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Protests in Tel Aviv and Greens aim high

Protests in Tel Aviv and Greens aim high

NZ Herald3 days ago
NZ Herald Morning News Update | Protesters in Tel Aviv march in opposition to the Israeli government's occupation plan, and the Green Party aim high for the next election.
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Green's co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick to decide whether to apologise and return to Parliament
Green's co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick to decide whether to apologise and return to Parliament

RNZ News

time2 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Green's co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick to decide whether to apologise and return to Parliament

Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick will today decide whether she will return to Parliament and apologise, or continue to be barred from the House for the rest of the week. During an urgent debate on Tuesday, Swarbrick said government MPs could grow a spine and support her bill imposing sanctions on Israel. The Speaker suspended her from Parliament and said unless she apologises, he will do so again every day this week. Swarbrick said the party will follow the correct processes, and will ask the speaker to reflect on previous language in Parliament. She said she's angry people are being massacred in Gaza, and politicians need to do their job. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Plan to seize Gaza City tipped Australia's hand on state recognition
Plan to seize Gaza City tipped Australia's hand on state recognition

1News

time10 hours ago

  • 1News

Plan to seize Gaza City tipped Australia's hand on state recognition

Israel's plan to take over Gaza City helped spur Australia's decision to recognise a Palestinian state, the Prime Minister has revealed. Anthony Albanese on Monday confirmed Australia would join the UK, France and Canada in recognising Palestine at a United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York in September, following mounting pressure to take action to support the suffering people of Gaza. While the Federal Government had previously insisted that the recognition of Palestine was a matter of "when, not if", the announcement was a shift from those comments made less than two weeks prior. This was because Australia's decision was partially fuelled by the Israeli Government's decision on Friday to approve a plan to seize Gaza City, Albanese said. "We make assessments based upon the totality of what is before us," he told reporters in Melbourne on Tuesday. ADVERTISEMENT "The other thing that is occurring is... the decision by the Israeli Government to double down on its military solution... with the decision that they've made to go in and to occupy Gaza City. "We have seen too many innocent lives being lost. "The international community is saying that we need to stop the cycle of violence." In late July, Albanese stressed he would not be "driven by a time frame" on the recognition issue. But less than a week later, Foreign Minister Penny Wong revealed Australia was co-ordinating with other countries on the issue amid concerns "there will be no Palestine left to recognise". Recognition could be used to "isolate Hamas" — a line the Government has continued to lean on — she added, referring to the designated terrorist group that controlled Gaza and was in a fight to the death with Israel. Senator Wong has said practical steps for recognition would be tied to commitments made by the Palestinian Authority, which exercised partial civil control in the West Bank. ADVERTISEMENT The commitments included assurances that Hamas would play no role in any future government. More than 140 of the 193 United Nations member states already recognised Palestine. Australia Palestine Advocacy Network president Nasser Mashni has warned recognition was "nothing but a veneer that allows Israel to continue brutalising Palestinians". Opposition Leader Sussan Ley said the decision "does not deliver a two-state solution, it does not improve the flow of aid, it doesn't support the release of the hostages and it certainly doesn't put an end to the terrorist group Hamas". Former Liberal prime minister Scott Morrison, whose government controversially recognised West Jerusalem as Israel's capital before Labor reversed the decision, branded any recognition of Palestine as a "hollow gesture". The crisis in Gaza began when Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, killing 1200 people and taking about 250 hostage. Israel's military response has since killed more than 61,000 people, according to Gaza's health authorities. ADVERTISEMENT French President Emmanuel Macron praised Australia's decision. But Israel said recognition would be counterproductive to peace in the Gaza Strip and its demands for the release of the remaining hostages. More than two million Palestinians faced severe food insecurity, based on UN projections. Israel has denied the Gazan population was suffering or dying from starvation, even though it throttled the flow of aid to Gaza for months, international human rights groups have said.

Slaying And Censoring The Journalists: The Murder Of Anas Al-Sharif
Slaying And Censoring The Journalists: The Murder Of Anas Al-Sharif

Scoop

time14 hours ago

  • Scoop

Slaying And Censoring The Journalists: The Murder Of Anas Al-Sharif

'Assassination,' wrote George Bernard Shaw in The Shewing-Up of Blanco Posnet, 'is the extreme form of censorship'. Such extremism visited Al Jazeera journalist Anas al-Sharif and his colleagues in Gaza City late on August 10. Resting in a tent located outside the main gate of Gaza City's al-Shifa Hospital, he was killed alongside Al Jazeera correspondent Mohammed Qreiqeh, camera operators Ibrahim Zaher, Mohammed Noufal and Moamen Aliwa, and freelance reporter Mohammed al-Khaldi. Palestinian journalist Wadi Abu al-Saud recalls the drone attack taking place at 11.22pm. Having entered the tent opposite, he had raised his phone to make a call when an explosion occurred. 'A piece of shrapnel hit my phone. I looked back and saw people burning in flames. I tried to extinguish them. Anas and the others had died instantly from the airstrike.' In two subsequent videos, al-Saud vows to 'return to my life as a citizen. The truth has died and the coverage has ended.' IDF international spokesman Lt. Colonel Nadav Shoshani, straining verisimilitude, claimed that intelligence obtained prior to the strike proved that 'Sharif was an active Hamas military wing operative at the time of his elimination'. The reporter must have been frightfully busy then, able to juggle his tasks with Al Jazeera, filing news bulletins while playing the ambitious militant. But distinctions are meaningless for Shoshani, who went on to accuse the slain journalist of receiving 'a salary from the Hamas terror group and terrorist supporters, Al-Jazeera, at the same time.' Evidence is typically sketchy, but the Lt. Colonel was untroubled, as the 'declassified portion of our intelligence on al-Sharif' was merely small relative to the whole picture. That picture, the IDF contends, revealed Sharif's credentials as leader of a rocket-launching squad alongside membership of the Nukhba Force company in Hamas's East Jabalia Battalion. This proved far from convincing to Muhammed Shehada, analyst at the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, who made the solid, pertinent observation that al-Sharif's 'entire daily routine was standing in front of a camera from morning to evening.' Particularly troubling in this killing is that the IDF seemed to be laying the groundwork for justified assassination last month, when army spokesman Avichai Adraee reshared a video on social media making the accusation that al-Sharif was a member of Hamas's military wing. This proved chilling for the United Nations special rapporteur on freedom of expression, Irene Khan. 'Fears for al-Sharif's safety are well-founded as there is growing evidence that journalists in Gaza have been targeted and killed by the Israeli army on the basis of unsubstantiated claims that they are Hamas terrorists.' The Committee to Protect Journalists was suitably perturbed by Adraee's remarks to issue a demand last month that the 'international community' protect al-Sharif. 'This is not the first time Al-Sharif has been targeted by the Israeli military, but the danger to his life is now acute,' said CPJ Regional Director Sara Qudah. 'Israel has killed at least six Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza during the war. These latest unfounded accusations represent an effort to manufacture consent to kill Al-Sharif.' The other journalists killed in the strike are not deemed worthy of mention by the IDF, affirming the tendency in Israeli military doctrine to kill those around the designated target as a perfectly tolerable practice. Again, the rulebook of international humanitarian war is discarded in favour of a normalised murderousness. The rulebook has also been abandoned regarding journalists working in Gaza, conforming to a pattern of indifference to distinctions between militants or civilians in Israel's sanguinary targeting. By December 2023, the Committee to Protect Journalists was already declaring that the war in the Strip had been the deadliest ever recorded by the organisation for press members. (The number currently stands at over 190; the global total for 2020-23 was 165.) 'Israel is murdering the messengers,' concludes Qudah. 'Israel wiped out an entire news crew. It has made no claims that any of the other journalists were terrorists. That's murder. Plain and simple.' In a statement, Al Jazeera Media Network described the killings as 'yet another blatant and premeditated attack on press freedom.' The order to kill al-Sharif, 'one of Gaza's bravest journalists, and his colleagues, is a desperate attempt to silence the voices exposing the impending seizure and occupation of Gaza.' The murder of al-Sharif and his colleagues by Israeli forces constituted the effective wiping out of Al Jazeera's team, one of the few able to offer consistent, unsmothered coverage about the IDF's remorseless campaign in Gaza. Since the October 7, 2023 attacks by Hamas, Israel has prohibited foreign reporters from entering Gaza except under strict invigilation by the Israeli military. Those accompanied by the IDF have been at the mercy of Israeli selectiveness as to where to go and barred from speaking to Palestinians. In a note to be published in the event of his death, al-Sharif stated that he 'lived the pain in all its details', tasting 'grief and loss repeatedly'. This did not deter him from conveying 'the truth as it is, without distortion or misrepresentation, hoping that God would witness those who remained silent, those who accepted our killing, and those who suffocated our very breaths.' He also reflected on what images of sheer barbarity had failed to do, with 'the mangled bodies of our children and women' failing to move hearts or stop massacres. In dying along with his colleagues, al-Sharif had been butchered in a climate of hyper normalised violence, thinly veiled by the barbaric justifications of Israeli national security.

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