Exposed Horror

Diaa Al-Kahlout, a journalist from Gaza, was recently released from Israeli prisons. In the circulating IDF video, he identified the Israeli soldier who had tortured and terrorized Palestinians during his captivity.

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Three Cheers For Iyah May

Australian singer-songwriter Iyah May garnered widespread attention after her latest track, “Karmageddon,” went viral on social media. She revealed that her management dropped her for refusing to change lyrics that branded Israel’s actions in Gaza as “genocide.”

In late 2024, the manager dropped May as she refused to change specific lyrics of the song. She revealed this on her Instagram in November.

In the song, May rails against “big pharma,” a “man-made virus,” “cancel culture,” and a war that she brands “genocide,” referring to Israel’s actions in Gaza.

Erasing any doubt about the lyrical targets, May’s website describes the track as “addressing the pandemic narrative, corruption within political, pharmaceutical, and health institutions, the Israel-Palestine conflict, violence against women and the social chaos that has swept through the world in the past few years.”

“While Karmageddon has sparked significant conversation and controversy, Iyah has stood her ground,” the website shares. “She refused to compromise her vision when asked to change a key lyric line, leading to the end of her contract with her manager. She chose to walk away from her record label and now, fully independent, Iyah continues to carve her own path as an artist.”

In the song, May says, “More than war, it’s genocide” and “Kids are killed from Israel’s actions.”

Despite losing her contract and manager, May’s Karmageddon has gone viral receiving support and likes from everywhere. On her Instagram, she expressed her gratitude to the people who supported her by saying:

“Thank you for getting behind this track with me. It’s been a journey to get this song out there and there were people who tried to stop this from happening.”

Raised in Far North Queensland in a tiny rainforest village in Australia, May pursued medicine in New York, where she met rapper Shaggy by coincidence and performed for him, accoridng to reports. Thus, setting the path for a music career as well. Before taking on the stage name ‘Iyah May’, she performed under the name, “Mayah”.

The track has caught the attention of those on the right, with Ryan Fournier, a political activist and chair of Students for Trump, sharing a clip of the song on X, formerly Twitter.

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Is Smotrich up to His Word?

Far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich incites in a statement on X against West Bank towns provocatively asserted that Palestinian towns in the West Bank “should resemble [Gaza’s] Jabalia” alluding to the heavily bombarded region in Gaza.

He added that Israel should not trust the Palestinian Authority when assessing its security needs. This is not the first time he incited against the Palestinian people.

Previously, he reaffirmed his determination to implement a plan to seize control of the West Bank and block the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Smotrich called Monday for massive destruction in the West Bank cities of Nablus and Jenin as the case in Jabalia in northern Gaza.

“Funduq, Nablus, and Jenin must look like Jabalia,” Smotrich said.

His call came after three illegal Israeli settlers were killed in a shooting attack in the village of Funduq in the central West Bank.

The extremist minister called for an urgent cabinet meeting to discuss what he called “a change in Israel’s approach” in the occupied West Bank according to Anadolu.

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HRF Files in Thailand Against Israeli Soldier

The Hind Rajab Foundation filed a lawsuit against an Israeli soldier who was residing in Thailand for committing war crimes.

Israeli media report that officials in the occupation state show that the Hind Rajab Foundation is about to increase its activities and is looking for lawyers to file lawsuits against Israeli soldiers who are travelling to Thailand for vacations. The reports also suggest that a lawsuit has already been filed against one of the soldiers on charges of committing war crimes in Gaza.

The Hind Rajab Foundation (HRF), a pro-Palestinian human rights organization, is working to prosecute Israeli soldiers who participated in the war on Gaza.

The organization, which bears the name of a little Gazan girl who was martyred during the war, is actively collecting documentary evidence from the social media to present it to the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

The organization has so far also been able to identify the names of about a thousand Israeli soldiers suspected of involvement in war crimes.

The Israeli occupation army, supported by the United States and Europe, has continued its aggression on the Gaza Strip for 457 consecutive days, where its warplanes bombed the vicinity of hospitals, buildings, towers and homes of Palestinian civilians, destroying them over the heads of their inhabitants, and preventing the entry of water, food, medicine and fuel.

The Israeli aggression has left about 155,000 Palestinian martyrs and wounded, most of them children and women, and more than 10,000 missing, amidst massive destruction and famine that has killed dozens of children and elderly people, in one of the worst humanitarian disasters in the world according to Qudspress.

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