Israel Gaza school massacre
At least 40 Palestinians have been killed in northern Gaza strip after the Israeli army targeted a school sheltering displaced civilians. Local sources say Israeli forces besieged families sheltering in the Khalil Aweida School in Beit Hanoun before launching the attack. Israeli forces also forced school residents to move toward Gaza City. This attack comes amid a wave of other strikes that killed dozens of other people in Gaza City and, Beit Lahiya and the Jabalia refugee camp. The Palestinian resistance group Hamas strongly condemned the school attack, calling it a continuation of Israel’s genocide and ethnic cleansing in Gaza. Since the start of Israeli genocidal war in Gaza October last year, nearly 45,000 people have been killed, and over 106,000 injured.
Israel Syria aggresion
Israel is continuing its aggression against Syria, which intensified after the fall of the Bashar Assad government in Damascus. Israeli tanks and armored vehicles pushed into several towns in Syria’s southwestern Quneitra province. They destroyed roads, water networks and power lines. Israeli forces have seized the so-called buffer zone separating the occupied Golan Heights from the rest of Syria. That's in violation of the UN-brokered 1974 disengagement agreement with Syria. The Israeli military has also launched more than 60 fresh strikes on the Arab country, bringing the total number of attacks in a week to about 800. In one of the latest attacks, Israeli warplanes targeted a military base near the southern Daraa city in with multiple attacks.
Israeli Ireland embassy closure
The Israeli regime has announced that it is closing its embassy in Ireland’s capital, following pro-Palestinian policies of the country. The regime’s foreign ministry cited Dublin's anti-Israeli decisions as reason for the closure. These included the formal recognition of a Palestinian state and support for an International Court of Justice case accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza. Reacting to the decision, Irish Prime Minister Simon Harris rejected Israeli claims, emphasizing that Ireland is pro-peace, pro-human rights, and pro-international law. In November, Harris said the country's authorities would detain Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he traveled to Ireland after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for him.