[RD] War in Gaza News: Pas de Deux

The Murderous Logistics of Israel’s Ethnic Cleansing Campaign in Northern Gaza

Eyewitnesses say the IDF is starving residents, targeting hospitals, bombing shelters, and murdering civilians in the streets

Relatedly, a Jewish organisation spoke out about the targeting of journalists in the region that have contributed to the media blackout about this campaign:
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This group sends Canadians to help the Israeli army. Some say that's illegal​

Joining Sar-El is 'a way to get involved with the war effort,' says volunteer

An organization that sends volunteers from Canada — and other parts of the world — to work on Israeli military bases is facing a renewed legal challenge, alleging its recruiting efforts violate a federal law against inciting Canadians to join a foreign army.

The non-profit group Sar-El says it has recruited more than 40,000 volunteers from over 30 countries since the Israel-Hamas war broke out last year — to provide logistical support to the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), such as packing supplies and cleaning and repairing equipment.

Daniel, a 42-year-old business owner from Toronto, is one of them.

"For me, it was an opportunity to give back to the brave [Israeli] soldiers who are fighting. It's a way to get involved with the war effort," said Daniel, who agreed to share his experience with Radio-Canada on the condition of anonymity to avoid any backlash that could harm his business.

He says he went to Israel as a Sar-El volunteer in February and August, staying both times for five days in an army base in the Negev desert, in the south.

Daniel says he "felt safe at all times," despite the danger of staying at a military base in the midst of war.

"I went [to Israel] with the mentality that what will be, will be."

In contrast, in a long post published on Facebook in December 2023, another volunteer, who says he is from Montreal, recounts having spent a month alongside Israeli soldiers in Eilat, a region southern of Israel, on the shores of the Red Sea.

The volunteer, whose identity is not disclosed for privacy reasons, wrote that he was "under rocket fire close enough and to such an intensity it felt as if the air itself shook."

"The rockets I had only seen on TV from thousands of miles away were now fully intended to kill me and my comrades."

A lawyer handling the legal challenge against Sar-El in Canada says the group's efforts are a "blatant" violation of federal law, an opinion not shared by prosecutors who previously opted not to pursue the matter.

'Tourists who want to help'​

Radio-Canada tried for several weeks to speak with representatives from Sar-El in Israel and in Canada but they didn't respond to several interview requests.

An information session for would-be volunteers was organized in Ottawa on Sept. 26. Radio-Canada tried to attend, but organizers refused any media presence.

Sue Potechin, from the Soloway Jewish Community Center where the session took place, is listed as the contact person to register for it. She says the volunteers "do support work, doing things that no one else has time to do," such as "cleaning the kitchen and sorting boxes."

She says that volunteers are not sent to the front lines with Israeli soldiers, who are engaged in wars in the south, against Hamas in the Gaza Strip, and in the north, against Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The army "doesn't let you near anything like that," Potechin said.

The Sar-El program is "basically for tourists who want to help," she said.

Volunteers also "perform duties such as packing food rations or medical kits, cleaning tanks ... [and] changing spare parts," according to the IDF website.

They live "under the same conditions as the soldiers ... and wear army uniforms," says Sar-El's website.

Whatever the army needs, "the volunteers are doing it," Sar-El CEO Keren Dahan said in an interview with the American channel Jewish Broadcasting Service (JBS), published on YouTube in April.

"Without logistics, even the best combat unit cannot win," she said. "If they're not eating well, if the weapon is not clean ... if they don't have all the materials they need."

It is not clear how many Canadians volunteered over the past year. In 2022, the president of the Canadian branch told the Canadian Jewish News website that his organization recruits "between 100 and 150 volunteers" each year.

However, this figure is likely to be higher today. Dahan told JBS that Sar-El's total recruitment has increased eightfold, to 40,000 people, since the start of the war.

Since it was founded in 1983, Sar-El — a Hebrew acronym meaning "Service for Israel" — says it has sent more than 240,000 volunteers to Israel.

Reaching out to youths​

According to Dahan, the organization's recruiting strategy has changed over the last two years in order to attract younger volunteers.

"Before, it was always retired IDF [volunteers], old people in their 60s and 70s," she told JBS. Now, the group is reaching out to youth through schools, synagogues and online.

"We are on Instagram and this is very, very new, we're doing … a lot of advertising."

The minimum age to participate is 17, though 16-year-olds can be accepted "with a parent or adult relative," according to the website.

The cost to participate is around $120 for one week and $60 for each additional week.

Dahan also says that around 25 per cent of the volunteers are non-Jewish. "Israel needs friends everywhere, it does not matter if they're Jewish or non-Jewish," she said.

Daniel, the volunteer from Toronto, is Jewish but doesn't hold Israeli citizenship. He says he was very impressed with the number of non-Jewish recruits in Sar-El.

"In my group, there were quite a few Canadians ... but also people from Bolivia, Ecuador, Argentina, China," he said. "We had a guy from South Africa who wasn't Jewish. He was a weapons expert."

The base he was assigned to also had non-Jews in its ranks, Daniel said. "There were Druze but also Israelis who originally came from India."

Legal challenges​

In Canada, the Foreign Enlistment Act prohibits anyone from inciting another person to enlist in the armed forces of a foreign state, unless carried out by diplomats "enlisting … nationals of the countries they represent and not Canadian nationals."

Based on that, a legal challenge was brought against Sar-El in September 2022 by David Mivasair, an Ontario-based rabbi, and Rehab Nazzal, a Toronto-based artist of Palestinian descent. They alleged the group is "recruiting or inducing individuals" to volunteer with the IDF.

The case was dropped a couple of months later by the Public Prosecution Service of Canada (PPSC) for "lack of evidence."

But the case is not closed, according to their lawyer Shane Martinez.

"We are now in the process of appealing," the PPSC decision, and will take it to the Ontario Court of Appeal on Nov. 7, he said.

"Essentially what we're saying is that the government acted in bad faith, that they interfered for political purposes," said Martinez, who also represents the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians, a group of pro-Palestinian lawyers.

"Imagine if there was an organization in Canada that was recruiting volunteers for the Russian army — they would go there and they would wear Russian military uniforms, they'd live on Russian bases, they would repair Russian weapons, clean Russian tanks," he said.

"The government wouldn't allow it for a second. They'd immediately step in."

"It's so blatant. It's perhaps one of the clearest violations of Canadian law in this context that we could possibly think of," he said.

But the PPSC says there's no evidence Sar-El Canada "recruits or otherwise induces" anyone to join the IDF.

"As part of the application process, the volunteer acknowledges that they do not intend to serve, join or swear allegiance to the IDF," wrote Marten Dykstra, counsel for the PPSC, in a letter explaining why it dropped the case.

"While there is a connection between the volunteer and the IDF, there is no evidence of a formal relationship."

There are currently more than 6,000 Canadians in Israel, according to Global Affairs Canada (GAC).

Since August, the federal government has recommended avoiding all travel to Israel because of the war.

"The security situation can deteriorate further without warning," GAC warns on its website.

However, insecurity in the Middle East does not seem to dampen Daniel's enthusiasm. He says he would not hesitate to volunteer for a third time with Sar-El.

"It's important work," he said. "The IDF need all the help they can get."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/sar-el-israel-volunteers-army-1.7361292
 

Israeli strike kills 3 Lebanese Army troops​

Fatal strike on troops comes as 70 countries gather in France to support Lebanese state

An Israeli strike killed three Lebanese troops in south Lebanon on Thursday, as France hosted a conference to rally support for Lebanese state forces, which are seen as vital to any diplomatic resolution of the war between Israel and Hezbollah.

The Lebanese soldiers were killed in an early morning strike as they were evacuating wounded people on the outskirts of southern village of Yater, the Lebanese army said. There was no immediate comment on the strike from the Israeli military, which has previously said it is not operating against the Lebanese army, but apologized days ago for another fatal strike.

The area is part of the border region pounded by Israel during its month-long offensive against the heavily armed, Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah, in a conflict that spiralled out of the Gaza war.

Armed and trained by the United States, the Lebanese army has little sway on the ground in Hezbollah's strongholds in southern Lebanon. It recruits from across Lebanon's myriad sectarian communities and has been seen as a guarantor of the civil peace since the 1975-90 civil war.

Its deployment into the south is a key part of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701 that ended a 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel. The Paris meeting is set to reiterate that Resolution 1701 should be the basis for a cessation to the current hostilities.

U.S. Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin told his Israeli counterpart on Wednesday that Washington had concerns about strikes against the Lebanese armed forces while urging Israel to take steps to ensure the safety of the Lebanese army and the UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, the Pentagon said.

Heavy losses suffered by Hezbollah​

A security source in Lebanon said 13 Lebanese army troops had been killed whilst on active duty since the start of hostilities last year. Another 16 had been killed whilst at home. Israel has apologized in the past when it has confirmed Lebanese military deaths.

Israel launched its Lebanon offensive with the declared aim of securing the return home of tens of thousands of Israelis who evacuated their homes in northern Israel due to a year of cross-border rocket fire by Hezbollah.

Israel has dealt heavy blows to Hezbollah, killing its leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah along with other top commanders and potential Nasrallah successors using airstrikes to pound its strongholds in the south, the Bekaa Valley and Beirut's southern suburbs.

The Israeli military said early on Thursday that its "troops continue their limited, localized, targeted ground raids against the Hezbollah terrorist organization in southern Lebanon."

Israeli troops had "eliminated dozens of terrorists" and the Israeli airforce had "struck over 160 Hezbollah terror targets, including launchers and terrorist infrastructure sites throughout Lebanon," it said.

France, Germany announce aid packages for Lebanon​

With more than 2,500 people killed by Israel's offensive in Lebanon and over one million forced from their homes, according to Lebanese authorities, the Paris conference aims to mobilize both humanitarian aid and support for the Lebanese military.

Some 70 government delegations and 15 international organizations were participating, with the goals including at least 500 million euros ($746 million Cdn) in humanitarian aid as well as a push for a ceasefire.

Lebanon's caretaker prime minister said international support would be needed to shore up the army, including new recruits, and to rebuild the country's destroyed infrastructure.

"The storm we are currently witnessing is unlike any other, because it carries the seeds of total destruction, not only for our country, but for all human values, as well," Najib Mikati told delegates.

France has historical ties with Lebanon and has been working with Washington in trying to secure a ceasefire. President Emmanuel Macron said France would provide 100 million euros ($149 million Cdn) in aid, while Germany said it would give 96 million euros ($143 million Cdn).

"There needs to be a ceasefire in Lebanon. More damage, more victims, more strikes will not enable the end of terrorism or ensure security for everyone," said Macron.

But U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken skipped the Paris conference, continuing a tour of the Middle East on a final push for peace before next month's U.S. election, while regional power Saudi Arabia, which has been reluctant to engage in Lebanon, sent a junior minister.

Neither Israel, whose prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, criticized the initiative, nor Iran were invited.

Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly and Stéphane Dion, Ottawa's ambassador in France, led the Canadian delegation at the conference.

Canada has previously announced aid packages for Lebanese civilians that according to International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen on Oct. 10, have amounted to $25 million.

Hezbollah declared solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza following the Hamas-led attack on Israel, which killed 1,200 people including several Canadian citizens, Israel says. The rampage also saw 250 people abducted, according to Israeli government tallies, with about 100 yet to be repatriated.

Israel's retaliatory offensive in Gaza led to heavy losses, displacement of people and destruction in the territory. More than 42,847 Palestinians have been killed and 100,544 injured in Israel's military offensive, the Gaza health ministry said on Thursday. The ministry does not distinguish between combatants and civilians, but has said thousands of women and children have been killed.

The Israeli military named on Wednesday six Palestinian Al Jazeera reporters in Gaza who it said were also members of Hamas or Islamic Jihad militant groups, an allegation the Qatari network rejected as an attempt to silence journalists.

The Committee to Protect Journalists' Middle East program said on X that the allegations amounted to smearing Palestinian journalists "with unsubstantiated 'terrorist' labels."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-lebanon-oct24-latest-1.7361744
 
iow, The Gaza Health ministry hasn't recorded the death of one combatant in this war. On the surface, this sounds odd, but perhaps they're just inexperienced, as opposed to lying:
- Hamas fighter gets killed
- His compatriots strip him of arms, equipment
- Health official later comes along, deems that a "civilian" was killed
would be my guess

Now it would be enough to say that Israel is killing a lot of civilians and should do better not to; it would be another to suggest that Israel is engaged in genocide and you're relying on their *[enemy's] health ministry as your primary source...

*edited for clarity
 
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This group sends Canadians to help the Israeli army. Some say that's illegal​

Joining Sar-El is 'a way to get involved with the war effort,' says volunteer

An organization that sends volunteers from Canada — and other parts of the world — to work on Israeli military bases is facing a renewed legal challenge, alleging its recruiting efforts violate a federal law against inciting Canadians to join a foreign army.

The non-profit group Sar-El says it has recruited more than 40,000 volunteers from over 30 countries since the Israel-Hamas war broke out last year — to provide logistical support to the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), such as packing supplies and cleaning and repairing equipment.

Daniel, a 42-year-old business owner from Toronto, is one of them.

"For me, it was an opportunity to give back to the brave [Israeli] soldiers who are fighting. It's a way to get involved with the war effort," said Daniel, who agreed to share his experience with Radio-Canada on the condition of anonymity to avoid any backlash that could harm his business.

He says he went to Israel as a Sar-El volunteer in February and August, staying both times for five days in an army base in the Negev desert, in the south.

Daniel says he "felt safe at all times," despite the danger of staying at a military base in the midst of war.

"I went [to Israel] with the mentality that what will be, will be."

In contrast, in a long post published on Facebook in December 2023, another volunteer, who says he is from Montreal, recounts having spent a month alongside Israeli soldiers in Eilat, a region southern of Israel, on the shores of the Red Sea.

The volunteer, whose identity is not disclosed for privacy reasons, wrote that he was "under rocket fire close enough and to such an intensity it felt as if the air itself shook."

"The rockets I had only seen on TV from thousands of miles away were now fully intended to kill me and my comrades."

A lawyer handling the legal challenge against Sar-El in Canada says the group's efforts are a "blatant" violation of federal law, an opinion not shared by prosecutors who previously opted not to pursue the matter.

'Tourists who want to help'​

Radio-Canada tried for several weeks to speak with representatives from Sar-El in Israel and in Canada but they didn't respond to several interview requests.

An information session for would-be volunteers was organized in Ottawa on Sept. 26. Radio-Canada tried to attend, but organizers refused any media presence.

Sue Potechin, from the Soloway Jewish Community Center where the session took place, is listed as the contact person to register for it. She says the volunteers "do support work, doing things that no one else has time to do," such as "cleaning the kitchen and sorting boxes."

She says that volunteers are not sent to the front lines with Israeli soldiers, who are engaged in wars in the south, against Hamas in the Gaza Strip, and in the north, against Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The army "doesn't let you near anything like that," Potechin said.

The Sar-El program is "basically for tourists who want to help," she said.

Volunteers also "perform duties such as packing food rations or medical kits, cleaning tanks ... [and] changing spare parts," according to the IDF website.

They live "under the same conditions as the soldiers ... and wear army uniforms," says Sar-El's website.

Whatever the army needs, "the volunteers are doing it," Sar-El CEO Keren Dahan said in an interview with the American channel Jewish Broadcasting Service (JBS), published on YouTube in April.

"Without logistics, even the best combat unit cannot win," she said. "If they're not eating well, if the weapon is not clean ... if they don't have all the materials they need."

It is not clear how many Canadians volunteered over the past year. In 2022, the president of the Canadian branch told the Canadian Jewish News website that his organization recruits "between 100 and 150 volunteers" each year.

However, this figure is likely to be higher today. Dahan told JBS that Sar-El's total recruitment has increased eightfold, to 40,000 people, since the start of the war.

Since it was founded in 1983, Sar-El — a Hebrew acronym meaning "Service for Israel" — says it has sent more than 240,000 volunteers to Israel.

Reaching out to youths​

According to Dahan, the organization's recruiting strategy has changed over the last two years in order to attract younger volunteers.

"Before, it was always retired IDF [volunteers], old people in their 60s and 70s," she told JBS. Now, the group is reaching out to youth through schools, synagogues and online.

"We are on Instagram and this is very, very new, we're doing … a lot of advertising."

The minimum age to participate is 17, though 16-year-olds can be accepted "with a parent or adult relative," according to the website.

The cost to participate is around $120 for one week and $60 for each additional week.

Dahan also says that around 25 per cent of the volunteers are non-Jewish. "Israel needs friends everywhere, it does not matter if they're Jewish or non-Jewish," she said.

Daniel, the volunteer from Toronto, is Jewish but doesn't hold Israeli citizenship. He says he was very impressed with the number of non-Jewish recruits in Sar-El.

"In my group, there were quite a few Canadians ... but also people from Bolivia, Ecuador, Argentina, China," he said. "We had a guy from South Africa who wasn't Jewish. He was a weapons expert."

The base he was assigned to also had non-Jews in its ranks, Daniel said. "There were Druze but also Israelis who originally came from India."

Legal challenges​

In Canada, the Foreign Enlistment Act prohibits anyone from inciting another person to enlist in the armed forces of a foreign state, unless carried out by diplomats "enlisting … nationals of the countries they represent and not Canadian nationals."

Based on that, a legal challenge was brought against Sar-El in September 2022 by David Mivasair, an Ontario-based rabbi, and Rehab Nazzal, a Toronto-based artist of Palestinian descent. They alleged the group is "recruiting or inducing individuals" to volunteer with the IDF.

The case was dropped a couple of months later by the Public Prosecution Service of Canada (PPSC) for "lack of evidence."

But the case is not closed, according to their lawyer Shane Martinez.

"We are now in the process of appealing," the PPSC decision, and will take it to the Ontario Court of Appeal on Nov. 7, he said.

"Essentially what we're saying is that the government acted in bad faith, that they interfered for political purposes," said Martinez, who also represents the International Centre of Justice for Palestinians, a group of pro-Palestinian lawyers.

"Imagine if there was an organization in Canada that was recruiting volunteers for the Russian army — they would go there and they would wear Russian military uniforms, they'd live on Russian bases, they would repair Russian weapons, clean Russian tanks," he said.

"The government wouldn't allow it for a second. They'd immediately step in."

"It's so blatant. It's perhaps one of the clearest violations of Canadian law in this context that we could possibly think of," he said.

But the PPSC says there's no evidence Sar-El Canada "recruits or otherwise induces" anyone to join the IDF.

"As part of the application process, the volunteer acknowledges that they do not intend to serve, join or swear allegiance to the IDF," wrote Marten Dykstra, counsel for the PPSC, in a letter explaining why it dropped the case.

"While there is a connection between the volunteer and the IDF, there is no evidence of a formal relationship."

There are currently more than 6,000 Canadians in Israel, according to Global Affairs Canada (GAC).

Since August, the federal government has recommended avoiding all travel to Israel because of the war.

"The security situation can deteriorate further without warning," GAC warns on its website.

However, insecurity in the Middle East does not seem to dampen Daniel's enthusiasm. He says he would not hesitate to volunteer for a third time with Sar-El.

"It's important work," he said. "The IDF need all the help they can get."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/sar-el-israel-volunteers-army-1.7361292
I don't know how Canadian law works. But in comparison, the US has the Neutrality Act. Basically US citizens cannot join the armies of other nations at war with third nations that the US is at peace with. Now there are obviously Americans violating this right now in Ukraine versus Russia (and at least one with a youtube channel I've seen), but if anyone's ever going to work up the nerve to prosecute them, I don't know...

From my quick reading of Wikipedia, the Canadian law seems to work similarly unless I'm missing something in the article. The thing is: Israel is technically, currently, fighting an internal insurrection (no matter what you think about Palestine being recognized by x-number of countries [Canada not included]) and not against some foreign adversary. So at a glance, I don't see how the law would apply.
 
I don't know how Canadian law works. But in comparison, the US has the Neutrality Act. Basically US citizens cannot join the armies of other nations at war with third nations that the US is at peace with. Now there are obviously Americans violating this right now in Ukraine versus Russia (and at least one with a youtube channel I've seen), but if anyone's ever going to work up the nerve to prosecute them, I don't know...

From my quick reading of Wikipedia, the Canadian law seems to work similarly unless I'm missing something in the article. The thing is: Israel is technically, currently, fighting an internal insurrection (no matter what you think about Palestine being recognized by x-number of countries [Canada not included]) and not against some foreign adversary. So at a glance, I don't see how the law would apply.

Isn't that for mercenaries though?
 
Well...one man's mercenary is going to be another's freedom fighter, I suspect...
Someone like Mike Hoare actually recruited soldiers to fight for him, and he was hired by African governments to do so. The excuse was fighting Communist-backed guerillas, but such was the time then.
"CivDiv" above claims he gets paid practically nothing, and it is doubtful that the Ukranian government even knows he's there.
Meanwhile, these Canadians sound like they're just carrying water (literally) for the IDF, but I don't know what they're really up to.

Anyway
I'm sure for those individuals who mostly oppose Israel in this war, any sort of in-kind offering by Israel and/or IDF to one of their compatriots is going to be denounced.
(And I would not at all be surprised if they then hypocritically support a movement like B.D.S. in the meantime).
 
iow, The Gaza Health ministry hasn't recorded the death of one combatant in this war. On the surface, this sounds odd, but perhaps they're just inexperienced, as opposed to lying:
- Hamas fighter gets killed
- His compatriots strip him of arms, equipment
- Health official later comes along, deems that a "civilian" was killed
would be my guess
Eh.

I'm willing to bet that the political support they expect is intensified by the ambiguity. All Israeli claims of combatant casualties will be met with extreme skepticism.

The gap created is usually filled by those sympathetic to Hamas(or, those biased against Israel, if not necessarily sympathizers) in the most damaging way possible.

They could, but the entirety of their strategy as far as I can tell appears to be to wring every possible political drop from civilian casualties they can and hope it has political effect. Is this a good strategy? Not in any sense, but it doesn't seem anyone cares.
 

Palestinian emergency workers pull out of northern Gaza, saying IDF targets its volunteers​

5 team members detained by Israeli military, 3 still missing: Palestinian Civil Defence

Palestinian Civil Defence announced Wednesday it will pull out of northern Gaza, saying its crews, which carry out first responder and search and rescue services, have been targeted by Israeli attacks as they tried to pull survivors — or bodies — from the rubble or offer first-aid to the injured.

The volunteers who work with the agency in northern Gaza have been working under impossible circumstances and doing so without access to crucial supplies, reporters heard at a press conference at the Al-Ahli (Al-Ma'madani) Arab Hospital.

"We are now announcing that the northern Gaza Strip, all of the northern district, the Civil Defence is not providing any humanitarian services, any medical services [in the area]," said Mahmoud Basel, a spokesperson for Palestinian Civil Defence.

First responders targeted

As the Israel-Hamas war rages on, hitting the northern part of the enclave particularly hard, the first responders say they have been the target of Israeli attacks in both the northern and southern parts of Gaza. In the last week, Basel said, eight civil defence members were either targeted by Israeli drones or detained by Israeli Defence Forces while attempting to reach a strike site to look for survivors, put out fires or to offer basic first aid.

Basel said the team moved toward the Indonesian Hospital "based on instructions from the Israeli army."

"On the way to the site, the occupying forces targeted the team, injuring a number of men and leading to the rest of the group losing contact with us."

"We don't know anything about them," he said.

Basel also said that due to the "heavy" bombardment another team was forced to abandon injured civilians while on its way to the Indonesian hospital.

He said the IDF "is executing" and detaining emergency services, effectively stopping all humanitarian aid in northern Gaza.

In an emailed statement to CBC News, the IDF said its soldiers are only stopping people it suspects of "terrorist activity" and are releasing those "not found to be taking part."

"The IDF has established comprehensive processes to ensure implementation of the Law of Armed Conflict during active hostilities, which includes the implementation of a highly regulated, multi-tiered process for approving pre-planned attacks against military objectives," the military said in a statement to CBC News.

400,000 trapped in northern Gaza

In early October, the IDF resumed its assault on the northern part of Gaza in an effort to, it said, weed out Hamas operatives still working in the area.

Though an estimated 1.9 million Palestinians have been displaced since the war began a year ago — some more than once throughout the conflict — there are believed to be at least "400,000 people are trapped" in northern Gaza, according to a post to X by Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN aid agency of Palestinian refugees, UNRWA.

The latest figures from the Gaza health ministry show that almost 43,000 Palestinians have died since the beginning of the conflict. The war began after a Hamas-led attack killed 1,200 people in Israel and saw 250 hostages taken into Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023.



In a post to X, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said that the ongoing "siege" in northern Gaza is "exhausting all available means for [people's] survival."

"Civilians must be protected and must be able to receive humanitarian assistance," the post said.

Israel has consistently denied stopping aid from reaching civilians in the Gaza Strip while the UN maintains that what's going in is only a "trickle."

Three hospitals under siege

As fighting in the north continues, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is on his 11th trip to the region to try to resume ceasefire talks between both parties. Blinken urged Israeli officials to "capitalize" on former Hamas Leader Yahya Sinwar's death to secure the release of remaining hostages and bring the war to an end.

Speaking to a crowd of journalists outside the Al-Ahli (Al-Ma'madani) Arab Hospital in northern Gaza, Basel made note of a recent detainment by the Israeli army of five civil defence personnel who were going through a checkpoint.

Basel painted a bleak picture of the situation in the north, ending his press conference by saying the IDF instructed members of Palestinan Civil Defence to leave the area and head south.

Finally, he said that three hospitals, Al-Awda, the Indonesian and Kamal Adwan, are "completely under siege" with hundreds seeking shelter in them.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/gaza-hamas-israel-war-1.7362290
 

Al Jazeera calls Israeli army claims 'baseless' after IDF accuses 6 journalists of being militants​

Journalists named say threats won't stop them but fear allegations will be used to justify killing them

The Israeli military on Wednesday accused six Palestinian journalists with Al Jazeera of involvement with Hamas or Islamic Jihad militant groups, claims that the Qatari news network "vehemently condemns."

The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) published documents Wednesday which it said it had found in Gaza that proved the men were militarily affiliated with the groups. CBC News was not able to independently verify the files' authenticity.

In an online statement Wednesday, Al Jazeera called the allegations "baseless," and said the IDF is instead trying to silence the few remaining journalists in the war-torn enclave.

"Al Jazeera categorically rejects the Israeli occupation forces' portrayal of our journalists as terrorists and denounces their use of fabricated evidence."

It called on the international community to intervene and protect its journalists.

The network is one of a handful still broadcasting daily from the besieged enclave, in part because the Israeli military has largely banned foreign journalists from Gaza, except on a limited number of supervised tours.

The accusations come as Israeli forces intensify a deadly siege of northern Gaza — where the UN estimates roughly 400,000 Palestinians remain — surrounding hospitals and refugee shelters and ordering residents to head south.

Israel says papers prove integration with militant groups​

The six accused journalists are Talal Aruki, Alaa Salama, Anas al-Sharif, Hossam Shabat, Ismail Farid and Ashraf Saraj. Several of them, including al-Sharif, have become mainstay figures of the outlet's 24-hour live coverage of Gaza.

The Israeli military said the papers it published included Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad lists of personnel details, salaries and militant training courses, phone directories and injury reports. It said four of the journalists are or have been affiliated with Hamas, and two with the Islamic Jihad.

"These documents serve as proof of the integration of Hamas terrorists within the Qatari Al Jazeera media network," the military said in a post on X on Wednesday.

The satellite news network, which is based in Qatar and primarily funded by its government, has been critical of Israel's military operation in Gaza and has faced claims of bias. It maintains that it operates independently.

'Threats will not stop us,' named journalist says​

Ashraf Saraj, one of the accused journalists, has worked in Gaza since 2018.

"I'm innocent of all of these accusations. I have no involvement in any military activities," Saraj told CBC News Thursday.

"There's a very real feeling that we're waiting for our death. These threats will not stop us."

Hossam Shabat, another of the six, called the documents "fabricated dossiers," and an "obvious attempt to pre-emptively justify our murder."

"Despite these dangerous and untrue threats made against us, we remain committed to our profession and will continue to report the facts on the ground as the genocide regretfully continues unabated."

Al Jazeera has accused Israeli forces of deliberately killing several of its journalists in Gaza in the past year, including Samer Abu Daqqa, Ismail al-Ghoul and Hamza al-Dahdouh. Israel has denied such allegations, saying it does not purposely target journalists.

In a prominent incident in 2022, Israeli forces shot and killed Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian American journalist for Al Jazeera, while she was reporting on an Israeli military operation in the occupied West Bank. The IDF eventually admitted responsibility for the killing, saying it was accidental, after initially denying it. A spokesperson later apologized for her death.

Committee to Protect Journalists condemns accusations​

At least 128 journalists have been killed in Gaza, the West Bank, Israel and Lebanon since the war began, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. They include 123 Palestinians, two Israelis and three Lebanese.

The committee said this isn't the first time Israel has accused journalists of militant involvement "without producing credible evidence."

It referred to a previous incident in July, when an Israeli airstrike killed two Al Jazeera journalists, including al-Ghoul. The military "produced a similar document, which contained contradictory information, showing that al-Ghoul, born in 1997, received a Hamas military ranking in 2007 — when he would have been 10 years old."

"Smear campaigns endanger journalists and erode public trust in the media. Israel must end this practice and allow independent international investigations into the journalists' killings," said CPJ program director Carlos Martínez de la Serna.

Reporters Without Borders said on X it was "alarmed" by the Israeli army's accusations against the six journalists.

Israel's previous claims against Al Jazeera​

Israel has long accused Al Jazeera of being a Hamas mouthpiece. Earlier this year, it passed a new law shutting down the news outlet's operations in the country, citing security reasons. Israel also raided its offices there and confiscated its equipment.

Following that decision, Israeli forces raided Al Jazeera's office in Ramallah in the West Bank, and ordered its immediate closure last month.

Al Jazeera said the latest allegations are "part of a wider pattern of hostility."

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, currently on a Middle East tour, said Thursday he couldn't speak to the veracity of the accusations. Blinken spoke from a joint conference in Doha with Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, Qatar's prime minister and foreign affairs minister.

Al Thani said Thursday that Al Jazeera must act if there is truth to Israel's accusations against its journalists, but that the claims must be treated with skepticism.

Qatar has been a key player in Gaza ceasefire negotiations, along with Egypt and the United States, though the talks have been deadlocked for months. A spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said an Israeli delegation will travel to Doha on Sunday, to try to restart talks.

As the war moves into its second year, the death toll from the Israeli campaign in Gaza is approaching 43,000, according to Palestinian authorities, with the densely populated enclave in ruins and almost all of its population displaced.

The war began on Oct. 7, 2023, after a Hamas-led attack on Israel killed some 1,200 and took more than 250 hostage.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-gaza-al-jazeera-journalists-1.7361844
 
Wars can not be ended unilaterally.
Israel can not say it is "done" before Hamas either:
- agrees to a peace treaty;
- exists no more.
That's farcical and you know it.
The war continues because in large part the Israeli government wants it to. Why they want to continue it varies depending on which group you ask.
It was widely reported over the summer that Hamas and Israel were close to a ceasefire, but at the last minute Netanyahu insisted on revising previously agreed upon terms and adding new terms - such as permanent Israeli military occupation along the Egyptian border.
 
iow, The Gaza Health ministry hasn't recorded the death of one combatant in this war. On the surface, this sounds odd, but perhaps they're just inexperienced, as opposed to lying:
- Hamas fighter gets killed
- His compatriots strip him of arms, equipment
- Health official later comes along, deems that a "civilian" was killed
would be my guess

Now it would be enough to say that Israel is killing a lot of civilians and should do better not to; it would be another to suggest that Israel is engaged in genocide and you're relying on their health ministry as your primary source...

Civilian health administration whose job is attempting to track civilian deaths does not report military deaths? How odd! What comparable israeli service reports on those for the israelis, have you bothered to research?

Ask better talking points from your israeli sources. I'm sure they can put out a claim that all the head-shoted infants and children are terrorists. Ask them if that remains a government talking point in Israel.

Ben-Gvir said, “We will talk about it a fifth and a fourth time if necessary. We cannot have women and children getting close to the border... anyone who gets near must get a bullet [in his head.”

I actually would agree on the legitimacy of the use of deadly force to defend an international border. But what Israel is doing is a massacre within its borders, on the fences it erected around the concentration camps it manages.

That's farcical and you know it.
The war continues because in large part the Israeli government wants it to. Why they want to continue it varies depending on which group you ask.
It was widely reported over the summer that Hamas and Israel were close to a ceasefire, but at the last minute Netanyahu insisted on revising previously agreed upon terms and adding new terms - such as permanent Israeli military occupation along the Egyptian border.

Netanyahu has been having anyone who negotiates with his government assassinated.
With american-provided weapons. The US fully backs the policy of not negotiation, of attempting to conduct this war as an extermination war.

All it took to force Israel to negotiate, as long as a year ago, was cutting off those weapens. But they will only be cut off when the stocks are expended. And anyway if the US cut them ogg Germany's chancellor has just announced that Germany wants to supply Israel with more weapons!
Fortunately Germany too is a military dwarf compared to what it once was. But I guess they figure they can supply a final genocide. Unfortunately the combined "western" remaining pool of weapns may just be enough for the couplee of million being targeted within Israel.

German chancellor Olaf Scholz announced further arms deliveries to Israel during a debate in the country’s parliament.
“We have delivered arms and we will deliver arms,” he made clear in his speech to German MPs.
The German government made decisions “which also ensure that there will be further deliveries in the near future,” he added.
However. Scholz left open the extent to which weapons are to be delivered – with some German parties previously accusing his governing coalition of lacking support for Israel.
The German government has been refusing export licences for ammunition or spare parts for tanks “for weeks and months,” criticized CDU leader Friedrich Merz.
Merz alleges that “a large number of companies” had come forward with written documents stating that licences had been applied for but not processed by the German government for months.
After the US, Germany is one of the most important exporters of weapons to Israel.
In the last year, exports were valued at 326.5 million euros – ten times more than in the year before.

That is german politics in 2024: making a point of selling weapons to a state that is openly conducting a genocide, and exchanging accusations in parliament of not supplying enough weapons already, even as exports there inreased ten-fold during this genoocide.

Thre is no shame.
 
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That's farcical and you know it.
The war continues because in large part the Israeli government wants it to. Why they want to continue it varies depending on which group you ask.
It was widely reported over the summer that Hamas and Israel were close to a ceasefire, but at the last minute Netanyahu insisted on revising previously agreed upon terms and adding new terms - such as permanent Israeli military occupation along the Egyptian border.
No it is not and no I do not.

Cease-fire is not peace.
It can be a step towards peace - but not as long as one side refuses to abandon destruction of another as its sole raison d'etre.

Under such conditions, it is just a wait for another festival massacre and a way to drag out suffering for another generation. :(
 

Three Lebanese journalists killed in Israeli strike​

Three journalists have been killed in an Israeli airstrike on a building known to be housing reporters in south-eastern Lebanon, witnesses have told the BBC.
The attack was carried out on a guesthouse in a compound in Hasbaya being used by more than a dozen journalists from at least seven media organisations - with a courtyard containing cars clearly marked with "press".
The three men worked for broadcasters Al-Manar TV and Al Mayadeen TV, which issued statements paying tribute to their killed employees.
Lebanon's information minister said the attack was deliberate and described it as a "war crime".
The Israeli military has not yet commented, but has previously denied targeting journalists.

Those killed were camera operator Ghassan Najjar and engineer Mohamed Reda from pro-Iranian news channel Al Mayadeen, as well as camera operator Wissam Qassem from the Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Manar.
The Lebanese ministry of health said three others were injured in the blast.
Five reporters had been killed in prior Israeli strikes in Lebanon, including Reuters journalist Issam Abdallah.
Footage broadcast by Al-Jadeed TV - whose journalists were also sharing the house - showed a bombed-out building with a collapsed roof and floors covered in rubble.
A vehicle used for TV broadcasts was overturned on its side, its satellite dish mangled with cabling nearby.
"All official parties were told that this house was being used as a stay-house for journalists. We coordinated with them all," an Al-Jadeed journalist, caked in concrete dust, said in a live broadcast while panting and coughing.
Lebanese journalists covering the conflict in the south of the country had to relocate from nearby Marj'youn to Hasbaya, as the former became too dangerous.

Youmna Fawwaz, a reporter for broadcaster MTV Lebanon, told the BBC that journalists in the compound were awoken at around 03:00 local time (01:00 BST) by the strike.
She said ceilings had fallen in on them, and they were surrounded by rubble and dust, with the sound of fighter jets overhead.
Each news organisation had their own building in the compound, she said, and the building housing the Al Mayadeen reporters was "obliterated" while Al-Manar employees were inside.
Ms Fawwaz said it was a media compound known as such to both Israel and Hezbollah.
"The airstrike was carried out on purpose. Everyone knew we were there. All the cars were labelled as press and TV. There wasn't even a warning given to us."
She added: "They are trying to terrorise us just like they do in Gaza. Israelis are trying to prevent us from covering the story."
Lebanon's information minister accused Israel of intentionally targeting journalists, in contravention of international law.
"The Israeli enemy waited for the journalists' nighttime break to betray them in their sleep," Ziad Makary wrote in a post on X.
"This is an assassination, after monitoring and tracking, with prior planning and design, as there were 18 journalists there representing seven media institutions."

Hasbaya, about five miles (eight kilometres) from the Israeli border, is inhabited by Muslims, Christians, as well as people from the Druze ethnic and religious minority.

It has seen attacks on its peripheries in recent weeks, but this was the first strike on the settlement itself.

The attack comes as part of an expanding conflict in Lebanon, where Israel has been intensifying air strikes for weeks - as well as launching a ground invasion on border towns and villages in the south.

Lebanese authorities have recorded over 1,700 air strikes across the country in the past three weeks.

Hostilities broke out between Israel and Hezbollah on 8 October last year, the day after Hamas's attack on Israel that killed around 1,200 people. The Iran-backed armed group has since been firing rockets and drones into Israel in what it described as "solidarity" with Palestinians in Gaza.

Nearly 2,600 people in Lebanon have been killed in the current conflict, according to the country's health ministry - many of the deaths occurring since Israel began escalating its attacks on 23 September.

Around 60,000 people in northern Israel have been displaced by Hezbollah rocket fire, and the Israeli government has declared returning them to their homes to be a key objective.

In southern Lebanon, satellite imagery examined by the BBC shows Israel's intensified bombing campaign has caused more damage to buildings in two weeks than occurred during a year of cross-border fighting.

Data shows that more than 3,600 buildings in Lebanon appear to have been damaged or destroyed between 2 and 14 October - about 54% of the total damage.

The attack comes days after the Israeli military accused six Al Jazeera journalists working in northern Gaza of being affiliated with Hamas or other armed Palestinian groups.

The Qatari broadcaster said it denies and "vehemently condemns" the allegations.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, at least 123 Palestinian journalists and media workers have been killed in Gaza since Israel launched a war in the territory last year.

Gaza's Hamas-run health authority has reported more than 42,000 people killed since.

Two Israeli journalists have also been killed in the conflict.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpvz2rzm4k0o
 
It can be a step towards peace - but not as long as one side refuses to abandon destruction of another as its sole raison d'etre.
I agree, so long as Israel refuses to abandon destruction of another (though at this point as it's razing Lebanon as well, we're up to anothers, plural), there can never be peace. Which is exactly why Western intervention is required, to force Israel's hand.
Under such conditions, it is just a wait for another festival massacre and a way to drag out suffering for another generation. :(
I don't know Yeekim, it seems like Israel have a habit of doing this regardless of any massacre.
 
Civilian health administration whose job is attempting to track civilian deaths does not report military deaths? How odd! What comparable israeli service reports on those for the israelis, have you bothered to research?

Ask better talking points from your israeli sources. I'm sure they can put out a claim that all the head-shoted infants and children are terrorists. Ask them if that remains a government talking point in Israel.
well I don't know: do YOU know what the Gaza Health Ministry's mandate is vis a vis reporting on any and all deaths in Gaza?
Have YOU looked into this, instead of just assuming you're right?
I was just making an casual observation and I'd happily be corrected by evidence, namely that the Gazans simply don't count dead combatants because they're a "civilian" agency...
 

Israel vows to improve Gaza conditions after U.S. threat to withhold weapons​

Israeli officials have been assuring their U.S. counterparts that Israel will act quickly to improve the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza following an ultimatum from the Biden administration, two Israeli officials tell Axios.

Driving the news: Secretary of State Blinken and Secretary of Defense Austin sent a letter to Israeli leaders on Monday warning that shipments of U.S. weapons to Israel could be affected if Israel does not take steps within 30 days to improve the conditions in Gaza, according to a copy of the letter obtained by Axios.
https://www.axios.com/2024/10/16/israel-gaza-humanitarian-aid-us-weapons
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...ithhold-weapons/ar-AA1sntXk?ocid=BingNewsSerp
 
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