ZIONIST TERRORIST WAR CRIMES Against Humanity

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Birzeit University student Shahd Awida is still in detention

FINALLY!!! Someone Said it!!!

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:police_car_light:Iranian police BUST covert Israeli drone workshop

Operation Iron Wall: A Crime Against Humanity in Plain Sight

Human Rights Watch’s latest investigation lands like a jolt: a detailed, unsettling account of entire Palestinian refugee camps in the West Bank being emptied under Israeli military orders. Drawing on satellite imagery, field research, and dozens of firsthand testimonies, the investigative report exposes a pattern of forced displacement so sweeping and so deliberate that it may amount to crimes against humanity. What follows is an unflinching look at how these findings fit into a decades-long machinery of occupation, one that continues to redraw the map of Palestinian life by force.

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Israel expulsions condemned as war crimes

Human Rights Watch says Israel’s early‑2025 expulsion of about 32,000 Palestinians from Jenin, Tulkarm and Nur Shams refugee camps during “Operation Iron Wall” amounts to war crimes and crimes against humanity and calls for urgent international measures to halt abuses and hold officials accountable. In a 105‑page report, the group found that residents were forced out in January and February, barred from returning, and left without shelter or aid as hundreds of homes were demolished. HRW analysed satellite imagery, demolition orders and verified videos and interviewed displaced residents, concluding more than 850 structures were destroyed or heavily damaged; a U.N. assessment put the figure at 1,460 buildings. The report documents soldiers storming and ransacking homes, using drone‑mounted loudspeakers to order families out, and bulldozers razing buildings as people fled. Displaced families crowded into relatives’ houses or sought refuge in mosques, schools and charities, and described severe shortages of food, medicine and basic necessities. HRW said the expulsions violate the Geneva Conventions, which prohibit forcible displacement from occupied territory except temporarily for imperative military reasons, and urged prosecution of senior officials for war crimes and crimes against humanity. The group also characterized the expulsions as part of crimes of apartheid and persecution and described them as ethnic cleansing in common usage. Israeli military spokespeople said demolitions were necessary to prevent civilian infrastructure being exploited by militants but did not say when residents could return. Israel maintains the West Bank is disputed territory, cites historical and security claims, and says operations target terrorist elements; most of the international community regards settlements as illegal under international law. HRW situates the expulsions within a broader escalation in the West Bank since the October 2023 Hamas attacks, alleging nearly 1,000 Palestinian deaths in the territory, expanded administrative detention, more home demolitions, accelerated settlement construction and surges in settler violence and abuse of detainees. The U.N. reported a spike in settler attacks in October, the highest monthly total since tracking began. The rights group urged governments to impose targeted sanctions on Israeli officials and commanders, suspend arms sales and trade benefits, ban settlement goods and enforce International Criminal Court warrants. It called for immediate steps to permit returns, provide relief to displaced civilians, conduct independent investigations and ensure accountability to prevent further violations.