On Sunday February 8, two year old Mohammad Hersham Maraba became the first victim of the Israeli wall's obstruction of Palestinian access to medical services. Mohammad died after desperate attempts by his father to take him to hospital were thwarted by the Israeli Apartheid Wall. Mohammad had developed a temperature during the night of Saturday 7, and seeming no better the following morning his parents took him to the local doctor in the next village of Habla. After assessing Mohammad the doctor explained that the child's situation was critical and an ambulance was called to take Mohammad to the hospital in Qalqiliya, 2.5 km to the north. The construction of the wall around Habla, Ras Atiya and Izbet Jalud began in December 2002, prior to this the journey from the surrounding villages to Qalqiliya hospital was relatively straightforward, probably taking no longer than ten or fifteen minutes. However, on the day Mohammad's father went to take his son to the hospital the obstructions and delays created by the construction of the wall led to the death of his child. The village of Ras Atieh where the Maraba family live is on the Palestinian side of the wall. Unlike many towns and villages in the northern Qalqilya district it is not isolated in an area now de facto annexed into Israel yet due to Israel's annexation of the Alfe Menashe settlement the wall has deviated considerably from the 1967 green line and circled back into Palestinian territory to catch the settlement. The only thing more blatant than Israel's illegal annexations is their determination to take the land without the people. The route of the wall can often be seen therefore to follow as close as possible to the edges of Palestinian built up areas while leaving their land on the Israeli side of the wall. This has been the case in Habla. Though Israel has annexed the land, incorporating the 5,300 population into Israel was not acceptable. The wall therefore breaks between Qalqiliya and Habla leaving a small gap for an Israeli bypass road, tunneling back into West Bank land before swelling out to engulf the Alfe Menashe settlement almost like a great lake. The ramifications of this are that people from Habla, Ras Atiya and Izbet Jalud now have to circumvent this great lake to reach services their small communities cannot provide, such as emergency hospital care. When the ambulance didn't arrive to take Mohammad to hospital his father rushed down to the Habla gate which could enable him to pass through the first wall and then on to the second and the gate to enter Qalqiliya. The gates however are renowned for their sporadic opening if not permanent closure. On reaching the Habla gate Maraba found it locked and un-manned. He was therefore forced to begin the long journey following the wall around the Alfe Menashe settlement. Forty minutes later he reached the town of Azzun - approximately half way to the Qalqiliya Hospital - where he met the waiting ambulance and medics pronounced his little boy dead. According to Doctor Zouhir Ashour from Al Aqsa medical center in Qalqilya the boy had suffered fibril convulsions. There is a simple medicine to treat such cases but this can only be administered in a hospital. Dr Ashour said there is no doubt that the obstruction caused by the wall was responsible for the child's death. Had the boy come to the hospital directly he could have been treated immediately and would have stood a significantly higher chance of survival. Read More...
By: UN Women
Date: 09/03/2019
×
My Rights, Our Power: A Joint Campaign Launched in Palestine to Raise Awareness on Women’s Fundamental Human Rights
1_March 2019, Ramallah – On the occasion of the International Women’s Day (8 March), a week-long joint campaign “My Rights, Our Power” was launched today in Palestine to raise awareness on women’s fundamental human rights. The joint effort, with participation from over 30 national and international partners from civil society organizations, media outlets, and international development agencies, targets youth, women, and men in various geographic areas in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and Gaza to promote women’s human rights in Palestine. The campaign comes at a crucial moment when the anticipated adoption of the Family Protection Bill is at a standstill, raising concerns among national and international stakeholders about the consequences of such delay on safeguarding women’s fundamental human rights in Palestine. According to the Palestine report of the International Men and Gender Equality Survey (IMAGES), nearly one in five Palestinian men (17 percent) surveyed said they had perpetrated act of physical intimate partner violence against female partners, while 21 per cent of women surveyed reported having experienced such violence. “Family violence, usually committed by a family member who has social or economic power over others in the family, causes enormous pain and suffering to all members of the family, especially the women and children,” said a spokesperson from civil society, which has vigorously initiated the development of the Family Protection Bill (FPB), and has strongly pushed its adoption since 2004. “The violation of women’s human rights manifests in various levels and should be also understood from economic, cultural, and social aspects,” the spokesperson added, highlighting the lack of opportunities and freedom of choice, as well as limited access to justice and services that women in Palestine still experience. The joint campaign aims to raise awareness of the general public, especially youth, women, and men on women’s fundamental rights in line with international standards and embedded in the Family Protection Bill draft endorsed by the previous Cabinet at the end of December 2018. Five key messages, addressing women’s right to a life free of violence, right to achieve justice and seek help in case of violation of such life, as well as the right to equal opportunities and right to make one’s own choices, will be distributed through various channels such as radio, social media, helpline (121), outreach activities, and on-site events. The closing event of the joint campaign will take place on 8 March in Jerusalem and will celebrate women’s achievements using TED-style talks, followed by art performances. “My Rights, Our Power” joint campaign is part of the global International Women’s Day 2019 campaign under the theme of “Think equal, build smart, innovate for change”. The theme focuses on innovative ways in which we can advance gender equality and the empowerment of women, particularly in the areas of social protection systems, access to public services and sustainable infrastructure, echoing the theme of the 63rd session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW 63) taking place in New York on 11-22 March 2019. The participating organizations of the “My Rights, Our Power” are (in alphabetical order): 17 Palestinian women’s organizations represented by Al-Muntada (coalition), British Consulate-General, Business Women Forum, CARE International, Consulate General of Sweden, Consulate General of Belgium, EUPOL COPPS, EU Representative Office, FAO, General Union of Palestinian Women, Government of Japan, CowaterSogema/GROW Project, International Labour Organization, Italian Agency for Development Cooperation, Ma’an TV, MIFTAH, Netherlands Representative Office, Nisaa FM, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Palestinian Working Woman Society for Development, Palestinian Family Planning and Protection Association, Representative Office of Canada, Representative Office of Denmark, SAWA, Sawasya II, Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation, Sports for Life, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, Representative Office of Norway, UNDP, UNESCO, UNFPA, UNICEF, UNOPS, UN Women, Women's Centre for Legal Aid and Counseling, Women’s Studies Center. For more information, please contact Eunjin Jeong at UN Women via eunjin.jeong@unwomen.org or 059 2321 308, Majd Beltaji at UNESCO via m.beltaji@unesco.org or 059 4501 506.
By: Dr. Riyad Mansour
Date: 08/11/2017
×
Statement of Ambassador Dr. Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine to the United Nations, before the United Nations Security Council Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security, 27 October 2017
Mr. President, We thank France for organizing this important meeting and extend our appreciation to the Chef de Cabinet of the Secretary General, the Executive Director of UN Women, the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security and the Secretary-General of the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie for their efforts and important briefings. The issue before us is of relevance not only for half the planet, but to all, given the role and contribution of women in the fields of peace and security and the untapped potential that could be unleashed by mainstreaming their participation. Since the adoption by consensus of resolution 1325 by this Council, a lot has happened, and yet we are still far from the goal of full and equal participation, including in the prevention and resolution of conflicts and in peace-building, and from ensuring the protection and empowerment of women. Gender equality and non-discrimination remain prerequisites for the fulfilment of the purposes and principles of this organization and all of our lofty, collective commitments, including the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The State of Palestine welcomes the Secretary General’s report and his commitment to implementing the women and peace and security agenda, including by placing gender at the centre of his prevention platform and surge in diplomacy. We appreciate all efforts by the UN in this regard, including by UN Women, OHCHR and UNDP, notably in the field of human rights, capacity building, employment and rule of law. We urge UN bodies, notably those operating in Palestine, including the Special Representative, to intensify their engagement and collaboration with women organizations. Mr. President, I wish to highlight some of Palestine’s own important efforts in this regard. The Palestinian women’s movement is one of the oldest and strongest in the region and beyond, with institutional and representative structures established as early as the 19th century. Within the PLO, the General Union of Palestinian Women was among the first unions to be established. A coordination of women frameworks within PLO political parties and other organizations has also been established as the “Women’s Affairs Technical Committee” in the aftermath of the 1991 Madrid Peace Conference. There have been many achievements thereafter. Among them: In 2012, Palestine inaugurated a High-Level National Committee for the implementation of resolution 1325, led by the Ministry of Women Affairs in partnership with relevant Ministries and NGOs. In 2016, the State of Palestine was among the 68 countries and areas that adopted a National Action Plan on women, peace and security. This Action Plan (2017-2019), adopted by both the Government and civil society organizations, identifies three primary objectives: 1. ensuring protection for women and girls both domestically and in the face of the Israeli occupation; 2. ensuring accountability through national and international mechanisms, with a particular focus on crimes and violations committed by the occupation; and 3. furthering women’s political participation in decision making at the national and international level. The State of Palestine also joined core IHL and human rights instruments, including CEDAW, without reservations. Women’s participation and empowerment are also important and cross-cutting objectives in the context of the National Policy Agenda (2017-2022). We are, however, conscious that, despite all these efforts, much more work remains to be done. Only in 2009 was a women elected to the highest executive body of the PLO. Quotas are still decisive in allowing women’s election to Parliament and local councils. And while women organizations were among the strongest advocates of national reconciliation, they have been unfairly absent from reconciliation talks. The relevant legislative framework applicable in Palestine is also outdated and must be revised to ensure consistency with Palestine’s international commitments and obligations and avail women the protection and rights they are entitled to and the opportunities they deserve. Mr. President, The Palestinian women’s movement since its establishment over a century ago pursued the struggle on two fronts – the struggle for the independence of Palestine and the struggle for women’s rights and empowerment – a dual struggle the movement continues to pursue to this day. The Israeli occupation remains the main source of the violations of our women’s rights and their vulnerability and violence against their person. We have repeatedly called for protection of the Palestinian people, especially women and children. We have also called for accountability, a key element of resolution 1325, the first resolution to address the disproportionate and unique impact of armed conflict on women, as the only way to put an end to violations and crimes. While Palestine stands ready to do its part to advance women rights and the role of women in the fields of peace and security, it is clear that the enjoyment of these rights in our country necessitates ending the Israeli occupation. We will thus continue to work for an end of the occupation and true progress on the path to independence, justice and peace, with the equal and full involvement of women, leading to an independent State of Palestine ensuring human rights for all its citizens without discrimination.
By: Palestinian Women Coalition of UNSCR 1325
Date: 20/10/2016
×
Seeking Justice: Statement by the Palestinian Women Coalition of UNSCR 1325 on the visit of the delegation of the International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor’s Office on 9-10 October 2016 to Palestine
On the occasion of the ICC Prosecutor’s Office to Palestine, the Palestinian Women Coalition of UNSCR 1325, which consists of twelve different Palestinian women’s organisations, is urging the Prosecutor’s Office to take concrete actions towards investigating war crimes committed against Palestinians. The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom remains deeply concerned with the complete impunity of Israeli war crimes and firmly supports the Coalition’s call for a just accountability mechanism for Palestinian victims. WILPF also calls on the international community to recognise and fully support Palestinian women’s organisations substantial role in paving the paths to justice, accountability and peace. Read the statement of the Palestinian Women Coalition of UNSCR 1325 below. We, the Palestinian Women Coalition of UNSCR 1325,welcome the visit of the delegation of the ICC Prosecutor’s Office as a step in the right direction. But we are deeply disappointed that the purpose of this visit was restricted to preliminary examination, while Palestinian victims of Israeli war crimes, including women, continue to suffer and urgently await justice and an end to Israel impunity. We do not understand the decision to exclude the Gaza Strip from this visit, when Gaza has been the site of the most war crimes and where women have been most systematically impacted by Israeli collective punishment policies; a prolonged imposed siege and a severe humanitarian deterioration resulting from Israeli military aggressions . We are further disappointed that women who have been systematically impacted, and their women’s organisations, have been excluded from the delegation’s agenda. We call upon all future delegations of the ICC Prosecutor’s Office to include on their agenda meetings with women’s organisations and women who have experienced direct and indirect impacts of Israeli crimes. We, the Palestinian Women Coalition of UNSCR 1325, have seen in UNSCR 1325, 2242, and other UN Resolutions a commitment to hold the Israeli perpetrators accountable for their war crimes. We look to the ICC as the most important mechanism to end impunity for all war crimes committed, finally bringing justice for the Palestinian people. Yet, we are very concerned that the preliminary examinations will be an endless process. Therefore, we urge, Ms. Fatou Bensouda, the Prosecutor of the ICC, to conclude the preliminary examination and move to investigations into Israeli war crimes, bringing justice to Palestinians. We have paid the price of non-accountability and impunity of Israeli war crimes for too long. “Delaying justice is justice denied.” Palestinian Women Coalition of UNSCR 1325: The General Union of Palestinian Women (GUPW), the Women’s Affairs Technical Committee (WATC), Palestinian Working Woman Society for Development (PWWSD), MIFTAH, Filastinyat, Women Media and Development (TAM), Women Stu Dies Center, Women’s Center for Legal Aid and Counseling (WACLAC), the National, YWCA of Palestine, Center for Women’s Legal Research and Consulting (CWLRC), the Culture and Free thought Association(CWLRC) and Women’s Affairs Center (GWAC). Occupied Palestine October 11, 2016
By the Same Author
Date: 22/08/2005
×
Gaza Disengagement: Facts, History, Political Reality
The Gaza Strip is located on the Mediterranean Sea and borders Israel to the north and east and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula to the south. It is inhabited by 1.4 million Palestinians (including nearly one million refugees from the 1948 war in which Israel conquered 78% of historic Palestine) and around 8,500 illegal Israeli settlers. These settlers (0.6% of the population) and the Israeli soldiers who guard them control all of the land borders of Gaza, its access to the sea, its drinking water, its air space, and 30% of its land area. Settlements and checkpoints split the small area in which Palestinians live into five sub-areas (Rafah, Khan Younis, Al Mawasi, Deir Al Balah, and Gaza City) that cannot be traveled between without Israeli permission. Settlers, on the other hand, can go back and forth freely on exclusive, heavily fortified roads that link them directly to Israel. The checkpoints between the five Palestinian enclaves areas are frequently closed. Many Gazans are not allowed to travel at all, and the people who are allowed through are subjected to humiliating body searches and sometimes abuse or even violence. Many patients have died at these checkpoints on the way to hospitals, and many babies have been born and died at them while waiting for Israeli permission to pass. Israel’s decision to evacuate its settlers from the Gaza Strip, and relocate them in Israel and the West Bank, is a tactical decision designed to strengthen Israel’s Jewish majority and its illegal stranglehold over East Jerusalem and the West Bank. Haaretz recently ran a story that stated that Palestinians now outnumber Jews between the Jordan and the Mediterranean. The same story said that disengaging from Gaza will ensure a Jewish majority in Israel plus East Jerusalem and the West bank for another 20 years. Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza is not a concession but rather a strategic choice to selectively obey international and Israeli law, which call for Israel’s withdrawal from illegally occupied Palestinian territory, in order to continue breaking the same law elsewhere, namely in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem. Currently Israel is busily building expanding dozens of settlements and outposts throughout the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Israel’s High Court has ruled this summer that the illegal Israeli settlements within the Gaza Strip are not part of the State of Israel and are in an area of “belligerent occupancy.” Therefore it cannot order the state to make “border adjustments” and annex the settlements to Israel. The West Bank and East Jerusalem are also under belligerent occupancy, but so far the High Court has avoided making a similar ruling about them since Israel wishes to annex vast areas of the West Bank and all of East Jerusalem to Israel illegally. The most important thing to understand about the Gaza withdrawal is that it is not a move toward peace by the Israeli establishment. It is a move to shore up Israel’s hold on the West Bank settlement blocks and on East Jerusalem that will make a two-state solution impossible. It is a way to postpone a just and negotiated final settlement to the conflicts that have devastated both societies for decades, and if East Jerusalem and vital areas of the West Bank are stolen unilaterally and illegally by Israel, more bloodshed will surely result. Israel also has not agreed to allow Palestinians to have any meaningful control over their land or sea borders or airspace in the Gaza Strip once the settlers leave. Palestinian goods and travelers may be forced to ask Israel’s permission to enter and exit the Gaza Strip, even if they are coming in from Egypt or another country via land, air, or sea. If Palestinians must continue to submit to Israel’s expensive and humiliating searches of every import and export into and out of Gaza’s territory, former World Bank president James Wolfensohn believes Gaza’s shattered economy will have no chance to recover. Israel also explicitly reserves the right to invade militarily any time it sees fit. If such is the case, the Gaza Strip will remain occupied territory under international law even after every settler leaves. Basic Facts:
Buildings damages or destroyed in the Gaza Strip - September 2000 to May 2005 Number of completely destroyed homes in Gaza Strip: 4,662 Number of partially damaged homes in Gaza Strip: 22,807 Number of damaged public buildings in Gaza Strip: 30 Number of damaged security buildings in Gaza Strip: 340 (Source: Ministry of Public Works and Housing, 2005) History of Gaza “A city so rich in trees it looks like a cloth of brocade spread out upon the land,” wrote the 14th-century Syrian scholar al-Dimashqi of his expansive view of Gaza. He was not the first to pen the city’s praises: Herodotus, Pliny, Strabo and others had all complimented it in antiquity. Indeed, as early as 1500 BC, Pharaoh Thutmose III had chiseled into the Temple of Amun at Karnak a note that Gaza was “flourishing,” and today, Gaza historian Ibrahim Skeik recalls seeing, in the early 20th century, “trees all about the city, olives and almond groves.” Cradled in the southeast corner of the Mediterranean Sea, near the crossroads of Europe, Asia, and Africa, what is now known as the Gaza Strip has changed hands many times over the millennia. Its fertile land and value as a trade route and seaport have been prized by successive invaders. The earliest known inhabitants of the area were the Canaanites, and in ancient times Gaza City served as the residence of the Egyptian governor of Canaan. In the 13th century B.C. it was taken over by the Philistines, who created a coastal power base with Gaza City as its principal center. The Philistine city came successively under control of the Israelites, Assyrians, Egyptians, Babylonians, and Persians until it was conquered by Alexander the Great in the 330s BC. Following the Roman conquest in 63 BC, the area known historically as Canaan became known as Palestine. It later came under Byzantine rule. Gaza became a Muslim city in 635 when it was captured by adherents to the new religion. It was captured by Christian Crusaders in the 1100s but recaptured by the Muslims in 1187. The Ottoman Empire took control of Gaza in the 1500s. The French under Napoleon briefly controlled Gaza beginning in 1798 after defeating the Egyptian Mamluks who were allied with the Ottoman Sultan of Turkey. Napoleon stayed three days in the modest palace of the governing Radwan family; in Gaza City today, the palace, now a girl’s school, is still called “Napoleon’s Castle.” The French were driven out years later by a combination of Brits, Turks, Mamluks, and Arabs. During World War I, in 1917, the Third Battle of Gaza ended with British forces capturing Gaza. During the war of 1948, following an ill-considered plan to partition Palestine into a 55% Jewish state and 45% Arab state (despite the fact that Jews at this time only owned about 7% of the land), 78% of historic Palestine was captured by Jewish forces. During the devastating 1948 war, Jewish gangs and armies drove approximately 800,000 Palestinian Arabs, including Christians and Muslims, farmers and bankers, women and children, from their homes in what became known as Israel. Many of these refugees fled into Gaza, swelling its population; many still have the keys and deeds to their homes and lands inside Israel. Of the 22% of historic Palestine not captured by Jewish forces, Jordan annexed the West Bank, and Egypt annexed the Gaza Strip. During the 1967 war, the West Bank, Gaza, Syria’s Golan Heights, and Egypt’s Sinai peninsula were conquered and occupied by Israel. The annexations were not recognized under the new regime of international law. Israel later gave the Sinai back to Egypt, but the West Bank, Gaza, and the Golan remain under illegal occupation. When Palestinians reached the breaking point with regard to the oppression, humiliation, and subjugation inherent in foreign military occupations, the Palestinians engaged in a popular revolt known as the First Intifada. Israeli forces engaged in excessive violence to put down the revolt, killing hundreds of Palestinians and injuring and imprisoning thousands. In response, Israel signed the Oslo Accords in 1993 in order to transfer social responsibility for Palestinians onto a new body called the Palestinian National Authority. Meanwhile Israel maintained security control over the Palestinian territories and maintained severe restrictions on freedom and movement. From the day it was signed until the Second Intifada broke out, Israel accelerated its project of building Jewish-only cities called settlements in the West Bank and Gaza in order to strengthen their position there in the hopes that they could eventually annex all of this territory outright. The Second Intifada, which began in September 2000 with an explosive visit by Ariel Sharon, a known war criminal, to the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, has resulted in the deaths of around 4,000 Palestinians, including over 700 children, and 950 Israelis, including about one hundred children. Israel’s population within the ’67 borders is currently around six million, 20% of whom are Arab-Israelis, or indigenous Palestinians who remained in Israel despite the ethnic cleansing of 1948. Thus, along with the Palestinian population in the West Bank and Gaza, the number of Jews and Palestinians is roughly equal between the Jordan and the Mediterranean, and the Palestinian population is growing much faster. The Second Intifada forced Israel to realize that it was impossible to keep total control over the 3.7 million Palestinians who live in the West Bank and Gaza. This combined with the Palestinians’ high birth rate and Israel’s inability to bring in the millions of Jews they needed to ensure a Jewish majority between the Jordan and the Mediterranean led to Sharon’s announcement in 2004 that he was leaving the Gaza Strip. He did so because he reached the inescapable conclusion that Israel can only choose two of the following three choices: Jewish, democratic, and occupying all of historic Palestine. If Israel wants to be Jewish but annex all of the land of historic Palestine, it cannot be democratic, as Palestinians will soon outnumber Jews between the Jordan and the Mediterranean. If it chooses to be democratic and occupy all of historic Palestine, it will no longer be dominated by Jews. Thus the only viable choice for a Jewish democratic state is to tactically retreat from at least the population centers of the West Bank and Gaza. And with the disengagement plan, Sharon is excising 1.4 million Palestinians from the Israeli population at a stroke. In other words, if Israel doesn’t find a way to “disengage” from the rapidly-growing Palestinian population, whom some say already outnumber Jews, Israel will be forced to replace its de facto Apartheid policies with official de jure Apartheid policies in order to maintain its Jewish dominance. Sharon bases his actions on the knowledge that Israel has enormously more power than the Palestinians and the belief that this disengagement and the inevitable ones to follow should happen on Israel’s terms rather than through a negotiated solution based on international law. Gaza Today Today, the past endures, scattered amid streets dense with homes and small shops. Only the Mosque of Umar—the converted crusader church—and the small Greek Orthodox Church of St. Porphyrius, which still serves Gaza’s 700 Christians, hark back to pre-Mamluk times. The Mamluk maze of arched, covered streets collapsed under World War I’s shells, except for a lone, musty passage in Gaza's gold market. The tomb of the Prophet Muhammad’s great grandfather, Hashim, still lies in a corner of a 19th-century mosque and former pilgrim’s hostel. Several smaller, Mamluk-era mosques and tombs dot Shuja’iyyah, Gaza’s old Lower Town; one, the Mosque of ibn Uthman, is considered by historian Salim al-Mobayed to be architecturally “the purest Islamic mosque in Gaza.” Mamluk baths open in the morning for men and in the afternoon for women, and in the narrow, ancient quarters of Daraj and Zaytun, cinder-block walls rise everywhere atop the worn stones and antique arches of earlier eras. Many details of Gaza's past hang today as equally unanswered questions. Where was the crusader castle? Where was [Roman Emperor] Hadrian’s famous stadium? What of the sixth-century library and school of rhetoric, known throughout the Mediterranean, or the eight Greek temples? Or, indeed, what of the remains of Gaza’s cultural life in every era? And who, at the dawn of history, really founded Gaza, the city whose name has meant “strong,” “treasure,” and “the ruler's prize”?
For a more detailed satellite map, see: Sources:
http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/199405/gaza-contested
Date: 24/09/2004
×
Democracy is Our Right
The Palestine Monitor calls upon the international community to immediately intervene and put pressure on Israel to re-open the ballot offices in East Jerusalem. In an attempt to halt the registration process and deter Palestinian voters from participating in their democratic electoral right, the Israeli occupation forces, have raided and closed six registration centers in Jerusalem. Israel constantly invokes the claim to be the only democracy in the Middle East and criticizes the Palestinian Authority’s stalling over elections. However, the Israeli ongoing occupation and military escalation in the OPT serve to further justify the Palestinian Authority’s suspension of elections. Now that the Palestinians are attempting to participate freely in elections, Israeli occupation forces are taking further deliberate measures intended to sabotage the election and reform processes by driving away Jerusalem residents from the registration centers. By shutting down the Palestinian elections offices in occupied east Jerusalem, and by detaining nine workers and seizing all voter registration lists, Israel is depriving Palestinians from holding elections and reform, and therefore building their nation in a free, democratic and peaceful manner. TAKE ACTION The Palestine Monitor calls upon a large mobilization of international public opinion on behalf of the Palestinian people demanding that those with power and responsibility act to re-open the offices. Talking Points for letters: - Immediate intervention to demand the right of Palestinians to conduct free elections. - A call for governments to unequivocally condemn Israel's closure of registration centers. - Support the Central Elections Commission (CEC) is an independent body responsible for the administration and supervision of the Palestinian National elections and is supported by the EU. We urge all concerned individuals and organizations to act immediately and without delay and contact the following US, UN, UK, and European Union representatives (Readers outside the United States are encouraged to contact their national political representatives. Contact information can typically be tracked down quickly by searching with Google.com): United States Representatives President George Bush Jr. 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington DC 20500 e-mail: president@whitehouse.gov Tel. 202-456-1414
US Secretary of State Colin Powell 2201 C St. NW Washington DC 20520 e-mail: secretary@state.gov (State Dept. Tel switchboard 202-647-4000) fax: 202-736 4461
US Ambassador to Israel Daniel Kurtzer Tel: (+972-3) 519-7575; e-mail: webmaster@usembassy-israel.org.il Your member of Congress -- Call the Capitol switchboard toll-free on 1-800-839-5276 and ask to be connected to your member of Congress. United Nations General Telephone: (212) 963-1234 Fax for Kofi Annan's office: (212) 963-7055 e-mail: inquiries@un.org Permanent Missions to the United Nations European Union Representatives EU Presidency e-mail: eu@taoiseach.gov.ie
High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) for the European Union Javier Solana Tel: +32 (0)2-285-6467 or +32 (0)476-93-6426; e-mail: presse.cabinet@consilium.eu.int UK Representatives UK Prime Minister Tony Blair e-mail or Fax via Downing Street website: www.number-10.gov.uk Appeals should be sent to: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon Office of the Prime Minister 3 Kaplan Street, P O Box 187 Jerusalem 91919, Israel Telegram: Prime Minister, Jerusalem, Israel Fax: +972 2 6705475 Telex: 25279 MPRES IL e-mail: rohm@pmo.gov.il
Minister of Justice Yosef Lapid Ministry of Justice 29 Salah al-Din Street Jerusalem 91010 Israel Telegram: Justice Minister, Jerusalem, Israel Fax: +972 2 6285438 E-mail: sar@justice.gov.il Date: 03/05/2004
×
Israel's Wall: For Security or Settlements?
Yet another anti-wall protest passed off peacefully this morning in the small village of Deir Qaddis north-west of the city of Ramallah where local Palestinians were joined by international solidarity groups among them a delegation from the French Farmers Union. Whilst the demonstration was small in terms of the recent violent clashes seen in Biddu and Abu Dis all members of the village young and old turned out to voice their frustration and anger hoping their demonstration would do something to stop the ongoing Israeli destruction of their lands. Deir Qaddis lies some five kilometers from Israel, well inside the Green Line. The majority of villagers are farmers and earn a living from working the surrounding land, most of it olive groves. This land is now being torn up in preparation for the next stages of the Israeli Apartheid Wall which is continuing on its path of destruction through the West Bank in the name of Israeli security. Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi of the Palestinian Medical Relief Committee emphasized the importance of maintaining the struggle on the ground, and at the same time making this possible by providing small communities such as Deir Qaddis with the basic means to survive. UPMRC has recently spent 50,000 dollars building the village a health centre at the request of the residents to provide primary health care services. This project is just one of fifteen that UPMRC operates in the area. The hope as Dr Barghouthi explained is to ensure the villagers are not discouraged in their plight and remain steadfast to the Israeli encroachment. Driving away from the village it is impossible to ignore the huge challenge these small communities are confronted with. The village and its small hills of olive groves are overshadowed by the continuing construction of high rise buildings in the illegal Mod'in IIIit settlement. From the school in Deir Qaddis the children view a different world and between them and it, their family's lands lie just moments from destruction. In what looks like a vast building site, Israel has taken yet another huge bite into the serene Palestinian landscape. The lands of the farmers of Deir Qaddis will soon be taken from them, annexed to Israel by the continuing wall. Once the wall is built it will almost surround the village isolating many of the children from their schools and cutting the community as a whole from a network of health and social facilities. All their lands will be taken and few will have the economic means to remain. Israel's wall will then have succeeded in emptying another village of its Palestinian residents and cleared yet more land for the sprawling Israeli settlements. Date: 20/02/2004
×
Israeli Wall claims its first victim
On Sunday February 8, two year old Mohammad Hersham Maraba became the first victim of the Israeli wall's obstruction of Palestinian access to medical services. Mohammad died after desperate attempts by his father to take him to hospital were thwarted by the Israeli Apartheid Wall. Mohammad had developed a temperature during the night of Saturday 7, and seeming no better the following morning his parents took him to the local doctor in the next village of Habla. After assessing Mohammad the doctor explained that the child's situation was critical and an ambulance was called to take Mohammad to the hospital in Qalqiliya, 2.5 km to the north. The construction of the wall around Habla, Ras Atiya and Izbet Jalud began in December 2002, prior to this the journey from the surrounding villages to Qalqiliya hospital was relatively straightforward, probably taking no longer than ten or fifteen minutes. However, on the day Mohammad's father went to take his son to the hospital the obstructions and delays created by the construction of the wall led to the death of his child. The village of Ras Atieh where the Maraba family live is on the Palestinian side of the wall. Unlike many towns and villages in the northern Qalqilya district it is not isolated in an area now de facto annexed into Israel yet due to Israel's annexation of the Alfe Menashe settlement the wall has deviated considerably from the 1967 green line and circled back into Palestinian territory to catch the settlement. The only thing more blatant than Israel's illegal annexations is their determination to take the land without the people. The route of the wall can often be seen therefore to follow as close as possible to the edges of Palestinian built up areas while leaving their land on the Israeli side of the wall. This has been the case in Habla. Though Israel has annexed the land, incorporating the 5,300 population into Israel was not acceptable. The wall therefore breaks between Qalqiliya and Habla leaving a small gap for an Israeli bypass road, tunneling back into West Bank land before swelling out to engulf the Alfe Menashe settlement almost like a great lake. The ramifications of this are that people from Habla, Ras Atiya and Izbet Jalud now have to circumvent this great lake to reach services their small communities cannot provide, such as emergency hospital care. When the ambulance didn't arrive to take Mohammad to hospital his father rushed down to the Habla gate which could enable him to pass through the first wall and then on to the second and the gate to enter Qalqiliya. The gates however are renowned for their sporadic opening if not permanent closure. On reaching the Habla gate Maraba found it locked and un-manned. He was therefore forced to begin the long journey following the wall around the Alfe Menashe settlement. Forty minutes later he reached the town of Azzun - approximately half way to the Qalqiliya Hospital - where he met the waiting ambulance and medics pronounced his little boy dead. According to Doctor Zouhir Ashour from Al Aqsa medical center in Qalqilya the boy had suffered fibril convulsions. There is a simple medicine to treat such cases but this can only be administered in a hospital. Dr Ashour said there is no doubt that the obstruction caused by the wall was responsible for the child's death. Had the boy come to the hospital directly he could have been treated immediately and would have stood a significantly higher chance of survival. Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street, Al Massayef, Ramallah Postalcode P6058131
Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647 Jerusalem
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1 972-2-298 9492 info@miftah.org
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
|