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Thursday, January 16, 2025

The Ceasefire in Gaza: The crisis is far from over...


 
Israel killed 80 Palestinians in Gaza today, 30 of whom killed after the ceasefire deal was announced. Israel always accelerates its massacres in the lead-up to ceasefire deadlines. Gaza also remains a besieged concentration camp reduced to rubble. The crisis is far from over.
 
Yusuf / Cat Stevens
@YusufCatStevens
 
 What a relief! Thank you Lord. But also a shameful moment for Humanity that so much blood had to be spilled before politicians in power agreed to ceasefire - peace can never come too soon

"This is long overdue for the children and families of Gaza who have endured more than a year of bombardment and deprivation, and for the hostages in Gaza and their families in Israel who have suffered so much." on announcement of ceasefire: unicef.org/press-releases

“The war has exacted a horrific toll on Gaza’s children – reportedly leaving at least 14,500 dead, thousands more injured, an estimated 17,000 unaccompanied or separated from their parents, and nearly one million displaced from their homes.

“The scale of humanitarian needs is enormous, and UNICEF and partners are ready to scale up our response. The ceasefire must, finally, afford humanitarian actors the opportunity to safely roll out the massive response inside the Gaza Strip that is so desperately needed. This includes unimpeded access to reach all children and families with essential food and nutrition, health care and psychosocial support, clean water, and sanitation, education, and learning, as well as cash assistance and the resumption of commercial trucking operations.

“With the collapse of essential services across Gaza, we must act urgently to save lives and help children recover."  ...READ MORE  https://www.unicef.org/press-releases/statement-unicef-executive-director-catherine-russell-announcement-ceasefire-gaza

Depraved & sadistic. With the announcement of the upcoming ceasefire Israel shelled the Palestinians celebrating in the street, then shelled the tattered tents of the displaced. The utmost cruelty.

At least 71 Palestinians have been killed and more than 200 injured since the announcement of the ceasefire agreement in Gaza.
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a phased ceasefire deal that includes boosting aid into Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners. Over the last 15 months, civilians have been targeted, attacked and killed at a scale unprecedented in the recent history of Israel and Palestine.
 
Our work is not done! A ceasefire is only the most important first step to end the genocide against the 2.3 million Palestinians in Gaza. Without massive pressure, it may constitute a continuation of a less visible form of genocide that Israel and the US hope will provoke less regional and global outrage, boycotts and sanctions. Boycott and pressure these companies now for their complicity in Israel’s occupation, apartheid and genocide against Palestinians.
 
"I welcome the announcement of a deal to secure a ceasefire and hostage release in Gaza. I urge the parties & relevant partners to seize this opportunity to establish a credible political path to a better future for Palestinians, Israelis & broader region." -
 
The 40 people who were killed after the ceasefire deal announcement yesterday afternoon managed to survive over the past 15 months, be it starvation, air strikes, illnesses, and the nonstop evacuation orders. Just in a click of a button, they were killed with their families. And yet sadly, more will be killed in Gaza today and will they never live to return to their bombed houses and feel that they made it.

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Never Forget! Hind Rajab- a little 5 year old Palestinian girl hit by 355 bullets fired by Israel's IDF in Gaza

 


Israel admits soldiers used ambulance in raid on Palestinian refugee camp in the West Bank: “Israel is no longer trying to hide its war crimes and is acting as though the norms and rules of international law do not apply,’’ said the prominent Israeli rights group B’Tselem, which investigated the incident."

Woman shot as Israeli soldiers emerge from ambulance in Nablus

Israel admits soldiers used ambulance in raid on refugee camp

Families seek justice after a raid on Balata camp in the West Bank resulted in the death of an 80-year-old woman and another civilian

The ambulance pulls up on a narrow street at the Balata Palestinian refugee camp in Nablus in the West Bank, seemingly no different from one of the many emergency vehicles that drive in the area every day. But then five armed Israeli soldiers emerge from the vehicle, going on to take part in a raid that results in the death of two civilians, including an 80-year-old woman, in an incident that Israel’s army admitted constituted “a serious offence … [and] violation of existing orders and procedures”.

The Guardian has reviewed video captured by a surveillance camera, spoken with witnesses and a survivor of the military operation, conducted by the IDF on 19 December 2024 using a hospital vehicle with Palestinian licence plates. It was described by rights groups as a “flagrant violation” of international humanitarian law, which prohibits the use of medical vehicles to carry out military attacks that result in injury or death of people.

 “Israel is no longer trying to hide its war crimes and is acting as though the norms and rules of international law do not apply,’’ said the prominent Israeli rights group B’Tselem, which investigated the incident.

Security footage from a shop on Al-Suq Road shows Israeli soldiers disembarking from at least two vehicles. Five servicemen descend from an ambulance while at least five others emerge from what appears to be a civilian white van. Shots appear to be fired and pedestrians run for their lives.

An elderly woman, who was talking at the roadside with a neighbour, falls to the ground, wounded. She attempts to raise her hand in a plea for help, but it is said that within seconds, she is fatally shot with two more rounds from an assault weapon by the soldiers. Her name was Halimah Saleh Hassan Abu Leil, 80.... READ MORE https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jan/14/suddenly-there-was-a-car-of-men-the-day-israeli-soldiers-attacked-a-refugee-camp

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OCHA OPT (Palestine) - In Gaza, the fuel crisis threatens the operation of essential services. - Explosive weapons in 2024 left about 15 children a day with potentially life-long disabilities. - +12,000 patients need urgent medical evacuation outside Gaza. - etc....

 

The Humanitarian Situation Update is issued by OCHA Occupied Palestinian Territory twice a week. The Gaza Strip is covered on Tuesdays and the West Bank on Thursdays. The Gaza Humanitarian Response Update is issued every other Tuesday. The next Humanitarian Situation Update will be issued on 16 January.

Children playing near a flooded area at a site for internally displaced people (IDPs) in Gaza city. Photo: OHCHR

Key Highlights

  • The fuel crisis continues to threaten the operation of critical health services, from ventilators in Intensive Care Units to hemodialysis machines.
  • Critical water, sanitation and hygiene facilities and activities are at risk of grinding to a halt if no additional fuel is urgently received, warns the WASH Cluster.
  • Explosive weapons in 2024 left an average of 15 children a day in Gaza with potentially life-long disabilities, according to Save the Children.
  • Less than 450 patients have been medically evacuated outside Gaza since May 2024, out of just over 5,000 evacuated in total since October 2023 and more than 12,000 still in need of urgent, life-saving evacuation, according to the Health Cluster.
  • Women and girls in overcrowded and poorly lit shelters face heightened vulnerability to violence, including sexual exploitation and abuse, warns UNFPA.

Humanitarian Developments

  • Israeli bombardment from the air, land and sea and detonation of residential buildings continues to be reported across the Gaza Strip, resulting in further civilian casualties, displacement, and destruction of civilian infrastructure. Rocket fire by Palestinian armed groups towards Israel has also been reported.... READ MORE    https://www.ochaopt.org/content/humanitarian-situation-update-255-gaza-strip
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Nour Elassy Poet and writer based in Gaza: Why I won’t stop telling Gaza’s stories. I continue to report from Gaza, not because I believe my words may end the war, but because I want to make a record of our existence – our dignity, resilience, hope.

There is a look I have come to recognise – the way a child’s eyes widen when they see me, wearing a press vest and holding the microphone. It is not curiosity. It is hope. A fragile, desperate hope that maybe I carry answers I do not have.

“When will this end?” a boy once asked me, tugging at my sleeve as I filmed near his shelter. He could not have been older than five, his feet bare and caked with dust.

His friends gathered around him, watching me as if I held some secret key to the future. “When can we go home?”

I did not know what to say. I never do. Because, like them, I am displaced. Like them, I do not know when or if this war will ever end. But in their eyes, I am someone who might know. Someone who, by simply being there with a camera, could change something.

And so they cling to me. They follow me through rubble and across broken streets, asking questions I cannot answer. Sometimes, they do not say anything at all. They just walk alongside me, quietly, as if my presence alone is enough to fill the silence that war has left behind.

I cannot count how many times a mother has pulled me aside after an interview, held my hand tightly and whispered, “Please … can you help us?” Their voices tremble not with anger, but exhaustion – the kind of exhaustion that sinks into your bones and never leaves.

They do not ask for much. A few more blankets. Soap. Medicine for their children. And I stand there, my camera still rolling, nodding, trying to explain that I am here to tell their stories, not to deliver aid. But what is a story to a new mother who does not even have a mattress to sleep on, let alone to her newborn?

I relive these moments every time I sit down to write. They replay in my mind like echoes – every face, every voice. And with each word I put on the page, I wonder if it will make a difference. I wonder if the people who read my words, who watch my reports, will understand that beneath the politics and the headlines, there is this: a woman washing her infant’s clothes in sewage water, a boy picking through rubbish to find something to sell, a girl missing school because she cannot afford sanitary pads.

I do not cover politics. I do not need to. The war speaks for itself in the smallest of details.

It is in the tangle of feet beneath tents, where families share spaces too small to breathe. It is in the way children cough at night, their chests heavy from the damp and the cold. It is in the sight of fathers standing by the sea, staring out as if the waves might carry away their burdens.

There is a kind of grief here that does not scream. It lingers, soft and persistent, in every corner of life.

One day, while reporting near a neglected group of tents, a girl handed me a drawing she had made on the back of an old cereal box. It was simple – flowers and birds – but in the middle, she had drawn a house, whole and untouched. “This is my house,” she told me. “Before.”

Before.

That word carries so much weight in Gaza. Before the air strikes. Before the displacement. Before war stripped away everything but survival.

I write these stories not because I believe they will end the war, but because they are proof that we existed. That even in the face of everything, we held on to something. Dignity. Resilience. Hope.

There is a scene I return to often. A woman standing at the entrance of her shelter, brushing her daughter’s hair with her fingers because she cannot afford a comb. She hums softly a lullaby that drowns out the horrific sound of close air strikes and distant shelling. Her daughter leans into her, eyes half-closed, safe for just a moment.

I do not know what peace looks like, but I think it might feel like that.

This is the Gaza I know. This is the Gaza I write about. And no matter how many times I tell these stories, I will keep telling them, because they matter. Because, one day, I hope that when a child asks me when the war will end, I can finally give them the answer they have been waiting for.

Until then, I carry their voices with me, and I will make sure the world hears them.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2025/1/14/why-i-wont-stop-telling-gazas-stories 


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Gaza deaths top 46,000 as one study suggests it could be much higher, and some pin ceasefire hopes on Trump

People search the rubble of a building destroyed in an Israeli strike on the Bureij camp for Palestinian refugees, in the central Gaza Strip, Jan. 8, 2025, as the war between Israel and Hamas continues. EYAD BABA/AFP/Getty
By

Could Other Countries Prosecute Soldiers in Gaza? A growing legal movement has turned to the principle of universal jurisdiction, which allows national courts to take on war-crimes cases, regardless of where those crimes were committed or the nationality of the perpetrator.

Last spring, a video spread across social media. Filmed at night, it shows several soldiers in olive-green army fatigues transporting a group of prisoners. The captured men wear white jumpsuits and blindfolds, and they have their hands tied behind their backs. The person holding the camera begins to narrate, in French, “Did you see those motherfuckers?” Referring to a prisoner whose jumpsuit has fallen to his waist, he says, “Look, he’s pissed himself. . . . I will show you his back. You’ll laugh. They tortured him to make him talk.” In a separate clip, he points the camera at the men, including one with marks on his back, and says, “You were happy on October 7th, you sons of bitches?”

A group of European and Palestinian human-rights organizations allege that the video was filmed by a French-Israeli soldier stationed with the Israel Defense Forces in Gaza. Politicians in France demanded an inquiry, arguing that if this soldier was of French nationality and a potential perpetrator of torture, or had aided and abetted it, he should be tried in French courts for possible war crimes... READ MORE  https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-lede/could-other-countries-prosecute-soldiers-in-gaza?mbid=social_twitter&utm_brand=tny&utm_social-type=owned

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Netanyahu's top administration official Ben-Gvir brags today about blocking past ceasefire deals that would've released Israeli hostages.

" Why isn't this covered in the US media?!! Netanyahu's top administration official Ben-Gvir brags today about blocking past ceasefire deals that would've released Israeli hostages." jpost.com/breaking-news/


CSM- In Israel’s democracy battle, an added front: Politicized police "a mass protest movement – unprecedented in size and duration in Israel’s history – was mobilized to counter what democracy activists portrayed as a naked power grab. Demonstrations packed streets around the country for about 40 weeks straight, until the devastating Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas assault thrust the country into war and brought the overhaul efforts to a halt."

Blocking Arab citizens’ protests against the war in Gaza. Making a mid-level officer who ordered aggressive tactics against anti-government demonstrators the head of Israel’s national police force. Another officer’s refusal to arrest violent Jewish settlers in the hopes of currying favor with his boss.

This is just a partial list of how the Israeli police force has been politicized under National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

The process has proceeded relentlessly since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power two years ago and gave Mr. Ben-Gvir, an extremist settler provocateur with his own long rap sheet, the highest law enforcement job in the country... READ MORE

Why We [CSM] Wrote This

A story focused on

How central is an independent police force to democracy? In Israel, the politicization of the national police is seen as part of the hard-line government’s revived judicial overhaul program, which sparked a mass pro-democracy protest movement.

"... For Palestinian citizens of Israel, the heavy-handed police stifling of dissent is nothing new. But the rise in systemic targeting of the community, especially when it comes to freedom of speech and the right to protest under Mr. Ben-Gvir and more so since the war began, has been marked.

Some 200 Palestinian citizens and East Jerusalem residents are facing charges for exercising their rights of freedom of expression, according to Adalah, a Palestinian-run legal center based in Haifa..."   READ MORE  https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2025/0110/israel-netanyahu-ben-gvir-police-democracy

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"Adalah" is an Arabic word that means JUSTICE    https://www.adalah.org/en 

Adalah’s mission is to promote human rights in Israel in general and the rights of the Palestinian minority, citizens of Israel, in particular (around 1.5 million people, or 20% of the population). This work also includes promoting and defending the human rights of all individuals subject to the jurisdiction of the State of Israel (e.g. Palestinian residents of the OPT). Adalah is the first Palestinian Arab-run legal center in Israel, and the sole Palestinian organization that works before Israeli courts to protect the human rights of Palestinians in Israel and in the OPT.  https://www.adalah.org/en/content/view/7189

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

CSM Where kindness meets crisis: This police unit put away its riot gear. Now it walks and talks with protesters.

Dialogue unit officers talk with people gathered at a rally in support of the Palestinian cause, in Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 24, 2024. Alfredo Sosa/Staff
"At a pro-Palestinian street protest in Columbus, Ohio, last fall, demonstrators march to the rhythm of liberation chants, punctuated by occasional horns from passing cars. “Free, free Palestine,” they cry, waving flags and banners.

But mingling among the demonstrators are four uniformed police officers wearing powder-blue police vests emblazoned with “Columbus Police Dialogue.” One of them is Sgt. Steve Dyer, the team leader of a special unit that talks with protesters rather than confronting them with riot gear.

“Their goal is to have their voices heard,” Sergeant Dyer says. “We will walk and work with those who are there to peacefully protest.” By walking with and talking to protesters, police hope to build legitimacy – a bridge of communication that could deescalate potential conflicts.... "  READ MORE   https://www.csmonitor.com/Daily/2025/20250113?cmpid=ema:bundle:20250113:1191533:toc&sfmc_sub=272001716#1191533

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Tasneem, the daughter of journalist Ayman Al-Amraiti, was killed by Israel this morning [January 14, 2025]

Tasneem, the daughter of journalist Ayman Al-Amraiti, was killed by Israel this morning
 

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International Committee of the Red Cross

The rules of war, also known as international humanitarian law: Recognize the right of civilians to be protected from the dangers of war and receive the help they need. Every possible care must be taken to avoid harming them or their houses, or destroying their means of survival, such as water sources, crops, livestock, etc.

The rules of war are universal. The Geneva Conventions (which are the core element of IHL) have been ratified by all 196 states. Very few international treaties have this level of support.

Hospitals in Gaza registered 4500 amputation cases in the past 15 months. Of them were 805 children and 541 ladies.

Gaza 2025


March 2024 in The New Yorker:  The Children Who Lost Limbs in Gaza

More than a thousand children who were injured in the war are now amputees. What do their futures hold?

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