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When one hurts
or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi figlio, non esistono
notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da qualsiasi
notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so called
'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.
VICTORY is on its way to the
sea -- Screengrab Al Jazeera: Wanted
for genocide - Guilty as Charged - rubio virus

Olive tree -
Symbol of Palestine
- Did you eat today -
Boy shouts FOOD and PEACE NOW - GO AWAY you mercenaries
of the usa/isr/idf/ghf devils!!!!

Palestinians in Acts of Resilience
Quds news - Jan 4, 2026
{Photos: Palestinians in Gaza Shelter in Damaged Buildings in Act of
Resilience
After two years of Israeli blockade, starvation, forced displacement,
and relentless bombardment, residents are clinging to what remains of
their resilience.
Israel’s two-year genocidal war has destroyed more than 80 percent of
the structures across the Gaza Strip, forcing hundreds of thousands of
families to take refuge in flimsy tents or overcrowded makeshift
shelters. Across the enclave, survivors seek shelter in severely
damaged buildings: homes without roofs or staircases, five-story
structures reduced to a single level, fragments of walls standing
alone, a single room with a bed balanced on a balcony. This is the
reality facing most of the affected buildings. After two years of
Israeli blockade, starvation, forced displacement, and relentless
bombardment, residents are clinging to what remains of their
resilience. Despite the ceasefire which took effect on October 10,
Israel continues to violate the agreement, killing hundreds of
civilians and restricting the entry of aid, including tents, mobile
homes and shelter materials. Reconstruction, which is believed to take
years, has not begun, as Israel has kept total control over the
crossings in Gaza, and under Trump’s vague ceasefire plan,
reconstruction efforts would begin. However, Israel has delayed the
transition to the second phase.} Photos - Source: https://qudsnen.co/post?id=67000&slug=photos-palestinians-in-gaza-shelter-in-damaged-buildings-in-act-of-resilience
Stormings of Al-Aqsa Mosque
Quds news - Jan 4, 2026
{December Sees 27 Israeli Stormings of Al-Aqsa and 53 Prayer Call Bans
at Ibrahimi Mosque
Israeli forces and settlers escalated violations at major Islamic holy
sites in December, with repeated incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque and
continued restrictions on the call to prayer at Hebron’s Ibrahimi
Mosque, according to an official report.
Occupied Palestine (QNN)- The Palestinian Ministry of Awqaf and
Religious Affairs said on Sunday that Israeli violations against
Al-Aqsa Mosque, the Ibrahimi Mosque, and other places of worship
across the West Bank continued and escalated during December. In its
monthly report, the ministry said Israeli forces and settlers
intensified incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque. The number of incursions
reached 27 during the month. The ministry warned that the danger of
these repeated attacks lies in their clear and systematic nature. It
said the goal is to normalize Jewish religious presence and worship
inside Al-Aqsa Mosque. It added that violations now occur daily. These
include full-body prostration, blowing the shofar, and wearing prayer
garments. The ministry said these acts openly display religious
rituals inside the mosque. According to the report, all incursions
took place under the supervision and protection of Israeli police. The
police regularly prevent Al-Aqsa guards from the Jerusalem Awqaf
Department from doing their work inside the compound. They also
restrict their movement. On Sunday, the Jerusalem Governorate said 123
settlers stormed Al-Aqsa Mosque in two separate periods. It added that
610 tourists entered the mosque through the Israeli-controlled tourism
gate. In Hebron, the ministry reported continued violations at the
Ibrahimi Mosque. Israeli authorities prevented the call to prayer 53
times during December. The ministry also noted loud party noises
inside the occupied section of the mosque. It said Israeli forces
barred several employees from entering without justification. The
ministry pointed to other violations at the site. These include
unknown excavations and the placement of mobile rooms around the
mosque. It said Israeli forces intensified security measures to block
Awqaf staff from knowing how these structures are used. The Ibrahimi
Mosque lies in Hebron’s Old City. Israel maintains full control over
the area. Across the West Bank, the ministry reported additional
violations against religious sites. These include raids on several
mosques and attacks on waqf properties.} Video - Source: https://qudsnen.co/post?id=67001&slug=december-sees-27-israeli-stormings-of-al-aqsa-and-53-prayer-call-bans-at-ibrahimi-mosque

Alaa Alzanin's family gather in a small tent-Photo-Riash-Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera - Jan 4, 2026 Ola Al-Asi
{Poverty, unemployment skyrocket in the Gaza Strip after Israel’s war
Gaza’s economy has plummeted by 87 percent in two years, deepening
poverty and leaving thousands without income or resources.
Gaza City- Crammed in a tiny tent at a United Nations-run school in
central Gaza City, Alaa Alzanin, along with his wife, five children,
his 71-year-old mother and younger sister, are taking shelter after
they lost their home in Beit Hanoon during Israel’s war. They have
been displaced eight times, and this tent is where they now protect
themselves from the rain and winter cold. Alzanin, 41, cannot sustain
his family because he is unemployed. He is a day labourer, but he is
out of work like hundreds of thousands of people across the Gaza
Strip. “Now I have no work, I can’t provide for my family,” he told Al
Jazeera, adding that he used to work in the infrastructure and farming
sectors. “I used to work with an axe to open water channels between
the trees, plough the soil around them, spray pesticides, and plant
tomatoes and cucumbers. I used to work from 7am to 4pm for 40–50
shekels [$13-$15] per day.”

Majed Hamouda’s family, displaced into a school class-Photo-Riash-Al
Jazeera
Another man without income is Majed Hamouda. The 53-year-old from
Jabalia, northern Gaza, has polio, and his wife is a thalassaemia
carrier. He has five children, and is sheltering at a camp in the
Remal neighbourhood school. He relies on financial aid from the
Ministry of Development and on charity, as he can’t work due to his
poor health. And since the war started, his aid payment has stopped.
“ًWe are like dead people, but not buried yet, we only look at living
people, yes, I swear. If someone destroyed your home and kicked you
out to the streets like dogs, even dogs live better lives than ours,’’
Hamouda told Al Jazeera. “The dog in the street, no one would kick it
off, but we were [kicked out] and displaced in the streets,’’ he
explained. as one of his daughters started to cry. On some days, the
Hamouda family has nothing to eat, so the father asks his only son to
collect plastics and rubbish from the streets to sell, so he can
support his family. “My little son Yaqoub was the first in the
northern schools in fourth grade. He won the prize of the Little
Scientist from the Ministry of Education as he made eight successful
scientific experiments for his age. Now, I sorrowfully look at him
collecting nylon to burn for cooking food and running after the hot
meal deliveries in the camp. I sometimes cry watching him,” he
explained. “Now it’s become a dream to eat a tomato or a cucumber, and
this is inhumane.” After more than two years of war, Israel has almost
totally destroyed the Gaza Strip, leaving it with a hunger crisis and
widespread famine. Supplies entering the besieged enclave are not
meeting the nutritional needs of the people living there, the United
Nations’ World Food Programme has said. The aid entering the territory
is way short of its daily target of 2,000 tonnes because only two
crossings into the Palestinian territory are open, and Israel has
restricted deliveries. The Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics
said in its report issued mid October that during Israel’s war the
rate of unemployment in Palestine increased to 50 percent, and 80
percent in the Gaza Strip. The bureau also said that there are 550
thousand unemployed people across Palestine. A report by the UN
Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) said the Palestinian
gross domestic product (GDP) had regressed to its 2010 level by the
end of last year, while GDP per capita returned to levels seen in
2003, erasing 22 years of development in two years. “Before the war,
the Gaza Strip witnessed economic growth, with the opening of many
commercial, tourism and industrial projects, and it became a haven for
many investments in all sectors,” Maher Altabbaa, the director-general
of the Gaza Governorate Chamber of Commerce and Industry, told Al
Jazeera. However, now the enclave’s GDP plunged 83 percent in 2024
compared with the previous year, with an 87 percent drop over two
years to $362m. GDP per capita plummeted to $161, placing it among the
lowest in the world. Historically, the private sector in Gaza has been
its largest economic engine, and it constitutes a large share of its
GDP. “It is the main driver in the Gaza Strip, where it used to
contribute more than 52 percent of employment, relying on small and
medium enterprises (SMEs) as the backbone,” explained Altabbaa, adding
that the agricultural sector achieved self-sufficiency in many
products, and the Gaza Strip contributed about 17 percent of the
Palestinian GDP. But the Strip’s economy was not great even before
October 2023, since Israel imposed a land, sea and air blockade in
2007. Some local Palestinian estimates put poverty levels at more than
63 percent of the population before this war, and the British
government estimated that about 80 percent of the population was
dependent on humanitarian assistance beforehand. The government in
Gaza estimates that 90 percent of all sectors, including housing and
infrastructure have now been wiped out. But it said it has plans to
fix the economy and create jobs – but that will depend on multiple
factors. “Supporting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) as they
are best positioned to absorb the workforce in the short term, and
regulating the market and preventing monopolies resulting from import
restrictions – which have led to sharp price distortions and high
inflation rates – are among the urgent needs to fix the situation,”
Ismail al-Thawabta, the head of the Gaza Government Media Office, told
Al Jazeera, estimating that total losses to the economy amounted to
$70bn. “We aim at building productive projects, not just relief
efforts, as well as temporary and emergency employment programmes
targeting youths, graduates and affected workers … in addition to
building an accurate economic database to support decision-making and
the development of future economic policies,” he said. That would
require all the crossings between Israel and the Gaza Strip to reopen
and allow the free entry of raw materials, production inputs, and
spare parts without restrictions, he said. “The key productive sectors
[industry, agriculture and services] have to be re-established as the
true path to job creation and reducing dependence on aid,” he said.
The ceasefire and peace plan by United States President Donald Trump
is yet to be fully implemented by Israel, and the second phase of that
plan remains unclear. But what is clear is that Gaza has a challenge
ahead to recover economically and rise from the ashes of war. And as
for Alzanin and his wife, Mariam, who is three months pregnant, they
are now provided with some food but still have no income. “We eat and
feel full from the hot meals deliveries in the camp … but it’s not
nutritious, we still want to eat food that we can’t afford,’’ Mariam
told Al Jazeera. “We see everything in the markets, but we can’t get
everything for the children; they tell us we desire bananas, apples,
fish, and eggs, we get tiny portions that are not enough, and only for
them,” she says. “I am pregnant, I need proper food and supplements, I
am losing my teeth, there was no calcium in my food for two years.
Alhamdulillah!”} Video - Source:
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/1/4/poverty-unemployment-skyrocket-in-the-gaza-strip-after-israels-war

Families living in makeshift tents-Photo-Khatib-Anadolu
Al Jazeera - Jan 3, 2026
{Severe weather in Gaza hits vulnerable and wounded most in Israel’s
war
As harsh weather conditions batter the besieged enclave once again,
Palestinians with shattered limbs in Israel’s genocidal war suffer the
most. The winter has made a life of relentless suffering worse for the
people of Gaza, particularly for the wounded, children and elderly,
with hundreds of thousands in the Palestinian territory displaced by
Israel’s genocidal war desperately trying to survive on the scant
humanitarian aid Israel is allowing in. Nine-year-old Assad al-Madhna
lost his left hand when Israeli fire hit a group of children playing
in al-Zuwayda in central Gaza. The same attack also wounded him in the
leg. Now, as winter envelops the besieged enclave, Assad’s pain
increases as the metal rods and pins holding his leg in place stiffen
in the cold, making every step slower and agonising. “I can’t play
with other children as in winter, my legs and hands hurt a lot,” he
told Al Jazeera. “I haven’t received any prosthetic, struggle to
change my clothes, and going to the toilet in this cold is a real
challenge,” he said, adding: “Without my parents, I can’t manage it.
At night, the severe cold becomes unbearable.” A truce between Israel
and Hamas since October 10 has been fragile, a ceasefire in name only,
according to Palestinians and rights groups, after two years of
destructive war. Despite the truce, Palestinians in crowded camps –
often in damaged tents and surrounded by mud – still face severe
humanitarian conditions, trying to survive with few or no resources,
making life the hardest for the most vulnerable.
‘No heating at all’
Eighteen-year-old Waed Murad survived an attack that wiped out her
entire family – seven relatives in one strike. She now lives with a
life-altering injury, and when the temperatures drop, her nerve pain
intensifies, sleep slips away, and the little recovery she had is
threatened. “I can’t keep myself warm because of the severe cold with
the metal bars and pins always freezing,” she told Al Jazeera. “I am
living in a tent with no heating at all. Every time I hear the wind, I
feel the pain will get worse, as the cold will affect the metal
fixation devices even more.” In the enclave, temperatures at night
have ranged between eight and 12 degrees Celsius (46 and 53 degrees
Fahrenheit) in recent days. Nearly 80 percent of buildings in the Gaza
Strip have been destroyed or damaged by the war, according to United
Nations data. About 1.5 million of Gaza’s 2.2 million residents have
lost their homes, said Amjad Shawa, director of the Palestinian NGO
Network in Gaza. Of more than 300,000 tents requested to shelter
displaced people, “we have received only 60,000,” Shawa told the AFP
news agency, pointing to Israeli restrictions on the delivery of
humanitarian aid into the territory.
Israel slammed for banning NGOs
Meanwhile, the international community has condemned Israel’s recent
announcement of a suspension of the operations of several
international nongovernmental organisations in the occupied
Palestinian territory. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he
was deeply concerned and called for the measure to be reversed. “This
announcement comes on top of earlier restrictions that have already
delayed critical food, medical, hygiene and shelter supplies from
entering Gaza.” “This recent action will further exacerbate the
humanitarian crisis facing Palestinians,” Stephane Dujarric, spokesman
for the secretary-general, said in a statement. Several countries in
the Middle East and Asia called on Israel to allow “immediate, full,
and unhindered” deliveries of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip as
winter storms lash the bombarded Palestinian enclave. In a statement
on Friday, the foreign ministers of Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Turkiye, Pakistan and Indonesia
warned that “deteriorating” conditions in Gaza had left nearly 1.9
million displaced Palestinians particularly vulnerable. “Flooded
camps, damaged tents, the collapse of damaged buildings, and exposure
to cold temperatures coupled with malnutrition, have significantly
heightened risks to civilian lives,” the statement read. Earlier this
month, Gaza experienced a similar spell of heavy rain and cold. The
weather caused at least 18 deaths due to the collapse of war-damaged
buildings or exposure to cold, according to Gaza’s civil defence
agency. On December 18, the UN’s humanitarian office said 17 buildings
collapsed during the storm, while 42,000 tents and makeshift shelters
were fully or partially damaged.} Video - Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/1/3/severe-weather-in-gaza-hits-vulnerable-and-wounded-most-in-israels-war

Palestine is our Land
Quds news - Jan 4, 2026
{Israeli Minister Says “Gaza Is Ours”, Palestinians Are “Guests”
When asked about the Gaza Strip, and whether the Israeli presence
there was considered an occupation, he rejected this, too, saying:
“Gaza is also ours. We’re just letting them stay there as guests until
a certain point, but Gaza is ours.”
Occupied Palestine (QNN)- Israeli Culture Minister Miki Zohar claimed
on Thursday that Gaza belongs to Israel, and that the nearly 2.3
million Palestinians in the enclave are “guests”. In an interview with
the Kan public broadcaster, while explaining the reason why he is
considering denying funds to the Israeli film industry, after Israel’s
most prestigious film prize, the Ophir Award, went to “The Sea,” a
movie about a Palestinian boy from the occupied West Bank who is
denied an entry permit to visit the beach in the Israeli-occupied
Palestinian territories, Zohar said the movie painted the Israeli
forces in a bad light and made Israel look like an “apartheid country
that is killing Palestinians”, according to The Times of Israel. “It’s
a movie that depicts a certain reality, that’s the reality of the
occupation,” the radio said. “Maybe you have a problem with the
occupation, but not with the movie, because the movie doesn’t lie in
that regard.” Zohar claimed that Israel “is not occupying anything”,
adding “Judea and Samaria are ours,” using the biblical term for the
occupied West Bank. When asked about the Gaza Strip, and whether the
Israeli presence there was considered an occupation, he rejected this,
too, saying: “Gaza is also ours. We’re just letting them stay there as
guests until a certain point, but Gaza is ours.” He and other
far-right members of Netanyahu’s governing coalition have repeatedly
voiced staunch support for occupying Gaza and establishing illegal
settlements. Ministers have also claimed that the West Bank and Gaza
are part of Israel. } Video - Source: https://qudsnen.co/post?id=66999&slug=israeli-minister-says-gaza-is-ours-palestinians-are-guests

Tents Supplied to Displaced Palestinians in Gaza ‘Inadequate for
Winter'
Quds news - Jan 4, 2026
{Tents Supplied to Displaced Palestinians in Gaza ‘Inadequate for
Winter’: New Assessment
The tent findings come as more than 25 Palestinians, including babies,
have died over the past weeks from hypothermia and collapsed buildings
in Gaza as heavy winter rains and strong winds have brought new
challenges to displaced Palestinians there.
Gaza (QNN)- Tents supplied by China, Egypt and Saudi Arabia to
shelter displaced Palestinians in the war-torn Gaza Strip are
"inadequate for winter” and offer only limited protection, an
assessment compiled by shelter specialists in the territory has found.
The assessment, prepared by the Palestine Shelter Cluster, which
coordinates the activities of nearly 700 non-government organisations
in Palestine and is chaired by the Norwegian Refugee Council, found
that newly delivered tents housing hundreds of thousands of displaced
Palestinians would “likely need to be replaced,” according to the
Guardian. The findings were based on 9,000 responses to a poll on
social media in November, observations “from partners on the ground”
and “community feedback.” “The fabric [of the Egyptian tents] tears
easily as sewing quality is poor,” it reported. “The fabric is not
waterproof. Other issues include small windows, weak structure, no
flooring, the roof collects water due to the design of the tent, and
no mesh for openings.” Saudi Arabia tents have “non-waterproof light
fabric, weak structure” and tents donated by China were “very light”
and not waterproof. Those supplied by Qatar, the United Arab Emirates
and the United Nations were judged to have met the specifications of
UN experts, according to the assessment. The findings come as more
than 25 Palestinians, including babies, have died over the past weeks
from hypothermia and collapsed buildings in Gaza as heavy winter rains
and strong winds have brought new challenges to displaced Palestinians
there. Flimsy tents were flooded and blown out and makeshift camps
engulfed in mud following heavy winter rains lashing the enclave.
Videos circulating on social media show tents being blown away, strong
winds scattering belongings, displaced people pleading for help, and
children shivering from the cold over the past days after a polar
low-pressure system accompanied by heavy rain and strong winds
battered the Strip. More than 27,000 tents housing displaced families
have been destroyed or swept away by flooding and powerful winds,
affecting over 250,000 people across Gaza, the Gaza Civil Defense
said. Israel’s two-year war has destroyed more than 80 percent of the
structures across Gaza, forcing hundreds of thousands of families to
take refuge in flimsy tents or overcrowded makeshift shelters. Now,
the humanitarian conditions continue to deteriorate as winter deepens
amid an Israeli blockade despite the ceasefire with limited access to
shelter materials, fuel, and medical care. Humanitarian groups have
immediately urged Israel to allow unimpeded deliveries of aid to Gaza.
But the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said
the Israeli occupation government has blocked it from bringing aid
directly into Gaza. “People have reportedly died due to the collapse
of damaged buildings where families were sheltering. Children have
reportedly died from exposure to the cold,” UNRWA said.
“This must stop. Aid must be allowed in at scale, now.”
Israel has continued to kill Palestinians in Gaza and restricted the
entry of much-needed aid, violating the ceasefire agreement. “Entry of
distribution and aid in the Gaza Strip will proceed without
interference from the two parties through the United Nations and its
agencies, and the Red Crescent, in addition to other international
institutions not associated in any manner with either party,” Trump’s
“20-point peace plan” says. Last week, Israel said it will suspend
more than three dozen humanitarian organisations, including Doctors
Without Borders, for allegedly failing to meet its new rules for aid
groups working in Gaza Organisations facing bans, started last
Thursday, didn’t meet new requirements for sharing information on
their staffs, funding and operations, Israeli occupation authorities
said. Other major organisations affected include the Norwegian Refugee
Council, CARE International, the International Rescue Committee, and
divisions of major charities such as Oxfam and Caritas. International
organisations said Israel’s rules are arbitrary. Israel claimed 37
groups working in Gaza didn’t have their permits renewed. Israel
changed its registration process for aid groups in March, which
included a requirement to submit a list of staff, including
Palestinians in Gaza. Some aid groups said they didn’t submit a list
of Palestinian staff for fear those employees would be targeted by
Israel. “It comes from a legal and safety perspective. In Gaza, we saw
hundreds of aid workers get killed,” said Shaina Low, communications
adviser for the Norwegian Refugee Council. The Humanitarian Country
Team (HCT), which coordinates decisions across UN agencies and NGOs
working in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, urged Israel to reconsider
its move, warning that they are an essential part of life-saving
humanitarian operations in the occupied Palestinian territory. “The
deregistration of INGOs in Gaza will have a catastrophic impact on
access to essential and basic services,” the HCT said in the
statement. “INGOs run or support the majority of field
hospitals, primary healthcare centers, emergency shelter responses,
water and sanitation services, nutrition stabilization centers for
children with acute malnutrition, and critical mine action
activities.” The move comes as ten countries, including Canada and
Britain, have expressed “serious concerns” over a “renewed
deterioration of the humanitarian situation” in Gaza, describing
conditions as “catastrophic” despite the ceasefire. Recently, more
than 100 aid groups accused Israel of obstructing life-saving aid from
entering Gaza and called on it to end its “weaponisation of aid”. The
UN described Israel’s move as “outrageous”. Ravina Shamdasani, the UN
human rights spokesperson, said the move was the “latest in a pattern
of unlawful restrictions” by Israel, as well as attacks on Israeli and
Palestinian NGOs, amid broader access problems faced by the UN and
other humanitarian groups. Doctors Without Borders, also known by its
French acronym MSF, warned that hundreds of thousands of Palestinians
could lose access to essential medical care as Israel’s revocation of
licences comes into effect. “The Palestinian health system is
decimated, essential infrastructure is destroyed, and people struggle
to meet basic needs. People need more services, not less. If MSF and
other INGOs lose access, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians would
be cut off from essential care. We currently support one in five
hospital beds and the delivery of one in three births in Gaza,” MSF
said in a post on X. The Palestinian human rights group Al-Haq said
the move amounts to an escalation of “genocidal policies” in Gaza.}
Video - Source: https://qudsnen.co/post?id=66998&slug=tents-supplied-to-displaced-palestinians-in-gaza-inadequate-for-winter-new-assessment
Quds news - Jan 4, 2026
{Former PM Says Israel Backs “Murderous” Settler Violence Against
Palestinians in Occupied West Bank
Last year was one of the most violent on record for Israeli settler
attacks against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, according to
United Nations data that shows more than 750 injuries.
Occupied Palestine (QNN)- Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
has said Israel enabled "murderous" settler violence against
Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, adding the attacks were
"designed to lead gradually to ethnic cleansing and mass expulsion".
In a Friday article published in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Olmert
said, "There's no other way of defining what's happening in the
territories except as a violent, murderous war," Olmert said, adding
that attacks against Palestinians were "designed to lead gradually to
ethnic cleansing and mass expulsion". Last year was one of the most
violent on record for Israeli settler attacks against Palestinians in
the occupied West Bank, according to United Nations data that shows
more than a thousand Palestinians were killed between October 7, 2023
and October 17, 2025, in Israeli attacks carried out by Israeli forces
and settlers, according to the UN, including over 220 children.
In 2025, OCHA documented at least 1,680 settler attacks, an average of
five per day. B’Tselem, an Israeli human rights group, said settlers
were attacking Palestinians “daily”, including “shooting, beating and
threatening residents, throwing stones, torching fields, destroying
trees and crops, stealing produce, blocking roads, invading homes, and
burning cars”. Israeli settlements are illegal under international
law. Today, 600,000 to 750,000 settlers live in more than 250
settlements and outposts across the West Bank and occupied East
Jerusalem. Many of these are near Palestinian towns and villages,
often leading to attacks on Palestinian residents and severe movement
restrictions for Palestinians. Olmert’s comments came days after
Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that only "a handful of kids" were
responsible for the violence and that they were addressing the rise in
attacks. "When they're talking about it, they're talking about a
handful of kids," Netanyahu said, referring to media coverage of the
settler violence. "We actually located it. It's about 70 kids. They're
not from the West Bank. They're actually… teenagers who come from
broken homes, and they do things like chopping olive trees, and
sometimes they try to burn a home. Olmert said armed settler groups
operated with near-total impunity, often baked by Israeli forces. "The
fact that in the vast majority of cases the rioters aren't detained is
no coincidence," he said. "I would claim - with full
responsibility - that this is the government's policy." He pointed to
the decision to halt the use of administrative detention against
settlers as a turning point that signalled impunity and emboldened
armed groups in the West Bank. Olmert added that this had created a
"comprehensive, coordinated and well-financed campaign" of settler
violence, supported by political leaders and local authorities. “This
is isn't the 'hilltop youth' or a small group of delinquents who are
violating the rules of proper conduct - it's a military, terrorist,
violent militia that murders, torches, beats, shoots, and in a
systematic, planned and organised manner destroys everything in the
territories that isn't Jewish," he said. "The Jewish terrorists in the
territories do not operate in isolation from a very broad swath of
supporters, who represent the various arms of the government, the
cabinet, the police and the army.” "The Israel Police cooperate with
the terror in the territories. There's no other way to describe what's
happening there but as active, planned and deliberate support by the
police for the murderous hooliganism of the Jewish terrorists," he
added. Olmert himself approved illegal settlement expansion between
2006 and 2009 while serving as prime minister. Since leaving office,
he has been accused of overseeing war crimes in Gaza during Israel's
2008–2009 assault on the enclave, during which over 1,400 Palestinians
were killed and over 100,000 left homeless.} Video - Source: https://qudsnen.co/post?id=66997&slug=former-pm-says-israel-backs-murderous-settler-violence-against-palestinians-in-occupied-west-bank

Maram Humaid
Al Jazeera - Jan 3, 2026 Maram Humaid
{A New Year for Gaza: Will life return?
Al Jazeera’s Maram Humaid reflects on a year of famine in
Gaza, marked by hunger, loss, and relentless suffering.
Gaza City – Over the past two years, we stopped counting
seasons, days, and the passage of time. Days are no longer
days; the life we knew before the outbreak of Israel’s
genocidal war is gone. Instead, days merge as we taste every
shade of suffering and drink from every bitter cup except
the one that will give us our lives back. We watch the world
writing about the end of 2025, celebrating achievements and
opening a blank page to welcome the coming year. But a new
year in Gaza means we are entering the third year of the war
and its aftermath. It’s as if Gaza has its own calendar
since the genocide began.
Carrying tears and disbelief
Whoever emerged from this year alive survived with their
body, but their soul has been eroded – you can see it on the
face of any woman or man who has been displaced for two
years. We were hopeful at the beginning of 2025 as we
returned, carrying our tears and disbelief, to northern
Gaza, to our destroyed homes where we had lived our entire
lives. In that ceasefire in January 2025, we thought the war
had ended and that we could start anew. But we were wrong.
Only six weeks later, as people were still trying to absorb
life in post-war northern Gaza, the war returned, even more
brutal. In mid-March, we were woken to the sound of bombs –
a sound that had never really left us. This time, Israel
added the weapon of starvation, blocking the entry of
everything, even aid. And so it went: War, bombardment,
blood, hunger, and the constant race to secure a single
meal. Seasons of abundance passed us by, Eid and feast days,
while tables were bare.
No holiday cookies, no coffee, no chocolate. Nothing.
People made do by offering water, and some stopped receiving
visitors, hiding their poverty.
This year’s Eid, supermarket shelves had been bare for
months. A vendor set out a table with thin fingers of sweets
his wife had made at home from sugar, sesame, and flour. One
little piece sold for 10 shekels (about $3). I wasn’t
surprised. Sugar and flour were priceless, sold by the
gramme, like gold. That day, I went from place to place with
my children, trying to find any sign of celebration. I was
surprised at myself for hoping, even subconsciously, that it
being Eid might change things, that perhaps food would
enter. But I told myself: What would it being Eid matter in
Gaza? Nothing changes. It’s just another day, the same
reality. A day in Gaza means bombs in the sky, and hunger
and deprivation of joy on the ground. I decided not to go
see my family in the north for Eid and turned back home. Not
only because I stood at a street corner for more than an
hour and a half looking for a car or even an animal-drawn
cart to take us north, but also because I felt joy was dead,
no matter how hard I tried. So I returned, broken, my
children trailing behind me. I had enough money to buy them
new clothes, but all my money couldn’t buy them a cookie. I
collapsed onto a couch at home, wondering at the wrath that
seemed to have been unleashed on us in Gaza while the rest
of the planet carried on, celebrating Eid as famine consumed
us.
The passing of days
As the days passed, they drained us. Day after day, I began
to lose my desire to work, to write, to keep listening to
people’s stories. What’s the point of listening to the
stories of the hungry when the world has grown accustomed to
our protruding bones? What’s the point of covering a
massacre that isn’t ending? I had no energy left. I would
think of a story, but my mind would tell me to conserve what
energy remained. My days narrowed to counting how much
flour, rice, and sugar we had left. I cooked lentils over an
open, smoking fire for my children. I worried about the last
of the yeast, worried about how to find more firewood,
craved a cup of coffee as if it were a dream, and scrolled
through photos of once-abundant tables. We were seeing
people die for a bag of flour or a food parcel, and crowds
gathering at night to go to aid distribution points. I had
never stopped thinking about leaving Gaza throughout the
war, but my motivation changed as the thoughts got sharper.
I was dreaming of taking my children somewhere they could
eat whatever they wanted. I want to title all this
humiliation and suffering in my memory as: “So we do not
forget.” How could I forget, when even now, whenever I pass
a stall full of fruits and vegetables, I gasp and stare, my
heart pounding with prayers that this blessing will not
disappear again? How could I forget, when I still remember
my shock and emotion in late September when I entered a
supermarket and saw shelves of food? I went into a buying
frenzy. I took a bit of everything: Canned goods, chocolate,
chips, cream cheese, flour, legumes. I felt like I was
carrying treasures, even at double the price. Since then,
whenever I enter a grocery shop, anxiety, fear, and
exhaustion overwhelm me. I buy what I need and what I don’t
need. Food is more available, yet my mind tells me that this
abundance will not last. We are conditioned to deprivation,
empty shelves and severed supply lines.
The food that has to last all day for the family. a small
basket of bread and three small bowls of lentil gruel
It is a deep trauma, a constant feeling that food will
disappear. I can’t say I hate food, but I hate the terror
and fear around it. The same feeling returns with every door
slam, every rug shaken out, every sound of a passing truck,
or gunfire. All of it throws us into a state of emergency,
waiting for the sound of a missile.
‘Achievements’
The other night, just before the end of the year, I was
joking with my father and my siblings, who have been
sheltering with us since September, when Israel forced
people out of the north. We wanted to imitate the social
media “achievements” trend, where friends and families
gather around a cake, and each person lights a candle and
details an achievement for the year. We began – without a
cake – under dim LED lights, because electricity had been
cut for months. When my turn came, I said my greatest
achievement this year was retaining my mental and
psychological faculties. I hadn’t even finished my sentence
before everyone burst into laughter. “Who told you that you
still have your mental and psychological faculties?” my
sister choked out around her laughter. I fell silent,
stunned by their reaction, then laughed along with them when
I realised the weight of what I had said. What is this, you
fool? What psyche, what sanity? God forgive you, Maram.
After what you mentioned above, and what you didn’t mention,
and everything you will never mention, is there still room
to speak of mental and emotional stability? It was the most
honest ending to this year. An ending where I fully
understood the limits of my strength and that I had reached
the end of it, yet somehow I managed to keep going.
This is not defiance, nor strength. Prolonged survival in
this state eats away at souls and minds.
Day after day, our humanity erodes further until we are no
longer fit for life, no matter how many years pass.} Video -
Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2026/1/3/a-new-year-for-gaza-will-life-return

Children whose homes were destroyed-Photo-Khatib-Anadolu
Al Jazeera - Jan 3, 2026
{Severe weather in Gaza hits vulnerable and wounded most in
Israel’s war
As harsh weather conditions batter the besieged enclave once
again, Palestinians with shattered limbs in Israel’s
genocidal war suffer the most. The winter has made a life of
relentless suffering worse for the people of Gaza,
particularly for the wounded, children and elderly, with
hundreds of thousands in the Palestinian territory displaced
by Israel’s genocidal war desperately trying to survive on
the scant humanitarian aid Israel is allowing in.
Nine-year-old Assad al-Madhna lost his left hand when
Israeli fire hit a group of children playing in al-Zuwayda
in central Gaza. The same attack also wounded him in the
leg. Now, as winter envelops the besieged enclave, Assad’s
pain increases as the metal rods and pins holding his leg in
place stiffen in the cold, making every step slower and
agonising. “I can’t play with other children as in winter,
my legs and hands hurt a lot,” he told Al Jazeera. “I
haven’t received any prosthetic, struggle to change my
clothes, and going to the toilet in this cold is a real
challenge,” he said, adding: “Without my parents, I can’t
manage it. At night, the severe cold becomes unbearable.” A
truce between Israel and Hamas since October 10 has been
fragile, a ceasefire in name only, according to Palestinians
and rights groups, after two years of destructive war.
Despite the truce, Palestinians in crowded camps – often in
damaged tents and surrounded by mud – still face severe
humanitarian conditions, trying to survive with few or no
resources, making life the hardest for the most vulnerable.
‘No heating at all’
Eighteen-year-old Waed Murad survived an attack that wiped
out her entire family – seven relatives in one strike. She
now lives with a life-altering injury, and when the
temperatures drop, her nerve pain intensifies, sleep slips
away, and the little recovery she had is threatened. “I
can’t keep myself warm because of the severe cold with the
metal bars and pins always freezing,” she told Al Jazeera.
“I am living in a tent with no heating at all. Every time I
hear the wind, I feel the pain will get worse, as the cold
will affect the metal fixation devices even more.” In the
enclave, temperatures at night have ranged between eight and
12 degrees Celsius (46 and 53 degrees Fahrenheit) in recent
days. Nearly 80 percent of buildings in the Gaza Strip have
been destroyed or damaged by the war, according to United
Nations data. About 1.5 million of Gaza’s 2.2 million
residents have lost their homes, said Amjad Shawa, director
of the Palestinian NGO Network in Gaza. Of more than 300,000
tents requested to shelter displaced people, “we have
received only 60,000,” Shawa told the AFP news agency,
pointing to Israeli restrictions on the delivery of
humanitarian aid into the territory.
Israel slammed for banning NGOs
Meanwhile, the international community has condemned
Israel’s recent announcement of a suspension of the
operations of several international nongovernmental
organisations in the occupied Palestinian territory. UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he was deeply
concerned and called for the measure to be reversed. “This
announcement comes on top of earlier restrictions that have
already delayed critical food, medical, hygiene and shelter
supplies from entering Gaza.” “This recent action will
further exacerbate the humanitarian crisis facing
Palestinians,” Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for the
secretary-general, said in a statement. Several countries in
the Middle East and Asia called on Israel to allow
“immediate, full, and unhindered” deliveries of humanitarian
aid to the Gaza Strip as winter storms lash the bombarded
Palestinian enclave. In a statement on Friday, the foreign
ministers of Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates, Turkiye, Pakistan and Indonesia warned that
“deteriorating” conditions in Gaza had left nearly 1.9
million displaced Palestinians particularly vulnerable.
“Flooded camps, damaged tents, the collapse of damaged
buildings, and exposure to cold temperatures coupled with
malnutrition, have significantly heightened risks to
civilian lives,” the statement read. Earlier this month,
Gaza experienced a similar spell of heavy rain and cold. The
weather caused at least 18 deaths due to the collapse of
war-damaged buildings or exposure to cold, according to
Gaza’s civil defence agency. On December 18, the UN’s
humanitarian office said 17 buildings collapsed during the
storm, while 42,000 tents and makeshift shelters were fully
or partially damaged.} Video - Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/1/3/severe-weather-in-gaza-hits-vulnerable-and-wounded-most-in-israels-war

Ikhlas Al-Tawil
Jinhagency - Womens News Agency - Jan 3, 2026
{A Low-Pressure System in Gaza Turns a Mother’s Joy into a
Tragedy
In a fleeting moment meant for her child’s laughter, Ikhlas
Al-Tawil’s life became tragedy when a concrete slab crushed
her back in a dilapidated refuge, leaving her paraplegic and
immobile. Rafeef Islim
Gaza — Thousands of families in the Gaza Strip are living
under harsh conditions imposed by displacement, forcing them
to seek shelter in dilapidated houses unfit for
habitation—especially as winter storms intensify across the
region. The story of Ikhlas Al-Tawil reveals a dark side of
the suffering endured by displaced people: caught between
houses at risk of collapse and tents that offer no
protection from the cold, they face impossible choices.
Ikhlas Al-Tawil sustained paraplegia in the lower half of
her body while playing with her child in a collapsing house
she had fled to in the southern Gaza Strip, during the first
winter low-pressure systems to hit the area. Al-Tawil says
that on December 12 she suffered a painful accident caused
by the storm, after being displaced to a dilapidated house
in southern Gaza following the destruction of her
home—attached to a garden in the Safatawi neighborhood in
northern Gaza—by Israeli forces. She notes that she was
forced to live in a house she knew well was at risk of
collapse and could threaten her life, yet it remained less
cruel than a tent and the suffering it entails. She
explains: “We live in a city surrounded by rubble from every
direction, with no place fit for a humane life. We therefore
find ourselves facing two equally bitter options: a tent
that neither protects us from the cold nor preserves our
dignity, or a collapsing house. Despite the high rent of
these houses, I am forced to pay it from my savings at the
expense of my physical and mental health. And today I bear
this burden alone, leaving four young children without a
provider—the eldest is seven years old and the youngest has
not yet reached three and a half.” According to doctors, the
accident resulted in a fracture of the first lumbar vertebra
of the spine, in addition to pressure on the spinal cord
that led to paraplegia in the lower part of her body.
Although she was immediately transferred to hospital and
admitted to the operating room urgently in an attempt to
save what could be saved, she still requires immediate and
urgent medical rehabilitation to regain as much mobility as
possible. Al-Tawil explains that medical and neurological
rehabilitation is no longer a secondary option, but the only
hope for restoring her ability to live a normal life. She
spends her days and nights lying on her back, unable to sit
or move independently. Worse still, she says, Gaza has only
two rehabilitation centers—Hamad Hospital and Al-Wafa
Hospital—neither of which provides services that would even
allow her to sit without assistance, let alone regain her
ability to walk. What troubles Al-Tawil most and deepens her
anxiety is that her father had suffered from paraplegia; she
knows well the stages of treatment and the time and
meticulous care it requires. She therefore fully realizes
the importance of urgently transferring her outside the Gaza
Strip for treatment. Doctors’ attempts to reassure her do
little to ease her psychological collapse, which worsens
whenever she feels sensation fading from the lower part of
her body, as if each nerve is snapping one by one, step
after step. She says: “What my body is going through now is
stiffness in the bones, muscle atrophy, and a gradual loss
of sensation in tendons I could feel moving just days ago.
It seems my body has begun to treat those nerves as if they
no longer exist.” She adds that since December 15 she should
have been in a physiotherapy center, receiving appropriate
exercises and specialized care using equipment unavailable
in Gaza. Instead, she remains stretched out on a bed all the
time, receiving only painkillers at night, with no
therapeutic intervention to help her recover what she loses
day after day. What is needed is not a miracle, but medical
and psychological rehabilitation and advanced equipment
designed to deal with cases of paraplegia—measures capable
of giving Ikhlas Al-Tawil a chance to live a normal life
like other women her age. This is not a rare medical case.
Al-Tawil finds solace in one thought that eases her
suffering: that she was the one who took the impact of the
falling concrete column, not her three-year-old child, who
would have certainly lost his life had he been struck. “I
bear the pain, the loss, the disability, and all the
countless hardships that fall upon me, but I cannot bear to
live a single day without my little child. So every day I
console myself that he survived, that he is able to live,
play, and run like other children his age.” Her young
children are also suffering psychologically. Although they
are living under the care of their paternal grandmother,
they miss their mother every moment. The new life imposed on
them is completely different and requires a long time to
adapt to. She notes that from the very first moment of her
injury, before she was transferred anywhere, she thought
only of her children and fully grasped the magnitude of the
disaster that had befallen her—especially when she
completely lost sensation in the lower part of her body.
Ikhlas Al-Tawil can no longer even bear to think about that
house. The mere image of it in her mind brings back the
moment of the accident and all the pain that accompanied it,
triggering a nervous breakdown followed by a severe
deterioration in her health and a sharp drop in blood
pressure. She therefore affirms that she will never return
to it. Because of that house, she finds herself today
injured, homeless, and in urgent need of treatment outside
the Gaza Strip—while it seems no one is paying attention to
her suffering or seeking to save what remains of her
health.} Source: https://jinhaagency.com/en/actual/a-low-pressure-system-in-gaza-turns-a-mother-s-joy-into-a-tragedy-38262
Al
Jazeera - Jan 3, 2026
{UN chief Guterres calls on Israel to reverse NGO ban in
Gaza, West Bank
Guterres says pending ban targets groups ‘indispensable to
life-saving’ work, undermines ceasefire progress. United
Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called on
Israel to reverse a pending ban on 37 nongovernmental
organisations (NGOs) working in Gaza and the occupied West
Bank. In a statement on Friday, Guterres called the work of
the groups “indispensable to life-saving humanitarian work”,
according to spokesperson Stephane Dujarric. He added that
the “suspension risks undermining the fragile progress made
during the ceasefire”. Israel banned the humanitarian groups
for failing to meet new registration rules requiring aid
groups working in the occupied territory to provide
“detailed information on their staff members, funding and
operations”. It has pledged to enforce the ban starting
March 1. Experts have denounced the requirements as
arbitrary and in violation of humanitarian principles. Aid
groups have said that providing personal information about
their Palestinian employees to Israel could put them at
risk. The targeted groups include several country chapters
of Doctors Without Borders (known by its French acronym,
MSF), the Norwegian Refugee Council, and the International
Rescue Committee. To date, Israel has killed about 500 aid
workers and volunteers in Gaza throughout its genocidal war.
All told, at least 71,271 Palestinians have been killed in
Gaza since October 7, 2023. In his statement, Guterres said
the NGO ban “comes on top of earlier restrictions that have
already delayed critical food, medical, hygiene and shelter
supplies from entering Gaza”. “This recent action will
further exacerbate the humanitarian crisis facing
Palestinians,” he said. Nearly all of Gaza’s population has
been displaced throughout the war, with many still living in
tents and temporary shelters. Israel had maintained severe
restrictions on aid entering the enclave prior to a
ceasefire going into effect in October. Under the deal,
Israel was meant to provide unhindered aid access. But
humanitarian groups have said Israel has continued to
prevent adequate aid flow. Ongoing restrictions include
materials that could be used to provide better shelter and
protection from flooding amid devastating winter storms,
according to the UN. Earlier on Friday, the foreign
ministers of Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates, Turkiye, Pakistan and Indonesia warned that
“deteriorating” conditions threatened to take even more
lives in Gaza. “Flooded camps, damaged tents, the collapse
of damaged buildings, and exposure to cold temperatures
coupled with malnutrition, have significantly heightened
risks to civilian lives,” they said in a statement.
They called on the international community “to pressure
Israel, as the occupying power, to immediately lift
constraints on the entry and distribution of essential
supplies including tents, shelter materials, medical
assistance, clean water, fuel, and sanitation support”.}
Video - Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/1/3/un-chief-guterres-calls-on-israel-to-reverse-ngo-ban-in-gaza-west-bank

A Mothers' Proof of a genocidal killing of a baby
Quds news - Jan 2, 2026
{Namecheap Takes Down Domain Hosting Videos Documenting
Israeli War Crimes
Namecheap.com, the popular domain name and webhosting
platform, has taken down the Genocide.live domain name, which
was home to a publicly accessible archive of over 16,000
videos documenting Israeli war crimes.
Gaza (QNN)- Namecheap.com has taken down the Genocide.live
domain name which was home to an archive of over 16k videos
documenting Israeli war crimes submitted as evidence on the
State of Israel’s acts of genocide against the Palestinians in
Gaza by the South African UN delegation to the UNSC and ICJ
cases. Namecheap.com, the popular domain name and webhosting
platform, has taken down the Genocide.live domain name, which
was home to a publicly accessible archive of over 16,000
videos documenting Israeli war crimes. The archive, formerly
known as TikTokGenocide, was previously submitted as “evidence
on the State of Israel’s acts of genocide against the
Palestinians in Gaza” by the South African UN delegation to
the United Nations Security Council in February of 2025 and is
also included in ongoing court proceedings of the
International Court of Justice case South Africa against
Israel. In a New Year’s tweet on Tuesday, the maintainer of
the site going by the alias of Zionism Observer on Twitter
detailed the suspension of the Genocide.live domain name,
under the seemingly claim of its hosting material that
“promotes, encourages, engages or displays cruelty to humans
or animals.” In addition to hosting over 16,000 videos of
evidence documenting evidence of war crimes by Israeli
soldiers and examples of intent of genocide from Israeli
military and civil leaders, the Genocide.live archive also
included an interactive map of Gaza detailing Israeli
violations against the populace in each area, a geolocated
index of the videos for which location data was positively
determined, a categorized listing of videos detailing the
nature of violations, an extensive index of the different
types of victims of Israeli agression, a cross-indexed
reference of various weapons of war used, and, perhaps most
sensitively of all, a cross-indexed list of individual Israeli
military brigades and battalions tied to each of the hosted
pieces of evidence, where that information was available. The
site’s maintainer noted with concern an anomaly in the traffic
the archive was receiving from Israel, and had earlier
reported recent attempts to probe their infrastructure from
the same. Genocide.live is a part of the Databases for
Palestine project, a collective founded in December of 2023
using tech to shed light on the terrible situation in Gaza and
the acts of the Israeli occupation government and army that
contributed to Israel being credibly accused of committing
genocide in Palestine by prominent human rights organizations
including Amnesty International, Médecins Sans Frontières, and
Human Rights Watch, among others. Source: Zionism Observer,
NeoSmart} Video - Source: https://qudsnen.co/post?id=66986&slug=namecheap-takes-down-domain-hosting-videos-documenting-israeli-war-crimes
Actual
news about All Aid Banned:
Quds news - Jan 2, 2026
{Joint statement: 53 NGOs warn of Israeli decision to halt
lifesaving humanitarian operations in Gaza and West Bank
Fifty-three international NGOs warn that an Israeli decision
to deregister aid groups could force a shutdown of
humanitarian operations in Gaza and the West Bank, as hunger,
displacement, and medical needs reach critical levels.
Occupied Palestine (QNN)- Fifty-three international
non-governmental organizations have warned that Israel’s
recent registration measures could block critical humanitarian
work across Palestine. In a joint press release, the NGOs said
the steps threaten to force international aid groups to shut
down operations in Gaza and the West Bank, including the
eastern part of Jerusalem, despite extreme civilian need. On
December 30, 37 international NGOs received official notices
that their registrations would expire on December 31, 2025.
The decision triggers a 60-day period. After that, the
organizations would have to stop all operations. The NGOs said
this move risks paralyzing humanitarian assistance at a
critical moment. International NGOs work with the United
Nations and Palestinian civil society groups to deliver
lifesaving aid. UN agencies and donor governments have
repeatedly said these organizations are indispensable. They
have urged Israel to reverse the decision. Humanitarian needs
remain severe, even with a ceasefire in Gaza. One in four
families in Gaza survives on just one meal a day. Winter
storms have displaced tens of thousands of people. About 1.3
million people urgently need shelter. International NGOs play
a central role in the response. They deliver more than half of
all food assistance in Gaza. They run or support around 60
percent of field hospitals. They implement nearly
three-quarters of shelter and non-food item programs. They
provide all treatment for children with severe acute
malnutrition. The NGOs warned that removing them would close
health facilities, stop food distributions, and collapse
shelter pipelines. It would also cut off lifesaving care for
children. In the West Bank, Israeli military raids and settler
violence against native Palestinians continue. Further
restrictions on international NGOs would sharply reduce aid at
a time of rising need. The NGOs stressed that they already
operate under strict compliance systems. More than 500
humanitarian workers have been killed by Israel since October
7, 2023. The NGOs said they cannot transfer sensitive personal
data to the occupation state. They also warned that false
narratives against aid groups put staff at risk and undermine
relief efforts. “This is not a technical or administrative
issue,” the statement said. “It is a deliberate policy choice
with foreseeable consequences.” If registrations expire, the
NGOs said Israel would obstruct humanitarian assistance at
scale. They stressed that humanitarian access is a legal
obligation under international humanitarian law, not a
political option. The organizations also warned that the
measures set a dangerous precedent. They said the move expands
Israeli control over humanitarian operations in Palestine.
This contradicts the internationally recognized legal
framework and the role of the Palestinian Authority. The NGOs
called on Israel to immediately halt deregistration
procedures. They urged donor governments to use all available
leverage to reverse the measures. They said independent and
principled humanitarian work must be protected so civilians
can receive urgent aid. The statement was signed by 53
international organizations, including Médecins Sans
Frontières, Oxfam, Amnesty International, Islamic Relief,
Norwegian Refugee Council, and War Child Alliance.} Source: https://qudsnen.co/post?id=66987&slug=joint-statement-53-ngos-warn-of-israeli-decision-to-halt-lifesaving-humanitarian-operations-in-gaza-and-west-bank
!!!!
Al Nakba - 75
years of resistence - VICTORY is on its
way to the sea
Video found footage
shoots: Genocidal crime scene witnesses evidence

Videoscreen grabs: Under Siege Children Pay Tribute to The Fallen

Screengrabs: Stop starving Gaza and
Foreign Doctors Uncover Disturbing Pattern of Israeli Forces
Targeting Children

Fighting for Habiba
- Gazanan Pieta - Children suffering from malnutrition -
USA visas for medical
evacuation patients denied
LOOK AND ACT AGAINST instead of ALWAYS looking away!!!!
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Gino d'Artali |
Women's Liberation
Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2026