Store room at Shifa Hospital
November 23, 2011
First the good. On
November 22, the International Middle East Media Center (IMEMC) said a
"Freedom Spring" convoy arrived through Rafah's border terminal,
connecting Gaza and Egypt.
Arab Spring movement
members will meet Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyya and other Palestinian
officials. In addition, meetings will be held with women's groups, local NGOs,
and others.
Tours through Gaza's
refugee camps and visiting UNRWA (UN Relief and Works Agency) are planned.
Palestinian Legislative
Council (PLC) head Ahmad Bahar called the visit historic, saying "convoy
members managed to defend their people's dignity and honor, and now, they came
to Gaza to express support and solidarity with their people."
"You came to
challenge this siege. I want to tell you that today is the beginning of the end
of this siege, the siege that was never lifted, despite conspiracies and claims
of easing it. This conspiracy is against the steadfastness of our people, the
people who defend their dignity, children and country, the people who want to
liberate Jerusalem."
Egyptian Popular
Committee Against the Judaization of Jerusalem head, Salah Sultan, said convoy
members will "return as fighters and liberators of Jerusalem and the Al
Aqsa Mosque. We will stand with you. The world will stand with you to defend
Jerusalem, especially after the Zionists declared plans to demolish the
historic Moghrabi (Magharba) Gate in Jerusalem that links between the Al Boraq
Wall and the Al Aqsa Mosque."
Arab Spring activists represent
solidarity with besieged Gazans. They also reflect a growing spirit that others
support their liberating struggle.
On November 22, the
Palestine News Network headlined, "Israel Allows More Construction
Materials into Gaza, Exports Still at Zero," saying:
Nearly 300 trucks came
through southern Gaza's Karem Abu Salem crossing. They carried industrial,
agricultural, and transportation supplies.
Palestinian liaison
official Ra'ed Fattouh said 12 trucks delivered cement and other construction
materials, despite a near ban most times. Another 53 trucks carried gravel, 11
had aid supplies, 183 were for industrial use, 40 delivered livestock feed,
nine were for agriculture, five for transportation, and 20 had new vehicles.
Another 50 came for UNRWA
projects. Cooking gas supplied only one-fourth of current weekly needs, falling
way short of avoiding a humanitarian crisis.
No exports left Gaza
since May 13, 2011. At the time, a small truckload of flowers destined for the
Netherlands got out.
Oxfam says Gaza's export
ban keeps its economy "heavily dependent on local demand." However,
it's constrained by an impoverished population's weak demand.
"Until crossings are
fully open for export, the impact of the easing of the blockade on
unemployment, poverty and food insecurity rates remains limited."
Israel planned it that
way. Its siege is politically motivated. It has nothing to do with security.
Saying so is a ruse to maintain it illegally.
THE
BAD NEWS
It always overwhelms the
good. Daily, the Palestine News & Information Agency (WAFA) reports it. On
November 22, it said:
(1) Israeli Rimon Prison security forces "viciously attacked" Palestinian prisoners "looking for hidden cellular phones." Beatings followed. Personal belongings were destroyed. Prisoners were isolated in solitary confinement. Other punishments were imposed.Palestinian minister of prisoners' affairs, Issa Qaraqi, accused Israel of targeting prisoners for "political gains."(2) Israeli bulldozers razed Hassan Erekat's agricultural land. Irrigation networks were destroyed. They were the main water source for land northeast of Jericho. Doing so was malicious and criminal. Reasons given were spurious.(3) Homes of West Bank activists were raided. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) said 17 of its members were arrested in Jenin, its refugee camp, area villages, and Kufr Malik village east of Ramallah.
On November 21, WAFA
monitored "incitement and racism" in Israeli publications. One
article said releasing Palestinian "murderers" in the Gilad Shalit
swap damaged Israel's "legitimacy of our fight against terrorism."
Another same day report
said Jewish extremists broke into Jaffa's Hasan Beik mosque "to perform
Jewish prayer" inside. Doing so was lawless breaking and entering. Damage
done was vandalism.
Israeli authorities
turned a blind eye like they always do, inciting further incidents. Israeli
hard-liners earlier tried to torch the mosque. No prosecutions followed.
Numerous reports say Gaza
patients can't access treatment abroad when it's unavailable otherwise. Last
summer, children needing life-saving surgery were denied. So are others for
political reasons, targeting human need maliciously.
Getting permission to
leave is daunting. Permits are required. Bureaucratic obstacles must be
overcome. The entire process is time-consuming. Gravely ill patients can't
wait. As a result, some die needlessly. Others suffer interminable pain. So do
loved ones watching them.
On November 17, Doctors
Without Borders (MSF) headlined, "Gaza: Residents deprived of critical
medications and medical care," saying:
Gaza health facilities
are critically short of drugs and medical supplies. MSF and others can't make
up for shortfalls. "In late September, 36% of essential drugs were
lacking," some entirely.
Since Israel besieged
Gaza in June 2007, conditions continue to deteriorate. Aid falls far short of
needs. At least 164 essential drugs are "completely unavailable."
“Patients' health is
threatened....Only 260 of the 900 required medical supply items (specifically,
single-use items) were supplied."
Most affected medical
areas include surgery, intensive care, hermodialysis, and treatment to prevent
organ transplant rejection, oncology, hematology, psychiatric medications,
ophthalmology, maternity, pediatrics, and catheterization lab procedures to
diagnose and treat heart disease.
In addition, five medical
centers treating kidney disease face drug shortages. Unless resupplied within
several weeks, they'll be exhausted. As a result, patients' lives will be
endangered. Many already are. For others it's too late.
MSF concluded saying,
"We remain particularly concerned about the future of Gaza's patients and
ill residents."
Staying alive and healthy
under siege is daunting. Few in normal surroundings understand. Gazans live it
daily.
A
FINAL COMMENT
Last August, the Al-Mezan
Center for Human Rights titled a report, "Israel makes Torture, degrading
treatment a policy," saying:
Its field report covering
the period from May 1, 2009 - April 30, 2010 said Israel practices it in
numerous ways, despite international law prohibiting all forms of cruel,
inhuman and degrading treatment.
Notoriously, Israel
brutally mistreats Palestinians in custody, including women and children.
Many other forms of mistreatment
are also common. They include lawless arrests and detentions, attacking
peaceful protesters, middle-of-the-night raids, restricting free movement and
expression, denying critically needed medical care outside Gaza, bulldozing
Palestinian homes, displacing residents, prohibiting farmers from accessing
their land, attacking fishermen at sea, restricting access to essential
services, besieging Gaza, and much more.
The Committee Against
Torture (CAT) includes 10 independent experts, charged with monitoring the
implementation of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment by State parties.
ED: Meanwhile they raise
a fuss about the treatment of Jonathan Pollard?!
All States must submit
reports, annually at first after adopting the Convention, quadrennially thereafter.
CAT called besieging Gaza
"cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment....a prima facie violation
of....CAT." It also violates Fourth Geneva's collective punishment
prohibition.
Israel spurns all
international laws, no matter its treaty obligations. All Palestinians suffer
extreme repression, especially Gazans, suffocating horrendously under siege.
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