[RD] War in Gaza News: Pas de Deux

Rashid Khalidi, America’s foremost scholar of Palestine, is retiring: ‘I don’t want to be a cog in the machine any more’​

As the Columbia University professor steps down, he addresses student protests, links between Ireland and Palestine and how ‘higher education has developed into a hedge fund’

History has a striking capacity to intrude on the present day, as it does when I meet Rashid Khalidi. The Palestinian American professor’s retirement from his position as the Edward Said chair of modern Arab history at Columbia University was imminent, and that morning he has received alarming news: a gang of extremist Israeli settlers had stormed a house on Silsila Road in Jerusalem, a property that had been in his family’s possession since the time of his great-great-great grandfather in the 18th century.

The property had recently been briefly uninhabited after a cousin living there had died. The plan was to convert the house into an extension of the Khalidi library, just across the road, which houses more than 1,200 manuscripts, some dating back to the early 11th century.

Khalidi says he believes the settlers were being strategic, that they had been watching the property, or perhaps the obituaries, and were ready to act. While his family has the ownership documents relating to the property, Khalidi says he is full of doom: “We had a court decision in our favor, saying that we own the property, but these people trample all over legality, law and courts, and they are supported by the police and the government.”

Rashid Khalidi turns 76 this year; he is the same age as the state of Israel, and this incident was the latest example of what has been happening to Palestinians since the founding of Israel: in his words, “systematic, massive dispossession and theft”.

Khalidi cuts a friendly professorial figure when I speak to him in the south of France. He is in a contemplative mood and being away from the US is a welcome respite from what has been among the most tumultuous of semesters at Columbia University, in his more than two decades there.

The student protest movement against Israel’s actions in Gaza after Hamas’s 7 October attack began on Columbia’s campus, and brought together two strands that have dominated his life: the politics of Palestine and Israel, and being a scholar of the Middle East at an elite college.

The day after police were sent in to break up the Columbia encampment this spring, Khalidi appeared with a megaphone in hand to support the students. Ever the historian, he reminded his audience that, as with the Vietnam protests, history would judge the students to have been on the right side, that their valor would be vindicated.

In the year since 7 October, his voice and narrative authority on the subject of Palestine have been sought extensively, mainly because of his most recent book, The Hundred Years War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonial Conquest and Resistance.

Khalidi has enjoyed a life dedicated to education, politics and family. But that life has also been laced with the agony of watching what has happened in and to Palestine. As he looks ahead to retirement and an emeritus position at Columbia, he does so as the pre-eminent Palestinian intellectual of his generation in the west – a mantle inherited from Edward Said, and not just because he has for so long occupied the chair created in Said’s name.

It’s arguable, though, that Khalidi has been more influential than Said in recent months. The Hundred Years’ War On Palestine has been in the top five in the New York Times’ nonfiction bestseller list for more than 30 weeks. It is a double-edged sword, says Khalidi, wanting your book to sell and also knowing that its success stems from a need to understand the history of the region in the wake of tens of thousands of Palestinian deaths. He gives his royalties to charity.

The book presents a persuasive framing that what has happened to Palestine is the consequence of a settler-colonial project, and the resistance that that has prompted. It also doubles up as the story of his own prominent family’s history: his father being sent by his uncle to deliver a message to King Abdullah I of Jordan to speak on behalf of Palestinians underlines the absence of diplomatic channels for Palestinians. Their voices were silenced. The opening of the book describes a prescient letter written by his great-great-great uncle, Yusuf Diya al-Din Pasha al-Khalidi, to Theodor Herzl, the founder of the modern Zionist movement, in 1899. Yusuf Diya argues in the letter that the fulfillment of the Zionist project would entail the dispossession of the Palestinian people.

His ancestor’s prophecy is borne out in the book and on the ground.

Khalidi’s grandfather lost the family home in Jaffa in the Nakba, or catastrophe – the mass displacement and dispossession of Palestinians during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. His family scattered. At the time, his parents were in New York, where his father was finishing his education. Unable to return to Palestine, they stayed in New York, where Rashid was born.

At Yale University, Khalidi was part of the class of 1970, the first that didn’t have quotas for Black or Jewish students. Those limits had crumbled after the civil rights movement. “We were the first class that was not made up of mainly white Anglo-Saxon Protestant prep school boys. And I almost dropped out after the first year,” Khalidi says. “It was hard to feel at ease around people like George W Bush, who was a senior.”

Khalidi did eventually find his people, who were involved in Palestinian activism, anti-Vietnam war organizing and the Black Panthers. He recalls a visit to Yale in the late 1960s by Golda Meir, Israel’s prime minister. She said that there was no such thing as Palestinians, that they did not exist. Meir received a rapturous reception from about a 1,000 students, and only four people, including Khalidi, stood in opposition to her visit.

“Now,” he says, “the situation would be reversed. There would be thousands of students protesting and a few in favor.”

He attributes this change to a shift on several levels. In the academy and in serious scholarship, the way that the subject of Israel-Palestine is taught has changed. There is also what he describes as utter contempt on the part of the younger generation for traditional media. His son, a playwright, urges him constantly to rescind his subscription to the New York Times, telling him it’s a disgrace that he pays the paper.

“They are deeply skeptical of the shibboleths and myths and lies and distortions that the politicians and the media and the institutions that dominate western societies cherish and hold dear, and enforce by law on everybody else if you demonstrate in favor of something they don’t like,” says Khalidi.

And then there is what happened on 7 October.

“There were two things that were taking place at the same time. The horrors of that day shocked people for weeks, and then there were those who said chickens had come home to roost. They were, of course, punished, those who said an explosion was inevitable when you impose a brutal occupation or blockade on people for four or five generations. Alongside that, people started to see a genocide being played out, and were watching it in real time on their phones; that had a profound effect.”

What did he make of the shift that took place immediately after 7 October, when young people around the world rose up in support of Palestine? “Understanding the traumatic experience of Israelis is essential to understand what is going on now. And also what else it might do. And I also think people say a dead child is a dead child. On the one side you have a dozen or two dozen dead children, and on the other side you have thousands of dead children. And if you are angry about this, you have to be outraged about that. That it wasn’t the case with the media or politicians – well, that was noticed. Within a couple of weeks, there were as many Palestinians dead, but somehow the deaths of Israelis was more horrifying, more atrocious, and the rank, racist hypocrisy behind those attitudes is now stark for many people.”

The impact of the protests at universities is likely to be felt for some time. Three presidents of elite colleges lost their jobs, some students still have court cases hanging over them, and questions about the role that universities play in civil society will continue to be debated. But Khalidi, who has dedicated his life to the pursuit of learning, has had enough of the routine life of an academic.

“I didn’t want to be a cog in that machine any more. For some time now, I have been both disgusted and horrified by the way higher education has developed into a cash register – essentially a money-making, MBA, lawyer-run, hedge fund-cum-real estate operation, with a minor sideline in education, where money has determined everything, where respect for pedagogy is at a minimum,” Khalidi says. “Research that brings in money, they respect. But they don’t care about teaching, even though it is the students with their tuition who provide a huge proportion of private universities’ budgets.”

His personal disappointment aside, Khalidi is beloved by his students: more than 60 of those whose PhDs he supervised over his career turned up from all over the world to pay moving tributes to him in New York last summer. It was part of a two-day seminar looking at his academic legacy – and a new venue had to be found at short notice, as Columbia was under lockdown.

Khalidi resists questions that demand a crystal ball. He is a historian who prefers to focus on analyzing what past actions tell us. His next book will focus on Ireland, and how it was a laboratory for Palestine. It stems from a fellowship he had recently at Trinity College, Dublin. He says that to understand Palestine, you have to understand British colonialism more broadly. He is hoping to examine key figures in the British aristocracy whose Irish experience was central to everything they did afterwards – people such as Arthur James Balfour, Sir Charles Tegart and Gen Sir Frank Kitson. He is hoping to show how the Irish experience was exported to India, Egypt and Palestine, and then returned to Ireland again during the Troubles, having been magnified in the colonies. “It is astonishing how personnel and counter-insurgency techniques, like torture, assassination, find their roots with the British in Ireland,” Khalidi says.

His personal family history, his scholarship and the front row seat he had as part of the Palestinian advisory group during talks in Madrid in the early 1990s show him that until the US shifts its total, uncritical support for Israel, the Palestinians will not get anything close to sovereignty. “It’s never statehood, it’s never self-determination,” he says. “It is an extension into the future of the status quo with epaulets.”

When he looks back at the 1990s, he is reminded of what the Palestinians were up against, and why they didn’t stand a chance. And why the peace efforts of the time were destined for failure. Not only did Israel have its own lawyers, combing over every detail, it had the backing of the US too. Khalidi understands that it was a fundamental error on the part of Yasser Arafat and his team to think that the US could be an honest broker.

“That is what drives me: Israel cannot do any of this – killing this number of Palestinians [more than 40,000 at the time of writing] without the US and western European countries. The US gives Israel the green light. It is a party to the war on Palestine. That is what drives me as an American. I am not just at this because I am a Palestinian. It is because I am an American. Because we are responsible.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/n...ne-israel-scholar-columbia-university-retires
 

UN chief tells Israel that draft law blocking aid agency UNRWA in Gaza would be 'catastrophe'​

Middle East conflict 'getting worse by the hour,' says Antonio Guterres

Draft Israeli legislation that would stop the UN's Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) working in the Gaza Strip and West Bank would be a "catastrophe" if enacted, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres said on Tuesday.

Guterres said he raised his concerns with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

"Such a measure would suffocate efforts to ease human suffering and tensions in Gaza, and indeed, the entire occupied Palestinian Territory," he told reporters.

"It would be a catastrophe in what is already an unmitigated disaster."

The Israeli parliament in July gave preliminary approval to a bill that would declare UNRWA a terrorist organization. Israeli leaders have accused UNRWA staff of collaborating with Hamas militants in Gaza.

In response to Guterres's remarks, Israel's UN Ambassador Danny Danon told Reuters: "Israel works with humanitarian agencies that are actually interested in humanitarian aid and not activism or, in some cases, terrorism."

The UN said in August that nine UNRWA staff may have been involved in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, and had been fired. Then a Hamas commander in Lebanon — killed last month in an Israeli strike — was found to have had an UNRWA job.

UNRWA provides education, health and aid to millions of Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. It has long had tense relations with Israel but ties have deteriorated sharply since the start of the war in Gaza and Israel has called repeatedly for UNRWA to be disbanded.

Guterres spoke to reporters a day after the one-year anniversary of the shock Hamas rampage in Israel, during which some 1,200 people were killed and about 250 taken hostage, according to Israeli figures. More than 100 hostages remain held in Gaza by the Palestinian militant group.

The secretary general said there is still time to stop the spreading violence.

He again called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon, the release of all hostages taken in Hamas's Oct. 7, 2023 attack in southern Israel and the delivery of humanitarian aid to the multitudes in desperate need.

The Hamas attack triggered Israel's retaliation in Gaza, sparking a humanitarian crisis in the besieged enclave where authorities say nearly 42,000 people have been killed.

"There is something fundamentally wrong in the way this war is being conducted," Guterres said on Tuesday.

"Ordering civilians to evacuate does not keep them safe if they have no safe place to go and no shelter, food, medicine or water."

The conflict in Gaza has raised fears of all-out regional war, pitting Israel against Iran and the militant groups that it backs, including Lebanon's Hezbollah. Israel's military on Tuesday deployed more troops into south Lebanon, signalling an expanding ground offensive against Hezbollah.

Gaza in 'death spiral,' says Guterres​

Guterres appealed to Israel and Hezbollah to respect the safety and security of UNIFIL peacekeepers in southern Lebanon.

He said that Israeli forces operating adjacent to a UNIFIL position — staffed by Irish peacekeepers — had left after he complained on Monday "to different entities." A UN official later said Guterres had communicated with the United States.

About 2,000 Lebanese have been killed since Hezbollah began firing at Israel a year ago in solidarity with Hamas, most killed in the past few weeks. Guterres said the death toll in Lebanon has already surpassed the number of people killed in the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war.

Guterres said "the Middle East is a powder keg with many parties holding the match," adding that Lebanon is on the verge of "an all-out war" and Gaza is "in a death spiral."

The conflict in the Middle East "is getting worse by the hour," Guterres said, and every airstrike, missile launch and rocket fired "pushes peace further out of reach and makes the suffering even worse for the millions of civilians caught in the middle."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/gaza-unrwa-israel-middle-east-crisis-1.7346041
 

Netanyahu warns Lebanon of 'destruction like Gaza'​

Israel's prime minister has made a direct appeal to urge the Lebanese people to throw out Hezbollah and avoid "destruction and suffering like we see in Gaza".
Benjamin Netanyahu's appeal on Tuesday came as Israel expanded its ground invasion against Hezbollah by sending thousands more troops into a new zone in south-west Lebanon.
Netanyahu also claimed the Israel Defense Forces had killed the successor to Hezbollah's former leader, Hassan Nasrallah, but the IDF later said it could not confirm Hashem Safieddine's death.
Elsewhere, Hezbollah's fighters launched barrages of rockets towards the Israeli port city of Haifa for the third consecutive day, injuring 12 people.
During a video address directed at the people of Lebanon, Netanyahu said: "You have an opportunity to save Lebanon before it falls into the abyss of a long war that will lead to destruction and suffering like we see in Gaza.
"I say to you, the people of Lebanon: Free your country from Hezbollah so that this war can end."
Hezbollah has remained defiant despite three weeks of intense Israeli strikes and other attacks that Lebanese officials say have killed more than 1,400 people and displaced another 1.2 million.
Earlier on Tuesday Hassan Nasrallah's former deputy, Naim Qassem, insisted Hezbollah had overcome the recent “painful blows” from Israel and that its capabilities were “fine”.
Israel has gone on the offensive after almost a year of cross-border fighting sparked by the war in Gaza, saying it wants to ensure the safe return of tens of thousands of residents of Israeli border areas displaced by Hezbollah rocket, missile and drone attacks.
The hostilities have escalated steadily since Hezbollah began firing rockets into northern Israel in support of Palestinians on 8 October 2023, the day after its ally Hamas’s deadly attack on southern Israel.

On Tuesday morning, the IDF announced that reservists from its 146th Division had begun “limited, localized, targeted operational activities” in south-western Lebanon.
It joined three standing army divisions which have been operating in central and eastern areas of southern Lebanon since the invasion began on 30 September - reportedly bringing the total number of soldiers deployed to over 15,000.
The IDF said troops had taken control of what it called a Hezbollah “combat compound” in the border village of Maroun al-Ras and published photos showing what it said was a loaded rocket launcher in an olive grove, as well as weapons and equipment inside a residential building.
Drone footage meanwhile showed widespread destruction in the nearby village of Yaroun, which was an initial target of the invasion.
Meanwhile, the UN special co-ordinator for Lebanon and the head of the UN peacekeeping force warned in a joint statement that the humanitarian impact of the conflict was “nothing short of catastrophic”.
Lebanon’s government says as many as 1.2 million people have fled their homes over the past year. Almost 180,000 people are in approved centres for the displaced.
In addition, more than 400,000 people have fled into war-torn Syria, including more than 200,000 Syrian refugees - a situation that the head of the UN’s refugee agency described as one of “tragic absurdity”.
The World Food Programme said there was “extraordinary concern for Lebanon's ability to continue to feed itself” because thousands of hectares of farmland had been burned or abandoned.

The IDF also said its aircraft had carried out a new round of strikes on Hezbollah targets in Beirut’s southern suburbs, where the group has a strong presence, and other areas of Lebanon on Tuesday.
Earlier, it announced that a strike in the capital on Monday had killed the commander of Hezbollah’s headquarters, Suhail Husseini.
Hezbollah did not comment on the claim. But if confirmed, it would be the latest in a series of severe blows Israel has dealt to the group, with Hassan Nasrallah and most of its military commanders having been killed in similar recent strikes.
Hashem Safieddine, a top Hezbollah official widely expected to succeed his cousin Nasrallah as leader, has not been heard from publicly since an Israeli air strike reportedly targeted him in Beirut last Thursday.
IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said on Tuesday evening the military could not confirm claims by Netanyahu and Israel's defence minister that Safieddine was killed in the attack, adding that the IDF was examining the results of the operation.
Hezbollah's deputy leader said in a defiant televised address from an undisclosed location on Tuesday that its command and control was “solid” and had “no vacant positions”, citing its attacks on Israel in recent days.
"We are hurting them and we will prolong the time. Dozens of cities are within range of the resistance's missiles. We assure you that our capabilities are fine," Naim Qassem said.
But, for the first time, he made no mention of ending the war in Gaza as a pre-condition where previously Hezbollah has said it would not stop attacking Israel until the Gaza conflict is over.
"We support the political efforts that (Lebanese Parliament Speaker) Nabih Berri is undertaking towards a ceasefire," Qassem said in a televised speech.
"Once a ceasefire is achieved, diplomacy can look into all the other details."
It was not clear if this meant a change in Hezbollah’s position.
The speech coincided with the launch of more than 100 rockets towards Haifa Bay, as well as the Lower, Central and Upper Galilee regions.
The IDF said most of the rockets were intercepted. There were no serious casualties.
On Sunday night, there was a direct hit on Haifa - something which had not happened since Israel and Hezbollah last fought a war in 2006.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cly3x1w0595o
 

At least 28 dead, dozens injured in Israeli strike on school sheltering displaced people: Gaza Health Ministry​

Israeli military targeted militants operating in the compound, Israeli forces say

At least 28 Palestinians were killed and dozens were injured in an Israeli airstrike on a school in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza Thursday morning, says the Gaza Ministry of Health.

The strike hit Rufaida School, which is sheltering displaced people. The Israel Defence Forces said it targeted Hamas militants who were operating in the compound.

"Prior to the strike, numerous steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians, including the use of precise munitions, aerial surveillance and additional intelligence," the military said.

At least 54 people were injured in the attack, according to the Health Ministry.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/central-gaza-school-airstrike-1.7348310

also

'A nightmare': Gaza doctor released after being detained in Israeli prisons for over 6 months​

Some 300 health-care workers, of which 145 are doctors, still arbitrarily detained: Gaza Health Ministry

Palestinian surgeon Khaled Al Serr was working at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in southern Gaza on March 25 when he was arrested and detained in a raid by Israeli troops.

For months, his family had no knowledge of his whereabouts until other detained health-care workers were released and informed Al Serr's loved ones about where he was.

After spending more than six months in Israeli custody, the 32-year-old doctor was released on Sept. 29 from Ofer military prison in the occupied West Bank, without any charges or trial.

"It was like a nightmare," Al Serr told CBC News of his detainment, two days after he was released and let back into Gaza.

While in custody, the doctor alleges, he was tortured, humiliated and denied adequate access to medical care by soldiers and prison guards.

"I was lucky that I [came] back to my family with a complete body ... [that] I did not lose my feet," he said. "Some of the prisoners there had an infection due to the dogs there that bit their leg — and some of them due to the health-care negligence there."

He said when Israeli forces raided the hospital, staff had been trying to clean and reorganize it so they could reopen to patients. The facility closed in February following an earlier raid that devastated much of the upper floor and stripped it of supplies.

145 doctors still in Israeli custody: Gaza Health Ministry​

Al Serr's experience is one that hundreds of health-care workers in Gaza have undergone. Roughly 300 health-care workers from Gaza remain in custody after being arbitrarily detained by Israeli forces while on duty, according to the local Health Ministry. At least 145 of them are doctors — roughly seven per cent of the estimated 2,110 physicians remaining in Gaza. The raids on health care facilities and detainment of medical staff are devastating to an already fragile health-care system, international rights organizations say.

Since June, Amnesty International had repeatedly called on Israeli forces to release Al Serr, pointing out that his fate and whereabouts remained largely unknown to his family until July.

The global human rights group says Al Serr was detained along with other medical staff in the Nasser Hospital raid and called on the military to disclose the whereabouts of all Palestinian health workers who it says were "forcibly disappeared."

CBC News reached out to the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) to ask about Al Serr's arrest and the number of health-care workers in custody, but it said it could not provide any information or confirm any details.

In a statement, it said in its offensive on Gaza that "suspects of terrorist activities were arrested" and taken for "further detention and questioning" in Israel.

Palestinians found not to have been involved in "terrorist activity" are released back to Gaza, the IDF said.

After the raid In February, Israel accused Hamas of regularly using medical facilities for military purposes, and it has aired footage taken by its troops that it says shows tunnels containing weapons below some hospitals.

The Israeli military said it apprehended various suspects at Nasser Hospital during that raid.

Punishment, humiliation in Israeli custody: Al Serr​

For the first five days in custody, Al Serr said. he was interrogated about his work inside the hospital, why he was living at the hospital and his whereabouts on Oct. 7, 2023, during the Hamas-led attacks on Israel that left 1,200 people dead.

He said before being taken to a prison, he was put in a shipping container with roughly 100 other prisoners, where he was beaten and left without any medical services. Al Serr said he was not allowed to be treated even though he was having difficulty breathing and coughing up blood.

He developed a skin rash, with pus-filled bumps and redness covering his arms.

"They left us to suffer from any disease," he said. "This is part of the punishment inside the prison."

Then, he said he was transferred to Sde Teiman, an Israeli military base in the Negev desert now used as a detention camp, where he says he was forced to sit down with his hands shackled and not allowed to move, speak or look at anyone. He says he was blindfolded and handcuffed for 24 hours in the day and he was allegedly mocked and sworn at by soldiers.

He said he was there for roughly 80 days without knowing why he was being held before he was taken to Ofer prison, not knowing what day or month it was.

"I have suffered a lot of punishment and beating from the soldiers there without any charge," Al Serr said.

"As a doctor, I did not have special treatment because all of the people there, or most of them, were … professors and … teachers, doctors, nurses. Everybody there has an equal treatment, which is punishment and humiliation from the Israeli soldiers."

Family didn't know if Al Serr was alive​

Meanwhile, for months, his fate and whereabouts were unknown to his family.

His father, Abdul Karim Al Serr, who was in Rafah at the time of his son's detainment, said he initially thought he lost his son in an airstrike. But after family members could not find him among those killed, they determined he was missing.

The elder Al Serr didn't know about the raid until a nurse, who had been arrested alongside the doctor, told him that his son was in Israeli custody and was alive. After that, the elder Al Serr said, he would ask every person released from Israeli prisons about his son, hoping to get information on his well-being.

"We would check in on him. Between the sadness, between the pain and the suffering, the [other detainees] would tell us what they endured in prison," he said.

When his son was released after six months in custody, Al Serr said he had no idea. He said he was in Khan Younis, outside of a makeshift home atop rubble, when his son walked up to him, but the father did not recognize him.

"I was surprised. I looked at him. Who's that? That's not Khaled," he said.

He said his son lost between 50 and 60 kilograms in prison and looked "half his size."

"I didn't think he would be released, even though he is a doctor. Everyone is supposed to respect him, to appreciate him — enemy or friend," his father said.

"Respect that he is a doctor. If a Jewish [patient] comes to him, he would treat him. If a Christian comes to him, he would treat him. If a Muslim comes to him, he would treat him."

Workers' arrests strain a fragile health-care system​

Amnesty International said detainees, including the younger Al Serr, have been held with no means of communication, "outside the protection of the law, in conditions amounting to enforced disappearance" that violate international human rights law.

Amnesty has cited Israel's unlawful combatants law, which grants the country power to detain anyone in Gaza that it suspects of engaging in hostilities against it or posing a threat to security. It alleged that Israel uses this law to "arbitrarily" detain Palestinian civilians without due process, calling for it to be repealed and those detained under it released.

"Since Oct. 7, 2023, and particularly since the start of ground operations in Gaza at the end of October, Israeli authorities have used the [law] to detain thousands of Palestinians without charges or trial," Amnesty International wrote on its website in June.

Since the onset of the Israel-Hamas war, a total of 595 health-care workers have been killed in Gaza and the West Bank by Israeli forces as of Sept. 20, according to Healthcare Workers Watch.

The arrests of health-care workers are further straining Gaza's tenuous health-care system more than a year into a war that has devastated its infrastructure and injured at least 97,590 people and killed more than 42,000 in Israeli bombardment, according to Gaza health authorities.

Dr. Ahmed Al-Farra, head of pediatrics at Nasser Hospital, said hospitals in Gaza are in a "catastrophic situation."

Al-Farra said hospitals lack supplies, equipment and fuel to generate electricity, in addition to the unsanitary conditions and overcrowding they are dealing with.

Al-Farra said the lack of clean water and rampant spread of diseases are contributing to more and more deaths.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/gaza-doctor-israeli-prison-1.7345806
 

UN accuses Israel of war crimes over attacks on Gaza hospitals​

A United Nations commission of inquiry has accused Israel of carrying out a “concerted policy to destroy Gaza's healthcare system" during its ongoing war with Hamas.
The commission said Israeli attacks on Gaza’s healthcare facilities and Israel’s treatment of Palestinian detainees amounted to war crimes, as well as the crime against humanity of “extermination”.
Hamas and other Palestinian groups are also accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity for their treatment of Israeli hostages held in Gaza.
Israel is yet to comment, but has long accused the UN of bias and dismissed previous critical reports.

The report, which will be presented to the UN General Assembly on 30 October, was led by Navi Pillay, the South African former UN human rights chief.
Israeli security forces have “deliberately killed, detained and tortured medical personnel”, the report said, while children have “borne the brunt” of “the collapse of the health system".
The commission cites the case of five-year-old Hind Rajab, whose car was hit as she and her family tried to flee bombing. Several family members were killed, but Hind managed to phone the Palestinian Red Crescent for help. The ambulance trying to reach her was also shelled, and Hind, her family, and the ambulance crew all died.
The commission says the attacks on the healthcare system have “inflicted conditions of life resulting in the destruction of generations of Palestinian children and, potentially, the Palestinian people as a group”.
The report alleges Palestinian armed groups, including Hamas, have subjected Israeli hostages to "physical violence, abuse, sexual violence, forced isolation, limited access to hygiene facilities, water and food, threats and humiliation".
It calls for the immediate and unconditional release of the remaining hostages.
The report also expresses concern about the treatment of thousands of Palestinian detainees, some of them children.
Israeli security forces have subjected them to systematic abuse, including torture, rape and other forms of sexual violence, the reports alleges.
It directly names Israel’s national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, saying the abuse took place “under direct orders” from him.
The report contains detailed evidence and adds to growing concerns, reflected in a case at the International Court of Justice and investigations by the International Criminal Court, at the conduct of the widening war in the Middle East.
The war began after Hamas’s unprecedented attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
More than 42,060 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c2lnw2gvllxo
 
Does Israel want UN to remove it's troops so they can smash everything into the ground without UN witnesses?

Biden says "no don't do that". They're not listening and don't care.

Hasn't stopped them obliterating medical centres and schools everywhere so far.

The extent of attacks makes for a good genocide case.
 
I was wondering if anyone would remind the ICC of the obligation they themselves said they have to investigate.

 

'Surrender or starve': Attack on Jabalia hints at controversial Israeli plan for northern Gaza​

On Saturday morning, a message was posted on social media by the Israeli military’s Arabic spokesman warning people living in the ‘D5’ area of northern Gaza to move south. D5 is a square on the grid superimposed over maps of Gaza by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). It is a block that is split into several dozen smaller areas.
The message, the latest in a series, said: "The IDF is operating with great force against the terrorist organisations and will continue to do so for a long time. The designated area, including the shelters located there, is considered a dangerous combat zone. The area must be evacuated immediately via Salah al-Din Road to the humanitarian area."
A map is attached with a large yellow arrow pointing from block D5 down to the south of Gaza. Salah al-Din Road is the main north-south route. The message is not promising a swift return to the places people have been living in, an area that has been pulverised by a year of repeated Israeli attacks. The heart of the message is that the IDF will be using "great force… for a long time". In other words, don’t expect to come back any time soon.
The humanitarian area designated by Israel in the message is al-Mawasi, previously an agricultural area on the coast near Rafah. It is overcrowded and no safer than many other parts of Gaza. BBC Verify has tracked at least 18 airstrikes on the area.
Hamas has sent out its own messages to the 400,000 people left in northern Gaza, an area that was once the urban heartland of the Strip with a population of 1.4m. Hamas is telling them not to move. The south, they are told, is just as dangerous. As well as that, Hamas is warning them that they will not be allowed back.
Many people appear to be staying put, despite Israeli airstrikes and artillery bombardments. When I went down to an area overlooking northern Gaza I could hear explosions and see columns of smoke rising. The intensity reminded me of the first months of the war.

Some of the people who have stayed in northern Gaza when so many others have already fled south are doing so to remain with vulnerable relatives. Others are from families with connections to Hamas. Under the laws of war, that does not automatically make them belligerents.
One tactic that has been used over the last year by civilians who want to avoid IDF operations without taking their chances in the overcrowded and dangerous south of Gaza is to move elsewhere in the north, for example from Beit Hanoun to Gaza City, while the IDF is operating near their homes or shelters. When the army moves on, they return.
The IDF is trying to stop that happening, according to BBC colleagues who are daily contact with Palestinians in Gaza. It is channelling families who are moving in one direction only, down Salah al-Din, the main road to the south.
Israel does not allow journalists to enter Gaza to report the war, except for brief, rare and closely supervised trips with the IDF. Palestinian journalists who were there on 7 October still do brave work. The Committee to Protect Journalists says at least 128 Palestinian media workers in Gaza have been killed since the war began. In northern Gaza, since Israel went back on the offensive, they have been filming panic-stricken families as they flee, often with small children helping out by carrying oversized backpacks.

One of them sent out a brief interview with a woman called Manar al-Bayar who was rushing down the street carrying a toddler. She was saying as she half-walked, half-ran on the way out of Jabalia refugee camp that "they told us we had five minutes to leave the Fallujah school. Where do we go? In southern Gaza there are assassinations. In western Gaza they’re shelling people. Where do we go, oh God? God is our only chance.”
The journey is hard. Sometimes, Palestinians in Gaza say, people on the move are fired on by the IDF. It insists that Israeli soldiers observe strict rules of engagement that respect international humanitarian law.
But Medical Aid for Palestinians’ head of protection, Liz Allcock, says the evidence presented by wounded civilians suggest that they have been targeted.
“When we’re receiving patients in hospitals, a large number of those women and children and people of, if you like, non-combatant age are receiving direct shots to the head, to the spine, to the limbs, very indicative of the direct targeted attack.”

Once again, the UN and aid agencies who work in Gaza are saying that Israeli military pressure is deepening what is already a humanitarian catastrophe.
Desperate messages are being relayed from the remaining hospitals in northern Gaza, saying that they are running low on fuel to power the generators that keep the hospitals going, and keep badly wounded patients alive. Some hospitals report that their buildings have been attacked by the Israelis.

The suspicion among Palestinians, the UN and relief agencies is that the IDF is gradually adopting some or all of a new tactic to clear northern Gaza known as the "Generals’ Plan". It was proposed by a group of retired senior officers let by Major-General (ret) Giora Eiland, who is a former national security adviser.
Like most Israelis they are frustrated and angry that a year into the war Israel still has not achieved its war aims of destroying Hamas and freeing the hostages. The Generals’ Plan is a new idea that its instigators believe can, from Israel’s perspective, break the deadlock.
At its heart is the idea that Israel can force the surrender of Hamas and its leader Yahya Sinwar by increasing the pressure on the entire population of the north. The first step is to order civilians to leave along evacuation corridors that will take them south of Wadi Gaza, an east-west stream that has become a dividing line in Gaza since the Israeli invasion last October.
Giora Eiland believes Israel should have done a deal straight away to get the hostages back, even if it meant pulling out of Gaza entirely. A year later, other methods, he says, are necessary.
In his office in central Israel, he laid out the heart of the plan.

“Since we already encircled the northern part of Gaza in the past nine or 10 months, what we should do is the following thing to tell all the 300,000 residents [that the UN estimates is 400,000] who still live in the northern part of Gaza that they have to leave this area and they should be given 10 days to leave through safe corridors that Israel will provide.
"And after that time, all this area will become to be a military zone. And all the Hamas people will still, though, whether some of them are fighters, some of them are civilians… will have two choices either to surrender or to starve."
Eiland wants Israel to seal the areas once the evacuation corridors are closed. Anyone left behind would be treated as an enemy combatant. The area would be under siege, with the army blocking all supplies of food, water or other necessities of life from going in. He believes the pressure would become unbearable and what is left of Hamas would rapidly crumble, freeing the surviving hostages and giving Israel the victory it craves.
The UN World Food Programme says that the current offensive in Gaza is having a "disastrous impact on food security for thousands of Palestinian families". The main crossings into northern Gaza, it says, have been closed and no food aid has entered the strip since 1 October. Mobile kitchens and bakeries have been forced to stop work because of air strikes. The only functioning bakery in the north, which is supported by WFP, caught fire after it was hit by an explosive munition. The position in the south is almost as dire.
It is not clear whether the IDF has adopted the Generals' Plan in part or in full, but the circumstantial evidence of what is being done in Gaza suggests it is at the very least a strong influence on the tactics being used against the population. The BBC submitted a list of questions to the IDF, which were not answered.
The ultra-nationalist extremists in Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet want to replace Palestinians in northern Gaza with Jewish settlers. Among many statements he’s made on the subject, the finance minister Bezalel Smotrich has said “Our heroic fighters and soldiers are destroying the evil of Hamas, and we will occupy the Gaza Strip… to tell the truth, where there is no settlement, there is no security.”
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1e82yy0wxno
 
Speaking of observable facts:
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Moderator Action: Attention, very graphic descriptions, read at your own discretion! The_J
Spoiler :

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Fifth peacekeeper wounded in southern Lebanon, UN says​

A UN peacekeeper has been wounded in southern Lebanon after being hit by gunfire, the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) has said, the fifth member of the multinational force to be injured in recent days.
In a statement on Saturday, Unifil said the peacekeeper was injured at its headquarters in the southern city of Naquora on Friday night amid "ongoing military activity nearby", though added that it did not know the origin of the fire.
"He underwent surgery at our Naqoura hospital to remove the bullet and is currently stable," it said.
Elsewhere, around 20 people were killed by an Israeli strike in Jabalia in Gaza on Friday night, according to the Reuters news agency, citing medics.

It comes as fighting continues in southern Lebanon, where Israeli forces have urged UN peacekeepers to leave their positions. A spokesperson for Unifil said on Saturday that there had been a "unanimous decision" to stay in the border region.
Separately, Unifil said buildings at a position in the village of Ramyah sustained "significant damage due to explosions from nearby shelling" on Friday night.
"We remind all actors of their obligations to ensure the safety and security of UN personnel and premises, including avoiding combat activities near Unifil positions," the mission said.
On Friday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) acknowledged that its troops were responsible for an incident in which two Sri Lankan soldiers, also in Naqoura, were injured.
The IDF said soldiers operating near the base opened fire after identifying a threat and that the incident would be investigated "at the highest levels".
Sri Lanka's foreign ministry said it "strongly condemned" the attack.
On Thursday, two Indonesian peacekeepers were injured falling from an observation tower after Israeli tanks fired towards it.
Asked about the incidents on Friday, US President Joe Biden said he was "absolutely, positively" urging Israel to stop firing at UN peacekeepers.
The leaders of France, Italy, and Spain have also condemned Israel's actions, saying in a joint statement that they were unjustifiable and should immediately end.
Earlier, the IDF said dozens more launches crossed from Lebanon into Israel on Saturday - with a number of them intercepted.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwy92zjq508o
 
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Fifth peacekeeper wounded in southern Lebanon, UN says​

A UN peacekeeper has been wounded in southern Lebanon after being hit by gunfire, the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) has said, the fifth member of the multinational force to be injured in recent days.
In a statement on Saturday, Unifil said the peacekeeper was injured at its headquarters in the southern city of Naquora on Friday night amid "ongoing military activity nearby", though added that it did not know the origin of the fire.
"He underwent surgery at our Naqoura hospital to remove the bullet and is currently stable," it said.
Elsewhere, around 20 people were killed by an Israeli strike in Jabalia in Gaza on Friday night, according to the Reuters news agency, citing medics.

It comes as fighting continues in southern Lebanon, where Israeli forces have urged UN peacekeepers to leave their positions. A spokesperson for Unifil said on Saturday that there had been a "unanimous decision" to stay in the border region.
Separately, Unifil said buildings at a position in the village of Ramyah sustained "significant damage due to explosions from nearby shelling" on Friday night.
"We remind all actors of their obligations to ensure the safety and security of UN personnel and premises, including avoiding combat activities near Unifil positions," the mission said.
On Friday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) acknowledged that its troops were responsible for an incident in which two Sri Lankan soldiers, also in Naqoura, were injured.
The IDF said soldiers operating near the base opened fire after identifying a threat and that the incident would be investigated "at the highest levels".
Sri Lanka's foreign ministry said it "strongly condemned" the attack.
On Thursday, two Indonesian peacekeepers were injured falling from an observation tower after Israeli tanks fired towards it.
Asked about the incidents on Friday, US President Joe Biden said he was "absolutely, positively" urging Israel to stop firing at UN peacekeepers.
The leaders of France, Italy, and Spain have also condemned Israel's actions, saying in a joint statement that they were unjustifiable and should immediately end.
Earlier, the IDF said dozens more launches crossed from Lebanon into Israel on Saturday - with a number of them intercepted.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwy92zjq508o
Widespread international condemnation. Israel don't care because no one will do anything.
 
UNIFIL said:
Early this morning, peacekeepers at a UN position in Ramyah observed three platoons of IDF soldiers crossing the Blue Line into Lebanon.

At around 4:30 a.m., while peacekeepers were in shelters, two IDF Merkava tanks destroyed the position’s main gate and forcibly entered the position. They requested multiple times that the base turn out its lights. The tanks left about 45 minutes later after UNIFIL protested through our liaison mechanism, saying that IDF presence was putting peacekeepers in danger.

At around 6:40 a.m., peacekeepers at the same position reported the firing of several rounds 100 metres north, which emitted smoke. Despite putting on protective masks, fifteen peacekeepers suffered effects, including skin irritation and gastrointestinal reactions, after the smoke entered the camp. The peacekeepers are receiving treatment.

In addition, yesterday, IDF soldiers stopped a critical UNIFIL logistical movement near Meiss ej Jebel, denying it passage. The critical movement could not be completed.

For the fourth time in as many days, we remind the IDF and all actors of their obligations to ensure the safety and security of UN personnel and property and to respect the inviolability of UN premises at all times.

Breaching and entering a UN position is a further flagrant violation of international law and Security Council resolution 1701 (2006). Any deliberate attack on peacekeepers is a grave violation of international humanitarian law and resolution 1701. UNIFIL’s mandate provides for its freedom of movement in its area of operations, and any restriction on this is a violation of resolution 1701.

We have requested an explanation from the IDF from these shocking violations.

Shooting at peacekeepers is the sort of crap Serb militia would get up to when they get bored with shooting Bosnians. Good to know the IDF has the same level of control as Serb militias.
 
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