Sunday, February 27, 2011

New Zealand Accepts Emergency Earthquake Aid from Israel

New Zealand Accepts Emergency Earthquake Aid from IsraelBookmark and Share



Israel is sending sanitation, water purification equipment and temporary shelters to the earthquake-ravaged city of Christchurch. This nearly a week after Israel first offered aid to Christchurch.
Last night, New Zealand Prime Minister John Key formally asked Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu for help. Key turned to Israel for assistance as health and sanitation problems continue to develop in the South Island city.
Israel is well-known for the relief delegations it sends to help victims of manmade and natural disasters around the world.
Rescue teams from New Zealand continue to scour ruined buildings hit by last Tuesday's 6.3 tremor. And though New Zealand has asked for Israeli sanitation aid, it continues to deny Israel's world renowned search and rescue teams to help look for survivors.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry said that as of February 26, there are still six Israeli citizens who are known to have been traveling in New Zealand at the time of the earthquake, but whose whereabouts are still unknown. Foreign Ministry officials also confirmed that an Israeli backpacker was killed in the quake.
New Zealand Prime Minister Key said the high number of foreigners killed in the tremor meant Christchurch's pain was being felt around the world. "This isn't just New Zealand's tragedy, the February 22 earthquake affected countless people internationally," he said.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Investors, Angels, High Tech Investment Capital Sought for iSiT Software - Google, IBM Ranked First Place Startup

Investors, Angels, High Tech Investment Capital Sought for iSiT Software - Google, IBM Ranked First Place Startup

By Helen Katzman
Israel News Agency

Tel Aviv , Israel ---- February 15, 2011 ...... Say you're reading a news or feature article on the Internet from Google News, The New York Times, AP, Reuters, Wikipedia or a Blog regarding a hard to believe, a new state-of-the art mobile phone that just seems too good to be true. Maybe you just read reports about violent riots in Egypt, Yemen or Iran or perhaps a news story about a raging forest fire in California or natural disaster that's occurring in some corner of the world. You saw a headline about the financial insolvency of another Europe country or the closing of your local bank. You say to yourself, "Is it a fact? Is it true?"

The iSiT online, fact checking software application is being developed so that people can verify the credibility of online information in real time.

This highly creative startup idea was judged as the first place winner by Google, IBM and Sun Microsystems at a Startup Weekend Israel competition.

During 2010 the original team of founders reorganized themselves into a company called Isit Ltd., brought in some new key people, posted its Website at www.isitfact.com and wrote a comprehensive business plan and product roadmap to attract investment capital.

Today large amounts of information found on the Internet are often subjective, reported with a bias or with intent to distort or misrepresent facts. Almost anyone can post a blog online or publish information on such sites as Wikipedia.

"People have rightfully become highly skeptical of what they read online and what information they can rely upon," says David Marcus, CEO of Isit Ltd.

"Online information has become the lifeblood of our work, investments, finance, business, trade, leisure, entertainment, friendships and families. iSiT? will be used by millions of people that need to quickly check the credibility of general news, finance, political, sports and entertainment and pass it on to their social networks including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube. Currently there is no professional, quick and reliable method by which a person can verify the credibility of information online in real time. The award winning iSiT Internet fact checking software application fills this gap."

iSiT is a Web 2.0, Web 3.0 software application based on deep knowledge of data base integration, a clever application of journalistic principles and its integration with SEO algorithms. Because iSiT is a computer generated service which takes into account changing reliability factors, the most reliable news sources and massive amounts of data there is no need to wait for the human response and no need to deal with human subjectivity which might lead to error. A provisional patent has been filed on the software application.

"The iSiT software will provide its users with 'credibility in a click' ", said Joel Leyden, Isit Senior VP of Marketing.

"We envision three target Internet markets for generation of revenues: the PC market, the corporate B2B market and the B2C smart phone application market. In addition, advertising and licensing opportunities will be aggressively pursued."

"We are seeking immediate investment for this Google and IBM judged award winning software application," says Marcus.

"We are speaking with a select number of VC, Angels, private investors and capital groups from New York, South Korea, Israel and the UK to France, Germany, Japan and China and want to widen the number of interested parties and potential partners. When potential investors such as Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, AOL, Facebook, HP, SONY, Apple, ARC Angle Fund, Trident Capital, BlackRock, The Blackstone Group, Barclays Global Investors N.A., Lehman Brothers - Wealth and Asset Management Division, Osage Partners, Goldman Sachs, and others whose investments are listed on NYSE, NASDAQ and AMEX equity markets are seeking creative Internet, new media, social media, Web 3.0 software applications that could enhance their ROI they become more than eager to share coffee with us," says Leyden.
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Leyden, an Internet pioneer who co-created the first Website in Israel and serves as a social networking and new media consultant to hundreds of global organizations including two governments, says that those industries which would benefit from IsIt Software would be financial and brokerage firms, news, information, database and editorial distribution services, security, intelligence INTEL agencies, academic institutions and political parties.

"We have a winner. We just want to make sure that the baby is born and developed in the most effective, practical and timely manner."




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Sunday, February 13, 2011

Israel Cabinet Approves Gantz As IDF Chief of Staff, Welcomes Egypt Military Pledge to Honor Peace Treaties

Israel Cabinet Approves Gantz As IDF Chief of Staff, Welcomes Egypt Military Pledge to Honor Peace Treaties




By Israel News Agency Staff


Jerusalem, Israel ---- February 13, 2011 ...... Part of the following was communicated by the Israel Cabinet Secretariat to the Israel News Agency.
At the weekly Israel Cabinet meeting held in Jerusalem today Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made the following remarks:
"Today, we will submit for Cabinet approval the appointment of IDF Maj.-Gen. Benny Gantz as the next Chief-of-Staff of the State of Israel. He is an outstanding officer and an experienced commander. Maj.-Gen. Gantz has considerable operational and organizational experience. He has all the necessary qualities to be an outstanding commander of the IDF. This appointment will enhance the stability of the IDF, which is always important, but is especially important at this time of deep shocks in our region."
Netanyahu added: "I would like to take this opportunity to thank Lt.-Gen. Gaby Ashkenazi, who is concluding his outstanding term as Chief-of-Staff. We congratulate him on his achievements and wish him success in the future."
In regards to the situation in Egypt, Netanyahu said: "Egypt President Hosni Mubarak resigned over the weekend and left Cairo. The Government of Israel welcomes the Egyptian military statement that Egypt will continue to honor its peace agreement with Israel. The peace agreement with Israel has stood for many years. During this period, all Egyptian governments have upheld and advanced it and we believe that it is the cornerstone of peace and stability, not only between the two countries, but in the entire Middle East as well."


Pursuant to Article 3(c) of Israel Basic Law: the IDF and in accordance with the recommendation of Israel Defense Minister Ehud Barak, the Israel Cabinet decided to appoint Maj.-Gen. Binyamin (Benny) Gantz as the Chief-of-Staff of the Israel Defense Forces, effective tomorrow Monday, 14.2.11.


Lt.-Gen. Gaby Ashkenazi will conclude his term as IDF Chief-of-Staff upon Maj.-Gen. Gantz's entry into office.
The IDF Chief-of-Staff serves for three years. In special circumstances, the Israel Cabinet is entitled to extend the term for an additional period, not to exceed one year.


The Israel Cabinet approved a comprehensive multi-year (2011-2014), approximately NIS 680 million plan to strengthen Druze and Circassian communities.


Israel Science and Technology Minister Prof. Daniel Hershkowitz and Science and Technology Ministry Director-General Menachem Greenbloom briefed the Israel Cabinet on the activities of the Ministry in 2010-2011.


Lt.-Gen. Gaby Ashkenazi grew up in Hagor, a moshav, or cooperative agricultural community in the Sharon region of central Israel. Ashkenazi completed high school at a military boarding school affiliated with the prestigious Gymnasia Herzliya in Tel Aviv. His roommates included Yigal Schwartz, a major figure in Israeli literature, and Yoav Toker, a Paris-based broadcast journalist.


Ashkenazi was drafted into Israel's Golani Brigade in 1972, Ashkenazi first saw action in the Sinai Peninsula during the 1973 Yom Kippur War. In July 1976 Ashkenazi was a platoon commander in the force that carried out Operation Thunderbolt, a mission to rescue hostages held in Uganda.] Ashkenazi's first of many experiences in Lebanon came in 1978 during Operation Litani. Ashkenazi was wounded in the fighting and left the IDF before being asked to return as a battalion commander two years later.


During the 1982 Lebanon War, Ashkenazi served as IDF Deputy Commander of the Golani Brigade and commanded the forces which captured Beaufort Castle, and the towns of Nabatieh and Jabel Baruch. Promoted to Commander of the Golani in 1987, Ashkenazi was reportedly popular with his brigade's combat soldiers during his nearly two-year tenure in that post.


In 1988, Ashkenazi was appointed head of Intelligence for Israel Northern Command. He commanded a reserve armor division in the early 1990s and later worked as the chief of Israel's civil administration in Lebanon, and in 1994 was promoted to chief of the General Staff's Operations Directorate. In 1998, Ashkenazi was appointed head of the Israeli Northern Command, a position that would make him responsible for Israel's withdrawal from its Security Zone in Southern Lebanon, ending Israel's 18 year presence in the country. Ashkenazi criticized the withdrawal, believing that it should have been accompanied by negotiations with Syria.


Israel Defense Minister Amir Peretz brought Ashkenazi back to the military to serve as the Ministry of Defense's Director-General. In this position, Ashkenazi became the relatively inexperienced Minister's "right hand man" during the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict and, according to Ynetnews, proved to be "much more proficient" than his boss.


Ynetnews attributes Peretz's decision to promote Ashkenazi to Chief of Staff to the two men's successful working relationship during the Lebanon war.


Ashkenazi became the Chief of the General Staff of the Israel Defense Forces on 14 February 2007.


At the end of February 2008, Ashkenazi commanded Operation Hot Winter during which the IDF fought terrorist organizations in Gaza for two days. The fighting ended in an truce agreement between Israel and Hamas. At the end of 2008 and in early 2009 Ashkenazi commanded also Operation Cast Lead during which the IDF fought again against the terrorist organizations in Gaza, headed by the Hamas. In the eyes of many Israelis and military commentators, IDF conduct in the operation, which resulted in a hard blow to Hamas (including at least 700 Hamas operatives dead, but also a large number of civilian deaths) and a very low number of Israeli casualties, proved that the IDF has learned the lessons from the Second Lebanon War and regained its reputation and deterrence against Israel's enemies.


Ashkenazi studied at the Tel Aviv Junior Command Preparatory School and the U.S. Marine Corps University's Command and Staff College. He also holds a B.A. in political science from the University of Haifa and is a graduate of a Harvard Business School program in management for senior executives.


Gabi Ashkenazi's brother, Brigadier General Avi Ashkenazi, was appointed head of the IDF's Staff and Command School in September, 2006.


The new IDF Chief of Staff Rav Aluf Benjamin "Benny" Gantz was born 1959 in Kfar Ahim is a general in the Israel Defense Forces and former Deputy Chief of the General Staff. Following the canceled appointment of previous nominee Aluf Yoav Galant, Israel Defense Minister Rav Aluf (ret.) Ehud Barak announced on 5 February 2011 that he will be recommending to the government that Gantz be appointed the 20th Chief of the General Staff (after the approval by the Turkel Advisory Committee on Senior Appointments and the vote of the government). On 13 February 2011 after a government meeting, the Israel government unanimously approved Gantz appointment to be the 20th IDF chief of staff.


Born in Israel, Gantz was drafted into the IDF in 1977. He volunteered as a paratrooper in the Paratroopers Brigade, and in 1979 became an officer after completing officer's training school. During his career Gantz has served in a number of different roles, including: Commander of the elite Shaldag Unit in the Israel Air Force, Commander of the Paratrooper Brigade, Commander of the Reserves Division in the Northern Command, Commander of the Lebanon Liaison Unit, Commander of the Judea and Samaria Division in 2000, before becoming the Commander of the Israel Northern Command in 2001, and as Israel's military attaché in the US from 2005 until 2009 before reaching his current position.


General Gantz has received a number of degrees during his military service. He is a graduate of the IDF Command and Headquarters College and the National Security College. He holds a Bachelor's Degree in History from Tel Aviv University, a Master's Degree in Political Science from the University of Haifa, and an additional Master's Degree in National Resources Management from the National Defense University in the United States.


The Israel News Agency sincerely thanks IDF Lt.-Gen. Gaby Ashkenazi for providing dedicated and successful service to the IDF which serves as an inspiration for all who follow in his foot steps and wishes IDF General Gantz the very best of success in his new position. May General Gantz go from strength to strength.










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Saturday, February 12, 2011

For Israel, Egypt Social Networking, Facebook, Twitter - People To People Communication Critical

For Israel, Egypt Social Networking, Facebook, Twitter - People To People Communication Critical 



Jerusalem, Israel ---- February 12, 2011 ...... Two peoples who share a very common historic and cultural past. Both Semitic from the desert who embrace family values, houmus, the same wind, sun and languages that begin from right to left.

Today at peace with a stable, growing trade and mutual interests in security and tourism.
But are the people from Israel and Egypt so alike?

From what one hears from our governments, the answer appears to be yes. But if you talk to the man on the street in Cairo, the answer might be somewhat different.

Now that Mubarak has resigned and the revolution for democracy is now taking hold, one must wonder what kind of new government will be formed.

Will it oppose or support Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood, Iran and Islamic Jihad?

Will this new democracy allow itself to be hijacked by the Muslim Brotherhood who have declared that "democracy is bad for Egypt" and create a new and hostile threat to Israel, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Europe and the US?

Anti-Semitism has been rampant in Egypt for ages. And even though former Egypt President Hosni Mubarak was a friend of Israel, he too suffered from that anti-Semitism as those who despise democracy and freedom would characterize Mubarak as a Jew in the worst manner. But even he and his colleagues did nothing to address it.

News stories and caricatures in the Egypt media have regularly featured anti-Semitic depictions of Jews as stooped, hook-nosed, money-hungry and conspiratorial. Israel leaders are illustrated as Nazis, while other articles deny or diminish the Holocaust. Anti Israel and anti Jewish conspiracy theories frequently surface, including references to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and modern reincarnations of the medieval blood-libel charge.

What Israel has is a cold peace with Egypt. This cold peace appears to remain in effect as the Egypt military has declared that they will honor the peace treaties. But what about the people of Egypt? 

Those who have read that Israelis drink the blood of Palestinian babies and hate each and every Egyptian.

Israel is now faced with an image, PR challenge that it has never had to truly address with Egypt until now.

In the last few hours I and others from Israel have written in Arabic that the people of Israel wish the Egyptian people long life, peace and democracy. Many of these remarks have been met with hateful responses. That we, the Jews are lying and that the Jews of Israel are nothing less than lambs in the clothing of wolves.

If we truly want a real democracy to take hold in Egypt, we must look beyond statements coming from the Benjamin Netanyahu and the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. If we truly want a democracy to develop and grow in Egypt with a warm peace between Egypt and Israel the responsibility should not remain solely on the shoulders of the Mossad, CIA, NSA, the US State Department and the English and France Ministries of Foreign Affairs.

For as it has been said, a peace between peoples is far more potent than a peace between governments.

There has never been a more sensitive time for the survival of Israel than today. 

We need not a hostile threat coming from the south, nor does the IDF need a new front to mobilize upon.

Israel needs a peoples PR campaign aimed and targeted towards the good people of Egypt. We need to take to Facebook, Twitter and YouTube and let the Egyptian hear directly from us that we are not their enemies. That we share similar goals and values. That our past, our present and future historical, cultural and political ties should be determined by all we have in common - not by any differences that can be exploited by Jihadists who wish to destroy any healthy relationship.

The Israel News Agency asks of every Israeli, of every Jew to change their profile picture in the Facebook and Twitter to that of the Egypt and Israel flags as seen in this news story. To join every Egypt room on Facebook, every thread on Twitter and using Google Translate to state in their native Arab language that Israel wishes the people of Egypt only long life, peace, democracy and prosperity.

That Israel has been a good friend for the last three decades and wishes to be even a better friend with greater trade and tourism between these two great nations.

Since the establishment of peace between Israel and Egypt, the two countries have developed trade relations in a number of realms, such as textiles, machinery, chemicals, vegetables and cotton. The peace treaty clearly specifies that Israel will purchase Egyptian oil on a regular basis.

Since the establishment of relations, there is tourism between the Israel and Egypt, with the Sinai Peninsula a popular site for Israeli visitors - especially in the summer months. The flow of Egyptian and foreign tourists to Israel from Egypt has steadily been growing.

There will be those who will say let the Egyptians say something nice first. To these people, I can only respond by saying that we must view Egyptian mentality as having been somewhat crippled, brainwashed by anti-Semitic propaganda. We must take the first step by openly declaring on Facebook and Twitter our admiration for Egypt, for their rich history, their culture and our condolences for those who died for democracy.

We must invite them to visit Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Haifa. We must create inexpensive tourism packages and warmly greet them at the airport.

We must communicate that we are human beings whose only agenda is to live side by side in a real and lasting peace for which our children and our children's children shall enjoy and prosper from.



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Thursday, February 10, 2011

"How Can You Defend Israel?"

David Harris

David Harris

Posted: December 27, 2010 06:34 PM


I was sitting in a lecture hall at a British university. Bored by the speaker, I began glancing around the hall. I noticed someone who looked quite familiar from an earlier academic incarnation. When the session ended, I introduced myself and wondered if, after years that could be counted in decades, he remembered me.
He said he did, at which point I commented that the years had been good to him. His response: "But you've changed a lot."
"How so?" I asked with a degree of trepidation, knowing that, self-deception aside, being 60 isn't quite the same as 30.
Looking me straight in the eye, he proclaimed, as others standing nearby listened in, "I read the things you write about Israel. I hate them. How can you defend that country? What happened to the good liberal boy I knew 30 years ago?"
I replied: "That good liberal boy hasn't changed his view. Israel is a liberal cause, and I am proud to speak up for it."
Yes, I'm proud to speak up for Israel. A recent trip once again reminded me why.
Sometimes, it's the seemingly small things, the things that many may not even notice, or just take for granted, or perhaps deliberately ignore, lest it spoil their airtight thinking.
It's the driving lesson in Jerusalem, with the student behind the wheel a devout Muslim woman, and the teacher an Israeli with a skullcap. To judge from media reports about endless inter-communal conflict, such a scene should be impossible. Yet, it was so mundane that no one, it seemed, other than me gave it a passing glance. It goes without saying that the same woman would not have had the luxury of driving lessons, much less with an Orthodox Jewish teacher, had she been living in Saudi Arabia.
It's the two gay men walking hand-in-hand along the Tel Aviv beachfront. No one looked at them, and no one questioned their right to display their affection. Try repeating the same scene in some neighboring countries.
It's the Friday crowd at a mosque in Jaffa. Muslims are free to enter as they please, to pray, to affirm their faith. The scene is repeated throughout Israel. Meanwhile, Christians in Iraq are targeted for death; Copts in Egypt face daily marginalization; Saudi Arabia bans any public display of Christianity; and Jews have been largely driven out of the Arab Middle East.
It's the central bus station in Tel Aviv. There's a free health clinic set up for the thousands of Africans who have entered Israel, some legally, others illegally. They are from Sudan, Eritrea, and elsewhere. They are Christians, Muslims, and animists. Clearly, they know something that Israel's detractors, who rant and rave about alleged "racism," don't. They know that, if they're lucky, they can make a new start in Israel. That's why they bypass Arab countries along the way, fearing imprisonment or persecution. And while tiny Israel wonders how many such refugees it can absorb, Israeli medical professionals volunteer their time in the clinic.
It's Save a Child's Heart, another Israeli institution that doesn't make it into the international media all that much, although it deserves a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize. Here, children in need of advanced cardiac care come, often below the radar. They arrive from Iraq, the West Bank, Gaza, and other Arab places. They receive world-class treatment. It's free, offered by doctors and nurses who wish to assert their commitment to coexistence. Yet, these very same individuals know that, in many cases, their work will go unacknowledged. The families are fearful of admitting they sought help in Israel, even as, thanks to Israelis, their children have been given a new lease on life.
It's the vibrancy of the Israeli debate on just about everything, including, centrally, the ongoing conflict with the Palestinians. The story goes that U.S. President Harry Truman met Israeli President Chaim Weizmann shortly after Israel's establishment in 1948. They got into a discussion about who had the tougher job. Truman said: "With respect, I'm president of 140 million people." Weizmann retorted: "True, but I'm president of one million presidents."
Whether it's the political parties, the Knesset, the media, civil society, or the street, Israelis are assertive, self-critical, and reflective of a wide range of viewpoints.
It's the Israelis who are now planning the restoration of the Carmel Forest, after a deadly fire killed 44 people and destroyed 8,000 acres of exquisite nature. Israelis took an arid and barren land and, despite the unimaginably harsh conditions, lovingly planted one tree after another, so that Israel can justifiably claim today that it's one of the few countries with more wooded land than it had a century ago.
It's the Israelis who, with quiet resolve and courage, are determined to defend their small sliver of land against every conceivable threat - the growing Hamas arsenal in Gaza; the dangerous build-up of missiles by Hezbollah in Lebanon; nuclear-aspiring Iran's calls for a world without Israel; Syria's hospitality to Hamas leaders and transshipment of weapons to Hezbollah; and enemies that shamelessly use civilians as human shields. Or the global campaign to challenge Israel's very legitimacy and right to self-defense; the bizarre anti-Zionist coalition between the radical left and Islamic extremists; the automatic numerical majority at the UN ready to endorse, at a moment's notice, even the most far-fetched accusations against Israel; and those in the punditocracy unable - or unwilling - to grasp the immense strategic challenges facing Israel.
Yes, it's those Israelis who, after burying 21 young people murdered by terrorists at a Tel Aviv discotheque, don the uniform of the Israeli armed forces to defend their country, and proclaim, in the next breath, that, "They won't stop us from dancing, either."
That's the country I'm proud to stand up for. No, I'd never say Israel is perfect. It has its flaws and foibles. It's made its share of mistakes. But, then again, so has every democratic, liberal and peace-seeking country I know, though few of them have faced existential challenges every day since their birth.
The perfect is the enemy of the good, it's said. Israel is a good country. And seeing it up close, rather than through the filter of the BBC or the Guardian, never fails to remind me why.