Nov 12, 2023 06:17 UTC
  • Thousands-strong protests held in Paris, Brussels to call for end to Gaza massacre

Thousands have taken to the streets in the capital cities of France and Belgium to call for an end to the Israeli regime's ongoing genocidal war on the besieged Gaza Strip.

The demonstrations were held on Saturday, with the participants trying to press their governments to hold Tel Aviv to account for its indiscriminate campaign of bloodletting and destruction against the coastal territory.

More than 11,000 Palestinians, including 4,506 children, have been massacred, and 27,490 others sustained injuries since October 7, when the occupying regime started the war in response to an operation staged by the Gaza-based resistance groups.

In Paris, demonstrators demanded that the regime "stop the massacre in Gaza," and urged "an immediate ceasefire."

"We can't stay at home eating and drinking while thousands of children in Gaza are buried. It's unimaginable that in 2023 a government like France won't say stop to this genocide," said Wassila Abdel Malek, a demonstrator.

"I'm demonstrating for the people of Gaza, who are today victims of a real genocide, and I think we need to be demonstrating today because we expect a lot more from our government than what it's doing today," said another protester, who identified himself as Dominique.

"We demand a ceasefire, we demand an end to the occupation. We demand an end to colonization," he added.

"It is elementary that as activists or simple citizens, you [should] go out onto the street to support the Palestinian people," said 85-year-old trade unionist Claude Marill.

Western governments, led by the United States, have stopped short of drawing any red lines for the Israeli regime, which has vowed to wage a "long" war against Gaza. Tel Aviv's allies have also refused to throw their weight behind the United Nations Security Council resolutions that called for a ceasefire.

Gaza ceasefire rallies were also held in other French cities, including Marseille, Toulouse, Rennes and Bordeaux.

Meanwhile, a pro-Palestinian rally in Brussels, the seat of the European Union, attracted more than 20,000 people, who marched through the city, shouting "free Palestine," "stop the genocide," and 'Israel is a criminal!'

Some also cried out "EU, shame on you," decrying the 27-nation bloc's heavy bias in favor of Israel, which has prevented it from holding Tel Aviv to account for its atrocities.

"It's a genocide, it's not a war like the media are telling us. It's a catastrophe for me, it's not natural but it's inhuman what the Zionist entity is doing. I don't say Israel, I never say the word Israel, because it's not a state. It's an entity, it's a collection of mafias, it's not exactly a state," said a  French activist.

ME

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