Many well-intentioned people still struggle to understand what exactly constitutes antisemitism and when anti-Israel rhetoric ‘crosses the line.’
FacebookLikeShareTweetEmail U.S. President Donald Trump has signed an executive order that opens the door to the deportation of pro-Palestinian student demonstrators. Pro Palestine organisations have called the order an attack on freedom of speech and peaceful demonstrations in the service of Israel.
The UN has said that people in Gaza are “effectively starving.” Before the war, the territory was “largely self-sufficient” in fresh produce, it added. But Israel’s mili
Trump's order vows to prosecute and cancel visas of foreign students who have expressed pro-Palestine views under the guise of 'fighting antisemitism'.
US President Donald Trump may sign an executive order to toughen penalties for antisemitism as early as today, 29 January. One of the options for punishment is likely to be deportation, according to the New York Post.
Many universities have been reluctant to embrace a definition that, among other things, considers some criticisms of Israel as antisemitic. The university’s decision was part of a lawsuit settlement.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed 15 months ago that Israel would achieve “total victory” in the war in Gaza — by eradicating Hamas and freeing all the hostages.
Israel delayed the return of Palestinians to northern Gaza for two days because they accused Hamas of violating the terms of the ceasefire agreement by not releasing Yehoud, a civilian, on Saturday. Palestinians began returning to the north on Monday morning after negotiations.
Documentary 'A Letter to David' by director Tom Shoval recalls his friendship with Hamas captive David Cunio; organizers say Arab filmmakers have sought free speech assurances
Trump signs executive order to cancel student visas of ‘Hamas sympathizers’ who protested Israel’s war in Gaza - Trump accuses Biden administration of ‘failure to fight anti-Semitism’ on campus
The president’s executive order on antisemitism would make universities monitor students’ constitutionally protected speech.
Hundreds of thousands of civilians returned to the northern Gaza Strip this week after checkpoints were reopened in line with the ceasefire agreement. Many will have found their homes destroyed after months of heavy fighting and bombardment – something the new US president, Donald Trump, has pointed out.