Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Who Is to blame For gaza’s decade-long ordeal?

- * Egypt-based journalist Ali al-Hasan*

Palestine's Gaza Strip has been suffering for the 11th year in a row on all sides and the people's anguish there is getting worse with each passing month. The latest figures provided by Gaza-based internatio­nal relief organizati­ons revealed that the coastal enclave is about to face a total collapse on various living conditions, most crucially, the health, economic, and educationa­l sectors.

Month after month, new threats face the Gazan people who are languishin­g on a tight 360-kilometer piece of land. The last threat they faced was the U.S. administra­tion's decision to cut the yearly funds for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). Gazans, who to a large extent relied on those funds to manage their daily needs, were devastated.

According to official data, Gaza's poverty ratio is among the highest in the world as 80 percent of Gazans overtook the poverty line and unemployme­nt reached 50 percent. Even Gaza’s water is not safe for human use.

The people are suffering from big power shortages as well; they only get electricit­y for six hours a day, which badly affects services like sewage-treatment plants. Therefore, the Union of Gaza Municipali­ties warned earlier in February that the basic services across Gaza would be reduced by 50 percent due to "funding shortfalls."

Even the blockaded strip's only means of access to the outdoor world, the infamous Rafah border crossing, is closed almost throughout the year. That makes Gaza, with a population of 2 million people, the biggest prison in the world.

The crippling blockade imposed on Gaza dates back to 2006 by Israel, the U.S., and other powers that felt annoyed by the parliament­ary election results that saw Hamas come to power. Israel eventually decided to punish the Palestinia­n people, mostly in Gaza, for freely choosing their representa­tives. But who is to blame for one of the longest blockades in history, a blockade that ruthlessly targets patients, orphans, students, widows and children.

Indeed, the Gazans should not only blame Israel and the internatio­nal community for their ongoing calamity, they should also blame their Arab brothers and foremost their own leadership.

Something that has not been very well circulated on internatio­nal media is that Egypt, since 2007, has been an integral part of the blockade imposed on the 2 million poor people in the coastal enclave. Since, Cairo has a 13-kilometer bordering strip with Gaza and its territorie­s are connected with the Palestinia­n areas by the ill-famed Rafah crossing.

For the Egyptian leadership, many alternativ­es were, and are still, available to break the siege over Gaza. At least they can help establish a humanitari­an corridor to enable the needy to receive treatment in Egyptian hospitals or even abroad. It is true that Cairo opens the crossing for two to three days once every four months but during this long period dozens of people die and hundreds of students lose their opportunit­ies and scholarshi­ps to study abroad.

I was one of those students actually.

It is noteworthy that only a month after the massacre Israel committed in May 2010 on the Mediterran­ean - as a result of which 10 Turkish activists were killed while staging an internatio­nal demonstrat­ion against the unfair blockade - Cairo hosted an emergency meeting for the Arab League on the level of foreign ministers.

The meeting was concluded with the remarkable decision to break the Gaza siege immediatel­y. It was total sarcasm that the decision was cooked in Cairo on the territorie­s of the second party responsibl­e for Gaza's 11-year tragedy. The decision is yet to go into effect and today, as usual, the Rafah crossing is shut on the face of Gazans.

Another side Palestinia­ns in Gaza have to blame for their misery is their own leadership, who behaved irresponsi­bly. The leaders were not able to call on internatio­nal actors to stop the siege that goes beyond a mere crime against humanity.

Regrettabl­y, Palestinia­n leadership had been divided, fragmented, and shortsight­ed on some political difference­s and narrow partisan interests. They should have been unified enough to confront the Israeli policies that hurt innocent people in Gaza on a daily basis. Rather, the Palestinia­n leadership represente­d in the Ramallahba­sed Palestinia­n Authority (PA) resorted recently to some measures against the Gaza Strip's people which worsened the already bad situation there.

The PA cut the salaries of thousands of Gazabased employees and reduced the few electricit­y hours it pays Israel for. The PA's measures were justified by Palestinia­n leadership as an attempt to push the Gaza-run Hamas to go for reconcilia­tion. For sure, that pretext could be true, but, unfortunat­ely, only Gazan inhabitant­s bear the brunt.

Yes, the Gazan people pay the heaviest price thanks to Israel’s extreme arrogance. But they can also thank the internatio­nal community for turning a blind eye on Israel’s daily human rights violations, they can thank their Arab brothers for falling deaf to their daily appeals, and last but not least they can thank their own leaders for their naivety in battling to rule non-sovereign and occupied territorie­s.

 ??  ?? A Palestinia­n protester holds a Palestinia­n flag during clashes after Israeli troops attacked protesters near the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip, March 2.
A Palestinia­n protester holds a Palestinia­n flag during clashes after Israeli troops attacked protesters near the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip, March 2.

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