Please Call Him Sir

March 31, 2007

Bono has been named “a Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire” at a ceremony where a message was read out from none other than Tony Blair, a man who knows something about titles, since he has been handing them out at bargain basement rates.

The ‘Empire’ doesn’t exist of course, but the knighthoods are still handed out generously. For some such an endorsement from the establishment — given its overall pernicious influence – would come as an insult. Bono, who has spent all his early life cultivating the image of a rebel (just as he has spent the latter kissing executive arse), clearly felt a need to subdue his exuberance to feign residual rebelliousness — he asked people not to call him ‘Sir’. But as a close associated of the already (be)knighted Bob Geldof, he is no doubt aware that as an Irish citizen, he can’t be called ‘Sir’ anyway since the “honor is reserved for citizens of the United Kingdom or British Commonwealth countries”. But saying it makes it appear as if he somehow resents such pretentious titles.

What a pompous ass! I wish someone would give him that Nobel and shut him up.

Argument Clinic

March 31, 2007

Call that Humiliation?

March 31, 2007

According to the Guardian, Tony Blair ‘expressed “disgust” at the captives’ treatment.’ Terry Jones (of Monty Python fame) muses, on the other hand, ”No hoods. No electric shocks. No beatings. These Iranians clearly are a very uncivilised bunch“.

I share the outrage expressed in the British press over the treatment of our naval personnel accused by Iran of illegally entering their waters. It is a disgrace. We would never dream of treating captives like this – allowing them to smoke cigarettes, for example, even though it has been proven that smoking kills. And as for compelling poor servicewoman Faye Turney to wear a black headscarf, and then allowing the picture to be posted around the world – have the Iranians no concept of civilised behaviour? For God’s sake, what’s wrong with putting a bag over her head? That’s what we do with the Muslims we capture: we put bags over their heads, so it’s hard to breathe. Then it’s perfectly acceptable to take photographs of them and circulate them to the press because the captives can’t be recognised and humiliated in the way these unfortunate British service people are.

It is also unacceptable that these British captives should be made to talk on television and say things that they may regret later. If the Iranians put duct tape over their mouths, like we do to our captives, they wouldn’t be able to talk at all. Of course they’d probably find it even harder to breathe – especially with a bag over their head – but at least they wouldn’t be humiliated.

And what’s all this about allowing the captives to write letters home saying they are all right? It’s time the Iranians fell into line with the rest of the civilised world: they should allow their captives the privacy of solitary confinement. That’s one of the many privileges the US grants to its captives in Guantánamo Bay.

The true mark of a civilised country is that it doesn’t rush into charging people whom it has arbitrarily arrested in places it’s just invaded. The inmates of Guantánamo, for example, have been enjoying all the privacy they want for almost five years, and the first inmate has only just been charged. What a contrast to the disgraceful Iranian rush to parade their captives before the cameras!

What’s more, it is clear that the Iranians are not giving their British prisoners any decent physical exercise. The US military make sure that their Iraqi captives enjoy PT. This takes the form of exciting “stress positions”, which the captives are expected to hold for hours on end so as to improve their stomach and calf muscles. A common exercise is where they are made to stand on the balls of their feet and then squat so that their thighs are parallel to the ground. This creates intense pain and, finally, muscle failure. It’s all good healthy fun and has the bonus that the captives will confess to anything to get out of it.

And this brings me to my final point. It is clear from her TV appearance that servicewoman Turney has been put under pressure. The newspapers have persuaded behavioural psychologists to examine the footage and they all conclude that she is “unhappy and stressed”.

What is so appalling is the underhand way in which the Iranians have got her “unhappy and stressed”. She shows no signs of electrocution or burn marks and there are no signs of beating on her face. This is unacceptable. If captives are to be put under duress, such as by forcing them into compromising sexual positions, or having electric shocks to their genitals, they should be photographed, as they were in Abu Ghraib. The photographs should then be circulated around the civilised world so that everyone can see exactly what has been going on.

As Stephen Glover pointed out in the Daily Mail, perhaps it would not be right to bomb Iran in retaliation for the humiliation of our servicemen, but clearly the Iranian people must be made to suffer – whether by beefing up sanctions, as the Mail suggests, or simply by getting President Bush to hurry up and invade, as he intends to anyway, and bring democracy and western values to the country, as he has in Iraq.

The Guardian and Iran

March 31, 2007

Last year, the Guardian had to apologize and retract an interview with Noam Chomsky in which one of its hitmen, Emma Brockes (an admirer of Ariel Sharon), smeared the eminent linguist by fabricating quotes and misrepresenting statements. One would have thought that the Guardian would dissociate itself from the disgraced hack, but today she returns triumphantly with a story on the frontpage of Guardian website, “My year with Camilla“. This of course is merely symptomatic of the paper’s low regard for accuracy, which is further in evidence in todays leader.

Neocon favorite, Robert Tait, regurgitates American propaganda about the Iranian diplomats captured by US forces in Irbil on January 11 in suggesting that “the seizure of the Britons was intended as a stunt to restore the IRGC’s prestige after a string of setbacks, including the arrest of senior officers of the guard’s elite Quds force by US troops in Iraq and the disappearance of two leaders last month.” The claim about the diplomats being members of the Quds force is then echoed by the editors in their otherwise sensible, if rather obsequeous (towards Tony Blair), leader in a show of total contempt for the intelligence of its readership. Tait even finds an ‘Iranian expert’, Ali Ansari, at the tory bastion St Andrews University who supports his thesis. Against the backdrop of Iranian Revolutionary Guard power politics, according to Tait, ”Britain is trying to negotiate the release of its citizens using normal diplomatic channels” [notice the use of the word 'citizen']

To their credit, the Guardian editors have finally manage to distinguish the militarists in Washington from the liberal imperalists.

The paper, which only recently reported on the alleged ‘confessions’ by prisoners at Guantanamo under torture without comment, once again bristles at the parading of British servicemen on Irani TV.

The Iranian captors continued to use the only female captive, Leading Seaman Faye Turney, to broadcast anti-British messages. A third letter in her handwriting claimed she was being “sacrificed, due to the intervening policies of the Bush and Blair governments”. “It is now our time to ask our government to make a change to its oppressive behaviour towards other people,” the letter said.

Another captive, Nathan Summers, was also broadcast admitting the British crew had “trespassed without permission”.

On the other hand, it takes a curiously uncritical approach towards the intransigence of its own government.

The letter [presented yesterday to Britain's ambassador in Tehran] restated that the British naval patrol was in Iranian waters when it was intercepted… [and demanded] just a guarantee it would not happen again.

After the delivery of the letter, an Iranian official expressed hope to the Guardian that the crisis would be “resolved soon”. But Margaret Beckett, the foreign secretary, dismissed it, saying it did not suggest Iran was looking for a way out.

One could be forgiven for believing that the facts suggest the reverse.

I was unable to post much the past few days because I was saddled with the task that I like the least — marking Sociology essays. I finished today, but it feels as though the experience fried my brains. Many interesting things have happened in the meanwhile, and I’ll attempt a quick roundup here.

First thing I noticed in the subway yesterday was the cover of the Metro, a daily newspaper available for passengers at at all train, bus and underground stations in UK. It was the usual fare, heavy on sports and celebrity gossip with the occasional news item (so long as it is sensational) to break the monotony. The cover was indeed sensational. It has a large grainy picture of the female British sailor in Iranian custody and the big headline reads:  ”A prisoner, a pawn — but above all a mother”. The mawkish layout even succeeded in drawing readers away, if only for a brief while, from the all important details of the latest sightings of Jordan or Paris Hilton’s undergarments outside some club somewhere, but I noticed that few gave it more than 10-15 seconds of their time (perhaps because like me, they are all certain that the end would be an anticlimactic release of the captives). The Metro made another attempt today to whip up some patriotic fervor — this time with the picture of the sailor along with a letter she purportedly wrote. From the reaction of the passengers, the effort looked equally futile. Between Sir Bono and Jennifer Lopez, they could pack enough enchantment to make news from a distant conflict appear dreary in comparison.

But how is the mainstream media faring?

The left-liberal Guardian‘s Leader rebukes Iran for its ‘unacceptable behavior’, for ’parading’ leading seaman Faye Turney on Iranian television, where she is shown ”admitting” [sic]  the sailors had trespassed into Iranian waters. While the British State’s main propaganda organ, the BBC, has merely been speculating if the confession was made under coercion, Guardian dismisses such pussy footing. It instead wants to know “under what duress” the confession was filmed. It even plays on the collective unconsious by comparing the behavior to ”all the worst Iranian hostage dramas”, implying there have been many. Meanwhile on the frontpage of its website, the paper reports on the confession of Australian Guantanamo inmate David Hicks — except, there is no reference to “all the worst American prison scandals” or “torture dramas”. Instead, the headline boldly declares “Guantanamo Detainee Guilty” — even though the linked article goes on to say further down that “Rights groups have condemned the tribunals as unfair, arbitrary and reliant on confessions obtained through torture.”

The neocon’s favorite journalist Robert Tait invites us to witness the spectacle of Iranian apathy, who are busy celebrating Norouz “in contrast to the political mood in London”.  The hack clearly has no trouble declaring the Iranian government “staunchly anti-western”, even though the hostility is mostly reactionary and confined to the rhetorical, but it is clearly inconceivable that he would refer to US-UK governments as “staunchly anti-Iranian; anti-Muslim; or anti-Arab” when the evidence of military aggression these nations has filled up libraries full of history books.

So, we are required to feel empathy for the captive, becuase “above all she is a mother”. But one must ask, how many Irani mothers, armed with assault rifles, do we have patrolling the North Sea or the English channel, kilometers away from British territory at the moment? It is hardly the apotheosis of maternal instincts to grab a gun and menace the shores of a country half a world away. One could feel some sympathy if similar sensitivity were show the Iraqis who have been slaughtered in droves. They may have been fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons, daughters — however to the British media, they were above all Statistics. All the moral indignation rings a little hollow, since Britain or its US ally have not felt any compunction about parading Iraqi prisoners on TV. By the standards set by UK and US, the prisoners are doing eminently well. Unlike the Iraqi and Afghan prisoners in coalition custody, none of them are being raped, sexually humiliated, tortured or sodomized by torchlights as far as we know — and we should, since US-UK also introduced us to the jolly activity of immortalizing such moments for posterity by publishing the trophy shots on websites.

Only a year and a half back, I remember reading in the same Metro the story of US military personnel trading photos of dead Iraqis for porn online. Something tells me that many, including Bush & Blair, are glad that the wogs have not internalized all ‘Western values’.

The immediacy of the unfolding tragedy in Iraq at times makes one forget that prior to the war, the nation had already endured twelve years of devastation sanctions, where the highest price was paid by the children of Iraq. According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, 567,000 children had died already by the end of 1995 from the effects of the sanctions. Two courageous officials — Dennis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck — resigned their posts at the UN because they were unwilling to carry out a genocide masquerading as foreign policy.

To the American secretary of state, Madeleine Albright, this price was “worth it”. Here is, “Paying the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq”, John Pilger’s moving portrait of the devastation wrought on the Iraqi society by the UN on behalf of US and UK.

[For a report on post-invasion deaths in Iraq, check out The Politics of Body Count]

From the Washington Post, March 1, 2002

“President Bush has dispatched a shadow government of about 100 senior civilian managers to live and work secretly outside Washington, activating for the first time long-standing plans to ensure survival of federal rule after catastrophic attack on the nation’s capital. [...]

“Officials who are activated for what some of them call “bunker duty” live and work underground 24 hours a day, away from their families.[...]

“The two sites of the shadow government make use of local geological features to render them highly secure. They are well stocked with food, water, medicine and other consumable supplies, and are capable of generating their own power.”

From 1964′s “Dr. Strangelove, or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb,” by Stanley Kubrick, script by Terry Southern.

DR. STRANGELOVE Mr. President, I would not rule out the chance to preserve a nucleus of human specimens. It would be quite easy… heh heh… At the bottom of ah… some of our deeper mineshafts. The radioactivity would never penetrate a mine some thousands of feet deep. And in a matter of weeks, sufficient improvements in dwelling space could easily be provided.

PRESIDENT MUFFLEY How long would you have to stay down there?

DR. STRANGELOVE Well let’s see now ah… cobalt thorium G… Radioactive halflife of uh, … hmm.. I would think that uh… possibly uh… one hundred years.

PRESIDENT MUFFLEY You mean, people could actually stay down there for a hundred years?

DR. STRANGELOVE It would not be difficult mein Fuhrer! Nuclear reactors could, heh… I’m sorry. Mr. President. Nuclear reactors could provide power almost indefinitely. Greenhouses could maintain plantlife. Animals could be bred and slaughtered. A quick survey would have to be made of all the available mine sites in the country. But I would guess… that ah, dwelling space for several hundred thousands of our people could easily be provided.

PRESIDENT MUFFLEY Well I… I would hate to have to decide.. who stays up and.. who goes down.

DR. STRANGELOVE Well, that would not be necessary Mr. President. It could easily be accomplished with a computer. And a computer could be set and programmed to accept factors from youth, health, sexual fertility, intelligence, and a cross section of necessary skills. Of course it would be absolutely vital that our top government and military men be included to foster and impart the required principles of leadership and tradition. (Slams down left fist. Right arm rises in stiff Nazi salute.) Arrrrr! (restrains right arm with left) Naturally, they would breed prodigiously, eh? There would be much time, and little to do. But ah with the proper breeding techniques and a ratio of say, ten females to each male, I would guess that they could then work their way back to the present gross national product within say, twenty years.

PRESIDENT MUFFLEY But look here doctor, wouldn’t this nucleus of survivors be so grief stricken and anguished that they’d, well, envy the dead and not want to go on living?

DR. STRANGELOVE No sir… (His right arm rolls his wheelchair backwards.) Excuse me.(He struggles with wayward right arm, ultimately subduing it with a beating from his left.) Also when… when they go down into the mine everyone would still be alive. There would be no shocking memories, and the prevailing emotion will be one of nostalgia for those left behind, combined with a spirit of bold curiosity for the adventure ahead! Ahhhh! (Right arm reflexes into Nazi salute. He pulls it back into his lap and beats it again. Gloved hand attempts to strangle him.)

GENERAL TURGIDSON Doctor, you mentioned the ration of ten women to each man. Now, wouldn’t that necessitate the abandonment of the so called monogamous sexual relationship, I mean, as far as men were concerned?

DR. STRANGELOVE Regrettably, yes. But it is, you know, a sacrifice required for the future of the human race. I hasten to add that since each man will be required to do prodigious… service along these lines, the women will have to be selected for their sexual characteristics which will have to be of a highly stimulating nature.

COMRADE DESADESKI I must confess, you have an astonishingly good idea there, Doctor.

[From Counterpunch]

Zbigniew Brzezinksi, the former cold-war hawk, has been one of the most strident critics of the neocon foreign policy in recent years, and his analysis has been consistently on the mark. In “Terrorized by ‘War on Terror’: How a Three-Word Mantra Has Undermined America“ he turns his attention towards the political cost of Bush’s imperial adventures at home.

[My dear friend Ann has a way of finding all the important stuff way before I do, so visiting her very informative website is part of my daily ritual. Here is another important article that I would have otherwise missed.]

The “war on terror” has created a culture of fear in America. The Bush administration’s elevation of these three words into a national mantra since the horrific events of 9/11 has had a pernicious impact on American democracy, on America’s psyche and on U.S. standing in the world. Using this phrase has actually undermined our ability to effectively confront the real challenges we face from fanatics who may use terrorism against us.

The damage these three words have done — a classic self-inflicted wound — is infinitely greater than any wild dreams entertained by the fanatical perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks when they were plotting against us in distant Afghan caves. The phrase itself is meaningless. It defines neither a geographic context nor our presumed enemies. Terrorism is not an enemy but a technique of warfare — political intimidation through the killing of unarmed non-combatants.

But the little secret here may be that the vagueness of the phrase was deliberately (or instinctively) calculated by its sponsors. Constant reference to a “war on terror” did accomplish one major objective: It stimulated the emergence of a culture of fear. Fear obscures reason, intensifies emotions and makes it easier for demagogic politicians to mobilize the public on behalf of the policies they want to pursue. The war of choice in Iraq could never have gained the congressional support it got without the psychological linkage between the shock of 9/11 and the postulated existence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. Support for President Bush in the 2004 elections was also mobilized in part by the notion that “a nation at war” does not change its commander in chief in midstream. The sense of a pervasive but otherwise imprecise danger was thus channeled in a politically expedient direction by the mobilizing appeal of being “at war.”

To justify the “war on terror,” the administration has lately crafted a false historical narrative that could even become a self-fulfilling prophecy. By claiming that its war is similar to earlier U.S. struggles against Nazism and then Stalinism (while ignoring the fact that both Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia were first-rate military powers, a status al-Qaeda neither has nor can achieve), the administration could be preparing the case for war with Iran. Such war would then plunge America into a protracted conflict spanning Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and perhaps also Pakistan.

The culture of fear is like a genie that has been let out of its bottle. It acquires a life of its own — and can become demoralizing. America today is not the self-confident and determined nation that responded to Pearl Harbor; nor is it the America that heard from its leader, at another moment of crisis, the powerful words “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself”; nor is it the calm America that waged the Cold War with quiet persistence despite the knowledge that a real war could be initiated abruptly within minutes and prompt the death of 100 million Americans within just a few hours. We are now divided, uncertain and potentially very susceptible to panic in the event of another terrorist act in the United States itself.

That is the result of five years of almost continuous national brainwashing on the subject of terror, quite unlike the more muted reactions of several other nations (Britain, Spain, Italy, Germany, Japan, to mention just a few) that also have suffered painful terrorist acts. In his latest justification for his war in Iraq, President Bush even claims absurdly that he has to continue waging it lest al-Qaeda cross the Atlantic to launch a war of terror here in the United States.

The Terrorism Industry

Such fear-mongering, reinforced by security entrepreneurs, the mass media and the entertainment industry, generates its own momentum. The terror entrepreneurs, usually described as experts on terrorism, are necessarily engaged in competition to justify their existence. Hence their task is to convince the public that it faces new threats. That puts a premium on the presentation of credible scenarios of ever-more-horrifying acts of violence, sometimes even with blueprints for their implementation.

That America has become insecure and more paranoid is hardly debatable. A recent study reported that in 2003, Congress identified 160 sites as potentially important national targets for would-be terrorists. With lobbyists weighing in, by the end of that year the list had grown to 1,849; by the end of 2004, to 28,360; by 2005, to 77,769. The national database of possible targets now has some 300,000 items in it, including the Sears Tower in Chicago and an Illinois Apple and Pork Festival.

Just last week, here in Washington, on my way to visit a journalistic office, I had to pass through one of the absurd “security checks” that have proliferated in almost all the privately owned office buildings in this capital — and in New York City. A uniformed guard required me to fill out a form, show an I.D. and in this case explain in writing the purpose of my visit. Would a visiting terrorist indicate in writing that the purpose is “to blow up the building”? Would the guard be able to arrest such a self-confessing, would-be suicide bomber? To make matters more absurd, large department stores, with their crowds of shoppers, do not have any comparable procedures. Nor do concert halls or movie theaters. Yet such “security” procedures have become routine, wasting hundreds of millions of dollars and further contributing to a siege mentality.

Fear and the Media

Government at every level has stimulated the paranoia. Consider, for example, the electronic billboards over interstate highways urging motorists to “Report Suspicious Activity” (drivers in turbans?). Some mass media have made their own contribution. The cable channels and some print media have found that horror scenarios attract audiences, while terror “experts” as “consultants” provide authenticity for the apocalyptic visions fed to the American public. Hence the proliferation of programs with bearded “terrorists” as the central villains. Their general effect is to reinforce the sense of the unknown but lurking danger that is said to increasingly threaten the lives of all Americans.

The entertainment industry has also jumped into the act. Hence the TV serials and films in which the evil characters have recognizable Arab features, sometimes highlighted by religious gestures, that exploit public anxiety and stimulate Islamophobia. Arab facial stereotypes, particularly in newspaper cartoons, have at times been rendered in a manner sadly reminiscent of the Nazi anti-Semitic campaigns. Lately, even some college student organizations have become involved in such propagation, apparently oblivious to the menacing connection between the stimulation of racial and religious hatreds and the unleashing of the unprecedented crimes of the Holocaust.

Muslims in the Crosshairs

The atmosphere generated by the “war on terror” has encouraged legal and political harassment of Arab Americans (generally loyal Americans) for conduct that has not been unique to them. A case in point is the reported harassment of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) for its attempts to emulate, not very successfully, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Some House Republicans recently described CAIR members as “terrorist apologists” who should not be allowed to use a Capitol meeting room for a panel discussion.

Social discrimination, for example toward Muslim air travelers, has also been its unintended byproduct. Not surprisingly, animus toward the United States even among Muslims otherwise not particularly concerned with the Middle East has intensified, while America’s reputation as a leader in fostering constructive interracial and interreligious relations has suffered egregiously.

The record is even more troubling in the general area of civil rights. The culture of fear has bred intolerance, suspicion of foreigners and the adoption of legal procedures that undermine fundamental notions of justice. Innocent until proven guilty has been diluted if not undone, with some — even U.S. citizens — incarcerated for lengthy periods of time without effective and prompt access to due process. There is no known, hard evidence that such excess has prevented significant acts of terrorism, and convictions for would-be terrorists of any kind have been few and far between. Someday Americans will be as ashamed of this record as they now have become of the earlier instances in U.S. history of panic by the many prompting intolerance against the few.

In the meantime, the “war on terror” has gravely damaged the United States internationally. For Muslims, the similarity between the rough treatment of Iraqi civilians by the U.S. military and of the Palestinians by the Israelis has prompted a widespread sense of hostility toward the United States in general. It’s not the “war on terror” that angers Muslims watching the news on television, it’s the victimization of Arab civilians. And the resentment is not limited to Muslims. A recent BBC poll of 28,000 people in 27 countries that sought respondents’ assessments of the role of states in international affairs resulted in Israel, Iran and the United States being rated (in that order) as the states with “the most negative influence on the world.” Alas, for some that is the new axis of evil!

The events of 9/11 could have resulted in a truly global solidarity against extremism and terrorism. A global alliance of moderates, including Muslim ones, engaged in a deliberate campaign both to extirpate the specific terrorist networks and to terminate the political conflicts that spawn terrorism would have been more productive than a demagogically proclaimed and largely solitary U.S. “war on terror” against “Islamo-fascism.” Only a confidently determined and reasonable America can promote genuine international security which then leaves no political space for terrorism.

Where is the U.S. leader ready to say, “Enough of this hysteria, stop this paranoia”? Even in the face of future terrorist attacks, the likelihood of which cannot be denied, let us show some sense. Let us be true to our traditions.

When Pinochet’s goons arrested Victor Jara the day after the US Backed coup on September 11, 1973,  he was subjected to intense torture before being shot. According to  fellow political prisoners he was taunted by the captors as he lay on the ground to play guitar for them. He defiantly sang a song in support of the murdered Salvador Allende’s political coalition. [Thanks Manfred]

Te Recuerdo, Amanda

El Derecho de Vivir en Paz 

 

Plegaria a un Labrador 

What Goes Around…

March 28, 2007

Only last week I had posted Alison Weir’s harrowing account of the strip-searching by Israelis of Palestinian women and children — some as young as 7-10 years of age. Despite its outrageous treatment of the Palestinians, Israel always manages to escape censure thanks to the diplomatic cover provided by the Euro-American alliance. Here the Guardian reports a British diplomat receiving a taste of the same treatment they have frequently defended as long as the victims were Palestinians.

Janet Rogan, who is Britain’s consul general in Tel Aviv, was with a delegation of British Treasury officials, led by Ed Balls, the economic secretary to the Treasury, earlier this month. They arrived at the Jerusalem office of the prime minister, Ehud Olmert, ahead of a meeting with his chief of staff and his political adviser. The names of the visitors had been given in advance, the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper said yesterday.

But security guards ordered Ms Rogan to undergo a physical search, the paper said. She refused and presented her diplomatic identity card. However, she was then made to step behind a partition and to undergo a physical search, which included removing her blouse. The Yedioth described the search as a “prolonged, needless and humiliating process” and said the diplomat was visibly upset.

Members of the Labour Friends of Israel – the powerful British lobby group best known for the exploits of its financier, Michael Levy – also received a taste of Israeli hospitality during a trip to the Occupied Territories:

One of its visiting members got a first-hand glimpse of IDF tactics when he got shot at in Rafah even though he arrived in a clearly marked UN vehicle. The three British MPs, surrounded by 20 children got shot at in the presence of UN officials, which led to a demand for investigation by the MPs into the IDF’s “outrageous behaviour” bordering on “lunatic”. One of the MPs, Crispin Blunt, concluded “If they are prepared to do this to people who come out of two clearly marked UN cars, what do they do when there is no one there?” He added “They are building up levels of hatred that will take decades, if not centuries, to erase.”

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