
UN Rapporteur Calls for Global Action to Stop ‘Genocide' in Gaza
Francesca Albanese spoke to delegates from 30 countries meeting in Colombia's capital to discuss the Israel-Hamas war and ways that nations can try to stop Israel's military offensive in the territory. Many of the participating nations have described the violence as genocide against the Palestinians.
'Each state must immediately review and suspend all ties with the State of Israel … and ensure its private sector does the same,' said Albanese, w ho was sanctioned by the U.S. earlier this month. 'The Israeli economy is structured to sustain the occupation that has now turned genocidal.'
The two-day conference organized by the governments of Colombia and South Africa is being attended mostly by developing nations, although the governments of Spain, Ireland and China have also sent delegates.
Israel, which was founded in the aftermath of the Holocaust, has adamantly rejected genocide allegations against it as an antisemitic 'blood libel.'
Analysts say it's not clear whether the conference's participating countries have enough leverage over Israel to force it to change its policies in Gaza, where more than 58,000 people have been killed in Israeli military operations following a deadly Hamas attack on Israel in 2023. The death toll comes from the health ministry, which is under Gaza's Hamas government and does not differentiate between civilians and combatants. The U.N. and other international organizations see its figures as the most reliable statistics on war casualties.
'The United States has so far failed to influence Israel's behavior … so it is naive to think that this group of countries can have any influence over (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu's behavior or on the government of Israel,' said Sandra Borda, a professor of international relations at Bogota's Los Andes University. She said, however, that the conference will enable some nations of the Global South to clarify their position toward the conflict and have their voices heard.
The conference is co-chaired by the governments of South Africa and Colombia, which last year suspended coal exports to Israeli power plants, and includes the participation of members of The Hague Group, a coalition of eight nations that earlier this year pledged to cut military ties with Israel and to comply with an International Criminal Court arrest warrant against Netanyahu.
Participating nations have said they are trying to comply with an I nternational Court of Justice opinion issued last year that said Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories is illegal. There is also a U.N. General Assembly resolution from September, which demands that Israel withdraw its military from Palestinian territories and calls on member nations to stop selling weapons to Israel.
'It's important that we stand up for the rule of law in a meaningful way,' said Chrispin Phiri, a spokesman for South Africa's Department of International Relations who is attending the conference in Bogota. 'This idea that international law … can only be enforced on counties of the global south is something that has become unsustainable.'
For decades, South Africa's ruling African National Congress party has compared Israel's policies in Gaza and the West Bank with its own history of oppression under the harsh apartheid regime of white minority rule, which restricted most Blacks to 'homelands' or Bantustans, before ending in 1994.
Albanese also brought up the comparison as she spoke to delegates in the conference, and urged them to impose sanctions on Israel until it withdraws from Gaza and the West Bank.
'I ask you to consider this moment as if we were sitting here in the 1990s, discussing the case of apartheid South Africa. Would you have proposed selective sanctions on South Africa for its conduct in individual Bantustans? Or would you have recognized the state's criminal system as a whole?' Albanese said.
The gathering comes as the European Union weighs various measures against Israel including a ban on imports from Israeli settlements, an arms embargo and individual sanctions against Israeli officials found to be blocking a peaceful solution to the conflict.
Colombia's Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs Mauricio Jaramillo said Monday that the nations participating in the Bogota meeting, which also include Qatar and Turkey, will be discussing diplomatic and judicial measures that can be taken to put more pressure on Israel to cease its attacks.
The Colombian official described Israel's conduct in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank as an affront to the international order.
'This is not just about Palestine,' Jaramillo said in a press conference. 'It is about defending international law … and the right to self determination.'
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Yomiuri Shimbun
15 hours ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Thailand and Cambodia Agree to Ceasefire Talks after Trump Steps in, but Border Clashes Persist
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Maly Socheata accused Thai forces of escalating the violence with bombardment of Cambodian territory early Sunday, followed by a 'large-scale incursion' involving tanks and ground troops in multiple areas. 'Such actions undermine all efforts toward peaceful resolution and expose Thailand's clear intent to escalate rather than de-escalate the conflict,' she said. Thailand on Sunday reported a new death of a soldier, bringing the total number of fatalities to 21, mostly civilians. Cambodia said 13 people have been killed. More than 131,000 people in Thailand have evacuated to safe locations and over 37,000 people fled from three Cambodian provinces. Many border villages are mostly deserted, with many schools and hospitals shut. Pichayut Surasit, an air-conditioning technician in Thailand, said the sudden outbreak of fighting meant leaving his work in Bangkok to return home to protect his family. 'I didn't have the heart to continue with my work when I heard the news. 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Japan Times
16 hours ago
- Japan Times
Israel declares Gaza fighting pause amid deepening hunger crisis
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The Mainichi
18 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Iranian ambassador visits east Japan atomic bomb museum, hears hibakusha testimonies
TOKYO -- Against a backdrop of heightened tensions between Iran and the United States with Israel over the former's nuclear facilities, Iran's Ambassador to Japan Peyman Saadat visited the Hachioji Peace and Atomic Bomb Museum in the Tokyo suburban city of Hachioji July 2, where he spoke with survivors of the August 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, viewed museum exhibits and shared his reflections. The museum, a rare facility outside of Japan's atomic-bombed cities, preserves and displays material related to nuclear bombings and is operated through the efforts of volunteers and public donations. Kozo Nagata, professor emeritus at Musashi University, a second-generation atomic bomb survivor and author of "Genbaku to haiku" (Atomic bombs and haiku), facilitated Saadat's request to visit through connections with museum staff. The diplomat's visit came amid ongoing international efforts for a diplomatic solution following the June attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities by Israeli and U.S. forces. Among those he met were Koji Ueda, 83, a "hibakusha" atomic bomb survivor now living in Hachioji, and Ken Nagamachi, 63, a second-generation survivor and son of the late Toshiteru Nagamachi, a former newspaper reporter and major donor to the museum. Ueda explained that after being evacuated, he returned with his mother and others to their home close to Hiroshima's ground zero, where he was exposed to the bomb's radiation. He recounted, "I heard from my mother and other survivors that there were people whose eyeballs popped out from the intense blast and had to cover them with their hands as they walked," adding, "There are survivors who continue to struggle emotionally as many had to shake off the hands of others clinging to their feet while fleeing toward the river and managed to survive." The group also discussed the preserved uniform and bloodstained shirt of Takeo Toshima, a first-year student at the former Hiroshima Second Middle School, who suffered the blast where students had been mobilized near the hypocenter on Aug. 6, 1945, and died the following day. Ken Nagamachi, Toshima's nephew, shared stories based on memories from his mother, Toshima's younger sister, saying, "My grandmother left her house about 7 kilometers away from the hypocenter and miraculously took Takeo, with his whole body severely burned, his face swollen and blinded, home. She cut off his shirt, which had fused to his skin, with scissors. After finishing singing the national anthem in his grandmother's arms, Takeo soon died. She treasured his school uniform, determined to convey the tragedy of the atomic bomb." Saadat commented, "I have long felt the need to meet hibakusha to learn more about the scourge of nuclear weapons. Seeing this uniform was a completely new experience. Every ambassador stationed in Tokyo, no matter from what country, should come to this museum to meet the hibakusha and see the uniform firsthand." (Japanese original by Megumi Nokura, Hachioji Bureau)