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Written by Laila El-Haddad Laila El-Haddad
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Category: News News
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Published: 28 December 2007 28 December 2007
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Last Updated: 28 December 2007 28 December 2007
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Created: 28 December 2007 28 December 2007
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The health indicators are telling: about a quarter of essential drugs
and a third of essential medical supplies were unavailable in the Gaza
Strip in October 2007. Less than half of Gaza's food import needs are
currently being met. Fuel reserves are almost at zero after punitive
cuts by the Israeli government began last month. And with diesel-run
water-pumps unable to function, tens of thousands of Gazans are without
access to fresh drinking water. Everything considered "non-essential"
has disappeared from supermarket shelves (including chocolates, as one
friend half-jokingly lamented).
It is as though depriving a nation of medicines and fuel and freedom of
movement and sanity will somehow make them turn against their rulers.
And as though providing them with a trickle of "essential" supplies
every few weeks is going to exonerate those imposing and supporting the
siege. Or sustain the besieged just enough so that they don't wither
and die; because somehow, the onus is on them to undo all of this, and
they need all the energy they can get.
Gaza's isolation has also come full circle this year. Travelling in and
out of the occupied coastal territory has always been an exercise in
the impossible, but now, it's no longer an option that can even be
exercised, in whatever degree of difficulty.
We Gazans stuck on the outside cannot return to our homes. The noose
continues to tighten, even when we thought there was no more room to
tighten it.
I was in Gaza through June. My son was with me. When I finished my work
there, I left after a gruelling 48-hour journey across Rafah Crossing
along with my family, who were coming to the US to visit my brothers.
That was the last day Rafah opened this year.
In fact, both my family and myself have been unable to return to Gaza
since that time. No, we don't carry foreign passports (and even if we
did, there is no way in unless you are affiliated with a humanitarian
organisation). We carry PA "passports" (Passport to where? What good is
a passport that can't even get you back home?) We are residents of
Gaza. And we have nowhere to return to now. The only way in to Gaza is
the Rafah Crossing. And it is not controlled by Egypt or by the
Palestinians, as many assume. It is, and always has been, even after
disengagement, controlled by Israel.
What do rockets or tunnels or elections have to do with letting people
return to their homes? Or with allowing students and the ill and even
the average human being with no pressing concern, to leave and live
their lives?
If one can say anything definitive about this year, it is that people's
attitudes in Gaza (and the West Bank and East Jerusalem for that
matter) about the future have changed. They no longer believe in the
myth of two states, and very likely, the west's call for democracy.
This is not to say they don't want peace. They just no longer believe
"peace", as defined and promoted by, well, virtually all the major
powers that have a stake in it, is possible. Is peace living in two
states, three territories, fragmented and divided by Israeli colonies
and encircled by an enormous barrier, all of whose borders are still
ultimately controlled by Israel and for whose security you, the
occupied, are responsible? Is it not being able to freely pray, think,
move, live?
According to a poll by Near East Consulting more Palestinian than ever
before think not. In fact, 70% of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, West
Bank, and East Jerusalem now support a one-state solution in historic
Palestine, where Muslims, Christians and Jews live together with equal
rights and responsibilities.
This is not a state that prefers and attempts to sustain its Jewish population at the expense of its Palestinian ones.
What has also changed is the Israeli government's recognition of this
reality and their frank discourse surrounding it. Only two days after
the theatrics of Annapolis, Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, warned
about the consequences of facing a struggle for one state: "If the day
comes when the two-state solution collapses, and we face a South
African-style struggle for equal voting rights (also for the
Palestinians in the territories), then, as soon as that happens, the
state of Israel is finished," he declared ominously in an interview
with Haaretz.
It doesn't matter, then, how this Palestinian state will be fashioned,
or what it will look like, so long as it is fashioned; for the sake of
demographics alone.
His statement - similar to one he made in 2003 - complemented by his
call for Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, to recognise Israel as a
purely Jewish state, as though the Muslims and Christians living there
were aliens, is essentially an acknowledgment not only of the untenable
nature and the inequity of the so-called two-state solution and
everything it entails, but also of the increasing inevitability of a
one-state solution. As some commentators have noted, it is no longer an
option up for debate; it is the new reality.
Israel in 2007 continued with its attempts to create its own realities
on the ground to counter this phenomenon. (It also ironically continues
to render a two-state solution a practical impossibility as it impedes
any future plans to divide the city.) Earlier this month, its housing
ministry gave the go-ahead for a new illegal settlement to be built in
occupied East Jerusalem, with the deputy mayor affirming that he sees
"no problem in building all-Jewish neighbourhoods" (the housing
minister has since backtracked, but plans have not been totally
scrapped).
So if anything has changed in 2007, perhaps it is the global
complacency and indifference towards Gaza and what is being done to its
people with such purpose. And perhaps this is the most troubling aspect
of it all, not that it is happening, nor even that it is happening so
methodically, but rather that we, the collective world governments,
mass media, and yes, Abbas, no longer seem to find it so morally
troubling. After all, Gaza is now a hostile territory. So anything goes.