Israel’s genocide in Gaza has not stopped, despite the ceasefire: Analysts

A ceasefire on October 10, 2025, was supposed to put an end to Israel’s genocidal conflict in Gaza.

However, after two months, Israel has violated the ceasefire more than 500 times, killing at least 356 Palestinians and overthrowing Gaza’s total death toll.

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Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, has made it clear that the conflict is still ongoing.

According to analysts, the war has continued despite the slowdown in Israel’s killing of Palestinians in Gaza, for all intents and purposes.

According to Muhammad Shehada, a visiting fellow with the Middle East and North Africa program at the European Council on Foreign Relations, “genocide is not just mass killing.”

He claimed that the population’s ability to coexist as a group is also being ruined by the mass destruction of infrastructure, ethnic cleansing, and starvation.

Political spectacle and theater

According to analysts, the ceasefire gave the international community an excuse to stop focusing on Israel’s actions in Gaza rather than as a pardon for Palestinians.

The US-backed ceasefire agreement was intended to stop Israeli attacks on Gaza and prompt the start of aid deliveries to Palestinians who were besieged by the Gaza Strip, which had been declared a famine.

US President Donald Trump stated from Cairo, where a Gaza peace summit was taking place, that “we have finally found peace in the Middle East.”

Israel, however, kept attacking. More than 1,500 buildings were destroyed, and it has expanded further into Gaza, preventing residents from entering the aid they agreed to.

“It’s theater because everyone was upset about the genocide and wanted to stop rather than end it,” said one witness. And that is exactly what Shehada said.

Gaza has scurried in and out of media attention in the weeks since the ceasefire was established.

According to Lebanese Palestinian researcher and writer Elia Ayoub, “the main difference is, of course, the reduced media coverage, which was one of the intended purposes of the so-called ceasefire.”

“Israel is currently under much less pressure than it was up until October 10; there isn’t any hope of accountability.”

Israel’s genocide is still ongoing.

Amnesty International, which released a legal analysis of what it called the “ongoing genocide in the Occupied Gaza Strip,” took note of the Palestinians’ ongoing harm in Gaza last week.

“The world must not be deceived,” he said. Amnesty International secretary-general Agnes Callamard said that Israel’s genocide is still ongoing.

The analysis cites the number of Palestinians who have died as a result of the ceasefire, Israel’s restrictions on humanitarian and medical supplies, and how the Israeli blockade and siege of Gaza caused a famine and increased the risk of illnesses.

There is no evidence that Israel’s intentions have changed, according to Callamard, who said there is no indication that it is taking serious action to stop the deadly effects of its crimes.

Prior to the ceasefire, UNRWA’s head, UNRWA’s Philippe Lazzarini, reported on October 1 that 100 people per day were dying in Gaza, primarily from Israeli military operations or gunshots at Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution points.

The foundations of Palestinian society in Gaza are still inruins, and even less people have died as a result of direct military operations since the ceasefire.

Defense analyst Hamze Attar claimed that the Israeli “yellow line of occupation” in the Gaza Strip is a continuation of the genocide and that the pace is different, the destruction of the homes is ongoing, and Palestinians are still killed, and the Israeli “yellow line of occupation” is still ongoing.

“The genocide involves preventing people from returning to their homes and creating a new reality in the Gaza Strip,” said one author.

Simply genocide

Hamas and other Palestinian organizations were required to release the prisoners held in Gaza, one of the main stipulations of the ceasefire. Ran Gvili, an Israeli policeman, and Sudthisak Rinthalak, a Thai national, have returned all living prisoners and all but two of the bodies of dead prisoners.

According to Israeli media, one of the bodies that are still unaccounted for may be returned in the near future. The most fervent supporters of Israel argued for months that the war would be ended by the captives’ return.

Hazem Qassem, a spokesman for Hamas, previously stated that the organization has made it “committed to fully complete the exchange process and its ongoing efforts to finalize it despite significant difficulties.”

In terms of Israel, it released the bodies of 345 Palestinian prisoners who had perished in its prisons and released 2, 000 of them. Many allegedly displayed signs of torture, mutilation, and execution. Israel hasn’t, however, reduced its grip on Gaza’s citizens.

No one bothers with details as soon as ceasefires come into effect, Shehada said, giving Israel the freedom to do whatever it wants.

Shehada claimed that Trump is more interested in the spectacle of peace than “the dynamics on the ground,” noting that Israel consistently violates the ceasefire, making it difficult for the mediators to keep up.

He claimed that the Palestinians’ ethnic cleansing in Gaza was still the end goal.

According to analysts, Israel has violated peace agreements in Gaza as well as in Lebanon and Syria. Analysts have repeatedly doubted Netanyahu’s claims that his goal is to annihilate and destroy Hamas.

According to Ayoub, “it confirms what we already knew: that the goal is not to end an armed group like Hamas but to ensure that life itself cannot be sustained in Gaza over the long term.”

Was ex-Honduras leader Hernandez victim of Biden ‘set-up’, as Trump claims?

President Donald Trump announced he would pardon a former Honduran president infamous for his involvement in the US drug trade as the United States continued its military campaign against what the Trump administration refers to as “narco-terrorists” in the Caribbean.

Juan Orlando Hernandez, who had been found guilty of conspiring to import more than 400 tonnes of cocaine into the US, was given a 45-year prison sentence in 2024.

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Trump claimed that Joe Biden’s administration had “set up” Hernandez during an interview with reporters on Air Force One on Sunday. Trump said, “If someone sells drugs in that country, you don’t arrest the president and imprison him for the rest of his life,” without providing any proof of the alleged “set-up.”

Trump made an inaccurate statement about the nature of the former Honduran president’s arrest and conviction: Hernandez was deeply involved in the flow of illegal drugs into the US after he was elected president, not because he sold drugs there.

Although the circumstance is uncommon, it has some similarities.

Trump’s planned pardon was seen by the White House as a step toward correcting a flawed system of justice. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt criticized Hernandez’ three-week jury trial for having weak evidence at a press briefing on December 1.

A judge denied Hernandez’ request for a new trial after his conviction.

What crimes did Hernandez commit?

Hernandez declared his intent to combat drug trafficking during his presidency, which extended from January 2014 to January 2022. Trump praised his 2019 accomplishments.

Hernandez was charged with drug- and weapons-trafficking and extradited to the US in April 2022. For importing cocaine and other prohibited weapons, District Judge P. Kevin Castel sentenced him to 540 months in prison and 60 months of supervised release on June 26, 2024.

Hernandez used his presidential authority to bring hundreds of tonnes of cocaine into the US, according to the US Justice Department, and used drug trafficking proceeds to finance his political career.

Hernandez once said that he wanted to “stuff the drugs right up the noses of the gringos,” according to the department.

Witnesses, some of whom were former traffickers, gave testimony for the prosecution. According to documents obtained in the case, Hernandez worked with coconspirators who were armed with assault rifles, machineguns, and grenade launchers to facilitate the importation of more than 400 tonnes of cocaine into the US.

Witnesses to Hernandez’ trial claimed that the Honduran military and police issued orders from criminal organizations.

According to US prosecutors, Hernandez ended up receiving millions of dollars in drug proceeds from some of the world’s largest and most violent drug-trafficking organizations. According to the prosecution, he then used those bribes to fuel his rise in Honduran politics, enabling him to defend his conspirators.

Under Hernandez’s leadership, Juan Antonio Hernandez Alvarado, a former member of the Honduran National Congress, was protected by the government. According to the prosecution, Hernandez also received millions of dollars from former Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

How did the US successfully prosecute a foreign leader?

Trump claimed Hernandez was given the honor of serving as Honduran president. A foreign president’s prosecution is unusual but not unprecedented.

A sitting head of state or head of government is protected by “complete immunity” from prosecution in international court, according to Anthony Clark Arend, a Georgetown University professor of government and foreign service with a focus on international law.

Former heads of state are less repressive, though. Hernandez’ US extradition took place weeks away from his office.

If a former head of state or government is accused of acting in their place of power, Arend said, they are not subject to legal action in another country. However, because drug trafficking has historically not been regarded as an “official” duty, the US was able to prosecute Hernandez.

According to Arend, there would be no impediment in the international law to try him, a former president, for those charges because he was facing drug-trafficking charges.

According to Daniel Sabet, a visiting fellow at the Johns Hopkins University’s SNF Agora Institute who studies Central America, Hernandez’s prosecution “seemed to have legitimacy both in the US and in Honduras.” The arrest was viewed as legitimate, according to “his main supporters.”

Particularly notable is Manuel Noriega of Panama’s case, which is uncommon but not unprecedented.

Following Noriega’s indictment by a US grand jury on drug-related charges, President George H. W. Bush ordered US forces to seize the nation’s leader in Panama in 1989. (Noriega’s position as the country’s head of state was contested at the time, and the US did not recognize it.)

On eight counts of drug trafficking, money laundering, and racketeering, Noriega was tried and found guilty after turning himself in and being taken to the US state of Florida. He received a 40-year prison sentence. A three-judge appeals court panel in 1997 upheld Noriega’s claim that his position as head of state should have preempted his prosecution.

Additionally, Sabet cited the arrest of former Ukrainian Prime Minister Pavel Lazarenko in the United States in 1999 on suspicion of 53 counts of money laundering. He was found guilty and given a three-year prison term.

Pope prays at site of 2020 Beirut port explosion

Pope Leo wraps up Lebanon visit with prayers at site of Beirut port blast

One of his final stops in Lebanon was when Pope Leo XIV stopped to pray at the site of the 2020 Beirut port explosion.

On Tuesday morning, the Catholic leader lit a lamp and silently prayed at a monument dedicated to the more than 220 victims and 6,500 others who had been injured in the explosion. During his first trip abroad, the American-born pontiff urged peaceful coexistence in the Middle East.

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The Pontiff greeted each of the survivors and victims’ relatives as they spoke, blessed, and spoke with mounds of rubble and the remains of the facility in view.

The Pope has visited us, and Cecile Roukoz, a lawyer whose brother died in the explosion, expressed her gratitude. We are aware of his plea for justice, and we must do it for the sake of our brothers and the lives of all those who were the victims of this explosion.

According to Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr, who was reporting from Beirut’s waterfront where Leo later celebrated Mass, many Lebanese people see his gesture at the blast site as a powerful gesture.

She said, “It really meant a lot for the Pope to speak to the family members one by one.”

Five years after the blast, which ripped through neighborhoods and caused billions of dollars in damage, victims and their families are still fighting for justice.

No official has been found guilty in a judicial investigation that has been repeatedly obstructed, infuriating Lebanese, for whom the blast was the most recent example of impunity following decades of corruption and financial crimes.

Leo had urged Lebanon’s political leaders to pursue the truth as a means of peace and reconciliation when he arrived on Sunday.

“Reduce ethnic and political divisions”

The Pope’s Mass was attended by thousands of people in Beirut’s waterfront, ending his three-day visit.

He urged Lebanon’s citizens to “cast off the armour of our ethnic and political divisions,” urging the people to “unify our efforts so that this land can return to its glory.”

He claimed that he wanted “a Lebanon where all people would recognize each other as brothers and sisters” and that peace and justice would rule.

Leo XIV attends a mass on December 2 at Beirut’s waterfront. [Giuseppe Cacace/AFP]

According to the Vatican’s press release, 150 000 people showed up for the outdoor ceremony, citing Lebanese authorities.

The result was a significantly lower turnout than the 300,000 people who attended Pope Benedict XVI’s 2012 waterfront Mass during his most recent papal visit to Lebanon.

The discrepancy, according to Khodr, is in line with the recent mass exodus of Lebanese, including Christians, driven by the country’s growing economic and political unrest, which includes deep sectarian strife.

Since Pope Benedict XVI arrived, the nation has experienced a crisis after crisis, including an economic collapse, people losing their savings, and then a port explosion, according to Khodr.

“And now there is Hezbollah’s ongoing conflict with Israel.” Really, the list goes on. People here say “we are struggling, but we appreciate the Pope’s presence,” but “life is difficult and we are struggling.”

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