VifteKopp Skrevet 17 timer siden Skrevet 17 timer siden Tussi skrev (5 minutter siden): Så. Damned if you do, damned if you dont, og ingen fremtid whatsoever? Valget står mellom Hamas-utryddelse eller videre Hamas-styre. Europeiske ledere tror det finnes et tredje alternativ, hvor Israel trekker seg ut og Hamas frivillig legger ned våpnene og det på magisk blir fred og fordragelighet, men dette er jo like urealistisk som Donald Trumps fredsplan for Ukraina! Vi kan ikke gjøre så mye annet enn å vente å se. Operasjonen i Gaza By begynner nå, og jeg har sett estimater at det finnes rundt 2500 Hamas-militante igjen i det området. Det er ikke et umulig nummer å bekjempe på et lite år, men Hamas har vist seg å være ekstremt resistente og krigen begynner å bli ganske upopulær i Israel. 1
Snikpellik Skrevet 4 timer siden Forfatter Skrevet 4 timer siden (endret) 22 hjelpeorganisasjoner krever at verden griper inn for å stanse krigen i Gaza https://www.nrk.no/nyheter/krigen-i-gaza-1.11060771 Lederne i over tjue internasjonale hjelpeorganisasjoner, som Redd Barna og Leger uten grenser, krever i et opprop at verdens land griper inn for å stanse krigen i Gaza. Alle organisasjonene har vært i Gaza. De beskriver situasjonen som «folkemord», «humanitær katastrofe», og advarer om at «Gaza er i ferd med å bli et dødsdom for titusener av barn og familier». De ber verdens ledere og FN om å gripe inn politisk, økonomisk og juridisk for å stoppe angrepene, og å stille ansvarlige til ansvar for brudd på folkeretten. De 22 hjelpeorganisasjonene krever full og sikker humanitær tilgang til Gaza, inkludert nødhjelp, medisiner, mat og vann til de sivile som nå lever under beleiring og stadig bombing. – https://reliefweb.int/report/occupied-palestinian-territory/gaza-leaders-major-aid-groups-call-world-leaders-intervene-following-un-genocide-conclusion GAZA, 17 Sept 2025: The leaders of over 20 major aid agencies working in Gaza, including Islamic Relief, are calling on world leaders to urgently intervene after a UN commission concluded, for the first time, that genocide is being committed. The statement is below: Spoiler As world leaders convene next week at the United Nations, we are calling on all member states to act in accordance with the mandate the UN was charged with 80 years ago. What we are witnessing in Gaza is not only an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe, but what the UN Commission of Inquiry has now concluded is a genocide. With this finding, the Commission joins a growing number of human rights organisations and leaders globally, and within Israel. The inhumanity of the situation in Gaza is unconscionable. As humanitarian leaders, we have borne direct witness to the horrifying deaths and suffering of the people of Gaza. Our warnings have gone unheeded and thousands more lives are still at stake. Now, as the Israeli government has ordered the mass displacement of Gaza City – home to nearly one million people – we are on the precipice of an even deadlier period in Gaza’s story if action is not taken. Gaza has been deliberately made uninhabitable. About 65,000 Palestinians have now been killed, including more than 20,000 children. Thousands more are missing, buried under the rubble that has replaced Gaza’s once lively streets. Nine out of 10 people in Gaza’s 2.1 million population have been forcibly displaced — most of them multiple times — into increasingly shrinking pockets of land that cannot sustain human life. More than half a million people are starving. Famine has been declared and is spreading. The cumulative impact of hunger and physical deprivation means people are dying every day. Throughout Gaza, entire cities have been razed to the ground, along with their life-sustaining public infrastructure, such as hospitals and water treatment plants. Agricultural land has been systemically destroyed. If the facts and numbers aren’t enough, we have harrowing story upon harrowing story. Since the Israeli military tightened its siege six months ago, blocking food, fuel, and medicine, we witnessed children and families waste away from starvation as famine took hold. Our colleagues too have been impacted. Many of us have been into Gaza. We have met countless Palestinians who have lost limbs as a result of Israel’s bombardment. We have personally met children so traumatized by daily airstrikes that they cannot sleep. Some cannot speak. Others have told us they want to die to join their parents in heaven. We have met families who eat animal food to survive and boil leaves as a meal for their children. Yet world leaders fail to act. Facts are ignored. Testimony is cast aside. And more people are killed as a direct consequence. Our organisations, together with Palestinian civil society groups, the UN, and Israeli human rights organisations, can only do so much. We have tirelessly tried to defend the rights of the people of Gaza and sustain humanitarian assistance, but we are being obstructed every step of the way. We have been denied access, and the militarization of the aid system has proved deadly. Thousands of people have been shot at while trying to reach the handful of sites where food is distributed under armed guard. Governments must act to prevent the evisceration of life in the Gaza Strip, and to end the violence and occupation. All parties must disavow violence against civilians, adhere to international humanitarian law and pursue peace. States must use every available political, economic, and legal tool at their disposal to intervene. Rhetoric and half measures are not enough. This moment demands decisive action. The UN enshrined international law as the cornerstone of global peace and security. If Member States continue to treat these legal obligations as optional, they are not only complicit but are setting a dangerous precedent for the future. History will undoubtedly judge this moment as a test of humanity. And we are failing. Failing the people of Gaza, failing the hostages, and failing our own collective moral imperative. Spoiler Signed by (in alphabetical order): Arthur Larok, Secretary General of ActionAid International Othman Moqbel, Chief Executive Officer, Action For Humanity Joyce Ajlouny, General Secretary of American Friends Service Committee Sean Carroll, President and CEO of Anera Reintje Van Haeringen, Executive Director CARE International Jonas Nøddekær, Secretary General of DanChurchAid Charlotte Slente, Secretary General of the Danish Refugee Council Manuel Patrouillard, Managing Director, Humanity & Inclusion – Handicap International Jamie Munn, Executive Director, International Council of Voluntary Agencies (ICVA) Waseem Ahmad, CEO, Islamic Relief Worldwide Joseph Belliveau, Executive Director of MedGlobal Joel Weiler, Executive Director of Médecins du Monde France Nicolás Dotta, Executive Director of Médecins du Monde Spain Christopher Lockyear, Secretary General of Médecins Sans Frontières International Kenneth Kim, Executive Director, Mennonite Central Committee Canada Ann Graber Hershberger, Executive Director, Mennonite Central Committee US Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council Amitabh Behar, Oxfam International Executive Director Simon Panek, CEO, People in Need Inger Ashing, CEO of Save the Children International Donatella Vergara, President of Terre des Hommes Italy Rob Williams, CEO of War Child Alliance Endret 4 timer siden av Snikpellik 1 2
Anbefalte innlegg
Opprett en konto eller logg inn for å kommentere
Du må være et medlem for å kunne skrive en kommentar
Opprett konto
Det er enkelt å melde seg inn for å starte en ny konto!
Start en kontoLogg inn
Har du allerede en konto? Logg inn her.
Logg inn nå