Showing posts with label targets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label targets. Show all posts

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Guardian reporter: We have list of NSA targets

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Guardian reporter: We have list of NSA targets

Friday, February 21, 2014

Syria War: Rebels Give US Targets To Defeat Regime | Today"s New




The Free Syrian Army (FSA) and the United States intelligence services are working together on targets that will bring about regime change in the country, ac…




Syria War: Rebels Give US Targets To Defeat Regime | Today"s New

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Use of NSA metadata to find drone targets kills civilians – Greenwald


NSA headquarters. Image from https://firstlook.org
NSA headquarters. Image from https://firstlook.org


The US is relying upon NSA metadata to identify targets for drone strikes, reports the Intercept. A former NSA operative said the tactic is flawed and the agency targets phones “in the hopes that the person on the other end of the missile is the bad guy.”


Citing documents leaked by Edward Snowden and testimonies from former Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) members, Glen Greenwald and colleague Jeremy Scahill have revealed the extent which the US military is using NSA intel to establish targets for drone strikes in an article in the Intercept.


The most common tactic employed by the NSA is known as ‘geolocation’, which entails locking on to the SIM card or handset of a suspected terrorist. A former drone sensor operator with the US Air Force, Brandon Bryant, told the Intercept that using the metadata led to inaccuracies that killed civilians.


The NSA uses a program called Geo Cell to follow potential targets and often do not verify whether the carrier of the phone is the intended target of the strike.

“It’s really like we’re targeting a cell phone. We’re not going after people – we’re going after their phones, in the hopes that the person on the other end of that missile is the bad guy,”
Bryant told the Intercept – the nascent news site created by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar to “to hold the most powerful governmental and corporate factions accountable.”


Over the past five years the NSA “has played an increasingly central role in drone killing,” but the growing reliance on metadata to find insurgents is also targeting civilians. The analysis of the electronic surveillance leaves a lot of room for error and can kill “the wrong people.”


Moreover, the lack of operatives on the ground in Afghanistan, Yemen and Pakistan means the JSOC is often not able to confirm the identity of the targets.


Instead of accessing cellphone metadata through cell phone towers and internet service providers, the NSA uses a program called Gilgamesh. To be able to track the cellphones of potential targets a special device known as a ‘virtual base-tower transceiver’ has to be installed on the drone. The transceiver emits a signal that forces the target’s mobile to lock into the NSA’s system, allowing the target to be tracked to within 30 feet of their location.


As well as Gilgamesh, the NSA has developed a program known as ‘Shenanigans’ that acts like a giant cyber vacuum cleaner. A pod on an aircraft downloads massive amounts of information from any wireless networks, smart phones, computers, or other electronic devices that are within range.


Bryant told the Intercept the “JSOC acknowledges that it would be completely helpless without the NSA conducting mass surveillance on an industrial level.”


Noting that innocent people have “absolutely” been killed in these strikes, Bryant said that some terrorists have got wise to geo-tracking and have developed a number of tricks to elude the NSA. Taliban groups, he said, had been known to purposely distribute SIM cards among their organization to muddle trackers.


“They would do things like go to meetings, take all their SIM cards out, put them in a bag, mix them up, and everybody gets a different SIM card when they leave,” said Bryant, adding the targets “might have been terrorists, or they could have been family members who have nothing to do with the target’s activities.”


The classified data paints a very different picture of the targeted killings to Washington’s stance on the matter. The White House maintains the strikes are conducted with the utmost precision and all possible measures are taken to minimize civilian casualties.


Last year President Obama claimed “before any strike is taken, there must be near-certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured.”


Source: RT





End the Lie – Independent News



Use of NSA metadata to find drone targets kills civilians – Greenwald

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Libyan air force attacks targets in south after gunmen storm airbase – ministry

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Libyan air force attacks targets in south after gunmen storm airbase – ministry

Friday, January 10, 2014

GOP House targets health care law; 67 Dems join in







President Barack Obama listens to Andres Cruz, second from left, as he has lunch with five young people at The Coupe restaurant in the Columbia Heights section of Washington, Friday, Jan. 10, 2014. The five are spearheading creative outreach efforts to connect with and help enroll young consumers through the Marketplaces or are interested in getting more involved with these efforts. Seated at the table with Obama at left is Anne Johnson. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)





President Barack Obama listens to Andres Cruz, second from left, as he has lunch with five young people at The Coupe restaurant in the Columbia Heights section of Washington, Friday, Jan. 10, 2014. The five are spearheading creative outreach efforts to connect with and help enroll young consumers through the Marketplaces or are interested in getting more involved with these efforts. Seated at the table with Obama at left is Anne Johnson. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)





House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif. meets with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2014. The top Democrat in the Republican-controlled House focused on the Affordable Care Act and the fight to pass immigration reform. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)













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(AP) — The Republican-led House voted overwhelmingly Friday to bolt new security requirements onto President Barack Obama’s health care law, with 67 Democrats breaking ranks to join with the GOP. It was the first skirmish of what is certain to be a long and contentious election-year fight.


The vote was 291-122 with Republicans relentlessly focusing on “Obamacare,” convinced that Americans’ unease with the troubled law will translate into significant election gains in November. Dozens of Democrats, nervous about their re-election chances or their campaigns for other offices, voted for the GOP bill.


“Americans have the right to know if the president’s health care law has put their personal information at risk, and today’s bipartisan vote reflects that concern,” said Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.


Among the Democrats joining the Republicans was Rep. Steve Israel of New York, the chairman of his party’s campaign committee dedicated to electing Democrats.


“I voted for this bill because I want to make sure confidential information is protected. That’s just common sense,” Israel said in a statement. “This is an added consumer safeguard on top of the many consumer protections in the law that already exist.”


The bill would require the secretary of health and human services to notify an individual within two business days of any security breach involving personal data provided to the government through the health care website HealthCare.gov.


White House press secretary Jay Carney said Friday that the administration opposes the measure as an unnecessary and costly burden. He said the government already has imposed stringent security standards, uses sensors and other tools to deter unauthorized access and conducts regular testing. He said Americans will be notified if personal information has been compromised.


Several House Democrats said the measure was a GOP message bill designed to scare people away from enrolling in coverage.


The bill stands no chance for final approval in the Democratic-led Senate.


Elsewhere on Friday:


— The administration said it was parting ways with the lead outside contractor for the sign-up website, which had to be rebuilt after its disastrous launch last fall.


— Obama lunched at a Washington restaurant with five young people to call attention to a need for young Americans to enroll for insurance through the law. The administration needs millions of Americans, but especially young, healthier people, to enroll to keep prices low for everyone.


On Capitol Hill, Republicans said their legislation on the overhaul addressed potential security breaches, though they offered no specific examples of compromised information to this point. Instead, they pointed to the recent security breach at Target Corp. The nation’s second-largest retailer said Friday that personal information connected to about 70 million customers through credit and debit card accounts had been stolen in a pre-Christmas data breach.


“What if Target had not bothered to tell anyone?” asked Rep. Joe Pitts, R-Pa., who argued that the Health and Human Services Department’s promise to notify Americans of security breaches needed the force of law.


Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., spoke of “credible and documented fear” of the health care website.


But Democrats said there had been no breaches at the health care website. The bill was simply a Republican effort to “put fear into the public,” according to Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J.


Rep. Diane DeGette, D-Colo., described the legislation as a “solution in search of a problem.”


In fact, there was at least one breach last year. A North Carolina man tried to log onto the website and got a South Carolina man’s personal information. The administration had to scramble to make a software fix.


Republicans used debate on the bill to assail the health care law more broadly.


The goal of the Affordable Care Act is to expand coverage to tens of millions of Americans who lack insurance, to lower health care costs, to increase access to preventive services and to eliminate some of the pre-existing condition requirements that insurance companies have used to deny coverage. The health care website got off to a calamitous start on Oct. 1, followed quickly by widespread reports of canceled policies and higher premiums.


To date, more than 2 million Americans have signed up for coverage through the federal marketplace covering 36 states and separate exchanges in 14 states. At the same time, at least 4.7 million people who buy their own insurance were told their policies would no longer be offered this year because they failed to meet the standards of the law.


Republicans who steadfastly opposed the law have seized on Obama’s proclamation — repeated by many Democrats — that if you liked your health care, you could keep it. The House voted more than 40 times last year to repeal, replace or undo parts of the law, but the Senate continues to support it.


Among the House Democrats who voted with the GOP were Senate candidates Bruce Braley of Iowa, Gary Peters of Michigan and Colleen Hanabusa of Hawaii. Democrats high on the GOP’s target list such as Ron Barber and Ann Kirkpatrick of Arizona, Sean Patrick Maloney of New York and Nick Rahall of West Virginia also backed the measure.


Next up as a political test is a House bill that would require the administration to report weekly on the number of visits to the government health care website, the number of Americans who applied and the number of enrollees by ZIP code, as well as other statistics. The administration has opposed this measure, saying it has been providing information on enrollments, and the added requirements would force it to hire new staff.


The House will debate that measure next week.


___


Associated Press writer Darlene Superville contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



GOP House targets health care law; 67 Dems join in

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Target’s Close Relationship to Government Needs to Be Watched




Target’s Forsenic Services is who the FBI, Secret Service, BATF and others have turned to for help for two decades. Now they’ve been pwned in the third largest credit card heist in history. Will this event be used to further a biometric agenda?


David Knight


“Unbeknownst to most, Target has a top-rated forensic services laboratory that provides forensic examinations, and assists outside law enforcement with help on special cases.” — Target’s Bullseye View



Just like Sherlock Holmes was the consulting detective who was sought out by Scotland Yard’s Inspector Lestrade for his forensic expertise, Target has played Sherlock for the FBI, BATF, Secret Service, local law enforcement and even international agencies like the World Customs Organization. When they’re flumoxed, they head to Target — for the Forensic Lab Services.


Target’s forensic expertise has its roots in loss prevention. But unlike other corporations, Target pursued it to such a degree that they surpassed the capabilities of government crime labs. In a Washington Post article eight years ago, Nathan K. Garvis, Target’s vice president of government affairs at the time said “In many ways, Target is actually a high-tech company masquerading as a retailer.” Target has been actively involved with law enforcement since the mid-90′s but “intensified” after 9/11.


And Target’s high tech masquerading isn’t just about crime solving. Target is watching its customers very, very closely. Target was able to tell that a teenage girl was pregnant before her father even knew by profiling her purchases. Their data mining was so detailed and intensive that they noticed that pregnant women began buying certain vitamin supplements and things like unscented lotion. When they sent coupons obviously targeted to pregnant women, the father was incensed and complained to a Target manager that he felt they were trying to encourage his daughter to get pregnant. On a subsequent contact, the father told the Target manager that his daughter had already been pregnant at the time and he wasn’t aware of it. That’s the power of “metadata” that the government keeps telling us is not so important while they build massive storage capabilities to capture and analyze it.


Target is by no means the only retailer profiling and data mining customers. Any and all data that companies get on you is sold to other corporations and given freely to the government without a search warrant. The basis of the decision on Friday by District Court Judge Pauley that gave the green light to NSA spying was that any information a third party has on you can get obtained without a search warrant. The government can bribe, buy or blackmail corporations or individuals to get that data. We have become commodities in an informant society.


But Target’s cozy relationship with government raises ethical issues as well. Eight years ago, Professor of business ethics and public policy said of Target’s Forensics Services, “It is a tricky issue when firms get too close to government. There is no reason we need to say that anything bad is happening, but we do need to watch.”


We’ve just seen one of the most massive thefts of financial data ever. Over 40 million credit card numbers, with their PIN data has been stolen. And they were stolen from a company that has been the leader in forensic sophistication for 20 years. A company the government relies upon to investigate crime. If you were a criminal hacker, sophisticated enough to get away with a crime of that magnitude, wouldn’t you know about Target’s Forensic Services? Wouldn’t another company be an easier mark?


As the business ethics professor said 8 years ago, Target’s close relationship with the government needs to be watched. If we see “anything bad is happening”, like using this theft to push for a biometric identification agenda, we should all start asking a lot of questions.


With permission
Source:
Infowars


Distributed by RINF Alternative News





WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Target’s Close Relationship to Government Needs to Be Watched

Friday, December 13, 2013

Media Matters staff: Megyn Kelly Defends White Santa "Jest": "Fox News, And Yours Truly, Are Big Targets For Many People"

From the December 13 edition of Fox News’ The Kelly File:


From the December 13 edition of Fox News’ The Kelly File:



Previously: 


Megyn Kelly Wants Kids At Home To Know That Jesus And Santa Were White


What Megyn Kelly’s White Santa Says About Power Dynamics In Journalism


MSNBC’s All In Calls Out Megyn Kelly For “Bizarre” Segment On White Santa



Media Matters for America – County Fair



Media Matters staff: Megyn Kelly Defends White Santa "Jest": "Fox News, And Yours Truly, Are Big Targets For Many People"

Media Matters staff: Megyn Kelly Defends White Santa "Jest": "Fox News, And Yours Truly, Are Big Targets For Many People"

At Those Damn Liars, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Those Damn Liars and how it is used.

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Media Matters staff: Megyn Kelly Defends White Santa "Jest": "Fox News, And Yours Truly, Are Big Targets For Many People"

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Victoria"s Secret Targets Awkward Guys: Employee

Victoria"s Secret Targets Awkward Guys: Employee
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif


(Newser) – Men, do you feel weird about going into Victoria’s Secret? Well, rest assured, the employees have noticed. They’re trained to wring money out of uncomfortable guys, a former employee tells Business Insider. “The general feeling about men is that they would buy anything in order to get out of the store a quickly as possible,” the ex-employee says.


Women shoppers don’t have that problem. They tend to be “value-oriented,” so associates tell them about deals and promotions. Whereas “men would buy a couple of $ 50 bras without questioning us, because they feel awkward,” the employee says. That mattered, because employees were heavily pressured to hit sales goals, with managers even urging them on through headsets. “So when a man walked in, it felt like a lucky break.” Click for the full piece. (Or read HuffPo’s coverage of an ugly Black Friday fight at a Victoria’s Secret.)




Lifestyle from Newser




Read more about Victoria"s Secret Targets Awkward Guys: Employee and other interesting subjects concerning Living at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Victoria"s Secret Targets Awkward Guys: Employee


(Newser) – Men, do you feel weird about going into Victoria’s Secret? Well, rest assured, the employees have noticed. They’re trained to wring money out of uncomfortable guys, a former employee tells Business Insider. “The general feeling about men is that they would buy anything in order to get out of the store a quickly as possible,” the ex-employee says.


Women shoppers don’t have that problem. They tend to be “value-oriented,” so associates tell them about deals and promotions. Whereas “men would buy a couple of $ 50 bras without questioning us, because they feel awkward,” the employee says. That mattered, because employees were heavily pressured to hit sales goals, with managers even urging them on through headsets. “So when a man walked in, it felt like a lucky break.” Click for the full piece. (Or read HuffPo’s coverage of an ugly Black Friday fight at a Victoria’s Secret.)




Newser



Victoria"s Secret Targets Awkward Guys: Employee

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Britain targets Guardian newspaper over intelligence leaks related to Edward Snowden


Anthony Faiola
Washington Post
December 1, 2013


titlepieceLiving in self-imposed exile in Russia, former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden may be safely beyond the reach of Western powers. But dismayed by the continued airing of trans­atlantic intelligence, British authorities are taking full aim at a messenger shedding light on his secret files here — the small but mighty Guardian newspaper.


The pressures coming to bear on the Guardian, observers say, are testing the limits of press freedoms in one of the world’s most open societies. Although Britain is famously home to a fierce pack of news media outlets — including the tabloid hounds of old Fleet Street — it also has no enshrined constitutional right to free speech.


The Guardian, in fact, has slipped into the single largest crack in the free speech laws that are on the books here — the dissemination of state secrets protecting queen and country in the British homeland.


Read more


This article was posted: Sunday, December 1, 2013 at 11:25 am


Tags: big brother, constitution, domestic spying, nsa









Infowars



Britain targets Guardian newspaper over intelligence leaks related to Edward Snowden

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

W.H. targets local media on Obamacare

Obamacare literature is shown. | Reuters

The local strategy is unusually aggressive, even for a president on the ropes. | Reuters





President Barack Obama has bungled HealthCare.gov so badly that he’s told senior aides to not even try to win positive coverage from the national press.


Instead, they’re going local.







In the past month, Obama and his Cabinet have hit nine of the top 10 cities with the highest concentration of the uninsured, while senior administration officials have held almost daily reporter conference calls in nearly a dozen states to challenge Republican governors who refuse to expand Medicaid.


Obama’s political arm, Organizing for Action, is taking a similar approach, holding protests — some only attended by a dozen or so people — that win coverage on the local pages of the nation’s small-town newspapers.


(PHOTOS: 12 Democrats criticizing the Obamacare rollout)


The local strategy is unusually aggressive, even for a president on the ropes and desperate to circumvent the national media. It’s been the only way to break through the glut of bad headlines and go on the offense to make the law work — although even when the White House showers attention on small markets, the results can be mixed.


The effort mirrors how Obama’s presidential campaigns operated. Pay special attention to local press because that’s where far more people who Obama wants to target get their news.


Josh Earnest, the principal deputy White House press secretary, got top billing in front page stories last week in The Times and Democrat of Orangeburg, S.C., The Post and Courier of Charleston, S.C., and the Portland Press Herald in Maine — offering the same talking points that the administration repeats daily in Washington without much notice.


(Understanding Obamacare: POLITICO’s guide to the ACA)


And while the White House briefing room is dominated by national news outlets, just behind the door where the communications staff works is a wall covered with reproductions of front pages of local newspapers. Stories about Obama’s initiatives are outlined with yellow highlighter.


Obama, thin-skinned about media coverage of his presidency and often frustrated by the White House press corps, knows a few favorable local headlines is as good as it gets these days. He made a rare public admission during his Nov. 14 press conference that his aides found strikingly candid for the image-conscious president: the media have been justifiably hard on him.


“Right now everybody is properly focused on us not doing a good job on the rollout, and that’s legitimate and I get it,” Obama said, repeating a sentiment he’s delivered privately to top aides. “There have been times where I thought we were kind of slapped around a little bit unjustly. This one is deserved. Right? It’s on us.”


(PHOTOS: House hearing on Obamacare website)


The centerpiece of the local strategy is the White House’s campaign against Republican governors or legislatures in 24 states that have declined to accept federal money to open up Medicaid to 5.4 million people. With a faulty website, the White House has lost much of the high ground to push back on Obamacare attacks over the last two months, but the one exception is the GOP resistance to expand Medicaid access, said a senior administration official.


Republicans have made a big deal of the canceled policies on the individual market, the official said, but the GOP is responsible for leaving millions of Americans in limbo. This population earns too much to sign up for Medicaid and too little to qualify for tax subsidies to purchase private insurance in the exchanges.


On the local media calls, administration officials quantify the impact state-by-state. In Nebraska, for example, the White House targeted Republican Gov. Dave Heineman, saying his refusal to expand Medicaid leaves 48,000 residents without access to affordable coverage.


(Also on POLITICO: It’s not Obamacare, it’s business)


“They can score short-term political points by attacking the Affordable Care Act and blocking Medicaid expansion,” Earnest told Nebraska media last week. “Or on the other hand, they can actually save taxpayer dollars and ensure that thousands of their residents … would have access to quality, affordable health care.”


The Omaha World-Herald put the story on A6 under the headline: “Nebraska takes heat for not expanding Medicaid.”


But flip to the front of the business page in the same edition, and the news is less favorable for the White House: “Midlands employers expect jump in 2014 health costs.” The story details how Nebraska and Iowa employers are bracing for benefit cost increases that exceed the national average, due in part to the Affordable Care Act, according to the survey of employers.


The Times and Democrat of Orangeburg, S.C., stripped two stories across its front page last week — one was about cancelled insurance policies, but the other focused on the White House demanding Republican Gov. Nikki Haley to open up Medicaid.


Visits by Cabinet officials to Atlanta, Tampa and Detroit, among other cities, generated stories that mostly played it straight, relaying their pleas to give Obamacare a chance and their calls for governors to expand Medicaid access.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



W.H. targets local media on Obamacare

Thursday, October 3, 2013

FLASHBACK - $5 million lawsuit targets Jimmy Carter for ‘attacking Israel’


By Sahil Kapur
Thursday, February 3, 2011 9:33 EDT







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  • WASHINGTON – Former President Jimmy Carter has become the target of a class action lawsuit over ostensibly mean things he said about Israel in his best-selling 2006 book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid.


    The lawsuit, filed in New York by an Israeli firm, alleges that the book “contained numerous false and knowingly misleading statements intended to promote the author’s agenda of anti-Israel propaganda and to deceive the reading public instead of presenting accurate information as advertised.”


    The five American plaintiffs, two of whom are dual citizens of the US and Israel, seek $ 5 million in damages over the book (which is being sold for less than $ 10 on Amazon) on the basis that its criticisms of Israel violated consumer protection safeguards.


    The plaintiffs alleged in a press release that the 39th US president and Nobel Peace Prize winner “violated the law and, thus, harmed those who purchased the book” by unfairly “attacking Israel.”


    Attorney Nitsana Darshan-Leitner said her clients’ lawsuit “will expose all the falsehoods and misrepresentations in Carter’s book and prove that his hatred of Israel has led him to commit this fraud on the public.”


    Publishing company Simon & Schuster, which is also targeted in the lawsuit, dismissed it as a frivolous act and a “chilling attack on free speech that we intend to defend vigorously.”


    “This lawsuit is frivolous, without merit, and is a transparent attempt by the plaintiffs, despite their contentions, to punish the author, a Nobel Peace prize winner and world-renowned statesmen, and his publisher, for writing and publishing a book with which the plaintiffs simply disagree,” Simon & Schuster spokesman Adam Rothberg told the Washington Post.


    A copy of the complaint can be viewed here.


    [h/t Matt Yglesias]





    WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



    FLASHBACK - $5 million lawsuit targets Jimmy Carter for ‘attacking Israel’

Saturday, August 24, 2013

US military updates list of potential targets in Syria as pressure mounts on Obama


Michael Wilner
Reuters
August 24, 2013


The Pentagon has updated its list of potential targets in Syria should US President Barack Obama decide to intervene militarily in the country, CNN reported on Friday, citing a US Defense Department official.


The report came as pressure is mounting on Obama to take action against the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad in the wake of allegations that he killed more than 1,000 people in chemical weapons attacks on Wednesday.


The US defense official told CNN that target lists for air strikes in Syria had been updated, and plans for using cruise missiles capable of targeting Syria without entering the country’s airspace had also been included.


The official stated that the US had made no decision to act in Syria, but rather the targets were updated “to give the president a current and comprehensive range of choices.”


Full article here


Related posts:


  1. Report: Russia delivers supersonic cruise missiles to Syria

  2. Syria: Time ripe for closer Russia military ties

  3. ‘Israeli strikes in Syria targeted multiple sites’

  4. Report: DOD drafting plans to strike Syrian chemical weapon targets

  5. Obama warns Syria chemical weapons use may spark US action

This article was posted: Saturday, August 24, 2013 at 5:50 am









Prison Planet.com



US military updates list of potential targets in Syria as pressure mounts on Obama

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

In Gaza, Hamas Targets Palestinian Informants In Crackdown





Palestinian gunmen drag a man from a motorcycle in Gaza City on Nov. 20. He was one of six men killed that day on suspicion of collaborating with Israel. The Hamas government in the Gaza Strip denied responsibility, though it has executed others judged to be working with Israel’s security forces.



Hatem Moussa/AP



Palestinian gunmen drag a man from a motorcycle in Gaza City on Nov. 20. He was one of six men killed that day on suspicion of collaborating with Israel. The Hamas government in the Gaza Strip denied responsibility, though it has executed others judged to be working with Israel’s security forces.


Hatem Moussa/AP



Life was already grim in the Gaza Strip when fighting raged between Israel and Hamas last November. Then Khulud Badawi got unexpected bad news about her husband.


“I was at home when my son came in and said, ‘Mom, they killed Dad.’ I said, ‘Who?’ He said, ‘Hamas.’ I asked him, ‘Where?’ He said, ‘Next to the gas station,’” she recalls.


Badawi’s husband, Ribhi Badawi, was in prison in Gaza City. He was supposed to go to court that day for a final appeal of charges that he had collaborated with Israel against Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip.


But Ribhi Badawi was taken from prison and executed in public, along with five other inmates. They were all accused of being collaborators, or informants, working for Israel.


“In this case, what was remarkable was that these men were not executed in anything resembling legislative authority or the penal authority of the Hamas government, but by armed men,” says Sarah Leah Whitson, who directs the Middle East division of Human Rights Watch.


“How they managed to get these men out of prison, and then how they managed to shoot them dead in broad daylight and drag their corpses around the street is a very big question mark,” she adds.


Israel’s Informant Network


For decades, Israel’s security forces has relied heavily on Palestinian informants to track and keep tabs on wanted Palestinians. The standard practice is for Israel to pay the informants in exchange for the information. But if uncovered, the informants are treated as traitors to the Palestinian cause and can expect to face harsh judgment in the Palestinian courts, or in some cases, through vigilante justice.



Hamas, which has been in control of Gaza since 2007, has executed people judged to be collaborators. But in the six deaths last Nov. 20, the Hamas-run government said it was not responsible.



“What happened was against the law,” Islam Shawan, a spokesman for Gaza’s Interior Ministry, says. “We had a high-level committee investigate, and it handed down tough punishments to security officials who failed to do their jobs.”



Shawan won’t name names, give ranks or offer any other information, but he claims that four people working in the prison system were punished. One was fired, one was transferred, one was jailed and one lost any chance at promotions.


He has no progress to report on tracking down the people who actually did the killings, but he does claim progress in cracking down on collaboration.


Hamas’ Campaign Against Collaborators


Three months after those accused collaborators were killed, Hamas started an anti-collaboration campaign in Gaza.


TV ads played scary music with pictures of a young man being dragged to the gallows by Hamas security forces. The video storyline shows he was coerced into collaboration by doing things that could set him up for blackmail — drinking, taking drugs, searching for sex online.


Shawan says this campaign was aimed at everyone in Gaza.


“This was a national campaign — not just directed at collaborators,” he says. “It was designed to educate and protect society by showing people how Israelis recruit.”


People were offered a chance to turn themselves in. Shawan won’t say how many did, but claimed one example: an engineering student who allegedly gave Israel information about his neighbors, his professors and student politicians. The young man wasn’t punished, Shawan says, but quietly re-educated.


There was no “re-education” offered by Hamas in the case of Khulud Badawi’s husband, who was a member of a rival militant group.


“I don’t believe in this campaign,” she says. “My husband used to tell me that people who were collaborators would confess immediately, but people who weren’t would be tortured for months and never confess because they were innocent.”


Just last week, two accused spies were given death sentences, suggesting that tough punishment is just as important in Hamas’ efforts to crack down on collaboration as education and amnesty.




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In Gaza, Hamas Targets Palestinian Informants In Crackdown