organization:palestine liberation organisation

  • London protest demands Israel end ’unprecedented attacks’ on Palestine
    Mattha Busby - Sat 11 May 2019 18.12 BST
    March included unionists, MPs and activist Ahed Tamimi, jailed for slapping Israeli soldier
    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/may/11/israel-end-attacks-on-palestine-london-protest-demands

    Thousands have demonstrated in central London to demand an end to the “unprecedented attacks” against the Palestinian people at the hands of Israel.

    Marching from Portland Place to Whitehall, a diverse crowd chanted “Palestine will be free” and called for the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes, while holding banners calling on the UK to stop arming Israel, as part of a demonstration organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign and the Stop the War Coalition, among others.

    Protesters gathered next to the cenotaph to hear speeches from the Palestine Liberation Organisation’s (PLO) representative, union officials, MPs and campaigners.

    Ahed Tamimi, who became a symbol of resistance for the Palestinian people after she was jailed for slapping soldiers outside her home in the West Bank, took to the stage and said she refused to be defined as a victim, but instead a freedom fighter. (...)

    • Ahed Tamimi Leads March For Palestine
      May 13, 2019 12:49 AM
      https://imemc.org/article/ahed-tamimi-leads-march-for-palestine

      On May 11, 2019, commemorating the 71st anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba or “catastrophe”, hundreds of protesters marched through the streets of London in solidarity with the Palestinian people, Maan News reports.

      During 1948, the Palestinian Nakba, an estimated 750,000 Palestinians were forcibly expelled from their homes when the state of Israel was created on the ruins of hundreds of Palestinian villages and towns.

      The march, organized by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC), and led by Palestinian icon Ahed Tamimi, 17.

  • for my records
    Civil rights granted to children of Jordanians and foreigners
    http://www.alaraby.co.uk/english/news/2014/11/11/civil-rights-granted-to-children-of-jordanians-and-foreigners

    Civil rights granted to children of Jordanians and foreigners

    By: Mohammad al-Fadilat
    Date of publication: 9 November, 2014
    Tags
    Jordan, women’s rights, passports, Abdallah Ensour
    Children born to Jordanian women married to foreign men will be given some state privileges, but won’t adopt nationality of the Hashemite kingdom.
    Jordanian women married to foreigners achieved a limited victory on Sunday, when Prime Minister Abdallah Ensour announced an easing of restrictions faced by children in mixed-nationality marriages.

    Jordan, however, will not ease its strict citizenship rules to allow female citizens to pass their nationality on to their children or partners.

    Hundreds of thousands of children of Jordanian mothers and foreign fathers, including many who have lived in the kingdom their whole lives, will now enjoy basic civil rights. But the move falls short of the demands of campaigners to grant automatic citizenship.

    Interior Minister Hussein Majali said that the law would benefit 355,923 children of 88,983 mothers.

    Partial rights

    Children of Jordanian mothers will now have free education in government schools until secondary level, free healthcare in state hospitals, and the right to work in jobs previously restricted to Jordanian citizens. They will also be able to invest in the kingdom and own property, obtain a private driver’s licence, and be granted a special national ID card.

    Mothers who want to claim these rights for their children must have been residents in the country for at least six months.

    There are 52,660 Jordanian women married to Palestinian men - as well as 8,486 married to Egyptians, 7,731 to Syrians, 4,549 to Saudis, 2,822 to Iraqis, 2,516 to Americans and 2,048 to Lebanese, according to the latest official statistics.

    Demographic imbalance

    Demographics appear to be the main motive for denying Jordanian women the same citizenship rights as men. The official justification is that any easing of the law would encourage an influx of Palestinians into the kingdom. Jordanian officials also say that it could lead to Israel expelling Palestinians to Jordan.
    [Changing nationality laws] could change the demographic balance and might lead to depopulating Palestine
    – Prime Minister Abdallah Ensour
    “[Changing nationality laws] could change the demographic balance and might lead to depopulating Palestine… the eases in restrictions will take into account meeting the needs of the children and not neglecting the rights of Palestinians,” said Ensour. 
    “The eases to restrictions for the children of these women are a culmination of joint efforts between the government and the efforts of those pushing for a parliamentary initiative to ease restrictions, showing the continuous cooperation between the executive and the legislative branches.”

    Jordan tightened nationality restrictions for Palestinians after the first intifada in 1989, when it severed its residual administrative and financial ties to the West Bank, amid sweeping popular support for the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO). 

    MP Mostafa Hamarneh, who has led the campaign for civil rights of children in parliament, told al-Araby al-Jadeed: “This was a landmark decision and is an important step towards equality between men and women.”

    Falling short

    Activists welcomed this as a first step in what they hoped would be changes that could eventually lead to granting full citizenship rights for their children.

    “The decision is an important step forward to attaining rights for the children of Jordanian women,” said campaigner Nima al-Habashneh. “The statements of officials are an explicit recognition of the rights of women and their children… the ease in restrictions is only the starting point to obtaining more rights that will hopefully culminate in granting nationality.”

    Habashneh’s “My mother is Jordanian and her nationality is a right for me” campaign started in 2006 - though critics have argued that, if successful, it would turn Jordan into an alternative homeland for Palestinians.

    Although Ensour stressed that the new move would not grant nationality, he did say officials will not deny the rights of those who have already applied for Jordanian citizenship.

  • PLO rejects military offensive in Yarmouk refugee camp
    https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/middle-east/17971-plo-rejects-military-offensive-in-yarmouk-refugee-camp

    The Palestine Liberation Organisation said on Thursday that it refuses to be involved in any military offensive in the Palestinian Yarmouk refugee camp in Syria, calling to resort to other means to protect the Palestinian people.

    “We refuse to be drawn into any armed campaign, whatever its nature or cover, and we call for resorting to other means to spare the blood of our people and prevent more destruction and displacement for our people of the camp” the PLO’s Executive Committee stressed in its statement from Ramallah.

    The PLO said that it will cooperate with all stakeholders, especially UNRWA and all parties that have an interest in preserving the camp from more devastation and horrors to stop all forms of aggression and armed actions.

    The statement said the PLO is keen to maintain equal relations with all parties.

    PLO executive committee member, Ahmed Majdalani said earlier in Damascus that his organisation will cooperate with the Syrian regime’s army in its offensive to regain control over the camp.

    “They [radical Islamists] have tried to use the camp as a launching pad to expand their scope of clashes and their terror activities inside and outside the camp”, Majdalani said.

    ISIS militants seized the Yarmouk refugee camp nearly a week ago after clashes with local militia.

  • PLO official to hold talks with Syria on Yarmuk relief - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/contents/afp/2015/04/syria-conflict-palestinians-refugee.html

    Ahmed Majdalani, an official with the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), told AFP that he would discuss with Syrian officials “ways to offer help to our people in the Yarmuk camp”.

    In a statement, the PLO called for “all sides to immediately agree to protect the camp from efforts to turn it into a battlefield”.

    It also called for civilians to have access to relief corridors and to humanitarian and medical assistance.

    Majdalani accused IS militants of “seeking to control the whole camp” and to use it “as a springboard for attacks on the Syrian capital Damascus because of its strategic location”.

    Since the jihadist advance began, regime forces have pounded the camp with shells and barrel bombs, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.

    “We don’t need to turn our people into human shields and pay the price for a fight that they have no role in,” Majdalani told AFP.

    Dozens of Hamas and Islamic Jihad supporters meanwhile protested in Gaza on Monday to demand an end to the violence in Yarmuk.

    Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/contents/afp/2015/04/syria-conflict-palestinians-refugee.html#ixzz3WXSAXHTj

  • #Hamas eager to form unity government
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/hamas-eager-form-unity-government

    Palestinians shouts slogans and wave their national flag during a demonstration supporting a new attempt to reconcile the militant Islamist movement Hamas and the #Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) in #Gaza City on May 14, 2014. (Photo: AFP-Mahmoud Hams) Palestinians shouts slogans and wave their national flag during a demonstration supporting a new attempt to reconcile the militant Islamist movement Hamas and the #Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) in Gaza City on May 14, 2014. (Photo: AFP-Mahmoud Hams)

    Gaza: Palestinian rival factions, #Fatah and Hamas, recently announced a landmark political pact. With two weeks left to form a new government, Azzam al-Ahmed, a Fatah central committee member in charge of the (...)

    #Articles #Ismail_Haniyeh #Israel #Mahmoud_Abbas #Palestinian_Authority #PLO #Ramallah #west_bank

  • BBC News - US vetoes UN resolution condemning Israeli settlements
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12512732

    The US has vetoed an Arab resolution at the UN Security Council condemning Israeli settlements in the Palestinian territories as an obstacle to peace.

    All 14 other members of the Security Council backed the resolution, which had been endorsed by the Palestine Liberation Organisation.

    It was the first veto exercised by the Obama administration which had promised better relations with the Muslim world.