Jordan’s Queen Rania says opponents of ceasefire in Gaza are ‘endorsing and justifying death’

The screengrab taken on November 5, 2023, shows Jordan's Queen Rania during an interview with In an in-depth interview with CNN's Becky Anderson. (Photo courtesy: CNN)
Short Url
Updated 06 November 2023
Follow

Jordan’s Queen Rania says opponents of ceasefire in Gaza are ‘endorsing and justifying death’

  • Queen Rania responded to Blinken’s rejection of cease-fire in CNN interview 
  • She denounced ‘catastrophic situation’ in Gaza, questioned global conscience

CAIRO: Queen Rania of Jordan on Sunday urged a collective call for a ceasefire in Gaza and said those who are opposed a truce were “endorsing and justifying the death of thousands of civilians.” 

In an in-depth interview with CNN's Becky Anderson, Queen Rania responded to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken's rejection of a ceasefire while in Amman.

After meeting Arab leaders on Saturday, Blinken said a ceasefire in Gaza would only enable more Hamas attacks. 

Queen Rania said: “There has to be a collective call for a ceasefire and I know some who are against a ceasefire argue that it will help Hamas. However, in that argument they are inherently dismissing the death, and in fact endorsing and justifying the death of thousands of civilians. That is just morally reprehensible, short-sighted and not entirely rational.” 

“If [Israel] manage to eliminate all of Hamas, the root cause of this conflict is its illegal occupation, routine human rights abuses, illegal settlements, disregard to UN resolutions and international law. If we do not address the root causes, you can kill the combatant but you cannot kill the cause.” 

Queen Rania denounced the “catastrophic humanitarian situation" in Gaza, and asked: “How many more people have to die before our global conscience awakes? Or is it forever dormant when it comes to the Palestinians?”

She noted that there had been nearly 10,000 deaths in Gaza since the war began, almost half of them children. 

“These are not just numbers. Each one of these children was somebody’s everything,” she said. 

“There’s an acronym in Gaza, W.C.N.S.F.: Wounded Child with No Surviving Family,” she added. “That’s an acronym that should never exist, but it does exist in Gaza.”

When asked about Israel’s claims that civilians were being used as human shields, Queen Rania stressed that while the use of human shields was “criminal,” under international law, Israel had a responsibility to avoid civilian deaths. 

“Before firing any bullet, before dropping any bomb, it is the responsibility of the nation to weigh the risk to civilian life. And if that risk is disproportionate to the military target, then it is deemed unlawful,” Her Majesty said.

Although many of Israel’s evacuation orders are issued online or on television, Her Majesty said she does not believe that these orders are for the benefit of the Gaza civilians, given the fact that electricity in the Gaza Strip has been cut off for weeks.

“They are not the target audience; the rest of the world is. It is Israel's attempt to try to legitimize their actions,” she said. 

“When 1.1 million people are asked to leave their homes or risk death, that is not protection of civilians. That is forced displacement,” she said. 

“UN agencies and other agencies have said that there is no safe place in Gaza. And even the areas that they have asked people to seek refuge in – those so-called ‘safe zones’ – they have been attacked as well.”

In response to a question on rising bigotry in the United States against both Jewish and Muslim people, Her Majesty “absolutely and wholeheartedly” condemned both antisemitism and Islamophobia, adding that Muslims should be the first to condemn antisemitism as Islamophobia is “the other side of the same disease.”

“We have had a long history of peaceful coexistence. So this is not about religion. It is about politics,” she said.


Algeria shuts most schools over storm alert

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

Algeria shuts most schools over storm alert

  • The Algerian civil defense urged the public to exercise extreme caution, asking residents to ready “lighting that does not rely on electricity,” stay away from windows and power poles, and avoid travel except in cases of necessity

ALGIERS: Algeria said Tuesday it was shutting down schools in the vast majority of its provinces for the next two days, as the country prepares for a major storm.
Winds are expected to reach speeds of 120 kilometers per hour (74 miles per hour) in regions spanning most of the North African country on Wednesday, including in the capital Algiers.
The education ministry said in a statement that classes were suspended across 52 of Algeria’s 69 provinces following the “urgent” storm alert.
The Algerian civil defense urged the public to exercise extreme caution, asking residents to ready “lighting that does not rely on electricity,” stay away from windows and power poles, and avoid travel except in cases of necessity.
Last week, severe weather in Algeria left two people dead, including a child, the civil defense said.
In Relizane, as well as in Algiers and Tipaza, entire neighborhoods were flooded last week and several roads were cut off due to heavy rains and flooding.
Heavy rainfall also hit neighboring Tunisia, where several people were reported dead in flooding and at sea.