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.
Background
I received a comment from one person saying “they don’t feel sorry for the death of thousands of innocent children killed in Gaza by Israeli airstrikes and that Armageddon is coming and will be the end of Palestinians” and another one advising me to stop writing about politics, as this is “unwelcome”. My answer to them :
A truth exposed, deemed unwelcome, bold,
Gaza's narrative where Israel's grip takes hold.
Against egregious cruelty, a resolute stand,
For justice, they yearn to thwart, withstand.
Branded and silenced, the truth they abhor,
Yet defiantly, I persist, endure.
Child killers, cease your heartless spree,
End Israel's oppression, let humanity be free.
London (Quds News Network)- Jeremy Bowen, the BBC’s international editor, has accused Israel of blocking journalists from entering Gaza because of scenes “they don’t want us to see”.
Bowen said that in the last 18 months of Israeli assault, he had been granted only half a day with the Israeli forces within Gaza. He said that the lack of access was part of an attempt to “obfuscate what’s going on, and to inject this notion of doubt into information that comes out”.
He added that while Palestinian journalists were doing “fantastic work”, he and other international media colleagues wanted to contribute to reporting on the ground in Gaza. He spoke after he accepted a special fellowship award for the Society of Editors conference.
“Why don’t they let us in,” he said. “Because there’s stuff there they don’t want us to see. Beginning after those Hamas attacks on 7 October, they took us into the border communities. I was in Kfar Aza when there was still fighting going on inside it. They had only just started taking out the bodies of the dead Israelis. Why did they let us in there? Because they wanted us to see it.”
“Why don’t they let us in to Gaza? Because they don’t want us to see it. I think it’s really as simple as that. Israel took a bit of flak for that to start with, but none now, certainly not with [President] Trump. So I don’t see that changing anytime soon.”
Asked about whether international media should trust Gaza casualty figures released by the Palestinian Health Ministry, Bowen said the numbers were currently “the best measure that we have” because of the inability of reporters and other bodies to verify them.
According to the Ministry, over 50,200 Palestinians have been killed since the start of Israel’s assault on Gaza on October 7, 2023, with the majority being women and children.
“I think without question, it’s the bloodiest war that they’ve had since the foundation of the Israeli state of 1948,” Bowen said. “If the place could open up, people could go through, look at the records, count the graves, exhume the skeletons from under the rubble and then they’d get a better idea. But when the doors shut, these things become very, very difficult.”
Last year, Bowen was among 50 journalists, including the BBC’s Lyse Doucet and its former presenter Mishal Husain, calling on Israel and Egypt to provide “free and unfettered access to Gaza for all foreign media”.
Critics have accused Israel of targeting journalists in the Palestinian territory to obscure the truth about its war crimes there. Since the start of the assault, at least 208 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza.
Posted inBBC, Gaza, Massacres & genocides, UK|TaggedBbc, Jeremy Bowen|Comments Off on They Don’t Want Us to See’: BBC’s Jeremy Bowen Accuses Israel of Blocking Journalists from Entering Gaza
I see what I want in the farm ... right now I see
braids of wheat combed by the wind, and I close my eyes
This mirage leads to Nihawand,
and this calm leads to lapis lazuli
I see what I want in the sea ... right now I see
a rush of swans at sunset, and I close my eyes
This wandering leads to an Andalusia,
and this sail is a dove's prayer over me
I see what I want in the night ... right now I see
the endings of this long life at one of the cities' gates
I will toss the pages of my log into the cafes at the dock and find a seat
for my absence aboard one of the ships
I see what I want in the soul: the face of a stone
scratched by lightning- green, oh land, green is the land of my soul-
haven't I been a child playing at the edge of a well?
I'm still playing ... this space is my playground and the stone is my wind
I see what I want in peace ... right now I see
a deer and grass and a stream of water ... and I close my eyes:
this deer is asleep on my arm
and the hunter asleep, too, near its sons, in a faraway place
I see what I want in war ... right now I see
the arms of our ancestors squeezing a wellspring into green stone
And our fathers inherited the water, but did not bequeath it, and I close
my eyes:
The land in my hands is the work of my hands
I see what I want in prison: days of a flowering
that led from here to two strangers in me
seated in a garden- I close my eyes:
How spacious is the earth! How beautiful the earth from the eye
of a needle
I see what I want in lightning ... right now I see
farms bursting from their chains with vegetation- bravo!
The song of the walnut floats down, white above the villages' smoke
like doves ... doves we feed alongside our children
I see what I want in love ... right now I see
horses making the plain dance, fifty guitars sighing
and a swarm of bees sucking wild mulberry, and I close my eyes
to see our shadow behind this homeless place
I see what I want in death: I fall in love, and my chest opens
and a white unicorn jumps out and gallops over the clouds
soaring on endless gauze, swirling with eternal blue
So please do not stop my death, do not return me to a star of soil
I see what I want in blood: right now I see the murdered,
his heart lit by the bullet, say to his murderer: from now on
you remember
no one but me. I killed you without meaning to but from now on
you remember no one but me, nor can you endure spring flowers
I see what I want in the theatre of the absurd: fiends in judges' robes,
the emperor's hat, the masks of our time, the colour of old sky,
women who dance for the palace, the chaos of armies
Then I choose to forget everything, remember only the noise behind
the curtain
I see what I want in poetry: when poets died, we attended their funerals,
buried them with flowers, returned safely to their poetry ...
now in the age of magazines, movies, and droning, we laugh—sprinkle
a handful of soil on their poems, come home to find them at our door
I see at dawn what I want in the dawn ... right now I see
nations looking for bread in other nations' bread
Bread is what unravels us from the silk of drowsiness, from the cotton
of our dreams
Is it from a grain of wheat that the dawn of life shines ... and the
dawn of war?
I see what I want in people: their desire
for yearning, their reluctance to go to work,
their urgency to come home ...
and their need for greetings in the morning
Translated by Saadi Simawe and Ellen Doré Watson from the Arabic