Jennifer Loewenstein Archive


WHY IS THIS GETTING NO PRESS??
 
 
EXCERPT: In Shifa hospital, Dr al-Saqqa said most of the dead bodies taken to the facility were torn apart and completely burnt.  "Even bodies of the injured have been almost completely burnt. They have been deformed in a very ugly way that we have never seen before," he told Aljazeera channel.  Al-Saqaa, who heads the hospital's emergency service, said relatives had been unable to identify the dead victims."When we try to X-ray dead bodies, we find no trace of the shrapnel that hit the person killed," he said, adding that the bodies seemed to have been chemically burnt. "We are sure that Israel is using a new chemical or radioactive weapon in the new operation. More than 25% of the injured are children, aged under 16." Four teenagers playing football were among the dead on Monday.
 
 
 
Israel intensifies Gaza action
Tuesday 11 July 2006
 
Israel has begun fresh air strikes in the Gaza Strip after pledging
to intensify its military offensive on the territory that has killed
51 Palestinians in two weeks.
 
One Palestinian was killed and four others wounded in a series of
Israeli air strikes in the northern industrial zone of Bait Hanun,
medics said on Tuesday.
 
The Israeli military confirmed an air raid in the Bait Hanun area of
northern Gaza, the site of two earlier strikes on Tuesday.
 
The dead man was named Ahmed Shahid, who was struck by a missile
fired towards a car, the sources said.
 
Israeli aircraft also carried out two overnight air strikes against a
bridge in the northern Gaza Strip and against a "gunman" west of the
Karni transit point for goods entering and leaving the Palestinian
territory, a spokesman said.
 
Ground troops are massed on the eastern and northern border of the
impoverished territory - one of the most densely populated areas on
earth - and are also stationed east of Gaza City and in the south
near a defunct airport.
 
Israel says the massive operation is to secure the release of a
captured soldier on June 25, and halting Palestinian rocket attacks.
 
Palestinian medics said on Tuesday that patients treated in Shifa
hospital in Gaza and bodies at the mortuary presented unusual burns,
raising concerns that Israel was using chemical weapons.
 
Meanwhile, Israeli defence sources said the government had given the
military the green light to continue and, if necessary, intensify the
so-called Summer Rain offensive with infantry and armour poised to
carry out "in depth" incursions.
 
The approval was granted during consultations late on Monday between
Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, and the defence minister,
Amir Peretz, who faced their biggest test since the new Israeli
government took office on May 4.
 
Olmert is due to hold talks with military commanders on Tuesday with
a view to continuing the offensive, the largest operation since
Israel pulled out of the Gaza Strip in September.
 
Chemical weapons?
 
In Shifa hospital, Dr al-Saqqa said most of the dead bodies taken to
the facility were torn apart and completely burnt.
 
"Even bodies of the injured have been almost completely burnt. They
have been deformed in a very ugly way that we have never seen
before," he told Aljazeera channel.
 
Al-Saqaa, who heads the hospital's emergency service, said relatives
had been unable to identify the dead victims.
 
"When we try to X-ray dead bodies, we find no trace of the shrapnel
that hit the person killed," he said, adding that the bodies seemed
to have been chemically burnt.
 
"We are sure that Israel is using a new chemical or radioactive
weapon in the new operation. More than 25% of the injured are
children, aged under 16."
 
Four teenagers playing football were among the dead on Monday.
 
At least 51 Palestinians have been killed since the operation started
two weeks ago. An Israeli soldier also died as a result of "friendly
fire", according to the Israeli military.
 
No end in sight
 
On Monday, Khaled Meshaal, the political leader of Hamas, demanded a
prisoner swap for freeing the captured soldier but Olmert said that
would be a "major mistake".
 
Hamas's armed wing - along with two other militant groups, the
Popular Resistance Committees and the Army of Islam -claims to be
holding the soldier.
 
Olmert has rejected international accusations that the response to
the soldier's capture was disproportionate, saying that Israel's
pullout from Gaza after 38 years of occupation has been followed only
by continued violence.
 
Aid groups have expressed concern about the difficulties of
providing assistance to 1.4 million people living in Gaza after
months of financial difficulties and the suspension of direct Western
aid to the Hamas-led government.
 
Junichiro Koizumi, the Japanese prime minister, is due to arrive in
the region on Tuesday for separate talks with Olmert and the Mahmoud
Abbas, the Palestinian president, on a trip he hopes will help to
calm the situation.
 
 


 


 
Jennifer Loewenstein
amadea311@earthlink.net
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Have you asked yourself how is it possible that you, a well informed and educated citizen, can be ignorant of what is being done in your name, with your money? Why have you never read anything by these journalists and commentators in the newspapers and magazines you read? Why have you not heard about this on your radio or TV?