Gaza is on the Brink of Disaster as Israel’s Genocidal Blockade
Threatens to Kill Thousands
What we are
facing with self-isolation is nothing compared to the calamity which may strike
Gaza. Gaza with 2 million people in an area about 10 square miles is the most
overcrowded territory in the world.
Gaza has been
under an Israeli siege for the past 14 years as a response to the election of a
Hamas administration. Its people are undernourished, its health system lacks
medicines and equipment and social distancing is not possible because of the
overcrowding.
In addition
to all these catastrophes most people are undernourished (or in Israel’s Nazi style
language, they are being ‘put on a
diet’) because of the blockade.
The
blockade must be lifted now otherwise thousands of people could die. Israel’s
blockade has become a genocidal blockade and those who claim legitimacy from
the Holocaust are, it would seem, prepared to perpetrate another genocide.
Copied
below is an article from Israel’s +972
magazine which has had very good coverage of the crisis.
Release all Palestinian
Child Detainees Now – Israel is Jeopardising the lives of Palestinian Children
as Young as 12
We should also demand that Israeli
authorities take immediate action to release all Palestinian child
detainees in Israeli prisons amid the COVID-19 virus pandemic.
TAKE ACTION: Demand Israel release all Palestinian child prisoners
Palestinian children imprisoned by
Israeli authorities live in close proximity to each other,
often in compromised sanitary conditions, with limited
access to resources to maintain minimum hygiene routines.
COVID-19’s impact is exacerbated by these conditions,
making Palestinian children in Israeli prisons and detention centers increasingly
vulnerable.
There is simply no way Israeli
prison authorities can ensure the health and well-being of Palestinian child
detainees.
Four Palestinian prisoners
detained at Israel’s Megiddo prison were placed in isolation after they were in
contact with a COVID-19 positive Israeli officer.
Megiddo prison is one of several
detention facilities located inside Israel where Palestinian child “security
prisoners” are held.
Israeli authorities must
take immediate action to release all Palestinian child detainees in
Israeli prisons and detention centers due to the increasing
vulnerability created due to the rapid global spread of the
COVID-19 virus.
Israeli authorities must take
action to safeguard Palestinian children’s rights to life, survival,
development, and health in accordance with international law.
Please bombard your MP with
demands that they raise these issues now with the government.
ALSO Please donate to Medical Aid for Palestine
who are on the front line and please email your MP asking that the British government
demands an end to the Zionist blockade.
Potential Covid-19 catastrophe
in Gaza – Your help is needed
Please support Medical Aid for Palestinians’ current COVID-19 crisis appeal
After 13 years of brutal siege by Israel and Egypt, the
healthcare infrastructure in Gaza has all but collapsed. Little equipment and
few supplies make their way in, and health professionals are really struggling
at the best of times. But if the Coronavirus breaks out in Gaza it could lead
to an unimaginable catastrophe for such a densely
populated space with so few medical resources.
The news today is what we most feared: the first two
confirmed cases of the virus in Gaza. Reports here and here.
This follows several weeks of virtually total lockdown of
the West Bank, with especially high rates of infection in Bethlehem.
The
easiest way for you to donate is via the Facebook
page for MAP’s current COVID-19 crisis appeal.
Israel’s
caging of Gaza is a recipe for coronavirus disaster
The pandemic's arrival threatens to make Gaza even more unlivable under Israeli siege. Humanitarian aid is not enough — Palestinians need freedom.
Palestinian Health workers spray disinfectant as a precaution against the new coronavirus in the Al-Omari Mosque in Gaza City. March 15, 2020. (Ail Ahmed/Flash90)
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The Palestinian Health Ministry today reported its first
two cases of the novel coronavirus in the Gaza Strip. For weeks the
Hamas-led authority, which has ruled the blockaded territory since 2007,
undertook serious measures to preempt the arrival of the virus to the strip. Up
until its decision to seal off its sides of the Rafah crossing with Egypt and
the Erez checkpoint with Israel, hundreds of Palestinians who entered the strip
were immediately quarantined to ensure they had no symptoms of the disease.
These actions, however, are of very little comfort.
It is no exaggeration to say that the prospect of
COVID-19 spreading in the Gaza Strip is terrifying. This year, 2020, is the
year in which the United Nations and other international agencies predicted
that Gaza would become “uninhabitable.” If Israel’s 13-year blockade and isolation of the strip continued, they warned,
Gaza’s most basic services and its capacity to sustain itself would collapse.
As the specter of the coronavirus haunts the strip’s 2
million Palestinian residents, half of whom are children, the world needs to
face an urgent truth: Gaza, which has long been unlivable
under its current conditions, will be even more so now that the virus has
reached its people.
For years, international NGOs, and even some Israeli officials, have warned that Gaza’s health system is
on the verge of collapse, incapacitated by decades of systematic de-development,
impoverishment, and siege. All the problems of the Israeli blockade are
entangled and heightened in Gaza’s health sector: a severe water crisis, an
extreme power shortage, high rates of unemployment, and crumbling
infrastructure.
As such, Gaza’s healthcare system is not equipped for
a COVID-19 breakout. It has a total number of 2,895 hospital beds, or 1.3 beds per thousand people. It
has just 50 to 60 ventilators for adults. According to the head of
the WHO’s sub-office in Gaza, Abdelnasser Soboh, Gaza is only prepared to
handle the first hundred cases of the virus; “After that, it will need further support.”
The health system is further aggravated by the emigration of many Palestinian health professionals due to
Gaza’s economic crisis. More than 35,000 Palestinians have left the strip since
2018 alone, among them dozens of doctors and nurses. A Health Ministry official
declared they would need at least 300 to 400 more doctors just to close the gap
and meet the population’s minimum needs.
Another feature of Gaza’s existence could fuel a mass
spread of the virus: population density. According to scientists, “crowded conditions can increase the likelihood of people
transmitting infectious diseases” — and with an average of 6,028 persons
per square kilometer, Gaza has one of the highest population densities in the
world. Its over-crowdedness is only surpassed by a few places, such as Hong
Kong; but while people can freely move in and out of Hong Kong, the majority of
Palestinians in Gaza are caged there against their will.
Gaza’s eight refugee camps have even higher population
densities than the territory’s average. Take Jabalia, where more than 140,000
Palestinian refugees live in an area of 1.4 square kilometers, or about 82,000
persons per square kilometer. The camp has access to just three health clinics
and one public hospital. On the land just on the other side of the fence within
present-day Israel — where many of the Palestinian refugees are from — the
density ranges from zero to 500 persons per square kilometer.
In the shadow of the global pandemic, these conditions
in Gaza are a recipe for a disaster. Yet they are not the result of some
unfortunate accident; they are a deliberate product of decades of Israeli state policy, consciously designed and maintained
to achieve Gaza’s disintegration.
General view of Palestinian homes and buildings in
Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, February 9, 2020. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
Most of the 2 million Palestinians living in the tiny
strip today are descendants of 200,000 refugees who fled or were expelled
during the 1948 war that created the State of Israel, joining around 80,000 to
100,000 Palestinians who resided in the area at the time.
These refugees believed that their stay in Gaza would
be temporary, but Israel quickly built militarized fences to confine the
Palestinians, and enacted laws to make their displacement permanent. These
included the 1954 Prevention of Infiltration Law, which deemed any attempt by
Palestinians to return to their land, homes, and property as illegal. Many
Palestinians who tried to do so were shot and killed by Israeli forces.
When Israel conquered the strip in 1967, it enabled
Jewish settlers to take over 25 percent of the already-small territory,
comprising about 40 percent of its arable land. Until Israel’s “disengagement”
in 2005, four decades of Jewish settlement worsened Gaza’s over-crowdedness and
prevented Palestinians from building and expanding within the strip. Since
then, repeated Israeli military offensives decimated Palestinian homes and
further displaced tens of thousands of families.
Put bluntly, the Gaza Strip is in its current shape
because of the logic of Israeli expansionism: the state’s relentless drive to
maintain a Jewish majority at the direct expense of the Palestinians. Two
million Palestinians are trapped in Gaza not because they chose this life, but
because it was forced upon them.
The threat of COVID-19 looming over Gaza is perhaps a
last opportunity to say what many refuse to hear: Gaza’s problem is not a lack
of humanitarian aid, as urgent as it may be. It is territorial, demographic,
and political. It is about who, between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean
Sea, is privileged and who is not; who gets to live and thrive on the land, and
who does not.
Palestinian students walk past a UN distribution center in the Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip on April 6, 2013. (Wissam Nassar/FLASH90)
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Right now, while Israel’s Jewish citizens enjoy the
land and its resources, Palestinians are denied that same right and barred from
returning to their homeland. And while the international community largely
focuses on the threat of Israeli “annexation” of its illegal settlements in the
West Bank, many do not care about the unnatural reality experienced by the
people in Gaza.
In this time of pandemic and concern for the health of
communities worldwide, it is time to address the full consequences of the unjust
partition of historic Palestine — and that includes Gaza.
Indeed, Gaza encapsulates many of our world’s
problems: war, poverty, displacement, and racism. But it also offers glimmers
of hope, through its humanity, resilience, and resistance.
In this moment — when people in more privileged
countries can just slightly relate to a life in confinement, separated from
loved ones, uncertain about basic needs, and worrying about our collective
future — it is imperative to think of places like Gaza, where people have
suffered much worse for decades, and are at the risk of a far more devastating
blow now that the pandemic has reached their shores.
I write this while thinking about my family in Gaza,
who, like many others, may soon be at the mercy of COVID-19. Although this is
the time to think about survival, it is also the time to ask big questions,
about how we as human beings have failed to prepare for this moment. If this is
not the time to end the blockade of Gaza and the occupation of Palestine, and
if this is not the time to address the injustices that have rendered
Palestinian life to suffering and pain, then when?
Jehad Abusalim is a scholar and policy analyst from Gaza. He is a
Palestine Activism Program Associate at the American Friends Service Committee,
and is currently studying at New York University.
Doctors
Warn of Gaza Strip’s Collapse After First Coronavirus Cases Surface
Medical and human rights
organizations call on Israel to lift its blockade of the Strip to boost
supplies of medical equipment and protective gear
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