 Hello and welcome to the International Daily Roundup with people's disspatch where we bring some of the top choice from across the globe. Let's take a look at today's headlines. Israeli forces storm Al-Aqsa compound ours after ceasefire in besieged Gaza. West Papuans demand end to violence and release of political prisoners in Indonesia. Spanish officials state hundreds of young migrants stranded in border areas and in our video section we take a look at the end of the Israeli offensive in Gaza. Israeli forces once again stormed the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in occupied Jerusalem on May 21, thousands of Palestinian worshippers had gathered for Friday prayers and to celebrate the ceasefire announced on Thursday. However, they were attacked with tear gas and stun grenades, leaving at least 20 injured. Meanwhile, displaced families in the besieged Gaza strip slowly began returning to their homes on Friday morning. As per the UN OCHA, the 11 days of attacks displaced around 91,000 people. As rescue efforts continued, medics found 10 survivors under the rubble of what appeared to be a tunnel. The Bafa News Agency reported that the bodies of nine people, including a three-year-old child, were also retrieved. The death toll in Israel's attacks on Gaza now stands at 243 people, including 66 children. Gaza officials have estimated 1,000 individual homes have been destroyed and 700 have been severely damaged. As of May 20, nearly 800,000 people lack proper access to safe, piped water damage to. Power lines have meant that the average power supply in Gaza lasts only around 7 hours a day. However, the ongoing 14-year Israeli siege means that the crucial resources needed for reconstruction will not be able to enter Gaza. The WHO has stated that 8,500 people have been injured across Gaza and 30 health facilities have been damaged. The Red Cross announced on Friday that the Karam Abu Salem crossing had been open and medical supplies were brought into Gaza. Meanwhile, South African workers' unions and civil society groups held a protest in solidarity with Palestine on Friday. This was after the South African Transport and Allied Workers' Union announced that dock workers would not offload cargo from an Israeli ship. Rallies and pickets were held at the Durban Harbor where the Israeli-owned Zim Line's ship was set to dock. Friday's solidarity action follows these days after port workers in Italy refused to load an armed shipment headed to Israel. Protests were held across the Papuan provinces of Indonesia on May 21 to demand an end to the ongoing violence. Indonesian forces have been engaged in an armed conflict with the West Papuan Liberation Army for months. The conflict has displayed over 50,000 people in most of whom are Papuans. The government announced the additional deployment of around 500 troops earlier this week. However, aside from the conflict, security forces have been cracking down on activists and church and civil society groups. Internet services have also been disrupted. The recent arrest of Victor Yemo on charges of treason led to growing goals for the release of political prisoners. Yemo is the general secretary of the West Papuan National Committee and was arrested on suspicions of his role in the 2019 anti-racist protests. At least 30 people, most of whom were West Papuans, reportedly died during the protests. Several activities and groups were associated, with a free Papuan movement have also been designated as terrorists by the government. Hundreds of people held demonstrations in West Papuan cities including Manukwari and Surong. On Friday, Papuan communities in other parts of Indonesia, including Java and Jakarta, also held protests. Human Rights lawyer Veronica Koman also shared footage of West Papuan and Indonesian students being attacked by an ultra-nationalist group. Around 46 student protesters were then arrested by the police. Spain's Interior Ministry stated on May 20 that 850 underage migrants were still in the country. They were part of the nearly 8,000 people who crossed the border fence or swam to the Spanish city of Ciuta earlier this week. Most of the migrants were from Morocco while some were from sub-Saharan Africa. Among them were an estimated 2,000 teenagers and a few women and children. They deployed its military to Ciuta on Tuesday and over 6,000 migrants have since then been forced back. There have been reports of Spanish forces using excessive force including the use of metal batons and tear gas that had crossed has stated that at least one young man died and dozens were treated for hypothermia. Meanwhile Moroccan police in the city of Vinley drove away hundreds of people from the border crossing on Wednesday. As reported by AP, migrants who crossed into Spain this week were fleeing unemployment and rising poverty. Unaccompanied minors are now being held in charity-run warehouses under police watch for a mandatory 10-day quarantine. 200 young migrants who were already in Ciuta before this week will now be transferred to the mainland. According to Spanish law, children remain under the care of regional authorities until their relatives are found or they become adults. Security officials announced on Thursday that both countries will establish a protocol system for the reign of migrants. This began crossing on May 17 after Moroccan police reportedly told them the border was open. The mass-crossing scheme amid an increasing rift between the Spanish and Moroccan government's tension grew. After Spain decided to provide COVID-19 treatment in the head of the Western Saharas, Polisario Front, the group has been fighting against Morocco's control over the Saharabi region which it calls an occupation. And for a final story, we take a closer look at the end of the Israeli offensive on Gaza. The Egyptian brokered ceasefire came into effect in the early hours of Friday. Thousands took to the streets to celebrate Palestinian resistance in Gaza and the occupied territories. An Egyptian intelligence delegation has also arrived in Gaza to meet with her mass leaders. Here is Prabir Purkhayastha to talk more about the current situation. That at the moment, Israel's ability to enter Gaza has decreased considerably. We saw that in 2014 that the first day they entered Gaza they suffered, the military suffered serious losses and that included senior commanding officers as well. So I think this has shown that increasingly physically entering Gaza is something that Israel cannot do and that changes the military equation in this conflict. The second part and again that's a takeaway which the Hamas will benefit from is the fact that in the first time the bubble of Tel Aviv was also threatened and the citizens had to scurry in the shelters. And this happened not only in Tel Aviv but also in other major cities of Israel. So what was essentially a local phenomena limited to areas within say 5 to 10 kilometers of the Gaza border extended to the almost entire Israel and all its cities. So all of this shows that though it's an extremely asymmetric war, it's the damage, destruction, casualties of far more on the side of the Gazans than Israelis. The fact is that Gaza can inflict some damage disrupting the normal life in Israel itself makes it not equal but changes the equation in favor of Gaza. Now let's look at also the numbers, you're talking of really the best military in West Asia supposedly at least has the best arms, has nuclear weapons. It is refurbished every time it expenses munitions in Gaza by the United States immediately they have offered 700 odd million dollars of intelligent munitions which is really precision munitions so that it can attack the AP buildings and the Al Jazeera stations if they rebuild it over there. So all of this goes to show that the battle is really one sided in terms of what the military power each side holds. The fact that Gaza can inflict damage it's only 2 billion population it's a small packed place where all the 50% unemployment, destruction at a massive scale each time this kind of war takes place. But the fact that it can still inflict damage makes it difficult for Israel to do what it does in the West Bank which is inflict punishment on any population which is restive which wants to protest by destroying their homes putting the people in jail by battering them physically and so on it's completely one sided over there but the fact that there is some resistance over here in military terms means the equation has changed and each time that this conflict emerges again and again as it has now three times. So if as it emerges again and again the equation will continue to change and I think that's something which makes Hamas a much more important force in Palestine and it's not just in Gaza but also in the other occupied Palestine territories and that equation means Fatah which at least had the leading voice in the Palestinian community is now going to see a serious challenge from Hamas a more militant challenge which will then force the equation to change also in the occupied West Bank. So I think this is not something which is changed in favor of Israel in fact each time the war erupts whatever damage Gaza or Palestinians take I think equation changes in two ways one it changes in Israel to the right which we now can see further and further but it's also changing the Palestinian issues bringing forth Palestinian issues to the fore and I think that's a very important change that we have to now recognize after this particular limited 11 day war and that's all the time we have for this episode of the internationally round up most hot stories and videos visit our website people's espach.org subscribe to our youtube channel and follow us on facebook twitter and instagram thank you for watching