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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 » Sat Mar 29, 2025 7:56 pm

Israel admits firing at Gaza ambulances

The Israeli Army has repeatedly targeted ambulances and medical teams throughout its war on Gaza, killing hundreds of medical workers while claiming that Palestinian Resistance factions use the ambulances

The Israeli Occupation Army has admitted on Saturday that it opened fire on ambulances in the Gaza Strip after alleging that the medical vehicles were "suspicious vehicles."

The incident took place last Sunday in Tel al-Sultan neighborhood in the southern city of Rafah near the Egyptian border, with the IOF claiming that troops "opened fire toward Hamas vehicles and eliminated several Hamas terrorists," according to AFP.

“A few minutes afterward, additional vehicles advanced suspiciously toward the troops…The troops responded by firing toward the suspicious vehicles, eliminating a number of Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists," the Israeli army claimed without clarifying if any shots were fired from the vehicles.

    On Monday, Gazan Civil Defense stated that it had lost contact with a team of six rescuers who were dispatched to Tel al-Sultan to respond to deaths and injuries, and on Friday, it reported that it found the body of the team leader and the rescue vehicles, which were completely destroyed
It stated that after a preliminary investigation, it found that some of the suspicious vehicles were ambulances and fire trucks, condemning what it alleged to be the repeated misuse of ambulances "by terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip for terrorist purposes."

Basem Naim, a member of Hamas’s politburo, accused Israel of “a deliberate and brutal massacre against civil defence and Palestinian Red Crescent teams in the city of Rafah."

This comes as Israel continues to intensify its war on Gaza, striking numerous parts of the enclave, killing and wounding hundreds of civilians.

In the past 24 hours, Gaza hospitals received 26 Palestinian martyrs, including one whose body was retrieved from the rubble, along with 70 injuries. A number of victims remain trapped under the rubble and on the streets, as ambulance and civil defense teams are unable to reach them.

Since March 18, 2025, the total number of martyrs has risen to 921, while the number of injuries has reached 2,054. The overall toll of the Israeli genocide since October 7, 2023, has now reached 50,277 martyrs and 114,095 injuries.

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/pol ... rs-missing
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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 » Sat Mar 29, 2025 8:06 pm

Remembering Hind Rajab:

A child’s life lost to Israel’s brutal war crimes in Gaza

On 29 January 2024, the world was shaken by the brutal killing of Hind Rajab, a 5-year-old Palestinian girl whose life was cruelly cut short during Israel’s brutal assault on Gaza.

Hind’s story is not just a personal tragedy – it is a symbol of the ongoing suffering endured by thousands of Palestinian children and families under occupation and assault.

“Please, come get me”

Terror and desperation marked Hind’s final moments. She was trapped in a car with her family, surrounded by Israeli tanks as bombardments raged across Gaza City. Her relatives were killed before her eyes, leaving her alone in the wreckage, pleading for rescue.

Israel claimed that there weren’t any troops present in the neighbourhood and denied carrying out the attack. However, this was refuted by investigations relying on satellite imagery and visual evidence, which concluded that several Israeli tanks were indeed present, and that one had likely fired 335 rounds on the car that Rajab and her family had been in, with tank operators being able to see that the car had civilians including children in it.

    In a harrowing phone call to emergency responders, 5-year-old Hind’s voice echoed the raw fear of a child facing unimaginable horror. “Please, come get me,” she begged, her words capturing the helplessness of Gaza’s most vulnerable
After hours of waiting, Palestinian paramedics were given the green light by Israeli forces to go to the aid of Hind. But within moments of the ambulance reaching her car, it was fired at by Israeli soldiers – killing the two Palestnian paramedics attempting to rescue Hind Rajab

Killing Gaza’s children

Hind Rajab’s murder is not an isolated incident – it reflects a horrifying pattern of violence against Palestinian children. According to reports, at least 17,400 Palestinian children have been killed during Israel’s attacks on Gaza since October 2023 – that’s one child killed every 30 minutes.

These children were not militants or combatants; they were students, dreamers, and symbols of Gaza’s resilience.

The killing of Hind Rajab drew widespread condemnation, yet accountability remains elusive. Calls for investigations into war crimes in Gaza continue to face political obstacles, leaving perpetrators unpunished and victims without justice.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) recently acknowledged that Israel’s actions in Gaza could plausibly amount to genocide, yet the violence persists.

A call to action

      Hind Rajab’s name must never be forgotten
One year on, the world must remember Hind Rajab – not just as a victim of Israel’s aggression but as a symbol of Palestinian innocence stolen by violence. Her cries for help remain unanswered, but her legacy must inspire us to fight for justice

Hind’s killing underscores the systemic targeting of civilians, including rescue workers and medics.

As we mark the anniversary of her killing, we must translate grief into action:

    Demand accountability – Write to your MP, urging the UK government to support investigations into war crimes in Gaza.

    Raise awareness – Share Hind’s story and the broader crisis in Gaza on social media and within your community.

    Support boycotts and sanctions – Join the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement to pressure Israel to comply with international law.

    Defend Palestinian children’s rights – Advocate for an end to arms sales to Israel and increased humanitarian aid for Gaza’s besieged population.
The Hind Rajab Foundation has been set up in her honour, who are engaging in legal action across the world against every Israeli soldier, accomplice and inciter of the war crimes in Gaza

https://www.interpal.org/20250201-remem ... s-in-gaza/
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Apr 02, 2025 9:06 am

Gaza offensive expands seizing large areas

Jerusalem, Undefined (AFP) - Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz announced Wednesday a major expansion of a military operation in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip, saying the army would seize large areas of the Palestinian territory

The expanded operation would "seize large areas that will be incorporated into Israeli security zones", he said, without saying how much territory Israel would take.

The announcement comes after he warned last week the military would soon "operate with full force" in additional parts of Hamas-run Gaza.

    Israel restarted intense bombing of Gaza on March 18 and then launched a new ground offensive, ending a nearly two-month ceasefire in the war with Hamas
The war was sparked by Hamas's October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Israel's retaliatory military campaign has killed at least 50,357 people in Gaza, the majority of them civilians, according to the territory's health ministry.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Apr 02, 2025 10:03 am

Paramedics shot by IOF had hands tied

Israel previously admitted that its troops shot at a medical convoy, accusing Hamas of "exploiting the ambulances" without providing any evidence

Some of the 15 paramedics who were killed by the Israeli Occupation Forces in Rafah had their hands and legs tied before being buried in a mass grave, two eyewitnesses reported on Wednesday.

In the early hours of March 23, Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance crews and Civil Defense rescue workers were dispatched to al-Hashashin in Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city, to respond to an airstrike, before Gazan Civil Defense lost contact with them.

    “I was able to see three bodies when they were transferred to the Nasser hospital. They had bullets in their chest and head. They were executed. They had their hands tied,’’ Dr. Ahmed al-Farra said, adding, “They tied them so they were unable to move and then they killed them.”
Al-Farra is a senior doctor at the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis. He saw the remains of some of the paramedics as they arrived to the medical facility.

He shared photographs which he took upon the arrival of one of the deceased at the hospital, showing a hand emerging from the sleeve of a long black shirt with a black cord tightly knotted around the wrist, The Guardian reported.

An official from an international aid agency, who participated in recovering remains from Rafah on Sunday, described seeing evidence that one of the deceased had been shot after being detained.

    “I saw the bodies with my own eyes when we found them in the mass grave,” the witness, who preferred to remain anonymous, told The Guardian, noting, “They had signs of multiple shots in the chest. One of them had legs tied. One was shot in the head. They were executed.”
Dr. Bashar Murad, the Red Crescent’s director of health programs in Gaza, stated that at least one of the recovered paramedics had been found with his hands tied and that one had been on a call with the ambulance dispatcher when the attack occurred.

“The gunshots were fired from a close distance. They could be heard on the call between the signal officer and of the medical crews that survived and phoned the ambulance centre for help. The soldiers’ voices were clearly audible in Hebrew and very close, as well as the sound of the gunfire," Murad told The Guardian.

He added that the dispatcher heard one of the Israeli troops saying, “Gather them at the wall and bring some restraints to tie them.”

Mahmoud Basal, spokesperson for the Palestinian Civil Defense in Gaza, stated that the bodies were found with around 20 gunshot wounds each and confirmed that at least one had their legs bound.

Believed to have been killed on March 23, two of the victims lost their lives in the early hours when their ambulance, en route to retrieve injured people from an earlier airstrike, came under Israeli fire.

    The remaining 13 were part of a convoy of ambulances and Civil Defense vehicles sent to recover the bodies of their two colleagues, including a UN employee, with Red Crescent paramedic Assad al-Nassasra still missing
The UN reported that ambulances and other vehicles, along with the bodies of the dead, were buried in sand by bulldozers in what seemed to be an attempt to conceal the killings, with video footage captured by the recovery team revealing a crushed UN vehicle, ambulances, and a fire truck, all flattened and buried in the sand by the Israeli military.

Israel admits to shooting at Gaza ambulances

The Israeli Occupation Army admitted on March 29 that it had opened fire on ambulances in the Gaza Strip, claiming the medical vehicles were "suspicious."

The incident occurred in the Tel al-Sultan neighborhood of Rafah, a southern city near the Egyptian border, where the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) stated that their troops "opened fire on Hamas vehicles, killing several Hamas militants."

“A few minutes afterward, additional vehicles advanced suspiciously toward the troops…The troops responded by firing toward the suspicious vehicles, eliminating a number of Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists," the Israeli army claimed without clarifying if any shots were fired from the vehicles.

It stated that after a preliminary investigation, it found that some of the suspicious vehicles were ambulances and fire trucks, condemning what it alleged to be the repeated misuse of ambulances "by terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip for terrorist purposes."

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

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Apr 03, 2025 8:38 am

Lone survivor of attack on Gaza ambulances

Paramedic Munther Abed survived the attack that killed 15 emergency workers by diving to the floor in the back of his ambulance

"I'm the only survivor who saw what happened to my colleagues," Munther Abed says, scrolling through pictures of his fellow paramedics on his phone.

He survived the Israeli attack that killed 15 emergency workers in Gaza by diving to the floor in the back of his ambulance, as his two colleagues in the front were shot in the early hours of 23 March.

"We left the headquarters roughly at dawn," he told one of the BBC's trusted freelance journalists working in Gaza, explaining how the response team from the Palestinian Red Crescent, Gaza's Civil Defence agency and the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) gathered on the edge of the southern city of Rafah after receiving reports of gunfire and wounded people.

"Roughly by 04:30, all Civil Defence vehicles were in place. At 04:40 the first two vehicles went out. At 04:50, the last vehicle arrived. At around 05:00, the agency [UN] car was shot at directly in the street," he says.

The Israeli military says its forces opened fire because the vehicles were moving suspiciously towards soldiers without prior co-ordination and with their lights off. It also claimed that nine Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad operatives were killed in the incident.

A UN official posted a photo of what he said was the "mass grave" where the emergency workers' bodies were found

Munther challenges that account

"During day and at night, it's the same thing. External and internal lights are on. Everything tells you it's an ambulance vehicle that belongs to the Palestinian Red Crescent. All lights were on until the vehicle came under direct fire," he says.

After that, he adds, he was pulled from the wreckage by Israeli soldiers, arrested and blindfolded. He claimed he was interrogated over 15 hours, before being released.

The BBC has put his claims to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), but it is yet to respond.

"The IDF did not randomly attack an ambulance," Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar claimed, when questioned at a news conference, echoing the IDF's statements.

"Several uncoordinated vehicles were identified advancing suspiciously toward IDF troops without headlights or emergency signals. IDF troops then opened fire at the suspected vehicles."

He added: "Following an initial assessment, it was determined that the forces had eliminated a Hamas military terrorist, Mohammed Amin Ibrahim Shubaki, who took part in the October 7 massacre, along with eight other terrorists from Hamas and the Islamic Jihad."

    Shubaki's name is not on the list of the 15 dead emergency workers - eight of whom were Palestinian Red Crescent medics, six were Civil Defence first responders, and one was an Unrwa staff member
Israel has not accounted for the whereabouts of Shubaki's body or offered any evidence of the direct threat the emergency workers posed.

Munther rejects Israel's claim that Hamas may have used the ambulances as cover.

    "That's utterly untrue. All crews are civilian," he says
"We don't belong to any militant group. Our main duty is to offer ambulance services and save people's lives. No more, no less".

    The father of paramedic Ashraf Abu Labda said he was killed in "cold blood"
Gaza's paramedics carried their own colleagues to their funerals earlier this week. There was an outcry of grief along with calls for accountability. One bereaved father told the BBC that his son was killed "in cold blood".

International agencies could only access the area to retrieve their bodies a week after the attack. They were found buried in sand alongside the wrecked ambulances, fire truck and UN vehicle.

Sam Rose, acting director of Unrwa's Gaza office, says: "What we know is that fifteen people lost their lives, that they were buried in shallow graves in a sand berm in the middle of the road, treated with complete indignity and what would appear to be an infringement of international humanitarian law.

"But it's only if we have an investigation, a full and complete investigation, that we'll be able to get to the bottom of it."

A funeral for the Palestinian Red Crescent medics was held in the southern city of Khan Younis on Monday

Israel is yet to commit to an investigation. According to the UN, at least 1,060 healthcare workers have been killed since the start of the conflict.

"Certainly all ambulance workers, all medics, all humanitarian workers inside Gaza right now feel increasingly insecure, increasingly fragile," Mr Rose says.

One paramedic is still unaccounted for following the 23 March incident.

"They were not just colleagues but friends", Munther says, nervously running prayer beads through his fingers. "We used to eat, drink, laugh and have jokes together... I consider them my second family."

"I will expose the crimes committed by the occupation [Israel] against my colleagues. If I was not the only survivor, who could have told the world what they did to our colleagues, and who would have told their story?"

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ckgere1y740o
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Apr 03, 2025 8:49 am

Israeli war on Gaza defies
decency - law - humanity


The UN's Jonathan Whittall declared that there are no "humanitarian solutions" as he urged political action and accountability

A senior UN official has condemned Israel's war on Gaza, calling it "a war without limits" as aid workers continue to be targeted.

    In a video conference, Jonathan Whittall, senior humanitarian affairs officer at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in the occupied Palestinian territory, cited the Israeli killing of 15 humanitarian workers whose bodies were discovered in a mass grave in the Gaza Strip, saying, "They were killed while trying to save lives."
Palestinian civil defense teams announced on Sunday that they had recovered the bodies of 15 martyrs in the Tal al-Sultan area of Rafah, southern Gaza. The victims, killed in an Israeli targeting, included civil defense personnel, Palestinian Red Crescent medics, and an employee for UNRWA.

Whittall called the case "emblematic" of the low point reached in Gaza, detailing how what is taking place "defies decency, it defies humanity, it defies the law. It really is a war without limits."

He emphasized the severe situation, stating that "as of today, 64% of Gaza is under active forced displacement orders or falls within the so-called buffer zone."

    He cautioned that "nowhere and no one is safe in Gaza" as victims are bombarded while attempting to get food, and aid depots are destroyed
The official rejected Israeli assertions that Gaza has enough food. "Supplies were literally drip-fed" into the strip, Whittall argued.

"There are no humanitarian solutions to the crisis," he said, urging political action and accountability.

Despite the tragedy, he emphasized that Palestinians maintain optimism, adding that "hope dies last in Gaza," encouraging nations to uphold international law and advocate for a ceasefire.

    Since Israel renewed its aggression on the Strip on March 18, 2025, the toll has climbed to 1,066 martyrs and 2,597 injuries. The cumulative toll of the genocide since October 7, 2023, has now climbed to 50,423 martyrs and 114,638 injuries, according to the latest figures from Gaza’s Health Ministry
Several victims remain under the rubble and on the streets, unable to be reached by ambulances and civil defense teams.

As for today's strikes, Al Mayadeen's correspondent in Gaza reported that Israeli airstrikes since dawn Wednesday have killed over 68 Palestinians, as relentless bombardment across the Strip continues.

Gaza bakeries shut down due to severe fuel, flour shortages amid siege

Every bakery in the Gaza Strip has suspended operations indefinitely due to a serious lack of flour and fuel, which resulted from a month-long Israeli siege that prevented these basic supplies from entering the Strip.

According to Abdel Nasser al-Ajrami, the chairman of the Gaza Bakery Association, the closing of bakeries in Gaza means the halt of all bakeries participating in the World Food Programme (WFP).

    Al-Ajrami described the present scenario as an ongoing hunger war, with bakeries in the southern Gaza Strip closing their doors yesterday and those in central and northern Gaza anticipated to follow suit starting today
According to al-Ajrami, the bakery closures are the direct result of "Israel's" ongoing blockade of products, which has resulted in significant shortages of not just flour and fuel but also yeast. He went on to say that the scenario is increasing Gaza's dismal living circumstances, which have already been hampered by continued Israeli aggression, with inhabitants now facing a lack of cooking gas.

The Gaza Strip normally uses 450 tons of flour each day, with bakeries providing around 50% of the population's needs. The area has 140 operational bakeries, 70 of which are automated. Israeli bombings have damaged a considerable number of these bakeries, mainly in northern Gaza, causing damages estimated in the millions of dollars.

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

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Apr 04, 2025 8:51 pm

Horrific night by IOF in Gaza

The ongoing Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip continues to take a devastating toll, with 86 martyrs and 287 injuries reported in the past 24 hours, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza

Gaza hospitals are overwhelmed as the casualties from the recent attacks continue to pour in.

Since March 18, 2025, the total number of martyrs has reached 1,249, with 3,022 injuries reported. The overall toll from the Israeli aggression, which began on October 7, 2023, has now risen to a staggering 50,609 martyrs and 115,063 injuries, according to the Health Ministry.

The dire situation in Gaza continues to worsen as the international community grapples with the impact of this brutal escalation.

Earlier today, the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) infiltrated the northern Gaza Strip and clashed with Palestinian Resistance fighters.

IOF tanks advanced in the Al-Shujaiya neighborhood in northern Gaza, Al Mayadeen's correspondent reported, adding that clashes were ongoing between Israeli troops and Palestinian Resistance fighters.

Meanwhile, Israeli Channel 12 reported that the operation conducted by the IOF's 252nd Division in Al-Shujaiya was supported by a wide wave of airstrikes, and Yediooth Ahronoth reported that "the Israeli army is expanding the buffer zone on Gaza's border," noting that "252nd Division troops are operating at the outskirts of Al-Shujaiya neighborhood."

This comes as the Israeli Occupation has killed more than a hundred people in the Gaza Strip in 24 hours, as part of its renewed war on Gaza after "Israel" ditched the ceasefire agreement in favor of a US proposal that ignores that original deal.
Israeli aggression on Gaza kills 112 Palestinians in 24 hours

Israeli airstrikes on Gaza have killed at least 112 Palestinians since dawn on Thursday, with 71 of the victims reported in Gaza City, an Al Mayadeen correspondent in the blockaded Strip reported.

The Israeli military targeted a school sheltering displaced families in Gaza City's al-Tuffah neighborhood, killing 31 people, including women, children, and the elderly, while three others remain missing. Dozens were injured in the attack.

    Among the victims 18 children, a woman, and an elderly person
The Israeli air force also launched intense strikes on multiple schools across Gaza City, further exacerbating the humanitarian crisis.

According to Gaza’s Government Media Office, the Israeli regime has so far bombed 229 displacement and shelter centers in a flagrant violation of international law.

"This brutal Israeli aggression comes amid an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe," the office continued. "The health sector is on the verge of total collapse due to the destruction of hospitals and the ongoing blockade, making it extremely difficult to provide medical care to the wounded."

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

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Apr 05, 2025 11:48 am

Video contradicts Israeli account
    of Gaza medic killings
Mobile phone footage has emerged that appears to contradict Israel's account of why soldiers opened fire on a convoy of ambulances and a fire truck, killing 15 rescue workers

The video published by the New York Times, and said to have been filmed by a Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) paramedic who was killed, shows the vehicles moving in darkness with headlights and emergency flashing lights switched on early on the morning of 23 March - before coming under fire.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) initial statement said "several uncoordinated vehicles were identified advancing suspiciously toward IDF troops without headlights or emergency signals. IDF troops then opened fire at the suspected vehicles."

A surviving paramedic previously told the BBC that the ambulances were clearly marked and had their internal and external lights on.

The IDF has been approached for comment about the video, which the PRCS said had been shown to the UN Security Council.

    The video shows the marked vehicles drawing to a halt on the edge of the road, lights still flashing, and at least two emergency workers stepping out wearing reflective clothing

    The windscreen of the vehicle being filmed from is cracked and shooting can then be heard lasting for several minutes as the person filming says prayers. He is understood to be one of the dead paramedics.
The footage was found on his phone after his body was recovered from a shallow grave one week after the incident. The bodies of the eight paramedics, six Gaza Civil Defence workers and one UN employee were found buried in sand, along with their wrecked vehicles. It took international organisations days to negotiate safe access to the site.

Israel claimed a number of Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants had been killed in the incident, but it has not provided any evidence or further explained the threat to its troops.

Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar earlier this week echoed the army account, saying "the IDF did not randomly attack an ambulance".

The IDF promised to investigate the circumstances after a surviving paramedic questioned its account.

In an interview with the BBC, paramedic Munther Abed said: "During day and at night, it's the same thing. External and internal lights are on. Everything tells you it's an ambulance vehicle that belongs to the Palestinian Red Crescent. All lights were on until the vehicle came under direct fire."

He also denied he or his team had any militant connections.

"All crews are civilian. We don't belong to any militant group. Our main duty is to offer ambulance services and save people's lives. No more, no less," he said.

    Speaking at the United Nations yesterday the President of the PRCS, Dr Younis Al-Khatib, referred to the video recording, saying: "I heard the voice of one of those team members who was killed. His last words before being shot…'forgive me mum, I just wanted to help people. I wanted to save lives'. It's heartbreaking"
He called for "accountability" and "an "independent and thorough investigation" of what he called an "atrocious crime".

One paramedic is still unaccounted for following the 23 March incident.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4g2z103nqxo
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Apr 05, 2025 10:22 pm

Israel backtracks on lies
footage exposes murder of Gaza medics


The Israeli occupation has changed its narrative after being exposed for deliberately executing 15 paramedics in Rafah last month

The video footage exposing the Israeli occupation forces' execution of 15 medics in Rafah has forced "Israel" to backtrack on its fabricated narrative, claiming its lies were "unintentionally made".

Further claims were made and later debunked by video evidence, including that the ambulances did not have their emergency light on, and that the Israeli forces came under fire. The later Israeli military report claimed that the Israeli forces hid the bodies and the ambulances under the sand "to prevent them from being eaten by wild animals."

This procedure was unusual for their forces committing genocide and leaving bodies in the streets left and right for one and a half years intentionally, for them to be eaten by wild animals later on, which suggests that the IOF did it to hide evidence.

What actually happened

The New York Times obtained video retrieved from the cell phone of a Palestinian paramedic, whose body was discovered alongside 14 other aid workers in a mass grave in Gaza in late March, showing clearly marked ambulances and a fire truck with emergency lights activated as they came under heavy Israeli gunfire.

The Israeli military spokesperson, Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani, had denied that Israeli forces had "randomly" attacked an ambulance. He claimed that multiple vehicles had been seen "advancing suspiciously" without headlights or emergency signals toward Israeli troops, prompting the shooting. He also claimed that nine of the individuals killed were Palestinian Resistance fighters.

    However, a seven-minute video shot from inside a moving vehicle was recovered, depicting a convoy of ambulances and a fire truck, all clearly marked and displaying both headlights and flashing emergency lights, driving southward on a road north of Rafah just after sunrise
The convoy halts when it comes across a damaged ambulance on the roadside—an earlier vehicle sent to aid injured civilians had reportedly come under attack. The new rescue vehicles move to the side of the road. At least two uniformed rescue workers are seen exiting the fire truck and ambulance, both bearing the Red Crescent emblem, and approaching the damaged vehicle.

Suddenly, intense gunfire erupts. The barrage of bullets can be seen and heard striking the convoy. The footage shakes and then goes dark, though the audio continues for five minutes with unrelenting gunfire. A man’s voice is heard in Arabic noting the presence of Israeli soldiers.

The paramedic filming the attack is repeatedly heard reciting the shahada, the Islamic declaration of faith typically spoken when facing death. He asks for forgiveness and expresses that he knows he is going to die.

“Forgive me, mother. This is the path I chose — to help people,” he says.

According to PRCS spokesperson Nebal Farsakh, speaking from Ramallah, the paramedic who filmed the video was later found with a gunshot wound to the head in the mass grave. His identity has not been made public due to concerns for the safety of his family still living in Gaza, a UN diplomat confirmed.

Israel's so-called investigation

The Israeli Kan 11 reported on Saturday that the Israeli military will present the findings of its investigation into last month’s targeting of ambulance crews in Rafah to Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir tomorrow.

According to the channel, the investigation was led by the commander of the Southern Command, Yaniv Assor, and revealed the sequence of events in the Tal al-Sultan area of Rafah.

The investigation claimed that “ambulances belonging to the Palestinian Red Crescent moved through the area in coordination with the army at 4:00 p.m., and at 4:30 p.m., a Hamas vehicle equipped with blue emergency lights arrived and came under fire from a unit belonging to the Golani Brigade, resulting in the death of one Hamas member and the arrest of two others.”

The report added that later, around 6:00 p.m., “a convoy of four ambulances arrived and stopped near the vehicle that had been targeted. Soldiers felt threatened and believed it to be an attempted attack, even though the medics were unarmed, prompting them to open fire,” denying that there was any “deliberate deception.”

Regarding the false claim that the ambulances were not using emergency lights—a claim debunked by video footage published by The New York Times—the Israeli military said that “the unit commander reported that no lights were visible,” which led to the gunfire, acknowledging a “gap in reporting.”

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Apr 06, 2025 6:03 pm

Gaza children slaughtered
    amid violent air strikes
Amid relentless Israeli bombardment, Gaza’s death toll has surged again—46 lives lost in just hours, including children killed in airstrikes on homes and displacement camps

In a statement released Sunday, the Ministry confirmed that several victims remain trapped under the rubble and in the streets, where emergency and civil defense crews are unable to reach them due to ongoing Israeli assualts.

The health authorities noted that since March 18, 2025, at least 1,335 people have been killed and 3,297 have been injured, highlighting a steep escalation in the humanitarian crisis.

The cumulative toll from the Israeli genocide, which began on October 7, 2023, has now reached 50,695 killed and 115,338 injured, according to the Ministry’s latest figures.

46 killed since morning

46 Palestinians were killed in Gaza in only a couple of hours since the early morning amid continued Israeli bombardment across the Strip. Warplanes persistently hover overhead, targeting civilian gatherings and homes, while invading units open fire in multiple areas, exacerbating the humanitarian catastrophe.

In southern Gaza’s Khan Younis, Israeli artillery shelled the Abu Amer area in eastern Aabasan al-Kabira, killing and injuring several people. Ambulance crews faced serious obstacles reaching the wounded due to relentless strikes.

An air raid on a home in the Khan Younis refugee camp claimed the life of a young girl and left others injured. Meanwhile, a father and daughter were killed in an attack on tents sheltering forcibly displaced families in al-Mawasi. Rescue teams also retrieved the body of a child previously buried under rubble in Bani Suheila.

    Simultanously, invading Israeli units demolished multiple homes in Qizan Raswan and bulldozed extensive farmland, destroying large swaths of agricultural land in the area
In Rafah, the Israeli army flattened a residential block near Al-Fadila School and advanced toward a junction, demolishing nearby houses and uprooting agricultural terrain in southern Khan Younis.

Reports indicate that Israeli troops are creating a separation corridor between Rafah and Khan Younis. In its wake, large-scale destruction has forcibly displaced residents and obliterated vital farmland — a deliberate blow to Gaza’s food supply in the south.

Southern Khan Younis neighborhoods — including al-Mawasi, Qizan Raswan, al-Najjar, al-Manara, the European Hospital zone, and al-Fukhari — remain under immediate threat from ongoing air and artillery attacks.
Gaza municipality: Infrastructure in ruins, services on the brink

Meanwhile, municipal spokesperson Husni Muhanna warned of a total collapse in Gaza City’s basic services, citing extensive damage to infrastructure.

“There is a critical shortage of services due to the destruction of essential facilities,” he told Al Mayadeen. “Our teams can no longer meet even the most basic needs of the population.”

According to Muhanna, more than 75% of municipal buildings and equipment have been destroyed. Residents are returning to burnt or structurally unstable homes as the breakdown of sanitation and water systems worsens public health risks.

“We’re witnessing the return of famine and a deepening water crisis,” he added.

It is worth noting that Israeli occupation forces have destroyed 164 water wells and intentionally targeted pipelines, compounding the suffering of an already besieged population. Waste continues to pile up in the streets, creating a ticking environmental and health time bomb.

    Education Ministry: Over 17,000 Children Killed in Gaza Since October
More than 17,000 Palestinian children have been killed in Gaza since October 2023, making them among the most heavily targeted victims of Israeli military aggression, the Palestinian Education Ministry announced on Saturday, according to Anadolu Agency.

In a statement released on Palestinian Child’s Day, observed every April 5, the Ministry said, "Education in Palestine, particularly in Gaza, is under direct attack by the Israeli occupation, which continues to destroy schools and prevent children from accessing safe educational environments.”

It emphasized that students across Gaza, occupied al-Quds, and the so-called “Area C” regions of the occupied West Bank endure daily hardship due to the ongoing war.

“More than 17,000 children have been martyred in Gaza,” the statement said, adding that this devastating toll “reflects the depth of the tragedy children are enduring, with each number representing a life, memories, and experiences lost.”

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Apr 07, 2025 2:01 pm

Gazan detainees tell BBC of torture
by IDF and Israel Prison Service


Warning: This article contains distressing content

Palestinian detainees released back to Gaza have told the BBC they were subjected to mistreatment and torture at the hands of Israeli military and prison staff, adding to reports of misconduct within Israel's barracks and jails.

One man said he was attacked with chemicals and set alight. "I thrashed around like an animal in an attempt to put the fire out on my body," said Mohammad Abu Tawileh, a 36-year-old mechanic.

We have conducted in-depth interviews with five released detainees, all of whom were arrested in Gaza in the months after Hamas and other groups killed about 1,200 people in Israel and took 251 hostage. The men were held under Israel's Unlawful Combatants Law, external, a measure by which people suspected of posing a security risk can be detained for an unspecified period without charge, as Israel set out to recover the hostages and dismantle the proscribed terror group.

The men say they were accused of having links with Hamas and questioned over the location of hostages and tunnels, but were not found to be involved in the 7 October 2023 attacks - a condition Israel had set for anyone released under the recent ceasefire deal.

Some of those freed under the deal were serving sentences for other serious crimes, including the killing of Israelis, but that was not the case for our interviewees. We also asked the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the Israel Prison Service (IPS) if there were any convictions or accusations against the men but they did not respond to that question.

In the men's testimony:

    They each describe being stripped, blindfolded, cuffed and beaten

    Some also say they were given electric shocks, menaced by dogs, and denied access to medical care

    Some say they witnessed the deaths of other detainees

    One says he witnessed sexual abuse

    Another says he had his head dunked in chemicals and his back set on fire
We have seen reports by a lawyer who visited two of the men in prison, and have spoken to medical staff who treated some of them on their return.

The BBC sent a lengthy right of reply letter to the IDF which laid out in detail the men's allegations and their identities.

In its statement, the IDF did not respond to any of the specific allegations, but said it "completely rejects accusations of systematic abuse of detainees".

It said some of the cases raised by the BBC would be "examined by the relevant authorities". It added that others "were brought without sufficient detail, without any detail regarding the identity of the detainees, making them impossible to examine".

It continued: "The IDF takes any… actions which contradict its values very seriously… Specific complaints about inappropriate behaviour by detention facility staff or insufficient conditions are forwarded for examination by the relevant authorities and are dealt with accordingly. In appropriate cases, disciplinary actions are taken against the staff members of the facility, and criminal investigations are opened."

The IPS said it was not aware of any of the claims of abuse described in our investigation, in its prisons. "As far as we know, no such events have occurred under IPS responsibility," it added.

Dr Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne, co-director of the Centre for International Law at the University of Bristol, said the treatment the men described was "entirely inconsistent with both international law and Israeli law", and in some cases would "meet the threshold of torture".

    "Under international law, the law of armed conflict requires you to treat all detainees humanely," he said. "The obligations relating to the basic needs of detainees are unaffected by any alleged wrongdoing."
Mohammad Abu Tawileh shows the scars he says were inflicted by IDF soldiers

The five Palestinians interviewed in depth were returned earlier this year under the ceasefire deal with Hamas - the group that led the 7 October 2023 attacks on Israel.

They were among about 1,900 Palestinian prisoners and detainees exchanged for 33 Israeli hostages, eight dead and 25 living, some of whom have described being abused, starved and threatened by their Hamas captors.

    Female hostages previously released have detailed physical and sexual assaults in captivity
The five released Palestinian detainees all described the same pattern - being arrested in Gaza, taken into Israel to be detained first in military barracks before being moved on to prison, and finally released back to Gaza months later.

They said they had been abused at every stage of the process.

More than a dozen other released detainees, whom the BBC spoke to more briefly as they arrived home in Gaza, also gave accounts of beatings, hunger and disease.

    These, in turn, align with testimony given by others to Israeli human rights group B'Tselem and the United Nations, which in July detailed reports from returning detainees that they had been stripped naked, deprived of food, sleep and water, subjected to electric shocks and burned with cigarettes, and had dogs set on them
A further report by UN experts last month, external documented cases of rape and sexual assault, and said using this as a threat was "standard operating procedure" for the IDF. Israel responded to say it "categorically rejects the unfounded allegations".

As Israel does not currently allow international journalists free access to Gaza, our interviews were conducted by phone call and text message, and also in person by our contracted freelancers in the territory.

All five men told us their abuse had begun at the moment of their arrest - when they said they had been stripped, blindfolded and beaten.

Mechanic Mohammad Abu Tawileh told us he had been tortured for days.

He was taken by soldiers to a building not far from the location of his arrest in March 2024, he said, and held in a room - the sole detainee there - for three days of interrogation by troops.

Soldiers mixed chemicals used for cleaning into a pot, he told us, and dunked his head in them. The interrogators then punched him, he said, and he fell to the rubble-strewn floor, injuring his eye. He said they then covered his eye with a cloth, which he said "worsened his injury". They also set him alight, he told us.

"They used an air freshener with a lighter to set my back on fire. I thrashed around like an animal in an attempt to put the fire out. It spread from my neck down to my legs. Then, they repeatedly hit me with the bottoms of their rifles, and had sticks with them, which they used to hit and poke me on my sides," he said.

They then "continued pouring acid on me. I spent around a day and a half being washed with [it]," he told us.

"They poured it on my head, and it dripped down my body while I was sitting on the chair."

Eventually, he said, soldiers poured water on his body, and drove him into Israel where he received medical treatment in hospital, including skin grafts.

Mohammad Abu Tawileh's back shows it is covered in raised red welts

Most of his treatment, he said, took place at a field hospital at Sde Teiman barracks, an IDF base near Beersheba in southern Israel. He said he was cuffed naked to a bed and given a nappy instead of access to a toilet. Israeli doctors at this hospital have previously told the BBC shackling patients and forcing them to wear nappies is routine.

When the BBC interviewed Mr Abu Tawileh shortly after his release, his back was covered in red welts. The residual pain from his burns still woke him up, he said, and his vision had been affected.

The BBC was not able to speak to anyone who witnessed an attack on Mr Abu Tawileh, but a specialist eye doctor who treated him on his return to Gaza confirmed that he had suffered a chemical burn to the eye, damaging the skin around it. He also said Mr Abu Tawileh's vision was weakening, due to either the chemicals or other trauma.

We showed images of his injuries and gave details of his testimony to several UK doctors, who said they appeared consistent with his account, though they noted there were limitations to what they could assess by looking at photos.

The BBC gave extensive details of this account to the IDF, giving it five days to investigate. It did not respond directly to Mr Abu Tawileh's allegations but said it took any actions "which contradict its values very seriously".

It said it would "examine" some of the cases, but did not respond to follow-up questions about whether this included Mr Abu Tawileh.

A specialist eye doctor in Gaza confirmed Mr Abu Tawileh had suffered a chemical burn to the eye, damaging the skin around it

Others we interviewed also described abuse at the point of arrest.

"They cuffed us and hit us. No-one would give me a drop of water," said Abdul Karim Mushtaha, a 33-year-old poultry slaughterhouse worker, who told us he was arrested in November 2023 at an Israeli checkpoint while following evacuation orders with his family. A report filed by a lawyer who later visited Mr Mushtaha noted he had been "subjected to severe beatings, humiliation, degradation and stripping during his arrest until he was transferred to prison".

Two said they had then been left outside in the cold for hours, and two said Israeli soldiers stole their belongings and money.

The BBC gave details of the allegations of theft to the IDF, which described it as "contrary to the law and IDF values". It said it would "thoroughly" examine the cases if more details were provided.

All our interviewees, including Mr Mushtaha, said they were transferred to the Israeli barracks of Sde Teiman, where Mr Abu Tawileh also said he received treatment in its field hospital.

One interviewee told us he was mistreated on the way there. He asked for his name not to be published for fear of reprisals, so we are calling him "Omar".

He said Israeli soldiers stood and spat on him, and others with him, calling them "sons of pigs" and "sons of Sinwar" - referring to the Hamas leader and architect of the 7 October attacks, killed by Israel five months ago.

"They made us listen to a voice recording that said: 'What you did to our children, we will do to your children'," said the 33-year-old, who worked for an electrical cable company.

Sde Teiman has been the focus of previous serious complaints in the wake of the October 2023 attacks. Several soldiers stationed there were charged in February after they were filmed assaulting a detainee, resulting in his hospitalisation for a torn rectum and a punctured lung. In a separate case, a soldier at the base was sentenced after he admitted to the aggravated abuse of Palestinian detainees from Gaza.

Our interviewees were initially detained at Sde Teiman, an IDF barracks which has been the centre of serious allegations regarding its treatment of Palestinians

Three of the men we spoke to alleged that dogs were used to intimidate detainees at Sde Teiman and other facilities.

    "We would get beaten up when they took us from the barracks to the medical clinic or the interrogation room - they'd set dogs on us, tighten our cuffs," said Mr Abu Tawileh who was held in general detention in the barracks, as well as being treated there
The BBC asked the IDF to respond to allegations it frequently used dogs to intimidate and attack detainees. It said: "The use of dogs to harm detainees is prohibited."

It also said there were "experienced terrorists considered to be very dangerous among the detainees held in IDF detention facilities" and that "in exceptional cases there is extended shackling during their detention".

Several detainees said they had been forced to assume stress positions, including having their arms lifted above their heads for hours.

"We would be sitting on our knees from 5am until 10pm, when it was time to sleep," said Mr Abu Tawileh.

Hamad al-Dahdouh, another interviewee, said beatings at the barracks "targeted our heads and sensitive areas like the eyes and ears".

The 44-year-old, who worked as a farmer before the war, said he had suffered temporary back and ear damage as a result, and his rib cage had been fractured.

The IDF did not respond to this allegation.

Hamad al-Dahdouh said he suffered beatings so severe that they fractured his rib cage

Mr Dahdouh and some of the other released detainees said electric shocks were also used during interrogations or as punishment.

"The oppression units would bring dogs, sticks and stun guns, they would electrocute and beat us," he said.

They would be subjected to beatings and intimidation every time they were moved, Mr Abu Tawileh added.

During these interrogations they had been accused of links with Hamas, the men added.

"Anyone who was imprisoned… they said: 'You are a terrorist'," said Mr Mushtaha. "They always tried to tell us that we had taken part in 7 October. They all had a grudge.

"I told them: 'If I am Hamas or anyone else, would I be moving through the safe passage? Would I have listened to your calls to leave?'"

Abdul Karim Mushtaha says he was beaten so much that "blood was pouring" down his arms and legs

He said interrogations would go through the night.

    "For three nights, I couldn't sleep because they were torturing me. Our hands were tied and put above our heads for hours, and we weren't wearing anything. Any time you would say 'I'm cold'… they would fill a bucket with cold water, pour it on you and switch on the fan."
Mr Dahdouh said their interrogators told them that whoever is from Gaza "is affiliated with terrorist groups", and when detainees asked if they could challenge this in court they were told there was no time for that.

He said he was not given access to a lawyer. The IDF told the BBC: "Israeli law grants the right to judicial review in a civil district court, legal representation by an attorney, and the right of appeal to the Supreme Court."

"Omar" said he was taken for three days of interrogation when he first arrived at Sde Teiman.

He said the detainees were dressed in thin overalls and held in a freezing room, with loud speakers playing Israeli music.

When the questioning was over, the men said they were led back to the barracks blindfolded.

"We didn't know if night had come or morning had come. You don't see the sun. You don't see anything," said Omar.

The IDF said it had "oversight mechanisms", including closed-circuit cameras, "to ensure that detention facilities are managed in accordance with IDF orders and the law".

Omar and Mr Mushtaha said they were then transferred to Ketziot prison, where they described a "welcoming ceremony" of beatings and other abuse.

Omar and Abdul Karim Mushtaha said beatings at Ketziot prison, pictured here in 2011, were severe and food minimal

Omar said he witnessed sexual assault at Ketziot.

    "They took the clothes off some of the guys and would do shameful acts… They forced guys to perform sex acts on each other. I saw it with my own eyes. It wasn't penetrative sex. He would tell one guy to suck another guy. It was obligatory."
The BBC did not receive any other reports of this nature, but the Palestinian Prisoners Society, which tracks conditions of Palestinians in Israeli jails, described sexual abuse of detainees held in Ketziot as a "common occurrence". This ranged from rape and sexual harassment to the beatings of genitals, it said.

The group said that while it had not received testimony of forced sexual acts between detainees, it had been told some had been made to look at each other naked and had been thrown on top of each other naked.

A report by B'Tselem has also gathered allegations of sexual violence, including from one prisoner who said guards attempted to rape him with a carrot.

The BBC put the allegation that prisoners were forced to perform sexual acts on each other to the Israel Prison Service (IPS). It replied that it was "not aware" of the sexual abuse claim or any of the other claims made about treatment and conditions at Ketziot and other prisons that the BBC had gathered.

It said: "IPS is a law enforcement organisation that operates according to the provisions of the law and under the supervision of the state comptroller and many other official critiques.

"All prisoners are detained according to the law. All basic rights required are fully applied by professionally trained prison guards. We are not aware of the claims you described and, as far as we know, no such events have occurred under IPS responsibility.

"Nonetheless, prisoners and detainees have the right to file a complaint that will be fully examined and addressed by official authorities."

Omar said they were also hit with batons at Ketziot prison.

"After we got tortured, I was in pain all night - from my back to my legs. The guys would carry me from my mattress to the toilet. My body, my back, my legs - my whole body was blue from beatings. For nearly two months I couldn't move."

Mr Mushtaha described having his head slammed into a door, and his genitals hit.

"They would strip us naked. They would Taser us. They would hit us in a sensitive place. They would tell us 'We will castrate you'," he said.

He said beatings were "meant to break your bones", and that detainees would sometimes be grouped together and have hot water poured over them.

"The amount of torture was enormous," he added.

Both he and Omar also described incidents of what they said amounted to medical negligence.

"My hands were all blisters and swollen," said Mr Mushtaha.

"If people could have seen my legs they would have said they needed to be amputated from the inflammation… [Guards] would just tell me to wash my hands and legs with water and soap.

"But how was I meant to do this, when there was only water for one hour a day [between us], and as for soap, every week they would bring [only] a spoon of shampoo," he added.

Mr Mushtaha said he was told by guards that: "As long as you have a pulse you are in good shape. As long as you are standing, you're in good shape. When your pulse is gone, we will come to treat you."

Abdul Karim Mushtaha was infected with scabies on release from prison, a medical report shows

A report by a lawyer who visited both Mr Mushtaha and Omar in Ketziot last September said of Mr Mushtaha: "The prisoner, like the rest of the prisoners, suffers from pain due to boils on his hands, feet and buttocks, and there is no cleanliness and he is not provided with any kind of treatment."

Mr Mushtaha also provided the BBC with a report compiled by a doctor in Gaza, which confirmed he was still infected with scabies on the day of his release.

Omar said detainees were beaten for requesting medical care.

The lawyer noted that Omar needed attention for "pimples spreading on the skin - in the groin and buttocks due to the harsh prison conditions" including lack of toiletries and polluted water. "The prisoner says that even when it is his turn to shower he tries to avoid it because the water… causes itching and inflammation."

All the detainees added they had been given limited access to food and water while in detention at various facilities - several reported losing significant amounts of weight.

Omar said he lost 30kg (4st 10lb). The lawyer said Omar told him food was "almost non-existent" in the first few months, though conditions later "improved a little".

Mr Mushtaha described food there being left outside their caged compounds for cats and birds to eat from first.

Another of our interviewees, Ahmed Abu Seif, said he was taken to a different prison - Megiddo, near the occupied West Bank, after being arrested on his 17th birthday.

    Ahmed Abu Seif, held in Megiddo prison's youth wing, says he had his toenails pulled out during interrogations
He said Israeli authorities would regularly storm their cells there and spray them with tear gas.

"We would feel suffocated and unable to breathe well for four days after each tear gas attack," according to Ahmed, who said he had been held in the prison's youth wing.

"There was no consideration of us being children, they treated us like the militants of 7 October."

During interrogations he had his nails pulled out, he told us. When the BBC filmed him the day after his release, he showed us how several of his toenails were still affected, as well as scars on his hands he said had been caused by handcuffs and dog scratches.

The IPS did not respond to this allegation.

Two of the men said they had witnessed the deaths of fellow detainees in Sde Teiman and Ketziot - one through beatings, including the use of dogs, and one through medical negligence.

The names and dates they gave of the incidents match media reports and accounts from human rights groups.

    At least 63 Palestinian prisoners - 40 of them from Gaza - have died in Israeli custody since 7 October 2023, the Palestinian Prisoners Society told the BBC
The IPS did not respond to questions about deaths of Palestinians in custody, while the IDF said it was "aware of cases of detainee deaths, including those who were detained with pre-existing illness or injury resulting from combat".

"According to procedures, an investigation is opened by the Military Police Criminal Investigation Division (MPCID) into every detainee death," it added.

The abuse continued right up to the moment they were freed in February, some of the men said.

"On the release day, they treated us brutally. They tightened the handcuffs and when they wanted to make us move they put our hands above our heads and pulled us," Mr Mushtaha said.

"They said: 'If you interact with Hamas or work with Hamas, you will be targeted.' They said: 'We will send a missile directly to you.'"

Ahmed, 17, also said conditions worsened after the ceasefire deal was signed in January. "The soldiers intensified the aggression against us knowing we were getting released soon."

It was only once the detainees were transferred to the Red Cross bus for transportation back to Gaza that they felt "safe", Omar said.

Footage showed some being returned in sweatshirts with the Star of David on them and the words: "We do not forget and we do not forgive" written in Arabic.

An official at Gaza's European Hospital, which assessed the conditions of returned detainees, said skin conditions, including scabies, were common, and medics had observed many cases of "extreme emaciation and malnutrition" and "the physical effects of torture".

Legal expert Dr Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne told us: "Certainly the use of chemicals to burn the detainee and submerge their head would meet the threshold of torture, as would the use of electric shocks, removal of toenails, and severe beatings. These, or comparable acts, have all been recognised to constitute torture by international bodies," as have the use of stress positions and loud music.

Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne said several of our interviewees' allegations met the definition of torture

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which conducts interviews with returning detainees, said it could not comment on individuals' conditions due to privacy concerns.

It added that it was eager to be granted access to those still detained - something which has not been allowed since the 7 October attacks.

"The ICRC remains deeply concerned about the wellbeing of detainees and emphasises the urgent need for it to resume visits to all places of detention. We continue to request access in bilateral and confidential dialogue with the parties," it told the BBC.

Fifty-nine hostages are still being held in Gaza, 24 of whom are believed to be alive. The ICRC has never been granted access to them in their 18 months in captivity, and their loved ones have grave concerns over their wellbeing.

For many of the released Palestinian detainees, returning to Gaza was both a moment of celebration and of despair.

Mr Abu Tawileh said his family was shocked by his appearance when he was released, and added he was still affected by his experience.

"I am unable to do anything because of my injury, because my eye hurts, and it tears and feels itchy, and all of the burns on my body feels itchy as well. This is bothering me a lot," he said.

Teenager Ahmed said he now wants to leave Gaza.

"I want to emigrate because of the things we saw in detention, and because of the mental torture of fearing the bombs falling on our heads. We wished for death but couldn't find it."

Link to Article - Photos - Videos:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn7vje365rno
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Apr 07, 2025 2:59 pm

Global Day of Action:

Pro-Palestine rallies sweep cities worldwide

Protests were held in countries including Lebanon, Turkiye, Jordan, Algeria, Morocco, the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and occupied Palestine.

Students attend a protest against the attacks on Gaza by Israel, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Monday, April 7, 2025. (AP)Students attend a protest against the attacks on Gaza by Israel, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Monday, April 7, 2025. (AP)

In solidarity with Gaza and in protest of the ongoing genocide being carried out by Israel against the Palestinian people, mass demonstrations erupted across the globe as part of the Global Day of Action for Gaza.

This follows a call from the Hamas Movement urging mass mobilization on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. The group appealed to Palestinians, the Arab and Islamic world, and global advocates of justice to rally in support of Gaza and occupied al-Quds and to defend Al Aqsa Mosque.

In a press release last week, Hamas pointed to the ongoing escalation of Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip, which have caused heavy civilian casualties and widespread devastation. The statement also condemned continued violations in the occupied West Bank, al-Quds, and Al Aqsa Mosque compound, attributing them to unrestrained aggression backed by US support and met with international silence.

Demonstrators demand end to war on Gaza

Protests were held in countries including Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan, Algeria, Morocco, the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and occupied Palestine.

In Palestine, calls for a general strike and mass protests echoed across cities in the occupied West Bank and occupied al-Quds, denouncing Israeli atrocities in the Gaza Strip.

In Beirut, Lebanon, solidarity vigils were held, including at the Lebanese American University and the American University of Beirut, expressing support for Gaza and the Palestinian cause.

In Damascus, Syria, demonstrators rallied in support of Gaza, demanding urgent international action to halt "Israel’s" genocidal war.

The protest, held under the powerful banner “We Remain on Our Land,” served as a resounding declaration of solidarity with the Palestinian Resistance. Demonstrators called for the immediate opening of borders to aid besieged Gazans and forcefully condemned "Israel’s" relentless and repeated assaults on Syrian territory, particularly in the embattled southern regions.

Protesters express strong support for Palestine

In Jordan, hundreds of lawyers staged a powerful demonstration at the Palace of Justice in Amman, fiercely condemning what they described as "Israel’s" ongoing war of extermination against the people of Gaza.

Morocco saw a massive anti-normalization protest, with demonstrators rejecting "Israel’s" genocide and expressing unwavering support for Palestine.

In London, UK, protesters gathered outside the US Embassy at the start of the workday, condemning Washington’s silence on Israel’s actions in Gaza.

In Bangladesh, students from multiple universities joined mass rallies at the University of Dhaka as part of the global strike, showing strong grassroots support for Gaza.

Montreal, Canada, also witnessed demonstrations rejecting the genocide and demanding justice for Palestinians.

In Paris, France, activists held a solidarity event to honor Palestinian journalists who have been killed and targeted during the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

Despite months of global protests, mass mobilizations, and widespread condemnation, Israel's genocidal war on Gaza continues unabated. Since the start of the aggression, more than 50,000 Palestinians—mostly women and children—have been killed, as the international community remains largely paralyzed.

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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Apr 10, 2025 7:10 pm

Gaza medics killing:

Israeli army fired as close as 12m, audio suggests


Israeli troops fired more than 100 times during an attack in which they killed 15 emergency workers in Gaza, with some shots from as close as 12m (39ft) away, a forensic audio analysis of mobile phone footage commissioned by BBC Verify has found.

Two audio experts examined a 19-minute video authenticated by BBC Verify, showing the incident and the moments leading up to it near Rafah on 23 March.

The findings support a claim made by the Palestinian Red Crescent that the workers were "targeted from a very close range". On 5 April an Israeli army official said aerial footage showed troops opening fire "from afar".

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) declined to comment on the analysis directly when approached by BBC Verify.

A spokesperson said it was investigating the attack and repeated claims that six of the people killed were linked to Hamas, without offering evidence. The Palestinian Red Crescent rejected the allegation, as did a ninth paramedic who survived and was detained by the IDF for 15 hours.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said the full video was recovered from the phone of a medic killed and buried in a shallow grave by the IDF.

    Video filmed by medic Rifaat Radwan who was killed in the incident showed the convoy driving at night, using headlights and flashing emergency lights. At least one medic can be seen wearing a high-vis jacket
Faced with this, the Israeli army changed its account, admitting that its initial statement that the convoy approached "suspiciously" with its lights off was inaccurate.

Experts told BBC Verify they used sound waveforms and spectrograms to measure the distance of the gunfire from the microphone of the mobile. Shortened time gaps indicate that the distance between the microphone and the gunfire decreased as the video progressed.

They concluded that the first shots were fired from around 40m to 43m away. But towards the end of the video, gunfire came from around 12m away.

At a briefing on 5 April, an IDF official told reporters that surveillance showed the troops were at some distance when they opened fire, adding: "It's not from close. They opened fire from afar."

One military expert told BBC Verify that any engagements under 50m to 100m would be considered as being within close range.

Robert Maher, an audio forensics expert at Montana State University, said towards the start of the footage one firearm is discharged about 43m away from the mobile phone.

Mr Maher and another expert, Steven Beck, independently corroborated one another's view that in the final few moments of the audio, shots are fired as close at 12m away.

Mr Beck, a former FBI consultant who now runs Beck Audio Forensics, said: "The shooter(s) at these times is much closer, with distances of 12m to 18m. There is a strange pop sound that may be a tire hit by a bullet."

He added: "The shockwaves indicate that the bullets are passing close to the recorder microphone - meaning they are being shot at."

Chris Cobb-Smith, a former British Army officer with over 20 years experience in conducting investigations in conflicts zones, said that at 50m the Israeli troops would have "definitively been able to identify the convoy as humanitarian" and would have been able to "determine that the personnel were unarmed and not posing a threat".

Voices can also be heard towards the end of the recording, shouting in Hebrew: "Get up," and: "You (plural) go back".

    Over the period of more than five minutes, at times, multiple firearms were in use simultaneously, the audio experts determined
Mr Maher said "the sounds are often overlapping in such a way that it is clear multiple firearms are in use at the same time".

Because of the overlap of gunshots, Mr Maher said it's difficult to identify individual shots. But both experts determined independently that there were more than 100 shots.

Our audio analysts could not comment on which weapons were being used but Mr Beck said there are "several bursts of fully automatic gunfire".

A bullet travelling at supersonic speed first creates a sonic boom - often called a "crack". The sound of the bullet being fired is what creates a second sound, often called a "pop".

At close distances, the two sounds are almost indiscernible to the human ear.

But by looking closely at the waveform of the audio, the two sounds can be detected and the distance between them measured.

What Mr Maher describes as "crack-pop sequences" are visible in these waveforms.

Mr Maher said the further away the firearm is from the microphone, the longer the gap between the two sounds.

Mr Maher said: "The first few audible gunshots have a crack-pop timing of about 72ms. Assuming a bullet speed of 800 m/s and speed of sound 343 m/s, that time gap implies the firearm was about 43 meters away. If the bullet speed were actually faster, that would move the firearm estimate closer to the microphone."

There are limitations to their estimates. For example, analysts told us they cannot be certain of the type of firearm used or of the miss distance, which is how far off the shot is from the intended target. They also must make an assumption about the average speed of the bullet.

BBC Verify will continue to investigate this incident.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ckg55q1w58jo
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Apr 11, 2025 10:08 pm

It’s Offical:
UN Accuses Israel of Genocide in Gaza

Kit Klarenberg comments on the landmark UN report that accuses Israel of genocide in Gaza, citing systematic sexual violence and targeted destruction of reproductive health infrastructure as deliberate tools of extermination

On March 22, Al Mayadeen English detailed the findings of a UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on “Israel’s systematic use of sexual, reproductive and other forms of gender-based violence since 7 October 2023.” This investigation focused primarily on the hideous, industrial scale rape and sexual abuse of male and female Palestinian detainees in Zionist Occupation Force (ZOF) prisons, a phenomenon so pervasive it can only be dedicated, determined policy, signed off upon and directed by the highest levels of the Israeli government.

Reinforcing that horrifying conclusion, buried within the Commission’s report are bombshell passages unequivocally charging the Zionist entity with deliberately committing “genocidal acts” in Gaza, consciously and intentionally “calculated to bring about the physical destruction of Palestinians as a group.” The details provided are irresistibly persuasive, and point to "Israel" being in flagrant breach of both the Rome Statute, and Genocide Convention. In a truly just world, the mainstream media’s mass omertà on this landmark ruling would in itself be a criminal act.

Ever since October 7th 2023, it has been inarguably clear that the Zionist entity is committing genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza. Within days of Tel Aviv’s unconscionable assault on the open air concentration camp erupting, Israeli historian Raz Segal, an endowed professor in the study of modern genocide, branded the ZOF’s campaign “a textbook case of genocide”. Mainstream rights groups have repeatedly levelled the accusation. Even elements of the media, which have overwhelmingly whitewashed Tel Aviv’s 21st-century Holocaust, acknowledge this reality.

However, no major international organization has hitherto formally inculpated the Zionist entity of genocide. While an October 31, 2024, UN Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People meeting featured several “experts” who decisively declared "Israel’s" actions in Gaza to be genocidal, the organization did not officially endorse their sentiments. Meanwhile, a case brought against Tel Aviv by South Africa in the International Court of Justice in December the previous year has produced mixed results.

On January 26th 2024, the ICJ issued a provisional ruling, ordering the Zionist entity to undertake all measures to prevent any acts contrary to the Genocide Convention, but did not demand a ceasefire. On May 20 that year, International Criminal Court prosecutor Karim Khan announced he was seeking international arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, for “crimes against humanity” committed in Gaza since “at least” October 8th 2023.

Netanyahu has freely travelled internationally and met with foreign government leaders ever since, despite ICC demands for local authorities to arrest the Israeli premier and render him to The Hague. Multiple Western officials have openly stated they won’t abide by the Court’s warrant. Now that the UN has openly accused the Zionist entity of genocide though, such intransigence may crumble. The Genocide Convention imposes a duty to prevent genocide on all signatories, including via extradition of suspects. Those failing to comply themselves become legally culpable.

Only Inference

The sections of the UN Commission’s report making an explicit charge of genocide against the Zionist entity document the ZOF’s December 2023 shelling of the Basma IVF Centre, “Gaza’s largest fertility clinic.” The strike destroyed around 4,000 embryos, as well as 1,000 sperm samples and unfertilized eggs. This amounted to “all the reproductive material stored in the laboratory.” The ZOF’s assault also deprived the facility of liquid nitrogen, vital for keeping storage tanks cold and preserving their contents for future use.

The Commission “determined through visual analysis of pictures from the scene that the extensive damage to the building’s exterior and interior was caused by a large calibre projectile.” This was “most probably” a shell fired from a ZOF tank. The clinic was a standalone building, with its name “clearly marked,” and there was no evidence “this IVF clinic was a legitimate military target.” The Commission thus found the ZOF “intentionally attacked and destroyed the Basma IVF clinic…the main fertility centre in Gaza”:

“The Commission concludes that the destruction of the Basma IVF clinic was a measure intended to prevent births among Palestinians in Gaza, which is a genocidal act under the Rome Statute and Genocide Convention. The Commission also concludes that this was done with the intent to destroy the Palestinians in Gaza as a group, in whole or in part, and that this is the only inference that could reasonably be drawn from the acts in question.”

The determination that "Israel" is committing genocide in Gaza is reiterated in areas of the Commission report discussing how the Basma IVF Centre’s destruction was no one-off, or the result of an indiscriminate blitzkrieg. The ZOF was found to have “intentionally and systematically attacked and destroyed reproductive and maternal health facilities across Gaza, including maternity hospitals and maternity wings of hospitals.” These “direct attacks on reproductive and maternal health…resulted in killings and caused serious bodily and mental harm to Palestinians.”

The Commission declares, “the only inference that could reasonably be drawn” from the ZOF’s deliberate devastation of “reproductive health care, infrastructure and facilities that provide essential services for the population of Gaza to survive and reproduce exhibits the intent to destroy the Palestinians in Gaza, in whole or in part” - genocide, in other words. Elsewhere, the Zionist entity was further found to have violated “the norm of customary international humanitarian law that affords special protection to women and children in armed conflicts” with such conduct.

All Means

The Commission frames the ZOF’s genocidal acts as part of a wider, concerted campaign specifically intended to inflict “unimaginable misery” upon “pregnant women, new mothers and newborns.” They were particularly impacted by Israel’s siege of Gaza, under which “the entry, content and amounts of humanitarian assistance” permitted is tightly controlled by Tel Aviv. This includes “necessary medications and equipment to ensure safe pregnancies, deliveries and neonatal care,” but also basic essentials indispensable to human survival, including “food, water, medicine and shelter.”

Meanwhile, Zionist entity authorities have routinely denied Palestinians in urgent need of medical care - “including patients with gynecological cancer” - approval to leave Gaza and seek treatment elsewhere. Pregnant women thus “suffered from a multitude of issues, including avoidable complications and no access to reproductive health services.” They “were forced to undergo unsafe deliveries due to not reaching hospitals and painful deliveries without access to adequate pain relief and medication,” resulting in “reproductive harms” and “prolonged physical and mental suffering”:

“Reproductive harms to pregnant, post-partum and lactating women amount to…the war crime of willfully causing great suffering, or serious injury to body or health…The harm for pregnant, lactating and new mothers is of an unprecedented scale in Gaza. Furthermore, lack of access to sexual and reproductive healthcare has caused immediate physical and mental harm and suffering to women and girls that will have irreversible long-term effects on the mental health and the physical reproductive and fertility prospects of the Palestinians in Gaza as a group.”

Given these findings, the overwhelming majority of governments the world over now have a clear legal obligation to do anything and everything in their power to halt the Zionist entity’s obliteration of Gaza and its people. Presently, 153 countries are parties to the Genocide Convention, and multiple international precedents state signatories must “employ all means reasonably available” to them to prevent genocide from occurring. This duty depends on a state’s “capacity to influence effectively the action of persons likely to commit, or already committing genocide.”

Failing to stop providing aid or assistance to a state or entity committing genocide could violate a country’s responsibilities under Article I of the Genocide Convention, so too failing to help hold accountable and punish all those responsible for perpetrating genocide. This includes investigating, extraditing, and prosecuting suspects, both independently and in tandem with other parties. The Rome Statute similarly compels signatories to assist in prosecuting suspects via the ICC. Governments could of course opt to follow Hungary’s lead, simply withdrawing from the ICC outright.

Yet, with incontrovertible evidence of the Zionist entity’s genocidal intent and actions in Gaza gravely multiplying daily, and the UN now having overtly accused Tel Aviv of genocide, the international freedom of movement hitherto enjoyed by Israeli officials may have constricted further. Moreover, a proverbial gauntlet has been thrown down at the feet of many states which claim to hold international law so dear. In turn, long-overdue justice for Palestinians could be inching closer.

https://english.almayadeen.net/articles ... de-in-gaza
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Re: Palestinians fight for their lives and their stolen land

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Apr 12, 2025 8:40 pm

Israel will vigorously expand
    offensive across Gaza
Israel Katz also said the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) had completed the takeover of a "security zone" in the southern part of the Gaza Strip, separating the cities of Rafah and Khan Younis

Israel's military also issued evacuation orders for Khan Younis and its surrounding areas, saying it was preparing to carry out strikes in response to the launch of projectiles from Gaza, which Hamas has claimed responsibility for.

Israel resumed its offensive against Hamas on 18 March following the collapse of a two-month ceasefire.

Since then, it has seized large areas of Gaza, displacing hundreds of thousands of Gazans once more.

The military has already seized land running along the entirety of the Palestinian territory's borders, which it has characterised as a buffer zone to prevent attacks.

Israeli officials have said the ongoing offensive aims to pressure Hamas into freeing the 59 remaining hostages being held in Gaza - 24 of whom are believed to be alive.

On Saturday, Katz said the IDF had completed the takeover of the "Morag axis" - a reference to a former Jewish settlement located between Rafah and Khan Younis.

He said this "makes the entire area between the Philadelphia axis and Morag part of the Israeli security zone".

The takeover of the corridor effectively cuts the southern city of Rafah off from Khan Younis. Rafah makes up almost one fifth of Gaza.

Katz also warned that "IDF activity will soon expand vigorously to additional locations throughout most of Gaza" and people in these areas "will have to evacuate the fighting zones".

"This is the last moment to remove Hamas and release the hostages, and bring about an end to the war," he said.

He added that areas of northern Gaza, including the city of Beit Hanoun and in the Netzarim Corridor - which cuts through central Gaza - were also being evacuated so that a "security zone" could be expanded there too.

"In northern Gaza as well - in Beit Hanoun and other neighbourhoods - residents are evacuating, the area is being taken over and the security zone is being expanded, including in the Netzarim corridor," Katz said.

When approached for comment, the IDF referred the BBC to the defence ministry's remarks.

Hamas said, in quotes cited by the news agency AFP, that the offensive not only "kills defenceless civilians" but also makes the fate of hostages "uncertain".

The UN's human rights office warned last month that the evacuation orders failed to comply with international law, accusing Israel of not taking any measures to provide accommodation for those affected, or ensuring satisfactory hygiene, health, safety and nutrition conditions.

Israel's government said it was evacuating civilians to protect them from harm and from being used by Hamas as "human shields" in violation of international law.

Following Katz's announcement, the Israeli military issued an evacuation order for residents of the southern city of Khan Younis and its surrounding areas, saying it was preparing to respond to projectiles launched from Gaza earlier on Saturday.

The IDF said its air defences had intercepted three projectiles launched from Gaza towards Israeli territory. Hamas's military wing later claimed responsibility for the attack. No injuries were reported.

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.

More than 50,933 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

Of those, 1,563 have been killed since 18 March, when Israel restarted its offensive in the Gaza Strip, the ministry said.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ckg5jwyje0do
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