It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
UK counter-terrorism police arrest 10 more Palestine Action activists
UK police raided homes of 10 activists linked to a protest against the Israeli Elbit arms company, sparking outrage over misuse of counterterrorism powers
Sebastian Shehadi London 26 November, 2024 Pro-Palestine activists who protested against Elbit were seized from their homes by police [GETTY]
UK counter-terrorism police raided the homes of ten Palestine Action activists last week, in what campaigners say in a further escalation against pro-Palestine groups.
Police arrested ten more people in relation to the 'Filton 10' case. Ten Palestine Action activists were originally detained after a protest at Elbit’s industrial site in Filton, which is said to have cost Israel's largest arms company over £1m in damages.
The suspects were taken from their homes by counterterrorism police last Tuesday and their residences were sealed off for investigation, family members say.
A parent of one of the arrested activists told The New Arab of her profound "anger" after the police "bashed down [her] door", and handcuffed her 17-year-old son, who was left in freezing weather in his underwear, she added.
Police said the family might not be able to return to their home for two weeks.
A grandmother of one of those arrested also described a police raid on the home at 7am involving three vans and around 20 officers, who confiscated electronic items and a notepad. "The house is now a crime scene," she said.
Commenting on the development, Tom Southerden, Amnesty International UK’s law and human rights director, said: "This latest round of arrests appears to be another disturbing example of a growing trend of terrorism powers being misused against protesters standing in solidarity with Palestinians, both in the UK and in other countries across Europe."
It has not yet been confirmed why the activists were arrested during Tuesday’s raid.
The Filton 10 activists were initially held under the Terrorism Act, but were subsequently charged with non-terror offences including aggravated burglary, criminal damage and violent disorder. The suspects are being held on remand ahead of a November 2025 trial, and are subject to arbitrary and severe restrictions.
"Counter-terrorism powers are particularly concerning when they are used to circumvent normal legal protections, such as justifying holding people in excessively-lengthy pre-charge detention," said Southerden.
"Authorities across Europe must cease the misuse of terrorism legislation against people protesting war crimes and apartheid in Gaza and instead focus their efforts on protecting the rights of the Palestinian people and ending the atrocities against them."
Police in the UK have increasingly brought highly controversial charges against journalists and activists under anti-terrorism powers.
Eyewitnesses in Gaza say Israel is using sniper drones to shoot Palestinians
Palestinians inspect damage following an Israeli airstrike that hit a home in the north of Gaza City on Thursday
.Dawoud Abo Alkas/Anadolu via Getty Images
TEL AVIV, Israel — "The shelling isn't far from us at all," says Fatma Daama. "The shelling is on our street, around us."
In a series of voice messages recorded for NPR in her apartment on Oct. 9, the 37-year-old Palestinian in Jabalia describes Israeli tanks closing in, as her city and other parts of north Gaza were besieged by Israeli forces.
In one message, she's interrupted by the sound of four quick gunshots.
"Oh, hear that?" she says casually. "That's the quadcopter. It's here most of the time. If I go to the door to get better cell service, the quadcopter starts shooting at me and I have to go back inside. It's very dangerous."
The quadcopter is what many Palestinians in the Gaza Strip call a small sniper drone with a gun attached that can fire single bullets. Over the past five months, NPR has collected accounts about sniper drones from more than a dozen eyewitnesses in Gaza, including Daama. Many say they've seen the drones shoot — and kill — civilians.
Adeeb Shaqfa, 55, lost his 32-year-old son Saher in such an attack. He says he and his son were walking in Rafah, in southern Gaza, on May 31. It was a quiet afternoon and there was no fighting nearby, he says, when a sniper drone appeared in the sky and shot Saher, who was walking up ahead.
"Two men rushed to help him, but the quadcopter also shot them," Shaqfa says. "The quadcopter kept shooting everyone who tried to help."
He says two older women nearby were shot in the head. Shaqfa tried to help them, but they were already dead. One of the men who tried to help his son was killed too, he says. Eyewitness accounts point to use of sniper drones in different parts of Gaza
The Israeli military tells NPR it is unaware of this incident, which it says "do[es] not align in any way with IDF directives and protocols," using the initials for the Israel Defense Forces. It says any suggestion that it "intends to harm civilians is unfounded and baseless."
Earlier this month, British surgeon Dr. Nizam Mamode testified before the U.K. Parliament's International Development Committee about his experience volunteering in August and September at Nasser Hospital in central Gaza, where he said he treated many injuries from sniper drones.
"The drones would come down and pick off civilians, children. And we had description after description. This is not, you know, an occasional thing," Mamode testified. "This was day after day after day, operating on children, who would say, 'I was lying on the ground after a bomb had dropped, and this quadcopter came down and hovered over me and shot me.' "
Many of those who spoke with NPR brought up these attacks in an offhand way — a reflection, perhaps, of how common the technology seems to them in the war. But little has been reported on it. Israel has not confirmed using sniper drone technology. Israel's United Nations Ambassador Danny Danon told NPR's All Things Considered he could not respond to specific questions about sniper drone use, saying, "We are using sophisticated weapons in order to minimize civilian casualties. The fact that we have sophisticated weapons, it helps us to target and kill the terrorists. And that's what we are trying to do."
NPR has gathered the following additional accounts from eyewitnesses in Gaza: In Beit Lahiya, in the north, several Palestinians tell NPR that sniper drones shot at civilians late last month as they rushed to help pull people from the rubble after an Israeli airstrike leveled a building full of families. "We came back the day after the strike to try to recover the bodies of our family, but the Israeli quadcopter started shooting at us. We weren't able to get to them," Mohammed Ashraf Abu El Nasr, 18, says.
Dr. Ghassan Abu Sitta, a visiting surgeon from the U.K., describes sniper drones firing on people as they tried to enter Al Ahli hospital in Gaza City, where he was working last November. He tells NPR he saw more than 20 injuries in one day from sniper drone shots, including at least one child shot in the neck. That child later died.
Khaled Abdel Moneim, 27, tells NPR in July he witnessed a sniper drone opening fire in a camp full of displaced people in Nuseirat, in central Gaza. "It fired at people randomly," he says. "It fired very, very, very heavily."
Dr. Mimi Syed, an American emergency and trauma physician who worked at Nasser Hospital in central Gaza for a month this past summer, says she had multiple patients a day — many in pediatrics — with single gunshot wounds to the head. "Every time someone would come in, they would be brought by family, and it was my routine practice to ask what happened. And every time, it would be a quadcopter drone shot," Dr. Syed says. "And this was on individual days, from different parts of Gaza, in individual incidents, over and over again."
In July, Youssef Abd-Alatif, 30, told NPR about his experience with a sniper drone in central Gaza. "We were sitting at home, and then suddenly a sound came, like the sound of fans, and it started getting closer," Abd-Alatif said, describing hearing the drone. "Then it started firing randomly everywhere, and the sound kept getting closer and closer, and the shooting increased everywhere." He and his family fled and found shelter in a school. But many others in his neighborhood, he says, were injured or killed in that incident.
NPR shared details of these accounts with Israel's military, which responded: "The claim that the IDF carries out indiscriminate fire towards children or other uninvolved civilians is completely baseless. The IDF is committed to the international law, as well as the law of armed conflict, and operates accordingly."
There is evidence that Israel's military has sniper drone technology
The Israeli military has not responded to NPR's repeated question if it could verify its use of sniper drone technology in Gaza.
"Israel, frankly, like many militaries, is very cautious about what kinds of information it provides about its operations and tactics that it uses," says Seth Jones, director of defense and security at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. "But that also makes it more difficult for everyday Israelis or journalists or other researchers to understand how these things are being used."
Further hampering that understanding was a decades-long Israeli censorship law — lifted in 2022 — forbidding the media from reporting on its use of armed drones. And Israel has not allowed outside journalists independent access to report on the war inside Gaza, where health officials say more than 44,000 people have been killed since the war began after the Hamas-led attack of Oct. 7, 2023, which Israel says killed some 1,200 people.
But sniper drone technology — distinct from that of other armed drones, which often carry bombs — does exist, and videos released by some drone makers and the Israeli defense ministry indicate that the Israeli military has acquired it.
In 2014, veterans of Israeli special forces units formed a U.S.-based company called Duke Robotics, which later announced it had created the TIKAD — a small drone with a camera that could be outfitted with several different types of lightweight firearms and shoot while it hovers, adjusting for the recoil of the weapons. A 2018 marketing video describes the drones as "the future soldier" that can be "deployed to places human soldiers can't reach, or simply shouldn't have to go." The video says the company "is in the process of implementing orders from Israeli forces."
At the end is a tagline: "No boots on the ground."
Around the same time, the Israeli defense ministry shared a video with Israeli press showing some of its newest technology, starting with soldiers seen operating one of Duke Robotics' sniper drones and firing at targets at an outdoor shooting range.
In 2021, Duke Robotics announced it had joined with an Israeli company, Elbit Systems, specifically to further develop the TIKAD drone and market it globally.
Other similar drones are on the market, also made by Israeli companies.
In 2022, an Israeli company called Smartshooter announced a drone called Smash Dragon. A YouTube video posted by the company shows a small drone attached with a rifle barrel taking flight. The video then zooms in through the drone viewfinder to show the drone locking in on a human-shaped target before taking a shot. Smartshooter's website says it uses artificial intelligence and machine learning technology to provide what it calls "'one shot-one hit' precision."
In response to a question from NPR, Smartshooter denied that its Smash Dragon drone is being used by the Israeli military. But Israeli forces have touted the use of other Smartshooter technology in the past, and some other Smartshooter products are partially funded by Israel's Defense Ministry's research and development wing.
A Gaza hospital treats sniper drone attack victims — including its own personnel
Dr. Ahmad Moghrabi, a head surgeon at Nasser Hospital in central Gaza, says he and his colleagues are very familiar with the sniper drone, which they refer to as the quadcopter.
"The gunshot of the quadcopter, it has a special sound," he explains. "They used to shoot at the displaced people inside the hospital, and they killed many people actually at the hospital," he says.
In early February, Nasser Hospital was a focus of the Israeli military, which said Hamas fighters were hiding there. (The hospital has not commented publicly on this allegation). Hundreds of Palestinian civilians, displaced by fighting, had taken shelter there.
Moghrabi says he has treated many people shot by sniper drones — and saved the life of his own co-worker, a nurse who was shot in the chest by a drone on Feb. 1 while the two men were taking a break together on a first-floor balcony after a long surgery.
In a video from the day, which Moghrabi recorded on his phone and sent to NPR, blood blooms from a bullet wound on the nurse's right chest as two colleagues hurriedly help him through the hospital hallways, and then lift him onto an operating table. Colleagues cut away his jacket and scrubs and start an IV drip, getting ready to operate.
The Israeli military tells NPR it is unaware of this incident.
Weaponized drones are part of warfare's present and future
"We're reaching a point where there is increasingly diminished human oversight over the practice of killing in war, and also the decision-making process around who lives or dies," says James Rogers, an expert on drone warfare and emerging technologies at Cornell University.
"No matter how precise your weapon systems are," he says, "if your intelligence is wrong, then all that precision, that guaranteed destruction of the target, means is the guaranteed death of the wrong person."
And, as Jones from CSIS points out, once technology exists, it rarely goes away.
"The reality is, this is an evolution in the character of war," Jones says. "So I don't think we're going to turn around and go the other direction."
Weaponized drones, he says, are part of the future of warfare.
Ahmed Abuhamda contributed to this report from Cairo. Abu Bakr Bashir contributed from London. Itay Stern contributed from Tel Aviv and Yanal Jabarin contributed from Jerusalem.
Prominent Irish lawyer dedicates her award to Palestinian women
‘Women of Palestine to build Gaza again from rubble and from destruction as they have before,’ says Blinne Ni Ghralaigh
Anadolu Staff |26.11.2024 -
JOHANNESBURG
Irish lawyer Blinne Ni Ghralaigh, who was a member of the South African legal team at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), has dedicated her “Tatler Woman of the Year Award” to the Palestinian women.
“I would like to dedicate this award to the wonderful women of Gaza. To the tens of thousands who have been killed. The many more who have been injured. Those who have suffered untold hurts and those who are still enduring against all the odds. To the displaced, starving, the bereaved, widowed and maimed,” Ghralaigh said on Sunday in her acceptance speech in a video posted on X.
South Africa filed a case against Israel at the ICJ tribunal based in The Hague in late 2023, accusing Israel, which has bombed Gaza since last October, of failing to uphold its commitments under the 1948 Genocide Convention.
Several countries, including Türkiye, Nicaragua, Palestine, Spain, Mexico, Libya, and Colombia, have all joined the case which began public hearings in January.
The top UN court in May ordered Israel to halt its offensive in the southern Gaza city of Rafah. It was the third time the 15-judge panel issued preliminary orders seeking to rein in the death toll and alleviate humanitarian suffering in the blockaded enclave, where the casualty count has crossed 44,200.
'Women of Palestine will build Gaza again'
Ghralaigh recognized the resilience of Palestinian women who undergo much pain but continue serving their community such as academics and teachers who are teaching the next generation in makeshift tents and bombed-out buildings.
“The women of Palestine will build Gaza again from the rubble and from the destruction as they have before, like Irish women have before, like women do the world over,” she stressed.
She also highlighted the role of Palestinian scientists and women journalists who are still broadcasting the ongoing genocide against Palestinians.
“I hope for a better future ahead for them and for us all. May the future finally be women-led. May it be led by brilliant, fierce, intelligent, and compassionate women like our mothers and grandmothers before us,” she added.
Israel has launched a genocidal war on the Gaza Strip following a Hamas attack last year, killing over 44,250 people, most of them women and children, and injuring over 104,700.
The second year of genocide in Gaza has drawn growing international condemnation, with figures and institutions labeling the attacks and blocking of aid deliveries as a deliberate attempt to destroy a population.
Last week, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.
Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice over its brutal war on Gaza.
Bombed into silence: Hearing loss skyrockets in besieged Gaza
Palestinians in Gaza have been shocked to find their hearing impaired following Israeli bombing and are concerned they won't be able to hear incoming attacks
Nadda Osman Sally Ibrahim 26 November, 2024 THE NEW ARAB More people in Gaza are experiencing hearing loss as a result of Israel's attacks and the spread of disease [Getty]
When Samir Al-Dadah woke up from a two-week coma after Israel bombed his apartment in Gaza's Al-Jalaa neighbourhood, he was startled to see people's mouths moving but could not hear a sound.
The 39-year-old completely lost his hearing on 24 December 2023 after the Israeli bombing, which killed over 20 people, including five of his family members.
He was wounded in his foot and back, but more startling was when people around him shouted or spoke loudly - he still could hardly hear a word.
Al-Dadah later underwent several medical examinations, learning that he had gone completely deaf in one ear and lost 60 percent of his hearing in the other.
Medical professionals told him he needs to undergo urgent surgery to insert a cochlear implant, however, due to Israel’s closure of land crossings, he has been unable to get the treatment.
"I only remember hearing the sound of a strong explosion and the glow of fire surrounding me, and then I fell to the ground. I don't remember anything after that," Al-Dadah told The New Arab.
He is just one of many Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip experiencing hearing loss and respiratory issues, which experts say is because of relentless Israeli bombardment and the rapid spread of diseases.
Specialists believe that such cases have risen two to threefold compared to before Israel launched its war on Gaza in October 2023.
Since the start of the war, which has killed at least 44,249 people in Gaza and wounded at least 104,746, Israeli attacks have forced medical facilities to close while the destruction of key infrastructure, such as sewage networks, has allowed diseases to proliferate, some affecting people's hearing.
Chest diseases and ear infections, which result in ear canals being blocked, are becoming more common in the Gaza Strip, experts say, with little medical assistance available to solve the issue. Children and babies vulnerable
Children and babies are particularly susceptible to diseases and the consequences of Israeli bombardment.
According to Raja Sharaf, the head of the audiology department at Gaza’s Hamad Hospital, there is a notable increase in the number of deaf people, of all ages, in Gaza since Israel launched its offensive on the territory just over a year ago.
Sharaf attributed this to the piercing sound of shelling and explosions, or in some cases direct injuries.
"The sounds of violent shelling causes damage to the auditory nerve and permanent hearing problems that may continue with a person throughout their life. Most injuries are concentrated in one ear, where the infection rate is more than 50 per cent" Sharaf explained, adding that the only means of treatment is to install medical hearing aids.
However, she also noted that some cases are difficult and cannot even be treated with hearing aids, rendering people completely deaf.
On 7 August this year, the Abu Aram family welcomed their newborn baby daughter Julia in the central Gaza Strip. Despite the war on the enclave and harrowing conditions they were subjected to, she was still a glimmer of hope.
Just three days after her birth, the Israeli army targeted a house near where they were staying, forcing everyone in the area to flee for their lives.
In the chaos of being displaced again, Julia’s father Mohammed noticed something unusual in his daughter.
"My baby seemed quiet and only cried when she wanted to breastfeed. Two months later, the baby stopped responding to any sounds" he told The New Arab.
Abu Aram took her to several doctors where his daughter underwent medical tests, all confirming she had indeed completely lost her hearing.
"The news came as a shock to me, as I never expected that my baby would lose her hearing. Every time I try to play with her, I cry a lot because of how she has gone deaf," her father said.
Unable to hear bombing
One of the biggest obstacles Palestinians who are now suffering from hearing loss have faced is being unable to hear airstrikes or calls to evacuate.
Al-Dadah, who has been forcibly displaced and ended up in a tent in the Mawasi area of Gaza’s Khan Younis says this is something that has intensified fears amidst heavy Israeli shelling.
"About a week ago, the Israeli army targeted a tent that was only 500 metres away from my tent, but I never heard the bombing," he explained.
He said that he only knew there was bombing after seeing plumes of smoke arising from the targeted tent.
"I didn't run away like other people. I just felt my heart trembling and didn't know what to do. Day after day, I feel like I will die without even being able to hear the bombing," he added.
Al-Dadah is not the only one with this fear and is one of many who have been affected by Israeli attacks.
Earlier this year, Hashem Ghazal, a well-known carpenter, Palestinian sign language teacher and disability rights activist was killed in an Israeli strike which also killed his wife and wounded his children.
Since the start of Israel’s war on Gaza, around 10,000 Palestinians have been made disabled, the Palestinian NGOs Network said in June.
The NGO added that destruction of key infrastructure, such as roads and healthcare facilities, only make it harder for people with disabilities.
"This has significantly diminished their ability to mobilise and evacuate safely, and has resulted in the loss of crucial assistive devices, abandoned in the face of bombardment," the Palestinian news agency Wafa reported, citing findings from the NGO.
In displacement camps, the experience of people with disabilities can be even more difficult, with experts highlighting that people with disabilities are more vulnerable to malnutrition and chronic illnesses, as well as death.
Rise in tinnitus
Earlier this year, Palestinians described having to wait months before being able to see doctors specialising in ear, nose and throat conditions, and for many, even when they are diagnosed they cannot access treatment.
Palestinians in Gaza who spoke to The New Arab said there has been a sharp increase in tinnitus among people, particularly after loud explosions.
For some, this is a constant ringing in the ears and for others it can be painful and cause headaches. While it is common, it can hugely impact peoples’ quality of life, by affecting their concentration and sleep, even triggering anxiety or depression.
Tinnitus can be caused by exposure to extreme loud noise, a build-up of ear wax or infections that causes ringing in the ears. Some experience it in one or both ears and it can come and go or be ever present.
Despite international organisations condemning attacks on Gaza and highlighting the impact on civilians, Israeli attacks and siege show no signs of ending.
Israeli forces bombed Gaza City’s Atfaluna Society for Deaf Children earlier this year, with Israeli soldiers grinning and posing with rifles in front of the building, as it was engulfed by flames.
The organisation has supported deaf and disabled Palestinians in the enclave since 1992 and employed deaf staff members.
Now, however, those experiencing tinnitus or other problems with their hearing have nowhere to turn to.
"While this is not the first school Israel has attacked using bombs and white phosphorous, this was an attack on what was once a safe and empowering place for deaf and disabled children and directly affects our community and the people we serve," the non-profit organisation Off-The-Grid Missions said in a statement following the attack.
According to Raja Sharaf, audiologist and speech-language pathologist from Gaza, hearing loss has remained a significant and growing problem since the Israeli siege on the enclave in 2007 due to frequent Israeli bombing and sonic booms.
Historically, Israel has imposed severe restrictions on hearing aids entering Gaza, most of which were delivered through the Erez Crossing. Patients would face months of delays while Israel carries out security checks, as well as during national Jewish holidays.
FASCIST UNITY
Netanyahu to Visit Hungary Amid ICC Controversy
By Charlie McCarthy | Tuesday, 26 November 2024
NEWSMAX
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly accepted President Viktor Orbán's invitation to visit Hungary.
Orbán said Friday he had invited Netanyahu to visit Hungary after several other European nations said the Israeli premier would be detained if he set foot on their soil, after the issuing of an International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant for Netanyahu over Israel's war in Gaza.
"I thank Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban for the warm support for me and the State of Israel," Netanyahu said in a statement. "Against the shameful weakness of those who have lined up alongside the outrageous decision against the State of Israel's right to defend itself, Hungary – like our friends in the US – has shown moral clarity and steadfastness on the side of justice and the truth."
The ICC last week issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu, his former defense minister and Hamas officials, accusing them of war crimes and crimes against humanity over the war in Gaza and the October 2023 attacks that triggered Israel's offensive in the Palestinian territory.
Assuring Netanyahu that he would face no risks if he visited Hungary, Orbán branded the arrest warrants a "brazen, cynical, and completely unacceptable decision." Orbán, who is often at odds with his European Union peers, has forged warm ties with Netanyahu.
"Today I will invite Israel's prime minister, Mr. Netanyahu, for a visit to Hungary, and in that invite, I will guarantee him that if he comes, the ICC ruling will have no effect in Hungary, and we will not follow its contents," Orbán said.
Orbán was not only leader to criticize the ICC's move.
President Joe Biden said the ICC arrest warrants against Israeli leaders were outrageous.
"Let me be clear once again: whatever the ICC might imply, there is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security," Biden said in a statement.
Rep. Mike Waltz, R-Fla., nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to be national security adviser, took to social media to condemn the ICC.
"The ICC has no credibility and these allegations have been refuted by the U.S. government," Waltz posted on Xwith The Associated Press story about the ICC's action. "Israel has lawfully defended its people & borders from genocidal terrorists. You can expect a strong response to the antisemitic bias of the ICC & UN come January."
Reuters contributed to this report.
Israel civil inquiry blames Netanyahu for October 7 failure
By Africanews with AP
11/26/2024
The independent civilian commission of inquiry into the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel has found Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directly responsible for the failures leading up to the attack, alongside former defense ministers, the army chief and heads of security services.
The commission led by retired judge Varda Alsheik presented its findings on Tuesday after a four month probe in which it heard some 120 witnesses. It was set up by relatives of victims of the Hamas attack, in response to the absence of any state probe.
The commission determined that the Israeli government, its army and security services “failed in their primary mission of protecting the citizens of Israel.”
It said Netanyahu was responsible for ignoring “repeated warnings” ahead of October 7, for his appeasing approach over the years toward Hamas, and for “undermining all decision-making centers, including the cabinet and the National Security Council, in a way that prevented any serious discussion” on security issues.
The commission further determined that the military and defense leaders bear blame for ignoring warnings from within the army, and for reducing the army’s presence along the Gaza border while relying excessively on technological means. On the day of the Hamas attack, the report says, the army’s response was both slow and lacking.
The civil commission called for the immediate establishment of a state commission of inquiry into the October 7 attack.
Netanyahu has opposed launching a state commission of inquiry, arguing that such an investigation should begin only once the war is over.
UN committee observes solidarity day, urges action for Palestinian rights, peace
The UN Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People held a special meeting Tuesday to observe the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, which falls on Friday.
"Today we once more gather to observe International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian people, not as a mere commemoration, but as a solemn reminder of unfulfilled promises, denied rights and the historic injustice," said Committee chair Cheikh Niang.
Stating that this year's commemoration takes place amid unprecedented suffering and tragedy, Niang, who is Senegal’s UN envoy, said: "The inalienable rights of the Palestinian people remain unrealized, including their right to self-determination, a right owed to all peoples on earth."
"We urgently call on the international community to take decisive action to end Israel's occupation to ensure accountability for protectors, deliver justice for the victims, and uphold the long overdue liberal rights of the Palestinian people," he added.
General Assembly President Philemon Yang said the Israeli-Palestinian conflict cannot be resolved through force, endless occupation or annexation.
"The Israeli-Palestinian conflict will only end when both Israelis and Palestinians are able to live side by side in their own independent states, in peace, security and dignity," said the president.
"We must restore hope, and some Palestinians hope that a better future is possible, and trust in the United Nations and its commitments, we can start building that future here today by demanding a cease-fire, an immediate return of the hostages, and the commencement of negotiations towards a long, lasting peace," Yang said.
Barbara Woodward, the UK's envoy to the UN, said a lasting and comprehensive solution in accordance with international law and relevant UN resolutions on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict can only be achieved by peaceful means.
She said the international community needs to redouble efforts to support a cease-fire, release all hostages and take urgent action to address the catastrophic humanitarian crisis and work toward the realization of a two-state solution to the conflict.
"We reiterate our unwavering commitment two-state solution and undermine the need to put in place urgent steps to revitalize a political pathway towards its realization," said Woodward.
Amina Mohammed, deputy secretary-general of the UN, conveyed Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ message, saying the international community stands in solidarity for the dignity, rights, justice and self-determination of the Palestinians.
"This year's commemoration is especially painful, as those fundamental goals are as distant as they have ever been," said Mohammed.
Call for international intervention to stop Gaza tragedy
She said nothing justifies the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas in Israel and nothing justifies the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.
"Yet, more than a year later, Gaza is in ruins. More than 44,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have been reportedly killed and the humanitarian crisis is getting worse by the day," said Mohammed, who called it "appalling" and "inexcusable".
For his part, Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian permanent observer to the UN, read a message from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who said urgent international intervention is needed to stop the tragedy in Gaza, which he said is taking place before the eyes and ears of the world.
"The international community has declared this international day in support of the rights of our people, foremost their right to self-determination and the independence of their state, which necessitates taking practical and dramatic steps to the dangers that are threatening millions of lives and the possibility of achieving a just and comprehensive peace based on international legitimacy," it said.
Abbas demanded suspending Israel's membership in the UN because of its refusal to abide by international law and obligations, and due to its insistence on continuing its crimes against the Palestinian people.
"At the same time, it's imperative to reject Israel's plans to separate Gaza from the West Bank, including Jerusalem, to diminish the state of Palestine's responsibility," said Abbas.
He said Israel needs to stop its settlement and occupation, killings, settler terrorism, attacks on the holy sites and the attempts to alter the legal status quo as well as raids on cities, extrajudicial killings and arbitrary arrests in Palestine.
"Once again, I reiterate that the occupation will end and Palestinian rights will prevail no matter how long it takes," the message concludes.
In 1977, the UN General Assembly called for the annual observance on Nov. 29 as the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People.
On that day, in 1947, the Assembly adopted a resolution on the partition of Palestine into two states, one Arab and one Jewish.
PS; ZIONISTS OPPOSE CHRISTIANITY
Israeli soldiers film themselves desecrating church, mocking rituals in south Lebanon
Israeli soldiers filmed themselves breaking into a south Lebanon church and imitating wedding rituals, leading to widespread outrage.
The New Arab Staff 26 November, 2024 Churches and other religious buildings have come under attack as a result of Israel's war on Lebanon [Getty]
Israeli soldiers published video footage of themselves mocking wedding rituals and desecrating a church located in the village of Deir Mimas in south Lebanon.
In video footage widely shared online, the soldiers break into the church at night with torches and mimic the religious imagery on the walls, before going on to imitate a bride and groom at the altar while holding microphones.
The soldiers then proceed to mimic intimate acts on the church floor, pile on top of each other and sing.
The Israeli army issued a statement, saying they condemn the act and will be taking disciplinary measures.
"This is a serious act that is not in line with the IDF’s values and orders. The IDF respects all religions and condemns this type of behaviour. This incident is under investigation and those involved will be dealt with disciplinary action," an Israeli army spokesperson said.
The actions have been heavily denounced online, with many calling for the Israeli army to be held accountable for its actions in Lebanon and Gaza.
"Deafening silence of US and European politicians who spent the past 20 years masquerading as defenders of Eastern Christians, only to pander to western Islamophobes," Karim Emile Bitar, a professor of international relations wrote on social media platform X.
"Nihilist barbarians. Obscene and depraved," another social media user commented.
The video also prompted scathing criticism from Christian groups worldwide.
"What if this happened in a synagogue? They’d be screaming antisemitism," Wadie Abu Nassar, the coordinator of the Holy Land Christian Forum said according to Israeli media.
The Vatican also reportedly condemned the actions as "outrageous".
Since the start of Israel’s wars on Gaza and Lebanon, faith leaders around the world have urged for a ceasefire and the protection of places of worship.
Last week, Pope Francis said that allegations that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza should be "carefully investigated", marking some of his strongest remarks since the eruption of Israel’s offensive.
Israeli forces have also shared images of themselves in Gaza urinating on pages of the holy Quran and destroying and setting fire to mosques.
Israel’s war on Gaza has killed at least 44,249 Palestinians and wounded an additional 104,746 others since 7 October 2023. Israeli attacks have also killed at least 3,768 in Lebanon and wounded 15,699 others.
TikTok CEO summoned to European Parliament over role in shock Romania election
The role of Chinese-owned TikTok is under scrutiny following the shock victory of a far-right candidate in Romania’s election.
The first-round victory of the ultranationalist and pro-Russian Călin Georgescu has triggered shockwaves about the political trajectory of the EU and NATO country. | Daniel Mihailescu/Getty Images
BRUSSELS — A top EU lawmaker is demanding that TikTok's chief executive appear before the European Parliament to answer questions about the platform's role in Sunday's Romanian presidential election, as researchers warn of covert activity on thousands of fake accounts leading up to the vote.
The first-round victory of the ultranationalist and pro-Russian Călin Georgescu has triggered shockwaves about the political trajectory of the EU and NATO country, with many concerns focused on how a TikTok campaign managed to propel an unknown candidate from obscurity. A second-round will be held on Dec. 8.
"We call on the CEO of TikTok to come to speak in this house and to ensure his platform conducted to no infringement under the DSA," said Valérie Hayer, head of the liberal Renew Europe group, told a press conference on Thursday, referring to the Digital Services Act, Europe's rulebook for online content.
"Romania is a warning bell: Radicalisation and disinformation can happen all over Europe with harmful consequences," added Hayer, an ally of French President Emmanuel Macron.
Hayer's appeal comes only two days after Georgescu's shock victory. He had no party backing and polls had failed to pick up on his popularity — though researchers are now zeroing on a major TikTok campaign he led in the days leading up to the election.
"We believed that Tiktok was misused and was led to be misused by him and an army of fake accounts that were used for his purpose," said Bogdan Manolea, executive director of the Romanian campaign group, Association for Technology and Internet.
Romanian Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu on Tuesday said funding for Georgescu's campaign on TikTok needed to be reviewed. "It's a system, I don't know how legal it is, I understood how the system was used. The source of financing, in my opinion, is to be followed, 'follow the money."
A top EU lawmaker is demanding that TikTok's chief executive appear before the European Parliament. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
There is, however, no proof at this stage of involvement by Russia or other state actors.
Manolea added TikTok should have seen the "wave of thousands of fake accounts" and that the company should be responsible for that under the DSA.
While paid political advertising isn't allowed under TikTok's terms and conditions, this time that rule was "largely ineffective," said Keith Kiely, coordinator for the Bulgarian Romanian Observatory on Digital Media.
The platform had a "significant influence" in the elections, he added.
It's not the first time that TikTok, which is owners by China's Bytedance, has come in for criticism in the EU. In 2023, Macron called TikTok "deceptively innocent" and a cause of "real addiction" among users, though the EU has yet to levy any major fines or penalties against the platform.
TikTok declined to comment on its role in the Romanian elections. The company had set up an election center inside the app to provide reliable election information and partnered with a local NGO to boost digital literacy and counter disinformation.
Mali cuts TV news station's signal over broadcast criticizing Burkina Faso's ruling junta
Mali’s ruling junta cut the signal of the popular news broadcaster Joliba TV News after a prominent politician criticized the military rulers of neighboring Burkina Faso during a televised debate, a journalist for the channel said Tuesday.
“This morning, the authorities cut off our TV channel signal, but we’re still hopeful that they’ll restore it soon,” Attaher Halidou, the journalist who chaired the debate, told The Associated Press.
Earlier this month, Malian authorities arrested and jailed politician Issa Kaou N’Djim after he claimed during the debate on Joliba TV that the military rulers of Burkina Faso had fabricated evidence of a foiled coup in September. The director of the broadcaster was also questioned by the authorities.
The Press House of Mali, which represents journalists and the media in the West African country, threatened on Sunday to rebroadcast the televised debate if the authorities revoked Joliba's license.
"We are in talks with the Malian authorities to find a global solution that not only concerns the restoration of Joliba TV’s signal, but also the threat of withdrawal of its license and all other factors concerning press freedom,” Bandiougou Danté, the president of the press organization, told The Associated Press.
N’Djim was one of the vice presidents of the National Transitional Council, Mali’s legislative body under the junta. He later distanced himself from the military regime and said he favored a return to electoral democracy. In 2021, he received a six-month prison sentence after he criticized the military regime on social media.
Mali has been ruled by military regimes since a series of coups which capitalized on popular discontent with previous democratically elected governments over security issues. With Niger and Burkina Faso, it is a member of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), a mutual defense pact which was created by the three states in 2023.
The security situation in the AES member countries has worsened in recent times, analysts say, with a record number of attacks by Islamic extremists. Government forces have also been accused of killing civilians they suspect of collaborating with militants.