Tag: Gaza

  • Netanyahu says Gaza ceasefire won’t be end of Israeli military action

    Netanyahu says Gaza ceasefire won’t be end of Israeli military action

    Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the fighting in the Gaza Strip will continue after a possible ceasefire.

    Netanyahu said this on Tuesday evening before a cabinet vote on a draft deal.

    The war will continue even after the implementation of an agreement with Hamas “until we have achieved all our goals,” Netanyahu said.

    Israel’s goals included the elimination of Hamas and the return of all hostages.

    In addition, there should no longer be a threat to Israel in Gaza.

    According to media reports, the draft agreement with Hamas provides for a four-day ceasefire and an exchange of 50 Hamas hostages for at least 140 prisoners in Israel.

    Both sides are in favour of the release of women and minors.

    Hamas had previously announced that it had already given its consent to the mediators in Egypt and Qatar.

  • Israeli army says it has opened door leading to tunnel under hospital

    Israeli army says it has opened door leading to tunnel under hospital

    The Israeli army says it has broken open the sealed blast-door at the end of a suspected Hamas tunnel under the al-Shifa hospital in the Gaza Strip.

    The military published two pictures on social media platform X, formerly called Twitter, Tuesday evening showing the open door in a tunnel.

    What exactly is behind the door remained unclear at first.

    “Just through this door, underneath the Shifa Hospital, are Hamas’ terrorists tunnels.

    “Here’s the PROOF of Hamas’ terrorism festering underneath hospitals,” the Israel Defense Forces said in their post on X.

    However, the photographs were published without context and could not be independently verified.

    The military suspects a command centre of the Islamist Hamas under the largest hospital in the Gaza Strip.

    Buildings in the vicinity of the hospital were also suspected.

    According to the army, a shaft uncovered a few days ago in the grounds of the embattled hospital led to a tunnel, at the end of which there was a locked “explosion-proof door” after 55 metres.

    Israel says the tunnel leads to a network of Hamas tunnels and bunkers.

    In spite of international criticism, Israeli soldiers have been engaging in combat operations in and around the Shifa hospital for days.

    Israel accuses Hamas of misusing the hospital for “terrorist purposes.”

    But Hamas denies this.

  • War: Gaza’s biggest hospital now ‘death zone’  – WHO

    War: Gaza’s biggest hospital now ‘death zone’  – WHO

    A joint team of United Nations and World Health Organization workers on an “assessment mission” to Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City called the hospital a “death zone” and said the situation is “desperate,” according to a statement released by the WHO Saturday.

    The humanitarian team found a mass grave at its entrance, which they were told contained the bodies of 80 people. The hospital, which has been without clean water, fuel, food or medical supplies for the past six weeks, also contained signs of shelling and gunfire, according to the statement.

    Some are unable or unwilling to leave Al-Shifa: 291 patients and 25 health workers remain. Damage and lack of key resources at the hospital had caused it to “essentially stop functioning as a medical facility,” the WHO statement said, adding that medical and solid waste piled in the corridors. Many injured patients’ wounds were severely infected due to the absence of sanitation and infection control measures at the hospital, it said.

    The statement added that evacuation plans for patients to hospitals in the south are being “urgently developed” by humanitarian organizations, but the ability to carry them out is “pending guarantees of safe passage by parties to the conflict.”

    The World Health Organization said Sunday that it and its partners are making plans to evacuate the remaining 25 health workers and 291 patients at Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital, where conditions continue to deteriorate.

    The hospital is no longer operational and is no longer admitting new patients and has become what a United Nations humanitarian assessment team called a “death zone,” the WHO said.

    “Over the next 24–72 hours, pending guarantees of safe passage by parties to the conflict, additional missions are being arranged to urgently transport patients from Al-Shifa to Nasser Medical Complex and European Gaza Hospital in the south of Gaza,” the WHO said. However, the organization stressed that the latter two hospitals are also overwhelmed, and an influx of patients will “further strain overburdened health staff and resources.”

    The WHO called for immediate efforts to restore functionality at Al-Shifa and other hospitals to provide urgently needed services in Gaza. “The extreme suffering of the people of Gaza demands that we respond immediately and concretely with humanity and compassion,” the WHO said.

    Hundreds fled on foot from Al-Shifa Hospital towards the southern Gaza Strip amid conflicting reports from health officials and the Israeli Defense Forces about who ordered an evacuation. Some rode in horse-drawn carts while others were pushed in wheelchairs.

    Dr. Ramez Radwan described seeing bodies in the streets as they walked on the road leading from the hospital through Gaza City.

    NBC News

  • Kaduna Shi’ites display ‘dead babies’ in protest against Gaza invasion

    Kaduna Shi’ites display ‘dead babies’ in protest against Gaza invasion

    Supporters of Sheikh Ibrahim El-Zakzaky’s Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) popularly known as Shi’ites, have staged a protest against the military invasion in Gaza.

    The protest reportedly took place on Thursday, November 16, in Kaduna State.

    The male members of the group were seen carrying placards and other protest materials.

    The women were seen carrying white clothes wrapped like dead babies with blood stains, symbolizing the children killed in the Israel/Hamas war.

    Over 11,000 persons, including children, have been killed in Israel’s attacks against attack on the Hamas terrorist group.

  • Iran’s supreme leader, Khamenei delivered clear message to Hamas chief – Officials

    Iran’s supreme leader, Khamenei delivered clear message to Hamas chief – Officials

    Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivered a clear message to the head of Hamas Ismail Haniyeh when they met in Tehran in early November, according to three senior officials.

    According to Iranian and Hamas officials with knowledge of the discussions who asked to remain anonymous to speak freely, Khamenei said to the head of Hamas that the group gave Iran no warning of “your Oct. 7 attack on Israel and we will not enter the war on your behalf.”

    The supreme leader said that Iran – a longtime backer of Hamas – would continue to lend the group its political and moral support, but wouldn’t intervene directly.

    A Hamas official told Reuters that Khamenei pressed Haniyeh to silence those voices in the Palestinian group publicly calling for Iran and its powerful Lebanese ally Hezbollah to join the battle against Israel in full force.

    Hezbollah, too, was taken by surprise by Hamas’ devastating assault last month that killed 1,200 Israelis.

    Its fighters were not even on alert in villages near the border that were frontlines in its 2006 war with Israel and had to be rapidly called up, three sources close to the Lebanese group said.

    “We woke up to a war,” said a Hezbollah commander.

    The unfolding crisis marks the first time that the so-called Axis of Resistance – a military alliance built by Iran over four decades to oppose Israeli and American power in the Middle East – has mobilised on multiple fronts at the same time.

    Hezbollah has engaged in the heaviest clashes with Israel for almost 20 years.

    Iran-backed militias have targeted U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria, just as Yemen’s Houthis have launched missiles and drones at Israel.

    The conflict is also testing the limits of the regional coalition whose members – which include the Syrian government, Hezbollah, Hamas, and other militant groups from Iraq to Yemen – have differing priorities and domestic challenges.

    Mohanad Hage Ali, an expert on Hezbollah at the Carnegie Middle East Center think-tank in Beirut, said Hamas’ Oct. 7 assault on Israel had left its axis partners facing tough choices in confronting an adversary with far superior firepower.

    “When you wake up the bear with such an attack, it’s quite difficult for your allies to stand in the same position as you.”

    Hamas, the ruling group of Gaza, is fighting for its survival against an avenging Israel, which vows to wipe it out and has launched a retaliatory onslaught on the tiny enclave that’s killed more than 11,000 Palestinians.

    On Oct. 7, Hamas’ military commander Mohammed Deif called on its axis allies to join the struggle.

    “Our brothers in the Islamic resistance in Lebanon, Iran, Yemen, Iraq, and Syria, this is the day when your resistance unites with your people in Palestine,” he said in an audio message.

    Hints of frustration surfaced in subsequent public statements by Hamas leaders including Khaled Meshaal, who in an Oct. 16 TV interview thanked Hezbollah for its actions thus far but said “the battle requires more”.

    Nonetheless, alliance leader Iran won’t directly intervene in the conflict unless it is itself attacked by Israel or the United States, according to six officials with direct knowledge of Tehran’s thinking who declined to be named due to the sensitive nature of the matter.

    Instead, Iran’s clerical rulers plan to continue using their axis network of armed allies, including Hezbollah, to launch rocket and drone attacks on Israeli and American targets across the Middle East, the officials said.

    The strategy is a calibrated effort to demonstrate solidarity for Hamas in Gaza and stretch Israeli forces without becoming engaged in a direct confrontation with Israel that could draw in the United States, they added.

    “This is their way of trying to create deterrence,” said Dennis Ross, a former senior U.S. diplomat specialising in the Middle East who now works at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy think-tank.

    “A way of saying: ‘Look as long as you don’t attack us, this is the way it will remain. But if you attack us, everything changes’.”

    Iran has repeatedly said that all members of the alliance make their own decisions independently.

    The Iranian foreign ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment about its response to the crisis and the role of the Axis of Resistance, a term of disputed origin that has been used by Iranian officials to describe the coalition.

    Hamas didn’t immediately respond to questions sent to Haniyeh’s media adviser, while Hezbollah also didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

  • Erdoğan accuses Israel of ‘extermination’ strategy in Gaza

    Erdoğan accuses Israel of ‘extermination’ strategy in Gaza

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has accused Israel of pursuing a strategy of extermination against the people of the besieged Gaza Strip and called it a “terror state.”

    “Israel is implementing a strategy of total destruction of a city and its people by deliberately targeting schools, mosques, churches, hospitals, markets, buildings, and streets,” Erdoğan told members of his Islamic-conservative ruling AKP party in Ankara on Wednesday.

    The sharp verbal attacks come shortly before the Turkish leader is to visit Berlin on Friday.

    They follow previous statements from him criticising Israel and supporting the Islamist militant group Hamas, which, together with others, attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing around 1,200 and taking about 240 into Gaza as hostages.

    Israel has retaliated with massive air strikes in Gaza and a major ground offensive.

    Erdoğan further called Israel a “terror state” and accused it of carrying out “non-stop massacres” in Gaza with “limitless support from America and the Western countries.”

    Israel, the United States, and the European Union have all declared Hamas a terrorist organisation but Erdoğan has called the group freedom fighters.

  • As Israel goes ballistic in Gaza, the world calls for ceasefire – By Magnus Onyibe

    As Israel goes ballistic in Gaza, the world calls for ceasefire – By Magnus Onyibe

    As the global community urges a halt to the ongoing Israeli-Gaza armed conflict, Israel, bolstered by unwavering support from the mighty United States of America (USA) and Western Europe, is providing only brief daily respites in the form of four to six hourly ceasefires. These pauses are aimed at facilitating the movement of beleaguered Gazans from the besieged northern region to the comparatively safer southern part of Gaza and for relief to flow into the besieged country.

    But the Gaza Strip and its residents that are experiencing a devastating form of destruction reminiscent of an apocalypse, with Israel acting aggressively, in the manner that resembles a wounded lion attacking its evidently weaker neighbor for invading and killing unarmed civilians. Owing to the ferocity of the counter attack by Israel,and the gruesome deaths of mostly innocent human beings particularly children,the world is once more on edge with protesters against the lsraeli -Hamas war literally covering the surface of the earth as they marched on all the major cities around the world.

    As it may be recalled on October 7, the less powerful neighboring Gaza militants- Hamas invaded Israel’s territory with the intent to harm and violate defenseless Israelis, resulting in the killing of Israelis initially estimated to be 1,400 , currently scaled down to 1,200 and abduction of nearly 240 people who are still in their custody in Gaza . Since that time which is a little over one month, a reprisal war has raged on with lsrael gaining the upper hand as Hamas/Gaza / Palestinians are being literally pulverized.
    In light of these atrocities, anyone with a conscience and a sense of humanity would undoubtedly call for a ceasefire, as is currently happening worldwide through street protests in both the Arab world and the Western Hemisphere as well.

    Arising from the global outcry, the US Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, has emphasized, “Far too many Palestinians have lost their lives.” And urged lsrael to be more conscious on its targeting to prevent the alarming collateral damage being incurred via human casualties.

    Additionally, during the Arab World meeting in Saudi Arabia that held last Saturday , there has been a unanimous call for a ceasefire. However, Israel appears unyielding, connecting the plea for a ceasefire to the condition of releasing approximately 240 Israelis allegedly held as hostages by Gaza fighters.

    To comply with the global call for a ceasefire, according to Prime Minister Netanyahu, would be akin to surrendering to terrorism.

    “The war is moving forward with force that Hamas has never seen,” Netanyahu proclaimed in a vigorous address commemorating a month since the invasion. “There will not be a ceasefire without the return of our kidnapped.”

    The Israeli prisoners are probably detained in a sophisticated network of underground tunnels, assumed to resemble the intricate overhead bridges in Los Angeles, California, USA commonly referred to as’spaghetti’ due to the complex interweaving of roads above and below each other. This network of tunnel in Gaza is believed to be impregnable.

    As such the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) may find it challenging to access these locations easily, making it difficult to rescue Israeli citizens. Therefore, opting for negotiations over sheer force appears to be the most viable approach to ensuring the safe return of Israeli hostages after a ceasefire has been implemented.

    In an apparent effort to exert public pressure on the Israeli leadership, Hamas, or Islamic jihadist fighters in Gaza, seem to be employing a psychological approach. This is evident in a video featuring Israeli hostages, a 70-year-old and a 13-year-old, who are urging Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to cooperate with their captors. The hostages warned that if they were harmed, the responsibility would lie with the prime minister. This tactic underscores a shift toward psychological warfare by the abductors rather than conventional military strategies.

    That move by Hamas is obviously aimed at softening the heart of PM Netanyahu, particularly following the emotional outpouring from the Israeli public, especially the family members of the kidnapped, whose emotions would be heightened by the distress call in the video clip. It is yet to be established if that strategy would work as envisaged by Hamas, or conversely, if it may become a justification for Israel to intensify its military onslaught on Gaza.

    That notion is underscored by the fact that the IDF, may get fired up to redouble efforts to rescue the hostages after watching the contents of the video, making the prospect of storming Gaza to rescue the unfortunate 240 Israelis abducted more urgent.In light of the extremely delicate circumstances surrounding the recent hostage situation, the daring commando raid on Entebbe airport in Uganda, east Africa in 1976 comes to mind as a poignant reference point.

    This historic event, which occurred in 1976, involved the rescue of hostages from a passenger plane en route from Israel that had been hijacked by Palestinian terrorists. The memory of this heroic operation may cast a significant shadow on the minds of Israelis who lived through it and on the global consciousness as a whole.

    Recalling the renowned Entebbe Raid staged by Israel on July 3–4, 1976, as highlighted by Britannica.com, seems relevant at this point. The event involved the rescue of 103 hostages from a hijacked French jet airliner en route from Israel to France.

    The airliner was hijacked on June 27 after stopping in Athens by members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Red Army Faction, a West German radical leftist group. The plane was then flown to Entebbe, Uganda, where additional accomplices joined the hijackers.

    At Entebbe, the hijackers selectively released 258 passengers who were not identified as Israeli or Jewish while keeping the remainder hostage. Their demand for the release of 53 militants imprisoned in Israel, Kenya, West Germany, and other locations added a complex layer to the crisis.

    In response to this dire situation, Israel took swift and decisive action. On July 3, they deployed four Hercules C-130H cargo planes, each carrying 100–200 soldiers, escorted by Phantom jet fighters. Covering a distance of approximately 2,500 miles (4,000 km) from Israel to Uganda, the Israeli force executed a meticulously planned rescue mission.

    Within an hour of landing, they successfully liberated the hostages, showcasing the effectiveness of their strategic and operational prowess.

    All seven militants were neutralized, and 11 MiG fighters, provided to Uganda by the Soviet Union, were obliterated. The Israeli forces incurred the loss of one soldier and three hostages during the operation. On their way back, the Israeli planes rendezvoused with a waiting hospital plane and refueled in Nairobi, Kenya. The success of the Entebbe raid significantly bolstered Israeli morale.

    However, it’s crucial to acknowledge that this event occurred approximately 47 years ago, and the global landscape has undergone significant transformations since 1976. The current hostages are not as visibly situated as the airline hostages were in 1976; instead, they are likely held in the earlier referenced intricate and concealed underground tunnels scattered throughout the Gaza Strip.

    In light of the evolving situation, countries like the US and European nations supporting Israel are facing significant criticism from their citizens for their unwavering endorsement of what some view as the dehumanizing treatment of Palestinians, potentially amounting to war crimes. This backlash is exacerbated by the stark power asymmetry between Israel, a financially and militarily dominant nation, and the impoverished and fledging Hamas/Gaza, the victim of its military operations.

    As a counter force to that psychological warfare of whipping up sentiments by Hamas against lsrael, damning information has been released by Israel and her allies (the US and European countries) indicating that a three years old American baby is amongst the Americans taken hostage by Hamas on October 7 after killing the parents. Somehow, that revelation about the American lad in captivity may temper the anger against Israel and her Western backers in the war as evidenced by the street marches reminiscent of Black Lives Matter, BLM which rocked the world in 2020 after the unfortunate killing of a black man ,Mr George Floyd by a white police officer in Minnesota, USA.

    Regarding the deteriorating humanitarian crisis in Gaza due to the actions of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), UN Special Rapporteur, Francesca Albanese expressed her concerns, especially in the context of the introduction of the daily 4-6 hour battle pause.

    “Think of what it may have felt for the [people] trapped in Gaza, Palestinians [and] hostages alike, especially the children, to be bombed incessantly night and day for 33 days. Not even a few hours of respite.”

    In light of Israel’s mission to clear civilians from the northern part of Gaza and dismantle infrastructure suspected to be operational bases for Hamas, with the goal of completely eliminating what it considers a terrorist group, the military campaign currently underway is being prosecuted without mercy, which is why the very grim optics has ignited expressions of indignation and outrage by men and women of goodwill across the world.

    During this operation, following the unmitigated damage inflicted on both lives and infrastructure triggering public condemnation,Israel has commenced implementing a daily pause in the fighting, lasting 4–6 hours, to facilitate the evacuation of distressed Palestinians from North Gaza to the southern part of the country. However, Mr. Edward Ahmed Mitchell, Deputy Director of the Muslim Advocacy Group CAIR, has expressed reservations about the IDF’s decision to pause the battle on hourly basis , emphasizing that the rest of the world is calling for a ceasefire instead.

    “Instituting a four hour pause on Israel’s indiscriminate bombing of northern Gaza so that Palestinians can flee their homes and face Israel’s indiscriminate bombing of southern Gaza makes no sense. We need a ceasefire across Gaza, not the ethnic cleansing of northern Gaza.”

    The Muslim advocacy group’s accusation of ethnic bias introduces a new dimension, supporting suspicions in some quarters that Israel’s ultimate plan is to render North Gaza not only uninhabited but also uninhabitable. This strategy is likely aimed at transforming the area into a demilitarized zone (DMZ), akin to the one between North and South Korea—an outcome stemming from the Korean Wars in the early 1950s.

    The Korean War commenced on June 25, 1950, when North Korea invaded South Korea after years of tensions between the two nations. China and the Soviet Union supported North Korea, while the United States and its allies backed South Korea. The conflict concluded with an armistice on July 27, 1953, leading to the establishment of a demilitarized zone.

    The current question is: would the Palestinians, who are likely to be further restricted into a much smaller area than the 365 square kilometers that they currently occupy in north and south Gaza, accept a situation where north Gaza is made into a demilitarized zone (DMZ) if Israel is successful in eliminating Hamas in the same way that the US and her allies defeated the extremely vicious and barbaric ISIS?

    Additionally, there is the question of whether the Arab League would be willing to concede more land without a replacement for the territory that might be lost if the speculated creation of a DMZ in north Gaza becomes a reality.

    In this dilemma also lies the question of whether the proposal to reclaim part of the Mediterranean Sea for the expansion of the homeland, as discussed in my previous column titled “Why the Israel-Hamas War Is the Consequence of Rebellion Against God’s Order,” is feasible and viable for the highly oppressed, ultra-sensitive, and extremely resistant Palestinians or not.

    For far too long, Palestinians have borne the brunt of the conflict involving both their political leaders, Hamas and Fatah, embroiled in internal strife, and their neighbor Israel. Despite a shared ancestry tracing back to the father of humankind, Abraham, Palestinians have consistently rejected acceptance by Israel and endured the consequences of engaging in wars with her neighbor intermittently resulting in massive loss of lives over the past Millenia.

    It is intriguing to consider how the current crisis might have been an African challenge had Israel embraced the land offer in Uganda presented by the United Kingdom in 1903 coinciding with the proposal of Palestinian territory. In this alternate scenario, the United Nations could have legitimized Israel as a nation in Africa in 1948, mirroring its establishment in the Middle East.

    The economic progress witnessed in the Middle East, primarily attributed to Israel’s innovative initiatives, could have potentially extended to Africa, and Uganda would have become celebrated for economic advancements instead of its notorious history under the despotic military rule of Field Marshal Idi Amin Dada.

    Even now,the country continues to grapple with prolonged leadership and autocratic rule under civilian dictator,Yoweri Museveni, who has held the presidency for over 37 years since assuming power in 1986.
    However, when considering the establishment of a homeland, Israel favored the land offered by Uganda over Palestine due to their historical connection to the Palestinians.

    This preference stems from the fact that the land the forbears of Palestinians handed over to them is believed by Israelis to be the original homeland of the Israelites based on biblical accounts going back to Abraham, their forefather, that faced expulsion along with Isaac and Ishmael due to various calamities including famine,pogroms, as well as conflicts with the Ottoman Empire from Turkey, which ruled the region for an extended period.

    This historical plight is compounded by the persecution of Jews during the inquisitions, their subsequent conquest by Islamists, and their eventual migration to Europe, where they endured the harrowing experience of Holocaust and genocide under the rule of Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich in Germany.

    In fact the annals of Israel’s history are marked by adversity and oppression spanning a millennium. Remarkably, in the past century since they were relocated to the Middle East and in the land where the Palestinians lay claim,lsraelis have managed a remarkable recovery since the United Nations officially recognized them as a nation through Resolution 181 in 1948

    It is worthy pointing out that an alternative to the Palestinian land where they eventually got relocated to, there was the option of relocating lsrael to Africa.

    lt is known as “The Uganda Scheme” which according to historical records was a proposal by British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain to create a Jewish homeland in a portion of British East Africa. It was presented at the Sixth World Zionist Congress in Basel in 1903 by Theodor Herzl, the founder of the modern Zionist movement. He presented it as a temporary refuge for Jews to escape rising antisemitism in Europe. The proposal faced opposition from both the Zionist movement and the British Colony.

    That idea of lsreal being located in Africa was the focus in a recent podcast that has gone viral featuring the erudite Professor of international relations and former minister of foreign affairs of Nigeria, professor Bolaji Akinyemi , an alumni of the Fletcher school of law and diplomacy, Massachusetts, USA and Oxford university, UK , who is a mentor to thousands of foreign relations scholars and enthusiasts in Nigeria and across the world.

    One might ponder what could have transpired if Israelis had chosen relocation to Africa. They might have thrived on the African continent, perhaps in the area around Uganda, much like their success in the Middle East. Through remarkable ingenuity, this small nation, with a population of less than 10 million, has transformed its desert landscapes into fertile and productive farmlands. Notably, this relatively modest-sized country boasts one of the highest number of Nobel Prize winners for inventions by nationality.

    It is remarkable that of the 965 individual recipients of the Nobel Prize and the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences between 1901 and 2023, at least 214 have been Jews or people with at least one Jewish parent, representing 22% of all recipients.

    Normally, a developed country triggers pockets of developments that would cascade down to neighboring countries as has been seen between the US, Mexico and Canada that are contiguous North America countries that developed a common trade zone to boost each other’s development . We have also seen it happening in south east Asia where countries around Japan such as Vietnam , Cambodia and those around Korea , Taiwan, Singapore started enjoying trickle down benefits of rapid industrialization triggered by the industrialized countries around them. Perhaps if Israel’s neighbors had been at peace with her, knowledge from high technological industries in the country of which Israel is a global leader might have been spread around to the neighboring countries. But such positive development could not happen in the Middle East due to the atmosphere of hostility prevalent in that geographical area and consequently the toxicity in the relationships between Israel and her neighbors.

    Could lsreal have repeated the same astronomical ingenuity in technology if it was located in Africa? We would never know simply because it did not happen.

    With all the energy that lsrael is currently investing in avenging the killing of lsraelis in their homes following the surprise attack by Hamas on October 7, the energy and resources that could have been invested in ideas that could move the world forward are being wasted in the war against Hamas. The armed conflict that has precipitated catastrophic humanitarian crisis is not only costing precious Israeli lives ,but also exacting enormous pressure on the country’s financial resources and by extension constituting a burden on the world as the allies of lsrael ( US and Europe) are also in one way or the other bearing the burden, just as the creative time and space of Israel has been hobbled in the period that the war has been raging. Until the guns stop blazing the world may not phantom the economic cost of the war that lsrael has suffered which would likely to be colossal.

    Considered from the prism above, no one is actually winning the war. Not lsrael, not Hamas/ Palestine and not even the world. Rather, the whole world is losing the lives of the innocent just as the productive time and resources of the world are also being wasted owing to an avoidable war.

    After all is said and done, despite the fact that it is Hamas that triggered the current unfortunate and sad attack and counter attack by IDF resulting in the loss of human lives of monumental proportions, there is a global plea directed at Israel and its supporters, (the U.S. and its Western allies) to grant Gazans/Palestinians the space to breathe. This phrase, akin to the oppressive act of a knee on a victim’s neck, draws parallels to the tragic incident involving police officer Derek Chauvin, who asphyxiated George Floyd in Minnesota, USA, in 2020 by kneeling on his neck.

    In accordance with conventional wisdom, expressed in the Latin phrase “Vox populi, vox dei,” meaning the voice of the people is the voice of God, the global call for a ceasefire echoes loudly.

    As such,I would like to reiterate, as I did in my last week’s column titled “Why the Israel-Hamas War Is a Consequence of Rebellion Against God’s Order,” my consistent position by urging both Israel and Hamas/Gaza/Palestine to heed the voice of the people across the word which is the voice of God and stop the senseless decimation of human lives and revert to negotiations. Obviously, going by past experiences from the more than five wars that had been fought over the matter,peace has not reigned in the land. That indicates that war is not the answer to the century long conflict.

    As such, it is essential for both Israel and Hamas to sheath their swords and explore more creative and imaginative ways to put an end to the current unmitigated bloodshed in the land that was promised by God to be one flowing with milk and honey in the holy books of instruction of faith for Jews, Muslims, and Christians alike.

    And the reclamation of part of the Mediterranean Sea of which Gaza has 41 kilometers coastline to create additional homeland for the Palestinians, remains one viable option, no matter how daunting the proposition may be in terms of financial and engineering costs as well as it’s possible negative effect on efforts to manage the impact of climate change crisis.

    Despite its complexity,such a costly solution can not be off the table as solution to the crisis that has become a sort of open sore that has remained festooned on the conscience of the world except there are more viable alternatives.

     

    Magnus Onyibe,an entrepreneur,public policy analyst ,author,democracy advocate,development strategist,alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,Tufts University, Massachusetts,USA and a former commissioner in Delta state government, sent this piece from Lagos, Nigeria.
    To continue with this conversation and more ,please visit www.magnum.ng

  • UN flags at half-mast for 101 staff killed in Gaza

    UN flags at half-mast for 101 staff killed in Gaza

    Flags at United Nations (UN) offices around the world are flying at half-mast in memory of the 101 UN staff members killed so far in the Gaza war.

    Staff held a minute’s silence to mourn and honour colleagues from UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) who were killed in the war.

    The UN relief body said in a statement on Monday that “the UNRWA death toll, already the highest in UN history, has continued to increase.”

    It added that the dead were among the 13,000 UNRWA staff working in Gaza, many of them killed with their families.

    They were teachers, school principals, health workers, including a gynaecologist, engineers, support staff and a psychologist, the agency said.

    Tom White, the Director of UNRWA in the Gaza Strip said “UNRWA staff in Gaza appreciates the UN lowering the flags around the world.

    “In Gaza however, we have to keep the UN flag flying high as a sign that we are still standing and serving the people of Gaza,’’ While said from Rafah.

    Meanwhile, UN agencies in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Europe and elsewhere posted photos on social media of flags at half-mast in front of and on their office buildings.

  • UN staff building in Gaza Strip attacked

    UN staff building in Gaza Strip attacked

    The United Nations on Monday said that Israel has attacked a building housing UN staff in the southern part of the Gaza Strip.

    The attack near the Rafah border crossing was another indication that no place in Gaza is safe.

    Not the north, not the centre, and not the south, said Philippe Lazzarini, commissioner general of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

    The UNRWA said it had sent the coordinates of the building’s location to all parties to the conflict twice, most recently on Friday.

    The information could not initially be independently verified.

    According to the UNRWA, four UN employees were being housed in the guest house and had left the building shortly before the attack, otherwise they would have all been killed in the attack, it said.

    Displaced people were not being accommodated in the building, it added.

    According to UN figures, more than 1.5 million people have been displaced as a result of the fighting in the Gaza Strip.

    The UNWRA said more than 60 UN facilities had been directly or indirectly damaged in recent weeks.

    Most of these are schools, which are now being used as emergency shelters.

    More than 600,000 people are said to have sought refuge in UNRWA buildings in the southern Gaza Strip.

  • ICRC demands protection of patients, healthcare workers, medical facilities in Gaza

    ICRC demands protection of patients, healthcare workers, medical facilities in Gaza

    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has called for the respect and protection of medical facilities, patients and healthcare workers in Gaza.

    Mr Aliyu Dawobe, the Public Relations Officer of ICRC, made the call in a statement in Abuja.

    Dawobe said that the healthcare system in Gaza has reached a point of no return, risking the lives of thousands of wounded, sick and displaced people, running on thin and overstretched supplies and increasingly unsafe environment.

    Dawobe quoted Mr William Schomburg, the Head of ICRC sub-delegation in Gaza, as saying “this is severely affecting hospitals and ambulances, and taking a heavy toll on civilians, patients and medical staff.

    “The destruction affecting hospitals in Gaza is becoming unbearable and needs to stop.

    “The lives of thousands of civilians, patients and medical staff are at risk.”

    Schomburg also said that over the past days, ICRC teams distributing critical supplies to medical structures across Gaza, witnessed horrendous images that have now gotten worse due to sharpened hostilities.

    According to him, children’s hospitals have not been spared from the violence, including Al Nasser Hospital, heavily damaged by the hostilities, and Al Rantisi Hospital, which has had to cease its operations.

    He said that their partner, the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS), had been working relentlessly to continue operating the Al Quds Hospital, as it desperately runs out of necessary means, amidst increasing hostilities.

    Schomburg said that Al Shifa Medical Complex, the largest referral hospital in the Gaza Strip, already overwhelmed with patients, now hosts thousands of displaced families who lost their homes over the last month due to the conflict.

    “Any military operation around hospitals must consider the presence of civilians, who are protected under international humanitarian law.

    “Attacks on medical facilities and personnel dealt a heavy blow on the healthcare system in Gaza, which is severely weakened after more than one month of heavy fighting.

    “The rules of war are clear. Hospitals are specially protected facilities under international humanitarian law.

    “The ICRC urgently calls for the immediate protection of all civilians, including humanitarian workers and medical personnel,” he said.

    According to him, the protection is not only a legal obligation, but a moral imperative to preserve human lives in terr