ARAB AND WORLD

Wed 06 Mar 2024 3:23 pm - Jerusalem Time

Washington Post: Black women should not become the face of America's ugly policy in Gaza

The Washington Post said that the administration of US President Joe Biden used black women as velvet gloves and iron fists in relation to the recent Israeli attack on Gaza, where more than 30,000 Palestinians were killed, and that both uses support US complicity in these atrocities and attempt to reduce their appearance.


The newspaper - in an article written by Karen Attia - referred to the visit of US Vice President Kamala Harris to the city of Selma, Alabama, to commemorate Bloody Sunday in 1965, when white officers attacked demonstrators protesting the police killing of Jimmie Lee Jackson and those demanding the right to vote, and severely beat them.


In this position, which gives an air of moral authority - as the writer says - Harris delivered the administration's last message about the plight of the Palestinians, declaring that "a very large number of innocent Palestinians have been killed," and she admitted, saying, "We have seen reports of families eating leaves and animal feed, and children are dying of malnutrition and dehydration,” and demanded an immediate ceasefire - at least - during the month of Ramadan, the release of detainees, and Israel allowing humanitarian aid to flow into Gaza.


But what Harris did not say was equally important. She did not criticize Israel's siege and deliberate aggression, nor did she mention the transfer of weapons to Israel. Instead, she referred to what happened to the Palestinians in Gaza as a "disaster" with unknown cause, as if a hurricane filled with bombs and bullets had exploded. From the Mediterranean Sea.


Use blacks

Harris's speech during the commemoration - as the author says - was an expression of complacency masquerading as strength, and the "humanitarian aid drop" operations - which she promoted - were severely criticized as ineffective and pathetically insufficient, and seemed to be a sign of American weakness, even if It was not a sign of weakness, but rather the face of continued American cruelty towards the Palestinians.


It is unlikely that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be influenced by Harris’s speech, which seems to aim not to persuade him as much as to calm the Democratic Party’s pro-Gaza and anti-ethnic cleansing base, especially since another black woman was hired by the US administration to send a completely different message to Netanyahu, when US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield twice voted against calls for a ceasefire.


For many black observers, the images of these voices brought back memories of Colin Powell, the first black secretary of state, when he used his standing before the United Nations to defend the invasion of Iraq, and - in the eyes of the world - just like Greenfield, a black face who provided cover for America's direct and indiscriminate brutality. Direct in the Arab world.


But there were voices who did not toe this line. Last October, Cori Bush, a black Democratic representative from Missouri, was among the first American politicians to call for a ceasefire and humanitarian relief, when she wrote, “Let me be clear, the collective punishment of the Palestinians in Gaza is a war crime. My commitment to ending violence, brutality and oppression is not conditional."


Minnesota Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar has also been outspoken about brutality against Palestinians, introducing a resolution to block arms sales to Israel, and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), a pro-Israel lobbying group, has pledged to spend millions of dollars to try to remove these black women from their positions, and can you imagine how much suffering and death could have been avoided if they had been listened to.

PALESTINE

Wed 06 Mar 2024 2:31 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: An Israeli settler was injured in a stabbing attack in occupied Jerusalem

A 65-year-old settler was injured today, Wednesday, in a stabbing attack near the “Neve Yaakov” settlement neighborhood in occupied Jerusalem.


According to the Israeli Broadcasting Corporation, the Israeli police arrested a 14-year-old boy on suspicion of carrying out the operation less than an hour after it occurred.


The Authority indicated that the settler suffered injuries described as minor to moderate.


The Israeli forces closed the Qalandiya checkpoint north of occupied Jerusalem in both directions, and prevented the passage of citizens back and forth, as well as vehicles, causing the detention of thousands of citizens moving between the city of Jerusalem and its north.


The Israeli forces also closed the roads in the Beit Hanina neighborhood, north of occupied Jerusalem, and began chasing a vehicle claiming that its driver had carried out a stabbing attack in the “Neve Yaqoub” colony established on citizens’ lands north of occupied Jerusalem, and announced the arrest of the driver.

PALESTINE

Wed 06 Mar 2024 2:28 pm - Jerusalem Time

Britain warns "Israel" of famine in Gaza

British Foreign Secretary David Cameron said that his country will warn Israel on Wednesday that its patience is running out with the "horrific suffering" in Gaza, where people are starving to death due to a lack of aid.


Cameron added to the British Parliament that the way Israel, as the occupying authority, deals with the aid provided to Gaza raises questions about compliance with international law.


His statement comes before his meeting today with Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz in the British capital, London.


Cameron said: We are facing a situation of horrific suffering in Gaza, and I spoke a few weeks ago about the risk of this turning into a famine, and we are now at that stage. People are dying of hunger, and dying from diseases that could have been prevented, and the aid that went to Gaza Last month it was almost half the amount delivered in January.


During the past weeks, Cameron intensified his calls for a ceasefire.

OPINIONS

Wed 06 Mar 2024 1:28 pm - Jerusalem Time

Is There a Possible Diplomatic Way to End This War?

Gershon Baskin

Gershon Baskin

Opinion Writer

The Conditions for ending the war This war will not end with Hamas in control of Gaza and continuing to threaten Israel’s security. The war will not end without the hostages being brought home. The war will not end unless the Gaza-Egypt border is secured against smuggling above ground and below. Those are the conditions, as I understand them, for Israel to end the war in Gaza. But even if all of these conditions are met and Israel remains in Gaza, the war will not end. Continued Israeli military presence in Gaza will guarantee continued armed insurgency against Israeli troops and will guarantee continued support for Hamas from the population in Gaza. Israel cannot defeat the idea of Hamas and the support for Hamas as long as Israeli troops remain in Gaza. Hamas will not be defeated entirely until the occupation ends in the West Bank as well and a Palestinian state exists and is recognized next to Israel. Hamas emerged and grew powerful in response to the occupation and the failure of the peace process. While Israel cemented the Hamas control of Gaza as part of the overall strategy to prevent the realization of the two-states solution, the refusal of Israel to negotiate with and to empower Palestinians who did seek peace was the fuel that powered Hamas’ militarization.

Some historic retrospect on Hamas In historic retrospect Israel licensed and legalized and even supported the registration and activities of Islamic organizations in Gaza founded by Sheikh Ahmad Yassin already in the 1970’s. These organizations were viewed by Israel’s military government in Gaza as a counter to the Palestinian national liberation movements which were part of the Palestine Liberation Organization led by Yasser Arafat. Those Islamic organizations were building public support, developing cadres of leaders, organizing mechanisms of financing, and building a clandestine terrorist organization. The Islamic University of Gaza was a base for recruiting, training and in the School of Engineering (the nicest most modern building on campus built with the assistance of USAID) they developed weapons including the first rockets.

Ariel Sharon’s surprising decision to unilaterally disengage from Gaza presented at the Herzliya Conference in December 2003 was not a sudden awakening and desire to enable the Palestinians to have independence, starting with Gaza. In October 2003, the Israeli-Palestinian Geneva Initiative was launched after a year of secret negotiations between former Israeli and Palestinian negotiators. The Geneva Initiative presented a detailed permanent status agreement between Israel and the PLO for a viable two states solution. World leaders responded to the publication of the Geneva Initiative with embracing support. The US State Department indicated at the time that the US Administration was considering voicing support as well. At that point Sharon came up with the idea of disengagement through which he succeeded in reining in global support for his initiative, and not for Geneva.

In April 2005, prior to the implementation of the disengagement US Secretary of State Rice announced: “UN Secretary General Annan, EU High Representative Solana, Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov and I all agree that we must seize the moment and secure the very best person available for this critical mission of Special Envoy for Gaza Disengagement. That is why we have agreed on one of the world’s most skilled, experienced and dedicated public servants, Mr. James Wolfensohn, the President of the World Bank.” But Sharon had no intention of coordinating the disengagement with the Palestinians. President Mahmoud Abbas was elected in January 2005, following the death of Arafat in November 2004 on a ticket of clear and firm opposition to the militarization of the second intifada and in a strong belief that the State of Palestinian would only be born through negotiations with Israel. Abbas’ national security advisor, Mohammed Dahlan was instructed by Abbas to create a disengagement authority in order to coordinate with Israel. Sharon responded that the decision to disengage was unilateral and that he would not coordinate with the Palestinians. Sharon called Abbas “a chick with no feathers” and “a non-partner”. From conversations that I had with one of Sharon’s closest advisors, I understood that Sharon planned for the Palestinians to fail in taking over Gaza and the result would be the elimination of pressure on Israel regarding the West Bank. After the disengagement, Hamas won the Parliamentary elections for the Palestinian Authority. Hamas also won the narrative – for Palestinians Hamas succeeded in evicting Israel from Gaza while Abbas and the Palestinian Authority failed.

In 2007 reflecting back on the disengagement and the Hamas takeover of Gaza, James Wolfensohn commented: “The reality is that you have 1.4 million Palestinians living in Gaza and you can’t wish them away, you can’t leave Gaza as a place where the rich and the intellectuals and the powerful can get out, and leave just the people who can’t make a living – or can make a living if they could, but have no leadership. And military use or subjugation doesn’t solve the problem, it seems to me. In the interest of Israel, in the interest of the Palestinians, there is a need to get things back to a situation where there is representation of all the Palestinian people in an entity that can deal with Israel to bring about, if Israel wishes, a two-state solution, which appears to be a thing Secretary [of State] Rice is now committed to. The situation cannot simply be allowed to lie there, because just pretending that 1.4 million people can live in a sort of prison is not a solution at all. So I think it’s going to require…some real negotiations to try and get this started.” How right he was.

Is there a diplomatic path to ending the war? The best chances for finding a diplomatic end to the war meeting the basic conditions that Israel requires is by reaching the first phase of a negotiated ceasefire with Hamas. A ceasefire is required to get more hostages home. That will also require that Israel release a large number of Palestinian prisoners, allow for substantially more humanitarian aid to enter Gaza throughout the Strip and allowing many Gazans to return to the north of Gaza. A six-week ceasefire could provide time necessary to devise a plan that would enable both Israel and Hamas to claim elements of victory – which is what is required to end the war prior to the major ground operation between Khan Yunis and Rafah – in the remaining 20% of Gaza. If we are totally honest with ourselves, we recognize that Hamas had its victory on October 7. Breaching Israel’s border, killing such a large number of Israelis, abducting into captivity 250 Israelis, shaking Israelis’ sense of security and wellbeing to bare bones – this cannot be undone. Hamas also succeeding in bringing the Palestinian issue back to the top of the international agenda. Israel’s victory has been in successfully converting its army from an occupation police force protecting settlers into a formitable fighting force fully capable of securing Israel’s borders. Revitalizing the two states solution is not part of Hamas’ victory, because Hamas never supported that solution. It is not part of the Government of Israel’s victory, because it too does not support it. But it will be the victory for the people of Israel and the people of Palestine. That is why the United States must lead the other OECD nations to immediately recognize the State of Palestine and remove Israel’s veto from the question of Palestinian statehood.

Removing Hamas from power In order for Hamas to accept that it will no longer rule Gaza the Palestinian Authority must be empowered to appoint an acceptable temporary Prime Minister as head of government with the authority to appoint non-partisan technocratic ministers – for both Gaza and the West Bank. President Abbas is the only person who has the authority to appoint such a person. But once that person is appointed, Mahmoud Abbas should step aside in order for the new Prime Minister to form a government of acceptable technocrats to whom Hamas will be willing to transfer authority – or in other words, will not oppose the new governing authority. Palestinian and other Arab leverage must be applied to the living military and political leaders of Hamas in Gaza to exit to Qatar. That may not happen, some, like Yehya Sinwar would probably prefer to fight to the death rather than leave. He cannot remain alive in Gaza – there is no end to the war if Sinwar remains alive in Gaza.

Securing Gaza The new Palestinian Prime Minister with his government will request to convene a meeting in Riyadh under the auspices of the Saudis with the Arab states with peace agreements with Israel, perhaps with the backing of the Arab League and call for the immediate deployment of an Arab-led multi-national force for Gaza with a mandate of up to two years. 

 

The decision of this meeting should be brought to the Security Council of the United Nations for adoption with the addition of the call for an immediate ceasefire and full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. The United States should support this resolution.

The issue of the security of the Gaza-Egypt border should be dealt with by agreement between Egypt and the United States. This border must be secured from smuggling above and below ground in order for the war to end, but it should not be done by Israel. US knowhow, technology and finance should be deployed with Egyptian labor to dig tens of meters below ground to cut off all smuggling tunnels into Gaza. US military personnel should oversee the work to ensure its completion.

The Hostages The issue of the hostages is the most difficult and sensitive to resolve. It is very likely that Hamas does not know where every hostage is located. Without having effective control over most of Gaza is it virtually impossible for Hamas to know where they all are being held. Hamas probably does not know who is alive and who is not. There is a very high probability that many hostages are below the rubble of buildings demolished by Israel on the ground or from the air. There is a high probability that some or many of the dead hostages will never be returned. This is a very difficult situation for the families of the hostages to accept. Just as there are thousands of Gazans buried underneath the rubble of what were buildings, this too may be the fate of many Israeli hostages. Since the beginning of the war, I have maintained that the only way to bring all of the hostages home alive is through a negotiated agreement which would have to include ending the war and releasing many thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israel. I have also emphasized that the military pressure will mainly get hostages killed. This is what I still believe. That is what is happening. There is still a chance for a partial deal with Hamas that could return tens of hostages alive; it must be done now!

 

PALESTINE

Wed 06 Mar 2024 11:49 am - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israel approves the construction of 3,500 housing units

Today, Wednesday, the Supreme Planning Council of the "Civil Administration" of the Israeli occupation in the West Bank approved the construction of about 3,500 new housing units in the "Ma'ale Adumim", "Efrat" and "Kedar" settlements, claiming that it comes in the wake of the shooting attack at a checkpoint. 


This approval came a year after the head of the extremist Religious Zionism Party, Bezalel Smotrich, was appointed a minister in the Ministry of Security and responsible for settlement, in addition to assuming the position of Minister of Finance.


Israeli media reported that during Smotrich's tenure as minister in the Ministry of Security, approval was made for the construction of 18,515 housing units in settlements in the West Bank, which is the largest number of housing units approved in one year.


Following the approval of settlement construction today, Smotrich said, “We have implemented great things for settlement this year, and this is a good start.


In parallel with my approval of housing units, we will advance the settlement (i.e., legalization) of youth settlement (i.e., random settlement outposts), a land survey and the issuance of decrees regarding it, security personnel, and streets in Judea and Samaria on an unprecedented scale.”


Smotrich claimed, “Our enemies seek to target us and weaken our control in the country, and our message is exactly the opposite. The State of Israel will continue to grow and develop throughout it, and settlement will increase and flourish. Today everyone realizes that where there is settlement throughout the country there is security, and where there is no settlement there is "Terrorist monsters threaten the entire State of Israel."


Smotrich considered the settlement in the occupied West Bank “a security belt for the State of Israel - Israel’s shield. I thank the Prime Minister, the Minister of Security, the Minister of Strategic Affairs, and the employees of the Civil Administration and the Planning Office for their cooperation.”

PALESTINE

Wed 06 Mar 2024 10:29 am - Jerusalem Time

Israel’s war on Gaza: List of key events, day 152

Israel continues attacks while its forces turned back a 14-truck food aid convoy.


Fighting and humanitarian crisis

  • On Wednesday morning, Israeli forces killed three civilians and injured an unknown number of others in an attack on a home in Deir el-Balah in central Gaza.
  • Separately, on Tuesday, Israeli forces turned back a 14-truck food aid convoy bound for northern Gaza following a three-hour wait at a checkpoint, according to the World Food Programme (WFP).
  • The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) said it has distributed flour to some 370,000 families in southern Gaza.Video Duration 02 minutes 30 seconds02:30

Regional tensions and diplomacy

  • The US has tabled a revised draft of a proposed UN Security Council ceasefire resolution that calls for “an immediate ceasefire of roughly six weeks in Gaza together with the release of all hostages”, the Reuters news agency reported.
  • Meanwhile, on Tuesday, the government of Chile announced that Israeli firms will be banned from the International Air and Space Fair (FIDAE) in Santiago in April.
  • The Canadian Lawyers for International Human Rights (CLAIHR) group, the Palestinian organisation Al-Haq and four individuals filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against the federal government to stop Canadian companies from exporting military goods and technology to Israel.
  • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Israel would face “very serious consequences” if it blocked Palestinian Muslims from entering their holy sites during the coming month of Ramadan.
  • The US military’s Central Command (CENTCOM) has said that it destroyed three Houthi antiship missiles and three unmanned surface vessels (USVs) on Wednesday in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen.
  • Jordan also said on Tuesday that it carried out humanitarian airdrops with eight planes into Gaza along with the US, France and Egypt, marking the largest such operation to date.
  • US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has met with Benny Gantz in Washington, DC, where the Israeli war cabinet minister and Netanyahu rival is conducting an unofficial tour.
  • The Middle East franchisee of Starbucks said Tuesday it has begun firing about 2,000 workers at its coffee shops across the region after the brand found itself targeted by activists during the continuing Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, affecting its sales in the region.

Violence in the occupied West Bank

  • Local media and Al Jazeera Arabic are reporting on Wednesday that Israeli raids and arrests across the occupied West Bank have taken place in the following locations: the villages of al-Jalama, Arabbuna, Deir Ghazaleh, Arrana and Jalbun northeast of Jenin; the town of Beit Fajjar, south of Bethlehem; and the city of Nablus.


SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

 

OPINIONS

Wed 06 Mar 2024 10:26 am - Jerusalem Time

Why Aaron Bushnell's death was a call to action

Middle East Eye

Middle East Eye

Opinion Writer

By Maha Hilal

 Analysis of the US service member's protest must recognise the agency of an individual who chooses self-immolation as a last-resort tactic to disrupt the status quo and demand change

By the time Aaron Bushnell, a 25-year-old active-duty member of the US Air Force, set himself alight in front of the Israeli embassy in Washington, DC, last weekend, Israel had killed at least 38,000 Palestinians in its ongoing genocide in Gaza.  

The indiscriminate and widespread violence and destruction that Israel has subjected Palestinians to since 7 October 2023, with full US backing, is precisely what drove Bushnell to commit this final and direct act of protest.

On 25 February, Bushnell began live streaming on the video platform Twitch, declaring that he could "no longer be complicit in genocide". He said: "I am about to engage in an extreme act of protest, but compared to what people have been experiencing in Palestine at the hands of their colonisers, it's not extreme at all. This is what our ruling class has decided will be normal."

Bushnell died the next day as a result of his injuries. In the final moments of his life, he could be heard yelling, "Free Palestine".

Bushnell's protest follows another act of self-immolation by an American protesting Israel's genocidal assault on Gaza. In December, a person holding a Palestinian flag set themselves on fire outside of the Israeli consulate in Atlanta in what police described as "likely an extreme act of political protest". The individual survived but was reportedly in critical condition.

Bottom of Form

Despite the shared motivations for their protests, the news of Bushnell's self-immolation was met with greater disbelief and shock that a US military service member would be so fundamentally disturbed by US state-backed violence that he would take his own life.

As soon as the story broke, US mainstream media outlets waged what seemed to be a coordinated campaign of obfuscation and character assassination as both an attempt to shield Israel from criticism and diminish the deep political commitment behind Bushnell's act of protest.

Obscuring the facts

In what has become standard New York Times editorial practice, the reasons for why things happen are conspicuously omitted. People mysteriously "die" in Gaza; sometimes, they are even "killed" - but readers are not told who killed them. Similarly, a man may "set himself on fire", but his reasons - even if he states them in no uncertain terms - are not given.  

Several outlets highlighted Bushnell's 'anarchist' past while ignoring the issues that inspired his political protest, namely US support for Israel's genocide

Many astute readers caught the initial headline of The New York Times report on Bushnell, such as X user @JoshuaPHill, who noted that the piece "does not mention any direct connection between his action and Israel's genocide in Gaza".

After receiving backlash, the headline appears to have been scrubbed from The Times's website, but it is hardly an outlier. Several other mainstream outlets, including CNN, Reuters, and the Washington Post, published nearly identical headlines in their coverage of Bushnell's political protest. The media's failure to identify the reasons for his act triggered a "barrage of criticism" on social media, which has served as an alternative source for real-time reporting and images of the horrors of Israel's present crimes in Gaza.

Once again, the mainstream media has deliberately obscured the impact of the genocide and elided the role of the US government, in particular, in providing diplomatic cover and military and financial support to Israel. Instead, western reporters have constructed a narrative built on Bushnell's alleged mental health issues, conservative religious upbringing, and other rationales for his actions.

Often keen on maligning acts of resistance and resistance movements, news outlets such as The Independent, The Guardian, and New York Magazine all published articles highlighting Bushnell's childhood and his upbringing in a strict religious community. According to New York Magazine, "Bushnell grew up in a religious group on Cape Cod called the Community of Jesus, whose former members have come forward alleging abuse and a rigid social structure."

A former member of his religious congregation reportedly told The Washington Post that it was common for members of the community to join the military, describing this transition as going from "one high-control group to another high-control group".

To further muddy the reasons for Bushnell's protest and divert attention from Israel's relentless attacks on more than two million Palestinians, several outlets highlighted Bushnell's "anarchist" past and leanings while ignoring the issues that inspired his political protest, namely US support for Israel's genocide.

The US media has largely papered over the political dimensions of Bushnell's protest in favour of promoting a mental health angle. A brief MSNBC segment covering Bushnell's protest, with an Israeli flag in the background, states that he was protesting the "Israel-Hamas war" and ended with information on how to contact the suicide and crisis lifeline. A Huffington Post piece similarly ends with information about a suicide hotline.  

It is common practice to include suicide prevention information when stories involve individuals who have chosen to end their lives. However, the inclusion of this information without the appropriate context represents nothing less than a deliberate attempt to pathologise Bushnell while also expressly ignoring the ways in which suicide by self-immolation is a distinct and intentional political act rooted in challenging collective injustice, particularly in cases of asymmetrical warfare.

More sinister yet is the claim in a recent Jerusalem Post piece that solidarity statements with Bushnell's individual protest "puts the US closer to suicide bombings". It disingenuously frames comments by presidential candidates Cornell West and Jill Stein as "support for suicide" while arguing that Bushnell's voluntary sacrifice "is another step toward more political violence".

Criticism of Bushnell's "political violence" was also a point made in a Guardian article last week. In both cases, the authors' choice to highlight self-immolation as a form of political violence distracts from the catastrophic levels of state violence that Bushnell's act of protest was calling attention to.

In his article, "When costs are benefits: Communicative suffering as political protest", sociologist Michael Biggs, who has studied self-immolations extensively, aptly summarises the process by which a protester's motivations - and the act itself - may be discredited. He states: "Even when someone indisputably dies for a cause, as with self-immolation, this can be discounted by the refusal to grant agency: the protester was mentally deranged, or was duped by a movement organisation."

Thus, not only does the media deny Bushnell the presumption that his act could have been a rational and calculated decision of protest, but it further obscures and cements ignorance in the American body politic to avoid contending with serious matters of injustice - in this case, the genocide of Palestinians by Israel.

An urgent call

Bushnell's act follows a long history of self-immolation as a protest tactic that bears revisiting. Many are familiar with the famous image of the "burning monk", or Thich Quang Duc, a Vietnamese Buddhist monk who was photographed as flames engulfed his entire body in 1963. He was challenging the persecution of Buddhists following the imposition of Catholicism by the Diem regime in South Vietnam. Quang Duc, whose act inspired many others, wanted his self-immolation to serve "as a donation to the struggle".

Other self-immolations followed, including in India in 1964 by a Tamil labourer over the imposition of the Hindi language, and in South Korea in 1965 by an individual protesting his country's post-war treaty with Japan.  

In 1965, two Americans - Alice Herz and Norman Morrison - also self-immolated in protest of the Vietnam War. By the end of 1965, according to Biggs, "self-immolation had entered the global repertoire of protest".

Perhaps the most famous self-immolation of the 21st century was that of Mohamed Bouazizi, the struggling Tunisian fruit vendor whose self-immolation in 2011 sparked the Arab Spring across the region. Bouazizi's act of protest was a call to action for Arabs who had become complacent toward the tyranny of their governments for far too long.  

In the case of Bushnell, the media's conflation of his political grievances with suicide based on personal struggles stems from both ignorance and malicious intent. In his work on self-immolation, Biggs refers to self-immolation as a form of "communicative suffering". Self-inflicted suffering - done without harming others - "reveals the various ways in which suffering can become a source of power."

In this vein, suffering is meant to mobilise and stir up collective action, not just immediately but also in the reverberating and haunting message that justice must continue posthumously. Death, in this context, occurring through the killing of one's own body, becomes a vehicle through which political life can be mobilised.

Through the lens of thanatopolitics - the politics of death - self-immolation is a call and response whereby those receiving the message conveyed by the protestor are, in turn, called to "engage in a common struggle against oppression, humiliation, and injustice".

As shallow understandings of self-immolation abound, several western commentators have gone a step further by criticising Bushnell's political protest. A piece in the Guardian argues that "acts of self-immolation are rare, but they have a clear intent: to use a grotesque display of self-sacrifice to draw the public's attention to an issue, to force them into moral witness".

It is about carrying out an act so extreme that the only logical response from anyone with a moral compass is to carry forward the torch of justice that the protester lit

But that is not where the goal of self-immolation ends: the protester does not merely want the public to "witness" but to take collective action. It is about carrying out an act so extreme that the only logical response from anyone with a moral compass is to carry forward the torch of justice that the protester lit.

While the author of The Guardian article also imposes her judgement that Bushnell could "be much more useful to the world if he were alive", it is critical to recognise the agency of the individual who chooses self-immolation as a protest tactic. Specifically, this individual has decided that there is no other way to disrupt the status quo. In other words, they have already questioned the utility of their life versus death to effect social change. 

In his final post on Facebook, Bushnell wrote: "Many of us like to ask ourselves, 'What would I do if I was alive during slavery? Or the Jim Crow South? Or apartheid? What would I do if my country was committing genocide?' The answer is, you're doing it. Right now."  

If there had been any doubt about the role of the US as not just a supporter but an active partner in Israel's genocide of Palestinians, Bushnell claimed to have discovered evidence of US troops fighting in Gaza. For someone already so distressed by his complicity, this revelation was perhaps the death blow that drove him to self-immolate.

A Vietnamese monk and peace activist wrote to Martin Luther King Jr in 1965: "To burn oneself by fire is to prove that what one is saying is of the utmost importance. There is nothing more painful than burning oneself. To say something while experiencing this kind of pain is to say it with the utmost of courage, frankness, determination and sincerity." 

Biggs notes that although self-immolation is rare, "it provides a significant theoretical lesson: suffering can serve to advance a collective cause". But any act of self-immolation begs us to go beyond theory and meet the call for justice.

While Palestinians continue to face genocide, Bushnell's call could not be clearer or more urgent.

PALESTINE

Wed 06 Mar 2024 9:22 am - Jerusalem Time

UN official: Israel is waging a starvation war on Gaza and must be punished

As the war of starvation continues, coinciding with the devastating Israeli aggression on Gaza, warnings from international and international humanitarian bodies continue about the expansion of the famine and its threat to the lives of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip, especially with the recording of more deaths resulting from malnutrition and loss of food supplies.


In an interview with Al Jazeera, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Michael Fakhri, accused Israel of deliberately bombing humanitarian convoys in Gaza despite knowing their routes. He pointed out that the Israeli occupation does not want any aid to reach those in need, and that it is waging a clear war of starvation. Fakhri called for imposing sanctions on Israel for ignoring the decisions of the International Court of Justice. He wondered why Washington dropped aid by air despite the chaos it caused?


United Nations experts also accused Israel of carrying out a starvation campaign in the Gaza Strip, and called on it to stop it immediately. Experts confirmed that Israel has been deliberately starving the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip since October 8.

They pointed out that Israel is targeting civilians searching for humanitarian aid and relief convoys, and called on it to put an end to what they said was a campaign of starvation and targeting of civilians in the Gaza Strip.


The experts said that Israel does not respect its international legal obligations, does not comply with the interim measures of the International Court of Justice, and commits brutal crimes. The UN experts warned against using humanitarian aid as a bargaining chip in negotiations to stop the war.


For his part, the spokesman for the Secretary-General of the United Nations said that the enormous needs for food and medicine in Gaza make what reaches the Strip very limited. The regional spokesman for the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Salim Owais, said that children in the Gaza Strip are paying the highest price for the war. In an interview with Al Jazeera, Owais called for urgent international action, noting that what is happening in Gaza is a test of human conscience.


For her part, Oxfam spokeswoman Fatouma Sheda told Al Jazeera that, in light of the catastrophic situation in the Gaza Strip, dropping aid by air does not represent a solution, and called for opening the crossings and delivering aid to northern Gaza.


Sheda accused Israel of using starvation as a weapon of war, adding, "Unfortunately, the people of Gaza are suffering from hunger."


The direct targeting of civilians seeking humanitarian assistance is an ongoing pattern, as we have seen today and last week. The situation is dangerous for the 90 percent of the Strip’s population who suffer from high levels of food insecurity.”


Famine statistics

According to the latest statistics on famine in the Gaza Strip after the Israeli war approached its sixth month, the entire population of the Strip - numbering 2.4 million - faces “crisis or worse” levels of food insecurity, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).


576,000 people, a quarter of the Gaza Strip's population, face catastrophic levels of food shortages, according to the United Nations.


One in every 6 children under the age of two suffers from acute malnutrition in northern Gaza, according to the World Health Organization.


The final statement of the FAO meeting expressed deep concern about the catastrophic conditions of the population in Gaza, which may lead to famine.


Abdul Hakim Al-Waer, Regional Representative and Assistant Director-General of FAO, said in an interview with Al Jazeera that most of the population in the Gaza Strip is currently considered to be in the fourth and fifth stages of the classification of food security stages, meaning that they are between the stages of disaster and famine.


The Assistant Director-General of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, FAO, added that almost all children and women in Gaza are malnourished due to a lack of supplies and nutrients, especially proteins.


For his part, Dr. Jadallah Al-Shafi’i, head of the nursing department at Al-Shifa Medical Complex, said that the situation in Gaza is catastrophic. He added in an interview with Al Jazeera that the war being waged on Gaza is unprecedented, noting the death of many patients due to famine.


In the Gaza Strip, 16 children died of starvation in one day, as a result of malnutrition, dehydration, and lack of medicine, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.


The government media office in Gaza said that a thousand trucks daily are required to enter all governorates, especially the northern Gaza Strip, to stop the genocidal war, according to the office’s statement.


American options for aid

In light of these catastrophic humanitarian developments, White House National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby said that Washington is considering a number of military and commercial options to transport aid to Gaza by sea. In a press conference, Kirby urged Israel to open more crossings and increase the number of aid trucks arriving in Gaza.


Kirby added that the US Department of Defense (the Pentagon) carried out another airdrop of humanitarian aid to Gaza on Tuesday morning, with several Jordanian aircraft joining these efforts.


In the context of options, NBC quoted an American official as saying that the Biden administration is considering other options for transporting aid to Gaza, including the possibility of building a floating dock or a temporary bridge off the coast of the Strip to enable ships to deliver humanitarian supplies.


The US Central Command said earlier that it and the Royal Jordanian Air Force carried out a joint airdrop of humanitarian aid in northern Gaza.


A statement from the Central Command stated that C-130 aircraft participated in the aid landing operation, which included more than 36,000 meals. Directed to civilians in the northern Gaza Strip. The statement added that the Pentagon continues to plan to carry out additional operations, noting that airdrops of humanitarian aid contribute to the ongoing efforts made by the United States and the governments of partner countries to provide assistance to the residents of Gaza.


For its part, the Jordanian army said that it carried out 8 joint air landings with friendly and sister countries, which it described as the largest since the start of the landing operations.


In this context, Israeli media said that some of the humanitarian aid that was airdropped to northern Gaza yesterday, Tuesday, did not reach its destination and landed on Zikim Beach in southern Israel.


Residents in the northern Gaza Strip are finding it difficult to obtain food and drinking water, in light of the continued Israeli bombing and the prevention of the entry of aid.


On their way to get some food to satisfy their needs, Palestinian citizens who were waiting for aid at the Kuwait Roundabout, east of Gaza City, documented that the occupation forces targeted - with shells and live bullets - the people while they were standing in queues to receive aid, which led to martyrs and wounded.

PALESTINE

Wed 06 Mar 2024 9:17 am - Jerusalem Time

Biden calls on Hamas to accept the Gaza ceasefire proposal

US President Joe Biden said that the ceasefire in the Gaza Strip is now in the hands of Hamas, after the Israelis agreed to a proposal that he described as reasonable. He expected that an agreement would be reached by the holy month of Ramadan.


For his part, the leader of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas), Osama Hamdan, said that the movement presented during the past two days its vision of the proposal presented by the mediators to complete the prisoner exchange deal with Israel, stressing the resistance’s adherence to the ceasefire, the complete withdrawal of the occupation forces from the Gaza Strip, the return of the displaced, and the start of reconstruction operations. .


Yesterday, Tuesday, Biden warned of a situation he described as very dangerous in Israel and Jerusalem if Israel and Hamas did not reach a ceasefire in Gaza by the holy month of Ramadan, which begins on the 11th or 12th of this March.


The US President told reporters before heading to the White House to return from Camp David that it is up to Hamas to agree to the truce offer for 6 weeks, warning in return that Israel has “no excuses” for continuing to prevent more aid from reaching Gaza.


Biden added, "The Israelis are cooperating, and the (ceasefire) offer is rational. We will know how things will turn out within two days. But we need a ceasefire."


Biden downplayed hints of tension in the relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu against the backdrop of pressure exerted by Washington on Israel due to the high death toll of civilians in Gaza, the day after a member of the Israeli war cabinet, Benny Gantz, one of Netanyahu’s most prominent opponents, visited the White House. Biden said that the relationship with Netanyahu "is the same as it has always been."


To contain a catastrophic humanitarian crisis and famine, about 6 months after the Israeli aggression on Gaza, Biden stressed the necessity of “bringing more aid into Gaza,” considering that Israel has “no excuses” for continuing to prevent the entry of aid trucks parked at the border with Egypt.


White House National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby indicated that the failure to bring aid into Gaza is unacceptable and that the flow of aid into Gaza is insufficient to meet the needs of the residents of the Strip.


In a press conference at the White House, Kirby urged Israel to facilitate the passage of more trucks and open roads so that aid can reach Gaza. Kirby stressed that Washington is still working to reach a ceasefire agreement in Gaza, indicating that the Israeli side was cooperative and negotiated in good faith, and that Hamas should Accomplishing the matter, as he put it, Kirby also stressed that the United States will continue to work with Israel to ensure its ability to defend itself and reach an agreement regarding the detainees.


In this context, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that there is an opportunity to reach an immediate ceasefire in Gaza. In a press conference with Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman Al Thani, Blinken stressed that the situation in Gaza is unacceptable and that the ceasefire is important for the entry of aid and the return of prisoners.


Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdul Rahman Al Thani warned of what he described as tampering with the aid issue and its exploitation for political blackmail by the Israeli occupation.


He said in statements to Al Jazeera after the end of the first day meeting of the US-Qatari strategic dialogue in Washington, that pressure was being exerted on Israel to bring aid into the northern Gaza Strip.


Hamas position

For his part, Hamas leader Osama Hamdan said that what Israel failed to achieve on the battlefield, it will not achieve at the negotiating table. Hamdan added during a press conference in Beirut yesterday evening, Tuesday, that any prisoner exchange cannot take place until after a ceasefire and all Hamas conditions are met.


Hamdan confirmed that during the past two days, the Hamas movement presented its vision regarding the proposals presented by the mediators in Egypt and Qatar, and stressed its conditions for a ceasefire.

PALESTINE

Wed 06 Mar 2024 8:57 am - Jerusalem Time

Updated|| Dozens of killed and wounded as a result of Israel’s targeting of people waiting for aid in Gaza

Dozens of citizens were martyred today, Wednesday, and others were injured as a result of Israeli forces targeting citizens who were waiting for aid in Gaza City.


According to local sources, 7 citizens were killed and at least 10 were injured in Israeli shooting at citizens near the Wadi Gaza checkpoint in the central Gaza Strip.


The Israeli forces opened fire on citizens who had gathered to obtain humanitarian aid that was on its way to the northern Gaza Strip, where famine is spreading among the population.


Ambulance crews recovered the bodies of 16 killed from various areas in Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip, since dawn today.


In Khan Yunis, two citizens were killed in an Israeli bombing on the Al-Qarara area, while others were killed and injured in a similar bombing in the center of the town of Bani Suhaila, near the city.


The Israeli forces also carried out intense bombardment targeting the besieged Hamad Town and areas in northern Khan Yunis.


In Rafah, a child was killed in an Israeli artillery shelling on the airport area, east of the city.


In Deir al-Balah, Israeli aircraft bombed a house on Al-Matahin Street, south of Deir al-Balah, coinciding with citizens’ funeral of the bodies of 12  persons from Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital.


Yesterday evening and today at dawn, Israeli aircraft targeted two homes in Deir al-Balah and the Bureij camp, killing 6 people.


In the Jabalia camp in the northern Gaza Strip, civil defense crews were able to rescue a girl alive and recover a number of dead bodies and wounded from under the rubble of a house after Israeli aircraft targeted a residential square in the camp.


The Ministry of Health announced that the Israeli army committed 9 massacres against families in the Gaza Strip, claiming 86 killed and 113 injured during the past 24 hours.


The Ministry indicated that there are still a number of victims under the rubble and on the roads, and the Israeli army prevents ambulance and civil defense crews from reaching them.


The toll of the Israeli aggression has risen to 30,717 dead and 72,156 wounded since the seventh of last October.

ARAB AND WORLD

Wed 06 Mar 2024 8:43 am - Jerusalem Time

The Guardian: Israeli settlers are part of a corrupt system and Western sanctions are historic

An article in the British newspaper The Guardian described the imposition of American, British and French sanctions on more than 30 Israeli settlers for committing acts of violence and incitement against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, as a historic step.


This step will result in freezing the assets of those settlers, who have documented records proving that they committed arson, theft, physical assault and destruction of property. They will also be subject to restrictions on traveling abroad, and their ability to do business limited, according to an article by independent journalist Zach Witus.


International human rights organizations have long protested the lack of accountability for settler violence.


Witus - who works as coordinator of the sector concerned with youth leadership and education at the "New Israel Fund", based in the US state of California - comments on these sanctions, saying that they will significantly hinder the mechanism of settler violence and may be the strongest message so far directed to the Israeli government about the need to curb attacks on Palestinian societies, as its continuation will have repercussions.


It will not solve a problem because it is part of a corrupt system

However, the writer believes that these sanctions on a few settlers will not solve the basic problem, as they are “not just a bunch of rotten apples,” but rather part of a long-term, systematic policy of the Israeli government aimed at expelling the Palestinians from their lands to make way for the expansion of the settlements. He described it as a bad policy that only produces corrupt people.


Witus said that he personally saw some of these Palestinians while working as a volunteer as a human rights monitor in 2022 in the rural area of Masafer Yata in the West Bank, where the Palestinian population largely depends on pastoralism and agriculture as a source of livelihood. He added that he saw with his own eyes two settlers - Yinon Levy and Eli Federman - attacking Palestinians almost weekly without justification.


Horrific scenes

He added that he saw the two settlers and some of their accomplices in the crime in the vicinity of the village of Zanuta, south of the city of Hebron, repeatedly attacking Palestinian shepherds and their herds of livestock, chasing them with dogs and drones to intimidate them and push them to leave their lands so that they (the Israelis) could graze their sheep and lambs on the Palestinians’ crops.


He added that he took pictures of Lennon Levy and others in the village of Susya in the Hebron Governorate, as they were illegally paving a road on private Palestinian land that leads to a settlement outpost. Another video clip showed Levy driving a bulldozer and moving piles of dirt to a road in order to close the only entrance and exit to the village.


Witus went on to tell stories of settler violations, and said that his fellow human rights activists filmed Federman unleashing his dachshund on a Palestinian resident of the area and biting his arm and stomach, while other settlers were aiming their rifles at Palestinians watching the scene.


He continued that during his time in the West Bank, he saw more than once that the Israeli army and police were unable to stop the crimes of settlers.


The settlers are an independent authority

According to the Guardian article, the settlers informed the residents of Zanota - weeks after the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) attacked Israel on October 7 - that if they did not leave within 24 hours, they would kill them. The next day, all 250 residents of the village packed their belongings and left. Last month, settlers erected a fence around the village so that its Palestinian residents could not return to it.


Witus stated that 2023 was the worst year ever for settler violence, who attacked Palestinians and their property in more than 1,200 separate incidents; They killed at least 10 Palestinians and set dozens of homes on fire, all of which occurred before the Hamas attacks on October 7.


Ben Gvir officially incites violence

He referred to the explicit orders issued by National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir to Israeli forces not to apply the law in cases of “Jewish nationalist violence.”


As a result of these policies, settlers and the Israeli army were able to forcibly displace at least 198 Palestinian families, with an estimated number of 1,208 people - including 586 children - from more than 12 villages during the months of November and December.


Source: Guardian+Aljazeera

PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 10:22 pm - Jerusalem Time

UNICEF warns of an “explosion of deaths” of children in Gaza due to malnutrition

The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) warned on Tuesday of an "imminent explosion" in the number of child deaths linked to malnutrition in the Gaza Strip, explaining that death rates in the northern Gaza Strip are "three times higher" than those recorded in the south.


UNICEF spokesman James Elder said in a press conference at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva: “We are seeing deaths (due to malnutrition) that we have feared for a long time, and we see that these deaths will continue to rise.”


He added: "We will see an imminent explosion in child deaths if the worsening nutrition crisis is not resolved" in the Gaza Strip.


He explained that "malnutrition rates among children under the age of five in the north are three times higher than those in Rafah" in the south.


Regarding the restrictions imposed on the entry of aid into the Gaza Strip, a UNICEF spokesman said, “The arrival of a small amount of aid may make a difference in saving lives.”


He explained, "In addition to hunger, there is an increasing risk of the spread of infectious diseases, as nine out of every 10 children under the age of five - about 220,000 - have become ill over the past weeks."


In this context, the Director of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said on Monday that “civilians, especially children and health workers in the Gaza Strip, need immediate assistance.”


In a post on the “X” platform, Ghebreyesus warned of “severe levels of malnutrition and children dying of hunger” in northern Gaza.


As a result of the war and Israeli restrictions, the residents of Gaza, especially the Gaza and northern governorates, are on the verge of famine, in light of a severe scarcity of food, water, medicine and fuel supplies, with the displacement of about two million Palestinians from the Strip, which has been besieged by Israel for 17 years.


The war on the Gaza Strip left tens of thousands of civilian victims, most of them children and women, in addition to an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe and massive destruction of infrastructure, which led to Tel Aviv being brought before the International Court of Justice on charges of “genocide.”

ARAB AND WORLD

Tue 05 Mar 2024 10:17 pm - Jerusalem Time

Truce talks in Gaza: Israeli team demands an expansion of its powers

Members of the Israeli negotiating team regarding the discussions aimed at reaching a calm in the Gaza Strip, and a prisoner exchange agreement between Hamas and Israel, will ask the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and the “war cabinet” to expand his powers.


This came according to what the Walla news website reported, citing two Israeli officials, in a report in which it indicated that the negotiating team’s request will be made next Thursday, in the cabinet meeting.


The Israeli negotiating team will request this “in an attempt to break the impasse in the talks,” according to the report.


Walla quoted a high-ranking Israeli official as saying that Hamas had made several concessions in recent weeks, such as reducing the number of prisoners it demands to be released, and removing the preconditions regarding ending the war and withdrawing Israeli army forces from the Gaza Strip.


The same official added that one of the estimates of the Israeli negotiating team is that Hamas has exhausted its ability to compromise at this stage, especially since Israel has not made more “concessions” on its part, beyond the proposal that was presented in the French capital, Paris, about two weeks ago.


The report quoted another Israeli official as saying, “Members of the negotiating team claim that it is necessary to abandon Israel’s current positions and go to the negotiations with updated positions that will make it possible to reach an agreement.”


The official pointed out that "the political level; Netanyahu, (his security minister, Yoav) Gallant, and (the minister in the 'war cabinet', Benny) Gantz, do not agree with them (with the negotiating team)."


This comes while the talks hosted by Cairo, which brought together Hamas and mediators, with the aim of reaching an agreement on a ceasefire in Gaza and the exchange of prisoners with Israel, did not lead to a significant breakthrough on Tuesday, days before the month of Ramadan.


The head of the Hamas political department in Gaza, Bassem Naim, said in statements reported by Reuters this afternoon that the movement had presented its proposal for a ceasefire agreement to the mediators during two days of talks, and is now awaiting a response from the Israelis, who were absent from this round.


The Hamas leader added that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “does not want an agreement, and the ball is now in the Americans’ court” to pressure him to reach an agreement. Regarding Israel’s request to provide a list of the names and numbers of prisoners detained in the Gaza Strip, Naim explained that this is impossible without a ceasefire.


Hamas leader Naeem confirmed: “We presented in Cairo a clear vision based on red lines that cannot be crossed. Our vision is based on a comprehensive and declared ceasefire with international guarantees, even if it is implemented in stages. We have sufficient flexibility for the exchange deal if the enemy accepts our conditions, and this can be achieved.” Within days if the Americans pressure Netanyahu.”


While Reuters reported that the talks in Cairo “collapsed,” the Israeli side denied this and said that the situation remains as it was, according to what was stated by an official in a briefing to the Israeli media, during which he stressed that Tel Aviv is waiting to receive an official response. 


The Israeli Channel 12 reported on Monday that the Israeli government had waived its requirement to obtain a list of the names of its prisoners detained in the Gaza Strip who are still alive.


The channel quoted one of the officials participating in the Cairo talks as saying that “there is no actual progress” in the talks, in light of Israel’s refusal to respond to Hamas’ conditions, especially the demands related to the withdrawal of Israeli army forces from the Gaza Strip, the return of the displaced to their areas in northern Gaza, and an agreement on a path. To stop the war.


ARAB AND WORLD

Tue 05 Mar 2024 9:52 pm - Jerusalem Time

World Health: 8,000 patients need to be evacuated from Gaza

The World Health Organization said on Tuesday that 8,000 patients in Gaza need to be evacuated from Gaza, expressing its disappointment that only a small number of patients were able to leave the besieged Strip to receive treatment abroad.


A team from the World Health Organization and its partners were able to once again reach hospitals in northern Gaza, where they confirmed high levels of malnutrition among Palestinians, the death of children due to hunger, severe scarcity of fuel, food and medical supplies, and the destruction of hospital buildings.


The representative of the World Health Organization in the occupied Palestinian territory, Rick Peppercorn, said that most of the missions that were scheduled to go to northern Gaza in January had been rejected, and only 3 of them had been approved. In February, no mission was able to reach the region.


The Israeli occupation forces prevented medical and UN missions and humanitarian aid convoys from reaching the northern Gaza Strip.


Peppercon added in a press conference held in the Swiss city of Geneva, in which he spoke via video from occupied Jerusalem, that the organization and its partners were finally able to reach the two hospitals of the martyr Kamal Adwan and return on the third of this month. This was the hospitals' first mission since early October, despite repeated efforts to reach northern Gaza.


The team was able to deliver 9,500 liters of fuel to each hospital and some basic medical supplies, although it was a small percentage of the volume of badly needed supplies, the World Health Organization official said.


Rick Peppercorn added that the situation in Al Awda Hospital, in particular, is horrific.

He said that Kamal Adwan Hospital, the only children's hospital in northern Gaza, is operating beyond its maximum capacity as it is overcrowded with patients.


He warned that power outages pose a major risk to patient care, especially in intensive care and the neonatal care unit.


Malnutrition represents a major threat to the population of Gaza, especially young children, as it can lead to wasting and its irreversible consequences. Gaza's self-sufficiency in fish and other food products protected the population from such risks. But now a representative of the World Health Organization indicates that wasting affects 15.6% of children under the age of two in northern Gaza.


The UN official said that only 12 hospitals in Gaza are partially operating, 6 in the north and 6 in the south, and that 23 hospitals have stopped working completely. Because of this situation, the World Health Organization is calling for a significant increase in medical evacuation from Gaza.


Peppercorn said: “We estimate that 8,000 patients must be referred outside Gaza, 6,000 of whom are war-related injuries and 2,000 have other diseases.”


The World Health Organization said that the period between October 7 and February 20 witnessed the evacuation of only 2,203 patients, although Egypt and a number of other countries offered to receive patients and injured people from Gaza hospitals.


In turn, UNICEF spokesman James Alder pointed out the "serious consequences" for children in those facilities. He said: “It is reported that at least 10 children died due to dehydration and malnutrition in Kamal Adwan Hospital in the northern Gaza Strip. It is likely that a large number of other children are fighting for their lives. These deaths are man-made, expected and preventable.”


A spokesman for the United Nations Children's Fund said that more children are likely to die in the coming days if the scope of aid is not expanded without delay.


Hunger, or an absolute lack of calories, can lead to things like organ failure, Elder said.


But before this stage is reached, severe malnutrition can be a major underlying cause of death, making children more vulnerable to death from common childhood diseases. So the fact that malnutrition is now also listed as a direct cause of child mortality is “alarming,” Elder said.


While the term famine might attract more media attention, he stressed that it "doesn't make much difference to the children on the ground."


For his part, spokesman for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Jens Laerke, said: “With the start of recording deaths among children...due to hunger, we are facing an alarm the likes of which we have never faced before.”

Laerke asked, "If we do not put an end to what is happening now, then when will we do it? When will the moment come to take urgent measures and make the aid flow to Gaza, which needs it?"

"This is what we want to happen," he added.

A United Nations report in January indicated that more than 15 percent of children under two years old in northern Gaza, or one in every six children, suffer from acute malnutrition, while 3 percent suffer from severe wasting that threatens their lives.

In the southern Gaza Strip, 5 percent of children under two years suffer from acute malnutrition, according to the same report, while the World Health Organization warned that the situation has likely worsened in the past few weeks.

The United Nations and humanitarian agencies have certain criteria to determine the state of famine, which has not yet been declared in the Gaza Strip, despite the catastrophic situation there.

The death toll in the Gaza Strip has risen to 30,631, the majority of whom are children and women, since the start of the Israeli aggression on the 7th of last October. 

ARAB AND WORLD

Tue 05 Mar 2024 6:54 pm - Jerusalem Time

Hopes for resumption of negotiations in Cairo, despite ending without a breakthrough

The American Wall Street Journal said on Tuesday that a temporary truce in the Gaza Strip “may be close,” despite the “obstacles” that still surround it, especially in light of the end of this latest round.


Hamas officials remained present in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, due to a possible resumption of negotiations on a deal, which would see the release of the hostages in exchange for a temporary ceasefire in Gaza, according to what the newspaper quoted Egyptian officials as saying.


These officials said, “The negotiators believe that Hamas and Israel are making slow progress, and could reach an agreement before the month of Ramadan,” according to the newspaper, while a senior Hamas official stated that the first week of Ramadan is “a more realistic goal” for reaching an agreement ( According to the Wall Street Journal.


The newspaper said that Israel had agreed to the broad outlines of the agreement, according to two officials, one Israeli and the other American, but the Israeli official expressed concern about “whether Hamas was sincere in reaching an agreement,” after the delegation in Cairo failed to provide a list of the names of the living hostages and their condition - This is the request that mediators say Israel submitted over the weekend.


The Israeli official added that Israel "believes that it is negotiating the fate of about 40 sick, elderly, and women hostages, but it does not know who of them is still alive."


The newspaper claims that Egyptian and Israeli officials said that Hamas did not provide answers on Sunday to two main sticking points: “Who are the Palestinian prisoners that the movement wants to release? How many hostages will be released?”


On Sunday, Israel decided not to send a high-level delegation to Cairo to participate in the negotiations, after mediators informed it that Hamas officials arrived in the Egyptian capital without answers to many of the main Israeli demands, according to the Israeli official.


Even if the two negotiating teams were able to reach an agreement, “there remains another major challenge, namely the leader of Hamas in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, with whom communication has not been possible for at least a week, raising fears of not being able to reach the man who can implement the agreement.” The deal,” Egyptian and Qatari officials said.


People familiar with the discussions said that Sinwar's final message to Hamas's political leadership in Qatar was that "there should be no rush to secure the hostage deal."


For its part, Egyptian media reported on Tuesday that the Cairo talks aimed at reaching a truce in Gaza “are still ongoing.”


A high-ranking security source confirmed to the Cairo News channel, which is close to Egyptian intelligence, that “the Cairo discussions are continuing, and there is no truth to the fact that an agreement has not been reached yet.”


The source indicated that there are “difficulties facing the discussions, but they are still continuing on Monday, as Egyptian security sources said that they were still in contact with the Israelis, allowing the negotiations to proceed without the participation of an Israeli delegation.”


There were hopes that the Cairo talks would be the last stop before reaching the first long-term ceasefire in the war, a 40-day truce, during which dozens of hostages would be released and aid would be pumped into Gaza to prevent famine, before the month of Ramadan.

OPINIONS

Tue 05 Mar 2024 6:47 pm - Jerusalem Time

Hebrew Newspaper|| Netanyahu is determined to lose the United States

Yedioth Ahronoth

Yedioth Ahronoth

Opinion Writer

By Ben-Dror Yemini

Between Hamas and Israel, the majority of Americans support Israel. But woe to us if we consider this an achievement. One-fifth of Americans support Hamas, a "terrorist" organization that is no different in nature from Al-Qaeda and ISIS. This is a cause for concern. If we don't wake up, this could only be the beginning.

It is strange that this achievement is the one that Netanyahu is most proud of. He is the one who is supposed to be one of those who understand American politics and the Jews in the United States. He lived there for years, and was an American in every sense of the word. He knows that the unwritten alliance between the United States and Israel is not based on the basis of interests, but also on the basis of values. He knows that despite all the differences, the United States proved immediately after October 7 that it is not only a support, but also a lifeline. Yes, our situation was bleak. We found ourselves facing a “terrorist” organization that has been building “deadly” infrastructure for years, requiring a much greater military effort than we thought. Israel needed an airlift of military equipment much larger than it needed in the Yom Kippur War [the October 1973 war]. Joe Biden's America actually stood by Israel in fighting "terrorism."

But something has changed. We know that it was a massive and terrifying oversight that led to October 7th. It is a strategic and military failure. The problem is that strategic failure continues. We learned nothing from previous confrontations, even though the address was on the wall. Also, we should have expected the wave of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic demonstrations that swept the countries of the free world in general, and the United States in particular. But we did not want to see, nor did we want to hear. Even when things began to change, the blindness persisted. We are now in the fifth month of strategic default. It should have been clear to Netanyahu that the battle is not only military, but also political. It should have been clear to him that Hamas would pay a heavy military price, but the greater its defeat, the clearer the images of destruction and killing that would flood the media, and the greater its political outcome. Who would have believed that a fifth of Americans support Hamas? However, this is what is happening.

These are marginal people. We tried to convince ourselves of the theoretical framework that is still the reason for our failure. But this is not true. These are not only the protesters, and not just Bernie Sanders [the left-wing Democratic senator] and his ilk. Now, there is Kamala Harris, US Vice President, with her terrifying statement. She says in a clear voice what many in the American administration are thinking. It wants an immediate ceasefire for 6 weeks. But it does not say that this ceasefire is in exchange for the release of the kidnapped persons. Rather, it says that it may allow the kidnapped people to be released. And now Harris is eliminating the strong card that Israel holds to justify the continuation of the fighting.

We should say things as frankly as possible. Netanyahu insists that the United States will lose. He does everything in his power to enter into a confrontation with her. He says no, no, and no to every American initiative. What the protesters are saying, and what Sanders is saying, Kamala Harris is now saying. But enough, enough self-deception. We have a thousand arguments to justify our defeat of Hamas, even if the price is more destruction and devastation. We can say that this is what the United States did in Mosul and in Raqqa in order to subjugate ISIS. But we, in our foolishness, and mainly because of Netanyahu's strategic blindness, did our best to neglect the strategy that would have given us more support. We did not have to wait for the protesters, Sanders, and now Harris, to propose a ceasefire in exchange for the release of the kidnapped and the disarmament of the Strip. We could have stopped the fire, not for six weeks, as Harris is demanding, but only for 48 hours, for Hamas to send its response, a rejection of course. We could have repeated these proposals over and over again, in order to strengthen our political position. But we chose the “hammer strategy,” which, even if justified militarily, is considered political foolishness when it is the only strategy.

Harris has given us a big warning that cannot be taken lightly. It can be assumed that Netanyahu's policy of strategic blindness will continue on its course. But we cannot allow ourselves to lose American support, because this would be tantamount to suicide. We do not need Harris to declare a unilateral ceasefire, on our terms, in order to prevent the US administration from demanding this. It's not too late. If Netanyahu is blind, we hope that Benny Gantz and Gadi Eisenkot will present an Israeli initiative that does not include any reference to a military concession, but which seriously strengthens the political aspect. But they did nothing, and so far, they have not provided an alternative, nor have they departed from the theory. Netanyahu is worrying, while Gantz and Eizenkot are not comfortable.

OPINIONS

Tue 05 Mar 2024 6:43 pm - Jerusalem Time

The West's last gasp of global dominance

By Marco Carnelos

As US hegemony fades away, Biden and his allies are focusing on a deeply flawed 'democracies versus autocracies' narrative

 A distinctive feature of western political thinking is its astonishing capacity to justify and self-absolve when the West commits atrocities or tolerates those perpetrated by allies. 

This attitude is combined with a peculiar tendency to see everywhere enemies who are allegedly determined to destroy freedom and democracy.

This is nothing new; it is neither a byproduct of the Cold War era nor of the post-Cold War one. Its roots go back thousands of years, at least to the ancient Greeks facing the Persians, and fits with Edward Said’s observation that modern societies tend to “derive a sense of their identities negatively”. In other words, they affirm and reinforce themselves in comparison with other societies deemed to be opposite and inferior. 

To a certain extent, this is a binary distinction resulting from the dichotomous thinking inherited from Aristotelian philosophy, which continues to shape western political thought.

A recent political construct supporting this mindset is the “democracy versus autocracy” narrative incessantly promoted by the Biden administration, to the point that it was fully incorporated into the US national security strategy, and whose fundamental ideas have been promptly accepted by Washington’s lost and disoriented European allies, apparently unable to develop autonomous strategic thinking attached to their own national interests.

This narrative frames Russia, Iran and China as the three main autocracies threatening the US-led rules-based world order, which, regardless of how many western theorists try to portray it as international law, is actually something quite different. Rather, it could be aptly summarised by the motto: “For my friends, everything; for my enemies, the law.”

The test cases of the new western narrative are the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza, in addition to issues with China over the South China Sea, Taiwan, and the latter's impressive technological accomplishments. 


Dystopian views

To get a real sense of such dystopian and problematic views, one needs only to read a recent article by historian Niall Ferguson, one of the main contemporary apologists for western imperialism. 

In a shocking 2,000-word piece titled “Ukraine Needs Total Western Support - and So Does Israel”, Ferguson fails to even mention the 30,000 Palestinians killed in Gaza, noting that “there might have been far more bloodshed” if Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had heeded his defence minister’s call for a pre-emptive attack on Hezbollah in Lebanon. In other words, we should be thankful to Netanyahu for having spared a higher number of casualties in Lebanon amid the ongoing carnage in Gaza.

In this view, Russia, Hamas and Hezbollah (and the enabler of the latter two, Iran), are sworn foes of western civilisation. China is the next one. And western democracies have no responsibility for the current geopolitical tensions, notwithstanding the blatant double standards displayed in all major international crises. 

Western exceptionalism cannot accept power-sharing arrangements or true multipolarity. The only option left is the friend-foe narrative

Ferguson equates Ukraine and Israel, when the latter, due to its decades-long occupation of Palestinian lands, should rightly be compared with Russia.

German political theorist Carl Schmitt has written extensively on the friend-enemy binomial. An interesting corollary of his work is the “state of exception”, which is a major part of the self-absolving drive displayed even today, in the rubble of Gaza, by western democracies. According to this principle, in order to save democracies from their enemies (either real or imaginary), democracy itself must sometimes be suspended. 

A vivid application of this principle can be seen in Gaza, where Israel - according to the western narrative - must commit atrocities to defend itself and save “the only democracy in the Middle East” from the threat of Arab-Islamic autocratic actors: Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran. 

It goes without saying that if a threat does not materialise, it must be invented; otherwise, the entire intellectual construct of western identity could collapse. And over the last two decades, western political elites and their numerous mouthpieces in the mainstream media have honed a considerable ability to invent and promote a wide range of threats.


Internal threats

This issue also arises in a recent Foreign Affairs essay by Hal Brands, titled “The Age of Amorality: Can America Save the Liberal Order Through Illiberal Means?”

Brands asserts that “the only way to protect a world fit for freedom is to court impure partners and engage in impure acts”. His essay displays binary thinking and a typical western zero-sum approach, describing US competition with China and Russia as “the latest round in a long struggle over whether the world will be shaped by liberal democracies or their autocratic enemies”.

Nevermind the fact that the war in Ukraine might also be the result of two decades of warnings by Moscow that Ukraine joining Nato was a red line for Russia’s security, like the Soviet nuclear missiles deployed in Cuba in the early 1960s were for US security; or that the 7 October Hamas attack followed more than a half-century of brutal occupation of Palestinian lands, which Israel has carried out with an impunity never granted to any other country in recent history, thanks to Washington’s political shield.

On China, Brands does not mention the fact that tensions over Taiwan might be related to the US gradually backing away from its “One China” policy, which was established in the 1970s and has since been a cornerstone of East Asian stability.

While the US views its allies’ security concerns as important, those of other players, such as Russia, Iran and China, are usually dismissed, as are historical grievances, such as those of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation. If the motivations and security concerns of the “others” are deliberately ignored, it is impossible to pretend there will be peace or stability.

This obsession with external threats, whether real or imaginary, prevents western democracies from dealing with their own, very real domestic threats. The “autocracies versus democracies” discourse is a weapon of mass distraction, aiming to divert the western public’s attention from internal polarisation, the crisis of representative democracy, widespread inequality, and many other vital issues.

The US and its allies cannot accept that centuries of western global domination are fading away, as the power balance shifts towards the so-called Global South. Western exceptionalism cannot accept power-sharing arrangements or true multipolarity. The only option left is the friend-or-foe narrative.

PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 6:40 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israel’s war on Gaza: List of key events, day 151


Killings continue in Gaza as US Vice President Kamala Harris backs Israel a day after seeking a ceasefire.


Fighting and humanitarian crisis

  • An Israeli air attack on a home in Khan Younis in southern Gaza on Tuesday morning killed at least eight people and injured several more, the Wafa news agency reported.
  • Omar Shakir, Human Rights Watch’s director for Israel and Palestine, said attacks by Israeli forces on people seeking aid in Gaza were part of a “decades-long pattern” of deadly abuses against Palestinians.
  • Using their bare hands, people have been digging through the rubble of destroyed homes to rescue victims of another Israeli bombing in Rafah. In the east of the city, there are similar scenes as crowds search through what remains of a building pulverised by Israeli air attacks.

Regional tensions and diplomacy

  • United States Vice President Kamala Harris reiterated her country’s support for Israel and pushed for more humanitarian aid to enter the Gaza Strip in talks with Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz a day after calling for a ceasefire.
  • Pro-Palestine protesters confronted US Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez outside a movie theatre in Brooklyn, New York, demanding that she call Israel’s war on Gaza a genocide.
  • In Australia, a group of lawyers accused Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of being an “accessory to genocide in Gaza” and asked the International Criminal Court (ICC) to launch an investigation.
  • In Lebanon, US special envoy Amos Hochstein visited the capital, Beirut, to mediate talks aimed at ending escalating fighting between Israel and Hezbollah.
  • Al Jazeera Arabic shared a video authenticated by the Sanad verification agency showing the interception of incoming fire from southern Lebanon into the north of Israel.
  • Israel ramped up its criticism of the embattled UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, on Monday, saying 450 of its employees were members of groups in the Gaza Strip, though it provided no evidence to back up its accusation.


SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

 

PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 5:57 pm - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: Bombing of those waiting for aid, and the death toll rises to 30,631

The Israeli army committed 10 massacres against families in the Gaza Strip, leaving 97 killed and 123 wounded during the past 24 hours, bringing the death toll from the Israeli war on Gaza to 30,631 killed and 72,043 wounded since last October 7, according to what the Ministry of Health announced on Tuesday.


On Tuesday morning, Israeli army forces again targeted groups of Palestinians while waiting to receive food and relief aid near the Kuwait Roundabout in Gaza City, resulting in dozens of injuries.


The government media office in Gaza considered the targeting of those waiting for aid “an attempt to reinforce famine and perpetuate the siege,” as this targeting was preceded by a massacre carried out by the Israeli army a few days ago against civilians who gathered on Al-Rashid Street to obtain aid, which left more than 112killed and hundreds wounded.


This comes as fighting intensified between the Palestinian resistance and the Israeli forces invading west of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip, where many areas of the incursion witnessed violent clashes, and fierce battles took place, especially in the center of the Gaza Strip and northern Gaza.

OPINIONS

Tue 05 Mar 2024 5:08 pm - Jerusalem Time

Hebrew Newspaper|| The massive devastation in Gaza is The Strategy

Haaretz

Haaretz

Opinion Writer

By Yoana Gonen

“According to the statistics of the Gaza Ministry of Health, which are largely accepted by the Israeli security establishment, more than 30,000 Gazans have been killed in the war so far... The number of wounded has reached more than 70,000. This is the number recognized by Gaza’s hospitals and clinics... Added to those who were displaced from Gaza... Assuming that there are 1.8 million people in Gaza, Israel struck and removed about 8 percent of the population of the Gaza Strip from working against it. This percentage is enormous... As for housing, tens of thousands of apartments were bombed in The Gaza Strip, in addition to the massive destruction of the road, sewage, water, and electricity networks. All of these elements lead to a state of emissions, which will take a long time to repair. 


The pressure on these displaced people also increases as their hunger increases. In other words, the Gaza Strip now has More people are displaced and killed than what happened in the original Nakba in 1948. The Israeli army is systematically destroying the Gaza Strip.”

The above-mentioned paragraph did not appear in an article written by [leftist writer] Amira Hass in the Haaretz newspaper, but rather in a post published by court journalist Shimon Riklin, literally, on the X platform (Twitter), on Saturday evening. The man’s goal in writing these lines, God forbid, was not to express his sympathy for the tens of thousands of dead, displaced, and people exposed to starvation. Rather, his goal was to brag about these facts, and to respond to the talk that speaks of “hesitation, and Israel’s inability to decide on the issue of Gaza,” according to his words, Riklin pointed out, with pride, that Israel was truly able to achieve miraculous achievements in the field of ethnic cleansing and systematic extermination of Gaza.

For several weeks, senior politicians in the United States and Europe have been warning Israel against harming innocent people on a large scale, and about the worsening humanitarian catastrophe in the Strip. They do not realize that detailed documentation of the suffering in Gaza constitutes a list of achievements in the eyes of people like Riklin, who now sit in power. We are not talking here only about the radical right: the belief that “there are no innocents in Gaza” and the call for unjust revenge have spread among wide sectors of the Israeli public.

It can be noted that Riklin, at least, did not try to deny the facts, and that he does not belong to the category of those who “starve the Gazans and cry over them,” those who feel a little discomfort when they see the terrifying scenes of starving infants in the Strip, but they calm down. They terrified themselves, arguing that the children of Gaza brought these calamities on themselves, and that Israel bears no responsibility for what is happening.


It is estimated that about 70 percent of the dead in Gaza are women and children, but Riklin does not distinguish between a one-month-old infant and an armed Hamas member. He is proud of each of the 30,000 bodies, and he is also proud of the collapse of the health system, thirst and starvation, the destruction of the sewage network, and the mass flight of people. His tweet, besides giving us a disturbing glimpse into his dark soul, is also evidence that the massive and continuing devastation in Gaza is not merely a byproduct of a strategy, but that this devastation is the strategy itself.

It is no coincidence that the crazy right considers the most difficult hours the country is going through to be a period of euphoria and exaltation: “It is an amazing time,” as [pro-Netanyahu right-wing journalist] Yanon Magiel described it in an interview he conducted with [broadcaster] Ronnie Cuban about two weeks ago.

This indifference to morality, and this overwhelming desire for revenge, are exploited by the fundamentalists who live among us, in order to achieve their real goal, which Riklin specified without hesitation: “cleansing” the Gaza Strip of its population, whether by iron and fire, or due to the lack of options, or by the sword or due to the spread of epidemics.

What the natural world sees as a horrific disaster, many in Israel consider an achievement. As their achievements accumulate, the entire Israeli society will slide into the abyss.

ARAB AND WORLD

Tue 05 Mar 2024 5:04 pm - Jerusalem Time

"Israel" condemns the European Union's decision to refinance "UNRWA"

The Israeli Foreign Ministry denounced the European Union's decision to return some funding to UNRWA after freezing it, claiming that some of the agency's employees participated in the October 7 attack on Israel.


The ministry said in a statement, "The disappointing decision legitimizes the involvement of UNRWA employees in terrorist activities and cooperation with Hamas." According to its claim


It considered that the European Union, with its decision, “reopens the tap on the United Nations investigation into the Israeli allegations of UNRWA bias, pledging to provide donor countries and United Nations investigators with all the information available to it on this subject in the coming weeks.”


It stressed that "Israel is committed to transferring humanitarian aid to Gaza and working with other UN agencies and additional actors to ensure the distribution of aid to the Strip."


The European Commission said in a statement on Friday that it decided to grant UNRWA 50 million euros after “taking into account the action taken by the United Nations and the commitments requested by the Commission from UNRWA.”

An additional amount of €32 million has been withheld pending the completion of steps set by the European Union, including European investigations and review.

It is noteworthy that a number of Western countries, including the United States, Britain, Germany and Canada, announced the suspension of funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees against the backdrop of suspicions that a number of agency employees were involved in the Hamas movement’s attack on Israel on October 7 last year.


The agency's commissioner general, Philippe Lazzarini, announced the dismissal of several employees against the backdrop of these accusations.

ARAB AND WORLD

Tue 05 Mar 2024 4:59 pm - Jerusalem Time

Israeli analyst: Washington's frustration with Tel Aviv's behavior in Gaza has turned into anger

Israeli military analyst Amos Harel considered that American “frustration” with Tel Aviv’s behavior in its war on Gaza has turned into anger, and that it has begun to increase its pressure on both sides of the conflict to reach a ceasefire agreement and complete a prisoner exchange deal before the month of Ramadan.


In an analysis published by the Hebrew newspaper “Haaretz” on Tuesday, the prominent military analyst pointed to US Vice President Kamala Harris’ call, on Monday, for a ceasefire in Gaza.

He said: “The speech delivered by Vice President Kamala Harris may indicate a change in the American position regarding the Gaza war. It is the first time that Washington has expressed its point of view directly and clearly.”

Harel added: “The Vice President’s lengthy and detailed statements reflect the US government’s position on two sides.”

He continued: “First, President Joe Biden and his aides are intensifying pressure on both sides of the conflict in the hope of reaching an agreement that includes a ceasefire and the release of the hostages before the beginning of the month of Ramadan in less than a week.”


He added: “The second is that, after 5 months of war, American patience with Israel has begun to diminish, and Washington is struggling to determine any Israeli strategy for the war, beyond Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s quest for political survival.”

Harel added, “Washington is angry at the slow response of the Israeli government, and in some cases the army establishment, to the worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and is concerned about the consequences of the continued involvement in Gaza on the regional situation and on Biden’s candidacy for a second term.”

He considered that “one of the most prominent events in this regard was the catastrophe that occurred in Gaza City last Thursday,” when more than 100 Palestinians were killed while waiting for aid. The Israeli army admitted that it opened fire on them, even though it blamed the Palestinians themselves.

“This incident shocked the world, but in Israel it was viewed with indifference,” Harel said.


He added: “In the West and even in Washington, the scope given to Israel to carry out military operations as it deems appropriate is shrinking, at least during Ramadan.”

He continued: “After the aid disaster, the United States airdropped food parcels to Gaza for the first time, and plans to continue doing so and the European Union resumed, on Friday evening, its financial aid to UNRWA, which had been halted.”

Harel pointed out that “the food convoy incident raised fears in the West about the spread of chaos throughout Gaza, similar to Somalia.”


He added: “Israel is less concerned, and in many discussions, Israeli officials told the Americans that Hamas continuing to rule Gaza would be worse than chaos, and without reaching an agreement, the danger is that the fighting will continue with more civilian deaths amid a growing humanitarian crisis.” .

Harel said, “As Ramadan approaches, the result could be another perfect storm: images coming from Gaza could inflame audiences across the Arab world and spark a new wave of anti-Israel demonstrations and riots, posing a danger to friendly regimes.”


He said: “It can be assumed that Minister (in the War Council) Benny Gantz is hearing about all these matters, this week, in Washington, in his conversations with senior American officials.”

Harel doubted that “the Biden team has any hope of being able to convey messages via Gantz to Netanyahu, as the prime minister is too busy feigning insult, claiming that the Americans went beyond protocol when they invited Gantz without his approval.”


On Sunday, Gantz began an official visit to Washington, in light of reports stating that “the American administration’s patience is beginning to run out with Netanyahu’s behavior in the war and allegations that he is being constrained by his two partners in the government, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich,” according to the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper. “.

On Monday evening, Gantz met with Harris, while negotiations were being held in the Egyptian capital to reach a truce in the Gaza Strip with the approaching month of Ramadan.

The Cairo negotiations are taking place with the participation of Egypt, the United States, Qatar, and Hamas, without further details, and without mentioning the reason for Israel’s non-participation.

OPINIONS

Tue 05 Mar 2024 4:50 pm - Jerusalem Time

“Le Figaro”: Israel must choose... a state for the Palestinians or permanent war

Ramallah - “Al-Quds" dot com

Ramallah - “Al-Quds" dot com

Opinion Writer

Renaud Girard, a French geopolitician and writer for Le Figaro newspaper, said that if the Jewish state continues to respond militarily without considering the creation of a Palestinian state, this leaves the specter of endless war.


Chaos and misery continue to grow in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli shooting on February 29, 2024, led to the killing of more than 100 Palestinians during the distribution of humanitarian aid, as two million Palestinians gathered without being able to escape. More than two-thirds of the homes and infrastructure were destroyed due to the Israeli bombing, according to Girard, adding that with the dismantling of the administration of the region due to the war, gangs are multiplying, and today the matter has become untenable.


The writer considered it certain that Hamas bears a heavy responsibility for the current disaster. Starting with the Israeli-Palestinian Oslo Accords in 1993, the movement could play the game of peace and gradually build a Palestinian state, living side by side with Israel in a spirit of mutual respect. But it did not do that, nor did it attempt to turn Gaza into a small Arab Singapore. It stubbornly refused to recognize Israel’s right to exist, which is what the Palestine Liberation Organization, led by Yasser Arafat, did in 1988. Then it adopted an armed confrontation line against the Hebrew state, a strategy doomed to failure. Always according to Renaud Girard.


The writer continued to say that since its establishment, the State of Israel has never allowed itself to be intimidated by violence. If Palestinian youth in Gaza and the occupied West Bank had resorted to passive resistance like Gandhi, instead of resorting to bombs and Kalashnikov rifles, the impact would have been much stronger on Israeli society, whose majority spirit is fundamentally democratic, Girard said.


Moreover, during its attack on October 7, 2023, Hamas demonstrated that it was unable to discipline its fighters. Instead of limiting their destruction to military targets or the separation wall surrounding the Gaza Strip, these fighters allegedly committed violations against Israeli civilians, which led to an Israeli response against the entire Palestinian territories. Girard says that collective punishment is not only immoral, but also counterproductive. According to Hamas figures, 30,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed since the beginning of this new Israeli-Palestinian war.


But the writer considered that there will come a time when Israel must stop, as it is not in its interest to prepare a new generation of Palestinian orphans who dream of avenging their parents, nor to alienate the Arab-Islamic world that has been approaching it again, especially since the Abraham Accords. Westerners have a moral and political duty to stop the massacres in Palestine, Renaud Girard stresses.


The writer went on to say that since 1967 and the Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, the Middle East has suffered from a vicious implicit division of labor: it is up to Israel to take care of its security; It is up to the West to take charge of humanitarian aid. Today in Gaza, the United States has reached a rare stage of schizophrenia, as it delivers bombs that destroy Gaza's homes, and at the same time drops aid on its displaced residents. With such a division of labor, the conflict can continue for a long time; because no one in the Western world is making a real effort to impose a political solution.


Girard considered that with unparalleled political, financial and military influence over Israel, the Americans could impose a partition on Tel Aviv, where the Hebrew state would agree to give up its control over 22% of Mandatory Palestine in order to create a viable Palestinian state. But for reasons of domestic politics and the near-constant election campaign, they don't. Today, the United States is the only country in the UN Security Council to vote to reject all ceasefire proposals in the Middle East.


Girard continued to say that it is unfortunate that supporters of the two-state solution in Israel are very conservative. The Netanyahu government suggests, without announcing it publicly, that the best solution is to resettle Palestinians in neighboring Arab countries. But this seems like a dream because neither these Arab countries will accept it, nor will the Palestinians themselves, who want to avoid a second Nakba.


Jews who support this solution say that Europe itself witnessed major population transfers in 1945. This is true, but this happened at the end of World War II, a conflict in which the numbers of the well-to-do population were relegated to a secondary position. Today, the UN Charter prohibits forced population transfers, which is strongly condemned by world public opinion. The Arab-Islamic world will never accept such transfers, the writer says.


At the end of his article, Girard considered that, given the weak will of its Western sponsors, it is up to Israel to decide for itself whether it prefers to give a state to the Palestinians, the keys of which can be handed over to Marwan Barghouti, who recognizes the right to the existence of the Jewish state, or choose eternal war. The writer said that he is convinced that if a referendum accompanied by an interpretive campaign is organized in Israel, the first solution will prevail.

Sama News

PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 4:18 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: A Palestinian boy was killed by Israeli forces south of Nablus

A 16-year-old Palestinian boy from Orif was killed this afternoon, Tuesday, near the Hawara Junction, south of the city of Nablus, where Israeli forces opened fire on him, claiming that he had carried out a stabbing attack in which an Israeli was injured, which were described as minor.


The Israeli army prevented the Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance crews from arriving to provide first aid to the injured Palestinian youth before he was dead.


While an Israeli settler was slightly injured in the operation and was taken to the hospital to receive treatment after first aid was provided to him.

PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 2:17 pm - Jerusalem Time

Talks in Cairo for a ceasefire in Gaza end without a breakthrough

Sources told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that a meeting between the delegation of the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) and the head of Egyptian intelligence, and discussions over the past two days in Cairo with mediators regarding reaching a ceasefire in Gaza, did not result in a breakthrough.


For its part, Reuters reported that the talks hosted in Cairo between Hamas and mediators with the aim of reaching a ceasefire agreement in Gaza and a prisoner exchange agreement with Israel ended without achieving a breakthrough.


Earlier today, an informed source in Hamas confirmed the movement’s position, which requires the occupation to stop its aggression against the Gaza Strip and allow humanitarian aid to enter without restrictions, in order for the movement to continue participating in negotiations regarding the exchange of prisoners.


The source - who requested not to be revealed - said in exclusive statements to Al Jazeera Net that the movement is considering suspending its participation in the negotiations as one of the options to respond to the continued aggression and the policy of starving citizens in the Gaza Strip.


He added that the movement showed great response to the mediation led by Qatar and Egypt, and that it sent its delegation to Cairo to participate in the negotiations, but "it is Israeli intransigence that fails the negotiation process every time."


For its part, Reuters quoted Hamas leader Bassem Naim as saying that the movement presented its proposal for a ceasefire agreement to the mediators during two days of talks, and is now awaiting a response from the Israelis, who were absent from this round.


Naim added that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin, "Netanyahu does not want an agreement, and the ball is in the Americans' court" to pressure him to reach an agreement.


"impossible" condition

Israel refrains from commenting publicly on the Cairo talks. A source told Reuters earlier that Israel boycotted the talks because Hamas rejected its request to provide a list of names of all detainees still alive.


Naeem explained that this is impossible without a ceasefire first, given that the detainees are distributed throughout the war zone and are held by different factions.


There were hopes that the Cairo talks would be the last stop before reaching the first long-term ceasefire in the war, a 40-day truce during which dozens of detainees would be released and aid would be pumped into Gaza to prevent famine, before the month of Ramadan, which falls next week.


In the first phase of the ceasefire agreement, Hamas demands the nomination of 500 prisoners to be released, including life sentences and those with high sentences, in exchange for the release of 40 Israeli detainees, including civilians, the elderly, and female soldiers.


A Hamas delegation arrived in Cairo on Sunday to hold meetings with mediators from Qatar, Egypt and the United States to complete ceasefire negotiations in Gaza and an agreement to exchange prisoners and detainees with Israel, while Tel Aviv did not send a delegation to represent it.


Qatari mediation - with Egyptian-American support - succeeded in reaching a temporary humanitarian truce on November 24, which lasted for a week, during which 240 Palestinian prisoners were released from Israeli prisons in exchange for the release of more than 100 detainees held by the resistance in Gaza, including about 80 Israelis.

PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 1:00 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israeli forces demolish a house in Nablus

Today, Tuesday, the Israeli forces demolished a house on Mount Gerizim in the Al-Ta'oun Al-Alawi area in the city of Nablus.


According to local sources, these forces, accompanied by two military bulldozers, began the demolition of a two-story house in the area, belonging to the Fasih al-Masri family, after taking its residents out into the open.


The Israeli forces had notified a number of homes of demolition in the same area under the pretext of building in areas classified as (C).

ARAB AND WORLD

Tue 05 Mar 2024 12:25 pm - Jerusalem Time

The first Western leader was referred to ICC on charges of his participation in the genocide in Gaza

Yesterday, Monday, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese became the first Western president to be referred to the International Criminal Court for being an “accomplice to genocide,” after providing political and material support for the genocidal war on the Gaza Strip.


More than 100 lawyers supported the referral under Article 15 of the Rome Statute, against Albanese, a member of the Labor Party, as well as members of his government and parliament, who provided the occupation with “rhetorical support in public statements and press conferences” in addition to material assistance, as revealed by lawyer Sherine Omri for “News Breakfast” on ABC.


Omari said that the assistance provided by Australia since the occupation began the genocidal war on Gaza included the export of spare parts for F-35 fighter aircraft, in addition to military intelligence information through the surveillance work carried out by the government at the Pine Gap Joint Defense Facility in the Northern Territory of Australia. .


While Albanese recently called on the occupation to respect international law, Omri said there had been very little in the way of urging restraint on the occupation and discouraging what the international community might do “despite months having passed since the war,” the website reported. Common Dreams.


The Court of Justice concluded on January 26 that it was a plausible case of genocide.”


The 92-page document compiled by the legal team outlines a number of specific ways in which officials in the Albanese government and other Australians acted as an accomplice to the genocide, including: freezing $6 million in funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East amid Humanitarian crisis due to unconfirmed claims by the occupation; Providing military aid and approving the export of defendants to the occupation, which could be used by the occupying army in the context of ostensibly committing genocide and crimes against humanity; the mysterious deployment of an Australian military unit to the region, whose exact location and role have not been revealed; allowing Australians, explicitly or implicitly, to travel to join the Israeli army and participate in its attacks on Gaza.


Omari explained in a statement that “the Rome Statute stipulates four forms of individual criminal responsibility, two of which are annexed.”


Along with Albanese, US President Joe Biden, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz are among the Western leaders who have repeatedly defended the occupation's crimes in Gaza - despite the genocidal intent expressed in numerous public statements by occupation leaders.


Biden was sued in federal court in January for “complicity in genocide committed by the Israeli government.” This case is still working its way through the US appeals process.

ARAB AND WORLD

Tue 05 Mar 2024 12:23 pm - Jerusalem Time

Washington demands a timetable from Israel to end the war on Gaza

The Hebrew newspaper “Maariv” said, on Tuesday, that US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan called on the Minister in the Israeli War Council, Benny Gantz, to set a “specific timetable” to end the war that has been ongoing in the Gaza Strip for 5 months.


The newspaper reported details of the meeting held at the White House on Monday evening, in which Sullivan called on Gantz to “set a specific timetable to end the war in Gaza.”


For its part, the Hebrew Broadcasting Corporation indicated that Gantz “asked American officials to pressure Egypt and Qatar to make Hamas accept the Israeli position in the ongoing talks, to reach an agreement to exchange prisoners and a prolonged ceasefire in Gaza.”


The authority reported that Gantz said in a text to senior American officials during Monday’s meetings at the White House: “You must escalate the pressure on the mediators, Egypt and Qatar, to make Hamas flexible. You have the ability to put pressure, and they have the tools,” as he put it.


On Sunday, Gantz began an official visit to Washington, in light of American reports stating that “the American administration is beginning to run out of patience with the behavior of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the war and allegations that he is being constrained by his two partners in the government, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich,” according to the statement. Yedioth Ahronoth Hebrew newspaper.


Gantz also met, on Monday evening, with US Vice President Kamala Harris, while negotiations were being held in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, to reach a truce in the Gaza Strip with the approaching month of Ramadan next Monday.


Negotiations are taking place in Cairo with the participation of Egypt, the United States, Qatar, and Hamas, without further details and without mentioning the reason for Israel’s non-participation.


On Sunday, the Hebrew Broadcasting Corporation quoted an unnamed Israeli official as saying that Tel Aviv required that attendees of the Cairo meetings obtain lists of the names of living Israeli detainees in the Gaza Strip, in order to move forward with the deal, which was also rejected by the Israeli War Council and sparked a new dispute with the two prime ministers. Benjamin Netanyahu on the course of the war and negotiations.


A truce previously prevailed between Hamas and Israel for a week from November 24 to December 1, 2023, during which a ceasefire took place, a prisoner exchange took place, and very limited humanitarian aid was brought into Gaza, with Qatari-Egyptian-American mediation.




PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 11:41 am - Jerusalem Time

Palestinian Prisoners' Commission": Israel arrested 22 Palestinians from the West Bank

The Prisoners and Ex-Prisoners Affairs Authority reported that the Israeli forces arrested at least 22 citizens from the West Bank last night and Tuesday morning, including two former detainees and a woman.

The total number of arrests rose after the seventh of last October to more than (7,422) cases, and this total includes those who were arrested from homes, through military checkpoints, those who were forced to surrender themselves under pressure, and those who were held hostage.


It is noteworthy that the Israeli forces continue to implement systematic arrest campaigns, as one of the most prominent established policies, which escalated in an unprecedented manner after the seventh of October, not only in terms of the level of the number of detainees, but also in terms of the level of crimes committed.


It is noteworthy that the data related to arrest cases includes those who were kept in detention by Israel, or those who were later released.

PALESTINE

Tue 05 Mar 2024 11:38 am - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israeli forces bulldozes land and uproots 400 olive seedlings west of Bethlehem

Today, Tuesday, the Israeli forces bulldozed lands and uprooted 400 olive seedlings in the lands of the village of Wadi Fukin, west of Bethlehem.


According to local sources, the Israeli forces stormed the “Abu Siyaj” area, west of the village near the “Tzur Hadassah” settlement, which is located on citizens’ lands, and bulldozed a land estimated at 40 dunams, and uprooted olive seedlings, belonging to the heirs of Othman and Abdel Aziz Al-Haroub.


It is noteworthy that Israel escalated its settlement attack on the village of Wadi Fukin, which consisted of seizing lands, bulldozing others, and uprooting hundreds of vine and olive trees.