Gaza demo stand-off….

January 17, 2009

GreenParkPalestine

I couldn’t get to the demo at Trafalgar Square regarding Palestine as I had a Labour Representation Committee (LRC) meeting instead. Coming back from the meeting I was on a bus where we were chucked off just by Green Park Station. I walked towards Green Park Station where the cops had cordoned off much of the area leading towards Hyde Park Corner.

Both riot and ordinary cops had hemmed in demonstraters on the pavement towards Green Park Station. They were marching towards the Israeli Embassy when they were stopped. According to a photographer I spoke to there had been dead lock and tension between the cops and demonstraters.

I got there at around 5:30pm and stayed for an hour or so. The cops had surrounded the demonstraters and there were plenty of cops vans around as well. Like I said there was deadlock and when I left the riots cops hadn’t baton charged the demonstraters…as yet… so don’t know what happened.

Unfortunately, couldn’t get any good pix as my camera can’t handle night shots.

dscn384625030001


Alison Colk: first death of a woman in prison this year

January 16, 2009

At the start of the year, the Ministry of Justice released figures stating that ‘self-inflicted’ deaths in prisons had reduced in 2008. The explanation was that it was due to better training, better information sharing and guidance on self harm.

Alison Colk was found hanging in her cell on the 8th January 2009. Alison is the first woman to die in prison this year so far. She died one day into her sentence at Styal Prison, which was for 28 days!!!!

As Deborah Coles from Inquest rightly argues what possible justification is there for sentencing someone for 28 days.

Around this time last year, Lisa Marley was found hanging in her cell at Styal. She was on remand. Her inquest is still to take place.

Since 2000, there have been 12 self-inflicted deaths in Styal (Pauline Campbell’s daughter Sarah died there in 2003). Shouldn’t there be a public enquiry into the functioning of Styal, frankly I’d like to see the place shut-down? Or will there be just the usual excuses and cover-ups?

One woman I knew who was in Styal during the 1980s described it, simply, as a ‘hell hole’ and things haven’t changed. The endless inquest narrative verdicts that are usually highly critical of the ‘care’ given by Styal and promises of improvements. Another woman is dead. A death that could have and should have been prevented.

During the past 10 years, 905 people have died of self-inflicted deaths . And 2008 was a year where the prison population had reached appalling levels.

It is a shameful indictment of this government. NL ever ready to be ’tough on crime’ with its ultra punitive criminal justice system. Pathetic and senseless sentences handed down for 28 days! Vulnerable, powerless and distressed people banged up in places what can only be described as social dustbins where death is the only escape for some.

I am angry, bloody angry, that another woman has died. A senseless, tragic and needless death in the so-called ‘care’ of the state…….


Thatcher: her crimes against the working class….

January 15, 2009

margaretthatcherhanibal

I remember my dad being on strike during the winter of discontent and it being the dying days of the sell-out Callaghan Labour government. Within a couple of months we had the advent of the Thatcherism. Again I remember my parents shocked and stunned faces when they realised the Tories had won. The memory of their expressions is forever etched in my mind.

And the memory of Thatcher on the steps of Downing Street quoting from St Francis of Assisi where the words became somewhat a distopian reality. She decimated the working class. She started to dismantle the welfare state with full throttle neo-liberalism. She caused untold misery, anger and a collective trauma on the psyche of the working class. She was a jingoistic racist and imperialist; from the Malvinas war, blood on her hands over the North of Ireland, backing vile right-wing terrorist organisations like the Contras, her support for apartheid South Africa, allowing America to use UK bases to bomb Libya in 1986….to name a few of her crimes against the international working class.

Her other crimes against the working class was smashing the trade unions….But at least the miners took her on and there was a glimmer of hope yet that was snatched away…..Though the Poll Tax was part of her downfall and the many drunken parties that happened simultaneously across the UK when Thatcher stepped down…’Stand Down Margaret’…Indeed!

So in reply to A.N. Wilson in today’s Mail ….

I am a proud Socialist…I loathed and still loathe Thatcher, loathed her ideology and her relentless attacks on the working class. She shaped my political consciousness that led me to Socialism.

Of course Wilson still swoons and Thatcher still the wet dream of the ruling class. And Mandelson may believe that we are all Thatcherites. Well, he can speak for himself and that statement betrays the labour movement.

So, A.N. Wilson, I will be dancing and drinking champagne when that woman dies. The first woman prime minister who betrayed her sex and defended her own class interests.

Tramp the dirt down, for her crimes against the working class…………..


These boots are made for walking…..

January 15, 2009

VictorianStyleBoots

Ok, HarpyMarx does frivolous and takes a step out of the real depressing world to show off her new boots.

Like I said, it is frivolous but as someone who doesn’t own a pair of shoes (I don’t) just….boots I just felt very happy and pleased with my latest purchase.

And ok, wanted to show them off. Took a picture in sepia in honour of the style of boots….

Ok, frivolity over….back to the serious politics


John McDonnell suspended from the House of Commons

January 15, 2009

john1

“It’s a disgrace to the democracy of this country.” (John McDonnell)

John McDonnell has been suspended from the House of Commons for 5 days. The reason being:

John McDonnell was sanctioned after he picked up the mace, the ornamental club which represents the royal authority of Parliament, in a breach of protocol. The Hayes and Harlington MP said the decision not to hold a vote on the runway was a “national disgrace”. Anyone manhandling the mace is considered in contempt of Parliament.

Well done John for taking a stand over the the planned new Heathrow runway. What was worse for the NL aparatchiks to see/hear, ‘manhandling the mace’ or John mentioning the word….’democracy’??!!

Again, well done John!


Barbara Ehrenreich: The growing clout of the nouveau poor

January 14, 2009

Article from the excellent Barbara Ehrenreich

Ever on the lookout for the bright side of hard times, I am tempted to delete “class inequality” from my worry list. Less than a year ago, it was the one of the biggest economic threats on the horizon, with even hard-line conservative pundits grousing that wealth was flowing uphill at an alarming rate, leaving the middle class stuck with stagnating incomes while the new super-rich ascended to the heavens in their personal jets. Then the whole top-heavy structure of American capitalism began to totter, and–poof!–inequality all but vanished from the public discourse. A financial columnist in the Chicago Sun Times has just announced that the recession is a “great leveler,” serving to “democratize[d] the agony,” as we all tumble into “the Nouveau Poor…”

But hard times are no more likely to abolish class inequality than Obama’s inauguration is likely to eradicate racism. No one actually knows yet whether inequality has increased or decreased during the last year of recession, but the historical precedents are not promising. The economists I’ve talked to– like Biden’s top economic advisor, Jared Bernstein–insist that recessions are particularly unkind to the poor and the middle class. Canadian economist Armine Yalnizyan says, “Income polarization always gets worse during recessions.” It makes sense. If the stock market has shrunk your assets of $500 million to a mere $250 million, you may have to pass on a third or fourth vacation home. But if you’ve just lost an $8-an-hour job, you’re looking at no home at all.

All right, I’m a journalist and I understand how the media work. When a millionaire cuts back on his crême fraîche and caviar consumption, you have a touching human interest story. But pitch a story about a laid-off roofer who loses his trailer home, and you’re likely to get a big editorial yawn. “Poor Get Poorer” is just not an eye-grabbing headline, even when the evidence is overwhelming. Food stamp applications, for example, are rising toward a historic record; calls to one DC-area hunger hotline have jumped 248 percent in the last six months, most of them from people who have never needed food aid before. And for the first time since 1996, there’s been a marked upswing in the number of people seeking cash assistance from TANF ( Temporary Aid to Needy Families), the exsanguinated version of welfare left by welfare “reform.” Too bad for them that TANF is essentially a wage-supplement program based on the assumption that the poor would always be able to find jobs, and that it pays, at most, less than half the federal poverty level.

Why do the sufferings of the poor and the downwardly mobile class matter more than the tiny deprivations of the rich? Leaving aside all the soft-hearted socialist, Christian-type, arguments, it’s because poverty and the squeeze on the middle class are a big part of what got us into this mess in the first place. Only one thing kept the sub-rich spending in the ’00s, and hence kept the economy going, and that was debt: credit card debt, home equity loans, car loans, college loans and of course the now famously “toxic” subprime mortgages, which were bundled and sliced into “securities” and marketed to the rich as high-interest investments throughout the world. The gross inequality of American society wasn’t just unfair or aesthetically displeasing; it created a perilously unstable situation.

Which is why any serious government attempt to get the economy going again–and I leave aside the unserious attempts like bank bailouts and other corporate welfare projects–has to start at the bottom. Obama is promising to generate 3 million new jobs in “shovel-ready” projects, and let’s hope they’re not all jobs for young men with strong backs. Until those jobs kick in, and in case they leave out the elderly, the single moms and the downsized desk-workers, we’re going to need an economic policy centered on the poor: more money for food stamps, for Medicaid, unemployment insurance, and, yes, cash assistance along the lines of what welfare once was, so that when people come tumbling down they don’t end up six feet under. For those who think “welfare” sounds too radical, we could just call it a “right to life” program, only one in which the objects of concern have already been born.

If that sounds politically unfeasible, consider this: When Clinton was cutting welfare and food stamps in the 90s, the poor were still an easily marginalized group, subjected to the nastiest sorts of racial and gender stereotyping. They were lazy, promiscuous, addicted deadbeats, as whole choruses of conservative experts announced. Thanks to the recession, however–and I knew there had to be a bright side–the ranks of the poor are swelling every day with failed business owners, office workers, salespeople and long-time homeowners. Stereotype that! As the poor and the formerly middle-class nouveau poor become the American majority, they will finally have the clout to get their needs met


RIP Patrick McGoohan: I am not a number I am a free man

January 14, 2009

mcgoohan460

Sad news that Patrick McGoohan has died.

I rather enjoyed the surreal 60s The Prisoner series and watched it in parallel to the equally surreal The Avengers (not the inferior The New Avengers mind you!).

And Patrick McGoohan always played an exceptionally great baddie (he appeared in a couple of Columbo episodes).


Welfare Reform Bill: more of the same

January 14, 2009

workhouse1

As predicted the Welfare Reform Bill was introduced today. The Bill has been, hilariously, described by those two dishonest NL apparatchiks McNulty and Purnell as ‘transforming people’s lives and creating a fairer benefits system’ and ‘giving disabled people more control’……

This is the politics and ideology of the workhouse. Punishing, penalising and bullying the poor in this society. In summary it is all about sanctions, conditionality and workfare but all under the illusion of ‘choice’. Interestingly though, there’s this:

And trailblazing a new right for disabled people to control how public resources are used to meet their individual needs.

What, exactly, does that mean? Is it about real control and involvement ….somehow my cynicism kicks in because if NL was supportive for the individual needs of  disabled people then they wouldn’t be forcing into work.

The other reforms include:

  • Lone parents and partners of people with younger children and disabled people who could work with support, will be expected to take part in training or other activities to help them move nearer to the job market.
  • Requirements for the long-term unemployed to “work for their benefits”
  • Measures for the rehabilitation of drug misusers
  • These reforms are all about transforming people’s lives, creating a fairer benefits system, which supports people as individuals, not just claimants. Many people claiming benefits, including lone parents and disabled people or those with health problems can work with the right help and support. We want to make sure that when jobs become available they are ready to take them.

     (Tony McNulty, Employment Minister)

    James Purnell: The Government is increasing the real help available to everyone claiming benefits during the economic downturn. We will not leave anyone behind as we face up to the global financial crisis. This Bill will allow us to bring about the most radical reform of the welfare state for generations. When times are tough, it is more important than ever that we provide people with the extra help they need. This includes giving more control to disabled people. Disabled people know better what they need in their lives than someone sat at a desk in Whitehall.

    Our reforms promise greater support for people on benefits and a more flexible, personalised system to help them find sustainable employment. In return we expect people to take up this help, and work with us to help themselves.”


    Gaza: All signs point to systematic targeting of civilians

    January 13, 2009

    Further report by Ewa Jasiewicz

    All signs point to systematic targeting of civilians

    Last night was a quiet one in Jabaliya. “Only” six homes bombed into the ground, the market, again, maybe four lightly injured people — shrapnel to the face injuries — and no martyrs. Beit Hanoun saw a young woman, Nariman Ahmad Abu Owder, just 17, shot dead as she made tea in her family’s kitchen. It was 9pm in the Hay Amel area when witnesses reported “thousands” of bullets shot by tanks onto homes in Azrah Street.

    We got a call to go to Tel al-Zaater looking for the dead and injured, around 2am. “This area is dangerous, very very dangerous,” warned one volunteer rescuer, Muhammad al-Sharif, as our ambulance bumped along sandy, lumpy ground, illuminating piles of burning rubbish, stray cats, political graffiti, and the ubiquitous strung-out colored sack cloth and stripey material in large thin squares, tenting the pavements. What is it? Protection, I am told, so that the surveillance planes won’t see the fighters. Palestinian body armor.

    Muhammad, and Ahmad Abu Foul, a Civil Defense medical services coordinator, told me they had been shot at by Israeli snipers yesterday. Muhammad had recounted the story, still counting his blessings, earlier on at the ambulance station. They’d gone hurtling over graves and tombstones to fetch casualties when Israeli snipers opened fire. They’d laid down flat on the ground until the firing stopped. Ahmad, 24, another rescuer here, told me he had been shot in the chest — in his bullet-proof vest — close to the Atarturah area while trying to evacuate corpses three days ago. His brother, he had told me, had been injured 14 times working as a paramedic. “Fourteen times. Then he got hit by an Apache. Then it was serious. That took him out of work for a few months,” he explained.

    Back to Tel al-Zaater, we searched with micro torches, sweeping over slabs of broken homes and free-running water from freshly smashed pipes. A black goat was trapped in a rubble nest. We stepped over broken blown-in metal doors off their hinges. Nothing, none, “snipers” on our minds. We ended up leaving with one casualty, lightly injured, more in shock than anything else. Explosions continued through the night. Abrupt slumps into concrete echoing around the hospital, like rapid beats to a taut drum skin.

    This morning was a different story. I’ve been finding that the most missile-heavy times seem to be between 7-9am. I counted 20 strikes in those two hours this morning. I’d come to Muhammad’s house. He went straight to bed, exhausted. I’d caught some sleep spread across the front seats of the rickety ambulance, waking up periodically to respond to calls.

    At Muhammad’s I did some badly overdue washing and went towards the roof with it. “Ewa, do you want to martyr yourself?” said Sousou, Muhammd’s 19-year-old sister, a bright sciences student unable to finish her studies due to her university — the Islamic University — having been bombed last week. Hanging out washing on the roof here is a potential act of suicide; there are stories of people having been shot dead on rooftops. Walking down the street to buy bread, also a potential act of suicide. Visiting family, going to the market, drinking tea in your own home — a potential act of suicide. In the end I do go up, with nine-year-old plucky Afnan, who hands me pegs nervously as we scan the skies periodically, while the murderous sneer of Israeli surveillance drones leers above us.

    Zomou

    The call comes as soon as I get to al-Awda Hospital. It’s 11:40am. A strike in
    Mahkema street, Zoumou, eastern Jabaliya. The streets of Moaskar Jabaliya are fuller than I’ve seen them for weeks. Fruit and vegetable sellers with wooden carts full of potatoes, tomatoes, cucumbers, aubergines, mountains of strawberries, bags of flour, plastic bottles of vegetable oil and rice, line the streets. The reason everyone’s here, exposed like this is because with the market being bombed, the streets have become the market.

    We roar through manically, siren blaring. Abu Bassem, one of the oldest and most hyper ambulance drivers, yells hoarsely at anyone nonchalant enough to not notice the screaming column of ambulances zooming towards them, past broken buildings, debris-covered streets, twisted tin can warehouses and rubble homes.

    Out of the city, we’re met by a crowd running towards us with a blanket hump on the back of a donkey cart. Jumping out I see bloodied legs and arms sticking it out of it, “Shuhada!” — martyrs! — yells the crowd running along with it, while others gesture wildly to go on, go on ahead. Jumping back in we get to the house where it all happened. A woman in her 50s, in black, has her arms around a large, lifeless woman. Pools of blood surround them. They’re cramped into a corner, the woman crying and clinging to her. We need to peel her away and lift the woman, cold, lifeless and shoeless, onto a stretcher. This is Randa Abed Rabu, 38. Her relative or friend comes in too, unable to stand, unable to speak or move; we drag her on and she has to slump on the ambulance floor. Next we bring in Ahmad Mohammad Nuffar Salem, 21, with 16 shrapnel injuries, tearing at his own clothes in pain, they needed to be cut off.

    Six members of the Abed Rabu family were killed in the strike on their house. It happened at 11:40am. Ahmad, 21, explains, “We were all eating together, and then we were struck.” The consensus amongst paramedics was that it was a tank shell, although the family thought it was a shell from an Israeli navel vessel.

    Muhammad Abed Rabu, 50, explains to me, that in the night his other family homes were struck three times by F-16 fighter jets. “Thirty of us spent the whole of last night hiding under ground, in the basement. Our whole street was full of fire. They [the Israelis] spent one and a half hours attacking us. They destroyed three of our family’s homes. All the martyrs today, they were underground with us last night.”

    Kamal Odwan’s “Mosque”

    Kamal Odwan Hospital is the main port of call for the bulk of emergency services, once a local clinic, it has now grown, concomitantly with the population of the north, now 350,000, into a hospital. Since the bombing of an average of one in 10 mosques in the Jabaliya area according to local Imams, Kamal Odwan is now also a prayer site, an open-air mosque. Rows of men kneel together daily in the car-park round the corner from the overflowing morgue; praying also takes place at the side of the lines of parked ambulances and in the little garden area in front of the reception and emergency room. The emergency staff, the families and friends of new martyrs, all pray together in perhaps the last place of sanctuary in Jabaliya, knowing that as soon as they set foot outside, they’re fair game for snipers, surveillance drones, Apaches, Cobras, F-16- and F-15-fired missiles, shrapnel, flying chunks of house, glass, and nails that are shredding people here. White phosphorous too is reportedly being used, along with a white mist of nerve gas hanging in Jabaliya a few days ago and over Beit Hanoun, in the Zoumou street area.

    Today at least three casualties, all of them elderly women, were brought into Beit Hanoun hospital suffering from inhalation of this gas, which chokes people, tightening chests and nasal passages and rendering people dizzy and disorientated; we were all affected by it, despite being maybe half a kilometer away from the site of its release. As I finish writing this now, in the offices of Ramatan News, the same gas, nerve fraying, chest tightening, tear-inducing and confusing is seeping into the offices.

    The director of public relations at Kamal Odwan, Moayad Al Masri, whose family now lives in the Fakhoura school in Jabaliya refugee camp gives me the stats for the past week. Every day approximately 20 people in Jabaliya are being killed, by tank shelling, Apache, F-16, and surveillance plane missile strikes. On 27 December, 14 people killed, 52 injured; December 28, six killed, 22 injured; December 29, 15 killed, 102 injured; 30 December, two killed, 11 injure; 31 December, three killed, three injured; New Year’s Day, 17 killed, 67 injured; 2 January, six killed, 10 injured; 3 January, 13 killed, 43 injured; 4 January, 28 killed, 35 injured; 5 January, 15 killed, 98 injured; 6 January 50 killed, 101 injured; 7 January, 17 killed, 33 injured; 8 January, 11 killed, 53 injured; 9 January, 15 killed and 63 injured; 10 January, 22 killed and 53 injured, and today, this morning, six people had been killed so far. Four of them were childre: ssters Saher (16) and Haowla Ghabban (14), and Fatima Mahrouf (16) and Haitham Mahrouf. Witnesses report that they were leaving their home at the United Nations-administered Beit Lahiya school, to go home to wash and make food. They were walking near strawberry fields in Sheyma when they were struck by a surveillance plane missile.

    I go to meet a friend from Beit Hanoun at the hospital. It takes stopping five different taxi drivers before I finally get one who agrees to take me. Missiles have been falling throughout the afternoon “ceasefire.” Everyone has heard about cars and their passengers zapped in two by missiles from surveillance drones. We all engage in a kind of Russian roulette every time we move, knowing we might be the next unlucky ones.

    In Beit Hanoun we hear about six families from the Abu Amsha House — 50 people — having to flee their four-story home after the Israeli occupation forces called to give them five minutes to leave before being bombed. As the families frantically gathered their belongings — mattresses, blankets, clothes, documents, photographs — and made their way down the stairs, an Israeli F-16 war plane bombed them. Twenty-seven were injured, four of them seriously, including one with shrapnel in the spinal area.

    A house upon them

    We meet Muhammad Zuadi Abu Amsha, a United Nations employee running a local job creation program and the son of Hajj Zohaadi Amsha, the owner of the destroyed house. Muhammad’s house, opposite his father’s house, had its windows blown out in the attack. I asked him why he thinks the house was targeted. “This is the policy of Israel, the logic is to make us leave this land, make us leave our homes, to clear this land for their occupation and ownership of it. That’s what this is about. There were no fighters here by the way,” he says. “This is a civilian house, my father is 80 years old, he worked as a teacher for the UN.” As we’re talking, children who have gathered around us point to the sky and say “look, look, Apache.” And we look at it, flying silently across the sky, puffing out a perfect line of burning dazzle flares. A boy of about 10 spots a piece of missile, the size of a large marrow, electronic parts still intact, and lugs it up to us, “Take care” we shout to him; he scrambles over debris and then lobs it onto the ground in front of us. All our hearts skip a beat.

    Back at Kamal Odwan, we hear the news. Wafa al-Masri, 40 years old, and nine months pregnant was walking to Kamal Odwan Hospital to give birth. With her was her sister, 26-year-old Raghada Masri. They were passing through the Diwar Mabub crossroads in the Beit Lahiya Project area. It was 4:30pm. Witnesses said they were hit directly by a missile from a surveillance drone. Daniel, a half-Ukrainian paramedic here described the scene. “Her legs were shredded, there was just meat, and she had a serious chest injury, hypoxemia.” Wafa was transferred to al-Shifa Hospital for a double leg amputation, from the upper thigh area down. Paramedics were apprehensive about her or her unborn child making it. Medics managed to save the right foot of Raghada Masri, 26. I visited her at Kamal Odwan today. Visibly distressed and writhing in pain, she recounted the story: ‘We were walking down the street when we heard the sound of the plane, I can still hear ringing in my ears. We were hit by a missile. We were in the area right in the main street, in broad daylight. We would never have expected this. I saw smoke, and I saw Wafa’s legs all mangled. She was thrown meters away from me, I was thrown too. Her scarf was torn off her head, her hair was all burnt, she didn’t look like my sister, her hair was gone, everyone was saying to me, ‘She’s a martyr, she’s a martyr.’” Today I learned medics managed to save one leg and that she gave birth to a healthy boy.

    Bombing civilians

    At 5pm, while we’re gathering information on the bombing of Wafa and her sister, ambulances and taxis bring over casualties. There’s been a tank bombing of an apartment building, the Burj al-Sultan, in Jabaliya. Three dead, two of them children, and five injured. Again Daniel brought them in. He’s sitting in the ambulance stunned and staring into space. “In all my days, I’ve never seen anything like this,” he says. “First they fired one missile at the roof of the building, this got people running out of the building. Then they fired another one, at the people outside, and then when we turned up, they fired another one. I don’t understand. And they were all civilians.” The weapon of choice was a tank shell that releases tiny flachettes, spiked arrows that tear into flesh at lightning speed. Daniel went on to say that ambulance staff and helpers were shot at by snipers when evacuating casualties. Ashar al-Battish, 33, lost his two brothers in the attack. “Kids were playing in the street, and then three missiles were shot at us,” he explains. Gesturing to his brother on an emergency room bed, Ashar adds, “he was shot by a sniper in the chest, and another sniper’s bullet grazed his face.”

    When I began writing this I was on the fifth floor of the al-Awda Hospital, a few things have happened in between. I was buying coffee, Snickers bars to chop up for the guys, and some shampoo from the local shop when we got a call at around 9:30pm, to pick up casualties from the Beir Najje area, western Jabaliya. We wove our way up, a column of rickety vans. Our ambulance had a plastic bag held up with brown parcel tape for a back window after it was blasted out last week — too close to an F-16 repeat attack.

    When we reached the casualty zone, near a mini roundabout flanked with painted portraits of pale Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine fighters, and orange groves on our right, we drove slowly up towards the leading ambulance which had stopped up ahead. As we were approaching, the crew suddenly came running towards us, waving their arms for us to move, move, get back, get back. We reversed sharply and a minute later advanced again as they receded back to the ambulance. I jump out with the stretcher and start to assemble it but I’m told, “Get back inside, get back inside, this is a dangerous area!” They have their casualty, we pick up another with a leg injury on our way back, and when we get back to base it transpires that a surveillance plane missile was shot directly onto the crew ahead but failed to explode. Unknown to us, it had been lying beside the ambulance when we came up to see about the injured.

    As well as this, there were two F-16 missile strikes on targets just a few hundred meters away from al-Awda. Both enormous bangs shook the building, shattered a window and sent everyone running for cover.

    An empty dead-zone

    I asked the paramedics what happened when they went to collect bodies and the injured from the areas where street fighting is taking place, places like Tel al-Zaater, Salah al-din Street, Atahtura, Azbet Abu Rabu — closed to everyone and anyone but the Israeli occupation forces. During 1-4pm there is supposed to be a ceasefire and coordination between paramedics and the Israeli army, through the Red Cross. Of the three paramedics I asked, all of their replies were the same. “We saw none.” “It was like a ghost town.” Despite finding bodies over the past week, including one baby which had been half eaten by dogs — photos, film and witnesses at Kamal Odwan confirm it — and bodies which had been run over by tanks, when they went yesterday, they found nobody, and came back to base empty-handed. “I think the Israelis must have taken the bodies away, I think they must have taken them away by bulldozer and buried them.” The terrifying thing is that there are still people trapped in their homes if their homes are still standing, without food, water, or electricity. Refugees at the al-Fakhoura school report not being able to recognize their areas, their streets after the heavy fighting and destruction of so many houses. When these areas are finally accessible to people, the full extent of the killing and destruction will at last be known.

    Meanwhile, as the killing continues, the Ministry of Health ambulances in the north are becoming slowly paralyzed. Four Ministry of Health ambulances based at Kamal Odwan have no fuel and have been grounded, two have just half a tank each. One in Beit Hanoun has also been immobilized. A senior source coordinating the rescue services who did not wish to be named, said, “We don’t have the capacity now to respond. The Civil Defense and the Red Crescent will go out; we cannot, only in case of a major emergency. In case of another strike like the one at Fakhoura [which killed 43 people taking shelter at the school], the injured will have to be transported by donkey cart. People will die.” Petrol is available, just a short drive away in Salah al-Din Street, but Israeli occupation forces control the area and won’t let any vehicle pass. To add to the Ministry of Health’s woes, the radios they’ve had since the beginning of the invasion have had no service — there’s been no radio contact between the base and ambulances and the Jawwal mobile phone network is also frequently down.

    So everybody who can, still keeps going. Israeli war planes keep targeting civilians. The evidence piling up points to a deliberate campaign and policy of targeting civilians. And the bombs keep falling, thudding all around all of us, everywhere we go, everywhere we sleep, everywhere we walk, drive, sit and pray. Everyone is exhausted and just wants these attacks to end and for a real ceasefire to materialize.

    Ewa Jasiewicz is an experienced journalist, community and union organizer, and solidarity worker. She is currently Gaza Project Co-coordinator for the Free Gaza Movement (www.FreeGaza.org).


    Anna May Wong: A Celestial Star in Piccadilly

    January 13, 2009

    annamaywong

    Anna Chen has written and narrated a wonderfully moving tribute to the Chinese-American actress, Anna May Wong, for Radio 4 and I would urge comrades to listen to it. She gives a fascinating insight to the rebellious and strong willed Anna May who defied racism to carve out a career in early Hollywood.

    Anna gives a political and historical analysis of what it was like for Chinese people living in the States who were viewed as ‘aliens’ and ‘non-people’, constantly demonised. Anna May recounted the racism and hostility she faced when she said that it was like a knife stab that left a ‘scar on her heart’.

    Anna May Wong starred in 50 films during the 20s and 30s yet she couldn’t go beyond playing stereotypes where a pattern started to emerge. Prostitute, slave, mistress, prostitute, prostitute….and so on. These roles reflected the sexist and racist western interpretations of the time. The Chinese woman luring the white man with her ‘exoticism’ and ‘otherness’. Anna May Wong died in her films and again this shows the necessity to punish the non-white woman.

    The Hollywood system kept Anna May Wong firmly in her place. She left for Britain in the late 1920s where she made the silent film noir, Piccadilly, directed by EA Dupont. Anna deconstructs the politics of the film which reflects the dominant power structures in society. Though for the first time the film shows a Chinese woman using her sexual power over her white lover. The film is decribed as a sexually driven melodrama. But as Anna points out, it doesn’t bode well for Anna May.

    annamaywong2

    And for the first time the audience would see Anna May kiss her white leading man (something which never happened in the States) but it was censored at the last minute. So much for ‘tolerant’ Europe!

    Anna May Wong’s portrayal of Shosho was a success. She later went back to the States. In 1931, Pearl Buck wrote The Good Earth about Chinese farmers at the start of the century. It was turned into a film. You would expect the most famous Chinese actress to get the role of O-Lan…. No, the part went to the white actress Luise Rainer. In other words, white actors in yellow face!

    annamaywong3

    Anna May Wong died at the age of 56 in 1961. Her films into obscurity and the woman rendered invisible. And it is a programme like Anna’s that brings Anna May back into the light and visible again. It gives an invaluable testimony to a life of a woman who was denied chances because of her race but it also exposes a courageous fighting spirit in Anna May Wong.


    Follow

    Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

    Join 60 other followers