Home Actress Mona Chalabi HD Photos and Wallpapers May 2024 Mona Chalabi Instagram - 1. Columbia university, October 19, 2023 (I left the ceremony early) 2. An email to the President of Columbia, sent March 2, 2024 (she did not reply) 3. A student protester at Columbia, April 18, 2024 via Tarik_Endale on Twitter 4. An article from YDSA, November 20, 2023 Solidarity with the brave students of Columbia 🖤

Mona Chalabi Instagram – 1. Columbia university, October 19, 2023 (I left the ceremony early) 2. An email to the President of Columbia, sent March 2, 2024 (she did not reply) 3. A student protester at Columbia, April 18, 2024 via Tarik_Endale on Twitter 4. An article from YDSA, November 20, 2023 Solidarity with the brave students of Columbia 🖤

Mona Chalabi Instagram - 1. Columbia university, October 19, 2023 (I left the ceremony early) 2. An email to the President of Columbia, sent March 2, 2024 (she did not reply) 3. A student protester at Columbia, April 18, 2024 via Tarik_Endale on Twitter 4. An article from YDSA, November 20, 2023 Solidarity with the brave students of Columbia 🖤

Mona Chalabi Instagram – 1. Columbia university, October 19, 2023 (I left the ceremony early)
2. An email to the President of Columbia, sent March 2, 2024 (she did not reply)
3. A student protester at Columbia, April 18, 2024 via Tarik_Endale on Twitter
4. An article from YDSA, November 20, 2023

Solidarity with the brave students of Columbia 🖤 | Posted on 19/Apr/2024 22:08:12

Mona Chalabi Instagram – If Gaza’s population were summed up in 100 characters, they would look something like this. Despite Israel’s occupation, families could be seen relaxing on the seashore, farmers were able to sell their produce and children (who make up 47% of Gaza’s population and so are represented as 47 of these 100 characters) could learn at school. 

These 100 tiny illustrations can show you what has happened to 2.2 million people in the space of just a few months.

Sources: United Nations Human Rights Office, IPC famine review, Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, Gazan Ministry of Health
Mona Chalabi Instagram – Some soldiers are traumatized by what they have done. A sniper from an “elite” IDF unit describes aiming for the knee of a Palestinian protester but hitting too high and killing the man. A mental health worker said that the soldier “can’t forget the man’s screaming not to be left alone. He also remembers vividly the evacuation [of the body], and the women who wept over him. From then on, that’s all he thinks about and all he dreams about. He says, ‘I wasn’t sent to defend the state, I was sent to murder.’”

A United Nations inquiry found that 80% of people wounded during protests in Gaza were shot by Israeli forces in the lower limbs. These protests, which began in 2018, were known as the Great March of Return. They called on Israeli authorities to lift an 11-year illegal blockade on Gaza and allow Palestinian refugees to return to their villages and towns. Over 6,000 protesters were struck by Israeli forces, many of them were left with permanent physical disabilities (Israeli authorities also routinely deny people exit permits for medical treatment outside of Gaza – only 17% of these applications were approved). 

In total, 214 Palestinians, including 46 children, were killed during these protests, according to the UN. Just one Israeli soldier was prosecuted. It was for the killing of a 14-year-old boy during a demonstration. The killer was sentenced to one month in prison and a suspended prison sentence of two-months.

There’s too much to say in just one post so I’ll share links in my stories, including to that really important Haaretz piece where I got the quotes about IDF snipers.

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