May 4, 2012

Date: 
May 4, 2012

GAZA CITY (Ma'an) -- Hamas on Thursday accused the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority of detaining 61 party members in the West Bank in April.

Article Author(s): 
Gili Cohen
Media Outlet: 
Haaretz
Date: 
May 3, 2012

 

An abandoned Israel Defense Forces base in the West Bank has been handed over to the control of a nearby settlement council, Haaretz learned on Thursday.



IDF Removes Key West Bank Roadblocks

Article Author(s): 
Yaakov Katz
Media Outlet: 
The Jerusalem Post
Date: 
May 4, 2012

 

In an effort to improve Palestinian quality of life, the Civil Administration of Judea and Samaria removed a number of roadblocks on key roads throughout the West Bank in recent weeks.



Palestinian Christians are disappearing

Article Author(s): 
Saliba Sarsar
Media Outlet: 
The Daily Star
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 4, 2012

Christians in the Holy Land, especially Palestinian Christians, are living under duress. In Bethlehem, the birthplace of Jesus, now only 18 percent of the population is Christian. In Jerusalem, where Jesus was crucified and resurrected, the percentage of Palestinian Christians is a far lower 1.5 percent, or 12,000 out of some 800,000 people. The remaining population is made up of around 65 percent of Israeli Jews and 33.5 percent Palestinian Muslims. In 1948, by contrast, Christians numbered 25,000 in the city, out of approximately 165,000 inhabitants, or 15 percent.



Is a Palestinian revolt against Mahmoud Abbas brewing?

Article Author(s): 
Adrian Blomfield
Media Outlet: 
The Telegraph
Article Type: 
Analysis
Date: 
May 4, 2012

It was meant to be a day of catharsis and rejoicing, marking the fulfilment of a visionary government strategy to end years of debilitating political cleavage and create a formidable platform to challenge Israel's occupation.

But instead of going to the polls as they were promised this Friday, Palestinians are remaining at home, betrayed once again by bickering leaders whose quarrels have contributed to an increasingly dangerous sense of malaise across the West Bank and Gaza.



Is the Palestinian Authority really a 'fig leaf' for Israeli occupation?

Media Outlet: 
The Christian Science Monitor
Article Type: 
Analysis
Date: 
May 3, 2012

Seated at her desk beneath pictures of two smiling leaders, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas [21] and the late founding father Yasser Arafat [22], principal Shadia Shaheen asserts that her high school plays a part in the building of a future Palestinian state.



By winning the elections, Netanyahu can enact his vision – doing nothing

Media Outlet: 
Haaretz
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 4, 2012

The big riddle is what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was thinking when he decided to move up the elections. Why not elections at the scheduled time? After all, another year and a half in a safe government is nothing to sneeze at. In addition, he is running the country with a solid majority of 65 seats. Nobody can bring him down. If he wanted, he could even bring Kadima under Shaul Mofaz into the coalition. Bibi Netanyahu is admired by a large part of the public, unlike during his first term when he slipped on every banana peel.



Israel's deep-sea dominance

Media Outlet: 
Ynetnews
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 4, 2012

Quietly, underwater, Israel [25] is turning into a maritime power like the United States and Russia, with an armada of advanced submarines. Germany recently agreed to provide Israel with a sixth Dolphin submarine; the Jewish state already has three. Two more will be arriving this and next year, and then the sixth one will come.



The Arab who saved my boy

Media Outlet: 
Ynetnews
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 3, 2012

I remember the first time I realized that as a religious/rightist/settler I was expected to hate Arabs, or at least treat them as second-class citizens. It happened in high school, during a trip to Jerusalem. We passed through the Muslim quarter's market and I wanted to purchase a small drum. I finalized a good deal with the peddler, when suddenly one teacher called me over, and quietly whispered: "We shouldn't support the Arabs."



A federated state for Israelis and Palestinians

Media Outlet: 
The Jerusalem Post
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 3, 2012

If anyone gains from the national election likely to take place in early September, it probably will be incumbent Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

At least one major public opinion poll gives his right-wing Likud party a two-to-one edge over its closest rival, the Labor party.

A reaffirmation of Netanyahu’s leadership for up to four more years will enable him to change the partisan and personal make-up of his next coalition government.

In that case, the losers might include the Yisrael Beytenu party of Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman.



Explosive Dust-Up Over Iran Policy

Media Outlet: 
The Jewish Daily Forward
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 2, 2012

On a sunny Sunday afternoon in late April, Israel put its raucous, divided political culture on full exhibition in New York for a day — and New York did not like what it saw.



Changing course in Israel

Media Outlet: 
Gulf News
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 4, 2012

Israel’s hard-line Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing an unprecedented challenge. As Israel’s longest serving prime minister, who has been in office for more than three years, he had come to seem immovable.



The road to Jerusalem

Media Outlet: 
The Jordan Times
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 3, 2012

I, like many who sympathise with the Palestinians during these particularly hard times, was extremely disappointed and saddened by the Islamists’ condemnation of the visit to Al Aqsa Mosque and Jerusalem by the grand mufti of Egypt a couple of weeks ago. This condemnation is yet another evidence of Islamists’ shortsightedness and negative vision.



Israel in disarray

Media Outlet: 
The Jordan Times
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 3, 2012

Since the criticism, last Friday, by a key secret service official of the right-wing Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and his wishy washy Labourite defence minister, Ehud Barak, the Israeli establishment appears to be in a serious state of disarray.