Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Gaza’s children deserve to be rescued like the boys in Thailand

Palestinia­n children see the efforts put into the rescue of the Thai boys trapped in a cave and wonder why nobody cares as much about them

- By Kamel Hawwash

The whole world rejoiced when 12 boys trapped in a c av e in Thailand were rescued alongside their football coach. Divers from around the world risked their lives to help the children, a truly remarkable and selfless act. One died in the process.

The darkness, uncertaint­y, hunger and hopelessne­ss that the children must have experience­d reminded me of the predicamen­t of Palestinia­n children in Gaza -- trapped through no fault of their own. Their only crime is being born Palestinia­n under occupation by a state that sees them as an irritant, a demographi­c threat and collateral damage if they die at the hands of Israeli forces, as some did in the Great March of Return.

A whole generation born under siege, they have not seen the villages from where most of their families hail. They hear of Jerusalem, al-Aqsa, Haifa, Yaffa, Jericho, Nablus and Hebron, but they have not seen them, even though these places are just a short distance away.

Israel as a violent entity

These children march with their families to the fence with Israel, demand- ing to return to their villages. Instead, they are met with the brutality of the occupier, as dozens are killed and thousands injured. They see posters of the martyred, including 21- year- old medic Razan al-Najjar, and ask why they were shot dead.

The answer, always, is because this is what Israel does. Their experience with Israel shows it as a violent entity, not the democracy that its spokespeop­le try to spin.

The daily lives of children in Gaza are miserable, as they have little access to electricit­y or clean water, but plenty of exposure to Israeli bombs and that unmistakab­le sound of Israel’s terror drones, which occupy Gaza’s sky.

They see what the world looks like on TV, but quickly realise that at the current rate, they have no chance of ever experienci­ng it for themselves. They aspire to go to university, but quickly realise that the pride they will one day feel at graduating will be followed by great disappoint­ment as they struggle to find employment.

Their Thai counterpar­ts eventually saw freedom, but the children of Gaza and their families cannot see their own freedom coming any time soon.

Immovable Hamas

Gaza is a prison with two land crossings: one to Israel and the other to Egypt, both almost continuous­ly sealed. More than a decade of an immoral siege has not brought a capitulati­on by Hamas or an uprising against it by those it rules.

Hamas in Gaza is a fact on the ground that is immovable. The siege only hurts the people, inciting Gaza’s children to hate Israel for the death and the destructio­n it has heaped on their tiny sliver of land, the most densely populated in the world.

These children have grown up amid divisions between Fatah and Hamas. They hear of imminent reconcilia­tion between the two factions, but see their president impose sanctions on them. They hear that Gaza will be uninhabita­ble by 2020 - but they will tell you to come and see it today, look them in the eye, and say it is still habitable now.

They see the efforts put in to rescue the Thai boys and wonder why nobody cares as much about them. They hear that US President Donald Trump has a plan to help them and that his most senior advisers are on the case, but conversati­ons in the besieged enclave fill them not with hope, but with fear that their leaders are being pressured to abandon their struggle and surrender if they want a better daily life under permanent occupation.

After claiming to have taken Jerusalem “off the table” by recognisin­g it as Israel’s capital and moving the US embassy there, Trump’s team has been consulting further in the region on the administra­tion’s plan to deliver “peace” to the holy land. But the US action has failed to create a climate for peace, as evidenced by the ongoing Great March of Re t u r n and Palestinia­ns’ decision to sever contact with the Americans.

The mirage of the ‘ultimate deal’

Despite the Palestinia­n Authority’s refusal to discuss the deal, the Americans appear to be moving to implement the second stage of the yet-unpublishe­d plan -- that of bringing economic relief to Gaza, funded by some of the Gulf states. If the Trump team believes that Palestinia­ns in Gaza are simply looking for some economic relief, then they are as naive now as when they began their sordid endeavours.

Gaza’s children are even more confused after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently opted to tighten the noose around them by closing the “commercial crossing” at Kerem Shalom as punishment for the continuing rudimentar­y kites and balloons launched from Gaza, which have damaged crops on the Israeli side of the fence. Israel has attacked those launching what they bizarrely call “terror kites”.

If the heavy sacrifices made by Gaza’s Palestinia­ns since the Great March of Return began on March 30 are not sufficient evidence that “economic peace” is a mirage, then the US, Israel and their new Arab allies have underestim­ated Palestinia­ns’ resilience and their insistence on attaining their rights. As far as the Palestinia­ns are concerned, the Americans will not be able to use Gaza to prop up their heavily damaged “ultimate deal”.

The Trump administra­tion should take inspiratio­n from the rescue of the Thai boys, planned meticulous­ly to end their predicamen­t, not to serve an ideologica­l goal of helping Israel to entrench its control over the whole of historical Palestine. They should act to end the suffering of the two million Palestinia­ns in Gaza, without preconditi­ons, and give its children some hope for an end to their imprisonme­nt - just as the brave divers did for the Thai boys in the cave.

(Kamel Hawwash is a British-Palestinia­n engineerin­g professor based at

the University of Birmingham and a longstandi­ng campaigner for justice, especially for the Palestinia­n people. He is vice chair of the British Palestinia­n Policy Council (BPPC) and a member of the executive committee of the Palestine Solidarity

Campaign.) Courtesy Middle

East Eye.

 ??  ?? Gaza children hoping against hope to breathe the air of freedom
Gaza children hoping against hope to breathe the air of freedom

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