• Unless Israel changes course, it could be legally culpable for mass sta

    From NefeshBarYochai@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 7 04:16:25 2024
    XPost: alt.atheism, can.politics, alt.politics.democrats.d
    XPost: alt.food.fast-food

    by Alex de Waal

    Gaza is experiencing mass starvation like no other in recent history.
    Before the outbreak of fighting in October, food security in Gaza was precarious, but very few children – less than 1% – suffered severe
    acute malnutrition, the most dangerous kind. Today, almost all Gazans,
    of any age, anywhere in the territory, are at risk.

    There is no instance since the second world war in which an entire
    population has been reduced to extreme hunger and destitution with
    such speed. And there’s no case in which the international obligation
    to stop it has been so clear.

    These facts underpinned South Africa’s recent case against Israel at
    the international court of justice. The international genocide
    convention, article 2c, prohibits “deliberately inflicting [on a
    group] conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical
    destruction in whole or in part”.

    In ordering provisional measures to prevent potential genocide last
    Friday, the ICJ didn’t rule on whether Israel is actually committing
    genocide – that will take years of deliberation – but the judges made
    it clear that the people of Gaza face “conditions of life” in which
    their survival is in question. Even Justice Aharon Barak, appointed by
    Israel to sit on the panel, voted in favour of immediate humanitarian
    relief.

    But a humanitarian disaster such as Gaza’s today is like a speeding
    freight train. Even if the driver puts on the brakes, its momentum
    will take it many miles before it stops. Palestinian children in Gaza
    will die, in the thousands, even if the barriers to aid are lifted
    today.

    Starvation is a process. Famine can be its ultimate outcome, unless
    stopped in time. The methodology used to categorize food emergencies
    is called the integrated food security phase classification system, or
    IPC. It’s a five-point scale, running from normal (phase 1), stressed,
    crisis, and emergency, to catastrophe/famine (phase 5).

    In categorizing food emergencies, the IPC draws on three measurements: families’ access to food; child malnutrition; and the numbers of
    people dying over and above normal rates. “Emergency” (phase 4)
    already sees children dying. For a famine declaration, all three
    measures need to pass a certain threshold; if only one is in that
    zone, it’s “catastrophe”.

    The IPC’s famine review committee is an independent group of experts
    who assess evidence for the most extreme food crises, akin to a high
    court of the world humanitarian system. The committee has already
    assessed that the entirety of Gaza is under conditions of “emergency”.
    Many areas in the territory are already in “catastrophe”, it said, and
    might reach “famine” by early February.

    Yet whether or not conditions are bad enough for an official
    declaration of “famine” is less important than the situation today,
    which is already killing children. Bear in mind that malnutrition
    makes humans’ immune systems more vulnerable to diseases sparked by
    lack of clean water and sanitation, and that those diseases are
    accelerated by overcrowding in unhealthy camps.

    Since the IPC was adopted 20 years ago, there have been major food
    emergencies in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
    Ethiopia’s Tigray region, north-east Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan,
    Sudan and Yemen. Compared to Gaza, these have unfolded slowly, over
    periods of a year or more. They have stricken larger populations
    spread over wider areas. Hundreds of thousands died, most of them in emergencies that didn’t cross the bar of famine.

    And in the most notorious famines of the late 20th century – in China, Cambodia, Nigeria’s Biafra and Ethiopia – the numbers who died were
    far higher, but the starvation was also slower and more dispersed.

    Never before Gaza have today’s humanitarian professionals seen such a
    high proportion of the population descend so rapidly towards
    catastrophe.

    All modern famines are directly or indirectly man-made – sometimes by indifference to suffering or dysfunction, other times by war crimes,
    and in a few cases by genocide.

    The Rome statute of the international criminal court, article
    8(2)(b)(xxv), defines the war crime of starvation as “intentionally
    using starvation of civilians as a method of warfare by depriving them
    of objects indispensable to their survival, including wilfully
    impeding relief supplies as provided for under the Geneva
    conventions”.

    The main element of the crime is destruction and deprivation, not just
    of food but of anything needed to sustain life, such as medicine,
    clean water and shelter. Legally speaking, starvation can constitute
    genocide or war crimes even if it doesn’t include outright famine.
    People don’t have to die of hunger; the act of deprivation is enough.

    Many wars are starvation crime scenes. In Sudan and South Sudan, it’s widespread looting by marauding militia. In Ethiopia’s Tigray, farms, factories, schools and hospitals were vandalized and burned, far in
    excess of any military logic. In Yemen, most of the country was put
    under starvation blockade. In Syria, the regime besieged cities,
    demanding they “surrender or starve”.

    The level of destruction of hospitals, water systems and housing in
    Gaza, as well as restrictions of trade, employment and aid, surpasses
    any of these cases.

    It may be true, as Israel claims, that Hamas is using hospitals and
    residential neighbourhoods for its own war effort. But that doesn’t
    exonerate Israel. Much of Israel’s destruction of Gazan infrastructure
    appears to be away from zones of active combat and in excess of what
    is proportionate to military necessity.

    The most extreme historical cases – such as Stalin’s Holodomor in
    Ukraine in the 1930s and the Nazi “hunger plan” on the eastern front
    during the second world war – were genocidal famines at immense scale.
    Gaza doesn’t approach these, but Israel will need to act decisively if
    it is to escape the charge of having used hunger to exterminate the Palestinians. Starvation is a massacre in slow motion. And unlike
    shooting or bombing, the dying continues for weeks even if killing is
    halted.

    This is the challenge facing the UN security council when it will soon
    debate the ICJ’s provisional orders to Israel. Just allowing in aid
    and putting some restraints on Israel’s military action are not going
    to stop this thundering train of catastrophe quickly enough.

    More than a month ago, the famine review committee wrote: “The
    cessation of hostilities and the restoration of humanitarian space to
    deliver this multi-sectoral assistance and restore services are
    essential first steps in eliminating any risk of famine.” In other
    words, an immediate end to fighting is essential to prevent a
    calamitous toll that may far exceed the numbers killed by violence.

    That’s the operative line. For the survival of the people of Gaza
    today, it doesn’t matter whether Israel intends genocide or not.
    Unless Israel follows the famine relief committee recommendations, it
    will knowingly cause mass death by hunger and disease. That’s a
    starvation crime.

    And if the US and UK fail to use every possible lever to stop the
    catastrophe, they will be complicit.

    Alex de Waal is the executive director of the World Peace Foundation
    at Tufts University and the author of Mass Starvation: The History and
    Future of Famine


    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/31/israel-gaza-starvation-international-law

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael Christ@21:1/5 to NefeshBarYochai on Wed Feb 7 15:50:16 2024
    XPost: alt.atheism, can.politics, alt.politics.democrats.d
    XPost: alt.food.fast-food

    On 7/02/2024 3:16 pm, NefeshBarYochai wrote:

    by Alex de Waal

    Gaza is experiencing mass starvation like no other in recent history.
    Before the outbreak of fighting in October, food security in Gaza was precarious, but very few children – less than 1% – suffered severe
    acute malnutrition, the most dangerous kind. Today, almost all Gazans,
    of any age, anywhere in the territory, are at risk.

    There is no instance since the second world war in which an entire
    population has been reduced to extreme hunger and destitution with
    such speed. And there’s no case in which the international obligation
    to stop it has been so clear.

    These facts underpinned South Africa’s recent case against Israel at
    the international court of justice. The international genocide
    convention, article 2c, prohibits “deliberately inflicting [on a
    group] conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical
    destruction in whole or in part”.

    In ordering provisional measures to prevent potential genocide last
    Friday, the ICJ didn’t rule on whether Israel is actually committing genocide – that will take years of deliberation – but the judges made
    it clear that the people of Gaza face “conditions of life” in which
    their survival is in question. Even Justice Aharon Barak, appointed by
    Israel to sit on the panel, voted in favour of immediate humanitarian
    relief.

    But a humanitarian disaster such as Gaza’s today is like a speeding
    freight train. Even if the driver puts on the brakes, its momentum
    will take it many miles before it stops. Palestinian children in Gaza
    will die, in the thousands, even if the barriers to aid are lifted
    today.

    Starvation is a process. Famine can be its ultimate outcome, unless
    stopped in time. The methodology used to categorize food emergencies
    is called the integrated food security phase classification system, or
    IPC. It’s a five-point scale, running from normal (phase 1), stressed, crisis, and emergency, to catastrophe/famine (phase 5).

    In categorizing food emergencies, the IPC draws on three measurements: families’ access to food; child malnutrition; and the numbers of
    people dying over and above normal rates. “Emergency” (phase 4)
    already sees children dying. For a famine declaration, all three
    measures need to pass a certain threshold; if only one is in that
    zone, it’s “catastrophe”.

    The IPC’s famine review committee is an independent group of experts
    who assess evidence for the most extreme food crises, akin to a high
    court of the world humanitarian system. The committee has already
    assessed that the entirety of Gaza is under conditions of “emergency”. Many areas in the territory are already in “catastrophe”, it said, and might reach “famine” by early February.

    Yet whether or not conditions are bad enough for an official
    declaration of “famine” is less important than the situation today,
    which is already killing children. Bear in mind that malnutrition
    makes humans’ immune systems more vulnerable to diseases sparked by
    lack of clean water and sanitation, and that those diseases are
    accelerated by overcrowding in unhealthy camps.

    Since the IPC was adopted 20 years ago, there have been major food emergencies in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia’s Tigray region, north-east Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan,
    Sudan and Yemen. Compared to Gaza, these have unfolded slowly, over
    periods of a year or more. They have stricken larger populations
    spread over wider areas. Hundreds of thousands died, most of them in emergencies that didn’t cross the bar of famine.

    And in the most notorious famines of the late 20th century – in China, Cambodia, Nigeria’s Biafra and Ethiopia – the numbers who died were
    far higher, but the starvation was also slower and more dispersed.

    Never before Gaza have today’s humanitarian professionals seen such a
    high proportion of the population descend so rapidly towards
    catastrophe.

    All modern famines are directly or indirectly man-made – sometimes by indifference to suffering or dysfunction, other times by war crimes,
    and in a few cases by genocide.

    The Rome statute of the international criminal court, article
    8(2)(b)(xxv), defines the war crime of starvation as “intentionally
    using starvation of civilians as a method of warfare by depriving them
    of objects indispensable to their survival, including wilfully
    impeding relief supplies as provided for under the Geneva
    conventions”.

    The main element of the crime is destruction and deprivation, not just
    of food but of anything needed to sustain life, such as medicine,
    clean water and shelter. Legally speaking, starvation can constitute
    genocide or war crimes even if it doesn’t include outright famine.
    People don’t have to die of hunger; the act of deprivation is enough.

    Many wars are starvation crime scenes. In Sudan and South Sudan, it’s widespread looting by marauding militia. In Ethiopia’s Tigray, farms, factories, schools and hospitals were vandalized and burned, far in
    excess of any military logic. In Yemen, most of the country was put
    under starvation blockade. In Syria, the regime besieged cities,
    demanding they “surrender or starve”.

    The level of destruction of hospitals, water systems and housing in
    Gaza, as well as restrictions of trade, employment and aid, surpasses
    any of these cases.

    It may be true, as Israel claims, that Hamas is using hospitals and residential neighbourhoods for its own war effort. But that doesn’t exonerate Israel. Much of Israel’s destruction of Gazan infrastructure appears to be away from zones of active combat and in excess of what
    is proportionate to military necessity.

    The most extreme historical cases – such as Stalin’s Holodomor in
    Ukraine in the 1930s and the Nazi “hunger plan” on the eastern front during the second world war – were genocidal famines at immense scale.
    Gaza doesn’t approach these, but Israel will need to act decisively if
    it is to escape the charge of having used hunger to exterminate the Palestinians. Starvation is a massacre in slow motion. And unlike
    shooting or bombing, the dying continues for weeks even if killing is
    halted.

    This is the challenge facing the UN security council when it will soon
    debate the ICJ’s provisional orders to Israel. Just allowing in aid
    and putting some restraints on Israel’s military action are not going
    to stop this thundering train of catastrophe quickly enough.

    More than a month ago, the famine review committee wrote: “The
    cessation of hostilities and the restoration of humanitarian space to
    deliver this multi-sectoral assistance and restore services are
    essential first steps in eliminating any risk of famine.” In other
    words, an immediate end to fighting is essential to prevent a
    calamitous toll that may far exceed the numbers killed by violence.

    That’s the operative line. For the survival of the people of Gaza
    today, it doesn’t matter whether Israel intends genocide or not.
    Unless Israel follows the famine relief committee recommendations, it
    will knowingly cause mass death by hunger and disease. That’s a
    starvation crime.

    And if the US and UK fail to use every possible lever to stop the catastrophe, they will be complicit.

    Alex de Waal is the executive director of the World Peace Foundation
    at Tufts University and the author of Mass Starvation: The History and
    Future of Famine


    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/31/israel-gaza-starvation-international-law


    One day you'll be saying Oct 7th never happened.

    In fact, you are saying it right now.



    Michael Christ

    --
    God is God

    Jesus is the everlasting Father, Jesus is God, Jesus is the Lord. John
    10:30  I and Father are one. If you can't see that the Lord Jesus is the everlasting Father you are not born again and can't see the Kingdom of God.

    Colossians 2:9 For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily.

    Rom 5:8 But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were
    YET sinners, Christ died for us.

    Jeremiah 10:23 O LORD, I know that the way of man is not in himself: it
    is not in man that walketh to direct his steps.

    Psalms 53:1 The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. Corrupt
    are they, and have done abominable iniquity: there is none that doeth good.

    Proverbs 12:15 The way of a fool is right in his own eyes: but he that hearkeneth unto counsel is wise.

    "To seek your own will is to seek your own glory."

    "If God is not first in everything He is not first in anything."

    "What makes the bible the truth? The resonance of God."

    "All men were born sinners. Why? Because all men were born not loving
    God with all their heart, soul, and mind. An abomination. Therefore,
    sin is not what you do; it is what you are."

    "Compromise will condemn you."

    "There are no sinners in Christ Jesus."

    "My sons are born of Me. In them is no darkness at all."

    "You can't learn righteousness. Haven't you had enough time already to
    know that?"

    "The way of truth is the testimony of life."

    "I merely speak the truth, what is revealed to me, and the cards fall
    where God intends."

    "Nothing that is produced is produced without first being faith."

    "You can only find proof of God through faith because that is how we all
    live, by faith."

    "It is not what you do that matters, it is how you treat Me."

    "Keep going forward. Forget about the past. Lift up your head, look
    ahead."

    "You cannot be free and free indeed with guilt in your heart."

    "Priority is everything."

    "The truth doesn't need evidence, it is evidence."

    "There is no greater possession a man has than his own will, to squander
    it or to place it where it truly belongs."

    "An atheist is a fool who thinks truth is found in living a lie."

    "Saying "prove it" [as a foundation] is merely an ignorant straw man, to
    an ignorant straw man."

    "Wait, rest, be still, and know."

    "No man can wash his own hands!!!"

    "I find this in the Christianity religions: 'Nobody's perfect' they say,
    and they use that as an excuse not to do what is perfect."

    The Atheist: "They don't believe and put their faith in a Creator (the obvious). So no evidence and proof is to be found!!"

    "The world is the way it is because God can't compromise who He is."

    "Man is not the centre of being."

    "Man is incompatible with the natural world because of his sinful nature."

    "And then the Lord said, "I see everything."

    "Man has no greater idol than his own will."

    "Where is God hiding? He isn't."

    "If you don't keep all the scriptures, you can't keep any of them."

    "You can't prove anything because everything depends on a person's
    willingness to believe."

    "Atheists are ultimately trying to be pointlessness, meaninglessness,
    and purposelessness in their point, meaning, and purpose."

    "The last day of creation will be the last day of time. God is always
    full of hope."

    "The veil of the temple was rent in twain, not to have a book pass
    through it so that you could play God."

    "A phylactery does not a heart for God make. Not back then, and not today."

    "No one in heaven is better (or higher) than what makes it heaven. Such
    is the love of God."

    "The definition of an atheist: A man full of bluster and bullshit
    pretending he is the meaning of life."

    "Free will is not power; it is the choice that I allow; that choice is
    still according to my power," says the Lord.

    What does a fool do? A fool looks for a "nothing" in a "something" in
    order to explain the existence of existence.

    "Unless you do all because He is who He is, all your religion is in vain."

    "Every man is subject to God; He judges every man, and He is reality.
     What a gift in a fallen world!"

    "Love MUST be a choice or it is nothing but a law!"

    "Why were all men born sinners? So that God could reveal Himself, so
    that we would behold the glory of God, and that we should bring forth
    the glory of God"

    "God does not and will not arbitrate for any man to love Him! If God
    isn't everything to you, He is nothing to you where the rubber meets the
    road."

    "It is the unforgivable sin not to love God with all your heart, soul,
    and mind. What do you have that is lasting? It is not so much being
    punished; it is what you are left with."

    "Love isn't worth anything without first a free will choice for God to
    birth it in a man."

    "The point of salvation: desperation. Anything less than that is self-righteousness."

    "A sinner is not a believer in God, a sinner is a believer in sin."

    "A piece of dirt is not the promised land; that is only a reflection.
    The promised land is knowing Me, says the Lord."

    "It is all about God or it is all about idolatry."

    "The Lord Jesus is coming soon. He has always come soon."

    "There is no revolving door of self-worship in a son of God's life!"

    "There is no such thing as random!"

    "You can't truly love without it being with all your heart."

    "No one can see God without their whole heart. Unless you can see God,
    you know nothing."

    "You can't learn God, God has to reveal Himself to you."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)