Wednesday, August 26, 2009

a second article accusing the Israeli occupation army of harvesting Palestinian organs

24/08/2009 Despite Israel's harsh protests, Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet published a second article accusing the Israeli occupation army of harvesting Palestinian organs.

In the article, published Sunday, Oisín Cantwell and Urban Andersson report from the northern West Bank village of Imatin, where 19-year-old Bilal Ahmad Ghanem was killed during a clash with Israeli occupation soldiers in 1992.

Ghanem's family says that his body was returned several days later, wrapped in hospital bandages. Aftonbladet published what is said was a photo of the body, which had a scar running from the neck down to the abdomen.

The second article, titled "Mother never stopped suffering; she never stopped wondering," quoted Bilal's brother as saying that the killed teen was "hunted by Israel for protecting his people."

The brother, who was 15-years-old at the time, recounted the shooting incident. "A number of (Israeli occupation) soldiers ambushed (the Palestinians) and opened fire. The fist shot hit (Bilal) in the chest, the second in the leg. We believe that he was still alive after sustaining the two bullet wounds."

The mother, Sadija, told Aftonbladet "they could have arrested him, but instead they decided to kill him.

According to the family, the Israeli occupation army demanded NIS 5,000 (about $1,300) to return the body. "It was the middle of the night. The soldiers caused an electrical power outage in the entire village. Bilal was returned in a black bag; he had no teeth. The body was stitched from the neck all the way down to the abdomen," the Swedish newspaper quoted the mother as saying.

According to the article, when asked what happened to the body, the occupation soldiers said it had undergone an autopsy in Tel Aviv. The family, however, says Bilal's organs had been stolen.

ISRAELI MINISTERS FUME ABOUT SWEDISH STORY
Contacts between Tel Aviv and Stockholm were continuing behind the scenes to prevent irreparable damage to Israeli-Swedish ties. A rupture in relations now would be particularly disruptive - both for Stockholm and for Tel Aviv - since Sweden holds the rotating presidency of the EU.

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, in his first public pronouncement on the article, made clear that Israel was not looking for an apology from the Swedish government. "The Swedish government crossed a red line when it did not condemn the article," he said. "The request is not for an apology, but for a condemnation."

On Thursday Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman slammed the Swedish Foreign Ministry for saying that Swedish Ambassador to Israel Elisabet Borsiin Bonnier's condemnation of the report does not represent the Swedish government's stance. "It's a shame that the Swedish Foreign Ministry fails to intervene in a case of blood libels against Jews. This is reminiscent of Sweden's stand during World War II, when had failed to intervene as well," Lieberman said.

He denounced the Swedes for hypocrisy. Lieberman said that while the Swedish government said it could not impinge on press freedom and condemn the article, it did exactly that during the 2005 upheaval over caricatures of the prophet Muhammad in the Danish press.

At that time, he said, Sweden shut down an Internet site in the country that posted the caricatures, and the Swedish foreign minister wrote a letter of apology to the president of Yemen.

Meanwhile, ministers at the weekly cabinet meeting expressed outrage at the Swedish government's stance, with Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz saying those who refused to condemn such libel "may not be welcome in the State of Israel."

Joining in the chorus, Interior Minister Eli Yishai said that he would act to prevent Aftonbladet reporters from receiving work permits in Israel, and Welfare and Social Services Minister Isaac Herzog said that Israel should take legal steps against the paper to combat the organ-snatching allegations.

Meanwhile, Aftonbladet on Sunday published a follow-up article, defending the report written by freelance journalist Donald Bostrom.

Sunday's article maintained that the organ-harvesting matter "should be investigated, either to stop the relentless Palestinian rumors, or, if the rumors prove to be true, stop the trade in body parts."

Aftonbladet's article on Sunday also called Swedish Ambassador in Israel Elisabet Borsiin Bonnier's condemnation of the article a "disgrace."

Åsa Linder Borg, author of Sunday's article, headlined "Dare to examine Israel," opines that no one is "sympathetic to the idea that Israel should be able to steer American public discourse," and that "not many deeply sympathize with Binyamin Netanyahu's policies."

Meanwhile, grassroots-level anger at the Swedes began to surface in Israel, with one online petition calling for a boycott of IKEA, a global home furnishing giant that was founded in Sweden and has a branch outside Netanya.

Representatives of the Jewish community in Sweden expressed concern Sunday about a diplomatic situation that they feel has gotten out of control.

The editor of the Swedish tabloid said Monday, "I'm not a Nazi. I'm not anti-Semitic."

In an Aftonbladet editorial, Jan Helin responded to claims by Israel that his paper had spread a blood libel about the Jewish people. "I'm a responsible editor who gave the green light to an article because it raises a few questions," Helin wrote.

Meanwhile, Israeli electronic site Ynet considered Monday the Israeli reactions over these reports as childish behavior saying that Israel is now engaged in a very childish "battle" with the Swedes.

The site added that "the correct response to a tabloid article on the harvesting of organs from Palestinians by our soldiers should have been, at most, a derisive remark from a Foreign Ministry official."

The report concluded, "The most Israel can do now is to collectively drop the matter and issue a statement recognizing the Swedish government as friendly and devoid of anti-Semitism. Yes, Israel will be admitting to a mistake, which is ultimately the adult thing to do

---

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Israeli trade in Palestinian body parts

 - The IDF: Israel's Organ Grinder

August 20th, 2009 2:50 AM   Print
Gilad Atzmon
There is an old Jewish joke that tells the story of a dying Jewish merchant who calls his son to his sickbed just before he perishes. He tells him, "Listen to me Moisha'le, life is not just about money… you can also do gold and diamonds."

Monitoring Israeli and Jewish news reveals a devastating fact, it is not 'just' about money. It may also be about human organs. A few weeks ago we learned about a ring of American Rabbis who had been arrested in New Jersey upon suspicion of human organs trafficking (amongst many other crimes). Rabbi Levy Izhak Rosenbaum, we read, enticed "vulnerable people to give up a kidney for $10,000 which he would turn around and sell for $160,000." Not too bad, I thought to myself then. We are living in hard times, financial melt down, credit crunch, Wall Street is licking its wounds, the car industry is evaporating. Seemingly, kidney trafficking is still booming.

In fact, the ring of the Rabbi in New Jersey didn't take me by complete surprise. For years we have been hearing about Palestinians claiming that Israel is "deep into organ trafficking." We also learned that the family of Alastair Sinclair, a Scottish tourist who hanged himself in an Israeli jail, "was forced to bring suit for his return with missing body parts."
In 2002 the Tehran Times reported: "The Zionist state has tacitly admitted that doctors at the Israeli forensic institute at Abu Kabir had extracted the vital organs of three Palestinian teenage children killed by the Israeli Army nearly ten days ago. Zionist Minister of Health Nessim Dahhan said in response to a question by Arab member of the Zionist Parliament 'Knesset', Ahmed Teibi, on Tuesday that he couldn't deny that organs of Palestinian youths and children killed by the Israeli forces were taken out for transplants or scientific research."
But now the news about Israeli trafficking of human organ is spreading to Western mainstream media. Ynet, the biggest Israeli online newspaper, reported today that "Leading Swedish daily Aftonbladetclaimed in one of its articles that IDF soldiers killed Palestinians in order to trade in their organs."
A few weeks ago we had a debate here on PTT whether Zionism is a colonial apparatus or not. One of the Materialist arguments against the perception of Zionism as a colonial practice was that Palestine has never been too attractive economically; it lacks oil, gold or minerals. However, this may change now. People who specialise in organ theft may find Palestine to be heaven on earth. In the light of the latest vastly spreading accusations, the Jewish national project maybe is colonial after all.
Though the Israeli government denies the accusation, and I myself far from being qualified to know what the truth of the matter is, one cannot deny that we are facing here a shift of consciousness within the Western discourse. At the end of the day, after watching the Israeli army dumping great quantities of white phosphorous on a civilian population in broad daylight, after seeing Israelis gathering gleefully en masse on the hills around Gaza just to watch their military spreading death and physical suffering in a genocidal manner, after reading that 94% of the Israelis supported the IDF military campaign against the elderly, women and children, most of whom were refugees with nowhere to escape and seek further refuge, organ theft seems to be a 'light crime'.
Whether or not the Swedish paper's accusations are genuine is yet to be revealed. However, one fact has already been established: after so many years of Western inclination to dance to the relentless crying violin of the Jewish melancholic victim serenade, the Western media is now changing its appetite, it is willing to confront Jewish institutional crime.
Rather than talking about the rise of anti-Semitism, we better discuss the growth of Jewish institutional crime.
 
OL/ ALG


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Sunday, August 23, 2009

Aftonbladet: A breath of fresh air from stolen lungs.

The Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said last Friday that he insists on respecting freedom of expression.
The remarks followed Israel's call on Sweden to officially denounce the article published in the Swedish newspaper "Aftonbladet" that accuses the Israeli Army of trading in body parts.
"Israel's reaction was strong.. and I think the newspaper has to respond", the FM said.
"I am not an Editor-in -Chief of the paper and I am not seeking to be so… but I understand the reaction", Bilt added, expecting no change in relations between Israel and Sweden.
The Swedish Ambassador to Israel denounced the article, but the ministry rejected to adopt her remarks.
Actually, the relations throughout the past years were strained because Israel accused Stockholm of bias towards Palestinians, and Stockholm accused Israel of breaching the human rights.

PS: Guys, this is HUGE! How come none of you picked up on it to post..... Tarek (This time i am signing the post!)