Datum: 21 October 2009.
Bron: Bekijk Bron
Protestors shut down Ehud Olmert speech at University of Chicago.
On 15 October 2009, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert came to give the annual King Abdullah II Leadership Lecture at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy. Outraged that a man responsible for war crimes in Palestine and Lebanon that killed more than three thousand people during his term of office, community members confronted Olmert inside the lecture hall effectively preventing him from delivering his speech. The Goldstone report, examining Israel's attack on Gaza last winter, while Olmert was prime minister, called for Israeli leaders to be held accountable for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Recording and photography were officially banned at Olmert's request, but The Electronic Intifada had a camera anyway as protestor after protestor rose to make a statement before police forced them to leave. Watch this exclusive video.
Al Jazeera
Olmert faces tough crowd.
By Teymoor Nabili in
21-10-2009
While those critical of Iran were given front row seats when President Ahmedinejad visited Columbia University, critics of Ehud Olmert were ushered from the hall when he spoke to students at Chicago University this week.
When President Ahmadinejad of Iran spoke to students at Columbia University in September 2007, the students, the faculty and the media were all given front row seats to condemn and to vilify.
Even the President of the University, Lee Bollinger, took the opportunty to get a dig in, telling Ahmadinejad:
"“Mr. President, you exhibit all the signs of a petty and cruel dictator”
The New York Times reported:
"Mr. Bollinger praised himself and Columbia for showing they believed in freedom of speech by inviting the Iranian president, then continued his attack."
The entire event generated reams of press coverage.
Contrast this with the experience faced by Ehud Olmert when he spoke to students at Chicago University this week.
In a letter to students, the university expressly forbade any video or audio recording equipment, barred members of the media from attending, told students they needed to be there 2 hours before the speech for security screening, and stipulated that questions should be pre-submitted, presumably also for screening.
The university ended the letter with the somewhat ironic comment::
"we appreciate your co-operation with our efforts to to ensure open discourse and freedom of expression."
Despite these efforts, a small group of students did protest, inside and outside the lecture hall, condeming Olmert's decision to attack Gaza and demanding that he respond to the Goldstone report.
But where critics of Ahmadinejad had been encouraged - and given every opportunity - to attack, critics of Olmert were ushered from the hall.
The New York Times and the mainstream US media didn't see fit to cover the event.
However, the Electronic Intifada did, and even managed to sneak in a camera
Bron
-----------------------------
EI exclusive video: Protesters shout down Ehud Olmert in Chicago
Maureen Clare Murphy, The Electronic Intifada, 16 October 2009
Approximately 30 activists -- mainly students from area universities -- disrupted a lecture given in Chicago by former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert yesterday which was hosted by the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy. While Olmert's speech was disrupted inside the lecture hall, approximately 150 activists protested outside the hall in the freezing rain.
Protesters inside the hall read off the names of Palestinian children killed during Israel's assault on Gaza last winter. They shouted that it was unacceptable that the war crimes suspect be invited to speak at a Chicago university when his army destroyed a university in Gaza in January. They reminded the audience of the more than 1,400 Palestinians killed during the Gaza attacks and the more than 1,200 killed during Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 2006. Both invasions happened during Olmert's premiership.
With interventions coming every few minutes throughout his appearance, Olmert had difficulty giving his speech and often appeared frustrated. At one point he appealed for "just five minutes" to speak without being interrupted.
The demonstration was mobilized last week after organizers learned of the lecture, paid for by a grant provided by Jordan's King Abdullah II. Within hours an appeal was issued, urging those concerned with Palestinian rights to call the university and demand that the lecture be canceled. The call was put out by major community organizations such as the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)-Chicago, American Muslims for Palestine and the United States Palestine Community Network, as well as solidarity organizations al-Awda, the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, the International Solidarity Movement, the Palestine Solidarity Group-Chicago and area campus groups such as Students for Justice in Palestine chapters at DePaul University and the University of Illinois at Chicago, as well as the Arab Student Union at Moraine Valley.
The security presence at the lecture was severe with university police, the US Secret Service and Israeli security present -- many of them visibly armed -- with Israeli security checking in those who had registered in advance to attend the lecture. Video and photography was banned inside the hall and media were not allowed to cover the lecture. Despite these restrictions, activists managed to take video inside the hall and drop an eight-foot-long banner from the mezzanine that read "Goldstone" in both English and Hebrew, referring to the recently published UN report investigating violations of international law during the Gaza invasion. One activist was arrested and put in a headlock by a police officer, witnesses said, and released around midnight. Approximately 30 supporters waited for him at the police station while he was detained.
Towards the end of the lecture, Olmert put his hand over his brow and squinted to search out the source of the shout, "There's no discussion with a war criminal -- the only discussion you should be having is in court!" That call was made by Ream Qato, who graduated from the university in 2007, and added, "You belong in the Hague!" Qato told The Electronic Intifada that yesterday's protest "Set the stage for University of Chicago students and students in the Chicago area ... no one should be afraid of speaking out against someone." She added that the demonstration was significant because "The Palestinian community [in Chicago] for the first time went to a university campus to protest."
Approximately 150 protesters demonstrated outside the University of Chicago hall where former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was speaking.
Second-year medical student Afshan Mohiuddin was removed from the hall after she voiced her disapproval at the Harris School dean's on-stage assertion that Olmert was invited to express his views. "He can do that at the International Court of Justice, not at this university," Mohiuddin shouted, adding, "[Olmert] belongs in a cage, not on a stage!"
Mohiuddin told The Electronic Intifada that "it was ironic that they searched us [instead of him]," considering that Olmert is suspected of war crimes. She added, "As a University of Chicago student I was upset with the lack of commotion on behalf of the student body before the event ... No one has protested the event."
Mohiuddin's frustration was echoed in a commentary published by the University of Chicago's student publication The Chicago Maroon earlier this week, in which third-year student Nadia Marie Ismail decried the lack of protest by the university community towards the Olmert speech. She contrasted this silence with the pressure the Center for Middle Eastern Studies faced after a lecture earlier this year by The Electronic Intifada's Ali Abunimah (who was the first to disrupt Olmert's speech yesterday), University of Chicago professor John Mearsheimer and Norman Finkelstein, whose lost bid for tenure at DePaul University is attributed to outside pressure by Israel government apologists. "[T]hat University center was put under unprecedented pressure for weeks before and months after the event, with claims that University centers and schools should not host 'one-sided' speakers," Ismail wrote.
Olmert's lecture in Chicago was one of several scheduled throughout the United States. His speech at the University of Kentucky the previous day was disrupted by activists and met with a protest outside. These demonstrations are part of a wave of notched-up dissent towards Israeli officials implicated in war crimes and racist policy. In 2003, former Israeli minister Natan Sharansky was greeted with a pie in the face by an activist at Rutgers University in New Jersey. Last year at the UK's Oxford University, a speech by Israeli President Shimon Peres was drowned out by protesters outside while students inside the hall disrupted his talk.
One of the organizers of the protest, Hatem Abudayyeh, National Coordinating Committee member of the United States Palestine Community Network, hoped for a larger count of protesters despite the adverse weather. However, he said, "The fact that there's people around the world who know about it, the fact that PACBI [the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel] sent us a letter of support and endorsement of our action, the fact that there was coordination with the outside protest and the inside disruption -- all of these components and aspects of the action made it one of the more successful ones that we've done."
He added, "There is real change happening, whether it's the international response to the Lebanon war or the international response to the Gaza war. The US is the most powerful country in the world, Israel is a powerful military as well, but the Palestinians have the world on their side."
Video shot and produced by The Electronic Intifada.
Maureen Clare Murphy is Managing Editor of The Electronic Intifada and an activist with the Palestine Solidarity Group-Chicago, which co-sponsored the demonstration.
Source
Alle video's in deze categorieën:
|
367 hits
|
353 hits
|
346 hits
|
373 hits
|
||||||
|
378 hits
|
339 hits
|
366 hits
|
568 hits
|
||||||
|
372 hits
|
367 hits
|
376 hits
|
392 hits
|
||||||
|
362 hits
|
356 hits
|
326 hits
|
346 hits
|
||||||
|
298 hits
|
369 hits
|
363 hits
|
378 hits
|
||||||
|
330 hits
|
317 hits
|
318 hits
|
315 hits
|
||||||
|
318 hits
|
324 hits
|
324 hits
|
305 hits
|
||||||
|
551 hits
|
318 hits
|
335 hits
|
331 hits
|
||||||
|
361 hits
|
552 hits
|
320 hits
|
514 hits
|
||||||
|
341 hits
|
521 hits
|
564 hits
|
751 hits
|
||||||
|
535 hits
|
343 hits
|
403 hits
|
376 hits
|
||||||
|
332 hits
|
363 hits
|
374 hits
|
392 hits
|
||||||
|
362 hits
|
376 hits
|
344 hits
|
340 hits
|
||||||
|
329 hits
|
352 hits
|
343 hits
|
355 hits
|
||||||
|
349 hits
|
299 hits
|
348 hits
|
327 hits
|
||||||
|
325 hits
|
322 hits
|
381 hits
|
319 hits
|
||||||
|
316 hits
|
381 hits
|
332 hits
|
317 hits
|
||||||
|
336 hits
|
309 hits
|
324 hits
|
334 hits
|
||||||
|
295 hits
|
405 hits
|
400 hits
|
350 hits
|
||||||
|
364 hits
|
344 hits
|
293 hits
|
296 hits
|
||||||
|
352 hits
|
383 hits
|
363 hits
|
342 hits
|
||||||
|
360 hits
|
420 hits
|
308 hits
|
379 hits
|
||||||
|
309 hits
|
323 hits
|
349 hits
|
325 hits
|
||||||
|
351 hits
|
348 hits
|
318 hits
|
346 hits
|
||||||
|
329 hits
|
335 hits
|
336 hits
|
367 hits
|
||||||
|
310 hits
|
507 hits
|
535 hits
|
310 hits
|
||||||
|
498 hits
|
322 hits
|
293 hits
|
530 hits
|
||||||
|
502 hits
|
358 hits
|
309 hits
|
503 hits
|
||||||
|
326 hits
|
517 hits
|
364 hits
|
287 hits
|
||||||
|
303 hits
|
313 hits
|
313 hits
|
291 hits
|
||||||
|
372 hits
|
287 hits
|
263 hits
|
315 hits
|
||||||
|
291 hits
|
284 hits
|
290 hits
|
280 hits
|
||||||
|
322 hits
|
335 hits
|
291 hits
|
292 hits
|
||||||
|
273 hits
|
261 hits
|
247 hits
|
272 hits
|
||||||
|
250 hits
|
253 hits
|
247 hits
|
262 hits
|
||||||
|
238 hits
|
247 hits
|
259 hits
|
267 hits
|
||||||
|
259 hits
|
257 hits
|
255 hits
|
255 hits
|
||||||
|
250 hits
|
263 hits
|
253 hits
|
246 hits
|
||||||
|
459 hits
|
462 hits
|
255 hits
|
222 hits
|
||||||
|
257 hits
|
265 hits
|
307 hits
|
252 hits
|
||||||
|
269 hits
|
265 hits
|
324 hits
|
279 hits
|
||||||
|
270 hits
|
288 hits
|
271 hits
|
296 hits
|
||||||
|
373 hits
|
321 hits
|
280 hits
|
311 hits
|
||||||
|
284 hits
|
282 hits
|
243 hits
|
487 hits
|
||||||
|
227 hits
|
242 hits
|
240 hits
|
213 hits
|
||||||
|
243 hits
|
|||||||||


