|
22 May 2010
By Stephen
Lendman
After Hamas was
overwhelmingly elected in January 2006, Israel,
Washington and the West ended all outside aid, imposed
an economic embargo and sanctions, and politically
isolated the new government.
Stepped up
repression followed, including regular IDF incursions,
bombings, killings, targeted assassinations, arrests,
property destruction, and Israeli-instigated internal
conflict that left Fatah usurping authority in the
West Bank, leaving Gaza alone under Hamas.
In June 2007,
conditions worsened after Israel imposed its siege,
medieval-like, according to some, for its harshness.
Now, nearing its third anniversary, it's still in
place, slowly suffocating and strangling 1.5 million
people, trapped by closed borders, regular incursions
and attacks, and shortages of everything needed to
function and survive. A humanitarian crisis resulted
and continues. The West and most regional states are
culpable, complicit or indifferent to a real time
catastrophe.
Israel's
Policy of Exclusion and Restrictions
The Gisha Legal
Center for Freedom of Movement (www.gisha.org) is a
2005-founded Israeli NGO, "whose goal is to protect
the freedom of movement of Palestinians, especially
Gaza residents" - rights international and Israeli law
guarantee. Yet under 43 years of military occupation,
Palestinian rights have been systematically
compromised, abused, and violated, worst of all in
Gaza under siege.
In January 2010,
Gisha examined the situation in a report titled,
"Restrictions on the transfer of goods to Gaza:
Obstruction and Obfuscation," saying that:
"Beginning in
September 2007, Israel openly stated that it would
restrict the movement of goods into and out of Gaza
(not for security), but (to) apply 'pressure' or
'sanctions' on the Hamas regime."
Earlier, claimed
security concerns were cited - from open borders and
goods through them, including "dual use" ones with
military potential. Hereafter, a limited "humanitarian
minimum" would be permitted excluding everything
deemed not "essential for the survival of the civilian
population."
What followed
were exclusions halting exports, normal economic
activity, production, agriculture, and availability of
commonplace items like shoes, paper, school supplies,
and tea called "luxuries." Gisha called it "economic
warfare (and) collective punishment designed to weaken
the (Gazan) economy as part of its warfare against the
Hamas regime."
Because of
Western complicity and regional indifference, Israel
maintains tight control, squeezing the life out of
Gaza, using Hamas as pretext, a government it doesn't
control like Fatah under Abbas.
In a December
2008 paper titled, "Gaza Closure Defined: Collective
Punishment," Gisha was blunt in calling Israel's
action:
"Not a siege,
not a blockade, not economic sanctions (but an
imposed) closure for purposes of collective punishment
(illegally in place to harm) the civilian population
and civilian institutions by blocking the passage of
goods necessary for health, well-being, and economic
life." It's solely a political act for political gain,
unrelated to security or military necessity.
Linking it to
Hamas' use of rockets, its right to self defense under
international law, is bogus on its face. Claiming
foods, medicines, fuel for electricity and other
essential to life goods relate to security is
outlandish and illegal under international law.
A Gisha May 6
news release said that:
"After 12 months
of unsuccessful (Freedom of Information Act) attempts
(to) obtain (Israeli) documentation about (its) policy
concerning the entry of food and other goods into
(Gaza), and after claiming for many months that no
such documents exist, Israel has finally admitted that
it does indeed possess the information (including) a
list of goods whose admission into (Gaza) is
permitted." More on this below.
In 2009, one of
several Haaretz reports alleged arbitrariness and
corruption in Israel's Gaza policy as well as
vagueness about what constitutes "humanitarian," let
alone the low quantities let in that fall far below
minimally sustainable levels for 1.5 million people.
As a result, other humanitarian aid efforts and Gaza's
tunnel economy supplement to compensate, but never
enough to relieve dire conditions that worsen, not
improve.
Gisha's Obtained
Israeli Documents
They list
policies that include:
(1) "The
procedure for admitting goods into the Gaza Strip,"
that regulates how requests for goods transfers are
processed and updates allowed products.
(2) "The
procedure for monitoring and assessing supply in the
Gaza Strip," that regulates the monitoring of the
supply of goods permitted, ostensibly to prevent
shortages.
(3) "A list of
humanitarian products approved for admission into the
Gaza Strip."
(4) A document
called "Food Needs in Gaza - Red Lines," that
reportedly establishes minimal nutritional
requirements for subsistence, or as Ehud Olmert
advisor Dov Weisglass said in early 2006:
"The idea is to
put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them
die of hunger." In other words, make them suffer
enough to reject Hamas or force its officials to
accede to Israeli demands and function like Fatah as
Tel Aviv's enforcer - and if fail at both, slowly
suffocate and strangle the entire population.
The "Red Lines"
document reportedly establishes minimal nutritional
requirements at below subsistence levels. Unreleased
to the public, it's believed to contain detailed
tables of the number of grams and calories of each
permitted food item by age and gender. Israel refused
to release it, saying the Freedom of Information Act
doesn't require it because it's a "draft document"
that doesn't serve as basis for policy. Gisha
countered by saying:
"This argument
does not provide an answer to the question of how
Israel manages to 'provide effective warning of
expected shortages' of goods in Gaza while continuing
to insist that there is no working document that
defines (their) minimum required quantities. It is not
clear why Israel....chooses to invest so many
resources in the attempt to conceal information....How
is the disclosure that Israel forbids the entry of
sage and ginger, yet allows in cinnamon, related to
security needs?"
Israel balks at
releasing anything for reasons of national security
and its foreign relations (its image), with no further
explanation, except that the information in this case
was so "confidential" that only a court in closed
session should hear it, excluding Gisha attorneys.
Yet what logic
excludes cans containing food, but allows Israeli
produced tomato paste? Or why large tubs of margarine
are embargoed but not individual sticks. Below is a
list of allowed and banned items, subject to arbitrary
changes and permissible quantities.
Wheat, animal
feed, flour, cooking oil, cooking fat, sugar, salt,
pasta, dates, garlic, chickpeas, rice, beans, lentils,
kidney beans, margarine, some dairy products, powdered
milk, frozen meat and fish, frozen vegetables, animal
medicines, gas for medical use, empty bags for flour,
certain medicines and medical equipment, diapers,
toilet paper, detergent, washing liquid, shampoo,
soap, toothpaste, toothbrushes, cleaning products for
tiles and glass, toilet cleaner, yeast, fertilized and
unfertilized eggs, some fruit, semolina, polyethylene
for greenhouses, some agricultural materials, tea,
instant and regular coffee, canned tuna, salami,
canned meat, bath and washing-up sponges, cloths to
mop floors, baby wipes, some canned goods other than
fruit, dried herb mix, black pepper, chicken stock
powder, blankets, olives, matches, candles, sticks for
brooms, rubbish bins, mops, hand cleansing gel,
aniseed, cinnamon, camomile, water dispensers,
potatoes, mineral water, tahini, combs, hair brushes,
shoes, wood for doorposts and window frames, small
amounts of aluminum, and some kitchenware.
Prohibited items
include common ones like sage, cardamon, jam, vinegar,
chocolate, fruit preserves and dried fruit, seeds and
nuts, biscuits and sweets, fresh meat, fabric for
clothing, fishing rods, musical instruments, writing
implements, notebooks, newspapers, toys, razors,
heaters, horses, donkeys, goats, cattle, and chicks.
Any and as many
of the above items can be changed arbitrarily by
military order without further explanation - Israel's
customary practice to harass, abuse and cause harm
enough for Amnesty International (AI) to title its one
year after Operation Cast Lead report, "Failing Gaza:
No rebuilding, no recovery, and no more excuses,"
concluding with a "call to action" for Quartet
members, the EU, Russia, UN and US, to end the
blockade by all available means under international
law to assure that Palestinian rights are restored,
enforced, and assured.
Nothing has been
done so far, AI calling it "a sign of the wider
failure to hold all parties to account for (ongoing)
violations of international law." In January 2009,
former Ireland President and UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights, Mary Robinson said:
"Their whole
civilisation has been destroyed, I'm not
exaggerating....It's almost unbelievable that the
world doesn't care while this is happening." Its
silence makes it complicit.
In June 2009,
Jews for Justice for Palestinians accused Israel of
"deliberating keep(ing) Gaza on the edge of
starvation," based on a Yotam Feldman-Uri Blau Haaretz
investigatory report explaining that Israel's policy
isn't fixed, but continually subject to change at the
whim of the Israeli Coordinator of Government
Activities in the (Occupied) Territories (COGAT).
For example,
after excluding them, carrots and pumpkins were
allowed in. Yet items like cherries, kiwi, green
almonds and pomegranates are prohibited and halvah
most often. At the time, no official approved or
banned items lists were available, COGAT officials
saying only that "Any goods that we allow in, or
prohibit - you'll know about....by phone. That's the
way we work."
A former COGAT
senior officer said:
"If you go back
two years (ago when the blockade began), you see that
it was utter foolishness. There was a vague, unclear
policy, influenced by the interests of certain groups,
by this or that lobby, without any policy that derived
from the needs of the population....What happened was
that Israeli interest took precedence over the needs
of the populace."
They, in turn,
use their tunnel economy to compensate for shortfalls,
but it's never enough to meet needs. Since the
blockade's imposition, the Karni terminal has been
closed. Earlier, over 600 trucks crossed daily. Now
Kerem Shalom crossing handles most goods by conveyor
belt for wheat, seeds and animal feed.
Nissim Jan, a
former Shin Bet agent, profits most as "head of the
crossings department." He built a small empire
profiteering from the siege that includes a logistical
and shipping services company, as well as real estate
deals. He's also erecting a building in the Barnea
area of Ashkelon, apparently partnering with Didi
Yamin, the contractor. In addition, he's closely
connected to Nasser Saraj, in charge of Israel - Gaza
crossings.
According to one
Israeli:
"The services
Jan supplies on both sides of the crossing have made
him one of the most significant figures at Kerem
Shalom."
He says that
"Nothing that happens at the crossings escapes my
notice."
Defense Ministry
sources told Haaretz that they've been checking
complaints about his activities, including charging a
fee for every truck entering Gaza. Jan denies it, yet
he profits both ways by charging Palestinians for
services rendered. He was fined for one incident
involving about 100 tons of cooking gas, reported at
the time to be stolen. He claimed he paid the fine to
say "Leave me alone."
His operation
clarifies an added reason for maintaining the siege -
the fact that Israeli businessmen profiteer from the
misery of 1.5 million people, and do it on both sides
of the border.
Stephen
Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site
at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio
Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are
archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/. |