Sunday, May 31, 2026

Ireland says Isreal is the last European planter colony and now is an Apartheid Regime

Israel's security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir was filmed taunting Gaza flotilla activists as they knelt on the floor with their hands tied. Photograph: Erik Marmor/Getty Images
Israel's security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, was filmed taunting Gaza flotilla activists as they knelt on the floor with their hands tied. Photograph: Erik Marmor/Getty Images.

Ben-Gvir was convicted in 2007 of racist incitement and support for groups on terrorism blacklists. For years, he prominently displayed a photo in his living room of Baruch Goldstein, who massacred 29 Muslim worshippers in Hebron in 1994.


'Don't Be Bothered by Their Screams'

Ben-Gvir Posts Video of Police Dragging Detained Gaza Flotilla Activists

The video shows the activists kneeling on a metal floor in an unshaded area while Israel's anthem is playing and armed Border Police officers watch. Later in the video, a woman is heard pleading and screaming, as Ben-Gvir says, 'Don't be bothered by their screams.'

On May 15, more than 50 vessels sailed from the Turkish port city of Marmaris, in what organisers described as the final stage of a journey aimed at challenging Israel’s blockade of the besieged Palestinian enclave.

Israeli forces began storming the boats in international waters off the coast of Cyprus on Monday, organisers said, and abducted activists.

The Israelis called them terrorists, but who were the gagisters 

Haaretz, the Israeli newspaper, reported: 

"Irish activist Dr Margaret Connolly, the sister of Irish President Catherine Connolly, said activists detained by Israel while aboard a Gaza-bound flotilla "got a feeling of what the Jews felt like during the Second World War," accusing Israel of "acting like a Nazi state."

Connolly and hundreds of other members of a Gaza-bound flotilla were detained on Israeli navy vessels after being intercepted and transferred to Israeli territory.

"I was on a warship … on Monday and Tuesday, which means we were kidnapped and abducted and held against our will on a warship, which was a prison ship," Connolly told RTÉ Radio, Ireland's public radio broadcaster.

On May 28, 2026, Benjamin Netanyahu said he had given orders to the Israeli army to seize control of 70% of the Gaza Strip in a move that threatens to torpedo an already fragile ceasefire and create catastrophic humanitarian conditions in the already devastated territory.

The defence minister, Israel Katz, said on Wednesday (May 29, 2026) that the government’s ultimate aim was for large numbers of Palestinians to leave Gaza by what he called “voluntary migration” but what human rights activists describe as a long-term plan for ethnic cleansing by making living conditions inside Gaza intolerable.


Mark Twain (circled) at the start of the Holy Land adventure in 1867-1869

Samuel L. Clemens (1835-1910) was reborn as Mark Twain at age 27 with the job of a newspaper humorist.  At 32, he caught a chance of getting to the Holy Land on the steamer Quaker City. His San Francisco newspaper, the Alta-California, sent him as their correspondent. The paper paid him $20 for each letter he sent home.

In his 1869 travelogue The Innocents Abroad, Mark Twain compares the silent, staring Arab villagers of Palestine to Native Americans.

He writes that the villagers watched them with a "vile, uncomplaining impoliteness which is so truly Indian", which made him so uncomfortable he wanted to "exterminate the whole tribe"

Twain utilised a common 19th-century American trope, projecting the stereotypes he associated with Native Americans ("Red Indians") onto the indigenous people of the Ottoman-ruled Middle East.

In 1867, the Palestine region was ruled by the Ottoman Empire (often referred to historically as Turkey). It was not a single, unified country at the time but was divided into administrative districts within the broader province of Ottoman Syria. 

Also a pivotal legal change: the Ottoman Land Law of 1867 allowed foreign nationals the right to own real estate in the empire, directly affecting land sales and European settlement in Palestine.

Twain was particularly disappointed by Jerusalem. While it was the "stateliest name in history," he found it to be a small, poverty-stricken village defined by "rags, wretchedness, poverty and dirt". He claimed that "Palestine sits in sackcloth and ashes"

In 2017, on the 150th anniversary of Twain’s visit, every major Israeli newspaper published articles celebrating this anniversary. 

These articles similarly discussed the importance of the travelogue in asserting that Palestine was empty and barren and that the Palestinian people are an invention.

Twain’s influence in Palestine and Israel through The Innocents Abroad has been appropriated, and this appropriation often underpins modern discourses on Palestine.

Benjamin Netanyahu and others are liars when they say that the Holy Land was void of people in 1867-1869.

1882 Jews 24,000   Others 276,000

1914 Jews 94,000  Others  595,000

1947 Jews 630,000 Others 1,324,000 

1948 Jews 716,000 Others 156,000

Between 1946 and 2024, the U.S. gifted $330 billion to Israel in 2024 terms


Israel is the West's last settler colony



Forever-Occupation: Genocide, and profit: United Nations exposes corporate forces behind the destruction of Palestine

A UN report titled "From economy of occupation to economy of genocide," presented by Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese, details how global corporations sustain and profit from Israel's actions in the Palestinian territories. The findings argue that these commercial endeavours help legitimise the occupation and form a "joint criminal enterprise".

Prominent human rights organisations and United Nations experts increasingly characterise Israel's treatment of Palestinians as an Apartheid Regime. 

This classification is based on institutionalised discrimination, territorial fragmentation, and systemic oppression that heavily disadvantage Palestinians across areas under Israeli control.

"Israel’s regime of apartheid and occupation is inextricably bound up in human rights violations. B’Tselem strives to end this regime, as that is the only way forward to a future in which human rights, democracy, liberty and equality are ensured to all people, both Palestinian and Israeli, living between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea"

The bulldozing of Palestinian homes and structures in the West Bank by Israeli authorities is a widely documented and highly controversial issue.

Human rights organisations and the United Nations classify these actions as part of a systematic policy of forced displacement and illegal settlement expansion.

From 1948 to the present day, Israel has systematically demolished tens of thousands of Palestinian homes and structures, leading to mass displacement. This policy has evolved across different eras and jurisdictions, serving as a tool for demographic displacement, border control, and punitive measures.


Residents of the Nur Shams Palestinian refugee camp watch their homes being demolished on New Year's eve by an Israeli military excavator in the Nur Shams camp, east of the northern West Bank city of Tulkarem, amid an ongoing offensive in the West Bank on December 31, 2025. (Photo by Zain JAAFAR / AFP)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu frequently states that the Jewish people have a continuous, unbroken connection to the land of Israel spanning 3,000 to 4,000 years. 

While Netanyahu uses this timeline for political and national identity, modern geneticists emphasise that DNA tells a complex story. Studies have shown that both modern Jewish and Palestinian populations in the Levant share significant amounts of ancestry from similar ancient populations 

Most Jews are of European descent, including Netanyahu.
The World Health Organization (WHO) and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) track strikes on medical facilities and staff in South Lebanon. You can review the WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean reports or see specific condemnation of these incidents via ReliefWeb Lebanon Updates.
Human rights organizations have extensively documented attacks on hospitals. You can read assessments of strikes on facilities like Nasser Hospital and the resulting casualties on the Human Rights Watch portal or the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Since the 2026 ceasefire went into effect, at least 730 to 900+ Palestinians have been killed in Gaza due to persistent Israeli gunfire, shelling, and airstrikes
While major combat operations largely stopped, near-daily ceasefire violations and bombings have continued, resulting in hundreds of fatalities and thousands of injuries.
In Labonnam, recent deaths have been at 3,500.
According to official data from the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) for 2025, a total of 151 Israeli soldiers died.