Briefing
Blocked at the mine gate: La Guajira shut down Glencore, the trader keeping Israel's coal plants running
Community members at the eleven-day blockade of the Cerrejón railway in La Guajira, May 2026. Photo: 350.org/Resist Glencore – Robert Garcia
Mohammed Usrof, Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy
June 3, 2026
On 1 June, Afro-Colombian and Wayuu communities forced Glencore to suspend El Cerrejón. The eleven days that produced the shutdown, and what they revealed about the supply chain it sits inside. The blockade at Cerrejón is the missing link in the embargo argument. From Puerto Bolívar through Richards Bay to Hadera, the same company runs the chain. Communities at the source are closing it from the mine gate.
"When the Viceminister called with the proposal to lift the blockade pending the dialogue, we felt as if a Glencore representative was sitting with him on the other side of the line."

– Community Representative on the 3rd of June, 2026

On 1 June 2026, Glencore declared force majeure at El Cerrejón, the largest open-pit coal mine in Latin America. The cause was eleven days of blockade by the Afro-Colombian Tabaco Community, the Hosco Revivir Community Council, and Wayuu organisations on the railway that feeds the mine to Puerto Bolívar. About 12,500 workers' contracts were temporarily suspended. Glencore shut its mining, rail and port operations and called force majeure on its contracts. The eleven days produced a result that decades of litigation and rulings from the Colombian Constitutional Court had not.

The blockade was lifted after an agreement with the Ministry of Interior, but the underlying struggle remains unresolved. Communities continue to press long-standing demands around land restitution, reparation, environmental restoration, and guarantees of non-repetition.

What the eleven days actually shut down

El Cerrejón is one of the largest thermal coal mines in the Americas. It produced 16.8 million tons in 2025, down from 19.2 million in 2024. Glencore took full control of the operation in 2022, after Anglo American and BHP exited. The complex sits in south-central La Guajira and runs as an integrated system of pit, railway and deep-water port at Bolívar. Its coal feeds Europe, Asia and the Americas.

A force majeure declaration at a tier-one asset of a major commodities trader is not common. Glencore declared one because the railway stopped moving and there was no fuel reaching the machinery. The reason for both is that the people on whose ancestral land Cerrejón sits closed the route. Operations restarted on the morning shift of 3 June, after Cerrejón restocked its fuel and lifted force majeure on the evening of 2 June. Glencore itself reports almost 80 blockades against the operation in 2026 alone, on top of 201 in 2025, which kept coal from reaching Puerto Bolívar for 95 days that year. The eleven-day shutdown was the inflection point in a much longer struggle.

The corridor: Colombia, South Africa, Israel

El Cerrejón does not stand alone. In our report Black Gold, Red Hands: Coal Rerouting and the Embargo Front, we tracked 122 shipments and 6.6 million tons of thermal coal between October 2023 and February 2026 across the Colombia, South Africa and Israel corridor, drawing on LSEG vessel data and Israeli Electric Corporation (IEC) financial filings.

Colombia tried to interrupt that corridor, and it was under President Gustavo Petro that Decree 1047 of August 2024 prohibited thermal coal exports to Israel. The first version of the decree preserved older contracts and let shipments continue through a loophole, while Decree 0949 of August 2025 closed the loophole. Right after, naval enforcement followed. The final cargo from Puerto Drummond to Israel left on 24 July 2025, and since then, the Colombian section of the chain was, at that point, shut down fully.

However, Glencore did not stop selling thermal coal to Israel. The company moved the trade especially as Glencore is a consortium owner at the Richards Bay Coal Terminal in South Africa. After the Colombian embargo, South Africa's share of Israel's seaborne thermal coal climbed from 11 percent before the decree to 88 percent after naval enforcement. PICS documented at least eight covert shipments, about 751,000 tons, on Greek-managed vessels using false destinations and AIS shutdowns to mask delivery. The coal burned at Hadera and Ashkelon flows into a single Israeli national grid, and that grid powers both Israel and the illegal settlements in occupied Palestinian territory. It does not separate civilian from military infrastructure, with illegal settlements expanding at an alarming rate.

The same company that has been mining Wayuu and Afro-descendant territory for three decades is the trader that has kept Israel's coal plants running through the genocide in Gaza. We set this argument out at length in Usrof’s piece for Jacobin on the 30th of May, 2026. The Cerrejón blockade is the on-the-ground extension of that argument, while the embargo travels from the decree to the mine itself.

The narrative war

Within hours of declaring force majeure, Glencore set the press frame: the communities are threatening the livelihoods of 15,000 workers. The Colombian commercial press picked it up almost verbatim. The framing matters because Colombia is in the final stretch of a presidential runoff, with the elections in almost 18 days.

The framing is false in four respects, and each one needs to be said publicly:

First, Glencore’s framing obscures the difference between workers’ legitimate fears over suspended contracts and the company’s attempt to redirect that anger toward affected communities. The insecurity facing workers in La Guajira is real, but it is produced by a corporate model that has extracted from the region for decades while failing to guarantee a just transition, land repair, or long-term social protection.

Second, the mine closes in 2034 in Glencore's own planning. An eleven-day blockade does not change that timeline. The real threat to workers in La Guajira is the company itself, preparing to walk away from a worked-out asset with billions in extracted value, leaving the region with environmental damage and no transition plan. Those displaced for the mine to begin with are still waiting for the restitution the courts ordered.

Third, the force majeure itself was a strategic act by Glencore. As one worker representative from SINTRACARBON, the Cerrejón coal workers' union, put it: "Cerrejón used the comrades' strike to spread alarm and declare a force majeure in order to suspend labour contracts." The blockade gave the company the cover it wanted to suspend contracts and to point the resulting worker anger at the communities, rather than at the company that was suspending them.

Fourth, the trade unions are not on Glencore's side of the line. Sintracarbón, together with Sintracerrejón and F23, has been part of the political space that built the embargo. The three unions filed the labour-rights complaint over the company's electoral pressure on workers, on which the Ministry of Labour has already taken action (see the next section). There are ongoing efforts to prevent Glencore from manufacturing a division between workers and affected communities.

The runoff and the Espriella pledge

On 31 May 2026, the far-right candidate Abelardo de la Espriella received over ten million votes in the first round of the presidential election. He is now the main right-wing candidate going into the runoff on 21 June.

Espriella has pledged to resume Colombian coal exports to Israel if elected. He has also pledged to open the door to fracking and to reverse the severance of fossil fuel ties that Petro's government has spent four years building. The Cerrejón blockade has become, in his campaign's framing, an attack on Colombian industry.

The link between Glencore's operation and Espriella's campaign is now a matter of regulatory record. As Revista Raya reported on 30 May, the three unions at Cerrejón, Sintracarbón, Sintracerrejón and F23, filed a formal complaint with Colombia's Ministry of Labour against Carbones del Cerrejón, the Glencore subsidiary that operates the mine. The complaint documents Espriella campaign material inside company premises, supervisors telling workers "no patees la lonchera" (don't kick the lunchbox) and "defender la minería en las urnas" (defend mining at the ballot box), and the company's internal Radio Cerrejón, which plays in the mining trucks, being used to broadcast anti-government commentary and interviews with mining-industry lobbyists. On 28 May, the Ministry issued a preventive protection measure against the company. This aligns with concerns already raised by labour and community actors: that the workforce is being instrumentalised to deliver an election outcome that benefits the company.

The connection between the blockade, the embargo, and the runoff is direct. The far-right candidate has promised to reopen the Colombian end of the corridor that PICS has documented at vessel level. If Espriella wins, the Black Gold, Red Hands corridor is re-stitched. If he loses, the embargo holds and the question becomes how to close the South African end as well.

The Cerrejón blockade is the moment at which all of this becomes visible at the same time.

Paramilitaries at the gate

On the night of June 2nd, a member of the community was detained by men whose identities the community could not confirm. They wore face coverings. They did not produce a detention order. When community members and supporters arrived to demand his release, the captors initially tried to hide that he was being held at all. He was released only after the community insisted publicly that any harm to him after release would be on the record. As one community spokesperson put it, the company's strategy is to show that even communities willing to resist will be made to learn that resistance is not viable.

The pattern is not new in La Guajira. In the Cesar coalfields, where Drummond operates, anti-union paramilitary violence in the 2000s led to a thirty-eight-year sentence for one of the contractors who organised the killing of two labour leaders. Colombian courts ordered prosecutors to investigate Drummond executives at the time. The names of the companies and the shape of the violence are the same. What is changing is the scale of community organisation against it.

PICS is in contact with allied organizations and will continue to monitor risks of retaliation against community leaders, blockade participants, and trade unionists.

What the communities are demanding

The delegation that meets the Viceminister on 4 June is taking in a concrete catalogue of demands, building on the rulings of the Colombian Constitutional Court that have ordered prior consultation, integral reparation, dignified resettlement and the restitution of ancestral land. The catalogue is the product of more than thirty years of struggle:

  • The return and full restoration of ancestral territory.
  • Restitution of 22,500 hectares on productive land outside the municipalities of Albania, Alto Nuevo and Barranca, where the soil has been destroyed.
  • Environmental restoration of water sources, fauna and flora damaged by Cerrejón's operations.
  • A high-level interinstitutional roundtable involving the Ministries of Mines, Interior, Agriculture and Justice, with regulatory bodies and community representatives.
  • A just energy transition with the effective participation of affected ethnic peoples and communities.
  • Redistribution mechanisms for royalties earmarked for reparation and territorial sustainability.

The community organisations describe the devastated territory as roughly 120,000 hectares, six times larger than the Tabaco lands alone. After three decades of that scale of damage, what they are asking for is the minimum the law requires, including guarantees of non-repetition.

PICS endorses these demands and adds three more.

  • A full public accounting from Glencore of its thermal coal shipments to Israel since 7 October 2023, including those rerouted via South Africa, and of any payments to entities supplying Israel's electricity grid.
  • Compliance with the 19 July 2024 ICJ advisory opinion. The duty on UN member states not to render aid or assistance in maintaining Israel's unlawful presence in occupied Palestinian territory applies to coal supplied to Israel's national grid, and to the multinationals headquartered in Switzerland (Glencore) and the United States (Drummond) that have supplied it.
  • No retaliation, by Glencore, its contractors or state security forces, against community leaders, blockade participants, or trade unionists in La Guajira.

The communities themselves have framed the strategy in clearer political terms than any of us could. As one organiser said on 3 June: "We want to set a precedent. We don't necessarily think we'll come out of this happy, but we want the fact that we have rights to stand, even if it isn't a total solution."

Where PICS stands

Our work focuses on the fossil fuel supply chains that connect occupation and climate breakdown. We were established after COP29 by Palestinian organisers, researchers and youth climate negotiators who came out of the energy embargo work that pushed Decree 1047 into being. We are part of a coalition that includes the Global Energy Embargo for Palestine and BDS, and we work with movements in South Africa, Brazil, Italy, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Kingdom and elsewhere along the same chains.

PICS is engaged with this struggle because Cerrejón is the source-end of the corridor we have been mapping. Colombia’s embargo is now a test case for whether a state can interrupt a fossil supply chain to Israel and withstand the corporate counter-pressure that follows.

The blockade at Cerrejón is the missing link in the embargo argument. Colombia proved a state could cut a fossil artery to Israel's war machine. Glencore proved capital can reroute. The communities of La Guajira are proving that the route can be cut at the mine itself. The same company runs the supply chain from Puerto Bolívar through Richards Bay to Hadera. The communities who pay for that chain with their land and water, and the Palestinians in Gaza who pay with their lives, are in the same struggle.

We are not asking for sympathy. We are asking for material solidarity at the points where the chain still moves.

That means amplifying the community demand list in the international press during this negotiation and election period and the 21 June runoff. It means pressure on Glencore's institutional investors in Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States, and a public reckoning with the disclosure questions raised by the covert South African shipments. It means refusing to handle Israel-bound coal in South African ports and in every transhipment node along the corridor. It means showing up for the Colombian energy transition coalition in the runoff window. It means a UK that recognises its own structural position upstream in the supply chains that feed Israel's grid and military, and that is prepared to act on it.

The communities at Cerrejón have done in eleven days what years of pressure could not. They have not finished. They are holding the line, and they are asking the rest of us to hold it with them.

Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy, Bogotá, 3 June 2026

Media enquiries: press@palclimateinstitute.org
Solidarity and amplification: info@palclimateinstitute.org (team support)

References
  • Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy, Black Gold, Red Hands: Coal Rerouting and the Embargo Front. https://palclimateinstitute.org/publications/black-gold-red-hands-coal-rerouting-and-the-embargo-front
  • Mohammed Usrof, "Colombia's Ban on Coal Exports to Israel Is in Danger," Jacobin, 30 May 2026. https://jacobin.com/2026/05/coal-exports-embargo-colombia-israel
  • Revista Raya, "Multinacional Glencore estaría ejerciendo presión y constreñimiento para votar por de la Espriella," May 2026. https://revistaraya.com/multinacional-glencore-estaria-ejerciendo-presion-y-constrenimiento-para-votar-por-de-la-espriella.html
  • El Tiempo, "Cerrejón suspende operaciones en Colombia a partir de este lunes." https://www.eltiempo.com/economia/sectores/cerrejon-suspende-operaciones-en-colombia-a-partir-de-este-lunes-que-hay-detras-de-la-decision-3561158
  • El Tiempo, "Cerrejón inicia reabastecimiento de combustible para reactivar sus operaciones en La Guajira." https://www.eltiempo.com/economia/sectores/cerrejon-inicia-reabastecimiento-de-combustible-para-reactivar-sus-operaciones-en-la-guajira-pero-advierte-que-tomara-tiempo-3561441
  • Forbes Colombia, "Cerrejón suspende operaciones y contratos laborales en Colombia tras un bloqueo de casi dos semanas." https://forbes.co/negocios/cerrejon-suspende-operaciones-y-contratos-laborales-en-colombia-tras-bloqueo
  • Resist Glencore Network. https://www.instagram.com/resist.glencore/
  • Tags:
    Cerrejón
    Glencore
    Coal embargo
    Briefing
    Blocked at the mine gate: La Guajira shut down Glencore, the trader keeping Israel's coal plants running
    Community members at the eleven-day blockade of the Cerrejón railway in La Guajira, May 2026. Photo: 350.org/Resist Glencore – Robert Garcia
    Mohammed Usrof, Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy
    June 3, 2026
    Summary
    "When the Viceminister called with the proposal to lift the blockade pending the dialogue, we felt as if a Glencore representative was sitting with him on the other side of the line."

    – Community Representative on the 3rd of June, 2026

    On 1 June 2026, Glencore declared force majeure at El Cerrejón, the largest open-pit coal mine in Latin America. The cause was eleven days of blockade by the Afro-Colombian Tabaco Community, the Hosco Revivir Community Council, and Wayuu organisations on the railway that feeds the mine to Puerto Bolívar. About 12,500 workers' contracts were temporarily suspended. Glencore shut its mining, rail and port operations and called force majeure on its contracts. The eleven days produced a result that decades of litigation and rulings from the Colombian Constitutional Court had not.

    The blockade was lifted after an agreement with the Ministry of Interior, but the underlying struggle remains unresolved. Communities continue to press long-standing demands around land restitution, reparation, environmental restoration, and guarantees of non-repetition.

    What the eleven days actually shut down

    El Cerrejón is one of the largest thermal coal mines in the Americas. It produced 16.8 million tons in 2025, down from 19.2 million in 2024. Glencore took full control of the operation in 2022, after Anglo American and BHP exited. The complex sits in south-central La Guajira and runs as an integrated system of pit, railway and deep-water port at Bolívar. Its coal feeds Europe, Asia and the Americas.

    A force majeure declaration at a tier-one asset of a major commodities trader is not common. Glencore declared one because the railway stopped moving and there was no fuel reaching the machinery. The reason for both is that the people on whose ancestral land Cerrejón sits closed the route. Operations restarted on the morning shift of 3 June, after Cerrejón restocked its fuel and lifted force majeure on the evening of 2 June. Glencore itself reports almost 80 blockades against the operation in 2026 alone, on top of 201 in 2025, which kept coal from reaching Puerto Bolívar for 95 days that year. The eleven-day shutdown was the inflection point in a much longer struggle.

    The corridor: Colombia, South Africa, Israel

    El Cerrejón does not stand alone. In our report Black Gold, Red Hands: Coal Rerouting and the Embargo Front, we tracked 122 shipments and 6.6 million tons of thermal coal between October 2023 and February 2026 across the Colombia, South Africa and Israel corridor, drawing on LSEG vessel data and Israeli Electric Corporation (IEC) financial filings.

    Colombia tried to interrupt that corridor, and it was under President Gustavo Petro that Decree 1047 of August 2024 prohibited thermal coal exports to Israel. The first version of the decree preserved older contracts and let shipments continue through a loophole, while Decree 0949 of August 2025 closed the loophole. Right after, naval enforcement followed. The final cargo from Puerto Drummond to Israel left on 24 July 2025, and since then, the Colombian section of the chain was, at that point, shut down fully.

    However, Glencore did not stop selling thermal coal to Israel. The company moved the trade especially as Glencore is a consortium owner at the Richards Bay Coal Terminal in South Africa. After the Colombian embargo, South Africa's share of Israel's seaborne thermal coal climbed from 11 percent before the decree to 88 percent after naval enforcement. PICS documented at least eight covert shipments, about 751,000 tons, on Greek-managed vessels using false destinations and AIS shutdowns to mask delivery. The coal burned at Hadera and Ashkelon flows into a single Israeli national grid, and that grid powers both Israel and the illegal settlements in occupied Palestinian territory. It does not separate civilian from military infrastructure, with illegal settlements expanding at an alarming rate.

    The same company that has been mining Wayuu and Afro-descendant territory for three decades is the trader that has kept Israel's coal plants running through the genocide in Gaza. We set this argument out at length in Usrof’s piece for Jacobin on the 30th of May, 2026. The Cerrejón blockade is the on-the-ground extension of that argument, while the embargo travels from the decree to the mine itself.

    The narrative war

    Within hours of declaring force majeure, Glencore set the press frame: the communities are threatening the livelihoods of 15,000 workers. The Colombian commercial press picked it up almost verbatim. The framing matters because Colombia is in the final stretch of a presidential runoff, with the elections in almost 18 days.

    The framing is false in four respects, and each one needs to be said publicly:

    First, Glencore’s framing obscures the difference between workers’ legitimate fears over suspended contracts and the company’s attempt to redirect that anger toward affected communities. The insecurity facing workers in La Guajira is real, but it is produced by a corporate model that has extracted from the region for decades while failing to guarantee a just transition, land repair, or long-term social protection.

    Second, the mine closes in 2034 in Glencore's own planning. An eleven-day blockade does not change that timeline. The real threat to workers in La Guajira is the company itself, preparing to walk away from a worked-out asset with billions in extracted value, leaving the region with environmental damage and no transition plan. Those displaced for the mine to begin with are still waiting for the restitution the courts ordered.

    Third, the force majeure itself was a strategic act by Glencore. As one worker representative from SINTRACARBON, the Cerrejón coal workers' union, put it: "Cerrejón used the comrades' strike to spread alarm and declare a force majeure in order to suspend labour contracts." The blockade gave the company the cover it wanted to suspend contracts and to point the resulting worker anger at the communities, rather than at the company that was suspending them.

    Fourth, the trade unions are not on Glencore's side of the line. Sintracarbón, together with Sintracerrejón and F23, has been part of the political space that built the embargo. The three unions filed the labour-rights complaint over the company's electoral pressure on workers, on which the Ministry of Labour has already taken action (see the next section). There are ongoing efforts to prevent Glencore from manufacturing a division between workers and affected communities.

    The runoff and the Espriella pledge

    On 31 May 2026, the far-right candidate Abelardo de la Espriella received over ten million votes in the first round of the presidential election. He is now the main right-wing candidate going into the runoff on 21 June.

    Espriella has pledged to resume Colombian coal exports to Israel if elected. He has also pledged to open the door to fracking and to reverse the severance of fossil fuel ties that Petro's government has spent four years building. The Cerrejón blockade has become, in his campaign's framing, an attack on Colombian industry.

    The link between Glencore's operation and Espriella's campaign is now a matter of regulatory record. As Revista Raya reported on 30 May, the three unions at Cerrejón, Sintracarbón, Sintracerrejón and F23, filed a formal complaint with Colombia's Ministry of Labour against Carbones del Cerrejón, the Glencore subsidiary that operates the mine. The complaint documents Espriella campaign material inside company premises, supervisors telling workers "no patees la lonchera" (don't kick the lunchbox) and "defender la minería en las urnas" (defend mining at the ballot box), and the company's internal Radio Cerrejón, which plays in the mining trucks, being used to broadcast anti-government commentary and interviews with mining-industry lobbyists. On 28 May, the Ministry issued a preventive protection measure against the company. This aligns with concerns already raised by labour and community actors: that the workforce is being instrumentalised to deliver an election outcome that benefits the company.

    The connection between the blockade, the embargo, and the runoff is direct. The far-right candidate has promised to reopen the Colombian end of the corridor that PICS has documented at vessel level. If Espriella wins, the Black Gold, Red Hands corridor is re-stitched. If he loses, the embargo holds and the question becomes how to close the South African end as well.

    The Cerrejón blockade is the moment at which all of this becomes visible at the same time.

    Paramilitaries at the gate

    On the night of June 2nd, a member of the community was detained by men whose identities the community could not confirm. They wore face coverings. They did not produce a detention order. When community members and supporters arrived to demand his release, the captors initially tried to hide that he was being held at all. He was released only after the community insisted publicly that any harm to him after release would be on the record. As one community spokesperson put it, the company's strategy is to show that even communities willing to resist will be made to learn that resistance is not viable.

    The pattern is not new in La Guajira. In the Cesar coalfields, where Drummond operates, anti-union paramilitary violence in the 2000s led to a thirty-eight-year sentence for one of the contractors who organised the killing of two labour leaders. Colombian courts ordered prosecutors to investigate Drummond executives at the time. The names of the companies and the shape of the violence are the same. What is changing is the scale of community organisation against it.

    PICS is in contact with allied organizations and will continue to monitor risks of retaliation against community leaders, blockade participants, and trade unionists.

    What the communities are demanding

    The delegation that meets the Viceminister on 4 June is taking in a concrete catalogue of demands, building on the rulings of the Colombian Constitutional Court that have ordered prior consultation, integral reparation, dignified resettlement and the restitution of ancestral land. The catalogue is the product of more than thirty years of struggle:

    • The return and full restoration of ancestral territory.
    • Restitution of 22,500 hectares on productive land outside the municipalities of Albania, Alto Nuevo and Barranca, where the soil has been destroyed.
    • Environmental restoration of water sources, fauna and flora damaged by Cerrejón's operations.
    • A high-level interinstitutional roundtable involving the Ministries of Mines, Interior, Agriculture and Justice, with regulatory bodies and community representatives.
    • A just energy transition with the effective participation of affected ethnic peoples and communities.
    • Redistribution mechanisms for royalties earmarked for reparation and territorial sustainability.

    The community organisations describe the devastated territory as roughly 120,000 hectares, six times larger than the Tabaco lands alone. After three decades of that scale of damage, what they are asking for is the minimum the law requires, including guarantees of non-repetition.

    PICS endorses these demands and adds three more.

    • A full public accounting from Glencore of its thermal coal shipments to Israel since 7 October 2023, including those rerouted via South Africa, and of any payments to entities supplying Israel's electricity grid.
    • Compliance with the 19 July 2024 ICJ advisory opinion. The duty on UN member states not to render aid or assistance in maintaining Israel's unlawful presence in occupied Palestinian territory applies to coal supplied to Israel's national grid, and to the multinationals headquartered in Switzerland (Glencore) and the United States (Drummond) that have supplied it.
    • No retaliation, by Glencore, its contractors or state security forces, against community leaders, blockade participants, or trade unionists in La Guajira.

    The communities themselves have framed the strategy in clearer political terms than any of us could. As one organiser said on 3 June: "We want to set a precedent. We don't necessarily think we'll come out of this happy, but we want the fact that we have rights to stand, even if it isn't a total solution."

    Where PICS stands

    Our work focuses on the fossil fuel supply chains that connect occupation and climate breakdown. We were established after COP29 by Palestinian organisers, researchers and youth climate negotiators who came out of the energy embargo work that pushed Decree 1047 into being. We are part of a coalition that includes the Global Energy Embargo for Palestine and BDS, and we work with movements in South Africa, Brazil, Italy, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Kingdom and elsewhere along the same chains.

    PICS is engaged with this struggle because Cerrejón is the source-end of the corridor we have been mapping. Colombia’s embargo is now a test case for whether a state can interrupt a fossil supply chain to Israel and withstand the corporate counter-pressure that follows.

    The blockade at Cerrejón is the missing link in the embargo argument. Colombia proved a state could cut a fossil artery to Israel's war machine. Glencore proved capital can reroute. The communities of La Guajira are proving that the route can be cut at the mine itself. The same company runs the supply chain from Puerto Bolívar through Richards Bay to Hadera. The communities who pay for that chain with their land and water, and the Palestinians in Gaza who pay with their lives, are in the same struggle.

    We are not asking for sympathy. We are asking for material solidarity at the points where the chain still moves.

    That means amplifying the community demand list in the international press during this negotiation and election period and the 21 June runoff. It means pressure on Glencore's institutional investors in Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States, and a public reckoning with the disclosure questions raised by the covert South African shipments. It means refusing to handle Israel-bound coal in South African ports and in every transhipment node along the corridor. It means showing up for the Colombian energy transition coalition in the runoff window. It means a UK that recognises its own structural position upstream in the supply chains that feed Israel's grid and military, and that is prepared to act on it.

    The communities at Cerrejón have done in eleven days what years of pressure could not. They have not finished. They are holding the line, and they are asking the rest of us to hold it with them.

    Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy, Bogotá, 3 June 2026

    Media enquiries: press@palclimateinstitute.org
    Solidarity and amplification: info@palclimateinstitute.org (team support)

    Briefing:
    Full Paper:
    Tags:
    Cerrejón
    Glencore
    Coal embargo
    Briefing
    Blocked at the mine gate: La Guajira shut down Glencore, the trader keeping Israel's coal plants running
    Community members at the eleven-day blockade of the Cerrejón railway in La Guajira, May 2026. Photo: 350.org/Resist Glencore – Robert Garcia
    Mohammed Usrof, Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy
    June 3, 2026
    Summary
    "When the Viceminister called with the proposal to lift the blockade pending the dialogue, we felt as if a Glencore representative was sitting with him on the other side of the line."

    – Community Representative on the 3rd of June, 2026

    On 1 June 2026, Glencore declared force majeure at El Cerrejón, the largest open-pit coal mine in Latin America. The cause was eleven days of blockade by the Afro-Colombian Tabaco Community, the Hosco Revivir Community Council, and Wayuu organisations on the railway that feeds the mine to Puerto Bolívar. About 12,500 workers' contracts were temporarily suspended. Glencore shut its mining, rail and port operations and called force majeure on its contracts. The eleven days produced a result that decades of litigation and rulings from the Colombian Constitutional Court had not.

    The blockade was lifted after an agreement with the Ministry of Interior, but the underlying struggle remains unresolved. Communities continue to press long-standing demands around land restitution, reparation, environmental restoration, and guarantees of non-repetition.

    What the eleven days actually shut down

    El Cerrejón is one of the largest thermal coal mines in the Americas. It produced 16.8 million tons in 2025, down from 19.2 million in 2024. Glencore took full control of the operation in 2022, after Anglo American and BHP exited. The complex sits in south-central La Guajira and runs as an integrated system of pit, railway and deep-water port at Bolívar. Its coal feeds Europe, Asia and the Americas.

    A force majeure declaration at a tier-one asset of a major commodities trader is not common. Glencore declared one because the railway stopped moving and there was no fuel reaching the machinery. The reason for both is that the people on whose ancestral land Cerrejón sits closed the route. Operations restarted on the morning shift of 3 June, after Cerrejón restocked its fuel and lifted force majeure on the evening of 2 June. Glencore itself reports almost 80 blockades against the operation in 2026 alone, on top of 201 in 2025, which kept coal from reaching Puerto Bolívar for 95 days that year. The eleven-day shutdown was the inflection point in a much longer struggle.

    The corridor: Colombia, South Africa, Israel

    El Cerrejón does not stand alone. In our report Black Gold, Red Hands: Coal Rerouting and the Embargo Front, we tracked 122 shipments and 6.6 million tons of thermal coal between October 2023 and February 2026 across the Colombia, South Africa and Israel corridor, drawing on LSEG vessel data and Israeli Electric Corporation (IEC) financial filings.

    Colombia tried to interrupt that corridor, and it was under President Gustavo Petro that Decree 1047 of August 2024 prohibited thermal coal exports to Israel. The first version of the decree preserved older contracts and let shipments continue through a loophole, while Decree 0949 of August 2025 closed the loophole. Right after, naval enforcement followed. The final cargo from Puerto Drummond to Israel left on 24 July 2025, and since then, the Colombian section of the chain was, at that point, shut down fully.

    However, Glencore did not stop selling thermal coal to Israel. The company moved the trade especially as Glencore is a consortium owner at the Richards Bay Coal Terminal in South Africa. After the Colombian embargo, South Africa's share of Israel's seaborne thermal coal climbed from 11 percent before the decree to 88 percent after naval enforcement. PICS documented at least eight covert shipments, about 751,000 tons, on Greek-managed vessels using false destinations and AIS shutdowns to mask delivery. The coal burned at Hadera and Ashkelon flows into a single Israeli national grid, and that grid powers both Israel and the illegal settlements in occupied Palestinian territory. It does not separate civilian from military infrastructure, with illegal settlements expanding at an alarming rate.

    The same company that has been mining Wayuu and Afro-descendant territory for three decades is the trader that has kept Israel's coal plants running through the genocide in Gaza. We set this argument out at length in Usrof’s piece for Jacobin on the 30th of May, 2026. The Cerrejón blockade is the on-the-ground extension of that argument, while the embargo travels from the decree to the mine itself.

    The narrative war

    Within hours of declaring force majeure, Glencore set the press frame: the communities are threatening the livelihoods of 15,000 workers. The Colombian commercial press picked it up almost verbatim. The framing matters because Colombia is in the final stretch of a presidential runoff, with the elections in almost 18 days.

    The framing is false in four respects, and each one needs to be said publicly:

    First, Glencore’s framing obscures the difference between workers’ legitimate fears over suspended contracts and the company’s attempt to redirect that anger toward affected communities. The insecurity facing workers in La Guajira is real, but it is produced by a corporate model that has extracted from the region for decades while failing to guarantee a just transition, land repair, or long-term social protection.

    Second, the mine closes in 2034 in Glencore's own planning. An eleven-day blockade does not change that timeline. The real threat to workers in La Guajira is the company itself, preparing to walk away from a worked-out asset with billions in extracted value, leaving the region with environmental damage and no transition plan. Those displaced for the mine to begin with are still waiting for the restitution the courts ordered.

    Third, the force majeure itself was a strategic act by Glencore. As one worker representative from SINTRACARBON, the Cerrejón coal workers' union, put it: "Cerrejón used the comrades' strike to spread alarm and declare a force majeure in order to suspend labour contracts." The blockade gave the company the cover it wanted to suspend contracts and to point the resulting worker anger at the communities, rather than at the company that was suspending them.

    Fourth, the trade unions are not on Glencore's side of the line. Sintracarbón, together with Sintracerrejón and F23, has been part of the political space that built the embargo. The three unions filed the labour-rights complaint over the company's electoral pressure on workers, on which the Ministry of Labour has already taken action (see the next section). There are ongoing efforts to prevent Glencore from manufacturing a division between workers and affected communities.

    The runoff and the Espriella pledge

    On 31 May 2026, the far-right candidate Abelardo de la Espriella received over ten million votes in the first round of the presidential election. He is now the main right-wing candidate going into the runoff on 21 June.

    Espriella has pledged to resume Colombian coal exports to Israel if elected. He has also pledged to open the door to fracking and to reverse the severance of fossil fuel ties that Petro's government has spent four years building. The Cerrejón blockade has become, in his campaign's framing, an attack on Colombian industry.

    The link between Glencore's operation and Espriella's campaign is now a matter of regulatory record. As Revista Raya reported on 30 May, the three unions at Cerrejón, Sintracarbón, Sintracerrejón and F23, filed a formal complaint with Colombia's Ministry of Labour against Carbones del Cerrejón, the Glencore subsidiary that operates the mine. The complaint documents Espriella campaign material inside company premises, supervisors telling workers "no patees la lonchera" (don't kick the lunchbox) and "defender la minería en las urnas" (defend mining at the ballot box), and the company's internal Radio Cerrejón, which plays in the mining trucks, being used to broadcast anti-government commentary and interviews with mining-industry lobbyists. On 28 May, the Ministry issued a preventive protection measure against the company. This aligns with concerns already raised by labour and community actors: that the workforce is being instrumentalised to deliver an election outcome that benefits the company.

    The connection between the blockade, the embargo, and the runoff is direct. The far-right candidate has promised to reopen the Colombian end of the corridor that PICS has documented at vessel level. If Espriella wins, the Black Gold, Red Hands corridor is re-stitched. If he loses, the embargo holds and the question becomes how to close the South African end as well.

    The Cerrejón blockade is the moment at which all of this becomes visible at the same time.

    Paramilitaries at the gate

    On the night of June 2nd, a member of the community was detained by men whose identities the community could not confirm. They wore face coverings. They did not produce a detention order. When community members and supporters arrived to demand his release, the captors initially tried to hide that he was being held at all. He was released only after the community insisted publicly that any harm to him after release would be on the record. As one community spokesperson put it, the company's strategy is to show that even communities willing to resist will be made to learn that resistance is not viable.

    The pattern is not new in La Guajira. In the Cesar coalfields, where Drummond operates, anti-union paramilitary violence in the 2000s led to a thirty-eight-year sentence for one of the contractors who organised the killing of two labour leaders. Colombian courts ordered prosecutors to investigate Drummond executives at the time. The names of the companies and the shape of the violence are the same. What is changing is the scale of community organisation against it.

    PICS is in contact with allied organizations and will continue to monitor risks of retaliation against community leaders, blockade participants, and trade unionists.

    What the communities are demanding

    The delegation that meets the Viceminister on 4 June is taking in a concrete catalogue of demands, building on the rulings of the Colombian Constitutional Court that have ordered prior consultation, integral reparation, dignified resettlement and the restitution of ancestral land. The catalogue is the product of more than thirty years of struggle:

    • The return and full restoration of ancestral territory.
    • Restitution of 22,500 hectares on productive land outside the municipalities of Albania, Alto Nuevo and Barranca, where the soil has been destroyed.
    • Environmental restoration of water sources, fauna and flora damaged by Cerrejón's operations.
    • A high-level interinstitutional roundtable involving the Ministries of Mines, Interior, Agriculture and Justice, with regulatory bodies and community representatives.
    • A just energy transition with the effective participation of affected ethnic peoples and communities.
    • Redistribution mechanisms for royalties earmarked for reparation and territorial sustainability.

    The community organisations describe the devastated territory as roughly 120,000 hectares, six times larger than the Tabaco lands alone. After three decades of that scale of damage, what they are asking for is the minimum the law requires, including guarantees of non-repetition.

    PICS endorses these demands and adds three more.

    • A full public accounting from Glencore of its thermal coal shipments to Israel since 7 October 2023, including those rerouted via South Africa, and of any payments to entities supplying Israel's electricity grid.
    • Compliance with the 19 July 2024 ICJ advisory opinion. The duty on UN member states not to render aid or assistance in maintaining Israel's unlawful presence in occupied Palestinian territory applies to coal supplied to Israel's national grid, and to the multinationals headquartered in Switzerland (Glencore) and the United States (Drummond) that have supplied it.
    • No retaliation, by Glencore, its contractors or state security forces, against community leaders, blockade participants, or trade unionists in La Guajira.

    The communities themselves have framed the strategy in clearer political terms than any of us could. As one organiser said on 3 June: "We want to set a precedent. We don't necessarily think we'll come out of this happy, but we want the fact that we have rights to stand, even if it isn't a total solution."

    Where PICS stands

    Our work focuses on the fossil fuel supply chains that connect occupation and climate breakdown. We were established after COP29 by Palestinian organisers, researchers and youth climate negotiators who came out of the energy embargo work that pushed Decree 1047 into being. We are part of a coalition that includes the Global Energy Embargo for Palestine and BDS, and we work with movements in South Africa, Brazil, Italy, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Kingdom and elsewhere along the same chains.

    PICS is engaged with this struggle because Cerrejón is the source-end of the corridor we have been mapping. Colombia’s embargo is now a test case for whether a state can interrupt a fossil supply chain to Israel and withstand the corporate counter-pressure that follows.

    The blockade at Cerrejón is the missing link in the embargo argument. Colombia proved a state could cut a fossil artery to Israel's war machine. Glencore proved capital can reroute. The communities of La Guajira are proving that the route can be cut at the mine itself. The same company runs the supply chain from Puerto Bolívar through Richards Bay to Hadera. The communities who pay for that chain with their land and water, and the Palestinians in Gaza who pay with their lives, are in the same struggle.

    We are not asking for sympathy. We are asking for material solidarity at the points where the chain still moves.

    That means amplifying the community demand list in the international press during this negotiation and election period and the 21 June runoff. It means pressure on Glencore's institutional investors in Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States, and a public reckoning with the disclosure questions raised by the covert South African shipments. It means refusing to handle Israel-bound coal in South African ports and in every transhipment node along the corridor. It means showing up for the Colombian energy transition coalition in the runoff window. It means a UK that recognises its own structural position upstream in the supply chains that feed Israel's grid and military, and that is prepared to act on it.

    The communities at Cerrejón have done in eleven days what years of pressure could not. They have not finished. They are holding the line, and they are asking the rest of us to hold it with them.

    Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy, Bogotá, 3 June 2026

    Media enquiries: press@palclimateinstitute.org
    Solidarity and amplification: info@palclimateinstitute.org (team support)

    Tags:
    Cerrejón
    Glencore
    Coal embargo
    Briefing
    Blocked at the mine gate: La Guajira shut down Glencore, the trader keeping Israel's coal plants running
    Community members at the eleven-day blockade of the Cerrejón railway in La Guajira, May 2026. Photo: 350.org/Resist Glencore – Robert Garcia
    Mohammed Usrof, Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy
    June 3, 2026
    On 1 June, Afro-Colombian and Wayuu communities forced Glencore to suspend El Cerrejón. The eleven days that produced the shutdown, and what they revealed about the supply chain it sits inside. The blockade at Cerrejón is the missing link in the embargo argument. From Puerto Bolívar through Richards Bay to Hadera, the same company runs the chain. Communities at the source are closing it from the mine gate.
    "When the Viceminister called with the proposal to lift the blockade pending the dialogue, we felt as if a Glencore representative was sitting with him on the other side of the line."

    – Community Representative on the 3rd of June, 2026

    On 1 June 2026, Glencore declared force majeure at El Cerrejón, the largest open-pit coal mine in Latin America. The cause was eleven days of blockade by the Afro-Colombian Tabaco Community, the Hosco Revivir Community Council, and Wayuu organisations on the railway that feeds the mine to Puerto Bolívar. About 12,500 workers' contracts were temporarily suspended. Glencore shut its mining, rail and port operations and called force majeure on its contracts. The eleven days produced a result that decades of litigation and rulings from the Colombian Constitutional Court had not.

    The blockade was lifted after an agreement with the Ministry of Interior, but the underlying struggle remains unresolved. Communities continue to press long-standing demands around land restitution, reparation, environmental restoration, and guarantees of non-repetition.

    What the eleven days actually shut down

    El Cerrejón is one of the largest thermal coal mines in the Americas. It produced 16.8 million tons in 2025, down from 19.2 million in 2024. Glencore took full control of the operation in 2022, after Anglo American and BHP exited. The complex sits in south-central La Guajira and runs as an integrated system of pit, railway and deep-water port at Bolívar. Its coal feeds Europe, Asia and the Americas.

    A force majeure declaration at a tier-one asset of a major commodities trader is not common. Glencore declared one because the railway stopped moving and there was no fuel reaching the machinery. The reason for both is that the people on whose ancestral land Cerrejón sits closed the route. Operations restarted on the morning shift of 3 June, after Cerrejón restocked its fuel and lifted force majeure on the evening of 2 June. Glencore itself reports almost 80 blockades against the operation in 2026 alone, on top of 201 in 2025, which kept coal from reaching Puerto Bolívar for 95 days that year. The eleven-day shutdown was the inflection point in a much longer struggle.

    The corridor: Colombia, South Africa, Israel

    El Cerrejón does not stand alone. In our report Black Gold, Red Hands: Coal Rerouting and the Embargo Front, we tracked 122 shipments and 6.6 million tons of thermal coal between October 2023 and February 2026 across the Colombia, South Africa and Israel corridor, drawing on LSEG vessel data and Israeli Electric Corporation (IEC) financial filings.

    Colombia tried to interrupt that corridor, and it was under President Gustavo Petro that Decree 1047 of August 2024 prohibited thermal coal exports to Israel. The first version of the decree preserved older contracts and let shipments continue through a loophole, while Decree 0949 of August 2025 closed the loophole. Right after, naval enforcement followed. The final cargo from Puerto Drummond to Israel left on 24 July 2025, and since then, the Colombian section of the chain was, at that point, shut down fully.

    However, Glencore did not stop selling thermal coal to Israel. The company moved the trade especially as Glencore is a consortium owner at the Richards Bay Coal Terminal in South Africa. After the Colombian embargo, South Africa's share of Israel's seaborne thermal coal climbed from 11 percent before the decree to 88 percent after naval enforcement. PICS documented at least eight covert shipments, about 751,000 tons, on Greek-managed vessels using false destinations and AIS shutdowns to mask delivery. The coal burned at Hadera and Ashkelon flows into a single Israeli national grid, and that grid powers both Israel and the illegal settlements in occupied Palestinian territory. It does not separate civilian from military infrastructure, with illegal settlements expanding at an alarming rate.

    The same company that has been mining Wayuu and Afro-descendant territory for three decades is the trader that has kept Israel's coal plants running through the genocide in Gaza. We set this argument out at length in Usrof’s piece for Jacobin on the 30th of May, 2026. The Cerrejón blockade is the on-the-ground extension of that argument, while the embargo travels from the decree to the mine itself.

    The narrative war

    Within hours of declaring force majeure, Glencore set the press frame: the communities are threatening the livelihoods of 15,000 workers. The Colombian commercial press picked it up almost verbatim. The framing matters because Colombia is in the final stretch of a presidential runoff, with the elections in almost 18 days.

    The framing is false in four respects, and each one needs to be said publicly:

    First, Glencore’s framing obscures the difference between workers’ legitimate fears over suspended contracts and the company’s attempt to redirect that anger toward affected communities. The insecurity facing workers in La Guajira is real, but it is produced by a corporate model that has extracted from the region for decades while failing to guarantee a just transition, land repair, or long-term social protection.

    Second, the mine closes in 2034 in Glencore's own planning. An eleven-day blockade does not change that timeline. The real threat to workers in La Guajira is the company itself, preparing to walk away from a worked-out asset with billions in extracted value, leaving the region with environmental damage and no transition plan. Those displaced for the mine to begin with are still waiting for the restitution the courts ordered.

    Third, the force majeure itself was a strategic act by Glencore. As one worker representative from SINTRACARBON, the Cerrejón coal workers' union, put it: "Cerrejón used the comrades' strike to spread alarm and declare a force majeure in order to suspend labour contracts." The blockade gave the company the cover it wanted to suspend contracts and to point the resulting worker anger at the communities, rather than at the company that was suspending them.

    Fourth, the trade unions are not on Glencore's side of the line. Sintracarbón, together with Sintracerrejón and F23, has been part of the political space that built the embargo. The three unions filed the labour-rights complaint over the company's electoral pressure on workers, on which the Ministry of Labour has already taken action (see the next section). There are ongoing efforts to prevent Glencore from manufacturing a division between workers and affected communities.

    The runoff and the Espriella pledge

    On 31 May 2026, the far-right candidate Abelardo de la Espriella received over ten million votes in the first round of the presidential election. He is now the main right-wing candidate going into the runoff on 21 June.

    Espriella has pledged to resume Colombian coal exports to Israel if elected. He has also pledged to open the door to fracking and to reverse the severance of fossil fuel ties that Petro's government has spent four years building. The Cerrejón blockade has become, in his campaign's framing, an attack on Colombian industry.

    The link between Glencore's operation and Espriella's campaign is now a matter of regulatory record. As Revista Raya reported on 30 May, the three unions at Cerrejón, Sintracarbón, Sintracerrejón and F23, filed a formal complaint with Colombia's Ministry of Labour against Carbones del Cerrejón, the Glencore subsidiary that operates the mine. The complaint documents Espriella campaign material inside company premises, supervisors telling workers "no patees la lonchera" (don't kick the lunchbox) and "defender la minería en las urnas" (defend mining at the ballot box), and the company's internal Radio Cerrejón, which plays in the mining trucks, being used to broadcast anti-government commentary and interviews with mining-industry lobbyists. On 28 May, the Ministry issued a preventive protection measure against the company. This aligns with concerns already raised by labour and community actors: that the workforce is being instrumentalised to deliver an election outcome that benefits the company.

    The connection between the blockade, the embargo, and the runoff is direct. The far-right candidate has promised to reopen the Colombian end of the corridor that PICS has documented at vessel level. If Espriella wins, the Black Gold, Red Hands corridor is re-stitched. If he loses, the embargo holds and the question becomes how to close the South African end as well.

    The Cerrejón blockade is the moment at which all of this becomes visible at the same time.

    Paramilitaries at the gate

    On the night of June 2nd, a member of the community was detained by men whose identities the community could not confirm. They wore face coverings. They did not produce a detention order. When community members and supporters arrived to demand his release, the captors initially tried to hide that he was being held at all. He was released only after the community insisted publicly that any harm to him after release would be on the record. As one community spokesperson put it, the company's strategy is to show that even communities willing to resist will be made to learn that resistance is not viable.

    The pattern is not new in La Guajira. In the Cesar coalfields, where Drummond operates, anti-union paramilitary violence in the 2000s led to a thirty-eight-year sentence for one of the contractors who organised the killing of two labour leaders. Colombian courts ordered prosecutors to investigate Drummond executives at the time. The names of the companies and the shape of the violence are the same. What is changing is the scale of community organisation against it.

    PICS is in contact with allied organizations and will continue to monitor risks of retaliation against community leaders, blockade participants, and trade unionists.

    What the communities are demanding

    The delegation that meets the Viceminister on 4 June is taking in a concrete catalogue of demands, building on the rulings of the Colombian Constitutional Court that have ordered prior consultation, integral reparation, dignified resettlement and the restitution of ancestral land. The catalogue is the product of more than thirty years of struggle:

    • The return and full restoration of ancestral territory.
    • Restitution of 22,500 hectares on productive land outside the municipalities of Albania, Alto Nuevo and Barranca, where the soil has been destroyed.
    • Environmental restoration of water sources, fauna and flora damaged by Cerrejón's operations.
    • A high-level interinstitutional roundtable involving the Ministries of Mines, Interior, Agriculture and Justice, with regulatory bodies and community representatives.
    • A just energy transition with the effective participation of affected ethnic peoples and communities.
    • Redistribution mechanisms for royalties earmarked for reparation and territorial sustainability.

    The community organisations describe the devastated territory as roughly 120,000 hectares, six times larger than the Tabaco lands alone. After three decades of that scale of damage, what they are asking for is the minimum the law requires, including guarantees of non-repetition.

    PICS endorses these demands and adds three more.

    • A full public accounting from Glencore of its thermal coal shipments to Israel since 7 October 2023, including those rerouted via South Africa, and of any payments to entities supplying Israel's electricity grid.
    • Compliance with the 19 July 2024 ICJ advisory opinion. The duty on UN member states not to render aid or assistance in maintaining Israel's unlawful presence in occupied Palestinian territory applies to coal supplied to Israel's national grid, and to the multinationals headquartered in Switzerland (Glencore) and the United States (Drummond) that have supplied it.
    • No retaliation, by Glencore, its contractors or state security forces, against community leaders, blockade participants, or trade unionists in La Guajira.

    The communities themselves have framed the strategy in clearer political terms than any of us could. As one organiser said on 3 June: "We want to set a precedent. We don't necessarily think we'll come out of this happy, but we want the fact that we have rights to stand, even if it isn't a total solution."

    Where PICS stands

    Our work focuses on the fossil fuel supply chains that connect occupation and climate breakdown. We were established after COP29 by Palestinian organisers, researchers and youth climate negotiators who came out of the energy embargo work that pushed Decree 1047 into being. We are part of a coalition that includes the Global Energy Embargo for Palestine and BDS, and we work with movements in South Africa, Brazil, Italy, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Kingdom and elsewhere along the same chains.

    PICS is engaged with this struggle because Cerrejón is the source-end of the corridor we have been mapping. Colombia’s embargo is now a test case for whether a state can interrupt a fossil supply chain to Israel and withstand the corporate counter-pressure that follows.

    The blockade at Cerrejón is the missing link in the embargo argument. Colombia proved a state could cut a fossil artery to Israel's war machine. Glencore proved capital can reroute. The communities of La Guajira are proving that the route can be cut at the mine itself. The same company runs the supply chain from Puerto Bolívar through Richards Bay to Hadera. The communities who pay for that chain with their land and water, and the Palestinians in Gaza who pay with their lives, are in the same struggle.

    We are not asking for sympathy. We are asking for material solidarity at the points where the chain still moves.

    That means amplifying the community demand list in the international press during this negotiation and election period and the 21 June runoff. It means pressure on Glencore's institutional investors in Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States, and a public reckoning with the disclosure questions raised by the covert South African shipments. It means refusing to handle Israel-bound coal in South African ports and in every transhipment node along the corridor. It means showing up for the Colombian energy transition coalition in the runoff window. It means a UK that recognises its own structural position upstream in the supply chains that feed Israel's grid and military, and that is prepared to act on it.

    The communities at Cerrejón have done in eleven days what years of pressure could not. They have not finished. They are holding the line, and they are asking the rest of us to hold it with them.

    Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy, Bogotá, 3 June 2026

    Media enquiries: press@palclimateinstitute.org
    Solidarity and amplification: info@palclimateinstitute.org (team support)

    Contact

    Media enquiries: press@palclimateinstitute.org
    Solidarity and amplification: info@palclimateinstitute.org

    In La Guajira: 

    • Necer Cambar González, Wayuu communities · +57 324 700 1471 
    • Jose Julio Pérez, Tabaco Community · +57 318 337 9802 
    • Helena Mullenbach Martínez, 350.org and Resist Glencore · helena.mullenbach@350.org · +57 314 302 4914 
    • Sonia Muñoz, Coordinadora Nacional Agraria · cnacomunica15@gmail.com · +57 301 830 5783
    References
  • Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy, Black Gold, Red Hands: Coal Rerouting and the Embargo Front. https://palclimateinstitute.org/publications/black-gold-red-hands-coal-rerouting-and-the-embargo-front
  • Mohammed Usrof, "Colombia's Ban on Coal Exports to Israel Is in Danger," Jacobin, 30 May 2026. https://jacobin.com/2026/05/coal-exports-embargo-colombia-israel
  • Revista Raya, "Multinacional Glencore estaría ejerciendo presión y constreñimiento para votar por de la Espriella," May 2026. https://revistaraya.com/multinacional-glencore-estaria-ejerciendo-presion-y-constrenimiento-para-votar-por-de-la-espriella.html
  • El Tiempo, "Cerrejón suspende operaciones en Colombia a partir de este lunes." https://www.eltiempo.com/economia/sectores/cerrejon-suspende-operaciones-en-colombia-a-partir-de-este-lunes-que-hay-detras-de-la-decision-3561158
  • El Tiempo, "Cerrejón inicia reabastecimiento de combustible para reactivar sus operaciones en La Guajira." https://www.eltiempo.com/economia/sectores/cerrejon-inicia-reabastecimiento-de-combustible-para-reactivar-sus-operaciones-en-la-guajira-pero-advierte-que-tomara-tiempo-3561441
  • Forbes Colombia, "Cerrejón suspende operaciones y contratos laborales en Colombia tras un bloqueo de casi dos semanas." https://forbes.co/negocios/cerrejon-suspende-operaciones-y-contratos-laborales-en-colombia-tras-bloqueo
  • Resist Glencore Network. https://www.instagram.com/resist.glencore/
  • Tags:
    Cerrejón
    Glencore
    Coal embargo
    Statement
    The Madleen Declaration
    This declaration, put forward by the Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy, ties together crises of border violence and refugee deaths at sea, extractivism and fossil fuel dependence, militarism, Big Tech and corporate power, the genocide in Palestine, and environmental destruction in the Mediterranean - and argues urgently for a transformative social, environmental and political alternative.
    On Monday, 9th June Israeli forces boarded the Freedom Flotilla Coalition sailboat Madleen in international waters and kidnapped her crew to prevent the passage of aid to the besieged Palestinian people.
    Despite at least 62,000 deaths and countless more people killed, injured, bereaved and displaced over the last two years in Gaza, it fell to one small boat to attempt to break Israel’s blockade.

    The international community has allowed a genocide to unfold in plain sight. And the poison of impunity is spreading. A month ago the aid ship Conscience was bombed off the Maltese shoreline, over a thousand miles from Gaza.

    Subsequent Maltese obstruction of the Conscience’s requests for aid mirrored Europe’s routine frustration of attempts to rescue people in distress at sea. Tens of thousands - Palestinians fleeing occupation among them - have drowned in the central Mediterranean on the world’s deadliest migration route.
    Here too, civilian ships and people seeking safety face obstruction and criminalisation as they keep humanitarian action alive; whilst European states sponsor crimes against humanity.
    En route to Gaza, the Madleen crew rescued four Sudanese refugees, fleeing genocidal forces backed by the West’s Gulf allies. They were unable to prevent the others on board being returned to Libya by an EU-backed militia, where people seeking safety routinely face slavery, incarceration, and death.

    Meanwhile the same Israeli Heron drones that surveil and target Palestinians in Gaza also police the Mediterranean for EU’s border agency Frontex. Across the Mediterranean, European states funnel money, weapons and political support to authoritarians and militias whilst claiming to uphold human rights.
    In return, Europe demands its neighbours act as border guards, buyers of its weapons and tech, and a steady supplier of fossil fuels and resources.
    The outcome is a sea where humanitarian ships and refugees are blocked whilst deadly arms and ecosystem-destroying fossil fuels move freely. And the sea itself is suffering. Amid successive years of record heat, the Mediterranean that is now warming a fifth faster than the world’s other oceans and much of the plant and animal life on its shores is dying out.

    The climate campaigners on the Madleen sailed to a Gaza where ecocide has compounded genocide, through a Mediterranean where more storms, fires and floods than ever before drive people from their homes and destroy their livelihoods. Those who protest the confluence of state violence and environmental destruction are targeted.

    From Italy to Egypt, harsh civil liberties restrictions have recently targeted climate activists, human rights activists and migrants first. Governments that claim to be protecting their people from the crises we are living through are in fact exacerbating them. This is as true in Europe as it is in Trump’s America, despite the growing schism between them.
    Palestine provides a glimpse of where this could end for us all.
    Israel’s new so-called “aid” distribution system in Gaza: a labyrinth of surveillance drones and biometric gates operated amid a lethal blockade by troops and private security companies, is a terrifying model of modern repression. And the technologies it uses are both imported and exported globally. Against this system, we must build a different future while we can.

    In place of war and genocide, we demand a free Palestine.
    In place of racialised and deadly borders and blockades we demand free movement.
    In place of destructive and polluting rearmament programmes and aid budgets being torn apart, we demand wages and housing and humanity.

    In place of tech billionaires’ dreams of mass surveillance and control, we demand that humanity’s technological capabilities are harnessed towards increasing, not restricting our freedom.
    In place of climate and environmental destruction and extraction we demand a just transition, the restoration of our natural world, and cheap clean energy for all.
    LANGUAGES
    ENGLISH
    DATE
    15 JUNE 2025
    CATEGORY
    OFFICIAL STATEMENT
    IMAGE CREDITS
    SALVATORE ALLEGRA/
    ANADOLU AGENCY
    In place of a Mediterranean Sea torn apart by state, corporate, and neocolonial violence, we demand a shared home in which we all can thrive.

    In place of death and despair, we demand life and hope.
    Please add your organization or
    individual name here
    [ List Of Signatories ] :
    Organizations:

    The Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy
    Freedom Flotilla Coalition
    No Name Kitchen, Spain
    EmpowerVan, Switzerland
    Missing Voices (REER), Senegal
    The Hummingbird Refugee Project, UK
    Artists for Palestine, UK
    Hermes Centre, Italy
    Reclaim the Sea, UK
    Haringey Welcome, UK
    Fridays for Future MAPA
    Youth Advocates for Climate Action, Philippines
    Fridays for Future International
    The Students for Palestine (TS4P), Canada
    Equinox Initiative for Racial Justice
    Antizionist Jewish Alliance, Belgium
    Melitea, Italy
    Glocal Roots, Greece
    Abolish Frontex
    Love Without Borders, Greece
    Refugees in Libya, Italy/Libya
    Walk the Petition Collective, Ireland
    Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign
    Statewatch, UK
    Sarah Seenotrettung, Germany
    Monkstown Vigil for Palestine, Ireland
    Pals for Palestine, Ireland
    Migrants Organise, UK
    Mobile Info Team, Greece
    For Refugees, UK
    North Wicklow Against Genocide, Ireland
    Refugee Platform Egypt
    CODEPINK, USA
    Sarnians4Palestine, Canada
    American Friends of Combatants for Peace, USA
    Droichead Solidarity Group in Tipperary, Ireland
    Hot Bubble
    Sneem Tidytowns
    Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, UK
    Mothers Against Genocide, Ireland
    Tipping Point, UK
    Bank Better, UK
    Irish Healthcare Workers for Palestine, Ireland
    Uni for Palestine Munich, Germany
    Stop Wapenhandel, Netherlands
    Northern Lights Aid, Greece
    Jews for Peace, Latvia
    Sea-Watch e.V., Germany
    Platform London, UK
    CRID, France
    Watch the Med - Alarm Phone, International
    Monkstown Vigil in Solidarity with Palestine, Ireland
    The Border Violence Monitoring Network
    Global Justice Now, UK
    Klima4Palästina, Germany
    BiPOC for Future, Germany
    Rumbo a Gaza, Spain
    Naas Biodiversity Group, Ireland
    Migration-Control.Info
    The Civil Fleet Podcast, UK
    South Yorkshire Refugee and Asylum Action Group (SYMAAG), UK
    US Boats to Gaza, USA
    Canadian Boat to Gaza (part of the Freedom Flotilla), Canada
    Ongi Etorria Errefuxiatuak, Basque Country
    Ecomuseo Mare Memoria Viva, Italy
    Shut Down Folkston ICE Processing Centre, USA
    Seebrücke, Berlin
    Climáximo, Portugal
    Parents for Future, Scotland
    Climate Refugees, USA
    European Jews for Palestine
    Leaders for Climate Action, Germany
    Books Against Borders
    Free Gaza Movement, Denmark
    Den Postkulturelle Krop, Denmark
    Greenish, Egypt
    Feminist Antimilitarist Collective, Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Pasifika Uprising, USA
    Neighbours 4 Palestine Owen Sound, Canada
    Water is Life Gaza, Palestine
    Seven Sisters Collective, Turtle Island
    Youth for Climate, Türikye
    Donne in Nero di Parma, Italy
    UNM Students Justice for Palestine, USA
    Our Grounding Foods, USA
    Conscience Canada, Canada
    SOLdePaz Pachakuti, Asturies
    Human Rights Sentinel, Ireland
    Council of Canadians London Chapter, Canada
    Qathet Climate Alliance, Canada
    Bruxelles Panthères, Belgium
    Comunita’ San Benedetto al Porto, Italy
    World BEYOND War, International
    Guidance for Growth, USA
    Oakland Jericho, USA
    Pacific Life Community, USA
    14 Friends of Palestine, USA
    Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid, Canada
    Solidarität International e.V., Germany
    Women in Black, Austria
    Vrouwen in het Zwart, Netherlands
    NTUA, Greece
    Green Mountain Solidarity with Palestine, USA
    Council of Canadians South Okanagan Chapter , CANADA
    BDS-NL, The Netherlands
    BDS Malaysia
    Jews Against the Occupation 1948, Australia
    GetUp, AUSTRALIA
    Palestine Solidarity Alliance, South Africa
    Edmonton Small Press Association, Canada
    Grandparents Against Genocide, Canada
    The Polis Project, USA
    Tribal Vibes Wild Fire Productions, Canada
    The Free Gaza Movement, USA
    Radbound Staff for Palestine, The Netherlands
    MARUF CT, USA
    The Frances Dinh Blake Foundation, USA
    Comité de Solidaridad con la Causa Árabe, Spain
    Geef Tegengas, Netherlands
    Saints Francis and Therese Catholic Worker, USA
    Cashel for Palestine, Ireland
    Radio Tv Lavapiés, Spain
    Council of Canadians South Okanagan Chapter, Canada
    Greater Toronto for BDS, Canada
    IWW Poland, Poland
    LEGACY-The Landscape Connection, USA
    Piano Terra, Italy
    Latin American Canadian Solidarity Association, Canada
    Croeso Menai, Wales
    BDS Malaysia, Malaysia
    Veterans For Peace Chapter 27, USA
    Central Coast Friends of Palestine, Australia
    Balkan Solidarity Network, The Balkans
    Solidarity Albania, Albania
    Mes 2 pieds sur la Terre, France
    GreenNet, UK
    BDS - Gruppe Bonn, Germany
    U Buntu e a Capo, Italy
    September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, USA
    Arles pour la Palestine, France
    The Francis Dinh Blake Foundation, USA
    Unlock, France
    Migrant Democracy Project, UK
    Jews for Palestine WA, Australia
    Saskatoon Chapter of  Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle  East, Canada
    Council of Canadians Edmonton Chapter, Canada
    Collectif Antigone, Canada
    Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, US Section (WILPF US)
    Glasgow Palestine Human rights campaign, Scotland
    UBC Staff for Palestine, Canada
    Hunter Palestine Solidarity, Australia
    Fridays For Future Lebanon, Lebanon
    For Palestine, UK
    Ship to Gaza Gotemburg, Sweden
    The Love Alliance, Scotland
    Fanrivista, La Fanzina Generalista, Italy
    Denman Islanders for Climate Action & Social Justice, Canada
    Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) Queensland Regional Meeting, Australia
    IranMotstånd - Lund, Sweden
    Doctors Against Racism Sweden, Sweden
    Connecting Gaza, UK
    Bienvenidxs Refugiadxs Málaga, Spain
    Fridays For Future Greece, Greece
    Mothers For Palestine, Sweden
    Centre for Environmental Living and Training, Ireland
    Convenzione dei diritti nel Mediterraneo, Italy
    Corporate Watch, UK
    Connacht One Future, Ireland
    Quilombo Ciência, Brasil
    XR Galway, Ireland
    Houses of Resources, Germany
    Headquarters of the Movement, Belgium
    Kinvara Climate Action, Ireland
    Tipping Point North South, UK
    Coalition Against Genocide, UK
    Peace-seeking Iranian Veterans, Iran/USA
    ESEA Green Lions, UK
    The Council of Canadians, Canada
    Araknea, Turkey
    Victoria Healthworkers Against Genocide, Canada

    UK Youth Climate Coalition, UK

    Individuals:

    Greta Thunberg
    MEP Carola Rackete, Germany
    Suchitra Vijayan, USA
    Petra Molnar, Faculty Associate, Harvard University, Canada
    Fahmida Miah, UK
    Natasha Walter, UK
    Gina Psylliakou, Greece
    Chloe Sarshar, Canada
    Carys Boughton, UK
    Farhana Sheikh, UK
    Hector Proveda, Spain
    Birgit Staack, Germany
    Eva Anagnostou, Greece
    Lou-Salomé Beaunay, France
    Josipa Lulić, Croatia
    Emma Martín Díaz, Professor of Social Anthropology, Spain
    Domenica Cox, UK
    Manon Louis, UK
    Francesco Anselmetti, PhD Candidate, Harvard University, UK
    Noah Hatchwell, UK
    Pauline Fritz, Germany
    Marc Schulpin, Germany
    Stephanie Richani, Cyprus
    Sue Fraser, UK
    Cassio Peia, Italy
    Clara Zinecker, Cyprus
    Mitzi Jonelle Tan, Philippines
    Claudia Lombardo, Spain
    Ben Anderson, Ireland
    Rand Attallah, USA
    Fernando Racimo, Italy
    Atizkoa Lopez de Lapuente Portilla, Spain
    Vesna Ivezic, Croatia
    Ayaan Khan, Canda
    Hope Barker, UK
    Innah Gaspar, Germany
    Fenya Fischler, AJAB, EAJS, European Jews for Palestine, Belgium
    Samia Khoder, Germany
    Georgia Nash, UK
    Sigrid Skou Hansen, Denmark
    Silvia Carta
    Mariana Santos, Portugal
    Jude Farrel, Ireland
    Kirsten Farrelly, Ireland
    Christine Barry, Ireland
    Natasha King, UK
    Aisling Drury Byrne, Ireland
    Clare Holohan, Ireland
    Deirdre Kelly, Ireland
    Nuha Izzatunnissaa, Indonesia
    Lissana Genuardi, Italy
    Mike Fitzgerald, Ireland
    Ger Power, Ireland
    Corina Barbul, Canada
    Margit Vincent, Italy
    Gianluca Cangemi, Italy
    Karine Vanthuyne, Professor at the University of Ottawa, Canada
    Jessamy O’Dwyer, Pals for Palestine, Ireland
    Lena Excrum, Germany
    Louika, Greece
    Kirsty Morgan, UK
    Jo Murphy, Ireland
    Barbara Liston, Ireland
    Bernadette Morton, Ireland
    Meadhbh Curran, Ireland
    Luca Ghidini, Italy
    Brett Davidson, USA
    Mary Caherty, Ireland
    Catherine Power, Ireland
    Dwayne Ferdinand Wildeboer, UK
    Polyana de Oliveira, USA
    Dorrotya Bower, Hungary
    Kate Cahoon, Germany
    Zainabb Hull, Crips for Palestine, UK
    Clara Joan Bauza, Belgium
    Johanna Lewis, Canada
    Gene Parfait, Abolish Frontex, Belgium
    Donal Murphy, Ireland
    Jasmine Lefebvre, Canada
    Kevin O’Brien, Pals for Palestine, Ireland
    Julia Falco, Canada
    Suzanne Murphy, Ireland
    Eleni Athanasiou, Greece
    Katja Janßen, Germany
    Barbara Kelly, Ireland
    Zohair Chamberlain Regev, Germany
    Nour Khalil, Egypt
    Emma Hume, Ireland
    Devorah Gordon, Canada
    H. Chang, USA
    Heather Beattie, Canada
    Robert Nowak, USA
    Katja Gavin, Germany
    Captain Locky Maclean, Canada
    Micheline Steele, Canada
    Asma Ali, Canada
    Jennifer Robinson, Canada
    Annie-Marie Fuller, Ireland
    Pauline Caulfield Gregg, Ireland
    Zara Flynn, Ireland
    Rhona Carroll, Ireland
    Clare Corrigan, Ireland
    Edel McPartland, Ireland
    Antionette Ryan, Ireland
    Eileen Brannigan, Ireland
    Annie Molloy, UK
    Maximilian Kratz, Germany
    Noirin Ni Earcain, Ireland
    Saoirse Kelly, Ireland
    Savannah Garcia, France
    Hossam el-Hamalawy, Germany
    Aisling McDonagh, Ireland
    Lisa Strohschneider, Germany
    Sarah Dawson, Ireland
    Art Ó Laoghaire, Ireland
    Danielle Gannon, Ireland
    Amy Remeikis, Australia
    Aoife Gannon, Ireland
    John Loudon, USA
    Siobhan M Quigley, Ireland
    Ali Brady, Ireland
    Lorna O’Brien, Ireland
    Gill Waters, Ireland
    Katie Smirnova
    Éadoin Curtin, Ireland
    Thomas Feldmann, Germany
    Suzanne Doyle, Ireland
    Liam Murphy, Ireland
    Emily Barrett Laois, Ireland
    Laura Caffrey, Ireland
    Eileen Carr, Ireland
    Ciara Murphy, Ireland
    Warren Kimmitt, Canada
    Anna Clauer, US
    Caoimhe Butterly, Ireland
    Marion Houston, Ireland
    Valeria Elliott, Canada
    Torbjörn Björlund, Sweden
    Fiona Cauchi, Ireland
    Mona Happ, Germany
    Karenza M Case, UK
    Dr Caragh Behan, Ireland
    E. Jahns, Germany
    Angy Skuce, Ireland
    Kieran Harkin, Ireland
    Mary Flynn, Ireland
    Helmut Dietrich, Germany
    Ronán Conroy, Professor Emeritus, RCSI University, Ireland
    Nayeon Kim, South Korea
    Nichola Donnelly, Ireland
    Marie Therese Connolly, Ireland
    Enrico Schifani, University of Parma, Italy
    Line Algoed, Belgium
    Niamh Geran, Ireland
    Siobhan O Neill, Ireland
    Sile Murphy, Ireland
    Wasil Schauseil, Germany
    Roza de Jong, Netherlands
    Maca Hourihane, Ireland
    Saoirse O’Brien, Ireland
    Lorenzo Maria Perrone, Germany
    Dr Kate Marie Boyle, Ireland
    David Heap, Canada
    Rabia Rivzi, Canada
    Benjamin Fasching-Gray, Austria
    Marie Denham, Ireland
    Huwaida Arraf, Human Rights Attorney, Freedom Flotilla Organiser
    Alice Gambella, Italy
    Anusia Grennell, Ireland
    Laura Colini, University of Venice, Italy
    Monika Vykoukal Judeobolschewiener*innen, Austria
    Madeleine Cobbing, Freelance Environmental Consultant for NGOs, UK
    Flux Krämer, Germany
    Bamboo Zardetto, UK
    Meredyth Yoon, USA
    Cllr Kim Bryan, Wales
    Bill Boggia, Scotland
    Martin O’Sullivan, Ireland
    Ernie Watt, Scotland
    JJ Buchanan, Scotland
    Friederike Gower, UK
    Peter Barlow, Scotland
    Rebecca McCallum, UK
    Isabel Macrae, Scotland
    Caroline George, UK
    Kit Kittredge, Freedom Flotilla Coalition, USA
    David Wardrop, UK
    Dean Nasser, UK
    Charles Henry Wightman, Scotland
    Aileen Ford, UK
    Carol Warom, UK
    Jan Mayor, Scotland
    Catherine Coyle, Scotland
    Joan Brown, Scotland
    Marieken Van der Elst, Netherlands
    Rita Hoppet, Scotland
    Lorri Morton, France
    Jules Morton, Australia
    Angela Hawe, Ireland
    Melanie Pereira, Portugal
    Ruby McGloughlin, United Kingdom
    Marlene Engelhorn, Austria
    Philippine Migeot, France
    Celine Dimanche, France
    Elliot Rudd, United Kingdom
    Andjelija Kedzic, Sweden
    Andreas Andersson, Sweden
    Caoimhe O’Sullivan, Ireland
    Ana Aguirre, Spain
    Iris de Pree, Netherlands
    Emmie Nilsek, Sweden
    Gintare, Finland
    Rowane Keller, France
    Emma Desuza, USA
    Ida Corner, UK
    Brandon Ham, Mexico
    Joséphine Queste, France
    Kyle Gray, Ireland
    Simone Rudolphi (photographer), German passport, Bangladeshi heart
    Jovita Beeston, England
    Brandon Camacho Ham, Mexico
    Ryan Jones, United States
    Donna Dougan, Scotland
    Elisa Serio, Italy
    Katherine Blackadder, United Kingdom
    Nadja, Germany
    Kirishni John, Norway
    Guenther Schneider, Germany
    Tara Kruszynski, Australia
    Katherine Blackadder, United Kingdom
    Kyye Blachly, United States
    Asphodel Denning, United Kingdom
    Linda, Ireland
    Lou Hauray, France
    Daniel Barker, United Kingdom
    Duilio Donfrancesco, Italia
    Ayesha Ubaidullah (3rd year medical student at Riphah International University), Pakistan
    Anna Wnuk, United States of America
    Andreea Boutaib, United Kingdom
    Lilith MacBean, United Kingdom
    Carolina Zetterblad, Sweden
    Oscar Méndez Martínez, México
    Blesyl Sutaron, Philippines
    Julia Laurie, South Africa
    Afnan Syed, Canada
    Bethan Lloyd, UK
    Stefan Simion, Germany
    Livio Fania, Italy
    Manca Majnik, Slovenia
    B. Sutaron, Philippines
    John Moloney, Ireland
    Luna, France
    Janina Hossbach, UK
    Fleur Stirling, England
    Vasa Nestorovic, Serbia
    Tijs Van de Venster, Belgium
    Ali, Germany
    Cotruță Roberta, Republic of Moldova
    Cindy Peter, Germany
    Anna Mous, Belgium
    Sarah Rueda-Blake, UK
    Mellyssa, France
    Charlie Fanniere, Australia
    Hermann Sæther, Norway
    Prita Permatadinata, Indonesia
    Jo Woffinden, United Kingdom
    Kamila Zahra, Indonesia
    Olivia Wong, United Kingdom
    Frida Hernandez, United States
    Clara Shade, Australia
    Ashley Salas, United States
    Saskia Vierheilig, Spain
    Nika Disney, Croatia
    Verda Padma, Indonesia
    Barbara Hernandez Gonzalez, Spain
    Krystal Thorne, UK
    Mantovani Annalisa, France
    Julie Sydenham, Ireland
    Serena Stampfer, United Kingdom
    Giusadi Cecere, Italy
    Laura Kammerbauer, Germany
    Emily Baird, United States
    Bent Erik Krøyer, Denmark
    Monia Sander, Denmark
    Joel Andersen, United States
    Hazel Millar, Canada
    Rebekah Kiddell Mullen, United Kingdom
    Odysseas Gabrielatos, Greece
    Clara Lidström, Sweden
    Sarah Mac Mrossan, UK
    Meilinda Pancawati, Indonesia
    Jordyn Ferguson, Canada
    Michaele Suisse, USA
    Birdie McGrail, UK
    Haleemah T, UK
    Ian Lucas, USA
    Bünyamin, Ergün, Sweden
    Christian Frank, Germany
    Chantal, Germany
    Payton Clevenger, USA
    Marta Sorgi, Italy
    Rachel Lee, Australia
    Viiva, Mexico
    Esther Romero Gutierrez, Spain
    Francisco Orellana Lara, Chile
    Cadiou Daniele, France
    Caterino Rato, Portugal
    Kayla Fernandez, Canada
    Norah Fraser, Canada
    Marilyn Keddy, Canada
    Alessandra Pioppo, Italy
    Fanny Brady, USA
    Silvana Radice, Italy
    Angela Maria Bernardini, Italia
    Anousha Steen, England
    Yousra Nadège Andre, France
    Astrid Cryz, Canada
    Claude Léostic, France Palestine Solidarity Association, France
    Hilary Wright, Canada
    Sheri Cowan, Canada
    Tabatha May, Canada
    Chime Namdol Sherpa, Nepal
    João Prestes, Brazil
    Yekalsi, Indonesia
    Fletcher Hogue, USA
    Carol Hayward, UK
    Quinnlan Steela, USA
    Cheryl Stewart, Canada
    Sam, Canada
    Ashley Ditch, USA
    Elcin Demir, Germany
    Liew Xiang Xiang, Malaysia
    Samantha Brand
    Sharifah Fauziah Alsree, Malaysia
    Rebecca Grover Jones, UK
    Asaad Hashin, Malaysia
    Rozita Maliki, Malaysia
    Vanessa Mason, USA
    Jenna Newberg, USA
    Tazeen Shaukat
    Tazeen, Pakistan
    Susan Okwuegbuna, Canada
    Robert Garthson, Canada
    Sandra Newton, Scotland
    Emily Lu, USA
    Sandrine Renaux, France
    Sabina Oldham, USA
    Villenave, France
    Zafira Miranti Agung, Indonesia
    Lyn Adamson, Canada
    Sam Clara Dupuy Georget, France
    Aylin Melo De La Hoz, Colombia
    Mary Cowper-Smith, Canada
    Tiphaine Pontdeme, France
    Aaron Scott, USA
    M Breen, Ireland
    Charles McFadden, Canada-Wide Peace and Justice Network, Canada
    Gry Senderovitz, Denmark
    Siobhan O’Sullivan, Ireland
    Maryann Blackburn, USA
    Anna Kallio, Finland
    Federico Scarso, Italy
    Jodie Evans, USA
    Tyler Schin, USA
    Farwa K, Canada
    Gabriela Serpa, USA
    Polleux Maryline, France
    Alice Poole, Scotland
    Maxwell Sivers Boyce, USA
    Janne Toft-Lind, Sweden
    Rachel Spencer, UK
    Katie Madanat, UK
    Anna Gabrysiak, Poland
    Débora Yumi Baccaro, Brazil
    Emily Mendel, USA
    Gabriella, USA
    Eve Nurmsalu, Estonia
    Celia M Torres, Paraguay
    Elizabeth Mortheim, USA
    Jessica Alves, Canada
    Mitchell Kosterman, Canada
    Jessica Gareau, Canada
    Lydia Wood, Canada
    Sofía Cortés, Mexico
    Conni Dawson, Ireland
    Rebekah Plett, Canada
    Anna Wible, USA
    Sophia Garau, USA
    Maria Tariq, Canada
    Emma Matthews, USA
    Sha Ongelungel, USA
    Malini Gija, Canada
    Chrishanthy Thevarajah, Norway
    Isha Mariyam Haris, India
    Gabriella Lucrexia Pinard, Canada
    Raeef Syed, Canada
    Francesca Pease, UK
    Alejandra Zavala, Mexico
    Asher Kirchner, Canada
    Colleen Fuller, Canada
    Rashi Amirdin, Malaysia
    Ocean Robbins, USA
    Rashid Amirdin, Malaysia
    Abigail Morgan, USA
    Kiana Fukuyama, USA
    Kalayaan Braza, USA
    Emma Jefkins
    Thais Yamasaki, Brazil
    Phạm Đức Lâm Hải, Vietnam
    Sandra Lee, USA
    Anette, Germany
    Roseanne Jeries, USA
    Maria Nas, Greece
    Stefan Warsink, Netherlands
    Katy Cox, UK
    Emily Graham, USA
    Alyssa, USA
    Bear Wiedman, USA
    Μαρία-Ειρήνη Κουκουλάκη, Greece
    Linda Gray, USA
    Kalana Ortega Hoefner, USA
    Lola García, Spain
    Sophie Elaine, Italy
    Zeynep, Türkiye
    Iman Nurul Ain, Malaysia
    Andrea Zylstra, Canada
    Amy Branco, Canada
    Solaf, Syria
    Brooke Bowlin, USA
    Ana Abad, Spain
    Mirela Ružić, Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Emilia Roder, Germany
    Grace Devries, USA
    Anne Marescaux, Belgium
    Sofie Huisman, Netherlands
    Margot Bunz, Canada
    Johanna Hietmann, Germany
    Kawaiola Wong, USA
    Niamh McNulty, UK
    Camille Roger, France
    Wolfe Erlichman, Independent Jewish Voices, Canada
    Aileen Hennell, France
    Elizabeth, USA
    Lauren Munn, Canada
    Cyrielle Vannieuwenhuyse, France
    Godet Yannick, France
    Reem Q, Australia
    Benjamin Irwin, uSA
    Fatimah Alsolaili, Iraq
    Dimitri, Greece
    Maria, Greece
    Max Claar, USA
    Jane Kirkwood, Scotland
    Finneas McLeod, USA
    Gina Asalon, USA
    Hugo, Belgium
    Joachim Pförtner, Germany
    Laura B., Germany
    Siobhan Crowley, USA
    Martina DiMeglio, USA
    Olivia Feist, USA
    Zara Nickell, UK
    Myriam Queru, France
    Fani Henry, Belgium
    Nanna Strandberg, Denmark
    Chiara, Belgium
    Dan Maitland, Canada
    Bliss Wylie, UK
    Jennifer Haro, USA
    Fabienne Guiot, Belgium
    Atlas Sarrafouğlu, Türkiye
    Marissa Saenger, USA
    Charya Samarakoon, Sri Lanka
    Regine Portilla Leal, Mexico
    José Alejandro Avendaño Miranda, Mexico
    Ronna Wallace, Canada
    Tinsae Geyer, USA
    Mia De Gennaro, Italy
    Lisa Skeggs, UK
    Tehmeedah Q - The Students for Palestine, Canada
    Jes Vesconte United States
    Heather Huguenor US
    Marit Parker Cymru/Wales, UK
    Melina King United States
    Lisa Stuart U.K.
    Estefania de la Torre - CODEPINK Chicago United States
    Mike Stuart U.K.
    Brooklyn Harker Cananda
    Keith Scanlon Ireland
    Fiona McMurran, Canada
    Noella Canada
    Cassidy Ross, USA
    Sabina Törnqvist, Finland
    Julie Barton United Kingdom
    Dylan Jordan United States
    Bobbi Morgan, Australia
    Ellen Murdock United Kingdom
    Liisa Räisänen, Finland
    Erin McKay
    Gail lucas Usa
    Joel Motto United States
    Mercedes Kemp, writer, UK
    Belinda Chisholm Scotland
    Giulia Matesi Italy /, Netherlands
    Anne G. Woodhead United States of America
    Zanna Ekeroth, Canada
    Rosanne Holecek, USA
    Almira Austria
    Abdul Malik, Austria
    Shelly Fortier United States
    Brenda Thompson, Canada
    Barbara Guarnerio, Italy
    Egla Martínez, Associate Professor, Carleton University Canada
    Moira Demos US
    Gregory Gillis, Canada
    Nick Edelstein U.S.
    Phil Soubliere, Canada
    Ilya Derevensky United Kingdom
    Keri-Louise Williams United Kingdom
    Wren Lax-Holmes Usa
    Seth H US
    Charles Fortier, Canada
    Kia Ora Gaza (New Zealand) New Zealand/Aotearoa
    Renee conjaerts, Belgium
    Grace Eadie, Australia
    Anne Bras, France
    Stephanie Boilard United States of America
    Seyda Ipek, Canada
    Charlie Arnold United States
    Clara Grossmann, Germany
    HIPOLITO RODRIGUEZ México
    Clara Grossmann, Germany
    Kaying Lee, USA
    María Yolanda Xelhuantzi López México
    Clara Ferri, professor, Mexico
    Raluca Ciceu United Kingdom
    thomas bef, Denmark
    David Lubell CA
    Marcela Gomez México
    Martina Camilleri Malta
    Susan Helen Bernamont, Spain
    Eduardo A. Rincón Mejía, Mexico
    Laura Tran, Canada
    Dianne Varga aspirational borderless world
    Manuel Fernandez - Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico
    Daniel Shunra Cascadia
    Ailbhe Wilson CA
    Javier. Chile
    David Houndjo, France
    Cathy Carpenter, Canada
    SUSI NURANI BINTI RAZIKIN MALAYSIA
    Karem Giorio italy
    Drena McCormack CA
    Jeppe Taudal Thorsen, Denmark
    Carmela Canada
    Bea Dal Bello, Canada
    Adam Goldberger, USA
    Fred Guerin qathet Climate Alliance, Canada
    Daniel Rück, Canada
    Andy Arech México
    Silver Damsen United States
    Jefferson County palestinian solidarity, USA
    Paul Strome CANADA
    TERESA MOROLLON ORIA Sastra de la CNT Madrid España
    Patrice P.-Martel, Canada
    Monica J Charlton United States
    ELIZABETH LEE CANADA
    Patrícia Portugal
    Angelika Hackett, Canada
    Robert Hackett, Canada
    Anh Le United States
    Chloe Dumpleton England
    Karren Smith, Canada
    B. Sutaron Philippines
    Arturo Aroch C. Salud Pública, UNAM, México Ciudad de México
    Arfa Marefa Haryanto Indonesia
    Paulina Aroch, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico
    Khurram Pakistan
    Caroline Cooper United States
    Liyana Binti Bakar Jamili Makaysia
    P Mikkonen, Finland
    Sarah McCoy United States
    Cristina Muller United States
    Sam Hovey, Canada
    Hakima Lamari, Canada
    Óscar Rueda
    Martha Goldin
    Angelica Temoche, USA
    Jennifer Griller, Canada
    Erin R United States of America
    Margaret Kapka, USA
    Marina Hasselberg Portugal, Canada
    Louise LaHatte New Zealand
    Alicia Richards Aotearoa New Zealand
    Maja Iwar-Svensson, Sweden
    J Moldovan, Australia
    Laurie Izaks MacSween so called Australia (land never ceded)
    Isabelle Elliot, USA
    Daniela Vanzo Italia
    Teun van Son, University of Antwerp Belgium
    Grace Marquez Philippines
    Cemo Cemo Türkiye
    Marta Alberti Lozano, Spain
    Coleen Ordinado Philippines
    Gordon Thorsten Ziems, Germany
    Silvia Pinca New Zealand
    Othman Alfarhan Kuwait
    Michel Chevalier, France
    Elena Probst Portugal
    Olivier Van den Brande, France
    Doreen Allan, Canada
    Jack Anderson, Canada
    Mandana Mansouri, Germany
    Mandana Christine Hanna Mansouri, Germany
    Ana Gvozdić
    Charlotte Sans, France
    Isabel Sicat Philippines
    Dan Glover United Kingdom
    Laila Bazzi, Australia
    Rahul Mehta, Canada
    Marietta Krumnau, Germany
    Charlse Newman, Australia
    Raquel Filipa Simas do Carmo Portugal
    Sofia Garcia Noriega Bueno United Kingdom
    Corrie Scott, Canada
    Tara Reynor OGrady Ireland
    Megan McMeekin, Canada
    Lile Maciupki Maelström, France
    Madison Senger, Canada
    Shoda Rackal, UK
    Camilla Edvinsson, Sweden
    Katia WERY - Association Belgo-Palestinienne (ABP), Belgium
    Rachel Roxburgh, UK
    Concepcion Requena Corona, Australia
    Sabryna Lefrançois, Canada
    Christiane Parreira Feresin Brasil
    Leann Nicole Velasco Philippines
    Rachele Voltolina, Italy
    Elisabetta Miotto Soain
    Lorraine McNeil, retired member, OPSEU 110, Canada
    Fouad Yammine, Lebanon
    Luc Rosenthal United States
    Brittany Loar with The Global March to Gaza and Artists Against Apartheid, USA
    Robert Hackett, Canada
    Gizem Koca Türkiye
    Ignacio Negri Aranguren, Argentina
    Beatrice Yefimov Ukraine, California (USA), Berlin (Germany)
    Nadia Arancio, Italy
    Asha Hon England
    Saidi Nordine Belgique
    Nabeela Australia
    Mackenzie Rylee Bulldog, Canada
    Paul Hendrikx The, Netherlands
    Memorial university Marilyn Porter, Canada
    Deidra Gauthier, Canada
    Fenya L., Germany
    Juhani Juutilainen Suomi
    Raquel Correia Portugal
    Raquel Correia
    Sidney platt United States
    Etna Indonesia
    Annaka Freve United States
    Sabina Indonesia
    Melissa Latronica - Humanitarian Activist, USA
    Gunilla Hjorth, Sweden
    Maddie Turner, USA
    Laura Colloridi, Australia
    Laurette Vankeerberghen, Belgium
    Leah Main, Canada
    Marianna Crociani, Italy
    Thiago Ramiro Argerich Lahitte, Italy
    Sharon O'Phee, Australia
    Sofia Ershova, Canada
    Indra Palmans United Kingdom
    Juri Hertel, Action Against War, Fridays for Future ,Cork Palestine Solidarity, Elders for Earth, Ireland
    Brenda México
    Nollaig Gallagher Ireland
    Diana Chaplin, Canada
    Elizabeth lee canada
    Ita tajura anwar Malaysia
    Adeline Esh United States
    ava pope, Canada
    Mary-Elizabeth Meagher United States
    Faith McKenzie, Australia
    Heidi Arata, USA
    Victoria Barbiani Italia
    Melissa Vivacqua Rodrigues- professor at Federal University of São Paulo, Brazil
    Jah France
    Saka Sora Walesa Indonesia
    Diana Alexe Romania
    Julia Rejek Deutschland
    Nola Smith Aotearoa New Zealand
    Zoé Ajasse, France
    Dr Louise Wakeling, Coalition of Women for Justice and Peace Australia
    Elisabeth Abdo, Germany
    Cecile Yazbek affiliated Coalition of Women for Justice and Peace, Australia
    Luca Cittadini, Italy
    Bettina Linke Ireland
    Natalia Perroni, Brazil
    Fabio Scaltritti, Italy
    Suzanne Rouleau, Canada
    Tami Tabibzadah, Canada
    Nola United States of America
    Thais Motta, Brazil
    Francesca Bellettini, Italy
    John King UAW Labor for Palestine, UAW local 7902 United States
    Kayla Anderson, USA
    Mia Berg
    Caroline Barton, UK
    Jacqui Gingras, Professor, Sociology, Toronto Metropolitan University Canada
    Mary McEvoy Ireland
    Olivia Zemer United States
    Sofia Wittzell, Sweden
    Giuliana Racco Spain/Italy/Canada
    Colette Piedcoq, France
    Lauren E Rushing United States
    Jacob Knutson United States
    Cristina Martínez Jiménez Galicia, Spain
    Nora Roman United States
    Mrs Margaret Barrie Scotland
    Natalie Fox, UK
    Luigi Eusebi, Italy
    Councillor Minesh Parekh, Labour and Co-operative Councillor on Sheffield City Council, United Kingdom
    Morgane Doby Kersaho, France
    Kritesh Kumar Rambarrun Mauritius
    Greta Coleman United States
    Larry McCumsey, Canada
    Cathy F, Canada
    Marie-Noelle RENONCET-UNGEHEUER, France
    Gary Erb United States
    ELIZABETH LDD CANADA
    Aisling Meath Ireland
    Tyrell Cooper ~ Citizens Climate Lobby United States
    El Vettersand, Australia
    Burton Steck usa
    Dana Visalli United States
    Babette Bruton United States
    Charles Byrne, USA
    Nick Hammer US
    Babette Bruton United States
    Jerise Fogel United States
    LeRoi Armstead, individual. United States pf America
    Sylvia Moyes, Australia
    Ellen Franzen, USA
    Jackie Tryggeseth United States
    Lisa Gherardi United States
    Ana Marton United States
    Dr. Connie Stomper United States
    Christine Grodd, Australia
    Jean McClure, Canada
    Vera Funk, Canada
    John Duddy, Canada
    Dr Lee W Andresen Dr Lee W Andresen, Australia
    Freedom Flotilla Participant; USS Liberty Survivor, USA
    Rebecca Nimmons United States
    Monique Foley Québec
    Peter fitting, Canada
    Ross Copeland, Australia
    Roger Leisner, USA
    zoe kunstenaar United States
    Lynn Shoemaker United States
    Elizabeth Pickett, Canada
    Eric Walberg, Canada
    Herb Buckwalter, Canada
    John Hill, Canada
    Ken Kraybill United States
    Herb Buckwalter, Canada
    Kathy Bradley, concerned human being United States
    John F Nagle, USA
    Jepke Goudsmit (member of Jews Against the Occupation '48), Australia
    pascal molineaux Colombia
    Prof. Andrew Paul Gutierrez FRES, Italy
    LauraLee Woodruff United States
    Jonathan Mitchell, author and anti-Zionist United States
    Khaled Mouammar, Former Member of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada
    Marie-France Imberton United States
    Former Member, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Mary Mouammar, Canada
    Elvina Sainte-Marie, Canada
    Larry Ulrey, USA
    Margaret Rogers’s, USA
    Justin Blouir United States
    Bonnie Black, Canada
    Thomas Matsuda United States
    Alisan T Tucker-Giesy United States
    Edward Mills United States
    Elizabeth Widerquist, USA
    Janet Beck, Canada
    Nancy G Klassen, Canada
    Sahar Masud Usa
    Cary Moy United States
    Joel Hildebrandt New Zealand
    Brent Rocks united states
    Jon Logan United States
    George jansson, USA
    Francois Gosselin Couillard, Canada
    Tue Magnussen, Denmark
    Peggy Luna United States
    Michael Cavanaugh United States
    Linda V. Kade, AIA Linda Kade United States
    Anam Matariyeh, USA
    Dean's office Beit el Hikma Tunisia
    Harlem United Andrew Arrabaca United States
    Anam Matariyeh, USA
    Hussein Ghadban, Canada
    Sylvia Hale, Australia
    Dan R Myers Refuse Fascism United States
    Drew Herzig United States of America
    Maria Soledad Bertucci Mora Chile
    Tracy Feldman United States
    Manuel Erickson, Canada
    Ricardo Wheeler United States
    Anthony Mihovich United States
    Beverly J Dahlen, poet & essayist US
    Nicolle Argueta Honduras
    Sapphire Pena United States
    Dolores Pino U.S.
    CAROLINE D ALCORSO, Australia
    Louise Bjorknas, Canada
    Jane Jewell United States
    Rev. Dr. Christopher Ross U.S
    Anthony Negus, Australia
    Pacific Life Community Rush Rehm, USA
    14 Friends of Palestine, Marin Jane C Jewell United States
    Janet Klecker, Hyderabad, India United States
    Tamara Yousry, Australia
    Jessica Rath United States
    Jan Passion United States
    Stan Alfred Squires, Canada
    Ray Cage Veterans For Peace US
    Paul Desney, Australia
    Tony Iltis, Australia
    Sandra Woodall US
    John C
    Theodore Voth United States
    Carol Furlan United States
    Donna Whitney United States
    Marie Myers Lloyd, Canada
    Robert Blair, Canada
    Dorothy Henaut, Canada
    Roe F Sybylla, Australia
    Johanna L Fritzke United States
    Marina Skumanich, USA
    Meredith West United States
    Walter Goodman United States
    Bo Svensson US
    Lydia Garvey US
    Rob Kulakofsky, USA
    Katie Doll United States
    Maritsa Vatou Greece
    Creators Equity Foundation Joshua Reichek United States
    Paula Orloff affiliated with Indivisible, USA United States
    Mary C. Daub, USA
    David Carr United States
    Paula Orloff, affiliated with Indivisible, USA United States
    Leslie Graves United States
    Renate Knudsen, Sweden
    scott chapman US
    myna lee johnstone, Canada
    Rachel Coloff, USA
    Mike Nestor, Canada
    Karen McClellan United States
    Janan Asfour United States
    Joshua Beth, USA
    Abir Elzowidi, USA
    Muriel
    Muriel Bittar, Canada
    Bill Johnstone, member of Amnesty International, Canada
    Melannie Burke, Canada
    Abry Jocelyne, France
    Marlena Santoyo, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Peace and Justice Action United States
    Chris C Marrs United States
    Dr Hani Faris Vancouver, B.c., Canada
    Gerry Milliken US
    Donna Wallach, San José Against War (SJAW), USA
    Alba Greco, USA
    Liz Murphy United States
    Ned Rosch United States
    Ruby Phillips, human rights activist, Buddhist, health worker United States
    Harold Watson United States
    Aysu Polat, Germany
    Ester Ollé Pérez Catalonia
    Jeffrey PANCIERA United States
    Michelle Granas United States
    Michael Kemper United States
    Debra Rehn United States
    Elmaze Krasniqi, Germany
    Nick Skrowaczewski, USA
    Lee Rhiannon, Australia
    Fred Williams none, Canada
    Bessie Wapp, Canada
    Connie Pratt US
    Christel Stoltz, Sweden
    Stefanni Stefan Bodmer Suisse
    Laurie Tuller, France
    Maria Gallastegi Euskal Herria
    Bret Polish United States
    Rami AL-ASWAD, Canada
    Frank Corcoran Ireland
    Dafni Anastasiadi, PhD-Scientist Greece
    Juliane von Bieberstein Deutschland
    Dominika Chodysz España
    John Scott Preiskel United States
    d carr United States
    Frances Scarrott, Netherlands
    Glenn Thureson US
    david druding US
    Didier Delaye FR
    Maaike Manten, Netherlands
    Communist Party of Norway (NKP) Hans Jørgen Mala Milde Norge
    NTUA ROULI LYKOGIANNI GREECE Associate professor
    Josie Gibberd Scotland
    Steve Stephan, Australia
    Howard K. Beale, Jr. United States of America
    Dimitris Vogiannidis Greece
    Rosalyn Kennedy, UK
    Laurie Price, Mexico
    Annette Dubois Switzerland
    Corina Vasilopoulou, journalist Greece
    Kate Taylor United Kingdom
    Guenter Wimmer. Munich, Germany
    Javier Gracia, Spain
    Carleen Mulloy, USA
    Rachel Lowther, UK
    Marian Larsen, Greece
    Zoi Artemis Athanasopoulou, Greece
    Maia Lund Newlyn, England
    Mary Pampalk, Palestine Solidarity Austria, Austria
    Traudlinde Aigner, Austria
    Michelle Vanek, Germany
    Naazim Adam, South Africa
    Francis Natha, Australia
    Merlin Nathan, Australia
    Jo Clayson, EarthSong, USA
    Richard Maguire, Australia
    Beatrice Romano, Italy
    Maria Maguire, Australia
    Froukje Brouwer, Netherlands
    Eileen Young, Canada
    Lígia Prado, PSOL, Brazil
    Ken Canty, USA
    John Earl, USA
    Elle Osborne, UK
    Nora Taji, Palestinian-Canadian, Canada
    Sophie Leeman, Australia
    Mick Breen, Ireland
    Colin Pearson, UK
    Nihad Ben Salah, Canada
    Nicholas Monro, UK
    Jon Singleton, Australia
    Yipeng Ge, Canada
    Loubna Messaoudi, Canada
    Lorne Walters, Belgium
    Taissir Makni, Canada
    Saba Tounsi, Canada
    Maroua Oueslati, Canada
    Nick Black, Canada
    Catherine Ann Cullen, Ireland
    Helene Dube, Canada
    Norman Daoust, USA
    Chris Monti, USA
    Cinzia Colosio-Le Dem, France
    Sister Esther Pollack, Olivetan Benedictines, UK
    Nelda Reid, USA
    Jerry Provencher, USA
    Hanen Zitouni, Canada
    Crayton Mendonça Cunha Filho, Brazil
    Imen, Canada
    Emmanuelee Fuare, France
    Eva Luursema, Netherlands
    Eleanor Martin, Australia
    David Fallow, USA
    Kellie Mattatall, CA
    Dadang Hawari, Indonesia
    Stefan Kreft, Germany
    Michael Peter Langevin, USA
    Serap Aker, Canada
    Davide Barelli, Switzerland
    Sayaka Fermi, USA
    Ndiame Gueye, Canada
    Simona Pogonat, USA
    Chantal Poulin, Collectif Antigone, Canada
    Hannah Prince, Scotland
    Alex Stewart, New Zealand
    Melanie Jacobs, USA
    JV Connors, USA
    Pascale B., Canada
    Mawan Aziz, Canada
    Michael MacPherson, USA
    Barbara Trypaluk, USA
    Steve Ditore, USA
    Alix Keast, USA
    Jenny Dinwoodie, UK
    Pamela Bond, USA
    Judy Geringer, USA
    Carolyn R Pilgrim, USA
    Siamak Vossoughi, USA
    Alan Papscun, USA
    Alana Porcino, Brazil
    Alan Papscun United States
    Isa Maria, Kauai for Palestine, Hawai’i (occupied by USA)
    Peter Oppenheimer, USA
    Eva Spitzner, Germany
    David Rothauser US
    David Hoadley United Kingdom
    Eva Spitzner, Germany
    David Janzen, Canada
    Xavi Spain
    Syed Omair Anwar, Canada
    Aileen C McEvoy United States
    Helen Werner United States
    Meris Germany
    Codi-Lee Chambers United Kingdom
    Meris Germany
    Hawwaa Chowdhury United Kingdom
    Paul Chislett, Canada
    Jessica Bayne United States
    Bente Leeuwerink The, Netherlands
    Saadaoui France
    Aksel Van Eynde, Belgium
    Jeronimo
    Ibtissem Bayou, France
    Carla Delpiano, Argentina
    Ozeroglu Jeremy, France
    Mahmoud Kholeif Egypt
    Seana Parker United States
    ALIKI ANTONOPOULOU GREECE
    Kayly Elliott-Tomkins, humanist. Wales
    Filippo Cauz, Italy
    Ilarion Tsonev UK / Bulgaria
    Adrianna Chmura United Kingdom
    Tess Perkins United States
    Farah Jaafar Tunisia
    Sayid Bayoumi Germay
    Lucy Msengane South Africa
    Corsica Palestina, France
    Matthew Burns United Kingdom
    Yasmina Bettayeb, France
    Chris Kelly Ireland
    Giorgia Galleri, Italy
    Maica Berenguel, Spain
    Seven Zero Tunisia
    İman Kabakçı, Turkey
    Anne Durastanti, Corsica Palestina France
    CarOze Van de Poll, France
    Lisa Martin United States of America
    Fanny Qvickström, Finland
    Fotios Logothetis Greece
    Claudia Farese, Spain
    Michelle McCarver, USA
    Emily Moss US
    İman Kabakçı, Turkey
    Jennifer Griller, Canada
    Myriam bokanoud, France
    Asma Uk
    Tracy Maroun, France
    Asma Uk
    Marek Germany
    larrissa usa
    Alexis Mangane United Kingdom
    Paul Turner US
    Claudio Binda, Italy
    Mathilde Fromageau France/UK
    Simon Ernst from Rettet Gaza Konstanz, Germany
    Michael Summerscales, Netherlands
    Miguel Aguado, Canada
    Lena Lampropoulou Greece
    Walleed Khan, Canada
    Davido Nascimento Macedo, UNIFESP Brasil
    Katerina Anastasiou Italy/Greece
    Isabelle Huchard, France
    joe helferty Ireland
    Luke DG, France
    joe helferty Ireland
    Valentina Anghinoni
    Abaida Mahmood United Kingdom
    Adrian Ramos United States
    GEORGIOS SPYRIDIS SOLACHIDIS Greece
    marie-claude patin FR
    Sophie Wang, Japan
    Tuesday morning-star Uk
    AHMET BOGA, UK
    Susana Perdiz Spain/Switzerland
    Helen Hempstead, UK
    Pascale Le Lièvre, France
    AHMET BOGA, UK
    Mariana Calvario, Mexico
    Halima Brewer, UK
    Maria Inês Silva Portugal
    Farah Lenzi Palhares, Brazil
    Sébastien Berwart Switzerland
    Megan Gwilym Wales
    Cengiz Turkiye
    Lou Monachino, Italy
    Mariana Martins Portugal
    Bernardo Rosa Ramirez Portugal
    Nastasja Scholz, Germany
    Pragati, Tampere University Finland
    Linda Lindsay United States
    Paula Germany
    Daniel Bowyer England
    Karen Vanussa Tiecher Brizuela España
    Sara Devesa Machado Portugal
    Megan Tenhage, Canada
    Jullien Jean-François, France
    Barbara D'Emilio, USA
    Morla Adrien, France
    Mark Puglise US
    Marina Burgess, UK
    Selma UK
    Susan Farquhar US
    Richard Kiernan Ireland
    Emma Callaghan
    Emily Leo, Germany
    Simona Strano, Italy
    Yasmine KHARROUBI, Spain
    Eleni Sidiropoulou, refugee education coordinator, Greek ministry of education Greece
    Tima Perrin, USA
    Yuliani Liputo Indy
    Peter Morrow Ireland
    Johnny Robbins United States
    Angela Torres, Spain
    Hugo Bonnin, France
    Conchi Cortegoso, Spain
    Leïla PEPPUY, France
    Natalie McCreary, USA
    Riccardo Tirendi, Italy
    Megan Gwilym Wales
    Emily Australia
    Daniel Gugitsch GERMANY
    Dave Brewer, USA
    Valérie Germany
    Emily Te Cambodia/Australia
    Seán Burke, Australia
    Stéphanie Martin, France
    Miranda Australia
    Adam Aldaamsah, Sweden
    Tribouillard Aline, France
    Stephen Kent, UK
    Gaby Orchidea Möckli Switzerland
    Abdel Elamroussy, Canada
    Samir N Semine United States
    Stop Thegenocide Worldwide
    Kate Corless, UK
    Mary Reidy Ireland
    Isa Desroches, France
    eileen ridge US
    Adam Versényi United States
    Annalisa Marinaro, Italy
    Anja Ratajczak, France
    Joana Ventura Portugal
    Karen Gearon Ireland
    Knosehr Garvery, Canada
    BAROUL JF, France
    Steven Mitchell, Australia
    Amber Lee Johnson, USA
    Roberto Marra
    Swan Benharrat, France
    Jenna Beales, USA
    Zasmira H Malaysia
    Alan Ritchie Scotland
    Emma G Czech Republic
    Liz Sanchez Usa
    Ellie Williams United Kingdom
    MOISES REAL MEXICO
    Sarah Craw Scotland
    Hanifi Aslan Türkiye
    Holly Mckenna United States
    Oliver Trautmann, Germany
    Sabine Bahi, Canada
    Zasmira H Malaysia
    Joaquim Teles Portugal
    Raul L Anorve United States
    Cristiana Madau, Italy
    Alice Rossi, Sweden
    Eva Santamaría Rueda España
    Maurizio Cirolli Italia
    Laura O'Neill Ireland
    Afshan Haqqi, USA
    Suzanne Savage, Operations Director of The Fold, United Kingdom
    Lila Hana Czeresnia Taragona Brasil
    Eloy Hensen, Netherlands
    Juliette Alenda The, Netherlands
    Anne Hoctor Ireland
    Winifred Dajani
    Anna Hennelly United States
    Arden Mullan Ireland
    Veronica Morfi, UK
    Francesca Trasarti, Italy
    Laurine Righyni, France
    Francesca Trasarti, Italy
    Jane Rademeyer South Africa
    Daniela Robles Aguirre México
    Fatima Khanom, USA
    Alain Brutout Belgique
    Arthur Henry Fork, Mexico
    Farwina Faroque Malaysia
    Carole Haddad, Canada
    Sébilet Hélène, France
    Ifrah Mah United Kingdom
    Ahmed Hassan yusuf hassan Egypt
    Fouad ahidar, Belgium
    Helen Hamogiorgaki Greece
    Elaine Fradley, Spain
    Clodagh Goss Northern Ireland
    Dietrich Belgium
    Alessio Vernini, Italy
    Angela Torbett Scotland
    Akif Görgülü, Belgium
    Vina McDermott, USA
    Sjoukje USA
    Roseline Garayoa, France
    Linda Jayne, Australia
    bob bowes, VFP-USA USA
    Gabrielle Ellis, UK
    Tisha Barros, USA
    Marie-Anne Delahaut, Belgium
    Catarina Sobral Portugal
    Bouke Jung, Netherlands
    Em Kriss, USA
    Akila Brahimi, Canada
    Saikat Bhattacharya United States
    Nesrine Bessaih, Canada
    Masjaliza Hamzah Malaysia
    Brian Janßen, Germany
    Marissa Riondino United States
    Romina Calvo Panama
    Elisha McLeod, Canada
    Mariana Couoh México
    José Ignacio Leguina Aranzamendi, Spain
    Jean François Guyard Switzerland
    Judy Hindle United Kingdom
    Arno van Rennes The, Netherlands
    Rumeysa Doğan Türkiye
    Duncan Douglas Lennox, Canada
    Rumeysa Doğan Türkiye
    Ingrid Denmark
    ODILE LENOIR, France
    Catherine Quinn Ireland
    Cathy Niroo, USA
    Shadan Iraq
    Camille Lorigo United Kingdom
    Minka San Millán, Spain
    Tomas Burget Czechia
    Juliette Moulin France, living in, Germany
    Kari Aist, USA
    Yolande Jansen University of Amsterdam Nederland
    Lamy Raphaël, France
    Michael Hogan, USA
    Herbert Fischer, Germany
    Stéphanie Kempf, France
    Enzo Germany
    Nikki Vergakes Usa
    Nikki Vergakes Usa
    Faith Griffin U.S
    Harv Branscomb, USA
    Susan Wortman, Canada
    Grace Senzano United States
    Yasmine Mellouk, France
    Petra Verdonk, Beyond Boundaries, the, Netherlands
    Hamza Austria
    Roger Hollander, Canada
    Sabrine France
    Camille Kittredge United States
    Raphaël.le Baquillon, France
    Noelia Martinez Urbina, Spain
    Alejandra Oliveras, mother, daughter, sister, human, USA
    Christine Starr United States
    Agnes Rosenke, Germany
    Tiziana Aresu, Italy
    María Florencia Monarca, Argentina
    santiago gonzález España
    Carmen Miravalls, Spain
    Erika Mourgues Deutschland
    Roland Schneider, Germany
    Lara Naz Switzerland
    Màire Ireland
    Mohsen KAYAL IRD, France
    Victoria Hertel United States of America
    Mary Hughes Ireland
    Bryan Brumley United States
    Emanuele De Giuseppe, Socialist Germany
    Estitxu Martínez de Albeniz, Spain
    Gloria Merlino United States
    Art Smoker United States
    Karen Malpede, Theater Three Collaborative.org US
    Sitiraudha Binte Noor Singapore
    Amal Garada United States
    Yoko Oikawa, Japan
    Gerry Ruecker, Canada
    Thijske den Ouden Nederland
    Rania Cortez United States
    Rebecca Jurisch, Germany
    Ragnar bjerregård, Denmark
    Galal Egypt
    Landon Nguyen, UCSF SJP US
    Federica Italy
    Ernst Mecke, Finland
    Michael Tobin Ireland
    Warda Baba, France
    Yvonne Lopez United States
    Tiziana Pozzessere Italia
    Fabrizio Capasso, Italy
    Corinne Huber Switzerland
    Annalisa Basso Italia
    Christophe Roh Switzerland
    Anne Jouault, France
    Patricia Dixon United States
    Marc Switzerland
    Alice Light Scotland
    atakan tan turkey
    Mary Johnson, USA
    Patrick Archer United States
    Sarah Miller United States
    Jean-François Pétillot, France
    JEFFREY CONLON United States
    Alessandro Braga, Brazil
    Büşra Akay, Denmark
    Kimberly Torres United States
    Eve Sassier, École Normale Supérieure Paris, France
    Matteo Severino, Italy
    Sander Goor The netherlands
    Maïlys Errico Hummel, France
    Margarita PÉREZ DE FRUTOS España
    Hélio Valentim Portugal
    Dominik Egli Switzerland
    Hélio Valentim Portugal
    Lucia Bellecci Sicily
    Smadar Carmon, Canada
    khaoula Ayari, Canada
    Philipp Müller Switzerland
    Nick J Swarth / XR Justice Now!, Netherlands
    Patrick Schnierer, Germany
    TJATTE HEDLUND SWEDEN
    E linders, UK
    Elizabeth Fattah, USA
    John Liss, Canada
    Marjorie Cariou, France
    Georg Andreasson, Sweden
    Alexandra Pallisco United States
    Antonietta Spedalieri, Spain
    Manon Hessels USA &, Netherlands
    Elodie CREPIN, France
    Zatu Amni Malaysia
    Jaimy Boelen Nederland
    Martine Perdrisat Switzerland
    Elizabeth Thelen United States
    Silvia Melo, Denmark
    Karin Stenvall, Sweden
    Karin Stenvall, Sweden
    Braiki Samir, France
    Monica Armanino, Mexico
    Samantha Madway, USA
    Alison Burns, Canada
    Tannith Haswell-Oosthuizen England
    Astrid Madsen, UK
    Riffat mian-hashim United Kingdom
    Orlando Ross United Kingdom
    César Pulido plazas Colombia
    Michael Kuttner, Canada
    Jose Manuel Paredes - Professor for Criminal Law Universidad de Oviedo, Spain
    Tom Hall United States
    Himani Bannerji, Professor Emerita, York University India
    Elane Heffernan Uk
    Slobodan Tabakovic Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Nicolás Tomsio (LCIP LA, PFP LA, UFCW 770, L4P LA.OC.IE, GSUS LA) United States
    Amy France
    Vincent Gérin, France
    Jozien Géron Nederland
    Manon Ribot, France
    BRIGITTE TRINCARD TAHHAN, France
    Semra Mahmutović Montenegro
    Gaye Frances Alexander CA
    Barbara E. Moore, USA
    Merna Ayman Shawky Habib Egypt
    Chelsey Lepage, Canada
    Jillian Emerson United States
    Sophie Orendorf United States
    Antonella Italy
    Kyle Ellenberger United States of America
    Humbeline RICHARD, France
    Jess Perkins England
    Ramón Linaza Iglesias, Spain
    David Hembrow, Netherlands
    Laura Astola, Netherlands
    Sebastian Kaep - EDITOR, Germany
    Eva Maillard, France
    Vanessa Maria Skantze, USA
    Naomi Berg, USA
    Jerome Hoffman United States
    Stella Hughes United Kingdom
    Zac Upton Ireland
    Catarina Syder Fontinha Portugal
    Steven Standard United States
    Rawan Farhan United States
    Isobel McCullough United Kingdom
    Shawn Pleski, USA
    Nema Bade United Kingdom
    Daniela Yanina Braña, Argentina
    Lawrence Reichard United States
    Andrew Clement, Canada
    Harriet McCleary, USA
    Sille Kirketerp Berthelsen, Denmark
    Harriet McCleary, USA
    Marcus Chapiron, France
    Sofia Portugal
    Dianne Post, International Human Rights Attorney United States of America
    Annick Becerra Monnier Switzerland
    Leslie Leyva González México
    Nancy Guberman, Canada
    Melissa Fung Costa Rica
    Andrea Reyes Elizondo The, Netherlands
    Constance Charles United States
    Celina Cardoso
    Art Hanson United States of America
    Radio Tv Lavapiés, Spain
    matilde Maribo köhler, Denmark
    Paul Griffin Scotland
    Judith Rosenbaum United States
    Zenon Oliveira Brasil
    Nicolas Magnard, Netherlands
    Nora Sternmann, Germany
    Patricia-Maria Weinmann United States
    Rachel Lindquist United States of America
    Magali France
    Diane Place, USA
    Steven Dean United Kingdom
    Monserrat Domínguez Navarrete México
    Amine Alaoui, Canada
    William Edelman United States
    Cathie Talbot
    Elaine Hagopian U.S.A. Les Etats Unis
    Wendy Broos The, Netherlands
    Yasmin Ahmed Uk
    Joyce Semaan, Australia
    Sabra Wolven, USA
    Suzanne Graham, Canada
    Lana Haubrich, USA
    Elizabeth Nyburg, Canada
    Paul Scotland
    Berber Nederland
    Dylan Arthur Dubuc United States
    Ruth danks United Kingdom
    Maria Barth, USA
    Victoria Brunetta Portugal
    Carl Rosenberg, Canada
    Georgeanne Samuelson United States
    Francisco Iñaki Almada García, political and pro-Palestine activist, Argentina
    Poppy Osprey, Australia
    Håkan Larsson, Sweden
    Chava finkler, Canada
    Håkan Larsson, Sweden
    Travis Frampton, Registered Nurse Canada
    Gynelle Nixon United States
    Melanie Ko, USA
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Geneyce melton, USA
    Don Ino US
    Sandra Fernandez U.S.A.
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Daniela Rodriguez A., Sweden
    Isabelle Ofume, Canada
    Achille Piombo, Italy
    Per-Olof Karlsson Sverige
    Sheila Meehan US
    Kim Eustache, France
    Lara Portugal & United Kingdom
    Jailyn Merengueli United States
    Teresa Hooker United States of America
    Angela Dawson Aotearoa New Zealand
    Viktor Karamanis Greece
    Meg Borthwick, Council of Canadians Canada
    Helen Newman, Australia
    Joyce Ryan. Cashel for Palestine Ireland
    Rene Vandenbrink, Canada
    Mariam mizyan United Kingdom
    Gord Doctorow, EdD Canada
    Maria Speyer, Australia
    Sasha Lofquist EPInc., Canada
    Luciana de Castro Laier Klug, Brazil
    Mary Nyquist, Canada
    Claudia Rodríguez México
    Sadia Hashmi, USA
    Rachel Dorson, UK
    Melanie Todd England
    Veronika Szoke, Canada
    Izzo maria giuseppina Italia
    Noemi Terrazzano, Italy
    Maria Giuseppina Izzo Italia
    Hakima Lamari, Canada
    John Schmittauer, USA
    Maria Giuseppina izzo Italia
    Saskia Morice, UK
    Zoé Blanc, France
    Eleonora Cos Italia
    Morven Ovenstone-Jones Scotland
    Marion Williams, UK
    Eileen Dreyer United Kingdom
    Claire Aldeghather, UK
    Giel France
    Linda Bigwood, UK
    Margaret Rossiter, Canada
    Paula Checkland, UK
    Sal Zafar, UK
    Alexandria Keating-Sofiakis United States
    Safia Gravel, USA
    Eloisa Carlos New Zealand
    Jean Cullen United Kingdom
    Sebastian Adorján Dyhr, Denmark
    Sherry L. Osadchey United States
    Pete Wade, UK
    GENDRON FRANCE
    Rachael Bardoe, France
    Lynn Peck, Canada
    Paolo Sbragia United Kingdom
    kerry scotland
    Lisa Brennan Ireland
    kerry scotland
    Adeline Lebreton, France
    Mohamed BEJI, France
    miss natasha khan United Kingdom
    Juhani Juutilainen, Finland
    Susanne S. Christensen, Denmark
    Bee Denning, UK
    Briony Panton, Spain
    Chantelle Rea-Bradley, UK
    Adele Coombs, Australia
    Anthony Ellis Aú, North Carolina Green Party USA
    Catherine Buca, UK
    Ann Molloy Uk
    S.Candeggi Italy
    Olivia Jackson United States of America
    Jessica Hope member of Amnesty, Greenpeace, Cwtch Pals, Reprieve UK
    Hinhan Ska Winyan, USA
    Yeuk Yi Pang, Germany
    Ilario De Gaetanis, Italy
    Aideen Landers Ireland
    Thomas Ardaen, Belgium
    Tommaso Gimelli, Italy
    Ivana failla Italia
    Régine Abadia, France
    Azrina Rusni Malaysia
    Jan Cook United States
    Justo Sánchez Elia, Argentina
    Alana Duggan, Canada
    Kristen den Hartog, Canada
    Alison Foale, Australia
    Fabienne Hannequart-Fortin, Canada
    Mathy France
    Don Ino United States
    Carla Romão Portugal
    DIANE PALM, Canada
    Christina Cabrera Puerto Rico
    Rebecca Jackson, Australia
    Querido Galdo United States
    Deirdre McDonald United States
    Jelica Roland Croatia
    Suzanne Sarkozy United States
    Lee Priday, Australia
    Arthur Young, Canada
    Frank Hulefeld United States
    Rechberger Elfriede, Austria
    Sylviane Lecomte Corsica, France
    Carolyn McGinty, Australia
    Belinda Fisher, Australia
    Christine Schmidt, Canada
    Godet Yannick, France
    Salla Lintonen, actress, France
    Rania Kapon Greece
    Nicole Day, USA
    Michael Leff, member Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) United States
    Kathleen Elworth United States
    Joan Rossy, Canada
    Ina Marja Selnes, Denmark
    Lydia Starring United States of America
    Candice Carpenter United Kingdom
    Oscar Rueda, Palestine
    Cynthia Bargar United States
    Jeff winch, Canada
    Erika Sezonov, USA
    Alison
    Christin Andersson, France
    Glynn Ryall, Rising Tide, Central Coast friends of Palestine Australia
    Humberto Ponce de leon, Canada
    Theda Ohling, Germany
    Inmaculada Martínez Alba, Spain
    Fabio Di Rocco, Italy
    Jeanne Crawford United States
    David Longmuir, Australia
    Seung-il Chang South Korea
    Bridgette Davis New Zealand
    Diane Oltarzewski, Quaker in Maine United States
    Tim O'Donnell, Australia
    Transito Rodriguez, Canada
    Neret Emma, France
    Thomas Edminster United States of America (sic)
    Croz Costa Rica
    Margaret Julie Finch, Peace & social Justice Com. 15th St.Friends Meeting U.S.A.
    Sheila O’Reilly, Canada
    Lesley Osborne, Australia
    Warren Kazor, Canada
    Maureen Marley, USA
    Jennifer Vergison, Australia
    Diana Silva Portugal
    Nuniek Setyo Indonesia
    Ed H England
    Elizabeth Burr United States
    Croeso Menai Wales
    Catherine Griffiths (Croeso Menai, refugee support) Wales
    Andrea Carta, Italy
    Ruth Taillon Ireland
    Kerry Scott, Parkdale - High Park for Palestine Canada
    Fazela Jacobs United States
    Risha Shahman Uk
    Ashley Cook United States
    Kathryn Devos, Australia
    Debra Ellis, USA
    Bonnie Kathleen Boyd, Canada
    ABDUL MAJED GLOBAL
    Don Wahl, USA
    Karen Boehler Ecuador
    Adam O United States of America
    Simone Garau, Italy
    Iha Agrawal, Australia
    Abdallah Abouhagrass
    Mike Madden, United States
    Robert Stuart, Canada
    Laurent Hourcle United States
    Bill Holt United States
    Humanity Worldwide
    Margaux Taillade, France
    Cornelius Talmadge, Canada
    Irene Melis, Sweden
    Santi Artanti Indonesia
    Tom Hayes documentary filmmaker, USA
    Julie Hillier, Australia
    Santi Artanti Indonesia
    William Hillier AUSTRALIAN
    Ahmad Ali Fahmi Indonesia
    Lyn Clark Pegg United States
    Ilham Nikolai Purnama, Canada
    Barry Warren Riesch United States
    Adrienne Morris United States
    Yvette Fouché, French living in Ireland
    Margaret Lumsdaine, USA
    Christine Graves United States
    Sylvie Barles, France
    Rebecca Keegan, citizen of Earth New Zealand
    Steve Mercier for Union Populaire Geneva Switzerland
    Tannis Zimmer, Canada
    Vigdis Bjorvand, Norway
    Susan Stout - Canpalnet, Canada
    Juan José Pérez Castillo (Vocal del Ilustre Colegio Oficial de Ingenieros T. en Topografía y Geomática) España
    William Collins United Kingdom
    Lindsay Hein, Canada
    Cristina Fernández Álvarez España
    Emma Scaife, Germany
    Alex Duncan, France
    Fariza Nasir Malaysia
    Lina El-Najjar Romania
    Megat Ismail Malaysia
    Jacqueline Shahinian Switzerland
    Marie-Louise Olsson Eriksen, Denmark
    Madiha Mojaddedi, Germany
    Omrcen Jean-Joseph, France
    Barbara Sisko Switzerland
    Virginia Mallin, UK
    Caroline Rooney, Professor Emeritus of African and Middle Eastern Studies UK
    Maria Gaitanou Greece
    Hanne Østerbye, Denmark
    Ally Coutts Scotland
    Mizuko Yakuwa, Japan
    Suzanne Strong South Africa
    Ally Coutts Scotland
    Mars Drum, Australia
    Kestoisa Finland
    Clara Nicolai, Germany
    Paige H New Zealand
    Sinne Lundgaard, Denmark
    Pia Holmrud Wetterberg, Sweden
    Emma Dunn, UK
    Cynthia Wannamaker, Canada
    Dorothea Rheinfurth, Germany
    Rebecca Pigot Ireland
    Palestine Solidarity Campaign, UK
    Nidzara Ahmetasevic Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Martha Pascoe New Zealand
    Saga Bokne, Sweden
    sandra andersson Sverige
    Blake Herve, UK
    caroline kuyper Ireland
    João Lourenço Portugal
    Michael Gruske, Germany
    Emma Berrocal, Spain
    Maureen Hibberd, UK
    Petersmann Italy
    Lena Nyblom Malmberg , Mothers Rebellion Sweden
    GENIEZ brigitte, France
    Rachel Winkworth United Kingdom
    Elhaid Isaj, France
    Luca Ciastellardi, Italy
    Ayan Mohamed United Kingdom
    Gustavo Beritognolo, Canada
    Fabien Despeyroux, Canada
    Cecilia Alarcón, Spain
    Lucia Catalina Josefine, Germany
    Anne Marie Craig Scotland
    Mickis Gullstrand, Sweden
    Toni Crowther, Italy
    Marie-Claire Binette, France
    Angelika Vartanyan Bulgaria
    Claudia Friedrich, Germany
    Ruth Jenkins, UK
    Nikos Tsopoglou-Gkinas Greece
    Jan Strömdahl, Sweden
    Michaela O'Hara Ireland
    alaa hajdouad Jordan
    Debbie Black Ireland
    rosa maria maiuolo Italia
    Katrina Irawati Graham, Australia
    Des Boyle Ireland
    Anna-Maria Jones, Australia
    Fabíola Borges de Castro (PhD candidate at Iscte) Portugal
    Louie Zamora Philippines
    René Plaetevoet, Belgium
    AMER ISAM HASAN ZABALAWI, Canada
    Isabelle Shickle, Australia
    Vanessa Martin, France
    Asem Azouka, Canada
    Ruth Garvey Ireland
    Peter Ypma, Netherlands
    Walter THomas Beckett - Human Rights Activist, Canada
    Angela Maria Bernardini Italia
    Despoina Karaoulani Greece
    Briana Reilly United States
    Jean Homsy, France
    Olivia Revans United Kingdom
    Daniel Ruiz Lorente, Spain
    Riccardo Volpe, Italy
    Melissa A. Torres / Oreilles Internaxionales Switzerland
    Deirdre Grealish Ireland
    Maddalena Santostefano, Italy
    Simone Britsch DE
    Nicolo De Luca, Italy
    David Peters, Canada
    Lydia Freiberg, Germany
    Sarah Alvarez, Belgium
    Clare McEnroe Ireland
    Concetta Musto Italia
    Birgit Muslim, Germany
    MacGregor Eddy of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom- US
    Gabríela Alice, Denmark
    Sarah Tan Malaysia
    Rita Primavera, Italy
    Mahé OLIVA, France
    Heidi Hoffmann, Canada
    S. Heigl CH
    Katja Hagedoorn The, Netherlands
    Sara Odelli Italia
    Lisa Bromley United Kingdom
    Patricia Patterer, Austria
    Murray Lumley, Canada
    Husni Taufiq Indonesia
    Penelet France
    Harry Dutton, UK
    Rolf Bengtsson, medlem i Palestinagrupperna, Sweden
    Linda Dutton, UK
    Anna Willats, Canada
    Katherine Helme, United Kingdom
    Shafeeqah Goolam Hoosen, South Africa
    Martina Lauer, Canada
    John Maclennan, Canada
    Felix Falk, Sverige
    Tom S, United Kingdom
    Rania, Algeria
    Shagufta Ahmad, Bahrain
    Robert Brown, United States
    Sia, Bahrain
    Henrik Sundström, Sweden Sverige
    Josephine Chesher United Kingdom
    Ane Christensen, Canada
    A T, France
    Phil Little - Xristos Community Society, Canada
    Meunier, France
    Jennifer Whitfield, Canada
    Brad Langerud, Canada
    Dimitri Sarantopoulos, Greece
    Ron Hazle, UK
    Gina Gaines, United States
    Ron Hazle Wales, UK
    Frank Pinto, UPTE CWA local9119 retired, US
    Hajra, Bahrain
    Isolda O'Connor, Ireland
    PATTICIA MCHUGH, United States
    Anne Zachariasen, Denmark
    An
    Mary Cowper-Smith, Canada
    Patrick Jackson, Canada
    Delwyn Pillay South Africa
    Karina Locke, USA
    Jill Acree, USA
    Aurelien Piras, Germany
    Nouhad Jazra regular loving peace citizen, Canada
    David Dirks
    Petra Heussler, Germany
    Maureen Healey-Beckett, Canada
    Luca Antognini Switzerland
    Séverine Marie FR
    Marie Scott Ireland
    Jane Kilthei, member Sylvan United Church, Mill Bay, BC Canada
    Samantha Lai, Australia
    Nawal Tamimi US
    Rik Masterson US
    Manuela Italy
    Barbara Polhamius US
    Krita Zaki Mohammed Algeria
    John Horne Scotland
    Abi Morrison United States
    Ralston Philippines
    Liz González United States
    Geneva Ferguson_Riders' Rights [NGO]_University of Toronto[Alumni], Lebanon
    Dee Zaranis, Australia
    Miguele Bittar, Canada
    Pat Howard, Canada
    Jan Bauman, USA
    Mariam Cassimjee South Africa
    Clayvonna Hooper United States
    Zahra Abbas, Canada
    Cinthya Paola Marquez Rojas, Mexico
    Lambert Meertens, Netherlands
    Anna Langley-Smith, UCU trade Union member UK
    Veronica Ma United States of America
    Eva Norrlöf, Sweden
    Jonas Åhlund, Sweden
    Melissa Baine New Zealand
    Vanessa Bonnin, France
    Jennifer Coulshed
    Siham Djafer, France
    Marika Straccia, Italy
    Sahabatku Indonesia
    Elisabeth O'Kelly United Kingdom
    Anthony Ellis Aú, North Carolina Green Party USA
    Lisa Ljungman, Sweden
    Aimilia komninou Greece
    Craig Dunn, UK
    Freya Higgins-Desbiolles, Academics4Palestine
    SA Australia
    Angelo Barth
    Yara Jacque Indonesia
    Leif Törnqvist Sverige
    Isabel Mora
    Nurul Afiah Binti Rosli Malaysia
    Maddalena Di Tolla Deflorian , independent journalist, Italy
    Elisa Fogliacco, Italy
    DHOLANDRE Nadine, France
    Diane Brown, Canada
    Evita Mavrogianni Greece
    Jack Payden-Travers, USA
    Michael stechishin United States
    Melanie Strauss-Staigis, Germany
    Pia Muehleib, Germany
    Ophelie Goy, France / Spain
    Pia Muehleib, Germany
    Beatrice De Blasi, Italy
    Michael Blake US
    Susanna Grigoletto, Italy
    Samar azawi, USA
    Christine Venner-Westaway (Quakers), Australia
    Liana phoenix- former teacher Usa
    Don and Roberta Thurstin Timmerman, USA
    Sara elm, USA
    Renee Nunan-Rappard, Canada
    Mona Amer, Canada
    Nadirah Bsr Singapore
    Per Christian Strøm, Norway
    Corinne Benson, Canada
    Sofia Cabral Portugal
    Zeinab Tunisia
    Karina Loureiro, USA
    Wasseem Germany
    Benedikt Freidel, Germany
    Dr. Maria-Inti Metzendorf, Germany
    Jean Cullen United Kingdom
    Ellmann Renate, Germany
    Gita Hashemi, Canada
    Frances Long, Quaker Australia
    Genie Silver, Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee, WILPF US
    Gigliola Cattalani Italia
    John Schmittauer America
    Cathleen Krahe, US
    Cecilia Edmond New Zealand
    Valerie Joy Austtalia
    Leslie Angeline ~ Codepink, Freedom Flotilla, Taxpayers Against Genocide, Veterans & Allies Fast for Gaza, USA
    Ahmet Akif Tosun Turkiye
    Deborah jackman, Canada
    Mary Helmer-Smith, Canada
    Nathan Herrington, Canada
    Don Skerik (Freedom From War Coalition), Canada
    Liz González US
    Tina Deshotels Shelton United States
    Katheryne Schulz, Canada
    Lily Ylang, USA
    Lindsay Rawluk, Canada
    Mary Amerongen, Canada
    Philippa Kemp, UK
    Vildan Ikiz, Belgium
    Lejla Kresevljakovic Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Shabnam Katebi, Canada
    Sies Vleeshouwers, Netherlands
    Alive Barry Ireland
    Annalisa Gorreri Italia
    Joelle France
    Nikolai Hartmann, Austria
    Rumana Islsm, UK
    Daniah Turkstany Saudi Arabia
    Bobbie Flowers United States
    Aideen O’Brien, Canada
    Andres Succar R., climate activist, Lebanon
    Zoe Cleland, Canada
    Leila Vieira, Brazil
    Jeff Tennant, Canada
    ΕΥΘΥΜΙΟΣ ΠΑΛΑΝΤΖΑΣ Greece
    Helen Oxnam, Australia
    Veena United States
    Lucia Amendola, Canada
    Mirjam Bendin, Germany
    Danielle Polson US
    Sophie Siemion United States
    Andrea Metzger, Germany
    Stefani Australia
    Karin Borjesson United Kingdom
    Itzy Cervantes United States
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Amanda Churchill US
    Laura Kupresak Switzerland
    Fekre Yohannes Mulugeta, Canada
    Aude Massé, France
    Kadir İlhan Turkish citizen Türkiye
    Marina Palovaara Belgique/Sweden
    Tim Mounsey Scotland
    Jessica Guilliams, Belgium
    Virginia Cavallini, Sweden
    Quentin Devegney Suisse
    Emil Mellerup, Denmark
    Nastasia Holm, Denmark
    Zanette France
    Dylan Nunez United States
    Appoline Amirault, France
    Mariana Favero Brasil
    Lorena Almeida de Andrade Brasil
    Donatella Degani, Italy
    Brynne Stevens United States
    Jacqueline Freitas Brasil
    Giulia Boccaccini, Italy
    Rebecca greenberg Usa
    Gisleine Fátima Ramos Portugal
    Mariam bint Sulaiman United Kingdom
    Phoebe Flockhart, Sweden
    Olga Fostini, France
    Dorothée Heibel, Australia
    Melanie Murray, Canada
    carole tootill CA
    Sydney United States
    Thaysa Canosa Ravanello, Brazil
    Maya Barrett, Australia
    Abdullah Bey Türkiye
    Samantha Canada
    rami farajallah, Sweden
    Fabienne Dreyer, Germany
    Trina Guest, Australia
    Trin louise, Australia
    Louise Guest, Australia
    Katrina Louise, Australia
    Scott Bacon, Australia
    Scott Charles, Australia
    Charles Bacon, Australia
    Jayden Charles, Australia
    Logan Joe, Australia
    Harry Stephen, Australia
    Julie Marie, Australia
    Liv Sendy, Australia
    Janell Louise, Australia
    Chris Jones, Australia
    Tony Caruso, USA
    Mike Smith, UK
    James Anderson, Australia
    Paul Allibon, Australia
    Ashley stanton United States
    David Pérez-Suárez, UK
    Sima Nasizadeh, Sweden
    Lief Eriksen, University of British Columbia Canada
    Lina Chittavong, USA
    Farhana Moolla
    Naomi Simington United Kingdom
    Karla Cristina Reis Brasil
    Lapo Bettarini, Italy
    Kenneth Benoit New Zealand
    Ulla Rudander, Sweden
    Beren Özavci, Turkey
    Celia S Read United Kingdom
    Juanita L Austin, Canada
    Jamie Wright Ireland
    Sarah Nirnamey, France
    Charlier Aurore BELGIUM
    Charles Malcolm Scotland
    Shannon Alexander, USA
    Jodie UK
    Don Ino United States
    Max Arendt, Germany
    Kerrie McGrath, Australia
    Helen De Zutter, Belgium
    Parbot Mariejo, France
    Lund Students For Palestine, Sweden
    Nicole Day United States
    Sanela Ajdaroska North Macedonia
    Hamidah Ismail Malaysia
    MAHMUD CLAUDE GUADELOUPE
    Mohammed Hasanen Egypt
    Haydyn Eilliams Scotland
    Sarah Jalandoon U.S.A
    Penelope Westwood Ireland
    Nikolai Bazylev Russi
    Viviana Laperchia, Germany
    Rima Harun, Canada
    Haley Gray United States
    Annette D’Armata, USA
    Lourdes Pérez, Musician USA
    Valeria Milillo, Italy
    Emma Callan Ireland
    Lizbeth Del, USA
    Emma callan Iteland
    Gerardo Mateo Catalonia
    Holly Shanholtzer McKenna US
    Martin Fisher United Kingdom
    Veronica Italy
    Christian Lorey, USA
    Abdul Malik Ramdhani Ireland
    Vicki Guy Ireland
    Carol A Kelly US
    Louise Cottereau, France
    Michel Rime Switzerland
    Cristina Leal. Badajoz con Palestina Espñaa
    Clara Martínez de Dios España
    Emily Bush England
    Muhammad Hadziq Bin Pazanon Malaysia
    Jessica Navarrete US
    Chery Claire, France
    Daoudi France
    Müller Switzerland
    Afshan Haqqi US
    Amos England
    Alessandro Pancotti, Italy
    Julie Bachelet, France
    Carl Cooney Ireland
    Mary Jane Hirchert, USA
    Mares Hirchert, USA
    Peter Nordlander, Sweden
    José Fernando Ramírez, Spain
    Julie Trarieux, France
    Baylee Thayer United States
    Nicola Lairdon, UK
    Helen Anderson Scotland
    Daniela Pichler Belgique
    Erman Erogan, Belgium
    Climate activist, Spain
    Eileen Sinclair, UK
    Susan Wright United Kingdom
    Giuseppe Sweden
    Valerie snyder Usa
    Hannah Cuevas, USA
    Jasmine robertson Scotland
    Bob Hastings, Spain
    Daniella Rascón, USA
    Nancy bright, Spain
    Joyce Semaan, Australia
    Evezard France
    Kelly Ann McGhee Scotland
    Kaoutar Mesnaoui, Belgium
    Fay Robinson England
    Willie Sinclair Scotland
    Lou bush England
    Antoine Cajot, Belgium
    Roza Suran Croatia
    Halimah Kasmani, Canada
    Ana Alfieri, Canada
    Hannah Sabir United Kingdom
    Linda Dukes Cambodia
    Lin Lisiecki, Australia
    Robert Brose US
    Renata luna, Mexico
    Kenzie Gordon, Canada
    Maryam Kuwait
    Hanan Mohamad (Pharmacist), Canada
    Dr. Ahlam Mansour, Canada
    Lucas Artico, France
    Sara Vanzani, Italy
    Lisa Sood United Arab Emirates
    Tajender Sagoo United Kingdom
    Thesu Jeff England
    Maria João Martinho Portugal
    Yasmin Scholz, Germany
    Erica Shorter Uk
    anya pakhomoff United Kingdom
    Antonio Della Marina, Italy
    Ed Mc Hale Ireland
    Konstantina Kapola Greece
    Zanette Isabelle, France
    Karin Hjort, Sweden
    Bruce Will, Canada
    Dr. Jasmine Mallory, Canada
    Kaze P, Australia
    Susan Barratt, Canada
    Lara Cole United Kingdom
    Lina Simahfoud, Canada
    Nathan Bois-McDonald, Canada
    Martina Finn Ireland
    Stephanie Schudel Switzerland
    Finola O Siochru Ireland
    Mike Walker, Canada
    Aberboir Zahra, France
    Janice Paquette, Canada
    Michael Watts United Kingdom
    Julie Barlow United States
    luisa stellato Italia
    Birgit Kollmann Ireland
    Maria Greece
    Anna Lensch, Germany
    Pol Horan, Canada
    JOAQUIN CANTU MEXICO
    Tammy Australia
    Doreen Fedrigo, Belgium
    Seán Ashton United Kingdom
    Edgardo Iozia, Melitea Italy
    Rami Farajallah Sverige
    Indiana Romeo South Africa
    Dawn Stephens, UK
    Luciana Lopes Rosas Brasil
    Brisa Reyes, Australia
    Maïlys Errico Hummel, France
    Corporate Watch United Kingdom
    Paola Italy
    Seán Burke, Australia
    Giorgia Baggio, Italy
    Jen Fisher Ireland
    Rebecca Kenny Ireland
    Regan Mercure, Canada
    Eleuthera Diconca-Lippert, Canada
    Jefferson Mendes - Quilombo Ciência Brasil
    Deirdre Grealish Ireland
    Fares Belhaouas, Canada
    Adam Perry Éire
    Lucienne Sencier U.K
    Allison Leonard, USA
    Oscar Harethwaites, UK
    Marisa Faietta, USA
    Bhattia Reej, UK
    Jeanne Mitchell, Canada
    Agnes Kueng Switzerland
    Giovanna Winckler Roncoroni, Italy
    Kathleen Raleigh, USA

    LANGUAGES
    ENGLISH
    DATE
    15 JUNE 2025
    CATEGORY
    OFFICIAL STATEMENT
    IMAGE CREDITS
    SALVATORE ALLEGRA/
    ANADOLU AGENCY
    On Monday, 9th June Israeli forces boarded the Freedom Flotilla Coalition sailboat Madleen in international waters and kidnapped her crew to prevent the passage of aid to the besieged Palestinian people.
    Despite at least 62,000 deaths and countless more people killed, injured, bereaved and displaced over the last two years in Gaza, it fell to one small boat to attempt to break Israel’s blockade.

    The international community has allowed a genocide to unfold in plain sight. And the poison of impunity is spreading. A month ago the aid ship Conscience was bombed off the Maltese shoreline, over a thousand miles from Gaza.

    Subsequent Maltese obstruction of the Conscience’s requests for aid mirrored Europe’s routine frustration of attempts to rescue people in distress at sea. Tens of thousands - Palestinians fleeing occupation among them - have drowned in the central Mediterranean on the world’s deadliest migration route.
    Here too, civilian ships and people seeking safety face obstruction and criminalisation as they keep humanitarian action alive; whilst European states sponsor crimes against humanity.
    En route to Gaza, the Madleen crew rescued four Sudanese refugees, fleeing genocidal forces backed by the West’s Gulf allies. They were unable to prevent the others on board being returned to Libya by an EU-backed militia, where people seeking safety routinely face slavery, incarceration, and death.

    Meanwhile the same Israeli Heron drones that surveil and target Palestinians in Gaza also police the Mediterranean for EU’s border agency Frontex. Across the Mediterranean, European states funnel money, weapons and political support to authoritarians and militias whilst claiming to uphold human rights.
    In return, Europe demands its neighbours act as border guards, buyers of its weapons and tech, and a steady supplier of fossil fuels and resources.
    The outcome is a sea where humanitarian ships and refugees are blocked whilst deadly arms and ecosystem-destroying fossil fuels move freely. And the sea itself is suffering. Amid successive years of record heat, the Mediterranean that is now warming a fifth faster than the world’s other oceans and much of the plant and animal life on its shores is dying out.

    The climate campaigners on the Madleen sailed to a Gaza where ecocide has compounded genocide, through a Mediterranean where more storms, fires and floods than ever before drive people from their homes and destroy their livelihoods. Those who protest the confluence of state violence and environmental destruction are targeted.

    From Italy to Egypt, harsh civil liberties restrictions have recently targeted climate activists, human rights activists and migrants first. Governments that claim to be protecting their people from the crises we are living through are in fact exacerbating them. This is as true in Europe as it is in Trump’s America, despite the growing schism between them.
    Palestine provides a glimpse of where this could end for all of us.
    Israel’s new so-called “aid” distribution system in Gaza: a labyrinth of surveillance drones and biometric gates operated amid a lethal blockade by troops and private security companies, is a terrifying model of modern repression. And the technologies it uses are both imported and exported globally. Against this system, we must build a different future while we can.

    In place of war and genocide, we demand a free Palestine.
    In place of racialised and deadly borders and blockades we demand free movement.
    In place of destructive and polluting rearmament programmes and aid budgets being torn apart, we demand wages and housing and humanity.

    In place of tech billionaires’ dreams of mass surveillance and control, we demand that humanity’s technological capabilities are harnessed towards increasing, not restricting our freedom.
    In place of climate and environmental destruction and extraction we demand a just transition, the restoration of our natural world, and cheap clean energy for all.
    In place of a Mediterranean Sea torn apart by state, corporate, and neocolonial violence, we demand a shared home in which we all can thrive.

    In place of death and despair, we demand life and hope.
    Please add your organization or individual name here
    Sign the Declaration
    [ List Of Signatories ] :
    Organizations:

    The Palestinian Institute for Climate Strategy
    Freedom Flotilla Coalition
    No Name Kitchen, Spain
    EmpowerVan, Switzerland
    Missing Voices (REER), Senegal
    The Hummingbird Refugee Project, UK
    Artists for Palestine, UK
    Hermes Centre, Italy
    Reclaim the Sea, UK
    Haringey Welcome, UK
    Fridays for Future MAPA
    Youth Advocates for Climate Action, Philippines
    Fridays for Future International
    The Students for Palestine (TS4P), Canada
    Equinox Initiative for Racial Justice
    Antizionist Jewish Alliance, Belgium
    Melitea, Italy
    Glocal Roots, Greece
    Abolish Frontex
    Love Without Borders, Greece
    Refugees in Libya, Italy/Libya
    Walk the Petition Collective, Ireland
    Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign
    Statewatch, UK
    Sarah Seenotrettung, Germany
    Monkstown Vigil for Palestine, Ireland
    Pals for Palestine, Ireland
    Migrants Organise, UK
    Mobile Info Team, Greece
    For Refugees, UK
    North Wicklow Against Genocide, Ireland
    Refugee Platform Egypt
    CODEPINK, USA
    Sarnians4Palestine, Canada
    American Friends of Combatants for Peace, USA
    Droichead Solidarity Group in Tipperary, Ireland
    Hot Bubble
    Sneem Tidytowns
    Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, UK
    Mothers Against Genocide, Ireland
    Tipping Point, UK
    Bank Better, UK
    Irish Healthcare Workers for Palestine, Ireland
    Uni for Palestine Munich, Germany
    Stop Wapenhandel, Netherlands
    Northern Lights Aid, Greece
    Jews for Peace, Latvia
    Sea-Watch e.V., Germany
    Platform London, UK
    CRID, France
    Watch the Med - Alarm Phone, International
    Monkstown Vigil in Solidarity with Palestine, Ireland
    The Border Violence Monitoring Network
    Global Justice Now, UK
    Klima4Palästina, Germany
    BiPOC for Future, Germany
    Rumbo a Gaza, Spain
    Naas Biodiversity Group, Ireland
    Migration-Control.Info
    The Civil Fleet Podcast, UK
    South Yorkshire Refugee and Asylum Action Group (SYMAAG), UK
    US Boats to Gaza, USA
    Canadian Boat to Gaza (part of the Freedom Flotilla), Canada
    Ongi Etorria Errefuxiatuak, Basque Country
    Ecomuseo Mare Memoria Viva, Italy
    Shut Down Folkston ICE Processing Centre, USA
    Seebrücke, Berlin
    Climáximo, Portugal
    Parents for Future, Scotland
    Climate Refugees, USA
    European Jews for Palestine
    Leaders for Climate Action, Germany
    Books Against Borders
    Free Gaza Movement, Denmark
    Den Postkulturelle Krop, Denmark
    Greenish, Egypt
    Feminist Antimilitarist Collective, Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Pasifika Uprising, USA
    Neighbours 4 Palestine Owen Sound, Canada
    Water is Life Gaza, Palestine
    Seven Sisters Collective, Turtle Island
    Youth for Climate, Türikye
    Donne in Nero di Parma, Italy
    UNM Students Justice for Palestine, USA
    Our Grounding Foods, USA
    Conscience Canada, Canada
    SOLdePaz Pachakuti, Asturies
    Human Rights Sentinel, Ireland
    Council of Canadians London Chapter, Canada
    Qathet Climate Alliance, Canada
    Bruxelles Panthères, Belgium
    Comunita’ San Benedetto al Porto, Italy
    World BEYOND War, International
    Guidance for Growth, USA
    Oakland Jericho, USA
    Pacific Life Community, USA
    14 Friends of Palestine, USA
    Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid, Canada
    Solidarität International e.V., Germany
    Women in Black, Austria
    Vrouwen in het Zwart, Netherlands
    NTUA, Greece
    Green Mountain Solidarity with Palestine, USA
    Council of Canadians South Okanagan Chapter CANADA
    BDS-NL The Netherlands
    BDS Malaysia
    Jews Against the Occupation 1948 Australia
    GetUp AUSTRALIA
    Palestine Solidarity Alliance, South Africa
    Edmonton Small Press Association, Canada
    Grandparents Against Genocide, Canada
    The Polis Project, USA
    Tribal Vibes Wild Fire Productions, Canada
    The Free Gaza Movement, USA
    Radbound Staff for Palestine, The Netherlands
    MARUF CT, USA
    The Frances Dinh Blake Foundation, USA
    Comité de Solidaridad con la Causa Árabe, Spain
    Geef Tegengas, Netherlands
    Saints Francis and Therese Catholic Worker, USA
    Cashel for Palestine, Ireland
    Radio Tv Lavapiés, Spain
    Council of Canadians South Okanagan Chapter, Canada
    Greater Toronto for BDS, Canada
    IWW Poland, Poland
    LEGACY-The Landscape Connection, USA
    Piano Terra, Italy
    Latin American Canadian Solidarity Association, Canada
    Croeso Menai, Wales
    BDS Malaysia, Malaysia
    Veterans For Peace Chapter 27, USA
    Central Coast Friends of Palestine, Australia
    Balkan Solidarity Network, The Balkans
    Solidarity Albania, Albania
    Mes 2 pieds sur la Terre, France
    GreenNet, UK
    BDS - Gruppe Bonn, Germany
    U Buntu e a Capo, Italy
    September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, USA
    Arles pour la Palestine, France
    The Francis Dinh Blake Foundation, USA
    Unlock, France
    Migrant Democracy Project, UK
    Jews for Palestine WA, Australia
    Saskatoon Chapter of  Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle  East, Canada
    Council of Canadians Edmonton Chapter, Canada
    Collectif Antigone, Canada
    Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, US Section (WILPF US)
    Glasgow Palestine Human rights campaign, Scotland
    UBC Staff for Palestine, Canada
    Hunter Palestine Solidarity, Australia
    Fridays For Future Lebanon, Lebanon
    For Palestine, UK
    Ship to Gaza Gotemburg, Sweden
    The Love Alliance, Scotland
    Fanrivista, La Fanzina Generalista, Italy
    Denman Islanders for Climate Action & Social Justice, Canada
    Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) Queensland Regional Meeting, Australia
    IranMotstånd - Lund, Sweden
    Doctors Against Racism Sweden, Sweden
    Connecting Gaza, UK
    Bienvenidxs Refugiadxs Málaga, Spain
    Fridays For Future Greece, Greece
    Mothers For Palestine, Sweden
    Centre for Environmental Living and Training, Ireland
    Convenzione dei diritti nel Mediterraneo, Italy
    Corporate Watch, UK
    Connacht One Future , Ireland
    Quilombo Ciência, Brasil
    XR Galway, Ireland

    Individuals:

    Greta Thunberg
    MEP Carola Rackete, Germany
    Suchitra Vijayan, USA
    Petra Molnar, Faculty Associate, Harvard University, Canada
    Fahmida Miah, UK
    Natasha Walter, UK
    Gina Psylliakou, Greece
    Chloe Sarshar, Canada
    Carys Boughton, UK
    Farhana Sheikh, UK
    Hector Proveda, Spain
    Birgit Staack, Germany
    Eva Anagnostou, Greece
    Lou-Salomé Beaunay, France
    Josipa Lulić, Croatia
    Emma Martín Díaz, Professor of Social Anthropology, Spain
    Domenica Cox, UK
    Manon Louis, UK
    Francesco Anselmetti, PhD Candidate, Harvard University, UK
    Noah Hatchwell, UK
    Pauline Fritz, Germany
    Marc Schulpin, Germany
    Stephanie Richani, Cyprus
    Sue Fraser, UK
    Cassio Peia, Italy
    Clara Zinecker, Cyprus
    Mitzi Jonelle Tan, Philippines
    Claudia Lombardo, Spain
    Ben Anderson, Ireland
    Rand Attallah, USA
    Fernando Racimo, Italy
    Atizkoa Lopez de Lapuente Portilla, Spain
    Vesna Ivezic, Croatia
    Ayaan Khan, Canda
    Hope Barker, UK
    Innah Gaspar, Germany
    Fenya Fischler, AJAB, EAJS, European Jews for Palestine, Belgium
    Samia Khoder, Germany
    Georgia Nash, UK
    Sigrid Skou Hansen, Denmark
    Silvia Carta
    Mariana Santos, Portugal
    Jude Farrel, Ireland
    Kirsten Farrelly, Ireland
    Christine Barry, Ireland
    Natasha King, UK
    Aisling Drury Byrne, Ireland
    Clare Holohan, Ireland
    Deirdre Kelly, Ireland
    Nuha Izzatunnissaa, Indonesia
    Lissana Genuardi, Italy
    Mike Fitzgerald, Ireland
    Ger Power, Ireland
    Corina Barbul, Canada
    Margit Vincent, Italy
    Gianluca Cangemi, Italy
    Karine Vanthuyne, Professor at the University of Ottawa, Canada
    Jessamy O’Dwyer, Pals for Palestine, Ireland
    Lena Excrum, Germany
    Louika, Greece
    Kirsty Morgan, UK
    Jo Murphy, Ireland
    Barbara Liston, Ireland
    Bernadette Morton, Ireland
    Meadhbh Curran, Ireland
    Luca Ghidini, Italy
    Brett Davidson, USA
    Mary Caherty, Ireland
    Catherine Power, Ireland
    Dwayne Ferdinand Wildeboer, UK
    Polyana de Oliveira, USA
    Dorrotya Bower, Hungary
    Kate Cahoon, Germany
    Zainabb Hull, Crips for Palestine, UK
    Clara Joan Bauza, Belgium
    Johanna Lewis, Canada
    Gene Parfait, Abolish Frontex, Belgium
    Donal Murphy, Ireland
    Jasmine Lefebvre, Canada
    Kevin O’Brien, Pals for Palestine, Ireland
    Julia Falco, Canada
    Suzanne Murphy, Ireland
    Eleni Athanasiou, Greece
    Katja Janßen, Germany
    Barbara Kelly, Ireland
    Zohair Chamberlain Regev, Germany
    Nour Khalil, Egypt
    Emma Hume, Ireland
    Devorah Gordon, Canada
    H. Chang, USA
    Heather Beattie, Canada
    Robert Nowak, USA
    Katja Gavin, Germany
    Captain Locky Maclean, Canada
    Micheline Steele, Canada
    Asma Ali, Canada
    Jennifer Robinson, Canada
    Annie-Marie Fuller, Ireland
    Pauline Caulfield Gregg, Ireland
    Zara Flynn, Ireland
    Rhona Carroll, Ireland
    Clare Corrigan, Ireland
    Edel McPartland, Ireland
    Antionette Ryan, Ireland
    Eileen Brannigan, Ireland
    Annie Molloy, UK
    Maximilian Kratz, Germany
    Noirin Ni Earcain, Ireland
    Saoirse Kelly, Ireland
    Savannah Garcia, France
    Hossam el-Hamalawy, Germany
    Aisling McDonagh, Ireland
    Lisa Strohschneider, Germany
    Sarah Dawson, Ireland
    Art Ó Laoghaire, Ireland
    Danielle Gannon, Ireland
    Amy Remeikis, Australia
    Aoife Gannon, Ireland
    John Loudon, USA
    Siobhan M Quigley, Ireland
    Ali Brady, Ireland
    Lorna O’Brien, Ireland
    Gill Waters, Ireland
    Katie Smirnova
    Éadoin Curtin, Ireland
    Thomas Feldmann, Germany
    Suzanne Doyle, Ireland
    Liam Murphy, Ireland
    Emily Barrett Laois, Ireland
    Laura Caffrey, Ireland
    Eileen Carr, Ireland
    Ciara Murphy, Ireland
    Warren Kimmitt, Canada
    Anna Clauer, US
    Caoimhe Butterly, Ireland
    Marion Houston, Ireland
    Valeria Elliott, Canada
    Torbjörn Björlund, Sweden
    Fiona Cauchi, Ireland
    Mona Happ, Germany
    Karenza M Case, UK
    Dr Caragh Behan, Ireland
    E. Jahns, Germany
    Angy Skuce, Ireland
    Kieran Harkin, Ireland
    Mary Flynn, Ireland
    Helmut Dietrich, Germany
    Ronán Conroy, Professor Emeritus, RCSI University, Ireland
    Nayeon Kim, South Korea
    Nichola Donnelly, Ireland
    Marie Therese Connolly, Ireland
    Enrico Schifani, University of Parma, Italy
    Line Algoed, Belgium
    Niamh Geran, Ireland
    Siobhan O Neill, Ireland
    Sile Murphy, Ireland
    Wasil Schauseil, Germany
    Roza de Jong, Netherlands
    Maca Hourihane, Ireland
    Saoirse O’Brien, Ireland
    Lorenzo Maria Perrone, Germany
    Dr Kate Marie Boyle, Ireland
    David Heap, Canada
    Rabia Rivzi, Canada
    Benjamin Fasching-Gray, Austria
    Marie Denham, Ireland
    Huwaida Arraf, Human Rights Attorney, Freedom Flotilla Organiser
    Alice Gambella, Italy
    Anusia Grennell, Ireland
    Laura Colini, University of Venice, Italy
    Monika Vykoukal Judeobolschewiener*innen, Austria
    Madeleine Cobbing, Freelance Environmental Consultant for NGOs, UK
    Flux Krämer, Germany
    Bamboo Zardetto, UK
    Meredyth Yoon, USA
    Cllr Kim Bryan, Wales
    Bill Boggia, Scotland
    Martin O’Sullivan, Ireland
    Ernie Watt, Scotland
    JJ Buchanan, Scotland
    Friederike Gower, UK
    Peter Barlow, Scotland
    Rebecca McCallum, UK
    Isabel Macrae, Scotland
    Caroline George, UK
    Kit Kittredge, Freedom Flotilla Coalition, USA
    David Wardrop, UK
    Dean Nasser, UK
    Charles Henry Wightman, Scotland
    Aileen Ford, UK
    Carol Warom, UK
    Jan Mayor, Scotland
    Catherine Coyle, Scotland
    Joan Brown, Scotland
    Marieken Van der Elst, Netherlands
    Rita Hoppet, Scotland
    Lorri Morton, France
    Jules Morton, Australia
    Angela Hawe, Ireland
    Melanie Pereira, Portugal
    Ruby McGloughlin, United Kingdom
    Marlene Engelhorn, Austria
    Philippine Migeot, France
    Celine Dimanche, France
    Elliot Rudd, United Kingdom
    Andjelija Kedzic, Sweden
    Andreas Andersson, Sweden
    Caoimhe O’Sullivan, Ireland
    Ana Aguirre, Spain
    Iris de Pree, Netherlands
    Emmie Nilsek, Sweden
    Gintare, Finland
    Rowane Keller, France
    Emma Desuza, USA
    Ida Corner, UK
    Brandon Ham, Mexico
    Joséphine Queste, France
    Kyle Gray, Ireland
    Simone Rudolphi (photographer), German passport, Bangladeshi heart
    Jovita Beeston, England
    Brandon Camacho Ham, Mexico
    Ryan Jones, United States
    Donna Dougan, Scotland
    Elisa Serio, Italy
    Katherine Blackadder, United Kingdom
    Nadja, Germany
    Kirishni John, Norway
    Guenther Schneider, Germany
    Tara Kruszynski, Australia
    Katherine Blackadder, United Kingdom
    Kyye Blachly, United States
    Asphodel Denning, United Kingdom
    Linda, Ireland
    Lou Hauray, France
    Daniel Barker, United Kingdom
    Duilio Donfrancesco, Italia
    Ayesha Ubaidullah (3rd year medical student at Riphah International University), Pakistan
    Anna Wnuk, United States of America
    Andreea Boutaib, United Kingdom
    Lilith MacBean, United Kingdom
    Carolina Zetterblad, Sweden
    Oscar Méndez Martínez, México
    Blesyl Sutaron, Philippines
    Julia Laurie, South Africa
    Afnan Syed, Canada
    Bethan Lloyd, UK
    Stefan Simion, Germany
    Livio Fania, Italy
    Manca Majnik, Slovenia
    B. Sutaron, Philippines
    John Moloney, Ireland
    Luna, France
    Janina Hossbach, UK
    Fleur Stirling, England
    Vasa Nestorovic, Serbia
    Tijs Van de Venster, Belgium
    Ali, Germany
    Cotruță Roberta, Republic of Moldova
    Cindy Peter, Germany
    Anna Mous, Belgium
    Sarah Rueda-Blake, UK
    Mellyssa, France
    Charlie Fanniere, Australia
    Hermann Sæther, Norway
    Prita Permatadinata, Indonesia
    Jo Woffinden, United Kingdom
    Kamila Zahra, Indonesia
    Olivia Wong, United Kingdom
    Frida Hernandez, United States
    Clara Shade, Australia
    Ashley Salas, United States
    Saskia Vierheilig, Spain
    Nika Disney, Croatia
    Verda Padma, Indonesia
    Barbara Hernandez Gonzalez, Spain
    Krystal Thorne, UK
    Mantovani Annalisa, France
    Julie Sydenham, Ireland
    Serena Stampfer, United Kingdom
    Giusadi Cecere, Italy
    Laura Kammerbauer, Germany
    Emily Baird, United States
    Bent Erik Krøyer, Denmark
    Monia Sander, Denmark
    Joel Andersen, United States
    Hazel Millar, Canada
    Rebekah Kiddell Mullen, United Kingdom
    Odysseas Gabrielatos, Greece
    Clara Lidström, Sweden
    Sarah Mac Mrossan, UK
    Meilinda Pancawati, Indonesia
    Jordyn Ferguson, Canada
    Michaele Suisse, USA
    Birdie McGrail, UK
    Haleemah T, UK
    Ian Lucas, USA
    Bünyamin, Ergün, Sweden
    Christian Frank, Germany
    Chantal, Germany
    Payton Clevenger, USA
    Marta Sorgi, Italy
    Rachel Lee, Australia
    Viiva, Mexico
    Esther Romero Gutierrez, Spain
    Francisco Orellana Lara, Chile
    Cadiou Daniele, France
    Caterino Rato, Portugal
    Kayla Fernandez, Canada
    Norah Fraser, Canada
    Marilyn Keddy, Canada
    Alessandra Pioppo, Italy
    Fanny Brady, USA
    Silvana Radice, Italy
    Angela Maria Bernardini, Italia
    Anousha Steen, England
    Yousra Nadège Andre, France
    Astrid Cryz, Canada
    Claude Léostic, France Palestine Solidarity Association, France
    Hilary Wright, Canada
    Sheri Cowan, Canada
    Tabatha May, Canada
    Chime Namdol Sherpa, Nepal
    João Prestes, Brazil
    Yekalsi, Indonesia
    Fletcher Hogue, USA
    Carol Hayward, UK
    Quinnlan Steela, USA
    Cheryl Stewart, Canada
    Sam, Canada
    Ashley Ditch, USA
    Elcin Demir, Germany
    Liew Xiang Xiang, Malaysia
    Samantha Brand
    Sharifah Fauziah Alsree, Malaysia
    Rebecca Grover Jones, UK
    Asaad Hashin, Malaysia
    Rozita Maliki, Malaysia
    Vanessa Mason, USA
    Jenna Newberg, USA
    Tazeen Shaukat
    Tazeen, Pakistan
    Susan Okwuegbuna, Canada
    Robert Garthson, Canada
    Sandra Newton, Scotland
    Emily Lu, USA
    Sandrine Renaux, France
    Sabina Oldham, USA
    Villenave, France
    Zafira Miranti Agung, Indonesia
    Lyn Adamson, Canada
    Sam Clara Dupuy Georget, France
    Aylin Melo De La Hoz, Colombia
    Mary Cowper-Smith, Canada
    Tiphaine Pontdeme, France
    Aaron Scott, USA
    M Breen, Ireland
    Charles McFadden, Canada-Wide Peace and Justice Network, Canada
    Gry Senderovitz, Denmark
    Siobhan O’Sullivan, Ireland
    Maryann Blackburn, USA
    Anna Kallio, Finland
    Federico Scarso, Italy
    Jodie Evans, USA
    Tyler Schin, USA
    Farwa K, Canada
    Gabriela Serpa, USA
    Polleux Maryline, France
    Alice Poole, Scotland
    Maxwell Sivers Boyce, USA
    Janne Toft-Lind, Sweden
    Rachel Spencer, UK
    Katie Madanat, UK
    Anna Gabrysiak, Poland
    Débora Yumi Baccaro, Brazil
    Emily Mendel, USA
    Gabriella, USA
    Eve Nurmsalu, Estonia
    Celia M Torres, Paraguay
    Elizabeth Mortheim, USA
    Jessica Alves, Canada
    Mitchell Kosterman, Canada
    Jessica Gareau, Canada
    Lydia Wood, Canada
    Sofía Cortés, Mexico
    Conni Dawson, Ireland
    Rebekah Plett, Canada
    Anna Wible, USA
    Sophia Garau, USA
    Maria Tariq, Canada
    Emma Matthews, USA
    Sha Ongelungel, USA
    Malini Gija, Canada
    Chrishanthy Thevarajah, Norway
    Isha Mariyam Haris, India
    Gabriella Lucrexia Pinard, Canada
    Raeef Syed, Canada
    Francesca Pease, UK
    Alejandra Zavala, Mexico
    Asher Kirchner, Canada
    Colleen Fuller, Canada
    Rashi Amirdin, Malaysia
    Ocean Robbins, USA
    Rashid Amirdin, Malaysia
    Abigail Morgan, USA
    Kiana Fukuyama, USA
    Kalayaan Braza, USA
    Emma Jefkins
    Thais Yamasaki, Brazil
    Phạm Đức Lâm Hải, Vietnam
    Sandra Lee, USA
    Anette, Germany
    Roseanne Jeries, USA
    Maria Nas, Greece
    Stefan Warsink, Netherlands
    Katy Cox, UK
    Emily Graham, USA
    Alyssa, USA
    Bear Wiedman, USA
    Μαρία-Ειρήνη Κουκουλάκη, Greece
    Linda Gray, USA
    Kalana Ortega Hoefner, USA
    Lola García, Spain
    Sophie Elaine, Italy
    Zeynep, Türkiye
    Iman Nurul Ain, Malaysia
    Andrea Zylstra, Canada
    Amy Branco, Canada
    Solaf, Syria
    Brooke Bowlin, USA
    Ana Abad, Spain
    Mirela Ružić, Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Emilia Roder, Germany
    Grace Devries, USA
    Anne Marescaux, Belgium
    Sofie Huisman, Netherlands
    Margot Bunz, Canada
    Johanna Hietmann, Germany
    Kawaiola Wong, USA
    Niamh McNulty, UK
    Camille Roger, France
    Wolfe Erlichman, Independent Jewish Voices, Canada
    Aileen Hennell, France
    Elizabeth, USA
    Lauren Munn, Canada
    Cyrielle Vannieuwenhuyse, France
    Godet Yannick, France
    Reem Q, Australia
    Benjamin Irwin, uSA
    Fatimah Alsolaili, Iraq
    Dimitri, Greece
    Maria, Greece
    Max Claar, USA
    Jane Kirkwood, Scotland
    Finneas McLeod, USA
    Gina Asalon, USA
    Hugo, Belgium
    Joachim Pförtner, Germany
    Laura B., Germany
    Siobhan Crowley, USA
    Martina DiMeglio, USA
    Olivia Feist, USA
    Zara Nickell, UK
    Myriam Queru, France
    Fani Henry, Belgium
    Nanna Strandberg, Denmark
    Chiara, Belgium
    Dan Maitland, Canada
    Bliss Wylie, UK
    Jennifer Haro, USA
    Fabienne Guiot, Belgium
    Atlas Sarrafouğlu, Türkiye
    Marissa Saenger, USA
    Charya Samarakoon, Sri Lanka
    Regine Portilla Leal, Mexico
    José Alejandro Avendaño Miranda, Mexico
    Ronna Wallace, Canada
    Tinsae Geyer, USA
    Mia De Gennaro, Italy
    Lisa Skeggs, UK
    Tehmeedah Q - The Students for Palestine, Canada
    Jes Vesconte United States
    Heather Huguenor US
    Marit Parker Cymru/Wales, UK
    Melina King United States
    Lisa Stuart U.K.
    Estefania de la Torre - CODEPINK Chicago United States
    Mike Stuart U.K.
    Brooklyn Harker Cananda
    Keith Scanlon Ireland
    Fiona McMurran, Canada
    Noella Canada
    Cassidy Ross, USA
    Sabina Törnqvist, Finland
    Julie Barton United Kingdom
    Dylan Jordan United States
    Bobbi Morgan, Australia
    Ellen Murdock United Kingdom
    Liisa Räisänen, Finland
    Erin McKay
    Gail lucas Usa
    Joel Motto United States
    Mercedes Kemp, writer, UK
    Belinda Chisholm Scotland
    Giulia Matesi Italy /, Netherlands
    Anne G. Woodhead United States of America
    Zanna Ekeroth, Canada
    Rosanne Holecek, USA
    Almira Austria
    Abdul Malik, Austria
    Shelly Fortier United States
    Brenda Thompson, Canada
    Barbara Guarnerio, Italy
    Egla Martínez, Associate Professor, Carleton University Canada
    Moira Demos US
    Gregory Gillis, Canada
    Nick Edelstein U.S.
    Phil Soubliere, Canada
    Ilya Derevensky United Kingdom
    Keri-Louise Williams United Kingdom
    Wren Lax-Holmes Usa
    Seth H US
    Charles Fortier, Canada
    Kia Ora Gaza (New Zealand) New Zealand/Aotearoa
    Renee conjaerts, Belgium
    Grace Eadie, Australia
    Anne Bras, France
    Stephanie Boilard United States of America
    Seyda Ipek, Canada
    Charlie Arnold United States
    Clara Grossmann, Germany
    HIPOLITO RODRIGUEZ México
    Clara Grossmann, Germany
    Kaying Lee, USA
    María Yolanda Xelhuantzi López México
    Clara Ferri, professor, Mexico
    Raluca Ciceu United Kingdom
    thomas bef, Denmark
    David Lubell CA
    Marcela Gomez México
    Martina Camilleri Malta
    Susan Helen Bernamont, Spain
    Eduardo A. Rincón Mejía, Mexico
    Laura Tran, Canada
    Dianne Varga aspirational borderless world
    Manuel Fernandez - Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico
    Daniel Shunra Cascadia
    Ailbhe Wilson CA
    Javier. Chile
    David Houndjo, France
    Cathy Carpenter, Canada
    SUSI NURANI BINTI RAZIKIN MALAYSIA
    Karem Giorio italy
    Drena McCormack CA
    Jeppe Taudal Thorsen, Denmark
    Carmela Canada
    Bea Dal Bello, Canada
    Adam Goldberger, USA
    Fred Guerin qathet Climate Alliance, Canada
    Daniel Rück, Canada
    Andy Arech México
    Silver Damsen United States
    Jefferson County palestinian solidarity, USA
    Paul Strome CANADA
    TERESA MOROLLON ORIA Sastra de la CNT Madrid España
    Patrice P.-Martel, Canada
    Monica J Charlton United States
    ELIZABETH LEE CANADA
    Patrícia Portugal
    Angelika Hackett, Canada
    Robert Hackett, Canada
    Anh Le United States
    Chloe Dumpleton England
    Karren Smith, Canada
    B. Sutaron Philippines
    Arturo Aroch C. Salud Pública, UNAM, México Ciudad de México
    Arfa Marefa Haryanto Indonesia
    Paulina Aroch, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Mexico
    Khurram Pakistan
    Caroline Cooper United States
    Liyana Binti Bakar Jamili Makaysia
    P Mikkonen, Finland
    Sarah McCoy United States
    Cristina Muller United States
    Sam Hovey, Canada
    Hakima Lamari, Canada
    Óscar Rueda
    Martha Goldin
    Angelica Temoche, USA
    Jennifer Griller, Canada
    Erin R United States of America
    Margaret Kapka, USA
    Marina Hasselberg Portugal, Canada
    Louise LaHatte New Zealand
    Alicia Richards Aotearoa New Zealand
    Maja Iwar-Svensson, Sweden
    J Moldovan, Australia
    Laurie Izaks MacSween so called Australia (land never ceded)
    Isabelle Elliot, USA
    Daniela Vanzo Italia
    Teun van Son, University of Antwerp Belgium
    Grace Marquez Philippines
    Cemo Cemo Türkiye
    Marta Alberti Lozano, Spain
    Coleen Ordinado Philippines
    Gordon Thorsten Ziems, Germany
    Silvia Pinca New Zealand
    Othman Alfarhan Kuwait
    Michel Chevalier, France
    Elena Probst Portugal
    Olivier Van den Brande, France
    Doreen Allan, Canada
    Jack Anderson, Canada
    Mandana Mansouri, Germany
    Mandana Christine Hanna Mansouri, Germany
    Ana Gvozdić
    Charlotte Sans, France
    Isabel Sicat Philippines
    Dan Glover United Kingdom
    Laila Bazzi, Australia
    Rahul Mehta, Canada
    Marietta Krumnau, Germany
    Charlse Newman, Australia
    Raquel Filipa Simas do Carmo Portugal
    Sofia Garcia Noriega Bueno United Kingdom
    Corrie Scott, Canada
    Tara Reynor OGrady Ireland
    Megan McMeekin, Canada
    Lile Maciupki Maelström, France
    Madison Senger, Canada
    Shoda Rackal, UK
    Camilla Edvinsson, Sweden
    Katia WERY - Association Belgo-Palestinienne (ABP), Belgium
    Rachel Roxburgh, UK
    Concepcion Requena Corona, Australia
    Sabryna Lefrançois, Canada
    Christiane Parreira Feresin Brasil
    Leann Nicole Velasco Philippines
    Rachele Voltolina, Italy
    Elisabetta Miotto Soain
    Lorraine McNeil, retired member, OPSEU 110, Canada
    Fouad Yammine, Lebanon
    Luc Rosenthal United States
    Brittany Loar with The Global March to Gaza and Artists Against Apartheid, USA
    Robert Hackett, Canada
    Gizem Koca Türkiye
    Ignacio Negri Aranguren, Argentina
    Beatrice Yefimov Ukraine, California (USA), Berlin (Germany)
    Nadia Arancio, Italy
    Asha Hon England
    Saidi Nordine Belgique
    Nabeela Australia
    Mackenzie Rylee Bulldog, Canada
    Paul Hendrikx The, Netherlands
    Memorial university Marilyn Porter, Canada
    Deidra Gauthier, Canada
    Fenya L., Germany
    Juhani Juutilainen Suomi
    Raquel Correia Portugal
    Raquel Correia
    Sidney platt United States
    Etna Indonesia
    Annaka Freve United States
    Sabina Indonesia
    Melissa Latronica - Humanitarian Activist, USA
    Gunilla Hjorth, Sweden
    Maddie Turner, USA
    Laura Colloridi, Australia
    Laurette Vankeerberghen, Belgium
    Leah Main, Canada
    Marianna Crociani, Italy
    Thiago Ramiro Argerich Lahitte, Italy
    Sharon O'Phee, Australia
    Sofia Ershova, Canada
    Indra Palmans United Kingdom
    Juri Hertel, Action Against War, Fridays for Future ,Cork Palestine Solidarity, Elders for Earth, Ireland
    Brenda México
    Nollaig Gallagher Ireland
    Diana Chaplin, Canada
    Elizabeth lee canada
    Ita tajura anwar Malaysia
    Adeline Esh United States
    ava pope, Canada
    Mary-Elizabeth Meagher United States
    Faith McKenzie, Australia
    Heidi Arata, USA
    Victoria Barbiani Italia
    Melissa Vivacqua Rodrigues- professor at Federal University of São Paulo, Brazil
    Jah France
    Saka Sora Walesa Indonesia
    Diana Alexe Romania
    Julia Rejek Deutschland
    Nola Smith Aotearoa New Zealand
    Zoé Ajasse, France
    Dr Louise Wakeling, Coalition of Women for Justice and Peace Australia
    Elisabeth Abdo, Germany
    Cecile Yazbek affiliated Coalition of Women for Justice and Peace, Australia
    Luca Cittadini, Italy
    Bettina Linke Ireland
    Natalia Perroni, Brazil
    Fabio Scaltritti, Italy
    Suzanne Rouleau, Canada
    Tami Tabibzadah, Canada
    Nola United States of America
    Thais Motta, Brazil
    Francesca Bellettini, Italy
    John King UAW Labor for Palestine, UAW local 7902 United States
    Kayla Anderson, USA
    Mia Berg
    Caroline Barton, UK
    Jacqui Gingras, Professor, Sociology, Toronto Metropolitan University Canada
    Mary McEvoy Ireland
    Olivia Zemer United States
    Sofia Wittzell, Sweden
    Giuliana Racco Spain/Italy/Canada
    Colette Piedcoq, France
    Lauren E Rushing United States
    Jacob Knutson United States
    Cristina Martínez Jiménez Galicia, Spain
    Nora Roman United States
    Mrs Margaret Barrie Scotland
    Natalie Fox, UK
    Luigi Eusebi, Italy
    Councillor Minesh Parekh, Labour and Co-operative Councillor on Sheffield City Council, United Kingdom
    Morgane Doby Kersaho, France
    Kritesh Kumar Rambarrun Mauritius
    Greta Coleman United States
    Larry McCumsey, Canada
    Cathy F, Canada
    Marie-Noelle RENONCET-UNGEHEUER, France
    Gary Erb United States
    ELIZABETH LDD CANADA
    Aisling Meath Ireland
    Tyrell Cooper ~ Citizens Climate Lobby United States
    El Vettersand, Australia
    Burton Steck usa
    Dana Visalli United States
    Babette Bruton United States
    Charles Byrne, USA
    Nick Hammer US
    Babette Bruton United States
    Jerise Fogel United States
    LeRoi Armstead, individual. United States pf America
    Sylvia Moyes, Australia
    Ellen Franzen, USA
    Jackie Tryggeseth United States
    Lisa Gherardi United States
    Ana Marton United States
    Dr. Connie Stomper United States
    Christine Grodd, Australia
    Jean McClure, Canada
    Vera Funk, Canada
    John Duddy, Canada
    Dr Lee W Andresen Dr Lee W Andresen, Australia
    Freedom Flotilla Participant; USS Liberty Survivor, USA
    Rebecca Nimmons United States
    Monique Foley Québec
    Peter fitting, Canada
    Ross Copeland, Australia
    Roger Leisner, USA
    zoe kunstenaar United States
    Lynn Shoemaker United States
    Elizabeth Pickett, Canada
    Eric Walberg, Canada
    Herb Buckwalter, Canada
    John Hill, Canada
    Ken Kraybill United States
    Herb Buckwalter, Canada
    Kathy Bradley, concerned human being United States
    John F Nagle, USA
    Jepke Goudsmit (member of Jews Against the Occupation '48), Australia
    pascal molineaux Colombia
    Prof. Andrew Paul Gutierrez FRES, Italy
    LauraLee Woodruff United States
    Jonathan Mitchell, author and anti-Zionist United States
    Khaled Mouammar, Former Member of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada
    Marie-France Imberton United States
    Former Member, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Mary Mouammar, Canada
    Elvina Sainte-Marie, Canada
    Larry Ulrey, USA
    Margaret Rogers’s, USA
    Justin Blouir United States
    Bonnie Black, Canada
    Thomas Matsuda United States
    Alisan T Tucker-Giesy United States
    Edward Mills United States
    Elizabeth Widerquist, USA
    Janet Beck, Canada
    Nancy G Klassen, Canada
    Sahar Masud Usa
    Cary Moy United States
    Joel Hildebrandt New Zealand
    Brent Rocks united states
    Jon Logan United States
    George jansson, USA
    Francois Gosselin Couillard, Canada
    Tue Magnussen, Denmark
    Peggy Luna United States
    Michael Cavanaugh United States
    Linda V. Kade, AIA Linda Kade United States
    Anam Matariyeh, USA
    Dean's office Beit el Hikma Tunisia
    Harlem United Andrew Arrabaca United States
    Anam Matariyeh, USA
    Hussein Ghadban, Canada
    Sylvia Hale, Australia
    Dan R Myers Refuse Fascism United States
    Drew Herzig United States of America
    Maria Soledad Bertucci Mora Chile
    Tracy Feldman United States
    Manuel Erickson, Canada
    Ricardo Wheeler United States
    Anthony Mihovich United States
    Beverly J Dahlen, poet & essayist US
    Nicolle Argueta Honduras
    Sapphire Pena United States
    Dolores Pino U.S.
    CAROLINE D ALCORSO, Australia
    Louise Bjorknas, Canada
    Jane Jewell United States
    Rev. Dr. Christopher Ross U.S
    Anthony Negus, Australia
    Pacific Life Community Rush Rehm, USA
    14 Friends of Palestine, Marin Jane C Jewell United States
    Janet Klecker, Hyderabad, India United States
    Tamara Yousry, Australia
    Jessica Rath United States
    Jan Passion United States
    Stan Alfred Squires, Canada
    Ray Cage Veterans For Peace US
    Paul Desney, Australia
    Tony Iltis, Australia
    Sandra Woodall US
    John C
    Theodore Voth United States
    Carol Furlan United States
    Donna Whitney United States
    Marie Myers Lloyd, Canada
    Robert Blair, Canada
    Dorothy Henaut, Canada
    Roe F Sybylla, Australia
    Johanna L Fritzke United States
    Marina Skumanich, USA
    Meredith West United States
    Walter Goodman United States
    Bo Svensson US
    Lydia Garvey US
    Rob Kulakofsky, USA
    Katie Doll United States
    Maritsa Vatou Greece
    Creators Equity Foundation Joshua Reichek United States
    Paula Orloff affiliated with Indivisible, USA United States
    Mary C. Daub, USA
    David Carr United States
    Paula Orloff, affiliated with Indivisible, USA United States
    Leslie Graves United States
    Renate Knudsen, Sweden
    scott chapman US
    myna lee johnstone, Canada
    Rachel Coloff, USA
    Mike Nestor, Canada
    Karen McClellan United States
    Janan Asfour United States
    Joshua Beth, USA
    Abir Elzowidi, USA
    Muriel
    Muriel Bittar, Canada
    Bill Johnstone, member of Amnesty International, Canada
    Melannie Burke, Canada
    Abry Jocelyne, France
    Marlena Santoyo, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Peace and Justice Action United States
    Chris C Marrs United States
    Dr Hani Faris Vancouver, B.c., Canada
    Gerry Milliken US
    Donna Wallach, San José Against War (SJAW), USA
    Alba Greco, USA
    Liz Murphy United States
    Ned Rosch United States
    Ruby Phillips, human rights activist, Buddhist, health worker United States
    Harold Watson United States
    Aysu Polat, Germany
    Ester Ollé Pérez Catalonia
    Jeffrey PANCIERA United States
    Michelle Granas United States
    Michael Kemper United States
    Debra Rehn United States
    Elmaze Krasniqi, Germany
    Nick Skrowaczewski, USA
    Lee Rhiannon, Australia
    Fred Williams none, Canada
    Bessie Wapp, Canada
    Connie Pratt US
    Christel Stoltz, Sweden
    Stefanni Stefan Bodmer Suisse
    Laurie Tuller, France
    Maria Gallastegi Euskal Herria
    Bret Polish United States
    Rami AL-ASWAD, Canada
    Frank Corcoran Ireland
    Dafni Anastasiadi, PhD-Scientist Greece
    Juliane von Bieberstein Deutschland
    Dominika Chodysz España
    John Scott Preiskel United States
    d carr United States
    Frances Scarrott, Netherlands
    Glenn Thureson US
    david druding US
    Didier Delaye FR
    Maaike Manten, Netherlands
    Communist Party of Norway (NKP) Hans Jørgen Mala Milde Norge
    NTUA ROULI LYKOGIANNI GREECE Associate professor
    Josie Gibberd Scotland
    Steve Stephan, Australia
    Howard K. Beale, Jr. United States of America
    Dimitris Vogiannidis Greece
    Rosalyn Kennedy, UK
    Laurie Price, Mexico
    Annette Dubois Switzerland
    Corina Vasilopoulou, journalist Greece
    Kate Taylor United Kingdom
    Guenter Wimmer. Munich, Germany
    Javier Gracia, Spain
    Carleen Mulloy, USA
    Rachel Lowther, UK
    Marian Larsen, Greece
    Zoi Artemis Athanasopoulou, Greece
    Maia Lund Newlyn, England
    Mary Pampalk, Palestine Solidarity Austria, Austria
    Traudlinde Aigner, Austria
    Michelle Vanek, Germany
    Naazim Adam, South Africa
    Francis Natha, Australia
    Merlin Nathan, Australia
    Jo Clayson, EarthSong, USA
    Richard Maguire, Australia
    Beatrice Romano, Italy
    Maria Maguire, Australia
    Froukje Brouwer, Netherlands
    Eileen Young, Canada
    Lígia Prado, PSOL, Brazil
    Ken Canty, USA
    John Earl, USA
    Elle Osborne, UK
    Nora Taji, Palestinian-Canadian, Canada
    Sophie Leeman, Australia
    Mick Breen, Ireland
    Colin Pearson, UK
    Nihad Ben Salah, Canada
    Nicholas Monro, UK
    Jon Singleton, Australia
    Yipeng Ge, Canada
    Loubna Messaoudi, Canada
    Lorne Walters, Belgium
    Taissir Makni, Canada
    Saba Tounsi, Canada
    Maroua Oueslati, Canada
    Nick Black, Canada
    Catherine Ann Cullen, Ireland
    Helene Dube, Canada
    Norman Daoust, USA
    Chris Monti, USA
    Cinzia Colosio-Le Dem, France
    Sister Esther Pollack, Olivetan Benedictines, UK
    Nelda Reid, USA
    Jerry Provencher, USA
    Hanen Zitouni, Canada
    Crayton Mendonça Cunha Filho, Brazil
    Imen, Canada
    Emmanuelee Fuare, France
    Eva Luursema, Netherlands
    Eleanor Martin, Australia
    David Fallow, USA
    Kellie Mattatall, CA
    Dadang Hawari, Indonesia
    Stefan Kreft, Germany
    Michael Peter Langevin, USA
    Serap Aker, Canada
    Davide Barelli, Switzerland
    Sayaka Fermi, USA
    Ndiame Gueye, Canada
    Simona Pogonat, USA
    Chantal Poulin, Collectif Antigone, Canada
    Hannah Prince, Scotland
    Alex Stewart, New Zealand
    Melanie Jacobs, USA
    JV Connors, USA
    Pascale B., Canada
    Mawan Aziz, Canada
    Michael MacPherson, USA
    Barbara Trypaluk, USA
    Steve Ditore, USA
    Alix Keast, USA
    Jenny Dinwoodie, UK
    Pamela Bond, USA
    Judy Geringer, USA
    Carolyn R Pilgrim, USA
    Siamak Vossoughi, USA
    Alan Papscun, USA
    Alana Porcino, Brazil
    Alan Papscun United States
    Isa Maria, Kauai for Palestine, Hawai’i (occupied by USA)
    Peter Oppenheimer, USA
    Eva Spitzner, Germany
    David Rothauser US
    David Hoadley United Kingdom
    Eva Spitzner, Germany
    David Janzen, Canada
    Xavi Spain
    Syed Omair Anwar, Canada
    Aileen C McEvoy United States
    Helen Werner United States
    Meris Germany
    Codi-Lee Chambers United Kingdom
    Meris Germany
    Hawwaa Chowdhury United Kingdom
    Paul Chislett, Canada
    Jessica Bayne United States
    Bente Leeuwerink The, Netherlands
    Saadaoui France
    Aksel Van Eynde, Belgium
    Jeronimo
    Ibtissem Bayou, France
    Carla Delpiano, Argentina
    Ozeroglu Jeremy, France
    Mahmoud Kholeif Egypt
    Seana Parker United States
    ALIKI ANTONOPOULOU GREECE
    Kayly Elliott-Tomkins, humanist. Wales
    Filippo Cauz, Italy
    Ilarion Tsonev UK / Bulgaria
    Adrianna Chmura United Kingdom
    Tess Perkins United States
    Farah Jaafar Tunisia
    Sayid Bayoumi Germay
    Lucy Msengane South Africa
    Corsica Palestina, France
    Matthew Burns United Kingdom
    Yasmina Bettayeb, France
    Chris Kelly Ireland
    Giorgia Galleri, Italy
    Maica Berenguel, Spain
    Seven Zero Tunisia
    İman Kabakçı, Turkey
    Anne Durastanti, Corsica Palestina France
    CarOze Van de Poll, France
    Lisa Martin United States of America
    Fanny Qvickström, Finland
    Fotios Logothetis Greece
    Claudia Farese, Spain
    Michelle McCarver, USA
    Emily Moss US
    İman Kabakçı, Turkey
    Jennifer Griller, Canada
    Myriam bokanoud, France
    Asma Uk
    Tracy Maroun, France
    Asma Uk
    Marek Germany
    larrissa usa
    Alexis Mangane United Kingdom
    Paul Turner US
    Claudio Binda, Italy
    Mathilde Fromageau France/UK
    Simon Ernst from Rettet Gaza Konstanz, Germany
    Michael Summerscales, Netherlands
    Miguel Aguado, Canada
    Lena Lampropoulou Greece
    Walleed Khan, Canada
    Davido Nascimento Macedo, UNIFESP Brasil
    Katerina Anastasiou Italy/Greece
    Isabelle Huchard, France
    joe helferty Ireland
    Luke DG, France
    joe helferty Ireland
    Valentina Anghinoni
    Abaida Mahmood United Kingdom
    Adrian Ramos United States
    GEORGIOS SPYRIDIS SOLACHIDIS Greece
    marie-claude patin FR
    Sophie Wang, Japan
    Tuesday morning-star Uk
    AHMET BOGA, UK
    Susana Perdiz Spain/Switzerland
    Helen Hempstead, UK
    Pascale Le Lièvre, France
    AHMET BOGA, UK
    Mariana Calvario, Mexico
    Halima Brewer, UK
    Maria Inês Silva Portugal
    Farah Lenzi Palhares, Brazil
    Sébastien Berwart Switzerland
    Megan Gwilym Wales
    Cengiz Turkiye
    Lou Monachino, Italy
    Mariana Martins Portugal
    Bernardo Rosa Ramirez Portugal
    Nastasja Scholz, Germany
    Pragati, Tampere University Finland
    Linda Lindsay United States
    Paula Germany
    Daniel Bowyer England
    Karen Vanussa Tiecher Brizuela España
    Sara Devesa Machado Portugal
    Megan Tenhage, Canada
    Jullien Jean-François, France
    Barbara D'Emilio, USA
    Morla Adrien, France
    Mark Puglise US
    Marina Burgess, UK
    Selma UK
    Susan Farquhar US
    Richard Kiernan Ireland
    Emma Callaghan
    Emily Leo, Germany
    Simona Strano, Italy
    Yasmine KHARROUBI, Spain
    Eleni Sidiropoulou, refugee education coordinator, Greek ministry of education Greece
    Tima Perrin, USA
    Yuliani Liputo Indy
    Peter Morrow Ireland
    Johnny Robbins United States
    Angela Torres, Spain
    Hugo Bonnin, France
    Conchi Cortegoso, Spain
    Leïla PEPPUY, France
    Natalie McCreary, USA
    Riccardo Tirendi, Italy
    Megan Gwilym Wales
    Emily Australia
    Daniel Gugitsch GERMANY
    Dave Brewer, USA
    Valérie Germany
    Emily Te Cambodia/Australia
    Seán Burke, Australia
    Stéphanie Martin, France
    Miranda Australia
    Adam Aldaamsah, Sweden
    Tribouillard Aline, France
    Stephen Kent, UK
    Gaby Orchidea Möckli Switzerland
    Abdel Elamroussy, Canada
    Samir N Semine United States
    Stop Thegenocide Worldwide
    Kate Corless, UK
    Mary Reidy Ireland
    Isa Desroches, France
    eileen ridge US
    Adam Versényi United States
    Annalisa Marinaro, Italy
    Anja Ratajczak, France
    Joana Ventura Portugal
    Karen Gearon Ireland
    Knosehr Garvery, Canada
    BAROUL JF, France
    Steven Mitchell, Australia
    Amber Lee Johnson, USA
    Roberto Marra
    Swan Benharrat, France
    Jenna Beales, USA
    Zasmira H Malaysia
    Alan Ritchie Scotland
    Emma G Czech Republic
    Liz Sanchez Usa
    Ellie Williams United Kingdom
    MOISES REAL MEXICO
    Sarah Craw Scotland
    Hanifi Aslan Türkiye
    Holly Mckenna United States
    Oliver Trautmann, Germany
    Sabine Bahi, Canada
    Zasmira H Malaysia
    Joaquim Teles Portugal
    Raul L Anorve United States
    Cristiana Madau, Italy
    Alice Rossi, Sweden
    Eva Santamaría Rueda España
    Maurizio Cirolli Italia
    Laura O'Neill Ireland
    Afshan Haqqi, USA
    Suzanne Savage, Operations Director of The Fold, United Kingdom
    Lila Hana Czeresnia Taragona Brasil
    Eloy Hensen, Netherlands
    Juliette Alenda The, Netherlands
    Anne Hoctor Ireland
    Winifred Dajani
    Anna Hennelly United States
    Arden Mullan Ireland
    Veronica Morfi, UK
    Francesca Trasarti, Italy
    Laurine Righyni, France
    Francesca Trasarti, Italy
    Jane Rademeyer South Africa
    Daniela Robles Aguirre México
    Fatima Khanom, USA
    Alain Brutout Belgique
    Arthur Henry Fork, Mexico
    Farwina Faroque Malaysia
    Carole Haddad, Canada
    Sébilet Hélène, France
    Ifrah Mah United Kingdom
    Ahmed Hassan yusuf hassan Egypt
    Fouad ahidar, Belgium
    Helen Hamogiorgaki Greece
    Elaine Fradley, Spain
    Clodagh Goss Northern Ireland
    Dietrich Belgium
    Alessio Vernini, Italy
    Angela Torbett Scotland
    Akif Görgülü, Belgium
    Vina McDermott, USA
    Sjoukje USA
    Roseline Garayoa, France
    Linda Jayne, Australia
    bob bowes, VFP-USA USA
    Gabrielle Ellis, UK
    Tisha Barros, USA
    Marie-Anne Delahaut, Belgium
    Catarina Sobral Portugal
    Bouke Jung, Netherlands
    Em Kriss, USA
    Akila Brahimi, Canada
    Saikat Bhattacharya United States
    Nesrine Bessaih, Canada
    Masjaliza Hamzah Malaysia
    Brian Janßen, Germany
    Marissa Riondino United States
    Romina Calvo Panama
    Elisha McLeod, Canada
    Mariana Couoh México
    José Ignacio Leguina Aranzamendi, Spain
    Jean François Guyard Switzerland
    Judy Hindle United Kingdom
    Arno van Rennes The, Netherlands
    Rumeysa Doğan Türkiye
    Duncan Douglas Lennox, Canada
    Rumeysa Doğan Türkiye
    Ingrid Denmark
    ODILE LENOIR, France
    Catherine Quinn Ireland
    Cathy Niroo, USA
    Shadan Iraq
    Camille Lorigo United Kingdom
    Minka San Millán, Spain
    Tomas Burget Czechia
    Juliette Moulin France, living in, Germany
    Kari Aist, USA
    Yolande Jansen University of Amsterdam Nederland
    Lamy Raphaël, France
    Michael Hogan, USA
    Herbert Fischer, Germany
    Stéphanie Kempf, France
    Enzo Germany
    Nikki Vergakes Usa
    Nikki Vergakes Usa
    Faith Griffin U.S
    Harv Branscomb, USA
    Susan Wortman, Canada
    Grace Senzano United States
    Yasmine Mellouk, France
    Petra Verdonk, Beyond Boundaries, the, Netherlands
    Hamza Austria
    Roger Hollander, Canada
    Sabrine France
    Camille Kittredge United States
    Raphaël.le Baquillon, France
    Noelia Martinez Urbina, Spain
    Alejandra Oliveras, mother, daughter, sister, human, USA
    Christine Starr United States
    Agnes Rosenke, Germany
    Tiziana Aresu, Italy
    María Florencia Monarca, Argentina
    santiago gonzález España
    Carmen Miravalls, Spain
    Erika Mourgues Deutschland
    Roland Schneider, Germany
    Lara Naz Switzerland
    Màire Ireland
    Mohsen KAYAL IRD, France
    Victoria Hertel United States of America
    Mary Hughes Ireland
    Bryan Brumley United States
    Emanuele De Giuseppe, Socialist Germany
    Estitxu Martínez de Albeniz, Spain
    Gloria Merlino United States
    Art Smoker United States
    Karen Malpede, Theater Three Collaborative.org US
    Sitiraudha Binte Noor Singapore
    Amal Garada United States
    Yoko Oikawa, Japan
    Gerry Ruecker, Canada
    Thijske den Ouden Nederland
    Rania Cortez United States
    Rebecca Jurisch, Germany
    Ragnar bjerregård, Denmark
    Galal Egypt
    Landon Nguyen, UCSF SJP US
    Federica Italy
    Ernst Mecke, Finland
    Michael Tobin Ireland
    Warda Baba, France
    Yvonne Lopez United States
    Tiziana Pozzessere Italia
    Fabrizio Capasso, Italy
    Corinne Huber Switzerland
    Annalisa Basso Italia
    Christophe Roh Switzerland
    Anne Jouault, France
    Patricia Dixon United States
    Marc Switzerland
    Alice Light Scotland
    atakan tan turkey
    Mary Johnson, USA
    Patrick Archer United States
    Sarah Miller United States
    Jean-François Pétillot, France
    JEFFREY CONLON United States
    Alessandro Braga, Brazil
    Büşra Akay, Denmark
    Kimberly Torres United States
    Eve Sassier, École Normale Supérieure Paris, France
    Matteo Severino, Italy
    Sander Goor The netherlands
    Maïlys Errico Hummel, France
    Margarita PÉREZ DE FRUTOS España
    Hélio Valentim Portugal
    Dominik Egli Switzerland
    Hélio Valentim Portugal
    Lucia Bellecci Sicily
    Smadar Carmon, Canada
    khaoula Ayari, Canada
    Philipp Müller Switzerland
    Nick J Swarth / XR Justice Now!, Netherlands
    Patrick Schnierer, Germany
    TJATTE HEDLUND SWEDEN
    E linders, UK
    Elizabeth Fattah, USA
    John Liss, Canada
    Marjorie Cariou, France
    Georg Andreasson, Sweden
    Alexandra Pallisco United States
    Antonietta Spedalieri, Spain
    Manon Hessels USA &, Netherlands
    Elodie CREPIN, France
    Zatu Amni Malaysia
    Jaimy Boelen Nederland
    Martine Perdrisat Switzerland
    Elizabeth Thelen United States
    Silvia Melo, Denmark
    Karin Stenvall, Sweden
    Karin Stenvall, Sweden
    Braiki Samir, France
    Monica Armanino, Mexico
    Samantha Madway, USA
    Alison Burns, Canada
    Tannith Haswell-Oosthuizen England
    Astrid Madsen, UK
    Riffat mian-hashim United Kingdom
    Orlando Ross United Kingdom
    César Pulido plazas Colombia
    Michael Kuttner, Canada
    Jose Manuel Paredes - Professor for Criminal Law Universidad de Oviedo, Spain
    Tom Hall United States
    Himani Bannerji, Professor Emerita, York University India
    Elane Heffernan Uk
    Slobodan Tabakovic Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Nicolás Tomsio (LCIP LA, PFP LA, UFCW 770, L4P LA.OC.IE, GSUS LA) United States
    Amy France
    Vincent Gérin, France
    Jozien Géron Nederland
    Manon Ribot, France
    BRIGITTE TRINCARD TAHHAN, France
    Semra Mahmutović Montenegro
    Gaye Frances Alexander CA
    Barbara E. Moore, USA
    Merna Ayman Shawky Habib Egypt
    Chelsey Lepage, Canada
    Jillian Emerson United States
    Sophie Orendorf United States
    Antonella Italy
    Kyle Ellenberger United States of America
    Humbeline RICHARD, France
    Jess Perkins England
    Ramón Linaza Iglesias, Spain
    David Hembrow, Netherlands
    Laura Astola, Netherlands
    Sebastian Kaep - EDITOR, Germany
    Eva Maillard, France
    Vanessa Maria Skantze, USA
    Naomi Berg, USA
    Jerome Hoffman United States
    Stella Hughes United Kingdom
    Zac Upton Ireland
    Catarina Syder Fontinha Portugal
    Steven Standard United States
    Rawan Farhan United States
    Isobel McCullough United Kingdom
    Shawn Pleski, USA
    Nema Bade United Kingdom
    Daniela Yanina Braña, Argentina
    Lawrence Reichard United States
    Andrew Clement, Canada
    Harriet McCleary, USA
    Sille Kirketerp Berthelsen, Denmark
    Harriet McCleary, USA
    Marcus Chapiron, France
    Sofia Portugal
    Dianne Post, International Human Rights Attorney United States of America
    Annick Becerra Monnier Switzerland
    Leslie Leyva González México
    Nancy Guberman, Canada
    Melissa Fung Costa Rica
    Andrea Reyes Elizondo The, Netherlands
    Constance Charles United States
    Celina Cardoso
    Art Hanson United States of America
    Radio Tv Lavapiés, Spain
    matilde Maribo köhler, Denmark
    Paul Griffin Scotland
    Judith Rosenbaum United States
    Zenon Oliveira Brasil
    Nicolas Magnard, Netherlands
    Nora Sternmann, Germany
    Patricia-Maria Weinmann United States
    Rachel Lindquist United States of America
    Magali France
    Diane Place, USA
    Steven Dean United Kingdom
    Monserrat Domínguez Navarrete México
    Amine Alaoui, Canada
    William Edelman United States
    Cathie Talbot
    Elaine Hagopian U.S.A. Les Etats Unis
    Wendy Broos The, Netherlands
    Yasmin Ahmed Uk
    Joyce Semaan, Australia
    Sabra Wolven, USA
    Suzanne Graham, Canada
    Lana Haubrich, USA
    Elizabeth Nyburg, Canada
    Paul Scotland
    Berber Nederland
    Dylan Arthur Dubuc United States
    Ruth danks United Kingdom
    Maria Barth, USA
    Victoria Brunetta Portugal
    Carl Rosenberg, Canada
    Georgeanne Samuelson United States
    Francisco Iñaki Almada García, political and pro-Palestine activist, Argentina
    Poppy Osprey, Australia
    Håkan Larsson, Sweden
    Chava finkler, Canada
    Håkan Larsson, Sweden
    Travis Frampton, Registered Nurse Canada
    Gynelle Nixon United States
    Melanie Ko, USA
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Geneyce melton, USA
    Don Ino US
    Sandra Fernandez U.S.A.
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Daniela Rodriguez A., Sweden
    Isabelle Ofume, Canada
    Achille Piombo, Italy
    Per-Olof Karlsson Sverige
    Sheila Meehan US
    Kim Eustache, France
    Lara Portugal & United Kingdom
    Jailyn Merengueli United States
    Teresa Hooker United States of America
    Angela Dawson Aotearoa New Zealand
    Viktor Karamanis Greece
    Meg Borthwick, Council of Canadians Canada
    Helen Newman, Australia
    Joyce Ryan. Cashel for Palestine Ireland
    Rene Vandenbrink, Canada
    Mariam mizyan United Kingdom
    Gord Doctorow, EdD Canada
    Maria Speyer, Australia
    Sasha Lofquist EPInc., Canada
    Luciana de Castro Laier Klug, Brazil
    Mary Nyquist, Canada
    Claudia Rodríguez México
    Sadia Hashmi, USA
    Rachel Dorson, UK
    Melanie Todd England
    Veronika Szoke, Canada
    Izzo maria giuseppina Italia
    Noemi Terrazzano, Italy
    Maria Giuseppina Izzo Italia
    Hakima Lamari, Canada
    John Schmittauer, USA
    Maria Giuseppina izzo Italia
    Saskia Morice, UK
    Zoé Blanc, France
    Eleonora Cos Italia
    Morven Ovenstone-Jones Scotland
    Marion Williams, UK
    Eileen Dreyer United Kingdom
    Claire Aldeghather, UK
    Giel France
    Linda Bigwood, UK
    Margaret Rossiter, Canada
    Paula Checkland, UK
    Sal Zafar, UK
    Alexandria Keating-Sofiakis United States
    Safia Gravel, USA
    Eloisa Carlos New Zealand
    Jean Cullen United Kingdom
    Sebastian Adorján Dyhr, Denmark
    Sherry L. Osadchey United States
    Pete Wade, UK
    GENDRON FRANCE
    Rachael Bardoe, France
    Lynn Peck, Canada
    Paolo Sbragia United Kingdom
    kerry scotland
    Lisa Brennan Ireland
    kerry scotland
    Adeline Lebreton, France
    Mohamed BEJI, France
    miss natasha khan United Kingdom
    Juhani Juutilainen, Finland
    Susanne S. Christensen, Denmark
    Bee Denning, UK
    Briony Panton, Spain
    Chantelle Rea-Bradley, UK
    Adele Coombs, Australia
    Anthony Ellis Aú, North Carolina Green Party USA
    Catherine Buca, UK
    Ann Molloy Uk
    S.Candeggi Italy
    Olivia Jackson United States of America
    Jessica Hope member of Amnesty, Greenpeace, Cwtch Pals, Reprieve UK
    Hinhan Ska Winyan, USA
    Yeuk Yi Pang, Germany
    Ilario De Gaetanis, Italy
    Aideen Landers Ireland
    Thomas Ardaen, Belgium
    Tommaso Gimelli, Italy
    Ivana failla Italia
    Régine Abadia, France
    Azrina Rusni Malaysia
    Jan Cook United States
    Justo Sánchez Elia, Argentina
    Alana Duggan, Canada
    Kristen den Hartog, Canada
    Alison Foale, Australia
    Fabienne Hannequart-Fortin, Canada
    Mathy France
    Don Ino United States
    Carla Romão Portugal
    DIANE PALM, Canada
    Christina Cabrera Puerto Rico
    Rebecca Jackson, Australia
    Querido Galdo United States
    Deirdre McDonald United States
    Jelica Roland Croatia
    Suzanne Sarkozy United States
    Lee Priday, Australia
    Arthur Young, Canada
    Frank Hulefeld United States
    Rechberger Elfriede, Austria
    Sylviane Lecomte Corsica, France
    Carolyn McGinty, Australia
    Belinda Fisher, Australia
    Christine Schmidt, Canada
    Godet Yannick, France
    Salla Lintonen, actress, France
    Rania Kapon Greece
    Nicole Day, USA
    Michael Leff, member Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) United States
    Kathleen Elworth United States
    Joan Rossy, Canada
    Ina Marja Selnes, Denmark
    Lydia Starring United States of America
    Candice Carpenter United Kingdom
    Oscar Rueda, Palestine
    Cynthia Bargar United States
    Jeff winch, Canada
    Erika Sezonov, USA
    Alison
    Christin Andersson, France
    Glynn Ryall, Rising Tide, Central Coast friends of Palestine Australia
    Humberto Ponce de leon, Canada
    Theda Ohling, Germany
    Inmaculada Martínez Alba, Spain
    Fabio Di Rocco, Italy
    Jeanne Crawford United States
    David Longmuir, Australia
    Seung-il Chang South Korea
    Bridgette Davis New Zealand
    Diane Oltarzewski, Quaker in Maine United States
    Tim O'Donnell, Australia
    Transito Rodriguez, Canada
    Neret Emma, France
    Thomas Edminster United States of America (sic)
    Croz Costa Rica
    Margaret Julie Finch, Peace & social Justice Com. 15th St.Friends Meeting U.S.A.
    Sheila O’Reilly, Canada
    Lesley Osborne, Australia
    Warren Kazor, Canada
    Maureen Marley, USA
    Jennifer Vergison, Australia
    Diana Silva Portugal
    Nuniek Setyo Indonesia
    Ed H England
    Elizabeth Burr United States
    Croeso Menai Wales
    Catherine Griffiths (Croeso Menai, refugee support) Wales
    Andrea Carta, Italy
    Ruth Taillon Ireland
    Kerry Scott, Parkdale - High Park for Palestine Canada
    Fazela Jacobs United States
    Risha Shahman Uk
    Ashley Cook United States
    Kathryn Devos, Australia
    Debra Ellis, USA
    Bonnie Kathleen Boyd, Canada
    ABDUL MAJED GLOBAL
    Don Wahl, USA
    Karen Boehler Ecuador
    Adam O United States of America
    Simone Garau, Italy
    Iha Agrawal, Australia
    Abdallah Abouhagrass
    Mike Madden, United States
    Robert Stuart, Canada
    Laurent Hourcle United States
    Bill Holt United States
    Humanity Worldwide
    Margaux Taillade, France
    Cornelius Talmadge, Canada
    Irene Melis, Sweden
    Santi Artanti Indonesia
    Tom Hayes documentary filmmaker, USA
    Julie Hillier, Australia
    Santi Artanti Indonesia
    William Hillier AUSTRALIAN
    Ahmad Ali Fahmi Indonesia
    Lyn Clark Pegg United States
    Ilham Nikolai Purnama, Canada
    Barry Warren Riesch United States
    Adrienne Morris United States
    Yvette Fouché, French living in Ireland
    Margaret Lumsdaine, USA
    Christine Graves United States
    Sylvie Barles, France
    Rebecca Keegan, citizen of Earth New Zealand
    Steve Mercier for Union Populaire Geneva Switzerland
    Tannis Zimmer, Canada
    Vigdis Bjorvand, Norway
    Susan Stout - Canpalnet, Canada
    Juan José Pérez Castillo (Vocal del Ilustre Colegio Oficial de Ingenieros T. en Topografía y Geomática) España
    William Collins United Kingdom
    Lindsay Hein, Canada
    Cristina Fernández Álvarez España
    Emma Scaife, Germany
    Alex Duncan, France
    Fariza Nasir Malaysia
    Lina El-Najjar Romania
    Megat Ismail Malaysia
    Jacqueline Shahinian Switzerland
    Marie-Louise Olsson Eriksen, Denmark
    Madiha Mojaddedi, Germany
    Omrcen Jean-Joseph, France
    Barbara Sisko Switzerland
    Virginia Mallin, UK
    Caroline Rooney, Professor Emeritus of African and Middle Eastern Studies UK
    Maria Gaitanou Greece
    Hanne Østerbye, Denmark
    Ally Coutts Scotland
    Mizuko Yakuwa, Japan
    Suzanne Strong South Africa
    Ally Coutts Scotland
    Mars Drum, Australia
    Kestoisa Finland
    Clara Nicolai, Germany
    Paige H New Zealand
    Sinne Lundgaard, Denmark
    Pia Holmrud Wetterberg, Sweden
    Emma Dunn, UK
    Cynthia Wannamaker, Canada
    Dorothea Rheinfurth, Germany
    Rebecca Pigot Ireland
    Palestine Solidarity Campaign, UK
    Nidzara Ahmetasevic Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Martha Pascoe New Zealand
    Saga Bokne, Sweden
    sandra andersson Sverige
    Blake Herve, UK
    caroline kuyper Ireland
    João Lourenço Portugal
    Michael Gruske, Germany
    Emma Berrocal, Spain
    Maureen Hibberd, UK
    Petersmann Italy
    Lena Nyblom Malmberg , Mothers Rebellion Sweden
    GENIEZ brigitte, France
    Rachel Winkworth United Kingdom
    Elhaid Isaj, France
    Luca Ciastellardi, Italy
    Ayan Mohamed United Kingdom
    Gustavo Beritognolo, Canada
    Fabien Despeyroux, Canada
    Cecilia Alarcón, Spain
    Lucia Catalina Josefine, Germany
    Anne Marie Craig Scotland
    Mickis Gullstrand, Sweden
    Toni Crowther, Italy
    Marie-Claire Binette, France
    Angelika Vartanyan Bulgaria
    Claudia Friedrich, Germany
    Ruth Jenkins, UK
    Nikos Tsopoglou-Gkinas Greece
    Jan Strömdahl, Sweden
    Michaela O'Hara Ireland
    alaa hajdouad Jordan
    Debbie Black Ireland
    rosa maria maiuolo Italia
    Katrina Irawati Graham, Australia
    Des Boyle Ireland
    Anna-Maria Jones, Australia
    Fabíola Borges de Castro (PhD candidate at Iscte) Portugal
    Louie Zamora Philippines
    René Plaetevoet, Belgium
    AMER ISAM HASAN ZABALAWI, Canada
    Isabelle Shickle, Australia
    Vanessa Martin, France
    Asem Azouka, Canada
    Ruth Garvey Ireland
    Peter Ypma, Netherlands
    Walter THomas Beckett - Human Rights Activist, Canada
    Angela Maria Bernardini Italia
    Despoina Karaoulani Greece
    Briana Reilly United States
    Jean Homsy, France
    Olivia Revans United Kingdom
    Daniel Ruiz Lorente, Spain
    Riccardo Volpe, Italy
    Melissa A. Torres / Oreilles Internaxionales Switzerland
    Deirdre Grealish Ireland
    Maddalena Santostefano, Italy
    Simone Britsch DE
    Nicolo De Luca, Italy
    David Peters, Canada
    Lydia Freiberg, Germany
    Sarah Alvarez, Belgium
    Clare McEnroe Ireland
    Concetta Musto Italia
    Birgit Muslim, Germany
    MacGregor Eddy of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom- US
    Gabríela Alice, Denmark
    Sarah Tan Malaysia
    Rita Primavera, Italy
    Mahé OLIVA, France
    Heidi Hoffmann, Canada
    S. Heigl CH
    Katja Hagedoorn The, Netherlands
    Sara Odelli Italia
    Lisa Bromley United Kingdom
    Patricia Patterer, Austria
    Murray Lumley, Canada
    Husni Taufiq Indonesia
    Penelet France
    Harry Dutton, UK
    Rolf Bengtsson, medlem i Palestinagrupperna, Sweden
    Linda Dutton, UK
    Anna Willats, Canada
    Katherine Helme, United Kingdom
    Shafeeqah Goolam Hoosen, South Africa
    Martina Lauer, Canada
    John Maclennan, Canada
    Felix Falk, Sverige
    Tom S, United Kingdom
    Rania, Algeria
    Shagufta Ahmad, Bahrain
    Robert Brown, United States
    Sia, Bahrain
    Henrik Sundström, Sweden Sverige
    Josephine Chesher United Kingdom
    Ane Christensen, Canada
    A T, France
    Phil Little - Xristos Community Society, Canada
    Meunier, France
    Jennifer Whitfield, Canada
    Brad Langerud, Canada
    Dimitri Sarantopoulos, Greece
    Ron Hazle, UK
    Gina Gaines, United States
    Ron Hazle Wales, UK
    Frank Pinto, UPTE CWA local9119 retired, US
    Hajra, Bahrain
    Isolda O'Connor, Ireland
    PATTICIA MCHUGH, United States
    Anne Zachariasen, Denmark
    An
    Mary Cowper-Smith, Canada
    Patrick Jackson, Canada
    Delwyn Pillay South Africa
    Karina Locke, USA
    Jill Acree, USA
    Aurelien Piras, Germany
    Nouhad Jazra regular loving peace citizen, Canada
    David Dirks
    Petra Heussler, Germany
    Maureen Healey-Beckett, Canada
    Luca Antognini Switzerland
    Séverine Marie FR
    Marie Scott Ireland
    Jane Kilthei, member Sylvan United Church, Mill Bay, BC Canada
    Samantha Lai, Australia
    Nawal Tamimi US
    Rik Masterson US
    Manuela Italy
    Barbara Polhamius US
    Krita Zaki Mohammed Algeria
    John Horne Scotland
    Abi Morrison United States
    Ralston Philippines
    Liz González United States
    Geneva Ferguson_Riders' Rights [NGO]_University of Toronto[Alumni], Lebanon
    Dee Zaranis, Australia
    Miguele Bittar, Canada
    Pat Howard, Canada
    Jan Bauman, USA
    Mariam Cassimjee South Africa
    Clayvonna Hooper United States
    Zahra Abbas, Canada
    Cinthya Paola Marquez Rojas, Mexico
    Lambert Meertens, Netherlands
    Anna Langley-Smith, UCU trade Union member UK
    Veronica Ma United States of America
    Eva Norrlöf, Sweden
    Jonas Åhlund, Sweden
    Melissa Baine New Zealand
    Vanessa Bonnin, France
    Jennifer Coulshed
    Siham Djafer, France
    Marika Straccia, Italy
    Sahabatku Indonesia
    Elisabeth O'Kelly United Kingdom
    Anthony Ellis Aú, North Carolina Green Party USA
    Lisa Ljungman, Sweden
    Aimilia komninou Greece
    Craig Dunn, UK
    Freya Higgins-Desbiolles, Academics4Palestine
    SA Australia
    Angelo Barth
    Yara Jacque Indonesia
    Leif Törnqvist Sverige
    Isabel Mora
    Nurul Afiah Binti Rosli Malaysia
    Maddalena Di Tolla Deflorian , independent journalist, Italy
    Elisa Fogliacco, Italy
    DHOLANDRE Nadine, France
    Diane Brown, Canada
    Evita Mavrogianni Greece
    Jack Payden-Travers, USA
    Michael stechishin United States
    Melanie Strauss-Staigis, Germany
    Pia Muehleib, Germany
    Ophelie Goy, France / Spain
    Pia Muehleib, Germany
    Beatrice De Blasi, Italy
    Michael Blake US
    Susanna Grigoletto, Italy
    Samar azawi, USA
    Christine Venner-Westaway (Quakers), Australia
    Liana phoenix- former teacher Usa
    Don and Roberta Thurstin Timmerman, USA
    Sara elm, USA
    Renee Nunan-Rappard, Canada
    Mona Amer, Canada
    Nadirah Bsr Singapore
    Per Christian Strøm, Norway
    Corinne Benson, Canada
    Sofia Cabral Portugal
    Zeinab Tunisia
    Karina Loureiro, USA
    Wasseem Germany
    Benedikt Freidel, Germany
    Dr. Maria-Inti Metzendorf, Germany
    Jean Cullen United Kingdom
    Ellmann Renate, Germany
    Gita Hashemi, Canada
    Frances Long, Quaker Australia
    Genie Silver, Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee, WILPF US
    Gigliola Cattalani Italia
    John Schmittauer America
    Cathleen Krahe, US
    Cecilia Edmond New Zealand
    Valerie Joy Austtalia
    Leslie Angeline ~ Codepink, Freedom Flotilla, Taxpayers Against Genocide, Veterans & Allies Fast for Gaza, USA
    Ahmet Akif Tosun Turkiye
    Deborah jackman, Canada
    Mary Helmer-Smith, Canada
    Nathan Herrington, Canada
    Don Skerik (Freedom From War Coalition), Canada
    Liz González US
    Tina Deshotels Shelton United States
    Katheryne Schulz, Canada
    Lily Ylang, USA
    Lindsay Rawluk, Canada
    Mary Amerongen, Canada
    Philippa Kemp, UK
    Vildan Ikiz, Belgium
    Lejla Kresevljakovic Bosnia and Herzegovina
    Shabnam Katebi, Canada
    Sies Vleeshouwers, Netherlands
    Alive Barry Ireland
    Annalisa Gorreri Italia
    Joelle France
    Nikolai Hartmann, Austria
    Rumana Islsm, UK
    Daniah Turkstany Saudi Arabia
    Bobbie Flowers United States
    Aideen O’Brien, Canada
    Andres Succar R., climate activist, Lebanon
    Zoe Cleland, Canada
    Leila Vieira, Brazil
    Jeff Tennant, Canada
    ΕΥΘΥΜΙΟΣ ΠΑΛΑΝΤΖΑΣ Greece
    Helen Oxnam, Australia
    Veena United States
    Lucia Amendola, Canada
    Mirjam Bendin, Germany
    Danielle Polson US
    Sophie Siemion United States
    Andrea Metzger, Germany
    Stefani Australia
    Karin Borjesson United Kingdom
    Itzy Cervantes United States
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Jake Javanshir, Canada
    Amanda Churchill US
    Laura Kupresak Switzerland
    Fekre Yohannes Mulugeta, Canada
    Aude Massé, France
    Kadir İlhan Turkish citizen Türkiye
    Marina Palovaara Belgique/Sweden
    Tim Mounsey Scotland
    Jessica Guilliams, Belgium
    Virginia Cavallini, Sweden
    Quentin Devegney Suisse
    Emil Mellerup, Denmark
    Nastasia Holm, Denmark
    Zanette France
    Dylan Nunez United States
    Appoline Amirault, France
    Mariana Favero Brasil
    Lorena Almeida de Andrade Brasil
    Donatella Degani, Italy
    Brynne Stevens United States
    Jacqueline Freitas Brasil
    Giulia Boccaccini, Italy
    Rebecca greenberg Usa
    Gisleine Fátima Ramos Portugal
    Mariam bint Sulaiman United Kingdom
    Phoebe Flockhart, Sweden
    Olga Fostini, France
    Dorothée Heibel, Australia
    Melanie Murray, Canada
    carole tootill CA
    Sydney United States
    Thaysa Canosa Ravanello, Brazil
    Maya Barrett, Australia
    Abdullah Bey Türkiye
    Samantha Canada
    rami farajallah, Sweden
    Fabienne Dreyer, Germany
    Trina Guest, Australia
    Trin louise, Australia
    Louise Guest, Australia
    Katrina Louise, Australia
    Scott Bacon, Australia
    Scott Charles, Australia
    Charles Bacon, Australia
    Jayden Charles, Australia
    Logan Joe, Australia
    Harry Stephen, Australia
    Julie Marie, Australia
    Liv Sendy, Australia
    Janell Louise, Australia
    Chris Jones, Australia
    Tony Caruso, USA
    Mike Smith, UK
    James Anderson, Australia
    Paul Allibon, Australia
    Ashley stanton United States
    David Pérez-Suárez, UK
    Sima Nasizadeh, Sweden
    Lief Eriksen, University of British Columbia Canada
    Lina Chittavong, USA
    Farhana Moolla
    Naomi Simington United Kingdom
    Karla Cristina Reis Brasil
    Lapo Bettarini, Italy
    Kenneth Benoit New Zealand
    Ulla Rudander, Sweden
    Beren Özavci, Turkey
    Celia S Read United Kingdom
    Juanita L Austin, Canada
    Jamie Wright Ireland
    Sarah Nirnamey, France
    Charlier Aurore BELGIUM
    Charles Malcolm Scotland
    Shannon Alexander, USA
    Jodie UK
    Don Ino United States
    Max Arendt, Germany
    Kerrie McGrath, Australia
    Helen De Zutter, Belgium
    Parbot Mariejo, France
    Lund Students For Palestine, Sweden
    Nicole Day United States
    Sanela Ajdaroska North Macedonia
    Hamidah Ismail Malaysia
    MAHMUD CLAUDE GUADELOUPE
    Mohammed Hasanen Egypt
    Haydyn Eilliams Scotland
    Sarah Jalandoon U.S.A
    Penelope Westwood Ireland
    Nikolai Bazylev Russi
    Viviana Laperchia, Germany
    Rima Harun, Canada
    Haley Gray United States
    Annette D’Armata, USA
    Lourdes Pérez, Musician USA
    Valeria Milillo, Italy
    Emma Callan Ireland
    Lizbeth Del, USA
    Emma callan Iteland
    Gerardo Mateo Catalonia
    Holly Shanholtzer McKenna US
    Martin Fisher United Kingdom
    Veronica Italy
    Christian Lorey, USA
    Abdul Malik Ramdhani Ireland
    Vicki Guy Ireland
    Carol A Kelly US
    Louise Cottereau, France
    Michel Rime Switzerland
    Cristina Leal. Badajoz con Palestina Espñaa
    Clara Martínez de Dios España
    Emily Bush England
    Muhammad Hadziq Bin Pazanon Malaysia
    Jessica Navarrete US
    Chery Claire, France
    Daoudi France
    Müller Switzerland
    Afshan Haqqi US
    Amos England
    Alessandro Pancotti, Italy
    Julie Bachelet, France
    Carl Cooney Ireland
    Mary Jane Hirchert, USA
    Mares Hirchert, USA
    Peter Nordlander, Sweden
    José Fernando Ramírez, Spain
    Julie Trarieux, France
    Baylee Thayer United States
    Nicola Lairdon, UK
    Helen Anderson Scotland
    Daniela Pichler Belgique
    Erman Erogan, Belgium
    Climate activist, Spain
    Eileen Sinclair, UK
    Susan Wright United Kingdom
    Giuseppe Sweden
    Valerie snyder Usa
    Hannah Cuevas, USA
    Jasmine robertson Scotland
    Bob Hastings, Spain
    Daniella Rascón, USA
    Nancy bright, Spain
    Joyce Semaan, Australia
    Evezard France
    Kelly Ann McGhee Scotland
    Kaoutar Mesnaoui, Belgium
    Fay Robinson England
    Willie Sinclair Scotland
    Lou bush England
    Antoine Cajot, Belgium
    Roza Suran Croatia
    Halimah Kasmani, Canada
    Ana Alfieri, Canada
    Hannah Sabir United Kingdom
    Linda Dukes Cambodia
    Lin Lisiecki, Australia
    Robert Brose US
    Renata luna, Mexico
    Kenzie Gordon, Canada
    Maryam Kuwait
    Hanan Mohamad (Pharmacist), Canada
    Dr. Ahlam Mansour, Canada
    Lucas Artico, France
    Sara Vanzani, Italy
    Lisa Sood United Arab Emirates
    Tajender Sagoo United Kingdom
    Thesu Jeff England
    Maria João Martinho Portugal
    Yasmin Scholz, Germany
    Erica Shorter Uk
    anya pakhomoff United Kingdom
    Antonio Della Marina, Italy
    Ed Mc Hale Ireland
    Konstantina Kapola Greece
    Zanette Isabelle, France
    Karin Hjort, Sweden
    Bruce Will, Canada
    Dr. Jasmine Mallory, Canada
    Kaze P, Australia
    Susan Barratt, Canada
    Lara Cole United Kingdom
    Lina Simahfoud, Canada
    Nathan Bois-McDonald, Canada
    Martina Finn Ireland
    Stephanie Schudel Switzerland
    Finola O Siochru Ireland
    Mike Walker, Canada
    Aberboir Zahra, France
    Janice Paquette, Canada
    Michael Watts United Kingdom
    Julie Barlow United States
    luisa stellato Italia
    Birgit Kollmann Ireland
    Maria Greece
    Anna Lensch, Germany
    Pol Horan, Canada
    JOAQUIN CANTU MEXICO
    Tammy Australia
    Doreen Fedrigo, Belgium
    Seán Ashton United Kingdom
    Edgardo Iozia, Melitea Italy
    Rami Farajallah Sverige
    Indiana Romeo South Africa
    Dawn Stephens, UK
    Luciana Lopes Rosas Brasil
    Brisa Reyes, Australia
    Maïlys Errico Hummel, France
    Corporate Watch United Kingdom
    Paola Italy
    Seán Burke, Australia
    Giorgia Baggio, Italy
    Jen Fisher Ireland
    Rebecca Kenny Ireland
    Regan Mercure, Canada
    Eleuthera Diconca-Lippert, Canada
    Jefferson Mendes - Quilombo Ciência Brasil
    Deirdre Grealish Ireland
    Fares Belhaouas, Canada
    Adam Perry Éire
    Lucienne Sencier U.K
    Allison Leonard, USA
    Oscar Harethwaites, UK
    Marisa Faietta, USA
    Bhattia Reej, UK
    Jeanne Mitchell, Canada
    Agnes Kueng Switzerland
    Giovanna Winckler Roncoroni, Italy
    Kathleen Raleigh, USA

    Statement
    A Palestinian Land Day
    
Statement from the Palestinian
    Institute for Climate Strategy
    The Land is Sacred. The Genocide is Ongoing.
    Who Will Deliver Justice to Our Martyrs?
    LANGUAGES
    ENGLISH
    DATE
    30 MARCH 2025
    CATEGORY
    OFFICIAL STATEMENT
    INITIAL SPONSORS
    • GREENISH
    • ARAB PALESTINIAN
      FEDERATION IN BRAZIL
    • CLIMATE VANGUARD
    • TRASNATIONAL INSTITUTE (TNI)
    • WAR ON WANT
    Palestinian land has always been considered sacred.
    It is rooted in our faith, our seasons of harvest, and our collective memory. It holds the bones of our ancestors, the labor of our farmers, and the hopes of generations yet to come. The land is life. But today, that land is being devastated—not only by bombs, but by a colonial system that seeks to eliminate us entirely.

    As we mark Palestinian Land Day, we do so amidst the renewed horror of genocide. On March 18, Israel resumed its military assault on Gaza, killing over 500 Palestinians in a matter of days. Since October 2023, more than 62,614 Palestinians have been murdered. Thousands remain missing under the rubble. This is the textbook definition of systematic extermination and genocide, and there is no debate about it.

    Israeli forces have re-entered Gaza, occupying the Netzarim corridor to bisect the Strip. This fragmentation is designed to dismantle life, dismantle governance, dismantle Gaza. Israel’s aim is to turn a homeland into an uninhabitable prison, and to redraw and erase the map of Palestine.

    This renewed assault comes after Israel violated the ceasefire, blocked humanitarian aid, and refused any movement toward a future in which Palestinians govern their own land. While Palestinians held up their end of the ceasefire, Israel escalated. It bombed. It besieged. It denied the possibility of reconstruction, let alone justice.
    Many are complicit in failing to uphold justice.
    A Siege by Design. The Logistics of Collapse.
    Since March 2, no humanitarian aid has entered Gaza. Over 1,535 trucks remain stuck in Egypt, and 311,000 pallets of aid are backed up across the region. Gaza’s crossings are sealed. Its storage hubs are within new evacuation zones. Its infrastructure is being methodically dismantled.

    This is not a mere failure of coordination, but a logistics of extermination. It is a deliberate policy to starve and suffocate the population. Gaza is being denied food, fuel, water, medical supplies, and even the means to bury its dead. What is happening in Gaza is not separate from Israel’s colonial project, that extends beyond just Gaza, it is rather the core of it. It’s an acceleration of the “incremental genocide” at the core of the colony.

    For decades, Israel has weaponized the land—bulldozing orchards, poisoning wells, and uprooting the ecosystems Palestinians have nurtured for generations. It builds over ruins, plants foreign trees where olives once stood, and calls it development. But there is nothing green about occupation.

    What is happening in Gaza is ecocide. A systematic destruction of land, water, and air to make Palestinian life impossible. It is carried out through bombs, blockades, and bulldozers—and always under the false pretense of “security” or “defense.” It is part of a politically-engineered ploy, and is a pattern that has repeated itself since before 1948. This destruction of the ecological basis of existence  has long been a tactical tool for systemic oppression and dispossession.

    And the world watches. As temperatures rise and disasters multiply, a "just transition” fails to find itself in Gaza. The same governments withholding climate finance to the Global South are fueling the fires in Palestine, through supplying arms, fuels, or political legitimacy.
    A transition that ignores genocide is not just. Climate solutions on stolen land is not climate action. Silence is not neutrality—it is total complicity.
    Countries who claim moral authority—like those in the West—have consistently washed their hands of their role in upholding a violent and unjust global order. Recent cuts in foreign aid in the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, and others reinforce the Global North’s indifference to suffering it has caused through centuries of colonialism. Political leaders continue to show their disdain for Palestinians in weak statements that treat our deaths as inevitable, or worse, as justified.
    There Is No Recovery Without Liberation.
    No humanitarian response can undo genocide and bring back more than 62,614 lives, no reconstruction can take root on Gaza post-destruction, and no just transition can be built on occupation. The problem begins with a system that feeds off of oppression and dispossession, and the climate crisis will not be solved within the racialised, militarised, fossil empire. Palestinians are not passive recipients of aid. We are not statistics. We are survivors, farmers, builders, mothers, students, and organizers. We are holding the line not only for ourselves—but for the world. There is no justice - ecological, social, or otherwise - without Palestinian liberation. We have always known that justice cannot be delivered by those who profit from our oppression. That development under colonialism is nothing more than the management of suffering. And that liberation is not a metaphor— it is a demand.
    This Land Day, we remember those we have lost. We honor those still fighting. We call on our allies to act.
    Silence is complicity. Neutrality is violence. Resistance is life and survival.
    Palestinians are resisting genocide—but we cannot do it alone. Individuals everywhere must disrupt and dismantle the structures that make Israel’s crimes possible. NGOs, climate coalitions, humanitarian groups, and grassroots movements cannot remain neutral. If your work does not center Palestinian survival, you are reinforcing colonialism.
    We demand that
    [ Individuals ] :
    Boycott complicit corporations—from weapons manufacturers to greenwashing brands. Pressure your universities, workplaces, and banks to divest.

    Reject normalization in all forms—academic, cultural, environmental. End partnerships with Israeli institutions that whitewash apartheid.

    Expose and disrupt: name those profiting from genocide, challenge Zionist propaganda, especially in climate and justice spaces.

    Organize locally:
    host teach-ins, share resources, mobilize for Gaza. Memory is resistance—document, archive, and amplify truth.

    Write for history:
    In times where Palestinian history and memory is being targeted and erased, we must be proactive in the act of documenting not only war crimes, and massacres, but also the struggles and the stories of families in Gaza and beyond.

    Stay conscious: Do not get desensitized to massacres. Answer the calls for help.
    We demand that [ Civil Society Movements ] :
    Center Palestinian liberation in your frameworks. Demilitarization and return are climate justice.

    Refuse normalization
    and reject all funding tied to apartheid greenwashing.

    Boycott blood-handed donors
    and expose “ethical” funders enabling genocide.

    Confront global hypocrisy:
    the same governments blocking Global South climate reparations are funding bombs on Gaza.

    Push policy demands:
    reinstate aid to Gaza, halt arms exports, and hold Israel accountable in multilateral spaces.

    Oppose false solutions
    such as solar geoengineering that the Israeli government heavily invests in with unknown, but dangerous consequences to the Palestinian people and the world.
    [ List Of Signatories ] :
    1. Greenish
    2. Arab-Palestinian Federation in Brazil (FEPAL)
    3. Climate Vanguard
    4. Tipping Point North-South