Smotrich Vows to Demolish Highest Number of Palestinian Homes

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has vowed that the occupation state will demolish more Palestinian homes than are built in the West Bank by 2025. If that is fulfilled, it will mark the first time since 1967 that Israel’s demolitions will outpace construction.

Smotrich made the announcement during a speech at a meeting of the Israeli Civil Administration’s Law Enforcement Unit on Sunday. He emphasized that the government would intensify demolition operations, aiming to increase efforts significantly by 2025.

“2025 will be the first year since 1967 in which we will destroy more than what Palestinians build,” Smotrich declared. He highlighted that controlling land is at the core of the Israeli colonial project.

Smotrich confirmed that the Israeli government will continue to block Palestinian construction in areas occupied by Israel. He pointed to the 2025 budget, which includes substantial increases for demolition operations. This will involve more manpower, new equipment, and advanced technology to monitor Palestinian construction according to the Quds News Network.

Since the start of the genocide in Gaza, Israel has escalated settlement activity in the West Bank. This is part of a broader strategy to annex more Palestinian land, despite international opposition.

Israel’s settlement expansion continues amid official statements and consensus among Knesset members rejecting the creation of a Palestinian state, defying international law. The United Nations has repeatedly called for a halt to these illegal settlements.

Since October 7, 2023, Israel has intensified attacks in the West Bank and the eastern part of occupied Jerusalem, resulting in over 900 Palestinian deaths, thousands of injuries, and the displacement of hundreds. Israel’s demolition campaign has destroyed more than 1,300 Palestinian structures in Area C, displacing over 1,100 people, according to UN reports.

By the end of 2024, around 770,000 Israeli settlers lived in the West Bank, spread across 180 settlements and 256 outposts. These settlements are considered illegal under international law.

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Lizzie Greenwood on Hunger Strike For Palestine

British activist Lizzie Greenwood continues her hunger strike for the 13th day protesting the UK weapons funding for the Israeli occupation and supporting its genocide in Gaza.

The former candidate for parliament and Holocaust Education Trust youth ambassador told Al Jazeera why she felt she had no choice but to take such drastic action.

Greenwood is currently trending on the social media as she calls on everyone to support the people to support the people of Gaza with everything they can.

These are some of the hashtags: #OpGaza #Palestine #FreePalestine #Anonymous #OpIsrael #ChildrenOfGaza

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Can Israeli Troops Invade Lebanon?

𝗜𝘀𝗿𝗮𝗲𝗹 𝗵𝗮𝘀 𝘁𝗼𝗹𝗱 the 𝗨.𝗦. 𝗶𝘁 𝘄𝗶𝗹𝗹 𝗹𝗮𝘂𝗻𝗰𝗵 𝗮𝗻 𝗶𝗻𝘃𝗮𝘀𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗶𝗻𝘁𝗼 𝗟𝗲𝗯𝗮𝗻𝗼𝗻.

Israel has informed Washington it will launch an imminent limited ground operation in Lebanon. But this is hard to believe on the ground level.

Israeli troops have been waiting to enter southern Lebanon soon after 23 September, 2024 when their warplanes started to bomb the southern part of the country and the southern district of Beirut that is deemed to be a Hezbollah stronghold.

Although, its troop divisions and military brigades switched to the north of Israel from Gaza, there are still standing on the border with Lebanon, meeting stiff resistance from Hezbollah fighters with skirmishes quite often described as heavy.

According to reports that whilst Israeli troops may have moved one or two kilometers inside the Lebanese borders from the south and the east, they couldn’t hold their positions and were soon pushed back.

These limited Israeli incursions have been continuing on a daily basis but with not much success.

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Avi Shlaim: ‘I am proud of my Arab heritage and proud of my Jewish heritage’ 

Editor’s Note: On the first anniversary of the bloody 7 October, 2023, I reprint the story I wrote on Professor Avi Shlaim that was scribbled early this year and published in countercurrents. Avi Shlaim is an eminent Israeli-British historian and international relations expert at Oxford University in the UK with many books on the Arab-Israeli conflict. He is part of what is called the “New Historians” who sought to provide a critical analysis of the prevailing Israeli view claiming Palestinians left their land of their own free will and were not forced out in 1948 as Israel was created.

In the light of Israel’s latest genocide in Gaza, he provides what he calls a “personal commentary” of his views as a Jewish Arab and on the current Netanyahu government.

“I am an Arab Jew. I was born in Baghdad and I grew up in Israel. My Iraqi birth certificate gives my name as Ibrahim. So, I am the real Ibrahim Al Baghdadi. The other chap is a fake. He stole my Identity,” he says in a mirthful manner.

Baghdad

“I am proud of my Arab heritage and I am equally proud of my Jewish heritage. The three pillars of Judaism are truth, justice and peace,” the historian, who left Baghdad at the age of five in 1950, emphasizes.  

“The Netanyahu government is the opposite of these core Jewish values,” adding “it is the most aggressive, expansionist, overtly racist and Jewish supremacist government in Israel’s history,” Shlaim maintains.

“The essence of Judaism is non-violence.” The present government is the anthesis of this non-violence,” he laments.

“As a Jew and an Israeli, I therefore feel that I have a moral duty to denounce Zionist-settler colonialism and American imperialism and to stand by the Palestinians in the anti-colonial struggle, in the just struggle to live in peace and dignity in their own land,” he concludes.

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