Israeli Blockade of Gaza Continues to Suffocate 
		Daily Life of 1.5 Million People, an Amnesty International Report
		
		Monday January 18, 2010 08:38 by Report by AMNESTY International
		
		
		Israel must end its suffocating blockade of the Gaza Strip, which 
		leaves more than 1.5 million Palestinians cut off from the outside world 
		and struggling with desperate poverty, Amnesty International said one 
		year on from the end of Israel’s military offensive in Gaza.
		
		Amnesty International’s briefing paper Suffocating: The Gaza Strip under 
		Israeli blockade gathers testimony from people still struggling to 
		rebuild their lives following Operation “Cast Lead”, which killed around 
		1,400 Palestinians and injured thousands more. 
“Israel claims 
		that the ongoing blockade of Gaza, in force since June 2007, is a 
		response to the indiscriminate rocket attacks launched from Gaza into 
		southern Israel by Palestinian armed groups. The reality is that the 
		blockade does not target armed groups but rather punishes Gaza’s entire 
		population by restricting the entry of food, medical supplies, 
		educational equipment and building materials,” said Malcolm Smart, 
		Middle East and North Africa Director, Amnesty International. 
		“The blockade constitutes collective punishment under international law 
		and must be lifted immediately.” 
As the occupying power, Israel 
		has a duty under international law to ensure the welfare of Gaza’s 
		inhabitants, including their rights to health, education, food and 
		adequate housing 
During Operation “Cast Lead”, from 27 December 
		2008 to 18 January 2009, 13 Israelis were killed, including three 
		civilians in southern Israel, where dozens more were injured in 
		indiscriminate rocket attacks by Palestinian armed groups. 
In Gaza, 
		Israeli attacks damaged or destroyed civilian buildings and 
		infrastructure, including hospitals and schools, the water and 
		electricity systems. Thousands of Palestinian homes were destroyed or 
		severely damaged. 
An estimated 280 of the 641 schools in Gaza 
		were damaged and 18 were destroyed. More than half of Gaza’s population 
		is under the age of 18 and the disruption to their education, due to the 
		damage caused during Operation “Cast Lead” and as a result of the 
		continuing Israeli boycott, is having a devastating impact. 
		Hospitals have also been badly affected by the military offensive and 
		the blockade. Trucks of medical aid provided by the World Health 
		Organization have been repeatedly refused entry to Gaza without 
		explanation by Israeli officials. 
Patients with serious medical 
		conditions that cannot be treated in Gaza continue to be prevented or 
		delayed from leaving Gaza by the Israeli authorities – since the closure 
		of crossings leading into and out of Gaza, patients have been made to 
		apply for permits, but these permits are frequently denied. 
On 1 
		November 2009, Samir al-Nadim, a father of three children, died after 
		his exit from Gaza for a heart operation was delayed by 22 days. 
		
Amnesty International spoke to a number of families whose homes were 
		destroyed in the Israeli military operation and one year on are still 
		living in temporary accommodation. 
Mohammed and Halima Mslih and 
		their four young children fled their home in the village of Juhor al-Dik, 
		south of Gaza City, during the conflict one year ago. While they were 
		away their home was demolished by Israeli army bulldozers. 
“When 
		we returned everything was broken. People were giving us food because we 
		had nothing,” said Mohammed Mslih. 
Six months after the 
		ceasefire the family was still living in a flimsy nylon tent and they 
		have only now been able to construct a simple permanent home. The family 
		fear, however, that continuing Israeli military incursions may destroy 
		the little they have left. 
Unemployment in Gaza is spiralling as 
		those businesses that remain struggle to survive under the blockade. In 
		December 2009, the UN reported that unemployment in Gaza was over 40 per 
		cent.
“The blockade is strangling virtually every aspect of life 
		for Gaza’s population, more than half of whom are children. The 
		increasing isolation and suffering of the people of Gaza cannot be 
		allowed to continue. 
The Israeli government must comply with 
		binding legal obligation, as the occupying power, to lift the blockade 
		without further delay,” said Malcolm Smart. 
		Hamas Welcomes Amnesty Report
		Monday January 18, 2010 14:09 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News
		
		
		Islamic Resistance Movement, Hamas, welcomed the report of Amnesty 
		International in which it demanded Israel to lift the siege on the Gaza 
		Strip, and stated that the siege leaves more than 1.4 million 
		Palestinians cut off from the outside world and struggling with 
		desperate poverty. 
Salah Bardaweel - Palestine-Info
		Palestinian Legislator of the Hamas movement, Dr. Salah Bardaweel, said 
		that the Amnesty report expresses rejection to the ongoing Israeli 
		violations and crimes against the Palestinian people. 
He added 
		that this report could not have been made without the steadfastness of 
		the Palestinian people, their struggle, and their sacrifices. 
		Dr. Bardaweel also stated that the Israeli violations are considered War 
		Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity, and that this siege is only one form 
		of Israeli violations and crimes. 
He stated that, sooner or 
		later, Israel’s leaders will be brought to justice, and will be 
		prosecuted by international courts. 
The Hamas leader said that 
		the movement welcomes the report of Amnesty, and demanded the group to 
		act on ending the illegal Israeli siege, and aggression. 
Amnesty 
		Report 
		Related Link(s):
		
		http://amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/israel039s-gaza-...00118