50 lawyers prepare a case against the US and UK for complicity in Israel’s genocide in Gaza

Led by South African lawyer Wikus Van Rensburg, a group of around 50 legal professionals is preparing a law suit against the US and the UK that focuses on the complicity of the two nations in the war crimes perpetrated by Israel in occupied Palestine.

South Africa is showing world leaders what humanity means.

https://www.anews.com.tr/world/2024/01/15/south-african-lawyers-preparing-lawsuit-against-us-uk-for-complicity-in-israels-war-crimes-in-gaza

“The United States must now be held accountable for the crimes it committed,” Rensburg told Anadolu in an interview, detailing the process by which Washington and London will be tried as complicit in Tel Aviv’s war crimes against the people of Gaza.

How US moved to block International Criminal Court referal for alleged Israeli war crimes after 2009

Goldstone report #Gaza #ICC Link:

https://web.archive.org/web/20220627211601/https://search.wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/10STATE15722_a.html#efmAciAc8B8SCCO

US intelligence sources discussed poisoning Julian Assange

Plans to poison or kidnap Julian Assange from the Ecuadorian embassy were discussed between sources in US intelligence and a private security firm that spied extensively on the WikiLeaks co-founder, a court has been told.

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2020/sep/30/us-intelligence-sources-discussed-poisoning-julian-assange-court-told

 

Algeria prevents a US aircraft carrying weapons to Israel from flying over their airspace.

https://new.thecradle.co/articles-id/15462

De-dollarisation: shifting power between the US and BRICS

There has been increasing talk of the BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) developing a new currency that will rival the US dollar as the global reserve standard. This month, the leaders of BRICS will meet in South Africa for further discussions on the matter. Growing pressure for a new global currency comes after continued weaponisation of the US dollar in the form of sanctions and trade wars. Many countries are seeking greater independence from the US financial system. But what makes the US dollar today’s world reserve currency?

Following the end of the Second World War, the Allies gathered at Bretton Woods and anointed the US dollar as the world’s principal reserve currency. It was pegged against gold at an exchangeable rate of $35 an ounce. However, in 1971 the dollar was decoupled due to insufficient US gold reserves rendering the dollar fiat money. A few years later, US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger visited King Faisal of Saudi Arabia to broker the petrodollar system. The United States agreed to provide military support and, in return, the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) would denominate oil globally in US dollars. This created synthetic demand – countries buying oil would need US dollars – which in turn enabled US dollar primacy.

However, the dollar dominance may be coming to an end. In 2021, Saudi Arabia and Russia signed a military cooperation agreement. The United States was no longer the sole protector of the Saudi Kingdom. Moreover, at this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Saudi Arabia’s Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan announced that the country was open to trading in other currencies in addition to the US dollar – something they haven’t done in nearly 50 years. The signals of de-dollarisation were emerging.

https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/de-dollarisation-shifting-power-between-us-brics

Don’t extradite Assange