Newsflash

The UN relief and works agency has said it will run out of food within the next 48 hours as the blockade imposed on Gaza by Israel continues.

Christopher Gunness, the agency's spokesman, told Al Jazeera the people in Gaza were being put through not just a "physical sense pf punishment but also a mental one".

"That's how serious it is. We feed 750,000 people in Gaza and these are some of the poorest and most disadvantaged people in the Middle East," he said on Wednesday.

"Something very unusual is happening here. This is becoming a blockade against the UN itself."

The blockade, which has prevented deliveries of essential items including food and fuel, was imposed after rocket attacks by Palestinian fighters, who said they were responding to an Israeli raid that killed six people on November 4.

Gunness said the agency was trying to get material into a school for blind children but that it had been barred.

'Blind Children'

"These blind children, as far as I am aware, are not firing rockets. And the material we are trying to get to them would make a pretty floppy rocket if they tried to make one from it," Gunness said.

"We have a situation where hundreds of thousands of ordinary people, including blind children who would have been assisted, are effectively being punished for the irresponsible acts of a few."

He added: "We condemn the firing of rockets. We do it every single time ... We cannot punish whole communities. This has got to stop. The blockade against the UN itself has got to come to an end."

Gunness said a team in Gaza was starting a human rights education programme in the run up to the 60th anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights, but he added that it would be hard telling children to respect people's rights.

"They are telling children in Gaza that they have to respect rights universally. How can we tell those same children, 'Oh, by the way, you have to respect rights of people in Israel but they are actually stopping us giving you food?' It doesn't make sense," he said.

Gunness said the agency had made phone calls and sent emails seeking permission to deliver aid to Gazans, but it was getting no response

"We are told it is not possible ... it is difficult ... this stuff and the other. This sort of prevarication is leading to misery. A population is being radicalised in the Middle East," he said.

Renewed Deliveries

On Tuesday, Israel partially renewed fuel deliveries to the Gaza Strip, ending a week-long suspension of supplies that led to blackouts in the homes of Palestinian families.

Palestinian workers said the first delivery was received at the Nahal Oz fuel depot and was sent on to Gaza's only power plant.

The plant shut down on Monday due to what Palestinian officials said was a lack of fuel, leaving about half of Gaza's 1.5 million residents without power.

An Egyptian-brokered ceasefire that began in June has been disrupted following the imposition of the blockade.

Israeli's foreign ministry accused Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, of exploiting the situation for political gain.

"The cynical Hamas exploitation of the civilian population in Gaza is contemptible," a ministry statement said.

Kanan Obeid, a Gazan energy official, criticised the move as an example of "Israel's policy of collective punishment".

The Gaza City plant provides about a quarter of Gaza's electricity, while most of the rest comes over lines from Israel. Egypt also provides a small amount.
 

(Aljazeera.net English and agencies)

 
Home arrow Opinion Articles arrow Thoughts are Free, Entry is Not
Thoughts are Free, Entry is Not PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 02 June 2008
Thoughts are Free, Entry is Not

Thoughts are Free, Entry is Not
 
Joharah Baker

Unfortunately, Palestinians are no longer surprised at Israel’s racist policies. Discrimination against Palestinians and those who support them has become the rule, not the exception. Still, when the Shin Bet, Israel’s internal intelligence agency, banned renowned American academic and author Norman Finkelstein from entering Israel on May 23, even the Palestinians’ jaws dropped. Finkelstein was reportedly interrogated for nearly 24 hours before being put back on a plane to Amsterdam and abruptly informed that he would not be able to return to Israel for 10 years.

Finkelstein, as the name suggests, is Jewish.

According to Israel’s Law of Return, any Jew from anywhere in the world has a right to return to Israel and be granted immediate citizenship. As an American, however, his deportation was still within Israel’s jurisdictions.

Hence, it is not the deportation order that is so surprising, even against a foreigner not of Palestinian origin. Over the past several years, hundreds of people sympathetic to the Palestinian cause have been informed by Israeli authorities that they are no longer welcome in Israel. Peace activists, teachers, even Palestinians married to Israeli citizens have been told not to return, banned entry from the various border crossings. Israel has always claimed it retains the right to ban entry to any non-citizen for reasons they do not necessarily have to disclose. In Finkelstein’s case, the Shin Bet said Finkelstein `is not permitted to enter Israel because of suspicions involving hostile elements in Lebanon.` This can only mean one thing in Israeli jargon – Hizballah. “He did not give a full accounting to interrogators with regard to these suspicions,” they concluded.

Finkelstein, who did travel to Lebanon earlier this year and met with Hizballah operatives, begs to differ, insisting that he answered to the best of his ability all the questions posed to him by the interrogators. He also maintained he was only traveling to Israel to visit an old friend.

It doesn’t even matter what bogus excuse the Shin Bet offered to justify their deportation order. We all know why Finkelstein is persona non grata in Israel. Not only is he a harsh critic of Israel’s policies towards the Palestinians, as a Jew he is also critical of Zionism and what he says is the exploitation of the Holocaust by the Jews. That is heavy stuff, especially for a country that has fooled most of the world into believing Israel is forced into these heinous practices against the Palestinians in defense of their security and that the establishment of the state was essential for the Jew’s survival after the Holocaust. For a highly intelligent and educated man such as Norman Finkelstein to shoot these claims down is not exactly what Israel is looking for.

Norman Finkelstein is probably the least surprised of us all, having learned early on that his positions would come with a high price. Last year, Finkelstein was denied tenure at DePaul University in Chicago after his positions regarding the Holocaust came under attack by faculty members, who said they were “inconsistent with DePaul’s values.”

In 2000, Finkelstein published a book entitled “The Holocaust Industry: Reflections on the exploitation of Jewish Suffering” in which he said Jewish activists, including the well-known Elie Wesiel were “exploiting the memory of the Holocaust as an “ideological weapon,” so that Israel, “one of the world`s most formidable military powers, with a horrendous human rights record, [can] cast itself as a victim state” in order to garner `immunity to criticism.”

Subsequently, in his 2005 book, “Beyond Chutzpah: On the misuse of anti-Semitism and the abuse of history”, Finkelstein basically charges Israel with exploiting anti-Semitism to steer international criticism away from it. The book also counters claims made in “The Case for Israel” by Alan Dershowitz, on Israel’s human rights record, recounting the daily practices of the occupation and the multitude of human rights violations its carries out against Palestinians.

No doubt, Israel was looking for an excuse to keep this man out of Israel and the Palestinian territories. The truth about the Palestinians is hardly coveted, especially since the majority of the Israeli public has already swallowed the bulk of Israel’s propaganda. In this case, Hizballah was the perfect scapegoat and one which Israel’s public would be sure to accept. While there may be a small minority of politically-aware Israelis who question Israel’s policies against the Palestinians, it is doubtful that many will show sympathy to Hizballah or those who recognize it.

Even Israeli Jews are not immune to Israel’s discriminatory policies if they are perceived as threatening. The best case in point is Ilan Pappe. Author of “The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine” among other books, Pappe has caused a major stir within Israeli society, given that he recounts Israeli policy in 1948 and the massacres perpetrated by Jewish gangs against Palestinians. He is one of the few Israelis who support the right of return for Palestinian refugees, something all Israeli governments and the overwhelming majority of the Israeli people adamantly refuse to recognize. This has hardly made him popular among Israelis, with some hardliners even calling him a “traitor” and the “the most hated Israeli in Israel.”

The last straw for Pappe was in 2007 after expressing his support for the academic boycott of Israel. At the time, he was a political science professor at the University of Haifa and justified his position by saying the boycott would be the best means to pressure Israel into ending the “worst occupation in recent history.” This did not go down well with the university’s administration and culminated in the university president asking Pappe to resign.

However, unlike Finkelstein, Pappe is an Israeli citizen, which makes it virtually impossible for Israel to deport him. Instead, Israel has made it tough for Pappe to live in his own home, even by his own admission, saying he found it “increasingly difficult to live in Israel because of his unwelcome views and convictions.”

Both Finkelstein and Pappe are perfect examples of what can be considered the biggest threat to Israel, which are not suicide bombers or Qassam rockets. The power of the mind, revolutionary thoughts and truths never before revealed are what Israel really fears, and for good reason. If these truths spread – the truth about what really happened in 1948 or how Israel treats the Palestinians and their actual plan to cleanse the country from as many Palestinians as possible – this could compromise Israel’s very reason for existence. If the falsities on which Israel was established are deconstructed and the racist premises on which Israel bases its existence are debunked, there is no telling where this could lead.

Israel is well aware of this. It is easy to bomb Palestinian cities, kill those who launch rockets or imprison children who throw rocks. It is not easy, however, to kill a thought and to stop its proliferation. That is why brave men such as Norman Finkelstein and Ilan Pappe are so persecuted by their own people. And that is precisely why they should be appreciated by all those who seek to have the truth told regardless of the consequences.

Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Programme at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it


**Source: MIFTAH
http://www.miftah.org/Display.cfm?DocId=17015&CategoryID=3

 

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