Just International

Beyond the Logic of Dehumanization – Those for Whom We Weep Will Win the War

By Ronnie Kasrils

Here is an AI-generated podcast based on the article

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In Gaza, six children are murdered every hour.

More than 17,000 children have been butchered. None of us, not even the poets, can summon words adequate to the horror of the fascistic bloodlust of the Israeli regime and the society that backs it.

A year after the attack on Gaza began, over 42,000 people had been killed. This number does not include the missing. More than 10,000 people are assumed to be dead, their bodies buried under rubble. More than 100,000 people are wounded, many grievously.

A study published in the esteemed medical journal, The Lancet, in July this year estimated that the total number of dead, due to direct and indirect causes, could exceed 186,000 people as of June 19, 2024. More than 70 percent of the dead are women and children. Over 1,000 children are now amputees, the highest number for a comparable period in history.

A study by Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins of Brown University, published on October 7 this year, shows that 90 percent of people in Gaza are displaced, 96 percent do not have enough food and water, there is no electricity, and just under 90 percent of the hospitals have been destroyed, with more than 880 health care workers killed.

Four in every five children are consumed with depression, grief, and fear. Infectious diseases are running rampant.

The confirmed deaths of 42,000 people as a direct result of the attacks by the Israeli military amount to almost two Sharpeville massacres every single day for a year.

After Sharpeville, there was relative calm after the storm. The wounded were taken to hospital, and the dead were buried with dignity. The regime was momentarily shaken by global condemnation.

In Gaza, the killing is relentless.

The Zionists and their liberal allies justify this avalanche of killing as a legitimate response to Operation Al Aqsa Flood on October 7 last year.

There is an internationally recognized right to armed resistance against occupation. There is no internationally recognized right of defense by an occupying power.

It is true that the right to armed resistance against occupation does not extend to taking civilian hostages or to deliberate attacks on civilians. We need, though, to be clear on three things.

The first is that the Israelis, backed by their allies in the United States and elsewhere, ran a brazen propaganda campaign after Operation Al Aqsa Flood. The claims about forty beheaded babies and organized mass rape have been comprehensively debunked.

The second is that more than 300 of the people killed in Israel during the operation were soldiers on active duty and therefore legitimate military targets. Many of the civilians killed were part of the Israeli military reserve and therefore off-duty soldiers. Moreover, it is well documented that many of those civilians were killed by fire from the Israeli military.

The third point is that in these matters, it is always necessary to take context into account. The context is 75 years of colonial dispossession and murderous ethnic cleansing throughout Palestine. Around 80 percent of Gazans are refugees from the Israeli ‘ethnic cleansing’ in 1948 and 1967.

Gaza has suffered a bloody siege for 17 years. The civilians taken hostage were taken to exchange them for the thousands of hostages in Israeli prisons.

As anyone who knows the history of the revolts against slavery and colonialism will be aware, atrocities do occur when the downtrodden arise. Serious analysis understands this in context. It understands that oppression is the root of violence and that ending oppression is the route to peace.

Every innocent death is a tragedy. We are all grieved by the death of babies in a conflict, but decent people are grieved by the death of all babies. Two Israeli babies died on October 7, 2023.

Within weeks, 70 newborn babies in Gaza had perished. The Israelis and their liberal allies around the world wish us to grieve for the two Israeli babies and accept the death of the 70 babies in Gaza as the actions of ‘the most moral army in the world’.

We are supposed to accept that Israeli lives are sacred while the Palestinians are the Untermensch. This logic of dehumanization has always been the logic of fascism and colonialism, and all decent people are called to resist.

People around the world have stood up on principle.

Israel’s colonial occupation and genocidal response to resistance would not be possible without the support of the United States.

In the year following Operation Al Aqsa Flood, the US spent at least $22.76 billion on military aid to Israel and related US operations in the region. But on university campuses across the United States, young people, many of them Jewish, have courageously stood up for justice.

Surveys show that 40 percent of Jews in the United States under the age of 35 oppose Zionism and support the Palestinians. They understand that Judaism existed for thousands of years before the state of Israel was formed and that it will continue to exist long after Israel has ceased to exist in its present form.

The international movement to boycott, sanction, and disinvest from Israel is growing rapidly stronger, and there has been significant progress towards empowering the United Nations and its apex courts, the ICC and ICJ, to finally act with the necessary urgency.

The South African state acted bravely to take Israel to the International Court of Justice. There is, of course, a strong pushback from the Israeli and US states, which includes significant attempts to sway public opinion in South Africa.

The US government funds projects that make it seem that ‘fake news’ only comes from its rivals in BRICS and never from the US or Israel.

In late November, the ‘World Movement for Democracy’, a project of the National Endowment for Democracy and a US state organization associated with many US-backed coups against elected governments, will be hosting a massive ‘civil society’ conference in Johannesburg that will misrepresent the US and the West as the custodians of democracy around the world.

Pressure for South African NGOs to boycott the conference is rapidly mounting, and some have already pulled out.

Israel’s hubris, its messianic sense of its right to kill and dominate, masks its growing weakness. As it has begun to attack Lebanon and Iran, following its bombing of Syria and Yemen, there is a growing understanding that its fascism is a threat to the wider region and, ultimately, to world peace.

In over a year, Israel has failed to achieve its declared aims of rescuing the hostages and crushing Hamas. Despite significant losses, the heroic resistance in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, and Yemen is undefeated. The Israeli military conceals the number of its dead and injured, but there is a growing awareness in Israel that casualties are mounting. Thousands of Israeli soldiers are suffering from psychological trauma that has rendered them incapable of combat duty.

The Israeli military basks in tactical wins but suffers strategic defeats. By expanding the battlefront, they overstretch themselves, and as the war escalates, they will grind to a halt.

Israel is not a stable state. The divisions within Israeli society are at breaking point, and Netanyahu’s effective abandonment of the hostages has weakened his support.

Moreover, Israel cannot indefinitely carry on a protracted war of attrition. The economy is in crisis, with capital flight, foreign investment drying up, and GDP rapidly dropping. There was a $64 billion loss last year. This year will be worse. Half a million citizens have fled the country.

The settlements and towns near the Lebanon border and in the south near Gaza are deserted. Hotels are overflowing with displaced settlers at government expense. The harbor of Aqaba is empty of ships and has declared bankruptcy.

Hezbollah rockets are striking military targets in Haifa and elsewhere, including key military and Mossad bases, and Netanyahu’s home has been struck by a drone. Operation Al-Aqsa Flood proved that Israel was not invincible, and Israel’s Iron Dome and air defenses are proving inadequate against the combined assaults from the region, from as far away as Iran and Yemen.

Israel has been severely punished by Hezbollah in Lebanon and will fail in its invasion of that country as it has in the past.

Iran is another factor entirely. It is a vast country, rich in resources and a formidable foe. And unlike Israel, Iran aims at military targets. It does not launch indiscriminate attacks on civilians. People and countries around the world are taking note of this.

The times are unimaginably grim in Gaza and in the ghettoes of the West Bank, where 11,500 people have been imprisoned. But the resistance lives on, their courage and stoicism manifest in the defiance of Yahya Sinwar in his last breath, manifest in the sheer grit of the little girl carrying her injured baby sister on her back through the piles of rubble and death.

People care and comfort one another in the most nightmarish conditions. They dig in the rubble for those buried alive. They rush to the bombed hospitals with the dying and injured in their hands, the remains of shredded victims in plastic bags. They bury their shrouded dead with the utmost tenderness in mass graves. They love their land, amaze the world with their dignity, and will not forsake the land of their ancestors.

Zionism is not dead, but it is certainly dying. The cost will be devastatingly high, high beyond measure, but those for whom we weep will win the war.

Ronnie Kasrils, veteran of the anti-apartheid struggle, and South Africa’s former Minister for Intelligence Services, activist and author. He contributed this piece to The Palestine Chronicle

3 November 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

 

Poll of Muslim-American Voters Presidential Preferences Released

By Phil Pasquini

Only days before one of the most pivotal presidential elections in US history takes place, CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations) released its national poll, “Final CAIR 2024 Election Poll of American Muslim Voters,” which was conducted on October 30-31. The results illustrate how this important block of voters will be pivotal in deciding the winner in Tuesday’s election.

According to CAIR, the ongoing genocide in Gaza is the top issue affecting American-Muslim voters’ choices in the presidential race with most voters having already decided who they support.

CAIR, for its part during a morning news conference in introducing the results, urged all voters regardless of their choices to get out and vote in the election to make their voices heard.

In introducing the results of the one-question national poll, CAIR Director of Government Affairs Robert S. McCaw indicated that according to Molitico, the independent third-party research group whom they engaged in conducting the poll, there are 376,667 registered American-Muslim voters in the six key battleground states of Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

The poll included 1,449 verified registered voters from across the country, with 42.3% for Dr. Jill Stein, 41% for Kamala Harris, and 9.8% for Donald Trump while 5.4% of voters polled said they would not be voting and 0.9% remain undecided. The results allow for a margin of error of +/- 2.5 percentage points with a confidence interval of 95%.

The same one-question poll conducted in September resulted with Harris at 29.40%, Stein 29.10% and Trump 11.20% while 16.50% of voters were undecided and 8.80% said they would not be voting at all.

While the results of the October poll show that Harris has lost some support, there are others who are urging all American-Muslim voters to support her to keep Trump from regaining the White House.

During a morning national television interview today, Palestinian refugee, Maher Nawaf Arekat, founder and President of the Palestinian Community Center of Arizona along with other Democrats and leaders in the Palestinian, Arab, Muslim and Progressive communities in Arizona, spoke of their joint statement issued on October 24 calling on all voters to take “The first step — and our best choice in this horrible situation — is defeating Trump by electing Harris. We urge you to join us.”

The statement concludes with “In our view, it is crystal clear that allowing the fascist Donald Trump to become president again would be the worst possible outcome for the Palestinian people. A Trump win would be an extreme danger to Muslims in our country, all immigrants, and the American pro-Palestine movement. It would be an existential threat to our democracy and our whole planet… Trump must be defeated. The only way to defeat him is to elect Kamala Harris… Voting for Harris is not a personal endorsement of her or of the policy decisions of the administration in which she served. It’s an assessment of the best possible option to continue fighting for an end to the genocide, a free Palestine, and all else that we hold dear.”

While expressing their collective frustration with Harris’ stance, saying that while she has not yet “…met our movement’s demand that she break with Biden on the issue” they are hoping that in the end “she will come around,” in part due to recent comments and statements wherein she expressed empathy for the suffering of the Palestinian people pledging to do “everything in her power” as president in ending the war in Gaza, and to achieve “a future of security and dignity for all people in the region.”

In addressing those inclined to vote for a third-party candidate in protest to the status quo, they warned that “In our electoral system, no third-party candidate can win this election. But voting for them could make Trump president.”

Report and photo by Phil Pasquini

2 November 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Hundreds of journalists sign letter condemning Israel for targeting and killing Palestinian reporters

By Kevin Reed

Hundreds of journalists from all over the world have signed an online petition condemning the Israeli government for deliberately killed Palestinian journalists in Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon over the past year.

As of this writing 790 individuals—writers, reporters, editors, producers, photographers and photojournalists, artists, videographers, educators and students—have signed the online petition with the headline, “Israel Must Stop Killing Journalists.”

The petition states in part,

Despite repeated condemnation by internationally-recognized human rights and media organizations, Israel has continued to kill and maim Palestinian journalists in Gaza. It has also escalated attacks against journalists in Lebanon.

The targeting of journalists is an attack on press freedom and a violation of international law.

This must stop.

Among the journalists endorsing the letter are Sakhr Al-Makhadhi, Executive Producer at AJ+, Al Jazeera; Anne Barnard, Freelancer and former New York Times Beirut Bureau Chief; Samaa Khullar, Investigative Journalist at the Nation; and Khalil AlHajal, Deputy Opinion Editor at the Detroit Free Press.

Palestinian journalists in Gaza have served as the world’s eyes and ears, documenting Israeli attacks such as the deliberate killing of civilians carrying white flags and torture of Palestinians in detention. These journalists have received death threats, been maimed or killed by Israeli forces—even while not on assignment. Their families have also been killed by Israeli forces.

The petition circulators point out that the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has reported that “Israeli attacks have killed at least 123 Palestinian journalists and media workers,” which makes it the deadliest period for journalists since the organization began collecting data in 1992. The Government Media Office in Gaza puts the death toll of Palestinian journalists at 182 since October 2023.

Most recently, an airstrike in Lebanon on October 25 killed three journalists as they slept in a guest house in an area that has been used by media as a base for covering the war. A report by Associated Press said,

The 3 a.m. airstrike turned the site—a series of chalets nestled among trees that had been rented by various media outlets covering the war—into rubble. Cars marked “PRESS” were overturned and covered in dust and debris, and at least one satellite dish for live broadcasting was totally destroyed.

The Israeli army did not issue a warning prior to the strike, which it said targeted Hezbollah militant infrastructure. The military later said the strike was being reviewed.

Mohammad Farhat, a reporter for Lebanon’s Al Jadeed TV in the south, said everyone rushed out in their sleeping clothes. “The first question we asked each other: ‘Are you alive?’”

The three journalists killed in the air strike were camera operator Ghassan Najjar and broadcast technician Mohammed Rida of the Beirut-based pan-Arab Al-Mayadeen TV, and camera operator Wissam Qassim, who worked for Al-Manar TV of Lebanon’s Hezbollah group.

While the Israeli military maintained that the buildings were targeted because they were a base of Hezbollah operations, human rights groups reported that the journalists were deliberately targeted.

The CPJ’s organizational director Carlos Martinez de la Serna said the organization was, “deeply outraged by yet another deadly Israeli airstrike on journalists, this time hitting a compound hosting 18 members of the press in south Lebanon.”

In another case, 19-year-old journalist Hassan Hamad was killed by an Israeli artillery shell at his home in Jabaliya on October 6 after he received death threats. Hamad received threatening phone calls and text messages via WhatsApp from an Israeli officer ordering him to stop filming evidence of the genocide. Hamad, 19, had been sharing video reports on the Israeli incursion into the Jabalia refugee camp when he was killed.

In one threatening text message received by Hassan, shared on X by human rights activist and journalist Maha Hussaini, said, “Listen, if you continue spreading lies about Israel, we’ll come for you next and turn your family into […] This is your last warning.”

One of the demands on the petition is that Israel allow injured journalists in Gaza to be immediately evacuated so they can receive urgently needed medical attention.

The petition states,

As the Israeli military escalated its attacks on central and northern Gaza in October 2024, they killed two Palestinian journalists and seriously injured three others. On Oct. 7, Al Jazeera cameraman Ali Al-Attar was severely injured due to shrapnel from an airstrike while he was covering the conditions of displaced Palestinians. Al-Attar is now in critical condition, with medical scans showing severe bleeding and shrapnel lodged in his brain. Two days later, Israeli forces shot Al Jazeera cameraman Fadi Al-Wahidi in the neck while he was reporting. Doctors say his injury has left him paralyzed for life and he is now in a coma.

A report in Al Jazeera said al-Wahidi was shot by an Israeli sniper in the Gaza Strip and has not been allowed by Israel to leave the enclave for urgent medical treatment. The Palestinian journalist was shot as he reported on the Israeli ground invasion of the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza, and he was wearing gear that clearly identified him as a member of the press.

Despite appeals from three media freedom organizations as well as medical officials, the Israeli government has not allowed al-Wahidi and Ali al-Attar to leave Gaza for “lifesaving medical treatment.”

Al Jazeera issued a statement calling on the international community “to take immediate action to ensure the safety of journalists and civilians in Gaza and hold the Israeli Occupation Forces accountable for their repeated crimes against journalists.”

The CPJ issued an appeal to the governments of the US, France and Germany as well as the United Nations seeking assistance to have al-Wahidi and al-Attar transferred out of Gaza. However, a CPJ statement says, “Despite these endeavors, the possibility of evacuating these journalists is currently blocked due to a lack of Israeli authorization for their safe passage.”

The petition campaign states that the targeting of journalists “is an attack on press freedom and a violation of international law.” A United Nations Security Council resolution adopted in May 2015 states that the council “[c]ondemns all violations and abuses committed against journalists, media professionals and associated personnel in situations of armed conflict and calls upon all parties to armed conflict to bring an end to such practices.”

2 November 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

UN Rapporteur Urges Suspension of Israel’s Membership

By Quds News Network

New York (Quds News Network)- The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Palestinian Territories, Francesca Albanese, urged the UN General Assembly on Wednesday to consider suspending Israel’s membership due to its repeated violations of international law and its ongoing occupation of Palestinian territories.

Speaking at a press conference, Albanese stressed that Israel’s impunity has enabled it to “become a serial violator of international law.”

Albanese’s recommendations include suspending Israel’s credentials at the UN until it halts these violations and withdraws its occupation, which clearly unlawful. She emphasized that Israel’s formation came at a huge price for the Palestinians, a cost that remains unaddressed.

Since the 1967 occupation, Palestinians have faced systematic segregation and repression, Albanese added, noting that Israel’s ‘Greater Israel’ policies aim to diminish Palestinian identity in the region. She highlighted that 75% of Gaza’s population consists of refugees originally from what is now called ‘Israel’, symbolizing what she termed Israel’s “original sin” since its creation.

In a recent report to the UN General Assembly, Albanese described a pattern of forced displacement, destruction, and actions amounting to genocide in Gaza and the West Bank. Her report points to “long-term, intentional, state-organized forced displacement and replacement” of Palestinians, especially in light of the Israeli attacks’ escalation since October 7, 2023.

Albanese’s findings address the genocidal intent behind Israel’s expansion, framing it as part of a sustained process of ethnic cleansing aimed at removing Palestinian presence from Palestine.

Albanese’s statements and report have faced significant outrage, especially from the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA) in Canada, which has labeled her criticisms as antisemitic. Ahead of her upcoming talk at the University of Toronto on November 7, CIJA called on Canadian authorities to take measures against her. They are urging Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly and Ambassador Bob Rae to publicly condemn Albanese and bar Canadian officials from meeting with her.

CIJA has also requested that Albanese be stripped of diplomatic immunity during her visit and removed from her UN position.

“No government official should be meeting with Albanese while she’s in Canada nor should Albanese enjoy diplomatic immunity while she’s here in Canada,” CIJA said, accusing her of spreading harmful rhetoric by equating Israel’s crimes to those of Nazi Germany.

2 November 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Humanitarian Group Leaders Say Israel Causing ‘Apocalyptic’ Situation in Northern Gaza

By Brett Wilkins

The heads of 15 humanitarian organizations operating under the United Nations umbrella on Friday accused Israel of creating “apocalyptic” conditions in northern Gaza and called on Israeli forces to stop attacking the Palestinian enclave and the aid workers trying to help its people.

“The situation unfolding in North Gaza is apocalyptic. The area has been under siege for almost a month, denied basic aid and lifesaving supplies while bombardment and other attacks continue,” the 15 group heads wrote in an open letter. “Just in the past few days, hundreds of Palestinians have been killed, most of them women and children, and thousands have once again been forcibly displaced.”

The letter’s 15 signers include directors of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, a forum of United Nations and non-U.N. humanitarian partners, including the International Council of Volunteer Agencies.

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“Hospitals have been almost entirely cut off from supplies and have come under attack, killing patients, destroying vital equipment, and disrupting lifesaving services,” the group leaders wrote. “Health workers and patients have been taken into custody. Fighting has also reportedly taken place inside hospitals.”

“Dozens of schools serving as shelters have been bombed or forcibly evacuated. Tents sheltering displaced families have been shelled, and people have been burned alive,” the letter continues. “Rescue teams have been deliberately attacked and thwarted in their attempts to pull people buried under the rubble of their homes.”

The signers wrote that “we have received reports of civilians being targeted while trying to seek safety,” and that “the entire Palestinian population in north Gaza is at imminent risk of dying from disease, famine, and violence.”

The letter warns: “Humanitarian aid cannot keep up with the scale of the needs due to the access constraints. Basic lifesaving goods are not available. Humanitarians are not safe to do their work and are blocked by Israeli forces and by insecurity from reaching people in need.”

“In a further blow to the humanitarian response, the polio vaccination campaign has been delayed due to the fighting, putting the lives of children in the region at risk,” the signers added.

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The humanitarian leaders lamented this week’s approval by Israeli lawmakers of a pair of bills targeting the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

“If implemented, such measures would be a catastrophe for the humanitarian response in Gaza, diametrically opposed to the United Nations Charter, with potential dire impacts on the human rights of the millions of Palestinians depending on UNRWA’s assistance, and in violation of Israel’s obligations under international law,” the letter states. “Let us be very clear: There is no alternative to UNRWA.”

The humanitarian leaders then turned their attention to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) genocide case against Israel led by South Africa and backed by around 30 nations and regional blocs. Israeli forces have been accused of flouting ICJ orders that the country prevent genocidal acts in Gaza, allow humanitarian aid into the strip, and stop the assault on Rafah.

“Israel must comply with the provisional orders and determinations of the International Court of Justice,” they asserted.

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Since October 2023, Israel’s assault on Gaza has left more than 155,000 Palestinians dead, wounded, or missing, and millions more displaced, starving, or sick. The Israel Defense Forces’ renewed offensive in northern Gaza has killed or injured thousands of Palestinians since last month amid fears Israel is implementing the so-called “General’s Plan” to starve and then ethnically cleanse northern Gaza to make way for Israeli recolonization, a policy promoted by senior members of Israel’s far-right government.

The humanitarian leaders’ letter also states that “Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups must release the hostages immediately and unconditionally and must abide by international humanitarian law.”

“The entire region is on the edge of a precipice,” the signers concluded. “An immediate cessation of hostilities and a sustained, unconditional cease-fire are long overdue.”

Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

2 November 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Israel has “perpetrated a concerted policy to destroy Gaza’s healthcare system”:UN report

By Quds News Network

Gaza (Quds News Network)- Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza has followed a “concerted policy” to destroy the enclave’s healthcare system, an independent U.N. commission report revealed Wednesday.

“Our report to the General Assembly, which we presented this morning, examines attacks on medical facilities and personnel and the treatment of detainees and hostages from 7th of October, 2023 to August 2024,” Navi Pillay, chair of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel, told a news conference at the U.N. headquarters in New York.

She said that the findings revealed “a concerted policy to destroy Gaza’s healthcare system,” while adding that “Palestinian detainees were subjected to persistent mistreatment by Israeli authorities, amounting to torture as a war crime and crime against humanity.”

“We intend to continue pursuing the fulfillment of our mandate, including in relation to making recommendations, in particular on accountability measures,” she said, pledging efforts to end impunity and ensure legal accountability.

The report submitted to the General Assembly found “thousands of Palestinians, mostly men and boys from Gaza, have been arbitrarily detained and held incommunicado.”

“Israeli forces used detainees as human shields in both the West Bank and Gaza, constituting a war crime,” it said.

The commission reported that Palestinian detainees, including the elderly and children, “were subjected to persistent mistreatment by Israeli authorities, including beatings, continuous blindfolding and handcuffing, severe overcrowding, death threats, humiliation, deprivation of food, restricting appropriate hygiene and withholding medical care.”

Asked about the legal consequences and the “slow-moving processes” in the International Criminal Court (ICC), Pillay said: “It’s a slow process, but we are getting there. We’re getting there mainly because of activism on the part of civil society and victims and commissions such as us.”

Regarding “positive steps” that countries should take to end the Israeli occupation, Pillay said the “onus lies on every state under international law to take steps not to cooperate with the occupation itself.”

She reminded all countries of their responsibility “not to continue to support this (Israeli) occupation. That would be any support – militarily, politically or recognition – even about moving the embassies to Jerusalem.”

“You have to change your traditional way of treating the situation,” she said.

Pillay noted “double standards” against Palestine, especially by some member states, and stressed that “huge violations” historically occurred before Oct. 7 and blamed the occupation.

Asked about the report’s finding “war crimes” against Palestinians and accountability, Pillay said there are more than “10,000 pieces of evidence” that relate to the “existence of proof of genocide.”

“We dedicated to gathering evidence with the goal of ensuring accountability,” she said, noting that “there is no other organ of the U.N. with an investigative mandate and that the commission is “handicapped. We’re not allowed inside the country.”

Saying that there are ways and measures that the Security Council and the General Assembly can adopt when a member state does not comply, Pillay noted the case of South Africa and its membership being suspended until apartheid ended.

Chris Sidoti, a member of the commission, criticized Israel’s decision to ban the activities of the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) and noted that only nine staff members were dismissed after Israel accused them of taking part in the Oct. 7 operation.

“That’s more than the number of staff that the Israeli Defense Forces have dismissed for violations of international humanitarian laws such as war crimes and crimes against humanity,” he said, adding that the Israeli army is far behind in “dealing with allegations and investigations of misconduct by employees.”

Sidoti noted that UNRWA “has saved Israeli taxpayers billions of dollars over the last 57 years … because Israel, as the occupying power under the Fourth Geneva Convention, is responsible for the care, protection and the provision of services to persons under occupation.”

“If UNRWA is kicked out, the cost for the Israeli taxpayer is going to be enormous. So, this is a decision that is bad for the Palestinians and ridiculous for Israeli taxpayers,” he added.

1 November 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

North Gaza: A cynical siege of notorious proportions

By Ranjan Solomon

This weekend has been one of trauma for the Palestinians. Over 100,000 Palestinians are besieged under Israeli siege and bombardment in the areas of Jabalia, Beit Hanoun, and Beit Lahia. As part of its ethnic cleansing policy, the Israeli occupation is killing anyone who tries to help the people of the northern Gaza Strip. The fate of many people remains  unknown.

Imagine this. Not a single drop of bread or water has entered the northern Gaza Strip. Israel simply will not countenance this. Israel’s holocaust is  brutal, callous, cold-blooded. That itself is an understatement. Words cannot describe the horrifying conditions of people  ejected from their homes and shelters on multiple occasions, each time leaving behind food supplies and personal belongings. They have no idea when the next bomb will strike them. It is insane that Netanyahu and his generals found it in them to attack Gaza Strip’s shelters 39 times in October alone.

They have closed down the UNRWA. This is savagery and inhumanity and the only way to describe it as brutish. Antonio Guterres, the UN secretary general, voiced his profound concern last week about the suffering of civilians in northern Gaza as a result of Israel’s siege. “People suffering under the ongoing Israeli siege in North Gaza are rapidly exhausting all available means for their survival.” Israeli forces have prohibited ambulances from passing through the majority of Jabalia and its camp, leaving many victims and injured people stranded and unable to be taken to hospitals. Medical teams were detained and the only hospitals that could care for victims and injured individuals were destroyed. The only parallel to such cruelty was the Nazi holocaust, the lessons of which have not been learned by Zionist thugs, despite their own people having experienced the horror of that savage experience. By the time this genocide concludes, it may turn out to be the worst form of collective human torture ever inflicted on any people.
The settlers are proving to be the most despicable wild things going around with license to kill. They’re now rummaging for land and homes that they can settle in once they have cleansed Gaza. If only, the ICC and ICJ would speed up their case and land notices on a few of the main culprits beginning with Netanyahu, Smotrich, and their wild racist.

Only a while ago, they referred to Palestinians as ‘human animals’. It is clear that it was a mere mirror image. And this expression is not just for the time being. From the Nakba onwards in 1948, terror has been their key strategy. It has left the Palestinians trapped in lives they never imagined. Netanyahu cannot extinguish this war against Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis – each of which are not traditional armies will be forced to find an escape route. It will be near-impossible for him to find a safe haven along with his closest co-villains.Or, will we witness an end that resembles that of Hitler’s?

Netanyahu and his minions in most parts of the West will not desert him. Colonialist-cousins, by nature and instinct, were all born and baptised in the same blood.As the UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food recently denounced, in the space of a few months, Israel has deliberately starved more than two million people — and it continues to do so. It has destroyed one-third of Gaza’s agricultural lands, 80% of the fishing fleet and wrecked its irrigation systems. Israeli forces have prevented countless food convoys from entering the territory by land or by sea, directly shelling aid workers in the process. The consequences are unbearable and irreversible. As of April 2024, international authorities have determined that famine has all but taken complete hold in Gaza.

What the situation demands is  to “Globalize the Intifada” – to promote worldwide activity in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance.  Intifada is a peaceful term, calling for a nonviolent uprising against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and blockade on Gaza.The chant and its associated chants have caused controversy, particularly concerning their impact and connotations. Critics claimed it encourages widespread violence or terrorism. This is a false flag. Pro-Palestinian activists believe in peaceful resistance and dialogue. Yet, Israel’s cronies will not easily do enough.  India, for example, is a chum of Israel and practices similar political strategies to suppress its minorities.

“Free Palestine” is not hate speech nor a terrorist slogan. Rather, it’s a call to liberate Palestine from colonialist oppression – Israel.

Ranjan Solomon is a political commentator

31 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

‘Gaza is Ours, Forever’ – Israel’s Extremists Have a Plan for the Day after the Genocide

By Dr. Ramzy Baroud

Under the slogan ‘Gaza is Ours, Forever’, a large number of Israeli extremists and right-wing politicians met in the settlement of Be’eri, near the Gaza border region, on October 20-21.

The group represented the who’s who in the Israeli right, far right and ultranationalists. They included Israeli Ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir, May Golan and Bezalel Smotrich, as well as ten MKs of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party.

The event, entitled “Preparing to Resettle Gaza”, was organized by one of Israel’s most extreme settler movements, Nachala, led by the notorious Daniella Weiss.

To appreciate how extremist this 79-year-old settler is, consider this: on June 27, the Canadian government, though one of the most stalwart supporters of Netanyahu and his wars, imposed sanctions on her, due to her “role in facilitating (…) acts of violence by Israeli extremist settlers against Palestinian civilians.”

The hate-filled conference, however, was but a culmination of a year-long effort to build a case of why Israel should ethnically cleanse Palestinians in the Strip and re-establish illegal settlements.

The story, however, does not start on October 7. In 2005, Israel decided to redeploy its forces out of the tiny coastal region. That was the start of the hermetic Israeli siege on the Strip, which led to multiple wars and, ultimately, the October 7 events and the ongoing genocide.

Although the number of Jewish settlers who were evacuated from the dismantled 15 illegal settlements was fairly small – 8,500 – the sense of betrayal felt by the settlers created deep divisions throughout Israeli society.

Chaotic scenes of settlers being forcefully removed from the Gush Katif settlements bloc in Gaza created a national crisis in Israel, and was compared to the forceful evacuation of the illegal Sinai settlement of Yamit, which Israel dismantled in April 1982 as part of a previous agreement with Egypt. But, why the crisis?

Israel is a settler-colonial society, which has linked its colonial expansion to religious diktats and prophecies. So the forced departure from Gaza, to most of these settlers, must have appeared to represent both national treason and a sacrilegious act.

This is why resettling Gaza became the immediate rallying cry for Israeli settlers. Compared to their limited political share of power during the redeployment of 2005, current extremists are now effectively the decision-makers.

While the army remains unclear regarding its strategic objectives in Gaza, the settlers have always been aware of the nature of their mission: the ethnic cleansing of all Palestinians from Gaza and the rebuilding of the settlements.

Thus, quickly, the likes of Weiss and many of her supporters began calling on Israelis to join the recolonization campaign. “Register, register, you’ll be in Gaza,” Weiss told an audience of supporters last March, joyfully declaring that 500 families had already signed up, according to a CNN report.

Weiss and Nachala are not acting independently from the overall objective of the country’s leading politicians. For example, on the first day of the war, October 7, 2023, Netanyahu made his intentions clear: “I say to the residents of Gaza: Leave now, because we will operate forcefully everywhere.”

On October 17, a position paper introduced by the Israeli Misgav Institute for National Security & Zionist Strategy called for the “relocation and final settlement of the entire Gaza population.”

The report saw in the war “a unique and rare opportunity to evacuate the whole Gaza Strip” into the Sinai desert. Later that same month, the Israeli intelligence ministry itself became involved, with the Israeli news outlet Calcalist publishing a document “recommend(ing) the transfer of Gaza residents to Sinai.”

On November 14, far-right Minister Smotrich spoke of ‘voluntary migration’. In December, media reports said that Netanyahu himself had told Likud party members that Israel’s real challenge is finding “countries that are willing to absorb them”, meaning the people of Gaza.

Conferences began to be organized to gather support around the idea of ethnically cleansing Palestinians. The first major conference was held by a coalition of settler movements last December. “A house on the beach is not a dream”, an advertisement for the gathering proclaimed. The ‘beach’ here is a reference to the Gaza beach.

Even Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s son-in-law, jumped on the opportunity. In March, he spoke of Gaza’s “very valuable … waterfront property”, which required Israel to remove the civilians and “clean up the Strip”.

The ongoing so-called General’s Plan, aimed at the extermination and ethnic cleansing of northern Gaza, is but the military component of the settlers’ vision, that of ‘Gaza is ours, forever’.

But if Israel has failed to sustain its settlements in the rebellious Strip under more manageable circumstances in the past, will it succeed now?

The settlers are already aware of the challenge at hand. This is why they constantly link their colonization of Gaza with the ethnic cleansing of the Strip’s Palestinian inhabitants.

Israel’s success and failure, however, will ultimately be determined by this maxim: as long as the Palestinian people are fighting back, Weiss and her fellow extremists will not find safety in Gaza.

Indeed, the native population of Gaza has subsisted in that historical land for thousands of years. If genocide has not forced them off their land, nothing else will.

Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle.

31 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Genocidal Scorecard

By Chris Hedges

The latest U.N. report chronicles Israel’s advances in its genocidal assault in Gaza. Israel is intent, the report warns, on expelling the Palestinians, recolonizing Gaza and turning on the West Bank.

A United Nations report, published on Monday, lays out in chilling detail the advances made by Israel in Gaza as it seeks to eradicate “the very existence of the Palestinian people in Palestine.” This genocidal project, the report ominously warns, “is now metastasizing to the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.”

The Nakba or “catastrophe,” which in 1948 saw Zionist militias drive 750,000 Palestinians from their homes, carry out more than 70 massacres and seize 78 percent of historic Palestine, has returned on steroids. It is the next and, perhaps, final chapter in “a long-term intentional, systematic, State-organized forced displacement and replacement of the Palestinians.”

Francesca Albanese, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, who issued the report, titled “Genocide as colonial erasure,” makes an urgent appeal to the international community to impose a full arms embargo and sanctions on Israel until the genocide of Palestinians is halted. She calls on Israel to accept a permanent ceasefire. She demands that Israel, as required by international law and U.N. resolutions, withdraw its military and colonists from Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.

At the very least, Israel, unchecked, should be formally recognized as an apartheid state and persistent violator of international law, Albanese states. The U.N. should reactivate the Special Committee Against Apartheid to address the situation in Palestine, and Israel’s membership in the U.N. should be suspended. Short of these interventions, Israel’s goal, Albanese warns, will likely come into fruition.

You can see my interview with Albanese here.

“This ongoing genocide is doubtlessly the consequence of the exceptional status and protracted impunity that has been afforded to Israel.” she writes. “Israel has systematically and flagrantly violated international law, including Security Council resolutions and [International Criminal Court] ICJ orders. This has emboldened the hubris of Israel and its defiance of international law. As the ICC Prosecutor has warned, ‘if we do not demonstrate our willingness to apply the law equally, if it is seen as applied selectively, we will be creating the conditions of its complete collapse. This is the true risk we face at this perilous moment.’”

The U.N. report comes amid an Israeli blockade of northern Gaza where over 400,000 Palestinians are enduring a starvation siege and constant airstrikes in an attempt to depopulate the north. Israeli forces have killed 1,250 Palestinians in the assault, launched on October 5, a medical source told Al Jazeera. Reports from northern Gaza are difficult to obtain as internet and phone services have been cut and the few journalists on the ground continue to be killed. Israel’s ground and aerial assaults are centered on Jabaliya, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun. Civil defense units say they have been barred by Israeli forces from reaching the sites of recent strikes and their crews have been attacked.

Israel has ordered Palestinians to flee to designated “safe zones,” but once in these “safe zones” they have been attacked and ordered to move to new “safe zones.”

“Displaced people have been systematically chased down and targeted in shelters, including in United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) schools, 70 percent of which Israel has repeatedly attacked.”

In May, Israel’s Rafah invasion caused the displacement of nearly one million Palestinians, driven into southern Gaza because of Israeli evacuation orders, into “uninhabitable wastelands of rubble, sewage and decomposing bodies,” Albanese notes.

By August, 90 percent of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million Palestinians were displaced “under dire conditions,” according to the U.N.

The months of “relentless shunting of weakened humans from one unsafe area to another — fleeing bombs and bullets, with minimal chances of escape, amid loss, fear and grief, and with little access to shelter, clean water, food and healthcare — have inflicted incalculable harm, especially on children,” the report reads. “The movement of displaced Palestinians resembles the death marches of past genocides, and the Nakba. Forced displacement severs connection with the land, undermining food sovereignty and cultural belonging, and triggering further displacement. Communal bonds are broken, the social fabric shredded and reserves of resilience depleted. Systematic forced displacement contributes to ‘the destruction of the spirit, of the will to live, and of life itself.’”

The constant displacement — many Palestinians have been displaced nine or 10 times — from one part of Gaza to another is accompanied by calls from Israeli officials to “renew settlements in Gaza” and encourage the “voluntary transfer of all Gazan citizens” to other countries.

Israel has killed at least 43,163 people in Gaza and wounded 101,510 in Israeli attacks since October 7, 2023. An estimated 1,139 people were killed – some by Israeli forces – in Israel during the incursion by armed Palestinian fighters into Israel and more than 200 were taken captive. In Lebanon, at least 2,787 people have been killed and 12,772 wounded since the Israeli assault on Gaza began, with 77 killed in strikes across the country on Tuesday alone.

The report found evidence that Israel has carried out “more than 93 massacres.”

U.N. investigators concede the numbers of dead in Gaza are probably a vast undercount given that at least 10,000 people, including 4,000 children, are missing, probably buried under the rubble, where “the voices of those trapped and dying are often audible.” Other Palestinians, an “uncertain number,” have been seized by Israel forces and “disappeared.”

Israel has repeatedly attacked aid distribution sites, tent encampments, hospitalsschools and markets “through the indiscriminate use of aerial and sniper fire.” The report notes that “at least 13,000 children, including more than 700 babies, have been killed, many shot in the head and chest” while approximately “22,500 Palestinians have sustained life-changing injuries.”

“The disturbing frequency and callousness of the killing of people known to be civilians are ‘emblematic of the systematic nature’ of a destructive intent,” the report reads. “Six-year-old Hind Rajab, killed with 355 bullets after pleading for help for hours; the fatal mauling by dogs of Muhammed Bhar, who had Down’s Syndrome; the execution of Atta Ibrahim Al-Muqaid, an older deaf man, in his home, later bragged about by his killer and other soldiers on social media; the premature babies deliberately left to die a slow death and decompose in the intensive care unit at Al-Nasr Hospital; the elderly man, Bashir Hajji, killed en route to southern Gaza after appearing in a propaganda photograph of a ‘safe corridor;’ Abu al-Ola, the handcuffed hostage shot by a sniper after being sent into Nasser Hospital with evacuation orders. When the dust settles on Gaza, the true extent of the horror experienced by Palestinians will become known.”

The genocide has turned the landscape into a toxic wasteland.

“Nearly 40 million tons of debris, including unexploded ordnance and human remains, contaminate the ecosystem,” the report goes on. “More than 140 temporary waste sites and 340,000 tons of waste, untreated wastewater and sewage overflow contribute to the spread of diseases such as hepatitis A, respiratory infections, diarrhea and skin diseases. As Israeli leaders promised, Gaza has been made unfit for human life.”

In a further blow, the Israeli parliament on Monday approved a bill to ban UNRWA, a lifeline for Palestinians in Gaza, from operating on Israeli territory and areas under Israel’s control. The ban almost certainly ensures the collapse of aid distribution, already crippled, in Gaza.

As of Oct. 20,  233 UNRWA workers have been killed in Gaza since Oct. 7, 2023, making it the deadliest conflict for U.N. workers.

Israel has expanded its “buffer zone” along the Gaza perimeter to 16 percent of the territory, in the process leveling homes, apartment blocks and farms. It has pushed over 84 percent of the 2.3 million people in Gaza into  “a shrinking, unsafe ‘humanitarian zone’ covering 12.6 percent of a territory now reconfigured in preparation for annexation.” Satellite imagery indicates that the Israeli military has built roads and military bases in over 26 percent of Gaza, “suggesting the aim of a permanent presence.”

The blockade of food is accompanied by the destruction of water treatment plantssewage systemsreservoirsaid convoyshealthcare facilities and food distribution points — crowds of desperate people waiting for food “have been massacred” by Israeli soldiers.

Israel has all but obliterated medical facilities and services in Gaza. It has damaged 32 of 36 hospitals, with 20 hospitals and 70 of 119 primary healthcare centers incapacitated. By this August it had attacked healthcare facilities 492 times. Israel besieged Al-Shifa Hospital for the second time in March and April, killing more than 400 people and detaining 300, including doctors, patients, displaced persons and civil servants. It carried out a forced evacuation of all but 100 of 650 patients in Al-Aqsa hospital.

“In August,” the report reads, “entry permits for humanitarian organizations nearly halved. Access to water has been restricted to a quarter of pre-7 October levels. Approximately 93 per cent of the agricultural, forestry and fishing economies has been destroyed; 95 per cent of Palestinians face high levels of acute food insecurity, and deprivation for decades to come.”

“In recent months, 83 percent of food aid was prevented from entering Gaza, and the civilian police in Rafah were repeatedly targeted, impairing distribution,” the report notes. “At least 34 deaths from malnutrition were recorded by 14 September 2024.”

These measures “indicate an intent to destroy its population through starvation.”

Palestinians detained by Israeli forces “have been systematically abused in a network of Israeli torture camps. Thousands have disappeared, many after being detained in appalling conditions, often bound to beds, blindfolded and in diapers, deprived of medical treatment, subjected to unsanitary conditions, starvation, torturous cuffing, severe beatings, electrocution and sexual assault by both humans and animals. At least 48 detainees have died in custody.”

The report cites the role of the Israeli media in “inciting” the genocide “by helping to foster an unchecked genocidal climate.”

The report criticizes the Israeli media for platforming “proponents of genocide” and withholding “facts from the Israeli public.” At the same time, the Israeli military has killed over 130 Palestinian journalists.

Palestinians are equated with the Amalek, the Biblical enemies of the Israelites, as well as Nazis, to justify their extermination.

Albanese’s report, in a section titled “Risk of genocide in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem,” notes that Israel has accelerated its lethal attacksdetentions and land seizures in the West Bank.

“Genocidal conduct in Gaza set an ominous precedent for the West Bank,” it notes.

In May 2024, the governance of the West Bank was “officially transferred from military to civilian authorities — further de jure annexation — and placed under [Bezalel] Smotrich, a committed Eretz Yisrael politician,” the report reads. “The largest single land appropriation in 30 years was then approved.”

Smotrich, the Minister of Finance, claims there are “two million Nazis” in the West Bank. He has threatened to turn parts of the West Bank into “ruined cities like in the Gaza strip” and stated that starving the entire Gaza population was “justified and moral,” even if two million people died. Minister of Foreign Affairs Israel Katz has also called for the West Bank to receive the same treatment as Gaza.

Thousands of Palestinians in the West Bank towns of Jenin, Nablus, Qalqilya, Tubas and Tulkarem live for days under curfew, making it difficult to access food and water. As in Gaza, the Israeli army, during its Operation Summer Camps, has “targeted ambulances, blocked entrances to hospitals and laid siege to Jenin Hospital. Bulldozers destroyed streets and electricity and public health infrastructure.”

Drones and war planes carry out airstrikes. Israeli roadblocks, checkpoints and blockades make travel difficult or impossible. Israel has suspended financial transfers to the Palestinian Authority, which nominally governs the West Bank in collaboration with Israel. It has revoked 148,000 work permits for those who had jobs in Israel.

“The gross domestic product (GDP) of the West Bank contracted by 22.7 percent, nearly 30 percent of businesses have closed, and 292,000 jobs have been lost,” the report reads. Over 692 Palestinians — “10 times the previous 14 years’ annual average of 69 fatalities,” have been killed and more than 5,000 have been injured. Of the 169 Palestinian children who have been killed, “nearly 80 percent were shot in the head or the torso.”

Since August, in the Jenin refugee camp “approximately 180 homes were levelled and 3,800 structures damaged, destroying or damaging power supplies, public services and amenities, displacing thousands of families and causing widespread disruption. More than 181,000 Palestinians have been affected, many multiple times.”

The report dismisses the claim that Israel is carrying out the assault in Gaza and the West Bank to “defend itself,” “eradicate Hamas” or “bring the hostages home,” charging that these claims are “camouflage,” a way of “invisibilizing the crime.” Genocidal intent, as Judge Dalveer Bhandari from the ICJ points out, “may exist simultaneously with other, ulterior motives.”

Rather, the incursion into Israel by Hamas and other resistance fighters on Oct. 7 “provided the impetus to advance towards the goal of a ‘Greater Israel.’”

“In the context of Israel ignoring the ICJ directive to end the unlawful occupation, the aim to eradicate resistance contradicts the rights to self-determination and to resist an oppressive regime, protected by Customary International Law,” the report reads. “It also portrays the entire population as engaged in resistance and therefore eliminable. By continuing to suppress the right to self-determination, Israel is replicating historical instances in which self-defence, counter-insurgency or counter-terrorism were used to justify destruction of the group, leading to genocide.”

It notes that Israel, rather than abiding by the 1993 Oslo Accords, which were supposed to lead to a two-state solution, increased its colonies in the West Bank from 128 to 358 and the numbers of Jewish settlers “have grown from 256,400 to 714,600.” Israel passed the 2018 Nation State Law that asserts exclusive Jewish sovereignty over “Eretz Yisrael” and names “Jewish settlement” on occupied Palestinian land a “national priority.” It cultivates “a political doctrine that frames Palestinian assertions of self-determination as a security threat to Israel” and uses it “to legitimize permanent occupation.”

“The current intent to destroy the people as such could not be more evident from Israeli conduct when viewed in its totality,” the report states.

A leaked Israeli Ministry of Intelligence “concept paper” from October 2023 outlines the plan to expel the entire Gaza population to Egypt and recolonize Gaza. It is a plan Israel appears to be following.

Albanese writes that Israel is replicating the patterns of past genocides. It creates through its rhetoric a “vengeful atmosphere” that conditions soldiers to be “willing executioners.” It claims it is acting in self-defense while targeting a civilian population. It is obliterating the infrastructure that sustains life, a process of “genocide by attrition.” It uses starvation as a weapon. It is attempting to hide its crimes by killing Palestinian journalists and U.N. workers and blocking international agencies and the international media from Gaza.

We have seen genocide before. We have also seen the complicity or silence of nations that have the power to intervene. History doesn’t repeat itself, but too often it rhymes.

Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent for fifteen years for The New York Times, where he served as the Middle East Bureau Chief and Balkan Bureau Chief for the paper. He is the host of the Emmy Award-nominated RT America show On Contact.

31 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Israeli massacre of children in Gaza is “greatest of any conflict in recorded warfare,” UN expert warns

By Andre Damon

Israel’s killing and wounding of children in Gaza is the “greatest of any conflict in recorded warfare,” UN human rights expert Chris Sidoti said in a press briefing Wednesday.

Sidoti, along with commission chair and International Court of Justice judge Navanethem Pillay, is a member of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, which is the official United Nations body of inquest into the war in Gaza.

Sidoti and Pillay delivered a report on the Commission’s findings and recommendations to the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday, followed by a press conference. Their report accused Israel of the “extermination” of Palestinians, and reasserted that it is the obligation of all states to cease any cooperation with the Israeli occupation.

In July, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled that Israel’s occupation of Palestine is unlawful, ordering all countries to cease enabling it.

The ruling by the ICJ and the reports of the commission of inquiry rip to shreds the justification of the imperialist powers for their support of the Gaza genocide on the grounds that Israel has the “right to defend itself.”

In reality, the ICJ and commission of inquiry found that Israel not only has no right to “defend itself” against a population it illegally occupies, but other countries also have no right to enable that occupation by funding and arming it.

In a blunt condemnation of the complete breakdown of international law embodied in the Gaza genocide, Sidoti declared, “Our reports, the decision of the International Court of Justice, resolutions passed by the Security Council in the last 13 months, and resolutions passed by the General Assembly—none of those have resulted in a single child not being killed.” He continued, “Not a single child has not died because of all of these actions. And that’s the reality that confronts the whole United Nations system today.”

Sidoti gave a succinct summation of the impact of the genocide on children, stating, “As of last week, 13,319 children have been killed in Gaza, of whom 786 were under the age of one. In addition, 165 children have been killed in the West Bank.”

“Kids aren’t terrorists,” Sidoti emphasized:

We have had thousands and thousands of kids killed, and that’s not even including those who are injured, those who are under the rubble, those who have lost limbs. It’s been said that the amputations of limbs of children are the greatest in any conflict in recorded modern warfare. Kids who have lost parents, siblings, aunties, uncles, grandparents, cousins, have experienced now 13 months of severe food deprivation, leading to a situation that is now described as acute malnutrition.

He added:

Kids cannot go through what they have gone through in the last 12 months without it having an enormous impact on them for their entire lives. But that is certainly the case physically for kids who have lost arms or legs or both, and we’ve met them. We’ve met them in hospitals, we’ve interviewed them. This is a lifelong result…

In her remarks, Pillay declared “that it’s the responsibility of every state, it’s their obligation under international law, to take positive steps to end the occupation” of Gaza by Israel.

A position paper published by the commission declared that “states have positive obligations, under both the Geneva Conventions and the Genocide Convention. States must ensure that Israel is not committing or preparing to commit violations of international humanitarian law. States must also prevent or punish genocide.”

It declared that “any state engaged in such transfer or trade to Israel shall cease its transfer or trade until the state is satisfied that the goods and technology subject to the transfer or trade are not contributing to maintaining the unlawful occupation or to the commission of war crimes or genocide.”

When asked about the legal obligations of states, Pillay said, “You have to change your attitude in the way you treat these two states, Palestine and Israel. You have to distinguish between them, so one is an occupier and the other occupied. And the onus then lies on every state under international law to take steps not to cooperate with the occupation itself.”

Dismissing claims by the imperialist powers that the war began with the October 7 attack by Hamas on Israel, Pillay declared, “History didn’t start on the seventh of October, and we have recorded again and again the huge violations that occurred historically. It’s the occupation.”

When asked to clarify the commission’s position that the Israeli occupation of Palestine is illegal, Sidoti gave a definitive answer: “We have defined it as an occupation. So has the International Court of Justice. This is now a decision taken by the most authoritative judicial body in the international system. There is no higher authority than the ICJ, and there is nowhere else to go to get a higher opinion or even an alternative opinion.”

He added, “So our opinion has been superseded by that of the most authoritative body in the international system, and it was the Court that said that states, individually and collectively, have a responsibility not to aid or assist the continuation of the occupation, the maintenance of the settlements, the establishment of new settlements.”

Despite categorical assertions of their concern, the United States and other imperialist powers are only deepening their collaboration with Israel in the Gaza genocide. This month, the United States sent 100 combat troops to Israel to directly participate in the war launched by Israel throughout the Middle East.

The genocide is continuing and accelerating. In a report Tuesday, the UN’s human rights office reported that Israel killed 343 people in seven separate recent “mass casualty incidents.” The report noted that “on 24 October, between 150 to 200 people were reportedly killed or injured when a residential block of eleven houses was hit in Jabalya refugee camp.” It added, “On 29 October, 93 Palestinians were killed or went missing under the rubble following an Israeli strike on a residential building in Beit Lahia.”

31 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org