كشف تقرير حقوقي أميركي ان الجيش السوداني يرتكب جرائم ضد المدنيين والأعيان المدنية في إقليم دارفور، مشيرا إلى أن هذه الاعتداءات الممنهجة ترقى الى جرائم حرب. https://t.co/Oh0n8CqtzO
لذلك من يدعم هذا الجيش بالمال والسلاح يغذي تلك الجرائم ضد الشعب السوداني الذي يعانى من حكم العسكر
**not-so-fun fact
There is still no authoritative translation of the Ethiopian bible, more than 500 years after the outside world learned about it
So it will be long before we get any translations of the hundreds of thousands of African manuscripts discovered in the last 30 yrs
It's interesting to read how astonished explorers were to find that the Africans they encountered were equally well-travelled
Barth in 1850 met Africans in Bagirmi (Chad) who had visited Basra (Iraq), kept works of Plato, and were as inquisitive about Europe as he was abt Africa
Cairo is a completely disgusting city that horrifies almost every visitor from a civilized country. Friend of mine was an Arabic studies major who immediately changed majors after doing a study abroad there
@Elior_Paul@NoaMagid The Mullah have overplayed its hand and proved that Israel was right when it said that they are not trustworthy.
all that remains is for GCV to accept living under this terror or just liks Israel refuse and fight for a better future for the region.
Target rich environment. 414th Birds of Magyar's 9th Battalion Kairos strike eight tankers near Kerch, whilst 1st Unmanned Center struck a cargo vessel in Kerch.
427th Rarog struck another one according to the killboard, but didn't get the footage into the compilation
I took the first shot today at 9:36 AM and the second shot was around 20 mins later 9:55 AM.
The aircraft has switched its radar off.
More and more suspicious act on this aircraft.
@CAAA_SL@somalilandmfa@khadarlooge@Huseindeyr@Presidencysl_
❤️ At the end of the 1990s, there was a notorious thief and con man in Israel named Moti Ashkenazi. He operated mainly on the beaches of Tel Aviv, was a heroin addict, and had a long criminal record. Yet today, almost everyone in Israel knows him — and many see him as a hero. All because of one story.
It happened on June 20, 1997. The repeat offender Ashkenazi had just been arrested again but violated the conditions of his house arrest and went to the Jerusalem Beach in Tel Aviv. It was the last day of school before summer vacation, and countless school classes were spending the day at the beach. Backpacks, bags, and valuables were scattered everywhere — a true paradise for a professional thief.
Moti did not hesitate for long and chose a promising-looking bag. Like a professional, he sat down next to it, casually opened it, and began feeling around inside. He found a towel and sunglasses — but no wallet. When he reached deeper inside, he froze: the bag was full of nails.
He looked around. Nearby, tourists were sunbathing, while children and adults played in the water. Moti opened the bag further and discovered a box with a hose and a timer mechanism. He immediately understood what he was dealing with. He grabbed the bag and ran as fast as he could toward Geula Street, where an abandoned building stood at the time. If police had stopped him on the way, he would have had a hard time explaining why he was running through the city with a bomb. But he wasn’t thinking about that at the moment.
He left the bomb bag in the crumbling building and ran to the nearest public telephone. There, he called the police:
“I found a bomb! Send bomb disposal units immediately! This is Moti Ashkenazi!”
The officers checked his name in the database, told him to stop using drugs, threatened him with real prison for violating his house arrest — and hung up.
Ashkenazi returned to the building and began dragging garbage containers onto the road in an attempt to block Geula Street, shouting loudly while doing so. At that point, the police had to respond. They arrested the disruptive man but, as a precaution, decided to check the abandoned building anyway.
The officers immediately came back out and called the bomb squad. The bag contained five kilograms of explosives. It was later determined that it had been placed at the beach by the same terrorist who had carried out the attack at the “Apropo” café in Tel Aviv three months earlier.
After this incident, all charges against Moti Ashkenazi were dropped, and all legal proceedings were closed. He was sent to a free rehabilitation program, where he successfully treated his drug addiction.
Today, Ashkenazi is over fifty years old, has five children, and holds a steady job. He lives in Tel Aviv and works as a beach inspector. No beach thief escapes the watchful eye of the former professional — and since that day, he treats abandoned bags on the beach with special caution.❤️👏🙏
Rather than demanding that Hamas release its grip on the people of Gaza, or having the courage to speak out against its brutality and repression, they offer Palestinians nothing but performative flag waving. Solidarity without moral clarity is not solidarity at all.