Jan. 3, 2009

World Rallies Against, For Gaza Airstrikes

As Diplomacy Fails To Halt Israeli Offensive, Protestors Lash Out Against Both Attacks On Hamas, Palestinian Rockets

    • Demonstrators in Marseille, France, carry a large Palestinian flag in a protest against Israel's military operation in Gaza, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2009. The banner reads

      Demonstrators in Marseille, France, carry a large Palestinian flag in a protest against Israel's military operation in Gaza, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2009. The banner reads "Israel terrorist state, Europe accomplice."  (AP Photo/Claude Paris)

    • Pro-Palestinian demonstrators protest Israel's military operation in Gaza, on Saturday, Jan. 3, 2009 in Duesseldorf, Germany.

      Pro-Palestinian demonstrators protest Israel's military operation in Gaza, on Saturday, Jan. 3, 2009 in Duesseldorf, Germany.  (AP Photo/Roberto Pfeil)

    • Supporters of Israel's recent attacks on Hamas in the Gaza Strip rally at the Federal Building in the Westwood area of Los Angeles, Friday, Jan. 2, 2009.

      Supporters of Israel's recent attacks on Hamas in the Gaza Strip rally at the Federal Building in the Westwood area of Los Angeles, Friday, Jan. 2, 2009.  (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

    • An Israeli Arab girl joins thousands protesting Israel's military operation in Gaza, in the northern Israeli town of Sakhnin, Jan. 3, 2009.

      An Israeli Arab girl joins thousands protesting Israel's military operation in Gaza, in the northern Israeli town of Sakhnin, Jan. 3, 2009.  (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

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(CBS/AP)  Protests against Israel's airstrikes on Gaza continued around the world, as calls for a ceasefire were raised - along with cries for revenge.

Meanwhile, thousands of Jews and Christians are expected at demonstrations to be held this weekend in New York, London, Toronto, Miami, Washington, Los Angeles and Tel Aviv to protest Hamas' rocket attacks from Gaza.

Some activists are billing the demonstrations as counter-rallies against what they call "assemblies of hatred for Jews and Israel."

Sunday's protest in Miami, to be held at the Holocaust Memorial, is billed as the Rally For Israel to Destroy Hamas.

The protests are ramping up as Israel's bombardment of the Gaza Strip enters its second week, with warplanes and gunboats blasting more than two dozen Hamas positions Saturday.

"We will do all that is necessary to provide a different reality for southern Israel, which has been under constant attacks for the past eight years," Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told Channel 2 TV.

The complexity of protesting military strikes in Gaza was recognized as far away from the Middle East as Sioux Falls, S.D., where about 50 people gathered in 16-degree weather Friday near the Islamic Center to denounce U.S. aid to Israel, saying Israel's actions have killed civilians.

Protester Mohamed Sharif of Sioux Falls said they want an immediate cease-fire and humanitarian aid to the people living in Gaza.

"People are being deprived of their necessities, water and medicine and food and clothes. Now they're being killed. This is what we're opposing, the killing of civilians," Sharif said.

South Dakota Peace and Justice Center director Deb McIntyre attended the rally and said the U.S. shouldn't pay for Israel's militarism.

The issue is more complex, others said.

"Certainly, the protesters in Sioux Falls have a legitimate complaint about the Israeli attacks," said Kurt Hackemer, a University of South Dakota history professor. "But the flip side is the Israelis have been taking rocket fire from Hamas for months now. There have been Israeli deaths and casualties."

The bitter divide was evident across the globe.

In Lebanon Saturday, hundreds gathered outside the United Nations compound in Beirut, carrying flags and banners supporting the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement.

Palestinians in Lebanon have been protesting for the past eight days to show their solidarity with the people of Gaza.

A number of Hezbollah lawmakers and supporters also took part in Saturday's protest.

(Fiona Hanson, Press Assn. via AP)
(Hundreds of shoes lie in the street after protesters attempted to throw shoes into Downing Street in London, Jan. 3, 2009. Thousands voiced their anger at the bombing of Gaza in a series of rallies across the U.K, Saturday.)

The Head of Hezbollah's political bureau, Mahmoud Qomati vowed that Hamas' response to the Israeli military offensive will be similar to that of Hezbollah during Israel's war on Lebanon in the summer of 2006.

"The resistance in Gaza is preparing surprises for the Israeli enemy," said Qomati, who promised Israelis "will be surprised in Gaza with a fierce, brave, and heroic confrontation which will lead to their defeat, God willing."

Police in Berlin said about 2,000 protestors marched with banners and Palestinian flags from Adenauer Platz to Wittenbergplatz. Protestors chanted "Stop the child murder at Palestine" and "Stop the blockade at Palestine."

Protestor Achmed Otur said Israel's policy with the Palestinians "just creates distrust between East and West, between Muslims and Christians and Jews. It only divides and all trust is destroyed in this kind of world."

While international pressure for a ceasefire has been growing, protestor Malik Hamudsaid said, "We only see conferences talking about fighting terrorism one day. Is this how one fights terror, by slaughtering people and by saying you are not allowed to do something? Terror is when you spread fear and terror among the civilians, and what Israel is doing is pure terror."

In The Netherlands, thousands of people marched through Amsterdam, criticizing both the Israeli attacks and the Dutch government's failure to condemn them. One banner declared: "Anne Frank is turning in her grave."


Barbed Wire And Skulls

In Bogota, Colombia, demonstrators walking through the streets set fire to self-styled Israeli and U.S. flags, complete with drawings of barbed wire and skulls.

Ali Nofal, a protester of Palestinian origin participating at the rally in the Colombian capital, said that an end to the Gaza conflict is in the hands of the Israeli government, "because we, the Palestinian people, have nothing to say to this policy of aggression. The entire world and the U.N. Council have the way to end this, the Western world has the way to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."

In Cyprus, 2,000 demonstrators, including Palestinians and Greek and Turkish Cypriots, converged Saturday in the center of the Cypriot capital of Nicosia. It was the largest protest on the Mediterranean island so far on the issue of Gaza.

The peaceful rally turned violent when some protesters tried to pull away barbed wire and break through a line of riot police blocking a road leading to the Israeli embassy.

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators pelted Cypriot riot police with rocks, sticks, shoes and oranges.

The demonstrators eventually stopped and dispersed after protest leaders pleaded with them to stop.

In Athens, however, a protest march turned violent, as protesters threw stones and fire bombs at riot police, who retaliated with tear gas and stun grenades.

An estimated 5,000 protesters marched from the city center to the Israeli embassy on Saturday. Police cordoned off the embassy.

Most of the protesters were Palestinians but leftist organizations and union members also joined in. Outside the embassy, anarchist youths joined the fray, targeting Greek police rather than the embassy. An Israeli flag was burned by demonstrators.

Some protesters also threw stones at the U.S. embassy without causing damage.

In Jakarta, hundreds of Indonesians from various Muslim groups staged a protest in front of the U.S. embassy on Saturday to voice their concern over Israel's military offensive on Gaza.

The protesters demanded the U.S stop their support of Israel and called for solidarity among Muslim brothers within Indonesia.

Jeje Zainuddin, a Muslim youth group leader, said, "I think all the nations agree that what Israel has done is inhuman, but the problem is, will the international community dare to condemn Israel's actions?"

"We still hope that the United Nations and America will get involved in the process, because this is not just about Muslims, it's about universal human rights," Zainuddin said.

At a protest yesterday outside Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Calgary constituency office, demonstrators compared Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to Adolph Hitler.

Muslim Council of Calgary chairman Nagah Hage denounced Olmert as a Nazi for what he called the "barbaric" bombing of Gaza, and said Harper's support for Israel makes him complicit in the Gaza bloodbath.

A lone counter-demonstrator defending Israel's right to stop Hamas rocket attacks was cursed by the crowd.


More Throwing Of Shoes

In London, several thousand people, many carrying Palestinian flags, marched past Prime Minister Gordon Brown's Downing Street residence to a rally in Trafalgar Square. Outside Downing Street, hundreds of protesters stopped and threw shoes at the tall iron gates blocking entry to the narrow road.

Shoe-throwing has become a popular gesture of protest and contempt since an Iraqi journalist pelted U.S. President George W. Bush with a pair of brogues in Baghdad last month.

Among the London marchers were activist Bianca Jagger, ex-Eurythmics singer Annie Lennox and comedian Alexei Sayle.

"As a Jew, it's very moving to see so many people who are so outraged at Israel's actions," Sayle said. "Israel is a democratic country that is behaving like a terrorist organization."

Rallies were being held in other British cities, including Manchester, Liverpool and Glasgow.

(AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
Outside the Israeli Embassy tempers flared, as protestors threw a barrier at police.

The clashes began after a small group of protesters stormed a barrier that had been penning them in. Riot police were brought in to control the crowds and demonstrators were seen being handcuffed and taken away by officers as they tried to clear the street.

Several protesters left the scene with bloodied faces, according to a reporter from the Press Association.

Brown's office said Saturday the British leader had phoned Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and called for an immediate ceasefire.

"Rocket attacks from Hamas must stop, and we have called for a halt to Israeli military action in Gaza," a spokesman said, on condition of anonymity in line with government policy. "Too many have died and we need space to get humanitarian supplies to those who need them."

President George W. Bush has declined to criticize Israel, branding Hamas rocket fire an "act of terror." But he has joined other world leaders in calling for an internationally monitored truce.

U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon also has backed a cease-fire, and French President Nicolas Sarkozy is due to visit the region next week as part of a diplomatic push to stop the violence.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Add a Comment See all 94 Comments
by abrame January 4, 2009 6:15 PM EST
Israel is doing the correct thing to stop violent criminally insane terrorists.

The criminally insane terrorists left no other choice except for Israel to evaporate and dissapear.

Not going to happen.
Reply to this comment
by eridanus1 January 4, 2009 3:10 PM EST
A lot of Jews here cry foul when their nation is assaulting another. Why? They can''t see or feel the pain that they''ve inflicted on the Palestinian people as they took over their homelands, destroyed their homes, murdered their kins, and evict them. I can''t see peace at the end of the tunnel as long as Jews feel they themselves are the victims as they create victims.
Reply to this comment
by eridanus1 January 4, 2009 3:09 PM EST
A lot of Jews here cry foul when their nation is assaulting another. Why? They can''t see or feel the pain that they''ve inflicted on the Palestinian people as they took over their homelands, destroyed their homes, murdered their kins, and evict them. I can''t see peace at the end of the tunnel as long as Jews feel they themselves are the victims as they create victims.
Reply to this comment
by eridanus1 January 4, 2009 3:07 PM EST
A lot of Jews here cry foul when their nation is assaulting another. Why? They can''t see or feel the pain that they''ve inflicted on the Palestinian people as they took over their homelands, destroyed their homes, murdered their kins, and evict them. I can''t see peace at the end of the tunnel as long as Jews feel they themselves are the victims as they create victims.
Reply to this comment
by eridanus1 January 4, 2009 3:05 PM EST
A lot of Jews here cry foul when their nation is assaulting another. Why? They can''t see or feel the pain that they''ve inflicted on the Palestinian people as they took over their homelands, destroyed their homes, murdered their kins, and evict them. I can''t see peace at the end of the tunnel as long as Jews feel they themselves are the victims as they create victims.
Reply to this comment
by eridanus1 January 4, 2009 3:03 PM EST
A lot of Jews here cry foul when their nation is assaulting another. Why? They can''t see or feel the pain that they''ve inflicted on the Palestinian people as they took over their homelands, destroyed their homes, murdered their kins, and evict them. I can''t see peace at the end of the tunnel as long as Jews feel they themselves are the victims as they create victims.
Reply to this comment
by chessman2009 January 4, 2009 3:02 PM EST
i am sicked and tired of israel bullying the poor palestinian people. The whole world is rallying with the palestinian people. The israelis are using disproportionate force. I mean only 4 people died on their side and over 500 on the palestinian side. What is Bush doing. A big NOTHING. I am disappointed at Obama for not speaking out. If he is to continue the US foreign policy siding with the jews, then there will not be peace in the region. It is about time the USA took an even handed approach in their foreign policy in the israeli-palestinian conflict. Thank God I am not palestinian, otherwise I would be mad as hell against the jews. I understand when moderate palestinians see their people being killed (including women and children) they can become emotional. It is only natural human reaction and when they fight back against the injustice against their people they are labeled terrorists. Give the palestinians a country that was taken away from them and they will live in peace.
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by shirajordan January 4, 2009 2:22 PM EST
To all the people who sleep safely in their beds at night and have the audacity to criticize the Israeli government, this is for you:
None of you spoke in the past 8 years when rockets and bombs fell in southern Israeli cities, causing death and destruction without any provocation on our part.
What you need to understand are two things-
First of all, there is no functioning government in Gaza. The Hamas took over (in a military coup!) and they are running the show. The Hamas, in case you didn''t know, is a terror organization. Just like Al-kaida and Hezbollah. Israel is dealing with terror organizations all through its borders. Not with governments. And not with civilians. We have nothing against the Palestinians. Only the terrorists.
The second thing you need to know is that the Hamas is a very cynical organization which uses innocent women and children to fight Israel. They launch their missals from civilian''s houses, not from open fields or military camps, and when the Israeli army wants to destroy those missals launchers- sometimes innocent people die.
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by shirajordan January 4, 2009 2:21 PM EST
-continue-
They stash weapons; bombs etc. in hospitals, mosques, civil houses and schools exactly for this reason- they know that the Israeli army will not bomb those places. Over the years, they have dig tunnels between Egypt and Gaza to smuggle everything, including weapons which is being used against us.
The Israeli army has such advanced technologies they can surgically hit those places. And that is exactly what we are doing. The manipulations in the media, done by the Arabs are ridicules, at best.
Ask yourself- what would you do if your life was constantly under threat? Look at the map. Maybe that will help you grasp our geographic situation.
The purpose of the Israeli army is to defend. Not attack.
So next time you think about how miserable and poor the Palestinians are, and how powerful and evil the Israelis are- think again. Israel has left Gaza more than 3 (!) years ago- their chaos and fights among themselves are not our responsibility.
(Written by a left-wing Israeli who thinks terror should not win anywhere in the world).
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by platteman January 4, 2009 10:43 AM EST
Hamass danced in the streets after 911, they don''t want to live in peace. They want to kill everyone, even those of their own party that don''t agree with their terrorist views.

Just kill them all and let God sort them out. That is the only way it will work. Israil left and for years Hamass had a chance to be civil, but no, they chose rockets to everything else. It is about time the world see that Iran is behind Hamass and let Israil do their thing.

When they are finished, buldoze the whole place and push it into the ocean. Then let Hamas live in Egypt or some other place.
They don''t deserve their own land. They are like kids who didn''t get their extra candy bar.
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