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https://t.me/warfareanalysis/36752
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After hours of studying the footage finally found the beheaded babies!
Oh wait…
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Our mujahideen targeted with a
barrage of bullets the occupation forces storming the Rafidia axis in central Nablus.
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About 50 people, students and others, were arrested during a demonstration in support of Palestine.
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🔻Warfare Analysis NEWS
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Why did Rabin take the decision to deport 415 members of the Hamas and Islamic Jihad movements in 1992?
Part 1
On December 17, 1992, Israel deported 415 Palestinian leaders of the Hamas and Islamic Jihad movements to the town of Marj al-Zuhur in the Nabatieh Governorate in southern Lebanon.
According to the Hamas the process of arresting and deporting its leaders and the leaders of Islamic Jihad,
After the "Al-Qassam Brigades" (the military wing of Hamas) managed to capture the Israeli soldier Nissim Toledano, on the sixth anniversary of the movement's launch (founded in December 1987),
In an operation called “Operation Loyalty to Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.”The founder of Hamas, who was arrested in May 1989, and sentenced in October 1991 to life imprisonment in addition to a 15-year prison sentence.
According to the Hamas website, the period specified by the “Al-Qassam Brigades” for the Israeli government to release Sheikh Ahmed Yassin ended on December 14, 1992.
In exchange for the release of the captured Sergeant Major Toledano, according to Hamas, Israel lost “Toledano’s life as a result of the failure to reach an agreement in which an exchange deal would be concluded.” Only two days later, the "Qassam Brigades" threw Toledano's body on the Jerusalem-Jericho road
What prompted the then Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin to declare war on Hamas from within the Knesset.
He launched a massive arrest campaign among the ranks of the movement and its leaders, affecting 1,300 people, 415 of whom were deported to the Marj al-Zuhur area in southern Lebanon.
The deportation came as a hysterical measure, after Israel's stubbornness led the Al-Qassam Brigades to kill soldier Nissim Toledano after his capture on December 13, 1992."
How did the deportation process go?
According to the Al-Qassam website, Israeli forces raided the homes of those whose names were on the deportation list.
They were all gathered on buses, and after some time had passed, the deportees found themselves on the Lebanese border.
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Part 1
On December 17, 1992, Israel deported 415 Palestinian leaders of the Hamas and Islamic Jihad movements to the town of Marj al-Zuhur in the Nabatieh Governorate in southern Lebanon.
According to the Hamas the process of arresting and deporting its leaders and the leaders of Islamic Jihad,
After the "Al-Qassam Brigades" (the military wing of Hamas) managed to capture the Israeli soldier Nissim Toledano, on the sixth anniversary of the movement's launch (founded in December 1987),
In an operation called “Operation Loyalty to Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.”The founder of Hamas, who was arrested in May 1989, and sentenced in October 1991 to life imprisonment in addition to a 15-year prison sentence.
According to the Hamas website, the period specified by the “Al-Qassam Brigades” for the Israeli government to release Sheikh Ahmed Yassin ended on December 14, 1992.
In exchange for the release of the captured Sergeant Major Toledano, according to Hamas, Israel lost “Toledano’s life as a result of the failure to reach an agreement in which an exchange deal would be concluded.” Only two days later, the "Qassam Brigades" threw Toledano's body on the Jerusalem-Jericho road
What prompted the then Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin to declare war on Hamas from within the Knesset.
He launched a massive arrest campaign among the ranks of the movement and its leaders, affecting 1,300 people, 415 of whom were deported to the Marj al-Zuhur area in southern Lebanon.
The deportation came as a hysterical measure, after Israel's stubbornness led the Al-Qassam Brigades to kill soldier Nissim Toledano after his capture on December 13, 1992."
How did the deportation process go?
According to the Al-Qassam website, Israeli forces raided the homes of those whose names were on the deportation list.
They were all gathered on buses, and after some time had passed, the deportees found themselves on the Lebanese border.
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Part 2
Only then did the responsible officer inform them that they were being deported by a decision of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
After a period of walking, they reached the Marj al-Zuhur area, and decided to stay in a camp they called “The Return Camp
To consolidate the principle of immediate return, the deportees, during their stay in the camp, formed committees for “event industry,” “media,” “control and guarding,” “archives,” “medical committee,” and others.
Some of the deportees likened the camp to a “mini-state,” because of their diversity, as they included a doctor, an engineer, and others from various other professions from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Among them was Ismail Haniyeh, head of the Hamas political bureau
The media committee, headed by Abdulaziz Al-Rantisi and Aziz Dweik, worked to convey the voice of the deportees to the Arab and international media
The international media and international humanitarian institutions began to move from the first moment to help the deportees who lived in very harsh conditions.
They arrived in that area in southern Lebanon in cold, rainy and snowy weather, and they lacked the minimum requirements for treatment and necessary needs, which caused them to suffer from diarrhea and high fever.
The International Red Cross was the first to arrive, and transported tents, blankets and some basic necessities for settlement, according to Sheikh Dawoud Abu Sir, one of the deportees.
Abdulaziz Al-Rantisi, a leader in Hamas, who was later assassinated by Israeli forces, emerged as an official spokesman for the deportees of Marj Al-Zuhur.
“He used to receive foreign and Arab delegations, and he had a cheerful spirit, and he would pray day and night to serve his brothers.”
Confirming that they were freedom pioneers and students of science, they established a university in the camp, the first university in the open, “Marj al-Zuhur University.
These deportees remained in Marj al-Zuhur for about a year, and returned in stages. The first to return, Bassem al-Siuri, was the youngest of them, whom Israel announced had been deported by mistake.
The sick deportee, Zuhair Labada, was returned to Israeli prisons on December 7, 1993
Then 17 other people were returned to Israeli prisons on December 23 of that year, where it was also announced that they had been wrongly deported.
Then the first batch of 189 people returned on September 9, 1993
Eight of them chose not to return, followed by allowing the return of the last batch of 214 people on December 17 of the same year.
While the deportees were in Lebanon, they held many marches and protests to demand their right to return.
Including the “March of the Shrouds” in April 1993, when they put on their shrouds and headed towards the border to reject any decision other than returning to their homes.
https://t.me/warfareanalysis/36766?single
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Only then did the responsible officer inform them that they were being deported by a decision of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
After a period of walking, they reached the Marj al-Zuhur area, and decided to stay in a camp they called “The Return Camp
To consolidate the principle of immediate return, the deportees, during their stay in the camp, formed committees for “event industry,” “media,” “control and guarding,” “archives,” “medical committee,” and others.
Some of the deportees likened the camp to a “mini-state,” because of their diversity, as they included a doctor, an engineer, and others from various other professions from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Among them was Ismail Haniyeh, head of the Hamas political bureau
The media committee, headed by Abdulaziz Al-Rantisi and Aziz Dweik, worked to convey the voice of the deportees to the Arab and international media
The international media and international humanitarian institutions began to move from the first moment to help the deportees who lived in very harsh conditions.
They arrived in that area in southern Lebanon in cold, rainy and snowy weather, and they lacked the minimum requirements for treatment and necessary needs, which caused them to suffer from diarrhea and high fever.
The International Red Cross was the first to arrive, and transported tents, blankets and some basic necessities for settlement, according to Sheikh Dawoud Abu Sir, one of the deportees.
Abdulaziz Al-Rantisi, a leader in Hamas, who was later assassinated by Israeli forces, emerged as an official spokesman for the deportees of Marj Al-Zuhur.
“He used to receive foreign and Arab delegations, and he had a cheerful spirit, and he would pray day and night to serve his brothers.”
Confirming that they were freedom pioneers and students of science, they established a university in the camp, the first university in the open, “Marj al-Zuhur University.
These deportees remained in Marj al-Zuhur for about a year, and returned in stages. The first to return, Bassem al-Siuri, was the youngest of them, whom Israel announced had been deported by mistake.
The sick deportee, Zuhair Labada, was returned to Israeli prisons on December 7, 1993
Then 17 other people were returned to Israeli prisons on December 23 of that year, where it was also announced that they had been wrongly deported.
Then the first batch of 189 people returned on September 9, 1993
Eight of them chose not to return, followed by allowing the return of the last batch of 214 people on December 17 of the same year.
While the deportees were in Lebanon, they held many marches and protests to demand their right to return.
Including the “March of the Shrouds” in April 1993, when they put on their shrouds and headed towards the border to reject any decision other than returning to their homes.
https://t.me/warfareanalysis/36766?single
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—
In the name of Allah the Almighty, we begin.
Our Brigades confront the invasion of zionist occupation forces into the city of Nablus with barrages of blessed bullets.
Indeed, it is a jihad of victory or martyrdom.
Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades
Vanguards of Liberation - Nablus
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🚨 Documentation of the fierce armed clashes between the resistance and invading occupation forces in Rafidia, #Nablus.
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Abdullah Barghouti swore that this novel was the only thing that made him cry several times.
He explained that the girl he called Magda had made him cry time after time because of the severity of what she had suffered, the hardships, and the tragedies and misfortunes she had faced.
“From there, from the grave of solitary confinement, in a dark room with black walls, I brought out for you the novel Al-Majida, memories without ink or paper that I brought out from the core of sadness and pain, that I brought out as a loud scream.”
Let everyone near and far know that Palestine is still in captivity, and that its liberation is a duty for all of us, and that Al-Majida is your mother, she is your wife, she is your sister, she is your daughter, Al-Majida is Palestine.
Abdullah Al-Barghouti opened his novel with a phrase he used to say
"Do not forget the engineer in the darkness of his isolation Freedom was your title"
Note: Dear members, when I finish reading it, I will share with you some quotes from it
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We will achieve absolute victory
Their facial expressions👆👆👆👆
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