What Joint Drills With South African, Russian Navies Mean for China

South Africa is under fire for hosting joint naval exercises with Russia during the one-year anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine, with critics saying it will be a propaganda victory for Moscow. But what does the third participant in the drills, China, have to gain from the tripartite exercises taking place this week?

Some analysts told VOA that, in China’s case, Exercise Mosi II, off South Africa’s east coast, is less about a real exchange of military prowess and more about important political and diplomatic optics.

“China has a lot to gain from these exercises,” said Paul Nantulya, from the Africa Center for Strategic Studies in Washington. “It is sending a very powerful signal to other African countries that in-person military training is now back on the table. … China and [its] People’s Liberation Army are basically back” after years of closed borders during the pandemic.

He said the drills were also sending a message to China’s competitors, namely the U.S., that Beijing has military clout in the region. The South Africa war games are taking place at almost the same time as the U.S. Army’s Exercise Justified Accord in Kenya and just after U.S.-led maritime exercises off the Gulf of Guinea.

They also take place amid heightened tensions between Washington and Beijing in the wake of the U.S. shooting down an alleged Chinese spy balloon and after Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned that China is considering supplying Russia with weapons for its war against Ukraine.

Priyal Singh, a senior researcher at the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) in Pretoria, had a similar assessment.

“This assists Beijing in illustrating to the West [and the world in general] that it has a foothold in the South Indian Ocean through its strong relations with South Africa. I believe this may be important to China, given the geopolitical contestations being played out across the Indian Ocean region,” Singh said in an email to VOA.

“I believe that the decision to proceed with these exercises was primarily driven by political considerations. Navies play important diplomatic and symbolic roles,” Singh’s ISS colleague Denys Reva added.

Darren Olivier, director at the African Defense Review, pointed out this week’s naval exercises off South Africa are limited in nature and “focused mostly on basic maneuvers and light gunnery.”

“It’s important to note that South Africa has a NATO-oriented operational and tactical doctrine that’s dissimilar to that of Russia and China, which inherently limits what can be done jointly, and unsurprisingly as a result, the exercise as described will not feature in-depth exploration or testing of any serious combat capabilities or procedures,” he said.

Asked by VOA what China seeks to gain from the exercises, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in the U.S. said “the joint maritime exercise held by the navies of the three countries in the southern waters of Africa is of great significance.”

“It will help deepen the exchanges and cooperation among the navies, improve their ability to jointly respond to maritime security threats, demonstrate their determination to maintain regional maritime peace and stability and their good will and strong capabilities to actively promote the building of an ocean community with a shared future.”

China, Russia and South Africa are all members of the BRICS grouping of emerging economies, which also includes India and Brazil.

Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at SOAS University of London, said that for the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) to join their Russian counterparts “in an exercise far away from China is highly beneficial,” as the Russian navy is more modernized.

Asked whether such exercises could act as preparation for an invasion of Taiwan, Tsang said they were too different, but added that “enhancing the capacity of the PLAN to operate long-distance will be beneficial in general terms to enhancing its capacity in a Taiwan Strait crisis in the future.”

The PLAN “need to train for long-distance deployments, particularly off Africa, where China is building up its interest,” he said. China has invested heavily in the continent through President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Infrastructure Initiative and is Africa’s biggest trade partner.

But there are more than economic reasons for China to join the exercises, according to Nantulya. They include having the ability to protect the many Chinese nationals working in Africa — the Chinese have been engaged in anti-piracy operations off Africa’s East coast for years — and maintain stability in countries that host Chinese peacekeepers or strategic investments.

Also, Nantulya said, it’s possible Beijing — which has only one military base in Africa, in Djibouti — is looking to establish additional bases on the continent in the next decade.

The U.S. has raised concerns about a possible Chinese base in Equatorial Guinea on the Atlantic coast.

“In terms of Russia, I think it’s quite obvious that what China has been doing is trying to provide Russia some form of platform to be able to continue conducting international relations despite the fact that it’s been heavily sanctioned,” Nantulya said. The war games that have been heavily criticized for taking place amid Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

The U.S. State Department has told VOA by email, “We note with concern South Africa’s plan to hold joint naval exercises with Russia and the PRC. … We encourage South Africa to cooperate militarily with fellow democracies that share our mutual commitment to human rights and the rule of law.”

According to Chinese state media, China has sent a destroyer, a frigate and a defense ship to the exercises in South Africa, which run until February 27.

Source: Voice of America

African Union vows ‘zero tolerance’ to undemocratic change

ADDIS ABABA— The African Union insisted it had “zero tolerance” for undemocratic changes of power and vowed to push through a continent-wide free trade deal as it wrapped up a two-day summit.

Leaders of the 55-nation bloc met in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa to discuss a slew of challenges facing the continent, including coups, conflict and climate change.

On the final day of the summit on Sunday, the AU said it was maintaining its suspension of four countries — Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali and Sudan — which have been ruled by military leaders following coups.

“The assembly reaffirmed zero tolerance against unconstitutional change (of government),” said its Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, Bankole Adeoye.

“The Commission is ready to support these member states to return to constitutional order, the idea is that democracy must take root and must be promoted and protected,” he told a news conference.

“It is necessary to re-emphasise that the AU remains intolerant to any undemocratic means to political power.”

At the end of the summit, the bloc’s new chairman, Comoros President Azali Assoumani, said the leaders had agreed to accelerate the implementation of a faltering trade deal launched in 2020.

The African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) is billed as the biggest in the world in terms of population, gathering 54 out of 55 countries on a continent with 1.4 billion people, with Eritrea the only holdout.

“I shall leave no stone unturned to ensure that this becomes a reality,” Assoumani said.

African nations currently trade only about 15 percent of their goods and services with each other. The AfCFTA aims to boost that by 60 percent by 2034 by eliminating almost all tariffs.

But implementation has fallen well short of that goal, running into hurdles including disagreements over tariff reductions and border closures caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

AU Commission chief Moussa Faki Mahamat said the deal was “strategic” for the continent but warned that the infrastructure to allow for its success was still lacking, highlighting that 600 million Africans did not have access to electricity.

On Saturday, UN chief Antonio Guterres said that among its many challenges, Africa was facing a “dysfunctional and unfair global financial system” that denied many countries the debt relief and concessional financing they need and charged them “extortionate” interest rates.

On the sidelines of the AU meeting, the regional Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) bloc also said it had maintained sanctions on the three Sahel countries.

“The Authority of Heads of State and Governments decided to maintain the existing sanctions on all three countries,” the bloc said in a statement signed on Saturday but shared on Sunday.

ECOWAS has also decided to impose travel bans on government officials and senior leaders in those countries, it added.

Fearing contagion in a region notorious for military takeovers, ECOWAS imposed tough trade and economic sanctions against Mali, but lesser punishments against Guinea and Burkina Faso.

All three countries are under pressure by ECOWAS to return swiftly to civilian rule by 2024 for Mali and Burkina and a year later for Guinea.

Juntas seized power in Mali and Burkina Faso amid anger at the military over the toll from an insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives and forced millions from their homes.

The coup in Guinea had different causes, being rooted in public anger against then president Alpha Conde over a lurch towards authoritarianism.

Sudan has been gripped by deepening political and economic turmoil since the coup led by army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan in 2021 that derailed a short-lived transition to civilian rule following the ouster of Omar al-Bashir in 2019.

In an address to the summit on Saturday, Faki said the pan-African bloc needed to look at new strategies to counter the backsliding of democracy.

“Sanctions imposed on member states following unconstitutional changes of government… do not seem to produce the expected results,” he said.

“It seems necessary to reconsider the system of resistance to the unconstitutional changes in order to make it more effective.”

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico express deep concern over Israel’s decision to legalize new outposts

The Governments of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico expressed in a joint statement today their deep concern over the decision of the far-right Israeli Government to legalize new outposts and build ten thousand units in settlements already existing in the occupied West Bank.

“These unilateral measures constitute serious violations of International Law and of Resolutions of the Security Council of the United Nations, especially no. 2334 (2016), in addition to contributing to raising current tensions,” read the statement.

The four countries added, “Our governments express their opposition to any action that challenges the viability of the two-State solution, in which Israel and Palestine can share secure and internationally recognized borders, while respecting the legitimate aspirations of both peoples to live in peace.”

“The Governments of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico call upon Israelis and Palestinians to refrain from acts and provocations that could lead to a greater escalation of violence and to resume negotiations with a view to achieving a peaceful solution to the conflict.”

Source: Palestine News and Information Agency

When a handful of armed and protected settlers threaten the safety and life of thousands of Palestinians

For Hosni Abdo, 62, from the town of Beit Imrin, west of the northern West Bank city of Nablus, visiting his friend in the village of Burqa, northwest of Nablus, last Tuesday had almost cost him his life.

“After visiting my friend in Burqa and I was heading back home, a group of five settlers attacked me and started to beat me before I could even utter a word,” Abdo told WAFA.

“The settlers sprayed pepper gas on my face and when I started screaming hysterically, they fled but not before slashing the four wheels of my vehicle and injuring my leg as a result of hitting me with sticks.”

The attack on Abdo is not an isolated incident. It is one of many daily attacks by settlers from the evacuated settlement of Homesh targeting Palestinians living in that area and their properties.

Palestinian taxi drivers who travel the road Abdo used, the Nablus-Jenin road, regularly talk to each other to check on the situation on the road in fear of a sudden attack by the Homesh settlers.

Yasser Rawajbeh, one of the drivers who was also attacked by settlers, told WAFA that drivers of public transportation and many citizens who use the same road daily are in constant contact with each other, and in the event of any settler attack on that road, they change their route and take a much longer detour.

“Yesterday, the settlers attacked vehicles on the same road, so I had to go back and take another road because a number of vehicles had been damaged by the stones thrown at them,” said Rawajbeh.

“They are most likely armed, and therefore we can expect them to shoot at us at any moment. So we must always be careful, especially since we take this road all the time driving people back and forth between the villages, towns and cities,” he said.

Yesterday, dozens of settlers attacked two schools and a number of houses in Burqa, and then they headed to the Nablus-Jenin road and attacked vehicles there. Even though the Israeli army, deployed in large numbers in the West Bank, knows what they do, the army would intervene only to protect the settlers and attack the Palestinians who try to defend themselves and confront the settlers.

Ziyad Abu Omar, head of Burqa village council, said settlers regularly attack village residents and their property, the latest of which was yesterday when dozens of settlers attacked two schools in the village and a number of homes, describing it as the most violent attack in a while.

The official in charge of the settlement file in the northern West Bank, Ghassan Daghlas, told WAFA that dozens of settlers attacked two schools and houses in the village, and threw stones at them, smashing the windows of more than 15 houses and that the army did nothing to stop them or arrest any of them.

Just today, settlers attacked the Burqa school and when students and residents confronted them, the soldiers attacked the residents firing tear gas and rubber bullets at them to protect the settlers.

Daghlas said that the residents of the villages of Burqa, Silat al-Dahr, Bazariya, and the neighboring villages are subjected almost daily to attacks by Homesh settlers, in addition to attacks on the Nablus-Jenin road.

There are now, according to Daghlas, about 40 to 50 settlers staying in the settlement in a large metal structure and tents. They are the ones most likely carrying out these attacks that turn the lives of thousands upside down, disrupt their security, and threaten their safety.

Although there are four Israeli Supreme Court decisions stating that the lands belong to the people of Burqa, Douglas fears the re-establishment of the settlement over a large area of Burqa lands and the nearby Silat al-Harithiya village.

The settlers established Homesh settlement in 1982 on the lands of Burqa village, and in 2005, the Israeli occupation authorities dismantled it as part of the unilateral withdrawal plan, which included four settlements in the northern West Bank.

It is noteworthy that the law prohibits Israelis from entering the land on which Homesh was built after the Israeli Supreme Court recognized that the land belongs to Palestinians from Burqa. But the settlers returned to that land repeatedly, erected tents on it, and held events and parties.

Despite the passage of about 18 years since its evacuation, the owners of the lands were unable to return to them or benefit from them. Rather, Homesh turned into a hotbed of terror for settlers who returned to it and used it as a launching point for their attacks against farmers and residents of Burqa, in addition to attacking vehicles on the Nablus–Jenin road.

The Israeli parliament, the Knesset, recently approved, in an initial reading, a bill to cancel the withdrawal from the northern West Bank, which would allow settlers to return to the four settlements evacuated by the Israeli government in 2005 and include the former settlements of Ghanim, Kadim, Homesh, and Sanur.

Source: Palestine News and Information and Agency

Racist Israeli cabinet minister, Ben-Gvir, doing his best to make Palestinian life even more miserable

Ever since Israeli Jewish supremacist Minister of National Security, Itamar Ben-Gvir, became officially a part of the new Israeli far-right government, he made it a mission as holy as a promise to impose new sanctions on Palestinians to make their lives even more miserable than it already is due to the Israeli occupation.

Ben-Gvir was sworn in as Israeli Minister of National Security at the end of 2022, becoming a key member of Israel’s most racist, far-right government coalition ever led by long-running Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The new racist minister is known for publicly advocating for dividing the holy site of al-Aqsa Mosque – which is the third holiest Muslim place of worship – between Muslims and Jews, a move that is likely to inflame an already tense situation in the Israeli-occupied territories.

On January 3rd, only a few days after Ben-Gvir took his new position, as a first provocative move, he stormed the compounds of the holy mosque in the occupied city of Jerusalem under heavy protection from the Israeli forces.

Moreover, Ben-Gvir’s malice has gone far, negatively affecting and dangerously impacting the living conditions of the Palestinian freedom fighters incarcerated in Israel for their resistance of the occupation, whom he calls “terrorists”.

One of Ben-Gvir’s publicly stated goals is to make sure that “murderers of Jews don’t get better conditions,” referring to the 4500 Palestinian freedom fighters serving time in Israeli jails for their resistance of the occupation.

To begin with, he announced that he is planning to cancel regulations that allow any lawmaker to meet with the imprisoned Palestinian freedom fighters.

In a statement, Ben-Gvir said he had informed the Speaker of the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, Amir Ohana, that he intends to return to an older protocol, according to which only one lawmaker from each faction will be allowed to visit the Palestinian prisoners, provided that visits be held under strict supervision.

Earlier to the announcement, Ben Gvir visited the recently renovated high-security Nafha Prison to review the imprisonment conditions of the Palestinian political prisoners and to ensure these conditions never improve.

To begin with, Israeli media said that he “went crazy” after learning that prisoners run their own bakeries inside Israeli prisons to make their own bread and ordered the immediate closure of all Palestinian prisoners-run bakeries in jails in Israel.

“Prisoners cannot get such a privilege. How can they get fresh bread every day?” Ben-Gvir was quoted.

The controversial move was reported to be aimed at denying “benefits to terrorists”, according to an official statement issued by his office. The statement said that such benefits were denied to regular prisoners in Israel and thus Palestinian prisoners should be no different.

Last but not least, Ben-Gvir’s dedication to increase the pressure on Palestinian prisoners has taken him to order the reduction of shower time the prisoners are allowed to have.

According to several Israeli media reports, the racist minister ordered that the prisoners shall only be allowed four minutes to shower and that running hot water for showers shall only be allowed one hour a day.

A few days ago, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant issued an order imposing financial penalties on 87 Palestinian prisoners from occupied Jerusalem, under the pretext of receiving money from the Palestinian Authority.

The Israeli Ministerial Committee also ordered at the time offsetting the welfare payments made by the Palestinian government to the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and the families of those killed by Israeli occupation forces in 2022.

Ben-Gvir’s hateful measures have caused the prisoners to revolt and plan a hunger strike to preserve what they have achieved through years of battles against the Israeli Prison Services (IPS).

The Palestinian Commission for Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society said in a joint statement that Palestinian prisoners in Nafha Prison declared mutiny against the new repressive measures by disrupting the so-called security checks as well as the requirement to wear the brown uniforms given to them by the IPS.

The prisoners are also planning to go on an open-ended hunger strike set to start the first day of Ramadan, which will start around March 24, in protest against Ben-Gvir’s extreme measures against them.

Additionally, the prisoners began to return their breakfast in response to the arbitrary measures taken by the prison administrations against the female and male freedom fighters in the Naqab, Ofer, and Megiddo prisons.

A state of tension appeared to have prevailed in all the prisons after female prisoners in Damon prison were attacked by the guards, spraying them with tear and pepper gas, abused prisoners in several prisons, and continued to isolate some of them.

The rise in tension in the prisons was caused by raids by the repression units against several departments in Ofer, Naqab, Megiddo, and Damon prisons, assaulting prisoners, isolating dozens, and confiscating their belongings.

Israeli security officials have actually warned that Ben Gvir’s tactics against the Palestinian freedom fighters are going to start serious trouble, not only in the prisons but also in the entire occupied territories, where for them the prisoners are a red line.

Source: Palestine News and Information and Agency

Japan expresses serious concern about Israeli plans to legalize outposts and build new settlements

The Government of Japan yesterday expressed its serious concern about the announcement by the Government of Israel on February 12 regarding the authorization of nine settlement outposts and the plan to approve new settlement construction, according to a statement by the government Press Secretary Ono Hikariko.

“Settlement activities are in violation of international law and undermine the viability of a two-state solution. Japan strongly urges the Government of Israel not to implement the measures and to totally freeze its settlement activities,” said the Press Secretary.

Japan also called to refrain from actions that exacerbate tensions.

“As the situation surrounding Israel and Palestine witnesses continued clashes and violence resulting in a number of casualties, Japan once again calls for refraining from actions that exacerbate tensions,” concluded the statement.

Source: Palestine News and Information and Agency

Six Palestinian homeowners told their buildings are going to be demolished for construction without permit

The Israeli municipality of West Jerusalem today informed six Palestinian homeowners in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Isawiyya of its intention to demolish their buildings under the pretext they were built without a permit.

Activist Mohammad Abu al-Humus said Israeli forces broke into the neighborhood and posted the demolition orders on the buildings, some of them built 25 years ago.

The Israeli occupation authorities started a campaign against Palestinian residents in the occupied section of the city including home demolition, confiscation of funds for prisoners and their families, arrests, raids at their homes, and lately a decision to strip them of their rights to live in their city if they were involved in the Palestinian resistance movement.

Source: Palestine News and Information and Agency

Israeli occupation forces raid homes of Palestinian prisoners in Jerusalem, seize large sums of money and goods

The Israeli occupation forces today raided homes in occupied East Jerusalem of several Palestinian former or current prisoners in Israel and seized large sums of money and private good, including jewelry while ransacking the homes.

WAFA correspondent said the Israeli forces broke into homes in Ras al-Amoud and Beit Hanina neighborhoods of occupied East Jerusalem, taking away money and jewelry, as well as other goods, including cars owned by any member of the family or seizing bank accounts for the parents of the prisoner claiming the prisoners were receiving allowance money from the Palestinian Authority during their imprisonment.

The far-right Israeli government decided to seize the money from all Palestinian prisoners as a punishment for receiving allowances from the Palestinian government.

At least 80 former or current Palestinian prisoners from Jerusalem or inside Israel who served time in Israeli jails for their resistance of the occupation are going to be part of this vicious Israeli government campaign.

The Israeli parliament also approved yesterday a law that would strip Palestinian prisoners from occupied East Jerusalem or inside Israel of their residency rights in the occupied city or citizenship in Israel and expel them and their families to territories outside Israel or Jerusalem.

Source: Palestine News and Information and Agency

US, EU foreign ministers denounce authorization of new West Bank colonial outposts

The US and some EU foreign ministers today denounced the Israeli occupation authorities’ plan to retroactively authorize nine colonial settlement outposts in the occupied West Bank.

The Foreign Ministers of France, Germany and Italy, the Foreign Secretary of the United Kingdom, and the Secretary of State of the United States voiced their ‘deep trouble’ over the Israeli coalition government’s decision to grant retroactive authorization to nine Jewish-only colonial settler outposts in the occupied West Bank and announce the construction of new homes within established colonial settlements.

“We, the Foreign Ministers of France, Germany and Italy, the Foreign Secretary of the United Kingdom, and the Secretary of State of the United States are deeply troubled by the Israeli government’s announcement that it is advancing nearly 10,000 settlement units, and intends to begin a process to normalize nine outposts that were previously deemed illegal under Israeli law,” the statement issued on the Germen Federal Foreign Office read.

Labeling the Israeli action as unilateral, the diplomats stated: “We strongly oppose these unilateral actions which will only serve to exacerbate tensions between Israelis and Palestinians and undermine efforts to achieve a negotiated two-state solution.”

They reiterated their support for comprehensive peace that would be conducive to the creation of the sovereign and viable Palestinian state.

“We continue to support a comprehensive, just, and lasting peace in the Middle East, which must be achieved through direct negotiations between the parties. Israelis and Palestinians both deserve to live in peace, with equal measures of freedom, security, and prosperity. We reaffirm our commitment to helping Israelis and Palestinians fulfill the vision of an Israel fully integrated into the Middle East living alongside a sovereign, viable Palestinian state.”

“We continue to closely monitor developments on the ground which impact the viability of the two-state solution and stability in the region at large,” they concluded.

Source: Palestine News and Information Agency

EU foreign policy chief, Saudi foreign minister, Arab League secretary-general discuss Middle East peace

High Representative and Vice-President of the European Commission Josep Borrell yesterday convened a meeting in Brussels with Saudi Arabia Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan, and Secretary-General of the League of Arab States Ahmed Aboul Gheit to discuss the Middle East peace process, the increasing number of victims of violence, conflict and occupation, and the absence of a political perspective for a peaceful solution.

A joint statement issued by the three officials said they “condemned the decision announced the day before by the Israeli government to legalize under Israeli law nine settlement outposts in the occupied West Bank.”

They also agreed “to explore ways to revive and safeguard the prospect of the two-State solution and to achieve a just, comprehensive and lasting peace, freedom, security, recognition, equal rights and prosperity for all peoples affected by the ongoing conflict, according to internationally-recognized parameters and the Arab Peace Initiative,” and “agreed to reach out to international and regional partners to this end.”

The trilateral meeting built on the Ministerial meeting held in New York on 20 September 2022 to mark the 20-year anniversary of the Arab Peace Initiative, where, based on the invitation of the Saudi Foreign Minister the Arab League Secretary-General, and hosted by the High Representative, “the participants discussed ideas to revive the Middle East peace efforts based on the Arab Peace Initiative, United Nations resolutions and established international peace parameters.”

The meeting also “underlined the enduring importance of the Arab Peace Initiative as well as of the European Union’s proposal, set out in the Council Conclusions of December 2013, to offer an unprecedented package of political, economic and security support to Palestine and Israel in the context of a final status agreement.”

In light of the very difficult situation on the ground, the participants agreed “on the urgent need to revive the Middle East peace efforts envisaging the potential of comprehensive regional peace. Such an effort aims to identify what contributions the participants’ governments and organizations would make to comprehensive peace, if and when, an Israeli-Palestinian final status agreement is reached wherein a sovereign and contiguous Palestinian state lives side-by-side in peace and security with Israel.”

The statement said the participants agreed “to create a Working Group that will develop proposals to engage with the members of the Arab League, the European Union and relevant international partners to closely coordinate efforts to encourage the parties to demonstrate -through policies and actions- their commitment to a two-state solution,” and “to remain vigilant regarding the current situation on the ground.”

Source: Palestine News and Information Agency

Foreign Ministry rejects Israel’s decision to expand its colonial settlement enterprise

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates today said it rejects what it described as Israel’s “criminal” decision to expand its colonial settlement enterprise.

“The State of Palestine rejects, in the strongest terms, Israel’s ongoing war crimes and acquisition of territory by force, including its criminal decision to expand its colonial settlement enterprise,” it said in a statement. “The State of Palestine warns that Israel’s declared annexationist policies violate the territorial integrity and independence of the State of Palestine and threaten regional and international peace and security.”

While stressing that all settlements are illegal under international law and are war crimes, the Ministry said that “Israel’s isolated efforts to legitimize its illegal settlement enterprise, in gross contempt of UN resolution and the international community’s repeated warnings, are aimed to further entrench its illegal occupation and apartheid regime and impose new facts on the grounds.”

It added: “The State of Palestine reiterates that Israel, as an occupying Power, has no sovereignty over any part of the State of Palestine, including Jerusalem, and that any attempts to alter the demographic composition or legal status are universally recognized to be null and void, and shall remain so.”

The Foreign Ministry said, “Land theft is an Israeli national project, undertaken by every branch of the Israeli government, and is facilitated by Israeli officials. It is a State-sanctioned crime. The State of Palestine holds Israel, the occupying Power, and its officials fully responsible for the illegal settlement enterprise, the crimes it entails, and the criminal activities and terrorism of settler militias.”

It said the UN Security Council “must act in accordance with its resolutions, including 2334, and hold Israel and Israeli officials accountable for their crimes. The Secretary-General of the United Nations must uphold his obligations and urgently convene an international conference with the aim of ending Israel’s illegal occupation and ensure that the Palestinian people exercise their right to self-determination in their independent State.”

It stressed that states “must not recognize the illegal situation or render aid or assistance in maintaining this situation and must ensure compliance by Israel, the occupying Power, with international humanitarian law.”

The Foreign Ministry concluded its statement by stressing that “Israel’s illegal occupation and settlement enterprise are the source of this protracted injustice. Israel, the occupying Power, must dismantle its settlement enterprise, in totality, and end its illegal occupation. The State of Palestine will not relent in its political, diplomatic, and legal efforts to ensure that the rights of the Palestinian people to self-determination, return, and independence are fulfilled.”

Source: Palestine News and Information Agency

Palestinian youth shot and injured by Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint northeast of Jerusalem

A youth, who was not immediately identified, was shot by Israeli soldiers at a military checkpoint at the entrance to Shufat refugee camp, northeast of occupied East Jerusalem, according to witnesses.

They said the soldiers opened fire at the youth, alleging he attempted to stab them.

The witnesses said the youth was injured and taken away by the soldiers.

His situation was not immediately known.

Source: Palestine News and Information Agency