Speak a word about the ‘Poor’ HAMAS
Photo: sacheng095/ depositphotos.com
Since 1948, the Gaza Strip was under Egyptian occupation. In June 1967, during the Six-Day War, the Gaza Strip came under Israeli control. At that time, about 400,000 people lived in the Gaza Strip.
In September 2005, as part of the Unilateral Disengagement Plan, Israel completely withdrew from the Gaza Strip, whose population had already reached between 1,070,000 and 1,376,289 people according to various sources.
In 2006, Hamas pushed out Fatah and took over the governance of the Gaza Strip. Hamas’s goal is to create an Islamic state over the entire historical land of Palestine from the Mediterranean Sea to the Jordan River. Thus, supporters of the ‘progressive agenda’ in Western countries, who chant the slogan ‘From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free’ in protests against Israel, whether knowingly or foolishly, are word by word strengthening Hamas in its aspiration to annihilate the 7 million Jews living in Israel.
For nearly twenty years, Hamas’s rule has turned the Gaza Strip into one large terror camp, with a population exceeding 2 million residents. The installations of missile launchers in residential neighborhoods, weapon depots in schools, command centers in hospitals, and underground tunnels for the transfer of terrorists stretching over 450 kilometers. And all this under the watchful eyes and with the participation of UNRWA workers. International aid, which has been flowing into the Gaza Strip for years, went towards armaments, tunnel construction, and propaganda.
The events of October 7th sparked a sharp rise in anti-Semitism and demonstrated how the world is still biased against Jews. The Hague court is a modern reincarnation of the Dreyfus affair. Jordan, Qatar, Belize, Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, and even Slovenia have already declared their desire to support South Africa’s lawsuit and speak a word for HAMAS.