‘War Criminal’, ‘Guilty in Genocide’

Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib representing Detroit had this to say for Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu when he was addressing the US Congress, Tuesday.

Her image continues to trend, setting with all the other Congressmen and Congresswomen as if this was the most natural thing in the world with signs of “War Criminal” and “Guilty in Genocide” staring Netanyahu in the face.

In protest of Netanyahu’s visit to Congress, activists in Washington dyed multiple fountains around Capitol Hill with red and projections cast demanding the arrest of war criminal Netanyahu.

Tlaib had wrote: “Netanyahu is a war criminal committing genocide against the Palestinian people. It is utterly disgraceful that leaders from both parties have invited him to address Congress. He should be arrested and sent to the International Criminal Court.”

In a statement on her website she clarified: “Since 1948, the US has provided more than $141 billion in weapons to the Israeli government to fund the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, including $17.9 billion since October.

Netanyahu’s apartheid regime has already slaughtered over 39,000 Palestinians in Gaza, including 15,000 children. Yet my colleagues and the Biden administration continue to approve more funding and send more weapons – even as innocent children like Hind Rajab are targeted with 355 bullets, shot in the heart by Israeli sniper, burned to death in their tents with US-made weapon, bombed while playing at school, deliberately starved to death, and Palestinians are bombed in refugee camps and discovered in mass graves, naked and with their hands tied, all live-streamed for the world to see.

These are undeniably wore crimes under international law.

 Make no mistake: This event is a celebration of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. It is a sad day for our democracy when my colleagues will smile for a photo op with a man who is actively committing genocide.

It is hypocritical to claim to be concerned about the massive death toll of innocent civilians, and then turn around and welcome the person responsible for these war crimes to our Capitol. Their silence is betrayal, and history will remember them accordingly.

Our government must stop supporting and funding this genocide now,” Tlaib ends by saying.

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The US Set to Clash With Israel Over UNRWA

In what appears to be a direct clash with the Israeli Knesset, the US government does not regard UNRWA as a “terrorism organization.”

US State Department spokesman Mathew Miller said, Wednesday “UNRWA is not a terrorist organization, and we urge the Israeli government and the Knesset to halt the movement of this legislation.”

Miller was responding to the fact that the Israeli parliament, last Monday, introduced a draft bill, in its first reading, designating UNRWA as a terrorism organization and that Israel is set to cut relations with this UN body.

“We have been clear about the important role that UNRWA plays in delivering humanitarian assistance and other critical assistance to Palestinians in Gaza – and throughout the region, not just in Gaza…the United States provides the majority of its funding for – a majority of the funding for humanitarian efforts in Gaza through the UN. We expect to continue to do so…” he added.

“…the attacks that the Israeli Government has leveled on UNRWA are incredibly unhelpful. They do nothing to advance the cause of getting humanitarian assistance to civilians in Gaza. So we’re going to continue to support the work that UNRWA does in the region, while also recognizing the need for reform…” he maintained.

The UN organization employs 30,000 employs working to serve 5.9 Palestinians in the region. Israel is accusing the organization of employing more than 400 terrorists in the Gaza Strip.

As a result the USA suspended its financial contribution to the agency after the Israeli accusations which were not proven by Israel.

Since then, US law has prohibited Washington from releasing funds to the agency, while several countries have resumed their contributions to the agency, including the UK, Germany, EU, Sweden, Japan, and France.

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“Disgusting speech, Shameful Session” Netanyahu in Congress  

Secretary-General of the Palestinian National Initiative Dr. Mustafa Barghouti, described Netanyahu’s speech as disgusting in a shameful session of the US Congress, which accepted to host and give a platform to the war criminal Netanyahu, who is committing crimes of genocide, ethnic cleansing, collective punishment and starvation in Gaza as reported in the Jo24.net website.

Barghouti added that the civilization he speaks of led to the martyrdom of 48,000 Palestinians in Gaza, including 17,000 children, amputation of the hands and feet of 1,200 Palestinian children and the displacement of two million Palestinians after the demolition of their homes.

He said: “This is not civilization, but decadence.”

Barghouti said Netanyahu’s speech was full of lies, even surpassing the Nazi propagandist Goebbels, especially when he claimed that Israel was delivering aid to the residents of the Gaza Strip while the whole world know that is a lie.

“Unfortunately, the US Congress witnessed a disgusting speech by Netanyahu in a shameful session in support of a war criminal, which was boycotted by honorable American representatives who are not subject to the Israeli lobby’s money, and thousands of supporters of the Palestinian struggle demonstrated against it, including thousands of American Jewish protesters who refuse to support Israel with weapons and who call for the freedom of Palestine.”

Barghouti pointed out Netanyahu has made himself and Israel a symbol of reactionism, fundamentalist racism, and a barbaric colonial mentality, and has practiced dangerous propaganda to spread Islamophobia.

Barghouti warned of the danger of Netanyahu’s plan of what he call “the next day for Gaza,” which includes “continuing the aggression against Gaza, maintaining the Israeli occupation there, establishing an entity that is an agent of the occupation…and continuing to use normalization with Arab countries to liquidate the Palestinian issue and restructure Palestinian consciousness to submit to the occupation.”

Barghouti stressed confronting Netanyahu’s vision would be through the rapid implementation of what was stated in the Beijing Declaration, especially the formation of a national reconciliation government that would foil Netanyahu’s tricks and plans and consolidate the unity of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Jerusalem,” he concluded.

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US Senator Bernie Sanders: “Netanyahu is a War Criminal’

US Democratic Senator Nancy Pelosi described Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Wednesday speech as “by far the worst presentation of any foreign dignitary” ever at US Congress according to Al Quds News Network.

“Benjamin Netanyahu’s presentation in the House Chamber today was by far the worst presentation of any foreign dignitary invited and honored with the privilege of addressing the Congress of the United States,” she wrote on X.

US Senator Bernie Sanders also called Netanyahu a “war criminal” and a “liar” following his speech, accusing him of coming “to Congress to campaign.”

On Wednesday, Netanyahu delivered his fourth address to the Congress, as he attempted to drum up continued support for the genocide war in Gaza.

As US legislators clapped for Netanyahu during his speech, activists outside called for him to be tried for abuses linked to Israel’s war in Gaza.

Many activists said that Netanyahu is a war criminal who belongs in jail, not in the halls of Congress.

The demonstrators held effigies of a blood-stained Netanyahu, waved Palestinian flags and chanted “free Palestine” as the Israeli prime minister spoke.

Dozens of lawmakers boycotted Netanyahu’s address, echoing concerns voiced by the demonstrators according to the Quds News Network.

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‘Art is Resistance’ Says Sliman Mansour

Sliman Mansour, a prominent figure in modern Palestinian art, emphasized the importance of “rehumanizing” the Palestinian people, noting that he spent his youth fighting against the erasure of Palestinian identity.

“The Israelis and the West – they’ve been trying very hard to dehumanize us. As artists and people who deal with culture, it’s our role to rehumanize the Palestinian people,” Mansour told Anadolu.

The 77-year-old renowned artist, sculptor, writer and cartoonist, who depicts the historical struggle of Palestinians through his paintings, said he sees art as a form of resistance.

Born in 1947 in the town of Birzeit in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Mansour has portrayed the Palestinian resistance through his art for over half a century.

“I would like to show that Palestinians cherish their land and are holding onto it, and they are saying in poems about the beauty of the land. In my art, I want to show the beauty of the landscape of the land. I want to show that we live in a very unjust situation,” he said.

‘Don’t forget Palestine’

“I’m not thinking about the whole people. I think about the Palestinian people, and especially those who live outside who never saw Palestine. My message for them is: Don’t forget Palestine and Palestine is beautiful. In my art, there is no message of hate. It’s beauty and love.”

Mansour, who lived through the Six Day War between Arab states and Israel in June 1967, often draws attention to the conflicts and pressures faced by Palestinians.

Using symbols derived from Palestinian culture, history, and traditions, Mansour underscores the deep attachment Palestinians have to their land, which serves as a significant source of inspiration for his work.

“Everybody is fighting about the land, and the land is my main inspiration. I was born in a village and I experienced the land and working in the land and living in a village,” he said. “I think the memories of childhood always stay with people, even if they leave the village. From these memories, I think I take my imagination and I take my inspiration,” he said.

Saying that Jerusalem is a symbol of Palestine, and the Dome of the Rock is a symbol of Jerusalem, Mansour said he reflected this idea in a painting titled, The Camel of Hardships, which contained his first political message.

“But the first main painting that I did that had very obvious political meanings is the old man carrying Jerusalem on his back. I have a big family outside, living in the US and everywhere. I noticed that everybody was outside of Palestine. He goes out and he thinks he’s free from all the political pressures.

“But no, he’s always carrying his Palestinian on his back. If you are a Palestinian, you are a problem just because you exist. I wanted to show this fact about Palestinians who live abroad,” he said.

Mansour said in his 1989 work titled, Rituals Under Occupation, he depicted crowds carrying a cross covered with the Palestinian flag and extending toward the horizon.

He received inspiration from a Palestinian judge who lived in the Old City in Jerusalem and had a son who could not walk. Mansour said the Palestinian identity is a “big burden” for them.

“I talked to him (the judge) and he said that everybody in the world has his own cross, and Palestinian people have, all of them, have one big cross,” he said.

“The Palestinian identity is a big burden for us. Our existence is a problem. The flag became one of the main important images of Palestinian identity. The flag is the Palestinian identity, and it’s forever. We don’t see the end of it,” he added.

Mansur pointed out that one of the most frequently used symbols in his work is the olive tree, highlighting his 2021 piece, From the River to the Sea.

“It’s half olive tree and half orange tree. The olive tree symbolizes the land that was occupied in 1967. The orange tree — it symbolizes the land that was occupied in 1948,” he said.

Olive tree, orange tree

Saying that he does not only address the Israeli occupation but also underscores the resilience of the olive tree in the painting, Mansour clarified: “Olive trees – it can live in very rough places on the mountains and without water, and its roots are very long inside the land.

It symbolizes perseverance and the feeling of being that – holding the land and not giving up. In my opinion, Palestinians are like the olive tree,” he added.

Highlighting the Israeli occupation with barbed wire in his paintings, Mansour said: “Barbed wire symbolizes the occupation. It symbolizes also the settlements.”

“Because in every settlement, you see these barbed wires all around the settlement. For Palestinians, when they see barbed wires, it’s either a settlement or a military base or something. It symbolizes the occupation. They want to forbid you to come near that area,” he said.

Adding he is not always hopeful as an artist, Mansur referred to his 2018 work, Temporary Escape, where he expressed those feelings.

“I made this painting during this time when I felt very, very depressed and hopeless. When you live in occupied land, you are the target of many media people that — they aim to defeat you. I mean, defeat you from the inside. Sometimes they succeed, but then you wake up after a while. This is a fight that you have to go in,” he added.

Mentioning the impact of art on the Palestinian resistance, Mansour stated: “If the artist is really truthful with his feelings, he could be effective or she could be effective.”

“Some artists, they do it just because they have to do it. It doesn’t affect anybody. But my art is still, until now, it’s effective because I do what I like to do. It comes out from my heart,” he said.

“It’s not enough to come from your heart. You have to feel a belonging to the culture of your people. It’s not enough to feel belonging, but you have to study it. If you want to express your art through this culture, you have to know this culture very good. I think I have been through that,” he added in an interview with the Turkish news agency.

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