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Written by Akiva Eldar Akiva Eldar
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Category: News News
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Published: 18 January 2010 18 January 2010
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Last Updated: 18 January 2010 18 January 2010
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Created: 18 January 2010 18 January 2010
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Who said we are shut up inside our Tel Aviv bubble? How many small
nations surrounded by enemies set up field hospitals on the other side
of the world? Give us an earthquake in Haiti, a tsunami in Thailand or
a terror attack in Kenya, and the IDF Spokesman's Office will triumph.
A cargo plane can always be found to fly in military journalists to
report on our fine young men from the Home Front Command.
Everyone is truly doing a wonderful job: the rescuers, searching for
survivors; the physicians, saving lives; and the reporters, too, who
are rightfully patting them all on the back. After Deputy Foreign
Minister Danny Ayalon became the face we show the world, the entire
international community can now see Israel's good side.
But the remarkable identification with the victims of the terrible
tragedy in distant Haiti only underscores the indifference to the
ongoing suffering of the people of Gaza. Only a little more than an
hour's drive from the offices of Israel's major newspapers, 1.5 million
people have been besieged on a desert island for two and a half years.
Who cares that 80 percent of the men, women and children living in such
proximity to us have fallen under the poverty line? How many Israelis
know that half of all Gazans are dependent on charity, that Operation
Cast Lead created hundreds of amputees, that raw sewage flows from the
streets into the sea?
The Israeli newspaper reader knows about the baby pulled from the
wreckage in Port-au-Prince. Few have heard about the infants who sleep
in the ruins of their families' homes in Gaza. The Israel Defense
Forces prohibition of reporters entering the Gaza Strip is an excellent
excuse for burying our heads in the sand of Tel Aviv's beaches; on a
good day, the sobering reports compiled by human rights organizations
such as B'Tselem, Gisha - Legal Center for Freedom of Movement, and
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel on the situation in Gaza are pushed
to the newspapers' back pages. To get an idea of what life is like in
the world's largest prison, one must forgo "Big Brother" and switch to
one of the foreign networks.
The disaster in Haiti is a natural one; the one in Gaza is the unproud
handiwork of man. Our handiwork. The IDF does not send cargo planes
stuffed with medicines and medical equipment to Gaza. The missiles that
Israel Air Force combat aircraft fired there a year ago hit nearly
60,000 homes and factories, turning 3,500 of them into rubble. Since
then, 10,000 people have been living without running water, 40,000
without electricity. Ninety-seven percent of Gaza's factories are idle
due to Israeli government restrictions on the import of raw materials
for industry. Soon it will be one year since the international
community pledged, at the emergency conference in Sharm el-Sheikh, to
donate $4.5 billion for Gaza's reconstruction. Israel's ban on bringing
in building materials is causing that money to lose its value.
A few days before Israeli physicians rushed to save the lives of
injured Haitians, the authorities at the Erez checkpoint prevented 17
people from passing through in order to get to a Ramallah hospital for
urgent corneal transplant surgery. Perhaps they voted for Hamas. At the
same time that Israeli psychologists are treating Haiti's orphans with
devotion, Israeli inspectors are making sure no one is attempting to
plant a doll, a notebook or a bar of chocolate in a container bringing
essential goods into Gaza. So what if the Goldstone Commission demanded
that Israel lift the blockade on the Strip and end the collective
punishment of its inhabitants? Only those who hate Israel could use
frontier justice against the first country to set up a field hospital
in Haiti.
True, Haiti's militias are not firing rockets at Israel. But the siege
on Gaza has not stopped the Qassams from coming. The prohibition of
cilantro, vinegar and ginger being brought into the Strip since June
2007 was intended to expedite the release of Gilad Shalit and
facilitate the fall of the Hamas regime. As everyone knows, even though
neither mission has been particularly successful, and despite
international criticism, Israel continues to keep the gates of Gaza
locked. Even the images of our excellent doctors in Haiti cannot blur
our ugly face in the Strip.