Iternational panel question future of Palestine following Israeli attacks

LONDON (AA) – An online roundtable of academics and activists discussed the ongoing Palestinian struggle and Israeli apartheid in the 21st century on Friday.

They also considered what the future holds for the occupied state following weeks of brutal violence and attacks by the Israeli state and settler community.

The online forum was hosted by the Cordoba Foundation and CEO Anas Altikriti. It featured celebrated Israeli critic professor Ilan Pappe from the University of Exeter, Phyllis Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington and Ammar Al-Dwaik head of the Independent Commission for Human Rights.

Pappe gave a brief history of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in Palestine before 1948 and the Nakba, or Catastrophe, that occurred shortly thereafter that saw the mass expulsion of Palestinians from their lands, the demolition of their cities, towns and villages and the beginning of Zionist settler colonialism in what would become Israel.

“Nowadays, more and more we understand the nature of the Zionist movement in relation to Israel as being a project of settler colonialism — people coming from all over Europe to someone else’s homeland [Palestine] with the intention of having the land without a people. Such an impulse eventually leads to acts of ethnic cleansing,” said Pappe.

“There were already minor acts of ethnic cleansing by the Zionist movement under British rule in the mid-1920s and before 1948 but of course the massive expulsion of Palestinians took place within nine months in the year of 1948. Half of Palestine’s villages – more than 500 – were demolished in the ethnic cleansing,” he said “Half of Palestine’s population was expelled and most of the towns and urban spaces were destroyed and rebuilt to house the settlers from Europe.”

– International accountability, Israeli apartheid

Al-Dwaik expressed relief at the announcement of a cease-fire that saw an end to Israel’s brutal and indiscriminate attacks on Gaza but reminded the international community of its responsibility to help rebuild the impoverished and destroyed territory, because Israel, he said, who bears the true responsibility for its death and destruction, will refuse to reconstruct towns and cities that lay in ruin.

“This killing and destruction machine has stopped but sadly it has left a massive destruction of the infrastructure in Gaza and a catastrophic humanitarian situation that should not be understated,” he said. “There should be a mobilization of billions of dollars to reconstruct Gaza, whose wounds have not yet healed from the previous wars. We are seeing a cycle of destruction and reconstruction in the territory and this is the fourth systematic and devastating attack in 12 years.”

The human rights activist also reminded the world that although the attacks have ended, Palestinians are still undergoing ethnic cleansing at the hands of Israeli occupation forces, they are still being militarily occupied and evictions in Sheikh Jarrah and elsewhere will continue “without any consequences and with immunity.”

The cease-fire does not address those issues and Palestinians are left to deal with the ongoing genocide without any support, said Al-Dwaik.

Bennis addressed the crime of Israeli apartheid and said international attention and focus were now settling on the breach of international law.

The international community, and especially the US, she said, is complicit in allowing apartheid to exist in Israel and occupied Palestinian territories.

“Apartheid exists when you have one territory, one power in control of that territory and you have two different legal systems which are applicable to two groups of different people based on their race and ethnicity for the goal and domination of one racial group over another and that is the description of Israeli policies towards Palestinians, from the river to the sea,” said Bennis.

Israeli apartheid has been discussed for more than 20 years by international figures such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former South African freedom fighter and leader Nelson Mandela, she said. But the phenomenon has expanded in recent years to involve the denial of basic rights and amenities to Palestinians that are enjoyed by illegal Zionist settlers such as freedom of movement, access to water and electricity and the ability to see families and friends.

After nearly a fortnight of intense and brutal air raids and ground attacks, the Israeli government agreed Thursday to a cease-fire.

At least 243 Palestinians have been killed and more than 1,700 wounded since May 10, according to Palestinian authorities.

A cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, a Palestinian resistance group, began early Friday.

Occupation forces have also targeted Gaza’s electricity grid, leaving it without power and cut off from the rest of the world.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war and annexed the entire city in 1980 – a move that has never been recognized by the international community.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish Airlines adds Newark to flight network

ISTANBUL (AA) – Broadening its flight network, Turkey’s flag carrier Turkish Airlines announced on Saturday that it would start operating flights to Newark, New Jersey in the US as of next week.

The carrier will operate four flights a week — Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday — until June 13 and then operate daily flights there, according to a press release.

Newark, as the biggest urban center in its state and one of the closest to New York City, will be the carrier’s 10th destination in the US.

The round trip between Istanbul and Newark with Turkish Airlines is to start at $655 (including taxes and fees), it said.

The airline flies to 320 destinations globally — 270 international and 50 domestic — in 127 countries with its fleet of 362 aircraft.

Source: Anadolu Agency

’I’ll keep protecting Al-Aqsa until death or liberation’

JERUSALEM (AA) – A woman voluntarily standing guard to protect the Al-Aqsa Mosque in East Jerusalem from Israeli attacks has said she will continue to defend the Muslim holy site until she is killed or the occupied Palestinian territories are liberated.

Hatice Huveys, a 44-year-old teacher, recounted that she and her family suffered prosecution and harassment by Israeli authorities while guarding the mosque.

Huveys told Anadolu Agency that she had been detained by Israeli forces 28 times since 2014 but that she shed tears for the first time when they took off her hijab and overcoat while being held in an Israeli prison about four years ago.

She was sentenced to 23 days in jail in 2017 on charges linked to the Al-Aqsa Mosque and protesting the entry of Jewish settlers to the site.

The most recent tensions started in occupied East Jerusalem during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and spread to Gaza as a result of Israeli assaults on worshippers in the flashpoint mosque compound and the neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah.

Israeli jets had staged airstrikes across the Gaza Strip since May 10, leaving behind a massive trail of destruction across the seaside territory by the time a cease-fire began early on Friday between Israel and Palestinian resistance group Hamas.

At least 279 Palestinians were killed, including 69 children and 40 women, and 1,910 others injured in Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.

Source: Anadolu Agency

 ‘Tragic’ that just over 25M vaccine doses administered in Africa: WHO chief

YAOUNDE, Cameroon (AA) – Africa has so far administered just over 25 million COVID-19 vaccine doses, or 1.5% of the doses given worldwide, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Saturday.

“And this is tragic,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a meeting of the Peace and Security Council of the African Union on access to vaccines against the COVID-19 pandemic for the African continent.

“In the past two weeks, we are seeing some progress … with a good number of countries committing to share and equitable distribution of vaccines, but vaccine nationalism still holds us back, ” Tedros added.

He also said WHO is working to bring immediate solutions for the equitable distribution of vaccine doses.

“At the same time, we cannot let down our guard. What is happening now in many other parts of the world can also happen in Africa,” the WHO head said.

Tedros said the pandemic has demonstrated that Africa cannot rely solely on imports of vaccines from the rest of the world.

“We must build that capacity, not only for COVID-19 vaccines, but for other vaccines and medical products. But at the same time we have to focus on the immediate solution of vaccine sharing, as I said earlier, ” he added.

There are over 4.7 million confirmed COVID-19 cases on the African continent with more than 4.2 million recoveries and 126,000 deaths, according to WHO figures.

COVID-19 vaccine shipments to African countries have slowed down in May due to “the reliance on India as one of the key manufacturers globally, and the devastating surge of cases India is dealing with, Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Africa Director Matshidiso Moeti said on Thursday.

The African continent was expecting 66 million COVID-19 vaccine doses through COVAX facility from February to May, but instead it has so far received only 18.2 million doses, according to the WHO.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Assad regime evicts 30 families from southern Syrian province

IDLIB, Syria (AA) – The Bashar al-Assad regime forcibly displaced some 30 families Friday from Syria’s southern Quneitra province to northern Idlib city under the control of opposition.

Some 150 people have been evicted from Quneitra, which is located adjacent to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights region.

The families were placed in briquette houses built by Turkish NGOs in Idlib.

“They want to settle Hezbollah and Iranians in our homes. We had been under blockade for about 3 years. They started to detain our young people,” Mohammed Said, one of the displaced civilians, told Anadolu Agency.

“They besieged us. They did not leave us alone and forced us to migrate. I hope Assad regime will fall and we will return to our country,” Um Muhammed, another civilian who took refuge in Idlib, said.

After imposing a blockade and carrying out massive attacks, the Assad regime completely took over Quneitra in mid-2018.

More than 10,000 people had been evacuated from Dara’a and Quneitra to the regions in northern Syria in July 2018.

Syria has been in a civil war since early 2011, when the regime cracked down on pro-democracy protests with unexpected ferocity.

Around half a million people have been killed, and more than 12 million had to flee their homes in the past decade.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Moroccan prime minister congratulates Palestinians, resistance groups for beating Israel

RABAT, Morocco (AA) – The prime minister of Morocco congratulated Palestinians and resistance groups for their victory against Israeli attacks on Friday.

Saadeddine El Othmani posted a congratulatory message on Twitter and expressed satisfaction with the cease-fire deal that took effect between Hamas and Israel early Friday.

The Israeli military staged airstrikes across the Gaza Strip since May 10, leaving behind a massive trail of destruction across the seaside territory.

The death toll from the Israeli attacks on the besieged Gaza Strip rose to 248, including 66 children and 39 women, the

Palestinian Health Ministry said on Friday.

At least 1,948 people have been injured, the ministry said in a statement regarding the loss of lives during 11 days of attacks by Israel.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Civilian member of Sudan’s ruling sovereign council resigns

KHARTOUM, SUDAN (AA) – A civilian member in Sudan’s ruling sovereign council has resigned over the killing of two protesters in front of the army headquarters earlier this month.

Addressing a news conference in the capital Khartoum on Saturday, Aisha Musa announced to step down, accusing the military of excluding the council’s civilian component in decision-making.

“The transitional government has violated the constitutional declaration by delaying the formation of the legislative assembly and commissions on justice, corruption, peace and others,” Musa said.

At least two people were killed and more than 30 injured on May 12 as Sudanese protesters demanded justice for more than 100 people killed on June 3, 2019 in front of the army headquarters.

Source: Anadolu Agency

UDATE – Big rallies in Pakistan slam Israeli bombing of Gaza

ISLAMABAD (AA) – Tens of thousands of demonstrators marched across Pakistan on Friday to denounce Israel’s attacks on Gaza as the country observed Palestine Solidarity Day.

National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser and Senate Chairman Sadiq Sanjrani led a peaceful march in Islamabad in front of the parliament house that was also attended by lawmakers, journalists and civil society members.

Condemning Israeli aggression, protesters expressed solidarity with Palestinians.

“The voice of the Palestinians cannot be silenced as the Palestine issue is the issue of the entire Muslim Ummah,” said Qaiser.

He supported Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s call for a world conference, saying his country will continue to support the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination.

The lawmakers also showed solidarity with Kashmiris and strongly condemned Indian forces’ violence against the people in the Indian-administered territory

“May 21 is a dark day in the history of IIOJK [Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir] . Today, 31 years ago in 1990, Kashmiri leader of the freedom movement Mirwaiz Maulvi Muhammad Farooq was martyred in Srinagar. Illegal occupation forces opened fire at protestors on his funeral, martyring 70 more Kashmiris,” said Pakistan National Security Adviser Moeed Yusuf.

“Many more Kashmiri leaders remain incarcerated in IIOJK. Every Pakistani feels their pain and shares their desire for freedom,” added Yusuf.

Later, opposition leader Shehbaz Sharif, along with government and opposition parties leaders, arrived at the UN mission and presented a joint resolution of the National Assembly of Pakistan.

Pakistan’s National Assembly — lower parliamentary house — unanimously adopted a resolution on Monday that condemned Israeli aggression against Palestinians and the killing of hundreds of civilians, including women and children, in the ongoing bombardment of Gaza.

– Big rallies across country

Meanwhile, big rallies were also held in the capital Islamabad, Lahore, Peshawar, Quetta, Faisalabad, Multan, Hyderabad and other cities on the call of Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), Pakistan’s two main religiopolitical parties.

In Islamabad, thousands of people rallied at the capital’s famous D-Chowk roundabout, less than a mile away from the Parliament House, to express solidarity with Palestinians.

Carrying Palestinian flags, banners and posters with pictures of children, wounded people and destroyed buildings, the protesters chanted anti-Israel slogans.

Addressing the rally, JI chief Sirajul Haq strongly condemned the Israel airstrikes in Gaza and Al-Aqsa, saying Israel is committed “terrorism and war crimes” by killing over 250 innocent people, most of them women and children.

He added today millions of Pakistanis came out on roads in over 200 small and big cities across the country to show solidarity with their Muslim brothers and sisters.

Haq also announced holding a “million march” in Karachi on May 23 and northwestern Peshawar on May 30, to show solidarity with Palestinian people.

“We are in contact with all Islamic movements around the world and will never leave the Palestinians alone,” Haq said.

In Peshawar, JUI’s chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman, while addressing a large rally in the northwestern city of Peshawar, criticized the US for its role in vetoing UN Security Council efforts against Israel.

“This continuing terrorism under the auspices of the United States is evidence that the United States is the largest terrorist,” said Rehman.

He added that Israeli aggression against Al-Aqsa Mosque is an aggression against the entire Islamic ummah, or community.

“World powers silence on Israeli barbarism is a heinous crime. Islamic countries need to show unity and provide support to Palestinian people,” he added.

The death toll from the Israeli attacks on the besieged Gaza Strip since May 10 has risen to 243, including 39 women and 66 children, the Gaza-based Health Ministry said on Friday.

A cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, a Palestinian resistance group, took effect at 2 a.m. Friday (2300GMT Thursday).

The truce brokered by Egypt came after 11 days of Israeli airstrikes on the blockaded Gaza Strip that left behind a massive trail of destruction across the seaside territory.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Poland to buy 24 Bayraktar TB2 drones from Turkey

ANKARA (AA) – Poland will purchase 24 unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) from Turkey, the country’s Defense Ministry said on Saturday.

“#WojskoPolskie [Polish army] will be equipped with modern equipment, with #Bayraktar TB2 [Turkey’s Bayraktar TB2 drones], which have a striking force and have proven themselves in the wars in the east of our continent. They were also used in Africa,” the ministry said on Twitter.

Mariusz Blaszczak, the polish defense minister, also announced that his country will buy 24 Bayraktar TB2 type UAVs from Turkey, according to Polish news agency PAP.

“This is a real weapon. It proved itself in wars in the east of Europe. It was also used in the Middle East,” Blaszczak added.


The agreement on the sale of the UAVs is expected to be signed next week during Poland’s President Andrzej Duda’s visit to Turkey.

Poland, a member of the EU and NATO, will purchase the UAVs from Turkey for the first time.

Bayraktar TB2 entered the inventory of Turkish army in 2014 and is currently used by several other countries, including Ukraine, Qatar, and Azerbaijan. Turkey has effectively used its cutting-edge drones over the years in cross-border, anti-terror military operations, such as Euphrates Shield, Olive Branch, and Spring Shield, to liberate its Syrian border from terrorist entities.

Source: Anadolu Agency