The: ARTICLE

Subj: A Lesson in AP's Senseless Sensation [A Poor 'olive tree' "story"] 
Date: 4/8/2004 1:33:01 AM Eastern Standard Time
From:
To: webadmin2@heraldsun.com, editor@guardianunlimited.co.uk

 
 
Here's another outrageous original AP "production," with red letters about: 'Poor 'palestinian' "victims" from the Fence,' [the very DE-Fense; which is actually DEFENDING Israeli Victims from Palestinian Violence].
 
So in one twisted around title, AP and the "media" that copies them blindly, has managed to:
1) Tarnish Israel as a 'wild bad kid,' imagine Israelis just blatantly "uproot innocent trees"...
2) Portrayed "palestinian" attackers as "victims."
3) Disregard Israelis' unawareness of the 'owner of a a particular tree.'
4) Switch the whole serious Security Situation for Israeli Babies (and NOT for Arab ones) into a "tree" subject.
5) Not reporting but INTENTIONALLY coloring the Anti-Terror-Fence as "political."
 
: Israelis Uproot Palestinian Olive Grove
http://www.heraldsun.com/nationworld/14-422049.html
 
 
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-3951241,00.html   Israelis Uproot Palestinian Olive Grove
Israelis Uproot Palestinian Olive Grove


Wednesday April 7, 2004 6:46 PM

By LARA SUKHTIAN

Associated Press Writer

BIDOU, West Bank (AP) - Israeli workers with chain saws cut down a Palestinian farmer's olive grove Wednesday to make way for a West Bank security barrier, sparking a clash in which at least 15 Palestinian villagers and two Israeli police were wounded.

The wrecking crew later replanted some of the 180 stumps on another plot, but villagers gave the trees little or no chance of survival in the dry season.

Construction of the barrier has sparked almost daily clashes as it cuts through Palestinian farmland and isolates West Bank villages. Israel says the series of fences, trenches and concrete walls are needed to stop Palestinian suicide bombers. The Palestinians denounce the barrier as a land grab.

The project is part of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's unilateral plan of ``disengagement'' from the Palestinians. In addition to imposing a new boundary in the West Bank, Israel plans to withdraw from the Gaza Strip.

Palestinian Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath said he will go to Washington this month to talk to senior U.S. officials about the Gaza plan.

Palestinians say they welcome any Israeli withdrawal, but fear Israel is giving up Gaza to tighten its hold over much of the West Bank, where the bulk of the 220,000 Israeli settlers live.

Shaath said he would meet Secretary of State Colin Powell and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice on April 21, a week after Sharon holds talks with President Bush.

Sharon is seeking U.S. endorsement for his plan. Shaath said U.S. officials assured him they would not make a decision on the Gaza plan before hearing the Palestinian side.

In weekend interviews, Sharon said the Gaza pullout would not take place until next year. He also said a West Bank redeployment would be minimal, an evacuation of only four of about 140 Jewish settlements there.

Palestinians see the planned route of the barrier, which at times cuts deep into the West Bank, as part of Sharon's plan for retaining much of that territory.

Early Wednesday in the village of Bidou, northwest of Jerusalem, a wrecking crew with chain saws and five bulldozers started cutting down farmer Mahmoud Saadeh's olive trees.

``My olives, my olives,'' Saadeh, 75, yelled as he threw rocks at workers sawing away at his grove. ``I've worked on this land for 20 years ... this is our livelihood.''

Saadeh said all of his 180 olive trees were cut down.

The Israelis later replanted about 40 of the stripped trunks in a nearby field, apparently without the knowledge of the landowners.

Bidou village councilman Mohammed Ayash said the trees had no chance of survival, because the winter rains were over.

Palestinian farmers do not generally use artificial irrigation on their fields, as water in the West Bank is scarce and expensive. Ayash said that even if the replanted trees could be watered, it would take 10 years for them to grow to full size.

Staff at the Israeli Defense Ministry, which oversees construction of the barrier, could not be reached for comment Wednesday, the third day of the weeklong Jewish holiday of Passover.

Raanan Gissin, an adviser to Sharon, said the barrier was an unpleasant necessity, a response to attacks by Palestinian militants from the West Bank.

``It disrupts their (the Palestinians') daily life, but terror takes away our lives daily,'' Gissin told The Associated Press. ``Where we have to uproot trees, we pay compensation.''

Throughout the day, villagers pelted the workers and their military escorts with stones. Troops and police fired steel-cored rubber bullets and tear gas in response, wounding at least 15 Palestinians, medics said.

Israeli police said three Palestinians were arrested, and two Israeli border policemen were wounded by stone throwers.

The barrier, which is one-third complete, will run about 400 miles through the West Bank.

 
==================================================================

 

As an experiment let's try this:

Step A [Correcting the Order]

 

The [fence] project is part of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's unilateral plan of ``disengagement'' from the Palestinians. In addition to imposing a new boundary in the West Bank, Israel plans to withdraw from the Gaza Strip.

Construction of the barrier has sparked almost daily clashes as it cuts through Palestinian farmland and isolates West Bank villages. Israel says the series of fences, trenches and concrete walls are needed to stop Palestinian suicide bombers. The Palestinians denounce the barrier as a land grab.

BIDOU, West Bank (AP) - Israeli workers with chain saws cut down a Palestinian farmer's olive grove Wednesday to make way for a West Bank security barrier, sparking a clash in which at least 15 Palestinian villagers and two Israeli police were wounded.

The wrecking crew later replanted some of the 180 stumps on another plot, but villagers gave the trees little or no chance of survival in the dry season.

Palestinian Foreign Minister Nabil Shaath said he will go to Washington this month to talk to senior U.S. officials about the Gaza plan.

Palestinians say they welcome any Israeli withdrawal, but fear Israel is giving up Gaza to tighten its hold over much of the West Bank, where the bulk of the 220,000 Israeli settlers live.

Shaath said he would meet Secretary of State Colin Powell and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice on April 21, a week after Sharon holds talks with President Bush.

Sharon is seeking U.S. endorsement for his plan. Shaath said U.S. officials assured him they would not make a decision on the Gaza plan before hearing the Palestinian side.

In weekend interviews, Sharon said the Gaza pullout would not take place until next year. He also said a West Bank redeployment would be minimal,  an evacuation of only four of about 140 Jewish settlements there.

Palestinians see the planned route of the barrier, which at times cuts deep into the West Bank, as part of Sharon's plan for retaining much of that territory.

Early Wednesday in the village of Bidou, northwest of Jerusalem, a wrecking crew with chain saws and five bulldozers started cutting down farmer Mahmoud Saadeh's olive trees.

[Palestinians CLAIM that] Saadeh, 75, yelled  ``My olives, my olives,''  as he threw rocks at workers sawing away at his grove. ``I've worked on this land for 20 years ... this is our livelihood.''

Saadeh said all of his 180 olive trees were cut down.

[Where on the bottom, is this important item hiding] The Israelis later replanted about 40 of the stripped trunks in a nearby field, apparently [Remember this term!] without the knowledge of the landowners.

Bidou village councilman Mohammed Ayash said the trees had no chance of survival, because the winter rains were over.

Palestinian farmers do not generally use artificial irrigation on their fields, as water in the West Bank is scarce and expensive. Ayash said that even if the replanted trees could be watered, it would take 10 years for them to grow to full size.

Staff at the Israeli Defense Ministry, which oversees construction of the barrier, could not be reached for comment Wednesday, the third day of the weeklong Jewish holiday of Passover.

Raanan Gissin, an adviser to Sharon, said the barrier was an unpleasant necessity, a response to attacks by Palestinian militants from the West Bank.

``It disrupts their (the Palestinians') daily life, but terror takes away our lives daily,'' Gissin told The Associated Press. ``Where we have to uproot trees, we pay compensation.''

Throughout the day, villagers pelted the workers and their military escorts with stones. Troops and police fired steel-cored rubber bullets and tear gas in response, wounding at least 15 Palestinians, medics said.

Israeli police said three Palestinians were arrested, and two Israeli border policemen were wounded by stone throwers.

===================================================================

Hence:

 Step B

All in the First Portion

Two Israeli border policemen were wounded by stone throwers.

The Israelis later replanted about 40 of the stripped trunks in a nearby field, Apparently without the knowledge of the landowners.  

(Now, here are MY continuing words accordiong to AP's running logic of the article:

Apparently  according to "palestinians", a 75 yr old... man was APPARENTLY an owner of a tree caught up in Israeli-Fence operation...)



___________________________________________________________________________

The: PHOTO

Subj: Your Baloon Photo on "Palestinian-olive trees". 
Date: 4/8/2004 4:59:19 AM Eastern Standard Time
From:
To: feedback@ap.org

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/040407/481/jrl10804071337
 
What are these words: "his land"? Says WHO?
 
This little boy's???
 
Did you even check the information before WRITING?
Tell me, Where's this little boy's "land" start and finish, dear "experts"!
 
Bombasting headlines and loud empty caption-language, that you are an expert at.

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