Israeli so called 'love'
Nick (an israeli/a jew) stated that:

There are 1.4 million Arabs - citizens of Israel. They have same exactly rights with Jews.

In addition there are 3.5 million Arabs, citizens of Palestinian authonomy. They are not citizens of Israel and therefore dont have same rights. If they attack us we attack them back, if they sit in silence we dont touch them. Same with all our neighbours.

He even mentioned on what the Jewish Torah says:

Leviticus 24:22 There will be one regulation for you, whether a foreigner or a native citizen, for I am the Lord your God.'"

Leviticus 19:33 When a foreigner resides with you in your land, you must not oppress him. 19:34 The foreigner who resides with you must be to you like a native citizen among you; so you must love him as yourself, because you were foreigners in the land of Egypt. I am the Lord your God.

You wont find anything even close to this in Koran. Lies on Talmud refuted here: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Cyprus/8815/exp.html

Answers to the above myth of the Israeli so called 'love'

Since the establishment of the State of Israel, the Arab minority has been marginalized in almost all aspects of Israeli society ( http://www.wcl.american.edu/hrbrief/v5i2/html/arabmi.htm )

"The Arab sector has been discriminated against for 52 years. We need a development program, but it's too little, too late," ( http://archive.salon.com/news/fe ... li_arabs/index.html )

"I feel like a prostitute. Israel used me to mount a PR campaign for the outside world so that the world would think it is democratic. But, in fact, it's a racist, militaristic country that takes away people's rights." ( http://archive.salon.com/news/fe ... i_arabs/index1.html )

Although Israel's Arab population has grown from 150,000 in 1948 to almost 1 million today, Arab communities have been systematically denied the right to expand beyond their 1948 boundaries. At the same time, Israel has continued to confiscate private Arab land ( http://archive.salon.com/news/fe ... i_arabs/index2.html )

Israel has a long record of imposing severe and frequently arbitrary restrictions on freedom of movement, despite repeated commitments to the U.N. and the international community to ease these restraints. The internal "closure" regime has been used since 1991 to control population movements within the West Bank and Gaza; as of December 2003, some 700 movement barriers were operational in the West Bank and Gaza.4

The barrier embodies long-term and severe restrictions on the movement that causes disproportionate harm to the lives of tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians. It effectively confines more than a hundred thousand men, women, and children in enclaves. It will institutionalize, and threatens to make permanent, a system in which all movement for large numbers of people is sharply curtailed except for a handful of permit-holders. The scope and duration of such restrictions endanger Palestinians' access to basic services like education and medical care, and in many cases to land, jobs, and other means of livelihood ( http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/02/20/isrlpa7581.htm)

The Arab minority in Israel has never been recognized by the State of Israel as a national minority. The national, ethnic, and linguistic character of the Arab community has been consistently ignored and has often resulted in discrimination by the Israeli Government ( http://www.wcl.american.edu/hrbrief/v5i2/html/arabmi.htm )

More on key legal representations that shows the israel violations ( http://www.adalah.org/eng/publications/annualrep2005.pdf )

The wall

According to the latest report of Special Rapporteur John Dugard of the UN's Commission on Human Rights, over 200,000 "Palestinians living between the Wall and the Green Line will be effectively cut off from their farmlands and workplaces, schools, health clinics and other social services," likely leading to "a new generation of refugees or internally displaced persons." ( http://www.asil.org/insights/insigh121.htm )

Israel's West Bank separation barrier entails serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law. Israel's legitimate concerns for the security of its citizens must be addressed in a manner that is proportionate to the threat and that does not amount to indiscriminate and collective punishment of entire communities. The separation barrier, in its present and planned construction, imposes long-term and severe restrictions on freedom of movement, causing extensive and disproportionate harm to Palestinians and worsening conditions of access to the essentials of civilian life. The existing and planned route of the barrier appears to be designed chiefly to incorporate and make contiguous with Israel illegal civilian settlements. The separation barrier constitutes a serious further encroachment on the land and resources of the occupied West Bank, causing extensive harm to the Palestinian inhabitants and threatening to impose permanent changes to the detriment of the local population. ( http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/02/20/isrlpa7581.htm )

The September 8 report of the UN Special Rapporteur concluded that the "evidence strongly suggests that Israel is determined to create facts on the ground amounting to de facto annexation," which the report characterized as "conquest in international law, . prohibited by the Charter of the United Nations and the [1949 Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War]." [9] Although the U.S. voted against the December 8 resolution, the Bush Administration has repeatedly called on Israel to cease construction of the Barrier and announced in November that it would reduce loan guarantees to Israel in retaliation for its continued construction of the Barrier.

The 20-page report by Mary Robinson, a former president of Ireland, criticized Israel’s armed forces for firing live ammunition, rubber-coated bullets and rockets against civilian targets (http://www-tech.mit.edu/V120/N60/westbank_60.60w.html)

The proportion of land confiscated by Israel is now estimated at more than 70% of the West Bank and 33% of Gaza strip, at least 32.5 sq km of land confiscated from Palestinians or about 33% of Palestinian land area in Jerusalem, and closing all but 7-8% of the area to Palestinian construction, according to the suppressed report.

The report cites legally invalid and discriminatory planning regulations preventing Palestinian construction of homes, the punitive and violent demolitions of Palestinian homes carried by administrative orders for lack of license - with average yearly demolitions over the period 1995-1999 rising every year, even as the area of number of Palestinians living under direct Israeli civil control gets smaller. ( http://www.twnside.org.sg/title/5093a.htm )

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