Thursday, October 13, 2011

Egypt’s Palestinians and the Uprising

Originally posted BY OCCUPIEDPALESTINE at http://occupiedpalestine.wordpress.com/2011/10/13/egypt’s-palestinians-and-the-uprising/  

A protester with his face painted in the colours of the Palestinian flag prays at Tahrir Square in Cairo May 13, 2011. (Photo: REUTERS – Amr Abdallah Dalsh)
 Bisan Udwan | , October 13, 2011 | Al Akhbar
Cairo — Little is written about Palestinians who have been living in Egypt for more than half a century. For generations of Palestinians, Egypt has been their only home — and place of exile — an Egypt they love and hate.
Generations of Palestinians have grown up fearing Egyptian security forces. They fear leaving Egypt and not being able to return and fear daily discrimination in education, work, and health. Palestinians lived in Egypt while the ruling party incited Egyptian public opinion against everything Palestinian, a strategy employed to distract Egyptians from their own repression. These developments created a Palestinian-Egyptian identity that is both distorted and confused, reflecting Palestinian fears of displacement and deportation.
The Palestinian cause is still at the center of revolution in the Arab world, particularly in Egypt. Over the last three decades, Egyptian demonstrations in support of the Palestinian cause were a crucial rehearsal for Egyptian protests against the state’s repressive authorities. For many, the movement to support the intifada was the first step towards the Egyptian uprising on 25 January 2011. At the same time, Palestinians living in Egypt experienced systematic marginalization. This affected their relationship with…their Palestinian identity, as well as the impact of other identities on theirs.
Between January and May 2011, Egyptians were not just concerned with their own revolution. Despite the many problems of Egypt, Palestinian issues were a genuine concern of the protest movement. The first Friday of May was called ‘The Friday of National Unity and the Palestinian Cause.’ With prior agreement, demonstrators and marchers set out to ‘March to Palestine.’ In Egyptian squares, people were commemorating the Nakba with slogans such as “Palestine from the river to the sea,” “Freedom for Palestine,” and “Yes to the return of the refugees.” Young people marched towards the Israeli embassy calling for the expulsion of the ambassador and the removal of the Israeli flag from the skies of free Egypt.
No one can ignore the status enjoyed by the Palestinian cause in Egypt’s collective consciousness, particularly among the revolutionary youth. But in the new Egypt, Egyptians have only been able to read a few articles about Palestinian interests. It was no coincidence that the reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas took place before the 63rd anniversary of the Nakba, with the aim of containing the marches organized by Arab revolutionary youth under the banner of March to Palestine. As for the sit-in organized by Egyptian mothers in front of the headquarters of the cabinet, demanding the right of citizenship for their Palestinian children, the event was poorly attended, superficial, and not preplanned. The demonstration did not address the tragedy of 70 percent of Palestinians who hold Egyptian travel documents, 50,000 of which are identified as refugees.
This is only one of the contradictions that Palestinians experience in Egypt. They face a duality of exile and homeland, a place which is both temporary and permanent. After the Egyptian revolution succeeded in ending Palestinian division, there was also the duality of joy and anticipation, the possibility of passively observing change in the Arab world and the seeming impossibility of beginning a revolution towards Palestine.
The Forgotten Society Forsakes the Revolution
The overwhelming position among the Palestinian community in Egypt was disengagement with the revolution. We adopted this position because we felt the revolution had nothing to do with us. There were exceptions to this, whereby several activists came out into the public arena. After the famous withdrawal by the police on January 28, most Palestinian participation was limited to forming popular committees to defend their neighborhoods.
Rami Abu Yazan, 33, says: “I participated in the private protection committees in Hilwan, where I live. We all feared for our lives, our homes and our streets. I did not participate in the youth revolution in Tahrir Square because that was a battle for the Egyptians themselves.” He explained that this was because Palestinians get into political trouble after every demonstration or popular protest. The security forces view us “as agitators, the reason behind protests. This makes us vulnerable to arrests and deportation.”
“We are always the accused,” says Mohammad Taluli, 28, commenting on the situation of Palestinians in Egypt. Taluli adds, “The Egyptian authorities incite public opinion against the Palestinians in Egypt whenever it suits them and whenever there is any danger. The government accused the Palestinians of being present in Tahrir Square and claimed that members of Hamas had broken into the prisons.” The government also led the people to believe that the man who bombed the church in Alexandria at the beginning of the year was a Palestinian.
Nabil al-Samadi, 29, says that he did not participate in the Egyptian revolution because it was an Egyptian domestic issue, while, for him, Palestinian problems took precedence, such as ending Palestinian divisions. He continues: “If the Egyptian revolution fails, we will be the scapegoats. We will be attacked in Egypt or even in Palestine itself.”
In the few existing social studies on the legal status of Palestinian refugees in their country of refuge, the Palestinians in Egypt were termed “Transit Palestinians,” because their legal status is fragile. In 1989, Elias Sanbar described this group as living in “permanent liminality,” in a temporary state with an eternal feeling of waiting. This “liminality” is evident in their economic lives and in the social networks they build amongst each other. Most of them come from Gulf countries, Egypt, and Lebanon and are refugees of 1948 and 1967.
A Divided Identity and Poor Participation
In the past few decades, many Palestinians avoided admitting their origins for fear of harassment, despite official claims that Egypt wishes to preserve Palestinian identity. Despite the Egyptian revolution’s accomplishments — which created a climate where Palestinians may openly demand citizenship — many Palestinians supportive of the revolution or who participated in the March to Palestine still conceal their identities. These Palestinians still fear reprisals from elements of the Egyptian security apparatus as the political and security situation remains unstable.
Writer and journalist Sama Jaradat, 33, tells us that for many years she has “lived in a state of temporariness.” Her identity is divided because she is a Palestinian who has lived two-thirds of her life in Egypt: “I am neither an Egyptian nor a Palestinian. This causes me trouble at various levels in my work, my creativity, my culture, and my private life. But January 25 was a turning point for me personally. It was the day I resolved my identity: I am a Palestinian-Egyptian.” During her university days, she participated in all Egyptian protests in support of Palestine, and lately she has felt that she has to support the Egyptian people “for whom the Palestinian cause has always been important and cherished.”
Yafa al-Haj, 35, is a human rights activist. She explains her participation in the Egyptian revolution: “The success of the Egyptian revolution is a step towards the liberation of Palestine. From the first day, I was convinced that these protests were not like any others before them and that they would stay strong. But I really did not imagine that they would succeed in overthrowing a corrupt authoritarian regime this quickly.” She adds: “I joined a political group which was set up after the revolution, but I have to stay in the background because of my nationality, due to fear of the military authorities or the media, who incite public opinion against any non-Egyptian who participated in the revolution or supported it, which may harm my group.”
Anticipation, caution, and fear of the unknown overwhelm the Egyptian streets because the revolution’s demands have not yet been met. Palestinians fear they will remain forgotten in the new Egypt. There is no talk of Palestinians right of return or of lifting Egypt’s discriminatory policies against Palestinians. Rather, the Palestinians are talked about as if they are under the control of the Palestinian embassy.
In 1958, emergency law no. 162 gave the authorities wide ranging powers to suspend basic freedoms: these included outlawing demonstrations and public meetings and arresting those suspected of wrongdoing, holding them without trial for long periods, and using military courts for their trials. Under the emergency law, the actions of Palestinians were severely restricted. There were wide scale arrests and surveillance of all charity and cultural activities. This affected Palestinian’s daily lives and forced them to fear one another.
Inas Salim, a 30-year-old lawyer, says her public work and human rights background encouraged her participation in the Egyptian revolution several days after it began: “The violations against the Egyptian youth were horrendous, such as arrests and deliberate killings by the police. I was compelled to participate, though in a limited way, through the lawyers’ union. Being Palestinian prevented me from going down to the Square even though I believed in the demands of the Egyptian revolution.” She adds that The Battle of the Camel, the February 2 attack on protesters, subdued her fear to join the youth in Tahrir Square. She believed that if the people remained in the square, it would accelerate the downfall of the regime. It would also grant Palestinians in Egypt the rights which had been suspended by security laws: “We are a part of Egypt because our mothers are Egyptian.”
Inas’ wish came true. After Mubarak’s overthrow, Palestinian attitudes changed. They began with chants, “I am Palestinian, my mother is Egyptian and it is my right to have citizenship,” and “I am Egyptian, I love my country and Palestine is not a charge against me.” These Palestinians realized that their citizenship was withheld by the security apparatus, and not because the authorities were interested in “preserving Palestinian identity,” as previously claimed. As a result, Egyptian mothers and their children from Palestinian fathers stood outside the Egyptian cabinet offices, demanding rights for their children. A number of seminars and conferences followed where Palestinians discussed the discrimination and abuse they faced from authorities. The Egyptian state rapidly responded to their demands, granting citizenship to children of Egyptian mothers. This ushered in a new dawn for the Palestinians in Egypt.
Mahmoud Ajmaan, a Palestinian human rights activist, believes that giving Palestinians whose mothers are Egyptian the right to citizenship has only solved two-thirds of the crisis. He wonders, “What about the Palestinians who have two Palestinian parents?” The policies practiced in Egypt against the Palestinians under Sadat and Mubarak are still in place. Palestinians are still restricted in their freedom of movement, travel, education, residency, and work, in clear violation of the international Human Rights Charter and the Refugee Charter of 1951. These discriminatory practices also contravene Egyptian laws passed during the sixties and the Casablanca Protocols, which were signed by the Egyptian government.
Virtual Entities and a Changing Identity
Some Palestinian youths in Egypt contribute to the resistance by joining online activist networks, creating a electronic space where they can resume their battle against the Israeli occupation.
Hatem Nazmi, 31, created a Facebook page called “Palestinian/Egyptian,” which contains the following message: “If you see someone on the street walking alone, talking to himself, his face looking tense, angry, protesting, sad, etc., you can be sure he is a Palestinian and not a mad man. He keeps to himself, does not attack you, and does not threaten your life. His eyes are focused inwards and he does not give you dirty looks. His anxiety is beyond the ability of human beings to bear, so he speaks to himself in protest against a world that does not listen to him. All of this because he carries a Palestinian travel document with the words ‘The Egyptian Arab Republic’ written across it.”
Nazmi points out that many Palestinians “do not know about the problems that face us in Egypt. Many among us do not know our rights. They do not even know about routine Egyptian measures that could solve the problems they face, particularly because the PLO or the Palestinian embassy in Egypt treats Palestinians badly. What is strange is that Egypt itself prevents those who carry their travel documents from entering the country without an Egyptian visa. They need the personal permission of the minister of the interior and state security, even if they fulfill all the conditions of entry.”
Nazmi believes that more people have joined his page over the last few months because of the Egyptian revolution and youth’s desires to get to know their society closely. Three years after it first appeared, the group page was updated every three or four days and had 157 members. After the revolution and the announcement of the March to Palestine, there were more requests to join the page and more interaction. The page now has 1,000 members and is updated daily.
Virtual activism is not restricted to individuals only. Palestinian factions took advantage of social networks to express themselves publicly after the revolution. Groups like the Palestinian Students’ Group in Egypt and Palestinian Media Forum in Egypt and pages such as “I am Palestinian and proud” and “Palestinian Journalists and Writers” began to appear.
The Palestinians in Egypt were reluctant to participate in the revolution because of their tenuous status in Egyptian society. As the revolution progressed and won some of its demands, particularly after the Battle of the Camel, the mood of the Egyptian public and Palestinians in particular dramatically changed. The events and effects of the Egyptian revolution are still too fresh for academic appraisals. Similarly, valuations of the Egyptian revolution’s impact on the ‘forgotten Palestinian society’ remain unclear.
Bisan Udwan is a Palestinian writer living in Egypt
This article is an edited translation from the series The Great Syrian Revolt published in al-Adab Magazine (Issue 7-9-2011). Al-Adab was founded by author, literary critic and renowned linguist Suheil Idriss in 1953. Currently published by his son, Samah Idriss, who is also an author, critic, and activist, al-Adab is a primary source and record of Arab cultural, social, and political debate and discourse.

~ reposted by Sofia Smith

Hebron school demonstrates for third day: “Without teachers there is no school” – video

Originally posted bY OCCUPIEDPALESTINE at http://occupiedpalestine.wordpress.com/2011/10/13/hebron-school-demonstrates-for-third-day-“without-teachers-there-is-no-school”-video/                                                                                          

13 October 2011 | International Solidarity Movement, West Bank
For the third morning children and teachers from Qordoba Scool gathered on the H1 side of Checkpoint 56 at 7.30am. The children, with the support of their teachers and the Director of Education in Hebron, Nisreen Amro, peacefully protested against heightened “security measures” that were introduced by the Israeli Army on Tuesday 11th October 2011.
The protest was covered by local, national and international press.
School children as young as 6 years old had their lessons outside, sitting on the floor by the checkpoint while standing at intervals to passionately chant, “We will not return, we want our right to education.”
Qordoba school continues lessons in the street – Click here for more images
The Director of Education in Hebron, representatives from the Governor of Hebron’s office, and teachers from Qordoba School attempted to reason with the soldiers, however the army continued to refuse anyone entry through the checkpoint gate. The Israeli Army’s response to the children’s peaceful protest was to send approx 10 soldiers and border police through the checkpoint to push the children further away from the checkpoint entrance.
For the past seven years teachers have had an agreement with the Israeli army that they can pass through the checkpoint gate instead of  the metal detectors. However two days ago without giving prior notification the Israeli army changed the rules – they are currently insisting that everyone, including teachers, pregnant women and people with heart complaints/ pace makers must pass through the metal detector.
As previously reported by ISM the children’s impromptu protest on Tuesday 11th October resulted   in a number of children requiring hospital treatment after being hit (with the butts of rifles) and kicked by both the Israeli army and the Israeli Police. Initially ISM reported that 7 children were taken to hospital, however today the father of one of the injured children informed ISM that 9 children were taken to hospital with injuries (1 boy and 8 girls). Fortunately all 9 children were able to leave hospital after a few hours.
Today ISM volunteers interviewed 11 year old Yazan Sharbati, one of the boys violently dragged into the checkpoint by an Israeli Police Officer on Tuesday 11th October as seen in the following video.

 

 
Sharbati stated, “There were no teachers in the school and so we protested to the army that we wanted our teachers. The army told us to go back to school, we told them that without teachers there is no school.”
Sharbati was asked how he felt when the Policeman grabbed him and pushed him into the checkpoint.
“I was so afraid that something bad was going to happen. He pushed me very hard,” he said.
When asked if he intends to continue protesting against the closure of the gate at Checkpoint 56 Sharbati replied, without hesitation, “Of course”.
The Director of Education for Hebron, Nisreen Amro, said to ISM volunteers “If the Israeli Army does not reverse their decision by Sunday, chalkboards will be brought to the checkpoint and lessons will be held here.”
At the end of the protest as ISM volunteers left the checkpoint they observed soldiers refusing to allow a far along, pregnant, Palestinian lady through the checkpoint gate. She and her toddler were forced to climb the steep hill next to the checkpoint in order to avoid the metal detector.
International volunteers will continue to observe and report on any future protests.

~ Reposted by Sofia Smith

Gaza Strip غزة


Originally posted by Nooran98 at http://youtu.be/JkwRXNAjKPE
Brought to my attention via Facebook by Andre Keppner.


~ Sofia Smith

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

A CALL FROM GAZA to the People of Conscience worldwide to break the Israeli Blockade


A CALL FROM GAZA 
to the People of Conscience worldwide to break the Israeli Blockade: 

Do not forget Gaza
We are waiting for your boats at our shores 

  
  
We the Palestinians of the Besieged Gaza Strip, are calling on the world: enough inaction, enough discussion, enough waiting – the illegal closure on the Gaza Strip must end.  While attention is focused on the Palestinian bid for statehood in the UN do not forget that the blockade and the suffering continue in Gaza. 

Shortly after 2006 democratic election which was supervised by people and bodies from the international community, nations formerly supporting aid and cultural organizations in Gaza withdrew their support.  In mid-2007, our borders, controlled by Israel and Egypt, fully closed, locking Palestinians within and preventing imports and exports from crossing our borders. 

From December 27 2008 to January 18 2009, Israel waged an all-out slaughter on Gaza, killing over 1400 Palestinians, the vast majority innocent civilians and among them nearly 400 children, and destroying thousands of homes, businesses, factories and buildings including universities, schools, hospitals and medical care facilities, and damaging vast tracts of our water and sanitation system. 

Almost three years following after Israel's attacks, almost no homes and few buildings have been rebuilt, our sanitation and sewage system is more dire than ever, raw waste continues to be pumped into our sea –for want of proper treatment facilities –polluting our water and the fish along the coast which fishermen are forced to harvest because the Israeli navy shoots at them if they try to fish more than three miles from the Gaza coast—contaminating our drinking water and food supply. 

Our farmers continue to be shot at, maimed and killed by Israeli soldiers along our border, prevented from working, growing and harvesting their land, denying us a rich supply of produce and vitamins.  Nutrient deficiencies and malnutrition continue to rise, affecting our children's growth and their ability to study.  Our economy is shut down by lack of functioning factories and electricity.  Our students hold little to no prospects of exiting for study abroad, even when placements and scholarships have been secured, due to the Israeli control of the Erez crossing and the Egyptian-controlled Rafah crossing being closed more often than opened. Our sick suffer for want of necessary medications and medical supplies and equipment. 

Since 2005, over 170 Palestinian organizations have called for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions to pressure Israel to comply with international law. Since 2003, Palestinians have weekly met in villages in the occupied West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem, to protest Israel’s occupation policies. 

Creative civilian efforts such as the Free Gaza boats that broke through the blockade five times, the Gaza Freedom March, the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, and the many land convoys must never stop their siege-breaking efforts, highlighting the inhumanity of keeping 1.5 million Gazans in an open-air prison. 

On the 2nd of December, 2010, 22 international organizations including Amnesty International, Oxfam, Save the Children, Christian Aid, and Medical Aid for Palestinians produced the report ‘Dashed Hopes, Continuation of the Gaza Blockade’ calling for international action to force Israel to unconditionally lift the blockade, saying that despite the reported June 2010 “easing” of the closure, the Palestinians of Gaza continue to live in the same devastating conditions.  Human Rights Watch published a comprehensive report "Separate and Unequal" that denounced Israeli policies as Apartheid, echoing similar sentiments by South African anti-apartheid activists. 

We call on the citizens of the world oppose this deadly, medieval blockade. The failure of governments and world bodies to condemn such crimes is tantamount to complicity. Only civil society is able to mobilize to demand the application of international law and put an end to Israel’s impunity. The intervention of civil society was effective in the late 1980s against the apartheid regime of South Africa. Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu have not only described Israel’s oppressive and violent control of Palestinians as Apartheid, they have also joined this call for the world’s civil society to intervene again. 

We call on the nations and citizens of the world to continue and/or reinitiate their plans to sail to Gaza to challenge and break the Israeli blockade. The civil society initiatives of the Freedom Flotillas are about taking a stance of justice and solidarity with besieged Palestinians when your governments will not. We call on the Flotilla movement to continue to sail until the blockade of Gaza is entirely lifted and Palestinians of Gaza are granted the basic human rights and freedom of movement citizens around the world enjoy. 
  
Signed by: 
University Teachers' Association 
Palestinian Nongovernmental Organizations Network 
Al-Aqsa University 
Palestine Red Crescent Society in Gaza 
General Union of Youth Entities 
Arab Cultural Forum 
General Union for Health Services Workers 
General Union for Public Services Workers 
General Union for Petrochemical and Gas Workers 
General Union for Agricultural Workers 
Union of Women’s Work Committees 
Union of Synergies—Women Unit 
Union of Palestinian Women Committees 
Women’s Studies Society 
Working Woman’s Society 
Palestinian Students’ Campaign for the Academic Boycott of Israel 
One Democratic State Group 
Palestinian Youth against Apartheid 
Association of Al-Quds Bank for Culture and Info 
Palestine Sailing Federation 
Palestinian Association for Fishing and Maritime 
Palestinian Women Committees 
Progressive Students Union 
Medical Relief Society 
The General Society for Rehabilitation 
Afaq Jadeeda Cultural Centre for Women and Children 
Deir Al-Balah Cultural Centre for Women and Children 
Maghazi Cultural Centre for Children 
Al-Sahel Centre for Women and Youth 
Ghassan Kanfani Kindergartens 
Rachel Corrie Centre, Rafah 
Rafah Olympia City Sisters 
Al Awda Centre, 
Rafah Al Awda Hospital, 
Jabaliya Camp Ajyal Association, 
GazaGeneral Union of Palestinian Syndicates 
Al Karmel Centre, 
Nuseirat Local Initiative, 
Beit Hanoun Union of Health Work Committees 
Red Crescent Society Gaza Strip 
Beit Lahiya Cultural Centre 
Al Awda Centre, Rafah 
Al-Quds Bank for Culture and Information Society 
women section -union of Palestinian workers  syndicate 
Middle East Childrens’  Alliance -Gaza 
Local Initiative -Beit Hanoun 

------------------------------------Français------------------------------------

UN APPEL DE GAZA
aux gens de conscience pour briser le blocus israélien :

N’oubliez pas Gaza
De nos côtes, nous attendons vos bateaux



Nous, les Palestiniens et Palestiniennes de la bande Gaza, appelons au monde entier : assez d’inaction, assez de discussion, assez d’attente. Il faut maintenant mettre un terme au blocus illégal de la bande de Gaza. Alors que toute l’attention est tournée vers le vote aux Nations Unies pour la reconnaissance de l’État palestinien, il ne faut pas oublier que pendant ce temps, le blocus et la souffrance ont toujours cours dans la bande de Gaza.

Peu après les élections démocratiques de 2006 qui ont été supervisées par des personnes et des organes de la communauté internationale, des États, qui auparavant soutenaient les organisations d’aide humanitaire et les organisations culturelles à Gaza, ont soudainement retiré leur appui. Au milieu de 2007, nos frontières, contrôlées par Israël et l’Égypte ont été complètement fermées, nous emprisonnant ainsi à Gaza et empêchant toute importation ou exportation de biens.

Du 27 décembre 2008 au 18 janvier 2009, Israël a lancé une attaque sanglante sur Gaza, tuant plus de 1400 Palestiniens et Palestiniennes, dont la vaste majorité était des civils innocents, incluant près de 400 enfants. Cette attaque a également détruit des milliers de maisons, d’entreprises et d’usines, elle a détruit des universités, des écoles, des hôpitaux, des cliniques médicales et une grande partie des infrastructures sanitaires et de distribution d’eau.

Aujourd’hui, près de trois ans après cette attaque israélienne, à peu près aucune maison ou immeuble n’a été reconstruit. Nos systèmes d’assainissement et d’égouts sont plus mal-en-point que jamais, les déchets sont jetés à la mer -faute d’installations adéquates pour en disposer- contaminant ainsi les sources d’eau potable et les poissons que nous sommes forcés de consommer puisque les pêcheurs ne peuvent pêcher au-delà de trois milles marins, à défaut de quoi, ils s’exposent à des tirs de la marine israélienne. 

Nos agriculteurs sont également la cible de tirs israéliens. Lorsqu’ils s’approchent trop près de la frontière, ils sont mutilés et tués par des soldats israéliens. Ces menaces les empêchent de travailler et de cultiver leurs terres, ce qui nous prive d’importantes quantités de nourriture et de vitamines. Les carences nutritionnelles et la malnutrition continuent d’augmenter, affectant particulièrement la croissance de nos enfants et leur capacité d’étudier. Notre économie est gravement minée par un manque d’usines fonctionnelles et d’électricité. Nos étudiants et étudiantes n’ont pratiquement aucune chance d’aller étudier à l’étranger, même s’ils bénéficient de bourses d’études et d’une acceptation formelle de l’Université, et ce, parce que tant les Israéliens qui contrôlent le passage d’Erez que les Égyptiens qui contrôlent celui de Rafah (qui a été plus souvent fermé qu’ouvert) leur refusent le passage.

Depuis 2005, plus de 170 organisations palestiniennes ont appelé à appuyer la campagne de Boycott désinvestissement et sanctions afin de contraindre Israël à respecter le droit international. Depuis 2003, les Palestiniens et Palestiniennes se rencontrent à chaque semaine dans les villages occupés de la Cisjordanie et de Jérusalem Est pour protester contre la politique israélienne d’occupation.

Les différentes et créatives initiatives civiles comme les bateaux du mouvement Free Gaza qui ont réussi cinq fois à briser le blocus israélien, la Marche pour la liberté, la Flottille de la liberté et les nombreux convois terrestres ne doivent jamais cesser si nous voulons briser le blocus. Ces initiatives permettent en effet de mettre au jour l’inhumaine prison à ciel ouvert dans laquelle sont enfermés 1,5 million de Gazaouis. 

Le 2 décembre 2010, 22 organisations internationales incluant Amnistie internationale, Oxfam, Save the Children, Christian Aid et Aide médicale pour la Palestine ont produit un rapport intitulé « Dashed Hopes, Continuation of the Gaza Blockade » et réclamé une action internationale visant à forcer Israël à lever inconditionnellement le blocus. Comme le dit le rapport, malgré les allégations  « d’assouplissement » du blocus en juin 2010, les Palestiniens et Palestiniennes de Gaza ont toujours les mêmes conditions de vie désastreuses. Human Rights Watch a d’ailleurs publié un rapport : « Separate and Unequal » qui décrit la politique israélienne comme une politique d’apartheid, faisant ainsi écho à ce que dénoncent des militants sud-africains anti-apartheid.

Nous invitons les citoyens du monde entier à s’opposer à ce blocus moyen-âgeux qui tue à petit feu. Le refus des gouvernements et des instances internationales de condamner les crimes d’Israël équivaut à de la complicité. La société civile doit se mobiliser afin d’exiger l’application du droit international et un terme à l’impunité d’Israël. Rappelons que cette même société civile a joué un rôle clé à la fin des années ’80 pour mettre un terme au régime d’apartheid en place en Afrique du sud. Nelson Mandela et l’archevêque Desmond Tutu ne se sont pas contentés de décrire l’oppression violente dont est victime le peuple palestinien comme étant une situation d’apartheid, ils ont également appelé la société civile à intervenir pour y mettre un terme, comme elle l’a fait dans le passé pour l’Afrique du Sud.

Nous appelons donc les nations et les citoyens de ce monde à continuer et/ou à initier des projets pour voguer à Gaza afin de défier et de briser le blocus israélien. Les initiatives de la société civile, comme celles de la Flottille de la liberté, ont pour objectif d’apporter justice et solidarité aux Palestiniens et Palestiniennes alors que vos gouvernements préfèrent fermer les yeux. Nous appelons le mouvement de Flottille à poursuivre ses efforts pour naviguer vers Gaza tant et aussi longtemps que le blocus ne sera pas complètement levé et que nous, Palestiniens et Palestiniennes de Gaza, ne verront pas l’ensemble de nos droits humains être respectés dont notamment, celui de pouvoir enfin circuler librement. 

Signé par
 :
University Teachers' Association 
Palestinian Nongovernmental Organizations Network 
Al-Aqsa University 
Palestine Red Crescent Society in Gaza 
General Union of Youth Entities 
Arab Cultural Forum 
General Union for Health Services Workers 
General Union for Public Services Workers 
General Union for Petrochemical and Gas Workers 
General Union for Agricultural Workers 
Union of Women’s Work Committees 
Union of Synergies—Women Unit 
Union of Palestinian Women Committees 
Women’s Studies Society 
Working Woman’s Society 
Palestinian Students’ Campaign for the Academic Boycott of Israel 
One Democratic State Group 
Palestinian Youth against Apartheid 
Association of Al-Quds Bank for Culture and Info 
Palestine Sailing Federation 
Palestinian Association for Fishing and Maritime 
Palestinian Women Committees 
Progressive Students Union 
Medical Relief Society 
The General Society for Rehabilitation 
Afaq Jadeeda Cultural Centre for Women and Children 
Deir Al-Balah Cultural Centre for Women and Children 
Maghazi Cultural Centre for Children 
Al-Sahel Centre for Women and Youth 
Ghassan Kanfani Kindergartens 
Rachel Corrie Centre, Rafah 
Rafah Olympia City Sisters 
Al Awda Centre, 
Rafah Al Awda Hospital, 
Jabaliya Camp Ajyal Association, 
GazaGeneral Union of Palestinian Syndicates 
Al Karmel Centre, 
Nuseirat Local Initiative, 
Beit Hanoun Union of Health Work Committees 
Red Crescent Society Gaza Strip 
Beit Lahiya Cultural Centre 
Al Awda Centre, Rafah 
Al-Quds Bank for Culture and Information Society 
women section -union of Palestinian workers  syndicate 
Middle East Childrens’  Alliance -Gaza 
Local Initiative -Beit Hanoun 







~ Sofia Smith