
Palestinians are facing joint attack by Israel and the United States: Palestinian Ambassador to India
'Israel is not fighting alone. It is a joint Israel-U.S. war that we are facing in Gaza. Israel is not just killing, it's committing genocide. Israel also has the support of many other Western countries, including the United Kingdom, which is also supporting Israel in its killing of innocent people,' said Mr. Abu Shawesh.
Also Read: Stop the slaughter | On Trump, Israel and the Gaza war
The remarks from the Palestinian envoy came against the backdrop of growing international concern about the ongoing Israeli military operations in the Gaza Strip that began after the October 2023 Hamas attack on Israeli targets. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited Washington D.C. earlier this week to discuss a ceasefire plan with U.S. President Donald Trump, where he also discussed the possibility of transferring the Palestinians from Gaza to other countries in the region. Mr. Netanyahu said that Israel was working with the U.S. to get a 'better future' for the Palestinians.
Responding to the Israeli plan to transfer Palestinians from Gaza, Mr. Abu Shawesh said, 'We had a better future in Palestine before Israel was born. We had our homes, we had our Palestinian passports. I still have the keys to my original house that we lost after the creation of Israel. I think the only way to ensure a better future for the Palestinians is to ensure that Israel obeys international law.'
The Palestinian envoy further said that Israelis are targeting the people who are the original inhabitants of Palestine.
'Our people have been living in Palestine even before Prophet Abraham's arrival,' said Mr. Abu Shawesh, making a presentation about the rights of the Palestinian people to the historic land of Palestine. He also said the Palestinians had agreed to a two-state solution despite the fact that it was unfair to them as it required them to surrender their right to return to their original homes. 'The two-state solution was unfair. But we agreed as we wanted to live in peace,' said the Palestinian envoy.
'Nothing is left in Gaza. The Israelis have destroyed everything. Two schools built with India's assistance have also been destroyed by the IDF,' he said, adding that the Jawaharlal Nehru library in the Al Azhar University - Gaza has also been destroyed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
9 minutes ago
- The Hindu
A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do
This week, the poster boys for toxic masculinity have been all over the news. Israel, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, continues to starve the people of Palestine. Its brutal actions, which have flattened neighbourhoods, killed tens of thousands of people, and decimated hospitals and schools, amount to genocide, according to many experts, writes Aaratrika Bhaumik in this explainer. For some, Israel's response to the Hamas attack of October 7, 2023, may not have been entirely unexpected. Back then, Major-General Ghasan Alyan from the Israeli Defence Ministry warned in a video, 'Human beasts are dealt with accordingly. Israel has imposed a total blockade on Gaza – no electricity, no water, just damage. You wanted hell – you will get hell.' The mastermind of the Hamas attack was also a ruthless, bloodthirsty man 'married to the Palestinian cause', Yahya Sinwar. As Stanly Johny said, on the rise and fall of Sinwar, 'violence defined his method.' Sinwar was killed in 2024 by the Israeli Defence Forces, but the scores between Israel and Hamas have still not been settled. All this bluster — which Netanyahu described best in 2014 when he said, 'A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do' — has nearly wiped out an entire region. In a 2019 academic paper titled Masculinity, war and militarism, Claire Duncanson wrote, 'Boys and men are socialised into thinking that being tough, being aggressive, being in authority, in control, are important markers of being a man.' She quotes various feminist scholars as arguing that 'men do not dominate in the world's militaries because they are naturally more violent, aggressive and tough,... but because in many cultures... proving oneself on the battlefield has been deemed an important way to prove oneself a man.' Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has organised photoshoots of himself riding horses bare-chested, or walking through the wilderness brandishing a gun, and who continues to wage a war against Ukraine, is one of the prototypes of this stereotype. With their blind (or perhaps calculated) rage and thirst for revenge, Sinwar and Netanyahu, who have together brought Gaza to its knees, are the others. Elsewhere, U.S. President Donald Trump, whose government has been aiding Netanyahu in the war, had yet another emotional outburst this week. On July 30, he hit his 'friend' India with a 25% tariff along with an 'unspecified penalty' for buying Russian oil and weapons. Trump rode to power calling several women, from Kamala Harris to Nancy Pelosi, 'unhinged' and 'crazy'. But today, by terming India's economy 'dead', he is the one putting painstakingly built India-U.S. ties at risk. The Hindu editorial says that 'something does seem to have shifted in India-US relations'. One of the primary objectives of patriarchy is the expansion of power. And this relentless pursuit of power without principles is causing moral bankruptcy, as Ashwani Kumar lamented in this piece earlier this month. Men with the most power around us are clinging on to it by doing whatever it takes: bullying, waging war, killing innocent people. Where are the compassionate women and men and a leadership of empathy and care that the world so desperately needs? It is all too clear that decision-making, especially on world issues, cannot be left to the whims of manchildren who mask incompetence and insensitivity with bravado. Toolkit In this photo essay, Ritu Raj Konwar captures the hustle and bustle of Ima Market, which is run entirely by women in Imphal, Manipur's capital. The market hosts 5,000-6,000 women vendors, who sell vegetables, fruits, textiles, toys, fish, spices, and utensils. Male shopkeepers and vendors are not allowed to set up or run stalls in this centuries-old market, which serves to empower women socially and economically. Wordsworth Femi-genocide: This month, the UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, Reem Alsalem, called for immediate global action to halt the unfolding 'femi-genocide' in Gaza. Alsalem said that existing concepts in legal and criminal frameworks can no longer adequately describe the scale and nature of the crimes inflicted by Israeli forces on Palestinian women and girls. 'What is happening to Palestinian women and girls is not collateral damage of war,' she said. 'It is the intentional destruction of their lives and bodies, for being Palestinian and for being women.' Ouch! Now girls are marrying at the age of 25. By then, many, not all, have been in relationships with multiple men. By the time a woman is 25, she is fully grown. It is only natural that by then, her youth has slipped away somewhere. Aniruddhacharya, also known as Pookie Baba People we met Rohin Bhatt is a lawyer in the Supreme Court. In 2022, Bhatt had asked the then Chief Justice of India, D.Y. Chandrachud, to modify the appearance slips for lawyers in the apex court to include an additional column for people's pronouns so that they may be correctly used in orders and judgments. When asked how much further courts have to go to become more gender-sensitive, Bhatt points out problems of both infrastructure and attitude. As a queer lawyer, he says he is typecast. 'I am often called an 'LGBT lawyer' who does 'LGBT cases' but my work is so much more — across civil, criminal, and constitutional law,' he says. Bhatt imagines that in a truly inclusive space, he and others would be seen as 'not just lawyers who do queer cases, but as good lawyers in our own right who can argue other briefs with equal expertise, in addition to queer rights cases.'


Economic Times
9 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Canadians readying for a major battle with Trump's USA, ready for hardship over humiliation in showdown over trade war
Canadians rally behind tough trade stance as tariffs bite; public backs PM Carney's defiance despite growing economic toll A growing majority of Canadians are willing to suffer economically to stand firm against US President Donald Trump's escalating trade war, according to a new poll that underscores rising frustration north of the a survey released by the Angus Reid Institute, 69 percent of Canadians say they want their government to take a 'hard approach' in trade negotiations with the United States, even if it worsens relations or causes financial poll comes just days after Trump slapped 35 percent tariffs on a range of Canadian exports. While the UK, EU, and Japan opted to strike last-minute trade deals with Washington, each making steep economic concessions, Canada is choosing defiance.'Canadians aren't flinching,' Angus Reid said in its analysis. Just weeks ago, only 63 percent supported the hardline stance. That number has since climbed, and support for retaliatory tariffs is even more dramatic, 76 percent say they'd back Canadian tariffs even if it causes household financial hardship. Prime Minister Mark Carney, who took office earlier this year after an unexpected election win, has called for patience and unity, saying Canada won't be bullied. 95 percent of those polled say they would still support Carney even if Trump retaliates with even higher tariffs. Trump further inflamed tensions after warning it would be harder to negotiate with Canada following Ottawa's decision, along with the UK and France, to formally recognize a Palestinian state. That move, however, also appears to have wide public backing as 63 percent of Canadians say they support recognition of Palestine, even if it complicates US impact on everyday life is already visible. Canadian tourism to the US dropped by 33 percent in June compared to the same month last year, according to Forbes, marking six consecutive months of decline. Businesses are feeling the squeeze. Air Canada's profits fell sharply, and US retailers in border towns are bracing for deeper losses.

Time of India
35 minutes ago
- Time of India
Trump Rages At Schumer As Senate Talks Collapse, Nominations And Budget Face Gridlock
Hamas Snaps At Israel For Starving Gazans, Exits Ceasefire-Hostage Deal | 'No Talks Until…' Hamas has slammed the brakes on all ceasefire negotiations, telling mediators it will not return to talks until Gaza's hunger crisis is addressed. The terror group is enraged over a recent UN-backed call for its disarmament. Meanwhile, Israel and the U.S. are pivoting toward a full-disarmament framework - vowing no more partial hostage deals. The war rages on as diplomacy collapses. 5.9K views | 1 day ago