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Gaza: On Top of Humanitarian Disaster, a News Blackout

by: Cherrie Heywood  |  Visit article original @ Inter Press Service

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A Palestinian boy carries sacks of flour handed out by the UN in Gaza. Israel has imposed a virtual news blackout on the Gaza Strip. (Photo: Abed Rahim / EPA)

    Ramallah, West Bank - Israel has imposed a virtual news blackout on the Gaza Strip. For the last ten days no foreign journalists have been able to enter the besieged territory to report on the escalating humanitarian crisis caused by Israel's complete closure of Gaza's borders for the last two weeks.

    Steve Gutkin, the AP bureau chief in Jerusalem and head of Israel's Foreign Press Association, said that he personally "knows of no foreign journalist that has been allowed into Gaza in the last week."

    Gutkin said that "while Israel has barred foreign press from entering Gaza in the past, the length of the current ban makes it unprecedented." He added that he has received no "plausible or acceptable" explanation for the ban from the Israeli government.

    AP has relied on reports from two of its journalists who were able to enter Gaza days before the closure began and are currently stuck there.

    A delegation of European Union parliamentarians was also prevented from entering Gaza to assess the situation on the ground and to hold talks with Hamas leaders. They subsequently broke the naval siege of Gaza by entering the coast's territorial waters from Cyprus by boat, defying the Israeli navy.

    During talks held with Hamas, the EU parliamentarians were able to get a historic commitment from the Islamic organisation to recognise Israel's right to exist within the internationally recognised 1967 borders. Hamas further offered a long-term ceasefire in return for Israel legitimising Palestinian rights.

    Israel also prevented 20 European Union consul-generals from entering Gaza on Thursday. On Sunday Israeli border police prevented 15 trucks loaded with medication from entering the Gaza Strip.

    EU commissioner for external relations and European neighbourhood policy, Bentita Ferrero-Waldner, has expressed strong reservations. "I am profoundly concerned about the consequences for the Gazan population of the complete closure of all Gaza crossings for deliveries of fuel and basic humanitarian assistance," Ferrero-Waldner said in a statement Friday.

    Karen AbuZayd, head of the UN Relief and Welfare Agency (UNRWA) which cares for Palestinian refugees, added that it was unusual for Israel not to let basic food and medicines in. "This has alarmed us more than usual because it's never been quite so long and so bad, and there has never been so much negative response on what we need," she said.

    Israel closed the borders following a barrage of rockets fired by Palestinian resistance fighters at Israeli towns bordering the Gaza Strip.

    The tit-for-tat violence began on Nov. 4 when the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) launched a cross-border raid into Gaza, breaking a shaky five-month ceasefire with Hamas. The purpose was ostensibly to destroy a tunnel built by Palestinians allegedly to smuggle captured Israeli soldiers.

    More than 20 Palestinians were killed in Israeli raids. Two Israelis were lightly injured in the subsequent rocket attacks.

    The timing of Israel's breach of the ceasefire is curious in that hundreds of these smuggling tunnels have existed ever since Hamas took over the strip in June last year. They have been used to smuggle everyday necessities as well as arms because the territory is hermetically sealed by Israel.

    John Ging, director of UNRWA in Gaza, who has lived there for the past three years, questioned the alleged security reasoning behind the closure. Since the ceasefire went into place this summer, Ging said, fewer supplies have passed through the crossing than in the beginning of 2006, when the western Negev in Israel suffered incessant rocket fire from Gaza.

    At that time the Palestinian Authority (PA), which is supported by Israel and the international community, was ruling Gaza in a unity government with Hamas.

    "Last week we were unable to feed 60,000 of Gaza's neediest refugees due to our warehouses running out of food. UNRWA supplies half of Gaza's population of 1.5 million people with emergency rations, and 20,000 people are fed per day when there are adequate supplies," Ging told IPS.

    Seventy percent of Gaza experienced electricity blackouts after Israel prevented deliveries of diesel fuel, forcing Gaza's main power plant to close down.

    "The Israelis were only allowing 2.2 to 2.5 million litres of fuel in per week prior to the closure, which was the minimum required to operate the power plant. The plant has a capacity for 20 million litres and this would last two months under normal circumstances and tide over emergency periods. But this has all run out," Ging said.

    Kan'an Ubeid, deputy chief of the Palestinian Energy Authority, said at a press conference in Gaza that in addition to the shutdown of the diesel-fuelled power plant, the electric network bringing in power from Israel collapsed due to increased pressure on the system.

    Gazans also ran out of cooking gas while Gaza's Coastal Municipalities Water Utility (CMWU) was forced to pump tonnes of untreated sewage into the ocean due to fuel shortages and the lack of spare parts for equipment in need of repairs and new parts.

    Much of this will flow back into Gaza's underground water table, and the threat of contaminated drinking water spreading diseases has increased.

    Meanwhile, the emergency and ambulance services director-general, Mu'awiyya Hassanein, says Gaza's health ministry is short of more than 300 types of necessary medication.

    Sammy Hassan, a spokesman from Gaza city's main Shifa hospital said only urgent surgery was being carried out. "We have delayed all non-urgent surgery as our small generator has stopped working, as we can't import a vital spare part.

    "We are down to 30,000 litres of fuel left to run the larger generator which is used when electricity is cut. Under the current circumstances with no electricity we require 10,000 litres per day," Hassan told IPS.

    Philip Luther, deputy director of Amnesty International's Middle East programme, said that Israel's latest tightening of the blockade had "made an already dire humanitarian situation markedly worse. This is nothing short of collective punishment on Gaza's civilian population, and it must stop immediately."

    Following international pressure and protests from the EU, Israel allowed 30 trucks of humanitarian aid to enter the strip Monday. "It will last a matter of days," said UNRWA spokesman Christopher Gunness. "But then what?"

    Oxfam's spokesman in Jerusalem Michael Bailey, who coordinates a number of humanitarian projects in Gaza, said this response was entirely inadequate.

    "Thirty trucks of aid after a closure of 10 days is insufficient. What we need is a complete revision of the embargo on Gaza. Dialogue with the relevant political leaders is the only way forward," Bailey told IPS.

    "Both Israel and Gaza's other neighbours need to put the human rights and essential needs of Gazans above all considerations if there is to be a way out of this quagmire."

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Comments

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A news blackout is

A news blackout is unnecessary - nobody cares about the Palestinians anyway. They must know, after all these years, that they're on their own. The world has turned its back on them, and permits anything done against them, with no consequences. Not even Egypt will lift a finger to help, even though there's only a fence between them. It's Guantanamo on the Med.

Should we expect anything

Should we expect anything less of the Palestinians in Gaza than we did of the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto in defying, resisting their oppressors?

Yes, genocide requires a

Yes, genocide requires a blackout and secrecy, the masters have learned their lessons well. May the dead haunt the generations of these dark and malicious immigrants to the middle east forever.

What the Israelis are doing

What the Israelis are doing to the Gaza Palestinians is almost as bad as what was done to them by the Nazis. There is no excuse for it. We in the U.S. should not stand by and let it happen. We should cut off all aid to Israel until they stop this inhumane activity. And the Israeli leaders who allow it should be truned over to the Hague for trial for war crimes and Crimes Against Humanity.

If a UN boat got in, perhaps

If a UN boat got in, perhaps a boatload of Israeli Air Force pilots who refused to bomb when ordered to could get through with food and with medicine from one of the international NGO's of good-hearted medical professionals. Listening to conscience over orders took courage. Would active-duty conscripts attack veterans? It would be logistically difficult to get USA food in, but what about Europe? Does Europe grow agricultural surpluses as we do? What is the nearest country with agricultural plenty? Does Turkey grow more than it needs? People nearby are afraid of what happens to people with nothing left to lose. At some times in history, the USA and Europe have responded with compassion. Bully Israelis have been encouraged by USA bullies, but it used to be that kindness could get through from time to time as well. Many American tycoons have made up with Viet Nam. I have no hope Obama will turn the spigot off for Israeli bullies. It is so sad. The reports on his behavior at an AIPAC meeting were sickening. If the dollar goes to zero though, the Israelis will have to machine their own spare parts. It's hard to think where they are going to get oil from either. Are the Israelis food-self-sufficient? D.C. is a paper mess and one of the bloodiest cities in the USA as well. Karma on us for situations such as this. We need a different currency and a shadow cabinet. Eventually we could stop the epidemics of suicides and homicides abetted by large goverporations.

Israel is turning the world

Israel is turning the world against their country, while calling us anti-semites. But let us not forget all those Israelis and Jews living outside of Israel who condemn the Zionists responsible for planning the removal of Palestinians and destroying their villages in 47/48 and who are critical of the Israeli Government today, sometimes at great personal cost.

I love how Israelis/Jews

I love how Israelis/Jews here and abroad are quick to call folks antisemitic if they utter the slightest criticism of Israel or if you say anything other then the official "line" about the holocaust (and i am by no means denying that it happened or trivializing the horror of it). But they will stand by and turn a blind eye to the brutality of Israel's acts against the Palestinians in the Gaza strip. And how can we continue to carry this terroristic state? Those $2,500.2 million that we gave to Israel in 2007 would have come in handy in resolving the economic situation we find ourselves in now...not to mention the untold millions we have spent on our middle east adventure to help further establish Israel and secure some oil reserves for our greedy, wasteful, and sad American consumerist culture...but that's another can of worms. Its time we cut off their allowance and put them on restriction...maybe even a spanking, just like you would an unruly child.

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