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Written by Report, The Electronic Intifada Report, The Electronic Intifada
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Category: News News
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Published: 15 December 2007 15 December 2007
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Last Updated: 15 December 2007 15 December 2007
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Created: 15 December 2007 15 December 2007
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Hadas Ziv, the director of PHR-I, said her organization had collected
affidavits from Palestinians whose permits to leave Gaza were allegedly
made contingent on their cooperation with the Israeli security services.
Bassam al-Wahidi, aged 28 from Rafah in southern Gaza, said doctors
told him several months ago that without proper treatment for an eye
problem he would lose his sight, and referred him to a hospital in East
Jerusalem.
He received a permit and went to the northern Erez Crossing with
Israel, where, after waiting for three hours, he was taken into a room
for interrogation.
"I waited in the room for over an hour. Then an officer began asking me
basic questions, like my name and about my family," Wahidi, who works
in the media, told IRIN.
The officer moved on to questions about militants saying "as a
journalist you must know things about them." The officer then asked him
"to work together" in tracking militants who fire rockets into southern
Israel.
Wahidi said the officer even offered to provide better medical treatment if he agreed.
He refused to help the Israeli security forces. "I told him it's my
right to get treatment. He said 'that type of language doesn't work
with us.'"
Wahidi has since tried several times to get a permit, but failed.
"I have already lost the sight in my right eye. If I don't get
treatment soon, my sight in my other eye will be in danger," he said.
PHR-I said there are many more like him in Gaza.
The International Red Cross \in Jerusalem said Israel still had
responsibility for Gaza, and must ensure access to health care for the
Strip's residents. It recalled that the Geneva Conventions forbid
forcing protected people to give information.
Israeli security officials have said the state does not condition
treatment on collaboration; security concerns lie behind the rejections.
"Security risks"
Ziv of the PHR-I told the symposium that even people deemed "security
risks" should be able to access care, and offered solutions, including
an Israeli military bus which would take patients from Gaza to Jordan
for treatment.
This might help people like Ahmed, a 21-year-old with stomach cancer,
which has led to severe internal bleeding. He was denied exit from Gaza
as he was deemed a "security risk" by the Israeli authorities.
His father, Naim, told IRIN he first took his ill son to the Erez
Crossing in late October, after receiving a permit, but they were
turned away for "security reasons."
They reapplied for permission and returned on 21 November.
"They made us wait for about one and half hours, and then [the
soldiers] said they needed to speak to Ahmed. I remained outside and
they took Ahmed away," recounted Naim.
The ill son returned from the interrogation, which consisted mostly of
questions about the refugee camp where they lived and "which everyone
knows the answers to," over an hour later. The two then waited another
four hours before they were sent home, after Ahmed was again refused
permission to leave Gaza.
This item comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information
service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United
Nations or its agencies. All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted
free-of-charge; refer to the copyright page for conditions of use. IRIN
is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs.