Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Rescuers rush to Pakistan-Afghan quake zone

Aid workers in two countries try to reach remote regions a day after massive quake kills more than 300 people.

 | Humanitarian crisesAsiaIndiaPakistanAfghanistan
Rescuers are rushing to deliver relief aid to victims of a magnitude 7.5 earthquake that hit northern Afghanistan and Pakistan, killing more than 300 people over a wide swath of mostly mountainous terrain.
Thousands spent the night outdoors in near-freezing temperatures reluctant to go back inside for fear of aftershocks, Pakistani media reported on early on Tuesday.
"Rescue work is ongoing, and tents, blankets and sleeping mats are being provided," Latif ur Rehman, a Pakistani disaster management official, told Reuters from the northwestern city of Peshawar.
Pakistan's military and civilian authorities dispatched several helicopters to affected areas to assess damage and run rescue operations, the National Disaster Management Authority said.


The total death toll stood at 343 with at least 260 people killed in Pakistan and at least 83 more in Afghanistan, according to official reports from the two countries. More than 2,000 people have been injured.
Al Jazeera's Kamal Hyder, reporting from Kabal Swat in the Swat Valley area, said rescue teams have been fanning out in the area to try to assess the extent of the damage following the quake.
At least 130 people have been reported killed in the Swat Valley area, he said, adding that many of the schools in the area have been closed for fear that it could collapse in case of major aftershocks. At least 1,900 homes and other buildings have been damaged. 
"People are also trying to retrieve whatever they can from the rubble," he said. Over 2,000 tents have been distributed for the homeless. 
The death toll could climb in coming days because communications were down in much of the rugged Hindu Kush mountain range where the quake was centred.
Landslides in mountainous northern Pakistan over the weekend caused by heavy rain and snow had already left thousands of tourists stranded.
Afghan women walk towards a damaged house, a day after the earthquake that also affected the Afghan capital, Kabul [AP]
Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister of Pakistan, cut short his visit to the United Kingdom to fly home to deal with the emergency.
"We will try our best to deal with this disaster using our own resources," he said.
Meanwhile, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani urged his countrymen to help those in need.
"I demand all Afghans, my fellow countrymen, to help each other if they are in the affected areas," he said. 
Al Jazeera's Jennifer Glasse, reporting from Kabul, said rescuers are facing challenges in getting to the mountainous areas of Afghanistan.
"It's further complicated by the fact that some of the areas are controlled by the Taliban," she said while adding that the armed group has also called on Afghans and aid organisations to extend help to victims. 
In an audio message on Tuesday, Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansoor urged his fighters to avoid harming public facilities, and to "treat people right", while reassuring unity among the ranks of fighters. 
Hundreds of houses destroyed
The earthquake struck almost exactly six months after Nepal suffered its worst quake on record on April 25.
The quake was 213km deep and centred 254km northeast of Kabul.
In Afghanistan, where rescue and relief work is likely to be complicated by security threats created by an escalating Taliban insurgency, more than 80 people were reported dead in several provinces including Badakhshan, where hundreds were killed in mudslides last year.
Hundreds of houses were destroyed, creating additional hardship with winter temperatures setting in.
Hikmat Fasi, a resident of Parwan Province in northern Afghanistan, said the quake caused a lot of damage in the area.
"We are safe, but I saw a lot of buildings collapse," Fasi said. "It [earthquake] caused severe damage to our area. We are just praying."
Strong tremors were also felt in the Indian and Pakistani capitals, New Delhi and Islamabad, residents said, as authorities in the two neighbouring countries issued warnings for strong aftershocks.
The United States offers help
The initial magnitude 7.5 quake on Monday afternoon was followed by several aftershocks, according to the US Geological Survey.
The US and Iran were among countries that offered to provide humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan.
John Ebel, chairman of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Boston College in the US, said the depth of the earthquake had limited its severity and meant damage was likely to be spread broadly rather than focused in one disaster zone.
But he said landslides on the unstable slopes of the mountainous region could pose a major problem.
At least 253 people were reported killed in Pakistan following the quake [The Associated Press]












Natural disasters are one of the most common causes of deaths in the world. And because of this, so often we overlook major events such as this. It's all over the news for one day, then we forget about it less than a week later. Reporters and journalists strive to make the news real to us, and to have us become emotionally attached to everyone on the Earth. Aljazeera usually does a good job against bias and coming across as an attack upon another person or people. With a case such as this, bias doesn't really play much of a factor because this isn't a conflict with multiple opposing sides.


"Aljazeera." 27 October 2015. Aljazeera Media Network. 27 October 2015. <http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/10/rescuers-race-reach-pakistan-afghanistan-quake-zones-151027033642367.html>. 

Monday, October 19, 2015


How does Israel stop Palestinians from protesting?


Rights groups say Israel resorts to 'preventive arrests' to quell Palestinian protests inside the Green Line.

Mya Guarnieri | 19 Oct 2015 07:59 GMT | Middle East, War & Conflict, Palestine,Battle for Jerusalem, East Jerusalem

Palestinian minors' legal rights are being violated by Israeli authorities, according to human rights activists [Getty]

Israeli police came to activist Adan Tartour's home in Jaffa at half past midnight on October 7,and pounded on the door. When the Tartours opened it, police said that they had an arrest warrant.

Adan Tartour, 18, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, was put under arrest for "suspicion of violence and terror" - only because she'd signed up to take a bus to a protest in Nazareth.

Tartour, and other activists, were detained on suspicion of planning "illegal" demonstrations.

"They had an arrest warrant for me and my father," Tartour explains, adding that this was the case with other female detainees. "They were arrested with their fathers… It's humiliating and chauvinistic," she told Al Jazeera.

She and her father were taken to a local police station before being transferred to Nazareth, where they arrived at 4:30 in the morning. During the interrogation, which began at 5:30am, police repeatedly told Tartour that she "is a shame to her family" and that her actions are "not good for her family".

She felt that this orientalist appeal to "family honour" was an attempt to dissuade her from protesting.

"But what they don't understand is that our [Palestinian] families stand by their daughters," she says.

RELATED: Intifada or not, something powerful is going on

Rights groups say that dozens of Palestinians are being detained in what they describe as a wave of "preventive arrests" that reflect Israel's attempts to quell Palestinian resistance against its excessive use of force against protesters and the extrajudicial killings of Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

According to Adalah, the Legal Centre for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, the detainees have been subject to preventive arrests before they attended demonstrations. Like Tartour, most of those detained have no criminal record.

As of today, between 160 to 200 Palestinian activists have been arrested either before or during protests, according to Adalah. Of those detained, 40 are still being held as Israeli authorities seek to lengthen their imprisonment.

Sawsan Zaher, a lawyer with Adalah, says that these arrests are illegal. "According to Israeli law, you cannot arrest a person based on the fear that in the future they might commit a crime," she explains, adding that stopping people from protesting is a "violation of their right to freedom of expression".

It's not only demonstrators and their family members who are being locked up. Several bus drivers who attempted to transport protesters to Nazareth - but were turned back by police outside of the city - were later arrested.

"Police claimed that the drivers themselves had participated in an 'illegal' demonstration," Zaher says, even though the protest "did not need authorisation in the first place" and despite the fact that the buses did not actually reach the protest sites.

The buses were also impounded. As of October 13, the vehicles were still in police custody.

Not only have the courts upheld requests to extend the activists' detention, but they have also, at times, accepted highly questionable "evidence".

"Judges referred to onions [found on demonstrators] as an indication that the protesters meant for a violent demonstration," Zaher explains. "We have never seen onions being referred to as a legal defence."

Onions are sometimes used as temporary treatment for exposure to tear gas, which Israeli military and police forces regularly use on peaceful Palestinian demonstrators.

Zaher adds that judges have also detained Palestinian citizens based on investigation material to which she and other defence attorneys do not have access.

In one case, a minor who doesn't know Hebrew was being held on the basis of a "testimony that was written in Hebrew" and signed by the child.

Minors' legal rights are being violated in other ways, as well.





A new generation hits the streets in Palestine


According to Israeli law, minors' parents should be informed and are allowed to be with their child during questioning. Children may also have a social worker present, and minors should not be interrogated after 10:00pm.

Lawyers have seen some or all of these rules ignored by Israeli authorities during this wave of arrests.

Farah Bayadsi,a lawyer representing a number of activists and minors who were detained, echoes similar views about police preventing detainees from getting the legal counsel they are entitled to according to Israeli law.

"A police officer intervened when I was giving a 14-year-old teenage [girl] legal consultation before her interrogation, as [provided for in] the law. The policeman kicked me out of the office and told me that my time was up," Bayadsi says.

OPINION: It's time to challenge the status quo in Palestine

For some, the recent events are reminiscent of the Israeli military regime that ruled over Palestinian citizens of the state from 1948 until 1966.

Shira Robinson, an associate professor of history and international affairs at George Washington University and the author of Citizen Strangers: Palestinians and the birth of Israel's liberal settler state, remarks, "There were tonnes of preventive detentions" of Palestinian citizens of Israel between 1948 and 1966. "It was the name of the game."



She offers the example of Israeli authorities' attempts to stop the commemoration of the Kafr Qasim massacre, which took place in October of 1956.

In the days and nights before the anniversary, "Israeli authorities would round up known activists ahead of time. That was standard fare".

Zaher says that it's unnecessary to look that far afield. She remarks that the manner in which Israeli police and courts have handled protesters points to a fundamental difference in the way the state treats and views its Palestinian citizens versus its Jewish ones.

Ultimately, she says, Israeli authorities handle Palestinian citizens similarly to Palestinians in the occupied territories: "It doesn't matter where you are - if you're Palestinian, you're an enemy and you're a threat."

The Israeli legal system, Zaher continues, "is based on a perspective of a Palestinian ... as an alien. When they are viewed as an enemy and this is anchored in the law, then you have the legitimisation to do anything".

RELATED: 'Israel is a terrorist state'

While Adan's father was released early morning on October 8, her detention was upheld and extended by an Israeli court. After four days, she was let go with the caveat that she might be taken in for additional questioning, and under the condition that she stay away from Nazareth for two weeks.



She is also "forbidden from joining protests".

And that's the ultimate goal, according to Tartour and others: The Israelis want to frighten Palestinian citizens and thus stop them from demonstrating.

Reflecting on her experience, Tartour is troubled by a number of things, particularly the treatment of minors, the court's role in upholding and extending detention, and the state's attempts to depict Palestinian protests as illegal.

When Tartour appeared in court and her detention was extended, Tartour recalls: "The judge said because of what's happening in the state ... they couldn't interfere with the police's work. So what is the courts' job?









Aljazeera being middle-eastern and probably predominately Muslim, will definitely show a bias judgment towards the Israeli forces as they kick out Arabs from their homes, which they have held for generations. Israel does seem to be heavily portrayed as the enemy within this scenario and this article. And I very much agree with the cases brought up against Israel over the human rights violations and extrajudicial killings that seems to be multiplying across the state. Israel cannot just waive the rights to every human being just because someone is Palestinian. Israelis are allowing their past conflicts with Palestine to continue to affect their judgement and actions today, which will result in another war, and more unnecessary killings. 

Guarnieri, Mya. "Aljazeera." 19 October 2015. Aljazeera Media Network. 19 October 2015. 

         <http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/10/israel-stop-palestinians-protesting-
         151018063934914.html>.  

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

NATO warns Russia after jet strays into Turkey

Alliance calls Russian incursion an "extreme danger" and urges Moscow not to attack Syrian rebels and civilians.

 | Middle EastTurkey-Syria borderTurkeyRussiaSyria
NATO has condemned Russian incursions into Turkish airspace as an "extreme danger" and demanded that Moscow halt all attacks against the Syrian opposition and civilians.
Counting the Cost: How is Russia financing its war in Syria?
The alliance summoned the ambassadors of its 28 member states on Monday for an emergency meeting to respond to what Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg called "unacceptable violations of Turkish airspace".
"[We] strongly protest these violations of Turkish sovereign airspace and condemn these incursions into and violations of NATO airspace. [We] also note the extreme danger of such irresponsible behaviour," NATO said after the emergency meeting.
US Secretary of State John Kerry said his country was "greatly concerned" about the incursion over the weekend.
"We are greatly concerned about it because it is precisely the kind of thing that, had Turkey responded ... it could have resulted in a shootdown, and it is precisely the kind of thing we warned against," Kerry said during a visit to Chile.
'Mistake'
Earlier, Turkey's prime minister said Russia had described its warplane's violation of Turkey's airspace as a "mistake" while describing the country's entry into the conflict in Syria as an escalation.
Ahmet Davutoglu, speaking in a live interview on HaberTurk TV on Monday, said that Turkey's rules of engagement were clear, whomever violates its airspace.
A Russian aircraft entered Turkish airspace near the Syrian border on Saturday, prompting Turkey to scramble two F-16 jets to intercept it and summon Russia's ambassador in protest.
"The Turkish armed forces are clearly instructed. Even if it is a flying bird, it will be intercepted," Davutoglu said.
He warned Turkey's enemies and allies not to infringe its airspace, but he dismissed the notion of tensions with Russia.
"The Syrian issue is not a Turkey-Russia crisis," he said.
"Our channels with Russia remain open," he said, hoping that Moscow would give up on "wrong attitudes".
Turkish warning
Feridun Sinirlioglu, Turkey's foreign minister, contacted his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, warning him not to repeat similar incidents.
Turkey and Russia remain on opposing sides of the conflict, the latter being one of the few allies of President Bashar al-Assad, while the former backs a solution excluding the Syrian leader. 
The presence of planes from both Russia and the US-led coalition in Syrian airspace is "fraught with danger," the United Nations warned on Monday.
"What we are seeing now is a lot of different countries and different
coalitions operating in the skies above Syria," UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.
"I think it creates a situation that is fraught with danger and very delicate as we had seen on the issue of the violation of airspace with Turkey."
Dujarric stressed that "this really should refocus people's attention to finding a political solution" to the Syrian conflict, which has already killed more than 240,000 people.
Against this backdrop, Syrian activists told Al Jazeera that Russian air strikes have hit areas at the Turkish border.
They reported strikes targeting the northwestern village of Bernas and Oubeen and on Yamadiya displacement camps.
Russia said the aerial campaign, which began on Wednesday, was aimed against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group and other "terrorist organisations".
But Western officials said Russia was failing to distinguish between ISIL fighters and more moderate rebels in Syria.
Russia has also been accused that many of its strikes led to civilian casualties , a claim that Moscow denies.



As we all know, Aljazeera is an organization from the middle east. Areas where tensions with Russia have been on both ends of the spectrum. Their past experiences are most definitely going to influence their writing and representation of Russia. That being said, my opinion on the matter is that Russia's involvement is making the conflict worse. They have vocalized their support for the Assad regime, and their strikes have been targeting Syrian rebel groups who are opposing Assad, not simply the ISIL fighters that Russia stated they would attack exclusively. Now, a large number of rebel groups have formed an alliance to combat the Assad regime backed by Russia and Iran because of the involvement of the Russian army. These groups are also opposed to ISIL, and so fight on multiple fronts. If Russia continues to target these rebels, then they are killing the opposition to ISIL.
"Aljazeera." October 6th, 2015. Aljazeera Media Network. October 6th 2015. <http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/10/nato-warns-russia-jet-strays-turkey-151005155403930.html>.