Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Ignoring Gaza's Humanitarian Crisis
Haiti isn't the only place that needs help, but in Gaza, Israel is keeping aid away
When a relief plane for Doctors Without Borders isn't allowed to land by U.S. military authorities at the airport in Port-au-Prince, there is an outcry.
But Israeli military authorities will not allow any relief planes at all to land in the Gaza Strip (the Israelis destroyed Gaza's airport in 2001).
We cheer when a Haitian child is rescued from the rubble, but ignore the thousands of Gazan children who are suffering malnutrition and being buried by Israeli policy, a policy that is a war crime. I am of course not the only to be struck by this contrast: see also Phil Weiss and others quoted at his essential site.
On Wednesday, 80 international aid groups called upon Israel to change its policy of blockading civilians in Gaza, because it is having severe negative effects on the health of Gazans.
Admittedly, the situation in Gaza is not as dire as that in Haiti. But it is very, very bad, and it is man-made. The Israeli government imposed a blockade on the Gaza strip in 2007 and has maintained it ever since. It limits the import of fuel and staples, and punishes the whole population. Since half of the 1.5 million Gazans are children, the Israeli siege of the little territory is among the more massive ongoing cases of child abuse in the world. There is a virtual news blackout on this atrocity in the US mass media, and attempts of two sets of activists to get humanitarian aid to Gaza in recent weeks were largely ignored by them.
Nor is the Gaza blockade a mere preoccupation of utopian human rights activists. It has become an element of regional geo-politics. It is part of the reason for significant tensions between Israel and one of its few allies in the Middle East, Turkey. As Turkey has democratized and Muslim sentiments have become more important in its politics, and as it has increasingly emerged as a new Middle Eastern power (some speak of neo-Ottomanism), its concern with issues such as Gaza has become more central. The horrible condition of the Gazans is often the lead story on Arab satellite news channels such as al-Jazeera, and public anger about it (expressed as much toward the US and the Egyptian regime as toward Israel) is at a boiling point. That anger feeds into terrorism against the West. The Gaza blockade is isolating Israel and fuelling a widespread boycott movement in Europe, Canada and South Africa. And, of course, the blockade makes even the virulently anti-Shiite Sunni fundamentalists of Hamas willing to take aid from Iran, bestowing a toehold in the Levant on Tehran. The French statesman Talleyrand once observed of Napoleon I's murder of the Duc d'Enghien, "It is worse than a crime; it is a blunder." The same could be said of the Gaza blockade from the point of view of any realistic Israeli and US foreign policy.
Last year UNICEF found that about one in ten children in Gaza is severely malnourished, to the point of stunting. The Israeli blockade is deeply implicated in this semi-starvation of tens of thousands of children, as is the Gaza War launched by Israel a little over a year ago, which wrecked nearly one-fifth of farms and deeply hurt agriculture in general. Gaza once flourished agriculturally, but it was cut off by Israel from its natural markets in the Levant, and the US and Egypt have been induced to support the blockade.
The World Health Organization fact sheet on Gaza's plight, issued yesterday, reads like a post-apocalyptic Hollywood film. WHO says:
The closure of Gaza since mid-2007 and the last Israeli military strike between 27 December 2008 and 18 January 2009 have led to on-going deterioration in the social, economic and environmental determinants of health.
Many specialized treatments, for example for complex heart surgery and certain types of cancer, are not available in Gaza and patients are therefore referred for treatment to hospitals outside Gaza. But many patients have had their applications for exit permits denied or delayed by the Israeli Authorities and have missed their appointments. Some have died while waiting for referral. . .
Supplies of drugs and disposables have generally been allowed into Gaza. However, there are often shortages on the ground mainly because of shortfalls in deliveries . . . Delays of up to 2-3 months occur on the importation of certain types of medical equipment, such as x-ray machines and electronic devices. Clinical staff frequently lack the medical equipment they need. Medical devices are often broken, missing spare parts or out of date. . .
Health professionals in Gaza have been cut off from the outside world. Since 2000, very few doctors, nurses or technicians have been able to leave the Strip for training eg to update their clinical skills or to learn about new medical technology. This is severely undermining their ability to provide quality health care. . . .
GAZA'S ECONOMY IN COLLAPSE
Rising unemployment (41.5 percent of Gaza's workforce in the first quarter of 2009) and poverty (in May 2008, 70 percent of the families were living on an income of less than one dollar a day per person) is likely to have long term adverse effects on the physical and mental health of the population [the unemployment is a direct result of the Israeli blockade]. . .
OPERATION "CAST LEAD" -- IMPACT ON HEALTH FACILITIES AND STAFF [I.e. the Israeli war on Gaza in winter 2008-2009]
- 16 health workers killed and 25 injured on duty
- Damaged health services infrastructure: + 15 of 27 Gaza's hospitals + 43 of its 110 Primary Health Care services + 29 of its 148 ambulances
The lack of building materials is affecting essential health facilities: the new surgical wing in Gaza?fs main Shifa hospital has remained unfinished since 2006. Hospitals and primary care facilities, damaged during Operation Cast Lead, have not been rebuilt because construction materials are not allowed into Gaza.
The UN complained that while Israel has a fair record of allowing treatment of Gazans in Israeli hospitals, and that record has improved, some 300-400 requests a month are met with substantial delays or turned down. This issue was foregrounded by a lot of the wire services who picked up the story, but it seems to me not the most important problem. The blockade is the problem.
The Israeli blockade is aimed at weakening Hamas, a fundamentalist party-militia that won power in the Palestine Authority in the elections of January 2006. (Ironically, the Israelis had supported Hamas the late 1980s in hopes of splitting the Palestinians) When the Bush administration and Israel successfully induced the Palestine Liberation Organization of Mahmoud Abbas to make a coup in the West Bank and dislodge the elected Hamas government there, Hamas managed to hang on to power in Gaza, in part because of strong public support. Hamas has committed terrorism against Israeli civilians, and launched small rockets at nearby Israeli towns. It had however made a truce with Israel in 2008, which it observed until Israel broke it, and no Israelis had been killed by Hamas rockets in the lead-up to Israel's war on the small territory.
Collectively punishing 1.5 million Gazans in order to weaken Hamas is in any case strictly illegal in international law and is a war crime. According to Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949:
Article 33. No protected person may be punished for an offense he or she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.
Pillage is prohibited.
Reprisals against protected persons and their property are prohibited.
Not only is today's ongoing blockade a war crime, but it follows on and continues destructive policies of the Israeli military during the Gaza War, as the Goldstone Report for the United Nations concluded. The Boston Globe reported Goldstone's defense of his findings at Brandeis University (hat tip to Mondoweiss).
Goldstone said his central criticism of Israel is that its strategy intentionally applied disproportionate force in Gaza to inflict widespread damage on the civilian population. His report found that the Israeli air and ground attacks destroyed 5,000 homes; put 200 factories out of operation, including the only flour factory in the country; systematically destroyed egg-producing chicken farms; and bombed sewage and water systems. "If that isn't collective punishment, what is?" Goldstone asked.
Very little of this destruction deliberately visited on civilians has been repaired, in large part because the Israelis won't allow the materiel in necessary for rebuilding.
Until President Obama does something to end the Gaza siege and its attendant horrors, his Mideast policy will remain an abject failure.




9 Comments so far
Show AllFurther proof of my latest personal assesment. Israel has become a private contractor, posing as a government.
However. When Juan Cole says "the israelis won't allow the materials for rebuilding". It struck me that, in turn. It would be helpful if people would write about the united state's global atrosities and war crimes in the same manner. I.E. "the americans have launched robotic warfare..." etc.
Maybe that would make us all feel more responsible for what our so-called 'government' is doing in the world.
Anyway. Regarding my latest theory. I also predict a natural disaster in israel. And what will happen when Xe, etc., begins to occupy the occupiers? Or, to go further with my theory. The contractor wars begin. Among themselves.
Perhaps we are seeing this already, and don't even realize it?
"Israel has become a private contractor, posing as a government"
Has become?
Any product that needs ad much advertising as Israel does, is probably poison.
Why is the international community not punishing Israel. It is only because the victims are muslims and life of a muslim is worth nothing in the eyes of west and America.
"It is only because the victims are muslims..."
Or is it because the perpetrators are rich?
According to wikipedia, there are about 3500 Christians in Gaza. The war is being waged on Gaza not because they're Muslims, but because 1. they're not Jews and 2. they won't leave.
Makes no difference - anyway, I'm sure there's no love lost for Muslims in that picture, either.
It's so lovely to see IDF soldiers helping Haitians, all warm and cuddly like little uncles, eh. Heart-warming.
Clearly you are correct!
The world has become ever more angry at Israel over the past few years. The rage felt all through the Islamic and Arab worlds over the brutality Israel has heaped on Palestinians is a major factor in "terrorism", which, from their perspective, is freedom fighting. Nobel Peace Laureate, Bishop Desmond Tutu, a black South African, has called the situation "worse than Apartheit. And note this quote:
"I spoke with the head military lawyer for the IDF, Joel Singer, and I said 'You know, I'm two weeks here. It's clear you people are inflicting Nuremberg crimes on the Palestinians, exactly what the Nazis did to the Jews. What's your explanation?' He said 'Military necessity'. Notice, he didn't disagree with me. I said 'That argument was rejected at Nuremberg when the lawyers for the Nazis made it.' So then he said, 'Well, we have public relations people in the United States, and they handle these matters for us.' " -- Francis Boyle, Professor of International Law, University of Illinois
Thank you for the Francis Boyle quote. I will look it up.
How soon the ones that tell others to never forget the holocaust become the very ones to holocaust others. In the united states the AIPAC is the mechanism that threatens our political system. Is is any wonder that history concerning Jews of european lineages has been a cycle of persecution and then some periods of peace and prosperity only to be followed by persecution. Why? becuase the policy of buying influence and gaining influence of high oficials in governments always backfires due to the resentment of the general populations. Behaviors thatare seen as being only in the best interests of Jews become resented by populations that are not Jewish. Its best to be friends to all not just the high and the mighty is my advice for jews in the diaspora. Reliance upon American Might and Monies will fail as resentment builds. Its interesting to note that before the establishment of the jewish state that jewish people lived nice lives among the arabs And muslims of the middle east. I cant recall on pogrom or holocaust against the jews by their arab and muslim brothers and sisters.