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British Parliamentary Committee Calls for Recognition of Palestine

A British parliamentary committee has urged the UK government to officially recognize Palestine as an independent state in an effort to support peace efforts and affirm the rights of Palestinians. The call comes amid increasing tensions in the region and international criticism of the continued occupation and settlement expansion in the Palestinian territories. The committee emphasized that recognizing Palestine would be a significant step toward a two-state solution, aligning with the UK’s longstanding policy to support peace and stability in the Middle East. The report noted that failure to take such a step undermines the credibility of the UK’s commitment to international law and human rights. It also highlighted the growing humanitarian crisis in Gaza and the West Bank, stressing the need for immediate international action to address the worsening conditions. The committee urged the UK to work with its allies to push for meaningful negotiations between Israeli and Palestinian leaders and to ensure the implementation of measures to protect civilians and uphold their basic rights. This call aligns with growing momentum among global governments and organizations advocating for Palestinian statehood as a means to achieve lasting peace in the region.

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Amid genocide, the tide is turning on Palestine

Pro-Palestine activists could not put an end to Israel’s genocide, but managed to shift the public opinion on the conflict. By Majed al-Zeer ( The Chairman of European Palestinian Council for Political Relations (EUPAC) The suffering of the Palestinian people, which began with the Nakba and the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948, reached brand new depths in the past 15 months.  More than 46,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have been killed and more than 110,000 injured in Israel’s continuing genocide in Gaza. More than ten thousand others are missing, arbitrarily detained, or known to be buried under the rubble of their destroyed homes. Israel’s relentless attacks have not spared homes, schools, and even hospitals in the besieged Strip. Hundreds of thousands of survivors, pushed out of their homes and into makeshift tents in so-called “safe zones”, are facing indiscriminate air strikes, daily massacres, disease outbreaks, hunger and harsh winter conditions with no end in sight to their misery. Palestinians in the occupied West Bank are also under attack from Israeli forces and lack most basic rights and freedoms. Palestinians document the atrocities committed against their people by Israel one by one and share them with the world in real-time for everyone to see. South Africa has launched a genocide case against Israel at the World Court, backed by a large variety of countries including Mexico, Brazil and Turkiye. The ICC has also taken action against Israel, issuing arrest warrants for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity. The global public is also clear in its support for Palestinians, with tens of thousands of pro-Palestinian protests, vigils and sit-ins held across the world, attracting support from millions of people from all walks of life, since the beginning of the genocide in October of 2023. Despite all this, however, Israel appears able to continue its crimes openly and with impunity. This is because its Western supporters and benefactors, especially the United States, turn a blind eye to all of Israel’s excesses, and refuse to acknowledge – let alone punish – its blatant violations of international law. Washington particularly, as the main supplier of arms, bombs and other military equipment to Israel, has not done anything to help end the genocide in the past 15 months. On the contrary, it has done everything in its power to shield Israel from accountability. For example, it has used its veto power four times, most recently on November 20, to prevent the UN Security Council from passing a resolution demanding a ceasefire. It also voted against the UN General Assembly resolution, supported by 154 member states, calling for an immediate end to Israel’s war on Gaza. It is also attempting to punish the ICC for issuing warrants against Israeli leaders, with the House of Representatives passing a bill to sanction the court. As such, it seems as long as the US military, political and financial support for Israel continues, there is nothing supporters of Palestine can do to bring the suffering of the Palestinian people to an end or ensure that their basic human rights are respected. Thankfully, however, the past 14 months were not marked only by losses and disappointment. Supporters of Palestine have also scored important political, legal and electoral victories in this time. Most importantly, despite the world’s inability to put an end to Israel’s genocide and lawless occupation, the Palestinian cause has more support in the global public square today than ever before. Israel is becoming a pariah. And this matters. Indeed, even in America, where politicians seem committed to protecting Israel at any cost, people have regularly taken to the streets to demand an end to the brutal war on Gaza’s population. American universities, from coast to coast, have been taken over by Gaza solidarity encampments. While most of these protests were crushed with force with many of their participants severely punished, they still managed to show the world that American people do not support genocide. They also made American people pay attention to what their country is funding in Gaza and helped shift the public opinion against the genocide. In Western Europe, another traditional support base of Israel, Palestine has also started receiving unprecedented support at both official and grassroots levels. Sure, the European dependence on the US and Israel’s historic ties to and extensive lobbying investment in most European nations, means official support for Israel’s war is still strong on the continent. The German government, for example, has been unwavering in its support for Israel since the very beginning of the genocide, and to this day supports and defends all actions of the Netanyahu government. But pro-Palestinian and anti-genocide voices gained significant prominence across Europe’s political, legal, media, entertainment and economic sectors, as well as in unions, academia and among students, gradually moving several European governments and leading institutions to stand for international law and Palestinian human rights.According to the data gathered by the European Palestinian Information Center (EPAL), there have been more than 26,000 demonstrations and other activities in support of Palestinian rights in 619 cities across 20 European countries during the first year of the genocidal Israeli war on Gaza. In response to this growing call for justice in Palestine coming from the European public, European governments are starting to slowly show support for the struggle. Belgium, Ireland and Spain officially sided with South Africa in the genocide case against Israel. Spain and Ireland also recognised the Palestinian state, bringing the number of EU nations to do so to 10. French President Emmanuel Macron has called for an arms export halt and the UK has suspended some licences. Ireland has been so vocal in its condemnation of the genocide that Israel has recently decided to close its embassy in the country. In electoral politics, despite the over all rise of the right and obvious successes of right-wing parties in various elections, supporters of Palestine have also made significant gains across several European countries in

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Corbyn: ‘End all arms sales to Israel, now’

Jeremy Corbyn, the former leader of the UK Labour Party and a human rights advocate, has reiterated his call for an end to all arms sales to Israel, amid criticisms of the UK’s indirect involvement in the Gaza genocide. Corbyn made the call in a post on X on Sunday where he shared the “last photo of Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, detained after refusing to abandon his colleagues and patients.” “In just one image, we see both the power of Palestinian humanity and the moral weakness of all those complicit in genocide. End all arms sales to Israel, now,” he wrote. Several international bodies and UK campaign groups have repeatedly raised concerns about Israel’s use of military equipment in Gaza. The regime’s ground and aerial offensive have killed over 45,500 Palestinians and left a trail of destruction across the Palestinian territory over the past eight months. In September, the British government announced its decision to ban arms exports to the Israeli regime partially. UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy told parliament on September 2 that the partial ban would suspend 30 out of 350 arms export licenses for arms manufacturers supplying military equipment to the Israeli regime. The suspension came after months of pro-Palestinian protests in London and other cities demanding an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and also a halt in British arms sales to Israel. Since the start of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, the UK, and to a much larger extent the US, has been supplying all kinds of arms and munitions to the Israeli regime. Media reports have revealed many of the weapons and ammunition shipments of arms manufacturers’ goods to the Israeli regime are done quietly, without formal notification of governments, or the public knowing about it. The unofficial deliveries include thousands of rockets, missiles, a variety of bombs, rifles, munitions, and other weapons, and equipment. London also claims that the UK sales exports of military equipment and goods to the Israeli regime are “relatively small” compared to the US.

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BBC staffers reveal editor’s ‘entire job’ to whitewash Israeli war crimes

News editor Raffi Berg reportedly controls online coverage of genocide in Gaza to ensure Israeli crimes are ‘watered down’ or ignored BBC editor Raffi Berg has almost complete control of the British broadcaster’s online coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza and is ensuring that all events are reported with a pro-Israel bias, according to a new report published on 28 December by Drop Site News. “This guy’s entire job is to water down everything that’s too critical of Israel,” one former BBC journalist said. Drop Site News spoke to 13 current and former staffers who stated that the BBC’s coverage consistently devalues Palestinian life, ignores Israeli atrocities, and creates a false equivalence in an entirely unbalanced conflict. Another BBC journalist said Berg plays a key role in a broader BBC culture of “systematic Israeli propaganda.”  “How much power he has is wild,” said another journalist. “There was an extreme fear at the BBC, that if you ever wanted to do anything about Israel or Palestine, editors would say: ‘If you want to pitch something, you have to go through Raffi and get his signoff,” another journalist explained. In one case, Berg downplayed Amnesty International’s accusation that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Berg chose a headline that stated, “Israel rejects ‘fabricated’ claims of genocide,” to describe the Amnesty report and failed to post the story for 12 hours after it was written to suppress its online reach. The journalists interviewed by Drop Site also noted that the Amnesty report was not covered on the BBC’s flagship news programs—BBC One’s News At One, News At Six, or News At Ten or its flagship current affairs program, BBC Two’s Newsnight. “Anyone who writes on Gaza or Israel is asked: ‘Has it gone to edpol [editorial policy], lawyers, and has it gone to Raffi?’” another journalist said. Raffi Berg, who wrote a book praising clandestine Mossad operations, wields great power to influence perceptions of Israel’s war on Gaza because the BBC news website is the most-visited news site on the internet, with over 1.1 billion visits in May alone. Israel’s war on Gaza has killed over 45,000 Palestinians, the majority women and children, and flattened large swathes of the besieged enclave. The pro-Israel bias imposed by Berg is evident in the language used to cover the war. While stories “prominently” used words like “massacre,” “slaughter,” and “atrocities” to refer to Hamas, they “hardly, if at all,” used them “in reference to actions by Israel,” wrote Rami Ruhayem, a Beirut-based BBC Arabic correspondent. In another case, the BBC published a story with a headline that hid Israel’s responsibility for killing an entire family in a missile strike. “Israel Gaza: Father loses 11 family members in one blast,” the headline stated. Drop Site notes that when the BBC does mention Israel as the perpetrator, it uses the caveat “reportedly.” The BBC also uses euphemisms preferred by the Israeli army to hide its soldiers’ war crimes. For example, the BBC describes the forcible transfer or ethnic cleansing of Palestinian civilians as “evacuations.” In one case, the BBC described Israel’s total siege on Gaza with a headline stating, “Israel aims to cut Gaza ties after war with Hamas.” Defense minister Yoav Gallant’s public vow to impose a “full siege” on Gaza while calling Palestinians “human animals” received just one mention in any BBC online content. The journalists speaking with Drop Site said they made specific requests to BBC management to balance its coverage, but their requests have been ignored. “Many of us have raised concerns that Raffi has the power to reframe every story, and we are ignored,” one journalist said.  “Almost every correspondent you know has an issue with him,” one stated. “He has been named in multiple meetings, but [BBC management] just ignore it.” The journalist said they demanded that stories should “emphasize that Israelhad not granted the BBC access to Gaza, that the network should end the practice of presenting the official Israeli versions of events as fact, and that the BBC should do more to offer context about Israeli occupation and the fact that Gaza is overwhelmingly populated by descendants of refugees forcibly driven from their homes beginning in 1948.” 

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Complicity in Israeli settlements is a prosecutable crime

EUPAC invites relevant bodies to use existing laws to stop illegal dealing with the Israeli settlements, through, inter alia: “The Israeli Settlements and Europe: Facts and Prospects” Conference Proceedings EUPAC invites relevant bodies to use existing laws to stop illegal dealing with the Israeli settlements, through, inter alia: Prosecuting complicit actors according to the Actio Popularis principle Prosecuting business enterprises that fail to undertake the necessary human rights due diligence procedures in line with the UNGPs and OECD Guidelines and the responsibilities under international human rights and humanitarian law. Prosecuting EU citizens serving in the Israeli army in the OPT and in the settlements for complicity in war crimes.

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