Livestream: Israelâs systematic murder of children
Eli Gerzon The Electronic Intifada Podcast 7 April 2025
Conditions in Gaza may be worse now than ever before. Israel has killed over 1,000 people since 18 March and has blocked all aid from entering the territory for more than a month.
Josh Rushing, an Emmy award-winning filmmaker, joined the show to talk about âKids Under Fireâ.
Focusing on Israelâs deliberate targeting of children, it is the latest film from Fault Lines, the flagship documentary series from Al Jazeera English.
American nurse Zahed Rahman spoke live from Gaza and described the deterioration in conditions since he was last there a year ago.
We also discussed new details about how Israel has sabotaged the latest efforts to restore the Gaza ceasefire and prisoner exchange deal.
On 30 âMarch, Palestinians located a mass grave containing the bodies of eight Palestine Red Crescent Society paramedics and six civil defense first responders and an employee of UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestine refugees.
âKids Under Fireâ
Al Jazeera spoke to 20 American doctors and medics who had volunteered in Gaza, for the documentary âKids Under Fire.â Every one of them reported treating children with gunshot wounds, which filmmaker Josh Rushing said was an âundeniable pattern.â
âIâm sorry there was just another bombâ
While describing the horrifying conditions in Gaza, American nurse Zahed Rahman paused, looked to his left and said, ââIâm sorry, there was just another bomb.â
When asked what message he wants to send to the world, an emotional Rahman said, âGazans are humans just like we are.â
Noting that his hospital had seen three more fatalities that day, he wondered, âHow is that not going to breed more resistance fighters?â He said the aid trucks need to be let in and there needs to be a diplomatic solution where ââeveryone gets to live freely.â
Rahman is in Gaza as part of a medical mission organized by Glia, a humanitarian organization that has worked for years to support medical care in Gaza.
Resistance Report
With daily massacres of civilians by Israel from the air and occasional retaliatory rocket fire from Gaza, but very little engagement on the ground, conditions in Gaza are once again similar to October 2023, contributing editor Jon Elmer reported.
The Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of Islamic Jihad, has fired rockets towards Israel.
According to Elmer, the Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, had been holding back from firing rockets into Israel or attacking Israeli troops that have entered so-called before zones around Gaza.
But on Sunday, Hamas fired its largest volley of rockets in several months towards Ashdod, a coastal city about 30 kilometers north of Israelâs boundary with Gaza.
Israel is trying to establish another military corridor to separate Khan Younis from Rafah in southern Gaza, an occupation zone Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanytahu dubbed the Morag corridor, naming it after a former Israeli settlement in that part of Gaza.
The military corridors can be used to âto âbreak up the contiguity of the Palestinian populationâ and as a precursor to Israeli civilian colonization or as Elmer described it, âZionism in a nutshell.â
Yemen shoots down another US warplane
Yemenâs armed forces last week shot down another MQ-9 Reaper Drone, the third of this type of unmanned US warplane to be brought down since early March.
In his update on the continued operations between the US military and Yemenâs ruling Ansarullah movement, Elmer noted that US insignia could clearly be seen on the debris of the downed warplane.
Despite ongoing American bombing attacks on Yemen, Ansurallah, often called the Houthi movement, has made clear that it will end the blockade of Israeli ships in the Red Sea only when Israel adheres to the ceasefire and ends its blockade of Gaza.
On Friday, President Donald Trump posted footage on social media that he claimed showed a US attack on âHouthis gathered for instructions on an attack.â
Many commentators pointed out that the gathering appeared to show a traditional Yemeni tribal gathering, one likely marking the occasion of Eid al-Fitr.
âIn closed briefings in recent days, Pentagon officials have acknowledged that there has been only limited success in destroying the Houthisâ vast, largely underground arsenal of missiles, drones and launchers, according to congressional aides and allies,â The New York Times reported on 4 April.
This is despite the strikes being heavier than previous American attacks on Yemen by the Biden administration, and the US expending such a large amount of munitions that military officials are concerned that stocks are running perilously low.
Can the ceasefire be restored?
New details have emerged about efforts to restore the ceasefire agreement which Israel shattered by cutting off food, fuel and humanitarian supplies to Gaza and resuming its massacres by air last month.
As executive director Ali Abunimah reported, mediators presented Hamas with a proposal for a new 50-day interim phase that would see the group release one Israeli soldier every 10 days, in exchange for the release of Palestinian prisoners, a resumption of humanitarian aid and starting talks towards phase two of the original ceasefire deal.
Hamas accepted the proposal, but Israel blew up the chances of an agreement by introducing demands that fundamentally depart from all previous agreements and proposals.
According to exclusive reporting by Al Jazeera Arabicâs Tamer Almisshal, Israel is now demanding that Gaza be disarmed and that Israeli forces remain there indefinitely â demands that the resistance will not accept.
Crackdown on free speech escalates
Last week, a federal judge in New Jersey ruled that Mahmoud Khalilâs challenge to his detention by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) could continue in New Jersey, a major win against the Trump administration for the Columbia University student leader who has been detained for a month.
Last week Columbia students were forcibly removed after chaining themselves to a fence while demanding transparency about whether any university trustees gave information to ICE to assist with Khalilâs arrest.
Meanwhile, on 2 April, Harvard University sanctioned the Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee, barring the student group from holding any events for the rest of the year.
And Harvard Divinity School suspended its âReligion, Conflict and Peace Initiativeâ because it âpresents a one-sided view of the Israel-Palestine conflict,â according to The Harvard Crimson.
But while Columbia and Harvard continued their pre-emptive surrenders to the Trump administrationâs threats to cancel federal funding, at least one other prestigious institution has signaled that it will stand up for academic freedom.
After news that the Trump administration had suspended dozens of federal grants to Princeton University, its president, Christopher Eisgruber, said the university would not make concessions in order to restore the funds.
âIf government funding were to go down, we and others would look for other sources that we could use to support the funding to the research that has to take place on our campuses,â Eisgruber said, signalling that this could include tapping the universityâs vast endowment.
âWe have to stand steadfastly against anti-Semitism and other forms of hate, but we do that at Princeton through anti-discrimination principles that are broad and that do not incorporate specific definitions of particular kinds of discrimination,â Eisgruber also said.
The Trump administration has been pressuring universities to adopt an Israel lobby-approved definition of anti-Semitism that equates criticism of Israel with anti-Jewish bigotry.
Who Will Arrest Benjamin Netanyahu?
Last week, Netanyahu visited Hungary in spite of that countryâs obligation to arrest him on the warrant from the International Criminal Court.
But Budapest flouted its obligation and announced it would pull out of the ICC altogether.
Larger, more influential countries in Europe remained silent, tacit acquiescence with Hungaryâs move.
But it is unclear that Netanyahu would be welcome anywhere else in Europe.
Flying from Tel Aviv to Washington on Sunday, the Israeli leaderâs official aircraft took an unusual route aimed at avoiding European countries he fears might arrest him if the plane had to make an emergency landing.
France, Italy and Greece, staunch allies of Tel Aviv as it continues to perpetrate genocide, appear to be the main European states willing to allow the war crimes fugitive to pass through their airspace.
In addition to avoiding the airspace of Iceland, the Netherlands and Ireland, Netanyahuâs plane also avoided Canadian airspace.
You can watch the program on YouTube, Rumble or Twitter/X, or you can listen to it on your preferred podcast platform.
Ali Abunimah contributed reporting for this article.
Tamara Nassar produced and directed the program. Michael F. Brown contributed pre-production assistance and this writer contributed post-production assistance.
Past episodes of The Electronic Intifada Livestreamcan be viewed on our YouTube channel.
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