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Gaza-Israel Conflict | October 2023

What we see is that whatever Dr. Israr Ahmed said about Pakistan or Afghanistan for black flags is incorrect. In our view, Iran appears to be the only country that stands with the poor Palestinian people, and Allah seems to be with them as well. We dont see any tweets from Imran Khan, Nawaz Sharif or Munira Mastri &Co stand bold statement like Iran. Lal Topi is also wrong about Gazwa e Hind because it actually opposes Munira Mastari and his pals.
 
What we see is that whatever Dr. Israr Ahmed said about Pakistan or Afghanistan for black flags is incorrect. In our view, Iran appears to be the only country that stands with the poor Palestinian people, and Allah seems to be with them as well. We dont see any tweets from Imran Khan, Nawaz Sharif or Munira Mastri &Co stand bold statement like Iran. Lal Topi is also wrong about Gazwa e Hind because it actually opposes Munira Mastari and his pals.
Dr Israr had a great insight, I don't know what he said about tbis but you cannot negate his opinion by looking at the current situation. And when Imran Khan was free he was very vocal and strongly stood with Palestine.
 
US is like Afghanistan - the superpower version of Afghanistan.
You can't compare the two, one fights with honor and doesn't commit genocide the other enjoys genocide parties.
No doubt it was a genocidal attack on the most vulnerable people , that is how cold blooded the Israelis are.

And people say, Hamas didn't kill the innocent Israelis.
If you steal other peoples' homes,land and lives and create an apartheid state even worse things will happen to you
 
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Britain has truly become sick with Zionophiles.

Manchester councillor leaves Labour over Starmer's Israel comments​

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      1 day ago
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Amna Abdullatif
IMAGE SOURCE,WOMEN'S AID
Image caption,
Ardwick councillor Amna Abdullatif said the party's leadership was showing a "lack of humanity" to Palestinians
A Labour councillor has resigned from the party over what she said were "horrifying comments" by Sir Keir Starmer about the Israel Gaza war.
In an LBC interview, the Labour leader said Israel had "the right" to withhold power and water from the Gaza Strip.
Manchester councillor Amna Abdullatif said the party's leadership was showing a "lack of humanity" to Palestinians as such a "collective punishment" was "inhumane and unconscionable".
Labour has been approached for comment.

Speaking to a fringe event at the Labour conference on 8 October, shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said Labour stood "with the people of Israel", following attacks by Hamas.
"Israel has a right to self-defence against terrorism," he said, adding that any response should be "proportionate" and "within international law".

In her resignation statement, which was shared on X, formerly Twitter, Ms Abdullatif said she had been a member of Labour "for the last decade and proud to have been elected in 2019 as the first Arab Muslim woman to represent Manchester City Council in my home of Ardwick".
She said she had joined the party because its values "reflected my own" and she was sad that was no longer the case.
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She said she was "devastated" to resign from the party, but felt she had "no choice" due to Sir Keir "and a number of his front bench making horrifying comments about Israel", which she said were "effectively endorsing a war crime".
"I am appalled by the lack of humanity being shown to Palestinians by the party I have been a member of for the last 10 years," she said.
"Collective punishment is illegal under international law, it is inhumane and unconscionable.
"I cannot fathom how the leadership... has not called for a de-escalation to violence and a ceasefire.

"This is deeply irresponsible and dangerous."
She said she mourned "the loss of innocent lives in Israel and in Gaza" and stood in "solidarity with the Jewish community in Manchester... and all those who are feeling sadness, fear and shock".
She added that she would continue as an independent councillor and would "continue to do all I can to create spaces that bring all communities together".
 

News|Israel-Palestine conflict

US vetoes UN resolution calling for humanitarian pause in Israel-Hamas war​

US ambassador says draft resolution did not do enough to underscore Israel’s right to self-defence.

A meeting of the UN Security Council

Palestinian UN ambassador Riyad Mansour, background right, addresses members of the UN Security Council at United Nations headquarters on Monday, October 16 [Craig Ruttle/AP Photo]
Published On 18 Oct 202318 Oct 2023

The United States has vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution that would have condemned Hamas’ attack on Israel while calling for a pause in the fighting to allow humanitarian assistance into Gaza.
The US was the sole vote against the resolution on Wednesday, with 12 members voting in favour and Russia and the United Kingdom abstaining.

KEEP READING​

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UN chief Guterres condemns ‘collective punishment’ of Palestinians

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Israel says it won’t block humanitarian aid entering Gaza from Egypt

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Russia’s top diplomat visits North Korea as battles rage in Ukraine’s east

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“We are on the ground doing the hard work of diplomacy,” US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the council after the vote. “We believe we need to let that diplomacy play out.”
The Brazil-drafted text would have condemned violence against all civilians, but the US said that it did not do enough to underscore Israel’s right to self-defence. The US has typically exercised its Security Council veto to shield Israel from critical resolutions.
“The overwhelming majority of the council, 12 countries, supported that resolution and expressed disappointment after days of negotiations and a humanitarian situation that was rapidly escalating, that the council wasn’t able to come together and offer this view, this call for calm, this call for access for humanitarians,” Al Jazeera correspondent Kristen Saloomey reported from UN headquarters in New York City.




Play Video

Video Duration 19 minutes 03 seconds19:03
US vetoes UN resolution urging humanitarian aid to Gaza
The vote came amid soaring tensions in the region, with crowds of protesters taking to the street in several countries after a deadly explosion at a hospital in Gaza on Tuesday drew widespread outrage.

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Palestinian authorities said at least 471 people were killed in the blast that was caused by an Israeli air raid. Israel says the explosion was the result of a rocket launched by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) armed group misfiring. The PIJ has rejected the allegation.
The United States has said an analysis of “overhead imagery, intercepts and open source information” showed that Israel was not behind the attack and that the US would continue to collect evidence.

Al Jazeera was not able to independently verify the claims.
Despite the uncertainty around the cause of the explosion, protests across the Middle East have heightened concerns that other armed groups in the region could join the Israel-Hamas war.
Speaking before the council, UN Middle East peace envoy Tor Wennesland said that the world was “at the brink of a deep and dangerous abyss that could change the trajectory of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, if not of the Middle East as a whole”.
An attack into southern Israel by Hamas on October 7, during which Palestinian gunmen killed hundreds of civilians in Israeli towns and kibbutzim and took 199 people captive, has been widely condemned.
Israeli authorities say at least 1,400 people, mostly civilians, were killed in the attack, and that more than 4,400 others were injured.

But Western countries, and especially Israel’s most firm ally, the US, have been accused of employing a double standard when it comes to potential Israeli violations of international law.
While the US has said that Israel should take steps to avoid killing Palestinian civilians, it has offered firm support and little direct criticism as Israeli air raids on Gaza level entire neighbourhoods, and as an Israeli siege cuts off access to water, food, electricity, and fuel for the strip’s 2.3 million inhabitants.
Palestinian authorities have said that more than 3,400 people have been killed and more than 12,000 others wounded in the Israeli assault on Gaza.




Play Video

Video Duration 28 minutes 23 seconds28:23
Why has the US always backed Israel?
“Hamas’ own actions have brought this on – this severe humanitarian crisis,” said Thomas-Greenfield.
Russia, which drafted a failed resolution calling for a ceasefire earlier this week, said the US veto showed that US rhetoric about international law and human rights was self-serving, following months of criticism over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“We have just been witnesses once again of hypocrisy and the double standards of our American colleagues,” said Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia.
 
Britain has truly become sick with Zionophiles.

Manchester councillor leaves Labour over Starmer's Israel comments​

    • Published
      1 day ago
Share
Related Topics
Amna Abdullatif
IMAGE SOURCE,WOMEN'S AID
Image caption,
Ardwick councillor Amna Abdullatif said the party's leadership was showing a "lack of humanity" to Palestinians
A Labour councillor has resigned from the party over what she said were "horrifying comments" by Sir Keir Starmer about the Israel Gaza war.
In an LBC interview, the Labour leader said Israel had "the right" to withhold power and water from the Gaza Strip.
Manchester councillor Amna Abdullatif said the party's leadership was showing a "lack of humanity" to Palestinians as such a "collective punishment" was "inhumane and unconscionable".
Labour has been approached for comment.

Speaking to a fringe event at the Labour conference on 8 October, shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said Labour stood "with the people of Israel", following attacks by Hamas.
"Israel has a right to self-defence against terrorism," he said, adding that any response should be "proportionate" and "within international law".

In her resignation statement, which was shared on X, formerly Twitter, Ms Abdullatif said she had been a member of Labour "for the last decade and proud to have been elected in 2019 as the first Arab Muslim woman to represent Manchester City Council in my home of Ardwick".
She said she had joined the party because its values "reflected my own" and she was sad that was no longer the case.
line

More on Israel Gaza war​

line

She said she was "devastated" to resign from the party, but felt she had "no choice" due to Sir Keir "and a number of his front bench making horrifying comments about Israel", which she said were "effectively endorsing a war crime".
"I am appalled by the lack of humanity being shown to Palestinians by the party I have been a member of for the last 10 years," she said.
"Collective punishment is illegal under international law, it is inhumane and unconscionable.
"I cannot fathom how the leadership... has not called for a de-escalation to violence and a ceasefire.

"This is deeply irresponsible and dangerous."
She said she mourned "the loss of innocent lives in Israel and in Gaza" and stood in "solidarity with the Jewish community in Manchester... and all those who are feeling sadness, fear and shock".
She added that she would continue as an independent councillor and would "continue to do all I can to create spaces that bring all communities together".
It is laudable that her values prevent her from serving in the government, but it should be considered that opinions of a person who is not even in an executive position to affect the functions of the U.K. government which itself has an almost negligible impact on how Israel wants to wage its war, is akin to getting too upset about somebody's answer to the question of how many angels can dance on a pinhead.
 
It is laudable that her values prevent her from serving in the government, but it should be considered that opinions of a person who is not even in an executive position to affect the functions of the U.K. government which itself has an almost negligible impact on how Israel wants to wage its war, is akin to getting too upset about somebody's answer to the question of how many angels can dance on a pinhead.
I think your conscience is making you crazy, it's hard being a zionophile isn't it and supporting the murder and atrocities of all those women and children? But then people like you don't have children because you are loveless people.
 
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And people say, Hamas didn't kill the innocent Israelis.
It is 12 days after the Hamas attack. By now, there are two large distinct camps. On one side are those who believe what Hamas did is wrong and unforgiveable and what Israel is doing is reasonable self-defense. On the other side are those who believe Hamas are brave warriors who are killing intruders just as anyone would do to a bandit trying to rob your home. They also strongly believe Israel has no right to wage a war over this and its proper course of action is to dissolve itself and migrate somewhere else. This being the case, any video or picture or other evidence is of little value in persuading someone from either group to see the perspective of the other group.
 

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