Daily Massacres in Gaza Without Accountability: Is History Repeating Itself?

The echoes of the 1996 Qana massacre are reverberating through Gaza, where civilians endure relentless bloodshed with no accountability. In Qana, Israeli artillery shells struck a UN compound, killing 102 people, many of them children. Today, the scale of devastation in Gaza surpasses that tragedy, yet the world remains largely silent.

Israeli journalist Gideon Levy, writing for Haaretz, warns that the horrors of Qana are now a daily occurrence in Gaza. "The killing has become routine," he writes, as Israeli forces no longer feel the need to justify their actions. From the first day of this war, Israel's military killed 436 civilians in Gaza, including 183 children and 94 women—nearly four times the toll of Qana in a single day.

Recent massacres in Gaza paint a grim picture: 15 bodies of rescue workers found buried together in Rafah, some with bound hands, some executed. An airstrike on a UNRWA clinic in Jabalia, killing 19, including children. Entire families wiped out as airstrikes target homes and shelters. Each day, the death toll climbs, and yet, no one is held to account.

If the world failed to act after Qana, will it act now? Or will history record Gaza as yet another place where international silence enabled unimaginable atrocities?

Source : Safa News