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April 26, 2010

South Africa likens Israeli restrictions to apartheid

The South African government has compared new Israeli military restrictions on the movement of Palestinians in the West Bank to apartheid pass laws.

The South African Department of International Relations and Cooperation issued a statement condemning the restrictions as “a gross violation of an individual’s human rights,” saying that the military order “further exacerbates the already fragile situation in Palestine,” according to a report in the daily Cape Times.

Israel has said the newly updated military order, designed to prevent infiltrations into the West Bank by requiring that residents have proper identification, has been in effect for many years. The order was updated recently to require an immediate hearing before a judge for illegal movement.

Avichai Adrai, the Israeli army spokesman for the Arabic media, said last week in a conference call with Palestinian journalists that the order actually will help legalize the presence of Gaza Palestinians who fled the coastal strip and now reside in the West Bank.

Americans for Peace now has charged that the updated order, which went into effect April 13, could lead to the arrest of an unknown number of Palestinian residents of the West Bank, as well as internationals living and working there.

“South Africa, because of its history, is particularly sensitive to the infringement of human rights that the carrying of a permit implies and the unilateral punishments that can be brought to bear on an individual by the state,” the South African statement said. It also said that the provisions were unclear and seemed “to disregard the existence of the Palestinian Authority and the agreements Israel signed with it and the PLO.”

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Holyland suspect asked about bribes to Shas leader, Lieberman

Police asked the main suspect in Israel’s largest-ever real estate scandal if Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman and Shas spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef received bribes.

The lawyer for Meir Rabin said Monday that police asked Rabin whether he had given Yosef about $270,000 in donations, as well as bribes to two other lawmakers who served as ministers at the time, Israeli media are reporting.

“This is nonsense that should not be dignified with a response,” Lieberman’s office said.

Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, and his successor as Jerusalem mayor, Uri Lupolianski, have been named in the bribery scandal involving a large residential development on the site of the former Holyland Hotel in Jerusalem.

Rabin is accused of advancing the building project by offering bribes to senior public figures.

Also Monday, Olmert’s former bureau chief Shula Zaken was taken into custody to be questioned about the Holyland corruption affair when she landed at Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport following a long trip abroad. Police are hoping to gain evidence on Olmert’s involvement in the scandal by questioning Zaken.

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Israeli police force to protect Palestinians

A special task force of border police will be stationed in the West Bank to protect Palestinian property.

The decision to establish the force was made following violent confrontations in a Palestinian village near the northern West Bank settlement of Yitzhar, according to a statement issued Sunday by Israel’s military. During those incidents on Israel’s Independence Day, an Israeli soldier was injured by a bottle thrown by a settler and another settler was arrested for slashing the tires of a police vehicle.

The force will work to prevent settler violence against Palestinians and damage to their property, and to ensure public order. It is expected to strengthen regional security as well.

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Hamas terrorist killed in Israeli arrest bid

A Hamas terrorist responsible for the death of an Israeli policeman was killed during an arrest operation near Hebron.

Ali Ismail Ahmed Sawiti, 42, was killed early Monday morning after Israel security houses shot at and partially bulldozed the house in which he was hiding in the village of Beit Awwa, south of Hebron, in an attempt to convince him to surrender, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

Sawiti, who had fired at the security forces surrounding his relatives’ home and refused to surrender, was found dead amid some of the house’s rubble, according to reports.

Sawiti, a member of an armed Hamas cell, executed six terrorist attacks—five shooting attacks and one explosives device attack—between 1999 and 2004, the IDF said.

Border Policeman Yaniv Mashiah was killed in one of the shooting attacks, on April 25, 2004. Two additional border policemen were injured in the attack. The IDF on Monday notified the Mashiah family of the terrorist’s death.

Sawiti escaped an attempted arrest in February 2007. He has been wanted by Israel since 2002.

The entire home was demolished following the incident, according to reports.

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Far-right Jobbik gains in Hungarian elections

Hungary’s openly anti-Semitic nationalist Jobbik Party secured 47 seats in the 386-seat legislature in the second round of parliamentary elections.

Jobbik, which had no seats in the previous National Assembly, in Sunday’s elections improved upon the 26 seats it had won in the first round of voting earlier this month. Jobbik deputies have threatened to march into the new Parliament session wearing the black uniforms and red insignia of the banned paramilitary Hungarian Guard organization.

As expected, the populist, ultra-conservative Fidesz Party grabbed the lion’s share of the vote Sunday, winning 263 seats, after garnering 206 in the first round. Fidesz, which held 163 seats in the last government, now holds more than the two-thirds parliamentary majority required for changing the Constitution in the absence of cross-party accord.

The ruling Socialist Party took 59 seats after taking 28 in the first round of voting—down from 190 in the previous government. Its erstwhile coalition partner, the Liberal Party, which once enjoyed strong Jewish support, lost its parliamentary presence. A new Green Party won 16 seats.

Political and economic analysts fear that the electoral success of Jobbik will undermine Hungary’s nascent recovery from the worst recession since World War II.

The Association of Hungarian Jewish Religious Communities, the largest Jewish organization in Hungary, has formally called on the democratic parliamentary parties to defend the country’s human rights tradition by isolating the incoming racist deputies. Fidesz chief Victor Orban has promised to curb the rise of the neo-Nazis.

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Israeli-Arab lawmakers visit Libya

A delegation of Israeli Arabs, including six Knesset members, is visiting Libya.

The 40-member delegation arrived in Libya on Libyan President Muammar Gadhafi’s private jet on Saturday for a two-day visit. In a meeting with Gadhafi on Sunday, the Libyan leader reportedly told the group, “We are not against Jews, but against Zionism.”

The invitation to visit Libya was extended two weeks ago via the Libyan ambassador to Jordan, Muhammad Hassan al-Barghouti. Members of the delegation were not granted Libyan visas, nor did they travel on their Israeli passports; instead they used special entry permits issued by Libya, according to reports.

Israel and Libya do not have official diplomatic ties, but Israel has not declared Libya an enemy state.  This is the first time Israeli lawmakers have visited Libya.

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Florida man blames Holocaust for crime

A Florida man who hid $10 million in offshore accounts did it because his Holocaust survivor parents taught him to “hide and hoard,” his lawyer said.

Jack Barouh, 65, a former watchmaker who sold his luxury watch manufacturing and distributing company in 2004 for $50 million, was sentenced Friday to 10 months in prison for tax evasion. He hid $6 million in offshore accounts at UBS AG. He had been hiding money since 1976, according to reports.

His layyer argued that Barouh had a compulsion “to establish a secret nest egg” as his parents taught him. Barouh, whose family fled from Austria during the Holocaust and moved to Colombia, reportedly received psychiatric help for his compulsion.

Barouh is one of 11 UBS clients to plead guilty to tax evasion since the bank admitted in February 2009 that it helped Americans evade paying taxes. The bank paid $780 million in fines. Barouh’s sentence is the longest so far, according to Bloomberg News.

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Israel lifts iPad ban

Israel has lifted its ban on the iPad.

The Communications Ministry announced Saturday evening that it will allow personal imports of the Apple iPad into the country.

Since its release two weeks ago, Israeli customs officials had been confiscating the device from Israelis entering the country. Officials said the devices were banned because they did not meet Israel’s wireless specifications and could place a strain on the wireless Internet in Israel.

But a report in Time magazine suggested that the reason might have more to do with personal politics: iDigital, Apple’s sole official Israeli importer, is owned by Chemi Peres, son of Israeli President Shimon Peres, and the ban might have been about protecting his monopoly.

A Communications Ministry statement released Saturday said, “The scrutiny conducted by the Ministry technical team vis-à-vis Apple’s team, International laboratory and European counterparts confirmed that the device which could be operated in various standards will be operated in Israel in accordance to the local standards.”

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Hamas Gilad Schalit Cartoon (VIDEO): Animated video taunts Israel over captured soldier

From HuffingtonPost.com:

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip—Hamas released an animated film Sunday bearing a grisly message for Israel: If it doesn’t meet the Islamic militant group’s demands, an Israeli soldier it has held for nearly four years could return home in a coffin.

The short but sophisticated cartoon – which depicts Sgt. Gilad Schalit’s aging father wandering empty streets with a picture of his son and ends with the words “There is still hope” – is the latest product of Hamas’ growing media machine.

TV and radio stations controlled by the group continuously broadcast Hamas-produced songs and music videos threatening the Jewish state and rallying the group’s militant Islamic base.

Read the full article at HuffingtonPost.com.

Video on YouTube:

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When a Pope needs friends

Since the public announcement of my upcoming meeting with Pope Benedict this Wednesday at the Vatican, courtesy of my friend Gary Krupp, many of my close Jewish friends have expressed not approval but disappointment. ‘They blamed the pedophile priest scandal on Jews and compared the attacks on the Church to anti-Semitism. How could you, Shmuley?’ ‘The Pope was in the Hitler Youth and he wants to make Pope Pius XII, who never condemned the holocaust, into a saint.’ ‘The Church has always been anti-Semitic. You’re being used.’

Come now. Jewish insularity is the ultimate obstacle to the dissemination of Jewish values, while Jewish contempt for the non-Jewish world because of its past immorality and Jew-hatred is itself immoral and hateful. Pope Benedict is being kicked to the curb in nearly every part of the world. But I as a Jew do not forget that for all his failures in properly handing the abomination of pedophile Priests, for which the Church must atone and repent, Benedict has been a great friend to the Jewish community, visiting an unprecedented three Synagogues in four years as well as the State of Israel. And whom does it benefit to see a mighty Church fall?  The millions of orphans the Church tends to worldwide? The schools it runs and the pupils it teaches? The hope its Priests give to the poor, especially in the third world?

I have been one of Pope Pius XII’s foremost critics in the entire world. But Benedict is not Pius and before we holler for his demise let’s recall that as the Cardinal Secretary of State he did more to extend the Church’s hand in friendship to other people’s and faiths than nearly anyone who preceded him.

There is much in Jewish law and tradition that could bring healing to the Church, beginning with the Jewish laws of modesty and sexual seclusion. In Judaism a man and woman who are not married are not allowed to be in a locked room together. When I was Rabbi to Michael Jackson I took this law and applied it his special circumstances. I told him that the only way he could rehabilitate his reputation, after the pedophile accusations against him, was to quite simply foreswear ever being alone with a child. I even grabbed Michael’s shoulders and made him promise me he would never seclude himself with a child not his own. And for the two years we were close to he stuck to the script. When he and I launched our initiative to help children, the focus was on working with their parents to prioritize their kids, rather than with the kids themselves. It wasn’t until Michael stupidly disregarded this simple advice and decided to share a bed – however platonically – with a young child and then brag about it on international TV that he was arrested and started the inexorable decline that ended in his death a few years later.

The Church should embrace the same straightforward rule. No priest should be allowed to be in alone with a child. Period. If a Priest needs to speak to a child alone, the door must never be locked and there must always be the possibility that they can be intruded upon by outsiders. If they walk in a park, it cannot be one that is empty of people. This way we’ll know that any Priest who breaks the guidelines will be punished whether or not they abuse a child. It would significantly curb the potential for any act of child molestation and might even discourage pedophiles from entering the priesthood in the first place.

But more importantly, it’s time for Jews and Catholics to work together to promote new values in America. While our country is gripped in an epidemic of materialism and an orgy of greed, the only values religion seems to talk about is opposition to gay marriage and abortion. But the emphasis on the negative is not going to create much that is positive. We need values that promotes family, strengthens marriage, inspires selflessness in children, and advances the cause of a purposeful life that makes us less obsessive about money and career.

This is why I wish to discuss with Pope Benedict the Catholic Church getting behind our ‘Turn Friday Night into Family Night’ initiative, the push for a global family dinner night. Imagine if all the world’s families – Catholic, Jewish, Islamic, Atheist, Agnostic – sat down every Friday night and embraced our ‘Triple Two.” Parents giving their children two uninterrupted hours every Friday night, inviting two guests to teach the children sharing and hospitality, and discussing two important subjects rather than a movie or celebrity gossip. And Friday night is the one evening that unites all. It’s sacred already to Jews and Muslims. Up until Second Vatican Council it was a night where Catholics were forbidden to eat meat. And for the non-religious it’s the beginning of the weekend and sets the tone the activities that will follow. If the family gets together on Friday night, chances are they’ll do more stuff together on Saturday and Sunday as well.

This is the right time for the Catholic Church to own a global family dinner night. The pedophile priest scandal has reinforced the conclusion of some that the Church is an old boys club that at best makes concessions to the weakness of human nature by allowing men and women to marry. The ideal, however, is celibacy and childlessness. The Church must return to its previous posture as a champion of family and what better way than to mandate that all Catholic families worldwide do as Jesus did. Put the worldly stuff away on Friday nights and consecrate it as an evening of holiness and togetherness.

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach is founder of This World: The Values Network. His major book on the universal Jewish values that can enrich the lives of every man and woman, Renewal, will be published by Basic Books on May 14th. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

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