20/05/2025

UK suspends trade talks with Israel over new Gaza offensive

 

UK suspends trade talks with Israel over new Gaza offensive


Foreign minister condemns 'dark new phase' of conflict

Israel's ambassador summoned over offensive

West Bank settlers hit with new sanctions


 - Britain on Tuesday paused free trade talks with Israel, summoned its ambassador, and announced further sanctions against West Bank settlers as its foreign minister condemned a "monstrous" military escalationin Gaza.

The Israeli military announced the start of a new operation last week and medics in Gaza say Israeli strikes have killed more than 500 people in the past eight days.

Israel has also blocked the entry of medical, food and fuel supplies into Gaza since the start of March, prompting international experts to warn of looming famine, although some trucks were allowed to enter on Monday.

Foreign minister David Lammy said the offensive was "a dark new phase in this conflict", called for Israel to end the blockade of aid and condemned comments by finance minister Bezalel Smotrich on the possible cleansing and destruction of Gaza and relocation of its residents to third countries.

"It is extremism. It is dangerous. It is repellent. It is monstrous, and I condemn it in the strongest possible terms," a visibly angry Lammy told lawmakers, adding the operation in Gaza was "incompatible with the principles that underpin our bilateral relationship".

"Today, I'm announcing that we have suspended negotiations with this Israeli government on a new free trade agreement."

Israel said Britain had not advanced the trade talks, which started formally in 2022 under a previous Conservative British government, for some time.

"The British Mandate ended exactly 77 years ago," a spokesperson for its foreign ministry said. "External pressure will not divert Israel from its path in defending its existence and security against enemies who seek its destruction."

SELF-DEFENCE

Britain has said it is committed to Israel's security and argues it has a right to self-defence following the deadly attack on Oct. 7, 2023, by Hamas.

However, Lammy said the new offensive would not secure the release of remaining hostages and that January's ceasefire had shown the better path that Israel should follow.

Earlier Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was "horrified by the escalation" after issuing a joint statement with France and Canada. Lammy said Britain would take further action if Israel pursued its military offensive.

Netanyahu has said his country is engaged in a "war of civilization over barbarism" and vowed it would "continue to defend itself by just means until total victory."

Israel's ground and air war has devastated Gaza, displacing nearly its entire population and killing more than 53,000, according to Gaza health authorities.

Britain suspended 30 of its 350 arms export licences with Israel last year over the risk that equipment could be used in serious violations on international humanitarian law.

Britain on Tuesday also sanctioned a number of individuals and groups in the West Bank who it said had been linked with acts of violence against Palestinians, building on sanctions on a number of settlers and settler organisations imposed in 2024.

Most countries deem Jewish settlements built on land Israel occupied in a 1967 Middle East war as illegal, and their expansion has for decades been among the most contentious issues.

(Reporting by Muvija M, Sachin Ravikumar and Sarah Young, writing by Sam Tabahriti and Alistair Smout; Editing by Kate Holton and Conor Humphries)

Britain, Canada, France threaten sanctions against Israel over Gaza

 


Britain, Canada, France threaten sanctions against Israel over Gaza


The leaders of Britain, Canada and France threatened sanctions against Israel if it does not stop a renewed military offensive in Gaza and lift aid restrictions, piling further pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.





The leaders of Britain, France and Canada warned on Monday that their countries would take action if Israel does not stop a renewed military offensive in Gaza and lift aid restrictions.

The Israeli military announced the start of a new operation on Friday, and earlier on Monday Netanyahu said Israel would take control of the whole of Gaza.

International experts already have warned of looming famine.

"The Israeli Government's denial of essential humanitarian assistance to the civilian population is unacceptable and risks breaching International Humanitarian Law," a joint statement said.

"We oppose any attempt to expand settlements in the West Bank ... We will not hesitate to take further action, including targeted sanctions."

The three governments added they "strongly oppose the expansion of Israel’s military operations in Gaza", and that the level of human suffering in Gaza is intolerable.

In response, Netanyahu said that "the leaders in London, Ottawa and Paris are offering a huge prize for the genocidal attack on Israel on 7 October while inviting more such atrocities".

He said Israel will defend itself by just means until total victory is achieved, reiterating Israel's conditions to end the war which include the release of the remaining hostages and the demilitarisation of the Gaza strip.

Israel has blocked the entry of medical, food and fuel supplies into Gaza since the start of March to try to pressure Hamas into freeing the hostages the Palestinian militant group took on 7 October 2023, when it attacked Israeli communities.

"We have always supported Israel's right to defend Israelis against terrorism. But this escalation is wholly disproportionate," the three Western leaders said in their joint statement. They said they would not stand by while Netanyahu's government pursued "these egregious actions."

The Western leaders also stated their support for efforts led by the United States, Qatar and Egypt for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, and said they were committed to recognising a Palestinian state as part of a two-state solution to the conflict.

Hamas welcomed the joint statement describing the stance as "an important step" in the right direction toward restoring the principles of international law.

Israel's ground and air war has devastated Gaza, displacing nearly all its residents and killing more than 53,000 people, many of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities.

The war began with the 7 October 2023, Hamas-led attack in which the militants killed about 1,200 people, including over 690 civilians, and seized 251 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

 (Reuters)


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For more, listen to:

 UN rapporteur says Israel's war in Gaza is 'emptying the land completely'


17/05/2025

Gaza: International calls for peace



European and Arab leaders call Israel to stop the attacks in Gaza


Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez also called for "pressure on Israel to halt the massacre in Gaza" during the Arab League summit in Baghdad, where Arabs and UN leaders voiced similar calls. Italy's government on Saturday also upped its exhortations to Israel to stop deadly military strikes in Gaza, with Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani saying: "Enough with the attacks." 





"We no longer want to see the Palestinian people suffer," Tajani said during a trip to Sicily, in remarks relayed by his spokesman. "Let's come to a ceasefire, let's free the hostages, but let's leave people who are victims of Hamas alone," he was cited as saying.

Israel's military has announced it is in the "initial stages" of a new offensive in Gaza aimed at defeating Hamas, after resuming its offensive on March 18, ending a two-month truce in its war against Hamas triggered by the group's October 2023 attack.

More than 100 people in Gaza were killed in Israeli strikes on Friday and another 10 on Saturday, according to the Gaza civil defence agency.

International condemnation has escalated over Israel's military actions, and its blockage of humanitarian aid entering the Gaza Strip, where more than two million people lived before the war started.

Israel's army said the goal of its latest offensive is to "seize control of areas within the Gaza Strip".

Multiple calls for peace

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez also called a little earlier on Saturday for "pressure on Israel to halt the massacre in Gaza" and said Madrid plans a UN resolution demanding an International Court of Justice ruling on Israel's war methods.

Sanchez told the Arab League summit in Baghdad that world leaders should "intensify our pressure on Israel to halt the massacre in Gaza, particularly through the channels afforded to us by international law", adding that the "unacceptable number" of victims of the Israel-Hamas war violates the "principle of humanity".

Demonstrations took place in Hamburg, Germany, in the US, and in Paris, France, from Gare du Nord, starting at 2pm local time to call for the end of "massacres" and to mark the 77th anniversary of the Nakba, the forced displacement of Palestinians started in 1948 by Israel.

As Arab leaders on Saturday held this summit in Baghdad, they also urged the international community as well to apply pressure for a Gaza ceasefire and humanitarian aid access to the besieged Palestinian territory.

"We call on the international community... to exert pressure to end the bloodshed and ensure that urgent humanitarian aid can enter without obstacles all areas in need in Gaza," the leaders said in a joint final statement at the summit.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi urged his US counterpart Donald Trump to apply pressure for a ceasefire.

"I call on President Trump, as a leader who wants to consolidate peace, to apply all necessary efforts and pressure for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip," which would pave the way "for a serious political process in which he would be a mediator and a sponsor," Sisi said in his address to an Arab League.

Finally, United Nations chief Antonio Guterres called for a permanent and immediate ceasefire in Gaza. 

"We need a permanent ceasefire, now," Guterres told leaders gathered in Baghdad. "I am alarmed by reported plans by Israel to expand ground operations and more."


Talks in Doha

Israel and Hamas resumed ceasefire talks on Saturday in Doha in Qatar, both sides said, even as Israeli forces ramped up a bombing campaign that has killed hundreds of people over 72 hours, and mobilised for a massive new ground assault.

A senior Hamas official said this new round of indirect negotiations with Israel, aimed at ending the war in Gaza, started "without any preconditions" on Saturday.

"Hamas will present its viewpoint on all issues, especially ending the war, (Israel's) withdrawal and prisoner exchange."

Prior rounds of negotiations have failed to secure a breakthrough on ending the war, and a two-month ceasefire between the sides fell apart when Israel resumed its operations in Gaza on 18 March.

The renewed fighting came after Israel imposed a total aid blockade on the territory that UN agencies warn has created critical shortages of food, clean water, fuel and medicines.


 (with AFP) 

Paris for Palestine

 

Paris

17 May 2025

Bvd Barbès

















16/05/2025

Solidarité

 







US - Africa summit for 2025


 Semafor reveals:


The Trump administration plans to host a summit for African leaders this year in order to shift its relationship with the continent, according to the US State Department’s senior official for African affairs.

“‘Trade, not aid,’ a slogan we’ve seen thrown around for years, is now truly our policy for Africa — a shift I know you have long sought and one that I am committed to strengthening,” Troy Fitrell said in a speech at an American Chamber of Commerce event in Abidjan on Wednesday.

Fitrell, addressing a separate event on Tuesday, said that “commerce, migration, and peace,” would be Washington’s priorities in its relationship with Africa. He later placed an emphasis on “commercial diplomacy,” with all US ambassadors in Africa now being evaluated on how effectively they advocate for American business.

Fitrell, previously an ambassador to Guinea, did not immediately provide further details of the summit, but it is an idea that many Africa watchers in Washington had pushed for ahead of the incoming administration. The last US-African leaders summit was hosted by President Joe Biden in December 2022.


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13/05/2025

May Newsletter

 


Human rights in limbo, war crimes & our struggle for joy



More worrying news this month of May, but with a promise to commit to resistance...




Read via Substack:


Human rights in limbo, war crimes & our struggle for joy



More worrying news this month of May, but with a promise to commit to resistance...

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12/05/2025

Gaza on our minds

 

The Guardian:

12/05/2025
Monday briefing:

Is Israel using starvation as a weapon of war?

Annie Kelly


Good morning.

If anyone thought that military sieges were consigned to the history books, they need only look at the images coming out of Gaza of starving children and obliterated landscapes as food, fuel and medicine – readily available just a few kilometres away – continue to be withheld.

Gaza has been under a total military blockade by Israel since the beginning of March. The Israeli government, which last week announced plans to begin the military conquest and occupation of the Gaza Strip, says it will refuse to allow in aid until it can take control of its distribution and be assured that it will not be siphoned off by Hamas.

The aid agencies still operating inside the Gaza Strip say that they have run out of food and, without immediate access to humanitarian supplies, it will be hunger, not bombs, that will kill people in increasing numbers.

Despite facing accusations that it is using starvation as a weapon of war, Israel, backed by the US, continues to insist that it is acting in compliance with international humanitarian and human rights laws.

For today’s newsletter, I talked with Paola Gaeta, director of the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights, about whether we are seeing war crimes being committed with impunity in Gaza, and the possible consequences of Israel’s new strategy.


In depth: The world is at a ‘moral crossroads’ over Gaza

Palestinians carrying out a search and rescue operation after Israeli attacks in Beit Lahia, Gaza, last week.

Human rights groups say there can now be no doubt that Israel intends to control humanitarian aid as part of its intended conquest of the Gaza Strip.

Last week, more than 20 UN experts said that the desperate situation facing over 2 million people trapped in Gaza placed the world at a moral crossroads, facing a choice between acting to halt the violence or witnessing the annihilation of the Palestinian population in the territory. We are all collectively, they said, descending into a “moral abyss”.


What is Israel saying it wants to do in Gaza?

Last week Israel approved a plan for Operation Gideon’s Chariots, a military campaign involving the mass mobilisation of tens of thousands of reservist soldiers to facilitate the conquest of the Gaza Strip. This would involve the displacement of most of Gaza’s population to zones “clean of Hamas”. Israeli officials are also talking openly about potential “voluntary” displacement from the territory altogether to allow the implementation of a reconstruction plan announced by Donald Trump in January.

The language used has been stark and brutal. Last week Israel’s finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, said that Gaza would be “entirely destroyed”.

The UN and aid agencies recoiled in horror at the news. In what many would see as an understatement, Volker Türk, the UN’s high commissioner for human rights, said it represented a “dangerous moment for the civilian population”.


Why is there no humanitarian aid going into Gaza?

Israel has restricted food, fuel and medical supplies going into Gaza for most of the war, but no aid at all has gone into Gaza for more than two months now.

Israel has repeatedly justified its ongoing siege of the strip and its humanitarian aid blockade with claims of defence and security concerns, and says that Hamas is diverting and profiting from aid brought in by international organisations. It also says that it will not let any food, fuel or medicine into Gaza until Hamas release all the remaining hostages it still holds.


How does this stand under international law?

In July 2024, the international court of justice (ICJ), the principal judicial organ of the UN, ruled that the Gaza Strip was under occupation by Israel.

Paola says that under international humanitarian law, an occupying power has a duty to provide relief and aid to the local population. Not allowing humanitarian aid into the strip is illegal under international law and potentially a war crime.

“But Israel, backed up by the United States, does not accept the ICJ’s ruling that it is an occupying force,” says Paola. “And so it says that means it does not have a legal obligation to ensure that the civilian population’s basic needs are met.”

She says that when it comes to humanitarian law, if you are not an occupying force, you can retain some power over the control and distribution of humanitarian aid to make sure it is not diverted to a warring party. “So in this way they are insisting that they are still in compliance with international law.”

Paola says that many human rights lawyers like herself believe that Israel has “changed the grammar” of international humanitarian law and the Geneva conventions throughout the conflict.

‘There is no doubt in my mind that they are abusing the system,” she says. “They have bombed hospitals, killed journalists and destroyed civilian infrastructure and are arguing that they are still following international humanitarian law because it is a proportional response to the threat they are facing.”


Is the starvation of a civilian population a war crime?

Using starvation as a method of warfare is a war crime under international law, specifically prohibited by the Geneva conventions and their Protocols.

Despite the World Food Programme and others saying all food stocks are gone and malnourishment is widespread, Israel denies that it is using hunger as a weapon of war, with some politicians saying there are enough supplies of water and food inside the strip.

Israel has already been accused of using hunger as a means of displacement when it deprived the north of Gaza of food in October 2024 to displace the civilian population to the south. The international criminal court (ICC) arrest warrant for Benjamin Netanyahu issued last year cites starvation as a method of warfare as one of the charges.


What is Israel saying it’s going to do to get supplies to civilians?

Israel has said that in order to ensure that aid gets to civilians, it intends to take control of the distribution and administration of humanitarian assistance through a series of “hubs” or distribution points controlled by the Israeli military.

Under the proposal, private companies (which at the moment appear to be from the US and Egypt) would run these hubs, distributing aid to civilians who have been “screened”.

Paola says this would essentially allow the Israeli military to decide who could receive food and medicine. It could also allow Israel to create aid deserts to displace civilians forcibly from their homes and land.

“Under international law, aid must not be used to achieve military objectives,” she says. “It must be impartial.”

International humanitarian organisations and the United Nations have said they cannot accept what Israel is proposing as it does not “live up to the core fundamental humanitarian principles of impartiality, neutrality and independent delivery of aid”.

As one aid worker told the Guardian, it is an attempt to “centralise, privatise and militarise aid” delivery, which will mean people are excluded from humanitarian assistance, which could make the aid organisations themselves complicit in war crimes.

Yet over the weekend, the United States has begun pressing aid organisations to accept Israel’s terms. There are fears that this could create an impossible environment for aid organisations to continue operating inside Gaza – the last international witnesses to what is happening on the ground.


Can anyone force Israel to let aid in?

Ever since Donald Trump’s plan to create a riviera of the Middle East in the ruins of the Gaza Strip, and what Andrew Roth labelled in a recent analysis his “walkaway diplomacy”, an emboldened Netanyahu has seemed unstoppable.

Trump has shown flashes of concern for Gaza’s population, saying that he will help civilians “get some food” despite the blockade. “But the silence and complicity of the rest of the world has been shameful,” Paola says. “The international community could stop this but we are choosing not to.”

There are some signs that the prospect of watching Palestinians in Gaza starve to death in real time has prompted some action. Last week, for example, the Dutch government, seen as one of Israel’s most loyal EU allies, called for an urgent review of the EU-Israel association agreement, describing the ban on aid going into Gaza as a clear breach of international humanitarian law.

Paola says that there have also been serious attempts at the highest judicial levels to hold Israel to account. As well as the ICC arrest warrants, the ICJ recently heard evidence on the legality of Israel’s withholding of humanitarian aid. Yet the judicial system is slow and the ICJ’s judgments nonbinding, with no one required to take concrete action to implement its rulings. ‘The hope is that it will become unsustainable for governments to keep supporting a country that has ruled to have committed war crimes,” she says.

Paola accepts that Israel’s alleged disregard for international humanitarian laws could encourage other countries to follow suit in future conflicts. Yet she says it is more crucial than ever to defend laws such as the Geneva conventions and keep faith with the values they were built on.

“What is happening is horrifying,” she says. “But it is not the humanitarian laws that are failing, it is the will of governments to uphold them. They are our moral GPS. It has never been more important to fight for them and the values they represent, not just for people in Gaza but for all of us.

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