Israel Palesine Conflict Day 691: ICJ rebuke, aid choked, Gaza buried in unexploded bombs

ICJ scolds, aid still chokes, and Gaza picks through bombs while Washington hedges.

Gaza City — Day 691 of the israel Palesine Conflict. The morning convoy formed up at first light, a dozen white vehicles inching through the gray of northern Gaza, where walls have become memorials and intersections are mapped as craters. On board were teams from the International Committee of the Red Cross, moving under a brittle arrangement with Hamas and under the eyes of Israeli forces. Their task was not rescue. It was recovery: to accompany searches for the bodies of Israeli hostages and Palestinians alike, to match fragments to names, and to make grief legible enough for burial. The road itself told the story, detours to avoid fresh collapse, pauses to consult a “yellow line” of no-go zones, and long waits that gave the dust time to settle on dashboards and on people, a choreography that has come to feel like a ceasefire without bread.

What was once Gaza’s busiest urban spine now reads as a ledger of what remains. The queues are for water and pharmacy lines that end in shrugs. The city’s hospitals, skeletal after months of siege, handle the work of postmortems alongside malnutrition clinics and trauma wards. Along the curb at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, men lift stretchers bearing white shrouds; inside, a technician carefully opens a bag and murmurs a family name that may or may not belong to the body. It is a ritual now: a search, a match, a whispered prayer, a decision about where to dig when the earth is already full. And everywhere, the landscape is seeded with the kind of explosive remnants that will take years to clear, a reality echoed in UN field notes on retrieval efforts hampered by unexploded ordnance and a later bulletin warning of rising explosive ordnance risks.

Under the evolving arrangement, Hamas is to return the remains of Israeli hostages; Israel, in turn, agrees to release Palestinian bodies, an exchange rate that has become its own kind of politics. The International Committee of the Red Cross does not conduct the searches or negotiate the deals; it shuttles, witnesses, and verifies, its neutral role in remains transfers is the only steady element on a field where tunnels have collapsed and homes have pancaked on themselves. Egyptian recovery teams have joined the choreography too, proof that even a ceasefire needs foreign hands to steady it, and that the work is, at best, a set of remains transfers mediated by the Red Cross moving at the mercy of the next checkpoint.

Every step doubles as a reminder of what was not prevented. Children learn to read ruins; parents teach detours by heart; the rest is chance. De-miners warn that Gaza will remain hazardous long after the fighting stops because so many munitions failed to explode on impact and so little of the landscape is mapped. Each week brings another set of injuries and deaths from unseen ordnance; each week the risk spreads as people return to check on apartments, shops, and schools that are no longer there. UN responders have paired incident tracking with risk education, a dry term for a lifesaving practice detailed in OCHA’s running situation reporting on explosive-risk education.

Unexploded ordnance warning markers beside tents in southern Gaza
UXO markers near displacement sites highlight a growing clearance challenge that will outlast the current truce. [PHOTO: NPR]

At the level of law, this is the week the paper cut deep. The International Court of Justice issued a binding order to enable UN-run relief and cautioned that judges warned of acute food insecurity in Gaza, yet on the ground the machinery to force compliance was missing. The gap, between what the court says and what the authorities do, has defined the war’s humanitarian theater. There are days when trucks roll; there are days when inspectors wave them through; there are days when a rumor, a threat, or a shelling spree silences an entire crossing. That is why lawyers and logisticians alike talk about a court-ordered aid corridor that never opened at scale and why the “truce” often functions as a ‘truce’ that functions as a border regime.

Israel counters that the court reads the battlefield in abstractions: that aid “on paper” approximates prewar volumes, that UN agencies have failed to police theft and diversion, that militants stage attacks from the cover of schools and clinics, and that the only reliable way to safeguard civilians is to disarm the perpetrators. Even sympathetic diplomats concede a basic contradiction: northern Gaza’s malnutrition wards and the cratered roads that aid convoys can’t use sit in the same map square. No ruling alters the physics of a convoy trapped behind a bulldozed earthen berm or a crossing slammed shut by an overnight cabinet order. The moral point, however, persists. If people starve where those in control have the means to feed them, the famine is not an accident of logistics but an effect of policy, visible in a malnutrition curve that only bends when trucks move and corroborated by UNICEF’s alert on rising admissions for acute child malnutrition and the WHO’s stark notice that famine was confirmed in parts of Gaza.

Outside Gaza, the conflict tightens its hold on politics and speech. In the United States, a British commentator critical of Israel’s campaign was detained by immigration authorities, a case that civil-liberties lawyers say crystallizes how visas and airport screenings have become instruments in a propaganda war, a story that has already triggered civil-liberties outcry. For the press, the war is the deadliest on record, a measure tracked by CPJ’s rolling tally of journalist killings and detentions. To Palestinians, this is an extension of the same logic that keeps aid trucks idling: those with power set the terms, invoke security when challenged, and assume costs will be borne by others. To many Israelis, the same story reads in reverse: critics minimize or excuse the war’s original crime, the seizure and killing of civilians and the taking of hostages, and overstate Israel’s capacity to protect innocents while dismantling the force that attacked them.

Lawyers and family members outside a courthouse after a detention hearing
Rights groups say mass detentions and restricted access have eroded accountability as courts strain under emergency rules. [PHOTO: NPR]

The search for bodies is the most intimate of these disputes because it collapses principle into practice. It is not a debate about causes or aims. It is a set of decisions about whether to permit a bulldozer into one block and a backhoe into another, whether to risk a sappers’ team here or wait for daylight there. It is about whether a mother can claim the remains of a son, or whether a husband can carry home what is left of a wife. The lists are grim and partial; Hamas says it does not know where every captive was held, and Israeli intelligence insists the group knows far more than it admits. Between those positions stand the Red Cross teams, who rise before dawn to do work that will satisfy no one and whose result, at best, is closure constrained by dust and time, aid convoys tied to nightly lists and a map that changes by the hour.

On the Israeli side of the prisons and detention centers, the war has bent institutions in ways that will take years to trace. Administrative detention has expanded, court access has narrowed, and testimony from released Palestinians, along with the condition of bodies sent back to Gaza, has painted a portrait of abuse that officials deny is systemic even as isolated prosecutions proceed. Rights groups have chronicled mass incommunicado detention, while medical journals have examined forensic evidence on returned bodies. The ledgers remain opaque after the October swap, an opaque detention ledgers after the swap that make oversight a theory more than a practice.

Hamas’s conduct has been, and remains, central to the war’s darkest chapters. The taking of civilian hostages is a war crime. Accounts from some released captives describe moments of care, medication supplied, food shared, injuries tended to, alongside accounts of terror, violation, and the ordinary cruelty of confinement. Advocacy organizations warn that those still held are at grave risk of ill-treatment. Gaza’s health authorities and rights monitors, for their part, insist that the campaign against the enclave, bombardment, siege, mass detention, has destroyed the foundations of ordinary life. The word genocide, long taboo in diplomatic circles, moved to center stage not by rhetoric alone but because international courts began to examine whether intent could be inferred from the pattern and scale of harm. Legal outcomes remain undecided. The politics around them, however, are not.

And yet amid the certainty, politics proceeds. In Ankara and London, leaders signed a deal for 20 new Eurofighter Typhoon jets, an £8bn agreement that signals a durable pipeline of arms regardless of Gaza’s calendar, an arms sale sealed in Ankara and read in every capital as a message about the region’s next decade. In European courts and ministries, legal teams parse what the ICJ’s language means for future cases, whether restrictions amount to siege warfare, whether the targeting of infrastructure meets the threshold for crime, whether relief agencies can be barred on suspicions that cannot be tested. In Washington, statements couple sympathy with conditional verbs: aid “must” flow, casualties “must” decline, attacks on hospitals “must” stop. What the verbs do not do, yet, is condition the weapons that let the war continue, a tension that also surfaced when Congress weighed preliminary annexation votes that rattled the coalition amid a broader record of settler violence surge documented this summer.

The two-state solution, once a diplomatic reflex, now reads like a ghost script. The map of Gaza is a palimpsest of ruins; the West Bank is a grid of enclaves joined by roads that Palestinians do not control and watched by settlers who act as if the future has already been decided. A handful of Palestinian leaders talk, again, about a one-state framework grounded in equal rights under law. Others, reading the world’s appetite for such an experiment as limited to slogans, float a confederation that would grant movement and dignity without a clean break from occupation. Christians in Jerusalem, who have watched their institutions whittled by both bureaucracy and zeal, press for an enforceable regime around holy sites, an echo of earlier proposals that now converse with the ICJ’s wider advisory opinion on the prolonged occupation’s legal consequences.

Journalists hold a vigil with press vests and candles
Advocacy groups record unprecedented journalist casualties and detentions as the information space narrows. [PHOTO: Al-Jazeera]

In Gaza itself, where future plans feel like an intrusion on the present tense, the question is survival. The most common gesture, a child’s hand raised to the forehead, signals that a drone can see and that there is nothing to hide. The most common sentence is a logistics problem: where to find clean water, how to keep a baby warm, which ruin can be made to serve as a room. Aid officials say that if trucks moved at scale, the famine curve would bend; if fuel reserves were secured, hospital generators could hold on through the nightly power drops; if de-miners could map the worst-affected sectors first, neighborhoods might come back street by street. Each “if” depends on decisions made by people who do not live there. That is the helplessness that threads through a thousand interviews: knowing that the essentials exist and knowing that the war will not let them through.

For Israel’s domestic scene, the political calendar is consumed by a war that long ago devoured the margins of ordinary debate. The families of the fallen and the families of the missing share a vocabulary of grief and recrimination. Municipal leaders count costs in shelters and sirens; generals brief casualty ratios and sortie counts; columnists conduct blame audits between alarms. Abroad, the rhetoric alternates between vetoes and vows. At home, a subset of politicians treats any concession as capitulation, even as a different kind of politics, from Washington to European capitals, flickers with moments of dissent, including a rare rebuke from Trump on annexation that complicated the usual alignments.

What this day captures, perhaps better than any speech or communique, is how decisions elsewhere ricochet through Gaza’s alleys. A ruling in The Hague may open a crossing tomorrow or close it by provoking backlash. An ultimatum from Washington may accelerate a search one morning and freeze it the next. A funding vote in a European parliament can mean a clinic carried through winter or a clinic locked at noon for lack of fuel. A viral video from a detention hearing in the United States can harden lines on campuses in Cairo and London. In that sense, israel Palesine Conflict day 691 is a mosaic of rooms far from Gaza, each lit by screens, each attended by aides, each capable of loosening or tightening the vise.

Inside the strip, the math is simpler and more brutal. De-miners say that even with a ceasefire in place, clearing unexploded bombs will take years counted in childhoods. Humanitarian logisticians say that even with the best planning, aid convoys need security assurances they do not have. Forensic teams say that even with more equipment, identifications will stall where records are missing and families are displaced. None of these are mysterious problems. They follow from command decisions and could, in theory, be solved by new ones. The question is whether the political will exists in Jerusalem, Ramallah, Cairo, Ankara, Brussels, and Washington to treat this war’s victims not as arguments but as obligations, an urgency captured in UN warnings about tactics denounced by UN officials.

By late afternoon, the convoy turned back, as it has many days before. The Red Cross teams collected what they could; the rest would wait until a safer route could be negotiated, until a particular berm was leveled, until a “line” was shifted on a laminated map. A small crowd gathered where the vehicles halted, and a young man asked a question that echoes beyond the perimeter: Is anyone accountable for time? For the public, time has become a substitute for justice, an accumulation of days that stand in for a reckoning that never comes. For the families, time is the enemy. It erodes memory. It scatters witnesses. It deepens the smell of the bags.

Day 691 ends the way it began: with the summons of the ordinary against the weight of a permanent emergency. In apartments without walls, a woman wipes the face of a child who does not remember a room with a door. In a prison across the line, a guard unclips a flashlight for another sweep of a corridor where men have learned to sleep in bursts. In a courtroom a continent away, judges file papers that will be read for what they symbolize and ignored for what they require. In Ankara and London, an arms deal travels its usual route from factory to runway. In Washington, aides polish adjectives meant to convey resolve without consequence. And in Gaza, where the hardest jobs are done by those who do not hold office, people do what they have done for nearly two years: they count the living, they honor the dead, and they try not to step where the ground remembers the war better than they do.

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Arab Desk
Arab Desk
The Eastern Herald’s Arab Desk validates the stories published under this byline. That includes editorials, news stories, letters to the editor, and multimedia features on easternherald.com.

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