NFL
ast UN committee: Israel war in Gaza ‘consistent with genocide’
While fighting continued in Gaza and Lebanon on Thursday, a United Nations special committee said that Israeli policies and practices in Gaza are “consistent with the characteristics of genocide.”
In a report published Thursday, the U.N. Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices also accused Israel of using “starvation as a weapon of war” and running an “apartheid system” in the occupied West Bank.
There was no immediate response from the Israeli government. In the past, it has accused the U.N. of being biased against Israel.
The U.N. special committee was set up in 1968 to monitor the Israeli occupation. Its annual report covers the period from October 2023 to July 2024.
The International Court of Justice is investigating a claim by South Africa that Israel’s military campaign in Gaza is genocidal. The Israeli government has rejected the charges.
Also Thursday, Human Rights Watch accused Israel of war crimes and crimes against humanity in its war against Hamas militants in Gaza, a conclusion Israel rejected.
The report said Israel, which has repeatedly displaced and relocated civilians, is “committing the war crime of forcible transfer,” and the actions “appear to also meet the definition of ethnic cleansing” in the areas where Palestinians will not be able to return.
In response, Israel accused the organization of using rhetoric that is “completely false and detached from reality.”
The Israeli Foreign Ministry said that Israel’s efforts are “directed solely at dismantling Hamas’s terror capabilities and not at the people of Gaza, unlike Hamas, which uses civilians as human shields and embeds terror infrastructure within residential areas.”
“Israel views all civilian harm as a tragedy, while Hamas views all civilian harm as a strategy. Israel will continue to operate in accordance with the law of armed conflict,” spokesperson Oren Marmorstein said in a statement
Hamas denies that it uses civilians as human shields or hides fighters and weapons in facilities such as hospitals and
War’s toll
Israel invaded the Gaza Strip last year after Hamas led a terror attack on communities in southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people, according to Israeli authorities, and abducting more than 250 as hostages, about 100 of whom are still in Gaza, a third of them believed to be dead.
Since then, the Israeli counteroffensive has killed more than 43,700 people, according to Gaza health authorities. An additional 103,000 Palestinians have been injured. The Israeli military says the death toll includes thousands of Hamas militants. Israel also has destroyed much of the enclave’s infrastructure, forcing most of the 2.3 million population to move several times.
Hamas and Hezbollah have been designated as terror groups by the United States, Britain and other Western countries.
West Bank
For the past month, Israeli troops have moved tens of thousands of people from areas in the north of the territory along the Mediterranean Sea as they sought to destroy Hamas forces the military says have been regrouping around the towns of Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun.
Human Rights Watch said the displacement of Palestinians “is likely planned to be permanent in the buffer zones and security corridors,” an action it said would amount to “ethnic cleansing.”
The Israeli military has denied seeking to create permanent buffer zones, and Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on Monday that Palestinians displaced from their homes in northern Gaza would be allowed to return at the end of the war.
Air strikes in Gaza, Lebanon
On the war front, an Israeli strike on a home in northern Gaza killed three children, among at least six people killed in the territory, Palestinian medics said.
An airstrike hit the southern suburbs of Beirut on Thursday after an Israeli warning to evacuate parts of the Hezbollah bastion, Agence France-Presse reported.
Shortly before the strike, Israel had issued a warning to residents to evacuate their home’s
“You are located near Hezbollah facilities and interests against which the [Israeli military] will operate in the near future,” army spokesperson Avichay Adraee said in a post on X that included a map identifying buildings in the areas.
In a post on the Telegram messaging app Thursday, Israel Defense Forces said the air force struck and dismantled more than 140 Hezbollah launchers in southern Lebanon and had killed two battalion commanders and a company commander.
“Over the past week, the IDF eliminated over 200 Hezbollah terrorists in southern Lebanon from the air and ground,” the post stated.
But, in a sign that a truce may be slowly approaching, the U.S. ambassador to Lebanon on Thursday submitted a draft truce proposal to Lebanon’s parliament speaker, Nabih Berri, according to Reuters.
Some information in this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse.