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Discussione: Hamas ha vinto: e ora?

  1. #1
    Ashmael
    Ospite

    Predefinito Hamas ha vinto: e ora?

    Che succederà ora che Hamas ha vinto?
    (Prego tutti quanti di moderare i toni e astenersi da insulti e invettive)

  2. #2
    itloox
    Ospite

    Predefinito

    la vittoria di hamas dimostra la volontà del popolo palestinese di non subire la storia ma di farla.
    il primo atto compiuto da hamas è stato quello di offrire ad israele una tregua.
    la risposta è stata una stizzosa e totale chiusura.questo la dice lunga su chi ricerca la pace

  3. #3
    Sospeso/a
    Data Registrazione
    09 Sep 2011
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    Predefinito

    Sondaggio fazioso e imbecille, da chiudere immediatamente. L'unico responsabile della situazione mediorentale è l'entità sionista abusiva denominata "Israele", Hamas c'entra ben poco, chi deve cambiare radicalmente sono proprio Sharon e soci.

  4. #4
    Fiamma dell'Occidente
    Data Registrazione
    31 Mar 2009
    Località
    Nei cuori degli uomini liberi. ---------------------- Su POL dal 2005. Moderatore forum Liberalismo.
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    Predefinito

    E' un dato strano questa vittoria, così tra poco Israele avrà mano libera. Se continua così i palestinesi si estinguono. Per loro scelta democratica.
    _
    P R I M O_M I N I S T R O_D I _P O L
    * * *

    Presidente di Progetto Liberale

  5. #5
    itloox
    Ospite

    Predefinito

    *Associated Press/AP Online

    GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - A leader of the Islamic militant
    group Hamas on Monday raised the possibility of negotiating with
    Israel through a third party, an overture made on the final day of
    campaigning for this week's Palestinian parliament elections.
    Fatah candidates accompanied by thousands of supporters made
    a pilgrimage to Yasser Arafat's Gaza City home, hoping to parlay the
    memory of the iconic leader into crucial votes and beat off a strong
    challenge from Hamas in Wednesday's elections.
    "Negotiation is not a taboo," said Mahmoud Zahar,
    a prominent Hamas leader in Gaza and a top candidate for the group.
    He said Hamas would be willing to talk to Israel through a third
    party, similar to past negotiations between Israel and Hezbollah
    guerrillas in Lebanon.
    Outside Arafat's house, a giant poster of the late
    Palestinian leader and smaller posters of Fatah fighters hung from a
    stage where 2,000 party backers, pledged in chorus their fealty
    "to the blood of the martyrs to the wounds of the wounded, to
    the suffering of the prisoners - and to vote for the Fatah list.
    Recent polls show Hamas, which has long sworn its commitment
    to Israel's destruction, gaining ground against Fatah in the group's
    first legislative run. Two days before the vote, the race for the
    132-seat parliament was too close to call.
    Across Gaza and the West Bank, Palestinians plastered
    posters on walls and electricity poles, strung up banners and
    cruised the streets with loudspeakers, trying to drum up last-minute
    support for their candidates.
    Mohammed Dahlan, a leading Fatah candidate, told the crowd
    in Gaza City that in coming to Arafat's house, they were expressing
    their commitment to the late Palestinian leader's lifelong goal -
    "establishing an independent Palestinian state with east
    Jerusalem as its capital, and a right and just solution for
    (Palestinian) refugees."
    Dahlan and eight other Fatah candidates walked to the gates
    of Arafat's house decorated with yellow Fatah flags, then went
    inside where the late leader's pencils and papers lay untouched
    since he last visited in 2001.
    Invoking Arafat's memory was a measure of how stiff a
    challenge Fatah is facing from Hamas, which over the past year
    suspended suicide bombings against Israel.
    At a time when the corruption-tainted Fatah has been unable
    to take control of lawless Palestinian streets, Hamas has won the
    confidence of many voters with its image of incorruptibility and its
    track record of providing health, education and welfare services. It
    also has argued that its attacks on Israelis, and not diplomacy,
    caused Israel to withdraw from Gaza over the summer.
    Huzeifa Abu Fadel, 22, a Hamas campaign worker, predicted
    confidently "we will see green in the legislative
    council," a reference to Hamas' signature color.
    Monday marked the final day of early voting for 58,000
    members of the security forces. They were asked to cast ballots
    early, to be free to secure polling stations on election day.
    Police officer Hisham Assam, 39, said he supported Fatah
    because backing Hamas would be too big a gamble. Fatah has been the
    torchbearer of the Palestinian cause for 40 years but has slipped in
    the polls, with voters complaining of official corruption and
    mismanagement.
    "With Fatah, at least we know what we are
    getting," Assam said. "With Hamas, we are heading into the
    unknown, because they don't have any programs for us."
    In the West Bank city of Hebron, a Hamas poster declared,
    "With one hand we will build, with the other we will
    fight." A Fatah poster boasted that the group was "the
    first to launch the bullet and to resist the occupation, and the
    first to launch democracy."
    In the West Bank town of Ramallah, a Hamas banner read,
    "Israel and America said no to Hamas. What do you say?"
    Pollsters have predicted that turnout will top 85 percent,
    with voters energized by having a first real alternative to Fatah.
    The small Islamic Jihad militant group issued an election
    boycott call on Monday, but it was not expected to have an impact.
    The group is sitting out because the election is an outgrowth of
    Israeli-Palestinian peace agreements.
    Hamas' participation has created friction with Israel and
    the U.S., but Abbas hopes the group will moderate by joining the
    political process. Hamas has not said whether it would join the
    government or hunker down in the opposition, where it would be under
    less pressure to abandon its anti-Israel ideology.
    Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni urged the
    international community on Monday to reject the participation of
    armed militants in the Palestinian legislature.
    The U.S. advocates the spread of democratic elections in the
    Mideast, and did not pressure Abbas to block Hamas from the race.
    But because it considers Hamas to be a terrorist organization,
    "if members of Hamas become members of a Palestinian
    government, we will not deal with those individuals," U.S.
    Embassy spokesman Stewart Tuttle said.
    Although a lot is at stake in this historic vote, the
    campaign has gone relatively smoothly, with limited violence.
    But in the campaign's waning hours, emotions heated up. In a
    debate with Dahlan Sunday night on Lebanese TV, Hamas leader Zahar
    recalled how Palestinian police cracked several of his ribs during
    an interrogation. Zahar criticized the Palestinian Authority for
    dealing with Israel, while Dahlan defended negotiations that yielded
    real benefits for the Palestinians.
    -=-=-
    C O P Y R I G H T * R E M I N D E R

    This article is Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press.

  6. #6
    itloox
    Ospite

    Predefinito

    *Associated Press/AP Online

    GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - A leader of the Islamic militant
    group Hamas on Monday raised the possibility of negotiating with
    Israel through a third party, an overture made on the final day of
    campaigning for this week's Palestinian parliament elections.
    Fatah candidates accompanied by thousands of supporters made
    a pilgrimage to Yasser Arafat's Gaza City home, hoping to parlay the
    memory of the iconic leader into crucial votes and beat off a strong
    challenge from Hamas in Wednesday's elections.
    "Negotiation is not a taboo," said Mahmoud Zahar,
    a prominent Hamas leader in Gaza and a top candidate for the group.
    He said Hamas would be willing to talk to Israel through a third
    party, similar to past negotiations between Israel and Hezbollah
    guerrillas in Lebanon.
    Outside Arafat's house, a giant poster of the late
    Palestinian leader and smaller posters of Fatah fighters hung from a
    stage where 2,000 party backers, pledged in chorus their fealty
    "to the blood of the martyrs to the wounds of the wounded, to
    the suffering of the prisoners - and to vote for the Fatah list.
    Recent polls show Hamas, which has long sworn its commitment
    to Israel's destruction, gaining ground against Fatah in the group's
    first legislative run. Two days before the vote, the race for the
    132-seat parliament was too close to call.
    Across Gaza and the West Bank, Palestinians plastered
    posters on walls and electricity poles, strung up banners and
    cruised the streets with loudspeakers, trying to drum up last-minute
    support for their candidates.
    Mohammed Dahlan, a leading Fatah candidate, told the crowd
    in Gaza City that in coming to Arafat's house, they were expressing
    their commitment to the late Palestinian leader's lifelong goal -
    "establishing an independent Palestinian state with east
    Jerusalem as its capital, and a right and just solution for
    (Palestinian) refugees."
    Dahlan and eight other Fatah candidates walked to the gates
    of Arafat's house decorated with yellow Fatah flags, then went
    inside where the late leader's pencils and papers lay untouched
    since he last visited in 2001.
    Invoking Arafat's memory was a measure of how stiff a
    challenge Fatah is facing from Hamas, which over the past year
    suspended suicide bombings against Israel.
    At a time when the corruption-tainted Fatah has been unable
    to take control of lawless Palestinian streets, Hamas has won the
    confidence of many voters with its image of incorruptibility and its
    track record of providing health, education and welfare services. It
    also has argued that its attacks on Israelis, and not diplomacy,
    caused Israel to withdraw from Gaza over the summer.
    Huzeifa Abu Fadel, 22, a Hamas campaign worker, predicted
    confidently "we will see green in the legislative
    council," a reference to Hamas' signature color.
    Monday marked the final day of early voting for 58,000
    members of the security forces. They were asked to cast ballots
    early, to be free to secure polling stations on election day.
    Police officer Hisham Assam, 39, said he supported Fatah
    because backing Hamas would be too big a gamble. Fatah has been the
    torchbearer of the Palestinian cause for 40 years but has slipped in
    the polls, with voters complaining of official corruption and
    mismanagement.
    "With Fatah, at least we know what we are
    getting," Assam said. "With Hamas, we are heading into the
    unknown, because they don't have any programs for us."
    In the West Bank city of Hebron, a Hamas poster declared,
    "With one hand we will build, with the other we will
    fight." A Fatah poster boasted that the group was "the
    first to launch the bullet and to resist the occupation, and the
    first to launch democracy."
    In the West Bank town of Ramallah, a Hamas banner read,
    "Israel and America said no to Hamas. What do you say?"
    Pollsters have predicted that turnout will top 85 percent,
    with voters energized by having a first real alternative to Fatah.
    The small Islamic Jihad militant group issued an election
    boycott call on Monday, but it was not expected to have an impact.
    The group is sitting out because the election is an outgrowth of
    Israeli-Palestinian peace agreements.
    Hamas' participation has created friction with Israel and
    the U.S., but Abbas hopes the group will moderate by joining the
    political process. Hamas has not said whether it would join the
    government or hunker down in the opposition, where it would be under
    less pressure to abandon its anti-Israel ideology.
    Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni urged the
    international community on Monday to reject the participation of
    armed militants in the Palestinian legislature.
    The U.S. advocates the spread of democratic elections in the
    Mideast, and did not pressure Abbas to block Hamas from the race.
    But because it considers Hamas to be a terrorist organization,
    "if members of Hamas become members of a Palestinian
    government, we will not deal with those individuals," U.S.
    Embassy spokesman Stewart Tuttle said.
    Although a lot is at stake in this historic vote, the
    campaign has gone relatively smoothly, with limited violence.
    But in the campaign's waning hours, emotions heated up. In a
    debate with Dahlan Sunday night on Lebanese TV, Hamas leader Zahar
    recalled how Palestinian police cracked several of his ribs during
    an interrogation. Zahar criticized the Palestinian Authority for
    dealing with Israel, while Dahlan defended negotiations that yielded
    real benefits for the Palestinians.
    -=-=-
    C O P Y R I G H T * R E M I N D E R

    This article is Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press.

  7. #7
    Obama for president
    Data Registrazione
    10 Apr 2003
    Località
    Venezia
    Messaggi
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    Predefinito

    basta con il giustificazionismo filo palestinese linea dura

  8. #8
    Ashmael
    Ospite

    Predefinito

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da matteomatteo
    Sondaggio fazioso e imbecille, da chiudere immediatamente. L'unico responsabile della situazione mediorentale è l'entità sionista abusiva denominata "Israele", Hamas c'entra ben poco, chi deve cambiare radicalmente sono proprio Sharon e soci.
    Senti chi parla di "fazioso".

  9. #9
    Ashmael
    Ospite

    Predefinito

    O Hamas rinuncia alla distruzione di Israele e agli attacchi suicidi, oppure l'UE taglierà tutti i finanziamenti ai palestinesi. Mi sembra giusto.

  10. #10
    Fiamma dell'Occidente
    Data Registrazione
    31 Mar 2009
    Località
    Nei cuori degli uomini liberi. ---------------------- Su POL dal 2005. Moderatore forum Liberalismo.
    Messaggi
    38,171
     Likes dati
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    Predefinito

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da benfy furioso
    basta con il giustificazionismo filo palestinese linea dura
    wow, è quel che penso io...

    Kill 'em all

    _
    P R I M O_M I N I S T R O_D I _P O L
    * * *

    Presidente di Progetto Liberale

 

 
Pagina 1 di 4 12 ... UltimaUltima

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