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Gaza-Israel Conflict | October 2023

Corrupt Jordanian regime attacks pro-Palestine protesters
Iranian Foreign Minister (Abdollahiah) meets SG of Hezbollah Seyed Nasrallah in Lebanon
IOF announces discovery of 30 more neutralised IOF soldiers in Jewish settlement of Be'eri

Jenin Bridges (in the occupied West Bank) start operation against illegal Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank

 
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Iranian support for Palestinians
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Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel | Flash Update #6​

KEY POINTS
  • Israeli bombardments from the air, sea, and land have continued and intensified across the Gaza Strip for the sixth consecutive day. According to the Ministry of Health in Gaza, between 18:30 yesterday and 14:00 today, 317 Palestinians were killed and 929 others injured. In total, 1,417 have been killed and 6,268 injured in Gaza since 7 October. Human rights organizations have expressed concerns about incidents where civilians and civilian objects appear to have been directly targeted by Israeli airstrikes
  • Palestinian armed groups in Gaza continued their indiscriminate rocket firing towards Israeli population centres, albeit with lesser intensity than in previous days. As a result, since yesterday noon, two people were killed in the southern Israel and several others were severely injured. According to Israeli official sources, at least 1,300 Israelis and foreign nationals have been killed in Israel since 7 October and at least 3,391 have been injured, the vast majority during the initial attack carried out by Palestinian armed groups
  • Mass displacement continues. In the Gaza Strip, the cumulative number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) increased by 25 percent over the past 24 hours, now exceeding 423,000 of whom over two thirds are taking shelter in UNRWA schools.
  • Mass displacement in southern Israel has primarily occurred in the immediate vicinity to Gaza, where dozens of small communities have been fully evacuated. The Israeli authorities have been responding to the needs of these IDPs (this Flash Update focuses on the humanitarian needs in Gaza and the West Bank).
  • Since yesterday at 14:00 Gaza has been undergoing a full electricity blackout, which has brought essential health, water and sanitation services to the brink of collapse, and exacerbated food insecurity. This followed Israel’s halt of its electricity and fuel supply to Gaza on 8 October, which in turn triggered the shutdown of Gaza’s sole power plant yesterday, after it depleted its fuel reserves. Secretary-General António Guterres stressed yesterday that “crucial life-saving supplies, including fuel, food and water, must be allowed into Gaza”
  • Between 100 and 150 Israelis, including soldiers and civilians, some of whom are women and children, as well as some foreign nationals, have been captured and forcibly taken into Gaza. The Secretary-General called yesterday for the “immediate release of all Israeli hostages”. Hostage-taking is forbidden under International Humanitarian Law.
  • Settler attacks, alongside confrontations between Palestinians and Israeli forces, continued across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, resulting in the killing of eight Palestinians, including two children, since yesterday noon

Disclaimer​

UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian AffairsTo learn more about OCHA's activities, please visit https://www.unocha.org/.
 
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Millions of Palestinians are going to starve to death. Egypt needs to send aid in now or transfer sovereignty over the Golan Heights to someone who will (Turkey, Iran, Saudi all would).
 
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Gaza's Children Pay the Heaviest Price, with Hundreds Dead​


News and Press Release Source UNICEF Posted13 Oct 2023 Originally published13 Oct 2023 Origin View original

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© UNICEF/UNI450059/Mohammad Ajjour
This is a summary of what was said by UNICEF Spokesperson James Elder – to whom quoted text may be attributed - at today's press briefing at the Palais des Nations in Geneva
GENEVA, 13 October 2023 – “Hundreds and hundreds of children have been killed and injured. Every hour in Gaza the number of children killed rises. The killing of children must stop.

“The images and stories are clear: children with horrendous burns, mortar wounds, and lost limbs. And hospitals are utterly overwhelmed to treat them. Yet the numbers keep rising.

“Israeli children being held hostage in Gaza must be safely and immediately reunited with their families and loved ones.

“The humanitarian situation has reached lethal lows, and yet all reports point to further attacks. Compassion – and international law – must prevail.

“UNICEF is calling for an immediate cease fire as 1.1 million people – nearly half of them children - have been warned to move out of the way ahead of what is expected to be a ground assault on one of the most densely populated places on the planet, but with nowhere safe for civilians to go.

“Children and families in Gaza have practically run out of food, water, electricity, medicine and safe access to hospitals, following days of air strikes and cuts to all supply routes.
“Gaza’s sole power plant ran out of fuel Wednesday afternoon, shutting down electricity, water and wastewater treatment. Most residents can no longer get drinking water from service providers or household water through pipelines.

“At least six water wells, three water pumping stations, one water reservoir, and one desalination plant serving more than 1 million people have been damaged by airstrikes.
“Humanitarians must be able to safely access children and their families with lifesaving services and supplies – wherever they may be.
“In every war, the ones who suffer the most are children. This is tragically true today.”

### ends ###

Media contacts
Ammar Ammar Regional Chief of Advocacy and Communication
UNICEF Middle East and North Africa Regional Office
Tel: 00962791837388 Email: aammar@unicef.org

Salim Oweis Communication Officer
UNICEF MENA
Tel: 00962799365212 Email: soweis@unicef.org
 
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Where have I supported Israel? Tell me.

Show me what bothered you and I will explain why I said it.
So, you are unable to show even a single post where you have condemned war-criminal Israelis for killing scores of civilians in the high-rise residential buildings or the criminal use of white pahsphorus bombs in a blatant violation of international ban on the use of such weapons. You a$$licker of war-criminal Israelis. Shame on you hypocrite.
 
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record the fight, it'll be fun to watch :pop:
He didn't come. He gave the address and said that I go to the reception of the building. The building was abandoned years ago. It used to be Police Station. I only saw some homeless people and some tents. That's it.
 
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It's not the first time terrorists hide inside buildings or areas not allowed to be bombed by the rules of war.
You liar, you are just speculating. All these are civilian buildings. Innocent Palestinians live in their homes in these building. Even if any Hamas fighters are presumably present in these buildings, there is no justification to kill scores of innocent civilians living in the same buildings. That's exactly the terrorist Israelis are committing war-crimes.
 
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In Britain, the Israel-Hamas war reignites old tensions between communities​

Pro-Palestine activists say they are accused of being anti-Semitic while criticising Israel, as Jewish groups fear attacks.
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Pro-Palestinian demonstrators protest during the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, near the Israeli embassy in London, Britain [Toby Melville/Reuters]

By Alasdair Soussi
Published On 13 Oct 202313 Oct 2023
Glasgow, United Kingdom – On Saturday, Wael Shawish, a retired project manager, plans to attend a rally in Glasgow to demonstrate his solidarity with Palestine, as Israel bombs Gaza.
A Palestinian who has lived in Scotland for 38 years, he will be doing so in the face of the British government’s unwavering support for Israel – and as Home Secretary Suella Braverman tries to crack down on certain acts of pro-Palestine support.

This week, as the British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly rushed to visit and support Israel after Hamas’s unprecedented attacks, Braverman urged British police to consider whether chanting phrases such as “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” could be treated as “racially aggravated” crimes.

Writing to chief constables of England and Wales on Tuesday, she reaffirmed the British government’s support of “legitimate Israeli defensive measures” and its commitment to protecting Britain’s Jewish community from “anti-Semitic abuse”.

The latest Israel-Hamas crisis has resonated across the United Kingdom, and reignited old tensions between supporters of Israel and those who condemn the occupation and advocate for Palestinian rights.

Many pro-Palestine campaigners say that over the years, they have increasingly been condemned as anti-Semitic, claiming accusations of anti-Jewish racism are used to silence them.

Referring to Israel as an apartheid regime, advocating for the rights of Palestinians and rising up against Israeli occupiers have in the past been seized on by pro-Israel commentators as examples of anti-Semitism.

According to Shawish, pro-Israel campaigners have “weaponised anti-Semitism”, and he knows several activists who are “terrified” of the label.

The Glasgow resident, who told Al Jazeera that it was “painful to see the loss of life on both sides”, lamented “that the Western media only shows interest in our part of the world when Israelis are killed and targeted”.

“Our advice is always to remain objective and focused on verified and publicly available information and always ensure that we do not conflate the Jewish people with Israel,” he said.

“Israel is a state and is not beyond criticism.”

Wael
Wael Shawish says Israel’s policies should not be ‘beyond criticism’ [Courtesy: Wael Shawish]
Saturday’s offensive in Israel by Hamas – the armed group that has controlled the impoverished Palestinian territory of Gaza since 2007 – took the world by surprise.

Israel has accused the group of killing hundreds of civilians, including children, and taken many hostage in Gaza. The Palestinian group denies deliberately targeting civilians but admits taking several people captive.

Israel responded to the attacks with fury, bombarding Gaza relentlessly, and imposing a total blockade on the already besieged strip. It is widely expected that its promised ground invasion of Gaza will begin within days.

More than 2,800 people have been confirmed killed in less than a week, a toll that includes Palestinians, Israelis and some foreigners.

The war has stirred a sense of Palestinian solidarity across some sections of society in Britain, which, during its days of empire, held colonial sway over Palestine for some three decades prior to the establishment of the Jewish state in 1948.

On Monday, thousands of pro-Palestinian activists massed in London, where the bulk of the UK’s Arab and Jewish populations live.

This came just 24 hours after Israel, which is deemed an apartheid state by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch on account of its occupation of the Palestinian West Bank and its blockade of the Gaza Strip, responded to Hamas’s audacious assault by declaring war on the Palestinian group.

Leanne Mohamed


Leanne Mohamad says pro-Palestinian sentiment is often wrongly conflated with anti-Semitism [Courtesy: Leanne Mohamad]


“The Palestinian struggle is inherently anti-racist in nature,” Leanne Mohamad, a 23-year-old British-Palestinian human rights activist based in the capital, told Al Jazeera.

“Opposing Israel’s severe actions against Palestinians and opposing anti-Semitism are not mutually exclusive principles.”

She described an “increasingly hostile environment today” for activists and observers, “where one cannot guarantee that expressing their views will not lead to attacks, fuelled by the dangerous conflation of anti-Semitism with the constitutional order of the State of Israel.

“This conflation of course poses a grave threat to the fundamental rights of Palestinians to articulate their lived experiences and the rights of others to advocate on their behalf.”

Like Shawish, she also plans to attend a pro-Palestine demonstration this weekend, in London.

“We must persist in our battle against injustice, not solely for the sake of Palestine but for the cause of humanity, for the preservation of human rights, and as a stance against supremacy, racism and imperialism,” Mohamad said.

“It is so important that we collectively continue speaking up and continue protesting all the governments that are encouraging this unimaginable atrocity.”

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(Al Jazeera)

But Chris Doyle, director of the London-based Council for Arab-British Understanding (CAABU), said both sides have used inflammatory language – in the past and during this current crisis.
“Some genuine anti-Semites had decided to hop on the Palestinian rights movement” for their own nefarious ends, he told Al Jazeera.

“Anti-Arab and anti-Muslim rhetoric” were also apparent among some supporters of Israel, he said.

Doyle cited the “appalling” comments made by Richard Ferrer, editor of Britain’s Jewish News, who wrote in a UK newspaper that Hamas’s assault on Israel was “plain and simple historic Islamic bloodlust, passed down through the generations from birth”.

Disgusting from the editor of the Jewish News, Richard Ferrer, in the Express today.
He actually says "historic Islamic bloodlust, passed down through the generations from birth"
This must be retracted. https://t.co/hwD4fvVirx pic.twitter.com/HNqm55a3d6
— Miqdaad Versi (@miqdaad) October 8, 2023

As battle lines were drawn on social media, there Jewish schools in the UK stepped up their security to guard against potential anti-Semitic attacks against pupils.
The Community Security Trust, a charity that monitors anti-Semitism, said anti-Jewish incidents had risen since Hamas’s assault.

Between October 7 and 10, it said, there were at least 89 incidents, compared with 21 over the same four days in 2022.

“In many cases, the perpetrators of these disgraceful incidents are using the symbols and language of pro-Palestinian politics as rhetorical weapons with which to threaten and abuse Jewish people,” the group alleged.

Separately, the Muslim Council of Britain warned that it was “crucial we do not allow these tensions to affect our communities here in the UK. There is the risk that at times like these both Islamophobia and anti-Semitism rise.

“We must be proactive to ensure that this is not the case and our communities can come together for the common good.”

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

Reports coming of an F 16 getting shot down over Gaza
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IAF claiming they shot down a missile.
 
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