[🇧🇩] Israel and Hamas war in Gaza-----Can Bangladesh be a peace broker?

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[🇧🇩] Israel and Hamas war in Gaza-----Can Bangladesh be a peace broker?
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its not as simple, just as just abandoning a venomous snake isn't simple.. ekdum wild me release karne ka

gotta find a new planet for them

warna kiso ko kaat lega ye saanp


...

also, where does it end, yahud ke baad kiski baari hai for global hate and revulsion ? I think musalmands go first, then all coludds ki baari, then goras fight among themselves again until.. and on and on it goes :LOL:
 
(((They))) are waay too well entrenched in the US, for now at least.

30 saal baad ? who knows.. but things do happen in cycles, law of nature waali baat hai.

they do have nukes, btw, probably the world's worst kept secret.

SHTF for the al yahudda and he gon' blow the whole neighborhood and make it unlivable for 500 years, bhai

This whole thing gotta be stopped, not just cause the Ayatullah crew might get their finger on a button one day, but because we need keep the yahud from pushing that button he already has.

If koi next very liberal left wing proper POTUS aa gaya, ya aa gai, and they throw (((them))) under the bus..

fir koi chaara nahi raha, they going sink the planet with them, or die trying.
I was listening to that Richard Wolffe Univ of Chicago professor and he remarked that Trump sahb is doing all this cuz the money is drying up bhai.

China has been rising at 9% annually for the last 40 some years and the US couldn't manage 3% economic growth annually in the same period.

That diff is apparent now and its much too late to stop Chinese ascendancy.

Israel is totally dependent upon the US for survival. And just like anybody else, disposable.

Iran also is a latent nuke power.......just like Japan.
 
I was listening to that Richard Wolffe Univ of Chicago professor and he remarked that Trump sahb is doing all this cuz the money is drying up bhai.

China has been rising at 9% annually for the last 40 some years and the US couldn't manage 3% economic growth annually in the same period.

That diff is apparent now and its much too late to stop Chinese ascendancy.

Israel is totally dependent upon the US for survival. And just like anybody else, disposable.

Iran also is a latent nuke power.......just like Japan.
Haan, world reaching an equilibrium.. like garam and thanda different colour liquids they teach in school.. first alag, then slowly by slowly molecues contracting/expanding..

and yellow and blue make green.
 
The US is realizing that many simultaneous competitors have emerged challenging its hegemony.

Russia and China to aap bhool jao to fukk around with.......its ridiculous to even ponder doing that.

Next is Iran bhai and Iran is very strong now and refusing to budge even an inch. Fighting Iran will devastate any remaining US allies if SHTF and Iran takes out all the oil n gas in the PG in two minutes.

So Iran is pretty much a no go and that just leaves the dalit people in the ME and subcontinent which don't really matter bhai and btw this hopeless lot includes the EU, third class Australia/ Canada and NZ.

What else to say here bhai.......lol

Aaaaaaahahahahaaaaaaaa......... :ROFLMAO:
 
The US is realizing that many simultaneous competitors have emerged challenging its hegemony.

Russia and China to aap bhool jao to fukk around with.......its ridiculous to even ponder doing that.

Next is Iran bhai and Iran is very strong now and refusing to budge even an inch. Fighting Iran will devastate any remaining US allies if SHTF and Iran takes out all the oil n gas in the PG in two minutes.

So Iran is pretty much a no go and that just leaves the dalit people in the ME and subcontinent which don't really matter bhai and btw this hopeless lot includes the EU, third class Australia/ Canada and NZ.

What else to say here bhai.......lol

Aaaaaaahahahahaaaaaaaa......... :ROFLMAO:
Iran have oil, is about it.

Unki saari miltri proxies tentacles gone, non existant air force or navy... what they do have is not of significance anyway.

We been through this before man, tum baari baari ghoom phir k wahi aa jaate ho :D
 
TP 3 kab releasing ?
its coming soon. Lot of chatter on Iranian news sites.


Oh bhai the worlds second largest gas deposits Iran also has, after the third largest oil deposits.
 

Israel blocks entry of all aid into Gaza
Says hostages must be released for truce to continue; 4 Palestinians killed, 6 hurt in Israeli attacks

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A young man bids farewell to one of two Palestinians killed in an Israeli strike in Beit Hanun, in the northern Gaza Strip, yesterday. The International Committee of the Red Cross called on Israel and Hamas to maintain their ceasefire in Gaza to prevent the conflict-weary region from sinking back into despair. Photo: AFP

Israel blocked the entry of aid trucks into Gaza yesterday as a standoff over the truce that has halted fighting for the past six weeks escalated, with Hamas calling on Egyptian and Qatari mediators to intervene.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said earlier that it had adopted a proposal by US President Donald Trump's envoy, Steve Witkoff, for a temporary ceasefire in Gaza for the Ramadan and Passover periods, hours after the first phase of the previously agreed ceasefire expired.

If agreed, the truce would halt fighting until the end of the Ramadan fasting period around March 31 and the Jewish Passover holiday around April 20.

The truce would be conditional on Hamas releasing half of the living and dead hostages on the first day, with the remainder released at the conclusion, if an agreement is reached on a permanent ceasefire.

Hamas wants Israel to move to 2nd phase of ceasefire

Hamas says it is committed to the originally agreed ceasefire that had been scheduled to move into a second phase, with negotiations aimed at a permanent end to the war, and it has rejected the idea of a temporary extension to the 42-day truce.

Meanwhile, the ministry of health in Hamas-run Gaza said four people were killed and six others wounded in Israeli attacks yesterday after the first phase of a fragile truce in the territory drew to a close.

"Since this morning, four dead and six wounded" have been brought to "hospitals in the Gaza Strip following Israeli attacks in various parts of the territory", the ministry said in a statement.

Egyptian sources said that the Israeli delegation in Cairo had sought to extend the first phase by 42 days, while Hamas wanted to move to the second phase of the ceasefire deal. Spokesman Hazem Qassem said that the group rejected Israel's "formulation" of extending the first phase.

Under the original agreement, the second phase was intended to see the start of negotiations over the release of the remaining 59 hostages, the full withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, and a final end to the war.​
 
its coming soon. Lot of chatter on Iranian news sites.


Oh bhai the worlds second largest gas deposits Iran also has, after the third largest oil deposits.
I'll believe it when I see it. Proper thousands of al-yahudas ekdum dead ek chutki mein !

Ye ni na, ki koi bechari grandma apna humus bana ri in kitchen and suddenly ayatullah missile comes and kills her and the cat :P
 

Israel worked to ‘collapse’ Gaza deal
Says Hamas; Israeli fire kills 2 Palestinians in the enclave

Palestinian group Hamas yesterday accused Israel of working to "collapse" a ceasefire agreement for Gaza and evade a continuation of the truce amid an impasse over its implementation.

"Violations of the agreement during the first phase prove beyond a doubt the (Israeli) occupation government was interested in the collapse of the agreement and worked hard to achieve that," senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan said in a video statement

Meanwhile, Israeli fire killed at least two people in Rafah and injured three others in Khan Younis in the south of Gaza, raising fear among Palestinians that the ceasefire could collapse altogether after Israel imposed a total blockade on the shattered enclave.

Gaza stores emptied and price of sack of flour more than doubles

Two Israeli government officials said mediators had asked Israel for a few more days to resolve the standoff.

Israel raised the stakes on Sunday by imposing a total blockade on all supplies, including food and fuel, to sustain 2.3 million Gaza people living among the ruins after the 15-month conflict.

Hundreds of lorries carrying supplies were backed up in Egypt, denied permission to enter. Gaza residents said shops had been swiftly emptied of all supplies and the price of a sack of flour had more than doubled overnight.

"Where will our food come from?" said Salah al-Hajj Hassan, a resident in Jabalia, where families returned to destroyed homes to live in the rubble.​
 

Why Palestinians are now worried about the ceasefire

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Israel blocked food and fuel from entering Gaza after the ceasefire's first phase expired on the night of March 1. Photo: Reuters

In nearly eight decades of negotiating history between Israel and the Palestinians, the rule is enshrined that the weapon of the Palestinians' in the negotiations is their right and the paper that establishes it, and that Israel's weapon is the power of fire. In other words, we always find ourselves with the narrative that Israel is doing completely contrary to what was agreed, and that very dynamic also refers to the US, which is always accused of double standards; first, ensuring the interest of Israel in full, and second, ignoring rights for the Palestinians, which they claim to stand for, in engineering agreements throughout the years.

The judgement in this equation is always power in all its military, economic and alliance components.

In all the agreements and understandings reached, Israel was exercising its commitment to them on the measure of the gains it has achieved for Israel, and the harm inflicted on the Palestinians by dispensing with them. Take for example, the Oslo Accords, signed in the White House and the aftermath that saw its promise utterly left unfulfilled for the rights of the Palestinians.

Palestine is at an immensely fragile position, where the ceasefire deal—a deal largely made by the US—could bring us back to square one. As widely known, the deal came in three stages: the first has advantages for both parties, and the second has more advantages for the Palestinians, in that it includes a more permanent withdrawal of Israeli troops and authorities' presence in Gaza, which they destroyed.

Israel's fascist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office came minutes after the first phase ended, and as talks have begun on starting the second phase that's aimed at ending the war and seeing all remaining living hostages in Gaza returned home, he issued a statement describing a US proposal—a ceasefire extension through Passover, or April 20. On the first day, half the hostages, alive and dead, would be released. The rest would be released if agreement is reached on a permanent ceasefire. The extension would provide Israel with its desired advantages to continue illegal occupation, and the fate of the second and third phases are becoming determined, according to the unequal equation based on Israeli military force, which, even if not exercised, remains threatening enough.

Since the beginning of the first phase, Israel has been thinking, planning and working on how to defer the second phase and continue to deprive the Palestinians of its advantages, benefiting from the fact that the exchange will reduce the pressure from the Netanyahu government to bring home the Israeli hostages, and neutralise the hate against them, while also benefiting from the time factor that gives it valuable opportunities to officially and actually abolish the second phase.

The Palestinians and Arabs can now admit that what is happening now is a lack of even the minimum balance that came from Washington—the American position under the Biden administration was characterised by a synthetic duality. Now, it is to unconditionally give Israel everything it needs and beyond more than the means of war, and giving the Palestinians in return—very limited drops of financial support to beat all the lingering traumas from the atrocities they have witnessed, and lived through. The Trump administration has unequivocally moved the already-lopsided equation between the US and Israel in another direction, as the US is no longer a mediator but rather a direct party by giving Israel an open mandate to do to the Palestinians whatever it wants.

Recent events in other parts of the world also indicate it could get much more frightening and worse for the Middle East. The kind of US government which staunchly supported Ukraine against Russian invasion, selectively following international law, is also vanishing from Washington. Ukrainian President Zelensky's humiliation in the White House should be understood as greater and deeper than being a verbal quarrel between two presidents. It established the beginning of a dangerous era in which the creditor is a master and the debtor is a slave. Countries, including the Arab states, who could also be candidates for similar insults—as would be Europe—have the actual potential to save themselves and their prestige before the axe falls on the head. It is incumbent upon nations that still have power against Donald Trump to act before things take a turn for the worse.

We are already witnessing a pattern of behaviour in what is happening about Gaza, where the stages of the agreed deal are slyly being turned into one stage—which is only to be extended until the recovery of all Israeli hostages, living and dead, and then we will see everything that had nothing to do with what is written on the paper. We have seen this game before: postponing the negotiations which save Trump's ally Netanyahu the precious time he needs to rearrange his cards in the Israeli political arena to remain in power. As long as the war continues, even in parallel with the temporary truce and exchange, Netanyahu will remain the ruler in Israel until the last day of his term, with renewed chances of reaching another term.

The papers of agreements and understandings from the beginning of the Palestinian cause to the present day, have been burning in all rounds of its right struggle with the Israeli fire, to enshrine an equation that says: "What can the ink, paper, signatures, mediators and witnesses do with the fire other than burning and turning into ashes?"

Yousef SY Ramadan is the ambassador of Palestine to Bangladesh.​
 

Disarming ‘a red line’ amid Gaza truce impasse
Says Hamas leader as Israel demands ‘full demilitarisation’
  • Arab summit draft communique adopts Egyptian plan for Gaza​
  • Hamas urges Arab summit to 'thwart' Gaza displacement plan​

Hamas leader Sami Abu Zuhri told AFP yesterday that disarming is a red line for his movement and other Palestinian groups in negotiations to extend the fragile Gaza ceasefire.

"Any talk about the resistance's weapons is nonsense. The resistance's weapons are a red line for Hamas and all resistance factions," Abu Zuhri said shortly after Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar demanded the "full demilitarisation" of Gaza to proceed to the second stage of the January truce.

"We don't have an agreement on phase two. We demand total demilitarisation of Gaza, Hamas and Islamic Jihad out, and give us our hostages. If they agree to that we can implement tomorrow," Saar told a news conference in Jerusalem. He also charged that humanitarian aid had become the "number one source of revenue" for Hamas, as he defended his government's decision to block all deliveries to Gaza.

Arab leaders yesterday gathered in Cairo to discuss an alternative to a widely condemned plan from US President Donald Trump to assume control of war-battered Gaza and displace its Palestinian population.

A summit draft communique adopted an Egyptian plan for Gaza's future and called on the international community and financial institutions to provide support for the plan quickly, reports Reuters.

Hamas urged Arab leaders to "thwart" the relocation of Palestinians from Gaza.

"We look forward to an effective Arab role that ends the humanitarian tragedy created by the occupation in the Gaza Strip... and thwarts the (Israeli) occupation's plans to displace (Palestinians)," a statement by the group said.

After the first phase of the truce ended over the weekend without agreement on how to continue, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office announced a halt to "all entry of goods and supplies" into the territory.

Israel's "closure of the Gaza Strip crossings for the third consecutive day, and its prevention of the entry of aid and goods, represents a Zionist insistence on violating the ceasefire agreement, and a clear war crime", Hamas said in its statement.​
 

Arab leaders meet to hash out Gaza plan as Hamas urges against displacement
AFP
Cairo
Published: 04 Mar 2025, 22: 34

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Syria's interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa (CR) and Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shibani (R) meet with the President of the European Council Antonio Costa (CL) in Cairo on 4 March 2025, on the sidelines of an Arab League summit on Gaza. AFP

Arab leaders gathered in Cairo Tuesday to discuss an alternative to US President Donald Trump's widely condemned plan to assume control of war-battered Gaza, with Hamas urging them to "thwart" efforts to displace Palestinians from their land.

The Arab League summit on reconstruction follows renewed backing of Trump's plan from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who labelled it "visionary and innovative".

The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas's 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, whose retaliatory offensive left the territory largely in ruins and created a humanitarian crisis that only recently began to abate with the start of a fragile ceasefire in January.

"We look forward to an effective Arab role that ends the humanitarian tragedy... and thwarts the (Israeli) occupation's plans to displace" Palestinians, the militant group said in a statement.

Trump triggered global outrage when he first floated his idea for the United States to "take over" the Gaza Strip and turn it into the "Riviera of the Middle East", while forcing its Palestinian inhabitants to relocate to Egypt or Jordan.

Palestinians, Arab states and many European governments have rejected Trump's proposal, opposing any efforts to expel Gazans.

Trump has recently appeared to soften his stance, saying he was "not forcing" the plan, which experts have said could violate international law.
In his opening remarks on Tuesday, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said his country's plan would ensure Gazans "remain on their land", saying the territory would be run by a committee of Palestinian technocrats.

Draft plan

A draft version of the Egyptian plan seen by AFP lays out a five-year roadmap with a price tag of $53 billion -- about the same amount the United Nations estimated Gaza's reconstruction would cost.

A proposed early recovery phase, expected to last six months and cost $3 billion, would focus on clearing unexploded ordnance and debris, and providing temporary housing, according to the draft.

That would be followed by a $20 billion initial reconstruction stage running until 2027 and focusing on rebuilding essential infrastructure and permanent housing.

The next stage of reconstruction, extending to 2030 at an estimated cost of $30 billion, aims to build more housing, infrastructure, and industrial and commercial facilities.

The plan proposes an internationally supervised trust fund to ensure efficient and sustainable financing, as well as transparency and oversight.
An Arab League source previously told AFP a plan "would be presented to Arab leaders at Tuesday's summit for approval".

Several Arab heads of state are participating, along with foreign ministers and other high-level representatives.

Among them were Palestinian Authority leader Mahmud Abbas and Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, participating in his first Arab summit since toppling Bashar al-Assad last year.

De facto Saudi ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, however, is not attending, sending his top diplomat instead, state media said.

As far and away the Middle East's largest economy, Saudi Arabia's backing would be essential to any regional reconstruction effort.

Ceasefire impasse

The talks in Cairo are taking place as Israel and Hamas find themselves at an impasse over the future of the ceasefire in Gaza.

The truce's first phase ended at the weekend, after six weeks of relative calm that included exchanges of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners and an influx of badly needed aid into the territory.

While Israel said it backed an extension of the first phase until mid-April, Hamas has insisted on a transition to the second phase, which should lead to a permanent end to the war.

Hours before the summit opened Tuesday, Israel's top diplomat Gideon Saar said it demanded the "total demilitarisation of Gaza" and Hamas's removal in order to proceed to the second phase of the ceasefire deal.

Hamas leader Sami Abu Zuhri rejected the demand, telling AFP: "The resistance's weapons are a red line for Hamas and all resistance factions."

Gaza has been under a crippling Israeli-led blockade since Hamas took power there in 2007, with critics of Israel often likening the territory to an open-air prison.

In a speech to parliament Monday in which he hailed Trump's plan, Netanyahu said: "It's time to give the residents of Gaza a real choice. It's time to give them the freedom to leave."

The idea of clearing Gaza of its inhabitants has been welcomed by far-right members of Netanyahu's coalition such as Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who has called for Israel to "establish full sovereignty there".

As the truce's first phase came to a close, Netanyahu's office announced Israel was halting "all entry of goods and supplies" into Gaza, and that Hamas would face "other consequences" if it did not accept the truce extension.

The move has drawn criticism from key truce mediators Egypt and Qatar, as well as from other regional governments, the United Nations and some of Israel's allies.​
 

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