Exploding donkey: Difference between revisions

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One donkey was exploded near a checkpoint in the [[West Bank]] town of [[Bethlehem]] on [[January 26]], [[2003]]. No humans died in the attack, and it was uncertain as to whether the attack was meant specifically to kill [[Israel]]i soldiers; the attack coincided with Israeli advances into the [[Gaza Strip]].
 
The attack did provoke a response from [[People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals|PETA]] president [[Ingrid Newkirk]], who, after receiving many complaints, wrote a letter to [[Palestinian territories|Palestinian]] President [[Yasser Arafat]] asking him to encourage others to "leave the animals out of this conflict". In the letter, she cited historical examples of [[United States|US]], [[United Kingdom|UK]], and [[Al Qaeda]]-sponsored abuses of other animals in conflicts, specifically noting [[dog]]s were simply left in [[Vietnam]] by the US during the [[Vietnam War]], despite the fact that they were "loyal." She thus came to the conclusion that:
{{quote|Animals claim no nation. They are in perpetual [[involuntary servitude]] to all humankind, and although they pose no threat and own no weapons, human beings always win in the undeclared war against them. For animals, there is no [[Geneva Convention]] and no peace treaty—just our mercy.}}