Gaza
in the Vise
Omar Karmi
July 11, 2006
(Jordan
Times correspondent Omar Karmi reported from the Gaza Strip.)
The
fall 2006 print issue of Middle East Report will focus on
the new architecture of conflict in Israel-Palestine. |
Five-year-old
Layan cupped her hands over her ears and screwed her eyes shut
when she tried to describe the effect of a sonic boom. She said
the sound scares her, even though her father, Muntasir Bahja,
32, a translator, has told her “a small lie to calm her” --
that the boom is nothing more than a big balloon released by
a plane and then popped.
Muntasir said
he illustrated the balloon-popping principle to his daughter,
but his explanation has not stopped her from fearing the massively
loud thunderclap caused when Israeli fighter jets break the sound
barrier over the Gaza Strip, as they did 25 times (mostly in
the wee hours of the morning) between June 25 and July 4, and
as they continue to do. Layan’s mother, Arish, 28, said
her eldest child has also started wetting her bed again, something
she had outgrown two years earlier. All three of her young children “are
very frightened lately,” she continued. “They are
very tired and very upset and they get sick and vomit. They’ve
lost a lot of their appetite. They are a little wild and I’m
finding it more difficult to control them.”
In the distance,
from the direction of Beit Hanoun, a town slightly to the north
of the home of the Bahja family in the Jabalya refugee camp,
the sound of intermittent artillery fire can be heard. “That’s
the sound of a bomb,” said Layan, somewhat dismissively,
when asked. “That doesn’t scare me.”
“AT
CAPACITY”
Physician
Thabit al-Masri has become adept at showing the media around.
After the June 25 capture by three Palestinian groups of an Israeli
soldier, Gilad Shalit, Gazans braced themselves for the Israeli
retaliation. Journalists were the first to invade.
In crisp sentences,
al-Masri went through the short history of his unit, the neonatal
intensive care department of al-Shifa Hospital, the Gaza Strip’s
biggest medical care facility. With 30 incubators, the unit,
which was built with foreign aid, handles a third of Gaza’s
premature births and all emergency cases, al-Masri explained.
At the time of the visit, a warm, sticky July 4 afternoon, all
incubators were occupied on the pleasantly air-conditioned first
floor. All this equipment hummed along on the hospital’s
private generators, as Israel had bombed Gaza’s only power
plant on June 28.
“We
shouldn’t be operating at capacity,” al-Masri said. “But
we don’t have much choice. In the past ten days, with the
heightened tensions and the sonic booms, the stress on mothers
has been tremendous.” He said doctors have noticed spikes
in admissions of pregnant women experiencing complications at
times of increased stress and violence in the Strip. According
to al-Shifa’s senior obstetrician ‘Adnan Radi, the
number of women admitted who miscarried or went into labor prematurely
has risen from an average of two to four a day to as many as
ten. Since June 28, when Israel commenced its military response
to its soldier’s capture, three stillbirths have been recorded,
where normally doctors say they might see one every five or six
months.
The doctors
are unsure why there have been so many stillbirths. But, said
Radi, the rise in miscarriages and premature births is not hard
to understand. “The sonic booms, combined with all the
other stresses, have a very bad effect on the health of pregnant
women. The shocks can lead to premature contraction of the uterus,
a ruptured membrane and premature delivery of the baby. Whenever
there is this booming, the next day we see a rise in the number
of premature deliveries and miscarriages.”
ALL THE OTHER
STRESSES
Being subjected
to a sonic boom is a profoundly distressing experience. Beyond
the immediate shock of the explosion, there is a physical sensation
caused by the vibrations as well as a momentary loss of orientation.
The boom comes from above and, unlike artillery fire or a missile
impact that can be located by the direction of the sound, it
wraps itself around a person as if he is right in the middle. “Look
at how people react when there is a sonic boom,” psychologist
Ahmad Abu Tawahina pointed out. “Either they start laughing
or they almost try to jump inside themselves.”
Abu Tawahina,
senior clinical supervisor at the Gaza Community Mental Health
Program, said Israel was engaging in a conscious strategy to
reduce Gazans to a “state of learned helplessness.” “The
Israelis are trying to make trauma overwhelming, and that happens
when it is unpredictable, unavoidable and uncontrollable. They
never used sonic booms before disengagement” -- the August
2005 withdrawal of soldiers and settlers from the Strip -- “because
their settlers were here among us.”
Conventional
models of diagnosis are hard to apply in Gaza, Abu Tawahina went
on to say. “We’re accumulating trauma. You talk of
post-traumatic stress disorder but we’ve never experienced
the ‘post’ bit, just the trauma, and that is ongoing.
Now everyone talks of sonic booms. Before they talked about salaries.
Even without the sonic booms and shells and bombs, life in Gaza
is very stressful. People can’t move in and out of the
Gaza Strip freely. Some families have become fragmented in different
parts of the world. All these things have a negative impact on
psychological health.”
Indeed, for
all the justifiable concern about “humanitarian crisis” in
the Gaza Strip since the capture of Shalit, the stresses on Gazans
have merely grown in magnitude, rather than changed in kind.
The post-June 25 sonic booms began occurring in the fall of 2005,
and were discontinued after they drew UN criticism. Air strikes
aimed at members of armed Palestinian groups have proceeded without
interruption. From the beginning of 2006 until June 20, according
to UN figures, there were a total of 142 missile strikes in the
Gaza Strip.
A campaign
of Israeli artillery fire, mostly at targets in the northern
Gaza Strip, dramatically intensified in late spring, in response,
according to the Israeli government, to the firing of homemade
Palestinian Qassam rockets over the Gaza border at targets inside
Israel. The campaign also came shortly after the formation at
the end of March of the Hamas-led Palestinian government, eight
weeks after the Islamist movement won parliamentary elections.
According
to a June 21 report from the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, Israel fired 781 artillery shells into
Gaza in the first three months of the year. The same period saw
417 Qassam rockets fired into Israel. From April to June 20,
however, an extraordinary 7,599 Israeli artillery shells were
launched at Gaza, compared to 479 Qassams shooting in the other
direction. From June 9 to June 20, 31 Palestinians were killed
in the Gaza Strip, including 10 children, six of them five years
old or younger. Those numbers include seven members of the Ghalia
family, who were killed on a northern Gaza beach on June 9. The
killings caused outrage among Palestinians and made an icon out
of Huda Ghalia, 10, the surviving daughter, who was caught on
camera in the aftermath of the bombing crying out for her father
next to his body.
Israel denied
that its artillery fire caused the explosion, a claim disputed
by a subsequent Human Rights Watch investigation. A day after
the explosion, Hamas’ armed wing, the ‘Izz al-Din
al-Qassam Brigades, announced an end to the ceasefire it had
upheld since March 2005. The Brigades, along with the Popular
Resistance Committees and a group called the Army of Islam, were
involved in the attack that ended with Shalit a prisoner of the
militants.
Meanwhile,
and in contravention of the Agreement on Movement and Access
brokered by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in November 2005,
Israel has closed the crossings into Gaza several times since
pulling out its settlements in the Strip. The Karni crossing,
Gaza’s only transfer point for goods, was closed for 60
days from the beginning of 2006 through the end of June, or 43
percent of the time. With no other means of bringing in commodities,
Gaza was already suffering shortages of staples such as bread
and rice, and hospitals and pharmacies feared running out of
medicines, before the lockdown of late June. With no other export
avenue, and with international funding cutoffs after the Hamas-led
cabinet took office in March, the economy was hit by a double
whammy: no salaries and virtually no revenue from agricultural
exports.
“IMPOSSIBLE
TO SET TIME LIMITS”
From June
25 to July 6, the Karni crossing was closed almost completely,
opening on July 2 and 4 for imports only. According to the World
Food Program (WFP), on July 4 there were two days’ supply
of sugar and eight days’ stores of animal feed. Supplies
of milk and other dairy products were available in minimal quantities.
On July 6, the crossing closed again. There is no telling how
long the closure might last, with Israeli tanks remaining in
parts of Gaza and Israel refusing Palestinian Prime Minister
Isma'il Haniyya's call for a ceasefire, and with Shalit’s
captors so far declining to release him without a corresponding
release of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails. Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told his cabinet that Israel has entered
a “war in which it is impossible to set time limits.”
On June 28,
Israeli aircraft bombed the power plant, which generated electricity
for more than half of the Strip’s population of 1.4 million.
The Gaza electricity company is currently load sharing the power
it receives from the Israel Electricity Cooperation in an attempt
to supply most households with six to eight hours of electricity
per day.
The lack of
power has compounded the food problem. With little electricity,
refrigeration is intermittent and there is an inevitably high
loss of perishable foods. With the sea also closed to fishermen,
the WFP has voiced its concern that fish, a vital source of protein,
is disappearing from the local market. At al-Shifa Hospital,
doctors say they are seeing an increase in the number of patients
with symptoms of gastroenteritis as a result of decreasing food
quality.
All Gaza Strip
hospitals rely mostly on generators. Generators need fuel, and
fuel supplies are running low, though Israel did reopen pipelines
on July 1, after a five-day closure. Water treatment and sewage
plants now rely on generators, but some apartment blocs are finding
it difficult to pump water up to tanks on roofs, again because
of the shortage of fuel for the motors.
Al-Shifa Hospital
has three generators, and the fear of running out of fuel or
losing a generator to malfunction, is pervasive. “It would
only take a few minutes without power,” said Radi, “and
we’d have a room full of dead babies.” According
to Juma‘ al-Saqqa, the hospital’s director of public
relations, as of July 4 the hospital had seven days worth of
diesel left. Five thousand liters a day are needed to power the
generators.
Refrigeration
remains a problem, and al-Saqqa said bloodlines in particular
were at risk, because they are unusable if not kept at the right
cool temperature. With al-Shifa Hospital already suffering shortages, “If
we see large numbers of casualties, we won’t be able to
cope.” Beyond that, maintaining morale among the 1,400-strong
staff at the hospital is a problem. “The staff are completely
depressed,” said al-Saqqa. “I am one of them. We
aren’t being paid because the rest of the world has cut
us off. We ourselves don’t have food to eat. We don’t
have electricity at home. There is no fuel for the cars and people
have to decide whether to pay for a taxi or feed their families.” Still,
the staff, unpaid for months, turns up at work. “How can
we ask the outside world to restore humanitarian aid if we don’t
help ourselves?”
HUDA
Psychologist
Abu Tawahina works with children between the ages of three and
18. One of his patients is Huda Ghalia. She suffers, he said,
from the whole spectrum of behavioral, emotional and cognitive
disorders.
But all children
are affected. Abu Tawahina’s phone kept ringing during
our interview on July 4. It was, he said, his own children, “seeking
reassurance.” “We tell parents that when there is
a sonic boom, the first thing they should do is gather their
children in their arms to make them feel safe. But we know from
talking to the children that they can feel that their parents
are afraid. When parents are afraid, to children it means everyone
is vulnerable. This leads to a lack of respect for authority.
It is something we have seen since the first [1987-1993] intifada.
Palestinian children fight authority. They will go and throw
stones at Israeli soldiers. But then they will come home at night
and wet their beds.”
Muntasir and
Arish Bahja are doing what they can to calm their children and
keep them out of harm’s way. With Muntasir’s parents
in the flat downstairs, the children are never left alone, a
great help for Arish, who at the moment mostly has to wash the
family’s clothes by hand. (“Don’t ask me about
the ironing,” she grimaces.) They have also kept their
children off the streets since June 28, making them stir crazy,
says Muntasir.
But even these
two educated and careful parents can’t think of everything. “Baba!
Baba!” Layan suddenly cries out, collapsing in a fit of
laughter at her father’s side. “Do you know what
she’s doing?” he asked, before answering his own
question. “I tried to prevent them from seeing the footage,
but it was on all the time. She’s acting out the scene
on the beach with Huda Ghalia.” “Sometimes,” added
Arish, “she calls herself Huda.”

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