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    Home » Two Years Too Many: The World Failed Gaza Two Years Too Many: The World Failed Gaza
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    Two Years Too Many: The World Failed Gaza Two Years Too Many: The World Failed Gaza

    adminOctober 8, 2025

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    Rabat – Two years since October 7, 2023, Gaza is not just a battlefield anymore. It is a place of ongoing human ruin. Israeli Occupation Forces have killed more than 67,000 Palestinians, including tens of thousands of children; the war-torn enclave’s healthcare system lies in pieces, whole neighborhoods are gone, and daily life has been replaced by queues for bread and water. 

    These are not abstract statistics. They are the count of homes emptied, families broken, and futures stolen. What is happening in Gaza is a genocide, plain and simple. For two years, Israeli aggression has systematically destroyed homes, hospitals, and entire communities. This is not a war, and definitely not a “conflict’; it is the deliberate annihilation of a people under siege. 

    International organizations like UNICEF and countless human rights organizations have all documented the same reality. Babies are dying because there is no oxygen, children are starving to death because food cannot reach them, and families are being wiped out in seconds. 

    Clearly a genocide

    The Gaza Health Ministry reports that 1,701 medical workers have been killed, and 25 of 38 hospitals are no longer operational. Hospital bed occupancy exceeded 225% by the end of September, and famine has claimed the lives of hundreds, including infants.

    No amount of political language can hide what is clearly a genocide unfolding in front of the world’s eyes.

    And yet, the world’s response has been a chorus of words, “condemn,” “concern,” “urge restraint,” repeated so often that they lost their meaning. Condemnation has become a ritual that is routinely performed to maintain the illusion of moral engagement while ensuring that nothing actually changes. 

    Western capitals release statements of sorrow, while continuing to arm and fund the very state responsible for this destruction. The United States alone has poured over $21 billion into Israel’s military campaign since 2023, a fact that lays bare the hypocrisy of its so-called commitment to human rights.

    We witnessed numerous ceasefire initiatives over the past two years, each one announced with optimism, only to collapse under the weight of bad faith and political cowardice. Even as negotiators gather now in Egypt, Israeli bombs continue to fall on Palestinian homes and children, ending lives and erasing the present and potential future of a people the Israeli leadership is hellbent on cleansing from their own land. 

    An indifferent and impotent international community

    This diplomatic process has become a theater of pretense, where the actors change but the outcome never does. It’s like watching a film whose ending you already know, yet still foolishly hope might turn out differently.

    When the world wanted to act, truly act, it did so elsewhere. It imposed sanctions, froze assets, and mobilized international institutions with remarkable speed when Russia invaded Ukraine. Yet in Gaza, where the crimes are broadcast live and the suffering is impossible to deny, that same moral urgency suddenly evaporates, with no sanctions, no isolation, no real consequences, only statements and symbolic votes. 

    In recent months, a handful of countries have finally begun to recognize the State of Palestine, with some calling what is happening in Gaza by its rightful name: genocide. But though significant symbolically, these gestures came far too late. Recognition without action is merely performance. For the families buried beneath the rubble, these words are no substitute for justice.

    The complicity of Western powers has been as devastating as the bombs themselves. Governments that claim to champion democracy and human rights have chosen to shield Israel from accountability, even as evidence of atrocities piles up. They speak of Israel’s “right to defend itself” but never of Palestinians’ right to live. The result is a world order that treats some lives as sacred and others as expendable.

    Condemning Israeli brutality is no longer enough

    Two years on, Gaza’s agony exposes both Israel’s brutality and the moral bankruptcy of a global system that allows it to continue. This is not just a Middle Eastern tragedy, which seems to be treated by the world as almost routine at this point, but a universal failure.

    If the international community truly wishes to prove that “never again” still means something, it must do more than condemn. It must act, first by ending military aid to Israel, by enforcing sanctions, by demanding true accountability through international courts, and by ensuring the immediate and unconditional flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza. Anything less is complicity.

    The world has watched Gaza burn for two years. Watching is no longer an option.

    Two years too many. Gaza cannot afford a third.

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