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副总统哈里斯说,加沙的巨大苦难要求暂时停火

2024-03-04 10:06 -ABC  -  130846

副总统卡玛拉·哈里斯周日下午在阿拉巴马州塞尔玛发表讲话,纪念民权运动里程碑时刻“血腥星期天”59周年

然而,哈里斯在讲话的最后谈到了其他一些事情:用她的话说,她呼吁以色列人为加沙人民做更多的事情他们“死于营养不良和脱水”“在哈马斯发动恐怖袭击后,以色列军方对哈马斯进行了轰炸。

“以色列政府必须采取更多措施大幅增加援助流量。没有借口,”她说。“他们必须开放新的边境口岸。他们不得对援助的运送施加任何不必要的限制。他们必须确保人道主义工作人员、场所和车队不成为目标,他们必须努力恢复基本服务并促进加沙的秩序,以便更多的食物、水和燃料能够到达需要的人手中。”

哈里斯还以“加沙巨大的苦难规模”为由,呼吁以色列和哈马斯同意一项经过多次谈判的提议,即以四至六周的停火换取哈马斯释放脆弱的人质。

美国官员本周末表示,以色列已经同意该协议,“现在责任在哈马斯。”

据加沙哈马斯运营的卫生部称,自哈马斯10月7日的袭击引发战争以来,加沙已有28,000多人丧生。

哈里斯和美国总统乔·拜登(Joe Biden)一直在寻求平衡他们对以色列打击哈马斯运动的支持——副总统周日再次表示,哈马斯的威胁“必须消除”——与对平民被杀的担忧。进步人士越来越多地公开反对政府没有向以色列施压以结束战争。

联合国表示,由于持续的冲突,加沙超过57万人正处于饥荒的边缘。

以色列官员坚称,他们已采取措施控制平民死亡,并对巴勒斯坦地区民众普遍存在的人道主义担忧做出回应。

以色列总理顾问奥菲尔·法尔克在接受美国广播公司新闻节目汤姆·苏菲·布里奇采访时表示,以色列“正在让数千辆卡车进入加沙。”

他还对联合国的饥荒警告提出质疑,但哈里斯在周日的讲话中表示,“加沙的人们正在挨饿。”

“条件是不人道的,我们共同的人性迫使我们采取行动,”她说。

纪念民权

除了她的演讲之外,副总统还参加了埃德蒙·佩特斯桥的年度穿越庆典,该桥最初以一位邦联将军的名字命名,1965年3月7日,阿拉巴马州警察在那里袭击了争取投票权的黑人示威者。

这一暴行震惊了全国许多人,并激起了对具有里程碑意义的投票权法案的支持。

哈里斯周日的访问正值选举年,她和美国总统乔·拜登(Joe Biden)试图巩固他们在黑人选民中的地位,并宣传他们对投票权的持续关注。投票权在国会基本上停滞不前。一些左翼人士批评说,没有国会,白宫可以做得更多。

参议院民主党人上个月重新提出了一项加强投票权的重大提案,该提案以已故佐治亚州议员和民权偶像约翰·刘易斯的名字命名。59年前,刘易斯在塞尔玛过桥时被打得头骨骨折。

哈里斯再次呼吁国会采取行动,就像她两年前在塞尔玛所做的那样,也是在“血腥星期天”周年纪念日。

众议员吉姆·克莱伯恩,南卡罗来纳州,众议员特里·休厄尔,阿拉巴马州。他的选区包括塞尔玛、司法部长梅里克·加兰和阿尔·夏普顿牧师都与第二先生道格·埃姆霍夫一起参加了周日的过桥活动。

塞尔玛还在努力扩大其高速光纤宽带接入,当地官员告诉ABC新闻,这对增强居民的权能非常重要。

塞尔玛市长小詹姆斯·帕金斯(James Perkins Jr .)在接受采访时表示:“能够快速、简洁地传播事实信息,可以创造一个更有教养的社区。”

塞尔玛大学校长斯坦福·安吉隆对此表示赞同,他说:“我很兴奋,因为我认为,数字公平和能够实时接触到人们将对提高选民参与度产生重大影响。”

哈里斯是美国第一位黑人副总统,是政府努力通过更多投票权立法的关键人物。这项立法尚未离开参议院,因为它缺乏10名共和党人的支持,无法克服参议院的阻挠议事规则。

民主党人表示,该法案将恢复一项规定,即要求有选民歧视历史的州和市政当局在修改投票法之前获得联邦政府的“预先许可”。

保守派反对他们所谓的联邦政府干涉州选举。

拜登和哈里斯将民主和个人权利作为其竞选信息的关键部分,同时寻求与前总统唐纳德·特朗普形成对比。特朗普一直在通胀、移民和外交政策方面抨击白宫。

拜登-哈里斯竞选团队进行了回击,称特朗普是一名反民主党候选人,同时指出他在终止罗诉韦德案对堕胎权的保证方面发挥了作用。特朗普看起来可能很快就会获得2024年共和党总统候选人提名。

塞尔玛市长帕金斯呼吁对多样性和包容性努力进行审查,并对投票进行新的限制。

“这真是一个危险的时刻。对我们来说,这是一个非常失去选举权的时刻。“我不知道人们是否真的完全理解这一点有多关键。但这是我们真正需要关注的事情。”

副总统在塞尔玛露面的前一天,纽约时报和锡耶纳学院的一项民意调查继续显示拜登在与特朗普的假想复赛中遇到麻烦,这是他一连串糟糕民调中的最新一次-但他的竞选活动对此泼冷水。

“民调继续与美国人的投票方式不一致,并一直高估唐纳德·特朗普,同时低估拜登总统,”通讯主任迈克尔·泰勒在一份声明中指出。

除了带头为拜登政府争取投票权外,哈里斯还在最高法院两年前推翻罗伊案后成为该政府在堕胎权问题上的主要信使。她在周日提出了这个问题,因为该州最高法院上个月裁定胚胎在法律上属于儿童,从而颠覆了体外受精的权利。

哈里斯在罗伊案裁决51周年之际在战场威斯康星州发起了一场“生育权之旅”,第一夫人吉尔·拜登周日在那里宣传“妇女支持拜登-哈里斯”计划,并点名警告特朗普。

阿拉巴马州是将在超级星期二投票的16个州和地区之一。这也是参议员凯蒂·布里特(Katie Britt)的家乡,她将于周四代表共和党发表国情咨文。

拜登去年曾前往塞尔玛,他周日在社交媒体上发布了关于周年纪念的消息。

他说:“59年前,勇敢的美国人试图通过一座以阿拉巴马州塞尔玛一名三k党人命名的桥梁,到达正义的彼岸。”书写。“今天和每一天,我们都通过努力保护投票权和维护选举的完整性来纪念这一遗产。”

虽然多年来一直有人呼吁重新命名该网站,但已故众议员刘易斯2015年与休厄尔在《塞尔玛时报杂志》上共同撰写了一篇文章,支持保留该名称。

他们写道:“保留这座桥的名字并不是对命名这座桥的人的认可,而是承认今天这座桥的名字是改变了这个国家和世界面貌的投票权运动的同义词。”

'Immense scale of suffering' in Gaza demands temporary cease-fire, Vice President Harris says

Vice President Kamala Harris spoke on Sunday afternoon in Selma, Alabama, to mark the 59th anniversary of a milestone moment in the civil rights movement -- "Bloody Sunday."

At the top of her remarks, however, Harris addressed something else: She called on the Israelis to, in her words, do more for the people in Gaza who are "dying of malnutrition and dehydration" amid the Israeli military's bombardment as it targets Hamas in the wake of Hamas' terror attack.

"The Israeli government must do more to significantly increase the flow of aid. No excuses," she said. "They must open new border crossings. They must not impose any unnecessary restrictions on the delivery of aid. They must ensure humanitarian personnel, sites and convoys are not targeted, and they must work to restore basic services and promote order in Gaza so more food, water and fuel can reach those in need."

Citing "the immense scale of suffering in Gaza," Harris also called for Israel and Hamas to agree to a much-negotiated proposal in which there would be a four- to six-week cease-fire in exchange for Hamas releasing vulnerable hostages.

U.S. officials said this weekend that Israel has agreed to that deal and "the onus right now is on Hamas."

Since Hamas' Oct. 7 attack sparked the war, more than 28,000 people have been killed in Gaza, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.

Harris and President Joe Biden have sought to balance their support for Israel's campaign against Hamas -- which the vice president did again on Sunday, saying the threat from Hamas "must be eliminated" -- with concern for civilians being killed. Progressives have increasingly spoken out against the administration for not pressuring Israel to end the war.

The U.N. says that more than 570,000 people in Gaza are on the brink of experiencing famine levels of hunger due to the continuing conflict.

Israeli officials insist they take steps to curb civilian deaths and have pushed back on the widespread humanitarian concerns for those in the Palestinian territory.

Ophir Falk, an adviser to Israel's prime minister, said in an interview with ABC News' Tom Soufi Burridge that Israel "is enabling thousands of trucks to get into Gaza."

He also challenged the U.N. warnings of famine but Harris, in her remarks on Sunday, said, "People in Gaza are starving."

"The conditions are inhumane and our common humanity compels us to act," she said.

Commemorating civil rights

In addition to her speech, the vice president also participated in the annual crossing jubilee of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, originally named after a Confederate general, where Alabama state troopers infamously attacked Black demonstrators as they marched for voting rights on March 7, 1965.

The brutality stunned many across the country and galvanized support for the landmark Voting Rights Act.

Harris' visit on Sunday comes in an election year as she and President Joe Biden seek to cement their standing with Black voters and tout their continued focus on voting rights, which has largely been stalled in Congress -- drawing some left-wing criticism that the White House could do more without Congress.

Senate Democrats last month reintroduced a major proposal to strengthen voting rights, named in honor of the late Georgia lawmaker and civil rights icon John Lewis, who was beaten to the point of a skull fracture while marching across the bridge in Selma 59 years ago.

Harris once again called on Congress to act, as she did two years ago in Selma, also on the anniversary of "Bloody Sunday."

Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., Rep. Terri Sewell, D-Ala., whose district includes Selma, Attorney General Merrick Garland and the Rev. Al Sharpton all attended Sunday's bridge crossing along with second gentleman Doug Emhoff.

Selma is also working to expand its high-speed fiber broadband access, which local officials told ABC News is important for empowering residents.

"To be able to circulate factual information quickly, succinctly, that creates a more educated community," Selma Mayor James Perkins Jr. said in an interview.

Selma University's president, Stanford Angion, echoed that, saying, "I'm excited because digital equity and being able to reach people in real time is really going to be significant, I think, in increasing voter participation."

Harris, the nation's first Black vice president, is a key figure in the administration's efforts to pass more voting rights legislation -- which that hasn't moved out of the Senate because it lacks the support of 10 Republicans to overcome the body's filibuster rule.

Democrats say the bill would restore a provision requiring states and municipalities with a history of voter discrimination to obtain federal "preclearance" before changing voting laws.

Conservatives oppose what they call federal intrusion into state-run elections.

Biden and Harris have made democracy and individual rights key parts of their campaign message while seeking to draw a contrast with former President Donald Trump, who has been hammering the White House over inflation, immigration and foreign policy.

The Biden-Harris campaign has fired back, arguing Trump, who looks likely to soon clinch the 2024 Republican nomination, is an anti-democratic candidate while pointing to his role in ending Roe v. Wade's guarantees to abortion access.

Perkins, the Selma mayor, called out the scrutiny of diversity and inclusion efforts and new restrictions on ballot access.

"This is really a dangerous time. And this is a very disenfranchising moment for us," he said. "I don't know that people really fully understand how critical this is. But it is something that we really need to be paying attention to."

The vice president's appearance in Selma comes a day after a New York Times and Siena College poll continued to show trouble for Biden in a hypothetical rematch with Trump, the latest in a long string of poor polling for him -- but his campaign threw cold water on that.

"Polling continues to be at odds with how Americans vote, and consistently overestimates Donald Trump while underestimating President Biden," communications director Michael Tyler argued in a statement.

In addition to spearheading voting rights for the Biden administration, Harris has become its main messenger on abortion rights in the wake of the Supreme Court reversing Roe two years ago. She raised the issue on Sunday, given the relevancy in Alabama after the state Supreme Court upended access to in vitro fertilization by ruling last month that embryos are children under the law.

Harris launched a "reproductive rights tour" on the 51st anniversary of the Roe decision in battleground Wisconsin, where first lady Jill Biden was on Sunday to promote the "Women for Biden-Harris" program and warn against Trump by name.

Alabama is one of 16 states and territories that will vote on Super Tuesday. It's also the home state of Sen. Katie Britt, who will deliver the State of the Union response for Republicans on Thursday.

Biden, who traveled to Selma last year, posted on social media about the anniversary on Sunday.

"Fifty-nine years ago, brave Americans sought to cross a bridge named after a Klansman in Selma, Alabama, to reach the other side of justice," he wrote. "Today and every day, we honor that legacy by fighting to protect the right to vote and uphold the integrity of our elections."

While there have been calls over the years to rename the site, the late Rep. Lewis co-authored an article with Sewell in The Selma Times-Journal in 2015 in favor of keeping the name.

"Keeping the name of the bridge is not an endorsement of the man who bares its name but rather an acknowledgment that the name of the bridge today is synonymous with the Voting Rights Movement which changed the face of this nation and the world," they wrote .

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