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Analysis : Middle
East
Israel deepens offensive in Occupied Territories
By Chris Marsden
21 July 2006
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Media reports now refer to Israels attack on Gaza as
the forgotten war, a conflict overshadowed by the
carnage in Lebanon. Tel Aviv is happy for this situation to continue.
While the worlds media focuses almost exclusively on Lebanon,
and Israel has itself concentrated its military efforts on the
bombing of Beirut, Tripoli and other major cities, the Israel
Defence Forces (IDF) has also deepened its three-week-long offensive
against the Palestinians.
To describe Israels actions in Gaza as collective punishment
does not do enough to convey the scale of the crimes being perpetrated.
The IDF has set out to destroy the social, economic and, indeed,
political infrastructure of Gaza and is attempting the same on
the West Bank. The aim of the Kadima-led coalition government
is to reduce the Palestinians to conditions of utter degradation.
This would serve to crush all opposition to the creation of a
Greater Israel through the forcible annexation of much of the
West Bank and East Jerusalem, leaving the Palestinians in a series
of squalid ghettos with the IDF acting as de facto prison guards.
A UN report issued yesterday said the Israeli Army has carried
out 168 air strikes and fired more than 600 shells into Gaza,
with close to 120 killed as of Thursday night.
In the most ominous development so far, the IDF yesterday dropped
leaflets on towns and villages throughout Gaza warning residents
that anyone with an arsenal of weapons in their homes would be
bombed. Military officials said the IDF was adopting a new
policy of attacking homes in civilian areas where weapons
such as homemade rockets were secretly stored.
The IDF has made clear that entire communities will be targeted,
not merely individual dwellings. The leaflets stress that people
should be aware of the actions of their neighbours and, if militants
were storing weapons in the area, their neighbourhoods could be
attacked.
The life of all those who are holding military equipment
and ammunition in their homes is in danger and they should leave
the premises for their safety and that of their families,
the leaflet reads. The Israeli Defence Force will strike
and destroy all sites and buildings housing ammunition and military
material.
This signals a dramatic stepping up of the targeting of civilians
that has been the hallmark of the offensive from the beginning.
To date, 70 percent of Palestinian deaths have been in the north
around Gaza City, Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia. Beit Hanoun was
occupied on Sunday until Israeli troops withdrew Tuesday, after
which it was subjected to renewed bombardment. On July 19, the
IDF made a major incursion into parts of central Gaza, taking
over buildings and bulldozing farmland.
The attack being mounted on the Mughazi refugee camp is a typical
example of the brutality meted out by the IDF.
Mughazi has 22,000 residents and is situated near the Gaza-Israel
border fence. On July 19 residents said 30 Israeli armoured vehicles
had arrived in the camp by sunrise. Fighting broke out and six
people were killed that day, some as a result of air strikes.
IDF soldiers opened fire towards paramedics working in the camp,
seriously wounding one.
Fighting continued until this morning, when the IDF announced
a pullout after killing at least 14 people. Residents said they
left behind considerable destruction, tearing up water pipes and
electricity wires.
Having quit Maghazi camp, the Israeli forces were massing on
the border ahead of a possible new incursion against the nearby
Bureij refugee camp. An Israeli army spokeswoman confirmed the
Maghazi withdrawal. Yes, our forces are out, but it is important
to emphasise that operations in Gaza continue, she said.
Israel has been systematically destroying major infrastructure
in the Gaza Strip, focusing on government buildings such as the
Foreign Affairs ministry. But power stations, water treatment
plants and greenhouses have also been singled out. In the latest
raids shelling was concentrated on industrial zones, including
industrial workshops east of Gaza City. This means that fewer
people are killed, but maximises the impact of Israeli aggression
in the long term. Many companies have already been forced to close
down.
Israel has mounted major attacks on the West Bank centred on
the city of Nablus, which has a population in excess of 100,000.
Early July 19, the IDF surrounded the local government building
with around 100 military vehicles, including bulldozers, jeeps
and tanks. The army completely destroyed the preventative security
building, killing at least three people. Members of the Ministry
of Security were taken prisoner and stripped of their clothing.
The Ministry of Health building was also seized and turned
into a detention facility. Palestinian paramedics were prevented
at gunpoint from retrieving the bodies of the three government
employees assassinated by the IDF.
Attacking medical personnel is an established tactic of the
IDF. At Beit Hanoun Hospital, ambulance drivers were fired on
July 16 as they attempted to pick up five people wounded and two
killed in the Israeli occupation of the town.
The IDF also stormed a government building in Ramallah on the
West Bank and the office of the Palestinian WAFA News Agency on
July 19.
The attack on WAFA is part of an attempt to prevent any reporting
of Israels criminal behaviour on the West Bank and elsewhere.
Wail Tanous, a cameraman for Al Jazeera, was shot in the leg by
the IDF while filming in Nablus on July 19. Faten Al-Wan, a reporter
with Al Hurrah television, was also shot with a rubber bullet
later that day.
The pattern was set in Gaza, where a number of journalists
have been fired on at close range despite being clearly identified,
including a news crew from the rightwing and avowedly pro-Israeli
Fox News from the United States.
Israels offensive in Gaza has already produced terrible
suffering. Its one and a half million residents are living in
dire straits, facing shortages of electricity, water and food.
Israels first major action was to destroy Gazas
sole power station. In addition three major sewage treatment plants
and more than 100 municipal wells are not working properly.
Charities Christian Aid, Oxfam International and Save the Children
UK have warned of a looming humanitarian disaster, particularly
an increase in disease as a result of the lack of clean water
and the buildup of untreated sewage. Should this occur, what remains
of a health system already deprived of power would be quickly
overwhelmed.
Adam Leach, regional director from Oxfam, commented:
Ordinary Palestinians are suffering from the destruction
of bridges, water pipelines and electricity suppliesall
things that civilians are entitled to and depend upon.
Hundreds of thousands of people are without a regular
supply of water. Many of our vital water projects had already
been interrupted because of prolonged Israeli restrictions stopping
supplies entering Gaza. Peoples basic rights are being denied...
The crisis comes as tens of thousands of families in
Gaza and the West Bank are struggling to survive without an income
because of the suspension of tax payments by the Government of
Israel and aid by the international community to the Palestinian
Authority.
Gaza is now very hot and humid with temperatures constantly
over 30 degrees. Without power, people cannot pump water up to
their flats. Old people cannot reach hospital if they live in
high buildings. At least 200 surgical operations have been cancelled.
Israel continues to enjoy the active support of Egypt in pursuing
its campaign of destruction in Gaza. It helped ensure the siege
imposed by Tel Aviv was complete by closing its own border with
Gaza, which runs through the town of Rafah, on June 25, in collaboration
with the IDF. Three thousand Palestinians were left stranded on
the Egyptian side of the border, after Cairo posted 2,500 police
in Rafah. Hundreds of others were denied access to medical treatment
in Egypt. In the days that followed, eight people died in the
sweltering heat.
On July 14, Palestinian militants forced open the border gate,
wounding an Egyptian officer and letting around 600 Palestinians
get into Gaza. After protest by the European Union and the United
Nations, Egypt and Israel finally agreed to open the Rafah border
for just a few hours on July 19 to allow people back into Gaza.
No one was allowed to leave.
See Also:
Western diplomacy supports Israel's war
of aggression
[19 July 2006]
G8 powers sanction Israeli aggression
in Lebanon
[18 July 2006]
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