After Hamas’ January 25, 2006 electoral victory,
On June 14, 2007, collaboratively with Israel and the US, Palestinian Authority (PA) president Mahmoud Abbas declared a "state of emergency," illegally dismissed Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniyeh and his national unity government, and appointed his own prime minister and new "emergency" cabinet. Authority is now split. Abbas runs the
Hamas remains isolated. It’s called a "hostile entity," and after last September 19 was squeezed by tightened sanctions. Electricity, fuel and gas were reduced and intermittently cut off. So were supplies of food, medicines, water and other essentials. Its industrial production dropped 95%, and its agricultural output is about half its pre-2007 level. Nearly all construction also stopped, and according to a new UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) report, poverty tops 50% and unemployment is nearly as high. Other unofficial estimates say 80% for both is more accurate. Things are bad and worsening.
Shops are short of everything because
— certain medicines;
— restricted food items like fruit, milk and other dairy products, wheat flour, rice, sugar, salt, cooking oil, and frozen foods;
— cleaning materials;
— agricultural samplings;
— herbicides and pesticides;
— footwear;
— clothing;
— fabrics, threads, and buttons;
— construction materials: cement, tin, iron, plastic pipes, asbestos, wood, nails, screws, wires, paint, etc.;
— spare parts and supplies for manufacturing goods;
— electrical appliances;
— office equipment and supplies;
— livestock and fodder;
— books;
— computers;
— telephones and mobiles;
— spare parts for communication devices;
— tobacco and cigarettes;
— beverages;
— all types of motor vehicles, including spare parts (batteries, tires, engine oil, etc.);
— elevators and their spare parts;
— water pumps and their spare parts; and
— the import or export of raw materials for industry, construction and agriculture – virtually everything a modern society needs to function and survive.
Compared to 9000 commodities imported before June 2007, now it’s only 20. People don’t get enough to eat, and conditions keep getting worse. Even fishing is restricted, idling thousands of local fishermen because anyone in open waters risks detention and harassment.
Power is in short supply – affecting hospitals, fresh water availability, sanitation, and the functioning of daily life under conditions of extreme duress. Families (including spouses) are also cut off. Some live in
Earlier, family unification was denied after the Knesset passed the Nationality and Entry into Israel Law (July 2003). It bars Palestinians in the Territories with an Israeli spouse from getting citizenship or residency status in
Thousands of married couples and their children are affected – forced to remain apart or leave
Here’s a brief snapshot of
International law (including the 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention) obligates occupying powers to protect civilian populations. Its Article 3(1) specifically states:
"Persons taking no active part in the hostilities, including members of armed forces who have laid down their arms and those placed hors de combat (out of action) by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause, shall in all circumstances be treated humanely, without any adverse distinction founded on race, colour, religion or faith, sex, birth or wealth, or any other similar criteria."
Under Fourth Geneva law, Israel is obligated to protect all Palestinians – especially the sick, wounded, children under 15, pregnant women, the elderly, infirm and disabled. It must also allow free passage of food, medicines and other essentials, let medical teams provide help, and refrain from imposing collective punishment and de facto martial law. The (1948) Universal Declaration of Human Rights goes further, and
Israeli Human Rights Violations
In January 2008, John Dugard, the UN Human Rights Council’s Special Rapporteur on Palestine prepared a scathing indictment of Israel’s human rights violations. Leading human and civil rights organizations have their own like the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), B’Tselem, the
Its March 9, 2008 report is called: "The Gaza Strip: A Humanitarian Implosion." Here are some highlights:
—
— Gazans are effectively imprisoned; movement in and out of the Territory is "impossible;" food, water, health care, sewage treatment, sanitation and other essentials "can no longer be taken for granted;"
— because of the siege and economic collapse, there’s "little money to buy food and limited food to buy;" rising prices exacerbate the problem;
— trucks carrying commercial and humanitarian supplies into Gaza have "plummeted" – from around 250 a day pre-crisis to a maximum of 45 a day or less;
— extreme poverty levels have "increased sharply" making 80% of Gazans dependent on humanitarian aid when it’s available – a 10-fold increase in the last decade; in 2007, households (on average) spent about 62% of their income on food;
— 95% of
— the siege destroyed public service infrastructure; Israel prevents repairs and maintenance; spare parts imports are prohibited; electricity and fuel are severely restricted; hospitals and public institutions can’t function properly; power cuts last 8 – 12 hours daily; 40 – 50 or more million liters of partially and untreated sewage are daily dumped in the sea;
— The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says its higher – up to 60 million liters daily; in addition, raw sewage is being pumped into heavily populated areas, including three million liters recently into the Jabaliya camp storm water lagoon;
— since
— the Coastal Municipalities Water Utility (CMWU) provides drinking water and treats sewage; with limited electricity, fuel, maintenance and spare parts, the network can’t function adequately; as a result, nearly one-third of Gazans have no running water; pre-siege, they all did;
— education is so undermined that classes are cancelled; dropout rates are high because families can’t afford to send their children to school; for those attending, school days are shortened; textbooks and other resources are in short supply; and failure rates are nearly 80%; 90% in math;
— healthcare has deteriorated markedly – inside Gaza and in access to outside treatment; Gazans needing special treatment are denied exit permits; patients are dying for lack of care, including children;
—
— Israel effectively controls Gaza; it’s obligated to protect its people but instead punishes them by its: military presence, attacks, extra-judicial assassinations, land and infrastructure destruction, restrictions on movement, lack of drinking water, food, medical care and other essentials, unemployment, impoverishment, and barriers to education;
— isolating Hamas has been counterproductive; it’s failed "at all levels;" a new strategy of engagement is needed: condemn the siege; go public on the humanitarian crisis; pressure Israel to end it; provide adequate emergency help; reactivate Gaza’s economy; enforce international law; and work towards "an inclusive (productive) political process."
The Al Mezan Center for Human Rights also monitors
On April 8, it produced a scathing report called "Worst Year under Occupation: 2008 1st Quarter Report on (Israeli) Violations of Human Rights in the Gaza Strip." Below are its highlights:
— during the first quarter of 2008,
— the level of 247 killings exceeded the combined totals reached for the 2005 through 2007 first quarter periods; they nearly equal all of them for 2007;
— public and private property destruction greatly increased; dunums of agricultural land destroyed as well;
—
— the international community remains silent in the face of systematic, "strangulating" collective punishment on an unprecedented scale; the lives and well-being of Gazans are affected in all ways imaginable;
— the number of Gazans victimized and their material losses show the extent of violations under international law; the international community’s failure to intervene made current conditions possible;
— Al Mezan condems Israel’s "aggression" and "gross human rights violations;" they’re willful crimes of war and against humanity and one of the most extreme examples ever of collective punishment against a civilian population; Al Mazen calls on the international community to intervene – to "investigate, pursue and prosecute those who ordered and/or perpetrated (these) crimes."
Last November, former NATO commander, (retired) General James Jones, was named the administration’s special Middle East envoy with this endorsement: he’s the "person we need to take up this vital mission….an experienced leader who can address the regional security challenges comprehensively and at the highest levels…." His assignment: draft a strategic security stabilization plan to complement Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
Word is now out about a report Jones is preparing that his superiors won’t like. Nor will Israelis. According to Haaretz (on July 22), it’s "extremely critical….of Israel’s policies in the territories and its attitude toward the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) security services" – President Mahmoud Abbas’ repressive shock troops doing Israel’s dirty work and targeting Hamas in Gaza and its supporters in the West Bank.
Administration officials have a draft summary, and it’s "arousing considerable discomfort. (It’s) conclusions about
— it’s "fairly broad definition" of
— "its attitude toward the PA security services."
That’s not all. Jones criticizes
That was Carter’s assessment in an April 17 speech at the
Last April, he met with Khaled Meshaal (Hamas’ exiled leader) in
For
A Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) Narrative Under Siege – "Swimming in Sewage"
It’s one of many PCHR accounts to show how Gazans’ lives have deteriorated under siege. It begins as follows: "I think the sea probably is polluted. Sometimes I get strange white marks on my skin; but we come down to the beach each day because we have nowhere else to go." That’s Salim’s voice speaking for himself and his friends. They go to
People flock to beaches in summer because it’s hot, but some of them are "swimming in sewage." According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), around 60 million liters of untreated and partially treated sewage pour into the sea around
The Gaza Coastal Municipal Water Utility (CMWU) supplies the Territory’s water and manages its three sewage treatment plants. Because of power and spare parts shortages, unfiltered tap water is saline and undrinkable, and sewage plants can’t function normally. It forces CMWU to dump raw sewage into the sea so it doesn’t flood residential areas.
Concern is great and growing. The World Health Organization (WHO) took samples from 30
WHO warned that "Waterborne outbreaks are….to be avoided because of their capacity to result in the simultaneous infection of a high proportion of (the) community" – most notably with gastroenteritis, ear and eye infections, dermatitis, dysentery, respiratory and urinary tract infections, guardia, and e-coli strains. These pathogens cause these diseases and death, so it’s crucial to avoid them.
Activists Plan to "breach the (
On August 6 or 7, about 40 unarmed activist members of the International Solidarity Movement, the Israeli Commission against House Demolitions and others will depart Cyprus on two wooden sailboats – to "get into the Gaza harbor and breach the siege." On board will be an 81 year Catholic nun, an 83 year old Holocaust survivor, a Nakba survivor, an Israeli professor, Palestinians from
"The IDF will probably stop us but part of the point is to show that
NGOs Worldwide Call for An End to
The Global Call to Action against Poverty (GCAP) is one of many. It’s a "growing alliance of trade unions, community groups, faith groups, women and youth organisations, NGOs and other campaigners working together across more than 100 national platforms….to end poverty, inequality," injustice and human suffering. It cites deep concern about
Other NGOs voice similar demands:
— in January 2007, 8 Israeli human rights organizations collaboratively joined an international campaign to end
(1) The Association for Civil Rights in
(2) Amnesty-Israel;
(3) Bimkom – Planners for Planning Rights;
(4) Gisha –
(5) Hamoked: Center for the Defence of the Individual;
(6) The Public Committee Against Torture in
(7) Physicians for Human Rights –
(8) Yesh Din – Volunteers for Human Rights.
Others have as well:
—
— the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committees (PARC) says: "The blockade makes export impossible so farmers are abandoning their crops; Israeli incursions result in huge destruction to lands and enterprises; almost every industry in Gaza is facing ruin; this collective punishment must end;"
— the Palestinian Medical Relief Society says: "
— the Women’s Affairs Centre says: "
The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) says: "How can
Many others worldwide as well call for;
— ending
—
— the right to work and an adequate standard of living;
— the right to health;
— education;
— life; and
— 41 illegal years of occupation.
The world no longer can wait. Neither can the people of
Stephen Lendman lives in
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