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August 21, 2013

Jerusalem-area monastery damaged in ‘price tag’ attack

A monastery near Jerusalem was vandalized in an attack that police believe is the work of right-wing extremists.

A firebomb thrown at the Beit Gemal Monastery caused minor damage, according to police. The words “price tag” also were spray-painted on the wall of the monastery.

The damage was discovered Wednesday morning.  The police unit for nationalist crimes is investigating.

Price tag refers to the strategy that extremist settlers and their supporters have adopted to exact retribution for settlement freezes and demolitions or Palestinian attacks on Jews. Several price tag attacks in recent months also have targeted Christian sites, however.

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Islamist Hamas in Gaza set to execute child offender

This story originally appeared on themedialine.org.

Hani Abu Aliyan, 28, has been convicted of two separate murders in the Gaza Strip. In the first case, he was only 14-years old in 2000 when he allegedly sexually assaulted and killed another boy. In a separate incident, he confessed to killing an acquaintance to whom he owed money in 2009 when he was no longer a minor. His lawyer said the confession was coerced under torture.

In an interview published on the Hamas-controlled Ministry of the Interior’s website, Gaza’s prosecutor general, Ismail Jabr, said that the Hamas council of ministers had approved the execution of a convict “in the coming days.” While he did not mention Abu Aliyan by name, there are only two convicts in Gaza who have exhausted all of their military appeals and face death.

“We, as a human rights organization, think that the death penalty wherever it is applied is cruel and inhuman treatment. There’s a global trend toward ending the death penalty,” Bill Van Esfeld, a researcher at Human Rights Watch told The Media Line. “However, it’s particularly concerning and atrocious in Gaza given the severe abuses that are endemic there. We have documented cases of arbitrary detention and of torture leading to confessions.”

Hamas spokesmen were unavailable for comment, but Jabr said that “the public is very satisfied (about the death penalty)” and that, “the only complaints come from some of the human rights organizations.” He also said that Hamas will ignore these voices because “our religious tradition” requires capital punishment as a deterrent.

In this case, complaints are coming from Palestinian human rights groups as well. Raji Sourani, the Gaza-based director of the Palestinian Center for Human Rights sent a direct appeal to Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Hanniyeh.

“I call on Mr. Hanniyeh to intervene to stop the application of the death penalty especially under the current circumstances facing the Palestinian people,” Sourani told The Media Line. “We are facing the Israeli occupation and the political split between our people and we should not take such an irrevocable step.”

The split he referred to is the ongoing rivalry between Hamas and Fatah, which controls the West Bank. All efforts to achieve “national reconciliation” which would lead to Palestinian elections have failed.

Human Rights Watch said that in the West Bank, while the death penalty is legal, there has been a “de facto moratorium on using it.”

Many Arab and Muslim countries carry the death penalty for murder, as prescribed in Islamic Sharia law. According to Amnesty International, Saudi Arabia carried out at least 79 executions in 2012; Iran carried out at least 314; and Iraq at least 129. Worldwide, the largest number was in China with more than 2,000 executions in 2012.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch says that what is especially egregious in this case is that one of the alleged murders was committed when Abu Aliyan was still a minor. Amnesty International says that only Iran and Saudi Arabia perform executions for crimes committed when the attacker was a minor.

“Here the impending execution would be of someone who was a child at the time of one of the offenses, so it’s really urgent that the Hamas authorities not carry this out, Van Esfeld said.”

The Independent Commission for Human Rights, a Palestinian organization which monitors human rights violations by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and the Hamas authorities in the Gaza Strip, says 36 Palestinians were sentenced to death in Gaza between February 2010 and June 2013. Of the total, Hamas authorities have executed at least six men. Seven others were murdered by gunmen who have not been arrested or charged.

Human Rights Watch says torture is widespread during interrogations of suspects.

“We have done a lot of documentation of severe abuses of the justice system in Gaza,” Van Esfeld said. “There is no accountability for torture by the Internal Security Service which is the agency to which all detainees are transferred before interrogation. None of them get a lawyer during their detention with internal security which can last for weeks or even months and accusations of torture by security officials are common.”

Raji Sourani argued that in countries with extensive use of capital punishment such as Saudi Arabia, Iran, China and the US, levels of crime have not decreased, meaning it is not an effective deterrent.

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Rosanna Arquette gets married

Mazel tov to Rosanna Arquette and her brand-new husband, investment banker Todd Morgan.

The two were married Sunday in a private family ceremony in Malibu, a rep for the Jewish actress told Us Weekly. According to another source guests included Barbra Streisand.

Arquette is best known for her roles in “Desperately Seeking Susan” and “Pulp Fiction,” but you may have seen her more recently on this last season of “Girls” as Jessa’s dad’s hippy girlfriend.

This is her fourth marriage.

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New Zealand Jewish students decry sale of Nazi memorabilia

Jewish students in the New Zealand coastal city of Dunedin condemned a sale of Nazi memorabilia, calling it a “slap in the face” to the local and national Jewish community.

“The decision to run this auction shows a lack of taste and sensitivity to those who lived through these atrocities and their families,” Ben Isaacs, president of the Dunedin branch of the Australasian Union of Jewish Students, told the Otego Daily Times, a Dunedin newspaper. “This is not something that should have a place in New Zealand. ”

Wednesday’s sale included pre-1945 German military items and memorabilia such as Nazi flags, helmets, belts and pins. Many of the items were brought back by veterans after World War II, Kevin Hayward of Hayward’s Auction House told the newspaper.

“We appreciate we need to be sensitive in how we sell and display it,” Hayward said.

The unnamed vendor reportedly had collected the items over a long period of time.

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Ban backtracking on U.N. bias disappoints Israeli officials

Israeli officials said they were disappointed that U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon backtracked on his statements that Israel faces bias and discrimination at the world body.

Unnamed Israeli officials made their comments Tuesday to Israeli media outlets a day after Ban amended the remarks he made late last week to Israeli college students.

Ban told the students during a meeting Aug. 16 in Jerusalem that “unfortunately because of the conflict, Israel has been weighed down by criticism and suffered from bias — sometimes even discrimination.”

“It’s an unfortunate situation,” Ban said, adding that Israel should be treated equal to the other 192 member states of the United Nations.

Asked Monday by a reporter at the U.N. what he intended to do about the bias, Ban retracted the remarks.

“No, I don’t think there is discrimination against Israel at the United Nations,” Ban said.

“The Israeli government maybe raised this issue that there’s some bias against Israel, but Israel is one of the 193 member states. Thus, Israel should have equal rights and opportunities without having any bias, any discrimination. That’s a fundamental principle of the United Nations charter. And thus, Israel should be fully given such rights.”

One unnamed senior Israeli official told Israeli media outlets that Israel was “disappointed” by the remarks.

“It’s clear that Israel has been systematically discriminated against at the United Nations, and the way to start dealing with that issue is first of all to recognize that there’s a problem,” he said. “The secretary’s comments on Friday in Jerusalem about the U.N.’s bias against Israel showed moral leadership, and we hope we’re not seeing backtracking.”

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Holocaust memorial to gays to be built in Tel Aviv

A monument to gays persecuted by the Nazis will be built in Tel Aviv.

The monument, the first of its kind in Israel, will be constructed in Meir Park, near the Tel Aviv Gay and Lesbian Association Center in the central part of the city, Haaretz reported.

It will include a concrete pink triangle along with a bench and a plaque providing information on the persecution of gays during the Holocaust. Gays were forced to wear an identifying pink triangle on their clothing in the same way that Jews were forced to wear a yellow star.

The inscription on the memorial will read: “To the memory of those persecuted by the Nazi regime for their sexual preference and gender identity.”

Attorney Eran Lev, a member of the municipal council from the Meretz party, came up with the idea for the memorial.

“This will be the first and only memorial site in Israel to mention the victims of the Nazis who were persecuted for anything other than being Jewish,”  Lev told Haaretz. “As a cosmopolitan city and an international gay center, Tel Aviv will offer a memorial site that is universal in its essence. As far as I’m concerned, it’s not a monument but a place  — a place of quiet that will invite visitors to sit, contemplate, reflect and be in solitude.”

Memorials to the gay victims of Nazi persecution exist in Berlin, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Sydney and San Francisco, according to Haaretz.

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Marion Cotillard replaces Natalie Portman as Lady Macbeth

Our condolences to all those who had their hearts set on seeing Natalie Portman rocking the Shakespeare thing in the upcoming adaptation of “Macbeth.”

The Israeli-born actress, who was initially on board to play Lady Macbeth opposite Michael Fassbender, has just been replaced by Oscar-winner Marion Cotillard, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

At least there’s still “Thor.”

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