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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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19 September 2010
By Stephen Lendman
Throughout 43 years of occupation, Israel has waged
war on Palestinians' human rights and civil liberties,
a new UN report providing more evidence that keeps
mounting exponentially, adding clarity about an
out-of-control rogue state operating lawlessly.
On
August 10, Haaretz writer Akiva Eldar cited it in an
article headlined, "UN report: IDF barring Gazans'
access to farms, fishing zones," saying:
"Over the last 10 years, the (IDF has) increasingly
restricted Palestinian access to farmland on the Gazan
side of the Israeli-Gaza border as well as (offshore
waters) along the Gaza beach, a United Nations report
(just) revealed."
Prepared jointly by the Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the World Food Program
(WFP), it's titled "Between the Fence and a Hard
Place," explaining Israel's draconian/illegal
restrictions on the pretext of "preventing attacks by
Palestinian armed factions." In fact, only Israel
poses a regional threat. A global one as well, what
Palestinians and Israel's neighbors have known for
decades.
Despite the Green Line, Oslo Accords, the so-called
2005 "disengagement," ongoing siege, the continued
theft of West Bank and East Jerusalem land and more,
Israel imposes punitive restrictions on Gazans,
including under the 1994 Jericho Agreement. It
established a 1,000 meter-wide "security perimeter" in
the Territory, Palestinian police enforcing "special
security measures" to prevent entry into Israel
without permission.
A
separate provision allowed a 20 nautical mile area off
Gaza's coast for fishing, recreation, and other
economic activities. Israel and the Palestinian
Authority (PA), in theory, share joint enforcement
authority, but, in fact, Israel has sole control.
Since September 2000, the start of the second Intifada,
Israel took over more repressively than ever.
Palestinians have been denied all rights in their own
territory under vague and restrictive rules, including
use of their own land and waters. As a result, Gazans
have been irreparably harmed.
Defining the Restricted Areas and
Affected Populations
Israel's precise access parameters "are uncertain,"
including boundaries, conditions allowing or denying
entry, and consequences if against Israeli
restrictions. Morever, in the past decade, the IDF
hardened measures in place.
Up
to November 2008, a 300 meter prohibition was imposed.
After Cast Lead, however, it expanded to a 1,000 -
1,500 meters, putting valuable farmland and
residential areas off limits as follows:
-- a
"no-go zone" up to 500 meters inside the Green Line.
Those entering may be shot on sight. Israeli
incursions regularly occur, destroying property found,
including crops; and
-- a
"high risk" zone up to 1,500 meters within the Line.
"Opening fire at people accessing this area, as well
as land leveling and property destruction, are common
and widespread practices....carried out irregularly
and unpredictably."
Affected Gazans reported even worse harshness,
affecting areas up to 3,000 meters inside the Line.
Omitting these from UN calculations, the combined "no
go/high risk" prohibitions cover about 62.6 square km
or about 17% of Gaza (95% of which is arable land),
off limits to Palestinians who own it. In total,
they're denied access to 35% of the Territory's
cultivable farmland, a major blow to its agriculture.
In
addition, under the 2002 Bertini Commitment, Israel
tightened coastal water restrictions from 20 nautical
miles (NM) offshore to 12, but, in fact, even harsher
limits were imposed. Some areas were entirely closed,
others allowed open only part of the year. In
mid-2006, restrictions applied beyond six NM, and
after Cast Lead beyond three and in some areas only
one. As a result, Gazans are gradually losing all
rights to their coastal waters, those entering
restricted areas risking life and loss of property.
"Overall, Palestinians are totally prevented from
accessing 85 percent of the sea areas on which they
are entitled to carry out maritime activities,
including fishing, according to the 1994 Gaza-Jericho
Agreement." About 113,000 people are affected (7.5% of
Gaza's population), including those owning land and
other property in restricted areas.
Many
fisherman have also been harmed, Gaza's Ministry of
Agriculture reporting at yearend 2009 that only 3,500
were registered, down from 10,000 in September 2000
when restrictions began. The number of people directly
affected by land and fishing limits is about 178,000
or 12% of the population.
The Resulting Crisis
The
UN report cites Israel's "systematic lack of respect
for (Gazans') basic rights, as enshrined in
international humanitarian and human rights law."
Worse still, are its enforcement methods, including:
--
arbitrarily opening fire on anyone entering restricted
areas, at times with warning shots, others with intent
to kill, incidents happening daily. "The Fishermen's
Syndicate reported that in (Q 1 2010)," 48 live
firings on fishermen occurred, an average of four a
week. A small percentage caused death or injury, but
the risk is always present.
In
the 19 month period from January 2009 through July
2010, 22 civilian deaths (including six children) and
146 injuries were reported (including 27 children).
Legal Implications
International law is clear and unequivocal, civilians
at all times to be treated as protected persons during
conflicts and occupation. The principle of distinction
puts combatants and others in separate categories.
Targeting civilians is absolutely prohibited,
regardless of circumstances, and when launching
attacks, care must be taken to avoid harming them and
their property. Yet Israel consistently and
egregiously defiles the law, acting willfully in
violation with impunity, besides its draconian
military laws and medieval siege, not covered in the
UN report.
Yet
they're crucial to understand the severity of
conditions, causing sustained, extreme, unrelenting
humanitarian harm in a climate of uncertainty.
Palestinians never know if they, their neighborhoods,
or loved ones will be attacked. Fishermen are always
endangered, and anyone collecting rubble or scrap
metal in restricted areas may be shot, killed or
injured, including women and children.
Worse still is the lack of clarity for demarcated
areas, besides Israel changing them regularly without
notice. In addition, at least once, misleading
information was provided, the Israeli air force (in
May 2009) dropping thousands of leaflets warning
Gazans not to enter areas closer than 300 meters from
the Green Line when, in fact, restrictions were up to
1,500 and in some areas 3,000.
"The
lack of clarity, (arbitrary modifications), and
unpredictability associated with this access regime
makes it highly arbitrary, thus significantly
increasing the level of risk to thousands of civilians
who depend on access....for their livelihoods."
Destruction of Land and Property
Most
occurred since September 2000, areas over 300 meters
especially since 2006. As a result, "most (affected)
agricultural land has been gradually abandoned and
structures never reconstructed."
Since late 2008, regular land, crops and property
destruction has been "carried out more less regularly"
during weekly IDF incursions, typically by four to 10
tanks, bulldozers and jeeps, accompanied by
helicopters, drones, and live fire. From January
through May 2010, 72 recorded incidents occurred,
averaging over three a week, Gazans never knowing
where or when they'll strike, or who may be affected.
They're also targeted by remotely-controlled weapon
stations, deployed in secured pillboxes every several
hundred meters along the Green Line. Each contains
machine guns able to hit targets up to 1.5 km away.
According to Haaretz, "the procedure to authorize
opening fire is complex, but takes less than two
minutes" to complete. An assault is then initiated by
pressing a button. Live fire guided by relayed field
images and ground sensors follows, as well as more
from aircraft and drones.
Attacks are also made by tanks and other weapons, in
all cases against nonviolent civilians in violation of
international law. After years of occupation and
conflict, the toll is horrific, ordinary people up
against the world's fourth most powerful military
acting lawlessly against noncombatants.
In
economic terms alone, the UN conservatively estimated
a $308 million cost over the past five years
(excluding Cast Lead) affecting:
--
nearly 4,500 acres of land planted with fruit trees;
--
another 1,500 acres of greenhouses;
--
1,000 residential structures;
--
over 300 water wells;
--
Gaza's water purification system and sole power plant;
--
six factories; and
--
the toll on fishermen, their boats and equipment.
Impact on Gazans' Livelihood
Affected Gazans have been impoverished and denied
essentials under siege, besides living in fear and
threatened almost daily with aggressive assaults. In
economic terms, the loss of livelihoods and property
alone has been devastating, affecting fruit trees,
greenhouses, water wells, sheep and chicken farms,
other farmland, fishing boats and equipment,
factories, schools, hospitals, mosques, homes, and
other structures.
An
estimated 75,000 annual metric tons of produce alone
has been lost, increasing as Israel destroys more
land, farmers losing a third or more of their income.
Fayyadh Al-Sumeiri's situation is typical. In 2003,
the IDF leveled his small farm. Another plot with
olive trees was destroyed in late 2008. He replaced it
with wheat, rented some additional land, but both
areas were again bulldozed during Cast Lead plus an
irrigation network.
Lost
income impoverished him and his family, plunging him
into debt, Al-Sumeiri saying:
"Every day I pass by shops and see people that I owe
money to, and I lower my head. I don't know what to do
because I have no income. Everything we earned was
from the land and every meter we planted was
destroyed. Every day I pray that I will be able to
return to my land and bring it back to the state it
was in."
Thousands of other Gazan farmers tell similar stories,
the siege, war, occupation, and regular incursions
suffocating them slowly. It's slow-motion genocide
ongoing for years, affecting the entire population,
1.5 million people trapped in the world's largest
open-air prison.
Coping Under Siege
Under dire conditions, humanitarian aid has helped but
not enough "to make a substantial difference in the
lives of the affected population." As a result,
strategies to generate alternate income have been
used, farmers, for example, trying crop
diversification or open-air planting after greenhouses
were destroyed. Others sold assets or rely on the
tunnel economy. Yet income generated is meager
compared to earlier, including by fishermen,
restricted on where they can go so their catch is
smaller, less lucrative, and over-fished shallower
waters are being depleted, compromising them further.
Other coping methods involve buying less, including
essentials harming health and well-being, but with
little income there's no choice. The quantity and
quality of food consumed has dropped. As a result,
health problems have increased, including higher
incidences of anemia, diabetes, high blood pressure,
and other illnesses. Overall, the quality of life in
all respects has steadily eroded since fall 2000,
especially under siege.
Impact on Education
Seven educational institutions were identified within
1,500 meters of the Green Line, affecting around 250
teachers, administrative and maintenance staff serving
about 4,400 students from elementary school to
vocational training. Cast Lead entirely destroyed
another school in the restricted area plus others,
including college facilities, throughout the Strip.
Overall, "The safety of students and staff attending
these institutions, the quality of education provided
and the level of educational achievement have been
seriously undermined by their frequent exposure to
Israeli fire...." As a result, schools have incurred
significant damage, remain vulnerable, and have
diverted scarce funds for recurrent repair needs.
Students and staff say classes are often interrupted
by nearby assaults, yet believe children are safer in
school than if evacuated elsewhere, exposing them to
conflict in the open. In addition, a shortage of
facilities forces most schools to run on double
schedules - shifts reducing overall class time,
restricting the number of new students, and providing
less education on very restricted budgets because
everything needed is in short supply, compounded by
traumatized students, their concentration and
performance affected.
"A
consistent message to emerge was that frequent
exposure to life threatening situations, along with
the systematic destruction of livelihoods, severely
eroded people's basic sense of physical and economic
security. This erosion is perceived as a key cause
behind the recurrence of an array of negative
symptoms" observed in students, families and
communities, including:
--
increased adult depression;
--
frequent childrens' bedwetting;
--
lower school performance;
--
higher dropout rates;
--
changes in nutrition habits;
--
greater domestic violence, symptomatic of adult men
losing their role as breadwinners; and
--
weakening social networks because dangerous conditions
keep people close to home, fewer family visits
resulting.
Impact on Utility Infrastructure
Israeli restrictions have significantly impeded
maintenance, repair and upgrading of wastewater and
electricity infrastructure, harming all Gazans under
siege. Located east of Jabalia up to 200 meters from
the Green Line, the North Gaza Emergency Sewage
Treatment Plant is the Strip's largest facility, able
to handle the sewage for more than 500,000 people.
Currently, IDF restrictions impede staff access, allow
only daylight operations, and inadequate fuel and
electricity compromise operations further.
Only
recently did Israel approve "in principle" the
relocation of a Khan Yunis facility, reaching up to
400 meters from the Line. Negotiations continue to
allow required material imports as well as worker
access to the site, Israeli bureaucratic restrictions
so far preventing them.
For
the past three years, a new Gaza City wastewater
treatment plant, to replace an existing lower capacity
one, has been stalled because of Israeli bureaucratic
delays. As a result, around 80 million liters of
untreated and partially-treated sewage is dumped daily
into the Mediterranean Sea, contaminating Gaza's
coastal areas and most drinking water.
"The
(serious) public health concerns of the inability to
properly treat the current volume of sewage produced
in the Gaza Strip are significant," affecting the
entire population, a topic addressed in previous
articles accessed through the following links:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/08/palestinians-denied-access-to-water.html
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/08/gazas-poisoned-water.html
As a
result, less than 10% of Gaza's aquifer drinking water
is safe, the rest toxic, exposing those consuming it
to serious health risks, including anemia, diarrhea,
parasitic skin and other infections, and infant
mortality.
In
addition, an electricity crisis exists, also addressed
in a previous article accessed through the following
link:
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/07/gazas-electricity-crisis.html
"Overall, access restrictions to infrastructure
delivering electricity from Israel into (Gaza) have
compounded an already precarious situation caused by
the steady decline in electricity produced by" the
Strip's only facility. It's severely impeded by
Israel's materials and spare parts ban, preventing
proper maintenance and rehabilitation unless lifted.
Final Comments
UN
findings reveal the impact of Israeli restrictions,
exacerbated by Gaza's siege. Israel's "lethal"
enforcement has "resulted in a severe 'protection
crisis,' characterized by a systematic lack of respect
for the most basic rights afforded to civilian
populations under international law."
The
entire Strip is impacted, especially Gazans close to
the Green Line, fishermen confined to shallow coastal
waters, as well as women, children, the elderly and
infirm. Everyone needs help more than ever, mostly by
lifting the siege, increasing humanitarian aid, ending
Israeli incursions, and giving the population a chance
to rebuild and restore their lives, livelihoods, and
dignity. It's what Israel won't allow and world
leaders still tolerate, violating their obligation
under international law and Security Council
Resolution 1860.
It
called for "an immediate and durable ceasefire
(leading) to a full Israeli withdrawal, unimpeded
provision through Gaza of food, fuel and medical
treatment, and intensified" efforts for peace. Yet
it's been unsuccessful because Israel ignores it and
enforcement pressure's not applied.
As a
result, Gazans suffer grievously, the entire
population harmed by an out-of-control rogue state,
bogusly claiming security concerns to commit
slow-motion genocide, the world community complicit by
indifference. Strong measures for change are needed,
what only mass outrage and intensified BDS pressure
can achieve.
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/.
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