The vicious and criminal nature of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government was on full display yesterday. He hold his cabinet "We are being asked to ease the living conditions of the population and allow goods and equipment in, but we have other priorities in the Gaza Strip."
This statement came as United Nations investigators were about to enter Gaza to carry out an investigation - with which the Israeli government refuses to cooperate - into Israeli violations of international law.
People of conscience must act now! We are building a movement in solidarity with the people of Gaza. We can't do it without your help. Please make an urgently needed donation.
Just last week, the United Nations - under the headline "Health Conditions Worsening in Gaza" - reported that 30 percent of children below 36 months and 50 percent of pregnant women are now anemic as a result of the complete blockade of petrol and diesel importations, and the importation of "only very limited amounts" of cooking gas since the beginning of November.
This report also stated that "... some 4,000 medical items per day on average could cross into Gaza before the conflict, whereas only 40 items are currently allowed to be imported daily. ... restrictions on building supplies have resulted in damaged health care centres being left in a state of disrepair and a scarcity of paper has led to difficulties in keeping medical records."
This is a direct result of the ongoing U.S.-backed Israeli siege.
The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East is now reporting that, as a consequence of expanded need and a budget "shortfall," they will be reducing already inadquate services, including closing hospitals. This announcement came just one week after the deaths of one-year-old Odai Samir Abu Azzoum and 10-year-old Ribhi Jindiyeh, among many others, in Gaza due to lack of medical supplies and services.
The people of the United States must act to demand that the U.S.-backed Israeli siege of Gaza must end immediately! Please make a donation today.
People from across the East Coast, Midwest and South are making plans to be in D.C. on Saturday, June 6 - the 42nd anniversary of Israel's seizure of Gaza - to stand in solidarity with those still suffering in Gaza and demand an end to the siege. Demonstrations will also take place in California and in other states. We will also stand for all Palestinian people's inalienable right to return to their homes from which they were evicted.
PLEASE NOTE: The June 6th Gaza Solidarity Day activity is being moved to the Israeli Embassy at 3514 International Dr NW. People are asked to gather there at 12 noon (rather than at Freedom Plaza).
The sponsoring organizations, including the ANSWER Coalition, have decided to change the location for the demonstration because June 6 is the 42nd anniversary of the seizure of Gaza and other Arab land by the Israeli state. The new Israeli government, headed by Benjamin Netanyahu, while in Washington, D.C. for meetings, made it clear that his government intends to expand the Israeli settlements throughout the West Bank and just stated explicitly that it will not end, or even ease, the siege. On June 6, worldwide attention will be focused on the efforts of international activists who will be leading humanitarian convoys into Gaza with humanitarian relief. The Israeli government has turned its back on all of the worldwide voices who are demanding an immediate end to the siege of Gaza. The Israeli government is forcing the people of Gaza into perpetual homelessness following the aerial destruction of their homes and neighborhoods in the war of aggression that was launched on December 27, 2008. They are deliberately depriving the civilians population of food, medicine, building supplies and energy resources - all the things necessary to sustain life.
The Israeli Embassy is located at the intersection of International Dr. and Van Ness St., one block from Connecticut Ave. (red line metro to the Van Ness-UDC).
Providing transportation, printing posters and leaflets, and renting sound and stage all costs a great deal. Please do your part today by clicking this link to make a generous online donation, where you can also find out how to contribute by check.
Sponsoring organizations for the June 6 Gaza Solidarity Day include ANSWER Coalition (Act Now to Stop War & End Racism), Muslim American Society (MAS) Freedom, American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), National Council of Arab Americans (NCA), Al-Awda - the Palestine Right to Return Coalition and more!
)
Contact us at (202) 265-1948 or
dc-AT-answercoalition.org to get involved!
Comments
Life in Gaza under Egyptian occupation
06 Jun 2009
When Egypt was in Gaza
When I first visited the Gaza Strip after the Six Day War, I encountered a territory that bore stark witness to Egyptian aggression, callousness and inhumanity. For 19 long years, the area had been run directly by the Egyptian army. Under a "constitution" drawn up by the Egyptians, all legislative powers were invested in the Egyptian military commander, who controlled the civil administration. All political parties, except one endorsed by the Egyptians, were banned. The military governor also acted as the judiciary, and there was no appeal.
There were no elections. A puppet government automatically ratified all legislation that the governor brought before it. In 1965, even this façade of local autonomy collapsed when the Egyptian army dismissed the legislature.
The secret police probed everywhere. No one was immune from sudden arrest and unlimited imprisonment without trial or, at best, a secret trial. The jails were always full and torture was common. There was official censorship of the press and mail, and telephone lines were regularly tapped.
For nearly 19 years, the inhabitants of the Strip were prohibited from leaving their homes from 9 p.m. until dawn on pain of death. This curfew was enforced by roadblocks. Men between 18 and 40 were prohibited from traveling to Egypt unless they were fortunate enough to secure permits. If they failed to return at the expiration of their permit, the military authorities took steps against their families.
The Egyptians seized property at will, while refugees were prohibited from owning land. Thousands of young refugees were forcibly conscripted into the Egyptian army. Many were sent to fight Gamal Abdel Nasser's war in Yemen; others were sent into Israel to murder, sabotage and disrupt communications.
Three-quarters of the able-bodied were unemployed. Medical and social services were almost nonexistent The Egyptians did nothing to help farmers, create housing or develop industry. The majority of Arabs in the Strip outside the town of Gaza were left to rot, without sewage, running water, electricity or roads.
INDOCTRINATION TO HATRED of Israel started at the very tenderest years. I saw pictures which children had drawn, with the encouragement of their teachers, depicting themselves killing Israeli children. The textbooks dripped venom. One text for the third grade, entitled Arabic Islamic History read: "The Jews are always the same, in every time, every place. They live only in darkness. They secretly plan to do evil; they fight only from hidden places because they are cowards. We must purify holy Palestine from their filth in order to bring peace back to the Arab homeland."
So harsh was the Egyptian rule in Gaza that Radio Mecca broadcast this protest on March 10, 1962:
"We would like to ask Cairo: What is this iron curtain that Abdel Nasser and his cohorts have lowered around Gaza and the refugees there? These are the very methods which the dictator Hitler used in the countries he occupied. Imagine, Arabs, how Nasser (who claims to be the pioneer of Arab nationalism) treats the Arab people of Gaza, who starve while the Egyptian governor and his officers bask in the wealth of the Strip..."
THE ONLY AREA in which the Egyptian army was active, aside from suppressing human rights, was in smuggling. There was a lively trade between its warehouses in Gaza - stuffed with television sets, French perfumes, Italian silks and US whiskey - and Cairo, with the cooperation of top officials in Egypt. Long convoys would arrive in Cairo biweekly loaded with contraband. When the Israeli forces captured Gaza in 1956 they found these warehouses. (Predictably the military governor and his cohorts had skipped with all the savings that Gazans had deposited in local banks.)
Egypt's policy for the Strip was succinctly spelled out by the deputy governor, Muhammad Flafaga, in an interview appearing in the Danish newspaper Aktuelt on February 9, 1967:
Question: Why not send the refugees to other Arab countries? Syria would no doubt be able to absorb a vast number of them. Are you afraid that national bonds with Palestine will be loosened, that the hatred against Israel will vanish if they become ordinary citizens?
Answer: As a matter of fact, you are right. Syria could take all of them, and the problem would be solved. But we do not want that. They are to return to Palestine.
UNRWA reported in 1956: "One of the obstacles to the achievement of the General Assembly's goal of making the refugees self-supporting continues to be the opposition of the governments in the area."
Ralph Galloway, an UNRWA official who quit in frustration, observed bitterly: "The Arab states don't want to solve the refugee problem. They want to keep it as an open sore, as a weapon against Israel. Arab leaders don't give a damn whether the refugees live or die."
The writer is a veteran journalist.
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite%...