In an exclusive interview, UFO hunter Luis Elizondo told NewsNation’s Ross Coulthart that the U.S. government has been aware of other life on Earth for decades. Elizondo joins “Morning in America” to detail the information he shared during his interview with Coulthart
Heidi Cowen, administrator of the Dockyard Arts Centre, believes Bermuda needs to re-evaluate its cruise ship tourism industry.
“It is a very quiet in Dockyard,” she said. “The types of ships that are coming in need to be looked at again.”
Last month, Wayne Furbert, the Minister of Transport, said 120 cruise ship calls took place in the first three quarters of 2024 with another 57 listed to take place before the end of the year, bringing an estimated 548,064 passengers to the island.
Ms Cowen called these numbers “a great illusion”.
“Our cruise ship picture is not really the best,” she said.
Speaking out: Puisne Judge Juan Wolffe delivers a presentation at the first Ending Homelessness Together conference (Photograph by Blaire Simmons)
A Supreme Court judge called on the community yesterday to do more to help people who are homeless and said there was a risk that the issue could become the island’s legacy if further action was not taken. Juan Wolffe spoke at the first Ending Homelessness Together conference, which was held at the Bermuda Industrial Union headquarters in Hamilton. https://bit.ly/404vPNM
When we heard in January that the Court on which you sit had decided to hear the case concerning the situation in Israel-Palestine, we were encouraged. Humanity needs an International Criminal Court that upholds the rule of law and is prepared to investigate the most serious allegations of violations of international law.
Today, on 7 October 2024, exactly one year after the start of the latest and most brutal phase of the 76-year-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict, we feel the need to address you directly. Not only because of the increasing cruelty of what is happening west of the Jordan River, but also because of the dangerous precedent that would be set if a state could operate so far outside the international consensus of acceptable behaviour in times of conflict. Unless such violations are sanctioned by a court such as yours, states will carry out war crimes with greater impunity in the future.
For it is now beyond dispute: Israel’s Government has set out to eliminate systematically every aspect of Palestinian life in Gaza. We have already seen:
– The most intensive bombing of a densely populated urban area in living memory
– The most deliberate starvation of a population since the Second World War
– The systematic destruction of health facilities
– An unprecedented number of journalists and UN personnel killed
The Israeli government has attacked schools, universities, libraries, archives, cultural centres, heritage sites, mosques and churches. Professors and teachers have been killed, along with their students and often their entire families. Meanwhile, under the cover of the Gaza conflict, Israeli settlers, protected by IDF soldiers, are evicting Palestinians from their ancestral homeland in direct violation of every principle of international law.
These are not merely violations by a government. The international community has no reason to expect that a change of government will bring the Israeli state back into the fold of international law.
On 19 July 2024 the International Court of Justice ruled as unlawful Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem. Five days later, the Israeli Knesset voted 65-9 to ignore the ICJ ruling and provocatively described the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem as part of “the Land of Israel”. To prove further its contempt for international law and the institutions humanity created after the Second World War to support it, last Wednesday Israel’s government banned UN Secretary General Guterres from entering the country.
So here is the question: When can we expect indictments from your Court?
Today is the anniversary of the beginning of the bleakest chapter of a tragedy that our generation will be answerable for, to future generations. Today humanity needs more than ever a court like yours, where impartial legal minds from around the world can reach consensus on standards of legal conduct in war and its aftermath. Your role is vital, and we implore you to act immediately.