Thursday, 29 February 2024

 

‘Operation Al-Aqsa Flood’ Day 146: Israeli forces massacre civilians waiting for humanitarian aid

Israeli tanks and warplanes reportedly targeted civilians waiting for aid, killing at least 77 and wounding hundreds. Meanwhile, international aid groups say airdrops of aid are so “negligible” that they “perpetuate the overall blockade strategy.”

Palestinians face extreme hunger and a potential famine as Israeli forces open fire on Palestinians waiting for air. (Photo: Omar Ashtawy/APA Images)
Palestinians face extreme hunger and a potential famine as Israeli forces open fire on Palestinians waiting for air. (Photo: Omar Ashtawy/APA Images)

Casualties

  • 30,035+ killed* and at least 70,457 wounded in the Gaza Strip.
  • 380+ Palestinians killed in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem
  • Israel revises its estimated October 7 death toll down from 1,400 to 1,147.
  • 582 Israeli soldiers killed since October 7, and at least 3,221 injured.**

*This figure was confirmed by Gaza’s Ministry of Health on Telegram channel. Some rights groups put the death toll number closer to 35,000 when accounting for those presumed dead.

** This figure is released by the Israeli military, showing the soldiers whose names “were allowed to be published.”

Key Developments 

  • Journalist says family killed in Israeli bombardment in Gaza City.
  • Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza out of service.
  • Fire broke out at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis on Wednesday, reported Al Jazeera. 
  • Northern Gaza’s last functional hospital, Al-Awda, shuts down, reports Wafa. 
  • Woman killed, daughter wounded in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon, according to MTV Lebanon.
  • PRCS registers concern for wellbeing of 7 detained medics.
  • Over 100,000 people vote ‘uncommitted’in Michigan primary over Biden Gaza policy.
  • UN: Gaza water supply at only 7 percent of pre-October levels.
  • UN: An estimated 339 hectares (838 acres) of greenhouses have been destroyed.
  • Gaza Health Ministry: seven children died of malnutrition on Wednesday. 
  • Rights group: UK arms transfers to Israel may violate international law.
  • Married couple killed in Israeli attacks on south Lebanon.
  • Israeli war cabinet backtracks on al-Aqsa Mosque restrictions, reports Channel 12, as cited by Al Jazeera.
  • Israeli minister says no normalization with Saudi Arabia if it means Palestinian state, reports Al Jazeera.
  • Israeli forces shoot dead Palestinian youth at checkpoint in Nablus, reports Wafa.
  • Refugees International chief: Humanitarian airdrops help Israel’s “blockade strategy.”
  • Amnesty chief urges European Union to fund UNRWA “without delay.”
  • Gaza Ministry of Health: Israeli forces kill at least 77 Palestinians waiting for food aid near Gaza City.
  • Israeli conscientious objector Tal Mitnicksentenced to third prison term.

Israeli massacre of starving civilians 

On Thursday, Israeli forces attacked starving Palestinians waiting for food aid near Gaza City, killing at least 77 people, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. 

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Bodies were seen on the ground after the attack, with rescuers unable to reach them due to the danger of further Israeli strikes, reported Al Jazeera.

One man said he had been waiting for the aid to arrive since Tuesday. 

“At about 4:30 this morning, trucks started to come through. Once we approached the aid trucks, the Israeli tanks and warplanes started firing at us as if it were a trap,” the man recounted to Quds News Network, as cited by Al Jazeera.  

“As the Israeli military opened fire on the aid seekers, Israeli tanks advanced and ran over many of the dead and injured bodies in the southwestern parts of Gaza City. It is a massacre, on top of the starvation threatening citizens in Gaza,” Al Jazeera correspondent Ismail al-Ghoul said. 

Over 250 Palestinians were wounded in the attack, the majority of whom have been taken to al-Shifa Hospital and Kamal Adwan Hospital. 

“Some of the others are being rushed to the Ahli and Jordanian hospitals. The [death toll] will rise. Hospitals are no longer able to accommodate the huge number of patients because they lack fuel, let alone medicine. Hospitals have also run out of blood,” al-Goul added.

The man who witnessed the attack added: “To the Arab states, I say, if you want to have us killed, why are you sending relief aid? If this continues, we do not want any aid delivered at all. Every convoy coming means another massacre.”

“Many young men and women were killed and many more injured when they headed to receive the aid. It is common sense that if aid is delivered, a ceasefire must be observed. This is not happening on the ground… this is a crime, it is a sin,” he concluded.  

Following the attack, Jadallah al-Shafei, head of the nurses’ department at al-Shifa Hospital, told Al Jazeera the “situation cannot be described in words.”

“It is reminiscent of the dark scenes from the Baptist Hospital four months ago where 500 people were killed in one Israeli air strike,” he said.

“Since the early hours of the morning, the hospital has been flooded with dozens of dead bodies and hundreds of injured. The majority of the victims suffered gunshot wounds and shrapnel in the head and upper parts of their bodies. They were hit by direct artillery shelling, drone missiles, and gunshots. 

“We are out of operating theatres, let alone medical staff. We ran out of medical supplies and fuel to run the hospital. We hope we will be able to provide life-saving assistance to those wounded. All of them are in critical condition, lying on the floor. We stand helpless amid this shortage of supplies and staff,” al-Shafei stated. 

The Palestinian Foreign Ministry has condemned what it says was a cold-blooded “massacre” of civilians.

In a press statement, the ministry said the attack was part of Israel’s ongoing “genocidal war.” The statement called upon the international community to “urgently intervene” to forge a ceasefire as “the only way to protect civilians.”

Similarly, Gaza’s government media office said: “We hold the U.S. administration, the international community, the [Israeli] occupation, and international organizations responsible for the killing of civilians in light of their starvation by the [Israeli] occupation,” as cited by Al Jazeera.

Northern hospitals in Gaza are non-functional 

Amid Israel’s ongoing attacks and brutal siege, Gaza’s healthcare sector has drastically suffered and cannot keep up with the rising numbers of patients. 

Yet another medical facility in northern Gaza, the Kamal Adwan Hospital, has been declared out of service after running out of fuel. 

Ahmed al-Kahlout, the hospital director, said halting all medical activities would deprive thousands of patients of the right to medical care, as reported by Al Jazeera.

Al-Awda Hospital in the city of Jabalia, northern Gaza, has also announced the complete suspension of all its medical services due to severe shortages of fuel and medical supplies.

The director of the monitoring and evaluation department in al-Awda, Dr. Muhammad Salha, warned in a press statement that the development would lead to “a complete deprivation of basic health services for citizens, especially in light of the cessation of service by all hospitals in the north,” according to Wafa news agency.

Dr. Salha urgently appealed to all international, humanitarian, and human rights organizations to pressure Israel to supply the hospital with medicines, consumables, medical supplies, and fuel.

Hamas has said that the closure of the northern Gaza hospital will exacerbate the health and humanitarian crisis in the area, reported Al Jazeera.

To make matters worse, not only is Israel actively depriving the hospitals of adequate supplies, but the army has continued attacking the facilities. 

Israeli forces besieged al-Awda Hospital for 18 days, causing severe damage to the upper floors of the building, in addition to destroying several ambulances, Wafa added. 

Additionally, on Wednesday, a fire broke out in one of the buildings of the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis after Israeli artillery shells hit the site in the southern city, reported Al Jazeera Arabic, sharing a video of flames engulfing parts of the hospital amid attempts to extinguish them.

Tania Hary, executive director at Gisha-Legal Center for Freedom of Movement, says that the Israeli government continues to “sow chaos and deny its responsibility to the population” as public order in Gaza disintegrates with growing desperation and starvation.

“The ICJ [International Court of Justice] provisional measure states that Israel must ‘take immediate and effective measures to enable the provision of urgently needed basic services’ not taunt, mock and endanger humanitarians trying to provide aid to 2.2 million Palestinians in Gaza,” Hary continued on X.

Medical staff still unlawfully detained 

While brutalizing medical facilities, Israeli forces have also continued to target medical staff. The army has seven members of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) in detention for the 20th consecutive day, including ambulance crews, anesthesia technicians, and a doctor.

“They were arrested during the Israeli occupation’s raid on Al-Amal Hospital, and their fate remains unknown at the moment. PRCS expresses its utmost concern for the safety of the detained teams and demands their immediate release,” PRCS said

According to Amani Sarhaneh of the Palestinian Prisoners Society, people being detained in the besieged coastal enclave are subject to forced disappearance by the Israeli military.

“Israel refuses to give out any information about the whereabouts or fate of the detainees,” Sarahneh told Al Jazeera.

She added that released prisoners have spoken of “horrific torture practices carried out against them during their detention in Israeli camps.”

“Since October 7, there has been a radical change in the conditions of detention. Palestinian prisoners are subject to a systematic torture policy, humiliation, and abuse,” she said, adding that ten detainees have died while in prison.

Detainees are also subjected to malnourishment and cell overcrowding. In addition, Israeli prison authorities took away prisoners’ warm clothes and blankets at the start of the winter season, while preventing them from taking daily showers and denying them family and lawyer visitations, Sarahneh said. 

Seven babies die of malnutrition  

The situation in Gazan communities grows worse by the hour as the threat of a man-made famine looms over the besieged enclave. 

The director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, Ahmad al-Kahlout, told Al Jazeera Arabic that seven children have now died due to malnutrition. The medical facility itself has run out of fuel to run its generators. 

A few hours before the fuel ran out at the Hospital, Dr. Hossam Abu Safia, the head of pediatrics at the hospital, told Al Jazeera the hospital was admitting between 1,000-1,200 babies a day, compared to the 500-600 daily admittance rate before the war.

“We notice that all patients are showing signs of paleness and weakness. Even newborns are emaciated,” he said.

“The majority of newborns we are treating today at the Kamal Adwan Hospital are without parents. They were referred to us by shelters or other hospitals, and they are without their mothers,” Abu Safia said.

He added that the hospital struggles to find enough milk for the babies, even as many needed milk to help their immune systems recover.

“Whatever milk we have is split equally amongst everyone, and this will definitely affect the babies’ weight and their daily progress,” he said. 

Project Hope, a humanitarian organization operating a clinic in the Gaza Strip, says 21 percent of the pregnant women it has treated in the last three weeks are suffering from malnutrition. Additionally, 11 percent of the children under the age of five treated during the same period are malnourished.

“People have reported eating nothing but white bread, as fruit, vegetables, and other nutrient-dense foods are nearly impossible to find or too expensive,” the group added.

Gaza’s water supply has also been critically affected by the severe restrictions on fuel shipments and the lack of functioning desalination plants.

“Malnutrition, epidemic disease and trauma is everywhere,” Jan Egeland, secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, said during a visit to Rafah in southern Gaza.

Visiting a school sheltering some 4,500 displaced people who fled Gaza City in the north of the enclave and nearby Khan Younis, Egeland said on social media he was “shocked by conditions” people were forced to live in.

“The disabled, the pregnant and the newborn share 18 latrines with 4,500 others,” he wrote on social media.

In an earlier post from the Rafah border crossing into Gaza, Egeland said hundreds of aid trucks were waiting to travel into the Palestinian territory to help “a starving civilian population.”

“The system is broken,” he said of the process involved in allowing aid into Gaza.

“Israel could fix it for the sake of the innocent,” he added.  

“There is no limit to the scale of humanitarian needs for people in Gaza. Diseases are rampant. Food production has come to a halt. Over 1/4 of water wells have been destroyed,” the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) said in a social media post

“Famine is looming. Hospitals have turned into battlefields. 1 million children face daily trauma.” 

Meinie Nicolai, director of the group Doctors Without Borders (MSF), said the people of Gaza are “desperate.” 

“They live in makeshift shelters. It’s cold. There’s not enough food. There’s not enough water. There’s not enough healthcare,” Nicolai said.

“Healthcare has been attacked, it’s collapsing. The whole system is collapsing. We are working from tents trying to do what we can. We treat for the wounded. With the displacements, people’s wounds have been infected. And I’m not even talking about the mental wounds. People are desperate. They don’t know anymore what to do.” 

“The place is very dark, and light only enters through narrow openings among the remnants of debris,” UNRWA quoted 12-year-old Alaa, who has been forced to seek shelter along with her family in a demolished building in Rafah.

“For the population of Gaza, there is literally nowhere left to go,” the UN agency added, accompanied by photos of the family in the bombed-out building.

Congressperson Pramila Jayapal, head of the Progressive Caucus, has written a letter calling for the complete restoration of U.S. funding for the primary aid distributer in Gaza, UNRWA, which was pulled over unsubstantiated Israeli allegations that several of its employees had taken part in the October 7 attacks. 

The letter was signed by representatives Andre Carson and Jamie Raskin.

“Suspension of funding to UNRWA, in a context where alarming signs of genocide exist, risks significantly exacerbating if not contributing to the harms which the Genocide Convention seeks to prevent,” the secretary-general of Amnesty International, Agnes Callamard, wrote in a letter to the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, urging the EU to continue its funding for UNRWA “without delay.”

Callamard also acknowledged the need for allegations against a dozen of UNRWA’s 30,000 staff to be independently investigated, but said that “suspending UNRWA funding also risks legitimising the practice of collective punishment of Palestinians.” 

Logistics of aid 

In light of the alarming rate of starvation in Gaza due to Israel’s efforts to obstruct aid, countries are increasingly considering airdropping humanitarian aid over Gaza, including the U.S.

“Hundreds of aid trucks wait in line to cross into Gaza at the Rafah and Kerem Shalom [Karam Abu Salem] crossings to a starving civilian population,” Jan Egeland, secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, said in a social media post.

“There has not been a single day we have gotten the needed 500 trucks across. The system is broken and Israel could fix it for the sake of the innocent,” Egeland’s post continued, accompanied by a video showing scores of aid trucks lined up.  

President Joe Biden’s administration has said they are debating airdropping aid from U.S. military planes, reported Reuters, citing a U.S. official. 

However, several human rights organizations have said the delivery method is inefficient for Gaza’s drastic and critical needs. 

The World Food Programme (WFP) has also said airdrops are a “last resort” for several reasons, including the “relatively small quantities” that can be delivered compared to a convoy of trucks.

“Facilitating airdrops — and driving media coverage around them — gives the public appearance that Israel is cooperating with humanitarian efforts,” said Jeremy Konyndyk, the president of Refugees International.

Konyndyk added that the amount of aid delivered in airdrops is so “negligible” that it helps “perpetuate the overall blockade strategy.”

“The fact that they need be considered is a major policy failure,” he concluded.

Journalism under attack 

Journalists covering Israel’s aggressions across the Gaza Strip continue to be targeted and obstructed by Israel. 

Foreign reporters have, with rare exceptions, been consistently barred from access to the besieged territory since the start of the war, while Israeli forces have kiled at least 89 Palestinian journalists since October 7, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).  

More than two dozen lawmakers from U.S. President Biden’s party have signed a letterdemanding that Secretary of State Antony Blinken take steps to protect the safety of journalists in the Gaza Strip and ensure press freedom.

“With more journalists killed in three months than have ever been killed in a single country over an entire year, we remain concerned that not enough steps have been taken to safeguard the lives of the civilian population in Gaza, including journalists,” wrote the members of Congress.

The congress members also demanded assurances that foreign journalists and all members of the press (including Palestinians already in Gaza) be granted access to personal protective gear while being allowed the freedom to enter and exit Gaza at will without an Israeli military escort. 

Additionally, the lawmakers demanded that communications infrastructures must be protected whenever possible. 

A group of 55 international journalists has penned an open letter urging the Israeli government to let them enter Gaza to report on the war, reported Press Gazette.

The letter says that foreign reporters have been refused access to the territory since the war broke out, “apart from rare and escorted trips with the Israeli military,” and calls on Israel and Egypt to give all media “free and unfettered access.”

It also calls for measures to protect local journalists, 126 of whom have been killed since the war broke out, according to Gaza’s government media office.

Biden uncommitted

On Wednesday, President Joe Biden won the Michigan Democratic primary. However, more than 100,000 people voted “uncommitted” over the administration’s policy in Gaza.

“Our movement emerged victorious tonight and massively surpassed our expectations. Tens of thousands of Michigan Democrats, many of whom who [sic] voted for Biden in 2020, are uncommitted to his re-election due to the war in Gaza,” tweeted the Listen to Michigangroup, which organized the campaign to vote uncommitted. 

“President Biden has funded the bombs falling on the family members of people who live right here in Michigan. People who voted for him, who now feel completely betrayed. President Biden, listen to Michigan. Count us out, Joe,” the group continued. 

Following the results, Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said: “The results in Michigan are clear: Voters are not happy with the U.S.’s handling of the war in Gaza,” Jayapal said in a social media post, referring to the solid showing by “uncommitted” voters in Michigan’s Democratic primary election yesterday.

“This is a profound moral issue — and it’s time to listen.”

BEFORE YOU GO – At Mondoweiss, we understand the power of telling Palestinian stories. For 17 years, we have pushed back when the mainstream media published lies or echoed politicians’ hateful rhetoric. Now, Palestinian voices are more important than ever.

Our traffic has increased ten times since October 7, and we need your help to cover our increased expenses.

Support our journalists with a donation today.

 

‘Operation Al-Aqsa Flood’ Day 145: Hamas warns Israel and U.S. of ‘political machinations’ amid ceasefire talks

UN humanitarian officials say that thousands of Palestinians in Gaza are “just a step away from famine” by May. Russia calls on UNSC members to refrain from endorsing Washington’s resolution on Gaza, denouncing it as “a license to kill” for Israel.

Injured Palestinains covered in dust enter the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip following Israeli airstrikes on homes in the area.
Injured Palestinians are brought to Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital for treatment following the Israeli attacks in Deir Al-Balah, Gaza on February 27, 2024. (Ali Hamad/apaimages) 

Casualties

  • 29,954+ killed* and at least 70,352 wounded in the Gaza Strip.
  • 380+ Palestinians killed in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem
  • Israel revises its estimated October 7 death toll down from 1,400 to 1,147.
  • 582 Israeli soldiers killed since October 7, and at least 3,221 injured.**

*This figure was confirmed by Gaza’s Ministry of Health on Telegram channel. Some rights groups put the death toll number closer to 35,000 when accounting for those presumed dead.

** This figure is released by the Israeli military, showing the soldiers whose names “were allowed to be published.”

Key Developments

  • Hamas armed wing launches volley of missiles from southern Lebanon at northern Israeli targets on Wednesday morning.
  • Hamas says it bombed “the headquarters of Israel’s 769th Eastern Brigade, and its airport barracks in Beit Hilal in northern occupied Palestine (present day Israel), with two missile salvos consisting of 40 Grad missiles.”
  • Hamas attack causes severe damage to Israeli buildings in Kiryat Shmona settlement in the Galilee panhandle area, close to the borders with Lebanon.
  • Ismail Haniyeh says “any flexibility we show in negotiations, out of concern for the blood of our people, is matched by a willingness to defend them.”
  • On ceasefire talks, senior Hamas figure, Basem Naim, says: “The gap is still wide. We have to discuss a lot of points with the mediators.”
  • Russia calls U.N. Security Council members to refrain from endorsing U.S. proposed resolution on Gaza, saying it constitutes “another license to kill” for Israel.
  • Carl Skau, deputy executive director of WFP, says there is “a real prospect of famine by May [in Gaza].”
  • Al-Awda Hospital in northern Gaza cancels all orthopedic and plastic surgeries after Israeli bombing destroyed two operating rooms.
  • The Commission for Prisoners warns that the life of Palestinian prisoner Moatasem Raddad, 38, is at risk inside Israeli jail.
  • Israeli settlers block Palestinian cars from traveling on road connecting Asira Al-Qibliya and Urif villages, south of Nablus. 

Hamas fires volley of missiles on Israel from Lebanon

Hamas’ armed wing, Izz El-Din Al-Qassam Brigades, launched on Wednesday morning a barrage of missiles from southern Lebanon on Israeli targets in the north. 

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Al-Qssam Brigades said it bombed “the headquarters of Israel’s 769th Eastern Brigade (Camp Ghaibour), and its airport barracks in Beit Hilal in northern occupied Palestine, with two missile salvos consisting of 40 Grad missiles.”

It said the attack comes as a response to “the Zionist massacres against civilians in the Gaza Strip and the assassination of the martyred leaders and their brothers in the southern suburbs of Lebanon,” referring to Saleh Al-Arouri, Hamas deputy political leader and four Al-Qassam’s commanders assassinated by Israel in January. 

Israeli forces and Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement have been engaged in battles since October 8th, exchanging fire and tit-for-tat rocket attacks and air raids along the UN Blue Line that separates their territories. 

Al-Qassam Brigades had launched several rockets on Israeli settlements from the Lebanese territory following the October 7th attacks. However, Wednesday’s missile attack is the biggest since December, causing severe damage in an Israeli building in Kiryat Shmona settlement in the Galilee panhandle area, close to the borders with Lebanon.

Israeli forces bombed several areas in southern Lebanon on Wednesday, launching an air raid on Bint Jbeil town, where plumes of smoke rose above Al-Maslakh neighborhood. No casualties have been reported on Wednesday morning.

Israeli officials have been threatening for months to launch a military operation inside Lebanon as Hezbollah’s attacks remained steady on Israeli northern settlements and military barracks. Analysts agree that such an act will ignite a regional war.

On Tuesday, Hezbollah carried out eight military attacks on Israeli targets.

Ismail Haniyeh warns Israel and U.S. of ‘political machinations’

On Wednesday, Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh said Israel and the U.S. will not be able to achieve with political machinations what it failed to get military on the ground in Gaza.

Haniyeh is the most senior figure to comment since a detailed potential ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas was widely reportedin the past few weeks.

“Any flexibility we show in negotiations, out of concern for the blood of our people, is matched by a willingness to defend them,” Haniyeh said.

He added that “the Zionist occupier is committing the most horrific crimes known to humanity in terms of murder, extermination and displacement in Gaza…”

“We assure the Zionists and the United States that what they were unable to impose on the field [militarily], they will not get through political machinations,” he added.

Haniyeh said Ramadan was “the month of Jihad,” calling Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and inside Israel to travel to Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem beginning on March 10. Israel recently announced that it would be imposing heavy restrictions on Palestinian access to the Al-Aqsa Mosque during the month of Ramdan, threatening to further inflame tensions in Jerusalem and the West Bank. 

Haniyeh added that “the world, especially the Arab countries, must confront this [Israeli] enemy and restrain it to prevent it from invading Rafah. Everyone must take the initiative to break the starvation policy in Gaza,” he added, referring to the little humanitarian aid and food that has entered the Gaza Strip since January. 

On Wednesday, Israel claimed that it allowed the entry of 31 aid trucks to northern Gaza, and 50 trucks in the past three days. Before October 7, at least 500 aid trucks entered the Gaza Strip to help hospitals, schools and centers cope with the Israeli blockade.

Haniyeh’s remarks about ceasefire talks reflect Hamas’s previously stated comment that the U.S. administration and its Western allies’ optimism to achieve it was far from the truth.

“The gap is still wide. We have to discuss a lot of points with the mediators,” Basem Naim, Hamas’s head of political and international relations, said on Wednesday.

Russian and American spat over Gaza resolution in UN

On Tuesday, the UN Security Council held a meeting to discuss a U.S. draft, which erupted in a spat between the Russian envoy Vassily Nebenzia and the U.S. and Western European representatives.

“Washington bears full responsibility for the unprecedented number of civilian victims of this escalation. Their number is now near 30,000. And that is the cost of the American veto in the Security Council on Gaza,” Nebenzia said.

The U.S. vetoed four resolutions that called for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and also the prevention of famine and mass starvation. 

However, the U.S. deputy ambassador Robert Wood hit back at Nebenzia, accusing Moscow of forcing Ukrainians under to live “savage, barbaric bombings and killings that they have to deal with every single day”.

“I would just remind everyone in this room that the Russian Federation is a country that doesn’t contribute to resolving humanitarian crises. It creates them,” Wood said.

Nebenzia called UNSC members to refrain from endorsing the U.S. proposed resolution on Gaza, saying it constitutes “another license to kill” for Israel.

“This is not an alternative. This is yet another license to kill, which the United States wants to give to Israel, but this time to have a Security Council signature on it. I call on members of the council not to support this destructive initiative,” the Russian envoy to the UN said. 

Palestinians in Gaza are ‘just a step away from famine’

Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Wednesday, during a weekly media briefing, that the international community is not doing enough to prevent Israel from deliberately starving Palestinians in Gaza.

“So far, we have not seen any real pressure from the international community to allow full and unconditional entry of aid [into Gaza],” said Majed al-Ansari, the ministry’s spokesperson.

He added that 2.5 million Palestinians are “living in complete absence of health and emergency services,” more than one million in Rafah town in southern Gaza.

UN humanitarian officials briefed the Security Council on the food security in Gaza on Tuesday. Carl Skau, the deputy executive director of World Food Programme (WFP) said there is “a real prospect of famine by May [in Gaza].”

“Gaza is seeing the worst level of child malnutrition anywhere in the world,” Skau said, with “one child in every six under the age of two is acutely malnourished.”

For thousands of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, “famine is just a step away,” the UN warned. 

Al-Awda Hospital cancels all surgical operations 

In the past 24 hours, Israeli forces committed eight “massacres” in various areas of the Gaza Strip, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health on Telegram, killing at least 76 Palestinian martyrs and injuring 110 people.

Since October, Israel has killed 29,954 Palestinians and injured 70,325 others. Thousands of civilians remain under the rubble.

Wafa news agency reported that an Israeli bombing of Gaza City killed six people and injured 22 others overnight.

They were waiting for aid trucks to arrive at Harun al-Rashid coastal road, west of Gaza City, when bombs’ shrapnel fatally injured them. They later died in Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.

Israeli forces also bombed Al-Zaytoun, Al-Sabra and Al-Rimal Al-Janoubi neighborhoods in Gaza City. It also bombed the eastern parts of Khan Yunis and the southern Rafah town with artillery shells, close to shelter points.

Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) said it rescued 34 Palestinians, following an Israeli bombing of two houses in Deir Al-Balah in central Gaza. PRCS released footage of crews with torches searching for survivors amid concrete debris and shattered and cracked walls.

Both the Nasser Hospital and Al-Amal Hospital are still coping with horrific conditions under Israeli siege, without electricity, enough food, or drinking water.

In north Gaza, medical staff at the Al-Awda Hospital had to cancel all orthopedic and plastic surgeries after the Israeli bombing destroyed two operating rooms.

Al-Awda’s director, Muhammad Salha, told Al-Jazeera that this meant “all medical services related to obstetrics and gynecology have stopped completely.”

“We were the only hospital in northern Gaza for orthopedic surgeries … There is no other alternative place in northern Gaza or Gaza City because the health ministry’s hospitals are out of service completely,” he said.

Palestinian prisoner’s life at risk inside Israeli jail

The Commission for Prisoners’ and Ex-Detainees’ Affairs warned that the life of Moatasem Raddad, 38, is at risk inside an Israeli jail. Raddad is from Sidon town in Tulkarm, and his health has deteriorated in Ofer military prison near Ramallah.

He was arrested in 2006 and sentenced to 20 years in jail. The Commission said that Raddad suffered intestinal bleeding and severe pain.

“The treatment he receives in prison is inappropriate, and the food provided to him is extremely poor, in terms of quality and quantity,” it added.

Last week, Khaled Al-Shawish, 53, from Al-Fara’a refugee camp north of Tubas, died inside an Israeli jail.

Shawish has been detained since 2007, and has been sentenced to 11 life sentences. He is the ninth Palestinian prisoner to die while in Israeli detention since October and the 246 prisoners since June 1967.

Since October, Israeli forces have arrested at least 7,305 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem, the Commission added; 20 of them in the past 24 hours, rounded up during night raids of several towns and cities.

Palestinian, Israeli, and international human rights groups have decried the deplorable conditions in Israeli prisons and detention centers, where Palestinian detainees have been tortured, abused, and subjected to sexual violence. 

Israeli forces destroy two houses near Bethlehem

Israeli settlers blocked Palestinian cars from traveling on a road connecting Asira Al-Qibliya and Urif villages, south of Nablus, Wafareported. Settlers arrived from the illegal outpost of Yitzhar and set up a makeshift checkpoint on the road, firing live bullets and forcing Palestinians to make a detour to reach their destinations.

In Al-Walaja, near Bethlehem, Israeli forces destroyed a house and a mobile home in the town. Israeli forces also stormed Jenin and its refugee camp overnight.

On Tuesday evening, hundreds of Palestinians took part in the funeral of Nizar Mahmoud Abdel Muti Hassasna, 34, from Al-Ubaidiya town. Israeli forces shot Hassana near Mazmoria military checkpoint which cuts Jerusalem from Bethlehem.

BEFORE YOU GO – At Mondoweiss, we understand the power of telling Palestinian stories. For 17 years, we have pushed back when the mainstream media published lies or echoed politicians’ hateful rhetoric. Now, Palestinian voices are more important than ever.

Our traffic has increased ten times since October 7, and we need your help to cover our increased expenses.

Support our journalists with a donation today.

Wednesday, 28 February 2024

 

Multiple States Prepare for Vaccines to Be Added to Food Supply: Doctor Warns About 'Genetically Adulterated' Food with No Long Term Safety Data

Rather than stopping vaccines from being added to our food, these states appear to be facilitating it.

Legislators in Tennessee and Arizona appear to be preparing their states for the addition of vaccines to their food supply.

Though they come from different states, the two bills were introduced only weeks apart.

Neither of the bills prohibit vaccines from being added to food.

Rather, they accept the addition as inevitable.

Tennesee

A new Tennessee bill would make it a Class C misdemeanor to sell or distribute food containing vaccines without clearly labeling them as such.

The bill was filed for introduction on January 5, 2023.

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“This bill adds to the list of prohibited acts constituting Class C misdemeanors the manufacture, sale, or delivery, holding, or offering for sale of a food that contains a vaccine or vaccine material unless the food labeling contains a conspicuous notification of the presence of the vaccine or vaccine material in the food,” HB 0032 reads.

The bill defines “vaccine or vaccine material” as a “substance intended for use in humans to stimulate the production of antibodies and provide immunity against disease, prepared from the causative agent of a disease, its products, or a synthetic substitute, treated to act as an antigen without inducing the disease, that is authorized or approved by the United States food and drug administration.”

The legislation’s sponsor, Republican Representative Scott Cepicky, doesn’t want to stop vaccines from being added to his state’s food supply.

He just wants to let consumers know whether pharmaceuticals have been added to their next meal.

“If you go to buy tomatoes, and there’s a polio vaccine in there, that you’re aware of what you’re buying as a polio vaccine,” said Rep. Cepicky. 

“The problem we have is if it’s not treated as a pharmaceutical. How many tomatoes do I have to eat to get the proper dosage versus how many tomatoes do you have to eat? And if you eat too many, do you get an overdose?”

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The Republican representative noted that the University of California, Riverside has already “perfected” vaccinating lettuce.

He also pointed to the University of California, Berkeley, which has conducted similar tests on tomatoes.

R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company has done similar work with tobacco products.

During a legislative session on the matter, Democrat Rep. John Ray Clemmons questionedwhether having vaccines in fruits and vegetables is even legal in Tennessee.

Cepicky emphasized that his bill is not meant to prevent vaccines from being put into food.

“I’m not arguing that point,” Cepicky responded to Clemmons, arguing only that vaccinated food should be listed as a pharmaceutical “so people can get the proper dosage.”

Watch the interaction below:

Arizona

similar bill in Arizona requires “[d]isclosure of all products made from aquaculture, livestock or poultry that received messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) vaccines and prohibits these products from being labelled as organic.”

The legislation was first read in the House on February 9, 2023.

It also “[f]orbids the Arizona Department of Agriculture Director or State Veterinarian from requiring or administering an mRNA vaccine that has not received full approval from the U.S. Department of Agriculture or U.S. Food and Drug Administration.”

Sponsored by Arizona Rep. John Gillette (R), the bill “[r]equires all products made from aquaculture, livestock or poultry that received mRNA vaccines” to “[c]ontain information on its labels or accompanying documents of sale indicating that the aquaculture, livestock or poultry from which the product was made received an mRNA vaccine” and “[n]ot be labelled or advertised as ‘organic.’”

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Doctor Weighs In

Dr. Richard Bartlett, a 30-year Texas emergency room (ER) physician and recipient of the Meritorious Service Award from the Texas Department of Health and Human Services, believes adding vaccines to our food supply represents a deliberate evasion of established safety protocols.

He raises concerns about minors’ inability to provide informed consent, lack of long-term safety data for genetically modified products, and potential violations of the Nuremberg Code regarding human experimentation without consent.

“In my opinion, this is a blatant attempt to circumvent tried and true best practices for public safety,” said Dr. Bartlett, a former adviser to then-Texas Governor Rick Perry.

“Consider this scenario: a legal minor is sent to buy lettuce at the grocery store and brings home a ‘genetically adulterated product.’ As a minor, they are not legally eligible to give informed consent for a medical treatment product.”

Bartlett continued: “Furthermore, the family that consumes that product was denied informed consent. Prior to Operation Warp Speed, no product was allowed to be FDA-approved without long-term safety data. What could go wrong? Thalidomide babies, VIOXX deathsBEXTRA deaths.”

“Modified RNA causes ‘frameshifting,’ according to Cambridge University. No long-term safety data has been presented for modified RNA products. The Nuremberg Code states that human experimentation without informed consent is an international crime against humanity.”

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