Gaza
Stop
the Siege! Stop the War!
A month of protest: November
4 – December 2, 2006
The
situation in Gaza has reached emergency levels –
inadequate water, electricity, and medicine; widespread hunger, poverty, and
unemployment; schools and other services out of operation; and constant
bombardments and attacks by the Israeli military. The problem is the
siege of the Gaza Strip by Israel and the sanctions imposed by the international
community, made worse by ongoing IDF attacks. If this siege continues,
we will see spreading disease, malnutrition, and
anarchy.
Join Our
International Campaign
The
community of peace organizations in Israel has joined together in a
coordinated, major campaign to end the siege of Gaza and call upon
Israel to embark upon negotiations with the Palestinian
legitimate representative. Israel and the
international community must respect the political choice of the Palestinian
people.
Gaza: Stop
the Siege – Stop the War!
Throughout
November: Vigils, teach-ins, petitions, flyers,
posters
December
2: Demonstrations around the world
Please
join us in this humanitarian and political effort: Use the month until the
big demonstration on December 2 to raise awareness in your community. Send
letters, faxes, and petitions to your elected representatives. Hold vigils
and teach-ins.
Let us
know your plans so we can empower each other with our numbers and advertise on
our websites.
Activities
planned for Israel
Perhaps
some of these will give you ideas for your own
activity:
Printed
material – informational flyers,
a poster, an ad, and stickers.
Local
events – “teach-ins” that bring
films, witnesses, journalists, Gazans, etc.
Small
vigils/demonstrations – In front of the Prime
Minister’s office, the EU, the foreign embassies, the offices of selected
Knesset Members. At the Rabin Rally on November 4, activists will
distribute printed materials and hold a human
chain.
A
special Knesset conference will be held to which strategic members of
Knesset will be invited. They will hear reports from
Gaza – Palestinians, human rights organizations, and
journalists.
Media – We will write
articles, letters to the editor, blogs, talk-backs – for newspapers, TV, radio,
and internet.
Car
cavalcade to the
Gaza border.
Mass
rally on December 2 in Tel
Aviv and all over the world to include phone hookups with Gazans and, if
possible, solidarity events held internationally.
International
campaign:
Actions
to raise awareness and bring pressure on the US and European
governments – appeals to decision-makers and civil society in the EU and the
US to demand that their governments overturn the
embargo.
December 2 -
demonstrations all over the world.
Background
Material:
The Economy of
Gaza
…According to the World Bank, Palestinians are currently experiencing the worst
economic depression in modern history. The opprobrious imposition of
international sanctions has had a devastating impact on an already severely
comprised economy given its extreme dependence on external sources of
finance. For example, the Palestinian Authority is highly dependent on
two sources of income. The first is annual aid package from Western donors of
about $1 billion per year (in 2005, according to the World Bank, donors gave
$1.3 billion in humanitarian and emergency [$500m/38%], developmental
[$450m/35%] and budgetary [$350m/27%]) assistance, much of it now suspended. The
second is a monthly transfer by Israel of $55 million in
customs and tax revenues that it collects for the PA, a source of revenue that
is absolutely critical to the Palestinian budget and totally suspended. In fact,
Israel is now withholding close to half a billion dollars in
Palestinian revenue that is desperately needed in
Gaza.
The combined
impact of restrictions, notably the almost unabated closure and the ongoing
economic boycott, has resulted in unprecedented levels of unemployment that
currently approach 40 percent in
Gaza
(compared to less than 12 percent in 1999). In fact, Palestinian workers from
Gaza have not been allowed into Israel since 12 March
2006, Gaza’s primary market and all entry and exit points have been
virtually sealed since June 25, 2006 when Israel’s current military
campaign in Gaza began. In the next five years,
furthermore, 135,000 new jobs will be needed just to keep unemployment at 10
percent. Trade levels have been similarly affected. By early May 2006, for
example, the Karni crossing, through which commercial supplies enter
Gaza, had been closed for 47 percent of the year with
estimated daily losses of $500,000-$600,000. Compounding this are
agricultural losses amounting to an estimated $1.2 billion for both
Gaza and the West Bank over the last six years.
By April 2006, 79 percent of Gazan households were living in
poverty (compared to less than 30 percent in 2000), a figure that has
likely increased; many are hungry…
Sara Roy,
The Palestine
Center
Not an Internal
Palestinian Matter
…These are the steps in the experiment:
Imprison (since 1991); remove the prisoners' usual means of livelihood; seal off
all outlets to the outside world, nearly hermetically; destroy existing means of
livelihood by preventing the entry of raw materials and the marketing of goods
and produce; prevent the regular entry of medicines and hospital supplies; do
not bring in fresh food for weeks on end; prevent, for years, the entry of
relatives, professionals, friends and others, and allow thousands of
people - the sick, heads of families,
professionals, children - to be stuck for weeks at the locked gates of the Gaza
Strip's only entry/exit.
Steal hundreds of millions of dollars
(customs and tax revenues collected by Israel that belong to the Palestinian
treasury), so as to force the nonpayment of the already low salaries of most
government employees for months; present the firing of
homemade
Qassam rockets as a strategic threat that can only be
stopped by harming women, children and the old; fire on crowded residential
neighborhoods from the air and the ground; destroy orchards, groves and
fields.
Dispatch
planes to frighten the population with sonic booms; destroy the new power plant
and force the residents of the closed-off Strip to live without electricity for
most of the day for a period of four months, which will most likely turn into a
full year - in other words, a year without refrigeration, electric fans,
television, lights to study and read by; force
them to get by without a regular supply of water, which is dependent on the
electricity supply.
It is the
good old Israeli experiment called "put them into a pressure cooker and see what
happens," and this is one of the reasons why this is not an internal Palestinian
matter…
Amira
Hass,
Ha’aretz
Israel's scandalous siege of
Gaza
Israel has killed 2,300 Gazans over the
past six years, including 300 in the four months since an Israeli
soldier, Corporal Gilad Shalit, was captured in a
cross-border raid by Palestinian fighters on June 25. The wounded can be counted
in the tens of thousands. Most of the casualties are civilians, many of them
children.
The
killing continues on a daily basis - by tank and sniper fire, by air and sea
bombardment, and by undercover teams in civilian clothes sent into Arab
territory to ambush and murder, an Israeli specialty perfected over the past
several decades.
How long
will the "international community" allow the slaughter to continue? The cruel
repression of the occupied territories, and of Gaza in
particular, is one of the most scandalous in the world today. It is the blackest
stain on Israel's patchy record as a would-be democratic
state…
Patrick Seale International Herald Tribune
October 27, 2006
The
siege is sowing anarchy and death in
Gaza.
It is
a man-made disaster that we must bring to an end.