The Zionist plan for Gaza is now clear: The ultra-religious Israeli government wants to prolong the war in Gaza for as long as is needed to create conditions so untenable that the Palestinians will "voluntarily" leave the territory: killings, bombings, no schools, no hospitals, constant migration, arrests, home and building demolitions, etc. and STARVATION.
Which explains the refusal by Netanyahu to accept a "permanent" ceasefire. Should he recover the remaining hostages in a "temporary" ceasefire or "pause", he plans to resume the anti-Palestinian genocide in Gaza until there are no Palestinians left. He can then annex Gaza and build the fancy colonial resorts he promised to his Jewish and Zionist American buddies.
=======================================================
U.N. experts say Gazan children dying in Israeli "starvation campaign"
Geneva
— United Nations rights experts on Tuesday accused Israel of carrying
out a "targeted starvation campaign" that has resulted in the deaths of
children in Gaza.
"We declare that Israel's intentional and
targeted starvation campaign against the Palestinian people is a form of
genocidal violence and has resulted in famine across all of Gaza," 10
independent United Nations experts said in a statement.
The U.N.
has not officially declared a famine in the Gaza Strip, but the
experts, including U.N. special rapporteur on the right to food Michael
Fakhri, insisted there was no denying there were famine conditions in
the Palestinian territory.
"Thirty-four Palestinians have died
from malnutrition since 7 October, the majority being children," said
the experts, who were appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council, but
who do not speak on behalf of the United Nations.
Their statement was immediately slammed by Israel's mission to the U.N. in Geneva, which charged that "Mr. Fakhri, and many so-called 'experts' who joined his statement, are as much accustomed to spreading misinformation, as they are to supporting Hamas propaganda and shielding the terrorist organization from scrutiny."
Israel's leaders and military commanders have consistently blamed all the human suffering in Gaza on the enclave's long-time Hamas rulers, who sparked the ongoing war with their unprecedented Oct. 7 terrorist attack on Israel. That attack saw the militants kill about 1,200 people and take some 240 others hostage.
Roughly 80 of those hostages are still believed to be alive, held captive in Gaza, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the goals of his country's war with Hamas are to destroy the group and rescue the hostages.
The Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health says the war has killed more than 38,000 Palestinians in the densely populated coastal territory.
The U.N. experts listed three children who had recently
died "from malnutrition" after a number of others were said to have
starved to death in northern Gaza earlier this year.
"Fayez
Ataya, who was barely six months old, died on 30 May 2024, and
13-year-old Abdulqader Al-Serhi died on June 1, 2024 at the Al-Aqsa
Hospital in Deir Al-Balah," they said.
Nine-year-old Ahmad Abu
Reida died just two days later "in the tent sheltering his displaced
family in Al-Mawasi, Khan Younis," they said.
"With the death of
these children from starvation despite medical treatment in central
Gaza, there is no doubt that famine has spread from northern Gaza into
central and southern Gaza," they said.
The experts decried that the world had not done more to avert the disaster.
"When a two-month-old baby and 10-year-old Yazan Al Kafarneh died of
hunger on 24 February and 4 March respectively, this confirmed that
famine had struck northern Gaza," they said. "The whole world should
have intervened earlier to stop Israel's genocidal starvation campaign
and prevented these deaths… Inaction is complicity."
Gaza has
faced a deep humanitarian crisis since the war erupted and the U.N. has
been warning for months of a looming famine, especially in the north,
but one has not been officially declared. A famine declaration does not
carry any legal implications, but it can help to galvanize international
support for an affected population.
The Israeli mission
highlighted Tuesday that the latest assessment by the Integrated Food
Security Phase Classification (IPC) partnership determined that famine
had not materialized after aid access improved somewhat in Gaza.
"Israel has continuously scaled up its coordination and assistance in
the delivery of humanitarian aid across the Gaza Strip," it said,
claiming Hamas "intentionally steal and hide aid from civilians."
The U.S. government has pressed Israel for months to increase the flow of aid into Gaza, and the Biden administration tasked the military with building a floating pier on the territory's Mediterranean coast in a bid to get more food and other vital supplies in.
The $230 million pier project has been dogged by logistical challenges and never managed to facilitate a significant amount of aid entering Gaza. It was always described by U.S. officials as an additive measure, with the acknowledgement that Gaza's land borders, controlled by Israel, are the only way to get sufficient aid into the enclave.
Aid agencies have accused Israel of limiting the flow of aid into Gaza and creating bureaucratic hurdles to movement around the war-torn territory. Israel dismisses those allegations and says Hamas is the impediment to humanitarian work in Gaza.
No comments:
Post a Comment