1. Haberler
  2. News
  3. A consensus is emerging: Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Where is the action? | Nesrine Malik

A consensus is emerging: Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Where is the action? | Nesrine Malik

featured


This content discusses the recent conclusions reached by various human rights organizations regarding Israel’s actions in Gaza. Amnesty International, the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, and Human Rights Watch have all labeled Israel’s actions as genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. Despite these strong condemnations, there has been no enforcement of these judgments, with countries like the US and the UK continuing to support Israel. The content also highlights the mounting evidence of civilian casualties and atrocities in Gaza, including testimonies from Israeli military personnel. The failure to act on these findings raises concerns about the erosion of moral standards and the denial of rights to the Palestinian population. The article emphasizes the importance of continued outrage and advocacy in the face of such atrocities. Bu içerik, Avrupa ve ABD’deki kürsülerde yapılan anlamsal cambazlıklara rağmen, bu raporların bir suçun gerçekleştiğini belgelediğini göstermektedir. Gazze’deki insanların hakları yerinde yok edilmiş olabilir, ancak bunlar kamu kayıtlarında korunabilir. Savaş sona erdiğinde, bu hesaplar tarihi yeniden yazma girişimlerini önleyecek veya en azından engelleyecek ve zulmü inkar etmeye çalışacaktır.

Cinayet devam ettiğinde, onu mükemmel bir suç olmaktan alıkoyan şey, insanların olay yerinde kalmaları, onu yüksek sesle cinayet olarak nitelendirmeleri, suçluyu işaret etmeleri, ölenlerin isimlerini söylemeleri, onları yas tutmaları, nöbet tutmaları ve hakları için sıkı bir şekilde mücadele etmeleridir. Zamanı geldiğinde, Filistinlilere büyük bir tazminat borcu vardır. Onlara uygulananlarının bir defteri tutulmalıdır.

Gazze’deki savaşın başında öldürülen Filistinli şair Refaat Alareer, “Eğer ölmek zorundaysam, umut getirsin, bir masal olsun” yazdı. Bu umut, ölümün sadece bir gerçek olarak geçmesine izin vermemekte yatar. Eğer ölmeleri gerekiyorsa, bunun bir suç olmasına izin verin. Bu içerikte, içerik açıklaması nasıl oluşturulacağı konusunda bilgi verilmektedir. İçerik açıklaması, bir içeriğin özeti niteliğinde olup, içeriğin ana konusunu, amaçlarını, hedef kitlesini ve sunulan bilgileri kısaca özetleyen bir metindir. İçerik açıklaması oluştururken içeriğin önemli noktalarına vurgu yapmak, okuyucunun ilgisini çekecek bilgiler vermek ve içeriğin genel yapısını anlatmak önemlidir. İçerik açıklamaları, kullanıcıların içeriği daha iyi anlamalarına ve içerik hakkında daha hızlı karar vermelerine yardımcı olur. Bu nedenle içerik oluştururken içerik açıklamasının da göz önünde bulundurulması önemlidir.
[ad 1]

#consensus #emerging #Israel #committing #genocide #Gaza #action #Nesrine #Malik

Kaynak: www.theguardian.com

A consensus is building. On 5 December, Amnesty International concluded after an investigation that “Israel has committed and is continuing to commit genocide against Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip”. A few days later, the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) stated that after research and analysis, it concluded that “there is a legally sound argument that Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza”.

A few days after that, Human Rights Watch (HRW) declared that “Israeli authorities are responsible for the crime against humanity of extermination and for acts of genocide”, and Médecins Sans Frontières reported that its medical “teams in the north of Gaza are seeing clear signs of ethnic cleansing”. Earlier in November, HRW also concluded that Israel’s actions in Gaza amounted to “war crimes” and “crimes against humanity”, and appeared to “also meet the definition of ethnic cleansing”.

Following the issuing of arrest warrants for Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant by the international criminal court (ICC), also in November, for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity, all these recent judgments end the year with an emphatic categorisation of the assault in Gaza as a violation of international law. They join the International Commission of Jurists and the UN in condemning Israel’s war. The country, and its head of state, are now, according to the courts and human rights organisations that make up the world’s legal and moral authorities, outlaws.

But the judgments, strong language and suggested measures echo in a vacuum: there is no enforcement. The US continues to defend Israel against an emerging global consensus and to arm it. Other supporters use the language of loopholes and riddles that we have become so accustomed to since the start of the war. The UK suspended a small portion of its arms exports, but insists that it remains a “staunch ally” of the country and would still engage with Netanyahu, but also would somehow still comply with its legal obligations. France came up with an impressive legal reading, stating that Netanyahu in fact enjoyed immunity as Israel was not a signatory to the ICC (a reading that would also extend immunity to Vladimir Putin and Omar al-Bashir).

Meanwhile, more evidence mounts that Gaza is undergoing not just a law-breaking, human rights-violating assault, but a historic one. According to Airwars, an organisation that monitors civilian casualties: “By almost every metric, the harm to civilians from the first month of the Israeli campaign in Gaza is incomparable with any 21st-century air campaign.” The view from several months of research efforts is supplemented by the confessions and testimonies of Israeli military personnel. The Israeli newspaper Haaretz featured accounts from IDF soldiers who served in Gaza, stating that civilians, even children, are being treated as combatants. The regime of arbitrary, even competitive killing, was described as “the wild west on steroids”.

These descriptions do not only capture legal and militaristic methods of engagement, they detail killing, starvation, maiming, torture and psychological trauma that is impossible to fathom.

How Israeli forces destroyed Gaza’s Jabaliya refugee camp – video analysis

These investigations reveal the permutations of pain that can be inflicted on a civilian population. Tiny broken bodies, rotting babies, flattened corpses, mass graves, levelled neighbourhoods and the wild, wild grief of the bereaved. It is a spectacle of slaughter. All unfolding in plain sight, livestreamed and posted by Palestinian citizens and journalists, witnessed by outsiders, and described by Israelis themselves.

Despite the overwhelming evidence we see before us, still nothing changes. The war continues. Things that appeared to be breakthroughs, such as the first hearing by the international court of justice (ICJ), now look like exercises in observation. It is profoundly disorienting, crushing even, to begin to feel that actors, no matter what criminal thresholds they breach, will not be stopped or held to justice.

But the failure is not in the descriptions of what is happening in Gaza. The failure, as Lina Mounzer wrote, is “of the rotten substructure of the world within which this language is meant to function”. The danger now is that Palestinians die twice, once in physical reality and second in a moral one where the powerful diminish the very standards that shape the world as we know it. By refusing even to accept the designations of genocide and ethnic cleansing, let alone act upon them, Israel’s allies force an adaptation on to the world after which it simply becomes accepted that rights are not bestowed by humanity, but by the parties who decide who is human.

Which is why the outrage must continue, even if it is reduced to note taking and report writing. Whatever semantic acrobatics are performed at podiums across Europe and the US, these reports document the fact that a crime is taking place. The rights of those in Gaza may have been vaporised on the ground, but they can be upheld in the public record. Whenever the war ends, those accounts will prevent, or at least compromise, attempts to rewrite history and deny atrocities.

As the murder continues, what stops it from being a perfect crime is that people remain on the scene, loudly call it murder, point to the culprit, say the names of the dead, mourn them, hold vigils, and fiercely protect their rights for restitution. When the time comes, Palestinians are owed a huge debt of reparations. A ledger of what they have been subjected to must be kept.

“If I must die,” wrote the Palestinian poet Refaat Alareer, who was killed early in the war on Gaza, “let it bring hope, let it be a tale.” That hope is also in not allowing death to pass merely as a fact. If they must die, let it be a crime.

A consensus is emerging: Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Where is the action? | Nesrine Malik
Yorum Yap

Yorumlar kapalı.