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This Friday on "ONE LAND, MANY VOICES", hosts Hala Gores and William Seaman
speak with Dr. Mona El-Farra in Gaza about the escalation in the Israeli
blockade and the resulting worsening of the humanitarian crisis there. Dr.
El-Farra is a physician by training and a human rights and women's rights
activist by practice. She is Deputy Director of the Union of Health Work
Committees, heads the Rachel Corrie Children’s Center and is the Vice
President of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society in Gaza. Your phone calls and donations can help free Gaza! Please call today! And
tune in Friday at 9:00AM to KBOO 90.7FM for ONE LAND, MANY VOICES!
Dear Friends,
This Friday on "ONE LAND, MANY VOICES", hosts Hala Gores and William Seaman speak with Dr. Mona El-Farra in Gaza about the escalation in the Israeli blockade and the resulting worsening of the humanitarian crisis there. Dr. El-Farra is a physician by training and a human rights and women's rights activist by practice. She is Deputy Director of the Union of Health Work Committees, heads the Rachel Corrie Children’s Center and is the Vice President of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society in Gaza.
The humanitarian crisis in Gaza has been radically increased by the recent escalation of the US-backed Israeli blockade. Appended below is a recent article from the Guardian (UK) newspaper from Monday. This morning it was reported that the border wall separating Gaza from Egypt has been blown up in several places and tens of thousands of Palestinians have been streaming across into Egypt to purchase basic supplies, fuel and food, and bringing them back into Gaza. Please take a moment to contact our representatives in Washington, DC, to demand an end to the blockade on Gaza (contacts listed below).
Please tune in Friday morning at 9:00AM to KBOO 90.7FM Community Radio for the ONE LAND, MANY VOICES interview with Dr. Mona El-Farra in Gaza. Please join the weekly Friday rally and march, this week focusing on the crisis in Gaza and calling for an end to the Gaza Seige, at 5:00 PM at Pioneer Courthouse Square in downtown Portland. (For more information, please visit the Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights website at www.auphr.org or call AUPHR at 503-287-1885 or visit the Portland Peaceful Response Coalition website at www.pprc-news.org or call PPRC at 503-344-5078.)
Your phone calls and donations can help free Gaza! Please call today! And tune in Friday at 9:00AM to KBOO 90.7FM for ONE LAND, MANY VOICES!
Peace,
William Seaman Hala Gores
Dr. El-Farra's BLOG: http://fromgaza.blogspot.com/
2007 Presentation at UfPJ Conference: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDe9wBZW9fo
2004 Interview: http://www.criticalconcern.com/el-farra-interview.htm
American Friends Service Committee PROFILES OF PEACE - Biography of Dr. Mona El-Farra
Palestinian physician active in medical relief efforts in the Gaza Strip. Among many other activities, El-Farra heads the Rachel Corrie Children’s Center in Gaza and writes a well-regarded blog, "From Gaza, with Love," that has attracted attention from journalists, activists, and academics around the world.
Dr. Mona El-Farra was born in Khan Younis, Gaza. Her family owned land in Gaza for about 900 years. In her lifetime, however, this land was confiscated by Israel and her family’s home was demolished. After obtaining her medical degree, she dedicated her life to working for relief in the Gaza Strip. Today, among many activities, she works as a physician in Northern Gaza.
Some of her relief work includes creating programs that combine health services with community and cultural recreation services. She implements these programs as the Director of Gaza Projects for the Middle East Children's Alliance (MECA). El-Farra is also a health development consultant for the Union of Health Work Committees in Gaza and Vice President of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society in Gaza.
“Though we do not now live with ease, we live with resolve. Until the world pressures Israel to recognize our rights in our land, and to pursue a peace that brings freedom and security to Israelis and Palestinians, we both will continue to pay the price.” El-Farra heads the Rachel Corrie Children’s Center, which is also in Gaza. The center is a project of the Union of Health Work Committees and is named after Rachel Corrie, an American activist who was killed by an Israeli Caterpillar bulldozer while protecting a home in Gaza from demolition. The Children’s Center provides a haven for the children from the ongoing war and violence surrounding them. El-Farra explains that the violence in Gaza has devastating effects on both the children and the future prospects for peace.
"[Israeli] aggression will leave psychological scars on the children for years to come," El-Farra commented in the newspaper article "My Life in Gaza," published in the Boston Globe on July 10, 2006. "Instilling fear, anger and loss in them will not bring peace and security to Israelis."
The center also provides computer and internet services to the children so that they can communicate with the outside world. El-Farra states that the importance of this communication is to show the children of Gaza that there are international solidarity networks with the Palestinian peoples, " …. to grow up knowing that there are still in the world a place for people who respect justice and who are fighting to see the world full of justice, not hate and injustice." (Democracy Now! Interview with Mona El-Farra, by Amy Goodman, October 18, 2006.)
El-Farra’s work extends beyond medical relief work. She is a human rights and women’s rights activist. She releases reports on the internet about the deterioration of health services in light of Israeli aggression in Gaza and the lack of resources. She has written for The Boston Globe, Le Monde Dipolimatique, The LA Times, and The Guardian. She also has been interviewed for Democracy Now! and the BBC.
In addition, her blog, "From Gaza, with Love," has attracted attention from journalists, activists, and academics around the world. Currently, El-Farra is co-authoring a book with Noam Chomsky. El-Farra writes about Gaza from different perspectives: as a physician, as a mother, daughter, and civilian. She reports on deaths, malnutrition, contaminated waters, lack of medicine, and the deterioration of health for the Palestinian people. She also talks about the effects of the Israeli aggression against Gaza on her children, and her separation from her mother and other family members, especially during the summer of 2006.
"Though we do not now live with ease, we live with resolve," El-Farra said in the Boston Globe article "My Life in Gaza." "Until the world pressures Israel to recognize our rights in our land, and to pursue a peace that brings freedom and security to Israelis and Palestinians, we both will continue to pay the price."
To visit Dr. El-Farra's web site "From Gaza, with Love" see: http://www.fromgaza.blogspot.com/.
For information about a Middle East Children's Alliance speaking tour featuring Dr. El-Farra see: http://www.mecaforpeace.org/article.php?id=169
URGENT ACTION on GAZA: =====================
Dear friends,
There is a humanitarian crisis and catastrophe unfolding in Gaza. The latest escalation of the blockade by Israel, with US support, is bringing unprecedented suffering to a population already in misery and at great risk. Please take a moment to help bring an end to the blockade of Gaza. Call our representatives in Washington, DC, to demand that Israel restore the shipments of fuel and open the border crossings for food and medicines, and also to restore the normal flow of all goods so that Gaza's economy can begin to recover. To find out more about the situation, and to donate for relief services, please visit the Middle East Children's Alliance Gaza emergency webpage:
http://www.mecaforpeace.org/article.php?id=265
Below are e-mail and telephone contact links to the Oregon representatives in Washington, DC. Please contact them today. Tell them that the blockade of Gaza must end!
Senator Ron Wyden: http://wyden.senate.gov/contact/
Senator Gordon Smith: http://gsmith.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.Home
Representative Earl Blumenauer: http://www.blumenauer.house.gov/about/Contact.shtml
Representative David Wu: http://www.house.gov/wu/email.shtml http://www.house.gov/wu/contact.shtml
Representative Darlene Hooley http://hooley.house.gov/index.asp?Type=DYNAFORM&SEC={9BDA1E4D-2430-4E7D-B7AB -236B60C42F5A} (503) 557-1324 phone (503) 557-1981 fax
Representative Peter DeFazio http://www.house.gov/formdefazio/contact.html http://www.defazio.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=127&I temid=74
Representative Greg Walden http://walden.house.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContactGreg.Home Main: 202-225-6730 Fax: 202-225-5774
Please call today!
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Israeli fuel blockade may halt food handouts, UN warns
Mark Tran and agencies, Monday January 21, 2008 - Guardian Unlimited
Food aid to residents in Gaza could be suspended unless Israel reopens the border, a UN agency said today.
The warning came amid a resurgence of violence between Israel and Hamas Islamists, and the halting by Israel of crucial fuel supplies to the coastal strip.
"Because of a shortage of nylon for plastic bags and fuel for vehicles and generators, on Wednesday or Thursday we are going to have to suspend our food distribution programme to 860,000 people in Gaza if the present situation continues," said Christopher Gunness, a spokesman for the UN Relief Works Agency, which distributes food aid to 860,000 Palestinians in Gaza.
Unwra distributes basic food parcels in Gaza consisting of items such as pulses, flour and packaged milk. The situation in the territory, which has been under a western economic embargo since Hamas took power last June, is already bleak.
"We are already seeing signs of malnutrition and there have been cases or rickets [a cause of weak bones through a lack of vitamin D]," Gunness said.
Israel, however, showed little signs of easing what is effectively an economic blockade of Gaza in response to a barrage of rocket fire aimed at its southern towns.
The Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, said Palestinians in Gaza might have to go without Israeli-supplied petrol for their cars as long as militants continue to fire rockets across the border.
"As far as I'm concerned, all the residents of Gaza can walk and have no fuel for their cars, because they have a murderous terrorist regime that doesn't allow people in the south of Israel to live in peace," Olmert said in a broadcast.
The UN and the EU have urged Israel to restore the flow of fuel amid fears of a humanitarian disaster. Lebanon and Syria called for an emergency Arab summit to discuss the Israeli blockade.
The Syrian foreign ministry demanded "an immediate end to the collective punishment and Israeli crimes", saying Israel was violating "the simplest rules of human rights".
The pro-western Lebanese prime minister, Fouad Siniora, described developments in Gaza as a serious escalation of Israel's "racial discrimination and blatant human rights violations against Palestinians, under the pretext of confronting Hamas".
Palestinian officials warned of a catastrophe in health services in Gaza because of Israel's decision to halt fuel shipments, which has forced the shutdown of Gaza's sole only power plant.
"We have the choice to either cut electricity on babies in the maternity ward or heart surgery patients or stop operating rooms," said a health ministry official, Moaiya Hassanain.
Israel last night refused to reopen crossings or allow fuel supplies in after the most intense fighting between Israel and the Palestinians in Gaza for more than a year. Nearly 40 Palestinians have been killed in the past week, at least 10 of them civilians.
Electricity officials shut Gaza's only power plant just before 8pm (6pm GMT) yesterday. Gaza bakeries stopped operating because of the blockade, bakers said, because they had neither power nor flour. Fresh pitta bread is a staple food for Gazans.
Israel denied its economic measures would cause widespread suffering.
"We will do everything to prevent a humanitarian crisis in Gaza and I can guarantee to you that there will not be a humanitarian crisis in Gaza," said Shlomo Dror, an Israeli defence spokesman.
Arye Mekel, an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman, accused Hamas of creating an artificial emergency, calling the blackout a "ploy ... to attract international sympathy".
Hamas said five hospital patients had died because of the power cut. But health officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, denied this.
Israel imposed the fuel blockade in response to rocket fire that has virtually paralysed life in southern Israeli towns. The upsurge of fighting last week followed an Israeli anti-rocket operation in Gaza.
The Israeli deputy prime minister, Haim Ramon, said there were signs the blockade was working, as the number of rockets fired dropped sharply today. The army said five were fired yesterday, down from 53 over the previous two days.
As well as fuel from Israel to power its electricity plant, Gaza receives about 70% of its electricity direct from Israel. That energy supply had not been stopped, Israel said. The Gaza power plant supplies most of the remaining electricity. Israeli officials acknowledge its fuel supply has been stopped.
The EU criticised Israel for punishing all of Gaza's 1.5 million inhabitants and urged it to restart fuel supplies and open border crossings.
"I have made clear that I am against this collective punishment of the people of Gaza," the EU external relations commissioner, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, said in a statement.
"I urge the Israeli authorities to restart fuel supplies and open the crossings for the passage of humanitarian and commercial supplies."
Ferrero-Waldner said the decision to close border crossings and stop fuel provision "will exacerbate an already dire humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip and risks escalating an already difficult situation on the ground".
Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005 after 38 years of occupation but still controls the borders and shipment of supplies.
Hamas seized power in Gaza from the rival Fatah faction, which is based in the West Bank and led by the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas.
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