Terrorizing Palestinians Daily: Life In
Occupied Palestine Harsh, Brutal, And Repressive
02 April 2012
By Stephen Lendman
Life in Occupied Palestine is harsh, brutal, and
repressive. It includes collective punishment, closed
borders, economic strangulation, land theft,
dispossessions, neighborhood incursions, ground and
air attacks, arrests, torture, incarceration, and
constant fear.
Daily reports explain. On March 27, soldiers and
settlers invaded the al-Aqsa Mosque through the al-Magharba
Gate. Inside they terrorized worshipers.
The previous two days, soldiers broke into Bethlehem,
Hebron, Rommana village, and other West Bank homes.
They ransacked them and arrested six or more
residents. It happens virtually daily throughout the
West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, most often
pre-dawn. Children are treated like adults.
For years, Gaza's suffocated under siege. On March 25,
the Gisha Legal Center for Freedom of Movement
headlined, "Israel prevents hairstylists and students
traveling out of Gaza," saying:
Five women and two men were denied. They requested
permission to participate in the Tulkarem "Palestinian
Beauty and Tradition Spring Fair."
Israel's District Coordination Office (DCO) said "in
view of the current political-security situation,
residents of the Gaza Strip are not permitted to enter
Israel other than in exceptional humanitarian cases,
with an emphasis on medical cases."
Gisha wrote DCO head Colonel Khatib Mansour saying:
Three applicants are independent businesswomen. "(A)approving
their application to participate in the fair is
particularly important. Everywhere in the world,
including the Gaza Strip, fewer opportunities are
available to women. Therefore, women must be supported
to aspire for economic independence so that they can
contribute to the development of their societies."
In addition, DCO prevented seven Gazan female students
from traveling to Al-Quds University in Abu Dis. They
were invited to participate in an international
technology competition. Denial again was for not being
an exceptional humanitarian case.
Under siege, Gazans face poverty, unemployment,
shortages of everything, at times lack of vital to
life essentials, and prohibition of exports except for
occasional limited amounts of strawberries, flowers,
peppers and tomatoes. However, getting them out is
expensive, time consuming and unprofitable.
On March 28, the Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR)
headlined, "Occupied Lives: Dying while waiting for
medical supplies," saying:
In 2009, Egyptian doctors diagnosed Gaza resident
Akram Mones Abu Sefan with chronic myelocytic
leukemia. Since 2010, Glivec kept him alive. It's a
new drug able to significantly increase patient
survival rates.
Even though cancer spread to other parts of his body,
he says Gilvec "changed my life. Since I started
treatment....the symptoms of the leukemia have
subsided and I feel healthy again."
However, since January 2012, the drug's unavailable in
Gaza's Central Drug Store. Under siege, Gazan
authorities face enormous obstacles getting enough
essential to life supplies, including medicines.
Procedures require Health Ministry officials
requesting supplies from Ramallah's health
authorities. They, in turn, must coordinate efforts
with Israel for delivery.
However, the combination of Israeli harshness, Hamas/Fatah
disputes, and financial problems limits the
availability of essential medications and other vital
supplies.
Akram's wife explained their ordeal, saying:
"My husband suffers from strong headaches and from
pain in his legs. I try my best to cook food that can
compensate the problems caused by his blood disease."
His doctor told them that interrupting treatment risks
severe consequences. They include respiratory and
kidney failure leading to death.
At present, 32 Gazan cancer patients depend on Gilvec
to survive. Supplies ran out before. For a month and a
half, Akram's treatment was interrupted. He depends on
Gaza's Health Ministry to provide it. It costs $3,700
a month. It's far more than he or most other
Palestinians can afford.
According to Shifa Hospital's Na'el Shih, 80% of
medicines patients need aren't available. "We are
dying in here. One hundred eighty six medicines are
currently depleted from the Central Drug Store of the
Ministry of Health in Gaza."
"The remaining stock will be finished within the next
2-3 months. (For the past) two months, there have been
no hepatitis vaccinations for newborns in Gaza."
Expensive medications like Gilvec are especially hard
to get or unavailable. Without them, patients suffer
and face death.
Israel can easily save them. Too often, it condemns
them to death while suffocating 1.7 million others
under siege. It's official policy.
On March 28, Haaretz headlined, "Israel's contentious
Bedouin relocation plan passes PM's Office panel,"
saying:
It calls for displacing up to 30,000 Israeli Arabs
from their own land. In other words, stealing it like
nearly half the West Bank. Known as the Prawar plan,
Netanyahu's cabinet approved it last September. They
want Arab land for Jewish development.
The plan involves "16 different ministries and
agencies, including the Industry, Trade and Labor
Ministry, and the Education, Transportation, Energy
and Water Resources, and Housing and Construction
ministries. Among the many officials who attended
Monday's meeting was Prawer himself."
The announcement coincides with Land Day. Palestinians
commemorate the IDF March 30, 1976 killing of six
Israeli Arab protesters against Palestinian land
theft. At the time, another 100 were wounded and
hundreds more arrested.
On the same day, the BDS Global Day of Action is held
"in solidarity with the Palestinian people's struggle
for freedom, justice and equality and for Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it
fully complies with its obligations under
international law."
In addition, a Global March to Jerusalem will be held
after Friday prayers. Israel plans disruptive
violence. It confronts Bedouin Arabs the same way.
They've faced forced relocations for years, but
nothing like on this scale. It amounts to racism writ
large. All Palestinians and Israeli Arabs are
affected.
A Final Comment
On March 29, Hana Shalabi's 42 hunger strike day
began. She's so deteriorated she remains dangerously
close to death.
For weeks, Palestinian solidarity protests rallied in
support. On Wednesday, a Gaza one took place.
Protesters marched on the ICRC's office. They demanded
her immediate release.
Few people in America and the West know about her and
other hunger strikers. Major media scoundrels say
nothing.
Photos and posters of Hana adorn her family's home.
One wall displays a large framed picture of her
martyred brother, Samer. In September 2005, Israeli
soldiers murdered him in cold blood like so many other
Palestinians.
On March 19, Hana's parents met with PA President
Mahmoud Abbas. They asked him to help secure Hana's
release. He promised to do his best. He's done little
or nothing.
According to Hana's sister Zahra, "Why does he call
himself a president if he can't use his diplomatic
powers to release my sister? I don't believe he's even
trying."
When Hana was arrested in 2009, an Israeli officer
said the PA provided a "secret file" on her. Abbas was
complicit in her arrest then. Perhaps again this time
on February 16.
He's a longstanding Israeli collaborator, a traitor to
his own people. Israel arranged his election and keeps
him in office even though his term expired in January
2009. Why bother with elections when coronations work
better.
On March 29, an Arab Association for Human Rights (HRA)
press release headlined, "Administrative Detention
Must Stop: Freedom for Prisoner Hana Shalabi," saying:
HRA "condemns the continual use of administrative
detention against Palestinian political leaders and
reminds that such policy constitutes a form of
arbitrary detention devoid of the most basic standards
of due process of law. The HRA is particularly
concerned about the health conditions of Prisoner Hana
Shalabi...."
HRA demanded international community help to free her
and other Palestinians lawlessly held. International
law supports them. So should world leaders and
everyone.
Hana's lawyer, Jawad Boulos, heads the Palestinian
Prisoners Society (PPS) Legal Unit. PPS appealed to
Israel's High Court for Hana's release. Boulos said
all legal means will be used on her behalf.
Rarely ever does Israel's Supreme Court overrule a
lower court decision affecting Palestinians. Expect
little or no redress this time.
Palestinians are on their own to survive. Even those
lawlessly condemned to die aren't helped. It shows
Israeli and Western contempt for human rights and
life.
Their imperial wars alone show it. Political prisoners
fill their prisons. America and Israel especially
defile principles they claim to support.
They don't now, never did, and won't ever unless mass
outrage in both countries and other Western ones
sustains struggles for systemic change. It's their
only chance.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached
at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog
site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to
cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on
the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive
Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and
Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are
archived for easy listening. http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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