Perhaps the mass murder isn’t so mass-murdery yet or something.
Rafah, November 26 – International humanitarian organizations and numerous governments around the world, including those of countries bordering the affected area, long ago declared the Israel is in the midst of an attempt to exterminate the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, while at the same time those organizations have declined to argue for neighboring countries to open their gates to allow Palestinians to flee the mass murder, and the one neighboring country has declined to allow more than a few isolated cases across the Gaza frontier, because, many experts surmise, perhaps the mass murder isn’t so mass-murdery yet or something.
The United Nations Human Rights Council, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Médecins Sans Frontières, various delegated to the United Nations Security Council, and hundreds of officials from dozens of governments – including those of Egypt, which abuts the Gaza Strip just over the border from this Mediterranean city – deemed Israel’s actions in Gaza “genocide” already last October, even before the Jewish State began operating in earnest against Hamas in the coastal territory to rescue hundreds of hostages and begin degrading the terrorist group’s fighting capacity after the latter invaded southern Israel, murdered 1300 people, injured thousands, and generally went on a torture, mutilation, rape, destruction, looting, and kidnapping spree.
However, at no time since those “genocide” pronouncements began – or rather, continued, given the prevalence of the accusation in anti-Israel rhetoric for decades already – has Egypt, a vocal critic of Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, lifted a finger to allow any such genocide-threatened Palestinians to escape the ongoing genocide – which unofficial estimates in activists’ letters to medial journals have predicted could, under unspecified circumstances, reach as high as 186,000 by an unspecified date – into Rafah’s Egyptian portion. Experts believe this refusal reflects the difference between genocide, a calamity that requires moving Heaven and Earth to save the lives of the people under threat, and genocide, a calamity that does not require moving Heaven and Earth to save the people under threat, certainly not by opening the border to allow at least some of them to escape the calamity.
Despite repeated attempts via trying to kill more Israelis, thus prompting further IDF action, by Iran-backed Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, they have so far failed to put a halt to the genocide – which Hamas-provided figures estimate at 40,000 dead, which, over the course of more than a year, represents the slowest, last effective genocide in history, resulting in a negative reduction in the Palestinian population. Analysts believe this aspect of the genocide has indicated to Egypt that this specific genocide perhaps requires no actual relief, and can be relegated in its entirety to fodder for political and diplomatic posturing.
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