Long Live Hell for the Oppressors
Yusuf İnan delivers a powerful commentary on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, condemning global inaction and hypocrisy. Through vivid imagery and moral outrage, he calls for accountability and justice—summed up in his stark declaration: “Long live hell for the oppressors.”
By Yusuf İnan
Long Live Hell for the Oppressors
The world stands helpless.
The Islamic world exists in name only, with little real power or influence. The Turkic nations recently gathered in Astana, yet their unity feels symbolic at best. Meanwhile, in Gaza, children remain the direct targets of relentless bombing campaigns.
They lie beneath the rubble. Bombs fall from the skies with no reprieve. Children, barefoot and shaken, struggle to walk away from shattered homes. A father who survived an airstrike carries his five children on his back, moving forward without knowing where he is headed.
Above, there is fire. Below, there is ruin. There is no clean water. No bread to eat. Humanity itself feels extinguished, leaving only a few injured children crawling among the debris.
Like mythical dragons, war machines unleash fire from both sea and air. No one—no nation, no alliance—can or will stop them.
I am ashamed. Ashamed of this merciless and unjust world. Ashamed of myself. Ashamed of the century I live in. Ashamed of the helplessness and passivity of billions, especially the one billion Muslims whose collective voice could have been decisive. Ashamed that the strong continue to crush the weak with impunity.
Today, the entire world has become Palestine. The entire world has become Gaza. And yet, in another tragic twist, the entire world has also become Israel—marching for Gaza, chanting curses against injustice, but doing little else of substance.
“Long live hell for the oppressors.”
For every act of injustice. For every abuse of law. For every tyrant—long live hell.
Vladimir Putin: "If a normal person does not react to what is happening in Gaza, they have no heart."
The hypocrisy is glaring. Bombs rain down on children in Ukraine, yet the same actors express outrage over the children of Gaza. They fail to see their own cruelty while condemning the cruelty of others.
“Long live hell for the oppressors.”
This is not just a cry for Gaza—it is a cry for every place where justice has been silenced, where innocence is buried beneath rubble, and where the world chooses to look away.
YUSUF İNAN / PEACE AT HOME, PEACE IN THE WORLD (*)
Twitter : @Yusufinan2023
Instagram : yusufinan2023
Instagram : fondinan2016
Email : gundem@sehitlerolmez.com
Website : www.sehitlerolmez.com
(*) As Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of modern Turkey, once said, 'Peace at Home, Peace in the World.' This timeless principle serves as a guiding light for nations striving for harmony, coexistence, and global stability.













