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 Topic: Isrealis attack Aid Convoy ships

 (Read 98482 times)
  • Previous page 1 ... 29 30 31« Previous thread | Next thread »
  • Re: Isrealis attack Aid Convoy ships
     Reply #900 - July 16, 2010, 09:29 AM

    Quote
    Report: Extensive ties between Erdogan government, Gaza flotilla organizers

    New York Times quotes Turkish government officials as saying as many as 10 parliament members considered boarding Mavi Marmara. 'Mission to Gaza served both IHH and government by making both heroes at home and in Arab world,' terror expert says

    Ynet Published: 07.16.10, 14:15 / Israel News

    Turkish diplomats and government officials told the New York Times that the Turkish organization that led the Gaza-bound flotilla in late May has extensive connections with Turkey’s political elite, and the group’s efforts to challenge Israel’s blockade of the Hamas-run territory received support at the top levels of the governing party.
     
    A senior Turkish official close to the government was quoted by NYT as saying that as many as 10 Parliament members from Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's governing Justice and Development Party were considering boarding the Mavi Marmara, the ship which was raided by Israeli commandos, but were warned off at the last minute by senior Foreign Ministry officials concerned that their presence might escalate tensions too much.

    Nine Turkish nationals were killed during the raid.
     
    According to the report, the organization in question, the Humanitarian Relief Foundation, often called IHH, has come under attack in Israel and the West for offering financial support to groups accused of terrorism. But in Turkey the group has helped Erdogan
    Quote
    "shore up support from conservative Muslims ahead of critical elections next year and improve Turkey’s standing and influence in the Arab world."

      

    Ercan Citlioglu, a terrorism expert at Bahcesehir University in Istanbul, told NYT that the government
    Quote
    “could have stopped the ship if it wanted to, but the mission to Gaza served both the IHH and the government by making both heroes at home and in the Arab world.”

     

    The Turkish government, for its part, said the group acted independently and that its leadership had refused to drop plans to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza, despite requests from the government. Government officials told NYT they had no legal authority to stop the work of a private charity.  

    Egemen Bagis, Turkey’s minister for European affairs, was quoted by NYT as saying that the organization and the Justice and Development Party, called the AK Party, had no substantive ties.
    Quote
    “The IHH has nothing to do with the AK Party, and we have no hidden agenda,”

     Bagis said.
     
    However, the NYT report said many of the 21 people listed on the organization's board have or had close links to the AK Party. In January, Murat Mercan, chairman of Parliament’s foreign affairs committee and a senior party official, joined an overland aid convoy to Gaza organized by the organization that tried to force its way through the Rafah crossing from Egypt to Gaza, according to the report.  

    Semih Idiz, a columnist for the Hurriyet Daily News in Turkey, wrote,
    Quote
    "How can such a large country as Turkey, with interests in four continents, and with an export- and investment-driven economy requiring extra caution all around the globe, be dragged to the brink of war by a nongovernmental organization?”

     The answer, he added, is that the IHH is a
    Quote
    “GNGO”

     — a
    Quote
    “governmental-nongovernmental-organization.”


    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3920791,00.html
  • Re: Isrealis attack Aid Convoy ships
     Reply #901 - July 18, 2010, 10:13 AM

    Quote from: MrSilly
    Surely secular and liberal democratic constitutions should be sufficent. Most people can practice their beliefs in the US without disturbance.

    all states in the world are secular and liberal democratic?


    No, but many are. In fact the country with the most number of Jews in it is the US not Israel. This sort of proves the fact that a Jewish homeland was not, and it not nessesary.

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    No, but where are these homelands going to be? There is no area/territory in the world where these minority religions are a unanimous majority that would be sufficently large to sustain a soverign state. The same was the case with Jews in 1948.


    it is immaterial. what matters is that no objection exist for a group of people to establish state with religious or any other concept they see it fit to their view.


    You're right in that regard. However, where your argument completely falls down is that if to establish this state you have to force people from their homes, steal their land and banish them from returning, then this is a problem. For Israel to have been created, this ethnic cleansing was nessesary. And there is a huge objection to ethnic cleansing. A Jewish homeland would have been impossible to establish without these actions. And these actions are wrong. Simple.

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    Do British Muslims have the right to a soverign nation out of, say, Tower Hamlets?

    I do not know what is the status of Tower Hamlets nor I know anything about it to answer the question.


    Tower Hamlets is a region of East London with a very large Muslim population. Do these Muslims have the right to form a sovereign nation out of Tower Hamlets?
     
    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    What considerations? (and you've already said historical right is not a valid, so why are you now prefixing this with "aside with..." implying that is has some degree of validity)

    in concern historical right. means it's understood from historical view that is a Jewish land occupied by foreign entity. but the entity won't take it as valid for it's own reasons. hence it's not valid from that aspect. despite the leaders of that entity knows this fact. the religious connection in form of the status of the places


    How exactly is the land "Jewish"?

    Quote from: yglag
    the symbols the historical scrips proves the Jewish sovereignty existed. to establish a home in our ancestral land was for us natural. you may disagree with that.


    Key word is "existed". You have no evidence that an individual Jew can trace his lineage back to a specific piece of land in Israel, nor can you provide evidence that Jewish owned land was comprehensively stolen over the centuries. Therefore there is not claimsworthy evidence for what you're saying at all.
     
    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    Why is it unrealistic?

    what do you suggest for the Indians to do in face of reality they are living?


    So you support the claims of Jews whose land was allegedly stolen over the past 2 millenia from the territory of modern day Israel. Do you support the claims of Native Americans who land was stolen over the past 400 years?

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MSilly
    A "right" that you believe was invalid.


    invalid to use not invalid to acknowledge.


    What is the point of acknowedging it if you admit it is worthless in terms of determining a "right"?
     
    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    That's bullshit. Arabs in the territory were having their territorial soverignty violated by Jewish immigrants where were trying to carve up a Jewish State from the territory. If Muslims in Britain started trying to carve out an Islamic state out of the territory, I'd sure as hell resist it. Is that unreasonable? Was it unreasonable that Arabs in the territory resisted the carving out of a Jewish State from their territory?


    they were having their territorial soverignty? the land was under Ottoman and then by British mandate there was no Arab territorial sovereignty.


    The Palastine Mandate existed as a territory under colonial rule of the British. The sovereignty (as violated by the British, and Ottomans before them) lay with the inhabitants. The influx of Jewish immigrants intent of carving up the territory was the second violation of the inhabitants sovereignty.

    What you seem to be saying is that because the inhabitants of the Palestine Mandate had their soverignty violated by the British, they must be doubly punished and have their sovereignty violated by Zionists. Your stance doesn't make sense.

    Quote from: ygalg
    and I have provided with historical details that verifies until 1947 the lands held by israel are legal.


    I have never disputed this. What I dispute is the equivalence with legally buying land and illegially violating a territory's soverienty. Just because land was bought legally, doesn't give the owners the right to carve up the territory and violate it's sovereignty.

    Do British Muslims have the right to declare Tower Hamlets an Islamic state?

    Does a paedophile have the right to declare his legally owned home a sovereign state?

    Quote from: yglag
    furthermore majority of arabs at that time became not due the birth but by immigarntion.


    And your supporting evidence?

    Quote from: yglag
    I can provide with details over massacre by Muslims in Islamic countries throughout history. there was no jewish hoemland then. the enmity the Muslims hold against the Jews goes way back to 7 century.


    Minorities often become scapegoats. It has little to do with religious belief, and more to do with archaic notions of identity (which Jews and Muslims alike insist on maintaining). Christianss have perseuted Jews (possibly much more so than Muslims). Likewise, there are many examples of Muslims offering safe havens to Jews in times of crisis. So you silly simplistic outlook on history is clearly misleading you.

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    So there's no universal ethics in your stance. Its basically that some Jews believe they have a right to this land, so this mean they should have it. What would happen if the whole world worked by this ethic? There would be no rule of law, no peace, no rights. Your argument is pathetic.

    we convinced we have the right to this land.


    You convinced yourself wrong. You do not have a "right" to this land at all. This has been well demonstrated to you.

    Quote from: ygalg
    we are the last people you should preach about universal ethics.


    Why are you the last "people"? I think people like yourself are in most need of it, since you entertain racist and supremist ideas of being Gods chosen people with rules for others that do not appear to apply to yourself.

    Judging from your posts, you have little concept of universal ethics.

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    Yes, but they stole large tracts of land in 1948. I am not arguing against the events preceding this.

     
    oh no my dear. we won it.


    So you believe that ownership of private property is determined by the might of those who seek it? Your statement show the dire need for an understanding of ethics.

    Are you able to separate the idea that land owned by individual Arabs remained the property of individual Arabs irrespectively of the wars between the
    Arab state and Jewish state and the respective boundry changes? This is a basic concept in international law and is rooted in basic ethics.

    Did Nazis win the right to plunder Jewish property in territory they occupied? Did Isreal win the right to plunder Arab property in territory they occupied?

    Quote from: yglag
    if we lost would you have preached universal ethics to the arabs?


    Yes. I believe that the plundering of Mizrahi land by Arab states is wrong, and it should be handed back. Do you?

    Do you believe that Jewish property stolen by the Nazis should have been handed back or kept by those who'd stolen it?

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    If Muslims come to Britain, then buy property legally in Tower Hamlets or Leicester, and then decide they want to form Islamic republics of Leicester and Tower Hamlets, steal the property of the kaffirs within these areas and force them out, is this okay by your ethics?


    but britian is an established state. different scenario.


    Identical senario. The Palestine Mandate was an established territory with the full functionings of a state, albeit under the colonial governence of London. So it is an identical senario. Just because the inhabitants of the Palestine Mandate had had their soverienty violated doesn't mean that they soverignty did not rightfully lie with them.

    So is it alright for these British Muslims to establish an Islamic state?

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    Also, if you believe it should be kosher, should the stolen land be returned, and the Arabs and their decendants who were pushed off their land be allowed to return?


    there is no stolen land. when a man gambles and loses should the casino return him the money? would the man if won return the money he won from the casino?


    But there was no gambling. There was war between the Arab and Jewish states. Individual Arabs' land remained theirs irrespective of the outcome. Why should civilians be punished for this war? Was it right that Nazis plundered Jewish property in territory they occupied?


    Quote from: yglag
    [quoteMrSilly]Because they were trying to carve up the territory and form a Jewish State. Its hardly suprising that many Gentiles resisted this. This war was not enforced upon Jews, but a war caused by those Jews.


    legaly. why not? appeal to popularity? [/quote]

    Given that you couldn't respond to what I said, I presume you agree that the war was caused by Jews. Thanks, al least with agree on something.
     
    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    The conflict came about because of some fanatics believing they can carve up territories to form a Jewish state. Don't lay the blame at the door of the resisting gentile population.

    resisting a state legally acquired, where muslims have not done the same.


    Not legally aquired. Large tracts of the territory of Israel did not belong to Jews. So how exactly was it legal?

    Quote from: yglag
    if it yours it ain't stealing it is liberating.


    I agree, but it wasn't theirs, so it was stealing. How exactly was the Negev "theirs"? How exactly was the land of current day Haifa, Ashkelon, Bersheeba and Sderot "theirs"? It belonged to other people who were driven out, and the land was then stolen by the Israeli State. That's criminal by international legal standards.

    Quote from: yglag
    if it yours again it would not be stealing. you're fighting for what is rightly yours.


    But yglag, how was the land that had not been legally aquired belonging to Jews?
     
    Quote from: yglag
    I did not say that god given right is moral. I merely point out that was the norm.


    What has the "norm" got to do with anything? You admit it is not moral, so where is its place in the debate? You know it is just mythology and inhabits the minds of the superstitious. So why is is relevent to the debate?
     
    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    So why you keep on raising the god given right to support your stance?

    religious connection and god given right are two different things.


    Okay, I'll agree with you on that one.

    So how does religious connection support your stance? Muslim have a religious connection. I, as a pre-Judaism pagan have a connection. Where do al these religious connections fit in?

    Quote from: yglag
    Quote from: MrSilly
    Because the ownership of the land under the religious building is presumed to be owned by members of the respective community (yes there are disputes, as you know all to well). So your point is completely irrelevent.


    I said "among other reasons." also I said "religious attachment can be comprehensible."
    whether Israel establish from religious reasons immaterial. eventually it would be judge by the means it established. no? why irrelevent?


    None of what you write makes any sense.

    Quote from: yglag
    how do you regard gifts that your parents give you?


    I take it as a form of inheritance.
  • Re: Isrealis attack Aid Convoy ships
     Reply #902 - July 18, 2010, 04:35 PM

    historical right and religious connection I admit it is sheer of nonsense. but 1948 it's history just as Jewish sovereignty 2000 years ago is history. we are now 2010. and there is a state. what do you suggest then?

    demographies have their impact. it's not about right or wrong. it is natural that it would lead to lose in favor of these who outnumbered. IMO.

    Quote
    The reasons for this increase in Arab population in the area was due to the high number of migrants from neighbouring countries hoping to take advantage of the high standard of living which was a result of the increased Jewish influence on the area

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_land_purchase_in_Palestine#Land_Purchases

    the inhabitants are result of conquests. the conquests allowed these inhabitants to be. this how they appeared there.
    note: Palestinian was a term that included everyone who lived in the region and that include the Jews.
    the land in large part was sand and marsh. otherwise Jews would not consider it valuable choice.

    war is amoral. and provides amoral results.

    it is repetitive argument that has no bear in reality today. what is your reasonable solution?



     

  • Re: Isrealis attack Aid Convoy ships
     Reply #903 - July 18, 2010, 05:41 PM

    The difference is that individuals Arabs can trace their ownership to specific property plundered/stolen since 1948 by Israel, for which they do have a right to reclaim (obviously this does not include legally purchased lang prior to 1947). The same is true of individual Jews who are able to trace ownership to specific property plundered/stolen between 1933-1945 by the Nazis. They have a right to reclaim it.

    The same is not true of this collective right of reclaim based on genetics that you seem to propose Jews have with regard to Israel.
    Just as every Palestinian does not have the right to land in Israel, because some did actually voluntarily sell their land prior to 1947.

    I propose that individual Palestinians who had their land stolen from them in 1948 onwards be given it back and be allowed to return to it.
  • Re: Isrealis attack Aid Convoy ships
     Reply #904 - July 13, 2011, 07:48 PM

    So those Floating Tillas.. Flotillas are back in news., The news says Flotilla organizers consider sailing from Egyptian ports  ., So instead of Turkey, Now the are going from Egypt


    Quote

    Dubai/Cairo: The organisers of the Gaza aid flotilla are not ruling out the possibility of the fleet sailing from Egyptian ports should their efforts to sail from Greece fail to materialise. Pro-Palestinian activists in Egypt have taken up the flotilla's cause, inviting organisers to launch the fleet from Egypt after Greece made it clear that it would not allow the Freedom Flotilla 2 to launch from its ports.

    A source close to the flotilla's organisers told Gulf News that the Free Gaza Movement, which is organising the flotilla, had already been in contact with the Egyptian government about the issue and would not rule out sailing from Egyptian ports. Organisers held a meeting earlier this year with former Egyptian Deputy Prime Minister Yahya Al Jamal and the foreign ministry official in charge of Palestinian affairs..

    read it all at the link., I hope this time both  sides behave themselves and act properly..

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
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