In this mailing:
- Khaled Abu Toameh: The UN, the
"State of Palestine" and the Torture of Women
- Burak Bekdil: Erdoğan Is Wrong
on Syria. Turkey Cannot Get the Job Done.
by Khaled Abu Toameh • January
15, 2019 at 5:00 am
- This is the kind of
story that the "State of Palestine" does not intend
to raise during its chairmanship of the largest bloc of
developing countries at the UN. It seems that, from the point
of view of the Palestinian Authority leadership, Jbara's ordeal
does not fall within the category of human rights.
- Jbara's story has
barely attracted the attention of the international mainstream
media. As far as many foreign journalists covering the Middle
East are concerned, a Palestinian woman complaining about
torture in a Palestinian prison is not newsworthy. Had she
been detained by Israel, Jbara would have most likely made it
to the front pages of the world's leading newspapers and
magazines in a matter of minutes.
- The PA regularly
complains about human rights violations of Palestinians held
in Israeli prison for security-related offenses. But when the
PA's own security forces detain and torture a mother of three,
Palestinian leaders are found elsewhere -- like at the helm of
a UN bloc.
The
Palestinian Authority's recent arrest and torture of a Palestinian
mother of three is the kind of story that the "State of
Palestine" does not intend to raise during its chairmanship of
the largest bloc of developing countries at the UN. Pictured:
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the UN
General Assembly on September 27, 2018 in New York City. (Photo by
Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)
A Palestinian mother of three has accused the
Palestinian Authority (PA) security forces of torturing her and
threatening to rape her during the two months she was held in a PA
prison in the West Bank.
The accusation by the woman, Suha Jbara, 31, came on
the eve of PA President Mahmoud Abbas's visit to New York, where he
is scheduled to assume the chairmanship of the largest bloc of
developing countries in the United Nations, known as the
"Group of 77 and China."
As chairman of the group, which represents 134
nations, Abbas and the "State of Palestine" will
negotiate and co-sponsor proposals and amendments on various developmental,
humanitarian and legal issues that are on the agenda of the UN.
by Burak Bekdil • January 15,
2019 at 4:00 am
- In May 2015, the
secular daily newspaper Cumhuriyet published on its
front page a video and photographic evidence of arms
deliveries by the Turkish intelligence services to Islamist
groups in Syria. A month later, President Erdoğan himself
filed a criminal complaint against Cumhuriyet's
editor-in-chief and said, "He who ran this story will pay
heavily for it."
- Clearly, Erdoğan's
"militarily speaking, the so-called Islamic State has
been defeated in Syria. Yet we are deeply concerned that some
outside powers may use the organization's remnants as an
excuse to meddle in Syria's internal affairs" means
"outside powers should not meddle in Syria but Turkey
should."
- Erdoğan's plan is
merely about substituting jihadists hostile to him with ones
friendly to him.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's plan for Syria is merely about
substituting jihadists hostile to him with ones friendly to him.
(Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
Shortly after President Donald Trump's controversial
decision to pull out U.S. troops from Syria, a move that
exorbitantly pleased Turkey, Russia and Iran, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in a charm offensive, wrote an op-ed piece
for the New York Times, entitled, "Trump Is Right on
Syria. Turkey Can Get the Job Done."
Turkey, Erdoğan claims, is the only country with the
power and commitment to perform that task of protecting the
interests of the United States, the international community and the
Syrian people.
This claim is grossly wrong. Despite some
convergences, Turkey's interests in the Syrian theater are widely
different than those of the Western bloc of countries. Turkey's
ambitions over the future of Syria are largely sectarian
(pro-Sunni) and, therefore, a good recipe for further violence in
civil war-torn Syria and the potential slaughter of the Kurds, a
job Turkey can get done.
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