zondag 25 juli 2010

Hamas en Hezbollah solidair met massamoordenaar al-Bashir van Soedan

 
Het zou natuurlijk niet mogen verbazen gezien de doelstellingen en acties van beide organisaties. Zowel Hezbollah als Hamas vinden het een nobele zaak om zoveel mogelijk Joden te doden (Hezbollah leider Nasrallah heeft zelfs gezegd dat het een goede zaak is dat de Joden zich in Israel verzamelen want dan hoeft men ze niet wereldwijd te vervolgen om ze te doden), en beide maken gebruik van klassieke antisemitische stereotiepen over Joodse almacht (in het handvest van Hamas worden de Protocollen van de WIjzen van Zion aangehaald om de kwade intenties van de Joden te 'bewijzen'). Toch is het in vooral progressieve kringen bon-ton geworden om beide als legitieme verzetsbewegingen te beschouwen die opkomen voor Palestijnse c.q. Libanese rechten. Misschien dat hun beider warme steun voor de crimineel en massamoordenaar Omar al-Bashir de ware aard van deze organisaties nog wat verheldert.
 
RP
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Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center
July 25, 2010
www.terrorism-info.org.il/malam_multimedia/English/eng_n/html/hamas_e121.htm

Hamas and Hezbollah expressed sympathy with the president of Sudan over the second arrest warrant issued against him by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for counts of genocide.


Overview

1. On July 12, 2010, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued a second warrant of arrest against Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir for three counts of genocide. Soon after, Hezbollah and Hamas expressed unequivocal solidarity with the president of Sudan, condemning the international community (mainly the US) and the international system of justice, claiming it serves political elements of world powers.

2. Hamas' support for the president of Sudan despite the serious genocide allegations, as well as its harsh statements against the international system of justice, is all the more notable considering Hamas' worldwide efforts to undermine the legitimacy of the State of Israel and its leaders. Those efforts include making use of international and country-specific systems of justice to sue Israeli top officials.

The arrest warrant

3. On July 12, the ICC issued a second arrest warrant against Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir for three counts of genocide committed against three different ethnic groups in Sudan. The counts include: genocide by killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, and "deliberately inflicting on each target group conditions of life calculated to bring about the group's physical destruction".

4. Al-Bashir still faces another ICC arrest warrant, which is not revoked by the one issued on July 12. The previous warrant, dated March 4, 2009, was issued against Al-Bashir for five counts of crimes against humanity (murder, extermination, forced transfer, torture, and rape) and two counts of war crimes (intentionally directing attacks against a civilian population or against individual civilians not taking direct part in hostilities, and pillaging).

The reaction of Hamas

5. Speaking at a ceremony naming a street after the shaheeds of the "Freedom Flotilla", the Hamas de-facto administration chief Isma'il Haniyah said the following: "Even as the international community remains silent over real crimes and state-sponsored terrorism directed against the Palestinian people in Gaza and those who sympathize with them, [false] allegations are leveled against the Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir". He further expressed complete solidarity with the Sudanese president (Ma'an, July 14, 2010).

6. This is not the first time that Hamas has expressed sympathy with Al-Bashir. When the first arrest warrant was issued against him for crimes against humanity and war crimes, Hamas called on Arab countries and the world of Islam to stand up for Al-Bashir and Sudan against the "unfair attack on it". Hamas declared "unequivocal solidarity" with the president, rejecting the "unfair allegations against him". According to Hamas, those allegations serve a system of international justice that "reflects the interests of the US and ignores the doings of the true criminals", i.e., Israel (Aqsaa.com, July 15, 2010).

The reaction of Hezbollah

7. On July 13, Hezbollah published the following announcement on its website (Al-Intiqad), expressing solidarity with the president of Sudan: "Hezbollah is hereby expressing complete solidarity with Sudan-with its president, its government, and its people-over the new allegations leveled against the president of Sudan, Omar al-Bashir, by the International Criminal Court. Those allegations are a new form of verdicts issued by international elements according to the whims of their superiors, with the purpose of furthering political objectives. Hezbollah condemns the silence of the international legal institutions over the ongoing and escalating Zionist crimes, a silence motivated by the instructions of arrogant countries. Yet those [international legal] institutions act in accordance with political interests in Sudan and in other countries to serve those ruling countries [i.e., the US and Western countries]. This makes those courts biased and unquestionably political" (Al-Intiqad, July 13, 2010).1
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1 Hezbollah published the announcement on the Arabic version of its website.
It is nowhere to be found on the English version.

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