Sunday, October 13, 2013

Israeli troops fired from air Mavi Marmara raid 12:46 | 20\07\1392


حمله نظامیان صهیونیستی به کشتی مرمرهحمله نظامیان صهیونیستی به کشتی مرمره


Israeli troops fired from air Mavi Marmara raid 12:46 | 20\07\1392
An anti-war activist has revealed at a Turkish court on Thursday that Israeli commandos opened fire from a helicopter during a raid on a Gaza-bound aid ship three years ago, countering Israeli assertions that the soldiers had acted in 'self defence'.

Israeli marines stormed the Turkish-owned Mavi Marmara, part of a flotilla carrying aid to Palestinians, on May 31, 2010 to enforce a naval blockade of the Palestinian-run Gaza Strip. Nine activists were killed in clashes on board.

The trial in absentia of four retired Israeli commanders, including the ex-head of the army, opened in Istanbul last November and resumed on Thursday with testimony from those who were aboard and relatives of the dead.

Kenneth O'Keefe, an Irish-Palestinian former US marine turned anti-war activist who was on board the aid ship, told the court that Israeli soldiers had started shooting from the helicopter, killing several people.

"Within 5 to 10 minutes after the Israeli helicopter approached the ship, I ran into Cevdet Kiliclar's dead body on the deck, before any Israeli commando had boarded the vessel," O'Keefe said, referring to one of the Turkish activists.

"He must have been shot from the air. After seeing Kiliclar's dead body, I went upstairs to the top of the deck and saw several people lying on the ground, wounded or dead."

Monday, October 7, 2013

Al-Qaeda Claims Suicide Attacks in Northern Iraq

Al-Qaeda Claims Suicide Attacks in Northern Iraq

Al-Qaeda Claims Suicide Attacks in Northern Iraq
TEHRAN (FNA)- Al-Qaeda’s local branch in Iraq claimed responsibility for a spate of suicide attacks last month in the Northern self-ruled Kurdish region.
At least six security forces were killed and more than 30 people wounded in the September 29 bombings, RT reported.
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant said Monday on a militant website the attacks were in retaliation to statements made by the regional President Massoud Barzani expressing readiness to help Syrian Kurdish militias.

6 Taliban Militants Killed in Afghan Raids

6 Taliban Militants Killed in Afghan Raids

6 Taliban Militants Killed in Afghan Raids
TEHRAN (FNA)- Up to six militants were killed and 11 others arrested in security operations within the last 24 hours, the Afghan Interior Ministry said Monday morning.
"Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) and NATO-led coalition forces launched cleanup operations in Nangarhar, Laghman, Kunduz, Badakhshan and Kandahar provinces over the past 24 hours. As a result six armed Taliban were killed, two wounded and 11 others were arrested by the ANSF," the ministry said in a press release providing daily operational updates, Xinhua reported.
They also found and seized weapons, the statement said, without saying if there were any casualties on the side of security forces.
Figures released by the ministry showed more than 600 militants had been killed and nearly 270 others detained in a series of military operations launched since last month across the central Asian country.
The Taliban insurgent group, which has been waging an insurgency of more than one decade, has yet to make comments.

"Bandar ibn Israel"

"Bandar ibn Israel"

"Bandar ibn Israel"
TEHRAN (FNA)- The recent acts of political violence in the Middle East’s Levant are not unrelated. Car bombings in the predominantly Shia southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh; twin bombings targeting Sunni mosques in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli; an alleged chemical weapons attack in the suburbs of Damascus blamed on the Syrian government; a secret IDF operation across the Lebanese border foiled by Hezbollah; rockets lobbed by an Al Qaeda-related group into Israel; an IDF airstrike on a pro-Damascus Palestinian resistance group base in Lebanon… .
From one perspective, the common thread is the crisis in Syria, where a 29-month conflict has cemented divisions in the rest of the region and set the stage for an existential fight on multiple battlefields between two highly competitive Mideast blocs.
From another perspective, the common thread drawing these disparate crimes scenes together is the "culprit" - one who has strong political interest, material capabilities and the sense of urgency to commit rash and violent actions on many different fronts.
In isolation, none of these acts are capable of producing a "result." But combined, they are able to instill fear in populations, stir governments into action, and in the short term, to create the perception of a shift in regional "balances."
And no parties in the Mideast are more vested right now in urgently "correcting" the regional balance of power than the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the state of Israel - both nations increasingly frustrated by the inaction of their western allies and the incremental gains of their regional rivals Iran, Syria, Hezbollah and now Iraq.
Worse yet, with every passing month the "noose of multilateralism" tightens, as rising powers Russia, China and others offer protective international cover for those foes. Israel and Saudi Arabia are keenly aware that the age of American hegemony is fast declining, and with it, their own regional primacy.
Common foes, common goals
At the helm of efforts to "correct" the imbalance is Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud, the US's longtime go-to man in Riyadh - whose 22-year reign as Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Washington provided him with excellent contacts throughout the Israeli political and military establishment
Like Israel, Bandar has long been a vocal advocate of curtailing the regional influences of Iran and Syria and forging a neocon-style "New Middle East" - sometimes to his detriment.
When he all but disappeared from public view in 2008, one of the reasons cited  for Bandar's "banishment" from the royal circle of influence was that he had "meddled in Syrian affairs, trying to stir up the tribes against the Assad regime, without the king's approval."
The frustrated Bandar, who at the time officially headed Saudi's National Security Council, was also notably absent when Saudi King Abdullah paid a highly visible visit to the Syrian president in late 2009 to renew relations after four years of bitter tensions.
All that changed with the Arab uprisings in early 2011. Regime-change in Syria - according to an acquaintance who visited various prominent Saudi ministers (all key royals) in 2012 - suddenly become a national priority for the al-Saud family. According to this shocked source, the Saudis had come to believe that if the battle for control over Syria "is lost," the kingdom would lose its Shia-dominated Eastern Province where its vast oil reserves are concentrated.
That year marked Bandar's return to influence in the kingdom, and within short order he was promoted to head the powerful Saudi Intelligence Agency, known for its myriad links into the underworld of global jihadis.
But the kingdom's once-reliable western powerhouse ally, the United States, appeared to be withdrawing from the region. Highly sensitive to the fall-out over its aggressive interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq, Washington was shying away from the kind of overt leadership that the Saudis desperately needed to re-establish their equilibrium in the region.
Which is where Bandar comes into the picture. The former ambassador to Washington has the kind of relationships that go deep - no Saudi knows how to twist American arms better than he. But to push western allies in the desired direction, the Saudis were in need of an influential and opportunistic ally that was also passionately fixated on the same set of adversaries. That partner would be Israel.
Says a 2007 Wikileaks cable from the US embassy in Riyadh:
"We have also picked up first hand accounts of intra-family tension over policy towards Israel. Some princes, most notably National Security Advisor Bandar Bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz, are reportedly pushing for more contact with Israel. Bandar now sees Iran as a greater threat than Israel."
Bandar's ascendancy to his current position suggests more than ever that the Saudis, at least for now, have put aside their reservations over dealing with Israel. And Iran's election of a moderate new President Hassan Rouhani has brought urgency to the Saudi-Israeli relationship - both fearing the possibility of a US-Iranian grand bargain that could sink their fortunes further.
Putting wheels into motion
For Riyadh and Tel Aviv, Syria is the frontline battle from which they seek to cripple the Iranians in the region. None have been as ferocious in lobbying Washington on the issue of Syrian "chemical weapons use" and "red lines" as this duo - perhaps even setting up false flag operations  to force its hand. Since last Winter, says the Wall Street Journal :
"The Saudis also started trying to convince Western governments that Mr. Assad had crossed what President Barack Obama a year ago called a "red line": the use of chemical weapons. Arab diplomats say Saudi agents flew an injured Syrian to Britain, where tests showed sarin gas exposure. Prince Bandar's spy service, which concluded in February that Mr. Assad was using chemical weapons, relayed evidence to the US, which reached a similar conclusion four months later."
The following Spring, it was Israel's turn. In an article entitled "Did Israel Ambush the United States on Syria," Alon Ben David says:
"By stating that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had used chemical weapons, Brig. Gen. Itai Brun, the director of Israel's Military Intelligence Research Department, cornered the Americans. Washington finally - and very tentatively - admitted that such weapons had been used. If Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu planned to ambush the Americans, it was a phenomenal success. From an Israeli standpoint, this was a chance to test America's supposed "red line."
The Russians, however, have stood in the way of every effort to draw the US into intervening directly in Syria. In the past year, the Saudis and Israelis have tag-teamed Moscow, by turns cajoling, threatening and dangling incentives to shift the Russians from their immovable position.
Just last month, Bandar beat a path to Moscow to test Russian President Vladimir Putin's appetite for compromise. According to leading Lebanese daily As-Safir, a private diplomatic report on the Saudi prince's visit claims that Bandar employed a "carrot-and-stick" approach to wrest concessions from Putin on Syria and Iran.
In what has to be the most delusional statement I've heard in a while, Bandar allegedly told the Russian president: "There are many common values and goals that bring us together, most notably the fight against terrorism and extremism all over the world." He continued with a threat:
"I can give you a guarantee to protect the Winter Olympics in the city of Sochi on the Black Sea next year. The Chechen groups that threaten the security of the games are controlled by us, and they will not move in the Syrian territory's direction without coordinating with us. These groups do not scare us. We use them in the face of the Syrian regime but they will have no role or influence in Syria's political future."
According to the report, Putin responded to Bandar thus: "We know that you have supported the Chechen terrorist groups for a decade. And that support, which you have frankly talked about just now, is completely incompatible with the common objectives of fighting global terrorism that you mentioned. We are interested in developing friendly relations according to clear and strong principles."
Bandar ibn Israel: a terror Frankenstein
Chechen jihadis have, of course, turned up in Syria to fight alongside their brethren from dozens of other countries against the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the past two years.
The Saudi links go beyond jihadis though. Seventeen months ago in Homs - and barely a month after the battle over Baba Amr - 24 Syrian rebels groups sent an email to the externally-based Syrian National Council, complaining about the rogue behavior of the Saudi-funded Al Farouq Battalion. This is the group to which the infamous lung-eating Syrian rebel once belonged.
Alleging that Al Farouq was responsible for killing at least five rebels and fomenting violence against civilians and other fighters, the group wrote:
"The basis of the crisis in the city today is groups receiving uneven amounts of money from direct sources in Saudi Arabia some of whom are urging the targeting of loyalist neighborhoods and sectarian escalation while others are inciting against the SNC.?They are not national, unifying sources of support. On the contrary, mature field leaders have noted that receiving aid from them [Saudi Arabia] entails implicit conditions like working in ways other than the desired direction."
In a reprisal of his role in Afghanistan where he helped the CIA arm the Mujahedeen - who later came to form the backbone of the Taliban and Al Qaeda - Bandar is now throwing funding, weapons and training at the very same kinds of Islamist militants who are establishing an extreme version of Sharia law in territories they hold inside Syria.
Says an analyst at a Beirut-based think tank:
"These fighters, many of whom are ideologically aligned with Al Qaeda, are much more pragmatic today. They are ready to take funding, facilities and arms from the Saudis (who previously they targeted). There is no concept of a main enemy - it could be the US, Russians, Iranians, Saudis, Muslim Brotherhood. Their only priority is to use the new situation of instability in the region to form a core territorial base. They now think in Syria they have a real opportunity to regenerate Al Qaeda that they didn't have since their defeat in Iraq. In the Sinai too. Through a central Syrian base they are ready to converge with other regional actors from which they will move into Lebanon, Iraq and other places."
"Some of them know Bandar for a long time," says the analyst. "There have always been Saudi intelligence officers dedicated to oversee jihadist groups in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kashmir, Chechnya."
Though the Saudis tell Washington that their goal is to keep extremists out of power in Syria, elements in the US administration remain uncomfortable about where this could end. Says the Wall Street Journal, quoting a former official concerned about weapons flowing into jihadi hands: "This has the potential to go badly" - an understatement, if ever there was one.
Using Lebanon as a lever
Whereas western powers have sought to maintain stability on the Lebanese front, the Saudis - who lost influence in the Levantine state when Hezbollah and its allies forced the dissolution of a Riyadh-backed government in early 2011 - are not as inclined to keep the peace.
Paramount for Bandar's Syria plans is halting the battlefield assistance Hezbollah has provided for the Syrian army in key border towns which had become supply routes for rebels.
To punish Hezbollah and weaken its regional allies, the Saudis have used their own alliances in Lebanon to hammer daily at the Shia resistance group's role in Syria. One easy route is to sow sectarian tensions in multi-sect Lebanon - a tactic at which the conservative Wahhabi Saudis excel. Pitting Sunni against Shia through a series of well-planned acts of political violence is child's play for Saudis who have decades of expertise overseeing such acts - just look at the escalation of sectarian bombings in Iraq today as example.
This does not necessarily mean that Riyadh is involved in planning these operations though.
Says the Beirut analyst: "The escalation may be Saudi-run, but not necessarily the deed itself. (When they back these Islamist extremists in Lebanon), they know the software of these people. They know they will attack Shia and moderate Sunni, use rockets, car bombs, etc. They empower these groups being conscious of the consequences. These guys are predictable. And the Saudis also have some trusted men among these groups who will act in a way that will conform to Saudi interests and projects."
The diplomatic report on the Bandar's Moscow visit concludes: "It is not unlikely that things [will] take a dramatic turn in Lebanon, in both the political and security senses, in light of the major Saudi decision to respond to Hezbollah's involvement in the Syrian crisis."
Two bombings: one, targeting a Shia neighborhood, the second aimed at Sunni residents. On another front, the IDF launches a secret mission across the Lebanese border, swiftly thwarted by a Hezbollah counterattack. Soon after, an Al Qaeda linked group called the Abdullah Azzam Brigades (AAB), which last year acknowledged its fight against the Syrian state, launches four rockets into Israeli territory. Israel does not retaliate against this Salafist militia though. The IDF choses instead to strike at the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a group that supports the Resistance in Lebanon and Syria.
It appears that Israel, like the Saudis, has a message to relay to Lebanon: Hezbollah should stay out of Syria or Lebanon will bear the consequences.
The escalation of violence in the region - from Lebanon to Iraq - is today very much a Bandar-Israel project. And the sudden escalation of military threats by Washington against the Assad government is undoubtedly a result of pressures and rewards dangled by this duo.
While Putin may have told Bandar to take a hike when the he offered to purchase $15 billion in weapons in exchange for a compromise on Syria and Iran, the British and French are beggars for this kind of business. Washington too. With $65 billion in arms sales to the kingdom in process, the Obama administration is prostituting Americans for cold, hard cash.
Let there be no mistake. Bandar ibn Israel is going for gold and will burn the Middle East to get there.
By Sharmine Narwani
This commentary originally appeared on Al-Akhbar on August 28

Obama’s Grotesque Hypocrisy over Cluster Munitions

Obama’s Grotesque Hypocrisy over Cluster Munitions

Obama’s Grotesque Hypocrisy over Cluster Munitions
TEHRAN (FNA)- Syrian civilians and children should count themselves lucky that mass opposition in the US, the UK and much of the rest of the world to the idea of a US bombing blitz aimed at punishing the Syrian government for allegedly using Sarin gas in an attack on a Damascus neighborhood forced the US to back off and accept a Russian deal to get rid of Syria’s chemical weapons. Had the US attacked, primarily with a two- or three-day barrage of Tomahawk missiles, many of those rockets would likely have carried warheads containing BLU-97 cluster munitions, according to the United States Campaign to Ban Cluster Munitions — cluster bombs that would have assuredly killed or maimed many Syrian children.
This news should come as no surprise. The US made heavy use of deadly body-shredding cluster munitions in its invasion of Iraq in 2003 and during the subsequent bloody war and occupation there, as well as in its invasion of Afghanistan in 2001. Some 30 tons of cluster bombs were dropped or fired into urban neighborhoods of Iraq during the first few weeks alone of the 2003 US invasion of that country. Another 250,000 antipersonnel bomblets were dropped or fired into Afghani neighborhoods during the 2001-2002 US invasion of that country.
The US Campaign to Ban Cluster Munitions notes that the last documented US use of cluster munitions was in 2009. The organization writes that was:
"…in Yemen, when one or more Tomahawk cruise missiles loaded with BLU-97 bomblets struck the hamlet of al-Majala in the southern Abyan province. The strike killed at least 41 civilians and at least four more civilians were killed and 13 wounded by unexploded bomblets after the attack. Four years later, the site of the attack remains contaminated by cluster munition remnants."
In fact, cluster weapons, whether bombs dropped from planes, warheads fired by missiles, or shells fired by cannons or tanks, are among the deadliest and most untargetable weapons devised by man, holding the distinction of being particularly lethal to civilians and children. They work by having a larger bomb, warhead or shell deliver a payload of smaller "bomblets" to a target (each Tomahawk cluster warhead contains 166 of the lethal bomblets). These casings burst open, releasing the small devices, either on the ground, or lowered by little parachutes. Many burst on impact, sending small deadly spinning flechettes out in all directions to tear the flesh off of bones, maiming and killing anyone in the vicinity, while others routinely fail to explode, and then lie around, sometimes for years, until someone steps on one, or a child picks it up to see what it is. (Unexploded BLU-97s look like cardboard drink containers and are bright orange.)"'
I remember a visit to Laos in 1995. It had been over two decades since the US had been relentlessly bombing that small peasant country day and night, primarily with anti-personnel bombs, and the country seemed to have returned to its tranquil past. But walking around the sleepy capital city of Vientiane, I was puzzled at seeing a surprising number of young children of varying ages hobbling around on crutches with one and sometimes parts of two legs missing, or arms missing, often with faces disfigured. I asked a Lao official why there were so many such kids, and he explained they were victims of the "bombis" - small fragmentation bomblets dropped by US forces in the secret war on Laos that had not exploded, and that remained buried in farmers' fields until found or inadvertently disturbed by peasants or, more often, children working or playing. (The US has refused to help locate and clear these relics of war, claiming, ridiculously, that the Communist Laotian government is still secretly holding captured US soldiers-a position that the then US ambassador shamefacedly admitted to me was nonsense, but that was dictated by right-wingers holding onto the myth of long-suffering MIAs "abandoned" in Southeast Asia.)
When President Obama went on national television on Tuesday, Sept. 10, and passionately evoked images of suffering Syrian children dying on hospital floors from a Sarin attack in Damascus, he might have looked sincere to some, but most of those US viewers probably didn't realize that as commander in chief, he was asking them to support a bombardment of Syria which would have likely included thousands of similar bomblets that he surely knows would inevitably end up, over time, killing far more children in far more horrible ways than the Sarin attack that was his casus belli.
According to experts, 98% of the victims of cluster bombs are civilians, not soldiers (as horrible as the deaths or maiming of even soldier-targets are from these insidious weapons). And 40% of the victims are children.
Since 2008, there has been a UN Convention against the use of cluster weapons. It has been signed by 112 nations, 83 of which have ratified it. The US is a key holdout, along with China, Israel, Pakistan and Russia. The US in fact, not content to simply not sign the convention, is arguing strenuously against the treaty, claiming that its bomblets, at least by 2018, will boast a 1% failure rate, and thus supposedly would not pose the danger of leaving unexploded, attractive or interesting-looking bomblets scattered around the landscape for months or years, waiting to be picked up by curious children. It's an absurdly low failure rate the government is claiming, and is also wholly unprovable. (At least the US is consistent; it also refuses to sign a Convention banning landmines, which kill many civilians in the same way as antipersonnel bomblets.) Critics of the cluster munitions, like the US Campaign to Ban Cluster Weapons, say the failure rate of current US weapons like the BLU-97, the most common cluster anti-personnel device used by US forces, is closer to 30%. Besides, as demonstrated by the Yemen Tomahawk attack, a lot of the killing and maiming of civilians and children by cluster weapons happens when the bomblets explode as planned and "on target."
Talk about brazen hypocrisy! A child killed or injured by Sarin gas is an atrocity, to be sure. But so is a child whose body is turned into chopped meat, or who is painfully rendered limbless by an exploding BLU-97 weapon. Worse yet, the US has had the audacity to accuse the Syrian government of an atrocity for allegedly using cluster weapons, voting earlier this year in the UN to condemn Syria for use of a weapon which the US used liberally in its wars against Iraq and Afghanistan, and in massive amounts in Indochina, and which it stockpiles and continues to design for more lethality and destructiveness for future use by American forces, including in Syria. (The US also sells these horrific weapons of child destruction to its "allies," including countries ruled by dictators, like Saudi Arabia, which notably is known to be supplying arms to Syrian rebels.)
Of course, Americans themselves can be hypocritical about this stuff. Much horror was expressed after the Boston Marathon bombing over the use of BB pellets in the home-made pressure cooker bombs alleged to have been used, which killed several and lacerated the bodies of others. "How could people be so evil," many asked. And yet the US provides its military with weapons that are far more efficient at shredding bodies, using taxpayer money, and has done so for decades, with few Americans expressing outrage, even at the carnage the weapons cause among children. Some 270 million cluster bombs were dropped on Indochina between 1964-73, 80 million of which failed to explode and remain to pose a threat to civilians today.
Textron Defense Systems, the maker of the most widely used cluster bomb in the US arsenal, which contains the BLU-97 bomblets, and which is being sold by the US to Saudi Arabia and other "allies," offers this marketing motto for its deadly product: "Clear victory, Clear battlefield." Given that most of the "battlefields" these days are urban areas, not classic battle fronts, the "clear battlefield" concept bodes ill for civilians and children.
Obama would be standing on stronger ground in demanding that Syria's government eliminate its stocks of poison gas, if the US would sign onto the UN's 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions. His call for Americans to stand against the use of poison gas weapons by the Syrian government would not ring so hollow if he ordered the US military to destroy its massive stockpiles of cluster weapons, and vowed never to use them again.
By Dave Lindorff
This commentary originally appeared on the weekend edition of Counterpunch on September 20-22.

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Former ISA Chief: Iran to Send New Home-Made Satellites into Space

Former ISA Chief: Iran to Send New Home-Made Satellites into Space

Former ISA Chief: Iran to Send New Home-Made Satellites into Space

TEHRAN (FNA)- Iran plans to send a new home-made satellite into space in the next two months, former Iran Space Agency (ISA) Chief Hamid Fazeli said. Speaking on the sidelines of the opening ceremony of the World Space Week in Tehran (October 4-10) on Saturday, Fazeli announced that ISA has built the Tadbir (prudence) satellite in cooperation with Iran University of Science and Technology. He added that the Tadbir satellite is equipped with more advanced navigation systems and higher resolution cameras compared with the Navid (Promise) satellite which was also sent into orbit by the university in 2012. He also commented on the Zafar (Victory) satellite, saying that this satellite will be sent into orbit aboard the Simorgh carrier sometime next year. Early in September, a senior advisor to Iran's President Hassan Rouhani announced that Tehran is preparing to orbit a new home-made satellite, called Tadbir, in the near future. “As stated by Fazeli, the first satellite to be launched in the new government is called Tadbir,” Presidential Advisor and the new ISA Chief Akbar Torkan said. Earlier this year, Chancellor of Iran’s Sharif University of Technology Reza Rousta Azad announced that Iran would launch into orbit a new home-made satellite, called 'Sharif Sat', by the end of summer. “We are through with building Sharif Sat and the satellite is waiting for launch,” Rousta Azad told FNA in June. Reminding that several more satellites are waiting for launch, he expressed the hope that Iran could send Sharif Sat into orbit in the first half of the current Iranian year (which started on March 21). Rousta Azad said that Sharif Sat would orbit at a distance around 500 kilometers from the Earth, adding that the satellite would be launched on the back of home-made 'Safir B1' (Ambassador B1) carrier. Earlier this year, Fazeli announced that the country would send 6 new home-made satellites, mostly made by Iranian universities, to the space in the current Iranian year. "Based on the foreseen timeline, Fajr, Sharif Sat, Tolou, Zafar, and A-Test will be sent to the space by the end of the current year," Fazeli told reporters in Tehran. He said that Mesbah is also among the satellites to be sent into orbit this year.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Israeli spies operating in regional states

Israeli spies operating in regional states 1:01 | 13\07\1392
Ex-director of Israeli military intelligence says Israel has penetrated several Arab countries, notably Egypt







The former director of Israeli military intelligence, General Amos Yadlin, has revealed that its operatives have penetrated a number of Arab countries, notably Egypt.

Yadlin also named Tunisia, Morocco, Iraq, Sudan, Yemen, Lebanon, Iran, Libya, Palestine and Syria as places where Israeli agents are active.

Speaking to Israel's Channel Seven, he said the Military Intelligence Division has established spy networks for collecting information in Tunisia, Libya and Morocco which are able to have a positive or negative influence on the political, economic and social scenes in the countries.

The retired General did not give details of the exact nature of such networks but he did say that Israeli agents are most active in Egypt where they have been established since 1979.

Yadlin is the current head of the Institute of National Security Studies at the University of Tel Aviv and still has strong links with the security and political authorities in the Zionist state.

Solar power project in Gaza schools

Solar power project in Gaza schools 1:05 | 13\07\1392
Hamas government has inaugurated a first solar power project to generate electricity in Gaza schools







Ministry of Education and Higher Education in Gaza has inaugurated, in collaboration with Islamic Relief, the first solar power project to generate electricity in Gaza schools in a new challenge to the Gaza siege.

Solar energy equipment has been already installed, at Ihsan School in Khan Younis, which directly generate electricity.

It is predicted to start working in this station during the coming few days.

The project entails promotion of environmentally friendly alternatives especially that it constitutes an essential component of the Palestinian curriculum.

Dr. Osama Mozainy Minister of Education confirmed that this project came in light of the ministry's tireless efforts to overcome electricity crisis in the besieged strip especially that it negatively affects the Educational Process in the Gaza Strip.

He also pointed out to the impact of the siege on the Palestinian people lives in Gaza.

The minister said that in case the project has succeeded, it will be applied to large numbers of schools in Gaza Strip to provide a conducive study atmosphere for the students.

Israel threatens to demolish 10 more Palestinian wells

Israel threatens to demolish 10 more Palestinian wells 1:08 | 13\07\1392
Israeli army has delivered demolition notices to Palestinian residents south of West Bank relating to 10 wells







The Israeli army has delivered demolition notices to the Palestinian residents of Yatta village in the south of the West Bank relating to 10 wells, a tent and a barn.

All are alleged to have been built "without a permit".

Popular resistance activist Ratib Al-Jbour told Turkey's Anadolu news agency that the wells were sunk with the support of an international organisation to help villagers to water crops and give the goats water to drink.

"Israel's intention is to displace the residents to expand a settlement," he claimed.

All Israeli settlements are illegal under international law.

Al-Jbour did not specify the demolition date, but local Palestinians say that the occupation army usually turns up unexpectedly with their armoured bulldozers once property owners have been served with demolition orders.

Israel prevents the Palestinians from building in "Area C", which includes most of the city of Hebron.

The occupied West Bank was divided into three zones by the Oslo Accords.

Area A represents 18 per cent of the West Bank and its administration and security are controlled by the Palestinian Authority.

Area B represents 21 per cent of the West Bank and is administered by the PA but security is run by the Israeli occupation authorities.

Area C covers 61 per cent of the West and is subject to Israeli security and administration.

Call for Arabia to cancel deal with G4S


Call for Arabia to cancel deal with G4S 0:54 | 13\07\1392

G4S is supplying torture equipment used by Israeli investigators on Palestinian captives









The National Committee for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions against Israel has called upon Saudi Arabia to stop dealing with G4S because the security company is involved in Israel's violations of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories.

According to the BDS Committee, G4S has won contracts to offer security services to Muslim pilgrims in Makkah for the next year.

The Committee affirmed its belief that the British company is complicit in maintaining the Israeli occupation.

It said the G4S was supplying "torture equipment" used by Israeli investigators on Palestinian captives inside the Zionist regime's jails, including children.

Many Palestinian and international human rights organisations have proved that G4S is involved in human rights abuses based on evidence that it supplies the Israeli occupation authorities and illegal Jewish settlers with equipment used in violating the rights of Palestinians.

Other organisations lobbying for justice for the Palestinians, including Britain's Friends of Al-Aqsa, have also written to the Saudi authorities calling on them to cancel the G4S contract.

One third of basic medicines unavailable in Gaza

One third of basic medicines unavailable in Gaza 11:27 | 12\07\1392
The closure of the Rafah Crossing has multiplied the deterioration of Gaza situation







Closure of the Rafah Crossing has raised many poblems, including gradual decreases in the health ministry's stockpile of medicine Spokesperson of the Palestinian health ministry in Gaza Ashraf Al-Qedra has said that the health sector is facing a crisis as basic medicines are starting to run out.

"The severe Israeli blockade on the Gaza Strip, which has been imposed for seven years, targets human medical services," he said.

"The closure of the Rafah Crossing has multiplied the deterioration of our situation."
Al-Qedra said that the Rafah Crossing is the minor, or what "could be called alternative", passage because delegations that bring medicines and food usually pass through it.

According to Al-Qedra, the closure of the Rafah Crossing has raised many problems, including gradual decreases in the ministry's stockpile of medicines.

He explained that previous shortages of medicines due to the blockade were compensated via the Rafah Crossing.

According to the spokesperson, 154 kinds of basic medicines, from a list of 460, have now run out.

These include medicines for serious illnesses such as chronic diseases, blood diseases, cancers, painkillers and antipyretics.