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Madonna asks Pope Leo to visit Gaza 'before it's too late'

Madonna asks Pope Leo to visit Gaza 'before it's too late'

9 News12 hours ago
Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here Madonna has urged Pope Leo to visit Gaza in a humanitarian mission to help starving Palestinian children, saying "there is no more time." The American superstar, who was raised a Roman Catholic, pleaded with the new pontiff to visit the enclave in an Instagram post Monday and said: "Most Holy Father. Please go to Gaza and bring your light to the children before it's too late. As a mother, I cannot bear to watch their suffering. The children of the world belong to everyone. You are the only one of us who cannot be denied entry." Madonna has urged Pope Leo XIV to visit Gaza before it is "too late". (Getty) Madonna said she was calling on Leo to visit Gaza because "politics cannot affect change," but "consciousness can." In the post, published on her son Rocco's birthday, Madonna said the best gift she could give to him is "to ask everyone to do what they can to help save the innocent children caught in the crossfire in Gaza." CNN has reached out to the Vatican for comment. Since his papacy began in May, the pope has been robust in his criticisms of Israel's war in Gaza, consistently voicing his concern for Palestinian civilians facing Israeli bombardment. "I am following with great concern the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, where the civilian population is suffering from severe hunger and remains exposed to violence and death," he said in July, calling for a ceasefire. According to UNICEF, the United Nations' children's agency, more than 18,000 children have been killed in Gaza since the war began in October 2023. An average of 28 children have been killed a day there, the agency said last week. An Israeli blockade on aid to the enclave has resulted in what the World Health Organisation (WHO) has called "man-made mass starvation." Madonna said that she is "not pointing fingers, placing blame or taking sides." "Everyone is suffering. Including the mothers of the hostages. I pray that they are released as well," she said. Madonna issued a direct plea to Pope Leo on Instagram. (Getty Images for The Met Museum/) WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus responded to Madonna's post on Monday, thanking her for her "compassion, solidarity and commitment to care for everyone caught in the Gaza crisis, especially the children." "This is greatly needed. Humanity and peace must prevail," he said. At least 222 people – including 101 children – have died from malnutrition since the beginning of the war, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. Ramesh Rajasingham, the head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), told a UN security council meeting Sunday: "This is no longer a looming hunger crisis – this is starvation, pure and simple." Israel tightly controls the flow of aid and personnel to the enclave. In a rare instance in July, Israel allowed two church leaders to visit after Israel struck Gaza's sole Catholic church, killing three people and wounding several others. The church had served as a shelter for Gaza's tiny Christian community throughout nearly two years of war. Since then, Gaza's starvation crisis has deepened, with images of emaciated children causing global alarm. Palestinians collect humanitarian aid packages from the United Arab Emirates after they were airdropped into Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza Strip. (AP) "We need the humanitarian gates to be fully opened to save these innocent children," Madonna said. "There is no more time. Please say you will go," she wrote. Whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government would grant the pope entry to the enclave is not certain, but Madonna's appeal underlines growing condemnation of the 22-month war, which has caused tensions between Israel and its allies. Australia, Canada and France have announced plans to recognise a Palestinian state, with the United Kingdom conditionally saying last month that it will recognise a Palestinian state in September if Israel does not meet criteria that includes agreeing to a ceasefire in Gaza. Madonna's comments come as a growing number of artists, including Massive Attack, Brian Eno and most recently U2, have highlighted the humanitarian situation in Gaza. During a performance in late 2023, Madonna also criticised the Hamas-led October 7 attacks on Israel, and Israel's military response. She called the war "heartbreaking." Palestine
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Aaron Patrick: Penny Wong can't answer the pivotal question about Gaza
Aaron Patrick: Penny Wong can't answer the pivotal question about Gaza

West Australian

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Aaron Patrick: Penny Wong can't answer the pivotal question about Gaza

When Foreign Minister Penny Wong was asked the pivotal question about her Government's recognition of a Palestinian state - why would Hamas give up power? - the woman who spent more than a year working on a historic shift in Australian policy had no answer. 'I speak for Australia,' she told Sarah Ferguson on the 7.30 program Monday evening. 'We are working to deliver a change in the cycle of violence that we have seen, and to work with others to try and provide some hope in what has been a very dark time.' Senator Wong, though, was clearer about another crucial point: Australia's recognition is not conditional on any actions by the Palestinians. The decision has been made, come what may. There was a different emphasis earlier Monday, when Anthony Albanese referred to the 'conditions' he had placed upon the Palestinian Authority's leader, Mahmoud Abbas. The Prime Minister said Mr Abbas had promised to reform the corrupt but largely compliant institution, which Australia will, in a month's time, consider represents a new country, the State of Palestine. 'And the conditions are ones that are consistent with the declaration in June, that recognition of the State of Israel, which of course the Palestinian Authority would argue had occurred with the Oslo Accords,' Mr Albanese said. He was referring to a letter sent in June by Mr Abbas to French President Emmanuel Macron that said: 'Hamas will no longer rule Gaza and must hand over its weapons and military capabilities to the Palestinian Security Forces.' Mr Abbas said he was 'ready to invite Arab and international forces to be deployed as part of a stabilisation/protection mission with a (UN) Security Council mandate'. In other words, the nominal Palestinian leader was asking for the international community to give him the Gaza Strip, from which the Palestinian Authority was violently ejected in 2007. Rather than the agreement towards peace Mr Albanese portrayed the conversation as, Mr Abbas seems to have repeated the offer he made to Mr Macron. On Monday, two months after the French president posted Mr Abbas' Hamas denunciation on X, Mr Albanese claimed credit: 'This is one of the commitments Australia has sought – and received – from President Abbas and the Palestinian Authority.' Mr Albanese's grasp of the intricacies of Middle East politics, and geography, has been questioned by people who have discussed the region with him in private. On Tuesday, appearing on the Sunrise program, he did not appear to know or remember that Israel abuts the Mediterranean Sea. 'Hamas don't support two states,' he said. 'They support one state. In their own words, 'from the river to the sea', from the Jordan river to the ocean.' In the US, a Democratic diplomatic veteran of the conflict did not agree with the switch. Former US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said recognising a Palestinian state before Hamas was removed 'would fortify proponents of terror on the Palestinian side and rejectionists of Palestinian statehood on the Israeli side.' Mr Albanese and Ms Wong say their decision was influenced by a call from 22 Arab countries on July 31 for Hamas to stop fighting and release its hostages. As anti-Israel fervour swept through the streets of the Western world, the Arab position was seen as tacit recognition of Hamas's responsibility for the war. The Arab's position showed that Hamas is being isolated, and a combination of Western pressure on Israel's right-wing government and international support for the Palestinian Authority could help remove it from power, end the violence in Gaza and bring peace closer, Mr Albanese and Ms Wong argued. 'We need to make sure that Hamas is isolated,' the Prime Minister said on Monday. 'The comments by Arab League nations have made it clear that that is their position as well.' There's an important problem with the position. Hamas is not an Arab-sponsored organisation. It is funded by Iran, the Persian power seen as a destabilising force across the Middle East by most Arab leaders. Iran's Islamist leaders are extreme anti-Semites impervious to Arab pressure. Why they would stop funding their Hamas proxies in a war against what they call the Zionist Entity is unclear. Without Iranian pressure, why Hamas's remaining leaders would retire from war and politics is a question not even Australia's formidable Foreign Minister could answer. Amid arguments about the pros and cons of international recognition, less symbolic steps towards peace seem to be happening. A regional media outlet, Sky News Arabia, reported Egypt, Qatar and Turkey are drawing up a cease-fire and hostage-release for consideration by Hamas. The deal would require the release of all hostages, and the bodies of some who have died, in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. The Israeli army would move to less aggressive posture and Hamas fighters would pause attacks while negotiations were held for a permanent cease-fire. The impetus for the renewed peace effort appears to be a desire to avoid another mass Israeli incursion into Gaza, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu foreshadowed on Sunday. Which suggests that, sadly, violence rather than talk can bring an opponent to the negotiating table.

ABC and the Guardian labelled ‘antisemitic' for leftist views
ABC and the Guardian labelled ‘antisemitic' for leftist views

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ABC and the Guardian labelled ‘antisemitic' for leftist views

Sky News host Danica De Giorgio and contributor Will Kingston discussed the Albanese government's recognition of a Palestinian state amid allegations of media bias and antisemitism related to Israeli actions and Hamas. 'There's an obvious answer and a less obvious answer; the obvious answer is that most of the media is of the left and the left is aggressively anti-Israel,' Mr Kingston said. 'I think there are journalists within the ABC and the Guardian who aren't just anti-Israel, they are antisemitic. 'I don't think that the left throughout this conflict has been able to comprehend that Hamas and indeed many people who hold the Islamic faith across the Middle East, do not think like us, they don't have a Western liberal world view, the concept of human rights is foreign to them.'

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