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Ethnic Cleansing

Israel Gaza War Turned into Genocides Against Millions of Palestinians

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Israel Gaza war

Over the last eight months, Israel Gaza war has shown the true colors of Zionists and what genocide looks like. Videos and graphics surfacing from the ground show the nightmarish reality millions of Palestinians are forced to live every day.

Mutilated bodies, lost loved ones, orphaned children, bombed shelters, and constant fear of being the next victim with no medical care, shelter, or food — are the appalling reality of Gazans.

But now, the world is waking up to the atrocities of Israel. Social media outrages and protests are asking governments to take rigid actions against war crimes. But how are these outrages shaping the future of Gaza?

All Eyes on Rafah: Social Media Outrage of Israel Gaza War

Pro-Palestinian activism has surged several times since the war began. ‘All Eyes on Rafah’ is the newest in a queue of content that has gone viral and been endorsed by millions of users on social media over the last eight months.

While the viral graphic brought Rafah and Israel’s genocide war into the limelight, the reality cannot be any more different. Unlike the clean, sequenced tent, today, Rahal is in ruin. Opposite to the clear blue skies, Rafah’s skies are grey from bombs, smoke, and debris.

Under the ruins lies many decaying bodies of innocents while Israel continues the military offense – set on eradicating Hamas.

But what enraged people about the Rafah attack was that the region was dedicated to sheltering millions of displaced Palestinians. Israel’s attack on Rafah has cut off the Gaza-Egypt corridor—leaving the war-torn region without any humanitarian aid. Palestinians also used the corridor to escape the wars and seek medical help from nearby hospitals — an option no longer available.

On Sunday, the UN agency reported that all of its 36 refuge shelters in Rafah are ”now empty’, a safe place where 1.4 million displaced Palestinians were sheltering until last month.

Since the attack, delivering aid to Gaza has become even more difficult. With IDF now in central Rafah, the humanitarian spaces are shrinking even further, leaving the leftover Gazans to wait for uncertain calamities.

But Rafah is not the only target of the IDF.

Jabalia Turned to Rubbles

Repeated air strikes in Jabalia, located in northern Gaza, have left the town in ruins. Just within 24 hours, over 50 Palestinians have lost their lives, while 400 were left grievously wounded.

In the meantime, Israel continues its genocidal operations in Rafah. The country claims to have killed 300 Hamas fighters in Rafah since the operation began in May. The IDF says it has wiped out major Gaza tunnels and left dozens of Hamas’ dens rattled in Jabalia after its three-week operations.

After the Israeli forces left Jabalia, returning to the sight of mass destruction, Gazans found their homes completely razed to the ground. Civil defense teams recorded 120 Palestinian bodies under the rubbles of bombarded budling and destroyed roads.

International Court of Justice (ICJ) Accuses Israel of Genocide

After eight months of its onslaught, burning refugee camps in humanitarian zones and claiming nearly 36,400 Palestinians’ lives, the World Court recognized Israel’s heinous war crimes as genocidal.

The court ruled by 13 votes to two and ordered Israel to “immediately halt its military offensive in Rafah.” But what did Israel do? Bombed camps and burned dozens alive in Rafah.

This triggered mass protests across the globe—Spain, France, Lebanon—and the ‘All eyes on Rafah’ movement started. International governments, including the EU, are also planning to stop Israel’s atrocities, but they are torn on how to do this.

Ireland and Spain prefer radical options like sanctions on the country and its institution. Others prefer an ultimatum, a threat to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — stop the genocide or else face the consequences.

Amongst all this, Biden proposed a ceasefire and hostage deal proposals on Saturday.

Biden’s Israeli Proposal to End Israel Gaza War

Brought in by US President Joe Biden on Saturday, the Israeli government has proposed a new ceasefire deal, a roadmap for permanent peace in Gaza. The three-part proposal includes plans for a ceasefire, a surge in humanitarian aid, the exchange of hostages, and post-war aid for Gaza.

Phase 1 will see a see truce with:

  • 6-weeks complete ceasefire
  • exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners
  • partial military withdrawal from Gaza
  • 600 trucks of aid each day

In phase 2, Israel and Hamas will negotiate a permanent ceasefire. The final phase 3 includes a major reconstruction plan for destroyed Gaza with international support.

Hamas has welcomed the plan, saying it’ll consider Biden’s plan ‘positively.’ Even in the previous negotiations, Hamas has shown interest in entering a comprehensive truce agreement if Israel holds its aggression.

However, though it’s an Israel-proposed deal, the proposal creates political turmoil within the country.

Israel’s Acceptance of the Proposal Could Mean a Military Coup?

The efforts to bring any middle ground between Israel and Gaza are hitting more roadblocks as the proposal threatens the coalition government in Israel.

While many Israelis disagree with Netanyahu’s method, they want talks, and getting hostages released from Gaza should be a priority. A vast number of Zionists, however, want the country to push on and destroy Hamas, even at the cost of civilian lives. These divisions are seeping into the government and military.

The country’s top influential politicians, including Itamar Ben-Gvir (National Security Minister) and Bezalel Smotrich (Finance Minister), are against the proposal, saying “no end to the war unless Hamas is completely obliterated.”

A video also surfaced showing an Israeli soldier asking the defense minister to quit. He wants complete victory over Gaza, and if not, he threatens that 100,000 soldiers will revolt.

Uncertainty Looms as Millions are Forced to Suffer

Earlier this year also, Israel refused a hostage exchange proposal. But can the US’s pressure to accept the proposal by both size and wind down the war finally put an end to the genocide? Only time will tell.

In the meanwhile, under the cover of negotiation, Israel continues the ethnic cleansing in Gaza. On Sunday, the IDF struck 30 targets, including weapons storage facilitates. At the same time, Israel air strikes and ground combat have killed over 60 Palestinians, climbing the death toll to 36,439.

But with both ends divided and unwilling to find any common ground, millions of Gazans are left stranded in a genocidal war in which they have no say and control.

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Ethnic Cleansing

What the World Watched vs What Gaza Lived: Seven Days in Screenshots

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A studio in New York argues over words while in Gaza, a power generator dies mid-sentence. The same week plays out on two screens – one glows, the other goes dark. This is our attempt to stitch them together!

Day 1 – Friday, 19 Sept

World Watched:

Diplomatic walkouts at the UN General Assembly dominate the prime time debate. Commentators ask if a gesture counts as justice.

Gaza Lived:

UN humanitarian updates log repeated damage to UNRWA shelters and nearby strikes that send displaced families running yet again. Children clutch school bags they no longer need. A mother ties a scarf over her child’s mouth to keep out dust as walls shake. The word “shelter” feels ironic when roofs keep falling.

Day 2 — Saturday, 20 Sept

World Watched:

Weekend punditry cycles through neutral words: “operations continue.”

Gaza Lived:

Tower demolitions in Gaza City fuel fears of permanent removal, not temporary wartime damage. A demolition is not just a strike; it is the unmaking of return with stairwells cut, cores collapsed, water and power shafts torn out so that even survivors come back to a skeleton unfit for life. Neighbors stand in the street with keys that now fit nothing.

Day 3 — Sunday, 21 Sept

World Watched:

Short segments claim “aid is flowing.” A ticker lists truck counts without context.

Gaza Lived:

Access maps show choked routes to the north; community kitchens shut early when Zikim and other constraints stall flour and fuel. You can picture a normal day: a cook lights a burner at 6 a.m., stirs lentils, and watches the phone for convoy updates. By noon, the pot thins. At two, a call: the gate didn’t open; fuel didn’t clear. By three, the kitchen closes. A line of people drifts away, quiet.

Day 4 — Monday, 22 Sept

World Watched:

A panel asks if “the worst is over.” It is quite a peaceful day.

Gaza Lived:

Hospitals are empty, generators gasp, oxygen plants pause, and sterilizers sit cold. Referrals are delayed or cancelled not for lack of skill, but for lack of fuel. A doctor counts syringes by torchlight and chooses who can wait. When power flickers, the monitors sound an alarm not because a patient worsened, but because the building did.

Day 5 — Tuesday, 23 Sept

World Watched:

Casualty numbers scroll past like stock prices. Eyes glaze; the segment ends.

Gaza Lived:

Conflict analysts report a civilian-heavy death ratio in recent months—overwhelmingly women and children among the dead. What does that mean in practice? It means school uniforms in the rubble. It means grandparents who moved twice and still did not outwalk the blast. Counting becomes an act of witness: not to sensationalize, but to keep the proportion of loss in view.

Day 6 — Wednesday, 24 Sept

World Watched:

Headlines say “civilians told to evacuate again.”

Gaza Lived:

Rights groups call city-wide orders unlawful and inhumane; families push carts south in heat and dust, with no truly safe place to stop. The map is a moving target: an area marked “safe” at dawn is pounded by nightfall. A father tapes a white cloth to a stick; a child asks if white is bulletproof. The answer is silence. Forced movement without guaranteed safety is not protection but a transfer under fire.

Day 7 — Thursday, 25 Sept

World Watched:

Studio guests debate whether the law “really matters.”

Gaza Lived:

The week ends like it began—bombing without a ceasefire, aid under strain, and a legal record that now includes a UN genocide finding and ICJ orders ignored on the ground. Law is not poetry; it is supposed to flip switches: halt weapons, open gates, protect shelters, punish incitement. If those switches stay off, the word “law” becomes a synonym for later.

Bottom Line

A week in screenshots cannot heal a wound, but it clears the haze. The records are plain through prominent sources like the United Nations and other reputable international organizations. OCHA’s maps showed aid funneled into bottlenecks in the north. On the other hand, UNRWA logged shelters damaged in days that were meant to be safer. When it comes to health paradigms, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned that hospitals were running on fumes. Towers are falling in Gaza City as if the skyline itself is on a conveyor belt.

Amnesty set out why city-wide evacuation orders break international law, while the UN Commission of Inquiry put the word genocide into the formal record. The ICJ’s orders stayed on paper while people looked for bread, fuel, and a bed that would not shake. So, there is an urgent need for a ceasefire that should last. A two-state solution and the recognition of Palestine are some of the courses towards eternal peace and stability. The civilians of Gaza, including the innocent women and children, never deserve this type of heinous genocide at all!

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Ethnic Cleansing

From Safe Zones to Killing Fields: When Israel Bombs Its Own Evacuation Routes

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In Gaza, evacuation orders arrive by leaflet, robocall, and text. Maps show corridors and colored blocks where civilians are told to go. The idea sounds simple: follow these routes and you will be safe. However, witnesses, medics, and rights groups have documented a pattern that breaks that promise: strikes on or near the very roads and areas civilians are told to use.

Legal and humanitarian experts have warned for months that the “safe zone/safe route” model in Gaza does not work in practice: areas change overnight, maps are unclear, roads are clogged with rubble and people and no independent monitoring exists to keep those routes protected. Civilians are forced to choose between staying under bombardment and moving along paths that may be hit next.

  • UN OCHA has repeatedly noted strikes affecting people who were displaced or moving under orders, and has questioned the feasibility of mass evacuations without real protection and basic services at the destination.
  • Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have called out evacuation edicts that are unlawful and inhumane, warning they can amount to forcible transfer when nowhere is actually safe.

Road To Death: How The Corridor Becomes A Target

Families describe walking in single file with white cloths raised, while others jam onto donkey carts or open trucks. Convoys move slowly because craters cut the road, and because people fear drones overhead. Several major incidents, documented by journalists and humanitarian trackers, showed convoys, crowds near aid distribution points, and groups on evacuation roads being hit with deadly results.

Even when a route is not directly struck, near‑misses cause panic, such as a blast on a side street, shrapnel slicing tents by the road, or an attack on a building that sends glass raining onto passersby. The message civilians hear is simple: there is no safe road in a kill zone.

The laws of war are clear. Civilians must never be the object of attack. Parties ordering evacuations must take all feasible precautions to protect civilians as they move and where they arrive, including ensuring adequate shelter, water, sanitation, food, and medical care. Marking a map in a war app is not a legal shield. If a state orders civilians to a place, it must ensure that the place is genuinely safe and that routes are not targeted.

Rights groups argue that repeated strikes on people obeying evacuation orders point to unlawful attacks, indiscriminate fire, or disproportionate use of force—each a war crime. The broader pattern, like mass displacement into areas without services, hits on shelters, destruction of water and power, also supports allegations of collective punishment and, taken with the extreme civilian toll and de‑humanizing rhetoric, genocide.

Aid Convoys, Targeted Logistics, and The Politics Of Routes

“Safe routes” also matter for aid flow. If roads are not secure, flour, fuel, and medicine cannot reach people. The same problem that puts families at risk on the move also starves entire districts with no trucks, no fuel to pump water, and no surgical kits. Agencies keep repeating the same plea: a real ceasefire and guaranteed humanitarian access that does not depend on daily negotiations and risky detours.

Yet weapons and political cover continue to arrive. U.S. vetoes at the UN stalled binding calls for a ceasefire, and weapons transfers helped sustain the campaign that makes evacuation maps look like moving targets. Accountability does not stop at the launch site of a missile; it includes those who arm and shield the war effort.

When we look at the numbers, UN trackers report repeated, large-scale evacuation orders affecting hundreds of thousands in recent weeks, many of them displaced multiple times. UNRWA schools and facilities, which were turned into shelters, have been struck repeatedly, causing high civilian casualties.Moreover, Independent conflict data show the overwhelming majority of those killed in certain periods are civilians, including large numbers of women and children.

Each data point is also a face: a child gripping a plastic bag of bread; a grandfather carried in a door used as a stretcher; a young man scanning a phone for the next arrow on a map that might lead to his last step.

The Line Between Flight and Surrender

To obey an evacuation order is to trust the power that issued it. In Gaza, civilians have learned that trust can be fatal. Maps change faster than families can move, corridors vanish under dust, and “safe zones” become target areas by nightfall. The lesson people carry is harsh: the only safety is a ceasefire that holds!

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Ethnic Cleansing

Is an Israel-Hezbollah War Inevitable?

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Israel-Hezbollah tensions

Israel’s attack on Gaza, which is entering its eighth month of ethnic cleansing, is taking new, dangerous turns. What started as hidden attacks now threaten to be a full-blown war between Israeli forces and the Irani-backed militant group in the region – Hezbollah.

However, the prospect of a full-scale war terrifies people on both sides. Aid agencies, including the United Nations, fear the war would be a “catastrophe that goes beyond the border and imagination.” Israel’s open military offensive in southern Lebanon would also risk an Iranian response.

Here’s a detailed report:

Israel-Hezbollah Escalation

While initially caught off-guard, Hezbollah has been supporting its regional ally- Hamas-ever since Israel initiated the Gaza genocide on 7th October. The two sides have exchanged near-daily cross-border strikes.

Till now, over 450 Lebanese, including fighters from the Hezbollah and allied groups and 80 civilians, have lost their lives. On Israel’s side, 16 soldiers and 11 civilians have been killed. The escalation has forced tens of thousands of residents on both sides of the border to be displaced – with no hope of returning any time soon.

But, the escalation simmering for months is now catching sparks. Last week, the Israel army disclosed it has “approved and validated” an offensive plan in Lebanon. In response, the militant group released surveillance drone videos of areas deep inside Israel’s border.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned Israel and the world at large, “Whoever thinks of war against us will regret it.” He ended by saying if a war broke out, Hezbollah would fight without limits.

The militia leader also thwarted any prospect of a cease-fire on the Israel-Lebanon border, unless there’s one in Gaza.

Hezbollah is Not Hamas

In his last Wednesday speech, Nasrallah said that militant leaders from Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Iran, and other Middle Eastern countries are offering to send thousands of fighters to help Hezbollah in the fight against Israel. But, with over 100,000 trained fighters, Hezbollah already holds one of the most potent militant armies in the region.

International government and aid agencies fear a war between Israel and Hezbollah will be more brutal and catastrophic than the Gaza crisis because it could put the entire region into war.

But, while the crippling economy of Lebanon puts Hezbollah at a disadvantage, taking apart the militant group’s military powers in days is a far taller task. Since the Israel-Lebanon war, both sides have been preparing for a chance to settle scores.

Hezbollah’s arsenal includes at least 150,000 missiles and rockets. With over 100,000 fighters, the group’s sophisticated attacks – like the largest rocket attack on 5th July – even surprised Israeli officials. They have shot down top-of-the-line Israeli drones and hit the Iron Dome batteries and anti-drone defenses.

Last month, the Iran-backed group shocked the world when it published drone footage of Israel’s highly sensitive public and military infrastructure. The most astonishing of which is Israel’s secret nuclear base.

The International Response to the Israel-Hezbollah Tensions

With the escalations only increasing, an all-out war can even drag the US into conflict with Iran. It could set the entire region on fire. That’s why the United States has drawn a red line on Hezbollah with a warning. It said the group should not assume that the US can stop Israel from attacking them.

And while the warning is conveyed indirectly because America doesn’t engage with the military group one-on-one, the message from the US officials is clear. The warning aims to get Hezbollah to back down. The officials also declared the US’s support to Israel in case Hezbollah retaliates.

After weeks of silence, Iran has warned Israel of an “obliterated war.” The escalating tension is also worrying the international community. This week, Germany, Canada, and the Netherlands immediately urged their citizens to leave Lebanon. Many are re-routing their flights into Lebanon and warning travelers to “strongly reconsider” traveling to the conflicted country.

The world is trying to slow down the tension, but the escalation is only spiraling to a new height in recent weeks as Israel’s attack on Hamas intensifies.

The Brewing Israel-Hezbollah War

Israel has effectively lost sovereignty in the northern part of the country due to consistent cross-border attacks by the group. The statement came before the Thursday attack where Hezbollah fired 200 rockets into the Israeli border – making it the biggest attack in the monthlong conflict. An Aljazeera report showed that since 7th October the two sides have shared 7400 attacks.

Israeli defense minister Yoav Gallant said that while the country is trying to prevent a wider war, its military is capable of getting “Lebanon back to the stone age.” The statement came as Israel is downshifting its military in Gaza and refocusing its resources on the northern Israel-Lebanon border.

But, while both countries do not want a full-scale war, in case a ceasefire deal fails in Gaza, a large-scale Israel-Hezbollah war can break out in the next several weeks – one that’ll be far worse than the last time around.

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