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Forums - Politics Discussion - Israel-Hamas war, Gaza genocide

‘We collected body parts of women and children’

More than 150 displaced civilians were sheltering in a family home in Gaza’s Deir el-Balah area. As night fell, they were hit by a massive Israeli air strike. “You can see for yourself the bodies. All the dead were women and children. There is no peaceful place for us to go. We were all displaced, we’ve all lost our homes. Where do you want us to go? The whole world is watching us. Have mercy on us,” one woman told Al Jazeera.

In dark and dangerous conditions, rescuers tried to save those they could. “We rushed downstairs when we heard the bombing. We saw the whole building coming down,” another man said. “We collected body parts of women and children. I swear to God they were all women and children between seven, eight and 12 years old. What have they done to deserve to die like this? What did this young girl do to Israel to be dismembered like this?”

‘For 8 years, we tried to have him’: Family of baby killed in Israeli strike

warning, picture of dead baby

Spoiler!

Palestinian woman Noor al-Dalou carries the body of her son Yasser, who was killed in an Israeli strike at Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir el-Balah, central Gaza.

Yasser al-Dalu’s parents had waited eight years to have their child. Now, the four-months-old is dead. “I struggled so much to be able to have him,” Noor al-Dalu, Yasser’s grieving mother, told the Reuters news agency. Yasser was born not long after Israel attacked Gaza last year. He was killed along with 21 others when the house they were in was struck by Israeli missiles on Friday. His small body is wrapped in a shroud inside a morgue.

Fourteen children, including Yasser, four women, and four men were killed in the attack on a house owned by the family of Mahmoud Abu Zaeiter, a comedian with 1.2 million online followers. Their house in Deir el-Balah was where Yasser and his parents were sheltering in after they fled Gaza City at the start of the war.

“We were sitting, and suddenly the rubble fell on our heads, I don’t know how the missiles fell, I was holding the child, in my embrace. I was telling, Noor, ‘Look at your son,’ I started nudging the baby, and moving him, slapping him so he could cry, but he didn’t, he was still,” said Rasha Abu Zaeiter, Yasser’s grandmother.

Dozens were rushed to the nearby Al-Aqsa Hospital, a barely functioning facility struggling to cope with the number of victims.


A woman mourns next to the bodies of Palestinians killed at Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir el-Balah

Al-Aqsa struggles to cope with inflow of Deir el-Balah victims: Doctor

“We expect to receive many more by the ambulances that are still at the site,” he told Al Jazeera. “We are not equipped to receive such large numbers of victims,” he said, adding that the strike was part of Israel’s “genocide against our people”.


Palestinians wounded in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip are brought to Al Aqsa hospital in Deir al Balah, Friday



Air strike hits Rafah

We’re getting reports of an Israeli air raid hitting Rafah in the last 30 minutes, causing major destruction. Our colleagues on the ground are reporting many casualties with bodies scattered on the streets. We’re hearing that a house was targeted by Israeli aircraft in the vicinity of al-Dakhiliyah Street in the al-Geneina neighbourhood, which is in southern Rafah.

At least seven people have been killed and several others wounded in the attack in Rafah. The area that was hit is on a busy road leading to a market.


Palestinians attend to casualties, at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Rafah, Saturday

Rafah bombing victims ‘incinerated beyond recognition’

The air raid [carried out] within the past hour took place on a very busy road leading to a market and hit a two-story residential building. The area shook as if an earthquake hit it, there was complete destruction and fire everywhere. Cars were incinerated and people on the sidewalks were critically injured.

Victims were also pulled from the under the rubble for the building. Seven people were reported killed, five of whom have been identified. Two of them could not be identified as they were incinerated beyond recognition.


Palestinians gather at the site of an Israeli strike on a house in Rafah, Saturday

 

Israeli attacks hit eastern Rafah

Our colleagues at Al Jazeera are also reporting Israeli artillery shelling in the areas of Qaizan al-Najjar and Batn al-Sameen, in the southern city of Khan Younis. International concern has in recent weeks centred on Rafah, amid fears that an Israeli army ground invasion could displace hundreds of thousands of Palestinians across the frontier with Egypt.

Israel has said it has no intention of displacing residents of Gaza across the border, but the majority of Gaza’s population is currently sheltered in Rafah, after being pushed there by Israel’s complete devastation of all other cities in the Strip.



Israeli forces hit Gaza City neighbourhood

Our colleagues at Al Jazeera are reporting an Israeli attack at Beach camp, locally known as Shati refugee camp, in Gaza City that has resulted in several deaths and injuries. Israeli forces have attacked the camp several times since the war began on October 7.

Palestinian news agency Wafa reports, citing local sources, that two Palestinians were killed in the attack and four others wounded. Israeli warplanes reportedly targeted a gathering of civilians in the camp, leading to the deaths.




Dead horses, scraps, leaves: Gaza’s hungry get desperate

At the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza, Abu Gibril is so desperate for food to feed his family that he slaughtered two of his horses. “We had no other choice but to slaughter the horses to feed the children. Hunger is killing us,” the 60-year-old told the AFP news agency.

Food is running out, with aid agencies unable to get into the area because of the bombing and attacks on the few trucks that try to get through. Residents have taken to eating scavenged scraps of rotten corn, animal fodder unfit for human consumption and even leaves to try to stave off the growing hunger pangs.

The WFP said its teams reported “unprecedented levels of desperation” while the UN warned that 2.2 million people were on the brink of famine. “We the grown-ups can still make it but these children who are four and five years old, what did they do wrong to sleep hungry and wake up hungry?” Gibril said.



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Pro-Palestine supporters take to the streets in Milan


People march during a protest in support of Palestinians and to demand an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza strip, on February 24, 2024, in Milan

The UN humanitarian agency OCHA warned that “the elevated risk of famine in Gaza is projected to increase” without enough food and water, as well as health services


Demonstrators hold placards depicting Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu shaking hands with Prime Minister of Italy Giorgia Meloni during the protest



ICJ member states should cut ties with Israel: Watchdog

International Court of Justice member states should cut political and military ties with Israel for violating the ruling on the Gaza genocide, the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor says.

In a statement, the Geneva-based organisation says that over the course of the four weeks since the ICJ decision, it has continued to document Israeli violations during its war on the Gaza Strip, begun October 7. “From the evidence examined in the period since the court ruling, Euro-Med Monitor demonstrated that the Israeli army is still carrying out genocide against the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip,” it says.

“Euro-Med Monitor emphasised that Israel persists in violating international law by targeting Palestinians, primarily in the Gaza Strip, with genocide, grave violations, war crimes, and crimes against humanity.”

Protests against Netanyahu across Israel


Israeli police officers are cracking down on demonstrators during a protest in Tel Aviv against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government. Some protesters are calling for a deal to return the captives in held Gaza, while others are chanting against the government across Israel, including in Caesarea, where protesters are gathered outside Netanyahu’s private home.


‘We must admit that this is Jewish terrorism’: Israeli group on settler violence

Mistaclim, a group of Israeli anti-occupation activists, has listed several incidents wherein settlers attacked Palestinians or their property in the occupied West Bank. In the last few days, the group said, in Shaeb al-Botum, settlers hurled stones, tried to run over a flock of sheep, and took the father of the family and his son to the settlement. Other attacks, according to Mistaclim, include:

  • In Burqah, they set fire to a house and injured two
  • In Kafr Kadum, they defaced houses and shops by spraypainting the Star of David
  • In Burin, they set fire to a car
  • In Sinjil, they burned down a house
  • In Asira al-Qibliya, they invaded the village

Israeli war cabinet to convene on potential captive deal

We do know that negotiators had come back from Paris with what they’re calling an outline and a framework to proceed with a deal to bring back the captives. The fact that negotiators wanted the war cabinet to convene to vote on the outline that they have received from mediators means there is something tangible here, and the negotiators came back from this meeting with something to offer now.

Israel’s war cabinet will convene, discuss, and then vote on this framework. After that, the wider cabinet will meet to discuss the deal in its entirety. According to media reports in Israel, we’re talking about a deal that would see a six-week pause in the fighting in exchange for around 40 Israeli captives, in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian detainees in Israeli jails.

All of this comes following immense US pressure on the Israelis to send their negotiators back to the table to meet with mediators in order to secure some sort of deal to recover the captives.

Netanyahu to convene cabinet next week to approve Rafah operation

“Only a combination of military pressure and firm negotiations will lead to the release of our hostages, the elimination of Hamas and the achievement of all the war’s objectives,” the Israeli prime minister says on X.

On the negotiations, underway in Paris between the US, Qatar, Egypt, Hamas and Israel, he said, “We are working to obtain another outline for the release of our hostages, as well as the completion of the elimination of the Hamas battalions in Rafah. That is why I sent a delegation to Paris and tonight we will discuss the next steps in the negotiations”



Hezbollah attacks Israeli army position, fires rockets into northern Israel

The Lebanese group says that it targeted the Israeli army’s “headquarters of the Beit Hillal Battalion of the 769th Eastern Regional Brigade” with Katyusha rockets.

In a break from the regular statements published by Hezbollah, the group says that this attack was carried out “in response to the enemy’s attacks on villages and civilian homes, especially in the town of Baraachit”. Meanwhile, our correspondent, along with Israeli media, reports that more than 20 rockets were fired from southern Lebanon towards the Kiryat Shmona settlement in northern Israel.

Al Jazeera’s correspondent also reported that sirens sounded in several areas in the Upper Galilee on the border with Lebanon.

US, UK strikes hit Yemen capital: Reports

The Houthi-affiliated Al Masirah TV is reporting that US and UK forces have struck targets in Sanaa. The Houthi-affiliated media outlet Al-Masirah said US and UK forces carried out three raids in the capital Sanaa, hitting an insecticide factory in al-Nahda neighborhood in al-Thawra District.

The US Central Command says American and UK forces with support from its western allies, have hit 18 Houthi targets. “These strikes from this multilateral coalition targeted areas used by the Houthis to attack international merchant vessels and naval ships in the region,” CENTCOM said in a post on X.

“Illegal Houthi attacks have disrupted humanitarian aid bound for Yemen, harmed Middle Eastern economies, and caused environmental damage.” 

Houthis target US operated fuel tanker in Gulf of Aden

Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis targeted MV Torm Thor, a US-flagged, owned, and operated oil tanker, in the Gulf of Aden, the group’s military spokesman Yahya Sarea has said in a televised speech.

We earlier reported the US army’s Central Command saying its ship the USS Mason shot down one anti-ship ballistic missile in the Gulf of Aden, that was most likely targeting the Torm Thor.

Anti-government protest in Tel Aviv

Protesters take part in an anti-government demonstration in the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv on February 24, 2024. Members of Israeli security forces mounted on horses try to disperse protesters



Israeli security forces clash with protesters

Israeli police use water cannon on protesters

We reported earlier that protesters are demonstrating across Israel for a deal to release the captives in Gaza and/or for Netanyahu to step down as prime minister. Israeli police are now using force against protesters in Tel Aviv.

The Israeli police say they have arrested 21 people near the Kirya complex in Tel Aviv, rising from five earlier in the night. The police say this demonstration was illegal, with protesters blocking roads and clashing with its personnel.

“At the same time as the approved protest, a number of protesters gathered at the intersection illegally and began to break the order and confront the police. At the end of the approved protest, most of the protesters dispersed, when dozens of the protesters began to descend on the Kaplan intersection and violated the order along with the rest of the protesters who were present there,” the Israeli police wrote on X.



Demonstrators call for end to Gaza war in Berlin

The rally in the German capital saw hundreds of protesters calling for an immediate halt to the ongoing war in Gaza. Demonstrators marched in the streets brandishing banners carrying messages like “Freedom for Palestine” and “Stop the Genocide”.

They join protesters around the world today in countries such as Italy, Holland and the UK.

Al Haq condemns killing of human rights defender

The legal rights organisation denounces the killing of Dana Yaghy with 40 members of her family in the besieged Gaza Strip. “We extend our deepest condolences to her remaining family and our dear colleagues at the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights – PCHR,” the organisation says in a statement.

Yaghy was killed in an Israeli bombing along with 40 members of her family, including 10 children in Deir el-Balah. The 27-year-old was killed a few days after her colleague Nour Abu Al-Nour, “both fantastic young lawyers”, the organisation says.





Baby dies after family unable to find milk in northern Gaza

A two-month-old child, named Mahmoud Fattouh, has died of malnutrition in Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, the Wafa news agency is reporting, citing medical sources. Baby Mahmud died after his family was unable to find milk and basic supplies.

A paramedic who helped Mahmud’s parents bring him to the hospital says, “We saw a woman carrying her baby, screaming for help. Her pale baby seemed to be taking his last breath.” The paramedic says that they rushed Mahmud to hospital where he was taken to the ICU with acute malnutrition but didn’t survive.

Gaza City is in the northern Gaza Strip, where almost no food has been delivered since the beginning of the year, and UNRWA and the WFP have both now suspended aid activities.

No milk for babies in Gaza: Paediatrician

Moaz Al Majida, a paediatrician in Gaza, says that nursing mothers are unable to lactate as their health worsens, affecting the health of their babies. “Children are also eating food that lacks essential nutrients for their growth,” Al Majida added.

Earlier this week, a new analysis from UNICEF and other aid organisations said that “a steep rise in malnutrition among children and pregnant and breastfeeding women in the Gaza strip poses grave threats to their health”.

“The Gaza Strip is poised to witness an explosion in preventable child deaths which would compound the already unbearable level of child deaths in Gaza,” said UNICEF’s deputy executive director for humanitarian action and supply operations, Ted Chaiban.

Norway mourns human rights lawyers killed in Gaza

Norway’s embassy in Palestine has shared a social media post mourning the deaths of two Palestinian human rights lawyers killed in Gaza. Norway described Nour Naser Abu Al-Nour and Dana Yaghi as two “brilliant young lawyers” who worked with the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR), defending women’s rights.

PCHR said that Dana Yaghi was killed along with 40 others by an Israeli air strike on her family home in Deir el-Balah, on Thursday. Two days earlier, “Israeli warplanes killed our colleague Nour Abu Nour along seven members of her family, including her two-year-old daughter,” PCHR added.




Rafah under wide bombardment

Rafah today has been under wide military bombardment. We’ve been seeing that residential flats today have been targeted in central Rafah. At least eight Palestinians have been reported killed. Alongside that, another air strike targeted agricultural land on the eastern side of the Rafah district. And within the past few hours, we have seen more explosions in the eastern parts of Rafah where another house has been targeted.


Palestinians carry a body following Israeli bombardment in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Saturday

‘Increased airstrikes in Rafah’ hurting ‘overstretched’ aid efforts: UNRWA

The latest situation report from the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, has said that “increased airstrikes in Rafah have heightened fears for the already “overstretched humanitarian operations” in the southern Gaza city. UNRWA also said that thousands of Palestinians are still fleeing to Rafah after weeks of “intense fighting in and around” neighbouring Khan Younis.

The report comes as Israeli forces have killed at least seven people, including a child, in an attack on central Rafah. Rafah has become densely overcrowded with almost 1.5 million people sheltering there, according to UNRWA. Rafah is also the only location through which aid trucks are entering the Gaza Strip but UNRWA says fewer than 35 trucks entered the besieged enclave on average per day last week.

On Friday, UNRWA spokesperson Adnan Abu Hasna told Al Jazeera that the agency is no longer able to provide assistance in northern Gaza.



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'Israelis Don't See Images From Gaza Because Our Journalists Are Not Doing Their Job'

https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/podcasts/2023-12-13/ty-article-podcast/israelis-dont-see-images-from-gaza-because-our-journalists-are-not-doing-their-job/

In the conversation, Saragusti also addresses the fact that Israeli mainstream media barely shows images of what's happening in Gaza and isn't regularly reporting on the dire situation in the Strip.

"The fact that Israeli audiences don't see images from Gaza means that journalists are not doing their jobs," she says. "They have to show the images. Hebrew-speaking Israelis watching television news are not exposed at all to what's going on in Gaza. We don't see the atrocities, the rubble, the destruction and the humanitarian crisis. The world sees something completely different."

Israelis fear that the world doesn't see their pain and is only sympathizing with the Palestinians. Saragusti sees things differently. According to her, "The world saw the October 7 massacre. Journalists came to Israel, they saw the bodies, the remains of the Nova partygoers, the destruction in the kibbutzim. They delivered the message, they reported on it. But now the focus is somewhere else.

"The fact is that people outside of Israel are seeing a completely different picture of reality. If we don't see what they are seeing, we won't be able to understand the growing sentiment against us. The majority of people know what happened, they know there was a massacre, they understand Israel went through something devastating. The fact that we Israelis are living in a completely different dimension doesn't work to our advantage. We need to deal with it."

 

How Israeli Media Became a Wartime Government Propaganda Arm

https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-12-25/ty-article-magazine/.premium/how-israeli-media-became-a-wartime-government-propaganda-arm/

After criticism of those in power in the initial days after the Hamas attack of October 7, the news channels have since devoted themselves to national morale, exclusively relying on official military statements and completely ignoring Palestinian casualties

The Gaza war is unfolding on Israelis' various screens via straightforward, unquestioning reporting of the Israeli military's official accounts, plus a daily press briefing by military spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari. The coverage meanwhile downplays critical questions that have arisen during the conflict, like how much the ground maneuver endangers the lives of the Israeli hostages in Gaza.

The deaths of thousands of Palestinian families in Gaza are ignored, and the Israeli media's coverage shows images of destroyed buildings without mentioning the possibility of people being buried beneath the rubble. Only a few on-air voices challenge the establishment's perception, even though the war broke out because of excessive reliance on pre-established concepts.

There is an obsessive repetition that the reports have been approved for publication by military censors. The media also gives too much attention to emotionality at the expense of hard news reports regarding the subject of the hostages. Perhaps more than anything, the media landscape is marked by endless forms of self-censorship.


Journalists and media researchers fear that Israeli broadcasting is returning to bad habits as part of an effort to lift morale and maintain solidarity with soldiers risking their lives in Gaza – and, in doing so, is failing to show the reality in Gaza.

"There are no explicit instructions, but there's this kind of vibe that allows no place for stories of Gazan victims in the news broadcasts," says a reporter for a leading new channel. "This is a surrender to the public mood, one that says that after such a great disaster, you shouldn't 'give the enemy an opportunity.'


"The problem is that this is detrimental to the role of the journalist because viewers get used to not treating the other side as human beings and then don't understand why the whole world, which sees the difficult images from Gaza, turns its back on us and treats Israel as the aggressor."


David Gurevitz, a cultural researcher and lecturer in the School of Media Studies at the College of Management Academic Studies in Rishon Letzion, says that "at first after the war broke out, the broadcast media played a responsible role. Now it's becoming a propaganda arm of the government, full of populism and fiery patriotism. What motivates the media is the desire to appeal to the public and get high ratings."

...

"On the one hand, delving into sensitive issues is our responsibility, but on the other, it's hard to deal with because of the difficulty the public has," she says. "So, again we aren't debating things that clearly will land on the public's desk in the future. When will we talk about the high number of reservists being killed, about friendly fire and the military accidents that are creating many victims, about the growing violence in the West Bank?

"There's fear of the public and its reaction, and fear of the politicians because everything is again becoming political, and 'the poison machine'" – as the network of incendiary, right-wing commentators and broadcasters that supports Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and attacks his purported enemies – "is very intense.



The most prominent figure in Israeli coverage of the war.: A daily update from IDF Spokesman Daniel Hagari is being shown on Channel 12 News.

Despite Netanyahu's low level of support and trust from the public, every wartime statement he makes to the media has been broadcast live. But with all due respect to Kushmaro (or Netanyahu), the most prominent figure who must be examined to understand the coverage of the war is IDF Spokesman Hagari.

Unlike many of Netanyahu's cabinet ministers, Hagari is perceived as credible and popular – to such an extent, says Gurevitz, that the public "treat him as though he were sacred, without any criticism, and with endless deference such that we have never seen for an IDF spokesman. There's total acceptance of him on the news broadcasts." Hagari's live daily briefings have become a regular fixture on the evening news as if he were an on-air talent who transcended a single station.


"The formula is fairly fixed," Gurevitz says, referring to the order of the main 8 P.M. news broadcasts, "with the main news from the battlefield, two commentators, 'suffering and bravery' features – the soldiers who have fallen in battle and the hostages' stories – and the IDF spokesman's news conference."

Each evening, Hagari makes sure to note the names of the most recent fallen soldiers and says that the entire military is embracing their families. By contrast, the deaths of thousands of Palestinian children are entirely absent from the news and current affairs coverage.


An Israeli soldier overlooks the ruins in Gaza, this month. Israelis are exposed only to one-sided coverage.

"From the moment that the army entered Gaza on the ground, we've really been spoon-fed by the IDF spokesman," says Shwartz Altshuler, noting that in the initial days following the October 7 slaughter in border communities, the media managed to find creative ways to report from the ground, even when being at the scene posed a risk.

"But since the [ground entry into Gaza on October 27], the distorted picture of the world that we have been seeing is mainly based on the [IDF] spokesman, and that should not be happening," she says. "We have to examine what's broadcast from inside Gaza and what they're showing on the media abroad and paint a picture that reflects reality."

Journalist Ben Caspit, considered to be in the political center and as a left-wing counterpoint to Amit Segal on Channel 12 and Yinon Magal on the right-wing Channel 14, described in a tweet the suffering in Gaza being ignored as a moral necessity: "Why should we turn our attention [to Gaza]? They've earned that hell fairly, and I don't have a milligram of empathy."

'The atmosphere in the newsroom is that Hamas is fabricating everything and that all the numbers and stories coming out of Gaza need to be taken with a lot of caution – that there actually isn't any basis for showing anything.'

"Numbers such as 20,000 dead become abstract when you don't see the difficult images," Gurevitz warns. "The Israeli audience isn't capable of accommodating two kinds of pain together, seeing and identifying with the human victim on the other side as such, and the media follows suit."

Shwartz Altshuler's assessment is that the main motive for the Israeli coverage of Gaza isn't actually a lack of empathy for the Palestinians living there but rather the relationship with the IDF spokesman and a lack of access to content that isn't suspected of being biased in favor of the Palestinians. Unlike in prior wars, the IDF has been largely preventing foreign reporters from entering Gaza.

...

A related issue is the narrow range of views presented on media outlets' various panel discussions. Most of the commentators– including large numbers of reporters and people previously in positions of authority who have crowded the studios since the outbreak of the war – use the same source, Shwartz Altshuler says.

"So how exactly will there be multiple views and perspectives regarding reality?" She asks. "For example, Tamir Hayman, the former head of Military Intelligence, who is a commentator on Channel 12 News, is a member of a limited team of advisers to Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on the war. "What's the difference between him and Jacob Bardugo?" she asks, referring to a close associate of Netanyahu who has worked in radio. "I don't think Hayman represents Gallant, but he does represent the defense establishment."

The issue, she says, is not just who appears on the air, but also who doesn't. Shwartz Altshuler cites revelations in the media about IDF border post spotters and an officer in Military Intelligence's Unit 8200 who had expressed concern about indications that Hamas was planning an attack before October 7. The Israel Democracy Institute fellow also asked why the channels didn't take the opportunity to feature more female commentators.

"Unlike men, they weren't part of the [mistaken] doctrine and the system that failed. Instead, again they're bringing in women to talk about psychology and men about defense," she says.

On December 4, the journalists' issued a letter calling on the directors of the TV news outlets to change the model and have at least half of the panel participants be women. But even more glaringly than the absence of women, the voices of Arab citizens of Israel have become a rarity on news broadcasts, even by the usual Israeli standards (unless their name happens to Yoseph Haddad, a high-profile pro-Israel advocate).

"The Arab community has been entirely excluded from the discourse, and therefore the public impression has been created that it doesn't exist at all in connection with these events," says Kholod Idres, the co-director of the Department for a Shared Society at the Sikkuy Association for the Advancement of Equal Opportunity nonprofit.

"The clearest example of that is that the hostages from the Arab community were totally ignored at the beginning of the war. For more than a week, with the exception of Army Radio, the main media outlets in Israel didn't mention the fact that among the hundreds of Israelis who were abducted to Gaza, there were also Arab citizens. On Channel 12, the first reference to the subject only came on October 20."

...

The full picture of the war isn't being shown, and the tours of Gaza that the IDF Spokesman's Office arranges for reporters don't really fill it out, but the media's quest for "an image of victory" explains at least some of the media's conduct.

"We'll see it more and more strongly in the coming weeks as the war begins to wane," Shwartz Altshuler predicts. The desire to portray the end of the war as a victory papering over the war's declared goal of completely defeating Hamas is mainly financial, she says, not ideological. "The media can't indicate to the public that 'we've lost' and still sell advertising," she says. "It needs the government to create the drama and the government needs it to create the narrative."

The initial signs of the trend were seen in the emotional images of the return of the hostages to Israel. "It was a total reality show," Shwartz Altshuler says. "Content to fill a vacuum, without news value but infringing on the privacy of the hostages who have returned."

The releases were documented even though the hostages' privacy has been respected in Israeli media coverage of hostage videos released by Hamas. Also absent from the Israeli coverage are pictures from foreign media news of Palestinian prisoners whom Israel released in exchange for the hostages and their reunion with their families.

A more recent example is the images of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in Gaza, handcuffed and in their underwear – broadcast despite the assessment (reported in Haaretz) that only about 10 to 15 percent of them were actually active in Hamas or identified with the organization. (A similar photo was released in the 2014 Gaza war.)

Enlisting the media during wartime is hardly a new concept, but Gurevitz has the feeling that this time, it's more pronounced than before: "The media is now reflecting our traumatic situation and the legitimization of acting in an extreme fashion because of it, and reflects a public thirst for revenge," he says. "Revenge is something that obviously motivates armies, but it doesn't really solve problems. The harsh rhetoric and sense of hysteria don't project Israeli strength, but rather despair and a desire to see pictures of surrender at any price."

...

Naor casts doubt over the argument that criticism of a war shouldn't be voiced while it is being fought ("quiet, we're shooting," as the saying goes in Hebrew). Such an approach, he says, cannot last for long.

You can't discount the shock that the events of October 7 have caused, but if anyone had hope that they would produce positive changes in the conduct of the Israeli media, they're bound to be disappointed. "Catastrophes don't create a change of reality. That requires genuine processes," Shwartz Altshuler says, pointing out that even amid the current fighting, the Israeli government hasn't stopped trying to intervene with the media for its own ends – pressing for concessions, for example, to Channel 14, a pro-Netanyahu station, and to regional radio stations.

"Why isn't anyone in television saying that Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi is exploiting 'quiet, we're shooting' to alter the television market?" she asks. No positive process will be possible, she says, without comprehensive soul-searching, which cannot wait until the war is over.



Only a UN peace keeping mission can stop Israel and US needs to stop vetoing in the security council



Just a guy who doesn't want to be bored. Also

Report of two-month old baby dying in Gaza from hunger ‘horrific’: UNRWA

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees says high risk malnutrition continues to increase in the coastal enclave, with one in six children in northern Gaza “severely malnourished”. “We continue to appeal for regular humanitarian access,” UNRWA said in a post on X.

According to Shehab news agency, the two-month old infant Mahmoud Fattouh died at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Friday. Footage, verified by Al Jazeera, showed the emaciated infant gasping for breath in a hospital bed.

Death of children in Gaza ‘man-made’: Doctor

Mads Gilbert, a Norwegian physician and humanitarian advocate, says infant death from starvation is a direct consequence of Israeli restrictions on aid entering the coastal enclave. “This is not a tragedy; it is man-made. Starvation is being forced upon the people of Gaza by the Israeli occupation forces,” Gilbert, who has more than 30 years of experience working in Gaza hospitals, told Al Jazeera.

“Just two days ago, the international nutrition cluster came out with a very alarming report … that there is a sharp increase in the drivers of malnutrition in Gaza – food insecurity, a lack of diversity in the diet and decreasing infant and young child feeding possibilities.”

Gilbert said Israel’s restricting food and water in the enclave was a “huge war crime”.



“How can the world just sit idly by and watch children die from starvation?”

Dr Mads Gilbert says more babies, children, and pregnant women are likely to die in the enclave due to a lack of food and water during the war. Those who do survive are likely to suffer long-term development problems, including stunting and disease, he says.

“There is a combination of malnutrition, starvation and thirst. This triangle will cause more death,” Gilbert told Al Jazeera. “In Gaza what is needed is water and food — and it’s all available from the neighbouring country,” Gilbert added. “But Israel is stopping the entry of food and water to the people of Gaza, which is a huge war crime. How can the world just sit idly by and watch children dying from starvation?”

“This is not a tragedy. This is a man-made, meant-to-be starvation, forced upon the people of Gaza by the Israeli occupation forces … It’s part of the politics of elimination of the Palestinian people,” he said.

Israeli army targets 2 hungry sisters seeking food in northern Gaza

Photos and testimonies have documented the Israeli army’s targeting of two Palestinian sisters while they were searching for food inside agricultural land in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip. The attack killed Hadeel Aghlais, whose body was transported on a towed cart. Her sister, Iman Aghlais, survived.

A child described that Hadeel was shot twice, in the heart and jaw, and noted that hunger forced the sisters to go to a dangerous area in order to get food. “Even the donkey was injured, we are not guilty of all this, we want a solution,” the child, who witnessed the shooting, said.

The world has failed the children of Gaza: Canadian doctor

Dr Fozia Alvi, a physician from Calgary, who went to Gaza for eight days, has said that she, along with her colleagues, “witnessed crimes against humanity together, saw small children dying of hunger, bombs, sniper shots.” She previously said that doctors, including herself, saw young children with catastrophic injuries, amputations, crushed limbs, ruptured eyes and severe burns.

Last time food delivered to northern Gaza was Jan 23: UNRWA

UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini says that since then, together with other UN agencies, “we have warned against looming famine, appealed for regular humanitarian access, and stated that famine can be averted if more food convoys are allowed into northern Gaza on a regular basis.”

Lazzarini says that the UN’s calls to send food aid have been denied and fallen on deaf ears.

“This is a man made disaster. The world committed to never let famine happen again. Famine can still be avoided, through genuine political will to grant access and protection to meaningful assistance. The days to come will once again test our common humanity and values,” he said.

UNRWA warns of diseases spreading due to unsanitary conditions in Gaza

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees has said shelters in the besieged coastal enclave are severely overcrowded. “Clean water is scarce. Solid waste is accumulating. Spread of diseases is on the rise,” UNRWA says in a post on X. “The situation is catastrophic, but UNRWA teams continue working to provide critical aid.”

Situation in northern Gaza catastrophic ‘beyond description’: Health Ministry

The ministry in the besieged enclave describes the dire health situation in northern Gaza as hospitals run out of fuel:

  • Medical refrigerators are without electricity, which risks destroying large quantities of sensitive medication.
  • Dozens of ambulances and medical services are out of commission.
  • Dialysis and intensive care patients are facing death due to the lack of fuel for generators, ambulances and medicine.

Rescuers continue to search for Palestinians trapped under rubble in north Gaza

Operations to rescue people under the rubble are still ongoing. It is an extremely difficult process, according to civil defence crew members, paramedics, and volunteers we spoke to.

This is not only the case in Beit Lahiya, where three people were killed in a home, but also in areas south of Gaza City, including the Zeitoun neighbourhood. There, another home was destroyed, killing three more people from one family and leaving others trapped under the rubble. The type of bombs that were used there flatten entire buildings, according to civil defence crew members on the ground.

In Khan Younis in southern Gaza, artillery shelling is ongoing, while attack drones and surveillance drones are in the air. It is getting very dangerous for people there, who in the past were targeted by these drones when they tried to move.



Displaced women from Beit Hanoon share tales of displacement and famine


“We suffer a lot. It is not fair to face starvation and face lack of everything. Our life is a complete misery. We are far behind the pace of civilisation and we can’t achieve any progress in the future. The suffering of the Palestinian people is unprecedented. We live in misery and suffering since birth,” Abu-Amsha added. Zarifa Ahmed Abdel-Hadi Hamed, 73-year-old from Beit Hanoon, said she has seen “so many wars but this one is the worst”.

“I have never witnessed the starvation like this … The last 45 years for the Palestinians are the worst in history and this war comes on top of everything else. We have never seen such humiliation … Death for us is much better than our current life,” she said.


A woman walks amid tents in a camp in Deir el-Balah on Saturday

Israeli forces partially withdraw from Nasser Hospital

The situation is really chaotic, as we have been seeing disturbing videos emerge from Nasser Hospital after the partial Israeli withdrawal. Inside, Israeli tanks have ruined much of the area around the hospital, razing the places that were allocated for ambulances to be stationed. Also, the Israeli military forces managed to destroy the mass grave that residents were forced to make – to bury the dead who were not able to get out.

Widespread destruction in Khan Younis after Israeli forces withdraw



A man passes by a destroyed building while walking on asphalt roads, turned upside down by Israeli airstrikes, as the withdrawal of the Israeli forces from some areas of Khan Younis turns the city into a pile of rubble and ash.



People walk among rubbles of demolished buildings, destroyed by Israeli air strikes





Renowned artist dies in Gaza after being denied treatment abroad

The Palestinian Authority (PA) Ministry of Culture has said that Gaza’s iconic artist Fathi Ghabin died today after Israeli authorities prevented him from leaving the besieged coastal enclave for treatment abroad. “Ghabin was at Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir Al Balah waiting to exit to Egypt to be treated there. All his paperwork was in order and he waited for two weeks but never received a permit to leave,” the ministry said in a statement.

Hundreds of patients in need of dialysis and others with similar chronic illnesses have been unable to leave the Strip for treatment and have not been able to seek treatment in Gaza itself due to a lack of medical supplies, the ministry added.



Aerial photos show over 2,000 aid trucks on Egyptian side of Rafah crossing

Aerial photos obtained by Al Jazeera show more than 2,000 aid trucks piled up on the Egyptian side of the Rafah crossing in the southern Gaza Strip.

Enough food is waiting across Gaza’s borders to feed entire population: UN official

Samer Abdeljaber, the World Food Programme’s (WFP’s) director for emergencies, says there is enough food stocked up across Gaza’s borders to feed the entire population, but it cannot safely reach the war-torn population due to the ongoing violence and extensive security checks.

“We have enough food across the borders, even from Jordan and Egypt, to be able to support 2.2 million people,” said Abdeljaber. “But we need to make sure we have the right access to Gaza from different crossings so that we can actually reach the people – whether they are in the north or the south or in the central areas.”

He noted that the WFP hoped to specifically resume operations in the north of Gaza, where it has had to suspend work due to the unsafe conditions but where there are “lots of people in need”. “Safe routes is one of our requirements to continue assistance to the north and that can only be guaranteed if that is a speedy process,” Abdeljaber said. “Delays at the checkpoints are making it impossible for us to reach deeper into the north.”

His comments come amid reports that people in Gaza, particularly in the north, have been facing starvation as Israel has continued relentless bombardment and blocked delivery of much-needed humanitarian aid.


Trucks carrying humanitarian aid line up at the Rafah Border Crossing, Egypt, on the way to Gaza

Netanyahu says military operation in Rafah ‘will happen’

In an interview with CBS News, the Israeli prime minister says that a deal between Israel and Hamas will delay a military operation in Rafah but stresses that Israel will have to invade at a certain point later. “If we have a deal, it will be delayed somewhat, but it will happen. If we don’t have a deal, we’ll do it anyway,” he told CBS.

He says it’s necessary in order to achieve a total victory.

Additionally, they’re going to be talking about a potential deal to bring back the captives. Again, there is no indication that we are heading in a direction that sees a deal within sight.

Israel’s allies in Europe have warned against the Rafah offensive while the US has called on Netanyahu’s government to present a “credible” plan for protecting civilians crammed into the city before launching the assault.


Palestinians gather at the site of an Israeli attack on a house in Rafah, February 24, 2024

Israel to advance construction of more than 3,300 housing units in occupied West Bank

The Israeli government plans to move forward with the building of 3,344 new housing units – 2,350 units in the settlement of Maale Adumim, 694 in Efrat, and 300 in Kedar, according to non-profit Peace Now. “They are significant and expansive projects that will greatly impact the possibility of reaching a two-state solution, especially the plans in Efrat and Kedar,” the Israeli settlement watchdog said.

“The decision to promote thousands of unnecessary and harmful housing units in settlements is a hasty and irresponsible decision by an extremist government that has long lost the trust of the people,” it added.

 

Orthodox Jews take over Muslim shrine, vandalise graves in West Jerusalem

This to according to Emek Shaveh, an Israeli NGO dedicated to archeology in the context of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. In a post on X, the organisation said that Orthodox Jews took over a Muslim shrine constructed at a site linked to a religious figure and vandalised Muslim graves before declaring it the “Tomb of Binyamin”.




Palestinians in occupied West Bank protest in solidarity with Gaza

Protesters lift placards and national flags at a rally supporting Palestinians in Gaza, in Hebron’s city centre

The protest commemorated 30 years since an Israeli settler killed dozens of Palestinian worshippers at the Ibrahimi Mosque


Thirty years ago, Baruch Goldstein carried out a massacre in Hebron

Breaking The Silence, an Israeli veterans organisation, says 30 years ago today, the settler from Kiryat Arba entered the Ibrahimi Mosque and massacred 29 Muslim worshippers. “They told us to ‘let it go, it’s just a few stray weeds’, and in the meantime continued to cultivate violence and terrorism,” the group says.

In a video it published on X, BTS says: “A handful of settlers turned the murderer into a hero. They’ve turned a cowardly terrorist into the poster boy for Jewish terrorism,” including National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir.

‘Goldstein’s deep racist spirit dominates Israel these days’

Mistaclim, a group of anti-occupation activists in Israel, says that although the Hebron massacre perpetrated by Baruch Goldstein was thirty years ago, “the concept did not change”. “It just became the Israeli mainstream. His spiritual disciples control the cabinet meetings and run the government, the police, the army, the West Bank, and within the state,” the group said in a statement.

“Shuhada Street and its surroundings, a central area of Hebron, which was partially closed immediately after the massacre, has become over the years, a ‘sterile’ area where Palestinians cannot go, through endless circles of hatred, bereavement, death and blood.”

The NewYork-born Goldstein killed 29 Palestinians when he opened fire at the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron. While rising through politics, Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, displayed a photo of Goldstein on his wall.

Israeli settlers storm Bedouin community in occupied West Bank: Report

A group of illegal Israeli settlers have stormed the Bedouin community of Arab al-Malehat, located northwest of Jericho in the occupied West Bank, stealing sheep owned by a local resident.

Hassan Malehat, supervisor of Al-Baidar organisation defending Bedouin rights, told the Wafa news agency that a group of settlers forcefully entered the community and stole nearly 30 sheep belonging to Suleiman Atallah Malehat.

According to Wafa, in the past year, Israeli occupation forces and settlers seized 43 agricultural tractors, 293 vehicles and 296 sheep in similar attacks against Bedouin communities in the region.

15 Palestinians arrested overnight in West Bank

The latest detainees include a journalist and several former detainees, reports the Quds News Network, citing the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society. The arrests add to more than 7,200 Palestinians detained by Israeli forces since October 7, 2023.

Travellers paralysed in West Bank after Israel closed key checkpoint: Wafa

Israeli forces have shut down a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank that patrols the only road connecting the southern part of the territory with the central and northern parts, leading to a massive traffic jam, the Wafa news agency reports. Israeli checkpoints and unanticipated travel barriers are a familiar feature of life for residents of the occupied West Bank, but they have intensified since the Gaza war broke out.

The movement restrictions often add hours to Palestinians’ trips within the territory or stop them from travelling altogether.