Just International

Gaza Flotilla Activists Accuse Israel of ‘Sexual Assault, Violence and Rape’ while They Were in Detention

By Maira Butt

Activists who were on board the Global Sumud flotilla have accused the Israeli military of carrying out beatings and sexual assault [photos] – Israel denied the allegations.

22 May 2026 – Activists who were detained when a humanitarian aid flotilla to Gaza was seized by Israel have accused the Israeli military of carrying out sexual assault, violence and rape against them while they were in detention.

Israeli forces arrested 430 people on board 50 ships in international waters on Tuesday, as the group of volunteers attempted to deliver aid supplies to the Gaza Strip.

Israel’s handling of the flotilla attracted international criticism after far-right security minister Itamar Ben-Gvirmocked detainees bound with zip-ties in a video posted to his X account.

Now that the activists have been released, they have made allegations of serious abuse during their capture, which Israel has strongly denied.

Catriona Graham, a 37-year-old Irish activist and one of the main coordinators of the mission, told The Independent the group had received multiple reports of abuse.

“We have had at least 15 reports so far of sexual assaults, and more than 30 reports of broken bones,” she said, although the group are awaiting final numbers as activists are still separated from each other. Ms Graham said at least one person was still having surgery to treat his injuries.

Luca Poggi, an Italian economist who was among those detained on board the flotilla, said on his arrival in Rome: “We were stripped, thrown to the ground, kicked. Many of us were tasered, some were sexually assaulted, and some were denied access to a lawyer.”

Sabrina Charik, who helped organise the return of 37 French citizens from the flotilla, said five French participants had been hospitalised in Turkey, some with broken ribs or fractured vertebrae. Some had made detailed accusations of sexual violence, including rape, she said.

In an Instagram post published by an activist group, French national Adrien Jouen showed bruises across his back and on his forearms.

In response, Israel denied claims of mistreatment. “The allegations raised are false and entirely without factual basis,” an Israeli prison service spokesperson said in a statement. “All prisoners and detainees are held in accordance with the law, with full regard for their basic rights and under the supervision of professional and trained prison staff.

“Medical care is provided according to professional medical judgement and in accordance with Ministry of Health guidelines.”

Hillel Newman, Israel’s ambassador to Australia, also denied that flotilla participants had been treated badly, and rejected claims of sexual abuse and violence carried out against eleven Australians.

“Out of the 400-plus people that were on the flotilla, no one was harmed,” he told the ABC on Thursday, claiming that the activists had been handled with “great sensitivity”.

The new allegations of abuse will add to pressure on Israeli authorities to explain the treatment of the detainees, whose plight was initially highlighted by the Ben-Gvir footage.

Ms Graham was seen at the start of the video shouting “Free Palestine” as the minister taunted prisoners at a processing centre earlier this week.

“They had a line of commandos between about 10 of us and them, and a ring … of military around him,” she told The Independent.

“There was just no way to let him walk by and have us be in silence while he’s gloating. I know that there is a video of me shouting ‘Free Palestine’ at Ben-Gvir, and there have been responses to that and condemnation of Ben-Gvir as an individual, even within the Israeli government.

“But I think it’s really important that they do not get to scapegoat him. He has been doing far, far worse to Palestinian prisoners for years.”

After the interaction, Ms Graham said she was dragged along the ground into isolation, and forced to lie on her face while she was zip-tied as eight men stood above her discussing what should be done to her. She said she has since been treated for bruising and swelling.

Ms Graham said she had noticed a marked escalation in violence since her last flotilla trip in 2025, and claimed that once they had been intercepted, the group was told: “You have words, we have weapons.”

“They were clear in their threats of violence with us and threats to use weapons,” she said. “We were very, very concerned that people were going to be killed.”

Ms Graham said she saw a fellow activist shot with a rubber bullet, another punched, and others being dragged and shoved repeatedly.

The group is now planning a legal case to sue Israel for its alleged treatment of the activists, and have accused the country of perpetrating war crimes and violations of international law in its treatment of both themselves and the Palestinians.

“What they are doing to the Palestinians is far worse,” said Ms Graham. “They’re left in detention and in isolation, sometimes in dark underground cells, and have no support or warm physical contact, all while knowing that the lives of their family and friends have been threatened.”

The on-camera treatment of the detainees has been condemned by the international community, including British home secretary Yvette Cooper, and even by Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu himself.

“The way that Minister Ben-Gvir dealt with the flotilla activists is not in line with Israel’s values and norms,” Mr Netanyahu said earlier this week, after the video clip was met with widespread backlash. “I have instructed the relevant authorities to deport the provocateurs as soon as possible.”

25 May 2026

Source: transcend.org

Sexual Abuse of Palestinians Should Force a Reckoning for the British Government

By Anne-Marie Simpson

Israeli soldiers and settlers are using sexualised violence to displace Palestinians, a new report finds. Britain should pull every lever available to stop this.

18 May 2026 – A new report documenting gendered and sexualised violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank has intensified pressure on Britain and its allies to confront the brutal realities of Israel’s occupation and military campaign against Palestinians.

The West Bank Protection Consortium investigated a catalogue of incidents, each representing a “grave violation of bodily integrity and personal dignity”, including forced nudity, invasive body searches, indecent exposure – including to children.

Researchers also documented cases of groping, stalking, threats of rape, and the use of drones to film inside women’s bedrooms and record strip searches.

In many of the cases documented, Israeli forces were present and either failed to intervene or actively participated.

The report comes shortly after a statement from UN Women highlighting the gendered consequences of Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza, where women and children are disproportionally affected by bombardment, injury, displacement, starvation and the collapse of healthcare services.

Taken together, these accounts reveal how gender-based violence operates as an integral feature of Israel’s system of oppression, occupation and genocide.

Britain can – and should – be doing more.

Our international obligations

Where there is credible evidence of serious violations linked to gender-based violence, third countries are obliged under international law not only to refrain from supporting the unlawful acts, but to take steps to prevent and respond to them.

In relation to Israel, these obligations have been reaffirmed through the International Court of Justice’s January 2024 finding of a plausible risk of genocide in Gaza and its July 2024 ruling on the unlawfulness of the occupation.

Yet despite mounting evidence of abuses, the UK has continued to offer diplomatic and military support to Israel while failing to take adequate steps to support accountability or pressure its government to change course.

As Chair of Liberal Democrat Friends of Palestine, I have spent years reading, speaking and campaigning about the harms inflicted on Palestinians as a result of Israeli military action and occupation.

Yet it was only after attending a recent webinar organised by Gender Action for Peace and Security that I began to understand the scale and systematic nature of Israel’s gendered crimes against Palestinians – from the targeting of women and girls through harassment, indecent exposure, and threats of rape, to the degrading treatment and sexual torture inflicted on men and boys in detention.

Making life unbearable

Speakers stressed how these abuses function as part of a broader coercive environment designed to make everyday life unbearable and drive Palestinians from their homes and communities.

More than two-thirds of displaced households interviewed in the report identified threats to women and children, particularly sexualised violence, as their decisive reason for leaving.

Some families reported arranging early marriages for girls aged 15 to 17 simply so they could move to households believed to be safer.

Speakers also highlighted how underreported many of these violations remain, due to stigma, fear of reprisals, and the culture of impunity surrounding violence against Palestinians in general.

Evidence from Gaza points to a parallel pattern of gendered harms emerging in the context of Israel’s genocidal assault on the civilian population.

According to Oxfam, more women and children were killed by Israeli bombardment in Gaza between October 2023 – September 2024 than during the equivalent period of any other conflict over the past two decades. Many more have been displaced, widowed or orphaned.

Israel’s systematic blockade of medical supplies and destruction of hospitals and IVF clinics has had severe consequences for women’s reproductive health. By October 2024, women were three times more likely to die from childbirth and three times more likely to miscarry, according to UN analysis.

Newborn deaths have also increased, while the birth rate has fallen dramatically, dropping by more than 40% in the first half of 2025 compared with the same period in 2022. Mothers and newborn children are also more vulnerable to starvation and malnutrition as a result of the blockade.

In this context, a UN Commission of Inquiry found that Israel has systematically imposed measures to prevent births in Gaza, one of the categories of genocidal acts established under the Genocide Convention.

The forced displacement of over 90% of Gaza’s population has created additional gendered harms. Many families now live in overcrowded tents or temporary shelters with limited access to food, sanitation or privacy.

In these conditions, women and girls face increased exposure to violence and exploitation, while also taking on greater responsibility for household survival following the loss, injury or displacement of male family members.

For women experiencing menstruation, the lack of privacy and sanitary products creates a stressful, humiliating and potentially unsafe environment.

Credibility at stake

The growing body of evidence emerging from Gaza and the West Bank should force a reckoning for governments that continue to support Israel while presenting themselves as defenders of human rights and women’s equality internationally.

Expressions of concern are no longer enough when credible reports from humanitarian organisations, UN bodies and Palestinian communities themselves continue to document patterns of abuse that demand accountability.

The UK government should be using every lever available to press for an end to these violations, support international accountability mechanisms, and ensure Britain is not contributing – directly or indirectly – to further abuses.

In addition to upholding our international obligations, the UK should suspend all arms sales with Israel until it complies with international law and ensure gender concerns are integrated into risk assessments and foreign policy decisions such as sanctions and arms transfers.

Failure to take action risks undermining not only international law, but also the credibility of Britain’s stated commitment to protecting women and girls in conflict around the world.

Anne-Marie Simpson is an elected councillor for the Liberal Democrats and Chair of Liberal Democrat Friends of Palestine.

25 May 2026

Source: transcend.org

The United States’ Long, 70-year War on Cuba

By Eric Ross

A US invasion would hardly inaugurate a new conflict. It would instead mark the bloodiest phase in a long, bipartisan war against Cuba for the “sin” of reclaiming national sovereignty.

15 May 2026 – In recent weeks and months, Washington has intensified its long-running campaign of collective punishment against the Cuban people. Escalating sanctions have further tightened the noose of a punitive US blockade that has strangled the island for more than half a century. The resulting “energy starvation” has deepened a manufactured crisis, threatening Cubans’ access to food, water, healthcare, fuel, electricity, and other basic human rights and needs, while intensifying the broader assault on the island’s sovereignty and development.

Since 2017, when the first Trump administration began dismantling the limited normalization measures introduced under former President Barack Obama, Cuba has once again been subjected to a regime of “maximum pressure” economic warfare. The consequences have been severe. These policies have degraded material conditions across the island, accelerated the exodus of more than 1 million Cubans, and imposed disproportionate suffering on the country’s most vulnerable populations.

This economic weapon, wielded by the ruling elites of the world’s largest financial and military power, has exacted particularly devastating consequences on mothers and children. During this period, the infant mortality rate rose from 4 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2018 to 9.9 in 2025. Put plainly, an estimated 1,800 Cuban infants died during these years who would have survived absent Washington’s intensified criminal sanctions. This is but one stark measure of the blockade’s profound brutality and inhumanity.

The only “crime” of these children, like that of countless other Cubans, was being born in a country that continues to insist on its right to determine its own political and economic future outside the structures of hemispheric domination the United States has sought to impose across Latin America, the Caribbean, and the wider world. The infliction of such suffering has never been incidental to such policies. It has been, and remains, a central feature.

It is time to end the madness of US policy toward Cuba and recognize that Cuba is not a failed state, but a state subjected to a criminal siege.

The same has been true since 1959, as Washington has pursued a singular, near-fanatical obsession with reversing the Cuban Revolution and restoring the neocolonial shackles it once imposed on the island. Its aim has been not only to undermine Cuba’s social transformation and internationalist commitments, but to extinguish the example the revolution represented: that an alternative to US hegemony and capitalist underdevelopment was possible.

So despite recent threats to “take” Cuba, such rhetoric cannot be understood in isolation, nor should it obscure a fundamental reality: A US invasion would hardly inaugurate a new conflict. It would instead mark the bloodiest phase in a long, bipartisan war against Cuba for the “sin” of reclaiming national sovereignty from a Washington-backed lawless order that has sought to punish Cuba for its defiance and refusal to submit meekly to the dictates of empire.

Cuba Under the Shadow of US Empire

Cuba’s independence has long been imperiled by its proximity to and economic entanglement with the United States. Situated 90 miles off the coast of Florida, the island occupied a central place within the US imperial imagination. Throughout the 19th century, Washington elites viewed Cuba not as a to-be sovereign nation, but as an inevitable extension of their commercial and geopolitical ambitions, a “crown jewel” destined to be drawn into Washington’s orbit.

The opportunity arrived in 1898. Seizing upon Cuba’s nearly victorious war for independence from Spain, the US intervened not to end empire in the hemisphere, but rather to inherit it. Washington presented its action as a selfless mission to secure Cuban liberation. But for many across the region, the contradictions were unmistakable. The US, itself forged in the crucible of empire, with all the violence and exploitation that project entailed, went to Cuba not to secure freedom, but to replace Madrid with Washington as the imperial metropole of the Americas.

As early as 1829, Simón Bolívar warned that “the United States seemed destined by Providence to plague America with misery in the name of freedom.” Decades later, Cuban revolutionary José Martí issued a similar denunciation. In his 1891 essay “Our America,” he called for “common cause” among oppressed peoples and warned against the threat of subordination to the rising power to the north. Martí also championed self-sufficiency over integration into an unequal global capitalist system, insisting that Cuba must “make wine from plantains. It may be sour, but it is our wine!” Having spent years in exile in New York, Martí sharpened that critique shortly before his death in 1895, writing “I lived in the monster and I know its entrails.”

History would soon vindicate these words. As the United States extended its “Manifest Destiny” to foreign shores, it repeatedly intervened across the hemisphere, seeking to transform it into a de facto protectorate. In doing so, Washington consistently sided with the interests of capital and local elites over the demands for popular sovereignty. In the decades that followed, the US invaded countries throughout the region, overthrowing democratic governments, crushing revolutionary movements, and backing brutal dictatorships.

In Cuba, this took the form of three lengthy military occupations spanning half of the island’s first 24 years of “independence,” from 1898-1902, 1906-1909, and 1917-1922. In each case, the objective was to uphold the neocolonial order established during the first occupation and rooted in US economic interests. Under this restrictive framework, the Cuban government was denied control over its foreign relations and domestic economic policy, compelled to cede territory to the US military, and forced to accept Washington’s unilateral right of intervention.

By the 1920s, this relationship had produced a profound dependence on exports, mainly sugar, to the United States while fostering a deeply corrupt system incapable of responding to the needs and aspirations of the Cuban people. The island’s land remained concentrated in the hands of American corporations and a domestic collaborationist aristocracy, while the state invested more heavily in repression than social development, constructing more barracks than schools. With the onset of the Great Depression and the collapse of the sugar economy upon which the country had been made dependent, popular discontent only intensified.

By 1933, the government of Gerardo Machado, which promised to transform Cuba into an island of stability for American investment while violently suppressing nationalist and anti-imperialist currents in Cuban society, had become untenable. Amid mounting unrest, Machado was deposed, and a revolutionary coalition under Ramón Grau San Martín emerged, seeking to challenge Cuba’s semi-colonial status. But the United States refused to recognize it. The resulting instability created conditions for the rise of one of the more conservative figures within the anti-Machado coalition, army officer Fulgencio Batista, who in 1934 deposed the short-lived government and consolidated de facto power in his own hands with the backing of Washington.

The Roots of the Cuban Revolution

Batista would directly or indirectly pull the political strings in Cuba for much of the next quarter century. Though his earlier rule adopted a more populist posture, culminating in his election to the presidency from 1940 to 1944, life improved little for Cubans. Corruption and dependence on foreign capital remained entrenched. And by 1952, Batista had seized power outright in a military coup, inaugurating an authoritarian regime backed by increased state violence.

It was Batista’s rise, coupled with decades of economic disparities, political repression, and social neglect, that created conditions that were ripe for revolution. Among those preparing to contest the suspended elections that year was a young lawyer named Fidel Castro. Batista’s closure of even the limited avenues for democratic change lent weight to John F. Kennedy’s later observation that “those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.”

For more than six decades then, Cuba has represented the “threat” of example: the possibility of building a more just and humane society in which the state serves the people and not the other way around.

Castro’s first revolutionary assault came soon after, with the attack on the Moncada Barracks on July 26, 1953. Though the attack failed, Castro’s arrest and trial gave him the opportunity to defend not his innocence, but the legitimacy of and need for revolution, delivering a two-hour speech that condemned the island’s entrenched inequalities and the regime that sustained them.

The state imprisoned Castro and his fellow revolutionaries before commuting their sentences under popular pressure in 1955, after which they went into exile. From Mexico, joined by Che Guevara, they began plotting their return to Cuba and the overthrow of the regime. By late 1956, they had landed in Cuba and launched their insurgency from the Sierra Maestra mountains. Just two years later, Batista fled the country on New Year’s Day 1959, carrying with him as much as $300 million in siphoned state funds and ill-gotten gains amassed at the expense of the Cuban people, while leaving behind the ruins of a regime stained with the blood of as many as 20,000 Cubans.

Counterrevolution in the Caribbean

In 1959, the new leadership inherited a desiccated country picked over by the buzzards of foreign capital and a corrupted local elite. The Cuban revolutionaries set out to overcome these conditions and construct a more just social order, one capable of guaranteeing a basic standard of living long denied to the Cuban population through the misappropriation of the island’s wealth and resources.

The earliest measures included agrarian reform, universal education, a national literacy campaign, expanded healthcare, urban reforms that opened pathways to homeownership for working-class Cubans, and anti-discrimination laws aimed at dismantling entrenched racial hierarchies. Crucially for the trajectory of US-Cuban relations, the revolution also nationalized parasitic foreign-owned and privatized industries.

The new Cuban government was initially met with a degree of popular appeal and favorable media coverage in the United States, further amplified by Fidel Castro’s April 1959 visit to the country, during which he sought to explain the revolution to American audiences. While in Washington, Castro even met with Vice President Richard Nixon, but the Eisenhower administration quickly soured on the revolutionary government and soon resolved to see it fail.

The concern was not Cuba itself, but what the revolution might represent. As State Department official J.C. Hill warned that year, “there are indications that if the Cuban Revolution is successful other countries in Latin America and perhaps elsewhere will use it as a model and we should decide whether or not we wish to have the Cuban Revolution succeed.”

By October 1960, that decision had effectively been made with the imposition of a blockade on the island. The logic underpinning this economic declaration of war was made explicit in a memo by State Department official Lester Mallory. Recognizing that Castro retained widespread popular support, Mallory concluded that the most effective means of undermining him was the deliberate immiseration of the Cuban people. The memo called for the denial of “money and supplies” to the island in order to produce “hunger, desperation, and overthrow of government.”

In April 1961, Washington escalated its campaign by backing a direct military assault on the island. Yet the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion did little to temper the obsession with unseating Castro. In the aftermath, consensus hardened across the Kennedy administration that “US policy toward Cuba should aim at the downfall of Castro.” What followed was an expansive campaign of covert warfare involving sabotage, assassination plots, and support for anti-communist exiles.

Among the proposals considered were plans to manufacture consent for military escalation through false provocations. One suggestion was to “develop a Communist Cuban terror campaign in the Miami area… pointed at Cuban refugees seeking haven in the United States… [which] would be helpful in projecting the idea of an irresponsible government.” Other proposals called for false flag attacks on the US navy and the shooting down of a civilian airliner that would then be blamed on the Cuban government.

This single-minded fixation did little to advance US objectives. Instead, it pushed Cuba further toward the Soviet Union, which offered the island an economic and political lifeline in the face of Washington’s blockade and escalating campaign of destabilization. It was within this context that Castro declared the Marxist-Leninist character of the Cuban Revolution in 1961. The relentless threats to the island also fostered a profound and understandable sense of siege within the Cuban government itself.

Ultimately, Washington’s Cuba policy, combined with what Kennedy privately described as the “goddamned dangerous” deployment of US missiles in Turkey, helped create the conditions for the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, bringing the world to the brink of a nuclear holocaust and revealing the extent to which the US was willing to risk a senseless, largely self-imposed global catastrophe in defense of the maintenance of its empire.

The Persistent “Threat” of Example

Despite this long war against Cuba, the Cuban government and people have not abandoned their revolutionary project. They have continued to build socialism and a new social order toward what Che Guevara described as the construction of “new [people]”: human beings whose motivations, commitments, and social relations are not governed by opportunistic self-interest at the expense of others, but by solidarity and a shared sense of collective humanity.

Cuba has consistently sought to demonstrate this commitment on the world stage. One of Fidel Castro’s earliest acts of foreign policy was the support of those seeking to liberate the Dominican Republic from the brutal US-backed dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo. In the decades that followed, Cuban soldiers and advisers would play major roles in liberation struggles across Africa, including in Algeria, the Congo, Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau.

For those living in the belly of the beast, we bear a clear moral and political responsibility to stand alongside the Cuban people, those on the island, to oppose the violence being carried out in our name.

Cuba’s foreign interventions proved especially consequential in the struggle against South African apartheid and white minority rule in Southern Africa. It was this material solidarity that led Nelson Mandela to declare during his 1991 visit to Havana that “the Cuban people hold a special place in the hearts of the peoples of Africa,” traveling to Cuba shortly after his release from prison.

But Cuba’s principal export to the Third World has not been bombs to take lives, as in the case of the United States. It has sent doctors to provide life. Since 1960, Cuba has dispatched more than 600,000 medical professionals to over 160 countries. In doing so, Cuba has advanced not only the principle and practice that healthcare is a human right, but a vision of education and foreign policy rooted in both science and conscience.

For more than six decades then, Cuba has represented the “threat” of example: the possibility of building a more just and humane society in which the state serves the people and not the other way around. It is time to end the madness of US policy toward Cuba and recognize that Cuba is not a failed state, but a state subjected to a criminal siege. It is not a sponsor of terrorism, but the victim of sustained US aggression.

For those living in the belly of the beast, we bear a clear moral and political responsibility to stand alongside the Cuban people, those on the island, to oppose the violence being carried out in our name. Cuba, like all those confronting US empire, deserves not the “freedom” of the grave that Washington has so often offered the world, but a true freedom rooted in justice, self-determination, and respect for human life and dignity.

We must therefore demand an end to the blockade on Cuba. We must reject any further military escalation. We must call for Cuba’s removal from the state sponsors of terrorism list. And we must support the restoration of Cuban sovereignty over the occupied territory at Guantánamo Bay.

Eric Ross is an organizer, educator, researcher, and PhD Candidate in the History Department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

25 May 2026

Source: transcend.org

Statement on the Day of Palestinian Struggle and the 78th Anniversary of the Ongoing Nakba — 15 May 1948 – 2026

Statement Issued by the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement
On the Day of Palestinian Struggle and the 78th Anniversary of the Ongoing Nakba
15 May 1948 – 2026

Our people have proven that they are prepared to go further than the world expects for liberation and return

Seventy-eight years have passed since the Palestinian Nakba: the displacement, uprooting, massacres, Zionist settler-colonialism, and attempts to erase Palestine from history, geography, and consciousness. Yet our Palestinian people have proven, time and again, that the will of free peoples is stronger than all projects of genocide and oppression.

Despite massacres, siege, wars and displacement, the Palestinian people, together with all the free people of the world, continue to impose their just national cause upon the world through their steadfast popular will, refusing submission, surrender, or acceptance of the colonial reality. Our people have proven that they are prepared to go further than the world expects, and at times even further than our people themselves expect, in defense of their rights and goals of liberation and return. The glorious Al-Aqsa Flood on 7 October 2023 was a clear expression of this historical truth and of the deeply rooted fighting spirit of our people and their heroic resistance.

The Day of Palestinian Struggle, the fifteenth of May, is not merely an occasion to commemorate the ongoing Nakba; it is a day to renew our commitment to Palestine, from the river to the sea, to the right of return for Palestinian refugees, and to the choice of comprehensive resistance as the natural path in confronting the Zionist colonial project backed by the forces of global imperialism. Revolution is the only strategic option capable of achieving our people’s national and social liberation and of breaking the chains of the racist Zionist regime on the road to its removal from our land and region.

At this dangerous historical moment, the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement affirms that our people are in urgent need of a genuine revolutionary approach, forged by the hands of its sons and daughters, capable of moving our people from fragmentation, division, and retreat into a new stage rooted in popular unity, resistance, and revolutionary popular organization: returning the Palestinian cause to the path of liberation and return, far from the illusions of settlement, surrender, and political and economic dependency.

The past decades have proven that the dominant Palestinian elite that seized control of national decision-making, monopolized representation, and suffocated the spirit of the Palestinian cause, an elite backed by the reactionary Arab order, is no longer capable of producing anything except further paralysis, division, and surrender. This comprador class, tied to the Oslo path, security coordination, and political subordination, has become a heavy burden on our people’s struggle and one of the principal obstacles to rebuilding a genuine national liberation project.

Accordingly, defeating this approach at the political, popular and organizational levels has become a national necessity in order to restore Palestinian decision-making to the masses of our people and their living, struggling forces, and to rebuild a Palestinian, Arab, and international national liberation movement grounded in resistance, popular unity, and comprehensive confrontation with occupation and colonialism.

On the Day of Palestinian Struggle, the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement salutes the Palestinian prisoners’ movement, which represents the first line of defense for Palestine and one of the brightest expressions of the Palestinian liberation struggle, and the thousands of prisoners who confront the Zionist repression machine inside prisons and detention centers with their bare chests. Palestinian prisoners today are subjected to a brutal campaign of revenge that includes torture, starvation, isolation, medical neglect, and deliberate killing in an attempt to break their will and destroy the fighting spirit of our people. Occupation prisons have been transformed into centers of torture and slow extermination, where the most horrific violations are committed against prisoners under the cover and support of imperialist powers and official international silence. Therefore, the responsibility to support the prisoners’ movement, escalate solidarity campaigns for the prisoners, and expose Zionist crimes against them before the peoples of the world is a national, moral, and political responsibility borne by all living forces among our people, our nation, and the free people of the world until all prisoners are liberated and their full freedom wrested from the occupation prisons.

In this context, the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement affirms that the Palestinian youth generation, especially in the refugee camps and throughout the diaspora, bears a historical and central role in the coming stage. The youth of Palestine in exile are not merely a human extension of their cause; they are a living and vanguard part of the national liberation project, carrying the memory of the Nakba, the consciousness of resistance, and the will to return. The responsibility of rebuilding the Palestinian national movement on revolutionary, democratic, and fighting foundations requires the involvement of younger generations in the path of liberation and in the arenas of popular, cultural, political, and media organization, reclaiming the historical initiative in confronting attempts at liquidation, containment, and normalization.

The movement also affirms that Palestinian women have always been, and remain, at the heart of the battle for national liberation, from besieged villages, refugee camps, and prisons to the fields of resistance and popular and organizational struggle. The central leadership role of Palestinian women is not symbolic or secondary; it is an essential part of the struggle for national and social liberation and of the process of rebuilding the Palestinian national movement on the basis of broad popular participation, justice, and human dignity. Palestinian women have proven throughout decades of struggle that they are full partners in shaping resistance, steadfastness, and revolutionary consciousness, and that no genuine liberation project can rise without their active and leading presence at all levels of national work.

The Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement extends a special militant salute to national liberation movements, revolutionary and progressive forces, and the free people of the world who stand alongside the Palestinian people in their historic struggle against Zionist colonialism and global imperialism. The cause of Palestine today is not merely the cause of one people, but a cause of global human liberation in the face of racism, colonialism, domination, plunder, and war. Accordingly, the movement calls for reclaiming the fifteenth of May as the Day of Palestinian Struggle as well as the annual commemoration of the ongoing Nakba, and as a global day of solidarity with the Palestinian people and their inalienable national rights, foremost among them the right of return to Palestine, the right to self-determination, and the right of our people to resist occupation by all legitimate means, especially through armed resistance. We also call for escalating campaigns of boycott and the popular, political, cultural, athletic, and academic isolation of the Zionist entity, and for strengthening the international solidarity front with our people’s struggle until colonialism is defeated and justice is achieved throughout all of Palestine, from the river to the sea.

On the Day of Palestinian Struggle, the 78th anniversary of the ongoing Nakba, we renew our affirmation that Palestine will not be defeated, and that its people, who have withstood 78 years of displacement, massacres, siege, and genocide, are capable of renewing their revolution and creating a new future and a new dawn, no matter the sacrifices.

Glory to the martyrs
Freedom for the prisoners
Healing for the wounded
Victory to the resistance
Long live international solidarity with Palestine

Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement
15 May 2026

Source: masarbadil.org

The Trump Administration’s War on Cuba (w/ Medea Benjamin)

By The Chris Hedges Report 

15 Apr 2026

The Trump Administration’s economic strangulation of Cuba has created unbearable hardships for the population. Medea Benjamin describes what she saw on a recent solidarity delegation and what people can do to break the blockade.

[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JzWMouhvDeM]

27 April 2026

Source: transcend.org

Israeli Guards Admit Dogs Are Used to Rape Palestinians, Says Analyst

By Joshua Carroll

Evidence of gruesome form of torture is ‘overwhelming’.

20 Apr 2026 – Guards at Israel’s notorious Sde Teiman torture camp have admitted their colleagues use dogs to rape Palestinian captives there, according to a prominent Israeli analyst.

Shaiel Ben-Ephraim, a geopolitical expert who opposes Israel’s genocide in Gaza, said he spoke to two guards from the facility about the gruesome form of torture “on more than one occasion”.

“Some have said that claims that Israel uses dogs to sexually abuse prisoners are antisemitic blood libels,” Ben-Ephraim wrote on X on Friday. “Unfortunately, there is a good deal of evidence.”

Of the two guards he spoke to, “one had seen this happen and said it was too awful to talk about. The other said that he had heard about it from others and believed it was true. This happened. This is happening still. The evidence is too overwhelming.”

He highlighted several cases reported by human rights groups and media outlets.​

They include a man who spoke to the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR). “We were stripped completely. Soldiers brought dogs that climbed on us and urinated on me,” he said. “Then one of the dogs raped me… I suffered a severe psychological breakdown and deep humiliation.”

“They know once they rape someone with a dog or with a stick that these people won’t be able to carry out their jobs or live their lives normally,” Basel Alsourani, international advocacy officer at PCHR, told Novara Media last year. “It’s part of their genocidal intention to destroy [Palestinians].”

Sde Teiman gained global notoriety after footage was leaked of soldiers gang-raping a captive there in 2024.

Joshua Carroll is a writer and journalist.

27 April 2026

Source: transcend.org

Israeli Soldiers Using Sexual Assault to Force Palestinians Out of West Bank, Report Says

By Emma Graham-Harrison

Experts say attacks, also carried out by settlers, are leading girls to quit school and enter early marriages.

21 Apr 2026 – Israeli soldiers and settlers are using gendered violence and sexual assault and harassment to force Palestinians from their homes in the occupied West Bank, human rights and legal experts say.

Palestinian women, men and children have reported attacks, forced nudity, invasive and painful body cavity searches, Israelis exposing their genitals, including to minors, and threats of sexual violence.

Sixteen cases of conflict-related sexual violence were recorded by researchers for the West Bank Protection Consortium over the last three years, a figure that is likely an under-reporting because of the shame and stigma faced by survivors.

“Sexualised violence is used to pressure communities, shape decisions about remaining or leaving their homes and land, and alter patterns of daily life,” the group of international humanitarian organisations said in a report.

The study, “Sexual violence and forcible transfer in the West Bank”, details accounts of escalating sexualised attacks and humiliation of Palestinians in their communities and inside their homes since 2023.

Other forms of reported violence include urinating on Palestinians, taking and distributing humiliating photographs of bound and stripped individuals, stalking women who are using latrines, and threatening sexual violence against women. The case studies are anonymised because of the stigma surrounding sexual violence.

Sexualised attacks were hastening the displacement of Palestinians, according to the report. More than two-thirds of households surveyed identified rising violence against women and children, including sexual harassment targeting girls, as a tipping point in their decision to leave, the consortium said.

“Participants described sexualised harassment as the moment when fear shifted from chronic to unbearable. They spoke of watching women and girls endure humiliation and of calculating what might happen next,” the report said.

Israeli soldiers present during abuse had repeatedly failed to prevent it or prosecute those responsible. One woman was subjected to a painful internal search by two female soldiers who entered her home with settlers then ordered her to remove her clothes for a full body search.

“She described being instructed to open her legs in a way that caused pain, and she described derogatory comments and touching of intimate areas,” the report said.

Men and boys were also targets of sexual assault and harassment. Last month, Israeli settlers stripped 29-year old Qusai Abu al-Kebash, from the northern Jordan valley community of Khirbet Humsa, put a zip tie on his genitals and beat him in front of his community and international activists, witnesses said.

In October 2023 settlers and soldiers stripped, handcuffed and beat Palestinians from the village of Wadi as-Seeq, urinated on them, attempted to rape one with a broom handle, and took photographs of them naked which they then distributed publicly.

Sexual violence and harassment had severe impacts even when communities were not displaced, and women and girls were particularly badly affected. To limit the chance of coming into contact with Israelis who might assault or harass them, girls had quit school and women had stopped working.

It had also led to a rise in early marriage, as parents desperate to protect their daughters sought ways to move them away from the threats. At least six families interviewed for the report arranged weddings for girls aged between 15 and 17.

The Ramallah-based Women’s Centre for Legal Aid and Counselling (WCLAC) has also documented the use of sexualised violence and harassment of Palestinian women and girls to fragment and displace communities.

The WCLAC said women in the occupied West Bank had reported sexual assault, including forced penetration during searches, and abuse, including Israeli soldiers exposing themselves to girls at checkpoints and molesting them during searches. Humiliation had included the mocking of girls who were menstruating, she said.

“Girls aren’t going to schools, and you see early, forced marriages. These are minors, but we know their mothers and fathers are trying to protect them by sending them out of the area,” said Kifaya Khraim, the advocacy unit manager at WCLAC.

“Women lose their jobs because they can’t get to work because of the sexual violence and then deciding to stay at home.”

Khraim said she believed her team knew about only a fraction of the cases of sexualised violence by Israeli soldiers and settlers. “This is maybe 1% of the cases, and we had to do a lot of research in local communities just to earn the trust for people to tell us about these cases.”

Milena Ansari, the head of the occupied Palestinian territory department at Physicians for Human Rights – Israel, said the rise in sexualised violence and harassment in the occupied West Bank was happening amid a broader culture of impunity for attacks on Palestinians.

A recent decision to drop charges against soldiers for the filmed rape of an inmate at the Sde Teiman centre sent a particularly clear message.

“Israeli officials are effectively green-lighting the use of sexual violence, when they decide not to prosecute the most high-profile case, which is extremely well documented,” Ansari said. “There is a culture of accepting sexualised assault against Palestinians.

“There was a discussion in the Knesset about whether or not it is OK to rape a Palestinian. Even the prime minister didn’t say that Israel opposes raping detainees.”

Israel’s failure to prosecute settlers who attacked Palestinians in the West Bank led to the country’s former prime minister, Ehud Olmert, calling for the international criminal court to intervene to save Palestinians from “Jewish terrorists”, in an interview with the Guardian.

The report on sexualised violence as a tool of forced displacement drew on 83 interviews with Palestinian communities across the occupied West Bank, including those facing settler violence and movement restrictions.

Participants included people at risk, those already forced to flee their homes, women, youth activists and community leaders. The findings are not meant to be a statistically representative sample of the West Bank.

The Israel Defense Forces did not respond to questions about allegations of sexual abuse by soldiers.

Information and support for anyone affected by rape or sexual abuse issues is available from the following organisations. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support on 0808 802 9999. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respect (1800 737 732). Other international helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/internl.html

Emma Graham-Harrison is the Guardian‘s chief Middle East correspondent, based in Jerusalem.

27 April 2026

Source: transcend.org

No to War, Yes to Peace: A Global Call to End Wars and Militarism

By Vijay Mehta

25 Apr 2026 – The defining crisis of the twenty-first century is not climate change alone, not inequality alone, not the rise of the far right alone — though all of these are real, all of these are deadly. The defining crisis of our age is war. Endless, permanent, profitable war. War that has become not an aberration, not a last resort, but the very engine of a global economic system that cannot function without it.

We talk endlessly about the cost of living. We debate housing, healthcare, wages, migration. These are vital debates. But we cannot afford to keep ignoring the elephant in the room. We cannot keep building our politics around the edges while at the centre of everything lies the catastrophic reality of militarism — the single greatest destroyer of human life, human dignity, and human potential on the planet today.

A World on Fire

The catastrophic war on Iran — prosecuted with US firepower and Israeli strategy — has already cost hundreds of thousands of lives and destabilised an entire region. The genocide in Gaza, watched live on our screens by the entire planet, has exposed the moral bankruptcy of Western governments who speak of human rights while signing arms deals and vetoing ceasefire resolutions.

World War III is looming on the horizon. I say to you today: it is not looming. It is here. It has been here for some time. It simply is not being called by its name because the dying, so far, has been concentrated among people whose deaths the Western media does not count in the same way.

The Business of War

The United States of America — the self-proclaimed leader of the free world — is, above all else, an arms dealer. Weapons are the number one export of the United States economy. This is not a conspiracy theory. This is a fact, documented in trade figures, confirmed by congressional records, visible in the share prices of defence contractors on any given day of conflict.

For the capitalist economy to continue functioning in the way it currently does, there must be markets for weapons. And for there to be markets for weapons, there must be wars. This is not paranoia. This is political economy. When you build an entire industrial complex around the manufacture and sale of instruments of death, you have a structural incentive to ensure those instruments are used. USA with 250 years of history had 16 years of peace and as a war monger is a global threat to the world.

History bears this out with terrible clarity. Hundreds of millions perished in the First and Second World Wars. The slaughter in Vietnam — which continued into the 1990s in its aftermath of landmines, Agent Orange, and destroyed generations. The bombing and occupation of Iraq in 2003, based on the deliberate lie of weapons of mass destruction, resulted in the deaths of approximately two million people. Two million. And what followed? Not justice. Not accountability. Not a single war crimes trial for those who ordered the invasion. Instead, the arms manufacturers who supplied that war posted record profits.

Now, as the Iran war grinds on, we are told once again that this is about security. About freedom. About democracy. It is nothing of the sort. President Trump has convened meetings of the wealthiest defence industry CEOs in the country — the heads of BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin, Honeywell, and others — and instructed them to quadruple their production capacity. He has handed out contracts worth billions of dollars. Billions. While nurses strike for a living wage. While children go to school hungry. While the homeless sleep on the streets of every major Western city.

This is not a coincidence. This is a choice. And we must name it as such.

The Human Cost

Statistics can numb us. Two million dead in Iraq. Hundreds of thousands in Iran. Tens of thousands in Gaza. The numbers become abstract. So let me ask you to think instead about one person. One family. Perhaps a mother in Tehran who has lost two sons. Perhaps a child in Gaza who no longer has a home, a school, a parent.

The human cost of these conflicts are staggering. Wars do not only kill on the battlefield. They kill in refugee camps. They kill in hospitals that have run out of medicine.

And wars displace people. The very migration crisis that right-wing governments exploit to whip up fear and division — that crisis has a cause. People do not leave their homes, their cultures, their languages, their families, unless they have no choice. When we bomb countries, when we sanction economies into collapse, when we arm one faction against another and then walk away from the rubble — we create refugees.

We will not get to peace through politics as mainstream political parties of centre or centre-left have no answers to conflicts. We will not get there by voting for the lesser evil and hoping for the best. We will only get there by building a politics of principle — a politics that starts from the lives of ordinary people, not from the demands of arms manufacturers, not from the interests of oil companies, not from the strategic calculations of imperial powers.

What We Stand For

We are against all imperialist wars. We are against the occupation of Palestine. We are against the bombing of Iran. We are against every instance of military aggression dressed up as liberation or democracy or security. We are against the arms trade. We are against the use of public money to fund private profit through the manufacture of death.

We stand for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire in Gaza and the West Bank. We stand for a political settlement in Iran based on diplomacy, not military force. We stand for the right of all peoples to self-determination, free from external interference. We stand for the redirection of military budgets towards housing, healthcare, education, and the transition to a sustainable economy. We stand for a world in which disputes between nations are resolved through international law and genuine multilateral institutions — not through the military supremacy of the most heavily armed power.

Tens of millions of people across the world who have marched against these wars, who have organised in their communities, who have sat in front of arms factories, who have refused to be silent. The anti-war movement is not a footnote in political history. It is one of the most important moral forces of our time.

A Call to Act

Peace is the most radical and the most necessary demand of our time. The power to end these wars does not rest only with governments. It rests with workers who refuse to manufacture weapons. It rests with soldiers who refuse illegal orders. It rests with journalists who refuse to launder propaganda. It rests with voters who refuse to support parties that fund war. It rests with each one of us who refuses to be complicit in our own silence.

Conclusion: The World We Choose to Build is Possible

History is not inevitable. It is made by people — by choices, by courage, by collective action. The wars of the past century were not inevitable. They were the product of decisions made by leaders who chose empire over equality, profit over peace, power over people. And they can be unmade. A different set of decisions is possible.

The world we want is not a utopia. It is not a world without disagreement or without difficulty. It is a world in which disagreements are resolved without mass slaughter. A world in which the resources we have — and we have extraordinary resources — are directed towards meeting human need rather than feeding the military-industrial complex. A world in which no mother has to bury a child killed by a bomb manufactured in a factory in Sheffield or Seattle.

That world will not build itself. It will be built by us, or it will not be built at all. Organise. Agitate. Build coalitions. Support the strikes. Join the marches. Knock on doors. Write to your representatives. Refuse to give comfort to those who profit from war.

The time for words alone is over — here is what each of us must do:

  • Sign and share every petition demanding an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the West Bank, Iran, Ukraine and Sudan.
  • Join or form a local peace group and make your presence felt on the streets.
  • Follow Uniting for Peace and join our conferences – https://unitingforpeace.com
  • Write to your MP, your senator, your representative — repeatedly, persistently, until they cannot ignore you.
  • Boycott the companies that profit from war: don’t buy their products, don’t invest in their shares, don’t give them your silence.
  • Support humanitarian organisations working on the ground in conflict zones with whatever you can spare.
  • Challenge war propaganda when you see it — in your newspaper, workplace, in your family, on your social media.
  • Demand that your trade union, your place of worship, your community organisation takes a public stand against these conflicts.
  • Vote out every politician who has voted for arms deals, who has abstained on ceasefire motions, who has chosen the arms manufacturer.
  • Do not stop. Peace is not won in a single march or a single election. It is won by people who refuse, day after day, to accept that this is simply how the world must be.

A different world, a safer and peaceful world is possible. Let’s build it.

Vijay Mehta is an author and peace activist. He is chair of Uniting for Peace, founding trustee of Fortune Forum charity, and board member of GAMIP-Global Alliance for Ministries and Infrastructures for Peace. 

27 April 2026

Source: transcend.org

Iran’s Civilizational and Moral Strength

By Vijay Prashad

The way Iran has been able to stand up to the West has become a source of admiration across the formerly colonised world. Where does that confidence come from?

23 Apr 2026 – During some of the worst days of the illegal US-Israeli war on Iran, I was talking to friends who were in the civilian areas being bombed. Some of them are scholars, others poets and artists, some work in the government, others in institutions of different kinds. All of them, regardless of their views of the government, stood defiant. Not one person felt that their world was under threat. They remained steadfast, their courage emanating from an immense belief in the resilience of Iranian civilisation.

Marxist and national liberation thought have had a very complex history with the concept of ‘civilisation’. Classical Marxism rejected it, since it could flatten social division under a blanket of cultural homogeneity and therefore negate the necessity of class struggle. But as Marxism became a crucial framework in the great anticolonial struggles of the post-World Anti-Fascist War era, the idea of civilisation returned with a different meaning. Civilisation came to be understood as a valuable terrain in the cultural struggle against imperialism. It could become an instrument of national continuity and political legitimacy rather than simply an ideological mask for class domination. Yet this reclamation of civilisation had to be carried out from the standpoint of an emancipatory project willing to break with certain reactionary inheritances within that civilisation itself.

In the case of China, for instance, Chinese Marxism – best synthesised by Mao Zedong – insisted on a break from the worst inheritances of pre-revolutionary China, such as Confucian hierarchy and sexism, at the same time as it adopted, through class struggle and ideological transformation, the very idea of ‘Chinese civilisation’ as a bulwark against imperialism and for the development of national patriotism.

The Iranian Revolution (1978–1979) was made by a range of political forces, including Marxists, many of whom were subsequently persecuted and killed by the newly created Islamic Republic. Despite their subjugation, many Marxist ideas entered the ideological framework of the Islamic Republic, whether through the work of a range of thinkers with their own histories with Marxism such as Ehsan Tabari (1917–1989), Jalal Al-e Ahmad (1923–1969), Ali Shariati (1933–1977), Bijan Jazani (1938–1975), or Khosrow Golsorkhi (1944–1974). I wish I could write more about these thinkers, but that would take an entire book. The most compelling was Golsorkhi, who was killed in his prime. He told a rattled judge at his trial:

I begin my words with a saying of Mowla [Imam] Hossein, a great martyr for the peoples of the Middle East. I, who am a Marxist-Leninist, first sought social justice in the school of Islam, and from there arrived at socialism. I will not bargain for my life in this court, nor even for my lifespan. I am an insignificant drop from the struggles and deprivation of the fighting peoples of Iran… Yes, I will not bargain for my life, for I am the child of a fighting and courageous people. I began my words with Islam. True Islam in Iran has always repaid its debt to Iran’s liberation movements. The Seyyed Abdollah Behbahanis, the Sheikh Mohammad Khiyabanis, are true embodiments of these movements. And today too, true Islam repays its debt to Iran’s national liberation movements. When Marx says, ‘In a class society, wealth accumulates on one side and poverty, hunger, and misery on the other, while those who produce wealth are themselves deprived’, and Mowla [Imam] Ali says, ‘No palace is erected unless thousands are impoverished’, there is a profound similarity. Thus, one can name Mowla [Imam] Ali as the first socialist in history, and likewise the Salman Farsis and Abu Dharr Ghaffaris.

By the time of the revolution, the Iranian left – divided among the Fedayeen guerrillas, the communist Tudeh Party, and the Islamist-revolutionary Mujahideen – had come to understand that they could not overthrow the Shah without the religious forces. But they underestimated the power of the clerics over Iranian society, including over the working class. It was this miscalculation that transformed the Iranian Revolution into the Islamic Republic within a year. Yet rather than form an ordinary theocracy, post-revolutionary Iran drew on a much older civilisational inheritance, one that dates back to the rule of Cyrus the Great (559–530 BCE) and the Achaemenid Empire (c. 550–330 BCE) – roughly two thousand years before the arrival of Shi’ism as the state religion in Iran during the Safavid Empire (1501–1736). It is this older civilisational inheritance that plays a foundational role in Iranian society, enabling it to absorb internal differences and to summon a deeper historical legitimacy at times of terrible crisis as the basis for the defence of sovereignty. In 1971, the Shah held a massive event at Persepolis to celebrate 2,500 years of continuous civilisation since Cyrus the Great. Later, during Iraq’s war of aggression on Iran from 1980 to 1988, when Saddam Hussein tried to cast the conflict as a war of Arabs against Persians, the Islamic Republic rejected that framework and insisted that this was rather a ‘defence of the homeland’ (دفاع از وطن, defa’ az vatan), drawing on the idea of an unconquered and uncolonised land that must be defended at all costs by its people.

It is difficult for those who do not come from colonised societies to understand the power of such statements as ‘defence of the homeland’ and of the idea of civilisational inheritance. The damage caused to so many social formations by colonialism is vast. Colonialism steals wealth and reinvests it elsewhere for the development of other peoples; it denigrates the colonised peoples’ cultures and often denies them their own language and their own sense of a historical mission. That is why so many people in the Global South marvel that Iran has been able to stand up to the United States and win the current conflict in strategic terms.

For those who share that history of obliteration, to witness the kind of dignity displayed by societies such as China or Iran, where there is less need to fashion cultural pride out of hallucinations (through the creation of imagined pasts) or by vilifying others (whether minorities or foreigners), is nothing short of inspiring. The lack of total colonial destruction of culture in such places allows for their own history to be reclaimed and reconstructed without being totally caught up in false reversals of the West (often equal parts rejection and mimicry). It is the kind of confidence that faces the destructive power of the United States with dignity and has the courage to send back Lego memes of Trump and his associates that are not about empty mockery but about genuine disdain.

In December 1997, the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) released the Tehran Declaration, which advanced the idea of a ‘Dialogue of Civilisations’. This was a direct response to Samuel Huntington’s 1993 essay and 1996 book The Clash of Civilisations and the Remaking of World Order. In that initial essay, published in Foreign Affairs, Huntington predicted that ‘Conflict between civilisations will be the latest phase in the evolution of conflict in the modern world’. For Huntington, history had moved from the clash of ideologies (communism versus capitalism) to the clash of civilisations (which he defined in religious-cultural terms as ‘Western, Confucian, Japanese, Islamic, Hindu, Slavic-Orthodox, Latin American, and possibly African civilisation’). Huntington warned that the new fault lines would be along these axes. The OIC cautioned that this way of seeing the world might produce the very conflict it claimed to describe rather than prevent it, and that it would be better to hold a dialogue of civilisations rather than await the conflict between them.

The Tehran Declaration found traction within the United Nations (UN) but not in the halls of Western capitals, where the rhetoric of the War on Terror – which predated 2001 – escalated out of control. Fear of Islam became routine, and it was quickly associated with fear of migrants, a dual fear that continues to paralyse Europe and the Americas. In 1998, the UN proclaimed 2001 the Year of Dialogue Among Civilisations, and at the 31st General Conference of the UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation, held in Paris from 15 October to 3 November 2001, it selected the Iranian philosopher and diplomat Ahmad Jalali as its president and invited Iran’s president, Seyyed Mohammad Khatami, to address the body. The conference took place little more than a month after the attacks on the US in September and during the US invasion of Afghanistan as part of its Global War on Terror. Khatami’s address remains powerful, asking the world not to yield to ‘false political polarisations and divisions’. Terrorism ‘is the result of the sinister union between blind intolerance and brute force, with the goal of serving an illusion which, despite all its propaganda, is nothing but the projection of the harmful contents of the unconscious’.

When a terrorist attack happens, the worst thing, Khatami said, is to respond with revenge. ‘Revenge is like salt water which, though it looks like water, increases the thirst rather than satisfying it, thus entangling the world in perpetual outbreaks of violence, hatred, and revenge’. Rather than revenge, Khatami insisted, dialogue ‘is the principal need of the international community’.

A call for dialogue is important and necessary because the alternative is driving us toward annihilation – both through the system of capitalism that deepens inequality and drives planetary destruction and through the system of imperialism that devours societies with war. But neither civilisation nor dialogue will by themselves drive history toward human emancipation. For that, in time, the class struggle will have to intensify, human needs will have to overcome material inequalities and power relations, and the global system will have to be transformed to meet our complex destinies rather than turn us against one another.

Carlos Gutiérrez Cruz (1897–1930) developed his poetic sensibility amid the literary currents of post-revolutionary Mexico, including the patriotic group Contemporáneos (Contemporaries), but later broke with them as he became more radical. In 1923, he published Cómo piensa la plebe, folleto de propaganda libertaria en haikais (How the Plebs Think: A Pamphlet of Liberation Propaganda in Haikais), which turned the haikai form associated in Mexico with José Juan Tablada (1871–1945) into a vehicle for communist poetry. Gutiérrez Cruz understood that there was no sense in defending the nation if the masses of workers got nothing from it. The point bears repeating here: a civilisation cannot be defended as an abstraction. If it is to mean anything, it must be defended as the living record of those who make history. As he put it in one of his haikais:

Labriego, la tierra da ciento por uno
y tú ganas uno por ciento.

Peasant, the land yields a hundred from one
and you earn one from a hundred.

Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter.

27 April 2026

Source: transcend.org

Genocidal in Essence, Settler Colonial Entities such as Israel Cannot Be Reformed

By Maung Zarni

26 Apr 2026 – They Self-Destruct at Enormous Human Costs

Andrey: Nazi Fuck! (i.e., Settler). You terrorist!

Issa Amro: (soldier) shoot him ! Shoot him as you shoot Palestinian kids! …. They do everything to make our lives impossible – to force us to leave.

Watch the clip here.

Watch the interview our delegation filmed with Issa in Hebron in his community center in Jan. 2025, here:

Here are the educational pieces that I find most helpful to understand the cancerous phenomenon that has come to threaten humanity at large – namely the very existence of Israel and its foundationally Jewish Supremacist (“Greater Israel” vision”).

Israel did NOT go bad or genocidal as a result of its right-ward drift as the result of Likud’s coming to power after the disastrous Prime Ministership of Golda Meir.

Emphatically, Israel was conceived and established as a genocidal settler colony, from its very inception.

These are some of the important pieces which further inform my understanding of Israel as the irreformable settler colonial European project.

Listen to the two Palestinian resisters on the soil, a very prominent anti-Zionist Jewish American economist, an anti-Zionist ex-Israeli (ex-Jewish?) psychologist, a Hungarian Jewish survivor of the Nazi genocide.

“Jewish Israelis have a choice. Instead of complaining and feeling sorry for themselves they can stop their orgy of destruction. They can give up their cult idea of an ethnically pure state at the expense of the non-Jewish indigenous people of Palestine, and try to join the human race. They have no right to cry and pretend to be the victims, when they are the ones inflicting destruction and misery on millions.”

—- Avigail Abarbanel (Read her full text here).

27 April 2026

Source: transcend.org