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ANALYSIS: The Victim that is Israel

ANALYSIS: The Victim that is Israel

Amid the continuing fallout over the deadly confrontation on the Gaza aid ship, the Mavi Marmara, there is a critical historical lesson: There is only one real victim, and that is Israel. Read more »

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  • Africa News Briefs from Global Information Network
    By Lisa Vives, in the Dec 31, 1969 issue
    SUPREME COURT VICTORY FOR NIGERIAN FAMILIES IN DRUG SUIT Nigerian families got the go-ahead this week from the U.S. Supreme Court to sue the drug company Pfizer for carrying out an illegal trial of a new antibiotic on their children that produced fatalities. The families say Pfizer did not get the proper consent to test the drug [...] (0 comments)
  • Honduras on the March
    By Chris Thomas, in the Jun 23, 2010 issue
    TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras—On June 28 of last year, soldiers burst into the Honduran presidential palace in the middle of the night, put Manuel Zelaya, the country’s leftleaning, democratically elected president, on an airplane and exiled him to Costa Rica. (0 comments)
  • ANALYSIS: The Victim that is Israel
    By Arun Gupta, in the Jun 23, 2010 issue
    Amid the continuing fallout over the deadly confrontation on the Gaza aid ship, the Mavi Marmara, there is a critical historical lesson: There is only one real victim, and that is Israel. (4 comments)
  • Activists Recount Events on the Mavi Marmara
    By Ellen Davidson, in the Dec 31, 1969 issue
    By Ellen Davidson A near-capacity crowd packed House of the Lord Church in Brooklyn June 17 to hear speakers from the MV Mavi Marmara, the Turkish ship carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza that was boarded by Israeli commandos May 31. Nine passengers were killed and dozens wounded in the raid. Counterdemonstrator at June 17 Gaza Freedom Flotilla [...] (2 comments)
  • ‘Soldiers Were Opening Fire’: An Account of the Flotilla Attack
    By Indypendent Staff, in the Jun 2, 2010 issue
    On May 30, Israeli commandos stormed an unarmed flotilla of a half-dozen ships bringing humanitarian supplies to the people of the Gaza Strip. At least nine activists are reported to have been killed and dozens more injured when Israeli troops opened fire on the passengers of one of the six ships. (1 comment)
  • Showdown in the Himalayas
    By Jed Brandt, in the May 12, 2010 issue
    A nation of 28 million people, Nepal is in the middle of a tense standoff between a revolutionary movement and a weakened regime — and the moment of truth is fast approaching. Two power structures are at loggerheads in Nepal. One just finished filling the streets of the capital city with a massive civil uprising marked by both discipline and revelry. The other is backed by the rifles of the Nepalese Army and the heavy weight of feudal tradition. (7 comments)
  • The Climate Justice Groundswell From Copenhagen to Cochabamba to Cancun
    By Karah Woodward, in the May 12, 2010 issue
    TIQUIPAYA, Bolivia — Bolivian President Evo Morales spoke for many developing nations last December when he rejected the United Nation’s Copenhagen Accord as “an agreement reached between the world’s biggest polluters that is based on the exclusion of the very countries, communities and peoples who will suffer most from the consequences of climate change.” (6 comments)
  • The Dusty Road to a Socialist State
    By Alex van Schaick, in the May 12, 2010 issue
    TOTORCAHUA, Bolivia—Ten minutes down a dusty dirt road from the World Peoples’ Conference on Climate Change, Don Cristobal points to a plot of wilted corn on the same land his grandparents tended. (1 comment)
  • Meltdown Greek Style
    By Costas Panayotakis, in the Apr 21, 2010 issue
    As a Greek teaching at the City University of New York, I can’t help but notice the parallels between brutal budget cuts in Greece and the impact of the economic crisis in the United States. Economic and political leaders around the world are bent on resolving the latest capitalist crisis by shifting the burden onto those least responsible for its eruption. One of the most recent examples is on display in Greece, where cutbacks amid an economic meltdown have met widespread resistance. (0 comments)

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