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Israeli finance minister calls for Palestinian villages to be ‘flattened' after pregnant woman shot dead in West Bank

Israeli finance minister calls for Palestinian villages to be ‘flattened' after pregnant woman shot dead in West Bank

Irish Times15-05-2025

Members of
Israeli
prime minister
Binyamin Netanyahu
's coalition have called for West Bank Palestinian villages to be 'flattened' after a Jewish woman was shot and killed while on the way to a hospital delivery room for the birth of her fourth child.
Doctors were unable to save the life of Tzeela Gez (37) from the northern West Bank settlement of Bruchin but performed a Caesarean section and delivered her baby. The baby was described as being in serious but stable condition. The child's father, who was driving Ms Gez to the hospital, was lightly hurt.
The shooting took place amid one of the largest Israeli military operations in the occupied West Bank in two decades.
Israeli soldiers launched a manhunt for the attacker, sealing off the nearby Palestinian villages. The army said five militants were killed in exchanges of fire in separate incidents in two West Bank villages.
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Mr Netanyahu said he was deeply shocked by the attack. 'This despicable event reflects exactly the difference between us – those who cherish and bring life, and the despicable terrorists whose life's goal is to kill us and cut short lives.'
President Yitzhak Herzog said the attack was 'a spine-chilling, horrific act of terror that shakes us to the core. At the very moment life was about to begin – life was taken in the most brutal way.'
Finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, leader of the far-right Religious Zionist party, said that the cruelty of the 'subhuman' attackers is 'inconceivable'.
'Just as we are flattening Rafah, Khan Younis and Gaza, we have to flatten the terror hubs in Judea and Samaria,' he said, using a biblical name for the West Bank. 'The village of Bruqin near where the attack took place must be like the destroyed neighbourhoods in the Gaza Strip.'
Other right-wing coalition members blamed the army for removing occupied West Bank roadblocks that had prevented Palestinian drivers using roads near settlements.
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Opposition parliamentarian Ram Ben Barak rejected the calls to flatten Palestinian villages. 'Israel's greatest mistake, for 60 years, is the belief that the violent conflict with the Palestinians can be managed and does not have to be resolved.'
Hamas praised the attack as a 'heroic' response to Israel's 'escalating crimes and ongoing aggression against our people in Gaza and the occupied West Bank'.
Hundreds of Palestinians and dozens of Israelis have been killed in a surge in violence in the West Bank since the start of the war in Gaza, which was triggered by Hamas's deadly attack on southern Israel on October 7th, 2023.
Palestinian residents have reported a wave of attacks by armed settlers on Palestinian property, cars and olive groves which rarely results in prosecution by the Israeli police.
About 700,000 settlers live in 160 communities across the West Bank. The settlements are considered illegal by the vast majority of the international community. – Additional reporting: Reuters

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Genocide in Gaza: three new books take stock
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Irish Times

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Genocide in Gaza: three new books take stock

Genocide in Gaza: Israel's Long War on Palestine Author : Avi Shlaim ISBN-13 : 978-1739090227 Publisher : Irish Pages Press Guideline Price : £18 Fintan Drury Author : Catastrophe: Nakba II ISBN-13 : 978-1785375590 Publisher : Irish Academic Press Guideline Price : €18.99 The Gaza Catastrophe: The Genocide in World-Historical Perspective Author : Gilbert Achcar ISBN-13 : 978-1849250917 Publisher : Saqi Books Guideline Price : £16.99 The charge of genocide against Israel over its war in Gaza (officially, but not widely, known as ' Operation Iron Swords ') has been laid since the earliest days of the conflict in October 2023. For a long time Israel and its defenders have dismissed the charges as strident, unserious or mischievous, even or perhaps especially, after South Africa brought a genocide case against Binyamin Netanyahu 's government at the International Criminal Court later that year, a case which Joe Biden and his secretary of state Antony Blinken both described as 'meritless' . Despite the mounting evidence of a willingness and desire to exterminate Gazans coming from both Israeli soldiers on active duty and senior members of society, who have been issuing declarations with all the rhetorical discipline of a post-pub social media user, there are still those who tut away, like high-minded broadsheet opinion columnists desperate to plumb a line somewhere down the middle, at the notion that Israel could possibly be carrying out a genocide. British-Israeli historian Avi Shlaim cites a litany of calls for massacres from Israeli politicians, entertainers and members of the public in his book Genocide in Gaza: Israel's Long War on Palestine. These range from exhortations to leave 'not a stone upon a stone' in Gaza, to 'turn Gaza into a parking lot' and to 'exterminate the roaches'. It's more than just a few bad eggs. Shlaim himself admits he was initially wary of using the term 'genocide' but now has little compunction in putting it in the title of a collection of essays and introductions that appears to take over from where his similar 2009 volume, Israel and Palestine, left off. The two other books under review here similarly mention either 'genocide' or ' Nakba ' in their titles. READ MORE Whether the serious centrist voices like it or not, the charge is very much out in the open now. These essays, which date back to just after 'Operation Cast Lead' in 2008-09, plot the deterioration of the Oslo Accords, as Israel was allowed to carry on as before in its construction of West Bank settlements, while the Palestinians made tangible, and painful, concessions. Netanyahu's Likud, the heir of the extreme maximalist Zionist Ze'ev Jabotinsky, cannibalised the Israeli body politic to make the country its ideological fief over the past five decades. Israel is now Jabotinsky's land, more than eight decades after his death. Shlaim shrewdly notes that Ehud Barak's comment that 'there is no Palestinian partner for peace' after the collapse of the Camp David summit in 2000 effectively finished Labor off as an electoral force, as it told Israelis they might as well now vote for the hard-right party bent on war. 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His contention that the genocide in Gaza will be a second Nakba is persuasive, not least because the death toll has already far outstripped that suffered by Palestinians in 1947-1949. Even if Donald Trump 's wild plans for real estate deals in Gaza are unlikely to have legs, the licence given to Israel to try to empty the exclave of its inhabitants looks like it could materialise. Drury is also rightly scathing of the failures of many western media outlets, particularly the BBC , in their default willingness to accept the Israeli line during the war (though such obliging coverage does appear to be belatedly abating in recent months). Some of the western governments that effectively countenanced the destruction of Gaza on account of the horror of the Hamas attacks have also begun to waver of late, but Drury is in no doubt that their culpability is long-established. [ Inside the tunnel underneath Gaza hospital where Hamas commander allegedly met his death Opens in new window ] Drury is unfortunately let down at times by careless editing: the prose needs tightening in places, with a number of hapless syntactic repetitions, and there are also factual infelicities – the 2015 Charlie Hebdo attacks did not take place 'almost two decades ago' and Tony Benn, whom Drury cites, was not speaking about the war with Iraq in the House of Commons in February 1998 but rather registering his opposition to the expected imminent allied bombing of Iraq, which ultimately didn't take place until 10 months later. It might seem like churlish nit-picking to point these out but they do contribute to an overall impression of a slipshod production that mars what is at times an engaging read. Gilbert Achcar's The Gaza Catastrophe is, like Shlaim's book, a collection of essays published over the past two decades combined with newer reflections written since the start of the war. Achcar, a Franco-Lebanese former professor of international relations at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, offers the best of these three books, written in a lively, often withering style, and providing a left-wing materialist perspective that has faded in prominence in the Arab world in recent times. The earlier essays cover the election of Hamas in 2006, Israel's manoeuvrings in exploiting peace talks following the occupation of the West Bank in 1967, and also what he calls the misuse of Holocaust memory, in a foreshadowing of Pankaj Mishra's recent The World After Gaza. [ One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This and The World after Gaza: holding the West to account Opens in new window ] The more recent ones are incisive, particularly in his assessment of Netanyahu, who, Achcar says, is not perpetuating the war simply to keep himself in power and out of prison (though that is a consideration) but because he is a true believer in the expulsion of Gazans and the annexation of the West Bank. For Netanyahu, the overarching historical stakes greatly outweigh even his own personal interest. Achcar, like Shlaim, sees the current Israeli government as fascist, and goes even further, calling it 'Nazi'. This might be a rhetorical exaggeration, but one he presumes is necessary to set it apart from other governments in the 'Neofascist International' he mentions, given Israel's wanton barbarism and cruelty in its war on Gaza. The war, for Achcar, is 'indisputably the worst episode in the Palestinian people's long ordeal', far worse than the 1948 Nakba, to such an extent that he suggests using a stronger Arabic word for catastrophe, Karitha, to name it. Like many contemporary observers, Achcar is terminally pessimistic about the fate of Gaza, seeing it as prey to two scenarios: a second, more final Nakba, or a mediated Oslo-style situation, which, like the original one, will benefit only Israel anyway. The authors of all three books are unequivocal in their disgust at the Hamas and Islamic Jihad attacks on Israel on October 7th. However, each places it in the context of what Palestinians and particularly the people of Gaza have endured over decades, the cynical dispossession, the rampant poverty and the enforced humiliations of living under an apartheid system in the West Bank. There are also nuances proffered that will sit uneasily with and perhaps outrage some readers. 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Hamas says it shot dead 12 fighters of Israel-backed Gazan militia

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The Irish Independent's View: Israeli strikes on Iran spawn another dark chapter for war-torn Middle East
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