Monday 4 December 2023

Gaza hospitals ‘flooded with dead bodies’

Gaza hospitals ‘flooded with dead bodies’

Gaza hospitals ‘flooded with dead bodies’





People try to comfort a woman holding the body of her baby girl in the courtyard of the Al-Najjar hospital © MOHAMMED ABED / AFP






Israel’s military widens its ground offensive in southern Gaza as Palestinian officials say more than 800 people killed since Saturday. Gaza Health Ministry official says hospitals “flooded with an influx of dead bodies”. At least 15,500 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since October 7. In Israel, the official death toll stands at about 1,200.







Hospitals in the southern Gaza Strip have descended into chaos since the resumption of the war between the Palestinian militant group Hamas and Israel.


After eight weeks of war, interrupted only by one seven-day pause that ended on Friday, the doctors are exhausted.


Fuel reserves have almost run dry because of Israel's blockade of the territory, so doctors are forced to choose when and where across their hospitals to run generators.


According to the United Nations, not a single hospital in the territory's north can currently operate on patients.


The most seriously wounded are transferred daily to the south by convoys organised by the International Committee of the Red Cross.


But even there, the UN says, the 12 remaining hospitals are only "partially functional".


Abdelkarim Abu Warda and his nine-year-old daughter Huda have just arrived at Deir al-Balah Hospital aboard one of the ICRC convoys.


On Friday, after the truce ended, an Israeli strike hit their house in the vast Jabalia refugee camp in the north.


Huda was wounded in the head. "She had a brain haemorrhage -- she was placed on a ventilator," her father told AFP.


Since then, "she hasn't responded to anything", he says, lifting up the little girl's arms.


"She doesn't answer me any more," he repeats, sobbing.



No words



It is daybreak and the first prayers for the dead are being performed.


A few dozen men gather in front of white body bags lined up on the ground.


Between two larger bags lies the small shroud of a child, close to his or her parents even in death.


Women in tears crouch down to touch a face or kiss a loved one for one last time before the bodies are carefully loaded into the back of a pickup.


"It's Adam going... and there is Abdullah," says one woman, weeping.


At the Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis, the largest medical facility in southern Gaza, the story is the same.


World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Sunday he was unable to "find words strong enough" to express his concerns about the conditions there.


Members of a WHO team who visited found it packed with 1,000 patients, three times its capacity.


Patients were being treated on the floor "screaming in pain", with "countless people... seeking shelter, filling every corner", the WHO chief wrote.


Israel unleashed its air and ground campaign in response to Hamas's October 7 attack on southern Israel, which killed around 1,200 people and saw some 240 kidnapped, Israeli officials say.


The Hamas government that runs Gaza says the Israeli campaign has killed more than 15,500 people -- including 280 medical staff -- since it began eight weeks ago.



'Saw the bomb fall'



Israel, which has vowed to eliminate Hamas, says it is now focusing on the southern city of Khan Yunis.


The army drops warning leaflets on neighbourhoods due to be targeted each day, telling residents that a "terrible attack is imminent" and ordering them to leave.


Each day, too, the warnings move closer to the hospital.


With each new explosion that shakes the city, more casualties arrive, often in private cars.


Staff race out with stretchers which are often still stained with blood from the previous patient.


Some bodies arrive unaccompanied, and so cannot even be identified.


In the corridors, families, the wounded and medical staff all jostle together.


In the corridors, families, the wounded and medical staff all jostle together.


Some tend to the patients, sliding a sweater or a T-shirt under the head of an wounded person lying on the hard floor.


Ehab al-Najjar, a man with several family members both alive and dead at the hospital, lets his anger explode.


"I came home and saw the bomb fall on our house. Women, children died. What did they do to deserve this?" he screams.




















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‘No science’ behind calls to phase out fossil fuels – COP28 President

‘No science’ behind calls to phase out fossil fuels – COP28 President

‘No science’ behind calls to phase out fossil fuels – COP28 President





©Getty Images/Sean Gallup/Staff






The host of the 28th United Nation Climate Change Conference, or Conference of the Parties (COP28) which took place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE), what drives the issue of reducing fossil energy to reduce exhaust emissions, the greenhouse effect driven by the US and its Western Alliance is the target of their 21st century propaganda to maintain their existence, not in order to save the earth and everything in it.


The UAE’s Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber reportedly says gradual cuts in oil, gas and coal use would 'take the world back into caves'.







The president of the COP28 climate conference, Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, has cast great doubt over zero-emissions policies being pushed by the United Nations, claiming there is “no science” to show that stage-by-stage cuts in fossil fuel use would decrease global heating, the Guardian reported on Sunday.


The chair of the 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference, now underway in Dubai, claimed that a gradual reduction in fossil fuel consumption would hold back sustainable development and drag humanity back to the Paleolithic period.


His comments, made in response to questions from former UN special envoy for climate change Mary Robinson during a live online event in late November, are fundamentally at odds with the position of the UN and its secretary general Antonio Guterres.


“We’re in an absolute crisis that is hurting women and children more than anyone… and it’s because we have not yet committed to phasing out fossil fuel,” Robinson, who chairs The Elders, a London-based human rights and environmental NGO, was quoted by the Guardian as saying.


“That is the one decision that Cop28 can take and in many ways, because you’re head of Adnoc, you could actually take it with more credibility,” she added.


Al Jaber serves as chief executive of the United Arab Emirates state oil company Adnoc, while also chairing Cop28 in Dubai. Many critics have described the two roles as a serious conflict of interest.


Responding to Robinson’s remarks, Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber said he expected the conversation to be “sober and mature,” but not “alarmist.”


“There is no science out there, or no scenario out there, that says that the phase-out of fossil fuel is what’s going to achieve 1.5°C,” he said, adding that the move would not “allow for sustainable socioeconomic development, unless you want to take the world back into caves.”


When Robinson argued that Adnoc is investing heavily in future fossil fuel production, Al Jaber responded by saying that she and her supporters were reading their own media, which is biased and wrong.


He also predicted that a phase-out of fossil fuels is “essentially inevitable,” but argued that countries need to be “real serious and pragmatic about it.”


Sunday 3 December 2023

Watch Russian Paratroopers Use Kornet System to Blast Ukrainian Armored Vehicles

Watch Russian Paratroopers Use Kornet System to Blast Ukrainian Armored Vehicles

Watch Russian Paratroopers Use Kornet System to Blast Ukrainian Armored Vehicles











The Kornet man-portable anti-tank guided missile system can hit targets at a range of up to 5,500 meters, with its tandem warhead capable of punching through about 1,200 mm of tank armor.







Russia’s Ministry of Defense (MoD) has released a video of Russian airborne forces successfully carrying out a combat mission in the special military operation zone.


The footage shows scouts destroying two Ukrainian infantry fighting vehicles in the Zaporozhye area.


The MoD said that the vehicles’ whereabouts were promptly transmitted to the control point, from where an order was received to destroy the enemy military equipment with artillery and the Kornet anti-tank guided missile system (ATGM).


Upon hitting the Ukrainian combat vehicles, the artillery crew and that of the Kornet ATGM quickly changed their position, according to the MoD



Watch Russian Lancet Drones Wreak Havoc on Ukrainian Troops Near Dnepr River



The Lancet unmanned aerial vehicles, developed by the Russian company Zala Aero, are capable of striking enemy targets at ranges of several tens of kilometers.






Russian airborne units successfully attacked the Ukrainian Armed Forces on the right bank of the Dnepr River in the Kherson region using the Lancet kamikaze drones, also known as the Lancet loitering munitions, the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) told Sputnik.


"At first, the crews of the reconnaissance drones tracked the enemy's floating equipment on the right bank of the Dnepr, from where Ukrainian troops were to be transported to the left bank for landing," the Defense Ministry reported.


The Lancet drone operators then destroyed all the targets, including scores of Ukrainian soldiers, as well as several of their motorboats, a truck and other materiel, the ministry announced.


The MoD stressed that the operators guided the drones in manual mode to avoid the slightest possibility of a delivery error.



Watch Russia's Army Attack Ukrainian Troops With Drones in Special Op Zone



Since the beginning of the special military operation, Russia has developed a wide range of drones capable of conducting battlefield reconnaissance and destroying enemies. Some of the most prominent UAVs are the Lancet loitering munition and the Upyr (lit. Vampire) drone.






Russia’s Ministry of Defense has published footage that shows the combat work of FPV drones in the special military operation zone near the village of Berestovoe, Donetsk region.


Troops successfully use a number of first-person-view kamikaze drones to conduct precise strikes on adversaries without undertaking unnecessary risks. Kamikaze drones have built-in warheads that detonate after collision, destroying the target.



Watch Russia's Army Attack Ukrainian Troops With Drones in Special Op Zone



Since the beginning of the special military operation, Russia has developed a wide range of drones capable of conducting battlefield reconnaissance and destroying enemies. Some of the most prominent UAVs are the Lancet loitering munition and the Upyr (lit. Vampire) drone.






Russia’s Ministry of Defense has published footage that shows the combat work of FPV drones in the special military operation zone near the village of Berestovoe, Donetsk region.


Troops successfully use a number of first-person-view kamikaze drones to conduct precise strikes on adversaries without undertaking unnecessary risks. Kamikaze drones have built-in warheads that detonate after collision, destroying the target.



Russian Su-25 jets strike Ukrainian targets



The Russian Defense Ministry has published footage of what it described as Sukhoi Su-25 fighter jets striking Ukrainian forces.


The clip captured the attack aircraft operating in undisclosed airspace in Russia’s Donetsk People’s Republic, the ministry said in a post on Telegram on Saturday.


The footage from several cameras placed on board the planes shows the Su-25 firing missiles and making evasive maneuvers while flying at extremely low altitudes.


On Sunday, a Telegram channel reporting on the conflict between Russia and Ukraine posted another video depicting Su-25s.


According to the channel, the Russian attack aircraft were filmed from a drone while performing a combat mission above the strategic town of Avdeevka, north of Donetsk.






Su-25s were introduced into the Soviet military in the mid-1970s and are still actively used by the Russian Aerospace Forces. Over the years, the plane, nicknamed ‘grach’ (rook), has earned itself a reputation as one of the country’s most reliable attack aircraft.


It has two engines and an armored underside, which protects it from surface-to-air missiles. During the conflict between Moscow and Kiev, there have been several reports of Su-25s making it back to base despite suffering heavy damage, including losing an engine.


700 people killed in 24 hours as Israel widens offensive in south

700 people killed in 24 hours as Israel widens offensive in south

700 people killed in 24 hours as Israel widens offensive in south





©AFP 2023 / John Macdougall






Israel's military on Sunday ordered more areas in and around Gaza's second-largest city of Khan Younis to evacuate, as it shifted its offensive to the southern half of the territory.







Heavy bombardments were reported overnight and into Sunday in the area of Khan Younis and the southern city of Rafah, as well as parts of the north that had been the focus of Israel's blistering air and ground campaign.


More than 700 people have been killed in the last 24 hours, according to Gaza's health ministry, despite US assurances that it had urged Israel to show "restraint" as it resumed its war on the Palestinian enclave.


Many of the territory’s 2.3 million people are crammed in the south after Israeli forces ordered civilians to leave the north in the early days of the 2-month-old war.


With the resumption of fighting, hopes receded that another temporary truce could be negotiated as Israel ordered its negotiators home from Qatar.


"We will continue the war until we achieve all its goals, and it’s impossible to achieve those goals without the ground operation,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in an address Saturday night.


On Sunday, the Israeli military widened evacuation orders in and around Khan Younis, warning residents of at least five more areas and neighbourhoods to leave or face the consequences.


Residents said the Israeli military dropped leaflets ordering residents to move south to Rafah or to a coastal area in the southwest. "Khan Younis city is a dangerous combat zone," the leaflets read. Palestinians and rights groups fear Israel is rolling out the same gameplan as it did in the north, using airstrikes and bombardment to push civilians even more to the south.


UN monitors said in a report issued before the latest evacuation orders that the areas residents were told to leave make up about one-quarter of the territory of Gaza. The report said that these areas were home to nearly 800,000 people before the war.


Ahead of a resumption of fighting, the US, Israel’s closest ally, had warned Israel to avoid significant new mass displacement, but these appeals seem to have fallen on deaf ears.


Despite Israel's focus on the south, the north is still under heavy assault.


Bombardments on Saturday destroyed a block of about 50 residential buildings in the Shijaiyah neighborhood of Gaza City and a six-story building in the urban refugee camp of Jabaliya on the northern edge of the city, said the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.






More than 60 people were killed in the Shijaiyah strikes and more than 300 buried under the rubble, the monitors said, citing the Palestinian Red Crescent.



Palestinian Leader Calls on ICC to Speed Up Israeli War Crimes Trial – Reports



Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas held a meeting with International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor Karim Khan, during which he urged Khan to expedite the trial of Israeli soldiers, who reportedly committed war crimes against Palestinians, Palestinian news agency reported on Saturday.


Abbas informed Khan of the recent developments in Palestine, as well as the acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing carried out by Israel in Gaza and the West Bank, the news agency reported.


He briefed the Prosecutor on Israel's violation of the sanctity of hospitals and shelters, the demolition of homes with civilians inside, the crimes of settler-colonial expansion, ethnic cleansing, apartheid, and various other violations of international law and international humanitarian law.


In 2014, the Palestinian Authority (PA) handed over files to the ICC on multiple Israeli crimes during the war on Gaza.


A year later, the Court opened a preliminary investigation, and in 2021, it approved an inquiry into the commission of "Israeli war crimes" in the Palestinian territories.


Palestine presented three cases at the ICC, including the aggression against Gaza in 2014, during which Israel used excessive force, prohibited weapons, and ordered massacres and killing of civilians.


Another case concerns the Palestinian prisoners inside Israeli prisons and includes ill-treatment of captives and their families and medical neglect that led to the death of some of them.


For years, the Palestinians have been documenting Israeli crimes in the Palestinian territories.


Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said during his meeting with Khan on Saturday that delaying justice is an absence of justice itself.


Shtayyeh added that the ICC should be for sentencing and deterrence, asserting that for 75 years now, Israel has been acting like it is above the law.


He explained that the responsibility of the Criminal Court is not a moral issue but a legal one.


The Authority wants the Criminal Court to investigate the ongoing war in Gaza and previous wars and inspect all other violations in the West Bank.


The Authority considers that the Israeli war on the Palestinians is comprehensive and not only in the Gaza Strip.


The Israeli displacement policy targets Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank as part of an attempt to liquidate the Palestinian issue.


Since Oct. 7, the West Bank witnessed an escalation in Israeli aggression, which included shutting down the West Bank governorates, deploying more military barriers, and launching massive incursions, whether during the day or the night, into most areas.


Israel began using drones to target Palestinians. It also killed and arrested dozens of them, demolished infrastructure, and attacked civilians in their homes.




















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Saturday 2 December 2023

Over 109 Palestinians killed since ceasefire ended – Gaza

Over 109 Palestinians killed since ceasefire ended – Gaza

Over 109 Palestinians killed since ceasefire ended – Gaza





©Getty Images / Mustafa Hassona






At least 109 Palestinians have been killed since the conclusion of a week-long ceasefire, the Gaza Ministry of Health reported on Friday. Hundreds more have been wounded as Israel resumed its high-intensity bombardment of the enclav







The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) confirmed it had struck more than 200 targets since the ceasefire expired at 7am local time on Friday, noting that the assault has resumed across ground, air, and sea on both north and south Gaza, including the cities of Khan Younis and Rafah.


After releasing 110 hostages during the ceasefire, Hamas still holds 137 captives, Israeli government spokesperson Eylon Levy told reporters on Friday, promising to deliver “the mother of all thumpings” to the Palestinian militants for “failing to release all the kidnapped women.” The vast majority – 126 – are Israelis.


Israel released about 240 Palestinian women and children held in Israeli jails during the ceasefire. According to NBC, 80% of the prisoners identified as eligible for release had never been convicted of a crime, and many of those had not even been charged, held instead under a controversial practice known as administrative detention.


The IDF, which resumed bombing just minutes after the pause expired, claimed Hamas had fired off rockets in violation of the truce. The militant group countered that West Jerusalem had “persistently” rejected further offers of hostage releases that could have prolonged the ceasefire.


Efforts by the US, France, and other Israeli allies to extend the pause in fighting were unsuccessful.


After weeks of failed negotiations aimed at reaching a temporary cessation of hostilities to facilitate a prisoner exchange and the distribution of humanitarian aid in Gaza, the two sides agreed to a four-day Qatari-brokered ceasefire starting November 24. Israel initially pledged to release 150 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for 50 of the approximately 240 hostages taken by Hamas, vowing to extend the ceasefire by one day for every ten prisoners released.


Over 15,000 Palestinians have been killed and more than 30,000 wounded since Israel declared war on Hamas in response to the militants’ October 7 attack, Palestinian ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, noting that the Gaza Health Ministry had stopped reporting exact casualty counts as Israeli bombing had decimated its hospital system while rendering the retrieval of bodies from the rubble prohibitively dangerous. Nearly 80% of the enclave’s 2.1 million people have been forced out of their homes, he said, accusing Israel of waging “a full-fledged war against Palestine and its people.”


The World Health Organization (WHO) chief on Friday said that he is "extremely concerned" about the resumption of fighting in Gaza, as the humanitarian pause came to an end earlier in the day.


"We are extremely concerned about the resumption of fighting in Gaza," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who heads the UN agency, said on X.


Stressing that the ongoing hostilities have crippled the health care system, he warned, "Gaza can’t afford to lose any more hospitals or hospital beds," referring to how almost all of the hospitals in the strip had to close or stop offering care due to chronic shortages and ongoing Israeli attacks.


"We need a ceasefire. A ceasefire that holds," he urged. "A ceasefire that progress to peace."


At least 109 Palestinians have been killed and many others injured in Israeli airstrikes on the blockaded Gaza Strip since the humanitarian pause – which went into effect a week ago – ended, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.


Israel's attacks resumed just after the humanitarian pause ended, as Israeli officials had pledged, though political leaders and civic groups worldwide had implored Israel to hold off



Iranian FM urges Israel, U.S. to stop attacks on Gaza



Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian on Friday called on Israel and the United States to immediately "stop the war on Gaza before it's too late."


In a post on social media platform X, Amir-Abdollahian said no solution existed to the crisis but an "open-ended ceasefire," sending extensive humanitarian aid to Gaza and reaching an agreement on hostages-prisoners exchange between the two sides.


Israel and Hamas agreed to a humanitarian truce on Nov. 24. Fighting between the two sides resumed on Friday morning, after Israel accused Hamas of violating the ceasefire agreement and firing at Israeli territory.


In a post on X, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanaani on Friday condemned Israel for its "violation of the ceasefire and resumption of its military aggression" against Gaza.


Kanaani stressed that the Israeli attacks came as most of the world's peoples and governments were calling for the extension of the ceasefire and complete cessation of the Israeli attacks against Gaza and the West Bank, adding civilians, children and women would again become the "main victims of the Israeli military's criminal attacks.



‘Bombing everywhere’: As Israel renews war, my eight-year-old has questions



After a week-long temporary truce, the Israeli air strikes have unfortunately resumed.


The author with her eight-year-old daughter at the Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir el-Balah, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2023 — less than a day before Israel's bombing started again [Maram Humaid/Al Jazeera]


The past seven days of relative calm have come to an end, and the familiar sounds of bombings, explosions, aircraft, artillery, naval boats and live ammunition are back.


These were our daily experiences for seven weeks before the truce, and we had become adept at distinguishing between them, including the distinctive sounds of rockets from Gaza and Israeli bombings.


This morning, at 7:00 sharp, the violent sounds resumed from land, air and sea, evoking new memories of sadness on my family’s faces.


My brother, opening the window to see what was happening, remarked, “Bombing is from everywhere.”


The toughest question came from my eight-year-old daughter, Banias, asking if this was war again. My husband explained that the past “calm” days were just a temporary truce, and the war had not ended.


Banias struggled to comprehend this strange cycle of war, pause, and then war again.


Reflecting on Banias’s confusion, I wondered how a young mind grapples with the illogical nature of war—pauses followed by resumptions.


Fifty-six days of conflict were apparently insufficient to secure a ceasefire.


Yesterday, displaced people living in tents amid dire conditions near Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the central Gaza Strip expressed distress, fear and despair, desiring not a temporary truce but a lasting ceasefire to return to their homes, even if damaged.


Their fear – that a new resumption of war would mean that Israel would move to bomb the south. Early today, their expectations came true as Israeli troops threw leaflets asking people living in east Khan Younis to move to Rafah at the southern edge of Gaza.


As air strikes persist from north to south, I ponder the multitude of wars faced by the people of Gaza: displacement, destruction, humiliation, tent living, thirst, hunger and the anxiety of temporary pauses followed by renewed bombing.


What should the people of Gaza do to make the world feel for them? How can the world allow the genocide to continue again? How will we return to the bloodshed again and worry about the loss of our loved ones? How, how and how?


I know that these questions will remain unanswered. The past 56 days have taught me, as they have shown to all of the people of Gaza, that our fears, lives, pain, hopes and dreams are not included in the calculations of this world.



















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