|
Gaza Under Siege
By
Ralph Nader
Friday, March 7. 2008
The world’s
largest prison—Gaza prison with 1.5 million inmates, many of them
starving, sick and penniless—is receiving more sympathy and protest
by Israeli citizens, of widely impressive backgrounds, than is
reported in the U.S. press.
In contrast,
the humanitarian crisis brought about by Israeli government
blockades that prevent food, medicine, fuel and other necessities
from coming into this tiny enclave through international relief
organizations is received with predictable silence or callousness by
members of Congress, including John McCain, Hillary Clinton and
Barack Obama.
The contrast
invites more public attention and discussion.
Israel has
militarily occupied Gaza for forty years. It pulled out its
colonials in 2005 but maintained an iron grip on the
area—controlling all access, including its airspace and territorial
waters. Its F-16s and helicopter gunships regularly shred more and
more of the areas’ public works, its neighborhoods and inflict
collective punishment on civilians in violation of Article 55 of the
Fourth Geneva Convention.
As the
International Red Cross declares, citing treaties establishing
international humanitarian law, “Neither the civilian population as
a whole nor individual civilians may be attacked.”
According to
The Nation magazine, the great Israeli human rights organization
B’Tselem, reports that the primitive rockets from Gaza, have taken
thirteen Israeli lives in the past four years, while Israeli forces
have killed more than 1000 Palestinians in the occupied territories
in the past two years alone. Almost half of them were civilians,
including some 200 children.
The Israeli
government is barring most of the trucks from entering Gaza to feed
the nearly one million Palestinians depending on international
relief, from groups such as the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency (UNRWA). The loss of life from crumbling health care
facilities, disastrous electricity cutoffs, gross malnutrition and
contaminated drinking water from broken public water systems does
not get totaled. These are the children and their civilian adult
relatives who expire in a silent violence of suffering that 98
percent of Congress avoids mentioning while extending billions of
taxpayer dollars to Israel annually.
UNRWA says “we
are seeing evidence of the stunting of children, their growth is
slowing…” Cancer patients are deprived of their chemotherapy, kidney
patients are cut off from dialysis treatments and premature babies
cannot receive blood-clotting medications, reports Professor Saree
Makdisi in the February 2, 2008 issue of The Nation.
The misery,
mortality and morbidity worsens day by day. Here is how the
commissioner-general of UNRWA sums it up—“Gaza is on the threshold
of becoming the first territory to be intentionally reduced to a
state of abject destitution, with the knowledge, acquiescence
and-some would say-encouragement of the international community.”
Amidst the
swirl of hard-liners on both sides and in both Democratic and
Republican parties, consider the latest poll (February 27, 2008) of
Israelis in the highly respected newspaper—Haaretz: “Sixty-four
percent of Israelis say the government must hold direct talks with
the Hamas government in Gaza toward a cease-fire and the release of
captive soldier Gilad Shalit. Less that one-third (28 percent) still
opposes such talks. An increasing number of public figures,
including senior officers in the Israeli Defense Forces’ reserves
have expressed similar positions on talks with Hamas.”
Hamas, which
was created with the support of Israel and the U.S. government years
ago to counter the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), has
repeatedly offered cease-fire proposals.
Source Site:
http://www.nader.org/index.php?/archives/1261-Gaza-Under-Siege.html#extended
|