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Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen lands

A place to talk about domestic politics in Middle East (Iran, Iraq , Turkey, Syria) Also includes topics about Assyrian, Armenian, Chaldean .

Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Apr 13, 2025 10:22 am

Israeli aircraft bombed
    Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital
Dozens of patients and medical workers were forced out of the Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital in the northern Gaza Strip as Israeli aircraft bombed the medical facility, Al Mayadeen's correspondent reported

The hospital is the only remaining functional medical facility in Gaza City and the northern Gaza Strip, after healthcare infrastructure was completely dismantled in previous Israeli attacks.

Israeli authorities issued evacuation orders shortly before bombing the hospital early on Sunday.

Our correspondent confirmed that the bombing inflicted severe damage on the emergency building, including the reception area, laboratory, and pharmacy.

This comes amid continuous bombardment that has targeted various areas across the Gaza Strip. Strikes on Sunday also targeted the Saad Bin Mua'th School and the Abdullah al-Dahyan School in the neighborhoods of al-Tuffah and al-Sheikh al-Radwan, respectively.

It is worth noting that the hospital's courtyard was bombed by Israeli occupation forces on October 17, 2023, in an infamous massacre that Israeli authorities denied involvement in.

At the time, the Gaza Ministry of Health reported that 471 Palestinians were martyred and 342 were injured.

International community urged to protect remaining hospitals

Meanwhile, the Gaza Government Media Office urged the international community to denounce the Israeli attack on al-Ahli Baptist Hospital, urging swift work to protect remaining healthcare facilities in the territory.

It underscored that the Baptist Hospital houses several specialized medical departments, serving hindered of patients. Being the only remaining hospital in the area, the Media Office stressed that the hospital provides healthcare services to more than one million Palestinians.

The office pointed to the deliberate destruction of 34 hospitals in the Gaza Strip as part of a "systematic plan to eliminate what remains of the healthcare sector in Gaza," in a statement.

The statement underlined that in doing so, the Israeli occupation blatantly violated international conventions and the Geneva Conventions, which prohibit attacks against medical facilities.

Al-Ahli bombing couldn't happen without US's green-light

Hamas has condemned what it described as a "new war crime" following the bombing of Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza, saying that it adds to a list of other crimes committed by the occupation.

The statement characterized the hospital attack as further evidence that "Israel" is a "rogue criminal entity" operating outside the bounds of international law and humanitarian norms. Hamas also underlined that these actions are taking place with direct support from the United States, criticizing Washington’s complicity and the failure of global accountability systems.

Holding the US administration fully responsible, Hamas said the bombing could not have occurred without an American "green light."

The group also issued a sharp critique of the international community, questioning the silence of global political and legal institutions — particularly the United Nations Security Council — in the face of “unprecedented crimes in modern times.”

Hamas urged the international community, including the United Nations, Arab and Islamic states, to intervene immediately. It called for urgent action to halt what it described as gross violations of international law and to take political and moral responsibility for ending the continued bloodshed in Gaza.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Apr 14, 2025 7:58 pm

Exclusive:

Al Mayadeen obtains Israeli doc.
regarding Gaza ceasefire


On the third day of the truce, negotiations are set to begin on “the day after,” which would center on disarmament efforts and the formal declaration of a permanent ceasefire.

    Al Mayadeen has obtained a copy of the Israeli proposal submitted to mediators and subsequently conveyed to Hamas regarding negotiations for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza
In March, "Israel" reneged on a ceasefire that brought two months of relative calm and resumed its war on the Gaza Strip.

The document outlines that Hamas would release captive Edan Alexander on the first day as a special gesture to the United States, signaling goodwill at the onset of the discussions.

The Israeli proposal includes a clear demand for the complete disarmament of the Gaza Strip, setting forth a framework for a 45-day temporary ceasefire. This ceasefire would encompass the cessation of military operations, the delivery of humanitarian aid, and the exchange of prisoners.

On the second day of the truce, Hamas would release five living captives in exchange for 66 Palestinian prisoners serving life sentences and 611 detainees from Gaza.

The proposal stipulates that any release of captives must occur without public displays or ceremonial proceedings.

Moreover, the proposal calls for the establishment of a mutually agreed-upon mechanism to ensure that humanitarian aid reaches civilians exclusively.

Following the release of the five captives, the document allows for the entry of humanitarian aid and necessary shelter equipment to assist displaced persons in Gaza.

Additionally, the Israeli military would begin its “redeployment” in the Rafah area and northern Gaza Strip following the release of the captives.

On the third day, negotiations are set to begin on “the day after,” which would center on disarmament efforts and the formal declaration of a permanent ceasefire.

By the seventh day, Hamas would release four captives in exchange for 54 Palestinian prisoners serving life sentences, as well as 500 detainees held since October 7, 2023.

The proposal specifies that after the seventh day, the Israeli military would begin "redeploying" east of Salah al-Din Street.

On the 10th day, Hamas would be required to provide comprehensive information about all remaining living captives in exchange for corresponding information on Palestinian detainees

On the 20th day, Hamas would release 16 dead captives in exchange for 160 Palestinians who have been killed, with both groups to be released simultaneously.

The Israeli proposal further outlines that negotiations for a permanent ceasefire must be finalized within 45 days. It also specifies that once a ceasefire agreement is reached, the remaining live and dead captives will be released.

If a temporary ceasefire is successfully agreed upon, the proposal indicates that it could be extended under mutually agreed-upon conditions and for a duration to be determined by both parties.

Finally, the document underscores that the guarantors of the deal—Egypt, Qatar, and the United States—would continue to exert efforts to ensure the continuation of negotiations and the eventual establishment of a permanent ceasefire agreement.

Resistance leader details Gaza proposal, Hamas’ stance: Exclusive

Earlier on Monday, a Palestinian Resistance leader speaking to Al Mayadeen outlined the key points of the latest Israeli proposal, which includes the redeployment of Israeli occupation forces to positions held before March 2, a 45-day term for halting military operations, the opening of crossings, and the entry of humanitarian aid—but all under Israeli-imposed conditions.

    According to the source, the proposal fails to meet Hamas’ core demands of a permanent ceasefire and a complete Israeli withdrawal from Gaza
The leader further warned that the Israeli plan appears designed to gradually strip Hamas of its leverage by extracting captives without securing meaningful concessions.

He further told Al Mayadeen that the Israeli proposal seeks to disarm Hamas and ensure it does not return to power in Gaza.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Apr 16, 2025 12:38 am

Israeli bomb Gaza displacement tents

Israeli airstrikes all over the Gaza Strip have caused extensive loss of life and damage as dozens of displaced are killed and wounded

Israeli airstrikes on Monday targeted several locations sheltering displaced civilians across the Gaza Strip, resulting in multiple casualties, according to local civil defense teams and media reports.

Two people were killed and seven others wounded when Israeli warplanes bombed tents sheltering displaced families at Yarmouk Stadium in central Gaza City, the Palestinian Civil Defense reported. The stadium has become a refuge for hundreds of families who fled their homes amid ongoing Israeli bombardment.

“Our crews responded to urgent distress calls from the Yarmouk Stadium, where hundreds of displaced people are taking shelter,” the Civil Defense said in a statement.

An Al Mayadeen correspondent confirmed that Israeli aircraft had struck the stadium, which housed a large number of displacement tents. In a separate attack nearby, two Palestinians were killed and others injured in an airstrike that targeted an apartment near al-Saraya junction in central Gaza City.

Elsewhere in western Gaza, several individuals were injured in a drone strike near Abu Hasira Street.

Escalating acts of aggression

Further south, Israeli airstrikes hit a tent sheltering displaced civilians in the Al-Mawasi area west of Khan Younis, killing two people and injuring several more, according to local reporters.

Civil Defense teams also recovered two bodies and rescued three injured individuals after an Israeli strike on a displacement tent at the northern gate of the Asdaa City complex, also in Khan Younis.

Meanwhile, in Rafah, Israeli forces reportedly demolished multiple residential buildings in the northern part of the city. Similar demolitions were carried out by Israeli forces in eastern Gaza City, where several civilian homes were leveled.

These attacks come amid a continued Israeli military offensive in the Gaza Strip, now in its seventh month, which has displaced more than 1.9 million Palestinians and caused widespread destruction to civilian infrastructure.

Dozens killed, wounded

Gaza’s Ministry of Health announced earlier in the day that 17 Palestinians were martyred and 69 others injured over the past 24 hours as a result of ongoing Israeli attacks across the besieged Gaza Strip.

The total death toll from the Israeli assault on Gaza has now reached 51,000 martyrs and 116,343 injuries since October 7, 2023. Since March 18, 2025, 1,630 Palestinians have been killed and 4,302 wounded.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Apr 22, 2025 12:35 am

Israeli airstrikes continue across Gaza

Dozens were killed and wounded in renewed Israeli airstrikes all over Gaza, even targeting displacement centers

Israeli occupation forces continued their bombardment of several areas across the Gaza Strip on Monday, inflicting new casualties amid an unfolding genocide that has already killed tens of thousands of Palestinians.

In southern Gaza, Israeli artillery targeted Abasan al-Kabira, east of Khan Younis, resulting in multiple injuries, according to Al Mayadeen’s correspondent. Separately, a residential home in Qeizan al-Najjar, also in Khan Younis, was hit in another strike, leaving additional civilians wounded.

In central Gaza, one Palestinian was killed after an Israeli strike targeted a group of individuals near the Great Mosque in al-Bureij refugee camp. Israeli warplanes also launched an air raid on Deir al-Balah.

Further east of Gaza City, renewed artillery shelling struck residential neighborhoods, while the Israeli military reportedly conducted fresh demolition operations.

Drone attacks, airstrikes target displacement zones

In southern Khan Younis, injuries were reported due to Israeli aerial bombardment. Meanwhile, in eastern Gaza City, an Israeli drone fired at civilian homes on Shaaf Street in al-Tuffah neighborhood.

In al-Zaytoun, southeast of Gaza City, two Palestinians were killed and others injured following a drone attack near Safed School, which is currently housing displaced families.

Separately, Al Mayadeen reported that two more people were killed and several were wounded in a strike targeting a house near al-Joulani Mosque in al-Tuffah.

39 martyrs in 24 hours in Gaza

The Gaza death toll has been updated by the Health Ministry in the Strip, with the latter reporting that 39 Palestinians arrived at hospitals as martyrs, including two recovered from under the rubble, and 62 others were injured due to the continued Israeli aggression on Gaza.

The total number of Gaza Strip casualties since the beginning of the conflict on October 7, 2023, has risen to 51,240 martyrs and 116,931 injuries. The casualties since March 18, 2025, stand at 1,864 martyrs and 4,890 injuries.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Apr 22, 2025 12:52 am

UN Highlights Escalating
Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza


The United Nations has revealed harrowing statistics regarding the ongoing crisis in the Gaza Strip, where approximately 420,000 individuals have been newly displaced since March 18, 2025, following the resurgence of Israeli military aggression against the territory

The UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has repeatedly urged for a ceasefire, emphasizing the protection of civilian lives in Gaza and the occupied Palestinian territories. This marks yet another chapter in the conflict, with Palestinian communities under siege since April 7, 2023, as part of what has been described by some as a systematic campaign.

Despite these calls, Israeli forces have reportedly dismissed appeals and continued military operations, aggravating the already dire situation for civilians.

Critical concerns from the United Nations include allegations of ethnic cleansing, violations of human rights and international law, and the necessity for humanitarian aid. UN agencies have stressed the urgency of addressing these violations while condemning the ongoing violence and disregard for ceasefire agreements.

In a statement released Monday, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) brought attention to the severe toll inflicted upon Gaza’s civilian population. UNRWA highlighted that children, women, and men are enduring “indescribable suffering” amidst relentless airstrikes and the prolonged blockade that obstructs the delivery of humanitarian supplies and essential goods.

Through its official X account, UNRWA condemned the collective punishment of the Palestinian people, asserting that such actions are unjustifiable under any circumstances. The agency has called for an immediate halt to hostilities and the establishment of mechanisms that prioritize humanitarian access and support for those affected.

As the situation continues to deteriorate, global humanitarian organizations are warning of catastrophic consequences unless urgent measures are taken to secure aid channels and end the violence.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Apr 25, 2025 1:52 am

Gaza Strip waste piles threaten lives

Palestinians in Gaza face severe health risks due to accumulating waste and sewage, worsened by the Israeli occupation's blockade and war, while UN agencies warn of a growing humanitarian disaster

Displaced Palestinians in the Mawasi area of Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, are facing deteriorating health conditions due to the mounting accumulation of waste and garbage, according to the Palestinian Information Centre.

Among them is Um Yasser Dawoud, an asthma patient living in a tent. Her condition has worsened because of the constant foul smell of waste and sewage carried by the wind. “This place has become a source of diseases,” she said. “Stray dogs gather at night and bark loudly, terrifying the children. Mosquitoes and flies never leave our tents.”

The situation is exacerbated by the disposal of animal carcasses in the waste heaps, as the ongoing Israeli bombardment and the difficult living conditions prevent proper burial. “This increases the foul odours and spreads diseases because of the worms coming out of them and the insects infesting the area,” she added.

Health impacts deepen for Gaza’s displaced

In central Gaza City, Mohammed Abu Dan, who lives in al-Saha district, described how informal waste sites have led to his infant daughter suffering from skin irritations due to constant bites from mosquitoes and flies.

“My daughter’s body is covered in tiny blisters, and her skin is irritated because of the insects that never leave my house,” he said. Lacking pesticides or fumigation tools, his attempts to deal with the infestation have been unsuccessful.

He lives in a damaged ground-floor apartment close to a newly formed waste dump, created by residents as the Gaza Municipality cannot transport garbage to proper facilities.

UNRWA, municipalities warn of looming environmental disaster

Meanwhile, Sam Rose, Director of Planning at UNRWA, emphasized the gravity of the situation, stressing, “People are literally living amid waste. Mass displacement has burdened everyone.” The agency previously warned that the build-up of waste in the Gaza Strip presents a serious threat to health, as many people are living in tents surrounded by garbage. The worsening waste crisis, it noted, adds to the already severe environmental and health challenges.

The Union of Gaza Strip Municipalities also sounded the alarm over the escalating humanitarian disaster due to the occupation's relentless war. The union stated that municipalities are unable to function properly because of equipment shortages and widespread destruction of infrastructure, which has crippled essential services.

It called for immediate international assistance to provide municipalities with critical resources, including heavy machinery to manage the estimated 55 million tons of rubble scattered across Gaza’s governorates.

The Gaza Municipality has issued urgent warnings about an unprecedented health and environmental catastrophe. Over 175,000 tons of uncollected solid waste are clogging the streets, while occupation forces block access to the main Juhr al-Dik waste dump.

Municipal spokesperson Hosni Mehanna stated that efforts to mitigate the crisis with the help of international organisations are being obstructed by "Israel’s" refusal to permit new equipment or allow municipal teams to reach the main dump site. He warned of disease outbreaks from uncollected waste, sewage leaks, and decomposing bodies under the rubble of homes and civilian infrastructure.

Urgent need for sustainable waste solutions

The UN Development Programme (UNDP) has also described Gaza’s solid waste crisis as an emergency, calling for swift action. Before the war erupted in October 2023, the UNDP had proposed a long-term plan for sustainable waste management aimed at transitioning to a circular economy. However, war has shifted priorities to immediate humanitarian needs.

The number of waste collection vehicles in Gaza dropped from 112 to 73 between 2017 and 2022. Many of the remaining vehicles are outdated, with each now serving about 21,000 residents, and each sanitation worker responsible for over 3,000 people.

Environmental expert Dr. Nizar al-Wahidi estimates that each person in Gaza generates approximately half a kilogram of waste daily, requiring the disposal of about 1.2 million kilograms of solid waste every day. He warned that makeshift dumps near tents and homes are triggering severe skin and respiratory illnesses, while also fostering the spread of rodents, snakes, and disease-carrying insects. Decomposing waste releases toxic gases and dangerous odors.

“Fifty million cubic meters of sewage per day cannot reach treatment plants because the [Israeli occupation] has destroyed the infrastructure,” he pointed out. Streets are now flooded with sewage, turning into hazardous swamps. He also revealed that "Israel" had cut the only power line to the Deir al-Balah water treatment facility.

Al-Wahidi voiced serious concern about the mixing of organic waste with debris and metals from destroyed homes, which may include hazardous chemicals. If leachate from these dumps contaminates groundwater, untreated drinking water could become lethal. He urged the safe and proper burial of waste per international standards.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Apr 26, 2025 10:51 pm

Exclusive: Al Mayadeen receives
    Hamas' vision for Gaza ceasefire
A senior Palestinian Resistance official tells Al Mayadeen that the proposal calls for an all-in-one agreement between the two parties, ensuring a full prisoner exchange

Hamas is presenting a comprehensive approach aimed at achieving a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and securing a prisoner exchange deal, a senior Palestinian Resistance official told Al Mayadeen on Saturday.

The official explained that the proposal calls for an all-in-one agreement between the two parties, ensuring a full prisoner exchange.

The Resistance is open to a long-term ceasefire lasting up to five years, under regional and international guarantees, according to the official, who maintained that once the framework is agreed upon, the situation on the ground would revert to the status prior to March 2.

    Immediately following the agreement, military operations would cease, Israeli occupation forces would withdraw from the Gaza Strip, and humanitarian aid would be allowed to enter the Palestinian enclave in accordance with an established humanitarian protocol, the official emphasized
As part of the proposal, Hamas suggests the formation of a local committee composed of independent technocrats to administer Gaza, granting it full jurisdiction and responsibilities, the official noted.

The governance committee would be established based on the Egyptian proposal for the community support committee.

The senior official also said that Hamas’ proposal aims to pave the way for achieving a broader national consensus within the framework of previous agreements reached between Palestinian factions, the latest of which is the Beijing Agreement.

Later, Israeli media reported that Mossad chief David Barnea met with the Qatari Prime Minister and discussed two proposals for a ceasefire in Gaza.

According to the media, the first proposal by the Mossad chief is a temporary plan involving the release of a number of Israeli captives in exchange for a short-term ceasefire, while the second calls for the release of all captives in exchange for a long-term ceasefire.

Hamas delegation arrives in Cairo for Gaza ceasefire talks

Earlier on Saturday, Hamas announced the arrival of a high-level delegation, led by the chairman of the Movement's Leadership Council, Mohammad Darwish, in the Egyptian capital, Cairo.

The group confirmed that the delegation has commenced talks with Egyptian officials to present and negotiate its vision for halting the Israeli war on Gaza.

Discussions include a prisoner exchange as part of a comprehensive deal calling for a full withdrawal of Israeli occupation forces and the reconstruction of Gaza.

    The delegation will also discuss the escalating humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza, underscoring the critical urgency of facilitating the swift entry of humanitarian aid, particularly essential supplies such as food and medicine, to alleviate the suffering of civilians in the besieged Strip
In addition, the delegation is engaging in talks on the establishment of a Community Support Committee to oversee governance and essential services in Gaza, while also reviewing recent internal Palestinian developments and exploring strategies to address ongoing political and social challenges.

Meanwhile, AFP, citing a Hamas official, reported that the movement has expressed readiness to accept a comprehensive deal to end the war, which would involve the immediate release of all remaining captives and the implementation of a five-year truce aimed at stabilizing the situation in Gaza.

“Hamas is ready for a single-batch prisoner exchange and a five-year truce,” the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The movement has firmly maintained that any truce must result in the complete end of the war, the total withdrawal of Israeli occupation forces from Gaza, and the prompt and adequate delivery of humanitarian aid to the devastated Palestinian enclave.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Apr 29, 2025 10:47 pm

Israelis kill 34 Palestinians in Gaza in 24h

As the death toll in Gaza skyrockets, UN envoy Riyad Mansour urges international action, warning that the world is growing desensitized to daily killings and displacement under occupation

At least 34 Palestinians have been killed since Tuesday morning, following a series of airstrikes carried out by the Israeli occupation across various areas of the Gaza Strip, according to Al Mayadeen’s correspondent.

In response to the escalating violence, Palestine’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, called on the international community to intensify pressure on Israel to halt its ongoing crimes.

Speaking before the UN Security Council, Mansour stressed that the Palestinian people are being killed and starved on a daily basis. He noted that 70% of the victims are women and children.

Call for urgent international action, support

Mansour urged the adoption of urgent measures to confront settler-colonialism, annexation, and forced displacement, calling for the end of the Israeli occupation's illegal presence in the occupied Palestinian territories, in line with the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice.

He also called for support for the Palestinian government, which has demonstrated a clear commitment to reform and peace, as well as for the political and financial backing of the Arab reconstruction plan and continued support for UNRWA.

Highlighting the growing desensitization of the international community, Mansour warned that the greatest danger lies in the world becoming accustomed to such atrocities. He emphasized that what is happening in Gaza is not war but "cruelty", a term used by Pope Francis to describe the ongoing aggression.

These developments come amid relentless escalation by the Israeli regime, with various parts of Gaza facing continuous aerial, ground, and naval bombardment. The ongoing assault is exacerbating the suffering of civilians and threatens to cause further casualties and widespread destruction.
'Israel' creating conditions incompatible with Gaza's survival: Türk

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, has called for immediate international intervention to prevent Gaza's humanitarian situation from spiraling into an even deeper catastrophe. In a statement issued Tuesday, Türk described the conditions created by "Israel's" total blockade of the Strip as pushing life-saving support systems toward collapse.

"There must be concerted international efforts to stop this humanitarian catastrophe from reaching a new, unseen level," Türk declared.

According to the UN rights chief, Gaza's critical infrastructure has been devastated under the blockade, with essential services like healthcare, clean water, and food supply networks now nearing total failure. Türk warned that the ongoing restrictions appear to be creating conditions that could threaten the very survival of the Palestinian population.

"Israel appears to be inflicting on Palestinians in Gaza conditions of life increasingly incompatible with their continued existence as a group in Gaza," he said.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu May 01, 2025 11:10 pm

Israel using food blockade
    as weapon of war
Palestine's envoy to the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, accused Israel of using the blockade on the Gaza Strip as “a weapon of war,” in an interview with Rudaw. His remarks come as the siege has crossed its 60 day mark, sparking warnings of food insecurity and malnutrition in the Palestinian enclave

Speaking on the sidelines of the United Nations Security Council meeting on Tuesday, Mansour called for an “immediate and permanent ceasefire” in Gaza and the urgent “provision of humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian people.” He accused Israel of “using the lack of food as a weapon in the war, which is cruel, illegal, and inhumane.”

The Palestinian envoy further accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government of “destroying the ceasefire to keep us in square one,” and of not allowing “peace for us and for the Israelis.”

Mansour’s remarks come as the UN Palestinian Refugee Agency (UNRWA) on Thursday warned that “nearly 3,000 UNRWA trucks with lifesaving supplies are waiting outside Gaza,” blocked from entry by Israel. “One million children depend on aid, and without it, their lives are in danger,” the agency cautioned, stressing, “The [border] crossings must reopen and the siege [on Gaza] must be lifted.”

The World Food Programme (WFP) also warned on Wednesday that its food stocks in Gaza “have been fully depleted,” and that it “has no food left to distribute.”

“The situation is growing more desperate every day. We need humanitarian access now,” WFP urged.

In October 2023, the Palestinian movement Hamas launched a large-scale incursion into southern Israel, killing more than 1,170 people, according to Israeli figures. Israel responded with a massive offensive in Gaza that killed 52,000 people, mostly Palestinian civilians, according to the Gaza health ministry. Some 118,014 have also been wounded.

Following 15 months of war, Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire which went into effect in mid-January. However, on March 18, Israel launched new attacks on Gaza, killing more than 2,300 Palestinians and injuring more than 2500 others, according to the Gaza health ministry. Israel says the offensive aims to secure the return of 59 hostages still held by Hamas.

Since early March, Israel has barred all supplies - including food, water and medicine - from entering Gaza, to pressure Hamas to renegotiate the ceasefire.

Notably, the Jerusalem Post on Wednesday reported that Israel is due to restore humanitarian aid to Gaza within weeks whether it reaches a new hostage and ceasefire deal with Hamas or not.

For his part, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday urged the UN Security Council to “take urgent action toward achieving a two-state solution,” which he warned “is near a point of no return.”

Peace is only possible by resolving “a core issue that the Security Council has affirmed and re-affirmed decade after decade… a two-state solution, Israel and Palestine, living side-by-side in peace and security, with Jerusalem as the capital of both states,” Guterres stressed.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/middleeast/01052025
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri May 02, 2025 10:27 am

Gaza kitchens warn food running out

Anera's community kitchens in Khan Younis feeds some 6,000 people each day

A hot meal is hard to come by in the Gaza Strip, but a lunch for needy families in the south is about to be delivered by donkey and cart.

Today's dish is koshari - made with lentils, rice and a zesty tomato sauce - in a set of huge cooking pots in one of two community kitchens run by American Near East Refugee Aid (Anera), a US-based humanitarian organisation.

"People rely on our meals; they have no source of income to buy what's left in the local markets and many foods are not available," says Sami Matar, who leads the Anera team.

"In the past we used to cook rice with meat - with protein. Now, because of the closure, there's no type of meat, no fresh vegetables."

Two months ago, Israel shut all crossings to Gaza – preventing all goods, including food, fuel and medicines from entering - and later resumed its military offensive, ending a two-month ceasefire with Hamas. It said these steps were meant to put pressure on Hamas to release the hostages it still holds.

Recently, the UN's World Food Programme and Unrwa, the agency for Palestinian refugees, said they had used up all their stocks of food aid.

There is growing international pressure on Israel to lift its blockade, with warnings that mass starvation could be imminent and that intentionally starving civilians is a war crime.

"Aid, and the civilian lives it saves, should never be a bargaining chip," the UN's humanitarian chief, Tom Fletcher, warned on Thursday.

"Blocking aid starves civilians. It leaves them without basic medical support. It strips them of dignity and hope. It inflicts a cruel collective punishment. Blocking aid kills."

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are relying on community kitchens for their survival

Hundreds of thousands of Gazans depend on a few dozen remaining kitchens for sustenance. The one run by Anera in Khan Younis feeds some 6,000 people a day.

But if Israel does not lift its blockade, by far the longest it has ever imposed on Gaza, the kitchens - a last lifeline for so many - will soon have nothing to distribute. Food stockpiled during the ceasefire at the start of this year, has all but run out.

"The coming days will be critical. We expect we have two weeks' supply, maybe less," Mr Matar says as he shows a local BBC journalist around the vast, empty Anera warehouse.

"We used to receive more than 100 trucks every week - trucks of food parcels and hygiene kits. Now we don't have anything.

"We struggle to provide food such as rice, lentils, pasta, cooking oil and salt, for our community kitchens. It's very expensive to buy 1kg of wood and we need over 700kg a day for cooking."

A displaced mother said there was no cooking gas or food to make meals for her family

Israel has accused Hamas of stealing and storing humanitarian aid to give to its fighters or sell to raise money. The UN and other agencies deny aid has been diverted and say that they have strict monitoring mechanisms.

"We work hard to avoid any interference from any parties. We have an accurate and strong distribution process," says Mr Matar, inspecting lists of aid recipients on his computer.

"We have a database of hundreds of thousands of people, including their names, ID numbers and addresses - the co-ordinates of the camps. This avoids duplication with the work of other non-governmental organisations and ensures transparency."

Back in the outdoor kitchen, Mr Matar tests the food from the steaming pots to check its quality. Parcels are wrapped up for distribution; each can serve up to four people.

All the workers receive food for their own hungry families.

The rest is soon transferred on the donkey cart through the bustling streets to al-Mawasi, a crowded tent camp for displaced people on the coast, where dozens of field monitors supervise the hand-out.

An elderly man walking with crutches looks relieved as he clutches two parcels of koshari to feed his family of seven. "Thank God, this will be enough," he says.

"Don't even ask me about the situation," he goes on. "We're only alive because death hasn't taken us yet. I swear I was searching for a loaf of bread since the morning, and I found none."

Each of the parcels of food can serve up to four people

"The situation is tragic, and it keeps worsening," comments a weary looking mother. "Life is humiliating here. We have men who are unable to work. There is no income, and all the products are so expensive. We're unable to buy anything."

"At this time, this is excellent," she says of the warm meal she has just been given. "Because there is no cooking gas, no food. When we want to have a cup of tea, I collect leaves to start a fire."

It has now been more than a year and a half since the war in Gaza began, triggered by the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel. That assault killed around 1,200 people and more than 250 people were taken hostage. Some 59 are still held captive, with up to 24 of those believed to be alive.

Israel's military campaign has killed more than 52,400 people in Gaza, mostly women, children and the elderly, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. More than 90% of the 2.1 million population has been displaced - with many forced to flee multiple times.

The UN has warned that the current situation "is likely the worst it has been" due to the blockade, the renewed offensive and evacuation orders that have displaced some 500,000 people since 18 March.

Anera distributes the food to tents in al-Mawasi rather than requiring people to queue for food at the kitchen

There is growing international pressure on Israel to lift its blockade, with warnings that intentionally starving civilians is a potential war crime. The UN says that Israel has a clear obligation under international law as an occupying power to allow and facilitate aid for Gazans.

Last Friday, US President Donald Trump said he had told Israel's Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu that "we've got to be good to Gaza" and pushed him to allow more food and medicine into the strip.

There was no official response to that, but earlier in the week, the Israeli foreign ministry rejected criticism from the UK, France and Germany, which described the blockade as "intolerable" in a joint statement and insisting "this must end."

The ministry said more than 25,000 lorries carrying almost 450,000 tonnes of goods had entered Gaza during the ceasefire. It added: "Israel is monitoring the situation on the ground, and there is no shortage of aid."

Israeli officials have indicated they plan to overhaul the aid distribution system.

For now, supplies are piling up at Gaza's border crossings waiting to be brought in, while inside the territory, aid workers carefully ration what is left of their stock.

In al-Mawasi camp, children gather playfully around Sami Matar and the Anera workers giving out the last of the day's food parcels.

Many are painfully thin, with new warnings of acute malnutrition in Gaza - especially among the young.

Sami Matar appealed to Israel to reopen Gaza's crossings

"I don't know what will happen if our supplies end," says Mr Matar, weighed down by the responsibility of his work.

"The feeling of having to stop this vital help to people would be so stressful and depressing to me and my staff."

"We have an urgent appeal," he continues. "Look at us, see our desperation, understand that time is running out. Please we just need to open the crossings again."

Link to Article - Photos:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx2vz02e7g8o
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat May 03, 2025 7:31 pm

Louis Theroux’s The Settlers:
    A truth the world ignores
Louis Theroux’s documentary, The Settlers, exposes the violent truth behind Israel’s settler movement, land theft, armed ideology, and silenced Palestinian voices

Louis Theroux: The Settlers is a powerful exposé that forces viewers to confront the harsh reality of the Israeli settler movement. More than a travelogue or a neutral survey, this 61‑minute film shines a spotlight on an extremist, hardline ideology that grabs land, pushes out Palestinians, and rejects the thought of peace.

Colonial violence

Theroux opens the documentary in al-Khalil (Hebron), one of the oldest cities in the world, but also a center point of occupation. Armed settlers move freely through Palestinian neighborhoods while residents live in fear of violence, subjected to arbitrary curfews. Concrete barriers and barbed wires cut through streets once shared by families of different faiths. By showing these barriers up close and watching settlers patrol with rifles, Theroux makes it clear that these outposts are built by force, not by any rightful claim.

The film then travels north to an Israeli settlement known for its hard‑line activists. Here, we meet young men who celebrate violence as a way to protect what they claim is their homeland. These interviews are chilling: settlers speak freely about expanding settlements into the West Bank and even Gaza, believing that their interpretation of divine law outweighs all human rights. Theroux doesn’t conceal his disgust, calling out extreme comments as he hears them, demanding that these settlers explain how they can justify taking other people’s land.

The miracle of the settler mindset

Theroux’s interviews also shed a bright light at the contradictions, on one hand interviewed settlers claim that they are armed to protect themselves from Arabs who lust for blood, but minutes later we discover that it’s the other way around; these very same people express their intent to take over land and kick out all the Palestinians just because they are “Arabs”.

Similarly, the British-American journalist made a point of asking each settler he met where he was originally from; the answers varied, but none said they were “from here”. This is a technique often used by the 54-year-old filmmaker, as he would ask subtle questions that seem very casual, often letting his interviewees speak for themselves, revealing their true nature without any pressure.

This ingenious trademark was used multiple times in previous Theroux documentaries. Notably, it worked very well when he went to South Africa and interviewed the Boer leader in the country back in 2008.

Perhaps one of the most chilling ‘characters’ in this documentary is Daniella Weiss, one of the founding mothers of the Israeli settler movement in Occupied Palestine. Watching her interviews was like watching a Disney villain, the evil laughs, the exclusionist mentality, and the unapologetic monstrosity; Theroux managed to get away with calling her a sociopath with just a little violent push, but an extremely telling one.

The Palestinian voice

At the same time, Theroux gives Palestinians the space to share their stories. We hear from Issa Amro, an activist in al-Khalil, who describes his day-to-day life among the IOF and Israeli settlers. These personal accounts bring home the daily humiliation and danger Palestinians face under occupation. Water and electricity are cut without warning; olive groves are ripped up; people of all ages risk being shot just for being Palestinian. By listening to Issa and others, Theroux paints a picture of what it is like to live under a brutal occupation that disregards you as a human being.

Still, one hour can only scratch the surface of an occupation rooted in a century of history and politics. The documentary touches on the 1967 war, but does not fully explain how international law regards these settlements as illegal; viewers who want deeper context on the 1948 Nakba, or United Nations resolutions, will need to look elsewhere. Additionally, due to the Israeli never-ending need for blood, the documentary was shot before the Israeli aggression on the West Bank began this year. Since January 21, 2025, daily incursions, killings, and arrests have taken place in the West Bank as laws get enacted and approved by the Israeli cabinet to further steal land from Palestinians.
Who will finally listen?

While the documentary offers amazing insight into the reality of the occupation of the West Bank and the expansionist settler movement, does it say anything new?

As Theroux’s camera rolls and the settlers excitedly articulate their expansionist vision, there lingers the tragic cry of Palestinians who have been calling out these very injustices for more than 75 years, with little to no response from the outside world. Since the Nakba in 1948, when more than 700,000 Palestinians were uprooted from their homes, survivors and their descendants have carried first-hand testimonies of loss and displacement into international forums, newspapers, classrooms, and courtrooms. UN resolutions, human rights reports, and documentary films have detailed mass expulsions, land seizures, and genocides unfolding, only for mandates to be ignored or suppressed by political vetoes and strategic alliances. The result is a deafening silence in which the Palestinian narrative becomes just “background noise”.

Activists like Issa Amro remind us that these ongoing sufferings are not relics of a distant past but living realities: families still separated by checkpoints and children coming of age knowing nothing beyond the walls they’re confined in. Yet every call for intervention winds its way through the maze of geopolitics, where oil, arms deals, and allegiances continue to outweigh basic human rights.

Voices raised in Palestinian towns and refugee camps have, over and over, fallen on deaf ears in world capitals; petitions to the International Criminal Court stall in a bureaucratic void, while high-profile media coverage too often focuses on episodic violence rather than decades-old systematic dehumanization.

What Louis Theroux achieves in The Settlers is a momentary reminder of the Palestinian cause, by showing Palestinian testimony alongside unvarnished settler rhetoric, he forces viewers to reckon not only with what is being done, but with how long these actions have gone unchallenged.

Yet even these powerful testaments can’t alone break through the stagnation that’s allowed the settler project to endure, and the genocide in Gaza to continue. Unless international law is enforced, unless media coverage shifts from “clashes” to the raw realities on the ground, and unless audiences actively seek out the voices that have for so long been marginalized, Theroux’s film risks becoming another testimony archived, and then forgotten, like so many that preceded it. In that sense, The Settlers both illuminates injustice and echoes a long-asked melancholic question Palestinians have been asking since 1948: Who will finally listen?

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/Art ... ld-ignores
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon May 05, 2025 12:04 pm

Israel cabinet approves
    plan to capture Gaza
Israel's security cabinet has approved a plan to expand its military offensive against Hamas which includes the capture of Gaza and the holding of its territory, according to an Israeli official

It is also said to include moving the 2.1 million Palestinians in Gaza towards the south, which could worsen the humanitarian crisis.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called it a "good plan" because it would achieve the goals of defeating Hamas and returning its remaining hostages, the official said.

The cabinet also approved, in principle, a plan to deliver and distribute humanitarian aid through private companies, which would end a two-month blockade the UN says has caused severe food shortages.

The UN and other aid agencies have said the proposal would be a breach of basic humanitarian principles and that they will not co-operate.

Hamas said Israel's proposal amounted to "political blackmail".

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's security cabinet met on Sunday evening to discuss the Gaza offensive, which resumed when Israel ended a two-month ceasefire on 18 March.

An Israeli official who briefed the media on Monday said that ministers voted unanimously to approve a plan proposed by the Israeli military's Chief of Staff Lt Gen Eyal Zamir to "defeat Hamas in Gaza and return the hostages".

"The plan will include, among other things, the capture of the Strip and holding the territories, moving the Gazan population south for its defence, denying Hamas the ability to distribute humanitarian supplies, and powerful attacks against Hamas," the official said.

Israeli media reported that the plan would take months and that the first stage included the seizure of additional areas of Gaza and the expansion of the Israeli-designated "buffer zone" running along the territory's borders. It would aim to give Israel additional leverage in negotiations with Hamas on a new ceasefire and hostage release deal.

Security cabinet member Zeev Elkin told public broadcaster Kan that there was "still a window of opportunity" for a new hostage release before the end of President Trump's 13-16 May trip to the Middle East "if Hamas understands we are serious".

During a visit to a naval base on Sunday, Lt Gen Zamir told special forces that tens of thousands of reservists were being called up in order to strengthen and expand our operations in Gaza.

"We are increasing the pressure with the aim of bringing our people home and defeating Hamas. We will operate in additional areas and destroy all terrorist infrastructure - above and below ground," he said.

However, critics say this is a failed strategy, as none of the 59 remaining hostages has been freed since the offensive resumed six weeks ago.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, which represents hostages' relatives, said the plan was an admission by the government that it was "choosing territories over the hostages" and that this was "against the will of over 70% of the people" in Israel.

The Israeli official said the security cabinet also approved by a large majority "the possibility of humanitarian distribution - if necessary - that would prevent Hamas from taking control of supplies and would destroy its governmental capabilities".

On Sunday, the Humanitarian Country Team (HCT), a forum that includes UN agencies, said Israeli officials were seeking to "shut down the existing aid distribution system" and "have us agree to deliver supplies through Israeli hubs under conditions set by the Israeli military, once the government agrees to re-open crossings".

The HCT warned that the plan would mean large parts of Gaza, including less mobile and most vulnerable people, would continue to go without supplies.

"It contravenes fundamental humanitarian principles and appears designed to reinforce control over life-sustaining items as a pressure tactic – as part of a military strategy," it said.

"It is dangerous, driving civilians into militarized zones to collect rations, threatening lives, including those of humanitarian workers, while further entrenching forced displacement."

Israel cut off all deliveries of humanitarian aid and other supplies to Gaza aid on 2 March, two weeks before resuming its offensive.

According to the UN, the population is facing a renewed risk of hunger and malnutrition because warehouses are empty, bakeries have shut, and community kitchens are days away from running out of supplies.

The blockade has also cut off essential medicines, vaccines and medical equipment needed by Gaza's overwhelmed healthcare system.

The UN says Israel is obliged under international law to ensure supplies for Gaza's population, almost all of whom have been displaced. Israel says it is complying with international law and there is no shortage of aid.

The Israeli military launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to an unprecedented cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

At least 52,567 people have been killed in Gaza since then, including 2,459 since the Israeli offensive resumed, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwy04km1zk0o
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue May 06, 2025 12:59 am

One child killed every 40 minutes:
    Gaza ministry sounds global alarm
Amid soaring child deaths and a collapsing health system, Gaza authorities launch a global plea to end the famine and save children’s lives

The Palestinian Ministry of Health officially launched earlier today the Global Solidarity Campaign for the Children of Gaza.

In a press conference held at the Nasser Medical Complex, in front of the Tahrir Building, health officials, alongside humanitarian advocates and media representatives, outlined the catastrophic conditions faced by Gaza’s children and called for immediate international intervention.

    The event spotlighted the urgent need for food, medical supplies, and protective measures for the most vulnerable in the population amid the ongoing Israeli genocide
Speakers emphasized that the campaign is not just a symbolic gesture but a call to action for governments, NGOs, journalists, and civil society worldwide to unite in halting the ongoing genocide, ending the blockade-induced famine, and preserving the rights and lives of Gaza’s children.

The ministry reiterated its appeal to the global community, saying, "Saving Gaza’s children is not just an option, it is an urgent, moral, and humanitarian imperative."

Collapsing health system, worsening famine under blockade

The Ministry of Health in Gaza has issued a grave warning over the escalating humanitarian disaster, stating that the Israeli occupation continues its systematic policy of starving more than two million people. For over two months, border crossings have remained sealed to food and medical supplies, while water access has been deliberately cut off, deepening the crisis.

According to the Health Ministry, Gaza is experiencing catastrophic health and humanitarian indicators, leaving no room for timely intervention by international organizations to save lives.

    The ministry confirmed that 16,278 children have been killed, translating to the death of one child every 40 minutes. Moreover, 311 infants were born and killed during the war, underscoring the severe vulnerability of newborns amid ongoing atrocities
The widespread destruction of primary healthcare centers has deprived both children and pregnant women of critical medical care. In addition, 51% of essential maternal and child medications are now unavailable, including therapeutic supplements, vitamins, and vaccinations, further straining the already decimated health infrastructure.

Health officials also reported that the entry of polio vaccines continues to be obstructed, threatening the collapse of the Ministry’s disease prevention campaigns. The blockade has intensified acute malnutrition among Gaza’s children. The number of child deaths due to starvation and related complications has risen to 57, according to official data.

    Further compounding the crisis, the ministry reported that several children were killed in direct attacks on charitable food kitchens while attempting to receive food portions
This unprecedented situation, the ministry stressed, demands urgent and coordinated global action to halt the genocide, lift the blockade, and protect Gaza’s children from further suffering.

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/pol ... ounds-glob
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed May 07, 2025 8:09 pm

IOF airstrikes on Gaza kill 92
including 33 in one massacre


The death toll from the massacre carried out by the Israeli occupation in its bombing of the vicinity of a Thai Restaurant on al-Wehda Street and the surrounding area in the al-Rimal neighborhood, west of Gaza City, has risen to 33 martyrs, with more than 86 others injured so far, Al Mayadeen's correspondent reported

Our correspondent added that a total of 92 people have been killed in Israeli airstrikes on the Gaza Strip since dawn on Wednesday, including 60 in Gaza City alone.

Earlier, the Gaza Ministry of Health confirmed that in 24 hours, hospitals in Gaza received 38 martyrs, including four of whom were retrieved from under the rubble, in addition to 145 injuries.

In its latest report, the ministry announced that the death toll from the ongoing Israeli war on Gaza has reached 52,653 martyrs, while the number of wounded has reached 118,897 since October 7, 2023.

Since March 18, the casualty toll has reached 2,545 martyrs and 6,856 wounded, according to the ministry's report.

Israel deliberately targeting civilian gatherings

Hamas, in a statement, affirmed that the Israeli occupation is deliberately targeting civilian gatherings, including shelters, displacement centers, and food distribution points, as part of a systematic genocide aimed at causing the highest possible number of civilian casualties and breaking the will of the Palestinian people through killing, starvation, and siege.

The group called for “urgent and serious international action to halt this criminal campaign and to deter the terrorist occupation government, which continues to commit war crimes and ethnic cleansing amid a troubling international silence.”

Hamas also urged the masses across the Arab and Islamic worlds, as well as all free people globally, to “intensify popular mobilization by all possible means” in support of the Palestinian people's resilience, in rejection of genocide and starvation, and in demand for holding Israeli leaders accountable as war criminals before international courts.
International silence emboldens 'Israel'

On its part, the Palestinian al-Mujahideen Movement stated that the latest massacre committed by the Israeli occupation reflects “a blatant disregard for the world, international organizations, and international resolutions, particularly the decision of the International Criminal Court.”

The movement condemned the international silence, complicity, and Arab abandonment in the face of Israeli crimes, stressing that this has “emboldened the occupation to continue its campaign of ethnic cleansing and genocide, and to tighten the brutal blockade on the Gaza Strip.”

It also held the US administration fully responsible for all Israeli crimes, calling on Palestinian Resistance fighters to escalate their top-tier and painful strikes against the occupation and its settlers.

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/pol ... -33-in-one
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu May 08, 2025 6:18 pm

Image

Martyr Yahya: Father and journalist who departed
leaving behind an unforgettable glance


Palestinian journalist Yahya Subaih wasn’t holding his camera at that moment. He wasn’t chasing a news story or documenting another massacre. He was simply trying to capture a quiet moment of life at the “Thai” restaurant with his friends—until the Israeli killing machine descended upon the place and reduced it to rubble

There, Yahya was martyred—leaving behind deep human sorrow and three children who are still searching for their father’s face in photographs.

Amira’s final glance

From beneath the rubble, an eternal image emerged: Yahya gazing at his newborn daughter, Amira, with a look unlike any other.

His face radiated love, life, and something indescribable—as if his heart somehow knew it was the last look. It wasn’t the lens of a journalist, but the gaze of a father into the soul of his child, just hours before his death.

Baraa and Kinan: Sudden orphanhood and heavy silence

Yahya had three children: Amira, Baraa, and Kinan. He left them without a goodbye, without telling them a parting story. What remains is sorrow, shock, and an aching longing that words can’t express.

A broken mother’s words, with her head held high

In a moving statement, Yahya’s mother said: “My son died without his camera, while eating like any normal person… He wasn’t carrying a weapon, he wasn’t on a battlefield—he was just a father, a simple man. I always feared for him when he went out to film, but I never thought he’d be taken while sitting in a place that should’ve been safe.”

She told our correspondent: “Yahya’s glance at his daughter Amira before he was martyred tore my heart apart… maybe he felt it was his last look, maybe he knew. I wasn’t by his side. May Allah be pleased with you, my son. I raised a man. My heart is broken, but I hold my head high because of you.”

The human martyr, his image never fades

Though Yahya was not martyred during journalistic work, he was known among his peers as an honest voice, and a lens that captured truth—not spectacle.

He had a heart beating with life, truth, and humanity. His departure was shocking, yet it carried profound symbolism: in the Gaza Strip, even those without a camera are targeted—simply for being Palestinian.

A testimony off-air but etched in history

Yahya fell while seeking life, but his death became a new life in the memory of his people. His final glances, his human presence, and the words he left in the hearts of those who knew him—all turned into a voice that cannot be silenced, and an image that will never die.

The Government Media Office strongly condemned the systematic targeting, killing, and assassination of Palestinian journalists by the Israeli occupation. It called on the International Federation of Journalists, the Arab Journalists Union, and all media bodies across the world to denounce these systematic crimes against journalists and media professionals in the Gaza Strip.

    It confirmed that the number of martyred journalists has risen to 214 following the martyrdom of journalist Yahya Subaih.
It also held the Israeli occupation, the U.S. administration, and countries complicit in the genocide—such as the United Kingdom, Germany, and France—fully responsible for this heinous and brutal crime.

The statement urged the international community and organizations concerned with journalism and media around the world to condemn the crimes of the occupation, to deter and prosecute it in international courts, and to bring its war criminals to justice.

It also called for serious and effective pressure to stop the ongoing genocide, to protect journalists and media workers in the Gaza Strip, and to end the crime of killing and assassinating them.

https://english.palinfo.com/Zionist-Ter ... 08/338887/
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