Israel’s Genocide in Gaza | 2023- till present

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She says Israeli military killed her husband and daughter. Then soldiers brought her to an Israeli hospital​


By Mick Krever, Jeremy Diamond and Abeer Salman, CNN
7 minute read
Updated 12:11 PM EDT, Tue August 20, 2024





Akram and his daughter Yasmeen were shot dead trying to return home to northern Gaza.

Akram and his daughter Yasmeen were shot dead trying to return home to northern Gaza.
CNN —
Sham Abu Tabaq, age 5, has a piercing stare. Behind her dark eyes are memories she has hardly begun to process.

She has experienced war. She has been forced from her home. And she was in her father’s arms when he was fatally shot, and saw both him and her older sister left for dead in the street.

But this is not your increasingly typical story of tragedy and loss in Gaza. That much is clear from the place where CNN met Sham and her mother, Sanaa: a Palestinian hospital in Jerusalem.


And then, there’s this: Sanaa doesn’t just blame the Israeli military for killing her husband and daughter and shooting her in the leg – though certainly she does blame the Israeli military.

An Israeli soldier may also have saved her life.

That should not be extraordinary. All militaries are obligated under international law to help injured civilians. But in the war in Gaza, stories like Sanaa’s are exceedingly rare.

“He had mercy towards us,” she said of the soldier. But he and his comrades, she said, “also took from me the most precious thing I had.”

Sham Abu Tabaq, 5, was in her father's arms when he was shot dead, her mother says.

Sham Abu Tabaq, 5, was in her father's arms when he was shot dead, her mother says.
CNN
Sanaa and her husband Akram – a schoolteacher – lived with their daughters Sham and Yasmeen in Beit Lahia, in the northernmost end of Gaza.

She worked at a foundation that provides support for orphans. Like many women in Gaza, she dressed conservatively and often covered her face, which is marked by deep burn scars from a childhood accident.

In the days after Hamas’ October 7 attack on Israel, and Israel’s ensuing military campaign, the family were forced from their home – fleeing Israel’s unprecedented bombardment of the Gaza Strip. When a brief ceasefire was announced in late November as part of a hostage release deal, they saw an opportunity to return.

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“We were so happy we weren’t even able to sleep,” Sanaa recalled. “A truce was happening, and we were going to go home.”

They departed the United Nations-run health clinic where they had been living, in the Jabalya refugee camp, and began the roughly three-mile journey on foot. They were almost home, she said, when shots rang out.

“It was like there was a sniper and he was shooting at us. We didn’t see him,” she said. “Suddenly we were all injured.”

Sanaa Abu Tabaq, who suffered burns as a child, saw her husband and daughter shot dead during the November ceasefire in Gaza.

Sanaa Abu Tabaq, who suffered burns as a child, saw her husband and daughter shot dead during the November ceasefire in Gaza.
CNN

‘They finished him off’​

Seven-year-old Yasmeen’s condition was the most serious. She was shot in the back and shoulder. Akram was struck in the stomach, and Sanaa in the leg. Only Sham was left unscathed by the hail of bullets.



Related articleIsrael is blocking physicians with Palestinian heritage from entering Gaza

“My husband was telling me, ‘Let’s crawl and maybe we can find an ambulance to take us, or somebody might see us and help us.’ But I couldn’t crawl. And Yasmeen was in a very terrible condition – two bullets, and she was all covered in blood. So, I told him, ‘We can’t.’ He said, “I’ll try to crawl.’ So he crawled a little bit. They finished him off! He remained in his place. He was killed,” Sanaa said.

For several hours they lay there in the middle of the street – too injured and fearful to move. Sanaa held Yasmeen, promising her daughter that an ambulance was on the way and that they would survive. But no help was on the way. False hope was all Sanaa could offer her daughter in that moment.

Life drained out of Yasmeen, and she succumbed to her wounds.


Sanaa was unable to retrieve her daughter Yasmeen's body.
Sanaa Abu Tabaq
“I laid my daughter Yasmeen on the ground, may God bless her soul. And I covered her with a blouse. And I told Sham, ‘Come on darling, let’s crawl.’”

Crawling along the ground, speaking in whispers, they left behind the bodies of their family and made it inside a partially bombed two-story house. They huddled in a bathroom as night fell.

“In the morning, around 7:30, we heard the sounds of the Israelis and of the tanks,” Sanaa said. “I told her, ‘Sham my darling, the Israelis have come. They are going to shoot us. But don’t be afraid. It’s over. And we are going to die.’ She said, ‘Okay mom, but hide me. I don’t want to see them when they come and shoot me.’”

As Sanaa cradled her daughter, an explosion shook the house, blowing in the door of the bathroom where they were huddled and shattering the window above them, sending glass raining down.

Soon, the soldiers were inside the house. After some tense moments of shouting, she said, the soldiers were convinced that Sanaa and Sham were not harboring militants and tended to their wounds.

The house in northern Gaza where Sham and Sanaa sheltered over a terrifying night in November. CNN
CNN obtained footage of this moment from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), as captured by a soldier’s body camera. The video, which does not have audio, shows two soldiers applying field dressings as Sanaa – curled in a corner – speaks with someone off-camera. The IDF would not make any of the soldiers concerned available for an interview with CNN.

Sanaa soon began pleading with an Arabic-speaking soldier, who denied that his forces had killed Sanaa’s husband and eldest daughter, and instead blamed Hamas and its leader, Yahya Sinwar, for their deaths.




By Augusta Anthony, CNN
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Sanaa and her daughter describe what happened the night the IDF came
02:00 - Source: CNN
“I told him, ‘Please hand me over to an ambulance to Gaza (City). Can you at least take me to my family, so they take my daughter? I am not important. I know I’m going to die. I just want my family to take my daughter.’”

“He told me, ‘No, we cannot hand you over to Gaza. Wait a little bit. I might be able to help you,’” Sanaa said.

Sanaa says the Israeli soldiers concluded they could not treat her in the field. Her condition was critical, she says, and she needed to be treated in a hospital. After making several calls, she recalled, the Arabic-speaking soldier said they would take them to a hospital in Israel. They carried her out of the house on a stretcher with Sham.

As she was being loaded onto a Humvee, Sanaa says she saw her daughter Yasmeen’s body in the street.

“I told him: ‘This is Yasmeen. Please bring her to me.’ He said no. I told him, ‘Then, please bury her for me,’” Sanaa recalled. “They kept going with the stretcher.”


A shoe on the floor of the house in northern Gaza where Sham and Sanaa sheltered over a terrifying night in November.
CNN
An hour’s drive later, Sanaa says, they arrived at what appeared to be a mostly empty military staging ground. Standing in an open area, soldiers doing a security check ordered Sanaa to remove her jilbab – a full-body covering garment – in front of female soldiers, while male soldiers said they would look away. All the while, she continued to bleed from the bullet wound to her leg.

“Then they made me lift off my blouse and my undergarment items,” she recalled. “Sham – they took off all her clothes as well.”

“If it was not for Sham, I wouldn’t have agreed to take off my clothes. Because I was scared that if I didn’t take off my clothes, they would shoot Sham. Or they would shoot me in front of Sham, and I would never know what happened to her. If I had been alone I would have rather they shoot me, and I wouldn’t have taken off my clothes.”

They continued to Kaplan Medical Center, in the central Israeli city of Rehovot, where doctors treated her wounds. CNN obtained Sanaa’s medical files, which show that a bullet pierced her right calf, fracturing both bones and damaging an artery. She was then transported to a Palestinian hospital in Jerusalem to recover.

‘This is God who stood by my side’​

For nine months, she has had a slow recovery, with physical therapy. She and Sham have lived in a single, shared hospital room. She has no idea what happened to the bodies of her daughter and husband.

It is a vexing limbo – aware of the privilege of their safety yet pining for a home and life that has been irrevocably changed.

And she is terrified at being sent back into the warzone that was her home. Indeed, Israeli authorities are now planning on returning the pair to Gaza next month unless another government takes them in, according to hospital officials, Israeli officials and human rights organizations.

The Israeli military denies its soldiers shot Sanaa and her family.

In a statement to CNN, the IDF said that the family inadvertently approached a concealed Israeli position. When soldiers shouted at the family to stop, their position was revealed to nearby militants, who began firing on the Israelis. The family, the IDF said, was “caught in the intense exchange of fire,” adding that “the troops did not open fire at the four people nor did they aim at them.”

A mug with a image of Akram Abu Tabaq, Sham’s father and Sanaa’s husband, who was shot dead while trying to return home during the November ceasefire in Gaza.

A mug with a image of Akram Abu Tabaq, Sham’s father and Sanaa’s husband, who was shot dead while trying to return home during the November ceasefire in Gaza.
CNN
Sanaa called that claim a lie. The IDF claimed that the militants fired grenades on their position – Sanaa said she did not hear any explosions.

“If we had heard the voice of Israelis, we would have fled and returned (to the shelter). If we had heard the voice of resistance, we would have fled and returned,” Sanaa said.

“It’s true he helped me,” Sanaa says of the Arab-speaking soldier who helped facilitate the decision to take her out of Gaza, to Israel.

But she cannot bring herself to thank him. And she says she would not, if she saw him again.

“This was a miracle from God that the soldier who was speaking to me in Arabic was helping me,” she said.

“This is God who stood by my side, and He put mercy in them towards me. It is from God,” she said. “Not by (the soldier’s) own will.”
 
Mossad flags being used to stir anti-Muslim hatred. whenever an incidents occur where Jews are mysteriously not killed most likely a MOSSAD job:-

Explosion outside synagogue in southern France injures police officer

AFP Published August 24, 2024 Updated a day ago



Law enforcement officers and firefighters stand in front of a burnt building nearby a synagogue following the fire and explosion of cars in La Grande-Motte, south of France, Paris, August 24. — AFP

Law enforcement officers and firefighters stand in front of a burnt building nearby a synagogue following the fire and explosion of cars in La Grande-Motte, south of France, Paris, August 24. — AFP
Listen to article1x1.2x1.5x
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaMc238IiRov8okfYy3n
Two cars set on fire outside a synagogue in southern France on Saturday caused an explosion in which a police officer was injured, authorities said.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin called the incident at the Beth Yaacov synagogue in the seaside resort of La Motte “an obviously criminal act”.

He said, “All means are being deployed to find the perpetrator”. Darmanin said police protection of synagogues and Jewish schools and shops would be strengthened across France.

William Maury, of the police union Alliance Police Nationale, told BFM TV that the injured police officer’s life was not in danger.







Police confirmed the attempted arson but declined to give more details.

Darmanin and Prime Minister Gabriel Attal were to travel to the site of the explosion on Saturday.

Police were hunting for a suspect and the anti-terrorism prosecutor’s office was put in charge of the investigation, Attal said.

“This is an antisemitic attack. Once more, our Jewish compatriots are targeted,” Attal said on X, adding: “We won’t give up. In the face of anti-Semitism, in the face of violence, we will never allow ourselves to be intimidated.”

Where there were IDF tunnels underneath the Jewish Synagogue????...
 
The IDF releases new footage showing this morning's airstrikes in southern Lebanon

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According to Reuters, Israel and Hezbollah have exchanged Messages via Third-Party Mediators that they do not wish to Escalate the Conflict.

@sentdefender
 
The Pentagon: The Minister of Defense directs that two groups of American attack aircraft carriers remain in the region

@AlArabiya_Brk
 
Al Arabiya sources: Egypt informed Israel that it will only coordinate with the Palestinian side regarding the Rafah crossing

@AlArabiya_Brk
 
Okay, both you and @r3alist recommend this video and I watched most of this garbage but couldn't take it anymore. I don't trust the clergy or of their counterpart mindset much--whether Muslim or Jewish or Hindu or Christian. And from my personal interaction with--they are not the sharpest tool in the shed.
The video you guys quoted shows a guy sitting on a throne looking down at his ignorant audience--both physically and online--making random, sweeping statements which have not borne true and if some of them did or have, they were to be expected.
Yeah, Ariel Sharone in Al-Aqsa or the same Al Jazeera as a tool of the Zionists which the Zionists had the Americans bomb during the 2003 Iraq War and recently banned from Israel.
Oh, please!!

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I didn't see the throne 🤣



He was actually a former diplomat, educated to a high standard, though for him he only looks at events through the Qur'an and his interpretation, again take it or leave it I guess

He also talks about what he learnt in the un itself

You don't have to believe him, I don't advocate him, but he was right about what Israel will do with respect to "cleansing" the people, decades ago and how Israel will play it out
 

Israels economy is struggling​

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05:51, 26 Aug 2024, updated 08:16, 26 Aug 2024By Associated Press

JERUSALEM (AP) - In Jerusalem´s Old City, nearly all souvenir shops are closed. In Haifa´s flea market, forlorn merchants polish their wares on empty streets. Airlines are canceling flights, businesses are failing and luxury hotels are half empty.

Nearly 11 months into the war with Hamas, Israel´s economy is struggling as the country's leaders grind ahead with an offensive in Gaza that shows no signs of ending and threatens to escalate into a wider conflict.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has tried to allay concerns by saying the economic damage is only temporary. But the bloodiest, most destructive war ever between Israel and Hamas has hurt thousands of small businesses and compromised international trust in an economy once thought of as an entrepreneurial dynamo. Some leading economists say a cease-fire is the best way to stop the damage.

"The economy right now is under huge uncertainty, and it´s related to the security situation - how long the war will go on, what the intensity will be and the question of whether there will be further escalation," said Karnit Flug, Israel´s former central bank chief who is now the vice president of research at the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank.

The war has inflicted a far heavier toll on Gaza´s already broken economy, displacing 90% of the population and leaving the vast majority of the workforce unemployed. All banks in the territory have shut. The fighting has killed more than 40,000 people, according to Palestinian health officials in the Hamas-run territory. Their count does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

The fighting in Gaza and daily attacks from Hezbollah militants in Lebanon have also driven tens of thousands of people from their homes along Israel's northern and southern borders and caused large-scale damage.

People buy fruit from a street market in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Aug. 16, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

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People buy fruit from a street market in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Aug. 16, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
TRE

The Israeli economy has recovered from previous shocks, including shorter wars with Hamas. But this longer conflict has created a bigger strain, including the cost of rebuilding, compensating families of victims and reserve soldiers, and vast military spending.

The drawn-out nature of the fighting and the threat of further escalation with Iran and its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah, have an especially harsh impact on tourism. Though tourism is not a major driver of the economy, the damage has hurt thousands of workers and small businesses.

"The hardest thing is that we don´t know when the war will end," said Israeli tour guide Daniel Jacob, whose family is living off savings. "We need to finish the war before this year´s end. If it´s another half a year, I don´t know how long we´re going to make it."

Jacob, 45, returned in April from six months of duty as a reserve soldier to find out that business had dried up. He was forced to shutter the tourism company he spent two decades developing. His only income is aid from the government, which pays him half his prewar salary every few months.

Meir Sabag, a Haifa antiques dealer whose shop sat empty, said business is worse now than during the COVID-19 pandemic.

On a recent weekday, the formerly bustling port of Haifa, a major hub of Israeli import-export where massive container ships would often stop, was still.

With Yemen´s Houthi rebel group endangering ships passing through Egypt´s Suez Canal, many long-haul ships have stopped using Israeli ports as hubs, said a port official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was sharing internal information.

He said Israeli ports saw a 16% percent drop in shipping in the first half of the year, compared with the same period in 2023.

The war began on Oct. 7, when Hamas militants killed some 1,200 people and took 250 people hostage.

Renewed U.S.-led cease-fire efforts appear to be sputtering, and Iran and Hezbollah have threatened to avenge the recent assassinations of top militant leaders, raising the threat of a wider regional war. These fears have prompted major airlines, including Delta, United and Lufthansa, to suspend flights in and out of Israel.

Yacov Sheinin, an Israeli economist with decades of experience advising Israeli premiers and government ministries, said the total cost of the war could amount to $120 billion, or 20% of the country´s gross domestic product, a broad measure of economic activity.

Of all 38 member countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Israel´s economy underwent the biggest slowdown from April to June, the organization reported Thursday. The Israeli GDP was projected to grow 3% in 2024. The Bank of Israel now predicts a growth rate of 1.5% - and that's if the war ends this year.

Fitch downgraded Israel´s rating from A-plus to A earlier this month, following similar downgrades by S&P and Moody´s. The downgrading could raise the government's borrowing costs.

"In our view, the conflict in Gaza could last well into 2025," Fitch warned in its rating note, which cited the possibility of "significant additional military spending, destruction of infrastructure and more sustained damage to economic activity and investment."

In another worrying sign, the Finance Ministry this month said the country´s deficit over the last 12 months has risen to over 8% of GDP, far exceeding the 6.6% deficit-to-GDP ratio the ministry projected for 2024. In 2023, Israel ´s budget deficit was roughly 4% of its GDP.

The downgrade and the deficit have increased pressure on the Israeli government to end the war and reduce the deficit - something that would require unpopular decisions such as raising taxes or cutting spending.

But Netanyahu needs to keep his coalition afloat, and his hard-line finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, wants the war to continue until Hamas is decimated.

Flug, the former central bank chief, said the situation is unsustainable and that the coalition will have to cut back on spending, such as unpopular subsidies to ultra-Orthodox schools that are perceived by the broader public as wasteful.

"The public will have hard time accepting it if the government does not show that the severity of the situation forces them to give up some of the things that are dear to them," Flug said.

Smotrich said Israel´s economy "is strong" and vowed to pass a "responsible budget that will continue to support all the needs of the war, while maintaining fiscal frameworks and promoting growth engines."

The unemployment rate has dipped below pre-war levels, Sheinin said, to 3.4% in July compared with 3.6% in July of last year. But when taking into account Israelis forced out of the labor market, the figure rises to 4.8%, a figure that would still be considered low in most countries.

Meanwhile, many small businesses have closed because their owners and employees were called up for reserve military duty. Others are struggling amid the broader slowdown.

Israeli business information company CofaceBDI reports that some 46,000 businesses have closed since the start of the war - 75% of them small businesses.

Even Jerusalem´s iconic American Colony hotel, a popular stop for politicians, diplomats and movie stars, has laid off workers and is mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, who represents the owners.

"We did consider at one point closing for a few months," said Berkovitz "but of course that would mean sacking all the staff. It would have meant letting the gardens, which we´ve developed over 120 years, go fallow."

Sheinin said the best way to help the economy bounce back would be to end the war.

"But," he cautioned. "If we are stubborn and continue this war, we will not recover."

___

This story corrects the name of the economist to Yacov Sheinin instead of Jacob Sheinin.


___

Find more AP coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

A woman looks at her phone while eating a sandwich next to a shopping cart in Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

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A woman looks at her phone while eating a sandwich next to a shopping cart in Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
A person sits on the sidewalk next to a mall in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

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A person sits on the sidewalk next to a mall in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
A worker walks in a corridor at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

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A worker walks in a corridor at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)
A dining room at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

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A dining room at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

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Gantry cranes used to load and unload cargo containers from ships sit stand during the dawn, in the port of Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

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Jeremy Berkovitz, right, the official representative of the owners of the American Colony Hotel, poses for a portrait in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Berkovitz. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Ille
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A woman checks the pomegranates displayed at a street market in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Aug. 16, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Corre
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A worker walks through the garden courtyard where breakfast is served American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Ille
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Cars sit at the port of Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Corr
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In this photo taken with a long exposure, traffic moves slowly in Tel Aviv, Israel, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schal
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A woman walks past a closed shop in Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Leo Corre
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A person walks his dog past a closed shop to rent in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel S
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Guests swim and sunbathe at the pool at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud I
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A worker readies a guest room at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud I
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In this photo with a long exposure, traffic moves slowly in Tel Aviv, Israel, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
 
Must be a French Zionist Jew that one.

No other explanation for his posts whatsoever.

A true monster in every sense of the word to be repeating those words when he knows they have been debunked.
I'm atheist. From a christian roots familly....
Could you accept that someone who don't agree with you may be non jude ?
 
Statement by the Qassam Brigades

Al-Qassam Mujahideen engage in fierce clashes with enemy forces penetrating the Al-Jaafrawi area, east of the city of Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, causing deaths and injuries among their ranks, and helicopters landing to evacuate them.


Statement by the Qassam Brigades

The Qassam Mujahideen were able to lure a Zionist force from the engineering unit into one of the pre-rigged tunnels in the area of the military sites east of the city of Deir al-Balah in the middle of the Gaza Strip. Immediately upon their arrival inside the tunnel, it was blown up and they were killed and wounded.
Less than 400 deaths in the IAF, against 16000 int the Hamas ones....
Qassam brigades may tell all that they want, they have lost the war.
 
Five hundred transport planes and 107 ships have delivered more than 50,000 tons of armaments and military equipment from the US to Israel since the start of the Israeli genocide in Gaza

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more than 50,000 tons ... insane numbers that can barely be imagined
 

Israels economy is struggling​

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05:51, 26 Aug 2024, updated 08:16, 26 Aug 2024By Associated Press

JERUSALEM (AP) - In Jerusalem´s Old City, nearly all souvenir shops are closed. In Haifa´s flea market, forlorn merchants polish their wares on empty streets. Airlines are canceling flights, businesses are failing and luxury hotels are half empty.

Nearly 11 months into the war with Hamas, Israel´s economy is struggling as the country's leaders grind ahead with an offensive in Gaza that shows no signs of ending and threatens to escalate into a wider conflict.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has tried to allay concerns by saying the economic damage is only temporary. But the bloodiest, most destructive war ever between Israel and Hamas has hurt thousands of small businesses and compromised international trust in an economy once thought of as an entrepreneurial dynamo. Some leading economists say a cease-fire is the best way to stop the damage.

"The economy right now is under huge uncertainty, and it´s related to the security situation - how long the war will go on, what the intensity will be and the question of whether there will be further escalation," said Karnit Flug, Israel´s former central bank chief who is now the vice president of research at the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank.

The war has inflicted a far heavier toll on Gaza´s already broken economy, displacing 90% of the population and leaving the vast majority of the workforce unemployed. All banks in the territory have shut. The fighting has killed more than 40,000 people, according to Palestinian health officials in the Hamas-run territory. Their count does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

The fighting in Gaza and daily attacks from Hezbollah militants in Lebanon have also driven tens of thousands of people from their homes along Israel's northern and southern borders and caused large-scale damage.

People buy fruit from a street market in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Aug. 16, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)'s economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

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People buy fruit from a street market in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Aug. 16, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
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The Israeli economy has recovered from previous shocks, including shorter wars with Hamas. But this longer conflict has created a bigger strain, including the cost of rebuilding, compensating families of victims and reserve soldiers, and vast military spending.

The drawn-out nature of the fighting and the threat of further escalation with Iran and its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah, have an especially harsh impact on tourism. Though tourism is not a major driver of the economy, the damage has hurt thousands of workers and small businesses.

"The hardest thing is that we don´t know when the war will end," said Israeli tour guide Daniel Jacob, whose family is living off savings. "We need to finish the war before this year´s end. If it´s another half a year, I don´t know how long we´re going to make it."

Jacob, 45, returned in April from six months of duty as a reserve soldier to find out that business had dried up. He was forced to shutter the tourism company he spent two decades developing. His only income is aid from the government, which pays him half his prewar salary every few months.

Meir Sabag, a Haifa antiques dealer whose shop sat empty, said business is worse now than during the COVID-19 pandemic.

On a recent weekday, the formerly bustling port of Haifa, a major hub of Israeli import-export where massive container ships would often stop, was still.

With Yemen´s Houthi rebel group endangering ships passing through Egypt´s Suez Canal, many long-haul ships have stopped using Israeli ports as hubs, said a port official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was sharing internal information.

He said Israeli ports saw a 16% percent drop in shipping in the first half of the year, compared with the same period in 2023.

The war began on Oct. 7, when Hamas militants killed some 1,200 people and took 250 people hostage.

Renewed U.S.-led cease-fire efforts appear to be sputtering, and Iran and Hezbollah have threatened to avenge the recent assassinations of top militant leaders, raising the threat of a wider regional war. These fears have prompted major airlines, including Delta, United and Lufthansa, to suspend flights in and out of Israel.

Yacov Sheinin, an Israeli economist with decades of experience advising Israeli premiers and government ministries, said the total cost of the war could amount to $120 billion, or 20% of the country´s gross domestic product, a broad measure of economic activity.

Of all 38 member countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Israel´s economy underwent the biggest slowdown from April to June, the organization reported Thursday. The Israeli GDP was projected to grow 3% in 2024. The Bank of Israel now predicts a growth rate of 1.5% - and that's if the war ends this year.

Fitch downgraded Israel´s rating from A-plus to A earlier this month, following similar downgrades by S&P and Moody´s. The downgrading could raise the government's borrowing costs.

"In our view, the conflict in Gaza could last well into 2025," Fitch warned in its rating note, which cited the possibility of "significant additional military spending, destruction of infrastructure and more sustained damage to economic activity and investment."

In another worrying sign, the Finance Ministry this month said the country´s deficit over the last 12 months has risen to over 8% of GDP, far exceeding the 6.6% deficit-to-GDP ratio the ministry projected for 2024. In 2023, Israel ´s budget deficit was roughly 4% of its GDP.

The downgrade and the deficit have increased pressure on the Israeli government to end the war and reduce the deficit - something that would require unpopular decisions such as raising taxes or cutting spending.

But Netanyahu needs to keep his coalition afloat, and his hard-line finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, wants the war to continue until Hamas is decimated.

Flug, the former central bank chief, said the situation is unsustainable and that the coalition will have to cut back on spending, such as unpopular subsidies to ultra-Orthodox schools that are perceived by the broader public as wasteful.

"The public will have hard time accepting it if the government does not show that the severity of the situation forces them to give up some of the things that are dear to them," Flug said.

Smotrich said Israel´s economy "is strong" and vowed to pass a "responsible budget that will continue to support all the needs of the war, while maintaining fiscal frameworks and promoting growth engines."

The unemployment rate has dipped below pre-war levels, Sheinin said, to 3.4% in July compared with 3.6% in July of last year. But when taking into account Israelis forced out of the labor market, the figure rises to 4.8%, a figure that would still be considered low in most countries.

Meanwhile, many small businesses have closed because their owners and employees were called up for reserve military duty. Others are struggling amid the broader slowdown.

Israeli business information company CofaceBDI reports that some 46,000 businesses have closed since the start of the war - 75% of them small businesses.

Even Jerusalem´s iconic American Colony hotel, a popular stop for politicians, diplomats and movie stars, has laid off workers and is mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, who represents the owners.

"We did consider at one point closing for a few months," said Berkovitz "but of course that would mean sacking all the staff. It would have meant letting the gardens, which we´ve developed over 120 years, go fallow."

Sheinin said the best way to help the economy bounce back would be to end the war.

"But," he cautioned. "If we are stubborn and continue this war, we will not recover."

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This story corrects the name of the economist to Yacov Sheinin instead of Jacob Sheinin.


___

Find more AP coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

A woman looks at her phone while eating a sandwich next to a shopping cart in Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)'s economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

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A woman looks at her phone while eating a sandwich next to a shopping cart in Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
A person sits on the sidewalk next to a mall in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)'s economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

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A person sits on the sidewalk next to a mall in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
A worker walks in a corridor at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)'s economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

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A worker walks in a corridor at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)
A dining room at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)'s economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

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A dining room at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

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Gantry cranes used to load and unload cargo containers from ships sit stand during the dawn, in the port of Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

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Jeremy Berkovitz, right, the official representative of the owners of the American Colony Hotel, poses for a portrait in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Berkovitz. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Ille
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A woman checks the pomegranates displayed at a street market in Haifa, Israel, Friday, Aug. 16, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Corre
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A worker walks through the garden courtyard where breakfast is served American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Ille
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Cars sit at the port of Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Leo Corr
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In this photo taken with a long exposure, traffic moves slowly in Tel Aviv, Israel, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schal
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A woman walks past a closed shop in Haifa, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Leo Corre
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A person walks his dog past a closed shop to rent in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel S
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Guests swim and sunbathe at the pool at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud I
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A worker readies a guest room at the American Colony Hotel in east Jerusalem, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. As Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, Jerusalem's iconic American Colony hotel has had to lay off workers and are mulling pay cuts, said Jeremy Berkovitz, the official representative of the owners. (AP Photo/Mahmoud I
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In this photo with a long exposure, traffic moves slowly in Tel Aviv, Israel, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2024. Israel's economy is suffering from the nearly 11-month war with Hamas, as its leaders grind ahead with its offensive in Gaza that threatens to escalate into a wider conflict. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)




Israel might be bankrupted in a year if it starts a conflict in Lebanon: 500,000 residents have already left Israel, there is no tourism, the economy has dropped by 20% when annualized, it would need to pull 300,000-400,000 people from its workforce and foreign investment would dry up.
 
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