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Huthis will be ‘annihilated’
Says Trump; Khamenei says US strikes must stop

US President Donald Trump said Yemen's Iran-backed Huthi rebels "will be completely annihilated," warning Tehran against continuing aid for the group amid an ongoing US military campaign against them.

"Iran must stop the sending of these Supplies IMMEDIATELY. Let the Houthis fight it out themselves. Either way they lose, but this way they lose quickly," Trump posted on his Truth Social platform.

The Republican referenced reports that Iran "has lessened its intensity on Military Equipment and General Support" for the Huthis, though added "they are still sending large levels of Supplies."

"Tremendous damage has been inflicted upon the Houthi barbarians, and watch how it will get progressively worse -- It's not even a fair fight, and never will be. They will be completely annihilated!" his post continued.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei yesterday said that deadly US strikes on the Huthi rebels in Yemen were a "crime that must be stopped".

The United States said its strikes on Yemen targeted and killed several top Huthi officials, while the Huthi-run health ministry said they left dead 53 people and wounded nearly 100.​
 

At least 91 killed in Gaza as Israel abandons ceasefire, orders evacuation
REUTERS
Published :
Mar 20, 2025 23:41
Updated :
Mar 20, 2025 23:41

1742517237422.png


A child looks on as people mourn Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes, at the European hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip March 20, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Hatem Khaled

At least 91 Palestinians were killed and dozens wounded in airstrikes across Gaza on Thursday after Israel resumed bombing and ground operations, the enclave's health ministry said, effectively ditching a two-month-old ceasefire.

After two months of relative calm, Gazans were again fleeing for their lives after Israel effectively abandoned a ceasefire, launching a new all-out air and ground campaign against Gaza's dominant Palestinian militant group Hamas.

Israeli aircraft dropped leaflets on residential neighbourhoods, ordering people out of Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun towns in the north, the Shejaia district in Gaza City and towns on the eastern outskirts of Khan Younis in the south.

"War is back, displacement and death are back, will we survive this round?" said Samed Sami, 29, who fled Shejaia to put up a tent for his family in a camp on open ground.

A day after sending tanks into central Gaza, the Israeli military said on Thursday it had also begun conducting ground operations in the north of the densely populated enclave, along the coastal route in Beit Lahiya.

Hamas, which had not retaliated during the first 48 hours of the renewed Israeli assault, said its fighters fired rockets into Israel. The Israeli military said sirens sounded in the centre of the country after projectiles were launched from Gaza.

Palestinian medics said Israeli strikes targeted several houses in northern and southern sections of the Gaza Strip.

With talks having failed to bridge differences over terms to extend the ceasefire, the military resumed its air assaults on Gaza with a massive bombing campaign on Tuesday before sending soldiers in the day after.

HUNDREDS DEAD

It said on Thursday that its forces had been engaged for the past 24 hours in what it described as an operation to expand a buffer zone separating the northern and southern halves of Gaza, known as the Netzarim corridor.

Israel ordered residents to stay away from the Salahuddin road, Gaza's main north-south route, and said they should travel along the coast instead.

Tuesday's first day of resumed airstrikes killed more than 400 Palestinians, one of the deadliest days of the 17-month-old conflict, with scant let-up since.

In a blow to Hamas as it sought to rebuild its administration in Gaza, this week's strikes have killed some of its top figures, including the de facto Hamas-appointed head of the Gaza government, the chief of security services, his aide, and the deputy head of the Hamas-run justice ministry.

The Islamist group said the Israeli ground operation and the incursion into the Netzarim corridor were a "new and dangerous violation" of the ceasefire agreement. In a statement, it reaffirmed its commitment to the deal and called on mediators to "assume their responsibilities".

For Israel, a return to full-blown war could prove complicated, some current and former Israeli officials say, amid waning public support and burnout among military reservists. Protesters accuse Netanyahu of continuing the war for political reasons and endangering the lives of remaining hostages.

A temporary first phase of the ceasefire ended at the start of this month. Hamas wants to move to an agreed second phase, under which Israel would be required to negotiate an end to the war and withdrawal of its troops from Gaza, and Israeli hostages still held there would be exchanged for Palestinian prisoners.

Israel has offered only a temporary extension of the truce, cut off all supplies to Gaza and said it was restarting its military campaign to force Hamas to free remaining hostages.

'WE DON'T WANT DEATH'

The ceasefire had allowed Huda Junaid, her husband and family to return to the site of their destroyed home to camp out in the ruins. But they were now forced to flee again, packing their few remaining belongings into a donkey cart and searching for a new place to pitch their tent near a school.

"We don't want war, we don't want death. Enough, we are fed up. There are no longer children in Gaza, all of our children are dead, all of our relatives are dead," she said.

Some Palestinians who tried to use the Salahuddin road said they saw cars come under fire from Israeli troops advancing towards Netzarim. The fate of those in the vehicles was unknown.

"Bulldozers protected by some tanks were heading to the west coming from the areas where they are stationed near the fence east of the Salahuddin road," one taxi driver told Reuters, asking not to be identified for fear of reprisals.

Speaking to Reuters on Thursday, a Hamas official said mediators had stepped up efforts with the two warring sides but no breakthrough had yet come.

Some residents said there were no signs yet of preparations by Hamas on the ground to resume fighting. But an official from one militant group allied to Hamas, who asked not to be identified, told Reuters on Thursday that fighters, including from Hamas, had been put on alert awaiting further instructions. Fighters had also been told to stop using mobile phones.

The war erupted after Hamas militants attacked Israeli communities near the Gaza border in October 2023, killing 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages, by Israeli tallies.

More than 49,000 Palestinians have been killed in the ensuing conflict, according to Gaza's health authorities, with much of the enclave reduced to rubble.​
 

Israeli warns residents of south Gaza town to evacuate ahead of strike
Agence France-Presse . Jerusalem 21 March, 2025, 00:26

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People sit in front of a building destroyed during Israeli strikes at the Nusseirat refugee camp, on Thursday. | AFP photo

The Israeli army on Thursday warned residents of the southern Gaza town of Bani Suheila to evacuate their homes immediately ahead of a strike in their area.

‘To all those present in the area marked as Bani Suheila, this is an early warning before a strike. Terrorist organisations are returning to and firing rockets from populated areas... For your safety, head west toward the known shelters immediately,’ Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee said in a post on X.

Hamas said it fired rockets at Israeli commercial hub Tel Aviv on Thursday in its first military response to the growing civilian death toll from Israel’s resumption of air and ground operations in Gaza.

Israel said it had closed off the territory’s main north-south route as troops expanded the ground operations they resumed on Wednesday.

Gaza’s civil defence agency said 504 people had been killed so far in the Israeli assault, including more than 190 children. Its previous death toll was at least 470.

The armed wing of Hamas, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, said it fired rockets at Tel Aviv in response to Israel’s ‘massacres’ of Gaza civilians.

The Israeli army said it intercepted one projectile fired from Gaza and that two others struck an uninhabited area.

After weeks of stalemate, Israel resumed its air campaign early Tuesday with a wave of deadly strikes that drew widespread condemnation.

The offensive shattered a relative calm that had pervaded in the war-ravaged Palestinian territory since a ceasefire took hold on January 19.

At the Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza, grieving families knelt by the bodies of their loved ones enveloped in blood-stained white shrouds.

‘We want a ceasefire! We want a ceasefire!’ one of them, Mohammed Hussein, told AFPTV, appealing for the international community to stop the killing.

‘We are defenceless Palestinian people,’ he added.

On Thursday, the Israeli army banned traffic on the territory’s main north-south artery.

Palestinians were seen fleeing south along Salaheddin Road near the Nusseirat refugee camp atop donkey-drawn carts piled high with belongings.

‘Over the past 24 hours, IDF soldiers have begun a targeted ground operation in the central and southern Gaza Strip in order to expand the security zone between the northern and southern parts,’ army spokesman Avichay Adraee said on X.

Movement along Salaheddin Road between the north and south of the Gaza Strip is prohibited ‘for your safety’, he said.

‘Instead, travel from northern Gaza to the south is possible via the Al-Rashid coastal road,’ Adraee added, without spelling out whether that meant movement from south to north was banned.

Asked by AFP for clarification, the army had no immediate comment.

An official from Gaza’s Hamas-run interior ministry said the Israeli army had closed what it calls Netzarim Junction, on Salaheddin Road just south of Gaza City, on Wednesday evening.

The official said Israeli tanks had deployed at the junction, where the road artery crosses Israel’s main supply route, ‘following the withdrawal of American special security forces Wednesday morning’.

He was referring to American private security contractors deployed in February after the pullback of Israeli forces under the terms of the January ceasefire.

The first stage of the ceasefire expired early this month amid deadlock over next steps.

Israel rejected negotiations for a promised second stage, calling instead for the return of all of its remaining hostages under an extended first stage.

That would have meant delaying talks on a lasting ceasefire, and was rejected by Hamas as an attempt to renegotiate the original deal.

The head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees on Thursday deplored ‘an endless unleashing of the most inhumane ordeals’ on the people of Gaza since Israel resumed its military offensive.

‘Israeli Forces bombardment continues from air & sea for the third day,’ Philippe Lazzarini wrote on X. ‘Under our daily watch, people in Gaza are again & again going through their worst nightmare.’

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called Israel’s latest strikes on Gaza a ‘catastrophic crime’ and said the United States ‘shares responsibility’.

The war began with Hamas’s 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in 1,218 deaths, mostly civilians, according to Israeli figures.

Gaza’s civil defence agency had said on Wednesday that at least 470 people had been killed in the territory since Israel resumed its strikes.

Among them was a worker for the UN Office for Project Services who the Gaza health ministry said was killed in an Israeli strike on the agency’s headquarters in Deir el-Balah.

British foreign secretary David Lammy called for a ‘transparent investigation’ into the strike on the UN compound in which a UK citizen was among five wounded.

The overall death toll in Gaza since the start of the war stands at 49,617, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.​
 

THE GAZA TRAGEDY: Violation of humanity, law and conscience
Kollol Kibria 21 March, 2025, 00:00

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Protestors rally outside the White House against Israeli bombing of Gaza on March 18 in Washington, DC. | Agence France-Presse/Getty Images/Andrew Harnik

FOR the people of Gaza, this Ramadan has brought nothing but sorrow — a sorrow deeper than words can capture, especially during what should be a time of peace. The sounds of warplanes, the distant echoes of bombs, and the constant fear of death have turned what should be a month of spiritual renewal into one of grief and despair. For the people of Gaza, this Ramadan is marked not by moments of prayer and joy but by the unbearable loss, uncertainty, and an unending cycle of violence.

This year, Gaza’s residents had hoped for a brief moment of respite, a fleeting glimpse of peace, of normalcy. They dreamed that perhaps, just perhaps, this Ramadan and Eid would be different. Perhaps, after so many years of suffering, they could experience a small measure of joy, free from the constant threat of war, free from the ever-present shadow of death.

They dreamed that this Eid, their children would at least laugh in the streets and celebrate with their families without fear. But those dreams have been shattered, and in their place lies a grim reality.

As warplanes continue to soar above Gaza, the sound of their engines is drowned out only by the blasts of bombs falling from the sky. On the eve of Eid, the people of Gaza are preparing for the unimaginable: carrying the lifeless bodies of their children, their parents, their siblings and loved ones ripped from them by airstrikes that show no mercy. These innocent lives, once full of potential, are now buried beneath the rubble of destroyed homes. The children who should have been celebrating the joy of Eid with their families will never get to do so. Instead, their families must bury them, their laughter forever silenced by the brutality of this ongoing conflict.

On March 18, 2025, Israel launched a devastating attack on Gaza, one that has claimed the lives of hundreds of innocent men, women and children, including the prime minister of Gaza. In the span of mere hours, homes were destroyed, lives were torn apart, and Gaza was plunged further into despair. The images of shattered homes and grieving families serve as a haunting reminder of the violence that continues to ravage this region. It is a violence that has no end in sight, a violence that disregards every norm of humanity and every law of warfare. The lives of innocent civilians are treated as expendable, their deaths nothing more than a footnote in the history of an unrelenting conflict.

But what makes this tragedy even more heart-wrenching is the continued support that Israel receives from powerful nations, most notably the United States. Despite the overwhelming evidence of civilian casualties and the cries of innocent children being silenced, the US continues to fund Israel’s military operations, providing the weapons and resources needed to carry out these devastating airstrikes. While the US government claims to promote peace and stability in the region, its actions tell a different story. They are complicit in the deaths of hundreds of innocent people, providing the means for more destruction, more suffering and more loss.

Their deaths are not just a tragedy for Gaza but for the entire world, a reflection of the collective failure to protect innocent lives and to uphold the basic principles of humanity and justice.

This Ramadan, the world must confront the harsh truth: the lives of innocent people in Gaza are being taken, and yet the international community remains largely silent. The time for silence is over. The world must demand an end to the violence. The people of Gaza are not asking for much; they are asking simply to live, to be allowed to celebrate Eid with their children, and to enjoy a moment of peace amidst the suffering. But that peace continues to be denied to them, not by their own actions, but by the actions of those who hold the power to stop the bloodshed but choose not to.

How many more lives must be lost before the world acts? How many more children must be buried before we say enough? The cries of the innocent are growing louder, but they fall on deaf ears. It is time for the international community to take a stand, to hold those responsible for these atrocities accountable, and to demand an immediate end to the violence. The people of Gaza have suffered for far too long.

The human cost

THE scale of human suffering is staggering. Over 400 people have been confirmed dead, with more than 500 others injured in a single day. Among the victims are children, who, for the most part, should be playing and learning, not dying under bombs. Gaza’s children, once hopeful and full of dreams, have been rendered powerless against a machine of war that recognises no innocence. Their bodies lie in the rubble of their homes, schools and places of worship, caught in a senseless cycle of violence they did not choose and cannot escape.

Equally tragic is the death of the Prime Minister of Gaza, a figure who had dedicated his life to serving his people amid tremendous hardship. His death is not just the loss of a leader; it is a loss to the entire political framework of Gaza. The repercussions of his assassination will be felt across the region and reverberate throughout the international community. Yet, his death is but one example of the widespread targeting of individuals whose only crime was their involvement in seeking some form of peace and governance amidst chaos.

The world has witnessed, time and again, how children become the unintended victims of conflicts they do not understand. They are victims of both the direct violence inflicted upon them and the long-term psychological toll of living under constant threat. How many more children must die before the international community is forced to act?

Violating international law

INTERNATIONAL humanitarian law, enshrined in the Geneva Conventions and other treaties, is meant to protect civilian lives during conflict. These laws prohibit the targeting of civilian populations and mandate that belligerent parties distinguish between combatants and non-combatants. The recent Israeli airstrikes, which targeted densely populated civilian areas in Gaza, flagrantly disregard these principles.

These attacks, executed in violation of the Geneva Conventions, raise profound questions about the accountability of those who carry out such strikes. According to the conventions, any deliberate attack on civilians constitutes a war crime. The principle of proportionality in international law mandates that the harm caused to civilians should not be excessive in relation to the military advantage sought. However, the indiscriminate nature of the Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, killing large numbers of civilians, including children, undermines this legal framework.

In addition to the Geneva Conventions, Israel’s actions also violate customary international law, which includes the protection of civilians in times of conflict. The targeting of infrastructure that supports civilian life, such as homes, schools, hospitals and places of worship, further breaches these legal obligations. The destruction of such critical infrastructure not only exacerbates human suffering but also threatens to destabilise Gaza’s already fragile healthcare and educational systems.

It is worth noting that such violations are not isolated. They have become part of a broader pattern of actions that disregard basic human rights and dignity. Despite the repeated calls from human rights organisations and the international community for Israel to cease these attacks, there has been little accountability or change.

Failure of international diplomacy

WHILE the world watches these horrific events unfold, there has been an agonising lack of meaningful international response. The United Nations has condemned the violence, yet it has failed to take any decisive steps to halt the bloodshed. The United States, one of Israel’s closest allies, has voiced support for Israel’s self-defence claims, despite the overwhelming evidence of civilian casualties. Meanwhile, European nations, such as the United Kingdom and France, have urged Israel to exercise restraint but have not gone beyond diplomatic rhetoric.

This diplomatic paralysis is inexcusable. The global community’s failure to act decisively not only allows violence to continue but also emboldens the perpetrators. In such situations, the international community must ask itself: how many lives must be lost before action is taken? What price will the world pay for standing idly by while Gaza burns?

Holding war criminals to account

ONE of the most pressing issues following this latest attack is the need for accountability. International law cannot be a mere abstraction; it must have real consequences for those who violate it. The death of innocent civilians, particularly children, and the targeted killing of political figures demand a full investigation by international bodies such as the International Criminal Court. The principle of universal jurisdiction, which allows for the prosecution of war crimes regardless of where they occur, should be invoked to hold the Israeli military accountable for its actions.

This process must not be hindered by political considerations or diplomatic relationships. The lives of innocent civilians cannot be weighed against the strategic interests of powerful nations. War crimes must be prosecuted, and those responsible must be held to account. If justice is not pursued, the world will continue to witness atrocities such as this, and the hope for lasting peace in Gaza and the broader Middle East will remain elusive.

Role of the international community

THE international community must step up to prevent further violence and ensure that the voices of the oppressed are heard. Humanitarian assistance must be allowed to flow freely into Gaza, and all parties involved in the conflict must agree to allow international peacekeeping forces to help protect civilians. Moreover, there needs to be greater focus on the protection of children in conflict zones. The Convention on the Rights of the Child, which mandates the protection of children from the ravages of war, should be a guiding principle for all governments and international organisations. Yet, in Gaza, this convention is being flagrantly ignored, as children are killed in their homes, schools and playgrounds.

In addition to immediate relief efforts, there must be long-term efforts to ensure lasting peace. This means addressing the root causes of the conflict: territorial disputes, historical grievances, and the ongoing blockade of Gaza. Negotiations must be reinvigorated, with a focus on creating a just and lasting solution that respects the rights and sovereignty of both Israelis and Palestinians.

As Gaza bleeds, the world must not turn away. The deaths of innocent children and leaders cannot be ignored. The global community has a moral obligation to intervene and put an end to the violence. The first step in that process is a ceasefire, but that must be followed by a comprehensive peace plan that addresses the humanitarian crisis, ensures accountability for war crimes, and promotes long-term peace and stability in the region.

The international community must not only condemn the actions of those who commit atrocities in Gaza but must also take concrete steps to ensure that the perpetrators are held accountable. This may require stronger sanctions, military interventions to protect civilians, or the imposition of international peacekeeping forces to maintain order and provide protection.

Most importantly, the lives of Gaza’s children must be safeguarded. No child should have to live in a world where their safety is constantly at risk, where their hopes and dreams are crushed under the weight of war.

The tragic events of March 18 have once again demonstrated the fragility of life in Gaza and the deep injustice faced by its people. But they also serve as a stark reminder of the failure of the international community to prevent such atrocities. We must act now, before the bloodshed continues, before more lives are lost, and before the children of Gaza are forever robbed of their future. The time for words is over; the world must act.

Kollol Kibria is an advocate, human rights activist and political analyst.​
 

World must act to stop Israel
FE
Published :
Mar 22, 2025 00:13
Updated :
Mar 22, 2025 00:30

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A child looks on as people mourn Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes, at the European hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip March 20, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Hatem Khaled

Words fail to condemn the Israeli air attacks across the Gaza strip on March 18 last, that killed more than 400 Palestinians, mainly women and children. Clearly, this is yet another instance of how Israel can defy all international norms with impunity however much the rest of the world except its mentors in the West may be outraged. The dastardly Israeli attack on defenseless civilians who had just gone to sleep after eating their pre-dawn meal or 'sahri' to observe their Ramadan fasting thinking it was going to be another day of peace under the ongoing 'ceasefire deal' that began on January 19 brokered by the USA between Hamas and Israel. But their shaky sense of relative calm soon turned into a nightmare by another show of 'shock and awe' by Israel since October 7, 2023 when that country first began such combined artillery and air campaign against Gazans in the name of striking military targets of Hamas.

The US-brokered Gaza truce set for implementation in a phased manner started on January 19 through exchange of the first batch of Hamas-held Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails. But from the very beginning Israel's claim to unilateralism that it could breach the truce as and when it chose to do it, rendered the ceasefire inherently fragile. So, after expiry of the first phase of the truce on March 1, it was a matter of time when Israel would resume the war, that is, the ongoing genocide in Gaza. Hence is the March 18's Israeli attack, without prior warning. In fact, Israel never fully observed the ceasefire with occasional breaches through blocking the flow of aid that included supply of food, water, power, medicine, etc., for the sustenance of the beleaguered Gazans. Now with the resumption of the full-fledged hostilities by Israel, reportedly, in consultation with the White House, the hopes of peace are getting dimmer by the day in that valley of death called Gaza.

Though Hamas and other Palestinian resistance forces have not as yet retaliated against Israeli attacks to avoid being blamed for breaching the 'ceasefire', their patience, too, must be wearing thin by now with the prospect of restoring peace gradually fading. Meanwhile, there is no visible attempt by the US, the UN or any other international quarters to reinitiate the ceasefire talks. This is indeed a tragedy that the international community seems helpless to stop the genocide of Palestinians! But the world must act to stop Israel from continuing its mindless killing of the Palestinian people. It is no secret that Israel wants Gaza free from all Palestinians. Had the Palestinians fled Gaza for fear of life, that would make the job easier for Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu and his far right cabinet colleagues. Israel's professed objective in the Gaza war that it is hunting down Hamas to rescue hostages and that the civilian casualties are part of unintended collateral damage is an utter lie. The systematic killing of over 49,000 Palestinians in Gaza at the hands of the Israelis so far, according the Palestinian Health Authorities, is deliberate. So, however much the rest of the world might be outraged and overwhelmed by the inhumanity of Tuesday's overnight killings across Gaza, Israeli population and their supporters on either side of the Atlantic may not feel perturbed.

Despite this apparent apathy of the West towards Palestinian lives, one would still like to believe that humanity will prevail and the world conscience would be reawakened to restore peace in Palestine.​
 

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