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  • Israel-Hamas war: British-Palestinian doctor who worked at al Ahli describes Gaza hospital scenes as ‘apocalyptic’ | World News

    Israel-Hamas war: British-Palestinian doctor who worked at al Ahli describes Gaza hospital scenes as ‘apocalyptic’ | World News

    Israel-Hamas war: British-Palestinian doctor who worked at al Ahli describes Gaza hospital scenes as ‘apocalyptic’ | World News

    Israel-Hamas war: British-Palestinian doctor who worked at al Ahli describes Gaza hospital scenes as 'apocalyptic' | World News

    British-Palestinian doctor Ghassan Abu Sittah has a methodical way of describing a wound and a dispassionate manner when describing his own interventions.  

    Take the way he describes the emergency room after a rocket landed on the premises of northern Gaza’s al Ahli hospital on 17 October.

    “On my right, I saw a man in his mid-fifties with an amputation at the level of the mid-thigh.

    “Like a guillotine amputation, there was blood spurting through the exposed arteries in his stump.

    “I took his belt and tied it as a tourniquet… I moved on to another patient who had received a single (piece of) shrapnel to his neck, blood was spurting out of the neck…”

    Israel-Gaza latest: Two-day truce extension agreed, say Hamas and Qatar

    A highly experienced plastic and reconstructive surgeon, he spent an arduous spell of 43 days in operating theatres in Gaza City.

    It is an experience that he variously describes as “dystopian” and “apocalyptic”.

    At a press conference in London, the UK-based medic talked about how the nature of the injuries he treated changed over the passage of time.

    “Most of the injuries initially were blast injuries, and these were severe soft tissue trauma, severe facial traumas, multiple fractures.

    “And then as time went, we saw the introduction of incendiary bombs where the patients would have and over 40% of their total body surface area burned,” he said.

    Image:
    A Palestinian child injured in an explosion at al Ahli hospital

    After the Israelis began their ground invasion in Gaza, Dr Abu Sittah says the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) fired white phosphorous bombs in populated areas.

    Phosphorous pellets embedded in the skin are extremely difficult to treat.

    “I treated white phosphorous burns in the Gaza Strip during the 2009 war. It was very familiar with the characteristic injuries and burns that they make.

    “Phosphorus burns right through to the inner core of the body and only stops when it is when it has no exposure to oxygen… the patients would be basically puckered with burns that tore right into the ribs, the bones.”

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    0:49

    11 more hostages handed over to Red Cross

    The Israeli military has denied using white phosphorous bombs in civilian areas in Gaza – and in southern Lebanon.

    Israel has not signed an international protocol which bans their use.

    Dr Abu Sittah said he managed to enter Gaza via its border with Egypt shortly after Hamas had begun its brutal assault on 7 October.

    He told the press conference that he expected Israel to deliver a “vicious response”.

    The surgeon said he worked at three hospitals in northern Gaza and was in the operating theatre at the Church of England’s al Ahli hospital when a missile landed in the complex in mid-October.

    Read more from Sky News:
    Temporary ceasefire extended, say Qatar and Hamas
    Released Palestinian prisoners complain of mistreatment

    “The false ceiling in the operating room fell on top of us. Luckily, I wasn’t injured, and I walked out of the operating room,” he said.

    “The forecourt which had been hit was full of bodies and parts of bodies… I remember walking past the amputated forearm of a child.”

    He dismissed the widely-held view – by Western governments and groups like Human Rights Watch – that the weapon in question was likely a malfunctioning missile fired from inside Gaza.

    Image:
    The site of the explosion at al Ahli hospital in Gaza. Pic: AP

    “There was no smell of fuel. When I went back to al Ahli to work there, there was nothing on the ground. You’d think that a missile that was destined for Tel Aviv would be full of fuel.”

    Dr Abu Sittah also rejected Israel’s assertions that al Shifa hospital was used as a key command and control centre by Hamas militants.

    “At no stage did I see any – at no stage did I see even armed policemen – at Shifa Hospital.

    “Even the security men at Shifa were there to just police the number of relatives trying to get all into the emergency departments. They had truncheons.”

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    3:57

    Gaza: 200 patients flown to UAE

    Israeli spokespeople and politicians have repeatedly insisted that they are not targeting civilians in Gaza – the fight they say, is against Hamas, not ordinary residents.

    In response, the softly-spoken doctor asked the public to look at the stats.

    “[There are] 36,000 wounded, over 14,000 dead, around 5,000 more buried under the rubble, statistically.

    “Statistically, it appears that the numbers tell a different story. (Look at) their homes that, when you take out 40%, 50% of Gaza’s homes, you can’t possibly have military targets in all of these homes.

    “It would be bizarre if all of these homes – and all of these families – and all of these dead kids – were sitting in military installations.”

    المصدر

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    Israel-Hamas war: British-Palestinian doctor who worked at al Ahli describes Gaza hospital scenes as ‘apocalyptic’ | World News

  • Can a divided EU have any meaningful policy on Gaza? | European Union

    Can a divided EU have any meaningful policy on Gaza? | European Union

    Can a divided EU have any meaningful policy on Gaza? | European Union

    Member states are at odds, some supporting Israel and others opposing its war against Hamas in Gaza.

    The Israel-Hamas war has exposed deep division within the European Union on policy towards Israel and Palestine.

    The only unity found has been in condemning Hamas and its attacks on October 7 that killed around 1,200 Israelis.

    But there’s been no such unity against Israel’s killing of thousands of Palestinians, most of whom were women and children.

    At one end, Germany fully supports Israel – at the other, Belgium wants sanctions.

    So, can EU policy on Gaza even be defined, when it’s so divided?

    Is it effectively pro-Israel? And is this war changing positions?

    Presenter: Nastasya Tay

    Guests:

    Grace O’Sullivan – Member of the European Parliament, representing the Green Party in Ireland

    Martin Konecny – Founder and Director of the European Middle East Project, an independent organisation specialising in European and international policies on the Israel-Palestine conflict

    Suzanne Lynch – Chief Brussels correspondent for Politico and host of the podcast EU Confidential

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Can a divided EU have any meaningful policy on Gaza? | European Union

  • Twenty killed in Sierra Leone attack on military barracks, army says | Conflict News

    Twenty killed in Sierra Leone attack on military barracks, army says | Conflict News

    Twenty killed in Sierra Leone attack on military barracks, army says | Conflict News

    President says most of the leaders arrested after attack on military barracks and prisons in the West African nation.

    At least 20 people have been killed, including 13 soldiers, and several wounded in a series of attacks over the weekend that targeted military barracks and prisons in Sierra Leone, according to the army.

    Speaking to reporters on Monday, an army spokesperson said attacks across the capital, Freetown, on Sunday were carried out by “renegade soldiers” but had been repelled.

    “We have launched a manhunt for all those who were involved in the violent attack, amongst them current and retired serving soldiers,” Colonel Issa Bangura said.

    Bangura said the 20 dead included 13 soldiers, three assailants, a police officer, a civilian and someone working in private security. Eight people were wounded and three arrested, he said.

    The Reuters news agency, citing a situation report, said about 1,890 people held at the Pademba Road central prison escaped the facility after it was attacked. Police urged those who had escaped to return to the prison.

    Reuters said a correspondent saw cell doors forced open or removed entirely during a visit to the facility on Monday, and ​​Colonel Shek Sulaiman Massaquoi, the acting director general of the Sierra Leone Correctional Service, said attackers had rammed through the front gate of the prison in a vehicle after a failed effort to break through with a rocket launcher.

    In remarks on Sunday, President Julius Maada Bio said most of the leaders behind the attacks had been arrested and efforts were under way to capture the rest.

    Seeking to reassure residents, Information Minister Chernor Bah told the public in a statement on Sunday: “The government and its state security forces are in control.”

    Few details have emerged regarding the identity and motives of the attackers. During the assault, some told local media they were fighting to “clean up the system”.

    “Certain members of the military are not loyal towards the government or the president despite taking the oath,” Bangura said.

    “We want to restore law and order as quickly as possible.”

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Twenty killed in Sierra Leone attack on military barracks, army says | Conflict News

  • US rights advocates launch hunger strike for Israel-Hamas ceasefire | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    US rights advocates launch hunger strike for Israel-Hamas ceasefire | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    US rights advocates launch hunger strike for Israel-Hamas ceasefire | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Washington, DC – State lawmakers and Palestinian rights supporters, joined by actor and progressive advocate Cynthia Nixon, have launched a five-day hunger strike outside the White House to demand a ceasefire in Gaza.

    At a news conference on Monday, the activists decried United States President Joe Biden’s role in supporting the Israeli offensive in Gaza and called for an immediate end to the fighting.

    The hunger strike adds to the growing demand for a ceasefire from activists, artists and politicians, as well as staff members working in the US government. But Biden has so far resisted such calls, voicing unwavering support for Israel.

    Biden has also pledged more than $14bn in additional US aid to Israel — funds that advocates say are contributing to the Israeli violence.

    The protesters at Monday’s event stressed that public opinion polls show that most Americans back a ceasefire. They also underscored the scale of the destruction in Gaza, where more than 14,800 Palestinians have died. United Nations experts have warned that the conflict puts Palestinians “at grave risk of genocide“.

    “How many more Palestinians must be killed before you call for a ceasefire, President Biden? We cannot wait any longer,” said Iman Abid, an organiser with the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights (USCPR).

    Israel and Hamas declared a four-day truce in the conflict last week, and on Monday, officials announced the pause in fighting would continue for two additional days, to allow for the release of more Israeli captives and Palestinian prisoners.

    The hunger-strikers said that the continued pause demonstrates that diplomacy — not bombs — can solve the crisis in Gaza.

    Israeli leaders, however, have suggested that they will resume the bombing with more intensity once the truce expires. They have also warned residents from northern Gaza against returning to their homes.

    “The area north of the Gaza Strip is a combat zone, and it is forbidden to stay there,” Israeli military spokesperson Avichay Adraee said last week.

    This week’s hunger strike in Washington, DC, is organised by Palestine solidarity advocates, progressive Jewish groups as well as Arab and Palestinian-American organisations.

    Here’s what some of the hunger-strikers at the White House had to say:

    Nixon: ‘Never again’ means never again – for anyone

    Best known for her work in the TV series Sex and the City, Nixon used her speech at Monday’s event to highlight the carnage in Gaza, including the killings of dozens of journalists and UN workers as well as the destruction of entire neighbourhoods.

    “Our president’s seeming disregard for the incredible human toll Israel’s far-right government is exacting on innocent civilians does not remotely reflect the desire of the overwhelming majority of Americans,” she said.

    “And I would like to make a personal plea to a president — who has himself experienced such devastating personal loss — to connect with that empathy for which he is so well-known and to look at the children of Gaza and imagine that they were his children.

    “We implore him that this current ceasefire must continue, and we must build off it to begin to negotiate a more permanent peace. We cannot keep letting American tax dollars aid and abet the killing and starvation of millions of Palestinians. ‘Never again’ means never again — for anyone.”

    Delaware lawmaker Madinah Wilson-Anton: Majority of Americans want ceasefire

    Wilson-Anton, a Muslim American legislator from Biden’s home state of Delaware, said that while she is anxious about abstaining from food for several days, her thoughts are with the people of Gaza who are experiencing a massacre with no choice or end in sight.

    “The majority of Americans are for a permanent ceasefire. And it’s unfortunate that our president and our congressional members are not being responsive to what’s important to Delawareans and Americans from all states,” Wilson-Anton, a Democrat, said.

    “And so I’m hoping that, this week, we’ll be successful in gaining the ear of our president and of our congressional members, so they can actually start to use their privilege and position to negotiate a ceasefire that is lasting.”

    Delaware Madinah Wilson-Anton, left, stands with other hunger-strikers outside the White House on November 27 [Ali Harb/Al Jazeera]

    New York State Representative Zohran Mamdani: Negotiations, not war, freed captives

    Mamdani hailed the release of Israelis held by Hamas and Palestinians imprisoned by Israel during the truce.

    “We are hunger striking for a world where everyone is with their family. And it is a world that can only be made possible through a ceasefire. It is not war that brought us these reunifications. It is negotiations; it is a cessation [of hostilities],” he said.

    “We hunger-strike not because we want to. We hunger-strike because we have been forced by this president and by our government’s foreign policy. We hunger-strike because Palestinians have been doubted in life and death, and their experience has been erased.”

    Activist Rana Abdelhamid: Dehumanising rhetoric normalises Palestinian deaths

    Abdelhamid, a New York organiser, linked the killing of Palestinians in Gaza to a rise in prejudice against Arabs and Muslims in the US. She pointed to Saturday’s shooting of three Palestinian students in a suspected hate crime as an example.

    “As someone who has been organising against hate-based violence across this country, I’m fully aware that the violence and the anti-Palestinian rhetoric that we’re seeing abroad is also impacting us here in the United States. Those two things are inextricably linked,” Abdelhamid said.

    “When our elected [officials] and our politicians and our representatives are continuously dehumanising Palestinian people, are normalising Palestinian deaths, we get what we got two days ago. We get three Palestinian students in Vermont being shot for simply wearing a keffiyeh, for simply speaking Arabic.”

    Palestinian-American writer and advocate Sumaya Awad: The US is complicit

    Awad stressed that the US is “complicit” in the ongoing violence against Palestinians. She added that the conflict also has domestic ramifications in the US.

    “I’m Palestinian and I’m a New Yorker. I’m an American and I’m a mother of a 16-month-old, and I’m on hunger strike to illustrate to our government just a sliver, a fragment of what Palestinians are enduring in Gaza every single day,” Awad said.

    “I am on hunger strike to demand a permanent ceasefire and to say that we will continue to pressure our government in every way possible to get that permanent ceasefire because we are not just silent observers. We are complicit in what is happening in Palestine.

    “We are on hunger strike because what’s happening in Gaza is not something far away that we have nothing to do with. It has real impacts on our lives here in the US.”

    المصدر

    أخبار

    US rights advocates launch hunger strike for Israel-Hamas ceasefire | Israel-Palestine conflict News

  • Hamas releases 11 more captives from Gaza, Israeli army says | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Hamas releases 11 more captives from Gaza, Israeli army says | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Hamas releases 11 more captives from Gaza, Israeli army says | Israel-Palestine conflict News

    Release comes after mediator Qatar says Israel-Hamas truce in Gaza extended by two days.

    The Israeli military says 11 hostages have been released by the Palestinian armed group Hamas and are on their way to Israel, the latest in a series of exchanges during a four-day humanitarian pause.

    “Based on information that was received from the Red Cross, 11 hostages are currently on their way to Israeli territory,” the Israeli military said in a statement on Monday.

    A spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Qatar, which has played a key role in mediation efforts, said those released were six Argentinians, three French citizens and two Germans.

    The release of the hostages, some of the roughly 240 people taken captive by Hamas in deadly attacks on southern Israel on October 7, comes after Qatar and Hamas said that an agreement has been reached to further extend the initial four-day truce.

    Qatar’s Foreign Ministry said on Monday that Israel and Hamas had reached a deal to extend their truce for an additional two days, offering much-needed respite for Palestinians in Gaza, who have been exhausted by weeks of relentless Israeli bombardment, and hope for Israelis with loved ones held captive who they hope to see return home.

    Over the past several days, Palestinian groups in Gaza have released captives in exchange for the release of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons, many of whom are women and children who have been held without trial.

    On Sunday, Hamas released 17 more captives – 14 Israelis and three Thais – the highest number so far. The total number of captives released since fighting began on October 7 now stands at 62, most of them since the temporary pause in the fighting began on Friday.

    Israel has said that it will extend the truce by one day for every 10 hostages released, and Hamas has said it has agreed to an extended truce under “the same terms” as the original deal.

    The pause in fighting has also allowed for increased shipments of aid into the Gaza Strip, where a relentless Israeli assault and siege of the territory has created a dire humanitarian crisis.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Hamas releases 11 more captives from Gaza, Israeli army says | Israel-Palestine conflict News