Israel
Has Turned The Gaza Strip
Into A Zoo
By Amira Hass
16 October, 2007
Haaretz
A
zoo. This is one of the ways that Palestinians describe the conditions
under which nearly 1.5 million of them have been living: in an area
of some 360 square kilometers, closed in on three sides by sophisticated
barbed-wire fences, concrete walls and military lookout towers, and
to the west by Israeli navy ships that seal them off from the sea. Overhead,
in the sky, unmanned aircraft and hot air balloons continually photograph
whatever happens inside this closed cage, which has seven gates connecting
it to the world, all of which are sealed off almost hermetically.
During the past four months,
Israel has permitted about 2,000 people to leave the Gaza Strip - a
minority of them were ill; more than half were Fatah senior activists
or loyalists who were fleeing from the Strip; and the rest were individuals
holding dual citizenship or visas for prolonged stays abroad. For the
sake of comparison: In 1999, 1,400 people a day went through the Rafah
crossing point alone, in addition to the thousands who passed though
the Erez crossing point, despite the permanent closure policy. Now,
1.5 million human beings are living with the knowledge that the length
of their world is at most 41 kilometers long and 12 kilometers wide.
The comparison to a zoo was
made by Dr. Mamdouh al Aker, a doctor who heads the Palestinian Independent
Commission for Citizens' Rights. For another Gazan, a prominent businessman
whose food plant is working at about 5 percent of its capacity, the
situation is reminiscent of a hospital: Like patients, the inhabitants
do not work, but they receive food. They do not work, because for four
months Israel has prohibited not only the exit of any Gazan products
to market, but also the entry of any raw materials or means of production.
If the prices of goods continue to rise and the cash crisis worsens
because of the severing of contact between banks in Israel and the banks
in Gaza, the international aid organizations will soon increase the
quantities of food that they donate, which today account for about 10
percent of the supplies that are brought in. Perhaps the day will come
when they will drop food packages from helicopters.
The governments of Israel, the United States and Europe see the hermetic
imprisonment of 1.5 million human beings and the final destruction of
Gaza's economic infrastructure as a suitable answer to Hamas, at least
until it falls. It appears that the Ramallah "government"
agrees with them. Indeed, the head of the Gazan "government,"
Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, has hinted that the exclusive Hamas regime
in Gaza is temporary. But, this temporary nature depends on the success
of a dialogue between Hamas and Fatah, whereas Israel and the United
States are forbidding Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas from carrying
on such a dialogue. And Abbas, in any case, is for the moment sticking
to the approach that Hamas is a hostile entity.
As always, the students who
are not being allowed to leave are a minority whose imprisonment reflects
the extent of the destruction inflicted upon the Palestinian future.
For years now Israel has been preventing Gazans from studying in the
West Bank. As a consequence, those who want to undertake advanced studies
at the university level must go abroad. Take, for example, 10 outstanding
students who have received scholarships for master's and doctoral studies
in Germany. Take another several hundred students who are already studying
abroad and got stuck in the Gaza Strip over the summer, and others who
registered for studies abroad this year. The essential future contribution
by all of these students to their community is ensured. But if they
do not leave the Gaza Strip today, right now, some of them will lose
their scholarships, others the first semester of the school year and
still others the entire year. Thousands of other young people have simply
given up on their aspiration to study abroad because of the closed-gates
policy. And when they do not receive the opportunity to get to know
the world, the world according to Hamas and the religious horizons that
it offers are the most persuasive.
Since 1991, Israel has been
using the partial or total imprisonment of the Gazans in their cage,
for longer or shorter periods, as a political strategy: Sometimes it
is depicted as punishment, sometimes as a deterrent action and always
as a preface to a political plan. Until not long ago, it seemed as though
the terms of imprisonment could not be any worse. The past four months
have proven that there is always "worse."
© Copyright 2007 Haaretz.
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