Thursday, June 28, 2007

Israeli President Katsav to Resign to Avoid Rape Charges

From Al Jazeera English:

Moshe Katsav, Israel’s president, has signed a plea bargain that will force him to resign but includes no rape charges and entails no jail time, Meni Mazuz, Israel’s attorney-general, said.

In the space of a year, Katsav has sunk from being “Israel’s number one citizen to a convicted sex offender,” Mazuz said on Thursday at a news conference.

Kinneret Barashi, a lawyer for one of the victims, expressed outrage at the plea bargain and a women’s rights’ advocate said it would discourage other women from complaining about sexual crimes.

Barashi said her client “feels she is a victim for the second time”.

Zahava Gal-On, a politician and women’s rights campaigner, accused Mazuz of moral cowardice.

Gal-On said: “Victims of sex crimes will believe they do not have any shield.”

Abrupt end

Israel’s high-level officials, including the prime minister, have been increasingly implicated in scandals.
Read more:

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Alleged Egyptian ‘Mossad Spy’ Found Dead in London

From Al Jazeera English:

An Egyptian billionaire who allegedly spied for Israel in the 1970s has been found dead outside his home in London.

Ashraf Marwan, the son-in-law of Gamal Abdel Nasser, a former Egyptian president, “lost his balance” while standing on his balcony on Wednesday and fell to his death, Egyptian state media said.

British police said only that they were looking into the death of an Egyptian man in central London, and it was being treated as “unexplained” but not suspicious...

Yom Kippur ‘tip-off’

Gad Shimron, a former Mossad officer turned historian, said Marwan had warned Israel hours before the Egyptian attack in 1973.

“We know now, from testimony given by Israeli spymasters and made public years after the Yom Kippur War, that Marwan was the man who tipped off the Mossad,” he said.

According to The Times, a UK newspaper, Marwan offered his services to Israel in 1969, going on to provide information on Egypt and the Arab world.

He worked as a senior information official for both Abdel Nasser and Anwar Sadat, Abdel Nasser’s successor as president.
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Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Los Angeles Times Feature: Jerusalem: Struggle for the Heart of a Holy City

Monday, June 25, 2007

Carter: Bush Administration’s Refusal to Accept Hamas’ Election is “Criminal”, Hamas Far More Organized than Fatah

From the Associated Press:

Former President Jimmy Carter accused the U.S., Israel and the European Union on Tuesday of seeking to divide the Palestinian people by reopening aid to President Mahmoud Abbas’ new government in the West Bank while denying the same to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

Carter, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who was addressing a human rights conference in Ireland, also said the Bush administration’s refusal to accept Hamas’ 2006 election victory was “criminal.”

Carter said Hamas, besides winning a fair and democratic mandate that should have entitled it to lead the Palestinian government, had proven itself to be far more organized in its political and military showdowns with Abbas’ moderate Fatah movement...

Carter said the U.S. and others supplied the Fatah-controlled security forces in Gaza with vastly superior weaponry in hopes they would “conquer Hamas in Gaza” — but Hamas routed Fatah in the fighting last week because of its “superior skills and discipline.”
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Sunday, May 20, 2007

Los Angeles Times: Tensions rise again at UC Irvine

Here is an excerpt from a Los Angeles Times article about the incident at UC Irvine last week where an unidentified FBI agent assaulted a Muslim student by pushing him with his car.

Senior Yasser Ahmed said a silver Ford Taurus followed him as he drove a 24-foot moving van from a nearby parking lot to UC Irvine’s Free Speech Zone to pick up an exhibit sponsored by the Muslim Student Union. The group had sponsored a weeklong presentation, “Israel: Apartheid Resurrected,” to protest that country’s policies against the Palestinians.

Ahmed, 21, said he got out of the truck, walked to the car and asked the driver why he was following him. The driver did not respond, Ahmed said, and he tried to snap a photo of the license plate with his cellphone camera. At that point, Ahmed said, the car nudged him with its front bumper and he got out of the way. He was not injured.

The man behind the wheel drove off but was stopped almost immediately by a campus police officer, who had responded to cries for help from Ahmed and other students. The driver identified himself as an FBI agent “who was doing surveillance,” Henisey said.

On Friday, Ahmed, an economics major and lifelong Orange County resident, said he was still reeling.

“He didn’t open his window and didn’t let me know who he was. He never said anything,” Ahmed said. “All he had to say was that he was FBI or law enforcement and this wouldn’t have happened. I was frightened. He pushed me with the car, which had tinted windows and then tried to drive away. What’s one supposed to think?”

Henisey said campus officers were interviewing witnesses.

“There are potential criminal allegations, and we’re still not certain what happened,” he said. “We’re trying to determine if there was an assault and if the vehicle was used.”
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Saturday, May 19, 2007

FBI Agent Assaults UCI Student by Pushing Him with His Car

The FBI is using unnecessarily hostile tactics to thwart freedom of speech at UC Irvine. An excerpt from an Orange County Register article:

UCI economics student Yasser Ahmed said he was driving a borrowed truck up onto the Ring Road near the library loading dock Monday night, on intending to haul away the wall, when he noticed a silver Ford Taurus with blackened windows following him.

Ahmed said he stopped the truck in view of other campus observers and stood in front of the Taurus, trying to look through the blackened windshield and asking the driver to identify himself. When he would not speak, Ahmed said he tried to take a photo of the car’s license plate with his camera phone.

“He could have just rolled down his window and said, ‘I’m an FBI agent,’ and that would have been the end of it,” Ahmed said. “There was nothing improper going on.”

Instead, according to Ahmed, the driver revved his engine threateningly and began pushing him backward with the car’s front bumper. Ahmed said he then began calling for help, and dozens of other students ran over to assist.

“I was frightened,” Ahmed said. “I felt I could have been killed or seriously injured if I hadn’t jumped out of the way.”

Sociology student Marya Bangee, a member of the Muslim Student Union, said the incident was frightening.

“The car was revving its engine to look as intimidating as possible,” Bangee said. “I thought it was going to come and hit the (mock Palestine) wall.”

Eventually, the car roared off, according to witnesses, chased by students on bicycles and a campus police car. Later, Ahmed said a police officer told him that the car had “cold” license plates, meaning they could not be checked through normal computers.

The next morning, Ahmed said, he went to the campus police station and was told by the police chief that the man in the car was an FBI agent.

Read more:

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Occupation 101 DVD Released in North America

Occupation 101 is a documentary film on the root-causes of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

A message from the producers of Occupation 101:


Dear Friends and Supporters

It is with great pleasure that we announce the Official DVD release of Occupation 101 for sales in the United States and Canada! That is right… Our Canadian brothers and sisters will also be able to purchase our film (we worked hard to make it happen…other markets/regions will soon be announced, please be patient with us :).

To purchase the DVD please visit www.occupation101.com

We chose to release our film on this day the 15th of May – to remember and honor the struggle of the many innocent victims of displacement, oppression, and unfortunate circumstances since before 1948. We have devoted many years of our lives to make sure that we present to you our best work in a most sincere and honest way – and with the best in artistic creativity.

Our goal is to raise awareness on the tragedy of Israel and Palestine through the medium of film so that we can re-educate millions of people in North America and across the world about a conflict that is most widely misunderstood. Give us 90 minutes of your time, and your reality will never be the same again – you will not only be informed, but inspired to take action!

Thank you so much for your continued support and may God Bless you all.

Peace,
Occupation 101

Please support these brothers’ noble efforts and purchase a DVD today:

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007

BBC: Red Cross Condemns Israeli Occupation of East Jerusalem

An excerpt from a BBC article about a confidential Red Cross report that was leaked to the press:

The international Red Cross has privately accused Israel of reshaping Jerusalem to further its own interests, in violation of international law.

A leaked ICRC report says Israeli policy has far-reaching humanitarian consequences for Palestinians living under occupation in East Jerusalem.

Israel captured East Jerusalem in 1967, and the territory is regarded as occupied land under international law.
Read more:

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Monday, May 14, 2007

New York Times: Israeli Riddle: Love Jerusalem, Hate Living There


An except from a New York Times article:

ISRAEL is facing a challenge it never expected when it captured East Jerusalem and reunited the city in the 1967 war: each year, Jerusalem’s population is becoming more Arab and less Jewish.

For four decades, Israel has pushed to build and expand Jewish neighborhoods, while trying to restrict the growth in Arab parts of the city. Yet two trends are unchanged: Jews moving out of Jerusalem have outnumbered those moving in for 27 of the last 29 years. And the Palestinian growth rate has been high.
Read the rest of the article:

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Friday, May 04, 2007

Palestinian Christian: Why Israel is after me

Azmi Bishara, a Palestinian Christian who was a member of the Knesset until last month wrote this op-ed in the Los Angeles Times.

A few excerpts from the op-ed:

More than 20 Israeli laws explicitly privilege Jews over non-Jews. The Law of Return, for example, grants automatic citizenship to Jews from anywhere in the world. Yet Palestinian refugees are denied the right to return to the country they were forced to leave in 1948. The Basic Law of Human Dignity and Liberty — Israel’s “Bill of Rights” — defines the state as “Jewish” rather than a state for all its citizens. Thus Israel is more for Jews living in Los Angeles or Paris than it is for native Palestinians.

Israel acknowledges itself to be a state of one particular religious group. Anyone committed to democracy will readily admit that equal citizenship cannot exist under such conditions.
...
I have certainly ruffled feathers in Israel. In addition to speaking out on the subjects above, I have also asserted the right of the Lebanese people, and of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, to resist Israel’s illegal military occupation. I do not see those who fight for freedom as my enemies.
...
Why then does the U.S. government continue to fully support a country whose very identity and institutions are based on ethnic and religious discrimination that victimize its own citizens?
Read the full op-ed piece:

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Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Laila Al-Arian: My Father, 9/11 Scapegoat

Laila Al-Arian wrote this heart-wrenching post on The Huffington Post on Monday about civil rights abuses suffered by her father Sami Al-Arian at the hands of prison guards. While the length of the post may be formidable, it is a very important read.


My Father, 9/11 Scapegoat
by Laila Al-Arian

“If they can kill each other during Ramadan, they can appear before the grand jury. I am not going to put off Dr. Al- Arian’s grand jury appearance just to assist in what is becoming the Islamization of America.”

-- federal prosecutor Gordon Kromberg

“The conditions under which Dr. Al-Arian has been detained both during his pre-trial detention, and since his sentencing appear to be unacceptably harsh and punitive.”

-- Amnesty International


My father, a Palestinian professor named Sami Al-Arian, was arrested over four years ago on trumped up terrorism charges and submitted to a prosecution over the course of six months that bordered on the farcical. Though he was ultimately acquitted by a jury of the most serious charges against him, the Bush administration has prolonged his imprisonment indefinitely. My father now languishes in a Virginia jail, another victim of the demagogic politics of the so-called war on terror.

Many have wondered why my father would be targeted so vigorously, especially after the government lost a case that cost $50 million. But as with its firing of the eight federal prosecutors who “chafed” against its radical agenda, the administration of President George W. Bush has injected its politics into the system, prolonging my father’s imprisonment to punish him for the humiliation his acquittal caused them.

Last month, my father completed a 60-day hunger strike to protest his continued imprisonment that left him in such a weakened state he was confined to a wheelchair. Soon after receiving medical treatment, he was transferred to a Federal Correctional Institute in Petersburg, Virginia. Upon my father’s arrival, a prison guard remarked while strip-searching him: “Where are you from? Afghanistan?” Though my father refused to answer the demeaning question, the guard repeated it several times. He went on:

“It doesn’t matter where you’re from. If I had my way, you wouldn’t be in prison. I’d put a bullet in your head and get it done with. You’re nothing but a piece of s***.”

This is not the first time this guard harassed my father. In January, he told him: “You’re a terrorist. I can tell by your name.”

This time there was a witness to the abuse, though he wasn’t exactly a friendly one. Upon hearing his underling’s outburst, the lieutenant in charge took my father aside and shackled his arms and legs. The shackles were so tight my father lost sensation in his extremities for the duration of the four-hour trip to his final destination, a detention center in Alexandria. On the way, the lieutenant joined in the abuse, unleashing a stream of obscenities at my father and repeatedly telling him to “Shut the f*** up.” When they arrived, the lieutenant violently shoved my father against a wall.

The human rights group Amnesty International has condemned the government’s treatment of my father. “The conditions under which Dr. Al-Arian has been detained both during his pre-trial detention, and since his sentencing,” Amnesty wrote in a February letter to the Attorney General, “appear to be unacceptably harsh and punitive.”

My father immigrated to the United States in 1975 and eventually earned tenure as a computer engineering professor at the University of South Florida. As the son of Palestinians forcibly removed from their land after the creation of Israel in 1948, he considered it his obligation to bring attention to the plight of the Palestinian people from his position of influence in the United States. He held conferences and published literature to tell the story of Palestinians living under occupation.

His activism earned the ire of some of the most reactionary figures of the right, from self-declared “terror experts” like Steven Emerson to Bill O’Reilly, whose expertise on Middle Eastern affairs apparently does not extend to the falafel.

(See here, here and here to learn about Emerson’s long history of hysterical, discredited claims.)

As the shrill cries for my father’s prosecution intensified after 9/11, the Bush administration arrested him. According to an anonymous FBI source, Attorney General John Ashcroft personally ordered the indictment against my father, a mandate that puzzled the many career professionals assigned to the case. The political nature of the charges was apparent from the beginning. A jury empaneled by the federal government would reach the same conclusion three years later, concluding that the Bush administration’s case was not much of a case at all.

But first my father would suffer under extremely restrictive, inhumane conditions clearly meant to psychologically break him before trial, including being placed in solitary confinement for 27 months. At one point, he was denied phone calls for six months, and while convicted felons were allowed to hug their families, my father, a pre-trial detainee, had to visit us behind glass. Even then, he was strip-searched before and after our visits. The cards were stacked against us.

When my father’s trial finally began in June 2005, the government presented 71 witnesses, including nearly two dozen from Israel, paraded before the jury for sheer emotional effect. Four hundred phone calls out of half a million the government recorded during a decade of relentless, indiscriminate surveillance of my family were also presented. The prosecutors acted out the phone calls on the 13th floor of a courtroom in downtown Tampa, giving new meaning to the phrase political theater.

The government’s evidence against my father largely consisted of speeches he gave, magazines he edited, lectures he presented, articles he wrote, books he owned (4 out of 5,000), conferences he organized, rallies he attended, and news he heard. In one particularly bizarre instance, the prosecutors presented as evidence a conversation a co-defendant had with my father in a dream.

Some of my father’s detractors say that his criticism of Israel was overly strident. Often they deliberately de-contextualize his remarks, made nearly two decades ago, to undermine the credibility of the Palestinian narrative they have long sought to suppress. But whatever you think about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, you hopefully agree that the criminalization of political speech is un-American and violates the letter and spirit of the Constitution.

Because the government based its case on my father’s expressed political views, our lawyers rested without presenting a single witness. Our defense was the First Amendment.

On Dec. 6, 2005, my father was acquitted of 8 of the 17 charges against him, though the jury voted 10 to 2 for full acquittal. Those holding out for conviction were the only two who listed themselves as readers of the Tampa Tribune, a paper which had slandered him for over a decade. Two of my father’s three co-defendants were fully acquitted; the jury did not return a single guilty verdict in over 100 charges. The verdict was a testament to the hollow nature of government’s case--an especially strong statement in the midst of post 9/11 hysteria.

Following the trial, the government had the option of dropping the charges against my father, but chose not to, once again revealing the political nature of his case. At the same time, they decided to casually drop tax-evasion charges against the founder of Hooters whose jury split evenly on his conviction.

Facing the prospect of a new trial that would drain my family emotionally and financially, my father decided to plead guilty to one charge of nonviolently supporting a designated terrorist group. In return, the government signed a plea agreement promising to drop the remaining charges, recommend the minimum sentence (which would have basically amounted to time-served) and allow my father to walk free on the condition that he leave the country. Disregarding the prosecutors’ recommendation and dismissing the jury’s verdict, the judge in the case gave my father the maximum sentence, which pushed his release date to this month.

Sadly, our story does not end there. An overzealous federal prosecutor with a documented record of bigoted remarks against Muslims, Gordon Kromberg, is trying to force my father to testify before a grand jury in Virginia in direct violation of his plea agreement. This is a ploy to bring further charges against my father and prolong his imprisonment -and our suffering--as much as possible. Kromberg himself bitterly referred to the plea agreement as a “bonanza” for my father.

Shortly before the Muslim observance of Ramadan began last October, Kromberg revealed an ulterior political motive behind his prosecution. When my father’s attorney requested to delay a prison transfer during the holy month, a time he would have liked to spend with visits from his family, Kromberg responded:

“If they can kill each other during Ramadan, they can appear before the grand jury. I am not going to put off Dr. Al-Arian’s grand jury appearance just to assist in what is becoming the Islamization of America.”

Kromberg’s racist outburst clearly calls his objectivity into question. Another reason my father has been reluctant to testify before a grand jury is because we fear Kromberg is setting up a perjury trap. The prosecutor did just that with another Muslim defendant in Virginia, who was acquitted by a federal judge. Following his acquittal, Kromberg summoned him to testify before a grand jury and charged him with making false statements when he didn’t like his answers. The man, Sabri Benkhala, is now facing 25 years in prison.

My father has endured a decade of surveillance and government harassment, a draining six month trial, and the demonization of his entire family by self-serving right-wing demagogues, all the while hoping his nightmare would end. It should have when he was acquitted by a jury and the government promised his freedom. Surely, the fulfillment of that promise is not too much to ask.

(To learn more about Sami Al-Arian or to join the campaign for his freedom, visit freesamialarian.com)

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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

New York Times: Egyptian Nuclear Engineer Is Charged With Spying for Israel

An excerpt from a New York Times article:
An Egyptian nuclear engineer who worked for the country’s Atomic Energy Agency has been arrested and charged with spying for Israel, the government authorities said Tuesday.

A government statement said the engineer, Muhammad Sayyid Saber Ali, had delivered “important and secret information” about the agency and about one of two nuclear reactors in Egypt to “Israeli intelligence elements” in exchange for about $20,000 transferred to a bank account.
Read more:

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Sunday, March 18, 2007

Nicholas Kristof: Talking About Israel

Pulitzer Prize winner and New York Times op-ed columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote a piece surprisingly critical of the Zionist state and the approach that American politicians take with regard to it.

Here is an excerpt from the article:

Democrats are railing at just about everything President Bush does, with one prominent exception: Mr. Bush’s crushing embrace of Israel.

There is no serious political debate among either Democrats or Republicans about our policy toward Israelis and Palestinians. And that silence harms America, Middle East peace prospects and Israel itself.
Read more (unfortunately, you will need a subscription to TimesSelect to access the article):

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Saturday, March 10, 2007

Olmert Planned for Invasion of Lebanon Four Months in Advance

From British newspaper The Guardian:
Preparations for Israel’s war in Lebanon last summer were drawn up at least four months before two Israeli soldiers were kidnapped by Hizbullah in July, Ehud Olmert, the prime minister, has admitted.

His submission to a commission of inquiry, leaked yesterday, contradicted the impression at the time that Israel was provoked into a battle for which it was ill-prepared. Mr Olmert told the Winograd commission, a panel of judges charged with investigating Israel’s perceived defeat in the 34-day war, that he first discussed the possibility of war in January and asked to see military plans in March.
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Sunday, January 07, 2007

Reuters: Israel has plans for nuclear strike on Iran

An excerpt from a Reuters article:
Israel has drawn up secret plans to destroy Iran’s uranium enrichment facilities with tactical nuclear weapons, Britain’s Sunday Times newspaper said

Citing what it said were several Israeli military sources, the paper said two Israeli air force squadrons had been training to blow up an enrichment plant in Natanz using low-yield nuclear “bunker busters.”

Two other sites, a heavy water plant at Arak and a uranium conversion plant at Isfahan, would be targeted with conventional bombs, the Sunday Times said.
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Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Israeli Government Blocks Nobel Laureate Bishop Desmond Tutu from Fact-Finding Mission

From Al Jazeera English:
Desmond Tutu, a Nobel laureate, says that Israel has refused him permission to lead a fact-finding mission to investigate Israeli-Palestinian violence.

Tutu was to begin leading a six-member team over the past weekend in the northern Gaza town of Beit Hanoun to investigate the killings of 19 civilians in an Israeli artillery barrage last month.

But Israel failed to grant them the necessary travel clearance.

“We find the lack of co-operation by the Israeli government very distressing, as well as its failure to allow the mission timely passage to Israel,” Tutu said. “We have, in our view, been turned down.”
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Friday, October 20, 2006

They are being treated as Arabs and not Americans

Excerpts from a CNN article:

“The State Department has complained to the Israeli government about its discriminatory treatment of Arab-Americans traveling to the Palestinian territories...”

“‘They are being treated as Arabs and not Americans,’ one senior official said. ‘They basically treat them as second-class citizens.’”


How inherently racist is that statement? The State Department is upset that Arab-Americans are being treated like Arabs, which is automatically translated into “second-class citizens”. If the State Department recognizes this reality, why doesn’t it ask the Israeli government to stop treating all Arabs as second-class citizens?

Imagine if the State Department had demanded from the apartheid regime of South Africa that it stop discriminating against African-Americans visiting the country, but fell short of criticizing the apartheid itself.

All they care about is that Americans don’t get treated as lowly Arabs.

Pathetic.

Read more:

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Monday, October 16, 2006

Police Recommend Rape Charges Against Israeli President

Israeli police say there is enough evidence to charge President Moshe Katsav with rape.

The police statement said, “There is sufficient evidence indicating that in several cases... the president carried out acts of rape, forced sexual acts, sexual acts without consent and sexual harassment.”

Read more:

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Tuesday, October 10, 2006

UCI Responds to Anti-Semitism Claims

Zionist groups have been attacking the right to free speech of the Muslim Student Union at the University of California, Irvine by pressuring the university to take action against the group for its programs in solidarity with the Palestinian cause. The university responded by defending the MSU’s right to free speech. In a statement, the university's Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Manuel Gomez said:

“Some individuals want us to place limits on freedom of expression. The university is legally obligated to protect speech on a content neutral basis. Inevitably the university must allow some speech that some may find offensive.

“UCI does not sponsor events encouraging intolerance. Indeed, while student and other groups may use our campus to espouse ideas that at times may be offensive, when they do so they are exercising their right to free speech.”
Read more:

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Thursday, October 05, 2006

Tragedy Continues in Lebanon after Ceasefire

by Sabeen Shaiq

Twenty-five days after the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, tragedy is still affecting the lives of Lebanese civilians. In a small village in southern Lebanon, Zebqine, families are starting to return home to assess the damage and collect any memories they can salvage. Two brothers, Hussein, 15 and Ali, 13 had returned home many times in the past few days to sift through the rubble that was once their home, but on Wednesday, September 6, 2006, while they were going through their home looking for their school books they were shocked by a sudden flash of a bluish-yellow light. An unexploded bomb that had landed in their home had been detonated.

At first Hussein did not know what happened, as there was no noise from the bomb. Hussein had though that Ali had playfully thrown something at him so he reached back to pull it off, then Ali yelled at him to stop. Hussein did not realize that he was actually pulling his skin off the back of his neck and face.

Like most residents in the south, they had been warned about going into their fields and had been shown pictures of the various types of cluster bombs that were dropped by Israel in the last few days of the war. But as their older sister Hiba shared, you would never expect to find a bomb in your own house.

Members of the humanitarian organization Islamic Relief visited the boys and their family in a hospital in Tyre (Sour) right after Hussein was coming out of surgery the next day. The boys were in good spirits considering their situation and pain they were in. They were lucky considering what could have happened if they had come across the numerous cluster bombs littering Lebanon. Hussein and Ali suffered second degree burns. Thankfully, they will physically recover and heal with time, but the emotional scars will linger permanently.

For Hussein and Ali, one of the hardest things for them and their family is losing their home along with all the memories, pictures, and belongings they have had since childhood. This is unfortunately a common theme in this village where 85% of the town’s homes have been completely destroyed and where 40 homes were destroyed just 5 minutes before the ceasefire.

As true in any war-torn area, even though the official conflict is over there are still a lot of lingering remnants that are greatly affecting the population. There is still a lot of work to be done. The people of Lebanon cannot be forgotten.

Shaiq visited Lebanon for a week-long needs assessment trip for Islamic Relief USA.

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