UNIFIL says Israeli military forced entry at base in southern Lebanon

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the UN to eject its troops from the area, and the UN peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon claims that Israeli tanks have forced entry to one of its positions.

The incident comes as Israel expands its bombardment and ground attacks on Lebanon (UNIFIL) and is the latest in a line of violations and attacks by Israeli forces against the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

Two Israeli tanks “destroyed the position’s main gate and forcibly entered the position,” according to UNIFIL in a statement on Sunday.

Soon after the tanks left, shells exploded 100 metres (328 feet) away, releasing smoke that blew across the base and sickened UN personnel, causing 15 to require treatment despite wearing gas masks, UNIFIL said. Who fired the shells and what kind of toxic substance was not disclosed.

According to the Israeli military’s account of the events, Hezbollah-affiliated Lebanese rebels fired anti-tank missiles at Israeli troops, injuring 25 of them. A tank that was assisting in the casualties’ evacuation was very close to the UNIFIL post, but the tank then burst into it.

“It is not storming a base. It is not attempting to break into a base. It was a tank under heavy fire, mass casualty event, backing up to get out of harm’s way”, the military’s international spokesperson, Nadav Shoshani, told reporters.

The military claimed in a statement that it covered the UN peacekeeping force by using a smoke screen to conceal the evacuation of the wounded soldiers.

Just before the Israeli Prime Minister called for the UN to appoint a peacekeeping force, it happened.

In a statement to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, Netanyahu said, “The time has come for you to withdraw UNIFIL from Hezbollah strongholds and from the combat zones.”

Netanyahu continued, “The Israeli army has requested this repeatedly and has received repeatedly denied this, which has the effect of providing Hezbollah terrorists with human shields.”

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati slammed Netanyahu’s demand.

Netanyahu’s request to have the UNIFIL removed “adds a new chapter to the enemy’s strategy of not complying with international norms,” he said.

Hezbollah refutes Israel’s claim that it protects its fighters by utilizing the presence of peacekeepers close to its allies.

Ray Murphy, a former UNIFIL peacekeeper, told Al Jazeera that “the use of the tanks, firing at and around UN posts, and recklessly endangering UN personnel is a deliberate, violent act by Israeli forces”.

“In no way can this be attributed to Hezbollah. It is a decision by Israeli forces to target UN forces, UN posts”, he said.

According to Murphy, UN peacekeepers are protected by international humanitarian law.

They don’t participate in military activities. They are supporting peace. They are observing, they are reporting, they are trying to deliver humanitarian assistance. There is no justification for this attack on UN forces”, Murphy said.

Israel’s envoy to the UN, Danny Danon, said that the “UN’s insistence on keeping UNIFIL soldiers in line of fire is incomprehensible”.

UNIFIL was set up in 1978 to monitor southern Lebanon. Since then, the area has seen persistent conflict, with Israel invading in 1982, occupying southern Lebanon until 2000 and fighting a five-week war against Hezbollah in 2006.

After Israel continued to attack Gaza, Hezbollah and Israel started trading near-daily fire in October 2023. More than 2, 100 people have been killed in the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, according to Lebanese authorities, mostly over the past few weeks since Israel escalated its attacks, and more than 1.2 million people have been displaced.

Attacks on UN peacekeepers

In a number of attacks that have targeted peacekeeping positions and personnel in recent days, five peacekeepers have been hurt, with the majority of the injuries being attributed to Israeli forces by UNIFIL.

UN Security Council members Jean-Pierre Lacroix stated to the UN on Thursday that “peacekeepers’ safety and security are now in jeopardy.” He claimed that peacekeepers were kept in place despite the fact that operations had almost stopped since September 23 and that troops had been stationed. Additionally, a further 3,000 had been temporarily relocated to bigger bases.

Israeli forces have been requited by the United States and other European nations to stop attacking the peacekeepers. On Friday, US President Joe Biden said he was “absolutely, positively” telling Israel to stop.

According to a statement from the Italian government, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who is typically one of Israel’s most vocal supporters among Western European leaders, reiterated to Netanyahu that UNIFIL is being attacked by Israeli forces.

Netanyahu stated on Sunday on X that he regrets “any harm done to UNIFIL personnel” in Lebanon.

Are the US and Israel creating a ‘new world order’ in the Middle East?

According to Matt Duss of the Center for International Policy, the US and Israel are rearranging the Middle East to their liking.

According to Matt Duss, executive vice president of the Center for International Policy and former foreign policy adviser to Senator Bernie Sanders, the United States and Israel have no intention of easing the Middle East’s tension.

Duss claims to be working closely with Israel and the US to bring about a “new security arrangement” in the area.

Al-Shifa Hospital: Annihilation and Resilience

Survivors of the hospital’s destruction in Gaza recount the tragedy a year after the genocide.

More than a year into Israel’s most brutal assault on Gaza, much of the besieged enclave has been destroyed, including many schools and hospitals. We visited Gaza’s largest and most significant hospital al-Shifa last year as the conflict was just beginning, which was in danger of collapsing as a result of the Israeli siege of water and fuel. Al-Shifa was about to collapse, and the electricity was about to run out.

We return to the hospital where so many Palestinians were treated during the numerous attacks in Gaza more than a year later. After the most recent siege, Al-Shifa Hospital is now a shell. No patients remain at the facility. The majority of the equipment is unusable or reduced to ashes, and the majority of the buildings have been severely damaged or destroyed. The facility’s complete non-functionality has been reduced, further reducing Gaza’s ability to receive life-saving healthcare. It seems unlikely to be possible to restore even the most basic functionality in the near future, but it could be done.

Explosives and fire have severely damaged the hospital’s emergency department and the surgical and maternity ward. Both the neonatal intensive care unit’s (NICU) emergency department’s western wall and its northern wall have been destroyed. Among other things, 14 incubators in the NICU were destroyed, and at least 115 beds were burned in the emergency department.

Just outside the emergency departments and administrative and surgical buildings, there are numerous shallow graves. In the same area, numerous bodies were partially buried with visible limbs, and the hospital complex was suffocated by the smell of decomposing flesh.

During the siege, patients were being held in abominable conditions, according to the acting hospital director. They endured a severe lack of food, water, healthcare, hygiene and sanitation, and were forced to relocate between buildings at gunpoint.

What the destruction of al-Shifa Hospital means for Gaza’s healthcare system will be brought to light by this movie.

The ICC’s credibility is hanging by a thread

A sprinkling of hope appeared as soon as the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court was implemented in 2002, which brought the era of impunity for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide to an end.

The court ignores calls to action quickly against those responsible for the widespread atrocities in Gaza twenty-two years later, weighing its international legitimacy. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his defense minister Yoav Gallant, and three Hamas leaders were asked by ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan to request in May that the court issue arrest warrants. Despite the rise in the number of fatalities and the destruction of Gaza as a result of Israel’s ongoing genocidal violence, the ICC is still waiting to decide.

In the legal circles of the victorious powers, the idea of a permanent international tribunal to prosecute war crimes first surfaced after World War I, but it never materialized. After World War II, which killed an estimated 75-80 million people, several concepts of “justice” were floated.

At the 1943 Tehran Conference, during which the heads of state of the USSR, the United States and Great Britain met to discuss war strategy, Soviet Union leader Joseph Stalin suggested that at least 50, 000 of the German commanding staff must be eliminated. US President Franklin D Roosevelt replied, reportedly jokingly, that 49, 000 should be executed. Winston Churchill, the prime minister of the UK, advocated for the individual responsibilities of trialing war criminals.

Eventually, the allies established the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals, which indicted 24 German and 28 Japanese military and civilian leaders, respectively. Because neither the leaders or military leaders of the Allied powers were charged with crimes against them, this was ultimately victors’ justice. In the end, these tribunals were, arguably, a symbolic attempt at trying those who waged wars of aggression and committed genocide.

No similar international effort was made to prosecute war criminals during the decades that followed. For instance, the mass murderers of people who rebelled against colonial and imperial powers were never brought to justice.

The UN Security Council established two ad hoc tribunals in 1991-1995 and 1998-1999 to prosecute crimes committed during the genocide in Rwanda and in 1994, and this was followed by the resumption of international justice in the 1990s. While these tribunals served their purposes, some questioned their efficacy, financial costs, and independence, given that they were set up by a Security Council dominated by Western powers.

Here again, the notion of victors ‘ justice hovered particularly over the Yugoslavia tribunal, as it didn’t investigate, let alone prosecute, NATO officials for the seemingly illegal 1999 bombing campaign against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

In accordance with the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide, the Rwanda tribunal failed to conduct an investigation into the possible involvement of Western powers in the genocide and/or their failure to stop or stop it.

In this context, it was anticipated that those who commit war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide would be brought before the new court, regardless of which side they were in a conflict, as a result of the signing of the Rome Statute in 2002.

In 2018, the crime of aggression – defined as the planning, preparation, initiation or execution of an act of aggression which, by its character, gravity and scale, constitutes a violation of the Charter of the United Nations – was added to the court’s jurisdiction.

But it didn’t take long for the high hopes for the ICC to be frustrated. A few signatories of the Rome Statute formally declared that they no longer wanted to be State Parties, thereby absolving themselves of their obligations. Among them were Israel, the United States and the Russian Federation. Other major powers, like China and India, did not even sign the statute.

The ICC’s credibility was undermined by the fact that all 46 of its suspects were Africans, including sitting heads of state, during its first 20 years of operation.

The court indicted three pro-Russian officials from the breakaway region of South Ossetia on charges of war crimes during the 2008 Russia-Georgia war for the first time in June 2022. Just 29 days after Chief Prosecutor Khan requested an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin, the court made the sensational move in March 2023.

The decision was, on merit, rather puzzling. The warrant was issued for Putin’s alleged “individual criminal responsibility” for the “unlawful deportation of population (children) and the “illegal transfer of population (children) from occupied areas of Ukraine to the Russian Federation despite the lethality of the war raging in Ukraine since February 2022 and reported attacks on civilian targets.

The UN Security Council’s current president’s arrest warrant could have signaled its willingness to travel where the evidence would lead, in and of itself. Some, however, saw the court’s decision as further evidence of the influence of its Western supporters given the obvious psychological conflict between the West and Russia.

If the court had followed the overwhelming body of documented war crimes and crimes against humanity committed against Palestinians, this perception might have been diminished.

In 2018, the State of Palestine submitted a referral to the ICC “to investigate, in accordance with the temporal jurisdiction of the court, past, ongoing and future crimes within the court’s jurisdiction, committed in all parts of the territory of the State of Palestine”. The court decided in March 2023 that it could launch an “investigation into the State of Palestine” after five years.

South Africa and five other signatories referred the ICC to the ICC in November 2023, and Chief Prosecutor Khan confirmed that the investigation is still ongoing and extends to the escalation of hostilities and violence since the attacks that occurred on October 7, 2023.

Despite having a ton of compelling evidence of their personal responsibility for the war crimes committed in Gaza, Khan recommended to the court’s pre-trial chamber for no less than seven months. He also made the same suggestion about three Hamas figures, two of whom Israel later assassinated.

Arguably, it took time and courage to seek the arrest of Netanyahu, who has the support of the US and of Mossad, Israel’s infamous intelligence agency specialising in assassinations abroad. In May, the British newspaper The Guardian revealed that Khan’s predecessor, Fatou Bensouda, had been threatened “in a series of secret meetings” by Yossi Cohen, the then-head of Mossad and “Netanyahu’s closest allies at the time”.

Cohen allegedly told Bensouda to “leave a war crimes investigation” and that she should “help us and let us take care of you.” You don’t want to be involved in activities that could endanger your safety or that of your family.

One can only imagine the pressures and threats Khan faced or feared if she had been threatened and blackmailed for only investigating allegations of war crimes committed before the current genocidal war.

The pre-trial chamber’s three sitting judges must now decide whether to issue the warrants once he has completed his duties. If Netanyahu and Gallant aren’t immediately given the same threats as Bensouda, they must be acutely aware that the very credibility of the ICC also hangs in the balance. The glaring and extraordinary amount of evidence of war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, and crime of aggression is such that were they to abscond from their responsibility, they would ring the death knell of the ICC.

Top-ranked Jannik Sinner beats Novak Djokovic to win Shanghai Masters final

Jannik Sinner, the reigning world number one, won the Shanghai Masters in China 7-6 (7-4) 6-3 over Novak Djokovic, who is 24 times Grand Slam champion.

Sinner denied Djokovic a 100th career singles title by taking a crucial break in the fourth game of his second match, which ended in one hour, 37 minutes for the Serbian.

Facing off before an impassioned crowd, neither player blinked in the first set, unable to break the other’s serve.

In the tiebreak, Sinner quickly took control, breaking Djokovic’s serve on the first point and going 5-1 up.

The Serb steadied himself before scoring a set point with 6-3 after the final goal.

Sinner initially struggled to convert, but he did not miss the second set of behind-serve opportunities.

In the fourth game of the second set, Sinner broke the tie, beating 3-1 with a superb forehand down the line.

The Italian had to maintain his composure in the final games, which he did when he scored an ace to seal the match and claim his seventh ATP title of the year.

Italy’s Jannik Sinner won his seventh ATP title of 2024 at the Shanghai Masters. ]Qian Jun/MB Media via Getty Images]