On 12 Jun., 15:32, "\"@'" <1...@iindnaavalid.invavvlid> wrote:
> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010 22:29:30 +0200, "Michael Weber"
>
>
>
>
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> <mich...@michaelweber.invalid> wrote:
> >"@' wrote:
> >> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010 12:08:25 -0700 (PDT), Patruljen
> >> <Patrul...@yahoo.dk> wrote:
>
> >>> On 10 Jun., 18:18, "\"@'" <1...@iindnaavalid.invavvlid> wrote:
> >>>> On Wed, 9 Jun 2010 12:55:45 -0700 (PDT), Patruljen
>
> >>>> <Patrul...@yahoo.dk> wrote:
> >>>>> On 9 Jun., 17:29, "Carl Alex Friis Nielsen" <cafn*mail.dk> wrote:
> >>>>>> "Patruljen" <Patrul...@yahoo.dk> skrev i en
> >>>>>> meddelelsenews:4925c070-f3b0-4a2d-bfee-c10a53f06b3d@k39g2000yqd.googlegroups.com...
>
> >>>>>>> Ahmed Musa, 10 years old, was shot in the head in July 2008,
> >>>>>>> after a demonstration against the construction of the separation
> >>>>>>> barrier in the West Bank village of Ni'lin. Today the
> >>>>>>> prosecution indicted the border police officer involved with
> >>>>>>> negligent manslaughter.
>
> >>>>>> Skel det forst s derhen at du er utilfreds med at de Israelske
> >>>>>> myndigheder
> >>>>>> sigter en af deres egne for at have beg et en forbrydelse ?
>
> >>>>> Nope. Hvis jeg har indvendinger, s svarer de nogenlunde til
> >>>>> BT`Selems.
>
> >>>>> "From the year 2001 until today, human rights group B'Tselem has
> >>>>> handled 35 cases of Palestinians who were injured or killed from
> >>>>> bullets fired by police officers and border police officers. Only
> >>>>> 16 of the cases were investigated, and of those, only two cases
> >>>>> resulted in indictments. One of the two is the case of Ahmed Musa."
>
> >>>> hvor mange sager har samme organisation "handled" som omhandler
> >>>> personer i Gaza som har affyret raketter mod israelske civilister ?
>
> >>>> mit g t ikke en eneste
>
> >>>> en s useri s organisation kan man kun foragte
>
> >>> Ja. Naturligvis m du foragte menneskerettighedsorganisationer. Det
> >>> er da klart -
>
> >> n dada,
>
> >> den traf vist,
>
> >> ensidig kritik af et land som forsvarer sine civile mod daglige
> >> raketangreb kritiseres, men ikke noget der bare ligner kritik af dem
> >> der affyrer raketterne!!!!!
>
> >> s danne organisationer har intet med menneskerettigheder at g re, de
> >> f rer politik og intet andet
>
> >Mage til vl skal man ikke lede l nge efter
>
> netop
Mon det nu også er det, som Weber mener, eller må du lige vride lidt
på tangenterne - der.
Ja. Det var ikke et spørgsmål -
> det er udelukkende vl sådanne en jede populistiske organisationer
> lukker ud
Du er afgjort ikke dygtig til at undersøge dine holdninger. Lad os
lige kikke lidt på facts, og indlede med denn helt centrale statemen;
" help create a human rights culture in Israel."[1]
B'Tselem (Hebrew: בצל×‎, "in the image of", as in Genesis 1:27) is an
Israeli non-governmental organization (NGO). It calls itself "The
Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied
Territories". The group was founded on February 3, 1989 by a group of
prominent Israeli public figures, including lawyers, academics,
journalists, and members of the Knesset.[1]
B'Tselem's stated goals are "to document and educate the Israeli
public and policymakers about human rights violations in the Occupied
Territories, combat the phenomenon of denial prevalent among the
Israeli public, and help create a human rights culture in Israel".[1]
In December 1989 the organization received the Carter-Menil Human
Rights Prize.[2][3] Its executive director is Jessica Montell.[4]
Focus "acts primarily to change Israeli policy in the Occupied
Territories and ensure that its government, which rules the Occupied
Territories, protects the human rights of residents there and complies
with its obligations under international law."[1]
Mission "to document and educate the Israeli public and policymakers
about human rights violations in the Occupied Territories, combat the
phenomenon of denial prevalent among the Israeli public, and help
create a human rights culture in Israel."[1]
B'Tselem was founded on February 3, 1989 by a group of prominent
Israeli public figures, including lawyers, academics, journalists, and
members of the Knesset.[1] B'Tselem's stated goals are "to document
and educate the Israeli public and policymakers about human rights
violations in the Occupied Territories, combat the phenomenon of
denial prevalent among the Israeli public, and help create a human
rights culture in Israel" with the primary objective being "to change
Israeli policy in the Occupied Territories and ensure that its
government, which rules the Occupied Territories, protects the human
rights of residents there and complies with its obligations under
international law."[1]
The NGO's key founders were:
Dr Daphna Golan-Agnon (academic and founding director of feminist
peace group Bat Shalom)
David Zucker (Knesset member for the Ratz party, one of the founders
of Peace Now movement)
Haim Oron (Knesset member for the Mapam party, one of the founders of
Peace Now movement)
Zehava Gal-On (Ratz party activist and future Knesset member for the
Meretz party formed through the merger of Ratz and Mapam)
Avigdor Feldman (civil liberties lawyer)
Dr Edy Kaufman (academic and civil liberties activist)
B'Tselem investigates in a number of areas related to the conflict. In
particular the following:
The accountability of police and military forces in the territories.
[7]
The use of administrative punishment.
The continued use of torture during interrogations, particularly by
the GSS.
The illegal policy of house demolition, as a form of collective
punishment, which is often justified for alleged military purposes.
Inequalities in the planning and building procedures which
discriminate against Palestinians Israeli-Arabs.
The legal status of residents of East Jerusalem.
The path and effects of the Israeli West Bank barrier and its legal
status.
Problems related to family unification and child registration.
Neglect of infrastructure and services.
Illegal Israeli settlements and the extreme closures placed upon the
Palestinian population of Hebron.
Breaches of international human rights law.
The water crisis in Palestinian areas.
Family separation.
Restrictions on movement, such as checkpoints roads, curfew and the
effect these have on the economy and medical treatment.
Israeli settlement land expropriation, settler violence and attacks on
Israeli civilians by Palestinian militants.
Gaza Strip - The scope of Israeli control, economic and social
decline, sonic booms, access restrictions, the firing of Qassam
rockets.
Use of force - beating and abuse, use of firearms and human shields.
Violations by Palestinians - attacks on civilians, harm to suspected
collaborators, death penalty in the Palestinian Authority.
Rights of workers from the territories.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
B'Tselem board members are:[8]
Co-chairs:
David Kretzmer, Professor of Law, Faculty of Law and School of Public
Policy, Hebrew University.
Gila Svirsky, Co-founder of Coalition of Women for a Just Peace.
Neta Amar: Lawyer, Legal Advisor for IHL Project, Diakonia and Staff
Attorney for Rabbis for Human Rights.
Anat Biletzki: Professor of Philosophy, Tel-Aviv University.
Orna Ben-Naftaly: Head of the Law and Culture Division and the
International Law Division, the Law School, the College of Management
Academic Studies.
Menachem Fisch: Professor of the History and Philosophy of Science,
Tel-Aviv University and Senior Fellow, Shalom Hartman Institute.
Tamar Hermann: Dean of Academic Studies, the Open University of
Israel, and Senior Research Fellow, the Israel Democracy Institute.
Amnon Kapeliouk: Journalist, Le Monde Diplomatique (Haaretz named
A.Kapeliouk as one of the founders of B'Tselem[9]).
Peretz Kidron: Journalist and Translator.
Menachem Klein: Lecturer in Political Science, Bar Ilan University.
Victor Lederfarb: Financial Administrator, the Association for Civil
Rights in Israel.
David Neuhaus: Jesuit Priest, Reverend, Lecturer in Religious Studies
at Bethlehem University and Seminary of the Holy Land in Beit Jala.
Danny Rubinstein: Journalist, Ha'aretz Newspaper.
Alla Shainskaya: Senior Staff Scientist, Weizmann Institute of
Science.
Ronny Talmor: Author and editor.
Oren Yiftachel: professor of political geography and urban planning,
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.
Rayef Zreik: Co-founder of Adalah, The Legal Center for Arab Minority
Rights in Israel, Lecturer at the Faculty of Law, Tel-Aviv University.
Board members have changed over the past 10 years. Four board members
from 1998 remain on the board in 2008.[10][11]
B'Tselem is independent and is funded by contributions from
foundations in Europe, Israel and North America that support human
rights activity, by private individuals in Israel and abroad, and by
the governments of some EU countries and the European Commission.[14]
According to B'Tselem, their donors include:[14]
British Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Christian Aid (UK)
Commission of the European Communities - 99,717 € per year (2007) [15]
DanChurchAid (Denmark)
Diakonia (Sweden)
Development Corporation Ireland
EED (Church Development Service, Germany)
Federal Department of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland
Ford Foundation (USA)
Foundation for Middle East Peace
ICCO (Interchurch Organisation for Development Co-operation,
Netherlands)
International Commission of Jurists, Swedish Section
Naomi and Nehemiah Cohen Foundation
New Israel Fund (Israel)
Norwegian Foreign Ministry
Shefa Fund
SIVMO (Netherlands)
Stichting Het Solidariteitsfonds (Netherlands)
Trócaire (Ireland)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Btselem
Se dog at få styr på dine facts?
>
> --
> Si vis pacem - para bellum-