Gaza-Israel Conflict | 2023-2024

New Press correspondent: Violent clashes between resistance fighters and occupation forces in the town of Qabatiya, south of #Jenin

@NewpressPs
 
Within the Battle of Al-Aqsa Flood
Our mujahideen were able to target an infantry force in the axis of the incursion into Al-Ghanim neighborhood, and our mujahideen rained heavy bullets on the force, which led to direct casualties among the force’s ranks, including dead and wounded.

It is a jihad of victory or martyrdom.
Martyr Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades - Tulkarm Battalion
 
Gaza/Israel is still the topmost news on NY Times and that too in an election year.


Thousands of primary schools and several municipalities, transport networks and hospitals slowed or suspended operations across Israel on Monday, as work stoppages and protests formed the broadest expressions of anti-government dissent since the war in Gaza began.

A day after the Israeli military announced that it had recovered the bodies of six hostages from Gaza, union chiefs and business leaders joined forces in an effort to pressure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to a truce with Hamas that could facilitate the release of dozens of hostages still in captivity. President Biden added to the pressure when he said Mr. Netanyahu wasn’t doing enough to bring the hostages home, and Britain said it would suspend some weapons exports to Israel.

Union leaders agreed to halt the labor strike at 2:30 p.m. local time, more than eight hours after it began, after a court said they had not given enough notice for the work stoppage to go ahead. Disruptions were widespread, even as the strike’s effects appeared to be limited in some sectors. Many schools and banks and some municipal offices closed or cut services. But many municipalities continued work as normal, according to the representative body for local authorities, and some transport services returned by the afternoon.

Here are the latest developments:

  • National fury: The work stoppage reflected the national outpouring of grief, anger and protest over the weekend. Advocates for the hostages and critics of Mr. Netanyahu argued that a cease-fire agreement could have saved the lives of the six hostages found dead in Gaza on Saturday. Huge street protests across Israel erupted on Sunday night in which hundreds of thousands of demonstrators, according to organizers, called for a hostage release and a cease-fire.
  • Netanyahu’s calculations: In his first news conference since the recovery of the six slain hostages, Mr. Netanyahu on Monday doubled down on his refusal to agree to a truce that would involve Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza or lead to a permanent halt to the fighting. Either move, he said, could allow Hamas to survive and endanger Israel’s long-term security. “If we leave, we will not be able to return,” he said, insisting that Israeli control of the border area between Gaza and Egypt — known as the Philadelphi Corridor — will “determine our entire future.” Asked how he would define the end of the war, he said, “When Hamas no longer rules Gaza.” Mr. Netanyahu insisted that conceding after the recovery of six dead hostages on Sunday would send Hamas the wrong message and vowed that he would not bend to pressure.
  • Britain’s pressure: Britain announced that it will suspend the exports of some weapons to Israel, a significant hardening of its position on the war in Gaza. Foreign Secretary David Lammy said the decision was based on a legal review that concluded there was a “clear risk” the weapons could be used in a way that would breach international law. The suspension would affect 30 of 350 British export licenses and was “not an arms embargo,” he said. But the decision further distances Britain from the United States, which has rejected calls to suspend arms shipments to Israel. President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris met at the White House on Monday morning with the team representing the United States in the talks.
  • Hostages killed: The Israeli military said on Sunday that the six bodies found in Gaza were those of hostages who had been “brutally murdered” by Hamas. The Israeli Health Ministry later said that a forensic examination showed the hostages had been recently shot at close range. Hamas claimed, without providing evidence, that the hostages had been killed by the Israeli military. A funeral for one of hostages, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, an Israeli American dual citizen whose parents were among the most prominent campaigners for their release, was held in Jerusalem.
  • Polio in Gaza: Polio vaccinations continued for a second day in Gaza, after the Gazan Health Ministry said that more than 72,600 children had been vaccinated on Sunday in the central part of the territory. (United Nations agencies gave a higher figure, saying that nearly 87,000 had received the vaccine.) After Gaza last month recorded its first polio case in 25 years, Israeli forces and Hamas agreed to brief pauses in fighting to allow for a staggered, three-phase vaccination drive.
 

UK suspends 30 arms export licences to Israel after review​



>> Shameful that they are still selling F-35 parts to Israel given that those F-35s are directly bombing Gaza and actually performing the genocide ..... A fig leaf theatrical act more for optics than a real decision of substance.



Mainly European settlers and then they were forced to import Arab settlers as they could not attract enough Europeans.

Arab Jews will one day regret joining the Zionist project and betraying the Arabs that provided them security and kindness for many hundreds of years.
 
Haaretz, on the authority of a senior Israeli Air Force officer: Without Washington’s military support, it would have been difficult for the war to continue for more than months


Hamas has been under siege for 17 years or more and Israel has systematically and comprehensively destroyed the Gaza Strip, leading to the current war, and Hamas does not surrender..
 
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades - Al-Amoudi Brigade:
#Video / Scenes from the joint operation in which the Al-Aqsa Brigades and the Mujahideen Brigades destroyed a gathering of enemy soldiers in the Al-Taqaddum axis in the Al-Zaytoun neighborhood, east of Gaza City, with regular “60” caliber mortar shells.

 
US President Joe Biden said on Monday that reaching an agreement to release detainees held by Hamas in Gaza is very close.

🔴 The American newspaper "The Washington Post" reported that Washington spoke with Egypt and Qatar about the features of a final deal to be presented to the parties in the coming weeks, a deal that, if the two sides fail to accept, could represent the end of the negotiations.
 
Reuters, from a Hamas leader:

Biden's statements represent an American admission of Netanyahu's responsibility for obstructing a deal
 
And 320 others remained, i can guess some unnecessary things are banned.


No in fact the things that were banned were the ones that would have the most impact with one exception....F-35 parts.

F-35 programme would stop dead in its tracks without UK parts.

In fact UK can stop the production of all F-35s simply by refusing to supply the necessary parts.

In this case, UK could just say it does not agree with its parts going to the Zionist entity and as the programme is consensus based, then the entity is cut off entirely from being "sold" any more F-35s.

This is not something that is realistic as the UK is generally considered as a US lapdog.
 
The UN is unable to get food to the Palestinians but miraculously is able to get vaccines to them. Another crime is possibly being committed. If they trace the vaccine it will go back to some Zionist lab.

Think about the vaccine programmes in Pakistan that were trying to find Bin Laden
 

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