامعات الداعية إلى «مقاطعة إسرائيل» في قرار «هارفرد» نصراً لقضيتهم. |
حملة في بروكسل لمقاطعة التمور الإسرائيلية
Aug 18, 2010
Ahlam M. Mohsen, Woman Who Threw Pie In Carl Levin's Face, Has Bond Set At $250,000
المقاطعة الأكاديمية لإسرائيل في برنامج ما وراء الخبر على قناة الجزيرة
Green tourism conference in Jerusalem – a JfJfP letter in protest
جدل حول التطبيع الفني بالمغرب
4 Palestinians to be tried for violating settlement boycott
The Palestinian Finance Ministry decided Tuesday to indict four merchants who violated the boycotted on products made in West Bank settlements.
The four Palestinians are expected to face harsh penalties.
The law that prompted the boycott, co-initiated by Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, rules that "anyone who trades in settlements products or cooperates or assists in their sale or import shall be imprisoned for 2-5 years and pay a fine of 10,000 Jordanian dinar (roughly $14,000)."
Moreover, the law states that Palestinians caught selling settlement products may have their license revoked and vehicle impouned.
Despite this, Fayyad's counterpart in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, said he believes the Palestinian Authority is not being firm enough with Israel.
Aug 17, 2010
Open Letter to John Lydon from the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign
Dear John,
Although you were born in Ireland, you may not be aware that on 12th August the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign (IPSC) launched its "boycott pledge" campaign, whereby over 140 (now over 160 and counting) Irish artists undertook "not to avail of any invitation to perform or exhibit in Israel, nor to accept any funding from any institution linked to the government of Israel, until such time as Israel complies with international law and universal principles of human rights."
Proportionally, the largest number of these artists are musicians: musicians of all kinds ranging from classical composers to sean nós dancers to death metallers to - yes - punk rockers, but all described without discrimination as musicians. I'm proud to be one myself.Some of these artists are starting out on their careers, and may be taking a risk in signing such a pledge: the reach of the Zionist lobby in the USA is long, and who doesn't want to be big in the States? Others are already household names, and can and do whistle at the risk.
Few of these artists waste time proclaiming their rebelliousness or their anarchism: they are natural-born rebels with historical awareness and a social conscience, and are prepared to put their reputations on the line to demonstrate it.
In calling for a boycott, they are contradicting the policy of the Irish government and of the European Union which is "not to support boycotts or sanctions of Israel at this time". Instead, these governments ignore Israel's crimes, offer it substantial trading privileges, and treat it like a European country and a model democracy - thus in reality demonstrating their complicity with an Apartheid state engaged in a pitiless process of colonial expansion and dispossession and slow genocide of the indigenous Palestinian people.
You, on the other hand, who explicitly claim to be "anti-government", apparently agree with the EU governments on this, because you plan to break the cultural boycott of Israel by performing in Tel Aviv on 31st August. You are also willing to play by the rules of the criminal Israeli government which, through its spokesman Nissim Ben-Sheetrit in 2005, stated that "We see culture as a propaganda tool of the first rank, and...do not differentiate between propaganda and culture."
John, do you really wish to be "a propaganda tool" for such a foul regime? Because, believe me, the Israeli state doesn't need to hi-jack your music or your words (just in case you do "protest" while you're there, as you've promised) - the very fact of your presence will be hi-jacked to prove how "normal" that abnormal state is.
But it's not too late: you can still cancel your trip to Israel, and join the ranks of those honourable artists who refuse to play along with Apartheid. The IPSC Cultural Boycott Pledge (http://www.ipsc.ie/pledge) is still open and you would be most welcome to sign it: we'll be waiting for you with open arms!
Sincerely -
Raymond Deane
(Composer, IPSC Cultural Boycott Officer)
Christians, Jews meet over boycott
JEWISH and Christian leaders have met in Sydney to heal the wounds caused by a call last month for Australians to boycott Israeli goods made in the occupied Palestinian territories.
The National Council of Churches in Australia called for Australians to consider the boycott at the request of Middle Eastern churches, but the Jewish community was outraged.
The president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, Robert Goot, wrote to the council saying the resolution was a ''most unpleasant surprise … we feel that we have been badly let down by people we have long thought of as our friends''.
Last week members of both councils, including heads of the Catholic and Anglican churches, archbishops Philip Wilson of Adelaide and Phillip Aspinall of Brisbane, met to restore relations.
Yesterday the councils, the leading organisations for the respective faiths, said in a joint statement that a ''serious exchange of views'' had helped Christian leaders better understand Jewish concerns and Jewish leaders better understand why the resolution was adopted.
Mr Goot would not comment further and the general secretary of the churches council, Tara Curlewis, said only that the statement showed the depth of the relationship between the groups. But the boycott resolution remained in place. They will meet again to work on a ''more comprehensive'' statement.
Public Image Ltd. To Play In Israel Despite Boycott
Israel has been boycotted by a broad range of artist in recent times, including Elvis Costello, Gil Scott-Heron and the Pixies. While most musicians are pulling out of shows due to concerns over the Israeli government’s treatment of Palestine, John Lydon has no such worries about bringing his recently revived Public Image Ltd. to the country.
“Of course, there are all sorts of terrible politics going on down there but there is just about all over the world,” Lydon said, in an interview with 6 Music. “You cannot separate yourself from your audience because of the political powers-that-be. I mean, I'm anti-government—I have been all my life no matter where I go—and I shall be making that loud and clearly proud once I'm in Israel."
How effective Lydon’s protest will be once he arrives in Israel remains to be seen, although he is likely to be unconcerned about raising the ire of people angered by him traveling there. "We've received a lot of hate mail, as it happens,” he claims. “[That] going to Israel is some kind of political faux pas. I say, 'Don't be so ignorant -- it's John speaking here and I'm going there to cause trouble and I will do it musically.'"
Iranian taekwondo fighter boycotts final, Israeli wins gold by default
Israeli taekwondo fighter Gili Haimovich, 17, wins gold medal at Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore when Iranian opponent refuses to compete against him in final.
Israeli taekwondo fighter Gili Haimovich, 17, won a gold medal at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore on Sunday on a technical victory after an Iranian fighter Mohammed Soleimani refused to compete against him in the championship match.
Haimovich waited several minutes until it was clear Soleimani would not appear before beginning his victory celebration.
Harvard not divesting from Israel
Harvard University sold off some of its investments in Israel but is not divesting itself from the Jewish state and the portfolio changes were not politically motivated, according to the university's spokesman.
Reports that Harvard sold off all of its holdings in Israel sparked immediate outrage across the Internet Monday morning, based on the news that the Harvard Management Company's most recent SEC filing revealed that it had sold stocks amounting to $39 million in Israeli companies such as Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., NICE Systems Ltd., Check Point Software Technologies Ltd., Cellcom Israel Ltd., and Partner Communications Ltd.
But Harvard spokesman John Longbrake tells The Cable that the filing shows only a change in holdings, not a change in policy.
"The University has not divested from Israel. Israel was moved from the MSCI, our benchmark in emerging markets, to the EAFE index in May due to its successful growth. Our emerging markets holdings were rebalanced accordingly," he said.
Harvard still is invested in Israel, Longbrake said, but he declined to go into specifics. He said the filing in question only represents a small portion of Harvard's overall portfolio, which is about $26 billion.
In other words, Israel's growth and development resulted in a status change whereby the stocks could no longer be considered "emerging market" holdings, requiring Harvard to rebalance its emerging market portfolio.
