Israel suddenly closes Karni crossing after only eight trucks 
		unload goods
		Date: 12 / 12 / 2008  Time:  14:12 
Gaza – Ma’an –
		
		The Karni crossing point was suddenly closed Friday for “security 
		reasons,” after only a fraction of the 110 trucks of goods slated for 
		entry into the strip were permitted to unload their cargo. 
Head 
		of the coordination committee responsible for goods entering Gaza Raed 
		Fattuh said only 43 truckloads of goods were scheduled to enter the 
		Strip through Karni on Friday, and that only eight loads actually passed 
		into Gaza. 
Fattuh confirmed that another fifty truck loads 
		entered through Karem Shalom crossing, 35kilometers south of Karni near 
		Rafah. 
		Free Gaza ship departs with 11 students denied exit by Israel
		Date: 12 / 12 / 2008  Time:  10:39 
Bethlehem - 
		Ma'an - 
		A ship with the Free Gaza movement left the Strip late Thursday night 
		with 11 Palestinian students aboard.
The students had previously 
		been denied exit by Israel to attend universities abroad despite having 
		all proper documentation from the institutions. 
Over 700 
		students are currently trapped in Gaza, unable to obtain permission from 
		Israel to continue their education abroad, according to the group.
		
Accompanying the students were two British academics, Jonathan 
		Rosenhead and Mike Cushman, of the London School of Economics and the 
		British Committee for Universities for Palestine (BRICUP), an 
		organization of UK-based educators that calls for an academic boycott of 
		Israel. 
"As academics, we are particularly pleased to be 
		traveling on the Dignity [the ship of the Free Gaza movement] on this 
		mission to enable at least some of the hundreds of students trapped in 
		Gaza by the Israeli siege to get out and take up their places at 
		universities around the world," said a statement released by the group.
		
"This siege is an affront to any idea of academic freedom or 
		human rights. How can anyone justify preventing young people from 
		fulfilling their potential and learning how to serve their community 
		more fully?" it continued. 
In an act of "nonviolent defiance" 
		against the ongoing Israeli occupation, the Free Gaza movement has been 
		running "civil resistance ships" to Gaza since August. 
The 
		Dignity's voyage is the fourth such trip, and aimed to reunite families 
		and deliver medical supplies, mail, and international humanitarian and 
		human rights workers to the Gaza Strip. 
Free Gaza spokesperson 
		Ewa Jasiewicz said "though we carried in a ton of medical supplies and 
		high-protein baby formula on our ship, our mission in Gaza was not to 
		provide charity, but to give our solidarity to the people of Palestine, 
		break the silence of the world over this continuing calamity, and 
		physically break through the blockade of Gaza in an act of direct 
		resistance against the siege."
"In the end, the oppression and 
		humiliation of occupation assaults the humanity of both occupier and 
		occupied and cannot and must not be tolerated any longer," Jasiewicz 
		added.
For over two years, Israel has imposed an increasingly 
		severe blockade on Gaza, dramatically increasing poverty and 
		malnutrition rates among the 1.5 million people who live in the tiny, 
		coastal region. 
Osama Qashoo, another Free Gaza spokesperson, 
		explained their voyage's success by saying that "the sea passage to Gaza 
		is open." Three ships, one from Libya, one from Qatar, and a third from 
		the Israeli Jaffa port were denied entry into Gaza just over a week ago.
		
Commenting on the Israeli action taken against the ships, Qashoo 
		said "Our fourth mission was a quick response to Israel denying earlier 
		attempts,” and an effort to maintain the opening the group had managed 
		to force in Israel’s blockade of Gaza. 
"We hope that other 
		nations, civil society organizations, and activists around the world 
		will learn from our experience, be strategic in their planning, and not 
		let Israeli threats and aggression stop them from coming to Gaza," said 
		the Free Gaza Movement. 
"Freedom of movement and of education 
		and to live in peace is everyone's right," the group added. 
		According to Caoimhe Butterly, a Free Gaza coordinator, the ship faced 
		no interference or radio contact from the Israeli navy on its way into 
		and out of Gaza waters. She did note, however, that the ship’s radar 
		showed naval vessels passing within a few miles of the vessel.
		Asked why the Free Gaza ship was allowed through while others were 
		blocked, Butterly said it was a sign that Israel “does not see this 
		project as a threat.”
***Updated 13:43 Bethlehem time
		Israeli stranglehold on Nablus claimed to to loosen, more 
		restrictions set to be eased
		Date: 12 / 12 / 2008  Time:  15:23 
Bethlehem – 
		Ma’an – 
		Nablus residents show reserved optimism as Israeli travel 
		restrictions to the northern West Bank ease after years of pleading from 
		the Palestinian Authority (PA).
Nablus suffered a slow 
		strangulation since 2001; labeled by Israeli TV as the “City of Suicide 
		Bombers,” for seven years the Israeli army made almost nightly 
		incursions. 
Roads into the city were blocked to all but those 
		with special permits, and no Nablus resident with a car has been able to 
		drive to Ramallah on the main road since the Huwwara, Awarta, At-Tur, 
		Beit Furik, Asira Ash-Shamalia, Beit Iba and Shave Shomeron checkpoints 
		were installed. 
Once the financial capital of the country 
		housing the Palestinian stock market and over a third of West Bank 
		residents; the Israeli military presence and enforced closure of the 
		city and stifled its growth. 
Trade, commerce and Nablus’ once 
		growing export markets closed. Businesses went under, and peoples’ lives 
		became miserable. The installation of Huwwara checkpoint was a curse on 
		northern West Bankers, and signaled the start of a rapid deterioration 
		in quality of life. Even those traveling for medical care into the once 
		bustling city were denied access without proper documentation. 
		Since Eid began on 8 December, all this changed. Palestinians over 50 
		were able to drive their cars into Nablus, and Palestinians living in 
		Israel were for the second time this year allowed to visit relatives or 
		go shopping in the city without first getting a permit. 
		Merchants in the city have seen sales increase, there is more traffic on 
		the roads, and a cautious optimism is palpable in the streets. 
		And according to Palestinian Chief of Civil Affairs in the Palestinian 
		Authority (PA) Hussein Ash-Sheikh, more changes are on their way. In the 
		coming weeks Nablus residents with registered vehicles will be able to 
		drive to Salfit, Tubas or Qalquilia, and on any of the roads open to 
		Palestinian traffic. 
Ash-Sheikh said the changes were the result 
		of years of lobbying on the part of the PA with Israeli authorities.