Micro322
97 posts









The First Intifada (1987-1993) started as a non-violent programme of protests, strikes, boycotts, refusal to pay taxes, and other acts of civil disobedience. Israeli security forces responded with excessive violence, including using live ammunition against unarmed civilians. Palestinians turned to violence in response. Israeli forces killed 332 Palestinians in the first 13 months and over a thousand over the whole intifada, including 240 children. 100 Israeli civilians were killed and 60 soldiers.


🇺🇸🇮🇱 Former CIA officer John Kiriakou: "If Israel wants to kill you and you're in an apartment building, when they think they can hit you, they blow up the entire building and kill 2,000 people along with you; that's Israel's policy."



@LauraLoomer You think about my husband too much, ho.




“Go inside, he will kill you” A 14-year-old Palestinian student, Aws al-Naasan, was shot in the head and killed outside his school in al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah, after an Israeli reservist took position on a nearby hillside and opened fire toward the school. The Guardian reports testimonies from teachers and students describing scenes of terror, with children hiding in stairwells as staff rushed to secure the building. Teachers shouted warnings “go inside, he will kill you”, as gunfire rang out. Aws collapsed instantly, and his classmates carried his bleeding body along the school wall, leaving a trail of blood, but he died before reaching medical care. Minutes later, the same attacker shot and killed 36-year-old Jihad Abu Naim, whose wife is pregnant with their first child. The killings unfolded amid a surge in Israeli settler violence targeting schools and students across the occupied West Bank. Residents say al-Mughayyir has long been subjected to repeated attacks, with Aws already having lost his father in a previous settler shooting. After the latest killings, classes were suspended as families weighed sending children back to school against fears for their lives. “We want to go back, but our families are afraid,” one student said.









