Pro-Palestinian Rally in Washington Seeks End to US Aid to Israel

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on May 29, 2021. AFP
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on May 29, 2021. AFP
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Pro-Palestinian Rally in Washington Seeks End to US Aid to Israel

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on May 29, 2021. AFP
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on May 29, 2021. AFP

More than 1,000 rallied Saturday in Washington in support of Palestinians and calling for an end to US aid to Israel.

The demonstration on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial came as a ceasefire that ended 11 days of intense fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip has so far held.

"We are hoping to send a clear message to the United States government that the days of supporting the Israeli state without repercussions are over," one of the demonstrators, 39-year-old Washington lawyer Sharif Silmi, said as he stood in the crowd where many protesters held red, white, green and black Palestinian flags.

"We will stand against any politician that continues to fund weapons to Israel. We will oppose them, we will vote against them, we will fund their opponents, until we vote them out of office," said Silmi.
Lama Alahmad, a resident of neighboring Virginia who is of Palestinian origin, said US public opinion is turning in favor of the Palestinian cause.

"There is a huge change" going on in the US with regard to the Palestinian cause seeking a sovereign homeland, AFP quoted Alahmad as saying.

"We just want the world to recognize that we are human beings. We are not terrorists," said Alahmad, a 43-year-old stay at home mother who grew up in the United Arab Emirates before moving to the US around 20 years ago.

Silmi insisted there was now broad opposition in the US to how Israel treats the Palestinians, which he likened to apartheid in South Africa.

"People have now woken up, and we're resisting. Whether young Jews, young Muslims, young Blacks, young whites, there is a generational shift. And people are working across ethnic groups, racial groups, to work for change and freedom and liberation for Palestinian people," Silmi said.



Lebanon State Media Says Israel Army Blows up Houses in Border Village

Lebanon state media says Israel army blows up houses in border village - AFP
Lebanon state media says Israel army blows up houses in border village - AFP
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Lebanon State Media Says Israel Army Blows up Houses in Border Village

Lebanon state media says Israel army blows up houses in border village - AFP
Lebanon state media says Israel army blows up houses in border village - AFP

Lebanese state media said the Israeli army dynamited houses in Lebanese border villages on Saturday, more than a month into its war with Hezbollah.

The official National News Agency said "the army of the Israeli enemy has since dawn blown up and destroyed houses" in the border village of Adaisseh.

The NNA also reported "large explosions" in the border village of Kfar Kila, saying the blasts were heard across the south as columns of smoke rose above the area.

The Israeli military had earlier reported "the explosion of a large quantity of explosives in Lebanon" that was strong enough to trigger earthquake warnings in large parts of Israel.

A video circulating on social media showed massive explosions along the border but AFP could not independently verify its authenticity.

Lebanese state media has reported several incidents of Israeli blasts in border villages in recent days amid Israel's ground invasion.

Hezbollah says it is fighting Israeli troops at close range in the area.

The two sides began exchanging cross-border fire with Hezbollah last year over the Gaza war, but all-out war erupted on September 23, when Israel ramped up its aerial campaign on Hezbollah strongholds in south Lebanon, the capital Beirut and the eastern Bekaa Valley.

The war has left at least 1,580 people dead in Lebanon, according to an AFP tally of nationwide health ministry figures though the real number is likely to be higher due to gaps in the data.