Vittorio Arrigoni

 
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 12:41 am    Post subject: Vittorio Arrigoni Reply with quote


Salafi leader says Islam prohibits murder
April 16, 2011
australiansforpalestine.com

Salafi leader Iyad Ash-Shami said Friday that Salafi groups were not involved in the murder of an Italian activist in the Gaza Strip. The killing of Vittorio Arrigoni “had nothing to do with Islam,” he said, adding that Salafi groups and scholars all agreed that the killing of any man was prohibited.

The body of Vittorio Arrigoni was found hanged in a home northwest of Gaza City early Friday morning, hours after the International Solidarity Movement activist was kidnapped in the coastal enclave. Salafi radicals were suspected of kidnapping Arrigoni, last seen alive in a video posted online Thursday. The kidnappers identified themselves in the video as belonging to a previously unknown group called The Brigade of the Gallant Companion of the Prophet Mohammed bin Muslima. They threatened to kill Arrigoni unless Hamas released Salafist prisoners by Friday evening. Before the deadline passed, however, Hamas said his body was found.

Ash-Shami said “any government or state anywhere in the world” could have made the video, but said Salafi factions in Gaza would meet Friday to decide how to respond to the killing. Earlier Friday, Salafi faction At-Tawheed wa Al-Jihad denied involvement in the abduction and murder of Arrigoni, but said it was “a natural outcome of the policy of the government carried out against the Salafi.”

The Hamas-run government in Gaza has in recent years taken a hard line against Salafists in Gaza, whose religious observances and refusal to comply with ceasefires with Israel has led to confrontations. Hamas severed ties with Salafist faction the Army of Islam in 2007 after the group claimed responsibility for kidnapping BBC reporter Alan Johnson. Hamas helped to secure the journalist’s release after four months in captivity.

In August 2009, Salafist faction Jund Ansar Allah (Soldiers of the Partisans of God) announced the creation of an Islamist “emirate” in Gaza, during a sermon at a mosque in the southern city of Rafah. That prompted a furious response from Hamas, whose forces stormed the mosque, prompting clashes which left 24 people dead.
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote


Michael Jansen: Murder of Vittorio Arrigoni
April 17, 2011
gulftoday.ae

Hammas has accused Israel of indirect responsibility for the abduction and murder of Italian rights activist Vittorio Arrigoni whose body was found Thursday in an empty flat in Gaza city. Israel certainly bears much of the blame. If Israel had not imposed a punitive siege and blockade on the coastal strip, Arrigoni may never have gone to Gaza to protest its harsh treatment of 1.5 million Palestinians. His initial trip to Gaza was in August 2008 aboard one of the tiny, frail boats that made the passage from Cyprus to Gaza on the first successful mission mounted by the Free Gaza blockade-busting movement. The 44 crew and passengers, who sailed into Gaza’s small fishing port, were accorded a spectacular welcome by Palestinians imprisoned in the strip for years.

These two small boats – Greek island-hopping ferry and fishing vessel – were the first for centuries to reach Gaza without passing through controls by occupying powers. Arrigoni and the others were awarded honourary passports by Gaza’s de facto Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas, which had seized control of the strip in 2007. During their stay, Hamas put them up in the best hotel on the beach front and, fearing that its rival Fatah or Israel could harm the activists, provided security.

The Free Gaza movement made several other voyages to the strip, carrying activists and medical supplies, the last being at the end of October 2008. Arrigoni went on that trip and stayed on through Israel’s war on the strip, which began on December 27th and ended January 18th, 2009. During this terrible onslaught, when 1,445 Gazan’s were killed, 900 of them civilians, and 5,000 wounded, Arrigoni and other members of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), to which he belonged, assisted ambulance teams and reported on what was happening on the ground.

Many of the more than 500 journalists who had assembled in Jerusalem but were not permitted by Israel or Egypt to enter Gaza depended on news received over tenuous mobile phone connections to ISM members volunteering with ambulance crews and undertaking other war work. Before and after the conflict Arrigoni went to sea with Gazan fishermen seeking to cast their nets within the 20 nautical mile limit prescribed in the Oslo accords.

Over the past few years Israel cut down the permitted fishing zone to six and then three miles. Israeli coastal patrol boats routinely harrass these fishermen, arresting and firing on them and ramming their small craft. Arrigoni was wounded when Israeli sailors fired on a Palestinian fishing boat. Arrigoni accompanied Palestinian farmers seeking to cultivate their land and harvest their crops in the 300 meter-1.5 kilometer buffer – and free fire – zone imposed by Israel on the Gaza side of the frontier. This land amounts to a significant percentage of cultivable land in the densely populated strip and poor Palestinian farmers simply cannot afford to be denied the right to work it.

Many have been shot, wounded and killed, doing so. The presence of “internationals” deters Israeli shooters. Arrigoni also wrote a blog and articles for Italian news-papers and, once the war was over, a book about Gaza and its people. His friends believe Israel had a hand in his death. Hamas security officials who found Arrigoni’s body said he had been killed soon after being kidnapped on Thursday although his abductors had demanded the release by Friday evening of their leader and two members of their group as the price for his life and freedom.

It is curious that the abductors made such a demand and killed Arrigoni before seeing whether Hammas was prepared to release the detained members of the group. Some sources speculate that the abductors became afraid of capture and killed him in panic while others suggest that they did not belong to a group at all but simply wanted to harm Hammas and intimidate the ISM and the Free Gaza movement which are planning to challenge Israel with a summer flotilla to Gaza.

The cuprits claimed they belonged to Tawhid-wa-Jihad (Monotheism and Holy War), a radical, puritan Muslim (Salafi) group. But Tawhid and the other Salafi factions condemned the murder as “against the teachings of Islam” and denied involvement. Since Hammas took power in Gaza, Salafis have been both tolerated and suppressed. There are five main groups formed by defectors from both Fatah, which formerly ruled the strip, and Hamas, which is regarded as too moderate by radicals. They have burned or trashed internet cafes, hair salons, and restaurants and are blamed for the murder of a Christian book seller.

They shot at the convoy of the former head of operations of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in Gaza, John Ging, and set fire to UNRWA summer camps for children. Ging, who left UNRWA this year, was a higher profile hero figure in Gaza than Arrigoni. Ging was constantly giving satellite television interviews chas-tising Israel for its cruel treatment of the Palestinians and for its disporportionate use of force.

Arrigoni was the third ISM activist to die in Gaza, the first allegedly slain by Palestinians. US citizen Rachel Corrie was crushed by an Israeli bulldozer when she tried to block it from demolishing Palestinian homes and Briton Tom Hurndall was trying to protect Palestinian children when he was shot by an Israeli soldier.

Arrigoni’s murder occurred only ten days after the fatal shooting by a masked man in the West Bank Jenin refugee camp of Juliano Mer-Khamis, director of the city’s Freedom Theatre. Film-maker and actor Mer-Khamis – son of a leftist Israeli Jewish woman and a Christian Palestinian – sought to use drama to raise the hopes and expectations of deprived Palestinian children and to promote ties between well-meaning Israelis and Palestinians.

The question that must be asked about the assassination of Arrigoni is: cui bono? Who benefits? Not the Salafis. Hammas is certain to strike them with an iron fist. Not Hammas. It has been exposed as having failed to provide security in the strip although Arrigoni’s kidnapping is the first since Hamas took power nearly four years ago. Not Gazans who count on the support given by ISM “internationals” who interpose between Israeli forces and threatened fishermen and farmers and report to the excluded outside world what is taking place in the strip.

Foreign activists, who had felt safe among welcoming Palestinians, may now have doubts about their security when they go about their work.

Israel, however, can claim that Salafis connected to Al Qaeda – the current bogey-movement of the Western world – are asserting themselves in Gaza and, consequently, the siege and blockade must remain. Israel can also contend that the ostracism of Hamas, which has, allegedly, permitted the Salafis to prosper, must continue. Cui bono can also be asked about the murder of MerKhamiss, but that is another story.

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Some conjecture, but may not be far from the truth...
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PostPosted: Mon Apr 18, 2011 4:58 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote



This is a shocking read. Most would have given up long before now. More power to his memory.
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 27, 2011 11:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

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PostPosted: Thu May 19, 2011 5:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

This was no 'peace activist'
Geoffrey Alderman,
May 13, 2011
thejc.com

Few events - not even the execution of Osama bin Laden - have caused me greater pleasure in recent weeks than news of the death of the Italian so-called "peace activist" Vittorio Arrigoni.

On Thursday 14 April Arrigoni was murdered in Gaza by members of Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad (JTJ), who had him strangled and then dumped his body in a deserted Gaza apartment. This same group had previously had him kidnapped in order - apparently - to compel the Hamas government of Gaza to release the group's leader, Sheikh Abu al-Walid al-Maqdisi.

Hamas was naturally having none of this, and launched a search for Arrigoni, whose murder may have been ordered to prevent discovery of the kidnappers, though it is just as likely that the deed was carried out merely as a routine (so to speak) quasi-judicial punishment for the crime of being a foreigner (i.e. a non-Muslim) in a Muslim land.

JTJ is an al-Qaida affiliate. Its precise history is necessarily obscure, but it seems to have originated in Iraq, where it has resorted to any means (including the use of chlorine gas) in the pursuit of its goal of turning Iraq, post-Saddam, into an Islamic state. In Gaza it has sought to establish itself as an alternative government to that of Hamas. Its religious leader, al-Maqdisi, by birth an Egyptian, is credited amongst many other things with having orchestrated the murder of western tourists in Sinai in 2006. He is certainly the author of a fatwa enjoining the kidnapping and killing of tourists in countries ruled by what he and his followers would regard as "apostate" Muslim governments. At the beginning of March this year he was detained by Hamas, perhaps at the request of the Egyptian authorities.

But my concern is less with Abu al-Walid al-Maqdisi than with Vittorio Arrigoni, whose killing was immediately pounced upon by the western media as an affront to the civilised world. Even Hamas felt impelled to associate itself with these encomia.

The Italian was described as a "peace activist." But the truth is very different. Vittorio Arrigoni, a disciple of the International Solidarity Movement, had travelled to Gaza to assist in the breaking of the Israeli naval blockade. As a supporter of Hamas he was a consummate Jew-hater. His Facebook page contained not merely the customary insults aimed at Israel but explicit anti-Jewish imagery, which may have reflected in part his Catholic upbringing: one image, for example, shows Jesus under arrest by Israeli soldiers.

The death of a consummate Jew-hater must always be a cause for celebration. In this case, however, the benefit is compounded by the dissensions that it has sown within the wider Israel-hating and Jew-hating fraternities.

Some members of these fraternities, ignoring or (in one case) making a virtue of the complete absence of evidence, have actually accused Mossad of his murder, alleging (in the wake of the Goldstone Retraction) that Arrigoni alone knew "the truth" of Operation Cast Lead. The Zionists, according to this argument, having forced Richard Goldstone to withdraw his contemptible allegation that during Cast Lead Israeli troops deliberately targeted civilians, needed to silence Arrigoni lest "the truth" be told.

But what particularly caught my eye was the emotional plea for Arrigoni's life posted on YouTube by Ken O'Keefe, the former US marine who has taken it upon himself to espouse the cause of Hamas and with whom I appeared on Press TV last year.

Arrigoni is not the first ISM activist to be murdered by Palestinian Arabs. In September 2007 Akram Ibrahim Abu Sba' was killed in Jenin by members of Islamic Jihad. But in his video plea O'Keefe ignored this precedent, and engaged instead a typical rant not only against the Jewish state but against its Christian supporters. Whoever had kidnapped Arrigoni, he argued, had branded themselves as collaborators of Israel and of its Zionist enterprise. And he repeated the charge of collaboration in a further video made after the discovery of Arrigoni's body.

The idea that JTJ - or indeed any fundamentalist Islamic group of the Salafist variety - would collaborate with Israel is too fanciful to merit attention. But in putting forward this argument O'Keefe has revealed himself as completely detached from reality.

During our Press TV discussion O'Keefe challenged me to a public debate. Naturally I accepted, and we subsequently fixed the date – 28 April 2011. This date has come and gone. But if we manage to reschedule the event I'll let you know.

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Disgusting bigoted cunt.
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