We stand firmly against injustice in all its forms. Nothing can justify the current war crimes committed by Israel in occupied Palestine. Equally, nothing can excuse the continued support offered by other nations to this apartheid regime. If you believe in human rights, dignity, and justice, then we urge you to boycott this rogue state. Silence is complicity, do what’s right.
Years after it was deemed illegal by a UN court, the wall continues to cut through and divide Palestinian communities.
About 85 percent of the wall falls within the West Bank rather than running along the internationally recognised 1967 boundary, known as the Green Line. [Al Jazeera]
Published On 8 Jul 20208 Jul 2020
Thursday marks the 16th anniversary since the International Court of Justice (ICJ) deemed Israel’s separation wall illegal.
In 2002, Israel started constructing the wall, slicing through Palestinian communities, agricultural fields, and farmland at the height of the second Intifada.
The wall has been described by Israeli officials as a necessary security precaution against “terrorism”.
Palestinians, however, have decried it as an Israeli mechanism to annex Palestinian territory as it is built deep within the West Bank and not along the 1967 Green Line, the generally recognised boundary between Israel and the West Bank.
While the ICJ’s decision is non-binding, it found the wall violates international law and called for its dismantlement. It also ruled Israel should pay reparations for any damage caused.
A month after the ICJ decision, the UN General Assembly (UNGA) voted overwhelmingly to demand Israel to comply with the UN’s highest legal body.
The vote called on UN member states “not to recognise the illegal situation resulting from the construction of the wall in the occupied Palestinian territory, including in and around East Jerusalem“, and “not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by such construction”.
The Israeli separation barrier divides East Jerusalem and the Palestinian West Bank town of Qalandia. [File: Thomas Coex/AFP]Israel’s separation barrier covered in graffiti, one depicting the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at the Qalandiya checkpoint between Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah. [File: Sebastian Scheiner/AP]The Israeli settlement of Pisgat Zeev (left), built in a suburb of the mostly Arab East Jerusalem, and the Palestinian Shuafat refugee camp behind Israel’s controversial separation wall. [File: Ahmad Gharabli/AFP]The wall separating East Jerusalem from the Palestinian village of Abu Dis. [File: Emmanuel Dunand/AFP]A Palestinian man rides his motorcycle past a mural of US President Donald Trump on Israel’s controversial separation barrier in the West Bank city of Bethlehem. [File: Ahmad Gharabli/AFP]Palestinian farmers harvest their olives in the southern West Bank village of the monastery of Samet, near the Israeli separation wall in Hebron. [Abed al-Hashlamoun/EPA]A man walks along a road by Israel’s controversial separation barrier between the occupied West Bank village of Nazlat Issa (left) and the Arab-Israeli town of Baqa al-Gharbiya (right) in northern Israel. [File: Ahmad Gharabli/AFP]The Israeli barrier at the Palestinian town of Abu Dis in the Israeli-occupied West Bank east of Jerusalem. [Ammar Awad/Reuters]A segregated Israeli highway near Jerusalem that features a large concrete wall segregating Israeli and Palestinian traffic. Critics have branded the road an ‘apartheid highway’, saying it is part of a planned segregated road system that would benefit Israelis exclusively. [Mahmoud Illean/AP]
Please do not to stay neutral or silent towards the Israeli onslaught on Palestinian children in Gaza. Please stand up and join the voices to demand an immediate ceasefire.
Silence speaks volumes, but let it not say, That in the face of oppression, you turned away. Oh, western world, the time is now, To question the oppressor, to justice bow.
For humanity’s sake, for values held dear, Let empathy rise, dispel the fear. Be Nobel in spirit, in action profound, Stand against the oppressor, let compassion resound.
Donald Trump has proven, once again, that he is not just a failed leader, he is a heartless accomplice to murder. As the Israeli war machine slaughters tens of thousands of Palestinians, wiping out entire families and turning neighborhoods into graveyards, Trump doesn’t even flinch. He does not see Palestinians as humans. Their cries, their shattered lives, their children buried under rubble mean nothing to him. Instead of calling for an end to the carnage, he feeds it, shipping weapons to the killers and giving them the green light to keep going.
Trump lies through his teeth about “peace,” but his every action screams WAR. His so-called peace talks are nothing more than war plans dressed up as diplomacy. He speaks of negotiations while fueling massacres, promising an end to violence even as U.S. bombs and bullets rain down on the innocent. This is not leadership. This is barbarity.
He has no empathy. None. Every dead child, every grieving mother, every desperate family is invisible to him because they are not part of his twisted worldview. Trump’s America arms the oppressors and silences the victims, and he smiles while doing it. This is what he calls “strength.” This is his legacy: rivers of blood and a trail of lies.
And shame, deep, burning shame on the Americans who elected this lunatic and still cheer for him. Shame on those who call themselves human beings while supporting a man who despises immigrants, mocks the suffering, and spits on the very idea of justice. Every vote for Trump is a vote for endless war, for cruelty without limits, for the death of conscience itself.
History will remember Donald Trump not as a leader, but as a war criminal in a suit, a man who armed killers, buried the truth, and turned his back on humanity. The blood of the innocent is on his hands. And it will never wash off.
The war Israel is waging on Gaza is a continuation of decades-long policies of ethnic cleansing, dispossession, and repression. Since October 7, 2023, this conflict has targeted civilians with unprecedented brutality—cutting off water, food, and medicine, bombing homes, schools, and hospitals, and forcing mass displacement. The scale and nature of the violence echo the atrocities of the past, revealing a systematic strategy to break Palestinian resistance, erase identity, and secure control over land and resources.
Israel pursues two interlinked objectives: an immediate demonstration of military might to restore its image of invincibility, and a long-term plan to finalize its dominance over Palestinians through extermination, Judaization, and displacement. This strategy is compounded by settlement expansion, ideological extremism, and normalization agreements with Arab states, ensuring permanent control over occupied territories.
The West has largely enabled this campaign. The United States, Europe, and other powers provide military, political, and diplomatic backing while portraying Palestinians as aggressors, ignoring their basic rights. This complicity extends to the framing of Israel’s genocide as “self-defense,” while humanitarian crises in Gaza are disregarded.
Despite the suffering, Palestinians continue to resist with steadfastness. To counter Israeli policies effectively, the Palestinian leadership and global allies must insist on an immediate ceasefire, ensure humanitarian aid, strengthen governance, define the liberation goals of a future Palestinian state, engage new international actors, and hold Israel accountable for the destruction of Gaza. Without these measures, the cycle of violence, displacement, and oppression will continue.
In late August 2025, the U.S. State Department revoked or denied visas for Mahmoud Abbas (President of the Palestinian Authority) and around 80 other Palestinian PLO/PA officials, preventing them from traveling to New York to attend the UN General Assembly.
The U.S. justification: these officials are supposedly failing to comply with commitments, undermining peace prospects, engaging in what U.S. calls “lawfare” (use of international legal bodies like the ICC/ICJ), pushing unilateral recognition of statehood, etc.
The Palestinian side argues that the U.S. visa denial violates the UN Headquarters Agreement (1947), under which the U.S. as host country of the UN must allow foreign diplomats representing UN member or observer states to access UN HQ for UN business.
The U.N. General Assembly responded by passing a resolution (145 in favour, 5 against, 6 abstentions) allowing Abbas to address the UNGA via video/pre-recorded statement due to visa issues.
There is an International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant for Benjamin Netanyahu in relation to alleged war crimes in Gaza. (This is from earlier reporting.)
Despite that warrant, Netanyahu continues to travel internationally, including plans to travel to the U.S. for UN / diplomatic events. These travels would, in theory, expose him to legal risk under the ICC decision—but in practice many states appear to be ignoring or refusing to enforce the warrant.
On one hand, a Palestinian leader who seeks to speak peacefully at the UN, to push for recognition of the Palestinian state, is blocked from entry. The reason given is partly because of diplomacy/legal activism (ICC, unilateral recognition, etc.).
On the other hand, an Israeli leader, and war criminal who killed more than 65000 Palestinians and using starvation as a weapon against the population and despite facing an ICC warrant (which is a serious international legal finding), faces comparatively little restriction in terms of travel by the U.S. and many other countries. Netanyahu can still travel, speak at international forums, meet with foreign leaders, without being arrested in jurisdictions that are signatories to the ICC (or at least without that being enforced).
This juxtaposition raises obvious concerns about double standards in how international law is applied, and how powerful states or well-allied but criminal leaders may be shielded from legal consequences that are enforced (or at least attempted) against weaker or less powerful actors.
Politically, powerful states often protect criminal allies or themselves via influence, via exceptions, or via fear from disclosure of certain embarrassing videos against politicians or by interpreting “immunity” in broad ways. Meanwhile, actors with less geopolitical clout find themselves subjected to stricter enforcement or barriers. This is a well-known corrupted pattern in international relations.
Denying visa to Abbas silences Palestinian leadership’s voice in a key international forum (the UN), even when that voice is seeking recognition, peace, or legal redress. Meanwhile, allowing a war criminal Israeli leader who faces serious allegations (ICC warrant) full access and diplomatic courtesies undermines the principle that no one is above law.
If ICC warrants are only selectively enforced (or ignored when inconvenient), and if treaties / host country obligations are selectively honored, then the credibility of international law suffers. This breeds cynicism and resentment, especially in places already suffering severe injustice.
In diplomacy, law, and human rights, perceptions matter. When one side is treated harshly for state-building efforts or legal activism, while the other is shielded despite their commitment of genocide , starvation , it reinforces the view that international order is biased toward the powerful.
If the U.S. can deny visas to one side’s leadership because they attempt to engage in lawfare or pursue state recognition, what stops similar denials or restrictions being used elsewhere, for other international causes? Similarly, if ICC arrest warrants are not enforced or are shrugged off when it’s a well-protected leader, that sets precedent that legal accountability depends less on the law and more on politics.
What legal mechanisms exist for compelling the U.S. (or any country) to abide by treaty obligations like the UN Headquarters Agreement, especially when denying visas to those who are observers or representatives?
Why don’t more states enforce ICC warrants uniformly, particularly for criminal leaders of powerful allies? What political pressures, alliances, or security/foreign policy considerations prevent enforcement?
Is there a coherent policy basis for denying Abbas a visa, while allowing war criminal Netanyahu travel, beyond rhetoric about “statehood recognition,” “lawfare,” or “security concerns”? Are these just pretexts to serve political alignment?
How much do moral or legal principles matter when weighed against geopolitical alliances? And what are the long-term consequences of letting legality bend to political convenience?
In summary, the case of Mahmoud Abbas being denied entry to the U.S. to address the UN, contrasted with war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu continuing to travel and act on the international stage despite an ICC arrest warrant, encapsulates a striking example of hypocrisy in international relations. It demonstrates how legal obligations, moral responsibilities, and human rights can be subordinated to political alliances and power dynamics.
It’s not just about one visa or one warrant. It’s about what the international order claims to be — and what it allows in practice. When rhetoric about justice, diplomacy, human rights, and international law is not matched by consistent application, it undermines the credibility of those very values.
(The night smells of smoke and dust. Handala, the eternal 10-year-old with his back turned to the world, stands among the ruins of Gaza. Across from him stands a suited figure: Prime Minister Netanyahu His tie is spotless, though his hands are not.)
Handala:
I’ve been standing here for decades, my back to you all, because none of you ever listen.
But tonight, I turn—just enough—to ask:
How many more children must you bury to save your career?
Netanyahu:
Career? I act for security, for my people’s safety.
The world is dangerous. My enemies are everywhere.
Handala:
Safety?
Is starving babies your definition of safety?
Is dropping bombs on hospitals your idea of morality?
You claim to defend life, yet you trade it for applause.
Netanyahu
These are tragic necessities.
Collateral damage.
The price of peace.
Handala:
Peace?
You kill mediators, bomb neighbours, starve and choke a population,
and call it peace?
Your words are porcelain—shiny on the outside,
full of filth beneath the lid.
Netanyahu
My army is the most moral in the world.
We warn before we strike.
We are forced to act.
Handala:
A moral army does not warn children before killing them—
it does not kill them at all.
You demolish homes, hospitals, schools, universities, UN shelters, dreams,then boast of virtue.
That is not morality.
That is war crime.
Netanyahu
The world understands my struggle.
They still shake my hand.
They still give me weapons.
Handala:
The world’s silence is not your innocence.
It is their complicity.
History does not forget—
it counts bones when leaders count votes.
Netanyahu
History is written by the strong.
Handala:
No.
History is carved by the dead.
Their names will stain your every page.
Children you starved will whisper through time
long after your podium crumbles.
(Handala steps closer, his small bare feet silent on the rubble. He keeps his back to the cameras, but his words pierce like shards of glass.)
Handala:
You bombed the mediators.
You shelled the shelters.
You fed hunger instead of hope.
And still you speak of morality.
Tell me, Prime Minister—
when the applause dies,
who will protect you from the ghosts of the children you buried?
(The leader opens his mouth but no words come. The silence of Gaza answers instead—