Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty
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Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi

Stone Age?
At a time when you were still in caves searching for fire, we were inscribing human rights on the Cyrus Cylinder.
We endured the storm of Alexander and the Mongol invasions and remained; because Iran is not just a country, it is a civilization.
Pete Hegseth@PeteHegseth
Back to the Stone Age.
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Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi

Controversial I know but I welcome these scenes. It shows the world exactly who these people are. The crowd chose Barabas. The Israelis chose Ben Gvir.
The Cradle@TheCradleMedia
VIDEO | Israeli National Security Minister Ben Gvir, outside the Knesset chamber, celebrates the passing of the death penalty law for Palestinian detainees, describing it as historic and saying, “Soon we will count them one by one.”
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Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi

Indeed it does. And every Palm Sunday there is a solemn procession commemorating Jesus' entry into Jerusalem.
Except today. The police banned the procession.
Hananya Naftali@HananyaNaftali
This is the likely path Jesus walked into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday more than 2000 years ago, and it still exists. Right here. In Jerusalem.
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Martin Doherty retweetledi

Across the road from the £1Bn new Barlinnie Prison, St Roch’s FC - the heart and Irish soul of the Garngad - faces a struggle for its very existence: my feature in @heraldscotland heraldscotland.com/life_style/259…
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Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi

These kids have names, faces, families and dreams.
They want us to forget about them, and quickly.
Don’t let that happen.
Clash Report@clashreport
📸 The last photo of Mikaeil Mirdoraghi, a third-grade student killed in the reported U.S./Israeli strike on a primary school in Minab, Iran. He is waving goodbye to his mother.
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Martin Doherty retweetledi

"🇮🇶 Iraqi prisoner of war comforting his 4-year-old son in Najaf, Iraq, March 31, 2003. The photo won the Pulitzer Prize.....
The photograph captures an Iraqi prisoner of war sitting on the ground, his head covered by a black hood, gently placing his hand over his child’s eyes. The boy, barefoot and frightened, sits against his father’s lap amid coils of barbed wire. Taken in Najaf during the early days of the Iraq War, it distills the human cost of conflict more powerfully than any statistic could.
In March 2003, U.S. forces advanced into Iraq under the premise of dismantling weapons of mass destruction. Towns like Najaf became battle zones as both sides endured heavy casualties. For civilians, these confrontations meant chaos, separation, and loss. In this image, the father’s protective gesture, shielding his son from seeing his captivity, transcends politics and ideology. It is a moment of love and helplessness in a place defined by violence.
The hood was a standard procedure for captured combatants, used to disorient and dehumanize. Yet the presence of the child breaks through that anonymity, reminding the viewer that behind every war prisoner lies a family.
The photo was taken by Jean-Marc Bouju for the Associated Press and went on to win the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography in 2004 for its raw depiction of human emotion during war."
This is one of the numerous atrocities committed by America. And no genuine reason has been given till date for invading Iraq. Now they plan to do the same thing with Iran...

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Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi

You bombed historic churches in Gaza and Lebanon and massacred entire Christian families




Prime Minister of Israel@IsraeliPM
To all our Christian friends around the world - Merry Christmas!
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Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi
Martin Doherty retweetledi
















