Hunger Before the Storm
By Sameh Akram Habeeb
ccun.org, December 30, 2008
Editor's Note:
This article was written before the start of the savage Israeli
terrorist attacks on Gaza.
Israeli politicians, in the run-up
to elections, are promising to deal a severe blow to Gaza as this is how
Israeli policy is made. However, every household in Gaza is already
under siege. In Gaza you can only find pale, angry and frustrated faces.
If you visit my house you won't find power, while my neighbor is out of
gas. Another neighbor seeks potable water as power outages have left him
without for four days. A third neighbor desparately looks for milk for
his child but does so in vain. Another friend who lives on the corner
needs medicine that can't currently be found in Gaza.
There is no
shortage of such stories in Gaza (though there is a shortage of nearly
everything else). Perhaps broadcasting such stories would result in
pressure on Israeli leaders to stop the siege. Because what is happening
is that the entire Gaza population of 1.5 million -- densely packed into
a small area -- is being punished for crude rockets being fired into
Israel by a few.
Shaher Mazen, 25, holds a degree in political
science but works as a taxi driver to put bread on the table for his
family. I spoke to him while I was on my way to some of the Gaza
bakeries to cover some news that was happening there. Shaher was
frustrated because of siege and furious towards the two rival
Palestinian governments, considering them as weak in the face of Israel.
Mazen said, "We are under an organized Israeli media campaign. We
are being starved and victimized by Israel. The world think we are
besieging Israel, not the other way around. Israel is playing up the
issue of rocket fire to besiege us more and more."
Al-Shanty
bakery in Gaza City is one of the Strip's largest, supplying tens of
thousands with bread. Yesterday, hundreds of people crowded outside the
bakery in a very long queue, waiting for a bag of bread. Children, women
and men were awaiting the chance to buy some bread, which has become
scarce as Israel has not allowed the import of adequate supplies of
flour and cooking gas.
"Our bakery is out of bread for days now
and what we have will only last for another 24 hours. In fact, we
stopped our work yesterday as we ran out of flour. Now, we use animal
feed which will finish in a matter of hours," explained 24-year-old Abed
Masod while he busily worked at the bakery.
A woman's voice arose
above the crowd. She started to scream and appealed to God for salvation
and relief from Gaza's dire situation. Forty-five-year-old Om Ali
Shoman's weary face bore the impact of Gaza's suffering. "This is our
destiny," she said. "It's a conspiracy designed against us. What did my
children do to stay at home with no bread? Did they fire rockets? Did
they kill Israelis? Are they holding guns?"
Only about a dozen of
Gaza's 47 bakeries are currently operating as of yesterday, but with
rapidly diminishing supplies. The UN agency for Palestine refugees
(UNRWA) had to stop its food aid deliveries because Israel has not
allowed it to replenish its stores. This affects 750,000 refugees in the
Gaza Strip.
Gazans fear that the worst, however, is yet to come
as the Israeli government renews its threats of a major offense against
the Gaza Strip, irrespective of the civilian toll an invasion would
inevitably incur.
Time is running out in Gaza and mass starvation
looms as Gaza's skies are further darkened with threats of an Israeli
military incursion. As a journalist, peace activist, and one of the
hundreds of thousands of Gazans who are being collectively punished by
Israel, I urge those who read this to appeal their governments to hold
Israel accountable to international law, including the Fourth Geneva
Convention, article 33 of which forbids the collective punishment of a
civilian population. Though it unilaterally removed its illegal
settlement population from the Gaza Strip in 2005, Israel has remained
in control of Gaza's borders, sea and airspace, as well as its
population registry, and remains the occupying power, and as such is
obligated to abide by international humanitarian law, including the
Fourth Geneva Convention.
I urge readers to press their
governments to force Israel to respect the countless United Nations
resolutions that affirm Palestinian rights, and which Palestinian
leaders demand must be immediately implemented.
Please don't let
Gaza's plight be forgotten, and urge those around you to act as well.
All photos in the link below by Sameh A. Habeeb:
http://picasaweb.google.com/sameh.habeeb/BakeriesOfGazaOutOfBreadPeopleAreHungry#
Sameh A. Habeeb is a photojournalist, humanitarian
and peace activist based in the Gaza Strip, Palestine. He writes for
several news websites on a freelance basis.
Gaza Strip, Palestine
E-mail: Sam_hab@hotmail.com
Sameh.habeeb@gmail.com
Skype: Gazatoday, Facebook: Sameh A. habeeb
Web:
www.gazatoday.blogspot.com
Daily Photos:http://picasaweb.google.com/sameh.habeeb
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