Bi-Weekly Brief for December 14, 2020

Bi-Weekly Brief for December 14, 2020

Israel receives vaccines while Gaza runs short of testing kits and hospital beds

Cases in Palestine have soared to more than 110,000 with nearly 1,000 deaths, and Gaza’s virus positivity rate of over 30% was exceeded only by Bolivia’s in early December.  With hospitals overwhelmed, Gaza ran out of testing material on Dec. 6.  The WHO immediately sent enough kits to provide 28,000 tests.  West Bank hotspots Nablus, Hebron, Bethlehem and Tulkarem were completely closed down on Dec. 10, with travel between major towns, weddings and funerals prohibited.  Israel’s Covid cases reached 357,000 with some 3,000 deaths by Dec. 14. It received the first shipment of what will be a million doses of Pfizer vaccine on Dec. 9 and plans to start a vaccination drive within weeks.  On Dec. 12, an official of the PA Health Ministry said it should be getting 4 million doses of the Russian vaccine over the next month.  

Trump endorses Morocco’s occupation in effort to expand bumpy ‘normalization’ drive

On Dec. 10, Trump reversed US policy and approved Morocco’s occupation of the former Spanish colony of Western Sahara, where a liberation struggle for an independent Sahrawi nation had been ongoing since 1975. Morocco, which has carried out military and surveillance cooperation with Israel for 60 years, is being invited to purchase $1 billion in US arms.  On Dec. 4,  Bahrain agreed the products it imported from settlements could be labeled ‘made in Israel’ but later said it would not import settlement products.  The UAE said it would as this would ‘help’ Palestinian workers. On Dec. 8, a member of the Abu Dhabi royal family bought 49% of an Israeli football club known as a hub of anti-Arab racism. Saudi Arabia seems unlikely to ‘normalize’ as long as King Salman is alive.  The King’s position was voiced by Prince Turki al-Faisal at a Dec. 6 Bahrain security summit Israel attended.  Israel is, the Prince said, a ‘Western colonizing power’ that incarcerates Palestinians in concentration camps.

Netanyahu and Abbas coordinating again while their governments face uncertain future

On Dec. 2 Israel transferred over $1 billion in tax revenues to the PA without making a deduction for payments to prisoners.  The resumption of coordination has deepened divisions among Palestinian factions.  Palestinian spokeswoman Hanan Ashrawi resigned from the PLO on Dec. 7, calling for Palestinian politics to be ‘reinvigorated.’Hoping an election would give him a majority big enough to pass an immunity law halting his corruption trial, Netanyahu has refused to sign the 2020 budget and seems poised to let the Knesset dissolve on Dec. 23.

 Palestinians live and die under fire as they struggle to save their land

On Dec. 4 Ali Abu Alia became the 5th child killed by live ammunition this year.  He was shot on his 15th birthday with an American-made sniper rifle while watching an anti-settlement protest in Al-Mughayyir  near Ramallah.  US Rep. Betty McCollum called it a ‘grotesque state-sponsored killing.’  Other Palestinians were seriously wounded in army raids on West Bank refugee camps and villages, and journalists were attacked as they covered protests against land seizures.  Israel forces continued to abduct and mistreat children, to demolish homes, to fire into the Gaza Strip and attack fishing boats, while settlers burned fields of olive trees.  In addition to constructing thousands of new settlement units,  Israel laid out its intention to permanently colonize the West Bank in a  Transportation Ministry master planwhich for the first time includes the West Bank in long-term planning.  

Water Fact

On Dec. 11, a large military force violently dispersed residents of Beit Dajan, east of Nablus, while they were planting olive tree saplings on their land in hopes of preventing a nearby settler outpost from seizing more of it.  The settlers had extended water pipelines and bulldozed a road across village land to their outpost.  Meanwhile, Beit Dajan and adjacent Furush Beit Dajan have been deprived of water on which their citrus and date trees depended.  The water pipeline that supplied Furush Beit Dajan was destroyed by Israeli forces in May 2019, and shallow village wells have been depleted by deep wells dug to enable the nearby settlements of Hamra and Mehora to irrigate hundreds of acres of date palms.  Twenty years ago, Beit Dajan dug a new well two miles from the village, only to be blocked from accessing it by a settlement road.

Compiled by Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

Design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press.

Design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press.

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Occupied Palestine Might Foretell the Future of Increasingly "Occupied" America

Empathy for the Palestinians may only develop when we all become Palestinians. In the absence of a large economic stimulus package in the USA, unemployed workers, victims of systemic racism, indebted students, evicted renters and those who have become bankrupt from healthcare debt will have a taste of what daily life is like in an occupied territory. But in the U.S. case, the occupiers are the 1%, the American financial, tech and lobbying elites who have profited handsomely from the pandemic.”

Does Biden’s Victory Offer Any Hope to Palestinians?

Photo from B’tselem video

Photo from B’tselem video

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Palestine in Pictures

Life goes on.

Amazing photos. Open link for more.

Palestine in Pictures

A Palestinian worker tries to unclog a drain on a flooded Gaza City street following heavy rains, 26 November.Osama Baba/APA images

A Palestinian worker tries to unclog a drain on a flooded Gaza City street following heavy rains, 26 November.

Osama Baba/APA images

Palestinians compete in a camel race at the site of the former international airport in Rafah, southern Gaza, 20 November.Ashraf Amra/APA images

Palestinians compete in a camel race at the site of the former international airport in Rafah, southern Gaza, 20 November.

Ashraf Amra/APA images

Palestinian workers sterilize vegetables ordered by customers for home delivery amid concerns about the spread of the coronavirus, central Gaza Strip, 30 November.Ashraf Amra/APA images

Palestinian workers sterilize vegetables ordered by customers for home delivery amid concerns about the spread of the coronavirus, central Gaza Strip, 30 November.

Ashraf Amra/APA images

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Bi-Weekly Brief for December 1, 2020

Bi-Weekly Brief for December 1, 2020

Covid cases in Gaza double in 2 weeks, hospitals are overwhelmed, hunger grows

As cumulative cases surge to 19,898 in the Gaza Strip out of a total for Palestine of 91,464, Israel’s blockade – which has cost Gaza’s economy $16.5 billion according to a new UN report - is depriving its collapsing health care system of sufficient oxygen machines, ventilators, PPE, hygienic materials and medicines.  Unemployment has reached 82% and 92% report receiving no government or NGO assistance.  The need to eat has made it difficult to impose lockdowns.  In the West Bank, the PA imposed new lockdowns on Nov. 27.  In Israel there has been a 66% increase in confirmed cases to 336,000 since Nov. 19, partly attributed to re-opening 15 malls. 

Pompeo gives more gifts to Netanyahu as Iran is put in the crosshairs

International law took a major hit during US Secretary of State Pompeo’s last Middle East trip.  On Nov. 19, he visited the West Bank settlement of Psagot and declared that settlement products should bear a ‘Made in Israel’ label, and then went to the occupied Golan Heights and stated ‘this is Israel.’ After asserting that ‘anti-Zionism is anti-Semitism’ and that the US will counter ‘the Global BDS Campaign,’ Pompeo made a secretive trip to Saudi Arabia on Nov. 22, reportedly to meet with Netanyahu, the Mossad head and Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman.  The crown prince’s presence was later denied by Saudi officials, as was the discussion of ‘normalization’ plans.  Meanwhile, the US deployed more military jets and nuclear bomb-capable B-52 bombers to its base in Qatar.  On Nov. 27, a top Iranian nuclear physicist Moshen Fakhrizadeh and 3 of his bodyguards were assassinated, with Israel the prime suspect. While the killing was widely condemned including by the EU, an unidentified senior Israeli official said the world should thank Israel for the deed.  The murder is seen as a blow to diplomacy that complicates the incoming US administration’s Iran policy.

The PA resumes ties with Israel and hopes Biden will breathe life into ‘two states’

On Nov. 17, the PA said it would resume coordination with Israel suspended last May as a response to Israel’s annexation plans. The announcement scuttled unity talks between Fatah and Hamas that were taking place in Cairo.  President Abbas is hoping for the speedy return to negotiations and immediate transfer of $903 million in taxes that Israel collects for Palestinians.  Israel said it will deduct the $200 million the PA gives to families of political prisoners. To placate Israel and woo the incoming Biden team, Abbas has agreed to ‘revise’ financial aid to prisoners.  Biden, who insisted that the word ‘occupation’ be struck from the Democratic Party platform, gives lip service to a ‘2 state solution,’ as do many of his potential cabinet members.  On Nov. 29, the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People (see its history here), UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres urged Palestinian and Israel leaders to ‘restore hope’ for a 2 state solution.

Israel races to tighten grip on East Jerusalem, multiply facts on the ground

Israel plans to build 108 new units in northern East Jerusalem, and 1,257 units in Givat Hamatos, sealing off Bethlehem from southern East Jerusalem. Meanwhile, 400 Palestinians face eviction from East Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood, and an Israeli court has ordered the expulsion of 87 residents from its Batn al-Hawas neighborhood to make way for extremist settlers.   Around the West Bank, homes, agricultural buildings and water wells have been destroyed, displacing scores of Palestinians.  On Nov. 18, dozens of settlers returned to the Sa-Nur settlement near Jenin which had been evacuated in 2005, proclaiming ‘this place belongs to the people of Israel.’ Palestinians protesting land grabs were invariably met with live ammo, rubber bullets and stun grenades, causing many injuries. In the Gaza Strip, a rocket fired at Ashkelon on Nov. 21 triggered IDF tank fire and missile strikes, followed by a 4-day ‘surprise drill’ near the Gaza border simulating a major military attack. 

Water Fact

Depriving Palestinians of water plays an essential role in Israel’s ethnic cleansing of parts of the 62% of the West Bank classified as Area C by the Oslo Accords.  Here is the tally of water deprivation on a single day, November 25.  Israeli forces confiscated a one-mile water pipeline connecting Khirbat Safi and Khirbat al Majaz in the southern West Bank.  At least 100 Khirbat Safi residents depended on the pipeline for their water.  The army also damaged a water tank in Khirbat Jabna and part of its irrigation network and destroyed buildings that included 2 health facilities and 4 water tanks in Fasayil village north of Jericho.  

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

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