Why is the world deaf to Gaza’s cries?
By Linda S. Heard
Online
Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 5, 2006, 01:40
How much longer
must the Palestinian people be bombed, starved, humiliated and abused before
the international community speaks up with one voice? How much longer will
world leaders avert their eyes from the cruel way Israel is pursuing a land
grab? How much longer will ordinary people prefer the World Cup and blissful
ignorance to the facts of Israel’s crimes and their effects on an entire
people?
The US and the EU
have labeled the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority “terrorist," a move that
has virtually given the Israeli government carte blanche to do its worst.
George W. Bush says Israel has the right to defend itself even as it works to
deliberately terrorize a civilian population. The proof of intent is Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s instruction to the IDF last Sunday: “I don’t want
anyone to sleep tonight in Gaza."
Almost 50 percent
of Gaza’s 1.5 million residents are without electricity at a time when
temperatures are hitting the mid-30s C (90s F). Israel saw fit to bomb a major
power station, in blatant contravention of the Geneva Conventions, during an
operation sadistically titled “Operation Summer Rain."
Experts say it may
take up to eight months to restore power during which time hospital patients
will die, families will be left without air-conditioners, fans, refrigerators
and televisions, office workers and students without essential computers.
Those of us who
live in this region and who have experienced inevitable brief power outrages
should ask ourselves whether we could survive months of unrelenting heat and
dark without even the respite of a cooling drink.
There is worse to
come. Fuel for generators is running out fast. Water supplies will dwindle and
the sewage system will collapse when electrically powered pumps become inert.
In short, there is a catastrophic humanitarian crisis in the making. Yet, far
from showing regret or remorse, Olmert, on Sunday, told his army to step up the
action, with whatever related horrors that will entail.
During his weekly
Cabinet meeting, which takes place in an air-conditioned boardroom, Olmert made
this callous statement: “It is true that the situation in Gaza is inconvenient,
so those who engage in terror should be inconvenienced. I told the United
Nations secretary-general, ‘It’s inconvenient that there is no electricity but
rockets kill.'”
Yes, rockets do
kill, and so do Israeli bombs and tank shells that are currently raining down
on the world’s largest open prison, where mothers can do nothing to protect
their infants from the terrifying sounds of death and destruction, not to
mention the deafening supersonic booms of low flying fighter jets.
Olmert hopes that
no one in Gaza will sleep. He has got his wish. One wonders how this true
ideological son of Sharon is able to sleep himself, provided, that is, he
possesses a heart and a conscience.
Could this
disproportionate military reaction to the abduction of a lone Israeli soldier
by Palestinian militants be for real? The more cynical among us conclude it has
more to do with the destruction of Hamas than the fate of Cpl. Gilad Shalit,
especially when these heavy-handed Israeli tactics coincide with the acceptance
by both Hamas and Fatah leaderships of the “Prisoners’ Peace Plan” that
incorporates US and EU demands.
The last thing
Olmert wants while he is thrusting his unilateral Convergence Plan onto the
international community is for Hamas to accept Israel’s right to exist, thereby
morphing into a potential partner for peace.
And so Hamas was
systematically goaded into breaking its yearlong cease-fire, which began last
August, when Israel began assassinating high-profile Hamas figures.
This pot-stirring
tactic stretches back to the days when Yasser Arafat was president. On almost
every occasion that Arafat would declare a unilateral cease-fire or support new
peace measures, Israel would go out of its way to upset the applecart.
In recent days,
Israel has rounded up dozens of Hamas Cabinet members, legislators and
officials using the pretext that Hamas has officially been declared a terrorist
group and has bombed the offices of Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh.
These aggressive acts are surely shameful when the Palestinian people were encouraged
by all and sundry to embrace democracy, which they proudly did, little knowing
they would be judged and punished for their choice.
It seems that
Israel is intent on bringing Syria into the row as well. Last week, Israeli
jets buzzed the summer residence of Syrian President Bashar Assad, in an
attempt to force him to close down Hamas offices in Damascus and deport Hamas
leader Khaled Meshal. On Sunday, Olmert told US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice that “the directives to carry out operations and the orders to carry out
terror attacks all come from Syria." This accusation Meshal vehemently
denies.
What is becoming
increasingly clear is this. Israel would prefer to escalate the crises rather
than allow any possibility of returning to the peace table.
Israel is not
prepared to accept any conditions related to the soldier’s return, including a
request for the release of 335 Palestinian children incarcerated in Israeli
jails. It’s ironic that while the uniformed Shalit is being portrayed as an innocent,
bespectacled boy-next-door, those children have been forgotten, along with over
9,000 adult Palestinian prisoners.
With bridges
literally burned by the Israelis, the Palestinians are pinning their hopes on
Egyptian negotiators.
“We ask the international
community and the Arab League to take its responsibilities toward our people
and intervene to end Israel’s insane policy,” says Haniyeh. Judging by recent
history, it’s a forlorn hope. We who do nothing and say nothing should all hang
our heads in shame.
Linda S. Heard is a British specialist writer on
Middle East affairs. She welcomes feedback and can be contacted by email at heardonthegrapevines@yahoo.co.uk.
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