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Palestinians' 'Saddam Street' funded by U.S.
WorldNetDaily ^ | January 22, 2007 | Aaron Klein

Posted on 01/22/2007 4:17:35 PM PST by Mr. Mojo

Major thoroughfare in West Bank honors executed Iraqi dictator

JERUSALEM – Palestinians in the northern West Bank have named a major street after late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein that was funded – along with the surrounding municipality – by the United States Agency for International Development.

Following Saddam's hanging earlier this month, thousands of Palestinians gathered in the Yaabid municipality, just outside of the northern West Bank town of Jenin, to hold a vigil in his honor.

According to Arabic media reports translated by Palestinian Media Watch, local Palestinian municipal leaders and members of armed factions in Jenin named a school and the municipality's main street after Saddam.

WND confirmed with local leaders the Yaabid street currently bares Saddam's name.

The Palestinian daily Al-Hayat al-Jadida stated the street's dedication was meant to emphasize the "values of Arabness and Jihad, which [Saddam] represented."

But USAID held a ceremony in July 2005 marking its contributions of $402,000 for paving the Yaabid municipality's main street – now named after Saddam – as well nearly two miles of inner streets. The American agency also contributed to the reconstruction of the city's main entrance.

USAID regularly funds reconstruction efforts in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, usually hiring local crews to carry out the construction.

USAID's office in Tel Aviv confirmed to WND it coordinated the Yaabid municipality's paving and reconstruction projects.

David Snider, a USAID spokesman, said his agency was not aware the street was renamed after Saddam.

"As always, USAID is fully compliant with all U.S. legislation and U.S. laws," Snider told WND.

Zacharias Zubeidi, leader of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades in Yaabid, told WND the city changed the name on the U.S.-funded street to show "Saddam Hussein is still alive."

"We will honor his memory until the American and Zionist occupation is driven from our land," Zubeidi said.

Saddam was considered a hero to most Palestinians. His final words prior to his hanging reportedly included "Palestine is Arab."

During the first Gulf War in 1991, Palestinians cheered Saddam's missile attacks on Israel, chanting "Beloved Saddam, strike Tel Aviv," as the Scud missiles flew overhead. Some scuds fell short and landed in Palestinian areas.

Saddam further endeared himself to the Palestinians during the latest Palestinian intifada, or terror war, which began in September 2000. The Iraqi dictator donated about $25,000 to the family of each Palestinian suicide bomber and $10,000 for each Palestinian killed while committing attacks against Israel. The stipends amounted to an estimated $35 million.

Mideast analysts say Saddam's support for the Palestinian cause was mostly aimed at gaining widespread support throughout the Arab world.

This is not the first time USAID projects to the Palestinians have been connected to support of terrorism and jihad.

WND reported USAID has reconstructed roads and municipalities in areas in the Gaza Strip controlled by Hamas.

In a WND interview, Hamas Foreign Minister Mahmoud al-Zahar thanked USAID for its efforts.

According to Palestinian Media Watch translations, after USAID funded road projects in Jenin in 2004, a central street there was named after the first Iraqi suicide bomber, who killed four American soldiers in Fallujah. The mayor of Jenin reportedly participated in an anti-American dedication ceremony in which speakers blessed the "resistance of the residents of Fallujah"

Also, a USAID-funded Palestinian sports center was named after Salef Khalef, operational head of the Black September terror organization, which was behind the killing of two U.S. diplomats in Sudan in 1973 and the massacre one year earlier of 11 Israeli Olympic athletes in Munich.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Israel
KEYWORDS: israel; saddam; westbank

1 posted on 01/22/2007 4:17:39 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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To: Mr. Mojo

How about funding for streets in NO instead of Palestine? I'm not in favor of the feds providing everything for us, but for crying out loud! Saddam Street when we have a disaster area still trying to recover? Or how about more roads in Iraq?


2 posted on 01/22/2007 4:19:30 PM PST by villagerjoel (Give me liberty, or give me death!)
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To: villagerjoel

Round Rock, Texas has a street named after a Cop Killer.


3 posted on 01/22/2007 4:22:37 PM PST by trumandogz (Rudy G 2008: The "G" Stands For Gun Grabbing & Gay Lovin.)
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To: villagerjoel

where is palestine? i don't see it on the map. LOL


4 posted on 01/22/2007 4:23:48 PM PST by sappy
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To: Mr. Mojo

Makes one wonder how many suicide vests we've paid for.


5 posted on 01/22/2007 4:31:55 PM PST by Spok
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To: Mr. Mojo

Gee, what a surprise.


6 posted on 01/22/2007 4:54:45 PM PST by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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To: Mr. Mojo
This is dwarfed by our USAID spending $2.4 million on such nonsense as "scholarships" for students to attend "Al-Quds University":

USAID Provides Scholarships to Over 2000 Palestinian Students
This was published as a press release on 18 September, 2006.

Abu Dis, West Bank - In a ceremony at the Abu Dis campus of Al Quds University, representatives of the U.S. government announced a $2.4 million scholarship fund to assist over 2000 students during this academic year. The scholarships, awarded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), were announced by Deputy Principal Officer Thomas Duffy. Dr. Hassan Dweik, Vice President of Al-Quds University, opened the event, during which university President, Dr. Sari Nusseibeh, and USAID Acting Director David Harden also spoke. During his remarks, Dr. Nusseibeh thanked the U.S. government for this significant assistance to the students and the university. For his part, Mr. Duffy praised the contributions Al Quds University has made to educating generations of Palestinians and their cooperation with universities throughout the world. He noted that Al Quds University is internationally recognized as a strong academic institution.

The $2.4 million USAID contribution will fund the studies of needy Palestinian undergraduates with high academic achievements. Simultaneously, USAID is providing Al Quds University with $100,000 of in-kind assistance through the Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI) to furnish 22 new lecture halls, 42 faculty offices, a computer lab and an auditorium.

The new scholarships are part of USAID's four-year Higher Education Support Initiative, managed by the Academy for Educational Development (AED). Launched in 2002, the $15 million program has provided training and education opportunities to hundreds of Palestinian students in local and U.S universities and colleges to prepare the next generation of leaders and managers.

During 2005, USAID's education assistance improved libraries in nine private universities in the West Bank and Gaza, by supplying library equipment, 10,000 books in Arabic and English, and by designing an on-line library catalogue. It also upgraded computer labs at 16 private community colleges and provided scholarships for Palestinian students in technical colleges. Since 1993, Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza have received more than $1.7 billion in U.S. economic assistance via USAID projects - to combat poverty, improve health and education, create jobs and promote good governance.

This "Al-Quds University" is the place that prominently posts such tripe as:

The Geography of Occupation: Education in Conflict

To understand the current hardships of Al Quds University and other Palestinian educational institutions, it is necessary to explore the geography of Israeli occupation. This geography shows the real colour of the degradation to which people are subjected and the effects of long-standing colonizing policies. One would have thought a simple, self-evident right to education should be guaranteed.

The eight universities in Gaza and the West Bank, other educational institutions and hundreds of schools are all subjected to severe restrictions in the delivery of knowledge, as a result of Israeli measures. Normal education has continued to be disrupted over the past 35 years of occupation, especially during and after the first Intifada started in 1987. Birzeit University was particularly singled out for harassment during this period because of its perceived role in intellectual leadership. Faculty and students were arbitrarily detained, the university president exiled, and the campus closed for extended periods. The measures resulted in a movement of ‘underground’ education, when faculty met students in private homes and other unofficial ‘campuses’.

Today, student and faculty attendance at all universities continues to be severely affected by the presence of Israeli checkpoints, curfews, sometimes by direct harassment, attacks and willful destruction. A single checkpoint on a West Bank road can close down teaching for many days. A study term of 15 weeks usually ends up being compressed into less than 12 weeks or extended over six or seven months. The academic and other effects are cumulative and drastic in the long-term, since few courses are taught in full. Not only is educational delivery impaired and an acute financial crisis affects all aspects of educational work. There is an unsettling sense of constant precariousness that makes any planning and any motivation difficult indeed. Priorities have shifted from an emphasis on quality to a struggle for mere survival.

Al Quds University in Jerusalem is unique in its location and the difficulties it faces, since it is the only Palestinian Arab higher education institution in this central region that is closest to the heart of the conflict. As with universities established earlier, it is an answer to the specific situation and environment. Palestinian universities were all created by the enlargement of colleges after 1967, when it became more difficult for students to continue studies at universities abroad. Occupation and restricted movement resulted in more universities than expected in a small area.

Al Quds University was founded in 1994 by the merger of several Palestinian Arab colleges in Jerusalem and suburbs. It now has 10 faculties, including arts, science, medicine, health sciences and law; it serves a student population of about 6000 in 2002, and has more than 700 faculty and staff. Main administration offices are located in East Jerusalem, just outside the walls of the Old City. (Last July, Israeli police stormed the offices, seized all files and computers, and welded shut the premises for several weeks. Earlier in the year, the Israeli army entered several educational offices in Ramallah and destroyed equipment at will.)

Teaching is conducted at four main campuses. Two of the campuses are in East Jerusalem, and the largest campus is in Abu Dees, a suburb a few kilometers to the east. Other faculties are in Ramallah/Al Bireh, and are similarly separated from East Jerusalem by major Israeli checkpoints and occasional ‘minor’ checkpoints in between.

These ‘checkpoints’ are more than places where the Israeli army stops people or checks identification. They have developed into real internal borders, with huge concrete blocks and barbed wire, to segregate and to stop movement required by a natural geography and real human needs.

Geography

In 1948, Israel was declared as a state after occupying about 78% of historic Palestine, including West Jerusalem. In addition to displacing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, it destroyed hundreds of Palestinian villages and instituted apartheid-like policies and laws. Israel occupied East Jerusalem (including the Old City) and the West Bank and Gaza in 1967, but its declaration to ‘unify’ the city has not been accepted internationally. Israel expanded the municipal boundaries of Jerusalem to accommodate its building of new colonies and to confiscate more land in the West Bank. The Israeli army set up checkpoints on those self-declared boundaries of ‘Jerusalem’ and along roads that crisscross Palestinian lands to connect Israeli colonies in 1967-occupied territories and to ‘create facts on the ground’. This process has invented an unreal mythic geography. It assumes a dictatorship of language through military power to set land boundaries and to sort and grade the people of the land.

As a result, Palestinian residents of suburbs and towns outside Israel’s declared ‘Jerusalem’ cannot enter or cross these boundaries to go to Jerusalem or other neighbouring suburbs, nor are they free to move from one Palestinian town or city or village to another across checkpoints. Cities, villages and camps are totally isolated, with residents requiring Israeli permits to cross. Today, Israeli checkpoints, together with barbed wire and concrete separators, excavated ravines, trenches and mounds of earth serve as walls to impede movement and imprison the Palestinian people in more than 200 non-contiguous ghettos.

A Palestinian West Bank resident of Izariyyah, a suburb to the east, just a 10-minute drive from the center of Jerusalem, is not allowed to enter East Jerusalem by the Israelis or to go to another Palestinian suburb that is only a 10-minute drive to the north of the city. These Israeli regulations apply to everyone, young and old, men, women and children, emergency medical cases, as well as students and faculty. Anyone caught attempting to cross these self-declared Israeli boundaries is arrested and punished, or may be shot.

Al Quds University’s educational structure is built on self-evident and natural connections between areas close to each other under normal conditions, but that now the Israeli occupation has turned into an impossible situation – in terms of access, services, administration, and delivery of education. The university’s organization assumes that these Palestinian areas are in close proximity (as they are), and that West Bank and Jerusalem Palestinians are the same people (despite the different colours of identity cards). On the other hand, the Israeli occupation presumes political positions and imposes military realities that disrupt communication and movement among the various Palestinian parts.

It is a cruel, suffocating geography.

Causes of Attendance Difficulties

The problem of attendance at universities predates the current Al Aqsa Intifada. It has less to do with ‘security’ than with Israeli long-standing policies. Israel has always targeted education, community developments and Palestinian civil society. It has been limiting, fragmenting and disconnecting the Palestinian areas for a long time.

Four main factors affect educational work: (1) Israeli closures and curfews; (2) Israel’s restrictions on movement everywhere in the West Bank and between the West Bank and Gaza; (3) Israel’s network of roads to its colonies/military outposts (‘settlements’) in the West Bank and Gaza; and (4) inability of students and faculty from the West Bank to enter Israel’s ‘Jerusalem’ boundaries or to cross them to go to other destinations. Since ‘Jerusalem’ is centrally located, Israel’s actions in effect disconnect the various Palestinian areas to the north, south and east.

Meanwhile, in pure apartheid fashion, Israeli authorities turn a blind eye to the cruelties of illegal colonists, allowing them freedom to rampage and destroy Palestinian farmlands, burn or cut down olive trees. Occupants in Israeli colonies in the West Bank and Gaza, their businesses and educational institutions, and the educational system in Israel, enjoy total mobility and freedom of movement. However, any sense of mobility is denied to all segments of Palestinian activity.

During my teaching at two Palestinian universities since 1995, I have not experienced a single term in which study was not disrupted by Israeli military and political actions. The problems have become merely more severe in the last two years. The difficulties are particularly acute at the two campuses of Al Quds University in East Jerusalem, where the Faculty of Arts is located. About 60% of students and faculty at these two campuses have only West Bank identity cards. On good days, often 25% to 30% of students were unable to attend classes, stopped at checkpoints or arrested or otherwise prevented from reaching the campus. On bad days, more than 50% are not able to move. On days when a curfew is imposed in any of the surrounding areas, classes cannot be held at all.

The worst case was the last semester (2nd semester in 2001-2002), which started in February and was supposed to end in June. It was only completed at the end of August, without our finishing all the work properly. It was possible to continue teaching only by moving courses from the Beit Hanina campus in East Jerusalem to a high school in the town of Ram. This temporary solution increased attendance by West Bank residents but caused more difficulties for Jerusalem residents. In this academic year (which resumed at the end of October 2002), most classes have been moved to the campus in Abu Dees, resulting in overcrowding, new travel difficulties for many, and much disorientation.

Electronic and Other Solutions

It is ironic that when physical movement and communication are restricted, people find ways to overcome barriers, or at least to cope. Because the educational process has been disrupted so much, people search for new ways to continue to learn and to teach. They are not really good solutions. Students and faculty try to reach the campuses by risking their lives, using rough side roads and other ways to pass without being stopped by Israeli soldiers. They try to continue their educational activities by whatever means. It demands dedication and a kind of humiliating ingenuity; it takes a long time, is costly and dangerous.

Alternative communication means are developed. For example, many students and faculty have cell phones and access to the Internet. Rumour and word-of-mouth communication are also very important. Students form small community networks to exchange news about work, dates of examinations, checkpoint status, and so on.

But all these means of communication are informal and unreliable. This is why I have considered using electronic methods in times when classes cannot be held. I started the process last term, though it was not implemented fully because classes were stopped suddenly and some students were already unable to attend. To the extent that I collected information, the experiment allowed some solutions for students who needed to complete assignments or to take tests. We were able to agree by e-mail on assignments and readings, or to confirm arrangements by phones for tests or meetings.

Next semester, I plan to start the process on the first day of classes. (Of course, it is not at all certain when we will have the ‘first day of classes’ or when teaching will stop.) I will try to make firm electronic arrangements and record students’ e-mail and phone numbers. Those who do not have Internet access will be advised to go to Internet cafes or communicate with others close by who have access.

E-mail communication will be used as a usual link, especially to benefit those students who are unable to reach classes. In extreme times of closure or extended disruption, e-mail messages will supply all students with directions, encouragement to read, handouts, study guides, topics to discuss, possibly summaries of lectures. Each student will be asked to communicate back with questions about the material. One possible strategy is to set up ‘chat’ groups. This will be difficult to implement right away and may require arrangements on the university web site (http://www.alquds.edu) and additional technical training for faculty and students.

Another potential coping strategy is multiple meeting places. In extreme situations, I hope to travel to meet two or three groups of students in locations they can reach, to re-establish contact and keep courses running on track. This option, however, is not feasible for most instructors to implement because they have identification cards that limit them to the same restrictions that apply to students.

Conclusion

In almost all subjects, a positive and motivating classroom atmosphere is indispensable for the educational process. In the Palestinian case, alternative solutions are forced by the worst of situations – if education is to continue at all. How is it possible to deliver a minimum standard in such impossible times?

Education is crucial for Palestine at this pivotal stage in its history. What is happening today is very harmful for any positive development and for the future of young generations. Because of the existing negative conditions, all other activities related to learning and teaching are affected – financing, improvement of resources, libraries, curriculum development and community projects. Israel knows this, and so education is singled out as one of the targets to disable the progress of the Palestinian people. Even more to the point, one would ask: why should education be included in the Israeli policy of collective punishment (why should ‘collective punishment’ be allowed in the first place), especially with an institution like Al Quds University whose administration has shown willingness to ‘normalize’ and to have joint projects with institutions in Israel?

It is hoped Israeli authorities would realize that their current policies are counterproductive for any peace. If Israelis want to achieve a ‘just’ peace, they must move their government to make necessary distinctions in its various activities, to urge it to stop disinheriting, punishing and suffocating all the Palestinian people all the time. The aim should be adequate resources, quality education and equitable development opportunities for both sides, not just one.

In this regard, people everywhere have an obligation to become more aware and more active, in more than words, in ensuring equal rights for all members of the human family, including the people of Palestine. An incubus of occupation and successive colonization for many centuries (most recently Ottoman, British, Israeli) has plagued this small but important country ‘Palestine’. Here, the real solution is unusually simple: Israel must withdraw from 1967-occupied territories; disable its exclusivist policies; free the Palestinians.

But such a solution will obviously not happen without effective international pressure. What Israel is doing to Palestinian education (not to mention all areas of civil society) makes a travesty of all international standards and conventions. However, Western countries are reticent to apply the same measures against Israel they have applied against other countries that violate international laws and flaunt UN resolutions. The right of education, among other normal rights, should be ensured and facilitated by free movement of educators and students.

Meanwhile, under duress, in educational as in other human endeavours, it is imperative to exercise all initiatives to cope with difficulties, even when the solutions are not complete or totally satisfactory. We do not have the luxury of despairing but must continue to find new pathways to learning, growth and development.


7 posted on 01/22/2007 5:12:26 PM PST by snowsislander
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To: Mr. Mojo

Could be worse. When I read the title, I thought it was going to be about the Pali equivalent of "Sesame Street." Funded by NPR, no doubt...


8 posted on 01/22/2007 5:15:41 PM PST by livius
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To: sappy

Point taken. Just goes to show you what a good job the MSM does with such things (Newspeak).


9 posted on 01/23/2007 6:58:31 AM PST by villagerjoel (Give me liberty, or give me death!)
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