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Israel-focused
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Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Army
to close Kissufim crossing tonight (August
14, 2005)
- At midnight tonight, less than 24 hours before disengagement
commences, the army will seal the Kissufim crossing into the Gaza
Strip. Tomorrow morning, teams of Israel Defense Forces and police
officers will fan out to every settlement in the Strip to inform
residents they have 48 hours to leave their homes and if they
refuse, they will be evacuated by force. The order in which
settlements are to be evacuated will be decided on Tuesday
afternoon. A senior police source told Haaretz that even then, each
brigade commander will be given two alternative assignments, to keep
the order of evacuation vague for as long as possible. The real
assignments will be handed out only on midnight Tuesday. The
evacuation itself is to begin on Wednesday morning. Defense Minister
Shaul Mofaz announced Thursday that the new target date for
completion of disengagement is September 4. In response to the
shorter deadline, the IDF will bring in two evacuation divisions
simultaneously, one in the north and one in the south, and put off
the evacuation of the northern Gaza Strip and the isolated
settlements to a later stage, beginning the evacuation Wednesday
with five or six smaller settlements. more...
- Gazans
celebrate pullout; Abbas: Jerusalem is next (August
14, 2005)
- The government-organized rally is Abbas' most high-profile attempt
yet to seek credit for the pullout. Tens of thousands of
Palestinians crowded into Gaza City's small fishing harbor Friday to
celebrate the impending Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip,
waving flags and hearing promises from their leader, Mahmoud Abbas,
that the West Bank and Jerusalem will be next. The
government-organized rally under the theme "Setting Sail for
Freedom" - the first mass celebration - was Abbas' most
high-profile attempt yet to seek credit for the pullout, and defuse
claims by political rival Hamas that its attacks have driven Israel
out. Abbas, surrounded by security guards, spoke briefly.
"From here, from this place, our nation and our masses are
walking toward the establishment of an independent Palestinian state
with Jerusalem as its capital," Abbas told the crowd. Yet
tensions between Abbas and Hamas became apparent when Cabinet
minister Mohammed Dahlan said the Palestinian flag must be the
official banner at all celebrations. He did not refer to Hamas
directly, but the militant group has said it plans its own
military-style celebrations, and is sewing thousands of its own
green banners. "This era is the era of unity, and the era that
will end any competition or disagreement," Dahlan told the
crowd. more...
(This article is for all those "peaceniks" out there who
feel sorry for the poor PLO. Their expressed goal is to destroy
every Jew and have Israel to themselves. Read their websites! They
don't hide it. We call that genocide here in the US. At least we
did.)
- On
Jews' 'darkest day,' expulsion set to begin (August
14, 2005)
- With Jews in Israel and around the world marking the darkest day
of their history by fasting and reading the Book of Lamentations,
the Jewish state today prepares to expel its residents from Gaza and
parts of the West Bank, and a nation once again braces for the
possibility of tragedy. Today marks the ninth day of the Jewish
month of Av, the date on the lunar calendar on which the First and
Second Temples were destroyed. Other more recent tragedies occurred
on the same date, such as the outbreak of pogroms against Jews
during the First Crusade, the expulsion of Jews from Spain and later
from England, and the crushing of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising in
Germany. The First Temple was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586
BC 100,000 Jews were killed and the remainder were exiled from
their Holy Land for 70 years. The Second Temple was destroyed in 70
AD by the Romans, according to traditional sources, because of
baseless hatred between Jews. The Jewish people at the time, the
Talmud relates, hated one another for no reason. Two million Jews
were killed during the destruction, and those remaining were once
again exiled. more...
- Lutherans
In National Meeting Condemn Israeli Security Barrier (August
14, 2005)
- The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America denounced the security
barrier Israel is building along the West Bank, saying Saturday that
Israeli policy throughout the territories has brought "extreme
hardship" to Palestinians. The statement, called "Peace
Not Walls: Stand for Justice in the Holy Land," is part of an
advocacy plan for Mideast peace that delegates to a church wide
assembly adopted on a 668-269 vote. It was approved at a time of
heightened tension between Protestants and Jews. Several protestant
groups have angered Jews by protesting construction of the barrier,
and some Christian denominations have considered divestment from
companies that profit from Israeli control of the Palestinian
territories. The new ELCA strategy doesn't mention divestment, but
it urges the denomination to move toward "stewarding financial
resources - both U.S. tax dollars and private funds - in ways that
support the quest for a just peace in the Holy Land." Lutheran
leaders insist it is not an endorsement of economic pressure against
Israel. more...
- Moderate
Earthquake Jolts Indonesia Island (August
14, 2005)
- A moderate earthquake shook parts of Indonesia's Sumbawa island on
Saturday, but no damage or injuries were reported. The 5.6-magnitude
quake was centered about 150 miles beneath the Flores sea and 25
miles northwest of Sumbawa Besar, capital of Sumbawa island,
according to Budi Waluyo of the Meteorology and Geophysics Agency.
The quake, which struck Saturday morning, also was felt in the
neighboring tourist islands of Bali and Lombok, Waluyo said.
Indonesia, the world's largest archipelago, is prone to seismic
upheaval due to its location on the Pacific "Ring of Fire"
— a series of volcanoes and fault lines stretching from the
Western Hemisphere through Japan and Southeast Asia. A massive
earthquake and tsunami on Dec. 26, killed more than 131,000 people
in Indonesia and left half a million homeless. Three months later,
another strong temblor left more than 900 dead on Nias and smaller
surrounding islands.
- Strong
earthquake shakes southern Mexico (August
14, 2005)
- A 5.4 magnitude earthquake rocked the southern Pacific coast of
Mexico on Sunday, 370 km south-southwest of Mexico City, according
to the US Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information
Centre. The earthquake struck the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca
near Santiago Pinotepa Nacional at 0820 hrs IST and could be felt in
Mexican City, where building swayed lightly. There were not
immediate reports of damages or injuries near the epicenter in towns
along the Oaxaca coast, said Leopoldo Jimenez, a radio operator with
the Oaxaca Civil Protection Department in Oaxaca City, 170 kilometers
northeast of the quake. "They told us it was very light,"
said Jimenez, describing a round of telephone conversations with
officials in cities along the coast, including the popular resorts
of Puerto Escondido and Huatulco. "We don't have any related
reports of human loss or of material damages." Miguel Angel
Rodriguez, night manager at the Hotel Carmona in Pinotepa Nacional,
said the quake lasted what felt like 10 seconds with light tremors
afterward. "Things on the tables moved, like televisions,"
he said.
- Moderate
Earthquake In Sumatra (August
14, 2005)
- A moderate earthquake measuring 5.3 on the Richter scale occurred
in the west coast of Sumatra at 2.27am Sunday, the Meteorological
Services Department said. It said the centre of the earthquake was
located 79km off Nias and 561km Southwest of Kuala Lumpur at
coordinates 1.4 North, 96.9 East. Based on its location and
magnitude, the earthquake was not expected to generate a tsunami, it
added.
- Earthquake
topples houses in China (August
14, 2005)
- An earthquake hit southwest China on Saturday, bringing down
several houses and causing injuries, Xinhua news agency said. The
quake, measuring 5.3 on the Richter scale, hit Wenshan county in
Yunnan province just after midday, local time. "Injuries have
been reported in seven townships... The earthquake has also toppled
some houses. However, the exact number of injuries and economic
losses are unavailable," Xinhua said. Earthquakes are common in
China. In December 2003, a tremor measuring 6.1 on the Richter scale
struck the remote northwestern region of Xinjiang. At least 10
people, mostly herdsmen, were killed and 700 mud and brick houses
destroyed. Yunnan's Huize county was hit by a quake measuring 5.3 on
the Richter scale last week. Nine people were injured.
- Siberia's
rapid thaw causes alarm (August
14, 2005)
- The whole western Siberian sub-Arctic region has started to thaw.
The world's largest frozen peat bog is melting, which could speed
the rate of global warming, New Scientist reports. The huge expanse
of western Siberia is thawing for the first time since its
formation, 11,000 years ago. The area, which is the size of France
and Germany combined, could release billions of tonnes of greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere. This could potentially act as a tipping
point, causing global warming to snowball, scientists fear. The
situation is an "ecological landslide that is probably
irreversible and is undoubtedly connected to climatic warming,"
researcher Sergei Kirpotin, of Tomsk State University, Russia, told
New Scientist magazine. more...
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