Thursday, 5 March 2015

Join WFPSC protest this Saturday, 7 March ’15, 11am – 2pm, outside Sainsbury’s, Walthamstow Market (112 High Street, London E17 7JY)


Sainsbury’s continues to profit from the Israeli occupation and exploitation of Palestine
.
Since 1967, Israel has built 37 illegal settlements in the Jordan Valley (Occupied Palestine), evicting nearly 80% of the Palestinian people who owned and farmed that land. These settlements depend for survival on Israeli export companies, such as Mehadrin and EDOM.
Sainsbury’s continues to trade with these companies, despite a 2 year-long campaign telling them about this crime. 
International Law and goods from Stolen Land:
It is illegal for Israel to exploit for its own profit land which it is occupying by force, like the Jordan Valley. Sainsbury's knows this, but still does business with companies that make Israel’s crimes possible.

How ethical is Sainsbury’s?
A recent survey by “Ethical Consumer” put Sainsbury’s next to the bottom in the UK supermarkets on the basis of its ethical conduct. It came below Tesco, Aldi and Lidl and was just above Asda.
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 What can we do? 

  Join our protest taking place on the first Saturday of each month between 11am and 2pm in front one of the local Sainsbury'

 

Always read the label: Stop buying goods produced in Israel and in the illegal settlements in the occupied Jordan Valley and West Bank

Talk to the manager of your local Sainsbury’s or write to Sainsbury's Head Office to raise your concerns and ask Sainsbury's to stop trading with companies which help Israel break the law.

Contact you MP, Councillor, Trade Union etc.



Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Demand justice for the Hares Boys


The second anniversary of the Hares Boys’ incarceration on trumped up charges for causing a traffic accident near their village in the occupied West Bank, is approaching.

Ali Shamlawi
 The accident involved a collision between an Israeli stationary truck and a car driven by a woman from the illegal West Bank Yakir settlement with her three children, one of whom was seriously injured and sadly died couple of weeks ago, almost two years after the crash.

.It is important to note that the Boys, who were age 16-17 at the time, were violently arrested by the Israeli soldiers and secret service agents, 

They were abused and tortured during interrogation and then charged with 25 counts of attempted murder, one for each stone allegedly thrown.


Ammar Souf
 It is also important to know that not a shred of credible evidence has been produced against them and that initial evidence gathering at, what was later declared a crime scene, was done by the car insurers!

Five Hares Boys are victims of a major miscarriage of justice which can result in up to 20 years of their young lives being spent incarcerated for attempted murder.
Mohammed Kleib 

The fact is the Boys have been, from the day one, declared guilty and labelled terrorists by the Israeli media and political leaders,including Netanyahu. .  

They have no chance of getting a fair trial from their occupiers and what all justice loving people need to do, is ensure that there is enough pressure by countries, such as the UK, put on the Israeli Government to free Hares Boys. as well as hundreds more Palestinian political prisoners, including children,  held in Israeli jails without a charge.


Tamer Souf

Israel’ place in the club of Western democracies and unprecedented access to the western markets, need to be linked to Israel’s respect for international laws, including human and prisoners’ rights.  .

Please, visit Hares Boys websites for updates and a host of information including examples of solidarity actions around the world and what you can do to ensure justice for the boys:  https://haresboys.wordpress.com/


 Also, join the London Palestine Action protest to mark the second anniversary of the Hares Boys incarceration, which will take place near the Houses of Parliament (exact location will be circulated nearer to the date) on Friday 13 March, between 8.00 -9.30 in the morning, 


Asking for justice for their children: mothers of Ali Shamlawi and Mohammed Sulaimanat the Press Conference  in Ramallah, 1 March 2015

Parents of the Hares Boys with, Issa Qaraqeh, Palestinian Minister of Detainees at the Press Conference in Ramallah.










Wednesday, 18 February 2015

By Mondoweiss: Second UK-based Israeli drone factory shut down by protesters

Instro Precision, an arms company near Broadstairs (Kent), was occupied at 5am this morning to protest its sales to both Israel and Afghanistan. Four people are on the roof with banners to shut the factory down, with ten more on the ground, one of whom is locked to the fence.
A wide range of groups came together to make this happen, including: Brighton BDS, Brighton Palestine Action, Smash EDO, Stop NATO Cymru, Anarchist Action Network, East Kent CAAT, Swansea Action for Palestine (with a bit of support from us too).
(Photo: London Palestine Action)
(Photo: London Palestine Action)
Instro is owned by Israeli arms company Elbit Systems, who make drones that are used to kill Palestinian civilians in Gaza. Optical and camera systems like those made at the Instro factory are also supplied by Elbit for use in drones flown over Afghanistan, as well as in Israel’s apartheid wall.
Elbit Hermes drones have been flown over Afghanistan and the new Watchkeeper drone, based on the Hermes, was deployed by the MOD last year. Although the Watchkeeper is ostensibly a surveillance drone, it has been displayed with missiles under its wings at the DSEi arms fair in London.
During last Summer’s ‘Operation Protective Edge’ attack last Summer, armed drones killed 830 Palestinians in Gaza. 85% of the drones used by the Israeli military are supplied by Elbit. Elbit’s share price rose in July off the back of the extensive use of its technology during Israel’s massacre,and the company recently reported a backlog in orders worth $6.2 billion. Elbit advertises its products as “combat proven”€, by which they mean their products are tested on the bodies of Palestinian civilians.
This is the second UK-based Elbit factory to be targeted by activists, after the successful occupation last summer of a drone engine factory near Birmingham.
One of the activists, Tom Anderson, a researcher from the UK research group Corporate Watch said:
We are here because we want to stop Elbit from supplying weapons which are used to massacre people in Gaza and Afghanistan. In 2013 I visited Gaza and spoke to the survivors of Israeli drone strikes. They told me that they wanted people to take action to prevent the companies that manufactured the drones that killed their loved ones from making equipment that will cause others to suffer the way they have.
Rida Abu Zneid, a young woman from Gaza who saw her sister ripped apart in front of her by a missile from an Israeli drone told Corporate Watch:
Why should they manufacture these weapons to kill innocent people? They should stop and close those factories. They only do it for the money. They get money and they cost our lives. If they only thought for a second about what these weapons can do they would stop. What do they feel when they see killed people on the TV? If they came over here and lived just one day in this area, and heard the bombing and the drones, what would they feel? I think they should live our experience€.
Elbit’s electronics are used in Israel’s apartheid wall, which stretches for hundreds of miles across the West Bank separating people from their loved ones, farmers from their fields and is intended to colonise more land for Israel and its settlements.
Lucy Marshall, another of the protesters said: “optical and camera systems like those manufactured at Instro Precision are supplied by Elbit for use on drones and also for camera systems on the apartheid wall. We are here to take action to prevent Israel from continuing its oppression and apartheid against the Palestinians.”
Palestinians have called on governments to impose an arms embargo on Israel, and not to buy arms from Israeli companies like Elbit. Abdulrahman Abunahel from the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement said: “We call on governments around the world to do the very least they can to stop Israel from carrying out more massacres of our people by imposing a military embargo on Israel. Such steps would be in line with growing public support for our struggle and for the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) campaign”.
(Photo: London Palestine Action)
(Photo: London Palestine Action) 
Notes:
  1. On Instro: Instro Precision advertises camera systems, optical systems and systems for ‘target acquisition’ [http://www.instro.co.uk].
  2. On Elbit: Owners Elbit Systems make 85% of Israel’s drones, and are the “world’s leading exporter of [drones]”. Israeli drones have been implicated in the killing of Palestinian civilians both in the recent assault and in previous assaults; the Israeli army described Elbit as a “real asset”€ during the recent bombardment of the Gaza Strip, which has to date killed over 2,000 Palestinians. Elbit advertises its products as “combat proven”, by which they mean their products are tested on the bodies of Palestinian civilians. More info on Elbit€“.
  3. On the use of Israeli drones: Human Rights Watch have published detailed information about the use of Elbit drones to deliberately attack Palestinian civilians during the 2008/­09 massacre of Gaza. Israel refuses to confirm officially that it uses armed drones, despite multiple journalists and defence sources evidencing that they do e.g. the International Business Times, Wikileaked US Embassy cables, military websites, and IsraelĆ¢€™s own Jerusalem Post and Haaretz.
  4. On UK arms links with Israel: the UK exported £7m of weapons to Israel in the six months leading up to the Gaza war, including components for drones.
  5. For more information about the Palestinian grassroots call for boycott, divestment and sanctions against israel see www.bdsmovement.net
- See more at: http://mondoweiss.net/2015/02/israeli-factory-protesters#sthash.kqJK7emb.dpuf

Friday, 13 February 2015

Letter in The Guardian - 700 UK artists: We won't work with Israeli institutions



http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/13/cultural-boycott-israel-starts-tomorrow
Letter: Over 100 artists announce a cultural boycott of Israel
Friday 13 February 201516.51 GMT

Along with more than 600 other fellow artists, we are announcing today that we will not engage in business-as-usual cultural relations with Israel. We will accept neither professional invitations to Israel, nor funding, from any institutions linked to its government. Since the summer war on Gaza, Palestinians have enjoyed no respite from Israel’s unrelenting attack on their land, their livelihood, their right to political existence. “2014,” says the Israeli human rights organisation B’Tselem, was “one of the cruellest and deadliest in the history of the occupation.” The Palestinian catastrophe goes on.
Israel’s wars are fought on the cultural front too. Its army targets Palestinian cultural institutions for attack, and prevents the free movement of cultural workers. Its own theatre companies perform to settler audiences on the West Bank – and those same companies tour the globe as cultural diplomats, in support of “Brand Israel”. During South African apartheid, musicians announced they weren’t going to “play Sun City”. Now we are saying, in Tel Aviv, Netanya, Ashkelon or Ariel, we won’t play music, accept awards, attend exhibitions, festivals or conferences, run masterclasses or workshops, until Israel respects international law and ends its colonial oppression of the Palestinians. To see the full list of supporters, go to artistsforpalestine.org.uk.
Peter Kosminsky, Mike Leigh, Jimmy McGovern, Phyllida Lloyd, Max Stafford-Clark, Will Alsop OBE, John Berger, Miriam Margolyes, Maggie Steed, Riz Ahmed, Anna Carteret, Jeremy Hardy, Brian Eno, Richard Ashcroft, Gillian Slovo, China MiĆ©ville, Aminatta Forna, Hari Kunzru, Liz Lochhead, Hanan Al-Shaykh, Peter Ahrends, David Calder, Caryl Churchill, Sacha Craddock, Selma Dabbagh, Ken Loach, Roger Michell, April De Angelis, Andy de la Tour, Mike Hodges, Rachel Holmes, Ann Jungman, Kika Markham, Simon McBurney, Andrew O’Hagan, Courttia Newland, Michael Radford, Lynne Reid Banks, Kamila Shamsie, Alexei Sayle, Roger Waters, Mark Thomas, Susan Wooldridge, Laura Mulvey, Pauline Melville, Khalid Abdalla, Bidisha, Nicholas Blincoe, Leah Borrromeo, Haim Bresheeth, Victoria Brittain, Niall Buggy, Tam Dean Burn, Jonathan Burrows, Taghrid Choucair-Vizoso, Ian Christie, Liam Cunningham, Ivor Dembina, Shane Dempsey, Patrick Driver, Okin Earl, Leon Rosselson, Sally El Hosaini, Paul Laverty, Eyal Sivan, John Smith, Mitra Tabrizian, Siobhan Redmond, Ian Rickson, Tom Leonard, Sonja Linden, David Mabb, Rose Issa, Gareth Evans, Alisa Lebow, Annie Firbank, James Floyd, Jane Frere, Kadija George, Bob Giles, Mel Gooding, Tony Graham, Penny Woolcock, Omar Robert Hamilton, James Holcombe, Adrian Hornsby, John Keane, Brigid Keenan, Hannah Khalil, Shahid Khan, Sabrina Mahfouz, Sarah McDade, Jonathan Munby, Lizzie Nunnery, Rebecca O’Brien, Timothy Pottier, Maha Rahwanji, Ravinder Randhawa, Leila Sansour, Seni Seneviratne, Anna Sherbany, Eyal Sivan, Kareem Samara, Cat Villiers, Esther Wilson, Emily Young, Andrea Luka Zimmerman, Jeremy Page, Sarah Streatfeild, Colin Darke, Russell Mills, Elaine Di Campo, Treasa O’Brien