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Analysis : Middle
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Israel moves to impede UN relief to Palestinians
By Jean Shaoul
20 October 2004
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Israel has mounted a political campaign based on lies against
the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), alleging that
it has aided Palestinian terrorists.
The aim of the Israeli government is to discredit the attempts
of the United Nationsfeeble as they areto expose the
crimes being committed by Israel in the occupied territories,
and prevent UNRWA from delivering aid to the Palestinians. Not
accidentally, the smear against UNRWA coincides with Israels
military offensive against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
Israels Operation Days of Penitence has left more than
100 dead, mostly unarmed civilians, including children, and many
more injured. This is more than the total number of Israeli losses
since the start of 2004. It has been carried out ostensibly in
retaliation for five Israeli fatalities.
The latest campaign and the accompanying offensive of lies
and provocations is aimed at starving the Palestinians into submission
or driving them out of the Gaza Strip, while at the same time
ensuring that there are no witnesses to report what is happening
on the ground.
It flows organically from Prime Minister Ariel Sharons
determination to expand Israels borders at the expense of
the Palestinians and his knowledge that he has the full backing
of the Bush administration, which has nothing but contempt for
international law and does not hesitate to flout the UN when it
cuts across US interests.
Last September, the Israeli security forces overrode international
conventions and imposed restrictions on UNRWA staffs freedom
of movement through the Erez crossing between Israel and the Gaza
Strip. They forced international staff holding UN Laissez-Passers
to get out of their vehicles and cross on foot through the Palestinian
terminals. Since the UN could not possibly expose its staff to
such dangers, the effect was to prevent UN international staff
from crossing in and out of Gaza.
Even after UN staff on their way to Tel Aviv airport had been
given explicit permission by the UN Designated Official for Security,
Israeli security forces subjected them to humiliating searches.
As a result of Israeli restrictions, UNRWAs international
staff have left Gaza for Israel.
On October 1, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) released a video
to the international press that it claimed showed a UN vehicle
transporting a Qassem rocket and alleged that the UN was
aiding Palestinian terrorists. Palestinian militants have used
home-made Qassem rockets against Israeli settlements. Although
the overwhelming majority of these rockets have been ineffectual,
one killed two children, sparking Operation Days of Penitence.
Under conditions in which the IDF was killing and maiming hundreds
of Palestinians, bulldozing their homes and terrorising the population,
the accusation against the UN agency was calculated to give the
IDF a green light to shoot at UNRWA ambulances and other aid vehicles.
Israels claim was risible. Even Israeli viewers could
see through the grainy images on their TV screens that the alleged
weapon was not a rocket. The clipping showed an UNRWA ambulance
and one of its three-member crew carrying a long, thin, light
object that he threw easily into the back of the ambulance. The
object was a folded stretcher.
As UNRWAs commissioner general, Peter Hansen, explained,
While the quality of the video clip is poor, its analysis
showed beyond a shadow of a doubt that the object carried and
thrown into the vehicle is not and cannot be a Qassem rocket.
I have been told that a Qassem rocket weighs at least 32 kg and
its diameter is approximately 17 cm. On neither count does the
object shown in the film correspond in the least to this description.
It is much thinner, longer and obviously much lighter than a rocket.
In my mind, and in that of those whom I have consulted, it is
clearly a folded stretcher, a logical and indispensable accessory
in any ambulance.
Hansen demanded an apology from the Sharon government. UNRWA
warned that these malicious allegations were a prelude to more
aggressive behaviour by Israel towards the UN in general and UN
humanitarian staff in particular that would endanger the lives
of UN personnel.
The IDF was forced to make a humiliating climb-down and remove
the video clipping from its web site. IDF Chief of Operations
Israel Yiv said, The IDF is not free of mistakes.
In a truly bizarre moment, when asked about whether the object
was a rocket or a stretcher, he replied, I suggest we dont
deal with the object but rather with the context.
Undeterred by the lack of evidence, Ziv not only refused to
apologise for the false allegations, but continued the attack
on UNRWA, saying that regardless of what the filmed object actually
was, UNRWA employees are exploiting the organisations
vehicles in order to support terror-related activities.
Hansen said that this was not the first time Israel had made
false allegations against UNRWA. Israel had targeted UNRWA and
Hansen whenever extensive Israeli military incursions into the
Palestinian occupied territories had resulted in large-scale casualties.
A few months earlier, two cabinet ministers had said publicly
that UNRWA ambulances were carrying the body parts of Israeli
soldiers. When challenged to produce evidence to back up their
claim, or retract their statement and apologise, the ministers
remained silent.
On other occasions, Israel complained that Hansen had exaggerated
reports of house demolitions by the IDF in Rafah and had denounced
Israel in strong language.
On October 5, with its story of UNRWA carrying weapons for
terrorists exposed as a fabrication, the IDF made another false
claim. General Yisrael Ziv announced that the IDF had detained
13 UNRWA staff in Gaza who were to be indicted on suspicion of
links to terrorism. This too turned out to be false.
Army spokesman Captain Jacob Dalal said that the words had
been taken out of context, and that the detentions had, in fact,
taken place over the last four years.
Some idea of the breach of international law and the intimidation
of UN staff carried out by Israel can be seen from a statement
by UN officials in New York. It said that in the 12 months to
June 2004, 34 UNRWA staff had been arrested or detained by the
Israeli authorities in the West Bank and Gaza. Most had been held
without charge, and UNRWA had received no official information
about the reasons for their detentions.
Hansen became embroiled in a separate controversy when he acknowledged
in a Canadian media interview that some of UNRWAs 24,000
Palestinian staff were probably members of Hamas, the Palestinian
Islamic party. Im sure that there are Hamas members
on the UNRWA payroll, Hansen said.
He continued, I dont see that as a crime. Hamas
as a political organisation does not mean that every member is
a militant and we do not do political vetting and exclude people
from one persuasion as against another. We demand our staff, whatever
their political persuasion, behave in accordance with UN standards
and norms for neutrality.
Israel has sought to use this and the Qassem rocket affair
to get rid of Hansen and discredit the whole UNRWA operation.
Israels ambassador to the UN, Dan Gilerman, sent a letter
to UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan demanding Hansens dismissal,
protesting at Hamass alleged use of UN vehicles to smuggle
arms and terrorists through the Gaza Strip, and insisting on an
investigation.
It had the desired effect. The Canadian Foreign Ministry issued
a statement that if it turns out that Hansens statements
were not taken out of context, and in case they represent the
position of UNRWA, we are deeply concerned and will request clarifications
from Mr. Hansen and the UN.
Canada contributes $50 million annually to UNRWA, and in November
2002 placed both the political and military wings of Hamas on
its list of terrorist organisations, making any assistance to
the group by a Canadian citizen illegal. It could use Israels
false allegations to end its contributions to UNRWA.
Far from rejecting the claims outright and demanding that Israel
stop its attacks and provocations against UNRWA, UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan announced that he would send a team to investigate
the accusations.
The UN established UNRWA as a temporary humanitarian agency
in 1949 in the aftermath of the establishment of the state of
Israel that led to the expulsion and flight of more 700,000 Palestinians
from their homes in the British Mandate territory of Palestine.
Its role is to provide relief and aid to the Palestinian refugees.
As a temporary agency that reports directly to the UN General
Assembly, its charter is up for renewal in June 2005.
The registered refugees dating from 1948 and their descendants,
plus those made refugees after the 1967 war, live in the West
Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon, or Syria and now number 4.1 million.
But this considerably underestimates the number of those displaced
by Israel, since it covers only those who lost both their homes
and their means of livelihood.
Since the Palestinians were to receive assistance from UNRWA,
they were explicitly and intentionally excluded from the international
refugee law established under a 1951 convention and from the provenance
of the United Nations Human Rights Commission. Donations have
not kept pace with inflation and the rising refugee population.
This has led to a fall in annual spending per refugee from $200
in 1975 to $79 in 2004.
Given its fragile funding basis, UNRWA has been forced to launch
repeated appeals for emergency funding. While its expected budget
for this year is $350 million, the shortfall in actual contributions
led to an emergency appeal for $193 million in June 2004.
UNRWA is responsible for running its education, health, and
relief and social services, which are located inside and outside
the refugee camps. It provides temporary employment to local workers
in its various relief and social programmes.
More than half its budget is spent on education programmes.
But Israels continuing military offensive against the Palestinians
in the occupied territories has disrupted education at all levels.
Enrolment has declined and various programmes have been cut back
due to lack of funding.
UNRWA is also responsible for the largest food aid programme
in the West Bank and Gaza, with more than 188,000 families receiving
food parcels in the six-month period to June 2004. But in the
West Bank, curfews and closures imposed by Israel have resulted
in food distribution being disrupted on 22 occasions.
The shortage in funds means that UNRWA is able to provide only
40 percent of nutritional requirements, instead of the 60 percent
that is the agencys standard. Withdrawal of food parcels
led to protests in some parts of the West Bank.
House demolitions by the Israeli army between September 2000
and June 2004 have left more than 21,000 people in Gaza homeless.
More than 17,000 of these were registered refugees, adding to
the work of the agency.
UNRWAs operations support officers (OSOs) have been crucial
in ensuring some minimal emergency relief to Palestinians in Gaza
and monitoring the humanitarian impact of the deteriorating situation
and the consequences of Israels security wall in the West
Bank. In Gaza, OSOs have escorted UNRWA trucks as they distributed
emergency food and water after Israeli military attacks. In the
West Bank, 200,000 have lost their land, access to water, agricultural
resources, and services under Phase I of the wall.
A recent UNRWA report documented the way that Israel has harassed
the agency and prevented it from carrying out its work. In one
incident, the IDF requisitioned UNRWAs compound in Tulkarm,
detaining about 200 women and children overnight in the building,
along with 10 UNRWA staff. On May 20, UNRWAs warehouse in
Rafah, its main distribution centre and emergency relief coordination
point, had to stop for one day after it came under sustained IDF
fire and was damaged by IDF tanks. On some occasions, the IDF
has even used UNRWA facilities as cover during its military attacks.
See Also:
Israeli offensive in Gaza kills, wounds
hundreds
[5 October 2004]
Israel targets Palestinians,
threatens Syria
[11 September 2004]
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