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News, August , 2007

 

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports may be  summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

Members of Israeli occupation government parliament to tour former illegal settlement of Homesh

Knesset members to tour Homesh 

Monday September 17, 2007 13:11 by John Smith - IMEMC & agencies johnsmithimemc at gmail dot com

Members of Israeli occupation government parliament (Knesset in Hebrew) Ayre Eldad, of the National Religious Party / National Union, and Yuli-Yoeal Edelstein, of Likud, will on Monday visit the site of the former illegal Israeli settlement of Homesh, located near the northern West Bank city of Jenin, Israeli media sources have reported.

The ministers are expected to tour the site, attending briefings on land-ownership and the status of Homesh, and talking to right-wing Israeli protestors who have made various so-called “pilgrimages” to the site of the former illegal settlement which was evacuated under the terms of 2005’s disengagement plan.

The Israeli occupation army in July forcibly removed around 30 illegal settlers from the former settlement. In recent months, Israeli settlers have illegally attempted to reoccupy the site on several occasions.

In August, an Israeli occupation government judge of the Juvenile Court ruled the disengagement law invalid, a move that removed prohibitions on illegally visiting the Homesh site, and compromised the legal basis under which such visits can be both challenged and punished.

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Note to Readers and Journalists:

The Israeli settlements as well as the Land-Grab, Apartheid Wall in the Palestinian occupied territories have been built illegally on confiscated Palestinian lands. These represent a major violation of international law, Geneva Conventions, and they obstruct reaching a peaceful resolution for the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

The Israeli occupation forces abduct and kidnap Palestinians from their homes and at checkpoints, on daily basis. Most media refer to these abductions and kidnappings as arrests, which is inaccurate and not true as the Israeli occupation government has no jurisdiction over Palestinian citizens inside their own territories.

Further, when Israeli occupation forces kill Palestinian civilians, particularly when the victims are women and children, this should be referred to as an act of terrorism, and perpetrators should be described as terrorists.

Since the end of the second intifadha in 2005, not a single Israeli civilian was killed by Palestinian resistance organizations. However, Palestinian civilians have been killed by Israeli occupation forces, almost on daily basis.

Any journalist who does not describe the Israeli killing of Palestinian civilians as terrorism is biased, unfair, not objective, and a participant in terrorizing the Palestinian people, so the Israeli occupation of Palestine can continue endlessly.

Note to Translators:

The Arabic definite article, Al (or its variant, El) should be written with a hyphen separating it from the noun it is associated with, for example Al-Aqsa. If a hyphen is not used, as in Al Aqsa, it confuses non-Arabic readers. They may think that it is an abbreviation of the name Albert, as many Americans do.

The Arabic definite article Al (or El) should be written as such, whether it is Shamsiyah or Qamariyah in pronunciation, simply because we are dealing with the written form of language, not the spoken one. Using the Shamsiyah so many forms in writing is inaccurate and confusing to non-Arabic readers, to say the least.

Only standard (fasih) pronunciation of Arabic names should be used. Non-standard ('ammi)  should be avoided. Example: Names like Abu Sunainah, Abu Rudainah, and Abu Shebak are written by some translators in the non-standard forms of Abu Snainah, Abu Rdainah, and Abu Shbak.

The standard pronunciation of the vowel at the end of names is (a), not (e), particularly if it is followed by (h), like in the cases of Haniyah and Rudainah, not Haniyeh and Rudaineh.

The standard pronunciation of vowels in the following names is (ai), not (ei) as written by  some translators: Hussain, not Hussein and Hassanain, not Hassanein. This is the same long vowel pronounced in the English words "rain" and "brain."

 


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