logo
150 (And Rising) Aotearoa Writers Demand Immediate Gaza Ceasefire

150 (And Rising) Aotearoa Writers Demand Immediate Gaza Ceasefire

Scoop21-07-2025
Today an open letter was sent to Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters from 150 of Aotearoa's writers, demanding they take urgent action regarding the atrocities in Gaza.
'We ask all people to join in our call for compassion, for reason and for mediation.
'For the over 57,000 Gazans killed, and for the survivors — starving, wounded, and scarred for life:
1. We demand the immediate unrestricted distribution of food and medical aid throughout Gaza by the UN.
2. We demand that sanctions be imposed on the State of Israel if the Israeli government does not heed this call, which is also the world's call, for an immediate ceasefire.
3. We demand a ceasefire which guarantees safety and justice for all Palestinians, the release of all Israeli hostages, and the release of the thousands of Palestinian prisoners arbitrarily held in Israeli jails.'
'This genocide implicates us all. We bear witness to the crimes of genocide, and we refuse to approve them by our silence.'
The full letter and list of signatories are below.
For more information, contact Mandy Hager, 027 5053020 or email mandy.hager72@gmail.com
Background:
In May 2025, 380 UK and Irish writers signed an open letter calling for an end to the genocide. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0qgpve3qzgo The UK writers generously shared their wording, which, in turn, was adapted from a similar open letter drafted by France's writers. All the signatories refuse to be bystander-approvers as crimes of war and crimes against humanity are committed daily by the Israeli Defence Forces, at the command of the government of the State of Israel, amounting to genocide.
The host of the open letter, Mandy Hager, says, 'we will continue to gather names and update the list, in order to keep up pressure on our government to speak out and act in accordance with UN Human Rights legislation, and to show our support for the Palestinian people caught up in this horror.'
Those authors/writers who wish to add their names, can see the post at: https://mandyhager.com/2025/07/07/a-demand-for-an-immediate-gaza-ceasefire-join-me-in-an-open-letter/
The letter:
We, the undersigned writers of Aotearoa New Zealand, ask our government and the peoples of the world to join us in ending our collective silence and inaction in the face of horror.
Eighteen months ago, the Palestinian poet Hiba Abu Nada was killed by Israeli airstrikes. In her poem 'A Star Said Yesterday,' she imagined for the people of Gaza a cosmic refuge — something utterly unlike the constant lethal danger they now face:
'And if one day, O Light
All the galaxies
Of the entire universe
Had no more room for us
You would say: 'Enter my heart,
There you will finally be safe.'
The government of Israel has renewed its assault on Gaza with unrestrained brutality, including the recent abhorrent killing of hundreds of people as they queue up for food in a mockery of humanitarian aid. Public statements by Israeli ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir openly express genocidal intentions. The use of the words 'genocide' or 'acts of genocide' to describe what is happening in Gaza is no longer debated by international legal experts or human rights organizations. Amnesty International, Médecins Sans Frontières, Human Rights Watch, the International Federation for Human Rights, the United Nations Human Rights Council, and many other specialists and historians have clearly identified genocide or acts of genocide in Gaza, enacted by the Israel Defence Force and directed by the government of Israel.
On behalf of the UN, and published by the office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights, over 40 Special Rapporteurs and independent experts recently concluded: 'While States debate terminology — is it or is it not genocide? — Israel continues its relentless destruction of life in Gaza, through attacks by land, air and sea, displacing and massacring the surviving population with impunity,' the experts said. 'No one is spared — not the children, persons with disabilities, nursing mothers, journalists, health professionals, aid workers, or hostages. Since breaking the ceasefire, Israel has killed hundreds of Palestinians, many daily — peaking on 18 March 2025 with 600 casualties in 24 hours, 400 of whom were children.'
Palestinians are not the abstract victims of an abstract war. Too often, words have been used to justify the unjustifiable, deny the undeniable, defend the indefensible. Too often, too, the right words — the ones that mattered — have been eradicated, along with those who might have written them.
The term 'genocide' is not a slogan. It carries legal, political, and moral responsibilities. Just as it is true to call the atrocities committed by Hamas against innocent civilians on 7 October 2023 crimes of war and crimes against humanity, so today it is true to name the attack on the people of Gaza an atrocity of genocide, with crimes of war and crimes against humanity, committed daily by the Israeli Defence Forces, at the command of the government of the State of Israel.
Recently, Alexis Deswaef, vice-president of International Federation of Human Rights and a lawyer at the International Criminal Court, recalled the concept of the 'bystander-approver,' drawn from the special tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. It refers to a senior official who looks on, remains silent, and whose silence is interpreted as a green light by the perpetrators.
We refuse to be a public of bystander-approvers. This is not only about our common humanity and all human rights; this is about our moral fitness as the writers of our time, which diminishes with every day we refuse to speak out and denounce this crime.
In taking this stand, we assert without reservation our absolute opposition to and loathing of antisemitism, of anti-Jewish and anti-Israeli prejudice. We reject and abhor attacks, hate and violence — in writing, speech and action — against Palestinian, Israeli, and Jewish people in all and any form. We stand in solidarity with the resistance of Palestinian, Jewish, and Israeli people to the genocidal policies of the current Israeli government.
We ask all people to join in our call for compassion, for reason and for mediation. For Hiba, for the over 57,000 Gazans killed, and for the survivors — starving, wounded, and scarred for life:
1. We demand the immediate unrestricted distribution of food and medical aid throughout Gaza by the UN.
2. We demand that sanctions be imposed on the State of Israel if the Israeli government does not heed this call, which is also the world's call, for an immediate ceasefire.
3. We demand a ceasefire which guarantees safety and justice for all Palestinians, the release of all Israeli hostages, and the release of the thousands of Palestinian prisoners arbitrarily held in Israeli jails.
This genocide implicates us all. We bear witness to the crimes of genocide, and we refuse to approve them by our silence.
Signed:
Dame Fiona Kidman
Dr Patricia Grace
Harriet Allan
Marilyn Duckworth
Fleur Beale
Dr Pip Adam
Catherine Chidgey
Tina Makereti
Lawrence Patchett
Brannavan Gnanalingam
Elspeth Sandys
Kapka Kassobova
Bill Manhire
Laurence Fearnley
Claire Mabey
Emma Neale
James Norcliffe
Kirsten McDougall
Marian Evans
Jo Randerson
Tim Corballis
Gavin Strawham
Courtney Sina Meredith
Chris Tse
Emma Hislop
Damien Wilkins
Briar Grace-Smith
Rebecca Macfie
Eirlys Hunter
Catherine Robertson
Whiti Hereaka
Jane Arthur
Phillipa Werry
Mandy Hager
Dr Debbie Hager
Nicky Hager
Chris Price
Nadine Hura
Jeffrey Paparoa Holman
Paul Maunder
Tusiata Avia
Hinemoana Baker
Dr Thom Conroy
Dr. Kirsty Baker
Andrea Bosshard
Rebecca Priestley
Gayna Veter
Mia Farlane
Kristen Phillips
Jared Davidson
Bill Nagelkerke
Maria Gill
Mark Derby
Lucy Wilson
Angelique Praat
Romesh Dissanayake
Pamela Gordon
Sylvan Spring
Lois Cox
Hilary Lapsley
Saige England (Palestinian Solidarity
Network of Aotearoa)
Sacha Cotter
Kathleen Gallagher
Anne Bennett-Eustace
Josh Morgan
Gail Ingram
Tim Jones
Latika Vasil
Harvey Molloy
Roly Andrews
Jordan Hamel
Brigid Feehan
Freya Daly Sadgrove
Always Becominging
Ash Davida Jane
Joan Fleming
Cello Forrester
Rose Lu
Nic Low
Olive Nuttall
Lynn Jenner
Sarah Jane Barnett
Toby Boraman
Geoff Palmer
Gina Cole
Michelle Elvy
Alison Glenny
Ingrid Horrocks
Tom Doig
Kate Duignan
Lynn Davidson
Tihema Baker
Carolyn McCurdie
Madeleine Slavick
Marilyn Garson
Cybèle Locke
Sally Blundell
Kim Hunt
Emma Barnes
Anna Jackson
Michaela Kebble
Peter J King
Andrea Christofidou
Vana Manasiadis
Sue Wootton
Ya-Wen Ho
Kanya Stewart
Paul Panckhurst
A.J. Ponder
Janet Charman
Paula Green
Bridie Lonie
Ariana Tikao
Marty Smith
Sue Fitchett
Miriam Saphira CNZM
Dr Miriam Larsen-Barr
Diane Brown
Philip Temple
Margo Montes de Oca
Tracey Slaughter
Gregory O'Brien
Jenny Bornholdt
Amanda Hunt
Loren Taylor
Cherllisha Silva
Fiona Lovatt
Christine Leunens
Claire Orchard
Melanie Koster
Miriama Gemmell
Sharon Lam
Ian Wedde
Nola Borrell
Jiaqiao Liu
Tokorima Taihuringa
Kate Evans
Modi Deng
Erik Kennedy
Melinda Szymanik
Ronnie Smart
Eva Wyles
Trevor Hayes
Elena de Roo
Michelle Duff
Michalia Arathimos
Caren Wilton
Mark Forman
Kyle Mewburn
Craig Cliff
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says Gazans starving, contradicting Netanyahu
Trump says Gazans starving, contradicting Netanyahu

Otago Daily Times

time2 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Trump says Gazans starving, contradicting Netanyahu

US President Donald Trump said on Monday many people were starving in Gaza and suggested Israel could do more on humanitarian access, as Palestinians struggled to feed their children a day after Israel declared steps to improve supplies. As the death toll from two years of war in Gaza nears 60,000, a growing number of people are dying from starvation and malnutrition, Gaza health authorities say, with images of starving children shocking the world and fuelling international criticism of Israel over sharply worsening conditions. Describing starvation in Gaza as real, Trump's assessment put him at odds with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said on Sunday "there is no starvation in Gaza" and vowed to fight on against the Palestinian militant group Hamas - a statement he reposted on X on Monday. Trump, speaking during a visit to Scotland, said Israel has a lot of responsibility for aid flows, and that a lot of people could be saved. "You have a lot of starving people," he said. "We're going to set up food centres," with no fences or boundaries to ease access, Trump said. The US would work with other countries to provide more humanitarian assistance to the people of Gaza, including food and sanitation, he said. A White House spokesperson said additional details on the food centres would be "forthcoming." "WHEN YOU GO TO BED HUNGRY, YOU WAKE UP HUNGRY" On Monday, the Gaza health ministry said at least 14 people had died in the past 24 hours of starvation and malnutrition, bringing the war's death toll from hunger to 147, including 88 children, most in just the last few weeks. Israel announced several measures over the weekend, including daily humanitarian pauses to fighting in three areas of Gaza, new safe corridors for aid convoys, and airdrops. The decision followed the collapse of ceasefire talks on Friday. Wessal Nabil from Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza described the struggle of trying to feed her three children. "When you go to bed hungry, you wake up hungry. We distract them with anything ... to make them calm down," she told Reuters. "I call on the world, on those with merciful hearts, the compassionate, to look at us with compassion, to be kind to us, to stand with us until aid comes in and ensure it reaches us." Two Israeli defence officials said the international pressure prompted the new Israeli measures, as did the worsening conditions on the ground. UN agencies said a long-term and steady supply of aid was needed. The World Food Programme said 60 trucks of aid had been dispatched - short of target. Almost 470,000 people in Gaza are enduring famine-like conditions, with 90,000 women and children in need of specialist nutrition treatments, it said. "Our target at the moment, every day is to get 100 trucks into Gaza," WFP Regional Director for the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe, Samer Abdel Jaber, told Reuters. Jan Egeland, head of the Norwegian Refugee Council, told Reuters the situation is catastrophic. "At this time, children are dying every single day from starvation, from preventable disease. So time has run out." Netanyahu has denied any policy of starvation towards Gaza, saying aid supplies would be kept up whether Israel was negotiating a ceasefire or fighting. A spokesperson for COGAT, the Israeli military aid coordination agency, said Israel had not placed a time limit on the humanitarian pauses in its military operation, a day after UN aid chief Tom Fletcher said Israel had decided 'to support a one-week scale-up of aid". "We hope this pause will last much longer than a week, ultimately turning into a permanent ceasefire,' Fletcher's spokesperson, Eri Kaneko, said on Monday. Netanyahu's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Compared to last week, UN spokesperson Farhan Haq said, there had only been a "small uptick" in the amount of aid being transported into Gaza since Israel started the humanitarian pauses. TRUMP SAYS HAMAS DIFFICULT TO DEAL WITH In his statement on Sunday, Netanyahu said Israel would continue to fight until it achieved the release of remaining hostages held by Hamas and the destruction of its military and governing capabilities. Trump said Hamas had become difficult to deal with in recent days, but he was talking with Netanyahu about "various plans" to free hostages still held in the enclave. The war began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas militants attacked communities across the border in southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people and taking another 251 hostage, according to Israeli tallies. The Gaza health ministry said that 98 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire in the past 24 hours. Some of the trucks that made it into Gaza were seized by desperate Palestinians, and some by armed looters, witnesses said. "Currently aid comes for the strong who can race ahead, who can push others and grab a box or a sack of flour. That chaos must be stopped and protection for those trucks must be allowed," said Emad, 58, who used to own a factory in Gaza City. The WFP said it has 170,000 metric tons of food in the region, outside Gaza, which would be enough to feed the whole population for the next three months if it gets the clearance to bring into the enclave. COGAT said more than 120 truckloads of aid were distributed in Gaza on Sunday by the UN and international organizations. More aid was expected on Monday. Qatar said it had sent 49 trucks that arrived in Egypt en route for Gaza. Jordan and the United Arab Emirates airdropped supplies. Israel cut off aid to Gaza from the start of March in what it said was a means to pressure Hamas into giving up dozens of hostages it still holds, and reopened aid with new restrictions in May. Hamas accuses Israel of using hunger as a weapon. Israel says it abides by international law but must prevent aid from being diverted by militants, and blames Hamas for the suffering of Gaza's people.

Trump warns of ‘real starvation' in Gaza as aid deliveries pick up
Trump warns of ‘real starvation' in Gaza as aid deliveries pick up

NZ Herald

time3 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Trump warns of ‘real starvation' in Gaza as aid deliveries pick up

Trump's remarks came after Netanyahu, during a reception on Sunday for Trump's spiritual adviser Paula White-Cain in Jerusalem, declared: 'There is no starvation in Gaza, no policy of starvation in Gaza.' US food centres The United States already backs food centres under the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), but the group's high-security operations have been criticised after repeated incidents in which Israeli troops have reportedly fired on civilians near its distribution points. Trump said the UK and European Union would back the new effort, and that the new food centres would be easier to access – 'where the people can walk in, and no boundaries'. 'It's crazy what's going on over there,' he added. The war in Gaza has dragged on for almost 22 months, creating a dire humanitarian crisis only exacerbated by an Israeli blockade on supplies imposed from March to late May. The easing of the blockade coincided with the beginning of the GHF's operations, which effectively sidelined Gaza's traditionally UN-led aid distribution system and have been criticised as grossly inadequate. In recent days, the UN and humanitarian agencies have begun delivering more truckloads of food after the Israeli military declared a daily 'tactical pause' in the fighting and opened secure aid routes amid mounting international outrage over hunger in the territory. Jamil Safadi said he had been getting up before dawn for two weeks to search for food, and Monday was his first success. 'For the first time, I received about five kilos of flour, which I shared with my neighbour,' said the 37-year-old, who shelters with his wife, six children and a sick father in a tent in Tel al-Hawa. Other Gazans were less fortunate. Some complained aid trucks had been stolen or that guards had fired at them near US-backed distribution centres. 'I saw injured and dead people. People have no choice but to try daily to get flour. What entered from Egypt was very limited,' said 33-year-old Amir al-Rash. Israel's new tactical pauses apply only to certain areas, and Gaza's civil defence agency reported 54 people killed in Israeli attacks on Monday (local time). The Israeli Defence Ministry's civil affairs agency, COGAT, said the UN and aid organisations had been able to pick up 120 truckloads of aid on Sunday and distribute it inside Gaza, with more on the way on Monday. Basic supplies Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have begun airdropping aid packages into Gaza, while Egypt has sent trucks through its Rafah border crossing to an Israeli post just inside the territory. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, cautiously welcomed Israel's recent moves but warned Gaza needed at least 500 to 600 trucks of basic food, medicine and hygiene supplies daily. 'Opening all the crossings and flooding Gaza with assistance is the only way to avert further deepening of starvation among the people of Gaza,' UNRWA said. Netanyahu has denied Israel was deliberately starving civilians, but on Monday two local rights groups, B'Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights, accused the country of 'genocide' – a first for Israeli NGOs. Israel has said the UN should quickly make use of the pauses in fighting and secure aid routes. 'More consistent collection and distribution by UN agencies and international organisations equals more aid reaching those who need it most in Gaza,' said COGAT. But the amount of aid entering the territory still falls far short of what is needed, say experts, who have called for a permanent ceasefire, the reopening of more border crossings and a long-term, large-scale humanitarian operation. 'We're one-and-a-half days into these new measures. Saying whether or not it is making a difference on the ground will take time,' Olga Cherevko, a spokeswoman for the UN's humanitarian agency, told AFP from Gaza, where the buzz of drones could be heard overhead. 'We know it's not perfect but we want to stay positive and we're seeing positive steps, because, for example, even the fact that all the requests to go and collect cargo yesterday were approved is already a step in the right direction.' Indirect truce talks between Israel and Hamas – mediated by Egypt, Qatar and the United States – have faltered, and Netanyahu remains determined to push on with the campaign to destroy Hamas and recover Israeli hostages held in Gaza. The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas' October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Israel's retaliatory campaign has killed 59,921 Palestinians, also mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory. - Agence France-Presse

Trump warns Russia: End Ukraine war in 12 days or face sanctions
Trump warns Russia: End Ukraine war in 12 days or face sanctions

NZ Herald

time3 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Trump warns Russia: End Ukraine war in 12 days or face sanctions

'I really felt it was going to end. But every time I think it's going to end he kills people. 'I'm not so interested in talking [to him] anymore,' he added. Ukraine swiftly praised the US President's stand and thanked Trump for 'standing firm and delivering a clear message of peace through strength'. 'When America leads with strength, others think twice,' Ukrainian presidential aide Andriy Yermak said on social media. The comments came after Trump and Starmer held a bilateral meeting that focused on ending the suffering in Gaza and reviving stalled ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas. Trump announced the US would set up walk-in 'food centres' in Gaza. Golf diplomacy 'We're going to be getting some good strong food, we can save a lot of people. I mean, some of those kids - that's real starvation stuff,' he said. Starmer, under domestic pressure to follow France's lead and recognise a Palestinian state, called the situation unfolding in Gaza an 'absolute catastrophe'. The pair also discussed the implementation of a UK-US trade deal that was signed on May 8 that lowered tariffs for certain UK exports but has yet to come into force. Trump hosted Starmer and his wife Victoria under tight security at Turnberry, where he had spent two days playing golf since landing in Scotland on Friday night for a five-day visit. Their talks came after the United States and the European Union reached a landmark deal to avert a full-blown trade war over tariffs, when EU chief Ursula von der Leyen visited Trump at the resort on Sunday. Trump hinted that he would not impose heavy tariffs on British pharmaceuticals. 'We certainly feel a lot better with your country working on pharmaceuticals for America than some of the other countries,' he told Starmer. 'With the relationship we have, you would not use that as a cudgel. You wouldn't be using it as a block,' he added. Trump set out early in his second term to fulfil a decades-long desire of reshaping US trade with the world, with his administration predicting his aggressive strategy of punitive tariffs could bring '90 deals in 90 days'. After months with very little to show, he is now enjoying some success, landing accords with Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia and, most importantly, the European Union. The deals are expected to kick in August 1 to replace the current tariff regime these economies face, a White House spokesperson told AFP. After their meeting, Trump and Starmer were to travel to Aberdeen in Scotland's northeast, where the US President is to open a new golf course at his resort on Tuesday. Trump played golf at Turnberry on Saturday and Sunday on a five-day visit that has mixed leisure with diplomacy, and also further blurred the lines between the presidency and his business interests. – Agence France-Presse

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store