
Egyptian, Turkish FMs discuss Gaza ceasefire, mass graves in Libya
LONDON: Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty discussed developments in Gaza and Libya with his Turkish counterpart, Hakan Fidan.
The ministers, during a phone call on Sunday, highlighted the urgency of a ceasefire in Gaza and described the situation there as a 'humanitarian disaster' amid Israeli attacks and military actions in the area.
They discussed efforts to achieve a ceasefire, secure the release of Israeli hostages and ensure the delivery of humanitarian, medical and shelter aid to the enclave.
Abdelatty and Fidan discussed recent developments in Libya, including the discovery of dozens of bodies in mass graves in the capital, Tripoli.
The Egyptian minister highlighted Cairo's support for Libya's unity and integrity, ensuring that Libyans can hold presidential and parliamentary elections simultaneously, without interference, as soon as possible, Kuwait News Agency reported.
Abdelatty said that Cairo and Ankara continue to cooperate in the economic, investment and trade sectors, and exchange views on urgent regional matters.
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An Egyptian immigrant who had overstayed his visa in the US and was angry with Israel's killings in Gaza was last week arrested and charged with a hate crime after he threw firebombs at a pro-Israel rally in Boulder, Colorado. Americans are angry about the attack, which has been presented as another act of Arab and Muslim terrorism and an act of antisemitism because the targets were supporting the release of hostages held by Hamas in Gaza. The suspect, identified as Mohammed Sabry Soliman, told police after his capture that he was angry at what Israel and the 'Zionists' were doing to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. Soliman also told investigators that he wanted to 'kill all Zionist people and wished they were all dead,' according to court documents. No act of violence should be condoned or encouraged. Eight people suffered severe burns and were hospitalized as a result of the attack, during which Soliman yelled 'Free Palestine.' The attack is tragic in many ways. What Soliman did was wrong. Violence is never justifiable. Injuring innocent people over a political issue or government policies is immoral as well as illegal. The problem is that Americans are the biggest hypocrites when it comes to the rule of law. Americans are the worst when it comes to embracing consistent morality. Americans scream when someone commits an act of aggression against them, but are silent when their country's actions fuel acts of aggression against others. The hypocrisy of how Americans respond to violence is one of the greatest inhumanities in the world today. Soliman was clearly motivated by American hypocrisy over US policy in the Gaza Strip. When you examine the Arab-Israeli conflict honestly and fully, you can only conclude that America has been the major enabler of violence in the Middle East — but only in one direction: against any person or nation that challenges Israel. Americans rightly condemn Soliman for his act of violence. But they refuse to condemn Israel's government for its violence. Ray Hanania America funds Israel. America arms Israel. America protects Israel against attempts to punish it for its war crimes. America is complicit in Israel's killing of innocent people — women and children who are just as innocent as those injured by Soliman. Instead of addressing this hypocrisy by enforcing international law and the fundamental principles of morality fairly and across the board in all circumstances, Americans selectively decide who they should feel sorry for and who they should condemn. They rightly condemn Soliman for his act of violence. But they refuse to condemn Israel's government for its violence. In fact, Americans give Israel protection against criminal prosecution for violating the basic principles of the international rule of law. The International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for his war crimes in Gaza. But instead of enforcing this and arresting Netanyahu, America instead announced sanctions against members of the court. You cannot cry about crime when the victim is someone you sympathize with and ignore crime when the victim is someone you are helping to injure and kill. Most people in the world know this. I just returned from a tour through Europe and I was astounded by how much sympathy Europeans have for the Palestinian cause and how much anger they harbor toward Israel, which has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians in Gaza since Oct. 7, 2023. The killings continue every day. But the difference is, when an Egyptian blinded by anger and rage over the massacre of women and children in Gaza commits a heinous crime, Americans scream in outrage. But when an Israeli soldier intentionally shoots a female Arab journalist in the head or drops a bomb on a Gaza tent city, massacring dozens of starving civilians, Americans shrug their shoulders. Americans also apply certain terms differently. A 'hostage' is an Israeli who has been illegally captured by Palestinians. But the same word is not used to describe a Palestinian illegally captured by Israel. I am angry with what Soliman did. But my anger does not stop on the border with Israel. My anger goes beyond that one tragic and horrendous act of violence in Colorado to also reflect the inhumanity of the Israeli violence in Gaza, which is paid for by America. Justice must be for everyone, not just those we embrace politically.