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Serene Assir: Bordering on Desperation
Palestine Chronicle
29 July, 2007
As the border crisis triggered by Israel's closure of the
Rafah terminal entered its fifth week, clashes broke out at
Arish Airport in North Sinai, where 108 Palestinians are
stranded. The incident, which reportedly involved trapped
Palestinians rioting on Tuesday, prompted the deployment of
scores of Central Security Forces personnel armed with batons.
At least two Palestinians were injured in the clashes. The
airport has been off-limits to journalists ever since the
Palestinians began to seek refuge there, though according to the
International Committee of the Red Cross, those stranded are
being provided with food and other essential items.
The clashes came as frustration among the estimated 5,000
Palestinians trapped outside Gaza since 9 June reached new
heights. "Now more than ever it feels like there is no solution
to our problem, and that no power is willing to even look for
one," Ahmed Al-Ghalban, a Gaza resident stranded in Rafah, told
Al-Ahram Weekly. "At first we had some hope the Egyptian
government would unilaterally open the crossing. Then we thought
perhaps [Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas] Abu Mazen would at
least open the subject in his meeting with [Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud] Olmert. Once again, though, we have been
abandoned."
The humanitarian crisis, which Central Security Forces
appear keen to ensure remains hidden from the public eye, is
worsening. "We know Arish General Hospital is providing free
treatment. But we cannot get there when we need to. And if we
leave here we wonder whether we'll be allowed back," said
Al-Ghalban.
"We don't want help. We want to go home, via the
Egyptian-Palestinian crossing at Rafah," Al-Ghalban added,
underlining the fact that few of the displaced would accept the
Israeli-Fatah proposal to open the crossing at Kerem Abu Salem
(Kerem Shalom in Hebrew). They fear that once the
Israeli-Egyptian crossing at Kerem Abu Salem comes into use
Rafah will be abandoned and all entry into Gaza will be under
direct Israeli scrutiny. "Should that happen the Israelis will
use the border to arrest people arbitrarily. We cannot accept
that as a solution," says Al-Ghalban, echoing Hamas's position
on the matter.
The ongoing crisis has far-reaching political implications.
Unlike the West Bank, restive Gaza -- which shares a 15km long
border with Egypt -- has shown itself to be exceptionally hard
to contain. While the Gaza Strip remains under siege for the
fifth week running, Egypt's position on how to deal with the
border crisis continues to be reactive.
Of most concern to Egyptian officials is whether or not a
new influx of Palestinians will enter Egypt. Though the
authorities have designated an area of land in Arish for use as
a temporary camp should this occur, it remains unclear what will
happen.
"The authorities have sought assistance from all the
relevant agencies," an informed humanitarian source told the
Weekly on condition of anonymity. "Because they don't actually
know whether there will be a thousands-strong influx that will
necessitate a camp they are unwilling to meet any of the
expenses themselves. But seen from a humanitarian perspective we
cannot be expected to fund a camp if there is no immediate
need."
There are two scenarios, though, that could plausibly give
rise to such a need. The first would involve Israeli raids on
parts of Gaza, expected by Gaza observers and residents for
several weeks now. The second, as this week's meeting between
Olmert and Abu Mazen suggests, would be a slower but no less
effective way to create refugees -- a steady deterioration in
economic and security conditions in Gaza.
Complicating Cairo's position is its apparent bias towards
Fatah. Palestinians stranded in North Sinai expressed their
disapproval of Egypt's decision to host up to 500 Fatah security
personnel at a Central Security Forces camp in Rafah while at
the civilian displaced receive virtually no assistance.
Meanwhile, attempts at meeting US congressional demands to
improve security along the Egypt-Gaza border included the
deployment last week of an additional 150 Egyptian border police
to the current 750. It is unlikely that border security can be
stepped up further without changes to the 1979 Israel-Egypt
Peace Treaty. And temporary or not, should a camp be created in
North Sinai, the Egyptian government will have an impoverished,
angry populace with which to deal.
As the political crisis escalates, Egypt must be aware that
no amount of aid will placate the displaced. "I don't want aid,
I want to go home," says Gaza resident Abu Hassan, who has been
sleeping in a tiny room along with five other Palestinians. At
the home of Sheikh Abdel-Sattar Al-Ghalban, a Palestinian Rafah
resident, at least 50 people have taken refuge in severely
overcrowded conditions. "It is terrible that the burden of
taking care of us should fall on another Palestinian. No one
else cares it seems. Why, animals should not live in such
conditions. There is barely any ventilation. Look at the size of
that window. This is a concrete cell. Yet a prisoner knows when
his term is due to end -- we don't!"
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