It's name means courage and bravery, and it's also an
abbreviation of Islamic Resistance Movement in Arabic. It grew out of
the Muslim Brotherhood (that had roots in Egypt) and was formed in 1987
during the first Intifada. At the time, Israel offered support and used
Hamas to counter the PLO's nationalist threat under Arafat. Ever since,
it's been an effective resistance movement against repression,
occupation and much more. It provides essential social services like
medical clinics; education, including centers for women; free meals for
children; financial and technical help to Palestinians whose homes
Israel destroyed; aid to refugees in the camps; and youth and sports
clubs for young people.
Hamas is also a formidable defender, and
that gets it in trouble. It established the Izz Al-Din Al-Qassam
Brigades, an elite military wing, and other security forces like its
Tanfithya Executive Force for self-defense and law enforcement.
Washington and Tel Aviv call it "terrorism" because Hamas wants the
occupation ended, won't surrender its sovereignty like Fatah did under
Arafat and Abbas, is willing to recognize Israel (though that's never
reported), but only if Palestinians get equal recognition and what's
rightfully theirs - an independent homeland inside pre-1967 borders or
one "state for all its citizens," Jews, Muslims, Christians, Druze and
others.
Instead, Hamas got isolated, hammered and called a
"hostile entity" by Israel's security cabinet. It was announced on
September 19, sanctions on Gaza were tightened, and it was decided to
"reduce the amount of megawattage provide(d) to the Strip, and Hamas
will have to decide whether to provide electricity to hospitals or
weapons lathes." There was more as well - cutbacks in fuel, food, other
essentials and even tighter border crossing restrictions.
Even
before the latest crisis, Gaza was devastated. Its industrial
production was down 90%, and its agricultural output was half its
pre-2007 level. In addition, nearly all construction stopped,
unemployment and poverty topped 80%, and by now it may be 90%. After
September 19, it got worse when shops began running out of everything.
Israel allows in only nine basic materials, their availability is
spotty, and some essentials are banned, like certain medicines, and
others restricted like fruit, milk and other dairy products. Before
June 2007, 9000 commodities could be imported. Today, it's down to 20,
people don't get enough food, and the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC) was unusually blunt in its criticism. In a November
2007 report called "Dignity Denied in the Occupied Palestinian
Territories," it said:
"....Palestinians....face hardship (in)
their (daily) lives; they are prevented from doing what makes up the
daily fabric of most people's existence. (They) face a deep human
crisis, where millions of people are denied their human dignity. Not
once in a while, but every day (and the people of Gaza are) trapped
(and) sealed off." The "humanitarian cost (is) enormous," people can
barely survive, "families unable to get enough food increased by 14%,
(and) Palestinians (are) being trampled underfoot day after day. (In)
Gaza (under siege, Palestinians) continue to pay for conflict and
economic containment with their health and livelihoods. Cutting power
and fuel further compounds their hardship."
Let 'em eat cake,
walk, and live without light or heat is apparently Israel's solution,
and noted Israeli historian, Ilan Pappe, took note. He calls it
"genocide....to describe what the Israeli army is doing in the Gaza
Strip." Knowing the facts, who can disagree.
Then there's the
matter of energy. With electricity restricted and fuel supplies
reduced, Israel went further. It sealed its borders and cut all fuel
shipments in response to Palestinian rocket attacks in and around the
border town of Sderot. They're fired in self-defense and used in
response to repeated Israeli attacks that in the week of January 17 -
23 alone:
-- killed 19 Palestinians along with three others from previous IDF-inflicted wounds;
-- extra-judicially executed seven of the victims, including two women;
-- wounded 71 Palestinians, including 24 children and three women;
-- made 33 IDF incursions in the West Bank and five in Gaza;
-- arrested 58 Palestinian civilians, including seven children, in the West Bank, and 32 in Gaza, including 3 children;
-- destroyed five homes and razed agricultural land in Jabalya in northern Gaza;
-- allowed further settler attacks against civilians and property in Hebron.
The
same pattern continued the following week through Janauary 30 with more
Israeli incursions, attacks and arrests. In the West Bank:
--
Nablus was targeted and several Palestinian civilians arrested; several
homes were also searched and ransacked in the villages of Kufer Kalil,
Beit Dajan and Beit Fourik;
-- the IDF seized six Palestinians
in Jenin in a pre-dawn invasion; another followed theire several days
later, the Israeli army opened fire randomly, one civilian was injured,
four others arrested and a home was ransacked; several civilian homes
were attacked and ransacked in the town of Qabatiya and village of Abu
Da'eif in the northern West Bank; local sources reported unprovoked
random gunfire by heavily armed troops in civilian neighborhoods;
--
the IDF invaded Bethlehem, killed one civilian, arrested another, and
injured seven others; eyewitnesses reported that local journalists were
prevented from witnessing and documenting the incursion;
--
several other West Bank cities were targeted and six civilians
arrested: the Al Toor neighborhood in northern Jerusalem; the village
of Beit Rima near Ramallah; Tulkarem city and the nearby Nur Shams
refugee camp; and Jenin city.
These are malicious acts of
aggression, abductions and wanton killing. Mostly civilians are
targeted, and when Palestinians respond with crude Qassam rockets and
children throw rocks, it's called "terrorism." Israel's response -
fiercer attacks and incursions in the Territories on any pretext or
none at all and further tightening of its medieval siege on Gaza.
Its
border crossings have been closed since June 2007, and severe
restrictions were imposed on movement. Finally, food and fuel supplies
were cut. Gaza's power plant exhausted its supply, shut down, and the
Strip went dark on January 20. Israel remained defiant, and Prime
Minister Olmert announced...."as far as I am concerned, every resident
of Gaza can walk because they have no gasoline for their vehicles," and
Foreign Ministry spokesman, Arye Meckel, told AP the blackout was "a
Hamas ploy to pretend there is some kind of crisis to attract
international sympathy."
The Director of Gaza's main Shiffa
hospital, Dr. Hassan Khalaf, had a different view. He described the
situation as "potentially disastrous." Already Israel's siege was
directly responsible for 45 deaths, and he said cutting hospital power
would cause 30 premature babies to die immediately. The World Health
Organization was also alarmed. It said insufficient electricity
"disrupt(s)....intensive care units, operating theatres, and emergency
rooms (and) power shortages have interrupted refrigeration of
perishable medical supplies, including vaccine."
To operate at
full capacity, Gaza needs 230 - 250 daily megawatts of electricity. Its
only power plant supplies around 30% of it, but people in central Gaza
and Gaza city are totally dependent on what can't be supplied if
industrial diesel fuel the plant depends on is cut off. The result is
critically ill people are endangered, bread and other baked goods can't
be produced without electricity to power ovens, food is already in
short supply, so is fresh water, and sanitation conditions are
disastrous.
Michele Mercier of the International Red Cross said
hospital medications were running out and wouldn't "last for more than
two or three days." In addition, allowable food shipments are
endangered according to UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) spokesman,
Christopher Gunness. He explained that the agency would have to suspend
distribution to 860,000 people because of a fuel and plastic bags
shortage.
Israel was unapologetic with Internal Security
Minister, Avi Dichter, saying the IDF must "eliminate the rocket fire
from Gaza, irrespective of the cost to Palestinians." Defense Minister,
Ehud Barak, added: "We are impacting the overall quality of life in
Gaza and destroying the terror infrastructure." He meant civilians as
did Ehud Olmert claiming: "We are trying to hit only those involved in
terrorism, but also signaling to the population in Gaza that it cannot
be free from responsibility for the situation."
Israel makes
no distinction between civilians (including women and children) and
resistance fighters, and B'Tselem stated that Yuval Diskin, head of the
Israel Security Agency (ISA), "defines every Palestinian killed in the
Gaza Strip as a terrorist," including small children and the elderly
infirm. The world approves, the Security Council debates and abstains,
the dominant media is silent, and innocent Palestinians suffer and die
- over 75 killed in January and several hundred injured. Who cares and
who's counting. They're just Arab Muslims.
They're also needy
human beings, now desperate, and on January 23 they responded
courageously. No help is coming so Hamas acted preemptively. It
destroyed 200 meters of metal barrier separating both sides of Rafah
that was divided in 1982 as part of Israel's peace treaty with Egypt.
About 40,000 people live in Egypt and another 200,000 in Gaza in the
original town and an adjacent refugee camp. Until the outbreak of the
second Intifada in September, 2000, crossing both ways was
uncomplicated. That ended as violence increased, and Israel erected a
barrier. Now it's breached, Gazans took advantage, and some called it a
"jail break." Hundreds of thousands entered Egypt for needed essentials
unavailable at home. Finally, the media noticed.
On January 24,
The New York Times tried to have it both ways. It called Hamas' border
breach "an act of defiance" and continued indifferently. Unmindful of
an 18 month siege, mass impoverishment, a humanitarian crisis and daily
killings, correspondent Steven Erlanger made things seem festive in his
report. Almost flippantly he said "Tens of thousands of
Palestinians.... crossed the border for a 'buying spree' of medicine,
cement, sheep....gasoline, soap and countless other supplies that have
been cut off."
Most Gazans can barely afford food and
essentials and struggle daily to survive. Yet, Erlanger said they
stocked up on "Coca-Cola, Cleopatra and Malimbo cigarettes, and
satellite dishes" and on January 25 added "televisions (and) washing
machines." It was a party, "Egyptian merchants greeted them with a
'cornucopia of consumer goods," and Hamas joined the festivities by
"mak(ing no) visible effort to control or tax" purchases. Those who
could afford it indeed took advantage. Merchants bought items for
resale at lower Egyptian prices. Most Palestinians, however, bought
essentials - food, fuel, medicine if available and various household
items.
Earlier on January 21, Israel relented to international
pressure and a PR disaster impossible to ignore. Haaretz highlighted it
in a January 26 editorial headlined "The siege of Gaza has failed."
Hamas ended it "via a well-planned operation and simultaneously won the
sympathy of the world, which has forgotten the rain of Qassam rockets
on Sderot, (and Israel looks foolish) entrenching itself in positions
that look outdated." Only a week ago, the government was crowing.
Triumphantly, it claimed its policy was "bearing fruit."
Today,
it's all bitter with Olmert in denial. In a speech at the January
Herzliya Conference, he said: "Mistakes were made; there were failures.
But in addition, lessons were learned, mistakes were corrected, modes
of behavior were changed, and above all, the decisions we have made
since then have led to greater security, greater calm and greater
deterrence than there had been for many years." Haaretz had another
view, and it was harsh. It stated events in Gaza "completely
(contradict) his statements. If that is what learning lessons looks
like, if that is what deterrence means, the Olmert government has
precious little to boast about." So it acted.
AP reported on
January 21 that authorities "agreed today to ship diesel fuel and
medicine into Gaza on a one-time basis," easing its blockade, but it
wouldn't continue unless rocket firings stopped. Everything then
changed on January 27.
Aljazeera, The New York Times, Haaretz
and other sources reported that the Olmert government relented. It
agreed to resume fuel shipments to Gaza, easing its blockade. The
decision came on the same day Israel's Supreme Court addressed the
petition of 10 human rights organizations to order a resumption and
prevent a humanitarian disaster. No decision was rendered, but state
authorities acted anyway.
They agreed to supply 2.2 million
weekly liters of industrial diesel fuel, the minimum amount needed to
power central Gaza and Gaza City, but it's not enough overall according
to Rafiq Maliha, the project manager at An-Nuseirat's power plant
location. It's only two-thirds the amount needed, a mere fraction was
delivered the first day, and Maliha said Gaza's gas companies would
strike and resist this "Israeli plot" masquerading as humanitarian aid.
His doubts are well-founded. On the same day fuel shipments resumed,
Israeli warplanes struck northern Gaza in two separate raids. Hamas
sources said two missiles hit a Palestinian car and others targeted a
Hamas' Al-Qassam Brigades position causing four injuries.
Human
rights groups are also dismissive. They noted previous promises made,
then broken, and the GISHA group (the Israeli NGO for freedom of
Palestinian movement in the Territories) spokesperson said that Israel
"repeatedly promised that it would ship 2.2 million litres (of fuel) a
week into Gaza and has repeatedly broken that promise." Why believe
authorities now, and with events so fluid it seems every day, a new
policy.
At the same time, Hamas and Egyptian security forces are
cooperating to close the border eight days after it was breached. On
January 28, Haaretz reported that openings were being sealed by barbed
wire, but not entirely as some two-way traffic continues as of January
30. Hamas and Egyptian forces now man the main Salah Eddin gate, most
cars and trucks aren't passing through, but pedestrians still in Egypt
"scoured (nearly) empty stores for food and consumer products to take
back to the Gaza Strip....in fear of an imminent border reclosing."
What's
next is anyone's guess, but Israel's Supreme Court will affect it. On
January 30, it upheld the government's Gaza sanctions and its right to
restrict fuel and electricity. In its statement, the three-judge panel
left no doubt where it stands. It wrote:
"We emphasize that the
Gaza Strip is controlled by a 'murderous terror group' that operates
incessantly to strike the state of Israel and its citizens, and
violates every precept of international law with its violent actions."
Israel, nonetheless, will supply enough fuel and electricity to
"fulfill the vital humanitarian needs of the Gaza Strip at this time."
Israeli
human rights petitioners were quick to respond, and their message was
clear and harsh. For its part, the Adalah Legal Center for Arab
Minority Rights called the ruling a "dangerous legal precedent that
allows Israel to continue to violate the rights of Gaza residents and
deprive them of basic humanitarian needs in violation of international
law." Hamas spokesperson, Fawzi Barhoum, was equally pointed. He added:
The High Court's decision "reflects the criminal, ugly face of the
occupation."
Things are now back to square one, Israel's siege
has been sanctified, and an unworkable 2005 security arrangement
remains in place. Hamas wants it replaced with a new one and demands
justice for Gaza's 1.5 million people. Its main objection is Israel
controls all movement and monitors it with cameras and computers to
track everyone entering and leaving Gaza. On January 27, Hamas leader,
Ismail Haniyeh, said: 'We don't accept a continued Israeli veto on the
movement, the exit and entry through Rafah." It's time for a new system.
Getting
one is another matter, according to Israeli officials. They commented
on January 28 saying "Israel will not allow the continuation of the
current state where its security interests are being compromised," and
Olmert and Abbas met on January 27 to discuss it. Initial reports were
that Israel wanted Egypt to control the border, Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak wants Abbas to do it, he, in turn, agrees to anything
Olmert and George Bush want, and they at first rejected putting Abbas
in charge, but that's now changed according to Haaretz.
On
January 29, it reported "Israel does not plan to block....Abbas from
assuming control of Gaza's border crossing with Egypt (if Cairo
agrees)." Abbas, in turn, says it does as well as the EU, Arab League
and Condoleezza Rice. Hamas reacted angrily through its spokesperson,
Sami Abu-Zuhri. He called the plan an "Israeli-led international
conspiracy (against the legitimate government) with the participation
of some regional parties. We tell all parties that we will not allow
the return of old conditions at the crossing."
So the beat goes
on. Nothing has changed, and unconsidered is what Palestinians want,
need and deserve. After decades of abuse, forces they can't control
continue buffeting them, yet they persist and endure.
Now
there's the latest crisis, and consider Haaretz's January 27 report. It
was after Olmert and Abbas met "for a two-hour tete-a-tete....in
Jerusalem" at which Olmert again made promises. He said Israel wouldn't
let a humanitarian crisis develop in Gaza, when, in fact, one has
existed for months, his government caused it, and it's accompanied by
daily attacks, killings, arrests and a vast array of human rights
abuses against an isolated population barely hanging on.
On
January 23, various Palestinian factions met in Damascus with plenty to
say. With little hope of being heeded, they called on Abbas to end the
"ridiculous" negotiations he insists must continue with Olmert. Among
those attending were Khaled Meshaal of Hamas and Ramadan Shallah of
Islamic Jihad. Their message was strong: "I want to ask our brothers in
Ramallah (Fatah headquarters), what exactly are you waiting for?" While
you're talking, Palestinians in "the biggest prison in history (are)
being massacred."
Even Abbas supporters are dubious, and
Palestinian writer, Hani Al-Masri, expressed their view: "It doesn't
make sense for negotiations to continue while Israel is changing facts
on the ground and undermining the chances for a just and acceptable
solution." The Arab League also responded, but not with teeth. It
denounced Israel's siege, but does nothing to end it. That's Hamas'
view with Khaled Meshaal saying the League could force change but
instead prefers words, meetings, resolutions and more meetings in Arab
capitals.
Still more are planned. Cairo is involved. So are the
Saudis, but most of all Washington and Tel Aviv. They control
everything and will decide what's next with one thing assured. Gazans
are isolated, locked in the Territory, children and the elderly are
dying, so are the sick without medical care, daily attacks kill others,
and no end is in sight.
The plight of Palestinians won't change
as things continue lurching from one crisis to another the way they
have for decades. It won't end until world leaders buckle to growing
world sentiment that no longer will injustices this grave be tolerated.
How much more suffering must be endured, how many more deaths are
acceptable, when will justice finally be served? People of conscience
want answers. It's about time they got them.
Stephen Lendman
lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.