Image with caption: I can no longer support Govt policy on Gaza: Baroness Sayeda Warsi
Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, United Kingdom’s Senior Minister of State for Faith and Communities on 5 August resigned over the British government’s policy on Gaza, saying: “I can no longer support Govt. policy on Gaza.” Warsi was appointed to Cameron’s Cabinet when his coalition government took power in 2010.
Dr Shuja Shafi, Secretary General of Muslim Council of Britain, praised Baroness Warsi over her decision and paid tribute to her role as a Minister: “Baroness Warsi made a difficult decision in resigning from the Government. But her decision reflects the common humanity that exists in her own party and across the political spectrum, all horrified by the brutality of the Israeli war machine against the people of Gaza. Our government can no longer remain oblivious to the concerns of the British public. It must speak out more firmly against the government in Tel Aviv and pressurise them to stop their bloody campaign and end the siege on Gaza.”
Praising Baroness Warsi’s work as a Minister, Dr Shafi said: “Baroness Warsi has worked extremely hard as a Minister, not in only representing our country so well in Muslim countries and at international forums, but also in bringing faith communities together here in the UK. She has also worked hard for British Muslims, from highlighting the contribution of Muslims in World War I to supporting Islamic Finance. Being the first Muslim to be a chair of the Conservative Party and a member of Cabinet, Sayeeda Warsi has certainly been a role model to Muslims around the country.”
REPORT REVEALS EXTENT OF BRITISH ARMING OF ISRAEL
A report has revealed the extent to which the British government has been supplying Israel with military equipment ranging from weapons control and targeting systems to ammunition, drones and armoured vehicles which are being used in the bombardment of Gaza, a news report said on 4 August. Despite former Foreign Secretary David Miliband vowing that all future export applications to Israel would be taken into account back in 2009 after he acknowledged UK-made components were used in that year’s Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip, five years on the UK authorities is again accused of failing to regulate arms sales to Israel.
The report revealed that arms export licences worth £42m had been granted to 130 British defence manufacturers since 2010 with the aim of selling military gear to Israel.
BRITISH POLICE STORM ISRAELI ARMS FACTORY PROTEST
Pro-Palestinian protesters who chained shut the doors of a factory believed to be owned by an Israeli military company which manufactures drone engines for Israel have been arrested and placed in custody by British police. The activists occupied the roof of the arms factory in Shenstone, Staffordshire in the early hours on 5 August, chaining shut the main gates to the factory before scaling the roof, demanding the closing of the factory belonging to UAV Engines Limited, a UK registered company owned by Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest weapons company and the world’s largest manufacturer of drones.
SINN FEIN ASKS RETAILERS TO BOYCOTT ISRAELI PRODUCTS
Sinn Fein, Irish republican political party, has asked major retailers and shop owners to stop stocking products made in Israel on their shelves. A campaign is growing in Ireland to support the international movement of boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel over its war crimes in Gaza.
The Irish TRADE union Mandate has called on more than 20 companies in Ireland asking management to “desist from trading, investment, or other commercial links with companies operating in providing services to, or sourcing goods from settlements in the region of Israel”. Freda Hughes from Ireland Palestine Solidarity Protest says implementing such sanctions and boycotting goods is “an obviously peaceful tactic.”
WOUNDED PALESTINIANS ARRIVE IN TURKEY FOR TREATMENT
Four wounded Palestinians were flown into Ankara for medical treatment on 11 August, the first sign of Turkey’s promised plan to evacuate thousands from the Gaza Strip. Turkey said last week it was seeking Israeli and Egyptian agreement for an air corridor to provide humanitarian aid to Gaza after a month of bloodshed that has killed 1,910 Palestinians and 67 Israelis.
Medics carried three Palestinian women and a male youth on stretchers into waiting ambulances at Ankara’s Esenboga airport. Despite crumbling relations with Israel, it also hopes through its ties with the Palestinian authorities to play a part in brokering a long-term settlement in the Gaza Strip.
EGYPT GRAND MUFTI REJECTS DEATH SENTENCE AGAINST MB CHIEF
Egypt’s top religious leader has dismissed death sentences passed on the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood and other members of the movement. On 7 August, Grand Mufti Shawki Allam stated that the case against Mohamed Badie and the other defendants lacks necessary evidence to incriminate the accused. The Mufti also noted in his report to the criminal court that the only evidence used in the case against the defendants was statements of a national security officer, which were not backed up by any other sources.
On 19 June, an Egyptian court sentenced Badie and 13 other Brotherhood members to death. It referred the verdict to the Mufti, the state’s highest Islamic legal official, whose opinion must be sought before any execution can take place. The court therefore adjourned a final verdict in the case until August 30.
EGYPT DISSOLVES FJP
An Egyptian court on 9 August issued a ruling dissolving the Freedom and Justice Party, the political wing of Muslim Brotherhood, striking another blow in the campaign to crush Egypt’s oldest Islamist movement. The ruling bans the Brotherhood from formal participation in electoral politics.
“This is a politicised ruling,” FJP lawyer Mahmoud Abul-Einen was reported as saying. “It violates the law because this party was founded in line with the Constitution,” he added. The party’s legal committee, meanwhile, described the verdict as part of a plan by what it described as the “counterrevolution” to stifle the January 25 revolution, which ousted the ex-president Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
HRW SAYS EGYPT GAGGING DISSENT
Human Rights Watch on 11 August accused Egypt’s government of trying to silence all criticism, after two of its top staff members were held at Cairo airport for 12 hours and then denied entry to the country for “security reasons.” Executive Director Kenneth Roth and Middle East and North Africa Director Sarah Leah Whitson had flown to Cairo to launch a report on the mass killings of protesters by security forces one year ago, weeks after the army removed elected President Mohamed Morsi from power. The lengthy report comes after a year-long investigation, including interviews with more than 200 witnesses to the killings in July and August of 2013. It details the conduct of government security forces in confronting protesters demanding Morsi’s reinstatement.
ERDOGAN’S PRESIDENTIAL WIN STARTS RACE FOR NEW TURKISH GOVT
Turkey’s ruling party on 11 August began deliberations on the shape of the next government after Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan secured his place in history by winning the nation’s first direct presidential election. Erdogan’s victory in Sunday’s vote takes him a step closer to the executive presidency he has long coveted for Turkey. In the coming weeks, Erdogan will for the last time chair meetings of the ruling AK Party he founded and oversee the selection of a new party leader, likely to be a future prime minister. He will be inaugurated on 28 August.