Brazil’s Lula: ‘Absolutely nothing justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza’

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva listens as US President Donald Trump addresses the United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters, in New York City, on September 23, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 23 September 2025
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Brazil’s Lula: ‘Absolutely nothing justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza’

  • ‘The myth of the ethical superiority of the West’ is buried in besieged enclave, president tells UN
  • ‘The spread of this conflict to Lebanon, Syria, Iran and Qatar is fueling an unprecedented arms buildup’

NEW YORK: The greatest worldwide example of “disproportionate and illegal use of force” is in Gaza, Brazilian President Lula da Silva told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, accusing Israel of “genocide.”

Though he condemned the Hamas attack on Israel of Oct. 7, 2023, as “indefensible from any angle,” he added: “Nothing, absolutely nothing, justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza.”

Beneath the rubble in the besieged enclave, there are “buried tens of thousands of innocent women and children,” Lula said.

“International humanitarian law and the myth of the ethical superiority of the West are also buried there,” he added.

“This massacre wouldn’t have happened without the complicity of those who could’ve prevented it.”

He accused Israel of using hunger as a weapon of war through the denial of humanitarian aid to Gaza, as well as forcibly displacing Palestinians “with impunity.”

He added: “I express my admiration to the Jews who, inside and outside Israel, oppose this collective punishment.”

Lula warned that the Palestinian people “are at risk of disappearing,” and could only be protected through an independent state that is integrated into the international community.

“This is the solution advocated by more than 150 UN members, reaffirmed yesterday, here in this very plenary, but obstructed by a single (US) veto,” he added.

Lula also condemned the US for blocking the Palestinian delegation to the UNGA, adding that it is “regrettable” that President Mahmoud Abbas was prevented from occupying the Palestinian seat “at this historic moment.”

Lula warned that Israel’s war in Gaza is risking regional security, adding: “The spread of this conflict to Lebanon, Syria, Iran and Qatar is fueling an unprecedented arms buildup.”


UK sanctions RSF commanders over links to mass killings in Sudan

Updated 58 min 28 sec ago
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UK sanctions RSF commanders over links to mass killings in Sudan

  • The government also pledged a further £21 million to provide food, shelter, health services, and protection for women and children

LONDON: Britain sanctioned senior commanders of Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces on Friday, over what it said were their links to mass killings, systematic sexual violence and deliberate attacks on civilians in the African country.
Abdul Rahim Hamdan Dagalo, the RSF Deputy Leader and brother of RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, as well as three other commanders that are suspected of involvement in these crimes, now face asset freezes and travel bans, the British government said.
“The atrocities taking place in Sudan are so horrific they scar the conscience of the world,” foreign minister Yvette Cooper said in the statement. “Today’s sanctions against RSF commanders strike directly at those with blood on their hands.”
The government also pledged a further £21 million to provide food, shelter, health services, and protection for women and children in some of the hardest-to-reach areas, the statement said.
Millions of people have been displaced by the war, which erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese army and the RSF.