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Friday, July 07, 2017

G20 கிளர்ச்சியாளர்கள் மீது ஜேர்மன் பொலிஸ் வன்முறை வெறியாட்டம்


 
More than 100,000 protesters were expected on the streets of Hamburg to protest against the meeting of world leaders. Pictured: Fires burn as riot police and protesters continue to clash 
 

Pictured: Protesters erect burning barricades in front of the Rote Flora left-wing centre after the 'Welcome to Hell' protest march
 

 
Organizers quickly called an end to the march after the violence broke out but skirmishes continued into the night. Pictured: Riot police patrol the streets of Hamburg 
 
Pictured: A man throws his hands in the air as he stands in front of burning bins after the 'Welcome to Hell' rally in Hamburg
 
Pictured: German police deploying a water cannon during a protest against the G20 summit in Hamburg
 
Pictured: A protester covered in blood is taken away by police during the 'Welcome to Hell' demonstration in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: An injured protester sticks up his finger as paramedics carry him away from the violence in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: A protester stands in front of a police riot van and officers as a water cannon is fired towards him 
 
Pictured: A woman is helped up from the pavement as protesters clash with riot police in Hamburg
 
Pictured: A man is detained by riot police during clashes between protesters and officers in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: A policeman and a protester tussle on the ground as another officer stands by with a spray can
 
Pictured: Firemen extinguish a car that was set alight during demonstrations ahead of the G20 summit
 
The blaze is put out by the firemen (pictured), who are accompanied by police in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: A riot policeman pushes a protester in the road as a flare burns nearby. In the bottom right, a brick can be seen on the pavement 
 
Pictured: A broken shop window in Hamburg as the protest continues in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: A car burns during a protest against the upcoming G20 summit in Hamburg
 
Pictured: A pizza delivery man encounters unusual traffic as he does his rounds in Hamburg 
 
Protesters jump as they are sprayed by a water cannon during the 'Welcome to Hell' demonstration in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: One woman laughed after being drenched by the riot van's water cannon
 

 
Pictured: Police firing pepper spray into the crowd of protesters in an attempt to disperse participants of the 'Welcome to Hell' demonstration at the Fish Market
 
Pictured: German riot police confront protesters during the demonstrations at the G20 summit
 
Pictured: Pepper spray being fired into crowds of protesters in Hamburg. They can be seen climbing over the wall to the left 
 
Pictured: A woman looks at a man's eye after he was allegedly punched by a policeman during the 'Welcome to Hell' protest
 
Protesters (pictured) stand in front of a riot van as it sprays its water cannon in front of them
 
Pictured: Riot police march through the streets of Hamburg as G20 protesters demonstrate 
 
Pictured: Police hold a man on the ground as he is arrested during the protest march in Hamburg
Pictured: A can is thrown as riot police use water cannon during the 'Welcome to Hell' rally against the G20 summit in Hamburg 
Pictured: Two people stand in front of an armoured police vehicle with their hands up
 
A protester (pictured) runs in front of policemen as crowds are dispersed during the demonstration in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: Protesters using smoke bombs during the demonstrations during in northern Germany 
 
Pictured: Protesters clash with riot police at the Fish Market in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: German riot police running towards protesters during the demonstration in Hamburg
Pictured: Several armoured police vans spray protesters with water cannons. Police using loudspeakers  were also calling on about 1,000 demonstrators to remove masks
 
Pictured: A protester gestures defiantly towards a police riot van as it sprays him with water
 
Pictured: A group of protesters is broken off from the main demonstration and surrounded by German riot police in Hamburg
 
Pictured: Riot police with shields and helmets escort the 'Welcome to Hell' rally in Hamburg as leaders from the world's richest economies descend on the city for talks 
 
Pictured: Onlookers take photographs (left) as the riot vans spray water into the crowd of protesters
 
Pictured: A riot van firing its water cannon at protesters on the eve of the G20 summit in Hamburg 
 
Pictured: Riot police spray protesters with water cannons as smoke from a flare rises in the streets of Hamburg 
 
Protesters marching during the 'Welcome to Hell' demonstration near the Fish Market ahead of the G20 summit in Hamburg
 
Pictured: A man puts his hands in the air as riot police move in during the "Welcome to Hell" rally against the G20 summit in Hamburg
 
 
Tens of thousands of anti-capitalist protesters are gathering in Hamburg ahead of US President Donald Trump and other world leaders' arrival for the G20 summit
 
Pictured: A giant inflatable 'Black Block' is carried during the 'Welcome to Hell' rally against the G20 summit in Hamburg
Pictured: Demonstrators shout and cheer as they listen to speeches in Hamburg 
 
Protesters wearing black hooded coats and sunglasses hold up a 'Welcome to Hell' banner as they march through Hamburg 
Pictured: Protesters covering their faces and wearing black clothes demonstrate against the G20 summit 
 
Pictured: Protesters listening to live music during the rally as leaders from the world's biggest economies come to Germany 
 
Police and hooded protesters meet in Hamburg as G20 leaders arrive in the city for the summit 
 
Pictured: A policeman with a scoped rifle outside the Hotel Atlantic before the beginning of bilateral talks with Chancellor Merkel ahead of the G20 summit in Hamburg
 
 
 
 
 
 
Pictured: A man in a wheel chair makes his way past riot police during the 'Welcome to Hell' rally against the G20 summit
 
Pictured: Riot police stand next to protesters, one of whom is brandishing a 'capitalism kills' placard 
 
German police are well prepared for the 'Welcome to Hell' rally. Pictured: Officers guard the road to the guesthouse of the Senate of Hamburg 
Pictured: Police march in Hamburg with riot shields and helmets as they prepare for the G20 protest 
 
Pictured: Huge crowds gather by the cranes in Hamburg as leaders from around the world arrive in the city for the G20 summit 
 
As many as 100,000 protesters from across Europe are pouring into the port city for a demonstration dubbed 'Welcome To Hell'
 
German police fear as many as 8,000 of more than 100,000 protesters amassing in Hamburg are ready to commit violence
Demonstrators gather with anti-G20 banners associating the group of nations with a 'war' on terror, the climate and the poor, adding: 'Not in my name' 
 
Protesters say the G20 has failed to solve many of the issues threatening world peace, including climate change, worsening inequality and violent conflicts. Pictured: A demonstrator raises her hands in the air as music plays during the rally 

The event poses a challenge for those tasked with securing the summit of leaders from the world's 20 biggest economies, hosted by Chancellor Angela Merkel
 
At the summit, shrouded by massive protests, Merkel faces a monumental talks on navigating through divisive issues including trade and climate change
 
Protesters say the G20 has failed to solve many of the issues threatening world peace, including climate change, worsening inequality and violent conflicts
 
A protester wearing a Donald Trump mask joins in a demonstration ahead of Friday and Saturday's G20 summit
 
Tens of thousands were expected to gather at the fish market in the borough of St Pauli, known for its red light district, at 2pm - around the same time as Trump's Air Force One jet is due to land in Hamburg. Pictured: A protester holds a flare in central Hamburg
 
Riot police prepare for G20 protests to begin in central Hamburg, Germany, ahead of the start of the 2017 Summit
 
Merkel is set to meet leaders including Turkish leader Tayyip Erdogan and Trump, who today called on NATO allies to spend more on defence
 
Trump will also have his first session with Russian President Vladimir Putin since he called Russia's behaviour 'destabilising'


Tuesday, July 04, 2017

Saudi-led group receives Qatar response to demands


Saudi-led group receives Qatar response to demands

Qatar 'will receive a reply in due time' after the group of countries confirm receiving response to the list of demands.

Saudi Arabia and its Arab allies said Qatar "will receive a reply in due time" after the group of countries confirmed receiving a response to their list of demands.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt announced on June 5 they were severing ties with Qatar and later put forward a list of 13 demands.

On Monday, Qatar's Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani handed over a letter from Qatar's emir in response to the demands to Kuwait, which is mediating in the dispute, according to state-run Kuwait News Agency.

"Minister Adel al-Jubeir received from the Kuwaiti state minister Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah Al-Sabah the official Qatari response regarding the demands of the boycotting countries," Saudi Arabia's foreign ministry said on Twitter early on Wednesday.

"Qatar will receive a reply in due time," said a statement, according to the Saudi News Agency.
On Tuesday, Qatar's foreign minister said the list of conditions for restoring relations "is unrealistic and is not actionable".

"It's not about terrorism, it's talking about shutting down the freedom of speech," he said at a joint press conference after talks with his German counterpart Sigmar Gabriel.

The list of demands by the group included Doha ending its support for the Muslim Brotherhood, closing Al Jazeera Media Network, downgrading diplomatic ties with Iran and shutting down a Turkish military base in the country.

Foreign ministers from the four countries that broke off diplomatic and trade relations with Qatar are due to meet in Cairo on Wednesday with Qatar's response set to be the talking point of the meeting.
The Saudi-led group accuses Qatar of supporting "extremism" and of being too close to Saudi Arabia's regional arch-rival Iran. Doha has strongly denied the accusations.

Qatar's foreign minister refused to give any details regarding the content of the reply but said Doha was looking for a solution to the month-long crisis based on dialogue.

"The state of Qatar has adopted a very constructive attitude since the beginning of the crisis. We are trying to act mature and discuss the matter," he said.

Al Jazeera's Saad al-Saeedi, reporting from Kuwait City, said there was "a sense of relief, tinged with caution" in Kuwait.

"Qatar's response to the demands was handed to the emir, followed by an extensive meeting between the Qatari foreign minister and his Kuwaiti counterpart for more than one and half hours," he said.
"The meetings reflect Kuwait's intense activity at the highest levels, from the emir down. Some sources suggest that the Kuwaiti foreign minister will join the four countries meeting in Cairo on Wednesday. It is clear that a breakthrough is being achieved; that some of the demands could be addressed."

Source: AL JAZEERA

Narendra Modi in Israel to meet 'friend' Netanyahu

Netanyahu, left, hugs Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at Ben Gurion Airport near Tel Aviv [Ammar Awad/Reuters]
Indo Israel Relations: Timeline
  • 1950: India formally recognises Israel
  • 1992: India establishes full diplomatic relations with Israel
  • 2002: Israel Space Agency and Indian Space Research Organisation sign deal on space cooperation
  • 2006: India-Israel agreement for agricultural cooperation signed
  • 2017: Joint-development programme for missile defence system for $2.5bn
 

By

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi has arrived in Israel on a three-day historic visit - the first by an Indian prime minister. The visit coincides with the 25th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries in 1992.
 
India recognised Israel in 1950 nearly two years after the Jewish nation declared independence, but it took New Delhi 67 years to establish diplomatic ties with the Middle Eastern nation.
 
Earlier on the day of the meeting, Indian English language daily The Times of India published a joint editorial opinion article written by Modi and his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu highlighting the collaborations between the two countries.
 
"India and Israel are walking hand in hand into the future as partners," the editorial said.
 
Ties between the two nations have become more "visible" since Modi became prime minister in 2014 and Israeli ambassador to India Daniel Carmon said the "landmark"  visit will focus on issues of economic development, innovation, agriculture, water and establishing a better connection between the  people of the two countries, as well as defence.
 
Modi is set to hold talks with Netanyahu, whom he calls his friend and is likely to address the Israeli parliament, the Knesset.

On the agenda

Modi's trip comes weeks after India approved a defence deal with Israel worth $2bn.
 
The Indian prime minister has been pushing for defence cooperation with Israel, which has agreed to collaborate and support his "make in India" initiative. The trip will focus on "Expanding business and investment collaboration on the ground. In addition, I hope to get insights into Israel’s accomplishments in technology and innovation through on-site visits," Modi wrote on his Facebookpage.
 
 
"We already have quite a significant collaboration in defence technology and cybersecurity, but now we need to go to new areas," Vijay Chauthaiwale, head of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) foreign policy department, told Al Jazeera.  
 
 
"It may be in the areas of agriculture and water conservation, innovation and startup culture. It coincides very well with the startup action plan of Modi," Chauthaiwale siad.
 
PR Kumaraswamy, a professor of Middle Eastern studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in New Delhi, also agrees that "much of the focus would be on non-political and non-security issues such as agriculture and water management", saying that Israeli technology can help India to attain food security.
 
Yet, India-Israel bilateral trade has grown from a mere $200m in 1992 to nearly $5bn last year.
Agriculture has emerged as one of the main areas of cooperation and Israel has helped to set up nearly 15 centres of excellence across India, which lend new technology to farmers to enhance crop produce.
 
 
Apart from discussing bilateral relations with his counterpart, Modi also includes on his agenda addressing the Indian diaspora community of more than 80,000 Jews of Indian origin who reside in Israel.
 
"I am particularly looking forward to interacting with the large, vibrant Indian diaspora in Israel that represents an enduring link between our two peoples," Modi wrote on his Facebook page before his arrival in Israel.
 
While matters of business and counterterrorism might be the focus of the trip, analysts and media in the two countries say defence deals will also be on the agenda.

A complex relationship

Modi's Hindu nationalist BJP has pushed for closer ties with Israel as opposed to previous governments, which kept the relationship more discreet.
 
 
"People [in India] were not openly admitting the relationship. You have a girlfriend but you are not ready to bring her to your family," Kumaraswamy, the JNU professor, said.
 
Yet since the BJP came to power in 2014, Modi has met Netanyahu twice on previous occasions in New York and Paris.
 
The two countries have become closer allies for various reasons over the past 25 years and have maintained high-level military cooperation. 
 
In the past decade India has bought more than $10bn worth of arms from Israel, more than any other country.
 
 
Vijay Prashad, editor of the publishing house Leftword Books, says the Congress party (which headed the previous government), for instance, was the one which initiated the normalisation of relations with Israel to forge better relations with the US as part of a pragmatic foreign policy.
 
"They [Congress party] were told that the road to friendship with Washington was via Tel Aviv," Prashad told Al Jazeera.
 
"The BJP perhaps has more programmatic push. They [BJP and Israel] share some ideas on anti-terrorism, identifying Islam with terrorism," he said.

BDS objections

But not everyone in India thinks fondly of the closer ties between the two countries. Activists from Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) in India and pro-Palestinian voices have criticised the Modi government's open embrace of the Israeli government.
 
They accuse Israel of imposing apartheid-like conditions on Palestinians and building illegal settlements on private Palestinian land in contravention of international laws.
 
Established in 2005, BDS is a grassroots movement calling for a boycott of Israeli goods, divestment from Israeli firms operating in occupied territories and imposition of sanctions in order to pressure the Israelis to prevent human rightsabuses against Palestinians.
 
 
"Prime Minister Modi's visit to Israel is a dramatic signpost of how far India has shifted: from support of the Palestinian struggle against occupation, to total involvement and complicity with Brand Israel," Githa Hariharan, who is a supporter of BDS movement in India, told Al Jazeera.
 
"India has, over recent years, got more and more implicated in the Israeli war machine that occupies, kills, and discriminates, through apartheid policies against the Palestinians in the [occupied] West Bank and Gaza, as well as its own Arab citizens."
 
Hariharan also pointed at "the striking parallels between Zionism and Hindutva". The ideology of Hindutva, which calls for supremacy of Hindus over others, guides Modi's BJP, which has turned a blind eye to the recent lynching of dozens of Muslims by cow vigilantes.
 
"At present, this link is sharp: both Zionism and Hindutva practise exclusionary politics; both believe in and aspire to states based on religious identity," she said.
 
 
In a break from the diplomatic past, Modi is not visiting the seat of the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah.
 
Kumaraswamy, author of the book India's Israel Policy, does not believe that New Delhi is abandoning one for the other, saying the "prime minister is going to say Israel is not going to influence the Palestinian issue and that Palestinians are not going to influence India's Israel's policy".
 
Previously, India had sympathised with the Palestinian cause and sided with the Arab nations, with which it maintains close economic ties. These include the seven million-plus Indian nationals who work in the Middle East, mainly in the Gulf countries, and send more than $30bn back home as remittances. India also imports more than 60 of its petroleum needs from the Gulf.
 
"We want to build a strong relationship with Israel at the same time as we support the Palestinian cause. And we are not shy about it," he said.
BJP's Chauthaiwale reiterated that India's stand on the Palestinian cause is not in question. 

In an interview with an Israeli newspaper, Israel Hayom, Modi affirmed New Delhi's support for the "two-state" solution. The Indian prime minister said that the Indian embassy won't be shifted from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, staying clear from the Netanyahu government's claim over Jerusalem as its capital.
 
Yet, some remain unconvinced. Critics say the government stand vis-a-vis Palestinians is shifting. In the wake of the Israeli onslaught on Gaza in 2014, the Modi government's response was restrained, and prevented a parliamentary resolution condemning the Israeli violence.
 
It abstained from voting at the UN human rights council that condemned Israel for the Gaza violence.
 
"All official Indian talk of Palestine and support to Palestine is shameful lip service," Hariharan, one of the convenors of the Indian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, thinks.
 
"How else can we view the massive buying of arms from Israel? How else can we view India's significant military ties with Israel…?"
 
Prashad from Leftword Books agrees. "Where is the space, then, to say that Palestine is occupied?"
 
Source: Al Jazeera News

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