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Analysis : Middle
East
Israel tightens the siege of Gaza
By Rick Kelly
7 August 2006
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While the worlds media has focused attention on Israels
four-week offensive in Lebanon, a no less ferocious assault is
also underway in Gaza. The Palestinian territorys 1.4 million
residents have been subjected to an unrelenting Israeli military
offensive, as well as an air, land, and sea blockade which threatens
a humanitarian catastrophe.
Seizing upon the pretext of the capture of Corporal Gilad Shalit
by Palestinian militants on June 25, the Israeli military has
mounted a six-week campaign aimed at annihilating the West Bank
and Gazas entire social, economic, and political infrastructure.
According to figures published in last Saturdays Haaretz,
Israeli ground forces have fired 12,000 artillery shells into
Gaza in the past five weeks. This is an average of more than 300
shells a day. In addition, at least 220 aerial strikes take place
each day. Israeli ground forces, including infantry, tanks, and
bulldozers have launched regular incursions into the area. This
firepower is concentrated on one of the worlds most densely
populated areas, which is seven times smaller than Rhode Island,
the smallest US state.
In the latest bombardment, Israeli forces have launched a sustained
operation in Rafah in south Gaza over the past five days. Tanks
and soldiers have taken over the area, conducting house-to-house
searches, and destroying greenhouses and farmlands. Eight Palestinians
were killed Saturday. At least three of these were civiliansincluding
an eight-year-old boywho were bombed as they fled Israeli
gunfire.
Raids and assassinations have also taken place in the West
Bank. In the latest provocation, two Hamas legislators, on of
them Abdel Aziz Duaik, the speaker of the parliament, were kidnapped
on the weekend. Israel has now imprisoned 33 parliamentarians,
including eight Hamas cabinet members.
The Israeli military actions in Gaza and the West Bank demonstrate
that its offensive has nothing to do with recovering the captured
soldier, or with preventing terrorism. The government
of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has rejected repeated Hamas offers
of a ceasefire, and has refused to accept proposals by Palestinian
militants for a prisoner exchange. Every Palestinian offer is
met with renewed Israeli bombardment.
Countless war crimes have been committed in Gaza. An investigation
by the Israeli human rights organisation BTselem found that
half of all those killed in the territory last month178
peoplewere civilians. Hundreds of others have suffered terrible
injuries. At one Gaza hospital, surgeons told the BBC that of
100 operations, one-third were amputations caused by Israeli attacks.
There are many more mutilations requiring amputations
as well as severe burns now than there were before, William
Dufourcq from the aid organisation Médecins du Monde reported.
This means the hospitals stay full for longer and there
is a greater need for skilled specialists as well as more drugs,
which were already in short supply. These people will be handicapped
for life.
July was the bloodiest month in the Occupied Territories since
April 2002. In an indication of the one-sided nature of the war,
just one Israeli soldier has been killed in the past five weeks,
and that was in a friendly-fire incident.
BTselem also catalogued a series of incidents in which
Palestinian civilians, including children and the elderly, had
been deliberately bombed by Israeli fighter planes and helicopters.
Just as in Lebanon, Israels offensive is calculated to terrorise
the entire population and suppress all resistance to the Israeli
occupation.
In a new tactic, the Israeli army now telephones Palestinian
residents and warns them to flee their home just moments before
it is bombed. While the military claims that this practice is
designed to reduce civilian casualties, it is in fact intended
to instil fear into the thousands of families who receive such
calls.
Some families, convinced by such calls, have left their
homes at two oclock in the morning only to see them bombed
directly by Israeli F-16 fighters, Al-Ahram Weekly
reported. Others have abandoned their homes and seen them
stand untouched. So fearful are they that they refuse to return
in case bombings are merely delayed.
The IDF has also dropped leaflets in many areas of Gaza demanding
that people flee their homes. With every border sealed off, however,
there is nowhere for people to go. That there is not an exodus
from the Palestinian territory equivalent to that in Lebanon is
due to the fact that Gazan residents are hemmed in on all sides
by Israel.
The Israeli blockade has greatly exacerbated the humanitarian
crisis in the Occupied Territories. Nine UN humanitarian organisations
working in Gaza last week issued a joint statement expressing
their deep alarm at the impact of the ongoing violence.
We are concerned that with international attention focusing
on Lebanon, the tragedy in Gaza is being forgotten, the
statement read.
One aid organisation reported that Israel was permitting just
150 food and aid trucks into Gaza each dayjust enough to
keep the population from starving. More than 400 daily truckloads
are estimated to be required to meet peoples nutritional
needs and provide some measure of food security.
Gaza is also suffering from worsening power and fuel shortages.
Israel destroyed the territorys only electricity station
on June 28. Some Palestinian homes receive 6 to 8 hours of electricity
each day, while others face constant blackouts. Several hospitals
rely on generators to operate minimal services but are running
out of fuel. Many medical services and operations have been cancelled,
while hospitals food supplies, medicines, blood banks, and
vaccines have been destroyed, as refrigerators no longer work.
Israeli attacks on Gazas infrastructure have also caused
water shortages and damaged sewerage systems. Humanitarian organisations
have warned of epidemics as a result of the increasingly unsanitary
conditions in the territory.
Gazas economy has been crippled by Israeli border closures,
and destruction of infrastructure, factories, and farmlands. Poverty
and unemployment have skyrocketted, following the imposition of
the Israeli and international financial embargo of the Palestinian
Authority following Hamass victory in the January elections.
Many of the PAs 140,000 employees have not received their
wages in months.
The UNs World Food Program has increased the number of
people it feeds by 38 percent since the beginning of the year.
Shortages have led to price rises, making basic foodstuffs unaffordable
and threatening mass malnutrition. The cost of wheat flour, for
example, has increased by 15 percent since January. Other foods
have entirely disappeared from markets. Fish is no longer available
due to an Israeli ban on Palestinian fishing, which has also eliminated
the income of about 35,000 people.
As in Lebanon, Israels war crimes in the Occupied Territories
have received the full backing of the US. Washington has failed
to even issue the once customary calls for restraint
on both sides. The Bush administration makes no secret of the
fact that it considers the destruction of all Palestinian resistance
to the Israeli occupation an essential part of its drive to forge
a new Middle East under US domination. This is why
Israel feels free to continue its onslaught on Gaza.
See Also:
US-Israeli war aim is to annihilate Lebanon
[5 August 2006]
Israel steps up military offensive
in Gaza
[28 July 2006]
Israel deepens offensive in
Occupied Territories
[21 July 2006]
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