PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 7:57 pm - Jerusalem Time

The Israeli occupation confirms its refusal to allow aid into the Gaza Strip.

The Israeli occupation announced on Wednesday that it will continue to prevent the entry of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip, which its ongoing attacks for nearly 18 months, resulting in more martyrs every day, have turned into a "mass grave," according to the medical charity Doctors Without Borders.


Israel halted aid deliveries to Gaza on March 2 before resuming air and ground attacks across the territory on March 18, ending a two-month ceasefire with Hamas.


This has exacerbated the worsening humanitarian crisis, amid ongoing airstrikes, shelling, and military attacks that the Gaza Civil Defense said killed at least 11 people on Wednesday, according to Agence France-Presse.


Israeli Defense Minister Yisrael Katz affirmed in a statement that "Israel's policy is clear: no humanitarian aid will enter Gaza, and preventing this aid is one of the main pressure tools that prevents Hamas from using it as a tool to pressure the population."


Katz added, "No one is currently planning to allow any humanitarian aid into Gaza, and there are no preparations to allow it in."


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday during a tour of army forces in northern Gaza accompanied by Katz, "Hamas will continue to receive further blows," according to a statement issued by his office.


In Ramallah, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry condemned Netanyahu's "incursion" into the northern Gaza Strip on Wednesday, describing it as "disregard for the international consensus to halt genocide, displacement, and annexation."


The Foreign Ministry affirmed in a statement that "Benjamin Netanyahu's provocative incursion into the northern Gaza Strip, and the statements and remarks he made, aim to prolong and deepen the crimes of genocide and displacement, in an attempt to evade the requirements of an immediate cessation of aggression and the implementation of precautionary orders issued by the International Court of Justice and relevant United Nations resolutions."


Video of an Israeli detainee

For its part, the Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of the Islamic Jihad movement, released a video on Wednesday showing a live Israeli captive in Gaza.


The detainee, identified by Israeli media as Rom Barslavsky, who also holds German citizenship, is seen speaking about the difficult conditions of his detention and appealing to the Israeli Prime Minister to secure his release.


The detainee is also seen asking US President Donald Trump about his promise to release all detainees in a prisoner exchange deal.


These developments come as the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) warned on Monday that the humanitarian situation in Gaza is likely the worst since the outbreak of the war, with the ongoing blockade and closure of crossings. It noted that a month and a half has passed "since any supplies have been allowed in, the longest period of time that supplies have been halted to date."


Hundreds of thousands of Gazans have been displaced since the resumption of attacks, with nearly all of Gaza's population forced to flee repeatedly since the start of the war amid the total lack of security.


Amid the ongoing blockade of the Gaza Strip, home to 2.4 million Palestinians, the non-governmental organization Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said Wednesday that the Gaza Strip has become a "mass graveyard for Palestinians and those who rush to their aid" as a result of military operations and Israel's prevention of aid entry.


"We are witnessing the annihilation and forced displacement of Gaza's population," said Amand Bazirol, Emergency Coordinator for the Gaza Strip, noting that the humanitarian response "is severely affected by insecurity and severe shortages."


On April 28, the International Court of Justice is scheduled to begin hearings on Israel's humanitarian obligations towards the Palestinians, after the UN General Assembly asked the Supreme Court in The Hague to issue an advisory opinion on the matter.


The General Assembly resolution calls on the International Court of Justice to clarify what Israel must do to "ensure and facilitate the unimpeded provision of urgent supplies necessary for the survival of Palestinian civilians."


However, although the ICJ's decisions are legally binding, there is no concrete mechanism for enforcing them. Nevertheless, they increase diplomatic pressure.



PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 7:38 pm - Jerusalem Time

Dead and wounded as a result of the occupation targeting the Al-Tuffah neighborhood, east of Gaza.

A number of civilians were killed and others were injured, most of them seriously, when the Israeli occupation forces targeted Gaza City in the central Gaza Strip.


According to local sources, a number of citizens were killed, including Khaled Mohammed Abu Shaib and Misbah Mohammed Abu Shaib, and others were injured, when the occupation forces targeted the Al-Tuffah neighborhood east of Gaza City.


In the same context, three citizens, including a child, were injured when a group of citizens were targeted in the Al-Barakah area of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip.



ARAB AND WORLD

Wed 16 Apr 2025 5:05 pm - Jerusalem Time

Egypt looks forward to the European Union's participation in the Gaza reconstruction conference.

Egypt expressed its aspiration for the European Union to continue its support for the Palestinian Authority and to participate effectively and constructively in the Gaza Early Recovery and Reconstruction Conference, which Egypt is scheduled to host in cooperation with the United Nations and the Palestinian government.


In a statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Wednesday, Cairo welcomed the European Commission's announcement on April 14 of a multi-year financial program for Palestinian recovery, estimated at €1.6 billion. This program reflects the European Union's support for the Palestinian Authority and the empowerment of its institutions, and contributes to achieving the aspirations of the Palestinian people and meeting their legitimate needs in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.


To counter calls for the "displacement of Palestinians" from their land, the Arab Summit in Cairo last month approved an Egyptian proposal aimed at "early recovery and reconstruction of Gaza, in specific phases, over a period of five years, at an estimated cost of $53 billion." The proposal to "displace Palestinians" from Gaza, advocated by US President Donald Trump and Israeli officials, has been met with widespread Arab and Islamic rejection.


Cairo called for an international conference to support the reconstruction of Gaza, in coordination with the United Nations. During a press conference with his French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron, during his visit to Egypt this month, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi indicated that "the conference will be held as soon as hostilities in the Strip cease."


According to a statement issued by the Egyptian Cabinet on Wednesday, Cairo affirmed that the European Union's position reflects an understanding of the need to support the Palestinian people at this critical stage in their history of struggle, and to work toward a just and lasting settlement of the Palestinian issue based on the two-state solution.


Egypt also welcomed the amount allocated to support Palestinian refugees through the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) (82 million euros), especially since the agency's role in providing basic services and humanitarian aid to Palestinian refugees cannot be replaced or dispensed with.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 3:58 pm - Jerusalem Time

Dead as a result of the occupation's bombing of Khan Yunis

Two citizens were killed and others were injured when Israeli drones bombed the city of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip.


According to local sources, Israeli drones bombed Street 2 in the town of Al-Qarara, north of Khan Yunis, killing two citizens: Khaled Al-Astal and Taher Al-Saqa.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 3:21 pm - Jerusalem Time

MSF: Gaza is a mass grave



Doctors Without Borders said on Wednesday that "Israeli military operations" and the blocking of humanitarian aid have turned Gaza into a graveyard for Palestinians and those who help them.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu resumed his war of extermination on Gaza with US support on March 18, after deciding to withdraw from the ceasefire agreement reached in mid-January under the administration of former President Joe Biden. The agreement entered into force on January 19, 2024, and lasted for two months, with Netanyahu refusing to enter into negotiations for the next phase.


Hundreds of thousands of Gazans have been displaced, as Israeli authorities have blocked the delivery of humanitarian aid since March 2, before the truce collapsed.


The United Nations says medical supplies, fuel, water and other necessities are in scarce supply.


"Gaza has become a mass grave for Palestinians and those who help them," said Amandie Bazirol, MSF coordinator.


Last month, Israeli forces fired on ambulances in Gaza, killing 15 paramedics and rescuers in an incident that drew international condemnation.


"We are witnessing, in real time, the destruction and forced displacement of the entire population of Gaza," Bazirol added. "With no safe place for Palestinians or those trying to help them, the humanitarian response is severely strained by insecurity and severe shortages of supplies, leaving people with limited, if any, options for care."


The Israeli occupation authorities announced on Wednesday that they would continue to prevent the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza. For his part, Defense Minister Israel Katz stated on Wednesday that Israel would continue to prevent the entry of aid into the besieged Strip, which has a population of 2.4 million. Israeli Defense Minister Katz said on Wednesday: "Israel's policy is clear: No humanitarian aid will enter Gaza, and preventing this aid is one of the main pressure tools to prevent Hamas from using it as a tool to pressure the population."


He added, "No one is currently planning to allow any humanitarian aid into Gaza, and there are no preparations to enable such aid."


Senior Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have repeatedly pointed to military pressure as the only way to secure the release of the remaining 58 detainees in Gaza.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 2:55 pm - Jerusalem Time

Health: 25 dead and 89 injured in Gaza in 24 hours

The death toll from the Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip has risen to 51,025, and the number of injuries to 116,432 since October 7, 2023.

Medical sources reported that the death toll includes 1,dead and 4,391 wounded since March 18.

It said that dead and 89 wounded arrived at hospitals in the Gaza Strip during the past 24 hours.


It explained that a numbe of dead remain under the rubble of destroyed homes and facilities, and on the roads, and that ambulances and specialist teams are unable to reach them due to limited resources.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 2:22 pm - Jerusalem Time

ActionAid: Significant increase in cases of acute malnutrition among pregnant women and children in Gaza

Doctors at hospitals run by ActionAid's partner organization, the Community Return Association, in Gaza reported a sharp increase in cases of acute malnutrition among pregnant and breastfeeding women, as well as among young children, amid the ongoing complete blockade on aid entry and the depletion of remaining food supplies.

The foundation explained in a statement issued Wednesday that no food, clean water, medicine, or other essential supplies have entered Gaza for more than 45 days after Israeli authorities closed all border crossings and prevented the entry of all aid, amounting to collective punishment and starvation of the population.

She noted that people are suffering from hunger and rapidly deteriorating health due to the severe food shortage, which has led to the closure of bakeries and community kitchens, and left markets empty of most supplies.

She cited the testimony of pediatrician Dr. Wissal Abu Laban, head of the therapeutic nutrition department at the Al-Awda Community Hospital and Foundation in Nuseirat, central Gaza, who said, "The impact on pregnant and breastfeeding women was very clear."

She added, "We have noticed a very significant increase in the number of pregnant and breastfeeding women suffering from severe and moderate malnutrition. This is all a result of the blockade over the past month and the closure of the crossings. All of them suffer from anemia and iron deficiency due to the lack of food or nutritional supplements, which negatively impacts pregnancy."

She pointed out that most babies are born with a lower than normal weight. "Most of the cases we see now... involve babies with a low birth weight of less than 2.5 kilograms. Of course, there is a direct link between this and the pregnant mother's own nutrition."

She continued: "There are also cases of miscarriage and bleeding among women due to anemia during pregnancy." A recent survey conducted by the Nutrition Group found that "between 10% and 20% of pregnant and breastfeeding women suffer from malnutrition, while a third of pregnant women in Gaza – estimated at 55,000 – face high-risk pregnancies."

About 130 babies are born in Gaza every day, but essential medical supplies—such as anesthetics for delivery, painkillers, antibiotics, and blood units needed for complicated cases—are running out, according to the World Health Organization.

Malnutrition is also on the rise among young children, with medical sources in Gaza estimating that some 60,000 children are at risk of serious health complications due to malnutrition.

At the same time, access to medical care has become difficult, as UNICEF was forced to close 21 of its nutrition centers due to Israeli shelling or forced evacuation orders, leaving hundreds of children without access to treatment.

"After more than six weeks of deliberately and completely blocking aid to Gaza, the devastating consequences of this illegal and egregious decision are beginning to become clear," said Reham Jafari, ActionAid Palestine's communications and advocacy officer.

“Severe malnutrition is on the rise among pregnant women – threatening their lives and those of their children – and among young children, with catastrophic, lifelong health consequences. Every day the blockade on aid continues, this humanitarian catastrophe worsens,” she added. “The time for condemnation is over. People in Gaza who have not been killed in the relentless daily bombardment now face the risk of starvation. The international community must act immediately to bring a permanent end to this war, ensure the full withdrawal of the Israeli army from Gaza, as stipulated in the ceasefire agreement, and allow immediate and widespread access to life-saving aid to prevent the humanitarian catastrophe from worsening further.”

ARAB AND WORLD

Wed 16 Apr 2025 2:19 pm - Jerusalem Time

Witkoff changes his mind and says Iran must stop and eliminate nuclear enrichment.



US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, who is negotiating with Iran on a new nuclear deal, said that Tehran must "halt and eliminate its nuclear enrichment program" to reach an agreement with Washington, in what appears to be an elevation of US demands ahead of another round of talks with Iranian officials.


Witkoff's remarks on Tuesday appeared to contradict his suggestion just a day earlier that the United States would be satisfied with Iran enriching uranium to a low level for energy production.


Witkoff had stated that the Trump administration was prepared to allow Iran to enrich uranium to a low level if it was subject to strict verification, a significant shift from the White House's initial demand to dismantle Tehran's nuclear program.


According to experts, this position, if adopted during the talks, which will resume on Saturday following an initial meeting held last weekend, will give Iran a foothold in its nuclear program and put the United States at odds with Israel's goals on the issue.


"They don't need to enrich beyond 3.67%," Witkoff said on Fox News on Monday night. "It will largely be about verifying the enrichment program and then ultimately verifying the weaponization potential."


The United States is seeking to impose strict restrictions on Iran's nuclear activities and missile program, while Tehran hopes to ease the economic sanctions that have damaged its economy. Before the Trump administration's first round of talks with Iran, held last weekend in Oman, Witkoff told the Wall Street Journal that the initial US position was that Iran's nuclear program must be dismantled. However, he also indicated that the White House would be willing to make concessions to reach an agreement.


President Trump warned that he might launch airstrikes if a nuclear agreement is not reached.


Iran has long refused to negotiate a waiver of its uranium enrichment capacity as part of what it describes as a civilian nuclear program used for electricity generation and medical research.


It's worth noting that the Obama administration's acceptance of Iranian enrichment was a key factor in paving the way for the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran. This agreement set a ceiling on uranium enrichment at 3.67%, but ultimately allowed Iran to reach enrichment levels well beyond that. This prompted Trump to describe the agreement as weak and withdraw from it during his first term.


The 3.67% enrichment level is the standard for fueling nuclear power reactors, according to the Arms Control Association. Adhering to it would extend the time it would take Iran to refine material to the 90% fissile purity needed for nuclear weapons. Currently, Iran could produce enough weapons-grade fissile material in one or two weeks, according to US officials.


While the ideas Witkoff presented in his Fox News interview were similar to the Obama administration's 2015 agreement allowing Iran to enrich uranium, they differed in other important aspects, experts said.


Witkoff appeared to suggest that the Trump administration wants Iran to permanently maintain its enrichment at levels no higher than 3.67%. The 2015 deal included a series of "sunset" provisions that allowed for increased enrichment levels over time. By 2031, Iran would be free to enrich to any purity level and increase its enrichment stockpile to any level.


Witkoff also suggested that a future agreement should include missiles that Iran might use to deliver a nuclear weapon. He said that verification procedures should include "the type of missiles they have stored there, including the bomb's trigger."


Iran has refused to negotiate its arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles, which it considers essential to its status as a major regional power and a means of compensating for its relatively weak air force, which US intelligence said in its annual threat assessment last month suffers from outdated equipment and limited training.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has consistently called for an agreement similar to the 2003 agreement with Libya, whose nuclear program was dismantled. Under the so-called Libyan model, Iran's nuclear program would be eliminated and its enrichment sites destroyed under US supervision.


Analysts say the course of the talks indicates a difference in views between the United States and Israel, its main ally in the region.


Trump has indicated that he strongly prefers a diplomatic solution to military action, in which Iran could attack US allies and forces in the region and disrupt oil traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world's most important commercial waterways.


But he continued to threaten Tehran with dire consequences if it did not quickly agree to a new nuclear agreement. Trump said on Monday that this could include a US attack on Iranian nuclear facilities—a direct threat that US officials have generally avoided.


"It's very simple. They can't have a nuclear weapon, and they have to move quickly, because they're very close to having one, and they won't have one," he said.


When asked if this included the possibility of striking Iranian nuclear facilities, the president replied, "Absolutely."


Iran has long stated that it requires 20% enriched uranium to operate its research reactor, a level well above the minimum proposed by Witkoff. It began producing material enriched to this level in 2010.


According to reports, Iran currently produces 60% highly enriched uranium, the only non-nuclear weapons state to do so. This material can be quickly converted into the 90% fissile material needed to make a bomb.


Given Iran's progress in manufacturing and installing more advanced centrifuges for uranium enrichment, a 3.67% limit could allow Iran to accumulate enough fissile material for a bomb within several months unless its stockpile is shipped out of the country. Under the 2015 agreement, Tehran remained 12 months away from the so-called breakout point during the first decade, but the breakout time has since been significantly reduced.


Even if Iran had enough material to build a weapon, it would still need to be converted into a nuclear device. US officials say it would take several months for Iran to produce a nuclear weapon.


Iran is working hard to overcome the remaining obstacles. US intelligence, in its threat assessment, noted that Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has not authorized the development of a nuclear weapon, but is likely under increasing pressure to do so.


Khamenei said on Tuesday that the first steps in the nuclear talks had been implemented well.


"We are neither very optimistic nor very pessimistic about the talks," he said, according to Iranian media.


There are currently IAEA inspectors in Iran, but Tehran has imposed significant restrictions on their activities.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 12:59 pm - Jerusalem Time

Jerusalem Governorate: 1,398 dunums seized in the first three months of this year

The Jerusalem Governorate stated that the Israeli occupation authorities seized more than 1,398 dunams of land in the Jerusalem Governorate during the first three months of this year.


In a statement issued Wednesday, the organization added that the escalation of the occupation authorities' colonial policies constitutes a blatant assault on the rights of our people and a flagrant violation of international law and international legitimacy resolutions, foremost among which are Security Council Resolutions 242 and 2334, which affirm the illegitimacy of colonialism in the territories occupied in 1967, including East Jerusalem.


The governorate pointed out the seizure decisions issued by the occupation authorities, which came under the pretext of expanding streets, as is the case with the colonial Route No. 45, or to expand existing colonies such as Givat Binyamin, or by annexing colonial outposts and transforming them into official colonies, as happened with Bani Adam. It was also announced that infrastructure projects would be established to serve the colonial project in the heart of Palestinian neighborhoods, such as: Wadi al-Joz, al-Ram, Kafr Aqab, Mikhmas, and Qalandia.


She stressed that the announced colonial plans, including seven new colonial plans, reflect a clear trend toward Judaizing the city and imposing a new demographic reality by seizing Palestinian lands and forcing their indigenous inhabitants to leave. This is particularly true in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood, where the occupation authorities are seeking to establish the "Nahalat Shimon" settlement at the expense of the neighborhood's Jerusalemite residents, who are considered protected tenants under Jordanian law in force in East Jerusalem.


The Jerusalem Governorate warned against the colonial project known as "Greater Jerusalem," through which the occupation government seeks to annex 223 km of West Bank land to the Jerusalem Municipality. This project includes the annexation of 14 settlements, as part of three massive colonial blocs, aiming to fragment the West Bank, besiege the city of Jerusalem, and separate it from its Palestinian surroundings.


The governorate also warned of the occupation municipality's direct participation, for the first time, in colonial projects located in Palestinian neighborhoods within the city. This demonstrates the increasing involvement of official occupation institutions in implementing Judaization plans and changing the Arab-Palestinian character of Jerusalem.


She pointed out that these practices are part of a systematic policy to impose Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem and eliminate the Palestinian presence there. She called on the international community, including the United Nations, the European Union, and Arab and Islamic countries, to take concrete and practical steps to halt these violations, ensure the protection of the Palestinian population from forced displacement policies, and preserve the legal and historical status of Jerusalem as an integral part of the occupied Palestinian territory.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 12:30 pm - Jerusalem Time

Two dead shot by the occupation forces in Qabatiya, south of Jenin.

The General Authority of Civil Affairs informed the Ministry of Health on Wednesday that two young men were killed by Israeli occupation forces in the town of Qabatiya, south of Jenin.


According to the commission, the two  are: Muhammad Omar Muhammad Zakarna (23 years old), and the young man Marouh Yasser Rateb Khazimiya (19 years old).

ARAB AND WORLD

Wed 16 Apr 2025 12:27 pm - Jerusalem Time

A dead and an injured person in an Israeli attack targeting a vehicle in southern Lebanon.

One person was killed and another injured Wednesday morning when an Israeli drone targeted a vehicle in the Wadi al-Hujayr area of southern Lebanon.


The Lebanese agency reported that one person was killed and another injured as a result of the Israeli raid.


Lebanese media reported that ambulance crews transported an injured person from the targeted vehicle in Wadi al-Hujayr.


According to Israeli reports, the bombing targeted a Hezbollah member.


The bombing reportedly targeted a vehicle on the road between Al-Shumariyah and Al-Qusayr in Wadi Al-Hujayr, according to Lebanese media.


The Lebanese news agency reported Wednesday morning that Israel targeted last night "the civil defense center of the Islamic Al-Risala Association in the town of Tayr Harfa, and two prefabricated homes."


On October 8, 2023, Israel launched an attack on Lebanon, which escalated into a full-scale war on September 23, 2024, resulting in more than 4,000 deaths and approximately 17,000 injuries, in addition to the displacement of approximately 1.4 million people.


Since the ceasefire agreement came into effect on November 27, Israel has committed more than 1,440 violations, leaving approximately 125 dead and at least 371 wounded, according to official data.


Israel evaded completing its withdrawal from southern Lebanon by February 18, contrary to the agreement. It implemented a partial withdrawal while continuing to occupy five major hills within the areas it occupied during the last war.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 12:04 pm - Jerusalem Time

Katz threatens Hamas and reveals a new mechanism for distributing aid in the Gaza Strip.

Israeli Defense Minister Yisrael Katz threatened Hamas on Wednesday that if it persists in rejecting the exchange deal, the military operation will expand and move to further stages.


Katz revealed in a statement that Israel is working on a new mechanism for distributing humanitarian aid in the Gaza Strip.


He said, "The plan to distribute humanitarian aid will be through non-military, private and civilian companies." He emphasized that preventing the entry of aid is one of the central pressure tools that prevents Hamas from exploiting this route to control the population, according to him.


He noted that, in the current situation, no one is planning to bring any kind of humanitarian aid into Gaza, and no preparations are being made for that.


He continued, "I emphasized that in the future, a mechanism should be established that relies on civilian companies to prevent Hamas from accessing aid in the future."


Regarding the Egyptian proposal, Katz explained that for the first time, the Egyptians have set a condition for concluding a comprehensive deal and ending the war by disarming Hamas and demilitarizing Gaza.


He said, "Our policy is clear and decisive: to make every effort possible to return the prisoners, to stop aid and find other ways to distribute it, to continuously target Hamas elements, to evacuate the population, to prepare the ground with firepower, and to annex the territories to the Israeli security zones without withdrawing from them."

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 11:44 am - Jerusalem Time

Gaza's Health Ministry reveals autopsy details of the bodies of the paramedics killed in Rafah.

The Director General of the Ministry of Health in Gaza, Dr. Munir al-Barsh, revealed that the autopsy report on the bodies of the paramedics killed in Rafah conclusively confirms that the Israeli occupation forces deliberately targeted them and buried them in a deep hole, a crime that exposes the falsity of the Israeli narrative regarding the circumstances of their deaths.


The health official explained that the results of the medical report completely refuted the occupation's allegations, proving that the victims were not killed accidentally, but were systematically targeted while performing their humanitarian duty.


He added that the continued closure of the crossings exacerbates the catastrophic health situation in the Gaza Strip and prevents the provision of medical care to patients and the wounded, given the scarcity of medicines and limited resources.


He stressed that medical personnel in Gaza are "overwhelmed with casualties and the wounded," and are facing significant difficulties in pursuing the occupation legally due to the ongoing aggression and deteriorating humanitarian conditions.


He pointed out that the health sector has lost more than 1,400 medical personnel since the start of the Israeli aggression, a shocking toll that reflects the extent of the direct targeting of health facilities and their workers.


He pointed out that the death toll continues to rise, as the specter of famine looms large among the besieged population, with the number of victims escalating due to shortages of food, water, and medicine.


In the same context, he explained that more than 13,000 patients in Gaza are eagerly awaiting permits to travel outside the Strip for treatment, amid Israel's refusal to open the crossings.


Gaza's health system faces imminent collapse, while the international community stands helpless in the face of crimes committed against medical and humanitarian personnel, in flagrant violation of international law and the Geneva Conventions.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 11:40 am - Jerusalem Time

Planning to establish a colonial neighborhood and bulldoze dozens of dunams in the West Bank

The Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission stated that the occupying state is accelerating its colonial expansion operations at an unprecedented rate, not only in terms of expanding settlements and adding new units and buildings within them, but also in terms of establishing colonial neighborhoods far from the original colony.


The head of the Authority, Minister Mu'ayyad Shaaban, added in a statement issued on Wednesday that the occupation authorities have recently increased the pace of construction of these neighborhoods, which are eating into more citizens' lands. He explained that the maps attached to the master plans received, which the Authority's crews are analyzing and documenting, indicated the occupation state's intention to expand the "Etz Efraim" settlement, built on citizens' lands in the villages of Masha in the Salfit Governorate, and Saniriya in the Qalqilya Governorate, by depositing a master plan aimed at establishing a new neighborhood belonging to the settlement for the purpose of building 192 new colonial units on an area of 32 dunams, through the master plan numbered (Yush/1/6/126).


He added that the planning authorities in the occupying state studied 45 master plans for settlements in the West Bank, including Jerusalem (both within and outside the municipal boundaries), last March. They approved 16 master plans, while depositing 29 others.


He noted that the March plans targeted a total of 3,280 citizens' lands.


In the same context, settlers, under the protection of Israeli occupation forces, bulldozed dozens of dunams of Palestinian land in the village of Umm Safa, northwest of Ramallah.


Local sources reported that a settler bulldozer, under the protection of the occupation army, razed dozens of dunams of land planted with ancient olive trees in the southern part of the village.


She pointed out that settlers had cut down dozens of olive trees in the area over the past 48 hours.


The sources indicated that the settlers seized hundreds of dunams in the southern region, with the aim of transforming it into a pastoral colonial outpost.


She said there is a plan to displace the village's residents and establish a large colonial settlement complex on the lands and homes of the citizens, linking it to the two neighboring settlements, especially since it is the only village whose entrances have remained closed since the war of extermination, and have not been opened for a single minute.


Umm Safa's area is estimated at 4,000 dunams, of which only 300 dunams remain due to the occupation's measures, land encroachment, and the seizure of vast areas of it. This is the same area on which the citizens' homes are located.

Wed 16 Apr 2025 11:07 am - Jerusalem Time

Israel’s escalating West Bank assault is part of a larger plan to split the territory in two

By Qassam Muaddi  April 14, 2025  3

Israel is expanding its “Iron Wall” offensive in the West Bank as it approves plans to separate the northern West Bank from the south. The plan is an accelerated prelude to Israel's expected annexation of the West Bank.


Israeli forces escalated their offensive in the occupied West Bank last week across Palestinian cities and refugee camps, killing three Palestinians. The escalation came amid renewed Israeli plans to expedite annexation plans to solidify the expansion of key new settlement projects in the central West Bank, including connecting one of the largest Israeli settlements, Maale Adumim, to Jerusalem. 

Last Monday, April 7, Israeli forces opened fire at three children in the town of Turmusayya, northeast of Ramallah, killing 14-year-old Palestinian-American citizen Omar Saadeh. On Tuesday, April 8, Israeli forces shot and killed a Palestinian woman, Aminah Yaaqoub, 30, at an Israeli checkpoint near Salfit in the northern West Bank.

These killings raised the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces or settlers since October 2023 to more than 800, as the Israeli army increased its use of lethal force as part of an ongoing military crackdown on the West Bank’s cities and refugee camps.

Earlier this month, Israeli forces shot and killed a Palestinian man, Hamza Khamash, 33, and arrested his brother during a raid into the city of Nablus. On the same day, Israeli forces raided the refugee camp of Dheisheh in southern Bethlehem and injured two 15-year-old Palestinian boys and two Palestinian men aged 50 and 46. The raid on Dheisheh lasted for more than seven hours, including house searches and multiple arrests. Israeli forces also threw leaflets in Dheisheh threatening residents of “the same fate of Tulkarem and Jenin” refugee camps if they harbor militant elements in the camp. Leaflets portrayed a picture of a destroyed street in one of the northern West Bank’s refugee camps, where Israeli forces have forced tens of thousands of Palestinians out of their homes.

Israeli forces also intensified their attack on Jenin with airstrikes on the already-depopulated refugee camp, detaining Palestinians in the surroundings of the camp and searching their phones.

This military campaign first began after the signing of the now-broken ceasefire deal in Gaza. The military offensive, dubbed “Operation Iron Wall,” started in Jenin and expanded to other parts of the northern West Bank following the start of the short-lived ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in mid-January. However, the operation is also an accelerated prelude to Israel’s annexation of the occupied West Bank, as pledged by Israel’s far-right Finance Minister, Bezalel Smotrich.

The plan to bifurcate the West Bank

The launching of the “Iron Wall” offensive has been described by the families of Israeli captives held in Gaza as compensation offered to Smotrich in exchange for accepting the signing of the ceasefire and refraining from quitting Netanyahu’s right-wing governing coalition. 

In reality, Smotrich’s agenda of crushing Palestinian refugee camps is part of the Israeli government’s broader stated agenda for annexing the West Bank. The escalation of Israel’s military campaign against Palestinian cities came as an echo to developments in Gaza, as Israel announced the expansion of its ground invasion in the strip last week, especially in Rafah. This West Bank escalation was also coupled with the expansion of new settlement projects.

On March 30, the Israeli cabinet approved a new settlement roads project east of Jerusalem. The project includes a road that circumvents the center of the West Bank between Jerusalem and the Jordan Valley, allegedly allowing Palestinians to drive directly from Bethlehem to Jericho and isolating both areas definitively from Jerusalem. The current highway, one of the few Israeli highways on parts of which Palestinians are allowed to drive, will be exclusively reserved for Israelis, connecting Jerusalem with Israeli settlements that expand from the east of Jerusalem to the Jordan Valley. Most central to this annexation project is the second-largest Israeli settlement, Maaale Adumim, which houses 40,000 Israelis.

On March 30, the Israeli cabinet approved a new settlement roads project east of Jerusalem. Linking Jerusalem with settlements to the east would cut the West Bank in half. It’s a plan that Israel has had in the works for years but has now gained official approval.

Linking Jerusalem with settlements to the east would separate the south and the north of the West Bank and create a geographical continuity between Israel’s 1948 boundaries, Jerusalem, and Israeli settlements. Most crucially, the West Bank would be bifurcated. It’s a plan that Israel has had in the works for years but has now gained official approval.

The Palestinian Bedouin village of Khan Al-Ahmar, located in the center of the soon-to-be isolated area, would become inaccessible for Palestinian vehicles and would be reached only on foot.

The project would cost $91 million and be covered by money in a special budget reserved for services to Palestinians separate from the Israeli government’s budget. The Israeli organization Peace Now said in a statement that the project “serves no purpose in improving Palestinian transportation. Instead, it is solely aimed at facilitating the annexation of a vast area, approximately 3% of the West Bank, into Israel.”

Israel’s Defense Minister, Israel Katz, stated that the project “will enhance security by separating Israeli and Palestinian circulation,” while the mayor of the Maale Adumim settlement called the project’s approval “a historical moment.” Peace Now warned that the project would “eliminate the possibility of ending the conflict and a two-state solution.”

Earlier this month, while standing alongside Bezalel Smotrich, Katz said in a video that Israel “will not allow the Palestinian Authority and Abu Mazen [the PA President, Mahmoud Abbas] to impose their control on the West Bank’s lands through illegal building that threatens the settlements’ security.” 

Katz added that “just as we crush terrorism in the camps of Jenin, Tulkarem, and Nur Shams, we will also prevent the Palestinian Authority from controlling lands in Judea and Samaria” — the Israeli term for the West Bank — by preventing the PA’s so-called “illegal building” projects that “threaten settlements.”

Katz made his statements during a tour of several West Bank settlements accompanied by Smotrich. In the video, Smotrich said that “there hasn’t been such a revolution [in settlement building] in Judea and Samaria since 1967.” 

“Israel’s government works on developing settlements and combats Arab illegal building, which has become a scourge to us in recent years,” the Finance Minister added.

Both Katz and Smotrich belong to the Israeli far right, whose voting base comes largely from the settler movement. Smotrich has been leading calls to annex the West Bank since 2015 and has labeled his plan “the definitive solution.” This plan, according to Smotrich, would “end the conflict” by imposing Israeli control over the West Bank and annexing it to Israel’s 1948 boundaries, killing any chances for establishing a Palestinian state. This vision aligns with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s longtime effort to undermine a two-state solution and prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state.

The Israeli far right has dominated Israeli politics in recent years, winning a majority of seats in the Knesset in five consecutive elections in two years. After October 7, 2023, Smotrich stated that his “definitive solution” of annexing the West Bank is “Israel’s response to Hamas.” Since then, Israel has been periodically escalating settlement expansion and violent crackdown on the West Bank, echoing developments in Gaza — with little to no international opposition.

Settler violence in the West Bank has displaced no less than 20 Bedouin communities in the West Bank since October 2023, while the Israeli army and settler attacks have killed more than 800 Palestinians in the same time period. According to UNRWA, Israel’s “Iron Wall” offensive has so far displaced well over 40,000 Palestinians and completely depopulated the Jenin and Tulkarem refugee camps, with Israel’s Defense Minister saying that its residents would not be allowed to return for at least a year.

OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 10:58 am - Jerusalem Time

Rabbis: How Do They Control Israel's Fate?

Translation for "Alquds" dot com

Translation for "Alquds" dot com

Opinion Writer

By Muhammad Shaaban Ayoub


In March 2024, Rabbi Eliyahu Mali, head of the Shirat Moshe religious school in Jaffa, called for "the killing of all residents of Gaza, including women and children," considering it a response to the teachings of Jewish law. He also considered the war on Gaza "religious," demanding that no one be left alive in the Strip.

This fatwa, which Eliyahu considered consistent with Jewish law, and other fatwas shed light on the history of rabbis and the rabbinate institution in Israel, and how, over the course of more than 100 years, they have formed an extreme right-wing movement that has, over time, become a real force controlling Israel from behind the scenes!

How has the rabbinate exploited secular Zionist movements to achieve its goals? How did it emerge? What are the most prominent events of this religious Zionist movement in Israel's past and present?

Religious Zionism Exploits Secular Zionism!

During the second half of the nineteenth century, amidst the rise of movements seeking to persecute Jews on the European continent, a group of Jewish religious leaders known as "rabbis" emerged to establish intellectual movements aimed at inspiring Jews in Europe to envision a new future by seeking a safe haven.

These efforts extended over decades well beyond the mid-twentieth century, marking a turning point in the collective thinking of European Jews.

In this context, individual visions crystallized from prominent thinkers and rabbis, led by Zvi Hirsch Kalischer, Yehuda Alkalai, and Moshe Hess. With the contributions of these and others, they laid the foundations for projects that reshaped the concept of Jewish identity in the face of the existential challenges facing them in Europe. Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Kalischer (1795-1874), a German Orthodox Jew, is considered a pioneer of thought, predating the founder of political Zionism, Theodor Herzl, with his bold ideas. He presented a deeply rooted religious vision calling for Jewish settlement in Palestine, emphasizing that immigration to this land was not merely a practical option, but a spiritual duty that carried within it a divine mission. It is noteworthy that Kalischer adopted a syncretic vision that brought together the religious foundations and practical principles of the secular Zionist movement. This prompted him to join it, along with a group of religious Jews, such as Rabbi Moshe Hess and a number of pioneers of the "Lovers of Zion" movement, founded in 1881 in Tsarist Russia. These leaders were influenced by the millennium doctrine, which believes in the coming of the Messiah, the Savior, and his rule over the earth for a thousand years. At the same time, they refused to be content with passively awaiting the fulfillment of this prophecy. Instead, they proposed a revolutionary vision based on the establishment of a political entity in Palestine, which, as they envisioned it, would pave the way for the fulfillment of the divine promise through the power of the army and the state. This was an intellectual shift that changed the course of traditional Jewish thought.

In the context of the development of these ideas, 1898 witnessed the convening of a prominent Zionist conference in Russia, attended by 14 rabbis among the 140 delegates. Rabbi Isaac Jacob Reines united them under the umbrella of the "Mizrahi" bloc, which formed the nucleus of the first political party expressing religious Zionism.

This party called for active action to achieve Jewish sovereignty and establish "Israel" without being bound by the expectation of a Messiah, in stark contrast to the Orthodox Haredi vision, which linked the establishment of the state to a divine event coinciding with the end of history.

Thus, in Eastern Europe during the nineteenth century, where the ultra-Orthodox Jewish tradition dominated, linking the return to the "Promised Land" with the coming of the Messiah, religious Zionism emerged as an innovative, centrist movement seeking to reconcile religious faith and Zionist ambition. This movement, based on the concepts of the "Chosen People" and the "Promised Land," gained momentum among the "New Orthodox," driven by the vision of rabbis like Abraham Kook, considered the spiritual father of religious Zionism, who linked settlement in Palestine to repentance and divine salvation. The rabbis of religious Zionism, led by Kook (1865–1935), led intellectual efforts to stimulate Jewish immigration to Palestine, emphasizing that a Zionist could be religious, and a religious person a Zionist, without Zionism being purely religious in nature. Contrary to the traditional Jewish view that awaits divine intervention, Kook championed the idea that secularists are divine instruments for fulfilling the divine promise, even if they are unaware of it. This contributed to five major waves of immigration to Palestine before the establishment of "Israel."


Religious Zionism in the Shadow of the State of Israel

Following the establishment of Israel, religious Zionism strengthened its influence by penetrating official and popular institutions, such as the Chief Rabbinate, the Ministry of Religious Affairs, and the army. Every city or settlement had its own rabbi, and the military had its own.

Despite the initial reluctance of religious Jews to serve in the military for religious reasons, the 1965 settlement, supported by a religious edict by Rabbi Zvi Kook, which made military service a religious obligation, led to the integration of Torah study with military training in private schools, paving the way for religious Jews to integrate into the social and military fabric of the state. The 1967 war—which resulted in the occupation of Jerusalem, Hebron, the West Bank, the Golan Heights, and Sinai—marked a major turning point. Rabbi Zvi Kook, son of Rabbi Abraham Kook, viewed it as a divine victory that reinforced the religious value of the Holy Land. This vision led to the strengthening of settlements in the occupied territories.

Through this intellectual and historical development, religious Zionism, led by Abraham and Zvi Kook, was able to exploit secular Zionism as a tool to achieve religious goals, while strengthening its presence in military colleges and settlements. However, Israel's defeat in 1973 revealed new challenges.

The role of religious Zionism escalated with the founding of the Gush Emunim movement in 1974. In its founding document, it declared its commitment to "the salvation of the people of Israel and the world," becoming a primary driver of religious Zionism, transcending traditional Jewish trends. It strengthened its insistence on establishing settlements as a pillar for achieving the vision of religious Zionism, declaring in its founding document its commitment to "the salvation of the people of Israel and the world," becoming a primary driver of religious Zionism, transcending traditional Jewish trends. This movement led the settlements in the West Bank and Gaza with the support of prominent political figures such as Ariel Sharon. The movement gained the support of the Likud government after 1977, enabling it to establish settlements close to Palestinian communities.


However, as Gush Emunim's momentum declined in the 1980s, other settlement groups emerged, such as Elad and Lehava, which continued to Judaize Jerusalem and the West Bank, based on a religious-nationalist ideology that viewed settlement as a fulfillment of the biblical promise. However, the role of the rabbinate in the military and settlement spheres has become prominent. In 1948, Shlomo Goren established the "Military Rabbinate" as an institution that justified military operations against the Palestinians on religious grounds. Meanwhile, Mercaz HaRav, founded by Abraham Kook in 1924 and later run by his son, Zvi, is considered a stronghold of religious Zionism, fueling the settlement movement in the West Bank after 1967.

Growing Influence

In his article "Rabbinishing Authority in Israel and the Abyss of Holy War," British author Jonathan Kook argues that David Ben-Gurion granted Orthodox Jewish rabbis broad authority over personal status and the public sphere, strengthening their role in mobilizing youth through religious military schools supervised by the army to revive religious fervor. Indeed, religious schools (yishivot) play a crucial role in disseminating Talmudic values, influencing the Israeli social and political fabric through their graduates. He also demonstrates the educational role of these institutions and their impact on the political, military, and settlement spheres. The Sanhedrin movement is considered one of the most dangerous movements sponsored by the rabbinates in Israel, because it serves as the authority for Temple organizations and because of its calls for and public support for Jewish incursions into the Al-Aqsa Mosque.

The movement issued a judicial ruling in 2003 permitting these incursions, paving the way for its expansion from an individual movement to a collective one by 2006, leading to the performance of public rituals in the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

As author Maha Shahwan argues in her study "Rabbis, Kingmakers in Israel," if we want to understand how religious Zionism infiltrates and the role of rabbis as a dominant and entrenched force in Israel today, we can see it through its control of politics, the media, the judicial, and security institutions.

According to the author, this influence reflects a major shift in the orientation of religious Zionism, shifting from a focus on religious law to nationalism and the practice of politics. This is evident in prominent figures such as Naftali Bennett previously, and today with Bezalel Smotrich, Itamar Ben-Gvir, and others like them. As Saleh al-Naami points out in an article for Al Jazeera Net, in the military sphere, adherents of Religious Zionism command elite units such as Sayeret Matkal and Egoz, and constitute a significant percentage of combat unit and Shin Bet officers, representing 60% of Shin Bet officers and 40% of combat units.

This influence undoubtedly reflects the power of the rabbis, their roles, and their fatwas, which sometimes override government decisions. A study by Israel's Bar-Ilan University revealed that 90% of religious recruits prefer to obey the rabbis and give them precedence if they conflict with government policy.

For this reason, Israel is witnessing a significant rise in the influence of Religious Zionism, which has become the backbone of coalition governments, exploiting political divisions to strengthen its dominance over security, economic, and legislative decisions. Therefore, religious parties such as Shas and United Torah Judaism strongly influence the formation of governments and elections through rabbinic edicts, as happened when Rabbi Aharon Yehuda Steinman ordered the ultra-Orthodox parties to boycott Benjamin Netanyahu's government in 2014, leading to its collapse. Remarkably, these parties have the ability to impose significant financial and political demands, including funding for religious schools and social institutions, enabling them to bring down governments if their demands are not met, as happened with Ehud Barak's government in 1999 when Shas withdrew due to disagreements over powers and financial support.

This influence reflects the transformation of religious Zionism into a central political force, capable of influencing the stability of governments and directing Israeli policies.

The most prominent example of this is Netanyahu's current alliance with Smotrich and Ben-Gvir, two pillars of the religious Zionist movement and followers of rabbis in Israel. Their continued pressure to displace and reoccupy Gaza, in the process leading to one of Israel's longest-running wars on the Strip, which has lasted more than a year and a half.

The repeated incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque, the accelerated arming of Israelis under Ben-Gvir's auspices in settlement areas in the West Bank, and their public discourse, especially that of Smotrich, about Israel's greater dreams of making Damascus part of Jerusalem, the necessity of annexing Jordan to Israel, and the imminent construction of the Temple on the ruins of Al-Aqsa Mosque, as he explicitly declared in a television interview with Israel's Channel 2. For all these reasons, rabbinic authorities in Israel, such as the Chief Rabbinate, established by Isaac Kook in 1921 under the British Mandate, constitute a dominant spiritual and legal force. They issue religious edicts (halakha) and define Jewish identity according to the Orthodox Jewish vision.

Israeli personal status law has adopted the rabbinic vision; for example, it refuses to recognize the Jewishness of those who convert outside the framework of Orthodox Judaism through civil conversions, as is the case in other countries. Recognition by the Chief Rabbinate is required first.

Deadly Fatwas!

For this reason, rabbinic edicts in Israel are gaining increasing influence, transcending the spiritual framework to influence political and military decisions, relying on inflammatory rhetoric that justifies violence against Palestinians. These edicts are often based on biblical or religious texts and enjoy legal protection that prevents them from being considered incitement, thus strengthening the rabbis' influence in decision-making. An investigation published by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz on December 19, 2015, indicates American support for rabbinic institutions calling for the destruction of Al-Aqsa Mosque and the killing of Arabs. This support is provided by tax exemptions to American Jewish organizations that fund these activities.

The rabbis' influence is centered on their control over religious and educational institutions financially supported by the Israeli government, along with the generous salaries they receive. Through these means, their fatwas (religious edicts) are widely disseminated among Israeli public opinion.

The rabbis' growing influence undoubtedly reflects the transformation of religious Zionism into a major political and social force, as rabbis exploit their role in mobilizing society and justifying the policies of the occupation. Remarkably, the previous investigation published in Haaretz also reveals the connection of these fatwas to schools such as the Rabbi Ginzenberg School, which incites violence. This profound influence is evident in the transformation of fatwas from individual directives into systematic actions that support extremism. In the 2009 book "The King's Doctrine," by Rabbis Yitzhak Shapira and Yossi Elitzur, we see the justification for the killing of "gentiles," including children, under the pretext of protecting Jews. The book asserts that such actions are not subject to state authority. These fatwas, which are disseminated through religious schools in West Bank settlements, have fueled extremist Israeli groups such as the "Hilltop Youth," who carry out organized attacks against Palestinians. Their influence is also evident in other organizations such as Lehava and Elad.


Rabbinical edicts have contributed to the intensification of raids on Al-Aqsa since the Sanhedrin decided to issue this order in 2003, paving the way for public Talmudic prayers by 2006, supported by groups such as the Temple Mount Faithful, which seek to impose Jewish sovereignty over the site.

This shift, described by Haaretz as having an impact on the mechanisms and systems of extremism, reflects the growing role of rabbis in mobilizing religious youth through institutions such as the Od Yossi Vehai seminary in Yitzhar, a hub for highly extremist Israeli organizations.

The extremist positions of many rabbis have been evident in the Gaza War since October 2023, such as the call by Rabbi Eliyahu Mali, head of the Shirat Moshe yeshiva in Jaffa, to kill all residents of Gaza, as we saw. Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu issued a fatwa permitting the killing of women and children in Gaza, arguing that "Jewish law and morality do not prohibit it," as part of what he described as "the extermination of the enemy." Source: Al Jazeera

ARAB AND WORLD

Wed 16 Apr 2025 10:08 am - Jerusalem Time

The US military is preparing to reduce its forces in Syria.

Two US officials confirmed to Reuters that the US military intends to integrate its forces in Syria in the coming weeks and months, a move that could reduce the number of troops deployed there by about half.


Approximately 2,000 US troops are currently stationed in Syria, distributed across several bases, most of which are located in the country's northeast. These forces are participating in supporting local partners with the aim of preventing the resurgence of ISIS, which seized large areas of Syria and Iraq in 2014 before being subsequently defeated.


An official, who preferred to remain anonymous, indicated that this merger could result in a reduction in the number of US forces to only about 1,000.


For his part, another official confirmed the existence of a plan to reduce forces, but expressed doubts about such a large reduction, especially in light of the Trump administration's negotiations with Iran and regional tensions that have seen a US military buildup in the region.


The United States has recently sent aircraft, including B-2 bombers, warships, and air defense systems to bolster its forces in the Middle East.


Meanwhile, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is conducting a global review of US military forces around the world.


The Israeli Broadcasting Authority revealed last January that senior White House officials conveyed a message to their Israeli counterparts indicating Trump's desire to withdraw some of his forces from Syria.


The commission explained that the withdrawal of US forces from Syria would raise grave concerns in Israel and would also impact Kurdish units in Syria.


For years, the United States had said it had approximately 900 troops in Syria, but last December, the Pentagon admitted that the number of these forces had risen to approximately 2,000, concentrated in eastern Syria.


The Washington Post reported that US soldiers are cooperating with Syrian Kurdish forces in a mission aimed at preventing the resurgence of ISIS and limiting Iranian influence in Syria. However, the future of this presence is in doubt because the new Syrian government has expressed its desire to see all foreign forces leave.


It's worth noting that Trump attempted to withdraw all troops from Syria in 2018 during his first term, prompting then-Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis to resign.

ARAB AND WORLD

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:49 am - Jerusalem Time

UN: Israel has killed about 71 civilians in Lebanon since the ceasefire last November.

The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said that Israeli occupation forces have killed at least 71 civilians in Lebanon since the ceasefire came into effect on November 27 of last year.


UNHCR spokesperson Thamin Al-Khaitan said in a statement last night that the victims included 14 women and nine children, and that more than 92,000 people remain displaced.


Al-Khaitan said, "Israeli airstrikes hit a newly constructed medical center in Naqoura, completely destroying it and damaging two ambulances." He added that Israeli airstrikes have also hit several other towns in southern Lebanon this month, killing at least six Lebanese citizens.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:38 am - Jerusalem Time

The Israeli army announces the assassination of the most prominent aide to the commander of Hamas's Gaza Brigade.

The Israeli army announced this morning, Wednesday, the assassination of Mahmoud Abu Hasira, the most prominent aide to the commander of the Hamas Gaza Brigade.

An Israeli military spokesman claimed that Abu Hasira served in an elite unit and participated in the infiltration of the Nahal Oz site during Operation Protective Edge in 2014, which resulted in the deaths of five soldiers.


"Over the past years, throughout the war and also during the preparations for October 7, Abu Hasira served as the personal assistant and right-hand man to the commander of the Gaza Brigade, Izz al-Din al-Haddad," the statement said.




OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:35 am - Jerusalem Time

No to a renewed authority in the Israeli-American sense...and for the Palestinian people it means an independent state.

  Fawzi Ali Al-Samhouri

Fawzi Ali Al-Samhouri

Opinion Writer

Reform, which signifies progress and development that achieves strength, power, prosperity, well-being, and a free and dignified life, is a demand and a historical tradition for individuals, nations, and peoples. Whoever lags behind in the path of reform condemns himself, his society, and his country to backwardness and weakness. Therefore, reform, in our understanding, is part of human nature, and therefore requires confronting the challenges that stand, or may stand, as an obstacle to achieving our goals as peoples and governments.

In the previous article, I spoke about the lack of concern for the goals and meanings of the reform required from the Palestinian leadership and about the concept of renewed authority by the United States of America, its tool, the Israeli colonial entity, and their axis.

Despite the above, and by nature, this does not mean in any way hesitation, slowness, indolence, fighting corruption if it exists, or betting on others in addressing the challenges and obstacles that hinder the progress of the reform process that leads to achieving the goals of the Palestinian people’s struggle, the vanguard of the Arab people, at the forefront of which are freedom, independence, and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital, and enabling the Palestinian refugees to return to their cities and villages from which they were forcibly expelled in 1948, after a series of brutal, bloody massacres and the destruction of hundreds of Palestinian villages and towns committed by Zionist Jewish gangs with the support, empowerment, and participation of the British colonial forces.

In the Palestinian case, the desired and self-required reforms differ from the challenges facing any country’s reform process. Among the challenges are:

First: The Palestinian people are threatened by their very existence on their homeland. The Israeli-American goal, the title of the colonial powers, is to uproot the Palestinian people from their historical homeland. The continuation of the Israeli colonial occupation authorities and their refusal to end their occupation of the occupied territories of the State of Palestine, which is internationally recognized by virtue of UN General Assembly Resolutions 181 and 19/67/2012, in implementation of dozens of resolutions issued by the Security Council, the General Assembly, and the International Court of Justice, is nothing but the most important title.

Second: Israeli control over the joints of Palestinian sovereign decisions (elections, air, land, and sea crossings, natural and non-natural resources, water, movement, security, the economy, and others).

Third: The interventions of Arab and regional regimes in the Palestinian issue, directly or through proxies, either to exploit the Palestinian issue as a card that serves their regime and justifies their oppression of their people, or to serve the Israeli-American project that aims to liquidate the Palestinian issue by undermining the Palestinian people’s right to freedom, independence, self-determination and the establishment of their independent state, and by abolishing the right of return for Palestinian refugees, as it represents a fundamental pillar in the conflict with the global Zionist movement.

Fourth: Transforming the Palestinian issue from the issue of a people struggling for freedom, independence and the establishment of their independent state by all internationally guaranteed means into a humanitarian and livelihood issue. The collusion, under various pretexts that lack logic, in an attempt to undermine the Palestinian legitimacy that holds onto the Palestinian constants represented by the Palestine Liberation Organization, the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, which it has seized at all regional and international levels with the support and rallying of the Palestinian people inside and outside the occupied territories around its national struggle strategy, which was and still is a major obstacle to moving to the next aggressive expansionist phase of the Israeli-American project to subject the Arab region to its hegemony for decades to come, starting with Palestine and by exerting pressure on Arab countries to push them to practically abandon their support for the struggle and steadfastness of the Palestinian people in their homeland. The drying up of the financial capabilities of the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Authority, the civil executive body concerned with managing the civil affairs of the Palestinian people inside the occupied territories, and participating with good or bad intentions, is nothing but an example of targeting and pressure to subjugate the Palestinian national will to steadfastness and push them to leave their homeland in the context of the ethnic cleansing war that we are currently witnessing in the Gaza Strip.

In light of the Palestinian strategy approved by the Palestinian National Council with the participation of all Palestinian forces within the framework of the Palestine Liberation Organization and approved implicitly and practically by forces outside the framework of the Organization and the institutions of the Palestine Liberation Organization to establish an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital on the borders of June 4, 1967, Palestinian reform, that is, taking all measures and procedures to put the Palestinian house in order in a way that strengthens the unity and struggle of the Palestinian people, “taking into account the large gaps in the balance of power with the Israeli enemy,” by all available legal, popular and political means, with Arab, Islamic and African support, and from the Non-Aligned Movement and all friendly countries of the world that believe in the values of justice, freedom and equality and in the right of all peoples of the world to self-determination and decolonization, has become urgent in confronting and confronting the Israeli-American conspiracy that targets all Palestinians as a prelude to targeting Arab and Islamic national security in its comprehensive concept:

▪︎ Strengthening the independent Palestinian decision, and what this requires in terms of rejecting all forms of political, financial and economic pressures, regardless of their source or objectives, that undermine the rights of the Palestinian people, their struggle, their determination and their will to pursue their national project towards freedom, independence and the establishment of their independent state with Jerusalem as its capital.

▪︎ Strengthening Palestinian legitimacy represented by the Palestine Liberation Organization to remove the pretexts of the artificial Israeli entity and those who support it for not ending its occupation of the Palestinian territories in implementation of international resolutions related to the Palestinian issue. The political and geographical division that followed the military decision carried out by Hamas in the Gaza Strip has become an urgent national demand to end the political and geographical divisions, freeze all forms of internal disputes, and unite around the interim goal approved by the Palestinian National Council in 1974, and confirmed by the rest of the sessions to establish the Palestinian state in accordance with international resolutions.

▪︎ Developing an action strategy that can be implemented immediately. This requires all factions and forces to assume their executive responsibilities in accordance with the comprehensive strategic vision by mobilizing all forms of political and economic capabilities to confront the forced displacement conspiracy and confront the crimes of settlers by forming popular committees throughout cities, villages, and neighborhoods to protect civilians and their property, strengthening their steadfastness.

▪︎ Forming a working group to communicate with global and regional powers and blocs to exert all forms of pressure on the Security Council to carry out its duties and compel the Israeli colonial occupation authorities to implement the resolutions issued by the General Assembly, noting that the General Assembly’s resolutions are binding and not merely decorative, and in accordance with the United Nations Charter, which stipulates that the Security Council acts as an agent for the General Assembly in implementing its resolutions and recommendations without duplication or selectivity.

The reform we seek is one based on strengthening the steadfastness and struggle of the Palestinian people and the free choice of their leaders in accordance with the Charter of the Palestine Liberation Organization until the end of the Israeli colonial occupation of the territories of the occupied and internationally recognized Palestinian state. Then, free democratic elections will be held in an independent state that will produce, by popular will, the leadership of the independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital.

As for the renewed authority, it does not mean anything to the Palestinian people inside and outside the occupied territories except an independent state, and it is not the renewed authority that means to the Americans and Israelis acceptance of the Israeli-American plan to deprive the Palestinian people of establishing their independent state and liquidate the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their cities and villages from which they were forcibly expelled in 1948.

As for good governance, its first components are freedom, independence, and liberation from the yoke of the racist, terrorist Israeli colonizer.

The first thing America should do, from its position as a world leader and a country that claims to be committed to consolidating international peace and security and upholding the values of democracy and human rights, is to compel Israel to end its occupation of the occupied Palestinian and Arab territories and to take punitive measures against the leaders of the artificial Israeli entity for threatening international peace and security. It should also end relations with a government some of whose ministers call for bombing the Palestinian people with nuclear weapons and support a government headed by a person who is being tried on charges of corruption, war crimes and genocide before the International Criminal Court. This is because of the repercussions this has on America’s standing on the international stage, leading to the international isolation of its policy.

The Palestine Liberation Organization will remain the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, who refuse to have their will confiscated or placed under tutelage, regardless of the names and titles they bear.

OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:34 am - Jerusalem Time

When the world promotes hope for Mars and ignores the genocide of Palestine

Fadi Abu Bakr

Fadi Abu Bakr

Opinion Writer

As scientists race to expand the boundaries of life beyond Earth, and companies like Estonian UP Catalyst are converting carbon dioxide into useful materials on Mars, one would think that humanity is confidently moving toward a brighter future. New technologies have recently been announced that promise the possibility of building life in space, as if the world is beginning to confidently move toward the dream of cosmic colonization.

However, on this same planet, and in a small patch of land called Palestine, it seems that the land no longer holds its inhabitants. There, science is not being invented to protect life, but rather the war machine is adept at ending it. In light of the ongoing war of extermination targeting the Palestinian people, Palestinians are bitterly wondering: Will Mars be the next place of exile? While American and Israeli statements toss around "solutions" such as displacement to Jordan, Egypt, or even African countries, it may not be unlikely that tomorrow we will hear about a plan to deport Palestinians into space.

Yes, perhaps this is the next step in their quest to transform barbarism into a policy that not only violates terrestrial law but also extends beyond the planet's borders. While the world promotes settlement projects on Mars, the Palestinians continue to fight for existence on their land, the land they have inhabited for centuries and where they are crushed daily in the name of the "right to self-defense."

In Gaza, even the pillow is not spared from the war of extermination. It is snatched from under a child's head before he dreams. In the West Bank, the scene of the settler who cuts off livelihoods, and the occupation soldier who slits throats, has become a familiar reality that is met with nothing but complicit silence. As for Jerusalem, the heart of the story and the cradle of pain, sanctities are raped, stones are Judaized, and people are oppressed in their religion, livelihood, and affiliation, amid shameful global disregard, or a blatant bias toward the narrative of the strong. It is as if the world has decided to make daily killing a normal, even legitimate, scene under the pretext of the "right to self-defense," even if this "defender" possesses planes and tanks, while the victim has nothing but his voice and his dreams, which are threatened every day.

The world—or whoever controls its destinies—has decided to make murder a normal, even legitimate, spectacle, justified in the name of "security," even if the aggressor wields tanks and aircraft, and the victim has nothing but his voice and his threatened dreams. In this inverted reality, talk of "human rights" becomes hollow rhetoric, invoked only when it serves the interests of the powerful, while justice is frozen when the victim is Palestinian.

Today, the world is governed by the logic of power; the strong possess the right, while the weak are stripped even of the right to survive. Power is no longer a means of maintaining security; it has become a standard of justice and a condition for survival. Here, the Palestinian question becomes an eternal one:

How long will we carry our shrouds on our way to life?

How long do we wait for justice that never comes, and for a tomorrow that never comes?

Despite this prolonged oppression, the Palestinian has only one weapon: the word.

The word that testifies, documents, and exposes.

The word that keeps truth alive in the face of falsehood, and protects hope from extinction.

The word that says to the world:

The world may be silent today, but history has no mercy on killers... nor does it erase the memory of victims.

OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:33 am - Jerusalem Time

Where are the morals of the world? A year and a half of hunger and death!

Ismail Muslimmani

Ismail Muslimmani

Opinion Writer

Gaza, that tiny speck on the map, holds within it stories of pain and resilience. In every corner, you can find scenes that embody the suffering of a people living under a stifling siege. Children play among the rubble, smiling despite the destruction, as if declaring to the world that life is stronger than death. Mothers bear their sorrows in silence, while fathers search for a living amid empty markets and long lines for water and food.

At night, Gaza turns into a canvas of horror, as the sound of aircraft and bombing dominates the scene. Children do not sleep, and fear becomes a constant companion. Yet, in Gaza, you find indomitable strength, as its people build new dreams from the rubble of their homes and plant hope in the hearts of their children.

Gaza is not just a place, but a symbol of resilience and dignity. It teaches us that hope can be born from suffering, and that dignity is not measured by circumstances, but by an unbreakable will. Gaza will always and forever remain a beacon of resilience and a symbol of honor and dignity.

Where are the morals of the world? A year and a half of hunger and death!

A year and a half has passed, and the bloodshed continues. Children are dying of hunger, mothers are screaming in darkness without electricity, and cities are being bombed until they are wiped off the maps. Every day a new question is born, but the biggest one remains unanswered: Where are the morals of the world?

Where are those resonant slogans about "human rights," "international justice," and "global conscience"? Why does the world remain silent in the face of massacres, watch famines, and do nothing in the face of the siege and slow strangulation of an entire people?

Why this silence? Why this blind bias?

Is a person's humanity now measured by their passport, their skin color, or the direction of their political compass?

The world doesn't suffer from a lack of data, but rather a lack of compassion. Organizations know, see, and document, but action is absent.

The global media has its lenses, but it chooses the angle that serves its interests. When murder becomes a common sight, people lose their humanity. When moral values are measured on the scale of profit and loss, silence becomes a crime.

Here, talking about "poor conditions" is not enough, nor are "statements of concern" exonerating anyone. A year and a half of international silence on the starvation of civilians, the bombing of hospitals, and the deprivation of people from electricity and medicine... This is not just a political failure, but a moral downfall. We are not waiting for pity... We demand justice. A person dying of hunger does not need the tears of conferences, but rather a piece of bread.

Those buried under the rubble are not concerned with unimplemented decisions; they just need a safe life. How long will the global conscience remain postponed?

How long will the world remain civilized in appearance, yet savage in its silence? History will never forget this disgrace. And living peoples, even if they starve... will never forgive those who colluded through their silence.

Gaza is not just a place on the world map; it is a story written with the blood of its sons, the dreams of its children, and the patience of its women and men. It is a symbol of unbreakable resilience, even in the face of the most harsh conditions. In every corner of Gaza, you find stories that pulsate with life despite death, telling of a people who refuse to be defeated. Scenes of resilience and tragedy in Gaza

Endless Destruction: The destroyed buildings are not just structures; they represent the history, dreams, and future their inhabitants were supposed to build. Among the rubble, you will find torn school books, broken children's toys, and shattered family photos.

The faces of grieving mothers: Every mother carries in her eyes stories of loss and pain, yet she perseveres to be a source of hope for her children. The strength of Gaza's mothers is a testament to a will that cannot be crushed.

Children between life and death: Children in Gaza are not just numbers in war reports; they are heroes, carrying dreams greater than the reality they face. You will find them playing amidst the rubble, making toys out of nothing, and smiling despite fear and hunger.

Night in Gaza is not a time for rest, but rather a new chapter of horror. The sounds of aircraft and bombing make sleep impossible, and fear becomes a part of every family's daily routine. Yet, families gather in dark rooms, talking about hope and a possible better tomorrow.


OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:32 am - Jerusalem Time

Destroy the destroyer and bomb the bombed

Baha Rahal

Baha Rahal

Opinion Writer

The planes returned to bomb the Baptist Hospital in Gaza for a second time, to confirm the approach of terrorism, genocide and the crushing of everything, from people, trees and stones. After the occupation forces bombed the Baptist Hospital, committing a major, hideous massacre on October 17, 2023, which resulted in more than 500 martyrs and hundreds of wounded and injured, they returned and bombed it a second time to erase the features of the oldest hospital in the Gaza Strip, which was founded in 1882.

The annihilation of everything in Gaza, the erasure of landmarks and sites in a complete purification of geography, the erasure of history, and the continuation of mass killing, not only as a war crime, but as a systematic policy, implemented by the occupation machine with the highest levels of brutality according to racist Nazi plans, without accountability or deterrence, and in full view of the world that sees and witnesses the most horrific massacres and does not move to stop the ongoing slaughter, while the people of Gaza are subjected to continuous bombing, and death by bombing and starvation.

The Baptist Hospital, this venerable medical facility that has served the people of Gaza for more than a century, was not a military site, nor did it pose any threat. Rather, it was a shelter for the wounded, for children, women, and the elderly who fled the flames of war in search of a safe haven. But the killing machine, merciless and persistent, confirmed at every moment that "there is no safe place in Gaza."

The second bombing of the hospital wasn't just a targeting of the building itself. It was an attack on people's memories, obliterating the place and all its vestiges of hope in an attempt to rebuild the ruins. The repeated targeting exposes the ongoing genocidal intent and confirms that this aggression is not a reaction or a military operation to free hostages, as the government of murder and terror claims. Rather, it is a systematic cleansing aimed at perpetuating the genocide, obstructing all understandings brokered by mediators.

Amidst this bloody scene, the world stands helpless, complicit, or content with cold diplomatic statements, while children die under the rubble, women and the elderly lie in the open, and the wounded bleed to death for lack of hospitals or doctors.

The genocide in Gaza continues, and people are homeless, without food, and without hospitals capable of providing treatment. The blockade continues and the suffering intensifies. Who will lift this injustice, this death and killing? Who will stop the genocide? It is a vile world, and its silence is a stain on humanity. How long will this silence continue? This blindness that ignores the massacres, slaughter, genocide, and ethnic cleansing?

OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:31 am - Jerusalem Time

The battle of Gaza was not decided by victory or defeat.

Hamada Faraana

Hamada Faraana

Opinion Writer

Despite the nearing of a new Palestinian-Israeli prisoner exchange deal, due to Egyptian-Qatari mediation, American pressure and desire, and the needs of both sides of the conflict: Hamas versus the colony, due to internal pressures on their decision-makers:


Hamas: 1- Its need to stop the liquidation, assassination and persecution of its military and political leaders, 2- The suffering of its people and its popular base that has endured the unbearable, and the inability of Arabic vocabulary to describe the suffering of the people of Gaza from: ethnic cleansing, genocide, human liquidation, making the Gaza Strip unfit for life, Nakba, tragedy, catastrophe, 3- Its need and desire to remain in the leadership position in the Palestinian political scene, and to remain the decision maker in the Gaza Strip towards confrontation or towards calm, or towards settlement and management.


The Israeli colony has: 1- Demonstrations and protests by the families of prisoners, which find solidarity and support from various segments, and are expanding to include other segments, even if they have not yet reached the point of creating a dangerous situation for the government’s survival and the continuity of its work. 2- Signed petitions announced by influential leaders, demanding an agreement to release prisoners, whatever the price, through a ceasefire and its procedural repercussions, especially by pilots, retired security chiefs, workers in the army’s medical health system, and other segments, indicating a shift from an issue related to the families of prisoners to a broader issue that includes: 1- The families of soldiers who were killed in the war, without political benefits. 2- The families of soldiers who have been in compulsory reserve service for a year and a half, and others.


The Israeli hesitation and lack of urgency that led to the decision not to agree to a ceasefire are due to:

1- Netanyahu's personal interest in prolonging the war because he has not achieved its goals so far, and is consolidating the preliminaries of his failure and failure, may lead to his defeat, and then the formation of an investigation committee that will end with his trial on the basis of "negligence." Therefore, he has been working and hoping since the beginning of the second phase of launching his reckless and insane war on 3/18/2025, in the hope of changing the picture and the results from a state of failure and failure to a state of success and victory.


2- The position of his allies, the leaders of the parties participating in the government, especially Ben-Gvir and Smotrich, is driven by extremist ideological motives, firstly to end any bet on Palestinian survival that would lead to a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip. This explains the attack on the West Bank camps and Al-Aqsa Mosque, and the war of killing and destruction in the Gaza Strip. It is also driven by motives to prevent the failure of the government coalition leading the battle, the results and repercussions of which will affect the parliamentary elections and their entitlements next year, 2026.


The results of the battle, the attack, and the confrontations did not decide one party's fate over the other. The failure and failure were the colonizer's, despite their reoccupation of the entire Gaza Strip. However, they were unable to locate the Israeli prisoners and release them without a prisoner exchange. They were also unable to end and eliminate the Palestinian resistance, despite the scale of the killing and assassination of important military and political leaders.


The resistance has held out so far, but it has been unable to deliver painful blows to the enemy that would force it to cease fire and withdraw from the Gaza Strip. This would mean its defeat and the victory of the resistance, and this has not yet been achieved.

Therefore, the political battle has not been resolved with victory or defeat for either side, because the confrontation and war on the ground and in the field have not yet settled their results and are still ongoing. This explains the intensity and ferocity of the Israeli attack, so that it does not end in the defeat of the enemy, which is still facing failure and setback.

OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:26 am - Jerusalem Time

Trump is heading toward a national disaster.

Alon Ben-Meir

Alon Ben-Meir

Opinion Writer

Trump's shortsightedness and cruelty have caused more damage to the United States, both domestically and internationally, than all his predecessors combined. The Republican Party has lost its moral compass and its bedrock and will pay a heavy price for enabling Trump, who has brought America to the brink of national disaster.


America is at a historic crossroads. Disaster lurks in the shadows. There is no doubt of any benefit, no salvation in wishful thinking, and no escape from the danger that awaits America unless Trump is reined in. His vicious assault on our institutions is unparalleled, his alienation of our allies is unfathomable, and his betrayal of his oath of office and abuse of power is ominous. Trump must be stopped. The Republican Party must be held accountable for enabling a criminal to destroy America as we know it.


The presidency has granted Trump the greatest power, exceeding that of any other person on earth. But that's not enough to quell his excessive arrogance, as his thirst for more power is insatiable. Tyranny runs in his blood, and bullying is what satisfies his fantasy of absolute power, which he delights in exercising with ferocity and vengeance.


Despite its many mistakes, America has remained a beacon of hope with its human resources and limitless wealth, a destination for dreamers who aspire to freedom, peace, growth, prosperity, and the promise of a better and brighter tomorrow.


Imagine what Trump could do with America's immense power for the good of the American people and humanity. He could build on America's greatness, but that's not in his DNA. Instead, he's digging up everything that makes America unique, what made it the undisputed global leader, without any plan or idea for improving things, something he claims he alone can achieve.


He violates the sacred constitutional right to free speech by punishing universities that allow their students to demonstrate against the Gaza massacre, and he violates the constitutional rights of students legally residing in the United States. He also punishes the law firms whose lawyers represented the government in lawsuits against him by barring them from entering federal buildings, thereby violating the law and denouncing justice. At the same time, he challenges the constitutional authority of the court, ignoring the principle of the separation of powers, which is the foundation of American democracy.


The Republicans' silence in the face of Trump's blatant abuses will not be forgotten, even by those who put them in power.

Trump appears to be planning to cut Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare, which provide a lifeline to millions of Americans. By what measure can one measure the monstrousness and cruelty of these illegal and contemptible cuts? Denying health care and cutting Social Security to the elderly, who desperately need it, and giving it to the wealthy is not only a grave mistake,

Rather, it is a complete moral bankruptcy for the Republican Party to remain silent in the face of this farce.


Trump has frozen funding for dozens of scientific and research institutions, disrupting vital medical, environmental, and social research while simultaneously undermining academic freedom and innovation in the American scientific community, forcing many young scientists to consider leaving and continue their research abroad. America's world-class scientific leadership will be irreparably damaged while Republicans do nothing.


In addition to the general deportation of thousands of undocumented immigrants, Trump deported 238 Venezuelan immigrants, some of whom were legal residents with protected status in the United States, to a notorious prison in El Salvador, accusing them of gang membership without due process and without allowing them to challenge the charges against them. Many of the allegations are based on flimsy or dubious evidence, leading to their detention in a prison where they are subjected to systematic abuse, torture, and inhumane conditions.


No courageous Republican leader rose to question the illegality and inhumanity of these brazen acts.

Exploiting political polarization, Trump uses every sinister means to sow division among the American people. He promotes ideological purity within the Republican Party while demonizing Democrats as existential threats. He amplifies white nationalist rhetoric and targets minorities, particularly Muslims, Latinos, and African Americans.


Moreover, Trump blames immigrants for economic and social problems, reinforcing an "us versus them" rhetoric. He incites working-class groups to fight each other based on race or legal status. He undermines democratic norms by supporting actions such as the January 6 attack on the Capitol to deepen distrust in electoral systems. He also attacks traditional media outlets to undermine trust by labeling them "fake news" while promoting conspiracy theories.


No Republican of any stature warned that Trump was causing irreparable damage to the American social fabric and tearing the country apart.


How can one explain Trump's shameful act of canceling one of the most successful trade agreements between the United States, Mexico, and Canada (USMCA), which he signed in January 2020, and then imposing a 25% tariff on both countries, citing concerns about illegal immigration and drug trafficking?


In an unprecedented move, Trump imposed unilateral tariffs on approximately 90 countries, clearly representing an additional tax on American consumers. Furthermore, this is disrupting the global economy in an unprecedented way, as tariffs reduce trade and investment, causing economic growth to decline. They also raise production costs, weaken consumer demand, and increase the likelihood of a global recession due to the escalating trade war. This will impact all sectors of the economy, forcing companies to restructure their operations. Reciprocal tariffs on American goods by most countries will alarmingly exacerbate trade tensions and harm American exports.


Trump shamelessly backed down on Wednesday, suspending his original plan for 90 days and reducing tariffs on all affected countries to 10% after several countries, including his allies, planned to impose retaliatory tariffs (with the exception of China, which he imposed a 125% tariff on). For him, the global turmoil he had recklessly precipitated was nothing more than a game that led to a disturbing loss of confidence in the United States and sowed uncertainty and chaos in the global market.


But Republicans who once cheered for free trade are now cheering Trump's disastrous trade war and destroying America's economic leadership.

Trump's treatment of European allies has crossed all boundaries and been marked by divisive actions. He has questioned the effectiveness of NATO's collective defense, alienated European leaders with public criticism, and happily aligned himself with Russia—America's arch-rival—to weaken the transatlantic alliance, all while promoting far-right nationalist movements in Europe.


Where are the Republicans who stood shoulder to shoulder with our European allies, with whom we have flourished and formed the bedrock of Western security?


One of the most disturbing steps is Trump's disgraceful treatment of our European neighbors and allies. How else can we explain Trump's shameful pleasure in humiliating Ukrainian President Zelensky before the eyes of the entire world? The leader of a country invaded by Trump's friend, Putin, who inflicted hundreds of thousands of deaths and massive destruction on an American ally.

But let the brave Republicans, who have previously overwhelmingly supported American political and military support for our allies, remain silent.


Alas, how despicable is it to even think, let alone declare, that Canada should become the 51st state? Or to seize Greenland, the Panama Canal, Gaza, and anything else on Trump's shopping list as if they were mere real estate transactions? Do the majority of Republicans—who support this ludicrous land grab—realize the horrific implications for America's image and global standing?


The moral decay of the Republican Party has now seeped into every layer of its ranks. No Republican leader, whether at the federal, state, or local level, will escape accountability for their betrayal of America's moral values and the undermining of its cherished democracy. They are sacrificing America's greatness to serve a selfish criminal who has sold out the country on the altar of his own ego and unbridled lust for power.

Judgment day is near and the Republicans who enabled Trump will pay the price.

OPINIONS

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:24 am - Jerusalem Time

Palestinian camps and the Israeli-American war on UNRWA

Dr. Hassan Brijia

Dr. Hassan Brijia

Opinion Writer

The issue of Palestinian camps and the Israeli and American war on UNRWA is considered one of the most dangerous issues discussed in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict throughout the history of contemporary struggle, not only in terms of the humanitarian and living dimensions, but also in terms of political and strategic exploitation, as the Palestinian camps, as a political and national symbol:

Since the Nakba of 1948, Palestinian camps have been a symbol of refuge and deprivation. At the same time, they have also become a permanent historical witness to the crime of forced displacement perpetrated against the Palestinian people. Their presence in the West Bank, Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan represents a constant reminder of the right of return, making them a strategic burden on the falsified Israeli historical narrative, which seeks to permanently close the refugee file and cement it in the political memory of the international community.


UNRWA is not just a relief agency; it is the only international entity that legally recognizes the existence of Palestinian refugees and their right of return. Israel and the United States view UNRWA's continued operations as a long-term political and existential threat to Israel, as it undermines its attempts to impose the narrative that the "refugee issue has ended." Both have waged a systematic campaign against it for years, including funding cuts, diplomatic incitement, and repeated accusations of supporting "terrorism."


In security and political contexts, Israel uses the camps as a pretext for military operations under the pretext of "fighting the resistance's infrastructure." It also exploits the conditions of overcrowding and poverty to justify its actions before the international community. More importantly, however, in a broader sense, is its political exploitation of the war against UNRWA in particular, in order to redefine the identity of the Palestinian refugee. This is achieved through political and economic pressure on host countries to integrate refugees into their societies and revoke their legal status as Palestinian refugees.


Weakening or dismantling UNRWA would not only deprive millions of Palestinians of education, healthcare, and basic aid, but it would also be a step in a systematic process to revoke Resolution 194 on the right of return. It would also constitute a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law, which obligates the occupying power to protect civilians in the occupied territories, especially in the absence of an effective international alternative to UNRWA.


The international community is called upon to fortify UNRWA politically and financially and reject Israeli attempts to liquidate it. At the Palestinian level, a strategic vision is needed to transform the camps from weak points into elements of resistance to erasure, by strengthening national identity and creating a documented and convincing legal discourse on the international stage.


Therefore, the Israeli attack on UNRWA and targeting of the camps is not merely a security endeavor, but rather a political project to liquidate the right of return and dismantle one of the last legal constants and pillars of the Palestinian cause. The required response must be a combination of national legal fortification, media documentation, active diplomacy, and broad public diplomacy.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:16 am - Jerusalem Time

A French initiative to stop the war on Gaza in exchange for that..!

France is leading diplomatic efforts to formulate a comprehensive agreement that includes a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, the release of Israeli prisoners, and a full Israeli withdrawal from the Strip, in exchange for normalizing relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia. This agreement does not require Israel to explicitly declare its support for the establishment of a Palestinian state.


This came according to what Haaretz reported on Tuesday evening, which stated that the French vision also includes the establishment of a mechanism that guarantees Israel the ability to carry out military operations in Gaza "when necessary," similar to the US-French monitoring mechanism in place in Lebanon following the war.


In this context, the newspaper reported that France and "other international parties" are holding talks with Egypt about the possibility of the latter receiving a number of Gaza Strip residents for a "limited" period during the reconstruction phase. In exchange, Cairo would receive economic incentives, including a partial write-off of its foreign debt and an expanded role in the Gaza Strip's reconstruction process.


According to the report, Paris aims to formulate an understanding that satisfies Saudi Arabia on the one hand, and allows the current Israeli government to engage in the process without a clear obligation to establish a Palestinian state. France is working "through public and secret diplomatic channels" with countries such as Turkey, Iran, and Egypt to advance the issue of prisoner release, which Paris considers a "top priority," as a first step within the initiative.


According to the newspaper, France views the release of prisoners and the expansion of humanitarian aid as a prerequisite for a comprehensive ceasefire. The newspaper quoted Macron's advisor on Israeli-Palestinian affairs, Ofer Bronstein, as saying that the French president is in almost daily contact with regional leaders, including Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad, and UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed.


He stated that Paris is also working through direct and indirect channels in Egypt, Turkey, and Iran to help complete a prisoner exchange deal, which France considers a necessary first step to calm the situation and open the door to political progress.


Bronstein also emphasized that his country seeks to reach a formula that reconciles Saudi interests on the one hand and the positions of the current Israeli government on the other, particularly regarding the possibility of normalization without Tel Aviv making any actual concessions regarding recognition of a Palestinian state.


The French president's advisor said that Paris' vision includes recognition of a Palestinian state by a number of countries, along with recognition of Israel by Saudi Arabia and other Islamic countries.


He declined to disclose the names of the countries with which France is in contact on this matter, but listed a number of countries that he said "have approached this in the past and could be pushed further in the future," including, he said, "Mauritania, Qatar, Indonesia, and Malaysia."


Earlier on Tuesday, French President Emmanuel Macron and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a phone call, during which Macron expressed hope for a decision within the "nearing hours" allowing the resumption of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip.


Macron urged Netanyahu to "release more hostages," according to a post on his official Twitter account. Paris plans to hold an international conference in New York next June, in partnership with Saudi Arabia, to advance this proposal based on "progress towards a two-state solution."

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 9:09 am - Jerusalem Time

Jenin: Israeli special forces storm Qabatiya and surround a house.

Israeli occupation forces stormed the town of Qabatiya, south of Jenin, on Wednesday morning and surrounded a house.


According to Al-Quds' correspondent in Jenin, Israeli special forces infiltrated the town in Palestinian vehicles and surrounded a house near the Engineers' Housing.


Local sources reported that these forces fired sound bombs at the besieged house, amid intense air traffic in the airspace.

In this context, Al-Quds' correspondent in Jenin reported that other Israeli special forces infiltrated the village of Masla, south of Jenin, coinciding with the shooting.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 8:59 am - Jerusalem Time

Israel escalates its bombing of the Gaza Strip, and Netanyahu confirms the continuation of military operations.

The Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip has been ongoing since March 18, following the collapse of a fragile truce that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quickly reneged on. He then resumed a policy of all-out war, including genocide, displacement, the suspension of humanitarian aid, and the closure of crossings. This comes in the context of an ongoing aggression that has lasted for nearly 17 months.


On Wednesday, the Israeli army expanded its military operations in the central Gaza Strip, bombing a number of residential homes east of Gaza City. It also issued warnings to displaced Palestinians at the Fatima Bint Asad School in the town of Jabalia, north of the Strip, urging them to evacuate the building ahead of its bombing.


On the 30th day of the resumption of military operations, the Qassam Brigades announced the loss of contact with the group responsible for capturing American soldier Idan Alexander, following a bombardment carried out by the Israeli army. For its part, the US administration affirmed that finding Alexander was a top priority for President Donald Trump.


Regarding political efforts, a Hamas leader stated that the recent negotiations in Cairo had yielded no results, stressing that the proposal put forward during the round was completely rejected by all factions.


He added that the proposal included unacceptable conditions, most notably the disarmament of the resistance, without any real guarantees for ending the war or withdrawing the occupation forces from the Gaza Strip.


In the same context, during his visit to the northern Gaza Strip accompanied by Defense Minister Yisrael Katz and Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir, Netanyahu vowed to continue strikes against Hamas, stressing that the military campaign would continue.


On the humanitarian front, the director of Gaza's hospitals warned of a severe fuel crisis, noting that the available supplies are not sufficient for more than two weeks. The Ministry of Health in Gaza explained that health services are being provided amid a severe shortage of medicines and medical supplies, which is hindering medical teams from performing emergency interventions to treat the wounded.


Meanwhile, reactions continued within Israel regarding popular petitions opposing the continuation of the war and demanding the completion of the exchange deal and the return of all abductees, with the number of signatories exceeding 100,000.


Haaretz reported that the Israeli army has reduced the number of reserve forces and their call-ups, amid indications of a real crisis within the reserve ranks, one that exceeds what is officially announced. In this context, Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir stressed that he would not allow disagreements to infiltrate the army.

PALESTINE

Wed 16 Apr 2025 8:49 am - Jerusalem Time

Our workers after October 7... uninterrupted bleeding causing an economic crisis.

Shaher Saad: More than half a million Palestinian workers are unemployed after October 7, with losses exceeding 25 billion shekels.

Mohamed Al-Balidi: Domestic workers enjoyed a degree of economic stability and believed that their work would continue without interruption.

Mahmoud Ziyada: The absence of a national social protection system exacerbated workers' suffering after October 7 and threatens social protection.

Jihad Aql: A worker who is unable to provide for his family suffers a psychological and social breakdown, which increases social crises within the family and society.



Since October 7, 2023, nearly a quarter of a million Palestinian workers who worked within the Green Line have faced a harsh living reality after their sources of income were suddenly cut off.


According to workers and union officials interviewed by Al-Quds, the ongoing war and Israeli restrictions on work permits have brought this vital sector, once considered a pillar of the Palestinian economy, to a near-complete standstill. This has exacerbated the suffering of workers, who find themselves trapped between unemployment and poverty, without any real social protection.


In heartbreaking testimonies from several Palestinian governorates, workers recount how their lives collapsed in just a few months. They lost their jobs, their source of income, and even their savings, and were forced to borrow or sell essential assets to secure their families' needs. Many confirmed that the crisis has affected every aspect of their lives, from education and health to housing, amid a lack of an effective response from official bodies and trade unions.


Figures released by trade unions reflect the scale of the disaster, with the number of unemployed exceeding half a million, and economic losses amounting to more than 25 billion shekels.


Despite some limited initiatives, the vast majority of affected workers have not received any tangible support, at a time when calls are growing for a comprehensive social protection system that guarantees a minimum level of human dignity for this group, which was once the backbone of the national economy, according to union officials.


Domestic workers... great suffering


Alaa al-Ghoul, a displaced person from Nour Shams camp, recounts his suffering since October 7, 2023. Alaa, who spent 14 years working in painting, decorating, and construction work within the Green Line, suddenly found himself unemployed, homeless, and without any source of income.


Alaa says, "I had a regular job at a company. My job was specialized in painting and decorating. I would go every day with a permit from the company and return in the evening. My daily income was 350 shekels, which allowed me to cover the basic necessities of life, such as building a house, educating my children, and buying a car. We lived a stable life like everyone else."


But according to Alaa, everything changed after the war. Work came to a complete standstill, and unemployment became a collective fate, causing great suffering for workers and increasing the suffering of workers who were displaced from their camps.


Alaa, whose home in Nour Shams camp was destroyed by the occupation forces, now lives in a shelter. He says, "I'm unemployed and have no income. We spent what we had saved, and we even borrowed money, accumulating debts. The situation has caused us significant psychological stress."


Lack of support from the Ministry of Labor and unions


Despite promises from official authorities, neither Alaa nor any other affected workers received any tangible support, according to Alaa. "We contacted the former minister and the current minister, but we received no response. They withdrew our workers' insurance and granted us unemployment insurance, but we were not compensated for the damages."


Alaa confirms that street stalls have increased, and finding work has become almost impossible. He says, "The economy now relies solely on employees. There are no salaries paid, and no work is done domestically. We, as workers, used to provide support to the economy and provide for our own basic needs. But now we've lost everything."


Alaa calls on the Ministry of Labor and labor unions to take immediate action, saying, "We have been appealing for a year and eight months without any response. They must assume their responsibilities. Even if the assistance is small, it makes a difference. If they cannot support us financially, let them help us by coordinating with institutions to postpone university payments or health, water, and electricity bills."


Alaa adds, "Why aren't displaced workers supported and assisted? Why aren't they provided with urgent aid? This is a humanitarian and moral duty before it is a national responsibility."


From the town of Yatta, south of Hebron, Suleiman Harizat, a worker who worked inside the Green Line, recounts the harsh transformation in his life after October 7, 2023. Suleiman, who used to work in construction,


"The minimum monthly income for any worker inside was 10,000 shekels," Harizat says. "Today, a worker cannot bring in even 10 shekels!"


"I was paid 500 shekels a day, but we had huge obligations, from permit costs to building a house or buying an apartment, to household expenses and transportation to get us to work, which is expensive," Harizat adds.


With work halted, many workers were forced to make difficult choices. “Some workers climbed the wall in a dangerous attempt to enter,” Suleiman said. “Others sold their wives’ jewelry to buy cars, even if they were illegal. Some collected iron to sell, and others sold their home furniture.”


The worker was the engine of the Palestinian economy.


Suleiman himself was forced to give up part of his savings to cover his basic expenses. He asserts, "The worker was a fundamental driver of the Palestinian economy, but when he became unemployed, no one asked about him."


Harizat points out that some workers are now threatened with imprisonment for bounced checks, asking, "Why are the workers' conditions not being taken into account? Why is this group, which used to be the country's economic lifeline, being neglected?"


Ali Thawabat, a worker from the town of Beit Fajjar, south of Bethlehem, recounts his suffering after being suspended from work within the Green Line, where he had been working in construction for six years.


Thawabteh says: “I used to get 300 shekels a day, but it wasn’t enough. My daily expenses were high, and I had obligations like university fees and construction.”


Ali Thawabta confirms that many workers in Bethlehem rely on donations from charitable people to meet their basic needs. He says, "The worker has become poor. There is no work, and the situation is tragic."


Thawabteh adds, "We demand that the government and unions provide us with aid or job opportunities. Many workers in the West Bank have been laid off, and many businesses have closed due to the difficult economic conditions."


The Palestinian labor market is experiencing an unprecedented crisis.


Shaher Saad, Secretary-General of the Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions, asserts that the Palestinian labor market has been experiencing an unprecedented crisis since October 7, 2023, following the escalation of security incidents and the outbreak of war on the Gaza Strip. This has led to hundreds of thousands of Palestinian workers losing their jobs, both inside occupied Palestine and in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.


Saad explains that the number of Palestinian workers working within the 1948 territories before October 7th amounted to approximately 248,000, of whom 200,000 held official work permits, while approximately 48,000 were working illegally without permits.


According to Saad, these workers were a vital backbone of the Palestinian economy, with the Bank of Israel estimating that their monthly salaries totaled 1.35 billion shekels.


Saad asserts that the disaster was not limited to the cessation of work inside Israel, but also extended to broad sectors within the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Estimates indicate that the number of unemployed currently stands at approximately 507,000 workers, including 248,000 who lost their jobs in the 1948 territories, and approximately 100,000 who lost their jobs from the West Bank, while the remaining numbers are distributed across the Gaza Strip.


The Secretary-General of the Workers' Unions stresses that what happened after October 7, 2023, was completely unexpected. Initial estimates indicated that the work stoppage would be temporary and would last for a few months, but the war dragged on, and workers have not yet been allowed to return.


The occupation did not commit to compensating the affected workers.


Saad asserts that the Israeli occupation has not complied with any agreements related to compensating affected workers, leaving tens of thousands of Palestinian families without a source of income or savings, triggering a serious economic and social crisis.


Saad points out that Palestinian workers' losses since October 7, 2023, have exceeded 25 billion shekels, directly impacting the decline in Palestinian GDP and causing poverty rates among workers to rise to 38%, a significantly higher rate compared to the period preceding 2023.


"When a Palestinian worker loses a large amount of income at once, it creates major economic, social, and psychological problems," Saad says.


Saad asserts that Palestinian workers are currently experiencing the worst possible economic and social conditions. There are no new job opportunities and no imminent hope of legally returning to work within the 1948 territories.


The amount of support does not match the amount of damage.


Despite numerous initiatives to try to mitigate the crisis, Saad asserts that the amount of support provided so far does not match the extent of the damage, describing it as "meager and insufficient to meet the needs of the workers." He noted that the aid has been limited to a very small percentage of workers, most of whom are from Gaza who lost their jobs and remain stranded in the West Bank.


Saad warns of the repercussions of this continuing situation, emphasizing that tens of thousands of workers remain unemployed to this day, in the absence of any real and comprehensive solutions. This further exacerbates the crisis affecting the national economy and Palestinian society as a whole. He emphasizes that these workers, in addition to losing their jobs, lack any social protection, social security, or even health insurance.


October 7 is a major turning point in the lives of thousands of workers.


For his part, the Secretary-General of the New Federation of Trade Unions, Muhammad al-Balidi, says that the events of October 7, 2023, marked a major turning point in the lives of thousands of Palestinian workers, particularly those employed in Israeli facilities within the 1948 territories or in the settlements.


Al-Balidi asserts that workers inside Israel enjoyed a degree of economic stability, as their salaries were relatively high, sometimes reaching multiples of, or even ten times, the average wage in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.


Al-Balidi points out that many of them were building their homes or had financial obligations to building contractors and workers in the West Bank, and they believed their work would continue uninterrupted.


However, according to Al-Balidi, the surprise of October 7th disrupted this stability. More than 200,000 Palestinian workers lost their jobs directly, both inside Israel and in the settlements. Despite the subsequent partial return of some workers to the settlements, the majority remain prohibited from working within the Green Line to this day.


Al-Balidi points out that the conditions of these workers have deteriorated significantly, with many forced to sell their property and cars to secure their basic needs, in the absence of any effective support from the Palestinian government due to its financial crisis.


Al-Balidi asserts that many workers have attempted to find alternatives to secure their livelihoods, such as opening stalls or small businesses. However, economic challenges have prevented many of these attempts from succeeding, and crises have worsened, particularly in areas of the northern West Bank, such as Jenin and Tulkarm, which have suffered widespread destruction, home demolitions, and forced displacement due to the ongoing Israeli escalation.


Collecting workers' rights, especially savings


Al-Balidi explains that the new labor unions began working from the first day after October 7 to recover workers' rights, particularly the financial savings owed to them. Through legal teams and lawyers, they were able to recover approximately 70 million shekels for the affected workers.


Al-Balidi emphasizes that there is a shared union and societal responsibility that must be shouldered by all parties, especially given that thousands of workers were paying monthly union dues amounting to 8 or 10 percent of their salaries, amounting to hundreds of millions of shekels. This makes it imperative for these unions to stand by them during this difficult time.


Al-Balidi asserts that the failure to pass the Social Security Law years ago was a severe blow to Palestinian workers.


Al-Balidi said, "Had this law been passed and implemented, we wouldn't have reached this state of helplessness and loss. Social security would have provided an economic and social safety net. We hope it will be re-introduced and worked on in a fair manner that serves the interests of workers and all citizens."



Absence of any national social protection system


Mahmoud Ziada, a member of the General Federation of Independent Trade Unions and a union activist in the social protection sector, explained that the loss of jobs for thousands of Palestinian workers after October 7, 2023, has plunged them and their families into a severe livelihood crisis due to the lack of income and the absence of any national social protection system in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, threatening social protection.


Ziyada points out that the majority of these workers supported their families through income from work, whether within the 1948 territories or in local facilities, which made them vulnerable to poverty and destitution once they lost their sole source of income.


Ziada asserts that the problem is not limited to the cessation of operations in Israeli facilities, but also includes the decline in job opportunities in the local Palestinian market, which was already suffering from high unemployment even before the outbreak of the war.


Ziyada points out that living conditions have worsened in light of the sharp rise in the prices of basic consumer goods and commodities, exacerbating the economic and social suffering of workers and their families. He explains that this crisis, which has been ongoing for more than a year and a half, is beginning to have negative repercussions on social life unless radical solutions are quickly found.


Ziada stresses that the absence of a comprehensive national social protection system is one of the most significant shortcomings in dealing with crises, asserting that this absence renders society unable to protect its members during crises and provide the minimum requirements for a decent living.


The principle of solidarity, mutual support and burden sharing


"We are in dire need of such a system, not only as a means of alleviating poverty, but as an existential necessity linked to the ability to persevere and continue the struggle for national liberation," Ziada says.


Ziada believes that establishing a national social protection system must be built on the principles of solidarity, mutual support, and burden-sharing, with citizens contributing to its financing in proportion to their income levels. This will enable it to intervene in emergencies and disasters, as is the practice in many countries around the world.


Ziada asserts that this project is not merely economic, but also carries political, social, legal, and moral dimensions, and expresses Palestinian society's commitment to the values of solidarity in the face of occupation and colonialism.


Ziada calls for the need for unions and relevant authorities to provide guidance and direction to workers, especially during difficult times, noting that the responsibility falls on all components of Palestinian society to achieve a "historic achievement" that achieves social justice and guarantees human dignity.


Ziada says, "All Palestinian national movements agree on the necessity of building this system as a realistic alternative that contributes to burden-sharing and enhances the Palestinian people's ability to withstand ongoing challenges. This system is supposed to see the light of day, strengthening social solidarity in difficult circumstances."



The conditions of Palestinian workers are "extremely painful"


For his part, trade unionist Jihad Aql describes the conditions of Palestinian workers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip as "extremely painful," noting that the working class is at the forefront of those affected by the repercussions of the ongoing war since October 7, 2023, whether economically, psychologically, or socially.


"What is happening in the Gaza Strip is a war of extermination that does not differentiate between a child, a worker, or a civilian," Aql said, stressing that many workers have been martyred or seriously injured, losing their jobs and livelihoods. He emphasized that "the situation is not just suffering, but a tragedy in every sense of the word."


In the West Bank, Aqel notes that the Israeli occupation authorities have imposed a stifling siege on workers and revoked all work permits since October 7, 2023. This has prevented thousands of workers from entering their workplaces within the Green Line, and their conditions have deteriorated to an unprecedented degree.


Aql says, "Workers are now living in extremely dire conditions, especially in areas subject to continuous raids, particularly in Jenin camp, Tulkarm camp, and Nour Shams, where the occupation forces target every Palestinian without discrimination."


Aql asserts that the Israeli occupation makes no distinction between workers and ordinary citizens. Rather, it continues its policies of starvation and siege, forcing some workers to risk their lives in order to earn a living by attempting to infiltrate the occupied territories to work despite the grave security risks.


stifling social and living disturbances


Aql points out the profound psychological impact workers experience, noting that being deprived of the ability to support their families and purchase basic necessities creates intense psychological stress and causes stifling social and economic unrest.


Aql says, "A worker who is unable to provide for his family is exposed to psychological and social collapse, which increases social crises within the family and society."


Aql believes that the occupation authorities' actions against Palestinian workers are part of a systematic displacement policy aimed at undermining the resilience of the Palestinian people and dismantling their social fabric. He asserts that the occupation seeks to influence the psychology of Palestinian workers, driving them to despair of the possibility of remaining in their homeland.


Aql explains that the working class has always been at the forefront of the Palestinian struggle and a pillar of popular uprisings, but today it faces repression, arrests, and abuse and is at the forefront of the ongoing tragic scene.


Regarding the means of obtaining rights, Aql says: "What the Israeli government has done constitutes a flagrant violation of international law, which stipulates that an occupying power must guarantee a decent living for the population under its occupation."


Aql continues: "There are workers who turn to lawyers or labor unions to collect their entitlements, such as savings and work compensation. However, this process is painful, as lawyers deduct a percentage of these savings, in addition to a 30% deduction from the original amount by Israeli authorities, which represents a huge loss for the workers."


Aql points out that the Palestinian Ministry of Labor, along with international organizations expressing solidarity, has filed official complaints with the International Labor Organization and relevant authorities regarding these violations. He expresses hope that these efforts will yield positive results that will ensure workers are compensated for the significant losses they have suffered and that some of their stolen rights are restored.