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Confronting the Wall
I
left for Rafah on 11 January 2004 as part of a three-person pilot
delegation to the city. We represented the Madison-Rafah Sister City
Project, an organization founded in February 2003 to establish
people-to-people ties between our two communities. Sistering projects
are well known in Madison, Wisconsin --a Midwestern University town
north of Chicago. Madison has official, City Council-approved sister
cities with El Salvador, Nicaragua, East Timor, Cuba, Vietnam, and
Lithuania among others. It seemed time, some of us thought, to build
ties with a city in Palestine though a vote making this official has
not yet been taken. Although in our first year we had had a number of
highly successful local events and were welcomed by many in the
community here, we were unprepared for the obstacles we encountered
trying to get into the Gaza Strip.
Since
the deaths of Rachel Corrie, Thomas Hurndall, and James Miller at the
hands of the Israeli military in Rafah last spring, entrance into the
Gaza Strip has been increasingly difficult.[4] What became clearer than
ever to me as I struggled to get permission to enter the Strip this
January was that internationals are being kept out for two key reasons:
to hide as much as possible what is taking place daily and to avoid any
further "mishaps" --i.e., the killing or wounding of internationals
that might draw unwanted publicity to the area again.
The
Israeli military forces kill Palestinians nearly every day in cruel and
horrible circumstances. Most of the reports about these deaths and the
unending atrocities against both the people and the land never make it
into our media. When they do, they are packaged as justifiable violence
against "terrorists" and "militants", as "retaliatory strikes"or as
actions of "self-defense". With the US and Israeli media and foreign
policy establishments spotlighting the "War on Terror" few stop to
question the reduction of entire groups of people into often
grotesquely caricatured national foes bent on destroying "freedom" and
"democracy". One result has been that nearly 3000 Palestinian deaths
have had no effect on the majority of Americans --most of whom have no
idea what is happening in the Occupied Palestinian Territories or
elsewhere in the Middle East-- even though their government is directly
responsible for them. When an international dies, however, especially a
young American girl like Rachel Corrie whose purpose for being in Rafah
was to engage in non-violent resistance, damage control becomes
necessary --despite concerted attempts by some to portray Corrie as a
"terrorist sympathizer".
On
4 January 2004 Israel issued a new series of restrictions designed to
further isolate the Palestinian people and to prevent the situation in
the territories from as much formal or informal international
monitoring as possible. The restrictions require prior written
authorization for all citizens attempting to enter areas technically
under the control of the Palestinian Authority (those known as "Area A"
under the 1993 Oslo Agreement). Persons wishing to enter Gaza "are
required to fill out a form requesting entry and to submit it to the
Foreign Relations Office in the Coordination & Liaison
Administration in the Gaza Strip, situated at Erez crossing.[5] These
requests take a minimum of 5 business days to process, can be rejected
at will, and often require repeated and frustrating attempts, as people
we spoke to affirmed[6]. Attempting to get into areas A without
permission can result in legal action, deportation, and the prevention
of future entry into the state of Israel.
The
excuse for these restrictions, which have been more or less in place
since the spring of 2003 but codified only recently, is to ensure the
safety of foreigners entering the Palestinian territories, routinely
described as "dangerous". The real reason, however, is not only to keep
out activists such as those belonging to the ISM (International
Solidarity Movement) but to keep people in general away from the Gaza
Strip. These restrictions follow other, equally unsettling policies
such as the requirement issued last spring that all visitors to Gaza
sign a waiver absolving Israel of all responsibility for death or
injury caused by the Israeli military.[7] International humanitarian
aid organizations and foreign journalists have sometimes, but not
always been, exempted. Nevertheless, the short-term effect of such
policies has been to discourage all but the most determined from going
to the Gaza Strip, and sometimes the West Bank. Their long-term effect
could be far more devastating.
Internal Checkpoints
We
arrived in Tel Aviv on Sunday the 11th of January and, after security
personnel interrogated two of the three of us, headed for the Jerusalem
Hotel in East Jerusalem[8]. We understood that saying we were on our
way to Rafah in the Gaza Strip would draw unwanted attention.
Nonetheless, we felt reasonably confident we would arrive at our
destination if we made it past Tel Aviv because we had a letter of
support from US Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin), a long-time
supporter of Israel but also of Madison's sister cities. Before we
left, Baldwin's State Department aide, Andrea Bagley, requested--and
received-- comprehensive information on the purpose of our visit, our
meeting agenda during the week, the names and contact information of
the Rafah municipal authorities hosting us, a clear and detailed
description of our organization and its goals, and our full names and
passport numbers. Her letter requested that the appropriate authorities
in Israel honor our desire to visit Rafah and facilitate our entry into
the Gaza Strip.[9] In addition to this letter, two of us had valid
press cards from local media outlets desiring reports on our
experiences in Rafah.
Journalists visiting Israel must have
their press cards validated at the Beit Agron [press house] in West
Jerusalem especially if they want to enter the Gaza Strip, as I made
clear I did. I therefore went to the Beit Agron first thing in the
morning only to be told my card was inadequate without 1) a letter of
assignment from the organization that had issued it and 2) a fax from
the Israeli Consulate in Chicago acknowledging that the media
organization for which I was working was legitimate. I followed this up
immediately, phoning Norman Stockwell at WORT radio in Madison asking
him to fax a letter to Richard Pater at the Beit Agron. Stockwell also
agreed to phone the Israeli Consulate to register WORT as a legitimate
media source. Because there is an 8-hour time difference between
Madison and Jerusalem I knew the process would take another day.
In
the meantime, we decided to visit the American Consulate in Jerusalem
to move ahead with our letter expecting this would prove more fruitful.
As Americans, we got into the consulate relatively easily and were
directed into a waiting room. Minutes later we were called up to one of
the service windows where I presented our letter--on official
Congressional stationery-- to the American attendant saying that we
hoped to get to Rafah to fulfill the obligations of our delegation
asking that he help facilitate this. The words barely made it out of my
mouth before I was cut off by the curt reply, "we have nothing to do
with Rafah and nothing to do with Gaza. Gaza is a dangerous place and
you shouldn't be going there. If you want to talk to the relevant
personnel at the [US] Embassy in Tel Aviv, go ahead but I'm sure they
will tell you the same thing." He shoved the letter back at us over our
naive protestations that this was from a US Congressperson. We
were dismissed and went back outside where it was raining. This was our
first direct experience with the extent of the collusion between United
States and Israel.
I
went back to the hotel to email Andrea in Tammy Baldwins office. By the
next day she had faxed another letter to both the US Consulate in
Jerusalem and the US Embassy in Tel Aviv appealing to them yet again to
assist us in our project.[10] Meanwhile I telephoned Richard Pater
repeatedly at the Beit Agron to follow up on my press card: the letter
of assignment had arrived but not the telex from the Israeli Consulate
in Chicago despite Stockwell's repeated phone calls. Exasperated, I
phoned the press division of the US Embassy in Tel Aviv and spoke to
division Chief Paul Patin who was both sympathetic and helpful. He
phoned Pater to vouch for WORT radio (it turned out Patin's neighbors
in Israel were from Madison, Wisconsin) and he promised to fax a letter
on my behalf, which Pater received the next morning. I phoned Pater six
times between 8:30 and 11:00am on Wednesday 14 January to inquire about
the status of my press card. He kept putting me off saying there were
still some "matters" he needed to look into. He refused to elaborate.
For
reasons that are unclear to me, I was finally --around 2pm on
Wednesday-- issued an Israeli press card (valid for one week).
Interestingly, this was just hours after a female suicide bomber, Reem
Riyashi, blew herself up at the Erez crossing's Industrial Zone killing
three Israeli soldiers and an Israeli border policeman.[11] Word had it
that Erez would be closed indefinitely. Hamas took credit for the
attack.
On a hunch, I phoned an IDF spokesperson who, contrary
to the rumors, said that with my press card I should have no trouble
getting into Gaza. I put my suitcase in a cab and we drove off,
arriving at the Erez crossing just before dark. There were 5 armored
personnel carriers parked outside the visitor's station but otherwise
the crossing was empty. Three young soldiers in the visitor's station
sat huddled together with long faces. I handed them my passport and
press card expressing my sadness over the deaths caused by that
morning's suicide bombing. "My friend is dead," said the young female
soldier who handed back my ID with the gate pass that finally allowed
me to proceed.
That night the streets of Gaza City were flooded
from torrential rains and waters gushing up from the useless, decaying
gutters. Cars were stopped in the streets standing in half a foot of
water and men were laying wooden planks from the curbs to help them
cross shallower areas. The power had gone out in a good part of the
city making it look more rundown than ever in the darkness. My taxi
driver took a circuitous route around the worst areas and dropped me
off at the Deira hotel hoping I would find a vacant room. In fact, the
hotel was empty. The desk clerk explained that all the journalists
planning to stay there that night had cancelled their reservations
because Erez was closed. To his surprise I explained that I had just
come through Erez. Now I had the beautiful villa-style hotel to myself.
I phoned my companions in East Jerusalem urging them to follow up with
our Congressional letter at the US Embassy and then, at 8pm, gave a
half-hour live interview to WORT radio in Madison as agreed. The next
morning I left for Rafah passing the north-south checkpoint at Deir
al-Balah with relative ease: we waited only 45 minutes before being
allowed to proceed --unusual for a place where delays anywhere between
2 hours and four days are common.
The Terrorist Infrastructure
Bullets
flew at us like hailstones when we left Naila's home that first evening
in Rafah. For two hours I'd sat together with Sumaiya, the mayor's
wife, and her sisters and their children watching their wide eyes and
smiles as, one by one, they stood before me to attempt a sentence in
English looking to me for approval and then running away in gleeful
embarrassment. The older girls passed around dinner, pastries and
coffee and Noof, Said Zoroub's beautiful 17-year-old daughter, asked me
what I thought of Islam and if I would tell her what the bad things
were that people in America said about it.
Some of the kids
were roughhousing in the background when the power went out leaving us
in darkness. The littlest boy, Karim, let out a shriek calling, "mama!"
and someone went to look for a battery-operated lamp. Electricity, like
water and phone lines, is never taken for granted.
We decided to
leave when the lights came back on and Talal, the mayor's friend, came
to pick us up, but we had to cram ourselves back into the doorway when
bullets flew at us from the watchtower in the distance hitting the side
of the building or shooting past us into the night. I would never have
left that doorway had I been alone, but for the others the routine for
these episodes of indiscriminate firing was to pause for a moment to
wait for quiet, then dart into the car and duck down below the windows
while the driver sped away. Up the road two cars had collided racing
away from the same scene, their drivers looking dejected standing there
in the middle of the dark street surveying the damage.
Back
at the mayor's home, I received a call from Laura Gordon, the last
American ISM activist in Rafah[12]. Would I come by the office and meet
her friends? They were planning a demonstration for Friday. Had I heard
that Tom Hurndall had died? Ten months in a coma and peace finally
came. The martyr's posters had already been printed with his young face
looking out at us. Now they would be plastered along the city walls
next to all the others. The demonstrators would march up Keer Street
the next morning to stand at the place where he'd been shot in the head
attempting to pull two children out of the line of fire.
Tanks
barrel down Keer Street when major invasions into Rafah begin. It is a
wretched slum-like street that dead-ends in a large mound of earth,
stone blocks and rubble across from the no-man's-land between it and
the IDF's positions. On Friday morning I stood on top of that mound
gazing across the way at another fortress-like bunker harboring Israeli
guards. I couldn't see them but I sensed their eyes on us. The
demonstrators, almost all children, wore bulls eye placards on their
shirts and carried the banners, "Palestinians and Internationals are
Targets for the Israeli Army." A young girl pointed to a small hole in
the wall of the building at the end of Keer Street, the mark of the
bullet, I was told, that ultimately killed Hurndall.
I
have heard many say that the Gaza Strip is a prison with the sky for a
ceiling. Its inhabitants live surrounded by electrified fences, motion
censors, barbed wire and metal barriers except along the sea coast
where Israeli gunboats patrol the shores. Israel prevents most Gazans
from leaving the territory or traveling freely even between its
overcrowded camps and towns since it is controlled by extensive
checkpoints that can turn half-an-hour's travel into a four day
journey. Its military can choose to close off sections of Gaza from all
contact with the rest of the Strip whenever it pleases though residents
of the 17 illegal settlements, which take up more than a quarter of
this tiny area, can travel back and forth to Israel with ease on the
Jewish-only roads[13].
The Gaza Strip is far more than a
prison, however. One need only spend time in Khan Yunis or Bureij,
Jabalia or Nuseirat, Gaza City or Beit Hanoun to recognize the flaw in
the prison analogy. In Gaza you are more than an inmate in a giant
penitentiary. You are a walking human target, shadowed by hired killers
who can destroy you and your surroundings at will. Your home belongs to
bulldozers and dynamite, your cities and refugee camps to F-16s and
helicopter gun ships. In Gaza your livelihood is diminished each day by
an impoverishment that is as deliberate as it is merciless. There is
neither escape from desperation nor refuge from terror. Nowhere is this
more evident than in Rafah.
Since
29 September 2000 the Israeli army has killed 275 people in Rafah, more
than three dozen of them since October 2003. Seventy-six of the dead
have been children. It has destroyed a total of 1,759 homes, 430 of
them since October 2003 displacing a total of 12,643 residents, 2,894
since October 2003. Unemployment is nearing 70% in Rafah, with a
poverty rate of 83.4% as of the end of the third quarter of 2003.[14]
Malnutrition affects a large number of Rafah's children as does Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder[15]. Rafah, a city with a population of about
120,000 (smaller than Ramallah, Nablus, Gaza City, and Hebron) has lost
more people than any other city in the Occupied Palestinian Territories
since the beginning of the second Intifada. It is the poorest of all
Palestinian cities, and its Shaboura district is the poorest section of
Rafah. There, whole families live together in one-room shacks made of
corrugated iron with dirt floors and sheet metal, cardboard and
tarpaulin roofs. Children run barefoot in the streets ill-clad and
ill-fed. Nowhere in Palestine will one find conditions as miserable and
destitute as they are in Rafah, approximately 80% of whose citizens are
refugees sometimes two and three times over.[16]
When Israeli
tanks came rolling through the streets of Rafah in October 2003 the
western media reported they were looking for tunnels linking homes in
Rafah to Egypt for the purpose of smuggling weapons. The Palestinian
leadership was failing to "dismantle the terrorist infrastructure" and
so it was up to Israel to do the job itself. We are supposed to accept
unquestioningly that such tunnels and the trickle of weapons they
deliver pose a serious threat to Israel's massive military arsenal, and
that the process of searching for these tunnels necessarily involves
the destruction of 2000 people's homes and all of their possessions. To
doubt this would jeopardize the logic of continued occupation and of
the greater "war on terror" Americans and their Israeli allies must
fight together. It could lead to the more likely conclusion that the
level of death and destruction routine in Rafah are part of Israel's
plan to clear --at whatever cost to the inhabitants-- a wide area in
between the Egypt-Rafah border in order to turn it into a closed
military zone under direct Israeli control and to terrorize and
intimidate the Palestinian population. Establishing a CMZ (closed
military zone) will remove the last international boundary between
Palestinian territory and a country other than Israel guaranteeing that
the Gaza Strip will become permanently quarantined. It will complete
the destruction of the Gazan economy since trade with Egypt will, for
all practical purposes, cease. It will advance the process of gradual,
internal flight away from Gaza's border regions into the already
overcrowded refugee camps and cities of the interior. Devastation and
the implosion of an entire society will be accelerated with the United
States' blessing.
Just
after the October incursions, Amnesty International issued a statement
labeling Israel's actions a war crime and calling for a halt to the
extensive demolition of family homes. Two weeks of destruction,
dispossession and death during which time Israeli forces found three
tunnels and no weapons.[17]
"Gaza is a Dangerous Place"
Heavy
tank and machine gun fire blast the nights wide open in Rafah. For six
hours straight I listen to the continual pounding of bullets and tank
shells outside my window. Now and then an unidentifiable explosion
interrupts the shooting, a silent pause creeps over the skies, and the
routine begins again. But the silence above me is not absolute: in the
distance on the ground I can hear the non-stop rumble of machines at
work; bulldozers devouring the edges of the town.
On the morning
of 17 January Arij Zoroub knocked on my door to find out if I was all
right. She wanted to know if I'd been afraid. I told her I was angry.
How could I explain the feeling of being transported away into a
nightmare world where you expect the next blast to come through your
wall --and that you almost wish for it so you can end your impotent
seclusion? that in your mind you stand in the shadowy, cracked-open
homes where the ragged partisans shoot back at the army and pray for
them to hit their targets.
On the roof of the mayor's house,
Arij points past the homes behind us to survey the night's damage: The
familiar flattened landscape gapes back at me like a dead man's eyes.
More homes gone and part of a mosque destroyed. Dozens more people
displaced. Disproportionate force unleashed against pitiful guerrillas
determined to fight back and to drag all of Rafah in with them if
necessary. What difference will that make? Israel's message is clear:
we will destroy you, if not in death then in life.
In
the two weeks following my departure, at least 30 more homes vanished
from Rafah and nearly 600 more people were displaced. Seven more people
died, including an infant while two more men were the victims of
Israel's "targeted assassinations" policy. Both were unarmed when they
were executed.[18] A photojournalist contact sent me photos from the
latest violence. These are the images that best summarize life in
Rafah, the kinds of images that clutter my memory when I think back to
my brief stay this January, even after the hours of working visits to
the municipality, youth centers, women's organizations, the ministries
of health and education, popular refugees' committees, and a
rehabilitation center for the deaf; after days of note-taking and
conversation about moving forward and building bridges between
communities[19].
Before
leaving Gaza City I'd found emailed messages from US Congresswoman
Tammy Baldwin's office waiting for me on-line. The same friendly aide,
so eager to assist us when we started on our journey, had received
correspondence from the US Embassy in Tel Aviv. Now her tone was
official and serious. She was "urging" me to get out of Gaza away from
"potentially dangerous areas and situations" and was conveying the
State Department's concern that American Citizens not be "exposed" to
such dangers. She had attached three items: a letter from Alison
Dilworth of the American Consulate in Jerusalem informing her that
American Citizens should not be traveling to the Gaza Strip; a "Public
Announcement: Warden Message" issued by the US Government on 15 October
2003 (just after an official American convoy traveling in the Gaza
Strip was hit by a bomb) recommending that all Americans in Gaza leave
immediately and that their evacuation be facilitated by the Israelis;
and a "Worldwide Caution" issued by the US State Department on 22
December 2003 warning American citizens abroad about the potential
threat to their lives from Al Qaida[20]. It seemed the office of our US
Congressperson had been made to fall into line with the US policy of
sanctioning Israeli actions.
When I tried to leave Gaza through
the Erez Crossing on the evening of 17 January Israeli soldiers ordered
me to stop before I passed the last barricade. I was left waiting for
more than two hours in the dark surrounded by concrete blocks. If I
moved forward, I knew I could be shot. I shouted repeatedly at the
soldiers in the Israeli bunker at the checkpoint to please let me
through because I had a flight to catch. My shouts were met with
sarcastic remarks and threats, "Erez is closed, go back"and "we heard
you the first time; you can be quiet now". Only after continuing to
holler that I was an American citizen and needed to leave was I finally
instructed to proceed through the electronic security gate. At the
window of the bunker, a helmeted young soldier grabbed my passport and
stamped it huffily saying that he hadn't been able to let me through
before he'd gotten clearance from a higher authority. A voice behind
him echoed guiltily, "We are just little screws in a big machine".
Would this be the justification years hence for the horrors of the
Israeli occupation?
The air was cold when my taxi drove me off into the night.
Jennifer
Loewenstein is a freelance journalist and human rights activist. She
lived and worked in the Bourj al-Barajneh Palestinian refugee camp in
South Beirut, Lebanon during the summers of 2000 and 2001, and worked
at the Mezan Center for Human Rights in Gaza City, Gaza for 5 months in
2002. She has participated in delegations to the Occupied Palestinian
Territories and was among the first internationals into the Jenin
Refugee camp after its destruction during "Operation Defensive Shield"
in April 2002. In February 2003 Jennifer founded the Madison-Rafah
Sister City Project and visited Rafah in January 2004 for its first
delegation to the city. She has written and spoken extensively about
her experiences. Jennifer can be reached at jsarin@wiscmail.wisc.edu or
at rafahsistercity@yahoo.com
Jennifer
teaches Professional Communications at the University of Wisconsin -
Madison.
[1]
Norway has provided development assistance to Palestine since 1993 to
"help prevent any further disintegration of the political, social and
economic basis for the peace process." From 1999-2003 Norway pledged
NOK 1.3 billion in aid to the Palestinian Territories making these
areas one of the single largest recipients of bilateral aid from Norway
since 1994. There was evidence of the Norwegian development assistance
all over Rafah (indeed it is sobering just how much international aid
in general is holding together the infrastructures of Palestinian
cities, towns, and refugee camps). The two new fresh water wells on the
outskirts of Rafah are one example of emergency Norwegian aid.
[2]
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
published a report on 28 January 2004 detailing the consequences of IDF
operations in Rafah. It found that "Some of those made homeless by IDF
operations moved into smaller units, which in most cases are
insufficient for the size of the family. Others have migrated
northwards in search of accommodation, or --in exceptional cases--
moved into abandoned dwellings adjacent to the buffer zones that were
left by other families fearful that their homes would be targeted. An
increasing number of families whose homes were destroyed are relying on
tents for shelter. Tents are being provided by UNRWA and ICRC." The
homeless figures I quote above are from this report. Others estimated
the number of people made homeless during the October 2003 raids at
around 2000.
[3]
For a report on the destruction of Rafah's two fresh water wells in
January 2003, see "Danger: Rafah's fresh water wells," by Amira Hass of
the Israeli daily Ha'aretz,
5 February 2003. The wells provided about 50% of the drinking and
household water to the city of Rafah and Hass suggests they were
deliberately destroyed.
[4]
Rachel Corrie was an American ISM (International Solidarity Movement)
activist who was crushed to death by a bulldozer in Rafah on 16 March
2003. She was standing in a flat, open area wearing a bright orange
vest and carrying a bullhorn shouting to the bulldozer driver to stop
the demolition of family homes. According to an Israeli investigation,
her death was an accident. Tom Hurndall was a British ISM activist shot
in the head on 11 April 2003. He died in the UK in January 2004 after
lying in a coma for ten months. Like Corrie, Hurndall had been wearing
a bright orange vest with reflective stripes. He had been trying to
move children away from an area where there was active IDF firing. A
Bedouin soldier in Israel has recently been charged with killing him.
James Miller was an award-winning cameraman making a film in Rafah on
how violence was affecting children. He was shot in the neck by Israeli
gunfire on 2 May 2003 while wearing a jacket marked "press" and waving
a white flag as he approached Israeli troops. He died while awaiting
evacuation.
[5] To view the document on the new, 4 January 2004 Israeli restrictions on
travel into the Palestinian Territories go to:
[6]
While in East Jerusalem, my companions and I spoke to a number of
individuals who had faced difficulties getting in and out of Gaza
including the acting manager of the Bookshop at the American Colony
Hotel, Peter Huff-Rousselle, and a young man working for the World Bank
who asked not to be named. Their experiences were significant in that
these two were indirectly or directly (respectively) involved with
international aid organizations for which such restrictions might have
been more relaxed.
[7] To view a copy of
the Gaza Waiver absolving Israel of responsibility for the deaths of internationals at the hands of the
Israeli military go to:
[8]
I was not interrogated but my companions, George Arida and Francis
Bradley, were each questioned and searched in an ordeal taking more
than two hours. There are many possible reasons for this. It is
significant to me, however, that I have yet to be questioned in Tel
Aviv although I have been to the West Bank and Gaza Strip on many
occasions, have written extensively and critically on the situation in
the Occupied Palestinian Territories, have worked in Gaza City, and
have Syrian and Lebanese stamps in my passport. I tend to think the
ease with which I pass through security in Tel Aviv is related to my
Jewish last name, Loewenstein.
[9]
A copy of the Bagley/Baldwin letter and all further correspondence
between myself and Congresswoman Baldwin's office can be found at the MRSCP
(Madison-Rafah Sister City Project) website:
[10] See footnote 10.
[11]
There are numerous articles on this Hamas-sponsored suicide bombing
focusing on the fact that the bomber, Reem Riyashi, was a 22 year old
married mother of two. See, for example, Chris McGreal's "Palestinians
Shocked at Use of Suicide Mother" in The Guardian
on 27 January 2004. What has been left out repeatedly is that the
victims in this case were all associated with the Israeli military
(three soldiers and one border police guard) and the bombing took place
on occupied land making the attack arguably wholly legitimate.
[12] Laura has
returned to the US and is doing a speaking tour across the country.
[13]
Much has been made of the recent development that Ariel Sharon is
planning to evacuate the 17 Jewish settlements in Gaza. What he said
was, "I have given an order to plan for the evacuation of 17
settlements in the Gaza Strip." An order to plan for the
evacuation is not the same as an order to evacuate, which is yet to be
given. Nonetheless, many have known for years that Israel does not
'need' Gaza and that giving up the settlements there could provide some
strategic leverage for Israel, keen to annex more Palestinian land in
the West Bank for its settlements there with Washington's approval.
Indeed, some say that Sharon expects the West Bank in return for
'giving up' the Gaza Strip. According to Sharon, "It is my intention to
carry out an evacuation - sorry, a relocation - of settlements that
cause us problems and of places that we will not hold onto anyway in a
final settlement, like the Gaza settlements," ("PM: I gave order to
plan evacuation of 17 Gaza settlements", article by Yoel Marcus in Ha'aretz,
3 February 2004.) Other analysts, such as Mouin Rabbani and Amira Hass,
have suggested that Sharons move is also, in all likelihood, a ploy to
look conciliatory during his next visit to Washington, to refocus
domestic attention on the Palestinian crisis and away from the scandals
now rocking Sharons government, and possibly an attempt to explore a
unity government with Labor. It may also be another attempt to divide
any remaining Palestinian leadership within the enclaves that remain.
The likelihood of the circumstances in Gaza being made easier for its
Palestinian inhabitants even with the evacuation of all Jewish
settlements is slim based on the extent to which Gaza is cordoned off
from Israel and Egypt and under heavy IDF military control. In fact,
the chances are considerable that the social and economic circumstances
in Gaza will continue to worsen and that extremism within the political
factions will increase.
[14]
The statistics listed here were compiled by the Mezan Center for Human
Rights based in Gaza City, Gaza. They do not include statistics on the
number of homes destroyed, people killed or displaced between 16 and 22
January 2004. During this time 1 woman was killed and 8 people were
injured. Seventy-two more homes have been demolished since the
beginning of January 2004 and an additional 684 people have been made
homeless. See "Report to the LACC on humanitarian consequences of the
Israeli Defence Forces operations in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip,"
published by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA), 28 January 2004.
[15]
On malnutrition in the Palestinian territories see, for example,
"Palestinian malnutrition at African levels under Israeli curbs, say
MPs," by Ben Russell in The Independent, 5 February 2004.
British MP's on a visit to Israel and the Occupied Territories are
quoted as saying, "Rates of malnutrition in Gaza and parts of the West
Bank are as bad as anything one would find in sub-Saharan Africa. The
Palestinian economy has all but collapsed. Unemployment rates are in
the region of 60 to 70 percent&.It is hard to avoid the conclusion
that there is a deliberate Israeli strategy of putting the lives of
ordinary Palestinians under stress as part of a strategy to bring the
population under heel." On the incidence of Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder among Palestinians, especially Palestinian children see "An
Interview with Eyad El-Sarraj"(of the Gaza Community Mental Health
Center in Gaza City, Gaza) in Tikkun, by Julie Oxenberg and Dan Burnstein, Nov/Dec 2003.
[16]
Information on the situation of Rafah's refugees was obtained in direct
conversation with Zeyad Sarafandi, President of Rafah's Popular
Refugees Committee, on 17 January 2004 in the main Rafah office.
[17]
Amnesty International Press Release, 13 October 2003. AI Index: MDE
15/091/2003 (public); News Service No: 234; Israel/Occupied
Territories: "Wanton destruction constitutes a war crime".
[18] See the UN's OCHA
reports for February 2004; also "Israeli Troops Kill Palestinian in
Raid," Al Jazeera, Sunday 8 February 2004.
[19] Brent Foster's photographs can be viewed at: A detailed description of the people met and organizations visited during this trip to Rafah can be found at the MRSCP website:
[20]
See attachments with correspondence from US Congresswoman Tammy
Baldwin's office on the Madison-Rafah Sister City Project's website at www.madison-rafah.org