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18/01/2026

A Cease-fire for Israelis and a War for Palestinians

Why should Gaza interest anyone when Israelis aren’t being killed? When the blare of sirens dies down in Israel, that’s considered a cease-fire

Gideon Levy, Haaretz, 18/1/2026


Mikail Çiftçi, Türkiye

 When Israelis aren’t being killed there’s a cease-fire. When Israelis aren’t being killed but over 400 in Gaza are, including 100 children, that too is called a cease-fire. When Israel demolishes 2,500 houses in Gaza in the middle of a cease-fire, and Defense Minister Israel Katz praises IDF soldiers for their operations, that is still called a cease-fire.

When hundreds of thousands of Gazans are freezing to death and wallowing in mud, that comes under the definition of a cease-fire.

When thousands of seriously ill people are dying because Israel denies them life-saving medical attention or the possibility of leaving their cages and going elsewhere for treatment, this a cease-fire. When an educated Israeli woman asks during a Sabbath meal whether there are still Israeli soldiers in Gaza at a time when over one half of the enclave is occupied by the IDF, that is a quintessential indicator of the existence of a cease-fire, at least as Israelis define it.

When life in Israel returns to normal, with cooking and song contests in full swing, and with in- depth discussions of the fateful issue of the leak to Bild magazine in Germany, that is the be-all and end-all of cease-fires. Only when a Hamas squad emerges from its hole and tries to plant an improvised explosive device in the rubble of Gaza, that is a grievous infraction of the cease-fire.

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When Israelis aren’t being killed, all the rest is of no interest. Why should Gaza interest anyone when Israelis aren’t being killed? When the blare of sirens dies down in Israel, that is a cease-fire. The fact that Gaza is still being bombed, but lacks sirens, is irrelevant. The world too is already showing signs of weariness with regard to Gaza, despite this weekend’s news of the establishment of a "Board of Peace," which will not save a single dispossessed person in Gaza from their bitter fate.

When Israelis are not being killed, a return to routine is declared, meaning that the war is over and that one can return to the victimhood stance of October 7, to the endless retelling of the stories of the hostages, to getting mired down in yesterday’s grief, being stunned every time there is a desperate attempt from Gaza to remind people of its existence. When Israelis aren’t being killed, Gaza doesn’t exist, nor does the entire Palestinian problem.

When Israelis aren’t being killed, everything is good. When they aren’t being killed one can resume denying and forgetting Gaza. When Israelis aren’t getting killed in the West Bank, life is even more wonderful. The fact that dozens of Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since the cease-fire took effect is even less interesting than the hundreds of Gazans killed in the same period.

News of the existence of a cease-fire in Gaza has not reached the West Bank or the IDF’s Central Command. All the draconian restrictions imposed in the West Bank at the beginning of the war in Gaza remain in place, not one of them having been rescinded or eased.

If those restrictions were imposed because of the war, why weren’t they lifted when the war ended? Nine hundred roadblocks set up during the war? Nine hundred roadblocks remain after the cease-fire took effect. Iron gates at every Palestinian community, opening and closing intermittently since the war began? The same thing continues after the war ended. Pogroms during the war? Even more so after it ended. When Israelis are not being killed, there’s no problem.

The decision to impose on Israel the signing of a cease-fire agreement turned out to be the deal of the year. This is the first one-sided cease-fire in history. Israel is permitted anything while the other side is not allowed to breathe. All the hostages were returned except for one body, and the promise to evacuate Gaza once the hostages were returned evaporated instantly, forgotten as if it were never made. Remember? The hostages were returned, and Israel is in Gaza, since then and forever.

The cease-fire also subdued the world outcry against Israel. Some in the world waited for an opportunity to return and embrace Israel, and a unilateral cease-fire is that opportunity. The world has moved on to Venezuela and Iran.

Trump can continue disseminating his idea of the invented peace he brought to the Middle East, and Israelis can continue telling themselves that the war in Gaza was justified and achieved all its objectives. Now it’s over. There is a cease-fire. The main thing is that Israelis are not getting killed in Gaza. All the rest is of no interest.

17/01/2026

The Greatest Historical Error of Palestinian Leaders

Ricardo Mohrez Muvdi, 16/1/2025
Translated by Tlaxcala

Ricardo Mohrez Muvdi 
is Palestinian, born in Beit Jala, Palestine (1952). A refugee in Colombia, he is a business administrator and president of the Palestinian Union of Latin America (UPAL), established in 2019 in San Salvador, El Salvador. He is also president of the Colombo-Palestinian Cultural Foundation.

The greatest mistake Palestinian leaders have made over decades of failed negotiations has been making concessions to Zionism in the belief that surrendering fundamental rights would bring peace, justice, or genuine recognition. History has shown precisely the opposite.

From the beginning of the modern conflict, the demand should have been clear: one single, democratic State with equal rights for all its inhabitants throughout historic Palestine. Accepting—and continuing to defend—the idea of “two States” was not only a poor strategy; it has been a progressive surrender of Palestine, legitimizing colonization, territorial fragmentation, and covert ethnic cleansing.

The so-called “two-State solution” was born already mutilated. It was not a proposal of justice, but of managing dispossession. Every Palestinian concession was met with more settlements, more walls, more checkpoints, and more racial laws. Negotiating under occupation was never negotiating: it was accepting the rules of the occupier. Persisting today in the fantasy of two States is not only naïve but politically suicidal. On the ground, there is no territorial continuity, no real sovereignty, and no control over borders, water, or resources.

What is being offered to the Palestinian people is not a State but fragmented, dependent, and surveilled reservations. Meanwhile, the Zionist project has been consistent: advancing without retreating, consolidating faits accomplis, and demanding international recognition without granting equality. In this sense, continuing to speak of two States is de facto endorsing the permanence of the occupation and accepting the transformation of territorial theft into international legality.

The only ethically, historically, and legally sustainable proposal is a single State in which Palestinians, whether Muslim, Christian, or Jewish, live with equal rights, free from ethnic or religious supremacy. A state where the right of return, equality before the law, and historical justice are non-negotiable.

This is not utopian; it is a matter of consistency. Apartheid regimes are not to be reformed—they are to be dismantled. And liberation does not arise from concessions to the oppressor but from steadfastness in principles. The Palestinian people have not survived decades of expulsion, exile, and resistance to settle for crumbs. Dignity is not negotiable—it is exercised.

 

16/01/2026

UPAL: Gaza depois do fogo after the fire después del fuego après le feu غزة بعد النار



    14/01/2026

    ‘Palestine 36’, The Historical Film by Annemarie Jacir on the Great Arab Revolt
    DOSSIER

    Fausto Giudice, 14/1/2026

    Audio  summary

    It began its public journey last September at the Toronto Film Festival, then opened the Carthage Film Festival last December. Nominated for Palestine for the Best International Film Oscar in coming March, Palestine 36 is beginning its theatrical run these days in Tunisia, France, and other countries, following its Palestinian premiere in Gaza on December 22, and Egypt and Great Britain, where it was screened as early as late December.

    Annemarie Jacir's film is a true event. It is the first film about the Great Palestinian Revolt, which saw a confrontation between the Palestinian people and the British occupiers, aided by armed Zionist settlers, for three long years, from 1936 to 1939. Its most impressive sequence was a general strike that lasted six months. 100,000 British soldiers, the largest military force deployed in that empire “on which the sun never set,” fought by all means an organized population resorting to a thousand forms of resistance.

    As in all anti-colonial struggles, a dialectical combination of various forms and levels of struggle was witnessed. The general strike launched from Jaffa on April 21, 1936, lasted 174 days, until October 11. Approximate toll: 5,000 Palestinians killed and 2,000 detained, 200 British and 500 Jews killed.

    The meaning and lessons of this historical moment for Palestine and the world today are strikingly evident.

    To tell this page of Palestine's history, a mirror of the world today as it was yesterday, Annemarie Jacir had the required background: A Christian Palestinian born in Bethlehem in 1974, she now lives in Haifa after studying and working in the USA and France. She has built a “portfolio” of cinematic works that enabled her to make her “magnum opus” possible. The film was financed by about ten countries and produced by a dozen producers, from the BBC and Denmark to Qatar, including foundations from wealthy Palestinian families. Filming was an ordeal: it began in the West Bank before October 7, was interrupted after, continued in Jordan, then resumed in Palestine. The boundaries between historical fiction and contemporary reality were very fluid. For instance, in a scene filmed in Nablus, British soldiers use a young Palestinian villager as a human shield in front of their jeep. On the same day, Israeli soldiers were filmed in reality tying a wounded Palestinian to the hood of their jeep in Jenin.

    The challenge for the director was: how to tell, almost a century later, in an effective, convincing, and humanly plausible way, a foundational historical period for a Palestinian, Arab, and global audience? Jacir made choices:

    1- Only two of the three collective protagonists are shown in detail: the Palestinians and the British. The Jews – immigrants and Zionist settlers – are only evoked, seen through the eyes of the natives, for whom the kibbutzniks settling in their fortified farms appear as alien invaders.

    2- While the British characters – High Commissioner, general, war criminal captain – are reconstructed versions of real historical figures with their real names, the Palestinian characters are fictional compositions based on real historical figures.

    3- The contradictions within each camp are not avoided, be it the betrayals on the Palestinian side or the disagreements on repression on the British side.

    4- As in all Annemarie Jacir films, women and children are full-fledged characters, as far from the patriarchal machismo of some Arab films as from the wokally correct rosewater Hollywood feminism.

    5- Finally, the film is and remains a fictional reconstruction, avoiding didactic aspects and translating ideological and political aspects through images, postures, attitudes, retorts, glances.

    Questions and answers

    The two characters that struck me the most are:

    1- that of the Palestinian journalist from Al Qods, Khulud Atef, played by Yasmine Al Massri, a magnificent actress born in Lebanon to a Palestinian father and Lebanese mother, whom we discovered in Nadine Labaki's Caramel (2007)

    2- that of Captain Wingate, played by British actor of Basque father Robert Aramayo

    Khulud is a fictional character. Wingate is a real historical figure. What is their relationship with historical reality?


    Read more



    11/01/2026

    Iran: Destabilizing by Strangulation
    Notes on the new protest wave in Iran

    Joachim Guilliard, Nachgetragen, 9/1/2026
    Translated by Tlaxcala

    Joachim Guilliard (b. 1958) studied physics, works professionally as an IT consultant, and is active in the German peace movement. He has long been engaged with the Middle East, with a focus on Iraq, and is the author of numerous specialist articles as well as the co-editor and co-author of several books on war-affected countries in the region. Since 2009, he has run the blog “Nachgetragen”.

    The strong wave of protest that spread in Iran at the end of 2025 against economic misery did not come as a surprise. The economic blockades steadily intensified over the course of the year and the direct military aggression by Israel and the USA in June have significantly exacerbated the country’s economic problems. The embargo Iran faces is as comprehensive and brutal as the one against Cuba.


    While the country manages to somewhat cushion the effects by expanding trade with Russia, China, and its Asian neighbors, the financial losses and supply problems are still considerable. Among other things, they lead to a steady devaluation of the Iranian currency, growing loss of purchasing power, and persistently high inflation, which soared to over 50 percent after the blockades were reinstated by the US President in 2018 and has since averaged 35 percent. Other domestic crises are also exacerbated by the embargo. Millions of people, including from the middle class, are thus increasingly being driven into poverty. [1]

    This is precisely the openly proclaimed goal of Trump. Iranians are to be driven to despair by a drastic deterioration in living conditions to the point where they rise up against the regime. This is in itself also the general calculation behind economic sanctions [2] and is also pursued by Berlin, Paris, and London. The UN and EU economic sanctions reactivated by them via “snapback” further devalued the exchange rate and drove inflation to almost 50 percent.

    The trigger for the current protests was ultimately an extreme plunge in the exchange rate of the rial against the dollar. Merchants in Tehran’s bazaar consequently closed their shops and took to the streets. The rial had lost another 10 percent of its value within a few days. As this was exceptional even for an Iran accustomed to currency crashes, its leadership sees the “hand of the enemy” behind it. [3]

    Although demonstrations spread to wide parts of the country, the hopes of the USA and its European allies have not been fulfilled so far. Even if Western media seek to convey a different impression, the protests are not aimed at overthrow the regime, but are predominantly directed against inflation, insecure employment, precarious living conditions, and the government’s inadequate measures to counter them.

    In the tense situation, the government is reacting more restrainedly than in previous protests.[4] It declares the demands to be justified, seeks dialogue, and made initial concessions, such as tax relief for merchants and higher subsidies.[5] President Masoud Pezeshkian also admitted, however, that the government currently lacks the means to solve the economic crisis.[6]

    Evidently, armed groups also endeavored to escalate demonstrations. In several provinces, there were violent riots, buildings were set on fire, and police stations attacked. Iranian security forces responded with corresponding severity. They also suspect, certainly not without reason, foreign interference.

    Surveillance, charges, and arrests had increased since June, after drone attacks, assassinations, and sabotage from Iranian territory had shown the extent to which sensitive areas of the country had been infiltrated by Israeli and US intelligence services. Pro-Western opposition figures thus came under increased suspicion. As always, attacks, destabilization efforts, and economic blockades drastically narrow political spaces for the civil society .

    But the Western strangulation measures and the massive support for anti-government forces in the country have nothing to do with efforts for freedom and democracy. They are also not primarily aimed at the Iranian nuclear program. The goal is the elimination of a regional power which, with its resource wealth, high level of education, and technological prowess, has enormous development potential. And which – similar to Venezuela – maintains strategic alliances with China, Russia, and other adversaries of the West, conducts trade bypassing the dollar, and due to its geographical location is a multipolar hub.

    As there are no sufficiently strong forces within the country itself to install a pro-Western regime, the USA, Israel, and the EU aim to bring Iran down to the level of Syria, Iraq, or Lebanon.

    Notes

    [1] Iran nach dem Zwölf-Tage-Krieg, UZ vom 26. Dezember 2025

    [2] Joachim Guilliard, Arsenal des Faustrechts: Wirtschaftsblockaden, Menschenrechte und der Widerstand des Südens, IMI-Studie 2024/4, 24. Mai 2024

    [3] Sayyed Khamenei links currency devaluation to ‚enemy hand’, Al Mayadeen, 3 Jan 2026

    [4] Tehran adjusts its public tone as protests return, Iran International, 1.1.2026

    [5] Iran President Moves to Calm Protests With Vow to Fix Budget, Bloomberg, 30.12.2025, Iran Offers Citizens $7 a Month in a Bid to Cool Protests, New York Times, 5.1.2026

    [6] Iran’s Pezeshkian urges unity as protests over economic woes turn deadly, Aljazeera, 31/12/2025

    10/01/2026

    Run, Renee, run, they're going to kill you!
    The murder of an USAmerican poetess by Trump and his gang

     Reinaldo Spitaletta, January 9, 2026
    Translated by Tlaxcala

    Renee Nicole Good, poetess murdered by ICE (Photo RNZ News)

    They murdered the poetess, with gunshots, in cold blood, as if she were a cockroach, or perhaps like a piece of pork that must be fried in the fat of immigration police. They killed her for no reason, because women must be killed, women who write, women who raise their voices, who speak with exploited foreigners, with the persecuted. She had to be killed. And that’s what the automatic agents did, assassins by nature, trained for that purpose: to kill and nothing more. Ah, and if the victim is a poetess, even better. We don’t want anyone to sing, or to tell any truth, in verse, or in prose, to the little president who looks more and more like Hitler.

    They shot and killed Renée Nicole Good, thirty-seven years old. They say she wrote “like someone opening a window in a besieged house.” She surely knew, before receiving that hail of bullets in a “country bathed in blood,” as Paul Auster described it, that she was destined to be a victim of Trumpesque repression, of the Corollary of the new filibusterer, of the New National Defense Strategy, of the pedocriminal, reincarnation—so the bandit president believes—of James Monroe, and who also represents Teddy Roosevelt’s Big Stick. The poetess knew they were going to kill her.

    She has been another victim of the system that has been bombing for years, sometimes with atomic bombs, sometimes with other bombs—deadly, indeed—civilian targets, entire populations, that murders people like those in the village of My Lai, or Iraq, or Syria, or Libya, also Venezuela. And it kills poets. Just like that. Perhaps as if imitating the one who murdered García Lorca in Granada, for being a faggot, or a poet, or because he was against oppression.

    They shot her, just like that, at point-blank range and with confidence, a young girl, yes, she was still a young girl in bloom, who wrote poems. Her verses had to be erased, the cop, the servant of the system, the licensed assassin, would think. A voice had to be silenced, a pencil, some stanzas, some lines... We don’t need poets, but thugs, bombers, criminals. Such is the vulgar prose of imperialism, of Trump and his henchmen, of those who applaud not only the bravado of the bloodthirsty pirate, but also his criminal actions throughout the universe.

    Killing a poetess can be insignificant. Besides being easy, besides everything can remain unpunished. She was just a woman, a young girl who wrote, who greeted immigrants, who told them how to unite, how to embrace, how to stay alert in the face of repression. That was it, so worthless, so meaningless for a subject like the president. Trump’s Gestapo murdered her.

    What can happen to an empire, or to a delinquent who shelters himself by being president of a superpower (in decline), for the crime of a woman who wrote, for example, "” want my rocking chairs back” and knew “cicada tercets” (like the cicada, so many times they killed me, so many times I died, yet here I am resurrecting...), who had “donated bibles to second-hand stores,” who knew—she was a poetess—that between her pancreas and her large intestine, “lies the insignificant stream of my soul.”

    The soulless ones disembodied her. The assassins erased her words, her desire for justice, the irrepressible wishes to sing against injustice, to bless the encounter between the ovum and the spermatozoon. They tore out her soul with gunshots.

    But the thing, as they say, is that no police officer, no bullet, no rifle, ends poetry. It continues living beyond the poet. Renée’s poetry now flies higher, goes from Minneapolis to Chicago, from Los Angeles to Texas, from the country of dead freedoms, of destroyed democracy, to beyond the blue planet. It was the afternoon of January 7, 2026, when a police officer from the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), fired ferociously at a young girl who wrote verses and who from that moment flies, like that butterfly which, with its wing flap, is capable of causing an earthquake in Beijing or bringing forth a tear somewhere in the world where there are people who sing.

    Renée Nicole is now fire. She is not ash. She is a powerful voice crying out for justice in the world and for utopia to keep living, or, at least, to keep many people walking.

    The poetess murdered in Minneapolis

    08/01/2026

    Fatal Motorcycle Accident Leaves Israel's Most Serious Security Corruption Case in Limbo



    Judge Benny Sagi was set to deliver the verdict regarding a suspect in the submarine and naval vessels affair, which concerns two deals with a German conglomerate for the acquisition of submarines and missile boats to defend the natural gas fields off Israel's coast

    Chen Maanit, Haaretz, 7/1/2026

    Amos Harel, Josh Breiner, Yael Freidson and Meirav Arlosoroff contributed to this report.

    The death of an Israeli district judge in a motorcycle accident earlier this week may delay the legal proceedings in the 2016 submarine and naval vessels affair.

    According to information obtained by Haaretz, Be'er Sheva District Court President, Judge Benny Sagi, was scheduled to announce his verdict on February 26 in a case connected to the affair.

    In the case, media consultant Tzachi Lieber is accused of mediating bribes between Michael Ganor, who was the representative of the German industrial engineering company ThyssenKrupp in Israel, and David Sharan, who served as the head of Prime Minister Netanyahu's bureau.

     

    Judge Benny Sagi. Photo Tomer Appelbaum

    Lieber has denied all charges against him.

    The submarine and naval vessels affair concerns two deals with ThyssenKrupp: one for the acquisition of two submarines, and one for the purchase of missile boats to defend Israel's natural gas fields off the coast. Netanyahu also wanted to include anti-submarine ships in the deal, but defense officials opposed this idea, which was shelved.

    The main allegation against the prime minister was that he pushed to buy additional submarines for the navy despite defense officials' objections. Netanyahu, former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen and former Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon were not questioned under caution in "Case 3000," which investigated the affair.

    Lieber's case was separated from the main trial of Sharan and Ganor, which is being held at the Tel Aviv District Court. The prosecution had been waiting for Lieber's trial – ongoing since May 2021 – to conclude before calling him to testify in the trial of Ganor and Sharan.

    In most cases, a defendant does not testify against another defendant in the same case to rule out a conflict of interest, seeing as a defendant might try to incriminate an accomplice in exchange for leniency.


    Michael Ganor in court, in 2019. Photo Moti Milrod

    Beyond its impact on the submarine affair, Sagi's death just before the verdict raises a complex dilemma regarding how Lieber's trial should proceed and be brought to a conclusion. Section 233 of the Criminal Procedure Law addresses situations where a judge is unable to complete a criminal case.

    The section states that when "evidence has been heard and, for any reason, the judge is unable to complete the trial, another judge may continue the trial from the stage reached by his predecessor, and may, after allowing the parties to present their arguments on the matter, treat the evidence collected by his predecessor as if he had collected it himself, or may choose to rehear any or all of the evidence."

    However, there is no known precedent for a judge dying or becoming unable to continue with a case at such a late stage, just as he was preparing to deliver a verdict.

    The dilemma now facing the system is complex. On one hand, allowing a new judge to deliver a verdict based solely on the protocols and evidence submitted is problematic, as a criminal verdict should be based on the judge's direct impression of the witnesses and the defendant, and their credibility.

    On the other hand, having another judge rehear the witnesses, or some of them, is also problematic and would mean the case would drag on for years. As mentioned, this would also delay Lieber's required testimony in the main case against Sharan and Ganor.

    Apart from this trial, Sagi was presiding over several other ongoing cases, which will now be transferred to other judges.


    Supreme Court President Isaac Amit (in tie, right) and Justice Minister Yariv Levin (in tie, left) at Be'er Sheva District Court President Benny Sagi's funeral, Tuesday. Photo Tomer Appelbaum

    Overall, Sagi's death has left the Be'er Sheva District Court in a difficult position. Sagi, who was appointed as district president only two years ago, was an outstanding administrator and a respected and well-liked judge, leaving a significant void behind.

    Six judges in the court are set to retire in the coming year. The paralysis Justice Minister Yariv Levin imposed on the Judicial Appointments Committee, combined with Sagi's death, have left the Be'er Sheva District Court in dire straits.

    The justice minister and court administration will have to quickly find a replacement for Sagi, but Levin continues to boycott his counterpart, and without communication between them, this will be a complex task.

    Lieber's attorney, Liran Zilberman, said he is "deeply saddened and pained by the death of the honorable Judge Sagi. The manner in which the case against Lieber will proceed is not up to us, and we will await the court's decision on this matter before determining our next steps."

    The prosecution said, "Further proceedings regarding Lieber will be determined by the court in accordance with the law," adding that he is not expected to testify in the submarine affair trial in the near future, "and in any case, there is no obstacle to hearing his testimony."


    Netanyahu climbs out after a visit inside the Rahav, the fifth submarine in the fleet, after it arrived at the Haifa port, in 2016. Photo Baz Ratner / Reuters