The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #122051 Message #2671829
Posted By: CarolC
05-Jul-09 - 01:10 AM
Thread Name: BS: Cynthia McKinney in Israeli prison
Subject: RE: BS: Cynthia McKinney in Israeli prison
The people of Gaza as well as the people of the West Bank and East Jerusalem are living under military occupation and are in the process of being ethnically cleansed from their homes and land, and are living under apartheid, all of which is imposed on them by the government of Israel. Our news media reports endlessly about the struggles of the people in Iran to have greater freedom and democracy, and about those who are killed and arrested by the government of Iran. The news media in the US and to a somewhat lesser extent in other parts of the West are mostly silent when non-violent protesters are killed by the government of Israel, even when they are British and American. Not terrorists, but non-violent protesters.
Our media sing the praises of protesters in Iran who are photographed and filmed throwing stones, while making excuses for the government of Israel when it kills Palestinian protesters who throw stones. According to our media in the West, if you're an Iranian, throwing a stone is congratulated as a great act of courage. If you are a Palestinian, throwing a stone qualifies you for the death penalty.
When an Iranian is shot to death by the government of Iran during a protest in that country, we treat it as a great tragedy and we endlessly sing the praises of the one killed. When a Palestinian is shot to death by the government of Israel during a non-violent protest, we completely ignore it.
It's definitely true that the situations in the two countries are different. In Iran, the government is certainly repressive, but it nevertheless regards its citizens as human beings with some rights. In the case of Israeli and Western treatment of Palestinians, the Palestinians do not have the status of human being, and they do not have any rights whatever. Their struggle is no less valid or urgent than that of the people in Iran. It is more so, in fact.
The fact that the government of Israel seeks to prevent people from entering Gaza by boat proves the lie that Israel has withdrawn from Gaza. If the occupation of Gaza has ended, that would mean that people could enter and leave Gaza by boat any time they wanted to as long as the Palestinian government in Gaza said they could.
This is what humanitarian organizations have to say about the blockade (as of June 20)...
RAMALLAH, Jun 20 (IPS) - Forty international aid agencies and NGOs have released a joint statement condemning Israel's blockade of Gaza, to mark the second anniversary of the coastal territory being hermetically sealed off from the outside world.
"We, United Nations and non-governmental humanitarian organisations, express deepening concern over Israel's continued blockade of the Gaza Strip which has now been in force for two years.
"These indiscriminate sanctions are affecting the entire 1.5 million population of Gaza, and ordinary women, children and the elderly are the first victims," read the statement, to mark the anniversary Wednesday.
Simultaneously, an increasingly concerned U.S. administration is pressuring Israel to change its Gaza policy and alleviate unnecessary suffering. Three weeks ago U.S. officials sent a diplomatic letter to Israeli government officials expressing alarm at the deteriorating humanitarian crisis in Gaza...
...Israel started a gradual blockade of Gaza's borders when the second Intifadah, or Palestinian uprising, broke out in 2000. The closure was tightened when Israeli corporal Gilad Shalit was captured by Hamas fighters in June 2006.
However, following Hamas's coup in June 2007, when the Islamic resistance organisation routed western-backed Fatah forces affiliated with Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas, Israel hermetically sealed off the coastal territory.
Israel allows in only a bare amount of humanitarian aid. Most food products and other goods, including construction material desperately needed to rebuild Gaza's infrastructure devastated by Israeli bombing during the war in January, are forbidden...
..."The situation is desperate, devastating and unbearable. Each day that passes brings more misery and suffering," said John Ging, head of Gaza's UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), one of the signatories to the joint statement.
When asked what good the statement would do in light of years of complaints falling on deaf ears, Ging told IPS, "We will not give up telling the truth. We have a responsibility to innocent civilians.
"We are convinced that if the policy and decision makers behind the blockade could witness the situation in Gaza first-hand, they would change their minds. Those who don't believe what we are saying, we invite them to come to Gaza and see the situation for themselves first hand."
"We were determined to mark the two-year sealing of the borders with a coordinated effort," said Mike Bailey of Oxfam, another signatory to the statement.
Bailey expressed frustration at the ever-changing list of goods Israel allows in. School textbooks, clothes, shoes, toys, lentils, pasta, pumpkin, fruit juice, chocolate, cigarettes, toilet paper, musical instruments and seedlings are amongst the items banned.
"Every month the list changes, so we are not sure what will and won't be permitted to enter the following month, and this makes it harder to coordinate relief," Bailey told IPS.
A decision by the Israeli government in March to enable unrestricted entry of all foodstuffs provided the source is approved by the Israeli authorities, has not been implemented.
Human rights groups argue that there is no security basis for the list of banned goods. The U.S. administration has taken this argument up and demanded answers from Israel.
A U.S. protest note, sent to Israel's foreign and defence ministries, and to the Prime Minister's office, demanded a more liberal opening of the border crossings to facilitate reconstruction.
The U.S. first wants adequate amounts of food, medicine and cash to be transferred into the territory. It also wants the borders to be opened sufficiently to allow imports and exports to rebuild Gaza's decimated economy.
According to a UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) report released Jun. 15, the number of truckloads of humanitarian goods entering Gaza on a monthly basis now is a quarter of the number that entered prior to Israel's blockade.
In May, 82 drug items in Gaza were at zero level, up from 65 in April. At the same time, 95 disposable items had reached zero level, up slightly from 90 in the previous month.
During May, the World Health Organisation (WHO) coordinated the entry of one shipment of medical drugs or disposables, while another four shipments of materials were put on hold by the Israeli authorities. The latter shipments contain x-ray materials, as well as medical and IT equipment.
Petrol, apart from small quantities for UNRWA, and to operate emergency generators at wastewater treatment plants and hospitals, has been banned since November last year. Gaza is instead relying on deep underground smuggling tunnels from Egypt for both petrol and other essentials. (END/2009)