Palestinian goalkeeper Saleem Al-Ashqar was shot dead by Israeli forces in Gaza. Married just five months ago, he leaves behind a wife expecting their first child. The Palestinian Football Association says more than 1,000 Palestinian athletes have been killed since October 2023.
En France, le gouvernement s’apprête à donner un «permis de tuer» aux policiers.
Le 7 juillet, l’Assemblée nationale doit voter une loi qui considèrerait légal TOUT TIR de policier ou gendarme.
Ce serait une bascule historique. Voici en 5 points ce que cette loi changerait.👇
La droite et l'extreme droite veulent que lorsqu'un policier tue quelqu'un, il soit considéré par défaut comme en situation de légitime défense.
C'est une mise en cause de l'article 9 de la DDHC.
Signez la pétition contre cette proposition de loi : https://t.co/0pKl32eZrX
Heated debates erupted in the Israeli Knesset today over an Israeli Supreme Court decision allowing the Red Cross to visit Palestinian prisoners and hostages in Israeli prisons after nearly two and a half years of denial.
The main objection? That Red Cross visits would expose what is happening inside the prisons and become a public relations disaster for Israel.
After 1,000 days of war, Gaza continues to face one of the world’s most severe humanitarian crises, as residents struggle to survive amid displacement, widespread destruction, and shortages of basic necessities, with no clear end to their suffering in sight.
Au Soudan, les enfants sont tués, enlevés, violés. Ils sont en première ligne de la guerre.
Nos équipes ont enquêté pendant 8 mois sur le massacre de la ville d'El Fasher. Elles ont récolté les preuves de crimes contre l'humanité et de nettoyage ethnique.
https://t.co/8d5K4qDpFd
Personne n'en parle : au Venezuela, un tremblement de terre terrifiant a frappé le pays ce week-end. Le plus violent depuis 1900.
Bilan : 1500 morts et 50 000 disparus.
Mais à cette heure, les États-Unis maintiennent encore des sanctions contre le régime. Cela complique donc en partie l'aide humanitaire et les opérations de secours.
Depuis 10 ans, les Vénézueliens survivent, accablés par les sanctions et le blocus étatsuniens. Ils connaissent les pénuries, les coupures d'électricité. Leur président en exercice a été enlevé par Trump. Et leur martyr se poursuit.
L'opération de secours internationale menée par l'ONU est une bonne chose. La France y prend part. Tout doit être fait pour permettre au Venezuela de se reconstruire.
This morning, the Israeli military released footage of this attack, which it had carried out two days earlier.
The footage shows Israeli aircraft targeting a person walking along the road, while to his right was a vehicle carrying more than twenty people, and to his left was a tent sheltering an entire family. The strike resulted in multiple people being killed and dozens more suffering serious injuries of varying severity.
This is not merely a war; it is genocide in every sense of the word—a crime that transcends all bounds of humanity.
I still cannot adapt, even now. I feel as though I have been suddenly transported into another world. I often ask myself: Who am I? What is life? What does it mean to be human?
These questions penetrate deeply into my awareness of reality, especially because I am not in the best circumstances. This makes everything I am experiencing feel even stranger and more difficult.
In just one day, after only a few flights, I suddenly found myself in a safe place—no more bombs, no more snipers, no constant fear of death. For me, this transition is deeply shocking and painful, and it makes me feel the profound injustice of what we have lived through.
When life forces you in a certain direction, all you can do is react and survive. But when life-changing decisions are placed in your own hands, a different kind of fear begins: Am I making the right decision? Will everything be okay? The unknown feels frightening when you are the one responsible for choosing the path.
Perhaps what hurts me most now is simply being in a safe country, where people live relatively normal lives. It is one thing to know that people live under different circumstances, but it is something entirely different to experience and feel that immense gap every day.
To be surrounded by people who have never had to struggle simply to survive, who have never seen their loved ones and neighbors killed or their cities destroyed, while many consider safety something normal and guaranteed.
Our world is full of injustice, and that hurts deeply. Sometimes I ask myself: How can life continue as normal while my family and my people are still dying?
My body is here, in a safe place, but my heart and mind remain there... in Gaza. 💔
Sans une mobilisation citoyenne massive, la répression de la solidarité avec la Palestine ne fera que s'aggraver.
📍 Rendez-vous le 7 juillet à 12 h 30 sur le parvis du tribunal de Paris (17ᵉ arrondissement) pour exiger la relaxe de toutes les personnes poursuivies pour leur soutien à la Palestine.
📢 Relayez cet appel massivement.
#StopRepression
Scenes that can never be forgotten, and can never be erased from memory
A child from Gaza pleads with the paramedic to save his brother and try to resuscitate him. But sadly, the paramedic had no choice but to tell him the painful truth: “Your brother has died”
He was killed by Israeli gunfire, while Gaza faces one of the most powerful military arsenals in the world
What scene could be more heartbreaking than a child clinging to hope, only to be confronted in a single moment with a reality far beyond his age, and too painful for a little heart to bear?
One of the harshest and most painful moments I have witnessed with my own eyes this morning…
This morning I went to Al-Aqsa Hospital to bid farewell to my cousin’s daughter after her death following years of suffering from chronic illnesses and old age.
We were waiting for her body to be prepared for burial, and suddenly the hospital turned into a full state of emergency. Ambulance sirens did not stop, and faces were filled with fear and shock, after the Israeli occupation army targeted a civilian family.
After about fifteen minutes, a medical team entered carrying a child no more than 8 years old… a child who was killed due to the direct targeting. His small body was torn apart by shrapnel in a way beyond human description or comprehension.
I looked at him… and wished I had not been there at that moment, that my eyes had never seen this scene. I could not bear what I saw. A child who was supposed to live and play, instead arrived at the hospital as a lifeless body torn apart and covered in blood.
And only minutes passed before another medical team entered carrying two martyrs on a stretcher; one a young man and the other an elderly man, who were both killed in the same strike.
Unbearable scenes… torn bodies, blood, shrapnel, and souls taken away. Some were killed instantly, while others could not survive due to the delay in the arrival of ambulances and medical teams as a result of a lack of resources.
Israel does not distinguish between a child, a young man, or an elderly person, and continues to commit the most heinous crimes against civilians. We are all targeted here and exposed to bombing and death, simply because we are Palestinians living in Gaza.
More than 600,000 children are sheltering in tents right now as they are getting intensely bombed - nowhere else left to go.
This is not war, this is genocide.
Amid Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza that destroyed most schools, 18-year-old Dana Shabat is sitting her final exams online. She’s determined, despite bombardment, displacement, blackouts, to turn survival into success, and to keep the legacy of her mother, Lina, alive.
We are still alive in Gaza… 🥹🇵🇸
Despite everything, we are still trying to hold on.
If you see this photo, please don’t scroll past in silence.
Write anything — even a single dot means so much to us and reminds us that we are not alone. 🥹💔🙏