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Greece buys Israeli weapons and signs security agreement.


Under the financial pressure of EU bailouts to Greece, following their complicity in the blockade of Gaza earlier this year with the prevention of the ‘Freedom Flotilla 2′ vessels moored in Greek ports, Greece and Israel signed a security cooperation agreement. The content of the memorandum was not disclosed

Greek Defense Minister Panos Beglitis, making the first official visit by a Greek defense minister to Israel, and his Israeli counterpart, Ehud Barak, signed a cooperation memorandum on ‘security’ in Jerusalem on Sunday during the first day of Beglitis’ three-day trip.

“I come as my country’s defense minister to state our political will as a government, as well as the majority of the country’s political forces, for the two countries, the two governments, the two peoples, to work together so that we can further develop and deepen our bilateral relations in all sectors of mutual interest and concern,” Beglitis said.

The visit is part of a cooperation memorandum signed last year between Prime Minister George Papandreou and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Last week a Greek Parliament committee approved the purchase from Israel of Rafael-made Spice 1000 and 2000 bomb precision upgrade kits at a cost of $155 million for 400 systems.

Israel’s ambassador to Greece, Arie Mekel, noted the “unprecedented number of high-level visits” between Israel and Greece this year. He said the visit by Beglitis “highlights again the dramatic upgrade of the relations between Greece and Israel for the benefit of both countries.”

Beglitis clarified that his visit concerns bilateral relations with the State of Israel exclusively and is not functioning competitively with other countries in the region.

His visit comes in the wake of the release last week of the United Nations’ Palmer report which said that Israel’s naval blockade of the Gaza Strip is legal, but that Israel used excessive force when boarding the Turkish-flagged ship Mavi Marmara, leading to the deaths of nine Turkish citizens, in May 2010. Turkey has demanded an apology and, with none forthcoming, said it would ramp up sanctions against Israel.

Beglitis was scheduled to meet Monday with Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres, and also will have a private meeting with Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. He met previously with the chief of Israel’s military, Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz.

Barak said he was pleased by the upgrading of the military and defense cooperation between Israel and Greece.

“We are seeing with satisfaction the deepening and widening of relations between us and the Greeks in all sectors, including the security sector, and we desire to see the deepening and widening of this cooperation between the governments, between the Defense Ministries and between our peoples,” Barak said.

Posted in Flotilla News, International NewsComments (1)

Watchful activists guard boats bound for Gaza


Activists planning on participating in an aid flotilla to the Gaza Strip are now guarding their ship around the clock after alleged sabotage disabled other boats in the planned convoy.

The Dutch-Italian ship Stefano Chiarim is waiting in a port on the Greek Island of Corfu for approval from the Greek government to begin the journey to Gaza.

The boat, set to host about 65 activists from several countries, is one of 10 flotilla ships currently gathering in Greek and Turkish waters with the aim of breaking the Israeli siege on the Gaza strip, the second attempt to reach the coastal enclave by sea in as many years.

The first “Freedom Flotilla” ended in disaster in May 2010, when Israeli commandos launched a predawn raid on the Mavi Marmara, a converted Turkish cruise ship, and killed nine passengers.

Due to alleged sabotage against this year’s flotilla, activists on the Irish ship Saoirse have announced that repair work to their boat will not be ready in time to set sail.

Activists on both the Saoirse and the Scandinavian boat Juliano claim their boats fell victim to “hostile divers” who damaged their propeller shafts.

Co-ordinators on board the Saoirse said in a video posted on the ship’s blog that they believe Israel was behind the damage, which they labelled an act of “terrorism”.

“It’s an absolute outrage that Israel talks about the flotilla as a provocation when they’re willing to engage in this type of international terrorism,” Fintan Lane, one of the co-ordinators, said.

The Saoirse‘s crew had taken the ship on a test run and refuelling trip on Monday when the engineer noticed that something was wrong.

When the crew returned, they discovered that the propeller shaft had been cut and “dangerously bent”.

News of the alleged sabotage emerged on Thursday.

Though the Saoirse will not be able to join the flotilla, five of the Irish activists on board found space on the Stefano Chiarim.

In a bid to prevent further damage to the flotilla, activists on board the ship created a “security rota” and are now taking shifts to stand guard on their boat around the clock.

At any time, at least five people are patrolling the deck, with another in the galley, hoping to catch a perpetrator in the case of another attack.

Gerald Oberansmeier, an activist from Austria, spoke to Al Jazeera as he hung over the railing of the ship, shining his flash light on the water below.

“The water in the port is not very clear but we would see if bubbles come up. Bubbles are the main thing we’re looking for. I might even jump in the water to scare them when I see bubbles,” he joked.

‘International terrorism’

The case of alleged sabotage occurred hundreds of kilometres away in a port near the Greek capital Athens, and in a port in Turkey, but Oberansmeier thinks it is not unlikely that the same could happen to the Dutch-Italian boat on Corfu.

“The goal of Israel is to prohibit these ships to set sail to Gaza. They are obviously willing to commit, what the Irish have said was an act of international terrorism, to prohibit this flotilla to set sai,” he said.

“I think sabotage in which the lives of people are endangered is indeed an act of terrorism. The sabotage was done in a way that the ships could sink during their journey.

“We now have four people on deck – one on each side of the ship - and one person inside the galley to pick up on any suspicious noise. We’re not paranoid.

“These acts of sabotage should make us cautious. Better to be cautious than sorry.”

Early on Friday morning the “guards” on the ship rang the alarm bells when one of them heard a noise coming from under the 20 metre long vessel.

“For a brief moment we heard a knocking sound every 15 seconds, and we saw some disturbance in water next to boat,” one activist said.

Immediately, the nearby coastguard vessels were notified and, after daylight broke, a diver was send down to check the hull for damage.

It turned out to be false alarm, but the incident shows how alert the activists are to prevent any kind of sabotage against their boat.

‘Drill a hole’

“The coastguard is keeping a close eye on us,” Chris Verweij, a Dutch activist on the boat, said while playing cards on the back of the ship.

“They are afraid that we would sneak out of this port without the necessary approval from the Greek authorities.

“But the captain of our ship, a Greek from Corfu, knows them and reassured them we won’t be doing anything illegal. Now they are letting us be. They allow us to sleep on the ship and guard it at night.

“The damage that was done to the other ships shows the necessity of standing guard. We’re not seeing ghosts here.”

Looking over his cards, Verweij speculated over how hostile divers could go about doing damage to the boat.

“They could use other techniques than were used for sabotaging the other ships. They could easily drill a hole in the hull at the front of the ship,” he said.

“Personally, I think now chances are very slim that they will do something against our boat, with people patrolling on deck and the coast guard 20 metres away from us.”

The flotilla ships are still waiting for the Greek authorities to give them the green light for departure towards the Gaza Strip.

Organisers are locked in a bureaucratic battle with port authorities on Corfu, who claim that the activists of the Stefano Chiarim do not comply with regulations needed to undertake the voyage.

“It is very obvious that the Greek government is doing the bidding of Israel,” Khaled Tuhraani, a leading activist, said at a briefing to the activists on Friday.

Al-Jazeera

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Israel withholds Palestinian cash transfer


Israel will hold up an $89 million cash transfer to the Palestinian Authority [PA] planned for this week because of a new unity deal between rival Palestinian factions.

“Israel wants assurances that any money transferred to the Palestinians will not reach the militant Hamas organisation, which is set to become part of the Palestinian government,” Yuval Steinitz, the Israeli finance minister, said on Sunday.

“I think the burden of proof is on the Palestinians, to make it certain, to give us guarantees that money delivered by Israel is not going to the Hamas, is not going to a terrorist organisation, is not going to finance terror operations against Israeli citizens,” he said.

Israel had threatened sanctions last week in response to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s surprise announcement of a unity deal with Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip and is shunned by the West for its hostility towards the Jewish state.

According to a report in the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, the Israeli officials would also cancel talks with the Abbas administration aimed at updating the tax transfer mechanism which provides it with $1 billion to $1.4 billion annually – two-thirds of PA budget.

Israel collects some tax and customs fees for the Palestinians under the peace agreements of the 1990s.

Israel has held up cash transfers several times in the past decade, citing concerns that the money was being used to fund attacks against Israelis.

Deal raises concern

There was no immediate Palestinian reaction to the Israeli move.

The deal signed between Fatah and Hamas is meant to lead immediately to a transitional government and new elections within one year.

Israel suspends transfer of $89m to Palestinian Authority in view of recent unity deal between Fatah and Hamas.

The Israeli government said the deal rules out the renewal of deadlocked peace talks and threatens Israeli-Palestinian security cooperation in the West Bank.

The agreement “should worry not only all Israeli citizens but all those across the world who want to see peace between us and our Palestinian neighbours”, Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister said on Sunday.

Israel has also expressed its concern to the UN about the deal.

Ehud Barak, the defence minister, on Saturday told Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary general, of “Israel’s concern” over the unity accord struck on Wednesday between Hamas and Fatah, according to a statement.

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Egypt warns Israel: Don’t interfere with opening of Gaza border crossing


Rafah’s opening would be a violation of an agreement reached in 2005 between the U.S., Israel, Egypt, and the EU; Israel official tells the Wall Street Journal developments in Egypt could affect Israel’s national security. 

Chief of Staff of the Egyptian Armed Forces General Sami Anan warned Israel against interfering with Egypt’s plan to open the Rafah border crossing with Gaza on a permanent basis, saying it was not a matter of Israel’s concern, Army Radio reported on Saturday.

Egypt announced this week that it intended to permanently open the border crossing with Gaza within the next few days.

Gaza border April 27, 2011 Reuters Palestinians take part in a protest at the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt, April 27, 2011.
Photo by: Reuters

The announcement indicates a significant change in the policy on Gaza, which before Egypt’s uprising, was operated in conjunction with Israel. The opening of Rafah will allow the flow of people and goods in and out of Gaza without Israeli permission or supervision, which has not been the case up until now.

An Israeli official on Friday told The Wall Street Journal that Israel was troubled by the recent developments in Egypt saying they could affect Israel’s national security at a strategic level.

Israel’s blockade on Gaza has been a policy used in conjunction with Egyptian police to weaken Hamas, which has ruled over the strip since 2007.

Rafah’s opening would be a violation of an agreement reached in 2005 between the United States, Israel, Egypt, and the European Union, which gives EU monitors access to the crossing. The monitors were to reassure Israel that weapons and militants wouldn’t get into Gaza after its pullout from the territory in the fall of 2005.

Before Egypt’s uprising and ousting of longtime leader Hosni Mubarak, the border between Egypt and Gaza had been sealed. It has occasionally opened the passage for limited periods.

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Seattle billboards on Israel canceled after controversy


Months after trying to place controversial ads about Israel on Metro buses, the Seattle group behind the ads said its latest effort to put a similar message on billboards has also been rejected.

The group, the Seattle Mideast Awareness Campaign (SeaMAC), said billboard company Clear Channel Outdoor had placed three of the group’s signs last week and this week.

The signs say, “Equal rights for Palestinians – Stop funding the Israeli military.”

But on Wednesday, Clear Channel announced it was canceling the contract, saying it re-evaluated its decision after people complained, according to SeaMAC.

“We don’t under what is objectionable about equal rights…” SeaMAC volunteer Ed Mast said Thursday, standing near billboard on Elliott Avenue West that once had his message. It now said, “A mind is a terrible thing to waste.”

“This leaves us censored now twice in Seattle.”

Olivia Lippens, president of Clear Channel Outdoor Seattle, said the company is committed to ensuring that “all messages we post, and any websites they promote, adhere to community standards and are not offensive towards any business.”

“Upon further review, it became evident that a campaign sponsored by Stop 30 Billion.org promoted a website that is not in keeping with those standards,” Lippens said in a statement.

“As a result of that review, we removed this advertising from our displays.”

The website Lippens refers to is for an umbrella group called the Coalition to Stop $30 Billion to Israel. The $30 billion refers to the amount the United States has committed to giving Israel in military aid over the next decade, says the group.

(The actual website on the billboards is for SeaMAC, whose site is stop30billion-seattle.org).

Mast said the billboards were placed on Aurora Avenue, Elliott Avenue West and Lake City Way. Lippens said Clear Channel was working to remove them in the next few days.

Last year, King County had authorized SeaMAC to put ads on Metro buses that said, “Israeli war crimes: Your tax dollars at work.”

But news of the ads prompted a torrent of complaints and threats of violence, and county officials worried about civil disobedience and terrorist acts.

Executive Dow Constantine reversed the decision in December, before the ads ever went up. SeaMAC and the ACLU then sued the county, saying the decision violated the Constitution.

The controversy also prompted King County Metro to announce new transit advertising policy earlier this month, saying it will take ads for non-profits, but that certain political and public issue ads will be banned.

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Every Fourth Palestinian Under Arrest


One-fourth of the Palestinian population residing in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) has been put behind the bars by the Israeli government, making Palestinians the most imprisoned people in the world, according to a new report.
Besides, Israel is the only state worldwide that has child prisoners under the age of 18. They number 280. “Their living conditions are harsh. Prison administration refuses to allow mature prisoners to join them. Israel uses all sorts of punishment and tortures against child prisoners to recruit them as spies. They threaten them with rape and other forms of violence,” contends the report by ‘Friends of Humanity International’.

“There is no one single family that didn’t experience the arrest of one of its members. The majority of those detained are male, which constitutes over 40 percent of the total male Palestinian population” in the OPT, says the report titled ‘A year of Jails storming and attempts to weaken prisoners determination’.

“Since Israel began its illegal occupation of the West Bank and Gaza in 1967, more than 650,000 Palestinians have been detained, representing approximately twenty percent of the current total Palestinian population in the Occupied Territories,” notes the report released in Vienna on April 22, 2011.

The report points out that Israel has illegally detained Palestinian men, women and children through an extensive and systematic set of regulations that control every aspect of Palestinian life. They restrict or deny their basic human rights.

Authors of the report, Fuad Al Khoffash and Ghassan Obaid, call a spade a spade: “The conditions of the prisons and treatment of prisoners are horrendous, violating numerous international laws. The Israeli military, which governs the Occupied Territories, constantly changes or issues new military orders that are often unknown to local populations until implemented. Palestinian prisoners are then subject to Israeli military tribunals, which rarely follow required international standards of fair trial. Palestinians not only live under an illegal occupation, but also under an unstable and unjust system of law and order.”

The majority of Palestinian political prisoners are charged with offenses under Israeli military orders of which there are some 1,500 governing the West Bank and 1,400 enforced in Gaza before Israel’s withdrawal from that area in 2005.

These military regulations carry a broad definition of “security” and they ban, amongst other things, political expression. For example, according to Military order 101 it is forbidden to conduct a protest march or meeting (grouping of ten or more where the subject concerns or is related to politics) “without permission of the Military Commander”. The distribution of political articles and pictures with “political connotations” is also forbidden under the same order.

Al Khoffash and Obaid add: “Israeli policies towards its prisoners routinely violate international law. Torture has become an endemic problem within Israeli prisons and increasing numbers of children are beginning to end up in Israeli jails. These general trends are areas of growing concern as they have remained unabated for decades.”

While there is a general problem facing Palestinians in Israeli prisons, the report provides details of the suffering faced by Palestinian prisoners incarcerated by Israel.

The report says: “Year 2010 was not an ordinary year for Palestinian prisoners. Yet, if there is a common feature to describe the reality of the movement of prisoners and the captives, we could label it as ‘A year of Jails storming and attempts to Weaken Prisoners Determination’.”

Al Khoffash and Obaid add: “The In 2010 there was also the largest movement of prison leaders of Palestinian detainees in an effort to disrupt prisoners and create a state of instability within prisons. This policy intended to hinder the work of Prisoners Movement, to plan and organize their struggle within jails such as protests and hunger strikes.

“The year also witnessed a sharp decrease in the number of prisoners in Israeli jails which was 6500 persons distributed in dozens of Israelis jails. The year included various random campaigns to arrest people in the West Bank cities and villages. Such campaigns were carried almost daily. Indeed there are daily operations storming houses, villages and towns in return of releases of some prisoners. It seems Israel is trying to send a message pointing out that no Palestinian is immune and protected from these campaigns and operations.”

The report has gathered some shocking information: The prisoners were tortured and their belongings were confiscated. They were hit, beaten, including with electric sticks and sprayed with tear gas. They were separated individually or moved to other departments in the jail, not dissimilar to what happened to those in Hadarim detention centre.

“In Hadarim centre, prisoners in division three were moved to division five. Walls between divisions were demolished while prisoners were deprived from taking electric equipments with them. Prisoners were corralled and put in a detention which lacked any basic provisions required in every prison. All this happened under a pretext of searching for mobile phones.”

The same incident happened in Nafha detention centre, located in the desert which the Israeli army stormed more than ten times. On every occasion, says the report, confrontation took place between prison guards and prisoners, resulting in bloody attacks against prisoners and their leaders.

On one occasion, an Israeli officer, at Nafha detention (which host Palestinian prisoners of highest sentences from Gaza Strip), phoned the wife of one of the prisoners with abuse to evoke response, while searching his private belongings. The incident caused enormous damage and has pushed the Management of the prison to apologize and provide further assurance that an open investigation in the manner in which prison cells are raided and prisoners restrained by carried out.

“The Israeli state and Prison Service facility has escalated their humiliating and torture tactics. Rarely a week passes before another raid or attack against prisoner’s chambers. Such conditions made the lives of prisoners extremely difficult, forced to live in continuous tension fearing frequent and untimely attacks,” the authors of the report note. (IDN-InDepthNews/26.04.2011)

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Three children hurt in Israeli air raids on Gaza


Three children were injured by flying glass as Israeli F16 fighter planes flew six raids against the Gaza Strip overnight, hospital staff, witnesses and Hamas officials said Friday.

The three children, aged two, four and 11, were hit by flying glass in a raid on the Sabra district, in the western part of Gaza City, said Moawiya Hassanein, head of the Palestinian emergency services in Gaza.

Three Israeli air strikes targeted an area west of Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza.

A fourth raid destroyed a workshop in the refugee camp of Nusseirat, in central Gaza.

In two other air raids, Israeli fighters targeted points in the west of Gaza City, completely destroying a small dairy factory in the Sabra district, said witnesses.

 

The attacks were carried out by F16 fighters, the witnesses said.

Israel’s armed forces have launched regular air raids on the Gaza Strip in recent weeks, responding to repeated rocket attacks into Israel from Gaza-based militants.

 

In recent days, Israeli ground forces have also clashed with Palestinian militants along the border with Israel.

On Tuesday, a Palestinian teenager was killed and several others were wounded as Israeli troops fired on protestors near the Gaza border.

 

The incident happened as Israeli Arabs and Palestinians marked “Land Day”, the annual commemoration of Israel’s killing of six Arab citizens during a 1976 protest against land confiscations.

And an Israeli officer and soldier were killed during fierce clashes last weekend.

Following the deaths, finance minister Yuval Steinitz, from the governing rightwing Likud party, told public radio: “Sooner or later we will liquidate the military regime of the pro-Iranian Hamas which controls the Gaza Strip.”

The present surge in violence is the worst since the end of the 22-day Israeli assault on the territory launched in December 2008 that killed some 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis.

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Riverdance’s Robert Ballagh in protest over show going to Israel


Artist Robert Ballagh, who designed the set for Riverdance , is boycotting an upcoming tour to Israel by Riverdance in support of justice for the Palestinian people.

In an open letter, Ballagh has also said he will donate any royalties due to him for performances by Riverdance in Israel to the fund for an Irish boat, which is taking part in an flotilla of vessels that hopes to break the “illegal and inhuman blockade” of Gaza.

“I, along with many other Irish creative and performing artists, signed a cultural boycott pledge not to visit Israel. This was a positive response to the call by Palestinian filmmakers, artists and cultural organisations for a cultural boycott of Israel. I believe that this non-violent cultural boycott will contribute to the struggle for justice for the Palestinian people.”

“Because I have signed up to support the cultural boycott I will not be travelling to Israel with Riverdance ,” he said.

Ballagh said his decision to support the boycott was inspired by a meeting with Nelson Mandela, who told him the sporting and cultural boycott of South Africa was an essential weapon in the struggle against apartheid.

In a second open letter published today, the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign says the Riverdance “farewell tour”, which includes events in three Israeli cities, violates a call for boycotts issued by 170 Palestinian civil society organisations in 2005 and a subsequent cultural boycott issued by filmmakers and artists.

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Report: Netanyahu, US plan anti-unity ‘diplomatic campaign’


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pressed a visiting delegation of US lawmakers Thursday to join him in measures against the Palestinian unity deal, according to Israeli media reports.

The meeting saw a decision to push a diplomatic campaign, focusing on the European Union, to undermine international recognition of the unity government between rival Hamas and Fatah factions, Israeli daily Haaretz cited senior Israeli government officials saying.

Netanyahu told the seven US Congress members, who had come to Israel on a bipartisan delegation, that “Israel would not recognize any government in the world that included members from Al-Qaida,” the report said.

The Prime Minister also said the United States should block aid to a Palestinian government that does not recognize Israel or renounce terror, quoting remarks by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in April 2009, saying that these were preconditions for talks or economic support.

Israeli military and intelligence officials joined the meeting of visiting Congress members, and told the delegation Hamas had signed the unity deal due to fears of instability in its allied regime, Syria, according to Haaretz’ report.

After 18 months of largely fruitless reconciliation talks, delegations from Hamas and Fatah meeting in Cairo on Wednesday announced a deal to form an interim unity government of technocrats with a view to holding presidential and legislative elections within a year.

The deal raises the prospect of an end to the devastating political divide that has seen the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority govern the West Bank while the Islamist Hamas movement control the Gaza Strip.

The Israeli Prime Minister and Defense Minister Ehud Barak vowed Thursday not to recognize a Palestinian government that includes Hamas, with Netanyahu warning President Mahmoud Abbas must chose between peace with Israel and Hamas. Senior US congress members decried the unity move and immediately threatened to axe millions in funding for the Palestinian Authority.

Palestinian-Israeli Knesset member Ahmad At-Tibi responded on Thursday saying, “Threats by Netanyahu and the US Congress against the Palestinians in light of the reconciliation agreement are arrogant, hypocritical and Israeli chutzpa,” according to a report in Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post.

Tibi continued, “In Israel, they sanctify the value of national unity, but demand that the Palestinians remain divided and weak. Palestinian unity will promote the goals of the Palestinian people to achieve freedom and independence.” Print

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Gaza is still the issue, despite the Arab revolutions


The revolutions taking place across the Arab world have taken the spotlight away from an ongoing issue which Israel would like the world to forget: the siege of Gaza, which has now been in place for four years. In May last year, Israel’s murderous attack on the Freedom Flotilla caused worldwide outrage and it was forced to announce that it would “ease” the siege; a year later it is still in place and continues to affect the lives of 1.5 million Gazans.

Most inhabitants of Gaza have seen little or no improvement in their lives as a result of Israel’s “easing” measures, which have been largely cosmetic. Exports from the Gaza Strip remain almost totally prohibited. Gaza’s factories, most of which were forced to shut down because of the Israeli siege, have been unable to resume operations because Israel blocks the import of the raw materials they need. These two measures together have crippled the economy. Today, poverty in Gaza is widespread and it has one of the world’s highest unemployment rates, at 39%; according to the UN, 80% of its population is dependent on food aid.

While it is true that more basic goods, including food items and consumer durables, are entering Gaza, many are still prohibited; the cost of those that are allowed in is prohibitive because of the poverty. Although Israel said that it would let building materials into Gaza following the “easing” of the blockade, in practice only a small amount has been allowed in. The UN has estimated that Gaza needs 670,000 truckloads of building materials in order to rebuild the homes destroyed by Israel in its 2008-2009 assault on the territory (never mind any new developments).  Since the blockade has been “eased”, only 715 trucks of building materials have been allowed in every month. Israel has instituted bureaucratic procedures designed to ensure that only a small amount of material actually gets through. It also has restricted the operation of crossing points such as the Karni Crossing – today less material is getting through than before the “easing”.

Israel’s ongoing siege of Gaza makes sure that life there cannot continue as normal and that the inhabitants of the territory still suffer. The lack of building materials means that existing schools cannot be repaired and new ones cannot be built. As a result, in some schools shipping containers are being used as classrooms. The fishing industry has been decimated because Israel refuses to allow fishermen to operate more than three miles from the shore. Even when fishermen stay within this limit, they risk being fired on by the Israeli navy. The total catch fell 47% between 2008 and 2009. Today 90% of Gaza’s fishermen live in poverty and most of them are unable to work.

Gaza’s water supply is still dangerously polluted; Israel continues to stop all water treatment equipment from entering the Strip and 90% of the water supplied to homes unfit for human consumption. Before the “easing” there were reports of babies being born with a blue tinge; they were suffering from a blood disorder known as methemoglobinemia which is caused by exposure to water with a high concentration of nitrates. The UN warned that Gaza’s damaged water supply system was on the verge of collapse, and if this happens, the additional damage will take centuries to fix. Because of Israel’s refusal to allow in the necessary equipment, this problem is ongoing and hasn’t improved in any way.

Gaza is still effectively a prison camp for its people. They are allowed to leave the territory only in the most exceptional cases. Following the “easing” of the blockade some business people have been granted exceptional leave to travel to the West Bank through Israel, but the rest of the inhabitants cannot travel abroad for work, study or to visit relatives. Many patients have died because of Israel’s refusal to grant permission for them to travel for medical treatment.

The ongoing suffering of the people of Gaza is the reason why the latest initiative to break the siege - Freedom Flotilla 2 – is so important.  While the world focuses on the protests and revolutions rocking the Arab world, Israel believes it can get away not only with the continuation of the siege but also with an escalation of its air-raids and attacks on the territory, which killed more than 20 people at the beginning of April.

A coalition of non-governmental organizations is putting together the new flotilla of 15 ships which will sail to Gaza from ports around the world next month.  Freedom Flotilla Two will arrive in Gaza nearly one year after the its predecessor was attacked by Israeli commandos, resulting in the deaths of nine activists and serious injuries to dozens more. The activists taking part wish to send a message to Israel that the people of the world will continue to support the people of Gaza. While the governments of the world and the mainstream media remain silent about the siege, people across the world have understood what is happening and won’t allow Israel to get away with the continued imprisonment and strangulation of Gaza’s people.

Israel is now doing anything it can to stop the flotilla, from issuing crude threats that it will meet the same fate as the last one to a diplomatic offensive undertaken by President Shimon Peres to get European countries to prevent their citizens from participating. That last strategy has failed and European governments have snubbed Peres.

The activism that led to the organisation of Freedom Flotilla Two and its predecessor suggests that Israel is in the middle of a new reality, one where news of its actions spreads around the world through new media and social activism, and where ordinary people will act to stop its crimes against the Palestinian people even when their governments won’t.

Israel is deeply mistaken if it believes that it can use the revolutions in the Arab world to cover up its crimes against the Palestinians. The revolutions have taught Arab leaders one thing - that they will be held accountable for what they do by their people, and that their abuses of power will come back to haunt them.

The age of impunity in the Middle East is thus drawing to a close, and Israel is not immune from this development. Making cosmetic changes and conducting a public relations campaign will not fool the world into believing that the siege of Gaza has been lifted.

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Medics: Israeli fire wounds 4 in Gaza family


Israeli tank fire wounded four members of a Gaza family on Thursday, medics said, in an incident that ruptured the calm of a shaky truce achieved after a spasm of cross-border violence earlier this month.

Officials in Gaza said Israeli forces had fired in the direction of a home in central Gaza after darkness fell.

Medics and witnesses said those wounded were a man and a woman and two children aged five and 10 from the same family, who were on the second floor of a building about 200 meters from a border zone with Israel.

All were treated in hospital for slight injuries, medics said.

The Israeli military said its troops had fired from a tank at a squad of militants “identified as planting an explosive near a border security fence” and that “uninvolved civilians were apparently injured in this incident.”

The statement went on to say that the military “regrets that terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip choose to operate from within the civilian population.”

The incident followed a surprise unity deal achieved this week between Hamas and the Fatah movement that dominates in the occupied West Bank, an accord denounced by Israel which shuns Hamas, a group that refuses to recognize the Jewish state.

Nineteen Palestinians in Gaza were killed this month in ‘retaliatory’ Israeli strikes.

The fighting died down after United Nations and other officials achieved an unofficial truce about two weeks ago.

 

 

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Egypt FM: Gaza border crossing to be permanently opened


Egypt’s foreign minister said in an interview with Al-Jazeera on Thursday that preparations were underway to open the Rafah border crossing with Gaza on a permanent basis.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil al-Arabi told Al-Jazeera that within seven to 10 days, steps will be taken in order to alleviate the “blockade and suffering of the Palestinian nation.”

Egypt’s foreign minister said in an interview with Al-Jazeera on Thursday that preparations were underway to open the Rafah border crossing with Gaza on a permanent basis.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil al-Arabi told Al-Jazeera that within seven to 10 days, steps will be taken in order to alleviate the “blockade and suffering of the Palestinian nation.”

Palestinians Rafah border - AP Palestinians at the Rafah border crossing before leaving the Gaza Strip to Egypt after Egypt opened the border in 2008 for two days.
Photo by: AP

The announcement indicates a significant change in the policy on Gaza, which before Egypt’s uprising, was operated in conjunction with Israel. The opening of Rafah will allow the flow of people and goods in and out of Gaza without Israeli permission or supervision, which has not been the case up until now.

Israel’s blockade on Gaza has been a policy used in conjunction with Egyptian police to weaken Hamas, which has ruled over the strip since 2007. The policy also aims to reduce Hamas’ popularity among Gazans by creating economic hardship in the Strip.

Rafah’s opening would be a violation of an agreement reached in 2005 between the United States, Israel, Egypt, and the European Union, which gives EU monitors access to the crossing. The monitors were to reassure Israel that weapons and militants wouldn’t get into Gaza after its pullout from the territory in the fall of 2005.

Before Egypt’s uprising and ousting of longtime leader Hosni Mubarak, the border between Egypt and Gaza had been sealed. It has occasionally opened the passage for limited periods.

Ha’aretz

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bD4=