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Saleh Al-Naami: Suffering in
numbers
Al-Ahram Weekly
19 August, 2007
Prayer time and afternoon naps excepted, Mohamed Saleh and
Hassan Barak spend most of their day together conversing at the
crossroads separating their homes in the southern quarter of Al-Maghazi
Refugee Camp in central Gaza. Saleh and Barak, who both work in
construction, have been unemployed since Hamas took exclusive
control of the Gaza Strip. Since then, Israel has tightened its
stifling siege of the Strip and prohibited the entrance of
materials used in construction, putting the entire sector out of
work. The housing project begun with European and Arab funding
in the suburbs of the Tel Sultan neighbourhood south of Rafah
has ground to a halt, as have the infrastructure projects of
local councils across the Strip.
Industrial activity in Gaza has practically halted as well.
According to statistics of the Palestinian Businessmen's
Association, 3,190 factories in the Strip have closed because of
the inability to import raw materials. This has rendered 56,000
workers unemployed. Further aggravating the situation, Israel
has barred Palestinian farmers from exporting their agricultural
crops through commercial crossings along the border separating
the Strip from Israel, crashing prices and the internal market
for producers.
Maher Al-Tabaa, director of public relations in the Gaza
Chamber of Commerce, notes that due to the siege imposed on the
Strip, merchants are losing $5 million a day, a sum that when
distributed across the Strip affects the life and bare survival
of thousands of families. Al-Tabaa warns that the price of
consumer goods will rise significantly due to the closure of
Gaza's commercial crossings.
The siege situation has, naturally, greatly exacerbated
poverty overall in the Strip. According to the Palestinian
Central Bureau of Statistics, in 2006 57 per cent of Palestinian
families had a monthly income below the national poverty line,
while 44 per cent of that number was classified as being in
extreme poverty. Adnan Abu Hasna, spokesperson of the UN Relief
and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), told Al-Ahram
Weekly that the number of those dependent on UN aid in the Strip
amounts to 782,000. He noted that this number is expected to
increase soon: "In the space of a few weeks, people will depend
entirely on external aid if the situation remains as it is."
In addition, the siege has led to a catastrophic
deterioration in health conditions. According to statistics of
the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, more than 150 types of
medicines have run out in hospitals and health clinics. Most of
them are essential to treating patients with chronic diseases.
The centre notes that 20 kinds of medicines have run out in all
of Gaza's private pharmacies, seriously impacting the health
status of thousands. Two weeks ago, hundreds of dialysis
patients sent a heart-wrenching letter to Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas and Abbas-dismissed Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh
asking them to provide treatment so that they do not die.
Lack of medicine is not the only problem facing patients in
Gaza due to the siege. Much medical equipment, particularly
x-ray machines, no longer works because necessary maintenance
cannot be undertaken. Maawiya Hasanein, director of the
Emergency Department in the Palestinian Ministry of Health, told
the Weekly that 80 per cent of x-ray machines in Gaza's
hospitals are broken, in addition to most CAT scan machines.
Dialysis machines and other medical equipment cannot be
serviced. Hasanein pointed out that a number of operations have
been delayed because the necessary equipment and anaesthetics
are not available.
Basim Naim, minister of health in Haniyeh's dismissed
government, says that the siege and closure of Gaza's crossings
are the reasons for the major crisis facing patients in Gaza. In
a statement to the Weekly, Naim said that most medicine in the
Ministry of Health is in Ramallah. Naim says that health
conditions in Gaza seem all the more tragic given the presence
of large medicine factories in the West Bank, a fact that has
made it relatively easy to find treatment and meet medicinal
needs in the West Bank.
Naim does not hold the government of Abbas- appointed Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad responsible for the deteriorating health
situation in Gaza. He notes that despite differences between the
two governments, there is close cooperation in order to overcome
the crisis caused by the lack of medicine.
Obviously, the siege has greatly increased restrictions on
Palestinians' freedom of movement. Although most of those
stranded at the Rafah border crossing have now returned to the
Strip, thousands of Palestinians in Gaza want to leave for
reasons related to personal commitments, due to their health
conditions, or to complete their university education.
While not as severe, the general situation is not so much
different in the West Bank. According to Abdul- Rahman
Al-Tamimi, head of the Association of Palestinian Hydrologists,
600,000 Palestinians in the West Bank are deprived of drinking
water because they cannot pay their water bills. Al-Tamimi says
that due to deteriorating circumstances, 50 per cent of
consumers are currently not paying their water bills, a fact
that in turn has affected the ability of local councils in the
West Bank to pay for the water they acquire from the Qatari-
Israeli water company Mekorot.
It is striking that in contrast to the impression Abbas and
his advisors have tried to put across, meetings with Israelis
have not led to an improvement of conditions for Palestinians.
On the contrary, conditions have worsened. Mustafa Al-Barghouti,
former Palestinian media minister and head of the Independent
Palestine bloc in the Palestinian Legislative Council, notes
that despite Israel's talk of removing military checkpoints from
roads in the West Bank, these checkpoints have increased,
jumping from 545 in 2005 to 693 currently. "These meetings
create a very misleading impression, and form a cover that
allows Israel to continue its project of expansion and
aggression against the Palestinian people," Barghouti told the
Weekly.
Barghouti notes that the number of settlers in the West
Bank has increased by 50 per cent since Israel began to
implement the disengagement plan in Gaza in 2005. Barghouti also
notes that since 255 Palestinian prisoners were released,
following the latest Sharm El-Sheikh summit, Israel has arrested
336 Palestinians, 50 per cent more than were released. Barghouti
says that Israel currently holds 11,000 Palestinians, among them
426 children. Barghouti laments the fact that by continuing to
hold meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Abbas is
contributing to the misleading of Palestinian, Arab and
international public opinion. Barghouti suggests that Israel is
coordinating a public relations campaign through these meetings,
and nothing more.
Barghouti stresses that the role played by foreign
interests has a negative effect on domestic Palestinian
relations, particularly between Fatah and Hamas. He has proposed
an initiative for dialogue that aims to rescue Palestinians from
current crisis; an initiative based on the formation of a
transitional government and dissolving the two standing
governments in the West Bank and Gaza. For Barghouti, the first
mission that must be undertaken is to re-unify Palestinian
administrative control in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Also
pressing is reform of Palestinian security agencies; their
restructuring on a professional basis removed from partisan
interests. His proposed transitional government would undertake
preparations for fresh elections in which all Palestinian
parties would take part, leading to the formation of a true
national unity government.
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