The English website of the Islamic magazine - Al-Mujtama.
A leading source of global Islamic and Arabic news, views and information for more than 50 years.
US President Joe Biden administration's silence and terming Zionist aggression on Palestinians as self-defense has led to massacres in Palestine, said a Palestinian government official on Friday.
Nabil Abu Rudeineh, the spokesperson of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, denounced the US position on Zionist attacks in Gaza, the West Bank, and Jerusalem, according to the official Wafa news agency.
Zionist entity is "waging war against the Palestinian people, their land and their holy sites," said Abu Rudeineh, and warned Zionist entity is "dragging the region into a situation that no one can bear the consequences by harming the interests of the region and the world."
He once more affirmed that Palestinians "will never give up or abandon their land, Jerusalem, and the holy sites," and that "patience, will, and the historical struggle of the Palestinian people have thwarted all conspiracies for more than a hundred years."
"Palestine and Jerusalem will remain greater than all of them, and peace and the relationship with any party will not be at any price, and the interests of the Palestinian people, their rights, and the preservation of our national constants will remain the destination of our movements and policies," he added.
Abu Rudeineh urged the Biden administration "to actively intervene to stop Zionist entity's relentless onslaught if it is interested in regional and international peace and security."
Zionist forces in recent days have attacked Palestinians protesting in solidarity with residents of the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem, who were ordered to be evicted by a Zionist court.
The occupying forces also raided the Al-Aqsa Mosque during special night prayers in Ramadan.
The subsequent escalation of tensions resulted in airstrikes by Israel on Gaza, killing over 120 Palestinian citizens, including children and women, according to health officials. At least 920 others have been injured, besides heavy damage to residential buildings./aa