In this mailing:
- Khaled Abu Toameh: Abbas: Shut Up or
I will Arrest You!
- Burak Bekdil: Turkey: Erdogan's
Obsession to Take Jerusalem
by Khaled Abu Toameh • July 17,
2017 at 5:00 am
- Critics
say the Palestinian Authority's (PA) Cyber Crime Law, which
permits the imprisonment of Palestinians for
"liking" or sharing published material on the
internet, paves the way for the emergence of a "police
state" in PA-controlled territories in the West Bank.
They also argue that the law aims to silence criticism of
Abbas and the PA leadership.
- "What
is laughable is that this law carries penalties that are
tougher than those imposed on thieves and sex offenders... the
law, in its present form, is designed to limit the freedom of
the media and punish people for simple matters." —
Journalist in Ramallah.
- This
latest dictatorial move in the PA-controlled territories might
also serve to remind the international community about the
current readiness of the Palestinian leadership for statehood,
and what such statehood would look like. In its current
incarnation, that state would fit in just fine with its brutal
Arab neighbors.
Palestinian
Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas. (Photo by Olivier
Douliery-Pool/Getty Images)
A new Palestinian law combating information
technology (IT) crimes has sparked a wave of protests from
Palestinian journalists and human rights organizations.
The controversial Cyber Crime Law, signed by
Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas on July 11,
permits the imprisonment of Palestinians for "liking" or
sharing published material on the internet.
Critics say the law paves the way for the emergence
of a "police state" in PA-controlled territories in the
West Bank. They also argue that the law aims to silence criticism
of Abbas and the PA leadership.
The new law comes on the heels of the PA's recent
decision to block more than 20 Palestinian websites accused of
publishing comments and articles critical of the PA leadership.
by Burak Bekdil • July 17, 2017
at 4:00 am
- Simply
put, Jerusalem's Judaic history dates back to thousands of
years before the birth of Islam, only in the seventh century
CE.
- As
an American friend delicately asked: "Isn't Turkey
supposed to be investing millions to help rebuild Gaza?"
- Not,
it seems, when Islamist ideology is involved.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan giving a speech in Ankara on April
17, 2017. (Image source: Getty Images)
Less than a year ago, Turkey and Israel agreed to
end their six-year-long diplomatic stand-off and officially
"normalized" their relations. They appointed ambassadors
Kemal Okem to Israel and Eitan Na'eh to Turkey, two prominent career
diplomats, who, since then, have been struggling actually to
normalize formally normalized ties. As some observers, including
your humble correspondent, cautioned in 2016:
"Erdogan had pragmatically agreed to shake
hands with Israel, but his ideological hostility to the Jewish
state and his ideological love affair with Hamas have not
disappeared; so the Turkish-Israeli 'peace' would not be easy to
sustain".
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