Sunday, August 06, 2006

Detroit Mass Demonstration Against Israeli Aggression

Channel 7 Television News Coverage of Detroit March Against Israeli Aggression

TV Coverage Can be Seen by Clicking on the URL Below:
http://www.wxyz.com/wxyz/nw_local_news/article/0,2132,WXYZ_15924_4894494,00.html

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MECAWI Holds Rally in Detroit

By 7 Action News
August 4, 2006

Friday evening, a large group of protestors marched from the Windsor Tunnel to Grand Circus Park in Detroit to hold a rally against Israeli aggression in Lebanon and Palestine.

The Michigan Emergency Committee Against War and Injustice (MECAWI) organized the protest saying there is no military solution to what is going on between Lebanon and Israel.

Protest organizer Abayomi Azikiwe said, "We’re calling for an immediate cease-fire in regard to the hostilities that are going on right now in Lebanon. We’re opposed to U.S. military assistance in Israel. The F-16, the F-15 fighter planes that are dropping bombs on Lebanon right now are made right here in this country. The weapons, the bombs that are being dropped are made right here in this country and we don’t think this is good for U.S. foreign policy."

They rally was held to demonstrate MECAWI’s solidarity with the people of Palestine and Lebanon.

Copyright 2006, WXYZ. All Rights Reserved.


Detroit News Underestimates Crowd Size

PANW Editor's Note: The following article was published in the conservative Detroit News which has taken a pro-Israeli stand on the bombing and ground assault against Lebanon. Consequently, it gave the lowest crowd estimate of all other media accounts of the Aug. 4 historic demonstration in downtown Detroit. The protest had far more than 700 people.
Even prior to the beginning of the march down Woodward Avenue, there were over a thousand people who had gathered along the route leading to the Detroit/Windsor Tunnel.

March through Detroit seeks Mideast cease-fire

Hundreds, with several carrying Lebanese flags, call for Bush to lean on Israel to halt onslaught.

John Wisely / The Detroit News

DETROIT -- More than 700 demonstrators marched through downtown Detroit Friday afternoon, demanding President Bush order an immediate cease-fire from Israel in Lebanon.

"One phone call, that's all it would take," said Ahmed Abdulhadi, 26, of Dearborn as he marched north on Woodward Avenue waving a large Lebanese flag. "If Bush calls (Israeli Prime Minister Ehud) Olmert one time, this whole massacre will be over."

The demonstration began about 4:30 p.m. near the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel, traveled west in front of Hart Plaza then north on Woodward to Grand Circus Park. The marchers were accompanied by a police escort and slowed traffic briefly as they moved through the streets.

In addition to Lebanese flags, demonstrators carried placards with photos showing maimed and killed woman and children with slogans such as "Your tax dollars did this." Some of the signs equated Israel and Olmert with the Nazis, and marchers chanted slogans saying the same thing.

"We have to make our voices heard," said Joseph Gaughan, 59, of Hamtramck. "The rest of us have to stand up with these Arab-Americans and particularly these Lebanese-Americans."

For Barri Ayoub, 35, of Dearborn the march was personal. Her 16-year-old daughter, Angela, is in Lebanon and having trouble getting out.

"They can say it's a war against Hezbollah, but it's a war against the Lebanese people," Ayoub said. "We are coming out to help the innocent women and children. What kind of crime did they do to deserve this?"

You can reach John Wisely at (313) 222-2035 or jwisely@detnews.com.

2 comments:

  1. U.N. draft seeks full halt to fighting

    Updated 8/5/2006 11:57 PM ET

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.S. and France agreed Saturday on a draft Security Council resolution that seeks a full halt to fighting in Lebanon, breaking a three-week impasse caused partly by Washington's refusal to press Israel to end its offensive against Hezbollah.

    Despite the agreement, fighting raged on. Israeli naval commandos struck the southern port of Tyre before dawn, while Israeli air raids killed at least eight people across Lebanon and a rain of Hezbollah rockets on northern Israel killed three civilians.

    The resolution would chart a path toward a lasting peace with a cease-fire monitored by international troops. If passed, it would be the most significant international response to the crisis and raise hopes of ending combat that has killed at least 600 and left Lebanon in tatters.

    The resolution must now go before the full 15-nation Security Council and gain Israeli and Lebanese acceptance — and initial reaction from both sides indicated that would not be easy.

    Hezbollah warned it will not abide by the resolution unless Israel withdraws from Lebanon entirely and indicated the lack of a timetable for such a withdrawal was perhaps the biggest sticking point with the text.

    "We will abide by it on condition that no Israeli soldier remains inside Lebanese land. If they stay, we will not abide by it," said Mohammed Fneish, one of two Hezbollah Cabinet ministers in the Lebanese government.

    In Israel, Tourism Minister Isaac Herzog said the agreement was an "important development," but Israel would not halt its assault on Hezbollah for the time being. Still, he appeared to acknowledge the draft meant Israel's offensive would have to wind down soon.

    "We still have the coming days for many military missions, but we have to know that the timetable is becoming increasingly shorter," he said.

    Israel says it won't pull its troops out of the south until a significant international military force deploys in the region.

    The text also ignored three Lebanese demands: setting a timetable for an Israeli withdrawal from the south, lifting Israel's full blockade of Lebanon and putting the disputed Chebaa Farms area under U.N. control.

    "We would have liked to see our concerns more reflected in the text," Lebanese special envoy Nouhad Mahoud said.

    "Unfortunately it lacks for instance a call for withdrawal of Israeli forces which are now in Lebanon and that's a recipe for more confrontation, we don't like to see that."

    President Bush is "happy with the progress being made" at the United Nations, but knows cementing a cease-fire will not be easy, White House press secretary Tony Snow said.

    "I don't think he has any delusions about what lies ahead," said Snow, who was with the president on his vacation at his private ranch in Crawford, Texas.

    British Prime Minister Tony Blair praised the resolution as "an important first step in bringing this tragic crisis to an end."

    "The priority now is to get the resolution adopted as soon as possible, and then to work for a permanent cease-fire and achieve the conditions in Lebanon and Israel which will prevent a recurrence," Blair said.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin called for an immediate cease-fire and political settlement in Lebanon, and stressed the Security Council must show "its responsibility by passing as quickly as possible a resolution aimed at achieving those goals," the Kremlin said. It said Putin spoke by phone with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

    The Security Council convened later Saturday to discuss the draft. Diplomats said the document was likely to be adopted early next week at a meeting attended by the foreign ministers of the 15 council members.

    The resolution's central demand was for "a full cessation of hostilities based upon, in particular, the immediate cessation by Hezbollah of all attacks and the immediate cessation by Israel of all offensive military operations."

    The document then charted a detailed path for the two sides to follow to achieve a lasting peace. It envisioned a second resolution in a week or two that would authorize an international military force for the Israel-Lebanon frontier.

    Among those steps would be the creation of a large buffer zone in southern Lebanon free of both Israeli troops and Hezbollah militants, monitored by the Lebanese army and international peacekeepers.

    The draft also called for Hezbollah to be disarmed and for Lebanon's borders to be solidified, especially in the disputed Chebaa Farms area, occupied by Israel since 1967.

    Another element was an arms embargo that would block any entity in Lebanon except the national government from obtaining weapons from abroad. That was aimed at blocking the sale or supply of arms to Hezbollah from Iran and Syria, which are believed to be the militia's main backers.

    The resolution would put significant pressure on Lebanon's government, which has all but ceded control of the south to Hezbollah. The government will have great trouble disarming the militia, especially because Hezbollah has ministers inside it.

    While the draft seeks the "unconditional release" of the two captured Israeli soldiers, it is less forceful on Lebanese prisoners held by Israel. It only encourages efforts "aimed at settling the issue" of those prisoners.

    The resolution would put significant pressure on Lebanon's government, which ceded control of the south to Hezbollah.

    "This is not a resolution that provides the comprehensive solution," U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said. "I'm sure there are aspects of it that are displeasing to almost everyone but the point is this is a way to get started and that's what we hope to do."

    The draft's chief goal is to ensure that southern Lebanon does not slip back into the same state it was in before Israel's offensive, which began after Hezbollah guerrillas raided northern Israel on July 12 in fighting that left eight soldiers dead and two captured.

    "Who could imagine that such a drama could happen again?" French Ambassador Jean-Marc de La Sabliere said. "It would be irresponsible."

    The U.S. and France had to compromise to get the draft adopted.

    Washington backed off its demand for a package of immediate steps, including the deployment of the international force in conjunction with a cease-fire.

    France gave up its desire for a blanket halt to violence, agreeing for the resolution to give Israel the right to conduct defensive operations — a term that the Israeli military could interpret broadly in response to any Hezbollah attack.

    The draft made no direct demand for the release of the two captured Israeli soldiers. It only emphasized the need to address the causes "that have given rise to the current crisis," including freeing the abductees.

    The Security Council has made the same demands previously — most recently with resolution 1559 in September 2004 — but Hezbollah has refused to obey.

    "What we're trying to do is lay in the foundation so that you can finally enact the provisions of U.N. Security Council resolution 1559," Snow told reporters in Texas.

    It asked Annan to play a key role in securing Israeli and Lebanese agreement to the principles for peace, giving him one month to work with the parties to come up with new proposals to implement the demands spelled out in resolution 1559 and elsewhere.

    U.S. Assistant Secretary of State David Welch also met with Lebanese officials in Beirut trying to pave the way for ending hostilities. He talked with Prime Minister Fuad Saniora and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a prominent Shiite who has been negotiating on behalf of Hezbollah.

    While meeting fierce resistance in southern Lebanon, the Israeli army claimed progress. Commanders said Israeli troops had knocked out half of Hezbollah's long-range rockets and seized positions in or near 20 towns and villages as part its drive to carve out a five-mile zone along the border free of Hezbollah fighters.

    "We plan to carry out the whole mission," Defense Minister Amir Peretz said. "Hezbollah must not have illusions that we plan to give in."

    Find this article at:
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-08-05-un-mideast_x.htm

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  2. Protest marches in London, Paris

    Saturday 05 August 2006 5:50 PM GMT

    Protesters demanded immdeiate truce in the Middle East

    Thousands of people demonstrated in Britain and France on Saturday to demand a Middle East cease-fire as the international community worked towards a UN resolution in the crisis.

    In London, thousands of placard-waving activists rallied to demand a halt to the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

    The demonstration passed the US embassy and Downing Street as Tony Blair, the British prime minister, worked inside on securing a United Nations resolution aimed at ending the bloody conflict.

    London's Metropolitan Police said 20,000 people were on the protest, while the organisers, the left-wing Stop the War Coalition, claimed a turn-out around 100,000-strong.

    Stop the War spokesman John Rees told AFP that the protest was to hammer home a message to Blair.

    "It's about telling the British and US governments that we want an unconditional cease-fire. We're the people who have the power to stop the Israelis in Lebanon," he insisted.

    "Their silence is permitting mass murder in Lebanon by the Israeli forces. Look at the casualties: it's eight to one."

    More than 1,000 people also demonstrated across the French cities of Paris, Lille in the north and Strasbourg in the east calling for an end to "the massacre of the Lebanese people".

    Some 400 people gathered in central Paris carrying banners reading "stop the massacres" and "a cease-fire in Lebanon" walking behind Lebanese and Israeli flags.

    Another 500 demonstrated in Strasbourg, with young demonstrators marching behind two coffins adorned with pictures of children injured in the Israeli onslaught of Lebanon.

    'Massacre'

    "It's about telling the British and US governments that we want an unconditional cease-fire. We're the people who have the power to stop the Israelis in Lebanon,"

    John Reece, Stop The War spokesman

    In the northern city of Lille, some 400 demonstrated according to police and some 800 according to organisers, to denounce "the international community's silence" over the "massacre".

    Two Jordanian policemen and two protesters were slightly injured in clashes in the capital Amman during an anti-Israeli protest, police spokesman Major Bashir al-Daajeh said in statements published on Saturday.

    The police also briefly detained eight demonstrators before releasing them on bail on charges of attacking law enforcement agents during Friday's
    "unauthorised" demonstration, Daajeh told Al-Ghad newspaper.

    He said the clashes broke out when around 200 people gathered outside a mosque in west Amman in an attempt to march on the nearby Israeli embassy to denounce the ongoing Israeli onslaught on Lebanon.

    "The police asked them to leave and when they refused they used clubs to break up the demonstration," Daajeh said.

    AFP
    You can find this article at:
    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/4928B291-164D-42F6-BBCB-B19FF987AD2C.htm

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