On
23 May, Israel
captured its most wanted terrorist in the West Bank, Ibrahim Hamad a senior
Hamas leader responsible for some of the most horrific suicide bombings of the
past few years including:
- a
double suicide bombing and a simultaneous car
bombing in Zion Square in the heart of Jerusalem five years ago, which killed 11
people;
- a
March 2002 suicide bombing at Jerusalem's Moment
Cafe, in which 12 people were killed;
- the
attack on the Shefield club in Rishon Letzion
in May 2002, which killed 16 people;
- the
attack at the Hebrew University cafeteria on
Mount Scopus in August 2002, which killed nine people;
- a
double suicide bombing in September 2003, which
killed a total of 17 people at the Hillel Cafe in Jerusalem's German Colony, and
at the Tsrifin junction near the Tsrifin IDF base.
Yet, according to the
BBC report on
the arrest:
BBC correspondent Caroline Hawley in Jerusalem says it is not clear
why the army moved against Hamad.
Hamas has not carried out any suicide attacks for 15 months and Israeli
military operations in the past few months have focused instead on the
militant Islamic Jihad group, which has been responsible for most of the
recent bombs.
Caroline Hawley seems to have put a 15 month statute of limitations on
responsibility for the murder of dozens of innocent people. Is it still not
clear to some in the BBC why the IDF would arrest Hamad when presented with an
opportunity?
BOWEN'S "BRUTALISATION"
A
number of eyebrows were raised when veteran BBC correspondent
Jeremy Bowen was appointed to the newly-created role of Middle East Editor
in June 2005 "to enhance our audience's understanding of the
Middle East; and to provide extra commentary, focus and analysis to an
increasingly complex area of the world."
Unfortunately, Bowen's explanation for such complexities can be
oversimplified and morally inverted, as demonstrated by his latest
BBC analysis of
continuing intra-Palestinian violence in the Gaza Strip:
Gaza always feels like a pressure cooker. How could it be anything
else? It is one of the most overcrowded places in the world. Getting on for
a million and a half people live in a strip of land around 50km long and
9-12km wide. But in this claustrophobic, fragile place, brutalised by
getting on for 40 years of a violent Israeli occupation, the temperature is
rising.
Despite Israel's withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, Bowen still refers to
"the pressure that never goes away, which comes from the
Israeli occupation." Thus, Bowen is unable to assign any responsibility
to the Palestinians for their current situation and even the propensity of Hamas
and Fatah to turn against each other, instead preferring to place the blame on
Israel. Bowen also goes on to describe IDF actions against
Palestinian terrorists while failing to mention the continuing barrage of Qassam
missiles fired at Israeli targets, including on 21 May, a
school in
Sderot.
For more on Bowen's latest commentary, see
Melanie
Phillips' Blog.
Comments on Caroline Hawley and Jeremy Bowen to BBC
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