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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/18/2012 10:46:46 AM

Israel returns fire on Syrian Golan, may have caused deaths


JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel fired artillery into Syria in response to gunfire aimed at its troops in the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights, and may have killed Syrian soldiers, Israel's army said on Sunday.

There were no reported injuries on the Israeli side from the shootings, which occurred on Saturday, the third case this month of violence seen as a spillover of civil unrest in Syria that has also alarmed other neighbors such as Lebanon and Turkey.

"There was small arms fire (at Israeli forces), there was a response and from what I hear over Arab media it appears Syrian soldiers were killed," Brigadier-General Yoav Mordechai, Israel's chief military spokesman, told Army Radio.

He said Israel was trying not to be dragged into battles between Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces and rebels. The chaos of the 20-month-old insurgency often makes independent assessment of casualties within Syria difficult.

"Our trigger finger is very stiff, not light," Mordechai said. "Under no circumstances do we accept any shooting on the State of Israel's territory, but nor do we intend to heat up the area."

Israel captured the Golan area in the 1967 war and later annexed it in a move never recognized internationally.

Israel lodged a complaint with the United Nations over Saturday's incident. The U.N. has a peace-keeper force in the area monitoring a ceasefire in place since the 1970s.

(Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Todd Eastham)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/18/2012 6:07:50 PM
Friends, I will attempt to post reports on the Israel-Gaza crises from (so to speak) across the street now.

Hunted by drones, dodging rockets and tank shells: An ordinary family's nightmare trapped inside Gaza's dead zone

PUBLISHED: 01:12 GMT, 18 November 2012

Ahmed Abu Hamda is a 42-year-old radio producer in beleaguered Gaza City, where he lives with his wife Suha and sons Mostafa, three, and Mohammad, two. Here he tells how life there has become a nightmare for him and his family.

Ahmed Abu Hamda is in Gaza with his young family. He writes about his experiences as Israeli airstrikes rain down around him

Ahmed Abu Hamda is in Gaza with his young family. He writes about his experiences as Israeli airstrikes rain down around him

Ever since the Israeli aerial attacks on Gaza began on Wednesday afternoon, most of the 1.4million people living here have been concerned with just one thing: how to keep their families from harm.

But Gaza is such a small place, and so overpopulated, that there is nowhere to hide.

The streets are almost deserted. People rush out to buy food and other essentials, but mostly families stay hunkered down in their homes as Israeli bombs and missiles rain down, shaking the buildings and making our children cry.

We are surrounded on three sides and from the air. Our only escape, across the Egyptian border in the south, is closed off to most people.

Israel has attacked more than 300 targets, using guided missiles from F-15 fighter bombers, artillery from gunboats cruising to the west off our Mediterranean beach, and shells fired from tanks and artillery batteries massed on the Gaza-Israel border to the north and east.

The fighters from Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Popular Resistance Committees and the other militant groups are nowhere and everywhere.

They move like shadows through our society, a few thousand people who hold the fate of a nation in their hands.

Usually they fire their rockets and mortars from isolated fields and villages in the north and west of the Gaza Strip, closer to the border with Israel, to bring more Israeli territory within range.


Since Wednesday, they have moved eastwards into the heart of Gaza City.

The first indication that the fighters have taken up position near your house is the whoosh of a rocket as it roars past your window, often followed just seconds later by the ground-shaking impact of an Israeli counter-strike.

Even if you manage to stay away from the obvious targets – the Hamas security compounds, weapons stores, arms manufacturing workshops and rocket-launchers – the violence can follow you.

Smoke rises after Israeli air strikes in Gaza City. Israel's military says 200 air strikes have taken place in the last few days

Smoke rises after Israeli planes drop ordnance in Gaza City. 300 air strikes have taken place in the last few days

A Palestinian carries a wounded female relative into the treatment room of Shifa hospital following an Israeli airstrike

A Palestinian carries a wounded female relative into the treatment room of Shifa hospital following an Israeli airstrike

If the Israelis track a militant suspect down your street and happen to strike his motorcycle or car just as you are coming home, you have no protection. Israeli eyes are everywhere.

Their drones hover like invisible demons above us, flying unseen and unheard high in the sky with their high-technology spyware. The drones follow suspects and beam back their co-ordinates to the soldiers who fire off missiles – as if they were playing some deadly video game with real flesh-and-blood targets.

‘This is a game that the Israelis are playing with us,’ says one friend. ‘It is totally unfair to compare Gaza to Israel militarily.

'Israel has planes and tanks and they could invade the entire Gaza Strip in 15 minutes.

Sorrow: Palestinian women cry during the funeral of Audi Naser, who was killed in an Israeli air strike, during his funeral in Beit Hanun, northern Gaza Strip

Sorrow: Palestinian women cry during the funeral of Audi Naser, who was killed in an Israeli air strike, during his funeral in Beit Hanun, northern Gaza Strip

‘They watch us from their drones and they peer right into our homes. They know what we are doing all the time. They like to hunt people. We are like chess pieces and they are just playing with us.’

Even your home is not safe. I have seen too many people badly injured and even killed, not by direct hits from the Israeli missiles – though I have seen that too – but by the flying glass and shrapnel that accompanies each explosion.

Then there is the blast wave, a silent tsunami of pressure that rampages through a house like a rhino – shattering windows, wrecking furniture and demolishing our flimsy Gazan walls.

The damage is enormous, and it can be deadly – especially for children and the elderly trapped under the debris and the rubble.

I am always being asked how I keep my family safe, but the truth is that nowhere in Gaza is safe – there are only places that are risky, and places that are less risky.

An Israeli F-15 jet fighter as it lowers its landing gear to come in for a landing at an air force base in southern Israel

Fire in the sky: An Israeli F-15 jet fighter as it lowers its landing gear to come in for a landing at an air force base in southern Israel

Blaze: Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a factory, which according to Palestinians, was hit by an Israeli air strike in Gaza

Blaze: Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at a factory, which according to Palestinians, was hit by an Israeli air strike in Gaza

When I go out to work, first I take my wife and two small sons to my in-laws. It’s no safer where they live because the militants and the Israeli drones that hunt them are everywhere.

But at least if something happens to me they will not be alone. At least my wife will be with her parents and the boys will be with their grandparents.

People in Gaza have become increasingly unhappy with Hamas since they took control in 2007. Unemployment remains high and wages are low.

At the bakeries and groceries, there are large crowds stocking up on bread, flour and potatoes – buying three times as much as they can use and creating a shortage of food where there is none.

In this way, we take the crisis and make it even worse for ourselves.

But despite these privations and problems, the sheer indiscriminate deadly might of the Israeli onslaught has turned almost all Gazans into Hamas patriots.

One of my friends, a secular woman who until now has had little patience for the strictures of Hamas, summed up the feelings of many even as the bombs were falling. ‘I feel like this is my independence day,’ she said.


Watch videos here


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/18/2012 6:16:58 PM

In Tel Aviv, 100s protest against Gaza operation

11/17/2012 21:22

Protesters call Operation Pillar of Defense "election campaign" for Netanyahu, chant "children in Sderot, Gaza want peace."


Sign reads: Jews, Arabs refusing to be enemies PHOTO: BEN HARTMAN

A few hundred Israelis protested against Operation Pillar of Defense in Tel Aviv on Saturday night, calling on the government to reach an immediate cease-fire with Hamas in Gaza.

The demonstrators called the military operation an “election campaign” for Netanyahu, and chanted “Children in Sderot and Gaza want peace,” as well as calls against the “occupation.”

Protester Yuval Itah said the demonstration was about “Jews and Arabs together calling for a cease-fire,” adding, “I don’t care any more about Jews than I do about Palestinians in Gaza, I don’t anyone to die...”

When asked how to stop the rockets against the south of Israel, he said, “Through peace” and by pursuing dialogue with Hamas.

Holding a sign that read “stop shooting, start talking,” Anat Mendelsohn Machis said the war was meant in large part “to keep the public from talking about social issues, which is not Bibi’s [Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s] strong suit. Instead, now we’re all talking about war only.” She also called for Israel to stop the rockets through dialogue with Hamas.

Click for full JPost coverage

A separate protest was held Saturday in Nazareth where Hadash leader MK Muhammad Barakei said, “I accuse the Israeli government for the spilling of both Israeli and Palestinian blood, and I mourn victims on both sides. Civilians must be pulled from the cycle of horror. Netanyahu is mistaken if he thinks the [Gaza] operation will bring quiet.

This will not happen.”

According to protest organizers, 1,500 participants took part, both Jewish and Arab.

“This operation is motivated by party politics, it was started to help Netanyahu win the election and to eliminate any possibility of serious negotiations, after the reelection of US President Barack Obama,” Barakei said.

John Benzaquen contributed to this report.



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/18/2012 6:20:57 PM

Gaza hospitals face dire supply shortages

Already stretched thin before this latest conflict, hospitals in the Gaza Strip face a "disaster" if fighting continues.
Last Modified: 17 Nov 2012 17:13

It's not yet been a week since the latest conflict in Gaza began, but already the casualties on the Palestinian side are proving to be overwhelming for overstretched hospitals.

Since the initial Israeli air strike that killed Ahmad Jabari, head of Hamas's Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, on November 14, Israel's military said it has struck at least 800 targets, and Hamas has responded with 500 rockets.

The imbalance in military power between the two sides is evident by the number of dead and injured in Gaza versus Israel.

At least 39 Palestinians have been killed since the start of this latest round of fighting, with three Israelis killed in the same period. By Saturday afternoon, 13 Israelis had been injured - including 10 soldiers - compared to 350 Palestinians, 73 per cent of them children and elderly, according to a statement made at a press conference by Gaza police chief Taysee al-Batsh.

Coping with the injuries is taking its own toll on Gaza's battered medical infrastructure.

According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, there are 24 medical centres in the Gaza Strip to serve apopulation of 1.7 million. Israel, in contrast, has 377 hospitals and a population of roughly 7.93 million.

There are also 21 health centres run by United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in Gaza. Despite fighting, the clinics, which serve Palestinian refugees, were able to open and function on Saturday, although they were not fully staffed.

Major medical shortage

Medhat Abbas, director-general of Al Shifa Hospital in the Gaza Strip, told Al Jazeera that there is currently a 40 per cent shortage of medicines and medical supplies in Gaza's hospitals.

"This is including trauma and emergency requirements, in addition to some orthopaedic kits," said Abbas.

Click to view our interactive map tracking social media
posts from residents in Gaza and Israel [Al Jazeera]

The large number of injured people flowing into Gaza's 13 hospitals - Abbas estimated 390 in the first four days of fighting - are sure to drain what little supplies they have left.

Saline solution, suturing supplies, anaesthetics and tools, such as plates, rods, screws, needed to stabilise complex fractures are in especially short supply, he said.

"What would have been enough for one week will be consumed in a few hours," said Abbas, adding that hospitals also need spare parts for CT scanning machines, which are crucial for diagnosing injuries. Most of the injuries stem from shrapnel wounds and bone fractures, with a few patients requiring amputations.

The only hope - outside a ceasefire - is that the border at Rafah remains open to allow patients to be sent to Egypt for treatment while letting medical supplies to flow into Gaza.

"I hope that a truce will be achieved because if things continue like this - with victims falling here and there and our supply shortages...it's a disaster," said Abbas.

"You're talking about a tragedy."

From bad to worse

Even before this latest round of fighting, Gaza hospitals were already stretched thin.

Basim Naim, Gaza's health minister in 2011, told Al Jazeera in June of that year that 178 types of necessary medications were at "near zero balance in stock" and that 190 kinds of medicines in stock were "either expired or are close to their expiry date".

Abbas said most of the medications arriving in Gaza are already expired.

"These drugs, they go in the incinerator and pollute the environment, but they don't help us," said Abbas,

"This war is coming on top of a siege, which is already known by the deficit of electricity and the shortage of fuel - we don't have enough to meet 10 days of our requirements."

During the last conflict, in 2008, Abbas said hospital staff had to "use linens to stop bleeding".

Aid and humanitarian groups, including UNRWA are trying to get supplies into Gaza.

"There are constant shortages of supplies in the hospitals in Gaza, which can only be exacerbated by the ongoing violence," said Robert Turner, Director of UNRWA operations in Gaza.

While he said there is "good general hospital care" in Gaza, he added that: "Ongoing shortages of supplies and equipment due to the blockade and financial difficulties and power shortages make [for] extreme challenges at the best of times."

Trapped and sealed in

Getting staff to the hospitals is also proving to be an issue.

Wala'a Summour, a medical intern, said that she has been effectively sealed into her neighbourhood by the constant air strikes.

"I can't leave my area because there have been intensive air raids, but I'm in constant contact with my hospital," said Summour.

"You can not move from one area to another. There are no cars on the street," said Summour, adding that many other medical staff are also isolated.

Hospital staff who are able to report for duty are working 24 continuous hours and then given two days off, Abbas said.

Getting medical supplies into hospitals also requires a tactical approach, and presently, the Egypt border at Rafah is the only route open to Palestinians, with limited aid making it though.

It's crucial that whatever makes it through is useful, said Turner.

"During an event such as this there is generally a lot of in-kind contributions or medicines and supplies, many of which are likely to come through Egypt," said Turner.

He added that UNRWA, Ramallah's ministry of health, the World Health Organisation and the International Committee of the Red Cross are trying to move in 205 pallets to support ocal hospitals.

Hatem Shurrab, the spokesman for UK-based charity Islamic Relief Worldwide, said the situation in Gaza is: "So far under control but is quickly deteriorating."

"We have enough supplies for one month, but not longer," he said. All hopes are pinned on the Rafah crossing, which is only open for the movement of people, not supply trucks.

"The crisis now is that the aid will take some time to deliver," said Shurrab.

In this situation, time lost equals lives lost.

"A delay means life," said Shurrab.

"It means that someone will suffer and maybe die. It’s a matter of life and death."

Follow D Parvaz on Twitter: @DParvaz

Source:
Al Jazeera

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/18/2012 6:24:48 PM

Morsi: Israel and Hamas “could soon” agree a truce

Published: 18 November, 2012, 05:50

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (L) meeting with Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi at the presidential palace in Cairo on November 17, 2012 (AFP Photo)

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (L) meeting with Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi at the presidential palace in Cairo on November 17, 2012 (AFP Photo)

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi said at a news conference, Saturday, with Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan there were indications a ceasefire could soon be reached in Gaza, but there were still “no guarantees.”

Erdogan is in Cairo for 4-way talks as regional parties desperately try and push Hamas and Israel towards a truce and avert an Israeli ground invasion of Gaza.

Israeli Prime Minister Banjamin Netanyahu told foreign leaders Saturday that he would agree to a ceasefire if Hamas agrees to stop rocket fire from Gaza.

Also present at the talks were Quatari Emir Haid Bin Khalifa al-Thari and several Palestinian leaders.

A senior advisor to Palestinian authority president Mahmoud Abbas praised the Egyptian efforts to broker peace while deploring the Israeli actions.

“President Abbas has consistently offered negotiations for a two state solution, but Israel has shown no interest in these negotiations. So this is the result. And the Palestinian people pay the price.” The advisor told Al-Monitor, a website specializing in Middle East coverage.

Arab League Secretary General Nabil El Araby said after the talks,"We need to start taking effective steps to push influential countries to take the issue back to the UN Security Council."

 Arab Foreign ministers stand for a moment of silence during an emergency meeting of the in Cairo on November 17, 2012 (AFP Photo)
Arab Foreign ministers stand for a moment of silence during an emergency meeting of the in Cairo on November 17, 2012 (AFP Photo)

However sources from inside Israel have been sending mixed messages over the prospects of a ground offensive on Gaza.

“A ground operation is a possibility. It’s an option which we must take in order to restore quiet and calm to the region. Until Hamas realize that we are here to stay and they cannot keep firing rockets at us and at our civilians on a day to day basis we will have to act in order to restore that deterrence,”

Josh Hartman, Israeli Defense Chief spokesman told RT.

Josh Hartman, Spokesman for the Israeli Defense Chief, speaking to RT earlier:

While Eli Yishhai, Israeli’s Interior Minister was blunter about the operation in Gaza, “The goal of the operation is to send Gaza back to the Middle-Ages. Only then will Israel be calm for 40 years,” he told Haaretz, an Israeli daily newspaper.

But Yossi Melman, an Israeli security correspondent struck a more cautious note.He told Al Monitor that Israel’s mobilization of reserves was mainly for psychological purposes to increase pressure on Hamas and that Israel was reluctant to move in with ground troops.

However, he also stated that if the Cairo talks came to nothing and there was no ceasefire, the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) would conduct a ground attack, which would result in fatalities for the Israeli military and far more Palestinian deaths. This, Melman argued, may result in Israeli public opinion turning against the government and force regional players Egypt and Jordan to take a more severe line with Israel.

Meanwhile, Hamas also has doubts as to the feasibility of a ceasefire. Senior Hamas leader Mousa Abu Marzouk told the Maan Palestinian news agency that he does not expect a ceasefire soon. "There are many calls for a truce but it will not be soon," he said.

Hamas is an offshoot of Egyptian President Mahammed Morsi's the Muslim Brotherhood. Quietly, though, non-Muslim members of Morsi's government are said to be pushing Hamas to end its rocket campaign, it was reported by AP.

As operation Pillar of Defense enters its fifth day, over 800 targets have been hit by Israel in Gaza, while Hamas has launched some 750 rockets into Israel.

Israel’s Iron Dome Ballistic missile defense battery has hit eight out of 10 incoming Palestinian rockets, many of which are crude homemade devices.

At least 45 Palestinians have been killed, including militants, civilians and children. Three civilians have been killed by airstrikes from Gaza in Israel.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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