Friday 15th March 2019 Christchurch, New Zealand
Following the terrorist attack in Christchurch, New Zealand on 15th March 2019 where fifty people were killed, Australian author, speaker and social activist wrote these words.
The UK is failing to stand up for international law, as Israeli forces are forcibly transferring civilians from northern Gaza to the south and relentlessly bombarding the area, making it uninhabitable and stripping away the essential conditions that sustain life. Read the full statement from 15 organisations.
Palestinians in Gaza are facing an imminent existential threat, warn 15 organisations
9th October 2024
The UK is failing to stand up for international law, as Israeli forces are forcibly transferring civilians from northern Gaza to the south and relentlessly bombarding the area, making it uninhabitable and stripping away the essential conditions that sustain life.
The Government must demand that Israel end its heinous attacks, and take action to oppose any annexation or shrinking of Gaza. Its current silence is tantamount to complicity.
Israel’s actions in northern Gaza are having devastating implications for the long-term future of Palestinians, with hundreds of thousands of people trapped under constant bombardment and a ground offensive. The Israeli military is besieging civilians in Jabalia refugee camp and Beit Lahia, ordering them to leave large areas and move south — an act that resembles forcible transfer under international law.
Yet, as people evacuate, they are targeted by Israeli forces, effectively cutting off their escape routes. The so-called designated “humanitarian zone” in the south, between Al-Mawasi and Deir Al-Balah, where one million people are already living in inhumane conditions, remains unsafe for both civilians and aid workers, as Israeli forces continue to target the area repeatedly.
Nowhere in Gaza is safe
Under international law, the forced relocation of civilians — without guarantees of safety or return, to areas that lack the necessary resources to sustain life — amounts to the crime of forcible transfer, and is prohibited under Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Families in the north are trapped, unable to leave their homes to find food or water, subjecting them to starvation, and aid workers and trucks providing life-saving resources are prevented from doing so. The two main roads south, including Salah ad-Din have been destroyed and are reportedly impassable. Ambulances can no longer transport the wounded and critically ill from Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia to Al-Ahli Hospital for necessary surgeries, as tanks have cut off North Gaza from Gaza City.
Those who choose to remain in their homes are facing collective punishment: we must reiterate with urgency that civilians who remain in a besieged area do not lose their protected status under International Law, and must not be forced to flee to receive aid. Israel must stop blocking entry of much-needed humanitarian supplies, particularly into the north, as a matter of extreme urgency.
Additional reports suggest that Israel plans to expand the Netzarim corridor, “fortifying a strategic corridor that carves Gaza in two, building bases, taking over civilian structures and razing homes”. The expansion of the corridor and the isolation of the north will obstruct vital aid deliveries, while ongoing Israeli military operations continue to damage infrastructure and disrupt supply routes.
This appears to be part of plans to carry out unlawful annexation in northern Gaza, which would be another atrocity under the guise of conflict. Israel must halt its assault on Palestinians in Gaza, cease displacing the population, facilitate the return of displaced people to their homes, and withdraw from the Occupied Palestinian Territory, in line with the International Court of Justice’s (ICJ) July 2024 Advisory Opinion.
Gaza is being erased before our eyes, violence against Palestinians in the West Bank is worsening, and Israeli military attacks on Lebanon continue to escalate, causing untold civilian suffering and threatening to replicate the conditions in Gaza. A ceasefire must be enforced, not merely paid lip service to, and the UK must act with urgency to ensure there are consequences for such clearly illegal conduct. We reiterate our calls on the UK to end its potential or actual complicity in violations of international law, and act urgently to:
Signatories:
Welcome to the first On Her Terms update of 2019. This year marks 30 years since the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. This landmark in children’s rights has remained a hugely important reference point for those working for justice for children and young people.
“Climbing Kilimanjaro has been on my bucket list for some time. At 5,895 metres it is both the highest mountain in Africa and the highest free-standing mountain in the world.” Neil Irving writes about ticking-off one item from his bucket list to raise funds for Amos Trust.
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“The idea was beautiful and crazy. The logistics alone would be an organisational nightmare. The risk assessment would run for pages. It would be a five-month, 3,300 kilometres trek across eleven countries with mountains, rivers and seas to navigate. And then there was no guarantee that the walkers would even be allowed to cross the border into the occupied West Bank, let alone reach Jerusalem.” Amos trustee Robert Cohen writes the forword for ‘Walking To Jerusalem’ – Justin Butcher’s book about his experience of walking from London to Jerusalem as part of Amos Trust’s ‘Just Walk To Jerusalem’ project in 2017.
Amos Trust
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WC2A 2JR
UK
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Email:
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