The political courage of Western leaders is at half-mast in the face of Zionist actions. Shameless leaders who bear the shame of a despicable crime. Amid the smoldering ruins, rescue workers used their bare hands to remove the bodies of 93 martyred innocents. Unbearable scenes. Women, men and children in a state of shock, their faces stained with blood and dust in their lungs. They have seen death. They have returned. They testify in silence. Forcibly displaced, the victims of the carnage at the Al-Tabaieen school in Ghaza are staring at the criminal alliance in an undignified posture before a Netanyahu condemned, nonetheless, by the ICJ with his all-powerful armed horde on a civilian population exhausted by months of bombardment. The butcher of Ghaza, isolated in his own backyard, persists thanks to the complicity acquired in the ranks of the European Union and the Biden administration, his unconditional supporters in the accomplishment of this genocidal barbarity. They are Macron, Scholz and Biden. "Horrified" they say in chorus in a litany of messages without credit and without asperity; a state of mind without aptitude and without will to impose peace in this region where the blood of Palestinians flows barely three hours' flight from the Olympic Games.
Western leaders dare not call it a "war crime and a crime against humanity", as the attacks on a dozen schools over the past two weeks continue to multiply. The UN Special Rapporteur for the Palestinian Territories, Italian Francesca Albanese, accused Israel of "genocide" of the Palestinians. "One neighborhood at a time, one hospital at a time, one school at a time, one refugee camp at a time, one security zone at a time", after more than ten months of war in the Ghaza Strip.
This attack, which came during the peace mission to the region by Antony Blinken, the US Secretary of State, sent shockwaves through Humanity. Algeria called for an emergency public meeting of the Security Council to discuss the tragedy.
On a peace mission in the Middle East, Antony Blinken has suffered his umpteenth humiliation at the hands of Tel Aviv's master of war, who has chosen the right moment to refuse any proposal for a ceasefire. Antony Blinken, in rather new language, shamelessly asserts that the war in Ghaza should end and that a path towards the establishment of a Palestinian state should be mapped out. What more is needed to convince him that attempts at peace through negotiation are no more than a cautery on a wooden leg for the Zionist entity.
El Moudjahid