Day: November 9, 2023
9:40 AM 11/9/2023 – News Review: Displaced pack Gaza hospitals, others flee as Israelis and Hamas clash … Israel-Hamas fighting heats up in Gaza City, accelerating the exodus of Palestinians to the south https://t.co/M8QM4px5Aj pic.twitter.com/p3QHEGl4Xz
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 9, 2023
Palestinians fleeing north Gaza walk towards the south, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in the central Gaza Strip, November 9, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
American students find out the shocking news that Hamas aren’t the good guys… pic.twitter.com/v8uAiMDdfw
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) November 9, 2023
Spanish minister has urged the international community to sanction Israel, which she accused of a “planned genocide” of Palestinians in Gaza.
Ione Belarra, the Spanish minister for social rights and leader of the far-left Podemos party, also criticized world leaders for an apparent double standard – saying while human rights abuses in Ukraine have been condemned, there is a “deafening silence” on the victims of Israeli bombardment.
“The Israeli state must end this planned genocide against the Palestine people,” Belarra said on Wednesday. “Why can we give lessons in human rights in other conflicts and not here when the world is watching in horror? The deaths of thousands of children, the mothers desperately shouting because they are witnessing the killing of their children.”
“There is a deafening silence of so many countries and so many political leaders who could do something. I speak about what I know well, which is the European Union. It seems the display of hypocrisy, which the European Commission is showing, is unacceptable.”
Belarra suggested that Spain and other nations should break off diplomatic relations with Israel in protest against its assault on Gaza, which began on October 7 after the Palestinian group Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, carried out an unprecedented attack in Israel, killing more than 1,000 Israelis and taking hundreds captive.
With the stated aim to crush Hamas, Israel then began bombarding Gaza, one of the world’s most densely populated areas, killing more than 10,000 people, including many children.
Belarra also called for economic sanctions on Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, who she described as a “war criminal”, and his political circle.
She contrasted the EU’s swift action in the case of Ukraine, where it imposed sanctions on Russian President Putin and his aides soon after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began in February last year, with its inaction on Israel.
“They reacted [over the Ukraine war]. We are losing the opportunity. At the moment, we could do lots of things,” she said.
Belarra’s comments come amid growing pressure on the Spanish government to review its arms sales to Israel, which amounted to more than 100 million euros ($113 million) in 2022, according to official data.
Several Spanish regions and municipalities have also declared themselves “free of Israeli apartheid” and pledged to boycott Israeli products and companies.
Belarra’s party, Podemos, is part of a coalition government with the Socialist Party, led by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who has expressed his “deep concern” over the situation in Gaza and called for an immediate ceasefire.
Belarra said she hoped that Sanchez would listen to the voices of the Spanish people, who have taken to the streets in recent days to show their solidarity with the Palestinians and demand an end to the Israeli aggression.
“I hope that the Spanish government will be brave enough to take a stand on this issue and not be afraid of the pressure from the powerful lobby that supports Israel,” she said.
Georgia’s Health Ministry has complicated the process a person has to go through to obtain an abortion, introducing mandatory counselling with a psychologist and social worker prior to the procedure, in a move that women’s rights defenders say could be aimed at providing a barrier to access.
A decree announcing the changes was published on the Georgian Legislative Herald’s website on 27 October, but was discovered by Georgian media on Tuesday.
From 1 January 2024, anyone seeking to terminate a pregnancy will be required to consult with an obstetric-gynaecologist, psychologist, and social worker, ‘under confidential conditions, in a doctor’s consultation room specially set aside for this purpose’.
This comes in addition to the pre-existing requirement to observe a five-day ‘cooling-off period’ prior to an abortion, with the new legislation adding that violation of the buffer period threatens a doctor’s right to practise.
Both international and local women’s rights organisations have stated that the Ministry of Health did not consult them before introducing the changes.
Baia Pataraia, head of Georgian women’s rights organisation Sapari, told OC Media that ‘they did not consult with anyone’, and added that it was not clear why the changes had been made.
She also stated that it was unclear how the additional costs incurred by the new procedures would be financed.
At present, abortions must be privately funded, as they are not provided as part of state healthcare. Pataraia stated that abortions are already unaffordable for many Georgians, driving people to seek ‘dangerous’ illegal abortions.
‘If it becomes more expensive, it will become even more unaffordable, and abortions will go underground’, she said, adding that consultation with social and psychological professionals should not be mandatory.
Pataraia suggested that measures should instead be taken to prevent unwanted pregnancies, and thereby prevent the need for abortions.
‘If the state wants to reduce abortions, then it should increase access to contraceptives and increase access to information’, said Pataraia. ‘Nothing is taught in the education system about reproductive health and contraception, which is the biggest problem. And contraceptives are extremely expensive — nobody finances anything, that’s why the number of abortions is high’.
According to Georgia’s National Statistics Service, in 2022, 16,600 women officially had an abortion in Georgia.
A UN Women 2021 report on gender equality in Georgia stated that use of ‘modern contraceptives’ was low in Georgia, with a substantial unmet need for family planning methods. It added that women still faced a number of barriers to accessing safe abortions.
Georgia’s Health Ministry did not respond to OC Media’s request for comment.
‘An additional barrier to access’
As in the previous legislation, abortions can be performed for non-medical reasons up to 12 weeks of pregnancy.
After 12 weeks of pregnancy, an abortion can be performed only for medical reasons listed in the decree. If continuing the pregnancy would threaten the life of a woman for a reason not listed in the decree, the case is considered by a commission.
The legislation does not specify what obligations social workers and psychologists meeting with people seeking abortions will have, raising questions amongst some as to what their aim or position will be.
Pataraia stated that in a positive scenario, the function of a social worker could be to support women in cases where an abortion is not their best option, as in the case of coercive abortion.
However, she added that social workers already struggled to identify and support women experiencing pressure or gender-based violence, due to ‘a huge shortage’ of social workers in Georgia.
‘[The changes] will not solve the problem, and it is not clear why they were introduced’, said Pataraia. ‘Consequently, there is reason to suspect that this is an additional barrier to prevent women from receiving this service.’
In answer to enquiries from OC Media, the Georgia office of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) stated that their office had not been involved in the process.
The organisation stated that their official position would be announced after relevant expert groups and organisations, to whom they had sent the updated legislation, had assessed the changes.
While there is only sparse data available on public attitudes towards abortion in Georgia, in a 2017 CRRC survey, 67% of respondents stated that abortion could never be justified.

A 2019 study on women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights by Georgia’s Public Defender’s Office additionally found that many doctors and clinics refused to provide abortion services due to the religious beliefs of their staff.
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