In this mailing:
- Khaled Abu Toameh: The Palestinians'
Own Goals
- Uzay Bulut: Turkish
'Justice': Life in Prison for Journalists; Leniency for ISIS
Terrorist
by Khaled Abu Toameh • April 29,
2019 at 5:00 am
- "We reject
normalization and adopt the approach of resistance until the
liberation of the entire Palestinian territory." — Statement
rejecting job offers, issued by Progressive Democratic Student
Pole, affiliated with the radical PLO group Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).
- "Resistance"
is a term used by Palestinians to describe the "armed
struggle" against Israel, which includes carrying out
various forms of armed attacks against Israelis. When the
students talk about the "liberation of the entire
Palestinian territory," they are actually saying that
they want to destroy Israel because they do not believe in its
right to exist.
- A video of the
protest at Bir Zeit University posted on social media shows
dozens of angry students surrounding the companies'
representatives, and chanting: "Normalization [with
Israel] is Treason."
- This is just another
example of how the movement for boycotting Israel is causing
damage to Palestinians. Perhaps the real motive of the people
promoting these boycotts of Israel is not to help the
Palestinians at all, but, like terrorist groups, such as Hamas
and Islamic Jihad, to destroy Israel.
On April
24, Palestinian student protestors at Bir Zeit University
(pictured) expelled representatives of two major Palestinian
software development companies who were invited to campus as part
of the university's Annual Hiring Day. The protestors accused them
of engaging in "normalization" with Israel. In other
words, the students attacked, humiliated and expelled Palestinian
companies that came to offer them jobs at a time when the
Palestinian economy is facing a crisis and thousands of young
Palestinians remain unemployed. (Image source: Oromiya321/Wikimedia
Commons)
On April 24, two Palestinian software development
companies came to Bir Zeit University, north of the West Bank city
of Ramallah, to offer jobs to Palestinian students. The companies
were invited to campus as part of the university's Annual Hiring
Day -- an event aimed at helping students find jobs with major
Palestinian firms.
The event, however, turned ugly when students
protested against the presence of the representatives of the two
companies on campus. The protesters expelled the company
representatives from the university premises after accusing them of
engaging in "normalization" with Israel. In other words,
the students attacked, humiliated and expelled Palestinian
companies that came to offer them jobs at a time when the
Palestinian economy is facing a crisis and thousands of young
Palestinians remain unemployed.
by Uzay Bulut • April 29, 2019 at
4:00 am
- "The magnitude
of these punishments, and the fact that the court failed to
implement a related, binding ruling of the Constitutional
Court, also raise fundamental questions about the ability of
the [Turkish] judiciary to uphold the constitutionally
protected right to freedom of expression." — Harlem
Désir, Representative on Freedom of the Media for the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).
- "The court
decision condemning journalists to aggravated life in prison
for their work, without presenting substantial proof of their
involvement in the coup attempt or ensuring a fair trial,
critically threatens journalism and with it the remnants of
freedom of expression and media freedom in Turkey." —
David Kaye, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Promotion
and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Opinion and
Expression.
- Sadly, such public
denunciations have not worked. At least 144 intellectuals are
languishing in Turkish jails for their work or political
views.
In
February, three dissident Turkish journalists accused of
"attempting to overthrow the constitutional order" were
sentenced to life in prison. Harlem Désir (pictured), the OSCE
Representative on Freedom of the Media, said that the punishments
"raise fundamental questions about the ability of the
[Turkish] judiciary to uphold the constitutionally protected right
to freedom of expression." (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty
Images)
Two recent criminal cases in Turkey underscore
Ankara's disturbing double standard when it comes to the concept of
justice.
In February, three dissident Turkish journalists
accused of "attempting to overthrow the constitutional
order" -- for their alleged "involvement in the 2016 coup
attempt" against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- were sentenced
to life in prison.
In March, Neil Christopher Prakash, an Australian
ISIS terrorist caught in 2016 crossing the border into Turkey from
Syria, was given a light sentence by the Kilis High Criminal Court.
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