In response to this week's shameful exposure of bias at NPR, a couple of its hosts on Friday had an on air discussion about whether or not the radio network does indeed have a political leaning. Shortly after “On the Media” host Bob Garfield said, “If you were to somehow poll the political orientation of everybody in the NPR news organization and all of the member stations, you would find an overwhelmingly progressive, liberal crowd,” Ira Glass of “The American Life” maintained the outlet had no left-wing bias whatsoever (audio follows with partial transcript and commentary): BROOKE GLADSTONE, ‘ON THE MEDIA’ CO-HOST, NPR: About 25 years ago, I was asked to do a piece, “Is NPR Biased to the Left?” And I couldn’t find a metric to apply to the question in order to answer it. IRA GLASS, ‘THE AMERICAN LIFE’ HOST, NPR: I don’t know the methodology somebody would use, but I feel like public radio should address this directly, because I think anybody who listens to our stations knows that what they’re hearing is mainstream media reporting. We have nothing to fear from a discussion of what is the news coverage we’re doing. I couldn’t find a metric. I don’t know the methodology somebody would use. Maybe that's part of the problem – these so-called journalists don't know how to determine bias in reporting. How about first taking a look at a week's worth of programming and simply adding up the number of real conservative and liberal guests as well as Republican and Democrat guests? The qualifier “real” means that folks like New York Times columnist David Brooks and former CNN contributor Kathleen Parker don't count because they are by no means conservative. Despite there being far more ways to measure bias, this would at least be a good start if NPR was serious about doing such an examination. But the best was yet to come as another host made quite an admission moments later: GLASS: As somebody who works in public radio, it is killing me that people on the right are going around trying to basically rebrand us saying that it’s biased news, you know, it’s left-wing news, when I feel like anybody who listens to the shows knows that it’s not, and we are not fighting back. We’re not saying anything back. I find it completely annoying, and, and I don’t understand it. BOB GARFIELD, ‘ON THE MEDIA’ CO-HOST, NPR: Okay, so this gets back to not only Brooke’s problem, finding a metric to report on this story, but it’s especially difficult when you and I both know that if you were to somehow poll the political orientation of everybody in the NPR news organization and all of the member stations, you would find an overwhelmingly progressive, liberal crowd. Not uniformly, but overwhelmingly. So, according to Garfield, the landscape of all the people that work for and are affiliated with NPR is overwhelmingly liberal. This didn't seem to phase Glass in the slightest: GLASS: Journalism in general, reporters tend to be Democrats and tend to be more liberal than the public as a whole. Sure. But that doesn’t change what is going out over the air, and I feel like let’s measure the product. That bears repeating: “[R]eporters tend to be Democrats and tend to be more liberal than the public as a whole…But that doesn’t change what is going out over the air.” Isn't it amazing that liberal media members almost universally believe this fallacy? Despite their political views, who they vote for, and what issues they support, they think they're totally impartial in their reporting. Glass continued: GLASS: And you’re saying what’s the metric that we can measure the product on? I’d say, go through this morning’s “Morning Edition” and find me even a sentence that smells like political bias to you. Like, like find one. Looking at only one program on only one day to determine if an entire radio network is biased is of course absurd, but that wasn't the last inanity uttered by Glass. After he challenged Garfield and Gladstone to take on the mission of identifying once and for all whether or not NPR is slanted in its reporting, Gladstone marvelously asked, “What if the answer is ‘Yes, NPR has a left-wing bias?’” Glass quickly responded, “It’s not going to be ‘Yes.’” Any bias there, Ira? Ironically, as the segment continued, Gladstone wondered if the answer was “No,” would anybody believe it. And therein lies the rub, for if NPR really wants to seriously make such a determination, it should hire an outside, neutral entity that knows what metrics to use to come to a valid conclusion. Just as importantly, it shouldn't be done by folks that were “overwhelmingly liberal.” Color me very unsurprised this trio didn't think it absurd for an organization filled with liberals to examine itself for liberal bias. That's akin to the White House doing its own investigation for wrongdoing or impropriety rather than appointing an independent counsel. Oh. That's right. Liberals do that, too. (H/T NB reader Carter Wood )
Continue reading …Alan Gross has been found guilty of crimes against the state and sentenced to 15 years in prison A Cuban court has found U.S. contractor Alan Gross guilty of crimes against the state and sentenced him to 15 years in prison, a verdict that is sure to have sweeping repercussions for already-sour relations between Washington and Havana. The court said prosecutors had proved their case that Gross, 61, was working on a “subversive” program paid for by the United States that aimed to bring down Cuba’s revolutionary system. Prosecutors had sought a 20-year sentence. The U.S. government and Gross’s family say he was working to improve internet access for the island’s Jewish community, and should be released. Cuban officials have called him a mercenary and maintained his motives were more nefarious. The court said the program that Gross worked on – part of a $20 million Washington effort to support democracy on the island – showed that the U.S. government continues to seek the government’s overthrow. Gross’s backers will try to get him released through a court action or executive pardon, possibly on humanitarian grounds. His wife Judy says Gross has lost more than 90 pounds since his arrest, and that his 26-year-old daughter and 88-year-old mother are both suffering from cancer. There was no immediate reaction to the verdict from Washington, or Gross’s family. Cuba United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Erdbeben und Tsunami in Japan am 11.03.2011 Trailer Tsunami In Japan 11 March 2011 Live Breaking News- 8.9 Earthquake Tsunami hits Japan! Watch CNN live coverage 2011 03 11 Penny Arcade Expo East: Nothing small here | MediaFile | Analysis … Believe it or not, there were crowds gathered on Friday doing something else besides waiting for an iPad 2. About 60000 people swarmed Boston for Penny Arcade East, a major convention for video game fans on the East Coast. ( Reuters ) – Japan confronted devastation Daybreak reveals huge devastation in tsunami-hit Japan – TOKYO ( Reuters ) – Japan confronted devastation along its northeastern coast on Saturday, with fires raging and parts of some cities under water after a mas… 8 minutes ago … Nokia more confident on Navteq – Reuters Canada | Tech Gadgets … Digital AnimatorsNokia more confident on NavteqReuters CanadaHELSINKI ( Reuters ) – Nokia, the world’s top cellphone maker by volume, is more confident t… Radiation leaking from quake-hit nuclear plant ( Reuters ) « Datapple Reuters – An explosion blew the roof off an unstable reactor north of Tokyo on Saturday, Japanese media said, raising fears of a disastrous meltdown at a nuclear plant damaged in the massive earthquake that hit Japan. … Oil, Japan to keep stock investors wary ( Reuters ) | www.bullfax.com Reuters – U.S. stock investors are turning more to options for protection after the latest data showing the frailty of the economic recovery, but they may find some comfort in Wall Street’s “fear gauge.” … dhayes1098 says: Fire guts home of Slumdog actress | Video | Reuters .com: Mar 5 – A fire in a Mumbai slum destroys thousands of h… http://bit.ly/fmRYdr
Continue reading …Rebels flee Ras Lanuf and call on UN to impose no-fly zone as Gaddafi’s forces recapture strategically important towns Muammar Gaddafi’s army won control of a strategic rebel-held Libyan town and laid siege to another as the revolutionary administration in Benghazi again appealed for foreign military help to prevent what it said would be the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people if the insurgents were to lose. The rebels admitted they had retreated from the oil town of Ras Lanuf – captured a week ago – after two days of intense fighting and that the nearby town of Brega was now threatened. The revolutionary army, in large part made up of inexperienced young volunteers, has been forced back by a sustained artillery, tank and air bombardment about 20 miles along the road to the rebel capital of Benghazi. The head of Libya’s revolutionary council, Mustafa Abdel Jalil, claimed that if Gaddafi’s forces were to reach the country’s second-largest city it would result in “the death of half a million” people. The Arab League, meeting in Cairo, called on the UN security council to impose a no fly-zone on Libya as Gaddafi’s forces also began to move against Misrata, a city of 300,000 people about 125 miles from Tripoli. Misrata is the only town in the west of the country still under the control of the insurgents after their defeat in a vicious battle for Zawiya. The rebels said that Misrata was now surrounded by Gaddafi’s forces, which included tanks. “We are bracing for a massacre,” Mohamad Ahmed, a rebel fighter in the city, said. “We know it will happen and Misrata will be like Zawiya, but we believe in God. We do not have the capabilities to fight Gaddafi and his forces. They have tanks and heavy weapons and we have our belief and trust in God. “The fighters here and the people of Misrata hold the international community responsible for the fall of Zawiya and for all the deaths that happened. Gaddafi is responsible, but they are partners in crime.” Jalil again appealed for the imposition of a no-fly zone to stop the air attacks on rebel forces. “If there is no no-fly zone imposed on Gaddafi’s regime, and if his ships are not checked, then we will have a catastrophe in Libya,” he said. The rebel Libyan leadership is frustrated that the European Union failed to agree to a no-fly zone at a meeting on Friday and US President Barack Obama has so far proved reluctant to apply anything more than sanctions and diplomatic pressure on Gaddafi. “Of course we’re disappointed, because every day that passes civilian people are either killed or injured and Gaddafi is bombing them with all kinds of weaponry,” Jalil said. He also claimed, however, that the rebel army was able to call on far larger numbers of volunteers than those already fighting. He also ruled out negotiations with Gaddafi. The revolutionary council has appealed for European countries to launch air strikes to reverse Gaddafi’s military gains. It also called for an international investigation of what it says are two vessels carrying weapons from an “eastern Arab country with Soviet-era weapons” to Tripoli. That country is believed to be Syria. The Arab League’s call for a no-fly zone gives the regional seal of approval Nato has said is needed before any military action. Egyptian state television also said that the Arab League had decided to open channels of communication with the Libyan rebel council based in Benghazi. The League said the council represented the Libyan people, the channel reported. League officials said they had already been in touch with the rebels about the situation on the ground in Libya. Arab states must intervene in Libya or risk unwanted foreign intervention, Oman’s foreign minister told the meeting. “What is needed now is Arab intervention using mechanisms of the Arab League and at the same time in accordance with international law,” Omani foreign minister Youssef bin Alawi bin Abdullah said in his opening remarks to an Arab League meeting. “We must look at various options that circumstances in Libya need,” he said, giving brief opening remarks during a televised opening session over which he presided. “What is happening now to the Libyan people poses a threat to the security and stability of Arab states. “If the Arab League does not take responsibility to prevent a downward spiral, that could lead to internal fighting or unwanted foreign intervention,” he added. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Arab and Middle East protests Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Around 4300 people attended the Working Families Rally at Kiener Plaza in St. Louis, Mo., this Friday to protest corporate greed and the push to turn Missouri into a “right to work” state. I attended the rally and took quite a few photos, which I wanted to share with the readers here at C&L. The video above is from one of our local stations, which decided to give “right to work” advocate and former State Senator John Loudon some equal time, all in the name of being “fair and balanced” don’t you know. According to the St. Louis Beacon, there was a pro-right-to-work rally held in St. Charles, Mo., this Friday as well, but KSDK didn’t air any footage from that “rally.” I have to wonder if it’s because almost no one showed up there. Here’s more from the St. Louis Beacon on the rally at Kiener Plaza — Thousands of union workers turn out to protest ‘corporate greed’ and attacks on bargaining rights : Thousands of area union members — from teachers to janitors — packed Kiener Plaza this afternoon, to protest actions by corporations and Republican-led state governments that speaker after speaker called “an attack on the middle class.” “Now is the time to send a powerful message to the enemies of working men and women,” declared Jo Wanda Bozeman, president of the Parkway National Education Association. She asserted that the nation was witnessing “a methodical and planned assault” on the collective-bargaining rights of union workers. The crowd roared as Bozeman shouted, “We’re not going to take it anymore!” Bob Soutier, president of the Greater St. Louis Labor Council called the turnout — the official count was 4,300 — the biggest local labor gathering he’s seen in years. Although smaller than union crowds in some other states with labor fights, including Wisconsin and Indiana, Soutier said the local rally — organized in a few days — was evidence that “people in St. Louis are fed up, not just by Washington, but in Jefferson City.” The rally was aimed, in part, at sending a message to Missouri legislators in the state Capitol. The state Senate is slated to take a floor vote Monday on a proposal, officially called “right to work,” that would bar union shops, in which all workers at a business must pay dues if a majority have voted to be represented by a union. Soutier and other area labor leaders plan to be in the Capitol for the Senate vote, even though it’s unclear if the state House will take up in the issue. It’s also doubtful that Gov. Jay Nixon, a Democrat, would sign it. Even so, the “right to work” fight — initiated by Senate President Pro Tem Rob Mayer, R-Dexter — has galvanized unions and many business groups. Mayer and his allies contend that “right to work” will make it easier for the state to attract and retain businesses. Union leaders dub the measure “right to work for less” and say it’s aimed at reducing worker wages, particularly since the Legislature also is voting on a proposal to curb the state’s minimum wage. Mark Mix, president of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, headlined a pro-right to work event held earlier Friday in St. Charles. ( Click here to read the Beacon’s advance coverage, including an interview with Mix.) I know there are a lot of St. Louis union members planning to go to Wisconsin to support the protesters there and the speakers talked about that at the rally today. If anyone has any photos to share of rallies in your area or information on groups in your area supporting the workers in Wisconsin, please share them in the comments section. Photos I took of the event in St. Louis below the fold. enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge
Continue reading …Film starring Jake Gyllenhaal follows in the tradition of Alfred Hitchcock and offers reminders of North by Northwest, the movie that inspired the naming of this Texas festival (Cert 12A) South by Southwest, Austin’s indie festival, was christened as a wink to Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest, which zips through Texas on its speedy tour of the US. Lately, the music and interactive wings have taken flight, leaving the cinematic one a little clipped. But the 25th festival returned to first principles, with an opening night film besotted by the Cary Grant adventure. Right from the titles, it’s clear that for Duncan Jones, the British director whose Moon premiered here two years ago, North by Northwest is not just for Christmas viewing. In a swooping survey of downtown Chicago, freeways criss-cross, the river snakes and doubledecker locomotives power round rails, missing each other by inches. But Hitch’s shadow looms larger than mere train fixation. For this is a tale of mistaken identities and mysterious dames, strange agencies and impromptu heroics – an unabashed entertainment, moving, amusing, difficult to resist. Jake Gyllenhaal stars as a helicopter pilot serving in Afghanistan who wakes to find himself on a commuter train to Chicago, in someone else’s body. He gets grouchy with the girl (Michelle Monaghan) sitting opposite, who’s convinced they’re both teachers, and with his fellow passengers. After eight minutes, the carriage blows up. But rather than dying, he’s transported back to a grimy chopper capsule, where he’s given instructions via a videolink by two military commanders – one sympathetic (Vera Farmiga), one suspect (Jeffrey Wright). They explain: the train did blow up, earlier today. It was the warning shot before a dirty bomb is detonated downtown. His mission (and he has no choice but to accept it) is to stop that happening. Which is why his brain has been teleported into the head of a man who died in the blast, to exploit the eight-minute short-term memory window in which circuits can keep functioning after death (don’t quote me on that). So Gyllenhaal is returned repeatedly to the scene, reliving those moments until he identifies the bomber. It’s testimony to Jones’s professionalism how convincing he makes such claptrap. Within minutes you’re nodding along to the Groundhog-Day-from-hell logic. But rather than just learning to be less grumpy, like Bill Murray, Gyllenhaal must save the world, and against two separate ticking clocks. And though high stakes don’t always translate into high drama, in this case, they’re a good fit. At a festival known for pioneering the mumblecore genre , it’s refreshing to see a film in which dialogue is largely barked. Not that there’s no shade; breathing time comes in Gyllenhaal’s claustrophobic solo scenes that inescapably recall Moon (fraying astronaut Sam Rockwell psycho-battles a computer voiced by Kevin Spacey). So much so it’s hard to believe Source Code was just a studio script in search of a director, rather than a project machine-tooled to Jones’ proclivities. Some may regret that Jones has chosen to dive headfirst into the mainstream rather than exploring the artier channels Moon opened up. But the pleasures of a slick thriller should not be underestimated. And the prospect of a festival that continues with bangs, rather than whimpers, is exciting indeed. Rating: 4/5 SXSW Festivals Alfred Hitchcock Cary Grant United States Texas Catherine Shoard guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [h/t Heather ] One of the problems with everything going haywire at once is the possibility of letting a really, really important thing go unnoticed. While we’ve all been looking at Wisconsin, Michigan could actually be facing worse, and more draconian measures intended not only to break unions, but the public schools, municipal governments and much, much more. The Michigan Martial Law Act of 2011 is fast-tracking right onto Governor Rick Snyder’s desk just in time to take center stage after the fact. Despite large protests in Lansing, it’s getting very little press while the Wisconsin conflict continues. Michigan Messenger : According to the law, which has already been approved in the House, the governor will be able to declare “financial emergency” in towns or school districts and appoint someone to fire local elected officials, break contracts, seize and sell assets, and eliminate services. Under the law whole cities or school districts could be eliminated without any public participation or oversight, and amendments designed to provide minimal safeguards and public involvement were voted down. An amendment to require Emergency Managers to hold monthly public meetings to let people know how they are governing was rejected by Senate Republicans, along with proposals to cap Emergency Manager compensation and require that those appointed to run school districts have some background in education. It shouldn’t come as any surprise that Detroit is one of the targeted cities. And while I wouldn’t dare say it’s race-motivated without some evidence beyond the obvious observation that Detroit is where Kwame Kilpatrick is mayor and is a city where over 80% of the population is black . No, I wouldn’t suggest it’s racially motivated at all, but then again… [Republican State Senator] Brandenburg said several urban areas of the state, especially Detroit, are in “bad shape” and will need a state-appointed emergency financial manager, or EMF, who can impose strong medicine. “He has to have the backbone, he has to have the power, to null and void a contract,” Brandenburg said. The senator also rejected claims by Democrats that the bill will destroy Michigan’s long history of local control by allowing the EMF to remove top administrators and elected officials, put millage increases on the ballot, lay off employees, slash services, and merge the city or school district with a neighboring government entity. Brandenburg said the EMFs will be deployed in communities that need “financial martial law.” “Local control? I’ll tell you what, I think that in a lot of these places there is no control,” he said This law will give this Republican administration in Michigan the right to overturn the will of the people by tossing their elected officials out and moving the “backboned ones” in. Michigan happens to be the home state of the DeVos family (of Amway fame), who has spent millions via their non-profit foundation to set up urban schools for privatization. Like Wisconsin, Rick Snyder received millions from the Republican Governors’ Association and the Chamber of Commerce for his run in 2010. And like Wisconsin, Rick Snyder received plenty of extra help from corporate interests , from insurance companies to chemical companies to financial companies. The coordinated efforts across these many states makes me wonder if they’re violating RICO statutes. If ever there was an example of racketeering, it’s what the US Chamber, Koch Industries, the Republican Governors’ Association and corporate interests are doing in these states. While they railroad people everywhere, the stench of their arrogance rises like the odor of dead fish on the beach.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [h/t Heather ] One of the problems with everything going haywire at once is the possibility of letting a really, really important thing go unnoticed. While we’ve all been looking at Wisconsin, Michigan could actually be facing worse, and more draconian measures intended not only to break unions, but the public schools, municipal governments and much, much more. The Michigan Martial Law Act of 2011 is fast-tracking right onto Governor Rick Snyder’s desk just in time to take center stage after the fact. Despite large protests in Lansing, it’s getting very little press while the Wisconsin conflict continues. Michigan Messenger : According to the law, which has already been approved in the House, the governor will be able to declare “financial emergency” in towns or school districts and appoint someone to fire local elected officials, break contracts, seize and sell assets, and eliminate services. Under the law whole cities or school districts could be eliminated without any public participation or oversight, and amendments designed to provide minimal safeguards and public involvement were voted down. An amendment to require Emergency Managers to hold monthly public meetings to let people know how they are governing was rejected by Senate Republicans, along with proposals to cap Emergency Manager compensation and require that those appointed to run school districts have some background in education. It shouldn’t come as any surprise that Detroit is one of the targeted cities. And while I wouldn’t dare say it’s race-motivated without some evidence beyond the obvious observation that Detroit is where Kwame Kilpatrick is mayor and is a city where over 80% of the population is black . No, I wouldn’t suggest it’s racially motivated at all, but then again… [Republican State Senator] Brandenburg said several urban areas of the state, especially Detroit, are in “bad shape” and will need a state-appointed emergency financial manager, or EMF, who can impose strong medicine. “He has to have the backbone, he has to have the power, to null and void a contract,” Brandenburg said. The senator also rejected claims by Democrats that the bill will destroy Michigan’s long history of local control by allowing the EMF to remove top administrators and elected officials, put millage increases on the ballot, lay off employees, slash services, and merge the city or school district with a neighboring government entity. Brandenburg said the EMFs will be deployed in communities that need “financial martial law.” “Local control? I’ll tell you what, I think that in a lot of these places there is no control,” he said This law will give this Republican administration in Michigan the right to overturn the will of the people by tossing their elected officials out and moving the “backboned ones” in. Michigan happens to be the home state of the DeVos family (of Amway fame), who has spent millions via their non-profit foundation to set up urban schools for privatization. Like Wisconsin, Rick Snyder received millions from the Republican Governors’ Association and the Chamber of Commerce for his run in 2010. And like Wisconsin, Rick Snyder received plenty of extra help from corporate interests , from insurance companies to chemical companies to financial companies. The coordinated efforts across these many states makes me wonder if they’re violating RICO statutes. If ever there was an example of racketeering, it’s what the US Chamber, Koch Industries, the Republican Governors’ Association and corporate interests are doing in these states. While they railroad people everywhere, the stench of their arrogance rises like the odor of dead fish on the beach.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [h/t Heather ] One of the problems with everything going haywire at once is the possibility of letting a really, really important thing go unnoticed. While we’ve all been looking at Wisconsin, Michigan could actually be facing worse, and more draconian measures intended not only to break unions, but the public schools, municipal governments and much, much more. The Michigan Martial Law Act of 2011 is fast-tracking right onto Governor Rick Snyder’s desk just in time to take center stage after the fact. Despite large protests in Lansing, it’s getting very little press while the Wisconsin conflict continues. Michigan Messenger : According to the law, which has already been approved in the House, the governor will be able to declare “financial emergency” in towns or school districts and appoint someone to fire local elected officials, break contracts, seize and sell assets, and eliminate services. Under the law whole cities or school districts could be eliminated without any public participation or oversight, and amendments designed to provide minimal safeguards and public involvement were voted down. An amendment to require Emergency Managers to hold monthly public meetings to let people know how they are governing was rejected by Senate Republicans, along with proposals to cap Emergency Manager compensation and require that those appointed to run school districts have some background in education. It shouldn’t come as any surprise that Detroit is one of the targeted cities. And while I wouldn’t dare say it’s race-motivated without some evidence beyond the obvious observation that Detroit is where Kwame Kilpatrick is mayor and is a city where over 80% of the population is black . No, I wouldn’t suggest it’s racially motivated at all, but then again… [Republican State Senator] Brandenburg said several urban areas of the state, especially Detroit, are in “bad shape” and will need a state-appointed emergency financial manager, or EMF, who can impose strong medicine. “He has to have the backbone, he has to have the power, to null and void a contract,” Brandenburg said. The senator also rejected claims by Democrats that the bill will destroy Michigan’s long history of local control by allowing the EMF to remove top administrators and elected officials, put millage increases on the ballot, lay off employees, slash services, and merge the city or school district with a neighboring government entity. Brandenburg said the EMFs will be deployed in communities that need “financial martial law.” “Local control? I’ll tell you what, I think that in a lot of these places there is no control,” he said This law will give this Republican administration in Michigan the right to overturn the will of the people by tossing their elected officials out and moving the “backboned ones” in. Michigan happens to be the home state of the DeVos family (of Amway fame), who has spent millions via their non-profit foundation to set up urban schools for privatization. Like Wisconsin, Rick Snyder received millions from the Republican Governors’ Association and the Chamber of Commerce for his run in 2010. And like Wisconsin, Rick Snyder received plenty of extra help from corporate interests , from insurance companies to chemical companies to financial companies. The coordinated efforts across these many states makes me wonder if they’re violating RICO statutes. If ever there was an example of racketeering, it’s what the US Chamber, Koch Industries, the Republican Governors’ Association and corporate interests are doing in these states. While they railroad people everywhere, the stench of their arrogance rises like the odor of dead fish on the beach.
Continue reading …Parents and three children aged between three months and 11 knifed to death in their West Bank home Five members of a Jewish settler family have been murdered in their home in what police suspect was an operation by Palestinian militants. The parents and three children, aged 11, three and three months, were attacked with knives in their house in the West Bank settlement of Itamar, near the Palestinian city of Nablus, on Friday. It is believed that two of the dead had their throats cut. The alarm was raised by the couple’s 12-year-old daughter, who had been at an event organised by a religious youth movement on the settlement and returned home to find the bloodsoaked scene. Two other children, who had been asleep at the time of the attack, were unharmed. The area was immediately sealed off by Israeli police and soldiers as a manhunt was launched. Checkpoints were set up on the road leading to Itamar, which was declared a closed military zone. The Israeli army launched an operation in the nearby Palestinian village of Awata early on Saturday, arresting around two dozen young men. According to an Israeli settlement security official who did not want to be named, one or two Palestinians scaled the security fence surrounding Itamar, and entered the family’s home through a window. The father, he said, was a teacher in a religious school in the settlement. The bodies of the dead were believed to be still at the house and would not be removed until the end of Shabat. “An innocent family – a father, mother and three of their children – were murdered in the middle of the night by despicable terrorists,” said Maj Gen Avi Mizrahi of the Israeli military central command, who visited the scene. “Rest assured, we are on a hunt for those responsible, and we will find them.” The prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, said the family had been murdered “while they were sleeping in their home on the Sabbath evening”. He demanded that the Palestinian Authority assist in the manhunt. “Israel will not stand by idly after such a despicable murder,” he said. It was the first killing of settlers since four adults were shot dead in a drive-by shooting near Hebron on the eve of direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians in September. The talks stalled after three weeks following Israel’s refusal to extend a freeze on settlement expansion in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, a pivotal issue for the Palestinians. The West Bank has seen few militant operations in recent years as the Palestinian Authority has stepped up security measures as part of its efforts to build the basis of a future state. Last month, Israel removed the infamous Harawa checkpoint, close to Itamar, in an indication of improved security in the area. But there has been continued tension between Palestinian villagers and hardline settlers, with regular skirmishes over the destruction of olive trees. Settlers have pledged to resist the evacuation of unauthorised outposts, which Netanyahu said last week would be completed by the end of this year. Itamar, home to around 100 families, is an intensely nationalist-religious isolated settlement deep inside the West Bank. Nationalist-religious Jews believe they have a divine right to the land irrespective of legal ownership. In Awata, Khalil Shurrab said that “many, many soldiers” had come in the early hours, going house to house to round up people suspected of involvement in the killings. Residents showed visitors spent tear gas canisters and rooms in houses that they said had been trashed by soldiers. Hilary Minch, a volunteer with a Christian monitoring group based near Nablus, said the army had used live ammunition and stun grenades. “The next 24 hours will be very tense,” she said. “The villagers fear retribution by the settlers.” Palestinian territories Israel Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
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