fbpx

November 17, 2014

Egypt to deepen buffer zone with Gaza after finding longer tunnels

Egypt will double the depth of a security buffer zone it is clearing on its border with the Gaza Strip to 0.62 miles after some of the worst anti-state violence since President Mohamed Morsi was overthrown last year.

Egypt declared a state of emergency in the border area after at least 33 security personnel were killed last month in two attacks in the Sinai Peninsula, a remote but strategic region bordering Israel, Gaza and the Suez Canal.

It also accelerated plans to create a 500-metre deep buffer strip along the border by clearing houses and trees and destroying subterranean tunnels it says are used to smuggle arms from Gaza to militants in Sinai.

“A decision was taken to increase the buffer zone along the border in Rafah to one kilometre. The decision … came after the discovery of underground tunnels with a total length of 800 to 1,000 metres,” the state MENA news agency said.

Residents of Sinai, who complain they have long been neglected by the state, say they rely on smuggling trade through the tunnels for their living and the creation of the buffer zone has stoked resentment. Egyptian authorities see them as a threat and regularly destroy them.

Militant violence in Sinai has surged since the army ousted Morsi, a Brotherhood official in July 2013. Egypt has launched a crackdown on the group, jailing thousands of its members and labeling it a terrorist organisation.

The Brotherhood says it is peaceful and condemned last month's attacks.

But Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis, a militant group that has sworn allegiance to Islamic State, has stepped up attacks on police and soldiers in Sinai and released a video this month in which it purported to claim that it was behind the Oct. 24 attack.

Reporting by Mahmoud Mourad, editing by Lin Noueihed

Egypt to deepen buffer zone with Gaza after finding longer tunnels Read More »

The I-word isn’t impeachment – it’s idiocracy

Is he – finally – the one we’ve been waiting for?

Just days after the midterm election, President Barack Obama made a big climate change deal with China, asked the F.C.C. to regulate Internet service providers as if they were public utilities and pledged to address the immigration mess on his own instead of continuing to wait for Congress to arise from its dysfunctional deathbed.

The president’s inaction on these issues until now was intended to prevent the electoral debacle and partisan caterwauling that happened anyway.  His previous patience has proven to be time squandered, and his search for common ground with folks who wanted his head on a pike turned out to be a case study in bad poker playing, if not wishful thinking. 

This post-election Obama is the one voters thought they put into office in 2008, but who spent the next six years being called naïve for projecting their civic hopes onto a cypher.  Whatever triggered his transformation – legacy clock ticking, nothing left to lose, stopbullying.gov – it’s a heartening moment for his base.  The challenge now for him is to deliver on that change; the challenge for his supporters is to rescue the stakes of these changes from soap opera.

We loves us our political melodrama.  “Will the Republicans force a government shutdown by baiting Obama to veto a budget that defunds immigration reform?” is the Washington equivalent of “What will Lance do when Kimberly tells him his lover is actually his sister?”  “Will the House impeach Obama?” is as effective a cliffhanger as “Will the train slice Pauline into pieces?”  The same narrative toolkit that makes stories entertaining – conflict, suspense, danger and rescue, power and perversion – also makes democracy theatrical and casts its citizens as spectators.   

The news media cover politics like a long-running serial in chronic need of crisis.  It doesn’t matter whether they caused this or merely reflect it.  Politicians are so accustomed to being performers that wondering whether Ted Cruz actually believes the things he says is as misbegotten a mission as searching for the real Justin Bieber.  It’s not our fault that the political characters angling for our attention seem no more authentic than the Punch and Judy roles they play – their words are scripted, their images are cosmetic and their stories hew to the genre conventions that spawned them.

The downside of storified self-government, and of experiencing pretty much everything else as entertainment, too, is that we relinquish our grip on reality.  In a series of 36 tweets (the perfect vehicle for such an argument), Grist.org columnist David Roberts, “>typographical error in the law – calls this “postmodern conservatism.” The right’s “nihilistic oppositionalism,” he says, makes its own reality.  They have “realized that if you just brazen it out, there’s no… ref to make the call.  In this way, every dispute, even over matters of fact, becomes a contest of power – loudest, best funded, most persistent voices win…. Epistemology becomes competing tantrums…. So there will only be increasing impetus for cons[ervatives] to retreat into fantasy, into simple morality tales… [which] always yield more motivated, organized constituencies than ‘it’s complicated’ ever will.”

Conservatives, of course, accuse the left of worse than fantasy.  The title of a book by James Inhofe, the Oklahoma Republican about to chair the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, depicts it as deceit:  “The Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future.”  But all he’s really doing is reframing the left’s strategy – to inform voters about scientific data – as the plot of an airport thriller.  “The bad guys are gunning for you!” is much more entertaining than, “May I please explain this graph to you?” And the studio funding that storyline – the fossil fuel industry – has the largest marketing budget in the world.

It’s in the economic self-interest of the news media to make politics as fun as wrestling and as risky as a high-wire act.  That’s what drives ratings.  But we pay a steep price for the pleasures of circus and spectacle.  The most critical problem American society faces right now is, arguably, inequality, and the plutocracy that benefits from it, and the corruption that puts remedies for it beyond our constitutional reach. Every breathless story about impeachment occupies bandwidth not given to exploring the structural problems that Naomi Klein addresses in ““>Idiocracy”?  It projects contemporary commercialism, anti-intellectualism and the showbizzification of everything into a dystopian America five centuries from now.  Five minutes is more like it. “ The I-word isn’t impeachment – it’s idiocracy Read More »

Starring on Broadway and Hollywood, fighting Ebola, helping Google and more…This week from Israel

The Israeli in the next blockbuster biblical film

It's official: Israeli actress Ayelet Zurer is joining Paramount and MGM's remake of “Ben-Hur” and is set to play the role of Naomi, the mother of the Jewish prince who is betrayed into slavery and fights his way to freedom, according to the Hollywood Reporter. Zurer is considered one of the biggest Israeli actors to succeed to Hollywood. Her resume’ includes parts in “Vantage Point” (2008), “Angels and Demons” (2009)- in which she played the lead female role, and “Man of Steel” (2013) – in which she played Superman's mother. She recently finished shooting the film “Last Days in the Desert” alongside Ewan McGregor, and is now participating in two television series: “Rake” and “Daredevil.”

Read more “>here


 

 

An Israeli on Broadway

This week, it was announced that Israeli actress Hani Furstenberg will assume the role of “Fraulein Kost” on Cabaret this December. Cabaret is playing a limited engagement on Broadway through March 29, 2015 starring Alan Cumming as “Emcee” (through March 29) and Emma Stoneas “Sally Bowles” (through February 1). Hani Furstenberg was recently seen Off-Broadway: in Lucy Thurber's Stay and Adam Rapp's Though The Yellow Hour (Rattlestick Theater). She is known for her American film work in The Loneliest Planet and won the Israeli Oscar for her role in the film Campfire.

Read more “>here

 

 

Google teams up with Israeli startup to celebrate 25 years of the Berlin Wall fall

To commemorate the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, Google today decided to make a very special video Google Doodle. With only a short time to put the Doodle together, and a desire to make it as meaningful as possible, the Google team wanted to make a video compilation showing parts of the Berlin Wall that are currently on display in 17 countries across the world. With little time on their hands, the Google team in Mountain View, California turned to Israeli video production startup VEED.me to get crews filming in all locations.

Read more