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OPINION: Israel-Hamas war: When will Enough be Enough?

 Israel-Hamas war: When will Enough be Enough? By Kelechi Okoronkwo
Israel-Hamas war: When will Enough be Enough? By Kelechi Okoronkwo

 

It is now exactly five months after the paramilitary arm of the Hamas and allied groups led a coordinated attack on Israel’s conclave of the Gaza strip. The attack happened in the wee hours of October 7th, 2023, by 6:30 am Local Time, when most of the Israeli civilians were either asleep or at rest. And given the fact that there had been relative calm on the Gaza strip since about 50 years after Operation Badr and the greater Yom Kippur War of October 6th, 1973, the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) protecting the civilians in Gaza were also at ease. Hamas took time to plan the attack. For instance, they converted tunnels initially built for smuggling purposes to militia use and readied it for the attack. There were snippets of military intelligence about Hamas readiness for attack. But Israel seemed not to have taken them seriously. Then the fateful day came. There was no immediate overt provocation. The IDF was not expecting any fracas. Then suddenly, the attack happened. Israel said the attack was the deadliest in its entire history, because, in other wars, the IDF readied itself. But on the October 7th, 2023 attack, the force was not ready.

Reports say the early morning attack started with a rocket barrage of at least 3,000 rockets launched against Israel. Armoured Vehicles transported the Hamas and military equipment into Israel’s side. The highly planned and sophisticated Hamas military fighters breached the Gaza–Israel barrier, attacked military bases and massacred civilians in Israel’s closest communities, including in Be’eri, Kfar Aza, and Nir Oz, and at the Nova music festival.

Reports also state that the October 7th attack resulted in 1,139 deaths—695 Israeli civilians (including 36 children), 71 foreign nationals, and 373 members of the security forces. Approximately 250 Israeli civilians and soldiers were taken as hostages to the Gaza Strip, including 30 children, with the stated goal to force Israel to release Palestinian prisoners.

Mohammad Deif, the head of Hamas’s military wing, the Qassam Brigades, said in a recorded message on 7 October that the attack was in response to what he called the “desecration” of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, and Israel killing and wounding hundreds of Palestinians in 2023. He called on Palestinians and Arab Israelis to “expel the occupiers and demolish the walls”. Deif also called on “Muslims everywhere to launch an attack” against Israel and urged supporters to “kill them (the enemy) wherever you may find them”. He continued, “in light of the continuing crimes against our people, in light of the orgy of occupation and its denial of international laws and resolutions, and in light of American and western [sic] support, we’ve decided to put an end to all this, so that the enemy understands that he can no longer revel without being held to account.”

There have been numerous other accounts of rape and sexual assault on Israeli civilians by Hamas fighters. A United Nations team this March concluded its investigation of alleged rape and sexual abuse of civilians by Hamas during the attack.  The report insists that there are “reasonable grounds to believe” sexual violence, including rape and gang rape, was committed during the Hamas attacks in Israel on 7 October.

While Hamas have dismissed such allegations, the UN report insists there was “convincing information” that hostages had been subjected to sexual violence. The Pramila Patten—UN Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict—led investigation was detailed that sexual molestation happened in at least three locations – the Nova music festival site and its surroundings, Road 232, and Kibbutz Re’im, it added.

Israel has been responding violently to the October 7th attack and sexual abuse of Israeli hostages by launching a military campaign in Gaza. The IDF launched Operation Swords of Iron in Gaza and only declared a state of emergency for areas within 80 kilometers (50 mi) of the Gaza border. The IDF Chief of General Staff, Herzi Halev noted that Hamas “made a grave mistake” in launching its attack and pledged that “Israel will win”. The IDF declared a “state of readiness for war”. At the last count, 30,500 people have been killed, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. And Israel does not seem to be backing down

The situation in Gaza has generated a global debate with the world polarising along historical, political and religious blocks. While at least 44 countries have denounced the attack as terrorism, Arab and Muslim countries have blamed Israel for continued occupation of the Palestinian clove of Gaza. Muslim communities and their allies accuse Israel of mindless killings and starvation of ‘innocent’ Palestinians in the Gaza strip. 

There are concerns that the situation in Gaza may snowball into a bigger global crisis if not properly managed. There are calls from various world leaders asking Israel to sheath its sword, that enough is enough. Few days ago, more than 100 persons (Palestinians) were reportedly killed and about 750 of them wounded after Israeli forces fired at Palestinians trying to get flour for their families as famine stalks the Gaza Strip.

Israeli fighters had prevented all forms of aid from getting into Gaza, a decision which fuelled hunger and starvation in the strip. Then last month, Israeli and Hamas reached a truce which allowed aid to go in. Last week, people had congregated at al-Rashid Street, where aid trucks carrying flour were believed to be on the way. As people queued to get food aid, Israeli forces reportedly fired on the scene. Al Jazeera said its verified footage showed the bodies of dozens of killed and wounded Palestinians being carried onto trucks as no ambulances could reach the area.

“We went to get flour. The Israeli army shot at us. There are many martyrs on the ground and until this moment we are withdrawing them. There is no first aid,” said one witness to Al Jazeera.

“The numbers will rise. Hospitals are no longer able to accommodate the huge number of patients because they lack fuel, let alone medicine. Hospitals have also run out of blood.”, another witness said.

There were reports of how Israeli forces targeted a hospital in Gaza where wounded Palestinians were receiving treatment; and a number of women and children were killed. Six months down the line, Israel has not soft-pedalled on bombarding Gaza in retaliation.

Across the globe, there are concerns about Israel’s continued onslaught on Hamas in Gaza. No matter which way the United States presidential election goes this November, it is most likely that neither Joe Biden nor Donald Trump will openly strongly oppose Israel’s stance on Hamas. This will take the end of Israel’s retaliation even farther. A lot of people believe that enough is enough, while others still believe that Israel’s retaliation is in order. To Israel, however, enough is not enough until Hamas openly confesses that it made a grave mistake launching that attack on October 7th, 2023.

 

Kelechi Okoronkwo, a journalist, writer and public relations executive sent this piece from Abuja, Nigeria.

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Latest News Law

Ethiopian-Jews demand Right to Immigrate to Israel

Members of Ethiopia's Jewish community gather below a banner reading "Welcome" in Amharic, English and Hebrew, to protest the Israeli decision not to allow all of them to emigrate to Israel, leaving their families divided between the two countries, in Addis Ababa, Nov. 19, 2018. Credit/BBC
Members of Ethiopia’s Jewish community gather below a banner reading “Welcome” in Amharic, English and Hebrew, to protest the Israeli decision not to allow all of them to emigrate to Israel, leaving their families divided between the two countries, in Addis Ababa, Nov. 19, 2018. Credit/BBC

 

Ethiopian-Jews demand Right to Immigrate to Israel

Hundreds of Ethiopian Jews gathered in the country’s capital Addis Ababa on Monday to protest the Israeli government’s refusal to allow all of them to immigrate to Israel, which they say has split families between the two countries.

About 135,000 Ethiopian Jews live in Israel, many of whom are related to the nearly 8,000 still awaiting permission to perform “aliya,” or Jewish immigration. Last October, the Israeli government made plans to bring over 1,000 people — but only one family has been allowed into the country since then.

Israel has been absorbing Ethiopian Jews by the thousands since the late 1970s through immigration and covert government missions that have secretly smuggled them out of Africa. In recent years, regulations slowed the flow of African migrants into Israel, and then stopped it completely.

Israel doesn’t consider them Jewish under religious law. They are descendants of Ethiopian Jews who were forcibly converted to Christianity around a century ago, and the Israeli government views bringing them to Israel as family reunification, rather than “aliya.” Until 2013, only Ethiopians with maternal heritage, a traditional way of identifying Jews, were allowed into the country.

“At least 70 percent [of the roughly 8,000 awaiting permission], and I think it’s higher than that, probably closer to 80 percent, have direct, first-degree relatives in Israel,” Rabbi Jerome Epstein, president of the North American Conference on Ethiopian Jewry, told VOA News. “If the people who’ve made aliya were Jewish, then these people are Jewish, too.”

Critics charge that the government’s reasoning is actually thinly-veiled bigotry.

“I’m not saying the government is racist, but I do think there are people who would prefer to see white people who look like them being brought over,” Epstein said. (VOA)

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Latest News War/Crisis

Nigeria votes end to Israel, Palestine conflict by UN’s 2-state solution

The Nigerian delegation to the previous United Nations General Assembly. Photo : RR
The Nigerian delegation to the previous United Nations General Assembly. Photo : RR

 

Nigeria backs U.N’s 2-state solution to end Israel, Palestine conflict

Nigeria says the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could end if both sides agreed to a two-state solution “based on the principles of relevant UN resolutions and international law,” sources said Friday.

Nigeria’s statement was delivered at the U.N. this week by Dr. Ibrahim Umar on the ‘Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories’.

The statement insisted that the situation in the Gaza Strip and the near collapse of its infrastructure being enforced by the Israeli blockade and military action should be of grave concern to the international community.

Hence, the Nigerian government has called on Israel and Palestine to end all forms of hostilities and work towards peace in the region.

“We reaffirm our unwavering support for a viable two-state solution, with Israel and Palestine existing side-by-side in peace, with their respective capitals in the Holy City of Jerusalem, based on pre-1967 borders,” he said.

Nigeria welcomed the conclusions and recommendations of the Secretary-General and called on Israel to halt and reverse all settlement development and related activities in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

This includes East Jerusalem as well as the occupied Syrian Golan in compliance with UN resolutions, including Security Council Resolution 2334 of 2016.

The Nigerian delegation called for an end to the blockade and the restoration of movement of people and goods in and out of Gaza. (ADV)

 

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US World

US Jerusalem embassy set for opening Monday, Palestinians plan bloody protest in Gaza

Ivanka, daughter of United States President, Donald Trump and her husband will attend the opening ceremony.
Ivanka, daughter of United States President, Donald Trump and her husband will attend the opening ceremony.

 

US Jerusalem embassy set for opening tomorrow, Palestinians plan bloody protest in Gaza

Senior White House advisers, Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, Sunday arrived in Israel ahead of the opening of the new US embassy in Jerusalem on Monday.

Ivanka, daughter of United States President, Donald Trump and her husband will attend the opening ceremony. But Mr Trump himself will not be there, the BBC has said.

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and US Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan will be there in person, alongside Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner.

A small interim embassy will open inside the existing US consulate building in Jerusalem on Monday, while a larger site will be found later when the rest of the embassy moves from Tel Aviv. President Trump is expected to address attendees at Monday’s event via video link.

Meanwhile Israel’s military will be bracing for thousands of Palestinian protesters to try to break through the Gaza border fence. But Israel’s security forces said that they are preparing for Palestinian protests against the embassy’s inauguration.

Trump’s decision to move the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem late last year angered Palestinians and polarized the world, but however brought to an end decades of US neutrality on the issue.

The plan was brought forward to coincide with the state of Israel’s 70th anniversary.

Israel regards Jerusalem as its “eternal and undivided” capital while the Palestinians claim East Jerusalem – occupied by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war – as the capital of a future state.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Christian community said the embassy move was a reason for celebration.

On the other hand, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has described it as the “slap of the century”.

 The delegation met Israel’s prime minister on Sunday afternoon, according to the local press.

Categories
News US

Trump May Name Jerusalem Capital of Israel Wednesday

President Trump, family visit Jerusalem’s famous Western Wall
President Trump, family visit Jerusalem’s famous Western Wall

 

Trump May Name Jerusalem Capital of Israel Wednesday

 

United States President, Donald Trump may name Jerusalem, the capital city of Israel on Wednesday to fulfil his campaign promise to evangelicals and ardently pro-Israel American Jews.

Trump’s advisers said on Tuesday that the President was ready to make good his promise on Wednesday although some US foreign officials have warned moving Israel’s capital from Tel-Aviv to Jerusalem may spark violence.

The New York Times reports that if Trump made such a move, it could spark demonstrations or violence by Palestinians or by Muslims around the world, in part because of the sensitivity of the Jerusalem site known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as Haram al-Sharif

“The site includes the al Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam, and the golden Dome of the Rock. It was also the site of an ancient Jewish temple, the holiest place in Judaism.

Israel seized East Jerusalem, which includes the area, during a 1967 war. However, the Waqf, a Muslim religious body, manages the Islamic sites within the compound”

But a senior U.S. official told Reuters last week that Trump was likely to make the announcement on Jerusalem’s being Israel’s capital on Wednesday, though his adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner on Sunday said no final decision had been made.

 President Trump plans to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and move the American Embassy there, upending nearly seven decades of American foreign policy and potentially destroying his efforts to broker peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

Mr. Trump’s decision, a high-risk foray into the thicket of the Middle East, was driven not by diplomatic calculations but by a campaign promise. He appealed to evangelicals and ardently pro-Israel American Jews in 2016 by vowing to move the embassy, and advisers said on Tuesday he was determined to make good on his word.

Mr. Trump spent Tuesday morning explaining the policy change in telephone calls with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel; Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority president; and to Arab leaders who warned him that it would disrupt the peace process, perhaps fatally, and could unleash a new wave of violence across the region.

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