US-Israeli genocide in Gaza
The Israeli regime presses ahead with its relentless air and artillery strikes across Gaza, causing more deaths and injuries among Palestinian civilians. At least, 20 Palestinians were killed in the regime’s latest strikes on five houses in Gaza City in central part of the territory. An earlier strike in Jabalia Al-Balad, north of Gaza, claimed the lives of at least ten civilians. Ten people were also killed in a separate strike on a house near Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Hanoun. The hospital itself was targeted by an Israeli drone. Another strike on a house in the Al-Daraj neighborhood of Gaza City killed six civilians, while Four others died in Beit Hanoun. Three civilians, including two women, were killed in airstrikes near the southern city of Khan Yunis. The Israeli genocide has killed nearly 45,100 Palestinians so far, leaving over 107,200 others injured.
Israeli crimes in Gaza
A new report on the Israeli soldiers' conduct in the Gaza Strip has shed more light on the regime’s war crimes in the blockaded territory. According to the Israeli newspaper, Ha'aretz, the regime's soldiers commit arbitrary killings and rampant lawlessness in Netzarim Corridor. The paper said Israeli soldiers have been randomly shooting at civilians, including children and individuals carrying white flags, near the Netzarim Corridor under flimsy justifications. The corridor has been created by the regime to divide Gaza into northern and southern parts. Soldiers probed by the newspaper said anyone crossing an imaginary line in that area is shot to death, with every Palestinian casualty counting as a terrorist, even if they were just a child. Since the onset of its genocide, Israel has also waged a war on journalists in Gaza. It has killed nearly 200 journalists and barred foreign reporters from entering the Strip to collect evidence of its war crimes. Therefore, reports released by Israeli outlets offer only a glimpse into the extensive crimes committed by the regime's forces in Gaza over the past 14 months.
Slamming UNGA resolution
The Iranian Foreign Ministry has strongly rejected the UN General Assembly's Canadian-sponsored anti-Iran resolution, calling it legally baseless and fundamentally invalid. The ministry's spokesman stressed that the resolution relies on unfounded claims and flawed generalizations. Esmaeil Baghaei was referring to a General Assembly resolution, which was adopted on Tuesday, accusing Iran of human rights violations. He noted that the majority of UN member states showed their dissatisfaction with the misuse of the UN General Assembly and instrumental use of human rights through their negative votes or abstentions. Baghaei stated that such unjustified measures reduce the concept of human rights to a tool for exerting political pressure on nations. He also pointed out that supporters of the resolution, including Israel, the US, and the UK are among the most notorious violators of human rights, and have been involved in the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza.