NOVANEWS
-
Damn your fathers, you shot baba!
-
‘If Jesus were to come this year, Bethlehem would be closed’
-
Ben-Ami: I advocate for Israel, Palestinian groups should advocate for Palestinian human rights
-
The Ron Paul moment– bad and good
-
If Lanny Davis is such a good Democrat, why is Obama-attack-dog Omri Ceren his VP?
-
Why Alan Dershowitz is wrong on Israel’s ‘rights’
-
Please bear witness to the unceasing violence against unarmed Egyptian revolutionaries
-
Inspire us! Mondo Awards 2011, a call for entries
-
Israel says it’s ‘disgusting’ for world to take stand on ‘domestic affair’ –settlers
Damn your fathers, you shot baba!
Dec 22, 2011
Abir Kopty
This story began when I was looking for a child who has lived through the First Palestinian Intifada (uprising), or been active participant. The project was part of Palestinian bloggers’ campaign to mark the twenty-fourth anniversary of the “First Intifada.” We had agreed, each of us, will publish a text or story commemorating this important era in our history which we have nostalgia to.
Due to Mustafa Tamimi’s murder by the Israeli army in Nabi Saleh village, I had lost my desire to write for some time. So the story came late.
Two days before the anniversary of the Intifada, I came a cross a tweet by Mahmoud Omar, a young Palestinian living in Egypt, saying “after watching it perhaps hundred times, after I was able to escape few inches away of her eyes, I saw she was still making the victory sign.” And he shared this video:
Few minutes later, he added another tweet “the Palestinian cause, the whole Palestinian cause, is in the eyes of this young girl.”
This drew me to watch the video, I watched it several times, and I understood what Mahmoud meant. At that moment, I decided to reach that child, who is now an adult woman.
I examined the picture she was holding of her father, the martyr of the first Intifada. His name was clear: The martyr Ibrahim Ahmed Hussein Odeh. After few taps on the web, I found out that he was martyred in 1988 in Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem.
I called and emailed some friends, asking if anyone has good connections with people from Dheisheh and if they could help me reach the family of martyr Ibrahim Ahmed Hussein Odeh. My friend Najla was quick to reply and promised to help. Later on, Najla reached a friend of her who knows the son of the martyr, the brother of the little child.
I called him, and explained the long story, who am I and why am I contacting him, the video, the picture, the child, her eyes, the Internet everything. He was very kind and gave me the phone number of his sister, Nour. Now I know her name, Nour.
I called Nour, and again told her the long story.
Then I was silent and she spoke.
She told me how her father was killed, she still remembers.
At the time, she was three years old, she was at home with her family, mother, father, and her seven siblings. She is the one before the last. Her younger sister was still in her mother’s womb when the father was killed. Her father was standing in the kitchen with her mother, when a bullet called “dumdum” hit his head. It was a shot by Israeli soldiers from outside the house. His head exploded in front of them.
What she remembers from the funeral is the image of his body wrapped with Palestinian flag. From now on, she has become the daughter of a martyr.
Today, Nour, 26 years old, remember how she met a week later Israeli soldiers who were passing in front of their home, she screamed at them: “damn your fathers, you shot baba.” They responded by throwing at her a thick ax-like stick, it did not hit her, but made her fall down the stairs, the horror stayed inside her body for long time.
Nour remembers that after the murder of her father she found a small piece of his head skin with some hair. She kept it for six years, until her mother convinced her to bury it, because this will help her release her grief and trauma. Nour used to hold her father’s picture and talk to it for long.
She also remembers how her father’s martyrdom became a charge against her family. The Israeli army used to raid the house every couple of days, take her brothers, and sometimes force them to remove the political graffiti on the camp’s walls.
Nour told me a lot, many things she asked not to publish, so upon her request I stop here. All that’s left for me is to quote what she said at the end of our conversation, when I asked her what she thinks about the First Intifada, she answered with honesty and simplicity, “I do not like it because I lost my father. I am angry at our grandparents, if they were like our generation, we wouldn’t have lost Palestine.”
When we talk about the First Intifada, with great romance, we must remember that there are thousands of children who have lived orphans against their will, so we can be free. The least we can do to reward them, is to liberate ourselves and them.
This piece was originally published at AbirKopty.wordpress.com. For the Arabic version of this article, click here.
‘If Jesus were to come this year, Bethlehem would be closed’
Dec 22, 2011
Seham
‘If Jesus were to come this year, Bethlehem would be closed’
A strip of settlements built on what was northern Bethlehem threatens to cut the city off from its historic twin, Jerusalem. If Joseph and Mary were making their way to Bethlehem today, the Christmas story would be a little different, says Father Ibrahim Shomali, a parish priest in the town. The couple would struggle to get into the city, let alone find a hotel room. “If Jesus were to come this year, Bethlehem would be closed,” says the priest of Bethlehem’s Beit Jala parish. “He would either have to be born at a checkpoint or at the separation wall. Mary and Joseph would have needed Israeli permission – or to have been tourists. “This really is the big problem for Palestinians in Bethlehem: what will happen when they close us off completely?”
Land, Property Theft & Destruction / Ethnic Cleansing / Apartheid / Refugees
Today, Three Accounts of Property Destruction in the West Bank
The occupation forces washed away a number of water wells, throne room and agricultural land in the area known as “Thahr al Suboh” in Kufur al Deik village in Salfit. The occupation has done this several times before within the same area, which is an agricultural relief operation project funded by the Dutch government.
A group of settlers also uprooted 30 olive trees belong to Osama Alsamamra and wrote hostile slogans to the Arabs, in al-Samou’ village in the Hebron district.
As well, and for the thirty-third time, the occupation forces demolished Araqib village in the Negev within the territory of Palestine 1948. Aziz Sayah said that the forces snatched them out while eating their lunch and started demolishing. Despite demolishing for the 33rd time the people of Araqib remain steadfast and will continue to be for as long as our people stand with us.
link to www.stopthewall.org
Expert: Israeli scheme to displace thousands of Palestinians in Al-Khalil
The IOA has expropriated thousands of dunums of Palestinian land to the south and east of Al-Khalil at trivial security pretexts, Abdul Hadi Hantash, an expert in settlement, warned on Tuesday.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk
Settlement expert warns of Israeli plan to displace thousands more Palestinians
An expert on settlement issues has warned of an Israeli plan which will displace thousands of Palestinian citizens from 20 towns and villages near Hebron in the occupied West Bank. Abdul Hadi Hantash has told the Palestinian media that the Israeli authorities have confiscated thousands of acres of land south and east of Hebron on what he says are very flimsy security grounds. The occupation authorities have also established a number of settlements on the confiscated land, including Ammon, Susiya and Carmel. These have expanded quickly and are the focus for the establishment of smaller satellite settlements.
Israeli government “bows” to settler pressure
Last week, following reports that Israeli forces were planning to evacuate and demolish Ramat Gilad, an illegal oupost located in the West Bank, Jewish settlers rioted. They hurled stones at Palestinians’ cars and threw a cinderblock into a military jeep.
Every Tuesday there is a demonstration against the occupation and the Israeli imposed no go zone that surrounds Gaza, stealing much of Gaza’s best farmland. Today, it was unseasonably warm, it felt almost like summer. We started our march from in front of the destroyed buildings Beit Hanoun Agricultural College. Music played over a megaphone as we marched down the road into the no go zone. As we got closer to the no go zone the music stopped, it got quiet. Usually, when the music starts the chanting begins, but not today. Everyone seemed to be lost in thought, perhaps pondering the green that has recently appeared in the no go zone. The bulldozers haven’t come for many weeks to kill all life in the no go zones. Perhaps they were remembering the olive trees, and orange groves that used to be here. Perhaps they were thinking of the families that used to live in the destroyed houses that we were walking by. Perhaps they were thinking of the houses that no longer exist, the houses that have been completely erased by the Israeli bulldozers.
Palestinian Worker Wounded By Army Fire In Gaza
Palestinian medical sources reported Wednesday that a Palestinian worker, 19 years old, was shot and wounded by Israeli army fire in the northern part of the Gaza Strip.
link to www.imemc.org
The Oliva sailed from Gaza Seaport at 8:15 am. The Palestinian captain and two international observers from CPS staff were on boardAt 8:45 am Oliva reached four hasakas in the north of the Strip, about 2.2 nautical miles off shore (31° 35.40N / 034° 26.29E). At 9:20 am the crew sighted an Israelis navy vessel moving toward the four hasakas and Oliva at a high rate of speed. The four hasakas and Oliva started to move toward the coast. The Israeli navy vessel continued to run after the hasakas and Oliva reaching 1.5 nautical miles off shore (31° 34.68N / 034° 26.49E) and then hanging back.
link to palsolidarity.org
Settlers Attack Child In Jerusalem, Clashes Reported
Eyewitnesses in occupied East Jerusalem reported Thursday that a group of extremist Israeli settlers attacked a Palestinian child in Al Wad neighborhood, in the Old City, leading to clashes between the residents and the settlers. Injuries and arrests were reported.
Jewish settlers storm the Aqsa Mosque
Three groups of Jewish settlers in the early hours of Thursday morning stormed the Aqsa Mosque through the Maghareba Gate which is closed to Muslims.
Soldiers let settlers assault Palestinian demonstrators
Beit Ummar residents demonstrated on their land by the Carmei Tzur settlement. Soldiers enabled settlers to attack them from within a buffer strip surrounding the settlement.
Direct Shooting in Nabi Saleh in 2011 – collection of footage
Footage depicting members of the Israeli security forces firing tear-gas canisters directly at protesters in a-Nabi Saleh. This footage was filmed by B’Tselem field staff and volunteers during May and June 2011 and was sent to the Israeli military authorities to alert them to this ongoing and dangerous practice, which is illegal under the military’s own regulations.
Israeli settlers frequently attack Palestinians; now, the settlers are turning on the Israeli army.
link to www.aljazeera.com
IOF troops round up 17 Palestinian citizens
Israeli occupation forces rounded up 17 Palestinian citizens in different West Bank areas and occupied Jerusalem on Thursday in the biggest such campaign in weeks.
link to www.palestine-info.co.uk
Jenin Refugee Camp Targeted with High Number of Arrests
Eight Palestinians were arrested in pre dawn raids during a large scale incursion by the Israeli military on Thursday in the Jenin Refugee Camp. Over 30 arrests have been made in the camp in the last month.
link to www.imemc.org
Israeli occupation forces arrested four Palestinian citizens in the West Bank on Wednesday, three of them in Al-Khalil, and assaulted a Palestinian paramedic while on duty.
The Palestinian Prisoners Society (PPS) reported that the Israeli “Ofer” Military Court sentenced, Thursday, former legislator, Husam Khader, to three months under administrative detention without charges filed against him.
Family committee says political arrests still ongoing even with national talks
The family committee of political prisoners said the Palestinian authority security apparatuses still carry out arbitrary detention campaigns despite the national reconciliation meetings.
Tunisian aid convoy to arrive in Gaza tomorrow
The Tunisian aid convoy, Al-Ahrar, is due to fly from Tunis-Carthage airport to Egypt on Thursday before heading to the besieged Gaza Strip to deliver humanitarian aid.
Israeli legislators are considering a controversial law that would ban mosques from using loudspeakers to call worshippers to prayer. A handful of European countries have similar laws in place and this latest proposal has sparked similar mixed reactions. The bill’s supporters say the amplified call to prayer is noise pollution, but critics say the proposed law is racist. Al Jazeera’s Cal Perry reports from Jaffa.
Tel Aviv University accused of spying on student activists
Talila Nesher – Haaretz – Tel Aviv University has called on lecturers to turn in students who carried out protest activities on campus last week. Students and lecturers accused the university of resorting to “secret police” methods and oppressing legal social protest on campus.
EI exclusive: UK charity with Mossad links secretly denounced anti-Zionist Jews to government, Asa Winstanley
An influential UK charity denounced Jewish critics of Israel in secret reports to the government earlier this year, The Electronic Intifada has learned.
Flash Mob Tells Bed Bath & Beyond: “Stop Selling Illegal Israeli Settlement Products!”
The three groups involved in this action — CODEPINK, 14 Friends of Palestine, and Keep Hope Alive — are all coalition members of the US Campaign, which offers its exclusive flash mob resources here.
Will the Holy Cow of Aid to Israel Survive the Dull Blade of Across-the-Board Budget Cuts?
Another budget battle has ended as Congress has agreed to fund the government through next fall including a record-breaking $3.075 billion in military aid to Israel. At the same time though, the failure of the super committee to come up with a deficit reduction plan will trigger across-the-board budget cuts in 2013, including a loss of $250 million per year in military aid to Israel. As our National Advocacy Director Josh Ruebner writes, this is the time for Congress to review U.S. policy towards Israel, a policy which the United States cannot afford “morally, politically or financially.” Military aid to Israel makes the average American taxpayer complicit in Israel’s human rights abuses as well as takes away resources from funding the projects Americans need at home, including providing affordable housing and primary healthcare.
“Newt Gingrich puts Israel interests first” – Kristin Szremski
Our Steering Committee member Kristin Szremski writes that Newt Gingrich is forwarding a Zionist agenda at the expense of Americans. In trying to “out-Romney” Romney, and align himself to the pro-Israel element, the potential GOP frontrunner is not only selling off the values and safety of the United States for his shot in the Oval Office — and still failing to impress the pro-Israel Jewish voters he was trying to court — he’s also inflaming tensions in the Middle East, where U.S. neutrality and integrity are already is viewed with suspicion and hostility. He’s proven he does not care about the people whom he’d be sworn to protect as President.
Ahmad Tibi Schools Eric Cantor
Member of Knesset Ahmad Tibi has vigorusly criticized House Majority Leader Eric Cantor in his hometown Richmond Times-Dispatch. Please make your online comments and send your letters to the editor today, particularly those of you in Richmond or in the district of Michele Bachmann or Newt Gingrich’s old district. Those two presidential candidates also came in for heavy criticism.
Militant Hamas moves to join PLO umbrella (AP)
AP – The rival Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas took an important step toward reconciliation on Thursday, announcing plans for the Islamic militants to join the umbrella group that has overseen two decades of on-and-off peace talks with Israel.
‘MK Barakeh traveled overseas for PA’
Foreign Ministry files formal complaint against Hadash Chairman Mohammad Barakeh for allegedly representing Ramallah on official visit to Poland.
Flotilla case closed: Zoabi won’t be charged
Attorney general decides to end investigation against Israeli nationals who participated in Gaza-bound flotilla that ended with lethal raid.
Jerusalem calls off $141 milliion deal with Ankara over fears that Turkey could hand over cutting-edge equipment to hostile parties, officials say.
Egypt: Prosecute Sexual Assaults on Protesters
There is an escalating pattern of physical attacks by Egyptian military and police officers against women and male protesters, journalists, and activists in Cairo, some of which are sexual in nature. News reports and images of protesters in Cairo being stripped, beaten, and dragged through the street in the past several days are just the latest incidents.
The Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has decided to impose biometric visas on diplomats and citizens of EU countries in response to the implementation of similar visa requirements for North African citizens, including Egyptians, visiting Europe. Foreign Ministry spokesman Amr Roshdy said that as from 15 January 2012 all holders of diplomatic and private passports who work in EU-member state embassies in Egypt will be required to obtain biometric visas from Egyptian embassies and consulates in their home countries. This means that applicants will have to go in person to be photographed and submit their fingerprints for the database, which will be used to identify applicants when they arrive in Egypt.
Egypt: Female Protesters Beaten With Metal Poles
Shocking images revealing the brutality of Egypt’s armed forces in quelling protests caused outrage around the world.
Photos of Women’s March Against Military Rule
[A day after soldiers brutally attacked and stripped a woman protestor in Tahrir Square in Cairo, thousands of women and men marched on 20 December from Tahrir Square to the Journalists’ Syndicate and back to condemn the violence. Sarah Carr reports in Al Masry Al Youm that, “There was pervasive anger against the army, with frequent chants for the SCAF to leave power… ‘Tantawi is the supreme commander of harassment and violation of honor,’ one placard read. … ‘They know that we participated as much as men in the revolution. But we’re not scared,’ Hadia Mohamed said. Thirty-six-year-old Nariman Youssef agreed. ‘The main thing is to show that we’re not afraid. They can kill us, hit us, beat us on our heads but we’re getting stronger.'”]
Syria imposes death penalty for arming “terrorists” as death toll soars
A new law introduced this week imposing the death penalty on anyone arming “terrorists” is only likely to worsen the bloodshed in Syria, Amnesty International warned today as the number of people killed this week soared. In one of the deadliest weeks since pro-reform protests began, some 170 people – including around 70 army defectors – were reported to have been killed when government forces attacked the village of Kafr Awaid in the north-western province of Idlib. Dozens of military personnel are also reported to have been killed in Syria.
Activists report more deaths, hours before arrival of advance observer delegation in accordance with peace plan.
About 200 people have been killed by Syrian security forces who launched an offensive against defected troops in the northwestern opposition stronghold of Idlib. The latest fighting has prompted the Syrian opposition to call for an emergency meeting of the Arab League. The Syrian National Council also wants an emergency UN Security Council session to discuss what they call the Assad regime’s massacres. Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr reports.
Iranian technicians ‘abducted’ in Syria
Iranian embassy in Damascus said five engineers were working on a power plant project in Homs, a center of the uprising.
81 Iraqis Killed As Maliki Targets Next Political Victim
A coordinated series of bombings shattered the peace in Baghdad, shortly after Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki ratcheted up tensions between his government and Sunni politicians. Despite international calls for prudence, Maliki is now targeting another senior Sunni politician for harassment. At least 81 Iraqis were killed and 184 more wounded in today’s carnage.
Tariq al-Hashimi says he will only stand trial in Kurdish region as prime minister calls for his return to Baghdad.
Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki told Kurdish leaders there would be “problems” if they do not turn over a vice president who has been accused of assassinations.
Sectarian Tensions in Iraq Reach Crisis State
Kurdistan Regional President Massoud Barzani called on Iraqi politicians to hold a “crisis summit” to discuss recent events surrounding Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s harassment of several Sunni politicians. Meanwhile, at least eight Iraqis were killed and 16 more were wounded in new attacks.
In Exiting Iraq, U.S. Military Discards Trove of Found Documents on 2005 Haditha Massacre of Iraqis
As the U.S. military leaves Iraq, the New York Times has recovered hundreds of pages of documents detailing internal interrogations of U.S. Marines over the 2005 Haditha massacre of Iraqi civilians. The documents, many marked “secret,” were found among scores of other classified material at a junkyard outside Baghdad as an attendant used them as fuel to cook his dinner. The documents reveal testimony of Marines describing killing civilians on a regular basis. “In some ways, this is one of the most grotesque episodes of the entire war in Iraq. And I’m afraid to say, this is part of our legacy,” says Time magazine contributor Tim McGirk, who first broke the story of Haditha in 2006. It was November 19, 2005, when a U.S. military convoy of four vehicles driving through Haditha was hit by a roadside bomb, killing Lance Corporal Miguel Terrazas. The next night, Marines burst into several homes in the neighborhood, killing 24 Iraqis, including a 76-year-old man and women and children who were still in their night clothes when they died. “Nobody is behind bars for this,” McGirk notes. Charges from the episode were dropped against six of the accused Marines, one was acquitted, and the final case is set to go to trial next year. [includes rush transcript]
At War Blog: Lens: Iraqi Photographers Captured the Costs of War
Nearly nine years of war in Iraq have produced a growing cadre of world-class, homegrown Iraqi news photographers. The Lens blog shares the stories of five of them.
Reuters – The United Nation’s top human rights official said on Wednesday Bahrain was failing to prosecute security forces who tortured people during anti-government protests in February and was still using excessive force against civilians.
UAE bloggers on trial for speaking out online
The UAE says it wants democracy, so why has it put five bloggers on trial for demanding political reform?
Security concerns cited, although those affected say they are being unjustly targeted for their political views.
Bradley Manning’s Defense Strategy on Display as Military Prosecutors Rest Case in Pretrial Hearing
In Shariah, Gingrich Sees Mortal Threat to U.S.
Long before running for president, Newt Gingrich was the most prominent American politician to embrace the idea that Shariah poses a major threat to the United States.
Israel’s image tanks as it slowly loses support of US media and Europe, Alex Kane
Susan Youssef’s Habibi, a Gaza feature film a decade in the making, wins major award, Ali Abunimah
Holy Land Betrayed: Our Unchristian Government, Stuart Littlewood
Prime minister David Cameron has told Britain: ‘We are a Christian country and we should not be afraid to say so.’ He was speaking on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the King James version of the Bible which, he said, had helped to give Britain a set of values and morals that make us what we are today. And Cameron doesn’t accept the argument about the church not getting involved in politics. “To me, Christianity, faith, religion, the Church and the Bible are all inherently involved in politics because so many political questions are moral questions.” True, but can our churchmen ‘do politics’? They perpetually fail to get a result even on the Church’s ‘home turf’, the Holy Land.
www.TheHeadlines.org
Ben-Ami: I advocate for Israel, Palestinian groups should advocate for Palestinian human rights
Dec 22, 2011
Ira Glunts

Jeremy Ben Ami
On a dreary, rainy evening in late November my friend Pat Carmeli and I were driving to Syracuse to hear Jeremy Ben-Ami speak. I smiled when Pat turned to me and said, “I’m going to ask him a question about human rights and the Palestinians.” I responded enthusiastically: “All right! That should liven things up.”
I am not a big fan of Ben-Ami and went along mainly to see Pat and some Syracuse Israel/Palestine activists I knew would be there. Yet from the moment Jeremy started to address us, I had the feeling this would be an interesting evening. Jeremy Ben-Ami, the founder and president of J Street, the self-described “political home for pro-peace, pro-Israel Americans” came to town in order to convince about 100 mostly elderly Jewish suburbanites that Israel should pursue a negotiated two-state resolution with the Palestinians. And also to help promote a new local chapter of his organization. The event, which was held at the Jewish Community Center (JCC), was tightly secured by two burly armed uniformed city policemen who were working privately, as is the custom at most Jewish events in and around this medium-sized city in the center of New York State. (I have previously written about my surprised reaction to the very visible police presence and a bit about Jeremy’s presentation here.)
Jeremy Ben-Ami is an experienced Democratic political hand, who worked for the Clinton administration. He is a fluent and knowledgeable speaker with an earnest and friendly manner. The J Street president and head cheerleader sports an adopted surname (I assume inherited from his father) which is quintessentially Zionist, translating as “son of my people.” This fact alone would have set my late mother’s heart all atwitter. Reinforcing his appeal to this pro-Israel crowd, Jeremy was decked out in an expensive Washington blue power suit, while wielding an impressive resume that recently expanded to include three years living in Jerusalem. Peppering his remarks with the common Hebrew phrase, “kol-hakavod” (trans. all right, way to go; literally, all the respect), Ben-Ami cut quite an impressive figure which kind of contradicted his otherwise strikingly nerdy physical appearance.
J Street Jeremy and his organization are highly controversial topics among American Palestine/Israel activists. Some of the progressive supporters of J Street think that whatever this group can do to soften mainstream Jewish opinion is helpful to the cause of obtaining a lasting peace in the Middle East. Although Pat Carmeli has some serious criticism of J Street policy and ideology, she subscribes to this view. Others, like me, think J Street is not helpful because, among other reasons, it espouses a “solution” that will only perpetuate the occupation by creating a Palestinian entity having limited sovereignty that would be an independent state in name only. For Ben-Ami, the current Israeli opposition leader and Operation Cast Lead booster, Tzipi Livni, is the Israeli politician who would best support the J Street vision of peace. Enough said.
At the Syracuse JCC, Ben-Ami’s remarks were much less liberal than I had expected, much less progressive than his organization’s web pages and his public pronouncements. He praised AIPAC for delivering huge amounts of U.S. military aid to Israel. Ben-Ami boasted that Tzipi Livni comes from “good Likud stock like me,” i.e., revisionist, terrorist and racist. Then the topper for activists: he declared in all seriousness: “There is no Palestinian peace movement” other than Salam Fayyad!
These remarks were apparently crafted to curry favor with the many security hawks in the audience, and also those whose vacations in Israel must include a solidarity visit to the Cave of the Patriarchs and the Jewish ultra-settlement of Tel Rumeida. Considering the crowd, it was hardly surprising that when Pat Carmeli, the inimitable local activist, asked her question, Jeremy, the usually very slick pro-Israel advocate, who restricts his appearances to Jewish venues, was caught off-guard. When reading the transcript below, notice that in his response to Pat, Ben-Ami did not recover his composure enough to answer the question he wanted to answer (not the one asked) until the second paragraph, when he returned to his recurrent theme of enthusiastic support for funding the Palestinian Authority.