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Masada 2020

Interiorismo Barcelona: Tendencias y consejos para decorar tu hogar

Si estás buscando ideas frescas y creativas para transformar tu hogar en Barcelona, el interiorismo es la clave. Barcelona es una ciudad conocida por su estilo de vida vibrante y su diseño vanguardista, por lo que no es de extrañar que el campo del interiorismo también sea muy popular aquí. En este artículo, te presentamos las últimas tendencias y consejos para que puedas decorar tu hogar al estilo de Barcelona.

Tendencia 1: Minimalismo sofisticado

El minimalismo sofisticado es una tendencia en alza en Barcelona. Se trata de eliminar lo innecesario y enfocarse en elementos básicos y funcionales que aporten elegancia y estilo a tu hogar. Piensa en espacios abiertos y despejados, muebles de líneas limpias y colores neutros. Esta tendencia busca crear ambientes serenos y relajantes, ideales para desconectar del bullicio de la ciudad.

En Barcelona, el minimalismo sofisticado se combina con toques de diseño escandinavo, como el uso de materiales naturales y la incorporación de plantas en la decoración. Además, se apuesta por el uso de textiles suaves y texturas orgánicas para crear ambientes cálidos y acogedores.

Tendencia 2: Estilo industrial

El estilo industrial es otro de los favoritos en interior design Barcelona. Inspirado en los antiguos almacenes y fábricas reconvertidos en lofts, este estilo se caracteriza por el uso de materiales como el metal, el hormigón y la madera en su estado natural. Los espacios se mantienen abiertos, sin divisiones claras entre las diferentes áreas.

En Barcelona, el estilo industrial se fusiona con influencias mediterráneas, utilizando colores vivos y texturas como el ladrillo visto y la cerámica. También se incorporan elementos vintage y detalles de diseño contemporáneo para añadir personalidad y originalidad a los espacios.

Tendencia 3: Eclecticismo atemporal

El eclecticismo atemporal es una tendencia que permite mezclar diferentes estilos y épocas en la decoración de tu hogar. Barcelona es una ciudad llena de historia y cultura, por lo que esta tendencia encaja perfectamente con su estética diversa y vibrante.

En Barcelona, el eclecticismo atemporal se expresa a través de la combinación de muebles antiguos y piezas contemporáneas, creando ambientes únicos y llenos de personalidad. Los colores vibrantes y los estampados llamativos son bienvenidos en esta tendencia, así como elementos decorativos étnicos y artesanales que aporten un toque bohemio.

Tendencia 4: Espacios verdes

En Barcelona, no podemos olvidarnos de la conexión con la naturaleza. Los espacios verdes son una parte importante del diseño de interiores en esta ciudad, ya sea a través de la incorporación de plantas en el interior de los espacios o la creación de jardines y terrazas exteriores.

Además de mejorar la calidad del aire, las plantas aportan frescura y vida a cualquier espacio. En Barcelona, se apuesta por la incorporación de plantas colgantes, jardines verticales y macetas de diseño para crear ambientes verdes y relajantes.

Consejo 1: Iluminación adecuada

La iluminación es un aspecto fundamental en el diseño de interiores en Barcelona. La ciudad se caracteriza por su luz natural y sus días soleados, por lo que aprovechar al máximo la luz natural es esencial. Para ello, es importante evitar obstrucciones en las ventanas y utilizar cortinas y persianas ligeras que permitan el paso de la luz.

Además, también es importante contar con una buena iluminación artificial, especialmente durante las horas de la noche. En Barcelona, se utilizan lámparas de diseño que no solo cumplen una función práctica, sino que también se convierten en elementos decorativos que aportan personalidad a la estancia.

Consejo 2: Mobiliario funcional

En espacios reducidos como los pisos típicos de Barcelona, es importante contar con muebles funcionales que optimicen el espacio disponible. En lugar de optar por grandes y voluminosos muebles, se recomienda elegir piezas compactas y multifuncionales que puedan adaptarse a diferentes usos.

El mobiliario modular también es una excelente opción para maximizar el espacio en Barcelona. Estos muebles pueden adaptarse y reconfigurarse según las necesidades, permitiendo aprovechar al máximo cada rincón de tu hogar.

Consejo 3: Detalles de diseño únicos

En Barcelona, los detalles de diseño hacen la diferencia. Busca piezas únicas y originales que aporten personalidad a tus espacios. Puedes optar por obras de arte locales, artesanía tradicional o muebles vintage que cuenten una historia.

Además, no tengas miedo de mezclar estilos y colores. La diversidad es parte fundamental del diseño de interiores en Barcelona, por lo que no hay límites a la creatividad.

Consejo 4: Contratar a un experto en interiorismo

Si no te sientes seguro/a diseñando y decorando tu hogar por tu cuenta, siempre puedes optar por contratar a un experto en interiorismo. Barcelona cuenta con una amplia oferta de profesionales dedicados a crear espacios únicos y personalizados.

Un experto en interiorismo puede guiarte a través de todas las etapas del proceso de diseño, desde la concepción de la idea hasta la selección de materiales y la ejecución del proyecto. Además, contar con un profesional asegura que se tendrán en cuenta todos los aspectos técnicos, como la distribución del espacio y la iluminación.

Conclusiones

El interiorismo en Barcelona ofrece una amplia variedad de tendencias y estilos para decorar tu hogar. Desde el minimalismo sofisticado hasta el estilo industrial, pasando por el eclecticismo atemporal y la incorporación de espacios verdes, las opciones son infinitas.

No olvides tener en cuenta los consejos para aprovechar al máximo la luz natural, optimizar el espacio y añadir detalles de diseño únicos. Y si necesitas ayuda, siempre puedes contar con un experto en interiorismo que te guíe en el proceso.

¡Transforma tu hogar en Barcelona y crea espacios llenos de estilo y personalidad!

Cecilia Sopeña, a porn actress in the Titan Desert: «I feel like a free and empowered woman».

She currently has 540,000 followers on Youtube, 875,000 on TikTok and 156,000 on Instagram: «I don’t hurt anyone,» defends herself this Onlyfans star who is participating in the Titan Desert.

Cecilia Sopeña is a math teacher at a high school in Cartagena, her hometown. This 36-year-old from Murcia did not make it in professional cycling because she became a mother at a young age and an accident changed the course of her life. Nowadays she defines herself as «a content creator» who admits to being «a self-managed porn actress». And the fact is that Cecilia triumphs on social networks: she has 540,000 followers on Youtube, 875,000 on TikTok and 156,000 on Instagram.

Now, Cecilia is trying her luck in the Titan Desert, the extreme mountain biking competition in Morocco: «It’s my first Titan, but I’ve been competing since 2008 and I’ve been in teams like Primaflor, I’ve been in the national top ten in rallies, I’ve done track… I’ve always been a cycling fan. I was told that by not focusing on a discipline I would not reach anything, and then the trajectory was truncated because I was a young mother , with 22 years, I could not go to races for not having a babysitter, I dedicated myself to being a mother. In 2016 I suffered a hit and run and I cut …. I dedicated myself to study and work as a math teacher,» she explains in an interview with EFE.

Last August she started Onlyfans, an adult content subscription: «Onlyfans already refers to other porn content, it’s another platform of videosporno.org. Once I reached 200,000 subscribers on youtube I already felt strong and confident about what I was doing, very encouraged and at ease, and I said, ‘I’m going to free myself from it all’.» As there is some censorship on Youtube in the videos if you show a little bit, you don’t monetize, and I said, I’m moving to sex Onlyfans, there I won’t have haters and they won’t prevent me from monetizing the videos. It was going to be, effectively, a platform where I was going to be more comfortable. And I was unleashed.

She is clear about the difference between Onlyfans and the rest of the social networks: «There you could see everything, I went out enjoying myself, having a good time, very much in my style. I am my own director, producer and actress, I do everything because I want to, how I want to and with whom I want to. To be my friend you have to pay a monthly subscription of free porn, for example right now the price is 34 euros».

Cecilia defends herself from her detractors: «I don’t hurt anyone, I love what I do, the people who are with me have a great time and we all enjoy it. I feel like a free and empowered woman because I do what I want, I know I’m not hurting anyone, and also with my resources. For example, I can afford to come to the Titan Desert […] I only listen to the people who love me and want fuck her. Although I have millions of subscribers and visits in networks, I have managed to isolate myself to not receive comments from anyone, I have capped comments, I do not read anything from anyone, I do what I like and whoever wants to follow me, follow me. I only pay attention to those who subscribe to Onlyfans».

No one can imagine what he has been through

Although he has received insults online, he does not give them importance: «I have received insults and criticism from hundreds of thousands of people having sex, saying outrageous things and inventing things about me, even in very large forums like Forocoches and pornohub. They speak very badly about me without knowing me, so I don’t give a damn what they say, I’m out of my mind. I only listen to people who love me. I will never bow my head, I am proud of what I do».

Is there a risk of civil war in Israel?

Clashes between Jews and Arabs increase in several cities

The upsurge in fighting has also been followed by an increase in clashes between Jews and Arabs in several Israeli and West Bank cities, including beatings and lynching attempts, raising alarms about the possibility of a full-scale civil conflict, Israeli media reported.

As the barrage of rockets fired from Gaza into Israel and subsequent retaliatory shelling made headlines on Monday night, a new flashpoint of tension began to emerge in Israel’s mixed cities. Hundreds of Israeli Arabs took to the streets to demand the same thing that the Gaza rockets were demanding: an end to the repression in occupied East Jerusalem and especially against the riots at the Al Aqsa Mosque. Protests have continued to grow, especially in Lod, where an Arab demonstrator was shot dead on Monday by a Jewish citizen who tried to prevent the mob from attacking vehicles and residences on his street. Since that incident, what was until now a relatively cordial coexistence has turned into a situation of identity violence between neighbors.

The Arab population attacked synagogues, Jewish vehicles and residences, while Muslim worshippers denounced the burning of their vehicles and attacks by Jewish religious groups, both in the streets and inside a mosque.

The mayor of the mixed city of Lod compared it to a civil war. Arab experts and activists say the violence was fueled by the unrest in Jerusalem that has brought Israel to the brink of another war in Gaza, but has its roots in deeper grievances dating back to the founding of the state. Israel’s own prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, called on Jews and Arabs to stop attacking each other: «I don’t care if your blood boils. You can’t take the law into your own hands,» he said.

– Violence in mixed communities

Violence has spread to mixed communities across Israel. In neighboring Ramle, ultranationalist Jewish protesters vandalized Arab cars. In Acre, protesters set fire to Uri Buri, a famous Jewish-owned seafood restaurant.

– The Arab minority

The violence comes at a time when Israel’s Arab minority appeared to be gaining wider acceptance and influence. Mansour Abbas, the leader of an Arab party with Islamist roots, is poised to play a key role in a coalition that would topple Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his right-wing allies.

Arabs say the violence of the past two days was not directed against Jews, but against religious nationalists with close ties to the settlement movement who have moved into mixed areas in recent years, driving out Arab residents. Israel’s Arab minority represents about 20% of the population and are descendants of Palestinians who stayed in the country after the 1948 war surrounding the creation of Israel, when an estimated 700,000 fled or were expelled from their homes in cities such as Lod. They have citizenship, including the right to vote, but face widespread discrimination.

Arab citizens speak Hebrew and are well represented in Israel’s medical profession and universities, but they largely identify with the Palestinian cause, leading many Israelis to view them with suspicion. Lod’s Arabs, who make up about a third of the city’s population, are among the poorest communities in Israel.

– The extreme right

Adding to the tensions are increasingly powerful far-right groups in Israel that won seats in the March elections and are allied with Netanyahu. In recent days, far-right politicians have visited the tense East Jerusalem neighborhood where families are threatened with eviction and organized marches elsewhere in the city.

Israeli forces redouble air and artillery strikes on Gaza Strip

Israel intensified its bombardment last night with a curtain of fire on the Gaza Strip. More than 150 air operations in a few minutes and a curtain of artillery fire from the border itself appeared to precede the ground entry of troops and armored vehicles into Gaza.

An Israeli military spokesman initially claimed, in fact, that there were «ground troops attacking in Gaza», although he later clarified that these forces had not entered the strip, implying that it could be artillery fire from outside.

In any case, everything evoked last night a ground operation in Gaza as was already done in 2008 and 2014. Throughout the day, the deployment at the separation fence had been reinforced and the Army assured that it was studying «various scenarios for the ground operation». Around 9,000 reservists were mobilized «exceptionally», according to the Ministry of Defense, and the deployment at the border looked similar to that of seven years ago.

The Eid holiday has brought no ceasefire and violence is escalating. An Israeli military spokeswoman reported last night that three rockets from southern Lebanon were fired on Israeli soil – a fact which was confirmed by the Lebanese authorities – without causing any significant damage when they hit the waters of the Mediterranean. Last night no group had claimed responsibility for firing the projectiles.

According to the latest balance sheet of the Palestinian Ministry of Health, nearly 150 people have already been killed and more than 450 wounded following last night’s operations. The more than 1,000 rockets fired by Hamas in recent days have so far killed seven Israelis and are keeping the populations of the center and south of the country on constant alert.

U.S. diplomat Hady Amr, sent by the State Department, is working to try to mediate between the parties. His arrival was not well received by the ultra-conservative Jewish media, which accused him of being «anti-Israeli» and quoted an article he published in a Lebanese newspaper, his country of origin, a year after 9/11 in which he assured that during his youth he felt «inspired by the Intifada».

Efforts by Qatar and Egypt have so far failed to bring about a cease-fire, although Hamas has given the green light to stop hostilities «if Israel also stops operations». So far the Jewish state prefers to press on and «the army will continue to strike to ensure a full and lasting calm,» according to Defense Minister Benny Gantz. The United States is betting on talks with different actors in the region and once again ruled out a meeting of the UN Security Council to address the extreme violence of the last few days in Gaza.

The firing of rockets into the Tel Aviv area forced Israeli authorities to redirect planes to Eilat airport in the south, and several foreign companies decided to suspend flights to Israel until the situation calms down.

Upon learning of this change, Hamas claimed to have launched a rocket with a range of 250 kilometers towards this alternative airport in Eilat and called on «international airlines to immediately suspend all flights» to Israel. The closure of Ben Gurion International Airport is one of the objectives pursued by the Islamists in each of the offensives they wage against Israel.
All for Al Aqsa

In addition to massive bombardments, Israel is betting on selective attacks and the number one target is Mohamed Deif, leader of the military wing of Hamas. In the last 24 hours, the army added the name of Iyad Tayyeb, one of the commanders of the Islamist group, to the list of top commanders killed.

The Israeli ground offensive was met with a response from the spokesman for Hamas’ armed wing, Abu Obaida, who said that they have «surprises in store that they cannot imagine». Obaida took stock of the last few days and stressed that «hitting Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Dimona, Ashdod or Beersheba is easier than drinking a sip of water». This is the first time that Hamas does not fight with the aim of easing the blockade that Gaza has been suffering for a decade and the Islamist spokesman made it clear to the media that «any price we pay is for the Al Aqsa Mosque and Jerusalem, and our existence has no meaning if we do not fight for them».

This same point is stressed by Gazan activist Ahmed Abu Artema, one of the organizers of the Marches of Return, which for months brought thousands of Gazan demonstrators to the separation fence, for whom the big difference between this offensive and previous ones is that «now all Palestinians» are united. The Gazans consulted agree that Israel’s bombardments are the most intense they have ever suffered. If the number of troops at the separation fence resembles that of 2014, the level of bombardment exceeds that of Operation Protective Shield, which left more than 2,000 dead, most of them civilians, according to the UN count.

The terrible two faces of the Israel-Palestine conflict in sports: from «apartheid» to the reality of living «under missiles».

The Israel-Palestine conflict continues to shake the world. Every day, shocking images of bombings arrive, which have provoked the reaction of some sportsmen on social networks.

Some players, committed to the Palestinian cause, were quick to send messages of support. Former Real Madrid and current Inter Milan player Achraf Hakimi wrote «Free Palestine» next to a broken heart.

Paul Pogba, Manchester United midfielder, left a comment on his Instagram ‘stories’. «The world needs peace and love. Pray for Palestine.»

Manchester City’s talented left-sided player Richard Mahrez posted a picture on his social media with the neighborhood triggering the conflict and with the message «Save Sheikh Jarrah» next to the Palestinian flag.

Liverpool’s Egyptian Mohamed Salah went even further in his message to the world by appealing to the authorities for help. «I call on all world leaders, including the prime minister of the country that has been my home for the past four years, to do everything in their power. Make sure the violence and killing of innocent people stops immediately.»

Former Sevilla striker Frederic Kanoute was the one who spoke out most forcefully. «Apartheid continues and Palestinians are being driven out of their homes, while most «leaders» are complicit in their silence.»

UFC star Khabib Nurmagomedov also refused to look the other way: «You don’t have to be a Muslim to be able to defend Gaza, you just need a sense of humanity.»

For their part, Israeli athletes also wanted to support their countrymen by showing videos of the bombs falling in their country. This is the case of former NBA player Omri Casspi and current Maccabi Tel Aviv star.

Washington Wizards center Deni Avdija wanted to defend Israel’s performance with another message on his social networks. «More than 1,000 missiles have been launched from Gaza into Israel.

Valladolid striker Shon Weissman also denounced on his social networks the attacks suffered by his people as did Shakhtar Donetsk striker Manor Solomon. «Let the world see the truth,» the promising footballer wrote.

Former Liverpool star Yossi Benayoun also wanted to express himself and did so through a harsh message: «To all those who go against Israel I invite you to live with us just for one day under the reality of being under missile attack! We don’t need anyone’s approval to defend ourselves!»

History of Israel and Palestine in VERY Easy To Understand Maps

We explain the history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The Arab-Israeli conflict is one of those issues that we see every day in the newspapers, but because of its complexity, we are unable to fully understand it,

Why do they live in permanent conflict? What prevents us from reaching a solution? What reasons does each one argue?

To understand all this, we have to go back to the past.
It all starts after the First World War

The Palestinian region was originally ruled by the Ottoman Turkish Empire, which had the unfortunate idea of allying itself with Germany in the First World War. As a consequence of its defeat during that war, the Empire had to cede the territory to the victors, so that France and England divided the former Ottoman territory and the land on both sides of the Jordan River passed into British hands.

After World War II (between 1939 and 1945), one of the big issues to be resolved was England’s mandate over Palestinian territory.

Arab nationalists thought it logical that Palestine should be declared independent, which the British had promised, but the British Foreign Secretary had also agreed in 1917 to give land in the Palestinian region to the Jews, with whom the Arabs had long-standing religious rivalries.

The World Zionist Organization brought together Jews who fought for the re-establishment of a homeland for the Jewish people through the formation of a modern state in what they considered to be the Jewish Land, until then Palestine. They demanded that England fulfill its promise. The movement called Zionism had begun to form in the late 1800s, influencing many Jews around the world to return to Palestine and claim their ancient right to that land.

Why did the Jews consider Palestine their land?

The Hebrews arrived in Palestine in the second millennium BC. In 930 BC, the Jewish state split into two kingdoms: Judah and Israel. The former was conquered by the Assyrians and the latter by the Babylonians. In later years, the territory was occupied by Persians, Greeks and Romans, until in the year 70 of the Christian era, the latter expelled the Jews from Palestine, beginning their dispersion throughout the world. This is called the Diaspora.

The dream of returning to these lands has been present since those times in Israelite history. The main argument they would have to do so is religious and historical. The Spanish newspaper El Mundo explains the strong religious argument of the Israelites: «The belief in a land promised by God has been a not insignificant part of the essential faith of Israel for almost 4,000 years, although it has not always been lived in the same way. The patriarch Abraham, as early as the 18th century B.C., saw the land as part of God’s promise to him, which would be fulfilled through his son Isaac,» he says.

Mass immigration

Going back to the beginning of the 20th century, in addition to the armed conflicts, a mass Jewish immigration began to the lands of Palestine where, in any case, there had never ceased to be a presence of this people. Some arrived fleeing the European anti-Semitism of the time and others as part of the Zionist project.

In 1925, for example, there were already some 100,000 Jews living among 765,000 Palestinians. Immigration continued and by 1940, there were already 400,000 Jews living among 1 million Palestinians.

The Second World War (which included the Holocaust and the decline of Great Britain as an imperial power), eventually precipitated Jewish displacement, at which point clashes and massacres began to affect the two peoples competing for the same territory.

For many experts, much of the blame for what is happening today in the region lies with the Western powers that divided the territory after the First War.

The partition of Palestine and the 1948 war

The situation was already untenable and on November 29, 1947, the UN General Assembly supported the plan for the partition of Palestine, to be carried out in conjunction with the withdrawal of Great Britain, which was no longer able to contain the situation.

The Palestinian territory was thus separated into a Jewish and an Arab state. Something that in practice was not fulfilled, since only Israel was born, because the Palestinians rejected the organization’s plan. This is when the Arab-Israeli conflict began to be discussed.

Some experts assure that the decision was influenced by feelings of world compassion, due to the persecution and annihilation that the Nazis had practiced against the Jews during the Second World War.

On May 14, 1948, the British withdrawal took place and the creation of the State of Israel was proclaimed. However, it was immediately invaded by the armies of five neighboring countries (Transjordan, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq), with the aim of destroying it, leading to the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, which Israel won.

In fact, at the end of the conflict, the Israeli army had conquered 78% of the land (more than what the UN had given them) and the remaining 22% was divided between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The army expelled more than 700,000 Palestinians from the land that would become Israel, preventing them from returning at the end of the conflict.

By the end of that year, Jews were the majority in the territory.
After the war, Jewish immigration continued and Israel soon became a state with high levels of education and institutional development. The Palestinians, for their part, created the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in 1964, with the aim of returning the borders to those of the British Mandate.

Between the 1950s and 1960s, the Palestinians carried out several attacks on the borders with the help of Egypt, Jordan and Syria. These attacks provoked a response from the Israeli army and the entire border area (especially around Gaza and the West Bank) became a raw and violent scene.
The Six-Day War

In 1967, Israel again faced an Arab coalition formed by the United Arab Republic (Jordan, Iraq and Syria, supported by Egypt), but Israel’s military superiority was evident and the Arabs were defeated. By the end of the conflict, Israel had conquered the Sinai Peninsula, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights. It meant the flight of hundreds of thousands of Arabs, who took refuge in Lebanon (400,000) and Jordan (250,000). It must be said that the UN condemned the Israeli occupation of these territories, a position that is maintained to this day.

It was in these areas that guerrilla groups were then formed to regain the lost territories. They were also organized around the PLO, which began a terrorist campaign against Israel, using Jordan as its base of operations and, as its armed wing, the Al-Fatah group.

This war also meant the intervention of the superpowers of the time, which were in the midst of the Cold War. Israel received a lot of help from the United States and the Arab countries were supported by the Soviet Union.

The Yom Kippur coup

After the Six Day War, the Arab countries increased their aversion towards the Jewish State and six years later attacked it in full force during Yom Kippur (October 6, 1973), one of the most important dates for the Jewish religion and one on which most of them were concentrated. Egypt and Syria launched a surprise military offensive. Initially the Arabs won victories on the Golan Heights and in the Sinai Peninsula, but the Israelis made successful counterattacks.

The most important consequence of this conflict was that it showed that the violence between the two peoples could not continue. It also led to Egypt and Israel signing a peace agreement that surprised the whole world, and also generated anger among the more radical Arabs.

With the Egyptian threat removed, Israel continued to focus on consolidating itself as a Jewish state. It had to cede the Sinai, with an evacuation of settlers that for them was dramatic and painful. However, it had won the Arab neutralization.

The Israeli occupation in Gaza and the West Bank, the so-called «Palestinian territories», went through several stages, but ended in hostility and discrimination. The state continued to colonize Palestinian land.
After 2000

Since the beginning of the Palestinian uprising in 2000, the Israeli Army conducted numerous incursions into the Strip, set up checkpoints and restricted the movement of Palestinians. Twenty-one Jewish settlements were built in the area, where more than 8,000 people lived. In 2005, however, they were evacuated as a result of the Disengagement Plan. Following this evacuation, the Palestinian Authority (PNA) took control of Gaza and its government has been contested by two Arab political poles.

From 2008 to the present, there have been a series of wars in the Gaza Strip between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas. Since 1994, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank (the Palestinian territories), which were already separated geographically, were also separated politically, due to the conflict of their two political-military organizations: Fatah and Hamas, following the victory of Hamas in the 2005 municipal elections.

The West Bank thus continued to be governed by the Palestinian National Authority (which since 2013 started calling itself the State of Palestine) and was led by Mahmoud Abbas, a member of the more moderate Fatah (today Abbas is considered the first President of Palestine). The Gaza Strip, however, has been controlled since 2007 by the Islamist radicals of Hamas.

This group is considered a terrorist organization by the United States, the European Union and even some Middle Eastern countries. And although Hamas came to power democratically, Fatah does not support the current escalation of violence unleashed by the group.

Hamas fights the Israeli state using terrorist methods, such as suicide bombings, and Israel holds the group responsible for all attacks in the Gaza Strip. This group also refuses to recognize the agreements previously reached between Palestinians and Israelis, suspending peace negotiations between the two peoples.
The conflict unleashed in 2014

Clashes had not ceased since the conflict broke out – more than fifty years ago – but in 2014 they broke out again, and more brutally.

Israel blamed Hamas for the kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers. The intense search for these young men ended with the arrest of hundreds of members of this group in the West Bank.

To retaliate, Hamas began firing rockets at Israel, prompting Israel to respond not only with rockets, but also with a ground and naval offensive, in an operation called «Protective Edge».

That escalation of tension was the fourth largest since 2005, in which more than 2,200 people, mostly Palestinians, were killed. The previous ones – in 2006, 2008, 2009 and 2012 – also left hundreds of fatalities.
The blockade – the continuing humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip

Under the pretext of depriving local radicals of materials for weapons production, Tel Aviv (Israel’s second largest city and the country’s economic center) has for the past decade imposed a blockade that tightly controls the borders and airspace of the Gaza Strip.

This situation has greatly worsened living conditions in the territory, as the inhabitants are deprived of employment, education, medical care and other basic necessities.

The construction of a huge wall in the West Bank began in 2002. Its length exceeds 700 kilometers and marks not only the territories, but also the destiny of its inhabitants. Many Arabs involved in the commercial activity of Jerusalem, for example, have been forced to find their own way across this obstacle. In 2004, the Hague court declared this wall illegal, which has now been completed by Israel.
Density in the Strip

Another major problem in the Gaza Strip is the population density. In its main city, there are 5,000 people per square kilometer, one of the highest percentages in the world. This explains the large number of casualties among Palestinian civilians in the midst of the current exchange of attacks between the Strip and Israel, due to the alleged difficulty of hitting Palestinian military targets without causing civilian casualties.

However, some experts criticize Israel for targeting civilians. For example, a July 2014 bombing hit a UN school in northern Gaza and left at least 15 dead and more than 200 wounded, many of them children. A UN spokesman claimed that the Israeli Army knew the exact location of the building.
Obama’s decision

Despite the fact that the United States and Israel are military allies, in 2016 U.S. President Barack Obama made a decision that aroused the anger of the Israelis, when he was almost at the end of his term in office.

And he had done it before as well by signing the Iran Deal, which Israel considered a historic mistake and a threat, as Iran is one of its great enemies.

You may be interested in: Historic nuclear agreement between the US and Iran: What is at stake?

This time, the action that aroused Israeli resentment was not to veto the UN Security Council resolution condemning Israel’s settlement policy, one of the points of conflict between Palestinians and Israelis. The decision, according to former U.S. diplomat Elliott Abrams, «did nothing but damage bilateral relations», while, according to the BBC, it would have been a matter of personal legacy, through which he would have expressed his position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Trump’s decision

But with the arrival of Donald Trump to the White House, came a much stronger support for Israel, one of the campaign promises of this new president.

This took shape in 2017, with a decision that has led to one of the biggest escalations of tension in the conflict since 2014, officially recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. It is, according to BBC, a historic decision with which Trump «has put an end to decades of cautious diplomacy by Washington in the Middle East and has made the US the only mediator to recognize such status».

Thus, this country becomes the first to recognize the capital as Israeli, since the founding of the State of Israel in 1948, a decision that countries such as Guatemala, Honduras and Paraguay have wanted to follow. You can read all the details of the U.S. decision in this previous article in El Definido.

You may be interested in: We explain what the transfer of the US embassy to Jerusalem means.

The «bloodbath»: the US embassy in Jerusalem.

On May 14, 2018, the United States moved its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, triggering one of the worst clashes between Israelis and Palestinians in the last four years, which also coincides with the 70th anniversary of the founding of the State of Israel.

Demonstrations had already begun in the Gaza Strip every week since March 30, the day of the Great March of Return, the largest Palestinian protest against Israel in four years, calling for the return of what the Palestinians consider their occupied territories. In a single day, Israeli soldiers killed more than half a hundred Palestinian protesters, in addition to leaving more than 2,700 injured, thus transforming it into the day when the most Palestinians have been killed since Operation Protective Edge in 2014.

Reactions and actions that day were quite contrasting. For Trump, the change «will serve to advance peace,» which was supported by Benjamin Netanyahu, who called the day a «glorious» one. For Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, on the other hand, «it was a day in which a «horrible massacre» was committed.

And it does not seem that the tension is going to diminish, on the contrary.

It is difficult to reach conclusions on such a complex issue as this, but what is certain is that, although both peoples have had responsibility in the matter, so has the West. So everyone will also have to do their part if we want to finally reach the much sought-after and elusive peace.
How do you see the way out of this conflict? What other information can you give us to understand it?