Edition 2: No. 49
Gaza under barbaric attack yet again
Once again, Israel has chosen the worst form of military conduct – ruthlessly blasting Gaza. Israel has obviously learned nothing from the lessons of Operation Cast Lead. In fact the ongoing strikes resemble what Israel did in 2008-2009 when no less than 1400 people were killed and subsequent investigations accused Israel of committing serious crimes. Already reports have it that Israel has destructed 800 targets in the Gaza Strip, 40 Palestinians have been killed most of whom are women and children. The air strikes and preparation on land are similar to the preparation of Israel’s last intervention to Gaza in 2008-2009.
Israel’s reliable ally- the western media- is perpetuating Israel’s lies with stories that pretend that Israel is victim of hostilities from Hamas fighters in Gaza and hence the retaliation. There is not much else one can expect from the western media controlled, as it is, by Zionist interests.
In Gaza, hospitals run into frenzied and disturbing scenes, as passages and rooms become congested with people trying to ascertain whether their relatives or neighbours have been hurt. There is panic and fear. People everywhere are looking for missing relatives. No one knows where the next missile will hit; no one knows where they can be safe. Parents are unable to keep their children safe, let alone provide them a sense of security. The hospitals in Gaza are having a hard time coping with all the wounded coming in. Medical supplies are running low. One report claims that Israel launched 30 air raids against Gaza in 10 minutes, 20 wounded. Fear and panic storm Gaza, children suffer severe trauma. 13 Palestinians wounded in northern Gaza as Israeli naval boats open fire. The Israeli military boasted carried out more than 500 air strikes against the densely populated territory of Gaza since launching its latest offensive, dubbed Pillar of Defense. The escalating air war is unfolding amid growing signs that the Israeli government is on the brink of launching a ground invasion of Gaza that would spell a huge increase in the bloodletting. The relentless bombardment has resulted in widespread destruction and carnage.
Under pressure, even churches and international NGOs – those who know the truth about Palestine – are calling for restraint from ‘both sides’, thus making this out to be an equal war between two enemies who have equally wronged each other. But this is an asymmetric situation. Israel is not merely the superior military power (aided and abetted by the US and Europe); it is the occupier of Palestinian territories. It is Israel that has converted the Gaza Strip into an open air prison that houses some 1.6 million people under atrocious circumstances. It has imposed an economic blockade against the people leaving starved for the essentials of life and dependent on aid that must be funnelled through Israel. The people of Gaza have borne it all to the extent they can.
Pragmatists would deem the rocket attacks on Israeli territory unnecessary but only because the retaliation is disproportionate and the suffering inflicted on innocent people severe. Helped by the smuggled goods trade through tunnels from Egypt, Gaza militias have smuggled in longer-range rockets. But their estimated 35,000 fighters are still no match for Israel’s F-16 fighter-bombers, Apache helicopter gun ships, Merkava tanks and other modern weapons systems in the hands of a conscript force of 175,000, with 450,000 in reserve.
There would be no rockets flying into Israel had Israel done the politically moral thing to do – de-occupy and hand Palestine back to the Palestinians according to pre-1967 borders. Yet, resistance is a right that Israel – nor any imperial power – can deny to the Palestinian.
The UN Security Council has proven once again that it is impotent. It has failed to silence the guns and tell Israel that the onus is on its government to restart and complete the peace process in line with UN resolutions and international law. Israel treats the UN with contempt because it has the United States and the United Kingdom on its side. To the US and UK, justice can be dispensed with when their interests are at stake. The Zionists control them and they are too afraid to act justly and with any sense of political morality. In fact the notion of political morality seems to have vanished from the political lexicon of these nations- as well as many European countries and the EU itself. As far as Obama is concerned, one must expect a nil account in the peace process. He is a slave of the Zionists and does not have either the courage or conviction to stand up to their lobbies. In any case, he does not run America. The corporates do- and many are the Zionists who constitute their ranks.
The Palestinians have invested far too much trust in the West- hoping against hope that somehow they will do the right thing. 45 years of occupation should have served as enough time for Europe to abandon its sense of guilt over the holocaust and prevent the ongoing holocaust and ethnic purging of Palestinians from their homes and villages.
The international community has failed the Palestinians for far too long. Arab neighbours have betrayed the Palestinians preferring to protect themselves from what might come from antagonizing the USA. Such is the bullying capacity of the US. That, of course, is the essential character of a ‘rogue’ state- to browbeat potential antagonists into submission and co-opt them to their way of thinking.
These are not easy days to be a Palestinian. People, in general, live in fear not knowing when their homes may be demolished, when someone in their home will be arrested, detained, and tried in ‘kangaroo courts’ on false charges and, of course, imprisoned unfairly under harsh conditions. Or, for that matter, when they will be expelled or punished in a myriad of ways that Israel has acquired expertise in inventing.
Just before the current fighting escalated, thirteen-year-old Ahmad Abu Daqqa was killed outside his southeast Gaza home while playing football. According to the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR), the life of the football-obsessed 13-year-old was cut short when a bullet fired by Israeli soldiers stationed nearby hit him in the stomach. So much so for barbarity with impunity!
“If I believed in miracles,” declared David Ben-Gurion in an October 1956 Knesset speech, “I would pray that Gaza would be washed down into the sea.” After 1967, Gaza’s inhabitants not only remained above water but came under direct Israeli rule. Today, Gaza has become living hell. And yet, they will not surrender to Israel bullets and rockets. They may not be able to hit back. With Oslo, they surrendered their right to resist using armed resistance. They believed that peace was around the corner. Now, they must rely on crude weapons, an underground economy, and charity to keep afloat.
Palestine Update shares with you an eye-witness account from Adie Mormech is a human rights advocate based in the Gaza Strip. He contributed the report (below) to the Palestine Chronicle. It is a stirring account of what takes place on-the-ground.
The least well meaning people can do is to make their voices heard through protests and strongly worded letters to the Israeli authorities in their countries. It may not silence Israel guns, but it will certainly convey the displeasure of a critical mass that says to Israel: End the occupation. Free Palestine!
In solidarity,
Ranjan Solomon
Gaza, Now: Future is Uncertain
By Adie Mormech – Gaza City*
I’m writing this from near the Gaza seaport from where I can see smoke rising around me from the bombs that fall down on the Gaza Strip from the Israeli planes above. Words fail me. Despite the limits to life from Israel’s five-year siege on Gaza some kind of normality is attempted in Gaza. How could it be any other way when the majority of the population are children, do parents and older siblings have any other option?
Yet this civilian population, most now holed out in the dense, tight refugee camp buildings and urban centres of Gaza are facing the wrath of some of the most powerful aerial warfare available to humankind. As I write the constant bombardments consume your senses and shake the entirety of your surroundings. For the over 300 people injured or killed so far by the Israeli F16s, drones and Gunboat shellings the loss for them and their families will never relent.
I can barely write a sentence and more news, “six injuries from a bombing in Sheikh Radwan, children among them, including a 4-year old child who was playing in the street.”, “Elderly man just killed in Zaytoun neighbourhood, with 4 injuries”. Friends have received text messages from the Israeli Occupation Forces saying in Arabic, “Stay away from Hamas the second phase is coming.”
Twelve year old Abdullah Samouni, who I teach English to in Zeitoun camp called me a little while ago. “We’re really scared”, he said. We moved to get away to Zeitoun and went to our grandmother’s house. Take care of yourself, there are so many bombs.” Abdullah lost his father and four year old brother shot by Israeli soldiers entering their house in the land offensive of Israel’s Cast Lead attacks on Gaza over the new year of 2009. In three days, he was injured and lost 29 members of his extended family. His mother Zeinat has moved her seven remaining children to a town further north, but bombs are raining down all over the Gaza Strip.
“We moved everyone out but bombing is so bad here. All of the kids are screaming. Whenever an attack happens they come and hold me. The children remembered what happened before, they think only the worst.” said Zeinat who like so many has had to put aside her own fears and tragedy to show strength for her children.
Seeing Western media continue to distort the picture of what is happening here, just as they did during the massacres that took place during Israel’s Cast Lead attacks, and any other offensive described as “retaliation” made my call with Abdullah all the more angry. This year from January 1st until November 6th this year 71 Palestinians were killed and 291 injured in Gaza, while no Israelis were killed and 19 were injured according to the United Nations. How many Western media outlets offer proportionate time to Palestinian victims as to Israeli victims?
Just as the Israeli forces initiated the pretence for the Cast Lead attacks, this time the Israeli army’s initial attack took place on Thursday 8th November with an Israeli incursion into Gaza, in Abassan village. They opened fire indiscriminately and leveled areas of Palestinian land. The shooting from Israeli military vehicles seriously wounded 13-year-old Ahmed Younis Khader Abu Daqqa while he was playing football with friends, and he died the next day of his injuries.
On the 10th November, Palestinian resistance fighters attacked an Israeli army jeep patrolling the border with Gaza, injuring 4 Israeli occupation soldiers.
Israeli forces then targeted civilian areas, killing two more teenagers playing football, then bombed the gathering that was mourning their deaths, killing two more. Five civilians were killed and two resistance fighters, including three children. Fifty-two others, including six women and twelve children were wounded. For Gaza to be under such attack, could anyone doubt that resistance forces would fire back? Once Israeli forces had carried out further bombardments, one of which was the extra-judicial killing of the Hamas military commander Ahmed Jabari, the circle was complete.
Since then during the last three days 29 Palestinians have been killed and three Israelis. The majority of Palestinian victims were civilians of which six were children. More than 270 have been injured of whom 134 are children and women. The vast majority are civilians. The number is rapidly rising.
Even this comparison is detached from the context that Gaza is under Israeli military occupation, illegal according to United Nations Resolutions and a five-year blockade, deemed collective punishment by all major human rights organisations, violating article 33 of the Geneva Conventions. The right to resist enforced military occupation by a foreign force is also enshrined in international law, a right that should be self-evident.
Which explained the jubilance from Palestinians in Gaza when rumours spread that one of the rockets which usually hit open land, this time brought down an Israeli F16 fighter jet, the likes of which had carried out over 600 airstrikes all over the Gaza Strip these last three days.
Indeed, our visits to hospitals didn’t take long to convince us that these Israeli aerial attacks and shelling from gunships have hit many civilian areas.
At the main Al-Shifa hospital, Gaza City, every ten minutes more people arrived in ambulances; an elderly man, a young man, a child, two more children. Once leaving the injured, the stretcher gets a new towel and is sprinted back out for the courageous paramedics of the Palestinian Red Crescent to go back out into the danger zones, to find the latest victims of attacks.
There weren’t many beds free in the intensive care unit where some had brain injuries from embedded shrapnel. While we were there, rushing in came a tiny child, ten month old girl, Haneen Tafesh. She had very little colour or life in her and was rolled on to the hospital bed. She had suffered a brain haemorrhage and a fractured skull. Later that evening we learned that she hadn’t survived.
Talking to the Director General of Al-Shifa, Dr Mithad Abbas he asked, “We know Israel has the most precision and advanced weaponry. So why are all these children coming in?” He stated that if casualties increased there would be a severe lack basic medicines and supplies, such as antibiotics, IV fluid, anaesthesia, gloves, catheters, external fixators, Heparin, sutures, detergents and spare parts for medical equipment. What’s more electricity blackouts would hit hard, without enough finance for suitable fuel for generators.
Once again as I write five huge blasts from nearby shake our building and our senses. The bombings have progressively escalated, especially once night falls. Jabaliya refugee camp, Shejaiya, Rafah and Meghazi I learned had been under a continuous barrage. One blast came down during an interview with a Canadian radio station which helped the audience to understand more than I could.
A 13 year old girl, Duaa Hejazi was hit in Sabra neighbourhood as she walked back home with family. Shrapnel was embedded all over her upper body. “I say, we are children. There is nothing that is our fault to have to face this.” She told us. “They are occupying us and I will say, as Abu Omar said, “If you’re a mountain, the wind won’t shake you”. We’re not afraid, we’ll stay strong.”
And so the night goes on. The near future of Gaza is uncertain. The fates of everyone here is uncertain. Which people now preparing to go to their beds, will have their lives turned upside down by the loss of a loved one these next few days. I know some of the warmest people here that I feel strongly attached to, that you would instantly care for if you met them. The complete madness of this violence makes me wonder what we have done to ourselves, how do we allow humanity to manifest itself in this way.
Outside you can make a difference. I’m asking you, because the Israeli army will not empathise with the people they are looking down on through their cockpit windows. Nor will their politicians. But you can empathise and you can act. The normal ways but multiplied by ten. Small and big efforts to create massive international mobilisation are the only way to reduce the extent of the horror and loss facing the Palestinians of Gaza.
The Israeli cabinet has approved the call-up of 75,000 reservists compared to the 10,000 reservists called up for the massacres during Israel’s air and land offensive in Cast Lead. There is not much time.
– Adie Mormech is a human rights advocate based in the Gaza Strip. He contributed this report to the PalestineChronicle.co –