Baroness Warsi Calls for an Immediate
Ceasefire on Israel/Gaza War in the House of Lords
Dr. Mozammel Haque
Baroness Warsi said, “Six minutes is not long enough to fully
acknowledge the grief of those who have lost loved ones in this recent outbreak
of violence, the pain of the families who so brutally witnessed the killing and
abduction of their loved ones on 7 October, and the ongoing pain of those who
await the return of those taken as hostages, including British families whom I
have met with, cried with and continue to advocate with. Their loved ones must
be returned, so I join the calls of so many others when I say to Hamas: “Let
them go. Your actions were brutal. I condemn you for your breach of
international law and your flagrant violation of the laws of the faith you
profess to follow, where women, children and the elderly, even in a state of
war, are off limits”.”
She continued, “Six minutes is not long enough to acknowledge the pain
and suffering of nearly 70 years of living under occupation, the forced
displacement from ancestral home and lands and the generations that have lost
lives, livelihoods and now, tragically, hope. But often in the midst of the
darkest of periods, we see beacons of light: the peacemakers.”
Baroness Warsi called for an immediate ceasefire and halt to the
violence. She said, “Today as I call for an immediate ceasefire and halt to the
violence, I want to speak of some of these peacemakers who call for the same:
British Jews who stand outside the Israeli embassy protesting for peace;
rabbis and other British Israelis who attend marches for Palestinian rights;
British Jewish lawyers who call for restraint and adherence to international
law; British Jewish and Israeli organisations, including ex-IDF soldiers
calling for an immediate ceasefire; and the 30 Israeli human rights
organisations which came together calling for an end to the bombardment.”
She mentioned, “I speak of the powerful voices of Yonatan Ziegen, whose
mother Vivian, a peace activist, is still missing and who said his mother would
be “mortified” by the bombardment in Gaza and that vengeance is not a strategy for
peace; and of Noi Katzman, brother of Chaim Katzman, killed by Hamas, who has
urged Israel not to use his brother’s death as justification for killing
innocent people.”
She continued, “I speak of Maoz Inon, a peace activist, who lost both
his parents in the attack and said he was seeking not revenge but peace and
equality, and that “war is not the answer”.
Baroness Warsi also mentioned, “I speak of Neta Heiman, whose 84 year-old mother, Ditza, was taken hostage by Hamas. Neta expressed her anger at the Israeli Government: “I call out to the government … Do not destroy the Gaza Strip; that won’t help anyone and will … bring .. even more …violence”. She urged us all to: “bring about an agreement between the two sides—not an ‘arrangement’, but a true peace agreement”.”
Baroness Warsi again said, “I speak of David Zonsheine, whose uncle was
killed and cousin taken hostage by Hamas, who said: “Revenge is not a vision.
Killing civilians is not a plan”.
She said, “I speak of Yaakov Argamani, the father of Noa Argamani who
was abducted from the music festival by Hamas fighters, who urged for his daughter
to be returned by peaceful measures. I quote his powerful words: “Let us make
peace with our neighbors, in any way possible. I want there to be peace; I want
my daughter to come back. Enough with the wars. They too have casualties, they
too have captives, and they have mothers who weep. We are two peoples to one
Father. Let’s make real peace”.”
Baroness Warsi added, “I speak of Elana Kaminka, who—movingly, as the
mother of an Israeli soldier killed on 7 October—said that she could not bear
any more mothers losing their child: “this was a horrible attack on innocent
civilians. You can’t fix that. The idea of more lives lost just tears me apart,
because I know what it means to lose your child”.”
Baroness Warsi raised the question, “Can any one of us profess to care
more, be impacted more, to understand more than these Israelis? They are
families at the heart of this tragedy who call for peace, ask for their grief
not be weaponised, reject revenge, seek co-existence, and acknowledge the
humanity of all, including the Palestinian people. Blessed are the peacemakers.”
She continued, “I ask us to follow the lead of these peacemakers. I urge
noble Lords to choose peace over revenge and join me in asking His Majesty’s
Government to call for an immediate ceasefire. I ask noble Lords not to follow
the lead of an Israeli Prime Minister who is mired in allegations of
corruption, in bed with far-right extremists, forming a Government on the basis
of a coalition agreement that denies the very existence of a Palestinian state
from the river to the sea, and who in 2019 said this about Hamas: “Anyone who wants to thwart the establishment
of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and transferring money
to Hamas … This is part of our strategy—to isolate the Palestinians in Gaza
from the Palestinians in the West Bank”.
Baroness Warsi mentioned, “For over a decade, in this House and wider, I
and others have been pleading with our Government to turn their attention to
the ongoing suffering of occupation, alongside Israelis who have taken to the
streets of Israel and around the world in their thousands in recent years to
warn of the rise of far-right extremism in Israeli politics and the egregious
breaches of human rights. For too long we have failed Palestinians and we have
failed Israelis. We now see the consequences of that failure. Let us turn this
moment of tragedy into hope and a genuine path to a two-state solution, and that
starts with calling for an immediate ceasefire.”
Baroness Warsi concluded, “Finally,
as a mother, I end with a clear call at this moment on behalf of innocent women
and children, hostages and others caught up in this war. To Hamas I say, “Stop
this violence and let them go”. To the Israeli Government I say, “End the
occupation and let them live”.”
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