• The shocking inhumanity of Israel’s crimes in Gaza

    From NefeshBarYochai@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 18 04:44:46 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, talk.politics.guns, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic
    XPost: alt.support.fat-acceptance

    Dozens of patients stand in line for hours outside the pharmacy booth
    in the Kuwaiti Hospital compound. They all start out by asking the
    pharmacist the same question: is my medication available? The answer
    for most is no.

    Amid the long lines of the elderly, the ill, and mothers carrying
    their children, a man appearing to be middle-aged leaning on a young
    boy arrives, speaking in a loud voice and asking to be allowed to jump
    the line — he’s just been released from prison, and can barely stand.

    “I spent sixty days of constant beating and humiliated,” he says.
    “They just released me, and I need to just get my medicine. Please let
    me take it without having to wait any longer.”

    Everyone lets him through, allowing him to collect his medications
    from the booth and leave.

    I stand beside him in the hospital courtyard and ask him how he came
    to be arrested by the Israeli army — and how he was eventually
    released.

    Haytham al-Hilou, 56, was displaced from Beit Hanoun to southern Gaza
    on October 27 of last year. He says that on his journey south, he was
    made to pass through a mechanized checkpoint that the Israeli army had
    set up at the Netzarim junction on Salah al-Din Street. When he passed
    through the metal doors, and the Israeli cameras picked up his image,
    Israeli soldiers called out his name through a microphone, instructing
    him to step aside. Al-Hilou was sent to an Israeli detention center,
    where he would endure sixty days of torture and humiliation
    interspersed with interrogations for any piece of information that
    might be of use to the army in identifying and reaching specific
    targets.

    “When I reached the detention point, the soldiers ordered me to take
    off all my clothes,” he says. “They told us to go wait in a ditch dug
    by the army a distance away from the checkpoint.”

    When he slid down into the ditch, he noticed it was already occupied
    by dozens of Palestinians who had also been detained, all of them
    naked and blindfolded. Not much time had passed before soldiers
    arrived and blindfolded him as well.

    Haytham had been fleeing south with his wife and five children, and
    when he was arrested, there was no one left to look after them.
    Al-Hilou says his family suffered immensely during his period of
    imprisonment, struggling to find any shelter that would take them in.

    “When I was released, I found my family homeless and in the streets,”
    he continues. “No shelter, no food, no drink. Every drop of water and
    piece of bread that they managed to find was after a long period of
    suffering.”

    He says it was a miracle that he found his family alive at all,
    especially since all his children were very young, including his three daughters and two young boys.

    When he was first arrested, he didn’t know where he was being taken.
    After a long journey, he found himself in Ofer Prison, outside of
    Ramallah in the West Bank.

    At Ofer, he was interrogated and subjected to physical and
    psychological torture. Israeli intelligence officers denied him food
    for long periods, holding interrogation sessions for hours on end.
    They would ask him about the hiding places of Hamas leaders like Yahya
    Sinwar and demand to know whether there were openings to tunnels
    inside his home. He kept repeating the same answer.

    I am a normal civilian. I am uninvolved in any military activity.

    The interrogators would beat him severely and often. As an older man
    with graying hair, a short frame, and a fragile build, he was unable
    to endure what had become standard treatment by the Shin Bet.

    And the questions would continue. Where are the Hamas leaders? Where
    are they hiding?

    His answers turned into shouts at one point. I don’t know! I don’t
    know! I am not a Hamas member! I have nothing to do with resistance. I
    have nothing to do with military activity. I don’t know where the
    Hamas leaders are, I don’t know anything about them. Civilians don’t
    know these things, only leaders do. Normal people don’t know who they
    are. They’re always in hiding.

    Despite all this, al-Hilou is grateful that he was eventually released
    and allowed to return home and that he is now in his family’s arms.

    He says that prison during the war is different than in any other
    period. Prisoners from Gaza are worried about their families,
    wondering whether they’ve been able to find shelter, whether they were
    able to secure food, or whether they were dead or alive.

    Haytham maintains that there was no reason for his arrest, and no
    evidence pointed to his involvement in any resistance or military
    activity. He does mention that between the ages of 17 and 20, he
    engaged in public activities that supported the resistance but which
    were not military by any stretch.

    “Maybe Israel wanted to punish me for my youth, years that are behind
    me and well in the past,” he speculates.

    In those youthful years, the activities showing support for the
    resistance that he and his friends had participated in were not at all uncommon. After all, who, in all of Palestine, doesn’t support
    resistance against the occupation?

    Arrested twice in the same day

    There are endless stories of arbitrary incarcerations that have taken
    place at the numerous Israeli military checkpoints throughout the Gaza
    Strip, where the army maintains control. Some people were arrested
    once, twice, and even three times during their stay in Gaza City,
    having refused to leave as part of Israel’s ethnic cleansing of
    northern Gaza. Eyad Eleywa is one of those residents. He is still in
    Gaza City, while several of his children chose to flee south. They are
    now in Rafah.

    Eleywa resides in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood along with his wife,
    three of his children, his daughter-in-law, and a number of his other
    relatives who had fled from the areas north of Gaza City to the city
    itself. His son Muhammad lives in a tent in the neighborhood of Tal
    al-Sultan in Rafah. I get to see him every now and again. He recounts
    the time his father was most recently arrested in northern Gaza.

    Muhammad’s father has already been arrested three times, and two of
    those arrests happened on the same day. Muhammad says that at the
    beginning of the ground operation in Gaza City, soldiers took his
    father from his home in Sheikh Radwan and ordered him to take off all
    his clothes before blindfolding him and leaving him out in the cold
    while conducting field interrogations.

    Where are the tunnel openings? Where are the Hamas fighters? Who do
    you know who owns weapons in the city? The questions weren’t asked
    only once, and he was detained from the early morning until the late
    afternoon. When the soldiers were done with him, they dropped him off
    in al-Tuwan, far away from his home in Sheikh Radwan. They ordered the
    elderly man, naked and beaten, deprived of food and water for that
    entire period, to walk back.

    On that same evening, as he returned home on foot, he was arrested a
    second time at another checkpoint in the area separating al-Tuwan from
    the al-Nasr neighborhood. He spent the entire night in Israeli custody
    and was released the following day.

    “When they gather the detainees in one place, they line them up one by
    one and terrorize them,” Muhammad says, relaying his father’s account
    of his treatment while under arrest. “They move from one person to the
    next, telling each of them, ‘We’re going to send you to your God,’ and
    ‘We’re going to send you to heaven to marry the virgins.’”

    Horror hidden from the world

    Those who have gone through these ordeals and lived to tell the tale
    consider themselves lucky because they were eventually released and
    returned to their families. Countless others have effectively been
    disappeared, abducted one day at an army checkpoint and with no
    further news of their fate or whereabouts.

    Every time I scroll through social media, I come across people posting
    about their missing family members, all of them saying that their
    loved ones were lost at an Israeli checkpoint. The Israeli army
    releases very little information about who it has arrested at these checkpoints. The arrested include doctors, journalists, patients,
    fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, and people from all walks of
    life. Their loved ones are constantly putting out announcements and
    calling on international bodies and human rights organizations to
    intervene and force Israel to reveal their loved ones’ whereabouts.

    Eyewitnesses who were able to escape death and reach Rafah tell
    horrific stories of how Israeli soldiers used civilians, especially
    male adolescents, as human shields or worse. One eyewitness who
    preferred to remain anonymous relayed a harrowing story of how Israeli soldiers, upon discovering a tunnel opening in northern Gaza, strapped explosives to a young 17-year-old man’s chest, legs, and arms and
    forced him to go down into the tunnel, lowering him with a rope and
    fastening a camera to his head. They would give him orders to go left,
    right, or forward as they observed from a screen aboveground.

    The eyewitness says that when the soldiers were fitting him with
    explosives, they were laughing and cracking jokes, boasting that they
    would “send him to his God piece by piece,” and that he would “meet
    the virgins in the tunnels.” The eyewitness says that this practice
    was common in Beit Hanoun, as the army made use of thin young men
    capable of moving with agility in small spaces. The eyewitness says
    that when soldiers noticed suspicious movements through the camera
    fastened to their captives, they would blow up the tunnel and the
    young man along with it. Whenever the tunnel was revealed to lead to a
    dead end or was discovered to be deserted, the young man would return
    unharmed, and the soldiers would remove the explosives from him.

    While these harrowing details that continue to emerge from survivors
    are so horrific as to beggar belief, the reality is that the
    occupation has succeeded in isolating the Gaza Strip from the rest of
    the world and rendering the majority of the crimes of its troops on
    the ground invisible. Israel is systematically blocking foreign
    journalists from reaching Gaza, assassinating Palestinian journalists,
    and enforcing a total information blackout through the cutting off of electricity, internet, and telecommunications.

    In other words, Israel’s blackout strategy has worked, even with all
    the gory images that still manage to make their way to your screens.
    The relative scale of the killing has prompted the world to recognize
    that a genocide is unfolding, but the horrific character of Israel’s
    crimes and the abject inhumanity of the army’s conduct still remain
    largely unknown to most of the world.


    https://mondoweiss.net/2024/01/the-shocking-inhumanity-of-israels-crimes-in-gaza/



    "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kenny McCormack@21:1/5 to void@invalid.noy on Thu Jan 18 15:11:08 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, talk.politics.guns, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic
    XPost: alt.support.fat-acceptance

    In article <9vahqid0vd7csjtnk36790d5cv9dolfqj1@4ax.com>,
    NefeshBarYochai <void@invalid.noy> wrote:
    Dozens of patients stand in line for hours outside the pharmacy booth
    in the Kuwaiti Hospital compound. They all start out by asking the
    pharmacist the same question: is my medication available? The answer
    for most is no.

    You guys brought this on yourselves. End of story.

    --
    "We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk
    about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth."

    - Greta Thunberg -

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tesla sTinker ofm minim@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 20 13:03:37 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, talk.politics.guns, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic
    XPost: alt.support.fat-acceptance

    On 1/18/2024 7:11 AM, Kenny McCormack scribbled:
    In article<9vahqid0vd7csjtnk36790d5cv9dolfqj1@4ax.com>, NefeshBarYochai<void@invalid.noy> wrote:
    Dozens of patients stand in line for hours outside the pharmacy booth
    in the Kuwaiti Hospital compound. They all start out by asking the
    pharmacist the same question: is my medication available? The answer
    for most is no.

    You guys brought this on yourselves. End of story.


    i would have to say as messed up as man is, it would be a good idea
    for them to acknowledge this truth ha. And to quit missing on purpose
    the one true religion and messiah Jesus. For it is not Mohamed. He was
    only a nobody politician. Which is why they lie about him.

    And since its them the politicians that start up wars on their lies,
    it would be a good idea to acknowledge this truth about it all yes, and understand, that only the phony religion is cursed, not the true one.

    And even in the true one, man can be a liar in sin. Which makes him a
    false apostle. God cursed Iraq Iran and the Nimrod of the tower of
    babel itself. The curse was said as a never ending one forever by God.
    And since He is God, I know He does not lie. Maybe they should also acknowledge this to save their own hides. Not lying to themselves
    anymore about any of it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)