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Does the death of an Arab weigh the same as that of a US or Israeli
citizen? The Israeli army, with utter impunity, has killed more unarmed
Palestinian civilians since September 2000 than the number of people who
died on September 11, 2001. In conducting 238 extrajudicial executions
the army has also killed 186 bystanders (including 26 women and 39
children). Two thirds of the 621 children (two thirds under 15 years)
killed at checkpoints, in the street, on the way to school, in their
homes, died from small arms fire, directed in over half of cases to the
head, neck and chest--the sniper's wound. Clearly, soldiers are
routinely authorised to shoot to kill children in situations of minimal
or no threat. These statistics attract far less publicity than suicide
bombings, atrocious though these are too.
Amnesty International has called for an investigation into the killing
of Asma al-Mughayr (16 years) and her brother Ahmad (13 years) on the
roof terrace of their home in Rafah on 18 May, each with a single bullet
to the head. Asma had been taking clothes off the drying line and Ahmad
feeding pigeons. Amnesty noted that the firing appeared to have come
from the top floor of a nearby house, which had been taken over by
Israeli soldiers shortly before. Amnesty suspects that this is not
"caught in crossfire," this is murder.
Israeli military reoccupation of the West Bank and Gaza--a system of
military checkpoints splitting towns and villages into ghettos, curfews,
closures, raids, mass demolition and destruction of houses (more than 60
000), and land expropriations--has made ordinary life impossible for
everyone, and is driving Palestinian society and its institutions
towards destitution. Moreover, Israel has been constructing a grotesque
barrier that, when completed, will total over 400 miles--four times
longer than the Berlin Wall. Extending up to 15 miles into Palestinian
territory, the real purpose of the wall is permanently to lock more than
50 illegal Israeli settlements into Israel proper. This is expansive,
aggressive colonisation, in defiance of the International Court of
Justice in The Hague and the United Nations General Assembly resolution
of last July.
Last year a UN rapporteur concluded that Gaza and the West Bank were "on
the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe." The World Bank estimates that
60% of the population are subsisting at poverty level (£1.12; $2;
1.6
per day), a tripling in only three years. Half a million people are now
completely dependent upon food aid, and Amnesty International has
expressed concern that the Israeli army has been hampering distribution
in Gaza. Over half of all households are eating only one meal per day. A
study by Johns Hopkins and Al Quds universities found that 20% of
children under 5 years old were anaemic, 9.3% were acutely malnourished,
and a further 13.2% chronically malnourished. The doctors I met on a
professional visit in March pointed to a rising prevalence of anaemia in
pregnant women and low birthweight babies.
The coherence of the Palestinian health system is being destroyed. The
wall will isolate 97 primary health clinics and 11 hospitals from the
populations they serve. Qalqilya hospital, which primarily serves
refugees, has seen a 40% fall in follow up appointments because patients
cannot enter the city. There have been at least 87 documented cases
(including 30 children) in which denial of access to medical treatment
has led directly to deaths, including those of babies born while women
were held up at checkpoints. The checkpoint at the entrance to some
villages closes at 7 pm and not even ambulances can pass after this
time. As a recent example, a man in a now fenced in village near
Qalqilya approached the gate with his seriously ill daughter in his
arms, and begged the soldiers on duty to let him pass so that he could
take her to hospital. The soldiers refused, and a Palestinian doctor
summoned from the other side was also refused access to the child. The
doctor was obliged to attempt a physical examination, and to give the
girl an injection, through the wire.
There are consistent reports of ambulances containing gravely ill people
being hit by gunfire, or detained at checkpoints while drivers and
paramedics are interrogated, searched, threatened, humiliated, and
assaulted. Wounded men are abducted from ambulances at checkpoints and
sent directly to prison. Clearly marked clinics are fired on, and
doctors and other health workers shot dead on duty.
Physicians for Human Rights (Israel) have lambasted the Israeli Medical
Association (IMA) for its silence in the face of these systematic
violations of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which guarantees the right
to health care and the protection of health professionals as they do
their duty. Remarkably, IMA president Dr Y Blachar is currently
chairperson of the council of the World Medical Association (WMA), the
official international watchdog on medical ethics. A supine BMA appears
in collusion with this farce at the WMA. Others are silenced by a fear
of being labelled "anti-semitic," a term used in a morally corrupt way
by the pro-Israel lobby in order to silence. How are we to affect this
shocking situation, one which to this South African-born doctor has gone
further than the excesses of the apartheid era.
*
Summerfield
D. Sociocultural dimensions of war, conflict and displacement. In:
AgerA, ed. Refugees. Perspectives on the Experience of Forced
Migration. London: Cassell, 1999: 111-135.