Israeli soldiers shoots dead young Palestinian man in northern Hebron

A Palestinian young man on Sunday evening was shot dead by Israeli occupation forces near the Al-Arroub camp, north of the city of Hebron, southern West Bank. The occupation forces, stationed at the entrance to Al-Arroub camp, opened heavy fire at a Palestinian vehicle as it was leaving the camp, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) said in a statement. The PRCS added that when the young man, Qatada Ghunaimat (20), got out of the car, the occupation soldiers shot several bullets at him, killing him instantly. The PRCS explained that the occupation forces detained the martyr’s body and opened fire on a PRCS ambulance and its crew when they tried to reach him.

Source: Jordan News Agency

King departs for Cairo to participate in international summit to stop war on Gaza

His Majesty King Abdullah on Saturday departed for Cairo to head Jordan’s delegation at the Cairo Summit for Peace. Hosted by Egypt, the summit is part of efforts to stop the war on Gaza. The Jordanian delegation includes Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, Director of the Office of His Majesty Jafar Hassan, and Jordan’s Ambassador to Egypt Amjad Adaileh. His Royal Highness Prince Feisal bin Al Hussein was sworn in as Regent, in the presence of Cabinet members.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Aid convoys begin entry into Gaza through Rafah crossing

Hundreds of trucks loaded with food and medical aid began entering the Gaza Strip through the Rafah border crossing to provide aid to Palestinians amid the ongoing Israeli occupation army bombing of the Strip for the fifteenth day in a row. The trucks, which were provided by several Arab countries, including Jordan, moved into gear and headed into Gaza after waiting for a couple of days near the borders. Egyptian authorities have paved the way for aid to enter through the Rafah crossing, most of which includes the medical equipment that the Gaza Strip needs. The nearly two-week-long Israeli occupation aggression against Gaza has resulted in the deaths of more than 4,137 Palestinians, including 1,524 children, and the wounding of more than 13,000 people. The besieged Strip is seeing an unprecedented humanitarian disaster, with its population suffering from a scarcity of food and water as a result of the Israeli government’s comprehensive closure placed on Gaza, as well as a total blackout of electricity and gasoline.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Cairo Peace Summit to end war on Gaza begins

The Cairo International Peace Summit to stop the war on Gaza kicked off on Saturday in the Egyptian capital, led by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, with the participation of His Majesty King Abdullah II, world leaders and representatives of more than 30 countries, and three international organizations, including the United Nations, the African Union, and the Arab League. The summit aims to stop the war on the Gaza Strip, discuss the sustainable introduction of humanitarian aid into the Strip, and begin examining ways to comprehensively settle the Israeli-Palestinian conflict under the two-state solution. The purpose of the summit is to establish broad parameters for addressing the Palestinian issue, identify a final solution, and underscore rejection for the displacement of Palestinians from their homes. Participating in the summit, alongside His Majesty King Abdullah II, are the leaders of the Emirates, Bahrain, Palestine, the Sultanate of Oman, Qatar, Mauritania, Kuwait, South Africa, the President of the Libyan Presidential Council, and the Cypriot and Greek presidents. The Secretary-General of the United Nations, the Chairman of the African Union Commission, the Secretary-General of the Arab League, and the prime ministers of Iraq, Spain, Britain and Italy will also take part in the summit. The Egypt summit coincides with the beginning of the third week of the ongoing Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip.

Source: Jordan News Agency

UNRWA receives 20 trucks loaded with humanitarian aid for Gaza

Palestinian sources said that the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) received on Saturday 20 trucks loaded with humanitarian aid, including food and medicine, after entering the Gaza Strip from the Egyptian side, through the Rafah border crossing. The Rafah crossing was opened earlier this morning to provide aid to Palestinians amid the ongoing Israeli occupation army bombing of the Strip. Hundreds of trucks, which were supplied by several Arab countries, including Jordan, are also on standby at the crossing.

Source: Jordan News Agency

King at Cairo Summit for Peace demands immediate stop of war on Gaza, protection of civilians

His Majesty King Abdullah on Saturday participated in the Cairo Summit for Peace, hosted by Egypt as part of efforts to stop the war on Gaza, with the participation of world leaders and heads of Arab and international delegations. In an address to the summit, King Abdullah said the relentless bombing campaign underway in Gaza is cruel and unconscionable on every level, describing it as collective punishment of a besieged and helpless population. “It is a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law. It is a war crime,” His Majesty said. “Anywhere else, attacking civilian infrastructure and deliberately starving an entire population of food, water, electricity, and basic necessities would be condemned,” the King noted. His Majesty highlighted that the message the Arab world is hearing is loud and clear: Palestinian lives matter less than Israeli ones. “The application of international law is optional. And human rights have boundaries they stop at borders, they stop at races, they stop at religions,” the King added. His Majesty warned that the consequences of continued international apathy and inaction will be catastrophic “on us all”. The King reiterated his call for an immediate end to the war on Gaza, the protection of civilians, and the adoption of a unified position that indiscriminately condemns the targeting of all civilians, “in line with our shared values and international law, which loses all value if it is implemented selectively”. His Majesty stressed the need for sustained and uninterrupted delivery of humanitarian aid, fuel, food, and medicine to the Gaza Strip. The King reaffirmed the unequivocal rejection of the forced displacement or internal displacement of the Palestinians, describing that as a war crime according to international law, “and a red line for all of us”. “This conflict did not start two weeks ago, and it will not stop if we continue down this blood-soaked path,” His Majesty warned. The King added: “Today, Israel is literally starving civilians in Gaza, but for decades, Palestinians have been starved of hope, of freedom, and a future”. Pointing to the absence of international accountability, His Majesty said when the bombs stop falling, Israel is never held accountable, the injustices of occupation continue and the world walks away, until the next round of violence. “The bloodshed we are witnessing today is the price of that, of failing to make tangible progress towards a political horizon that brings peace for Palestinians and Israelis alike,” the King said. His Majesty said the Israeli leadership must realise that there is no military solution to its security concerns and that it cannot continue to sideline the five million Palestinians living under its occupation Israeli leadership, the King continued, must realise that Palestinian lives are no less valuable than Israeli lives. “The only path to a safe and secure future for the people of the Middle East and the entire world starts with the belief that every human life is of equal value and it ends with two states, Palestine and Israel, sharing land and peace from the river to the sea,” His Majesty concluded. Following is the full text of His Majesty’s speech: “In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful Prayers and peace be upon our Prophet Mohammad, My brother, Your Excellency President Abdel Fattah El Sisi, Your Majesties, Highnesses, Excellencies, Peace, God’s mercy and blessings be upon you. My thanks to His Excellency the President for convening this meeting during these difficult times, so we can work urgently together to stop this humanitarian disaster pushing our entire region into the abyss. Allow me to speak in English to our friends from Europe and the world who join us here today. My message is to them. My friends, Peace, God’s mercy and blessings be upon you. This is how Muslims and Arabs greet others: with a wish for the other to be blessed with peace and the mercy of God. Our religion came with a message of peace. The Pact of Omar, issued at the gates of Jerusalem almost 15 centuries ago, more than a thousand years before the Geneva Conventions, ordered Muslim soldiers not to kill a child, a woman or an old person, not to destroy a tree, not to harm a priest, not to destroy a church. Those are the rules of engagement that Muslims must accept and abide by, as should all those who believe in our common humanity. All civilian lives matter! My Friends, I am outraged and grieved by those acts of violence waged against innocent civilians in Gaza, in the West Bank, and Israel. The relentless bombing campaign underway in Gaza as we speak is cruel and unconscionable on every level. It is collective punishment of a besieged and helpless people. It is a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law. It is a war crime. Yet, the deeper the crisis cuts of cruelty, the less the world seems to care. Anywhere else, attacking civilian infrastructure and deliberately starving an entire population of food, water, electricity, and basic necessities would be condemned. Accountability would be enforced, immediately, unequivocally. And it has been done before recently, in another conflict. But not in Gaza. It’s been two weeks since Israel put in place the complete siege of the Gaza Strip. And still, for the most part, global silence. Yet the message the Arab world is hearing is loud and clear: Palestinian lives matter less than Israeli ones. Our lives matter less than other lives. The application of international law is optional. And human rights have boundaries they stop at borders, they stop at races, and they stop at religions. That is a very, very dangerous message, as the consequences of continued international apathy and inaction will be catastrophic on us all. My friends, We cannot let raw emotions dictate the moment; our priorities today are clear and urgent: First: An immediate end to the war on Gaza, the protection of civilians, and the adoption of a unified position that indiscriminately condemns the targeting of all civilians, in line with our shared values and international law, which loses all value if it is implemented selectively. Second: The sustained and uninterrupted delivery of humanitarian aid, fuel, food, and medicines to the Gaza Strip. Third: The unequivocal rejection of the forced displacement or internal displacement of the Palestinians. This is a war crime according to international law, and a red line for all of us. This conflict, my friends, did not start two weeks ago, and it will not stop if we continue down this blood-soaked path. We know all too well that it will only lead to more of the same a zero-sum game of death and destruction, of hatred and hopelessness played on repeat. Today, Israel is literally starving civilians in Gaza, but for decades, Palestinians have been starved of hope, of freedom, and a future. Because when the bombs stop falling, Israel is never held accountable, the injustices of occupation continue and the world walks away, until the next round of violence. The bloodshed we are witnessing today is the price of that, of failing to make tangible progress towards a political horizon that brings peace for Palestinians and Israelis alike. Israeli leadership must realise that there is no military solution to its security concerns, that it cannot continue to sideline the five million Palestinians living under its occupation, denied of their legitimate rights, and that Palestinians lives are no less valuable than Israeli lives. The Israeli leadership must realise, once and for all, that a state can never thrive if it is built on the foundations of injustice. Over the past 15 years, we have seen how the dreams of a two-state solution and the hopes of an entire generation have turned into despair. This has been the policy of hardline Israeli leadership to focus solely on security over peace and create new illegal realities on the ground that render an autonomous Palestinian state unviable. In the process, it has empowered extremists on both sides. But we must not we cannot write off this conflict as too far gone, for the sake of both the Palestinians and the Israelis. Our collective and unified message to the Israeli people should be: We want a future of peace and security for you and for the Palestinians, where your children and Palestinian children should no longer live in fear. It is our duty as the international community to do whatever it takes to restart a meaningful political process that can take us to a just and sustainable peace on the basis of the two-state solution. The only path to a safe and secure future for the people of the Middle East and the entire world for the Jewish people, for Christians, for Muslims alike starts with the belief that every human life is of equal value and it ends with two states, Palestine and Israel, sharing land and peace from the river to the sea. The time to act is now. Thank you. Thank you all. Peace, God’s mercy and blessings be upon you.” The Jordanian delegation includes Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, Director of the Office of His Majesty Jafar Hassan, and Jordan’s Ambassador to Egypt Amjad Adaileh.

Source: Jordan News Agency