"Here goes the only place we look forward to going in the summer."

“Due to the shortage of power supply and the intermittent power outages in the besieged Gaza Strip caused by the Israeli blockade, municipalities in the coastal enclave started today pumping sewage into the sea, according to the Palestinian news agency WAFA.

For more than three weeks now, Israeli occupation authorities have shut down the Karm Abu Salem border crossing with Gaza, the only gate through which Israel allows the entry of basic commodities into the Strip, including badly needed fuel and gas.”

Due to Power Outage, Gaza Municipalities Forced to Drain Sewage into the Sea

Gaza's beach. (Photo: Fawzi Mahmoud, The Palestine Chronicle)

Gaza's beach. (Photo: Fawzi Mahmoud, The Palestine Chronicle)

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Israel's Assault on Gaza's Water Infrastructure

Israel’s relentless bombardment of the Gaza Strip is a humanitarian catastrophe. As well as erasing entire families, destroying hospitals and clinics and the roads accessing them, and the only lab for conducting tests at a time of surging Covid-19, Israel’s assault has badly damaged the water and sanitation infrastructure and the electricity system, leaving Gazans with only 2 – 3 hours of electricity a day.

The New York Times reported on May 18 that the streets of Gaza City were flowing with wastewater due to the destruction of the sewage system. Nearly a million people (about half the population) are without water due to the partial shutdown of a desalination plant and the smashing of water pipes, with the situation growing more dire with each passing day.

On May 20, the Middle East Monitor reported that the Israeli forces deliberately targeted two water pipelines in the Al-Saftawi area. cutting off water to 20% of Gaza City's residents. "The Municipality of Gaza regrettably confirms that the bombing of these two water pipelines, one of which serves more than 200,000 citizens, leaves them with no water supply and aggravating the water crisis that the city suffers due to the deliberate targeting of its infrastructure."

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When do we call Israel’s attacks genocidal?

When do we call Israel’s attacks genocidal?

On May 18, Dr. Mustafa Barghouti, head of the Palestinian Medical Relief Society, told Democracy Now! that Israel’s massive attack on the Gaza Strip “really is an act of genocide.”

The word ‘genocide’ may seem hyperbolic, but here is how the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, adopted by the UN in December 1948, defines it:

“In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: 

  1. Killing members of the group;

  2. Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;

  3. Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;

  4. Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;

  5. Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.”

What Israel is doing to the people of the Gaza Strip can readily be slotted into a., b., or c. above.  

It has been erasing entire families, destroying medical facilities and the roads accessing them, as well as the only biological lab for conducting tests at a time of surging Covid-19.   By May 18, at least 6 hospitals and 9 primary clinics had been badly damaged.  The main road to Gaza’s most important hospital, al-Shifa, had been bombed to such an extent that it could no longer be used by ambulances, and the head of internal medicine at al-Shifa, Dr. Ayman Abu al-Ouf, and a leading psychiatric neurologist, Dr. Mooein Ahmad al-Aloul had been killed.  

Israel’s assault has badly damaged the water and sanitation infrastructure as well as the electricity system, leaving Gazans with only 2 – 3 hours of electricity a day.  The New York Times reported on May 18 that the streets of Gaza City were flowing with wastewater due to the destruction of the sewage system.  Nearly a million people (about half the population) are without water due to the partial shut down of a desalination plant and the smashing of water pipes, with the situation growing more dire with each passing day.   

The conditions that Israel is inflicting on the fragile Gaza Strip make it hard to imagine how the population can recover its physical and mental health, much less thrive. 

Some recent history

But none of this is new.  Back in 1992, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin stated, “I would like Gaza to sink into the sea, but that won't happen, and a solution must be found.”   The solution he thought he had found was the Oslo Accords, and he was killed for it by a far right extremist Yigal Amir.  

Israel began cutting Gaza off from the West Bank and the world in the 1990s.  In the following years, it was relentlessly pummeled by Israel’s military might.   

From 2000 to 2008, Israel repeatedly used tanks, F16s and helicopter gunships against a defenseless civilian population.  Some 3,000 people were killed in the Gaza Strip during these years – the per capita equivalent of 600,000 American dead.  Among them were approximately 700 children.  

Israel’s withdrawal of its Gaza settlers in 2005 completed the transformation of the Gaza Strip into what the Israeli human rights group B’tselem called the largest prison on earth.  Totally encircled by walls, fences and towers, Israel continued to control the land, sea and air, and who goes in and out.

Once the Israeli settlers were gone, Palestinians were repeatedly subjected to eardrum shattering sonic booms and frequent tank fire and missile strikes, as the Israeli armed forces attacked the Gaza Strip with increasing ferocity.  Operation Summer Rains (June 2006) during which it destroyed the only power plant in the Gaza Strip was followed by Operation Autumn Clouds (November 2006).  

Collective punishment

Israel’s closure of the Gaza Strip was tightened after Hamas won the January 2006 legislative election that former US president Jimmy Carter called transparent and fair.  It was transformed into a chokehold in June 2007 after a clash with a CIA-backed Fatah militia led to a total Hamas takeover of the territory.  

Under the harsh economic siege initiated by Israel only 12 basic items were permitted to enter the Gaza Strip – and just enough of them to keep people alive. Electricity and fuel were severely rationed, and cement, soap, many medical supplies, potable water and raw materials were kept out all together as Israel made Gaza a laboratory for trying out its new weapons systems and finding the breaking point of human beings.

On March 6, 2008 a coalition of human rights groups issued a devastating report entitled The Gaza Strip: A Humanitarian Implosion. It concludes: “This humanitarian crisis is a direct result of on-going collective punishment of ordinary men, women and children and is illegal under international law.  Peace will not be achieved by locking 1.5 million people into a prison of spiraling poverty and misery…”.

  Still, the siege went on, preparing Gazans for the “shock and awe” of Israel’s military might over the next dozen years:  what it called Operation Cast Lead (Dec. 2008-January 2009); Operation Pillar of Defense (November 2012) and the summer 2014 51-day onslaught named Operation Protective Edge and today’s Operation Guardian of the Walls.  

These offensives have killed thousands of people (more than 800 of them children) and wreaked massive destruction on homes, schools, hospitals, municipal buildings, the industrial area, agricultural lands, and the vital infrastructure for water, sewage and electricity.  And after each aggression the Israeli-imposed closure has remained in place, barring the import of essential building materials and forcing people to live in the rubble of their homes.   

Such have been the methods used by Israel in its seven-decades-long project of destroying resistance to dispossession – for it is in the tiny Gaza Strip where 70% of the residents are refugees and half are children that Palestinian resistance has been at its most unrelenting and determined.  

Shame on the US for subsidizing and colluding in the destruction of the lives and future of the Palestinian people which fits the definition of genocide.

Nancy Murray

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A Voice from Gaza

As casualties mount in the Gaza, we want to bring to your attention the voice of Dr. Yasser Abu Jamei, the head of the Gaza Community Mental Health Program in the Gaza Strip:

This Must End

I am writing this letter looking at my terrified 6-year old son, who keeps putting his hands over his ears trying block the sounds of Israel’s bombardment, my two daughters, aged 13 and 10 and my wife. These faces show the anxiety of not knowing where they can be safe now. My two older sons, 16 and 15, sit stunned and silent and I know they are reliving the memories of the previous three offensives on Gaza Strip and the family members we lost. These are the feelings that every family in the Gaza strip are living through.

We Palestinians have lived decades of humiliation, injustices, and maltreatment. In 1948, we were expelled from our land; over 600 villages were fully destroyed; hundreds of thousands of us were killed or uprooted. Nearly eight hundred thousand ended up living as refugees in different places around the globe. 

This happened under the eyes of the International Community, who have promised us, a sovereign State over about one fifth of our original homeland. That decision was only accepted in the 1990s by Palestinians believing in a two-state solution. 

Twenty-six years later, we look at the conditions in the promised State of Palestine and we see a West Bank divided and occupied by hundreds of thousands of settlers living in settlements built on the rubble of Palestinian homes, and who are making the lives of the Palestinian people living hell. 

We see the Gaza Strip under blockade for more than 14 years, leaving us deprived of basic living conditions. Not only that, but having suffered three large offensives in this small area which killed, destroyed and traumatized thousands of our people. 

And we see East Jerusalem, with its holiest sites for Muslims and Christians alike continuing to be under constant threat as settlers take over Palestinian homes and neighborhoods. 

A week ago, Israeli settlers started to attack Sheikh Jarrah trying to seize more homes of Palestinian families. Everyone saw it. No one intervened. 

In one of the holiest Ramadan evenings, Israel decided to evict tens of thousands of worshipers who were just praying at Al-Aqsa. These were mostly Palestinians who live in Palestine ‘48 – now Israel. Everyone saw the brutal use of military power by Israel. No one intervened.

The violent scenes in Sheikh Jarrah and the Al-Aqsa compound have lit a fire in Palestinian hearts not only in historic Palestine, but also everywhere in the world. 

While we demonstrated in Akka, Jafa, Nazareth and the West Bank, rockets were fired from Gaza demanding an end to the atrocities in Jerusalem. 

The Israeli army response was to attack Gaza with even more violence than in the terrible days of previous offensives. This time causing the deaths of more than 80 people including 17 children and 7 women. Bombardments hit tower blocks, apartments, governmental and police buildings and even whole streets. Everyone is seeing it. No one intervenes.

How long will the world just sit idly by while we here in Gaza suffer like this? The people of Gaza need more than just statements and resolutions, while Israel receives the arms which are killing and terrorizing us. 

I am a father first and a psychiatrist second. My dream for my children to live, to grow, to learn, in safety. This is the same dream as that of every one of the clients I see. There will be more of them today, and tomorrow. It is my job to give hope. I will tell them what I tell my children and my wife. “Because this injustice for Palestinians has gone on for seven decades, that does not make it normal. The world is increasingly full of people who do not accept it is normal. There will be change.”

Concrete political action is needed NOW to end not only the current deathly bombing raids, but also this illegal occupation and siege of Gaza by Israel, immediately. 

Our current living conditions under the siege are an affront to human dignity. I tell my children and my clients, “we Palestinians have the right to live as any other people in the world: to live in peace, in dignity and to enjoy our rights. It will come.”

The International Community MUST NOW fulfil its promise of a sovereign Palestinian state. Respect for international law demands every civilized country must recognize the State of Palestine now. 

After more than seven decades now of occupation and misery, we remain resilient and will never give up. But there is no father who can bear to see his children live like this.

By: Dr Yasser Abu Jamei

May 13, 2021

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