Israel’s Genocide in Gaza | 2023- till present

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Enough of fukin words and talk, Muslim countries must openly start supply weapons and troops to Palestine. If their soldiers are too cowardly then they must facilitate volunteers. The Nazi Israelis have crossed every red line like Hitler and must be deNazified and held to account.

FM Dar calls for immediate Gaza ceasefire, Israel’s accountability at OIC summit

APP Published May 3, 2024



Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar participates in the preparatory Meeting of Foreign Ministers to the Islamic Summit of the Organisation of Islamic Countries in Banjul on May 3 — APP

Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar participates in the preparatory Meeting of Foreign Ministers to the Islamic Summit of the Organisation of Islamic Countries in Banjul on May 3 — APP
1x1.2x1.5x
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaMc238IiRov8okfYy3n
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar has called for the declaration of an immediate and unconditional ceasefire in Gaza, the opening of a humanitarian corridor and urged the international community to hold Israel accountable for its military offensive in the besieged enclave.
Dar arrived in The Gambia on Wednesday to represent Pakistan at the 15th Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) summit in Banjul on May 4 and 5. Besides attending the OIC summit, the newly appointed deputy prime minister will also hold bilateral meetings with dignitaries from the member countries.
The October 7 attack on southern Israel by Hamas and the ensuing Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip has killed nearly 35,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health ministry figures, obliterated much of the enclave’s infrastructure and created a humanitarian crisis verging on famine. About 1,200 people in southern Israel were killed in the October 7 attack
Addressing the Preparatory Meeting of Foreign Ministers on Thursday, ahead of the 15th Session of the OIC’s Islamic Summit Conference, FM Dar emphasised the need to implement UN Security Council (UNSC) resolution 2728 to cease hostilities and demand Israel to halt settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories and relinquish all Palestinian properties.



He expressed Pakistan’s “deep concern” about the ongoing “genocide and starvation of Gaza people” and called for the reactivation of the OIC’s Ministerial Committee on Israeli aggression against the Palestinians, offering Pakistan’s assistance to the body.
The deputy prime minister reaffirmed Pakistan’s full support for the Palestinian people’s “inalienable right to self-determination” and stated that the only permanent solution to the crisis lay in the creation of a “secure, viable, contiguous, and sovereign state of Palestine based on the pre-June 1967 borders, with Jerusalem as its capital”.



Dar also strongly condemned “oppressive state action in Indian-held Kashmir, including extrajudicial killings and media blackouts”. He pledged Pakistan’s “unwavering diplomatic support” for the Kashmiri people’s right to self-determination, as mandated by relevant UNSC resolutions.
The deputy PM also stressed joint action by the OIC to confront rising Islamophobia, which he said “has manifested in more frequent discrimination and acts of violence and incitement against Muslims around the world”.
He said that while social media platforms had established a clear understanding of content relating to “antisemitism” and “holocaust denial”, the same was “not the case for blasphemous or anti-Islamic content”.
Dar said this content was “responsible for widespread distress among Muslims and the global wave of Islamophobia”.
The deputy prime minister urged the OIC to formulate a joint strategy to influence global information networks and platforms to harmonise their application of content regulation policies for blasphemous, anti-Islamic and Islamophobic content.
The OIC foreign ministers adopted the report of the Senior Officials’ Meeting and finalised various documents, including the Resolution on the Issue of Palestine, the Final Communique of the OIC Summit Conference and the Banjul Declaration.

Countries can formally help Lebanon if Lebanon asks for help from Pakistan and other countries if Israel attacks Lebanon - as Lebanon is a sovereign state. However, all these groups are not state actors and therefore any assistance is branded as sponsoring terrorism..
 
Solomon
I suggest you stop bringing Pakistan and Bangladesh into this thread.
I notice when you begin to lose the argument -
I'm not "losing" arguments. I'm trying to raise the moral level - and courage - of the Pakistanis here. One could say I'm channeling the spirits of now-dead Pakistanis who wished their homeland the best but died in dreadful disappointment. It is a tough endeavor, yes?

- the Israeli have killed people waiting for food. Stopping water and electricity has killed people.
Hamas and Israel cut from the same cloth.
Is that a just and considered equivocation, or merely a convenient one?
 
Channel 13 Hebrew:

8 soldiers from the Yalam Unit of the Engineering Corps were seriously injured
As a result of being ambushed with an explosive device
“There are two soldiers who are in very serious condition.”
 
Private sources:
Since this morning, 16 vehicles have been destroyed and two occupation soldiers have been sniped at on the outskirts of Jabalia

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#Urgent| The Israeli army completely cuts off communications from the Jabalia camp in the northern Gaza Strip (Anatolia correspondent)

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Fierce battles in Jabalia camp, and helicopters to transport the dead and wounded did not stop.

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You won't survive in the middle east, you need to go
Odd that you mention that, today of all days:

MAY 13, 2024 9:40 AM

The Monumental Importance of Yom Hazikaron

avatar
by Jan Lee / JNS.org

OPINION

The Western Wall and Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.orgThis year, more than most, Jews internationally need to commemorate Yom Hazikaron.

Israel’s Day of Remembrance was created more than 70 years ago with a unique purpose — to honor soldiers and civilian fighters killed during the efforts to establish its nationhood. But in recent years, it has taken on an additional role: to acknowledge the mounting numbers of citizens murdered during terrorist attacks on Israeli soil.

The Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism went a step further last year by introducing a policy that recognizes the victims of antisemitic terror attacks throughout the world. No event more symbolizes that connection than the Oct. 7 massacre in southern Israel — an attack whose victims hail from across the world and include Jews, Christians, and innocents of other faiths as well.

But this year’s memorial has another, often overlooked significance. This year marks a half-century since the terrorist attack in the northern city of Kiryat Shmona, when 18 civilians, largely immigrants, were murdered in their homes.

Eight of the victims were children in their apartments during the Passover holidays. The massacre, and the terror attacks that followed during the next few months that year, became front-page news in international media, forcing the UN Security Council to intervene and call for a buffer zone on Lebanon’s southern border. According to UN Security Council records from April 1974, Israel’s efforts to persuade the United Nations to hold both Lebanon and the Palestinian Liberation Organization accountable for the cross-border attack were rebuffed. UN peacekeeping troops were established briefly on the border, but Lebanon refused to assume responsibility to stop terrorists from crossing into Israel.

I was in Kiryat Shmona a half-hour before the attack that morning. I was waiting for a bus to Jerusalem, where I planned to spend the rest of the Passover holiday. The bus left filled with travelers, including residents from the apartment building that had been targeted. Egged buses in those days were equipped with a portable radio that in the best of times was hard to hear over the chatter of riders. But when the emergency broadcast came on, panic ensued. Passengers began pleading with the driver to turn the bus around and head back to Kiryat Shmona so they could check on their families. The bus was eventually flagged and pulled over by a supervisor, who confirmed the news. The city had already been cordoned off by Israel Defense Forces, and the driver was ordered to continue on to Jerusalem.

It was a searing experience to step off a bus crammed with families and solitary travelers, knowing that some had survived a terrorist attack because they were on a shopping trip instead of at home — and worse, that they might not find out the fate of their families until they returned home. But the image I think of every Yom Hazikaron is that of the young Russian immigrant from Kiryat Shmona sitting next to me, whose tears were reflected in the window pane next to her. She had confessed to me a few minutes earlier that she was still learning conversational Hebrew. Apparently, she knew enough to understand the worst of the news broadcast.

Public memorials like Yom Hazikaron help us heal. But they also serve as a way to register and reflect public unity and sentiment about compelling issues. And sometimes, when our representatives listen hard enough, responses to those memorials can inspire action.

Perhaps Israel’s decision last year to enact a policy that recognizes the worldwide victims of antisemitism was prescient of the increasing need for global action against terrorism. It’s an uncomfortable thought. But if Israel is going to overcome the greatest threat to its safety, it won’t just come from within — from the yearly sirens that mark its losses or from its incessant efforts to inspire the United Nations to finally support its side of disputes. It will also come from those of us in the Diaspora, who know all too well the importance of a Jewish homeland.
 
Al-Qassam fighters clash with the occupation soldiers and destroy the vehicles penetrating Khan Yunis

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Odd that you mention that, today of all days:

MAY 13, 2024 9:40 AM

The Monumental Importance of Yom Hazikaron

avatar
by Jan Lee / JNS.org

OPINION

The Western Wall and Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.orgThis year, more than most, Jews internationally need to commemorate Yom Hazikaron.

Israel’s Day of Remembrance was created more than 70 years ago with a unique purpose — to honor soldiers and civilian fighters killed during the efforts to establish its nationhood. But in recent years, it has taken on an additional role: to acknowledge the mounting numbers of citizens murdered during terrorist attacks on Israeli soil.

The Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism went a step further last year by introducing a policy that recognizes the victims of antisemitic terror attacks throughout the world. No event more symbolizes that connection than the Oct. 7 massacre in southern Israel — an attack whose victims hail from across the world and include Jews, Christians, and innocents of other faiths as well.

But this year’s memorial has another, often overlooked significance. This year marks a half-century since the terrorist attack in the northern city of Kiryat Shmona, when 18 civilians, largely immigrants, were murdered in their homes.

Eight of the victims were children in their apartments during the Passover holidays. The massacre, and the terror attacks that followed during the next few months that year, became front-page news in international media, forcing the UN Security Council to intervene and call for a buffer zone on Lebanon’s southern border. According to UN Security Council records from April 1974, Israel’s efforts to persuade the United Nations to hold both Lebanon and the Palestinian Liberation Organization accountable for the cross-border attack were rebuffed. UN peacekeeping troops were established briefly on the border, but Lebanon refused to assume responsibility to stop terrorists from crossing into Israel.

I was in Kiryat Shmona a half-hour before the attack that morning. I was waiting for a bus to Jerusalem, where I planned to spend the rest of the Passover holiday. The bus left filled with travelers, including residents from the apartment building that had been targeted. Egged buses in those days were equipped with a portable radio that in the best of times was hard to hear over the chatter of riders. But when the emergency broadcast came on, panic ensued. Passengers began pleading with the driver to turn the bus around and head back to Kiryat Shmona so they could check on their families. The bus was eventually flagged and pulled over by a supervisor, who confirmed the news. The city had already been cordoned off by Israel Defense Forces, and the driver was ordered to continue on to Jerusalem.

It was a searing experience to step off a bus crammed with families and solitary travelers, knowing that some had survived a terrorist attack because they were on a shopping trip instead of at home — and worse, that they might not find out the fate of their families until they returned home. But the image I think of every Yom Hazikaron is that of the young Russian immigrant from Kiryat Shmona sitting next to me, whose tears were reflected in the window pane next to her. She had confessed to me a few minutes earlier that she was still learning conversational Hebrew. Apparently, she knew enough to understand the worst of the news broadcast.

Public memorials like Yom Hazikaron help us heal. But they also serve as a way to register and reflect public unity and sentiment about compelling issues. And sometimes, when our representatives listen hard enough, responses to those memorials can inspire action.

Perhaps Israel’s decision last year to enact a policy that recognizes the worldwide victims of antisemitism was prescient of the increasing need for global action against terrorism. It’s an uncomfortable thought. But if Israel is going to overcome the greatest threat to its safety, it won’t just come from within — from the yearly sirens that mark its losses or from its incessant efforts to inspire the United Nations to finally support its side of disputes. It will also come from those of us in the Diaspora, who know all too well the importance of a Jewish homeland.

Yep, don't care,, your monsters

You've burnt all bridges, and their HAS to be consequences for that
 
I'm not "losing" arguments. I'm trying to raise the moral level - and courage - of the Pakistanis here. One could say I'm channeling the spirits of now-dead Pakistanis who wished their homeland the best but died in dreadful disappointment. It is a tough endeavor, yes?


Is that a just and considered equivocation, or merely a convenient one?

Moral? You?
Thieving occupier!!!
Murdering occupied under threat of nuclear annihilation...

Stop spitting on this thread!
 
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Jabalia

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Odd that you mention that, today of all days:

MAY 13, 2024 9:40 AM

The Monumental Importance of Yom Hazikaron

avatar
by Jan Lee / JNS.org

OPINION

The Western Wall and Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.orgThis year, more than most, Jews internationally need to commemorate Yom Hazikaron.

Israel’s Day of Remembrance was created more than 70 years ago with a unique purpose — to honor soldiers and civilian fighters killed during the efforts to establish its nationhood. But in recent years, it has taken on an additional role: to acknowledge the mounting numbers of citizens murdered during terrorist attacks on Israeli soil.

The Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism went a step further last year by introducing a policy that recognizes the victims of antisemitic terror attacks throughout the world. No event more symbolizes that connection than the Oct. 7 massacre in southern Israel — an attack whose victims hail from across the world and include Jews, Christians, and innocents of other faiths as well.

But this year’s memorial has another, often overlooked significance. This year marks a half-century since the terrorist attack in the northern city of Kiryat Shmona, when 18 civilians, largely immigrants, were murdered in their homes.

Eight of the victims were children in their apartments during the Passover holidays. The massacre, and the terror attacks that followed during the next few months that year, became front-page news in international media, forcing the UN Security Council to intervene and call for a buffer zone on Lebanon’s southern border. According to UN Security Council records from April 1974, Israel’s efforts to persuade the United Nations to hold both Lebanon and the Palestinian Liberation Organization accountable for the cross-border attack were rebuffed. UN peacekeeping troops were established briefly on the border, but Lebanon refused to assume responsibility to stop terrorists from crossing into Israel.

I was in Kiryat Shmona a half-hour before the attack that morning. I was waiting for a bus to Jerusalem, where I planned to spend the rest of the Passover holiday. The bus left filled with travelers, including residents from the apartment building that had been targeted. Egged buses in those days were equipped with a portable radio that in the best of times was hard to hear over the chatter of riders. But when the emergency broadcast came on, panic ensued. Passengers began pleading with the driver to turn the bus around and head back to Kiryat Shmona so they could check on their families. The bus was eventually flagged and pulled over by a supervisor, who confirmed the news. The city had already been cordoned off by Israel Defense Forces, and the driver was ordered to continue on to Jerusalem.

It was a searing experience to step off a bus crammed with families and solitary travelers, knowing that some had survived a terrorist attack because they were on a shopping trip instead of at home — and worse, that they might not find out the fate of their families until they returned home. But the image I think of every Yom Hazikaron is that of the young Russian immigrant from Kiryat Shmona sitting next to me, whose tears were reflected in the window pane next to her. She had confessed to me a few minutes earlier that she was still learning conversational Hebrew. Apparently, she knew enough to understand the worst of the news broadcast.

Public memorials like Yom Hazikaron help us heal. But they also serve as a way to register and reflect public unity and sentiment about compelling issues. And sometimes, when our representatives listen hard enough, responses to those memorials can inspire action.

Perhaps Israel’s decision last year to enact a policy that recognizes the worldwide victims of antisemitism was prescient of the increasing need for global action against terrorism. It’s an uncomfortable thought. But if Israel is going to overcome the greatest threat to its safety, it won’t just come from within — from the yearly sirens that mark its losses or from its incessant efforts to inspire the United Nations to finally support its side of disputes. It will also come from those of us in the Diaspora, who know all too well the importance of a Jewish homeland.
You are trying to defend the indefensible!

What are you waiting for to accept the two states solution and leave and let live in peace!???
 
Hebrew media: “Similar to the Kerem Shalom incident, Hamas was once again able to fire a mortar that resulted in many casualties, this time at the Rafah crossing, where 10 soldiers were injured, including 3 seriously and 6 moderately.”

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Clashes have been raging on the fighting fronts since this morning until this moment in the south and north of the Gaza Strip...

Tank 9
Troop carrier 4
Bulldozer 3
Zionist power 1
Soldier sniper 1

@BasilPal90
·
 
For the second time today, the occupation army announces another batch of Injuries: 19 the first time and now 14

For the third time today

🔥🔥🔥🔥

The Israeli army announces that 6 other soldiers were moderately injured when shells fell on them, all of them from the Yahalom tunnel detection unit.
 
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