Brighton Protest: Interactive online map
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 'Remember Gaza', 'Blood on your hands' - the protest marches along Lewes Road outside Moulsecoomb. Photo © Josh Jones 2010
Monday 18th January, 2010: Hundreds gathered in Brighton today to protest the presence of EDO, an arms firm that develops weapons parts used in the assault on Gaza last year. Police responded with force, and scuffles outside the EDO/ITT weapons factory on Home Farm Road led to several injuries. In Brighton city centre, protestors were kettled by police for up to an hour, and several arrests were made, including one medic.
The Smash EDO campaign has been calling for the closure of the Brighton-based arms manufacturer for six years, and claims EDO/ITT corp. is complicit in war crimes.
 Mounted police find a picturesque position to await the protest. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 Avoiding a police blockade on Lewes Road viaduct, protesters storm up the hill towards the EDO/ITT weapons factory. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 Defiant, one protester faces police as they attempt to protect the EDO/ITT arms factory. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 Police in riot gear form a line outside the weapons manufacturer. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 Protesters attempt to force their way through police lines. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 In town, Brighton and Hove bus drivers look on as the protest passes. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 In Brighton, demonstrators resist all efforts to kettle or curb the march's progress. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 Local citizens show their support as the protest passes Brighton University. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 A group of 50 protesters were 'kettled' by police in the North Laine for one hour, including the present photographer. Photo © Josh Jones 2010.
 1417: London remembers the dead. Photo © Josh Jones 2010
People from all over the United Kingdom came to London today to remember the 1417 Palestinians who died in Israel’s assault on the Gaza Strip one year ago.
‘This is not only to remember the dead’, one speaker announced, ‘but also to protest at Israel’s ongoing policy of occupation.’
The planned ‘die-in’ protest at Trafalgar Square was instead held as a minute’s silence, due to wet weather. Each attendee held up the name of one person who died in the assault, to emphasise that the victims were individuals and not just part of a statistic. Of the 1417 Palestinians killed, up to 1181 are thought to have been civillians.
 Photo © Josh Jones 2010
 Photo © Josh Jones
 Photo © Josh Jones
 Photo © Josh Jones
 Photo © Josh Jones
Students at the University of Sussex have received messages of support from Palestinian grassroots organisations and Israeli and Jewish academics, following a decision by ballot to boycott Israeli goods.
The boycott referendum was in one of the best attended and closest contested in Sussex Student Union’s history, and the final result mandates the Union to remove all Israeli food produce from its stores.
The decision has received support from the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee, the grassroots Palestinian committee formed out of the campaign to boycott Israel in 2007. Speaking on behalf of its 23 member organisations, a spokesperson said that Sussex’s decision was significant as part of the international movement:
‘The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC) salutes Sussex University students for their decision to boycott Israeli goods.
‘Student movements played a key role in ending Apartheid in South Africa. Today, we call on students across the globe to boycott Israeli products and divest from Israel until it complies with fundamental human rights principles and international law.’
 Sussex students campaigning on campus. Photo © Josh Jones 2009
Elsewhere, the boycott at Sussex has come under fire, with the Jewish Chronicle lamenting it as an assault on ‘the Jewish state’. The result has also sparked an online backlash on Facebook from some pro-Israel and non-affiliated students at Sussex.
Meanwhile, Jewish and Israeli academics critical of the occupation of Palestine have shown their support. The scholar Norman G. Finkelstein commented,
It is heartening that Sussex students are actively engaged in ending the inhuman and illegal Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands. I consider this a victory not for Palestinians but for truth and justice.
Let us hope it transmits the message to Israel that it should end the occupation so that Palestinians can lead a decent life and amicable relations can be restored between Israelis and other peoples.
Dr Ronit Lentin, Senior Lecturer at Trinity College Dublin, also sent her support to Sussex students:
As a citizen of the State of Israel, and as an oppositionist Jew, I believe that boycotting is the most efficient non-violent strategy to motivate the Israeli state and Israeli citizens to re-think the occupation policy.
Non-governmental organisations campaigning for Human Rights have shown a similar response to the Sussex boycott. The UK charity War on Want sent its congratulations, with Yasmin Khan, Senior Campaigns Officer (Economic Justice), stating:
Palestinians have suffered under the Israeli repression for 61 years, during which time governments all over the world have allowed Israel to act with impunity. It is time for this to change.
The Boycott movement could be just the thing to finally bring justice to Palestine.
Messages of support were also received from the Palestinian grassroots organisation Stop the Wall, and the Badil Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights, in Bethlehem.
Following a landmark referendum, students at Sussex University have voted to boycott Israeli goods. The decision follows the Palestinian call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions against Israel, which calls upon the Israeli state to respect international law and end the occupation of Palestine.
 Students of Sussex Palestine Society and Stop The War Coalition. Photo © Josh Jones 2009
The referendum result mandates the Students’ Union to remove all Israeli produce from its stores, and review its sources for food outlets. This makes Sussex Students’ Union the first in the UK to implement a full boycott of Israeli goods through referendum. The vote was one of the largest and closest contested in the Union’s history, with 562 votes for and 450 against the boycott.
The referendum received messages of support and thanks from Jewish and Israeli academics and non-governmental organisations that oppose Israel’s policy of occupation in Palestine. Author and scholar Norman G. Finkelstein described the referendum result as ‘a victory, not for Palestinians but for truth and justice’.
He continued by saying, ‘Let us hope the boycott transmits the message to Israel that it should end the occupation, so that Palestinians can lead a decent life and amicable relations can be restored between Israelis and other peoples.‘
UK charity War On Want and the Palestinian grassroots campaign Stop The Wall also sent messages of support.
Debates over the boycott were often tense, with the Friends of Palestine Society leading the ‘Yes’ campaign, and the ‘No’ campaign running under the slogan ‘Build Bridges Not Boycotts’. Martha Baker, a member of Palestine Society and speaker at one of the events, said that the biggest challenge for the pro-Boycott team was not, however, the pro-Israeli campaigners.
‘Our biggest challenge was ignorance: most students are not aware of the situation facing Palestinians living under occupation. Much of our work involved actually telling people what was happening in Palestine. The more we spoke to people, the more they understood the reasons for boycotting Israel.’
The 30-strong ‘Yes’ campaign team aimed to talk to as many students as possible in person. Syed Bokhari, one of the campaigners, pointed out that door-knocking on campus and talking to people face-to-face proved invaluable to the final outcome. In addition, a benefit club night featuring Lowkey helped raise awareness about the occupation of Palestine.
Pro-Boycott students also made extensive use of social networking sites to raise awareness about the campaign. Messages of support from NGOs and academics were shared almost instantly across Facebook, and pro-Boycott talks were recorded and published on the Palestine Society’s YouTube channel.
Senior Palestine Society member Bushra Khalidi says that the society will now focus its efforts on gaining scholarships for Palestinian students, and lobbying the Union to sell Palestinian West Bank produce.
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April 22nd, 2009 | From Journalism | tags: Palestine, Photojournalism |

Pride by Josh Jones
For the first time, an online collection of the best of my photojournalism in Palestine has been created. The series focuses on human rights issues for Bedouin people, farmers, and other locals living under Israeli occupation in the West Bank.
The photo-stories have already been exhibited in Brighton and at the University of Sussex, and some were featured in Palestine Monitor. However, this is the first full, open, online version of the collection. The gallery makes sharing and commenting easy.
I invite you to visit, share with your friends, and comment upon these photos and thoughts. Josh

Bedouin children in the West Bank of occupied Palestine.
The children of this valley are put at constant risk by the live-fire exercises that Israeli military conduct in the area. Their mother told me how soldiers would set off explosives of all sorts, from gas bombs to sound grenades, on the hill pictured behind. The ground is then left dangerous, as many explosives remain undetonated.
These children remain strong, and the older brother insisted I try riding his horse – which I did, bareback, for the first time in my life.
Thanks for dropping by – all comments are appreciated.
Image and text © Josh Jones 2008.

While visiting the home of some Bedouin farmers in occupied Palestine, I was invited to try milking a sheep.
I was rubbish. Honestly, it’s harder than it looks. And it really feels funny, like a warm furry water balloon.
Later that evening, the farmers treated us to gallons of hot, sweetened goat’s milk. We left after nightfall, disturbed by their stories and humbled by their generosity.
A popular photo of mine depicts this boy and his little sibling, and can be found here.
Image and text © Josh Jones 2008.

A Bedouin farmer in the Tubas region of the West Bank, occupied Palestine.
She told us the plight of her children. The family farm is often surrounded by Israeli military exercises.
Image and text © Josh Jones 2008.
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Featured Gallery: Palestine
Photojournalism from the West Bank of occupied Palestine.
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