Israel will stop issuing automatic visas to UN employees, while accusing the UN of being an "accomplice" in the abuses that Hamas "propagandizes". Elon Levy, a spokesman for Israel**, said that Israel will consider visa applications for UN employees on a case-by-case basis.
While the war in Gaza is becoming less and less suspenseful, relations between the United Nations and Israel are becoming increasingly tense. This is partly due to the fact that the United Nations has repeatedly called for a ceasefire in Gaza, but the United Nations has blamed Israel more for harming civilians than it has criticized Hamas and called for them to release the hostages.
In a paragraph published on social media, Levy said that Israel "demands global accountability for international responsibility for complicity with Hamas propaganda" and is "leading by example." Levy believes that for a long time the international community has been shifting the blame to Israel in order to cover up the fact that they are covering up for Hamas. Instead of condemning Hamas's hijacking of aid and its war from inside and outside hospitals, they have become complicit in Hamas's Human Shield strategy.
He added that "they have disappointed the whole world" and that as a result, Israel will consider visa applications for UN employees "on a case-by-case basis" and that Israel will no longer work with those who "work with the propaganda machine of the terrorist regime of Hamas."
2. The conflict is intensifying after Hamas police shot and killed children in Gaza, and more and more Gazans are dissatisfied with Hamas's control over international relief supplies. And Hamas simply does not even want to pretend, the leader of the group, Moussa Abu Marzouk, publicly declaredThe international community's humanitarian assistance to Gaza should be distributed to Hamas members on a priority basis, not to the people of Gaza"The aid that comes to Gaza must be distributed to the resistance fighters and the rest to the people. As is happening today in Rafah, some people are trying to seize aid, we will fight with all our might, people must give the resisters expensive or cheap things, and not steal the food of the resisters".
Hamas has robbed most of the international humanitarian aid that has entered the Gaza Strip, while allowing the Gazans to starve and lack medical support, noting, it is not the lack of food and medicine that Hamas has taken and not distributed to the Gazans at all.
It was a tried and tested war, and the Russian armed forces were victorious at the last cannon fire in the city of Maryinka. On the 26th, the nine-year conflict made key progress, Russia cleared the last stronghold of Ukrainian forces in Maryinka, and the Ukrainian army had to choose to retreat, ending the defensive position in Maryinka City.
The Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Zaluzhny frankly stated that the city of Maryinka no longer exists. The city has endured a tenacious defensive that bordered on despair for nearly two years. However, the Russian army first destroyed every street, and then every house. This protracted war became a nightmare for Maryinka City, and the end of it all makes people look back and reflect on the ins and outs of this bloody war.
The city of Maryinka, located 13 km west of Donetsk, was once the administrative center of the Pokrovsky district of the Donetsk region of Ukraine and was part of the Donetsk urban agglomeration. In 2014-2015, it became a fierce front line for the Donbass militia and the Armed Forces of Ukraine. In that engagement triggered by heavy **, the city of Maryinka became a place of life and death for the first time between Ukraine and Russia.
Although the Russian military has declared full control of the city of Maryinka, experts note that this is not the end, but could be the beginning of another, more difficult battle. Maryinka was one of the main positions of artillery firing by the Ukrainian army at the city of Donetsk, where the Ukrainian army built a huge artillery group. Now, with the retreat of the Ukrainian army, these artillery pieces may continue to pose a threat to the urban area of Donetsk. And the Russian military's control may be just the beginning, and the shadow of the future will still hang over this war-torn land.
The conflict is far from over, and while Marinka's control has given Russia a strategic victory, it is not the end. Ukraine** stressed that the war is "not close to the end", a phrase that could be a warning of a more dire situation in the future. At the same time, international calls for a ceasefire are growing, but Prime Minister Netanyahu has made it clear that the battle is far from over. This is a battlefield of uncertainty, and every conflict can trigger a new spark.
Behind the intensification of the fighting in Maryinka, the international community has also been caught in a political storm. Russia's actions have caused strong dissatisfaction in Western countries, with sanctions and condemnations coming one after another. Voices in support of Russia are also resounding on the international stage, and some countries are more cautious about their support for Ukraine. Such differences are not only evident in international organizations such as the United Nations, but also in the speeches of world leaders.