VC2 on TV | August 16, 2005 | 10 comments

Gaza Raw Footage

Jaron
Settlers were given 48 hours to leave their homes after the IDF delivered eviction notices at 8:00am on Monday August 15th. However, in Neve Dekalim, the largest settlement in Gush Katif, only about half of the notices were handed out due to a large resisitance staged by mostly outside protesters vying to stop the disengagement. This is the raw footage of Day 2 as security forces finally enter the settlement and attempt to begin the withdrawal process by bringing in the moving trucks to haul the settlers belongings away. Both sides have long promised nonviolence. This was shot all handheld by Adrian Baschuk and Jaron Gilinsky, a news documentary duo. We got so lucky with some of the shots even Reuters was wanting the images, but we've brought them to Current because rather than just the one most sensational piece of video making the headlines, we strung together an accurate and full picture of the day. Compare what you see here with what the major networks showed.
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10 comments // Gaza Raw Footage // Video

  • john_cali
    • 0
      john_cali  
    • "Palestinian homes are being systematically bulldozed all over the West Bank,"
      What Gradstein didn’t mention-- and what someone who relied on NPR for their Middle Eastern news would have little idea of -- was that this has been in no way a period of calm for Palestinians. In fact, in the three-week period that Gradstein referred to, at least 26 Palestinians were killed by occupation forces-- more than one a day.
      Media critic Ali Abunimah documented the killings in a letter of protest to NPR (1/8/02), starting with 13-year-old Rami Khamis Al-Zorob, shot in the head on December 13 while playing near his home in Rafah, Gaza. Most of the deaths cited by Abunimah were of unarmed civilians; six were minors, ranging in age from 12 to 17.
      (1/6/05) Morning Edition aired a correction of sorts: "We could have given more context for his statement. We said it was in response to violence, but did not specify that the violence was an Israeli tank shell that killed seven Palestinians." What the correction still left out was that the Palestinians were all children, ranging in age from 10 to 17.
      Days before the advertisement appeared on April 8, the executive director of Rabbis for Human Rights had been arrested while participating in nonviolent civil disobedience against Israeli demolition of houses. "Palestinian homes are being systematically bulldozed all over the West Bank," said a bulletin from Rabbi Arthur Waskow, director of the Shalom Center in Philadelphia. "In this case, there isn't any pretense of 'security interests' or 'military targets.' The houses destroyed yesterday and today belong to ordinary Palestinian citizens whose only crime is the wish to have a roof over their heads."
      But the portrayal of Israel as the innocent victim in the Gaza conflict is hard to square with the death toll in the months leading up to the current crisis; between September 2005 and June 2006, 144 Palestinians in Gaza were killed by Israeli forces, according to a list compiled by the Israeli human rights group B'tselem; 29 of those killed were children. During the same period, no Israelis were killed as a result of violence from Gaza.
      In the three weeks leading up to the Hamas raid, three separate Israeli missile strikes killed 20 innocent Palestinians and injured dozens more. One incident, the shelling of a family on the beach in Beit Lahiya, garnered much U.S. media attention at the time, but the very same media seemed unable to recall it only a few weeks later.
      fair reporting at
      Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), the national media watch group

    • 5 years ago
  • Dayspring
    • 0
      Dayspring  
    • I agree with the previous post that this is nothing more than issue-advertising. During the pull-out the mainstream media was all abuzz about how the lives of settlers, who were there illegally from the get-go, were being uprooted.

      I would love to see some video stories about how Palestinians are living under the occupation and how they feel about being rooted from their homes.

      Where are the Liberal Israelis? I want to hear what they have to say? Where is PeaceNOW?

    • 6 years ago
  • ragir
  • gilfam
  • gilfam
  • Cmaehl
    • 0
      Cmaehl  
    • Same blank screen shows up when trying to play Three Days in Gaza clip too.
      Is there an online video transmission prob ?

    • 6 years ago
  • Cmaehl
  • In4mativ
  • saudadede
    • 0
      saudadede  
    • This piece makes for excellent television, and Adrian Baschuk should be commended for that. It's visceral, provocative, gritty and engaging, but it is also deeply biased. I think it belongs on television, but only within the context of other equally subjective pieces dealing with the same subject matter. This is not journalism. This is not even-handed reporting. This is issue advertising, and I think the question of its proper place in the media landscape is a very important one. I'm all in favor of it being shown, but only if Current TV is ready to "package" it alongside other equally subjective editorials. Anything short of that makes Current little better than a mouthpiece for whomever has the money and resources to craft a halfway decent infomercial.

    • 6 years ago
  • Jung_Mihwa
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