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53245


Date: March 11, 2024 at 09:36:40
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Strangled by Israel for decades, Gaza’s future must begin with free...

URL: https://www.972mag.com/gaza-movement-permits-separation/


Strangled by Israel for decades, Gaza’s future must begin with free
movement

By Noa Galili March 10, 2024

excerpt:

Israel persistently shirks responsibility for Gaza despite subjecting it to
closures, permits, and assaults. Returning to those policies is not an option.

In recent months, international media attention has rightfully been devoted to
the unprecedented scope of death and destruction wrought by the Israeli
military in the Gaza Strip. Daily news bulletins have grown increasingly
concerned with the deprivation of food, water, medicine, and other basic
supplies resulting from the intensified siege that Israel imposed shortly after
the Hamas-led attacks of October 7.

Yet much of this focus tends to view the current policies of restriction and
deprivation in isolation. This is a profound mistake.

In fact, the Israeli stranglehold on Palestinians in Gaza has been gradually
tightened over the course of decades, as a means of control, pressure, and
collective punishment. Even in “ordinary” times, between its periodic military
offensives in the Strip, Israel’s sweeping restrictions on the movement of
people and goods have long undermined basic living conditions in Gaza and
violated other human rights that depend on it — such as the rights to family
life, education, medical treatment, and pursuing one’s livelihood.

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The catastrophic situation today must be understood within the context of
Israel’s pre-October 7 policies, including vis-ŕ-vis Palestinians’ freedom of
movement between Gaza, Israel, and the West Bank. Over more than half a
century, the violence of Israel’s ongoing occupation, repeated military
assaults, and “separation policy” between Gaza and the West Bank have
created a broken and bleeding stretch of land. These policies have
manufactured and maintained a humanitarian disaster; separated
Palestinians in Gaza from those in Israel and the West Bank; and promoted
Israel’s illegitimate political and demographic objectives.

The birth of a permit regime
The Gaza Strip was never meant to exist as a distinct territorial unit. There
are not enough resources in its tiny area to support an independent
economy, and certainly not the economy of 2.3 million people who are
deprived of the basic right to move freely. But for decades, Israeli restrictions
on the movement of people and goods have led to deteriorating living
conditions in the Strip and cut it off from the outside world.

In 1948, approximately 200,000 Nakba refugees from across Palestine were
forced to flee to what became the Gaza Strip. This almost quadrupled the
area’s population, which had, until then, been concentrated mainly in the
ancient town of Gaza City. The humanitarian crisis prompted by this sudden
influx of refugees has persisted to this day.

Palestinian children at a refugee camp in Gaza, November 1, 1956. (Pridan
Moshe/GPO)
Palestinian children at a refugee camp in Gaza, November 1, 1956. (Pridan
Moshe/GPO)
Since occupying the West Bank and Gaza in 1967, Israel’s military has
developed a complex system of rules and sanctions to control the movement
of the millions of Palestinians who live in these areas, as well as those living
within Israel’s 1948 borders. Initially, Israel instituted a “general exit permit,”
allowing Palestinians to travel relatively freely between Israel and the
occupied territory, but this was canceled in 1991.

In its place, Israel began requiring Palestinians to obtain individual travel
permits from Israeli authorities, thereby establishing the permit regime
through which it has continued to restrict Palestinian movement and access
to this day. Predictably, this led to a steady decrease in movement to and
from Gaza.

In 1993, during the Oslo process, Israel for the first time declared a weeks-
long general closure on the occupied territory, blocking all travel regardless
of its purpose. Shortly thereafter, it began constructing an electric fence and
segments of a concrete wall surrounding the Gaza Strip.

These trends worsened following the failure of the Camp David negotiations
and the onset of the Second Intifada in late 2000. In the months before the
Intifada began, more than 26,000 Gaza residents had held permits to work in
Israel, clocking some 500,000 exits into Israel via the Erez Crossing each
month. After the Intifada broke out, Israel revoked and canceled numerous
travel permits — not only as a method of countering security threats, but as a
means of collective punishment.

In the first year of the Second Intifada, the Erez Crossing was closed to
Palestinians 72 percent of the time. By the end of 2000, the number of
residents holding Israeli work permits had dropped to less than 900.

Palestinian workers gather in the waiting hall to enter the reopened Erez
Crossing to Israel, after Israel ends a ban on workers from Gaza, in Gaza City,
September 28, 2023. (Atia Mohammed/Flash90)
Palestinian workers gather in the waiting hall to enter the reopened Erez
Crossing to Israel, after Israel ends a ban on workers from Gaza, in Gaza City,
September 28, 2023. (Atia Mohammed/Flash90)
The illusion of ‘disengagement’
Since the implementation of Israel’s “disengagement plan” in the late
summer of 2005, many Israelis and internationals have falsely believed that
Israel relinquished its control over Gaza, thus ridding itself of the
responsibilities it owed the Strip’s residents as the occupying power.

But despite withdrawing its troops and citizens from within the enclave, Israel
has continued to wield control over almost all aspects of life in Gaza by virtue
of its ongoing restrictions on the movement of people and goods in and out
of the Strip.

After Hamas’ victory in the Palestinian parliamentary elections in 2006, Israel
tightened these restrictions further still, imposing a full closure. The entry of
goods into Gaza was limited to what Israel defined as the “humanitarian
minimum.” The exit of goods from the Strip to be marketed in Israel and the
West Bank — to which Gaza had until then exported a combined 85 percent
of its goods — was entirely prohibited. The entry of fuel was substantially
reduced. And the movement of people into and out of Gaza was slowed to a
virtual halt.

In September 2007, a few months after Hamas took sole control of the Strip,
the Israeli cabinet declared Gaza a “hostile territory.” From that point on,
Israel has insisted that it has no obligation to enable even minimal
humanitarian access to or from the Strip — and that any decision to do so is
made ex gratia, not as a result of any legal obligation.

Israel has since enforced sweeping travel restrictions that have blocked Gaza
residents’ access to employment, education, and medical treatment, as well
as to their family members living in Israel, the West Bank, and abroad. Israel
also severely restricted the entry of goods into Gaza.

Trucks with humanitarian aid arrive at the Palestinian side of the Kerem
Shalom border crossing, in the southern Gaza Strip, December 18, 2023.
(Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
Trucks with humanitarian aid arrive at the Palestinian side of the Kerem
Shalom border crossing, in the southern Gaza Strip, December 18, 2023.
(Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
In 2012, a prolonged legal battle by Gisha, the human rights organization
where I work, led Israel’s Defense Ministry to reveal a document entitled
“Food Consumption in the Gaza Strip – Red Lines,” which included
information about the policy of restricting the entry of food into Gaza
between 2007 and 2010. The document contained, among other things,
calculations of the amount of calories permitted to enter Gaza per resident.

Even after retracting this policy, Israel continued to prohibit the entry of
numerous items and raw materials it defined as “dual-use” — meaning Israel
considers them to have both civilian and military uses. This effectively
banned many goods that are essential for the development of civilian
infrastructure and the advancement of the local economy, such as fertilizer,
cement mixers, and any type of heavy machinery. Israel also continued to
determine what products could exit Gaza, and where they could be sold, how
much of them, and when.

Moreover, decades after the signing of the Oslo Accords, which included an
agreement to pass control over the Palestinian population registry to the
Palestinian Authority, Israel continues to control the registry in practice. As
such, it retains the power to designate Palestinians as either residents of
Gaza or of the West Bank — dictating where they can live, work, and start a
family.

Israel’s continuous control over Gaza extends to the Strip’s maritime territory
and airspace, too. Contrary to the agreements reached in the Oslo Accords,
Israel has prohibited the construction of a seaport and prevented the
reconstruction of the international airport in Gaza, which was destroyed by
Israeli bombings in 2001. It has blocked Gaza’s airspace and deepened
control over its telecommunications, limiting the available frequencies so as
to deprive Palestinians of third- and fourth-generation technologies. Israel
also violently enforces a “fishing zone” of 10-15 nautical miles off Gaza’s
coast, and has established a “buffer zone” along the separation barrier,
restricting access to the area where most of the Strip’s agricultural lands are
located.

Therefore, despite persistent claims to the contrary, Israel’s ongoing control
effectively amounts to a continuation of the occupation — and such control
entails moral and legal obligations toward the civilian population. But instead
of acknowledging its fundamental duty to protect the human rights of
Palestinians, Israel has consistently disavowed its responsibility and opted for
collective punishment and economic warfare, in violation of international law.

Israeli military vehicles seen near the Israeli-Gaza fence, February 28, 2024.
(Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)
Israeli military vehicles seen near the Israeli-Gaza fence, February 28, 2024.
(Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)
Isolation, separation, and fragmentation
The enclosure of Gaza has always been part of a wider set of movement
restrictions imposed as part of Israel’s “separation policy,” the goal of which
is to isolate and sever the territory from the West Bank and Israel. Israel has
justified the policy as a security necessity, but its sweeping restrictions on
travel and goods cannot be explained by security alone.

Rather, these restrictions are imposed in order to advance Israel’s illegitimate
political and demographic goals: to undermine the national institutions that
were supposed to underpin a Palestinian state; to fragment Palestinian
society and their economy; to promote de facto annexation of the West Bank
and limit Palestinians’ access to it; and to maintain Israeli control over the
region as a whole.

As a result of the policy, the Palestinian economy was effectively split
between Gaza and the West Bank. Students from Gaza were blocked from
studying in West Bank universities. Medical teams, academics, employees of
civil society organizations, and professionals in every field could not travel
between the two areas, even for meetings or trainings. Families split between
Gaza and the West Bank could not reunite, except in the most exigent
circumstances.

In recent years, the few Palestinians who did obtain permits to leave via Erez
all belonged to one or more of three categories: traders or laborers (subject
to narrow quotas dictated by Israel), patients (and their companions) in need
of urgent medical treatment that is not available in Gaza, and a handful of
other cases defined as “humanitarian and exceptional,” like people seeking to
attend a wedding, visit a sick relative, or attend a funeral — but only of a first-
degree family member.

Travel via Egypt, Gaza’s other neighbor, has also been restricted over the
years, as has access to goods. Egypt, too, has obligations toward
Palestinians in Gaza arising from its physical proximity, including facilitating
the entrance of humanitarian access and, like every other country in the
world, actively preventing breaches of international law. But unlike Israel,
Egypt does not owe obligations to Palestinians under the law of occupation,
nor does it control Gaza residents’ access to the other parts of the occupied
territories. " CONTINUES


Responses:
[53253]


53253


Date: March 11, 2024 at 18:49:21
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Strangled by Israel for decades, Gaza’s future must begin with...


reading this while listening to the Balfour document and
the history leading up to it.


Responses:
None


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