As this week marked the 48th Commemoration of the UN International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People and the celebration of 30 years of diplomatic relations between South Africa and the State of Palestine, a stark reminder echoes in our minds that the world has watched Gaza burn for far too long. Every cycle of bombardment, displacement, and humanitarian collapse is followed by the same hollow refrain from global leaders: “We must restore calm.” But calm without justice is simply the pause before the next explosion. The truth is unavoidable — the Gaza conflict will not end until the Palestinian people are free, their rights recognised, and the structures that perpetuate occupation and violence are dismantled.
For decades, the international community has treated the Palestinian question as an infinite crisis that can be “managed” rather than solved. Gaza, in particular, has been reduced to a humanitarian project: feed people, medicate people, rebuild what’s left of their homes, and then look away until the next war. This approach is not only morally bankrupt; it guarantees perpetual instability.
Every credible international body — from the UN to leading human rights organisations — acknowledges that Gaza’s suffering is fundamentally political. Blockade, occupation-linked restrictions, statelessness, and the denial of fundamental civil and political rights create the conditions that fuel repeated conflict. For you cannot bomb your way out of a political crisis, just as you cannot negotiate peace while ignoring the structural violence Palestinians face daily.
Humanitarian aid may save lives, but it does not save futures. Gaza requires liberation, not indefinite emergency response.

Therefore, ending the conflict means confronting the reality that Palestinians must have self-determination instead of dependency, genuine freedom of movement rather than a life restricted by blockade, full political rights rather than indefinite military rule, control over their own land and resources instead of enduring externally imposed deprivation, and lasting security instead of recurring cycles of devastation.
These are not radical demands, but they are the basic rights outlined in international law.
A free Palestine is not merely a moral aspiration but it is a practical necessity. As long as millions live under occupation, dispossession, and blockade, the region will remain trapped in cycles of violence.
A genuine ceasefire cannot be conditional or selective; it must involve the complete cessation of all military assaults, the protection of civilians on both sides, the unimpeded delivery of food, medical supplies, and reconstruction materials, and effective international monitoring to prevent any violations.
Ceasefires fail when they are treated as political bargaining chips. But they succeed when they are rooted in humanitarian urgency and legal obligation.

Gaza cannot remain an open-air prison. Lifting movement restrictions, enabling trade, restoring electricity and infrastructure, and allowing Palestinians to rebuild their economy are prerequisites for long-term peace.
The “peace process” of trying to manage this conflict rather than resolve it, must no longer be entertained. A genuine and credible solution must recognise Palestinian statehood, base negotiations on UN resolutions rather than power imbalances, guarantee equal rights and protections for both Palestinians and Israelis, and include international enforcement mechanisms instead of relying on voluntary promises. For without accountability, diplomacy becomes performance.
It must be noted, the Gaza crisis did not emerge from a vacuum. It is the result of decades of political exclusion, occupation, and the refusal of powerful states to enforce international law when it comes to Palestine. Calling for a “return to calm” without addressing these underlying dynamics is not peacebuilding — it is crisis recycling.

If the world genuinely wants stability, it must stop treating Palestinians as humanitarian subjects and recognise them as a people entitled to full political freedom. Peace does not grow from rubble; it grows from justice.
A free Palestine is not a threat to regional peace, but it is the foundation of it. Ending the conflict in Gaza demands more than compassion; it demands courage, accountability, and a global insistence that all people — Palestinian and Israeli alike — deserve security, dignity, and the right to live in freedom.
Until that principle becomes the backbone of international action, the world will continue to watch the same tragedy unfold again and again.
Enough cycles. Enough devastation. The world must choose justice — because justice is the only path to peace.








