The death toll in the Gaza Strip has risen to 70,354, with 171,030 others injured, since the conflict between Hamas and Israel erupted on Oct 7, 2023, according to data released by Gaza's health authorities on Saturday.
The data showed that 367 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed and 953 others injured by Israeli attacks since Oct 11, a day after a ceasefire took effect.
On Saturday alone, six people were killed in Gaza, including two in northern Gaza who, according to Gaza's Civil Defense, died in an Israeli drone strike.
Meanwhile, local sources and eyewitnesses reported Israeli raids and artillery shelling in the Shuja'iyya, Tuffah, and Zeitoun neighborhoods, east of Gaza City.
Khaled Mashal, Hamas leader abroad, has warned of the broader regional threat posed by Israel, called for Palestinian national unity, and rejected any form of external trusteeship over the Gaza Strip, IRNA news agency reported Saturday.
He urged that Israel and its leaders be held accountable, saying they should face legal and political proceedings, as well as condemnation, for the war waged in Gaza, in Palestine, and across the wider region.
Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said Saturday at the Doha Forum that negotiations on the second phase of a Gaza ceasefire deal had reached a "critical" point, adding that Qatar and other mediators were working to push the parties to begin talks as soon as possible.
The prime minister said the ceasefire could only be considered complete once Israel fully withdraws from the Gaza Strip.
He also stressed that peace in the region can only be realized with the establishment of an independent Palestinian state.
Palestinian death toll in Gaza rises to 70,354
Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama has underscored the need for the international community to properly recognize the historical injustices committed against Africa and support efforts to advance reparations for Africans and people of African descent.
Mahama made the remarks in an interview with the China Media Group (CMG) which was aired Friday and recorded during the Ghanaian President's trip to Beijing in October.
Earlier this year, Mahama had issued a call for collective action in securing justice for Africans and individuals of African descent through reparations at the 38th Ordinary Session of the African Union.
Located in West Africa along the northern shore of the Gulf of Guinea and bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the south, Ghana boasts a more than 500-km coastline and abundant agricultural, fishery, forestry and mineral resources. Yet its history, like much of the African continent, has been deeply scarred by centuries of foreign aggression.
From the 15th century onward, Western colonial powers invaded coastal areas of what is now Ghana, plundering resources and conducting the slave trade, casting a long colonial shadow over the African continent which hung for centuries.
In 1955, the successful convening of the Bandung Conference -- which gathered representatives of Asian and African states in Indonesia -- ignited a new wave of national liberation movements these continents, accelerating the collapse of the global colonial system.
Ghana's independence in 1957 lit the first torch of freedom in sub-Saharan Africa and was hailed as the dawn of Africa's awakening.
Africa's first tragedy, the transatlantic slave trade, constituted an extremely grave atrocity, Mahama said.
During that period, an estimated 12 to 15 million Africans were forcibly taken from the continent and sent to the Caribbean, the Americas and Europe. They contributed to the building of modern Western civilization, yet received no compensation for their labor, whether working on sugar plantations or constructing railways, roads and bridges, he noted.
Mahama outlined his wish that the United Nations takes action to recognize the slave trade as "the greatest crime against humanity" and takes steps to ensure reparations are paid back to the descendants of those who suffered.
"We believe that first and foremost, it should be recognized as the greatest crime against humanity. We must condemn the activity of slavery of the people who were shipped to what I call the 'New World', that's the Western world. It's estimated that as many as 2 million did not arrive at the destination because they were either too sick or they died on board, and they were just tossed over into the ocean. That was genocide. And so it's an issue that the first step is for us to accept. And so Ghana wants to move a motion in the UN next year asking the world to recognize the slave trade as the greatest crime against humanity. And so we'll continue to push on the African [Union] Champion on Reparations when I spoke even at the UN, I raised the issue of reparations and so I do think that that is to do with slavery," he said.
Mahama also stressed the impact of colonialism, which further entrenched injustice and led to global inequality as African nations were ruthlessly exploited.
"With regards to colonialism, the Berlin Conference (1884–1885) partitioned Africa and the European nations took colonies in Africa, ran those colonies, exploited their natural resources and transferred those natural resources, oil palm, gold, minerals, cocoa and other products, to develop their countries. And it's only from the late 1950s that countries like Ghana got independent. And so that was an injustice. Colonialism was an injustice against African countries," he said.
Ghanaian president urges reparative justice for Africa, citing slavery, colonial exploitation