Gaza Chap8
Gaza Chap8
Gaza Chap8
International Law
Restrictions on movement near border
farmland
Restrictions on Fishing
Economic Strangulation
Humanitarian Crisis
8. Gaza
Palestinian children travel to an UNRWA school to seek shelter after evacuating their homes near the border in Gaza
City on July 13, 2014. (UN/Shareef Sarhan)
8.1
Chapter 8. Gaza
34
8.1.1 International Law
Israels siege and naval blockade of Gaza are acts of collective punishment, which is illegal
under international law, and is considered as such by the United Nations and human rights
organizations such as Amnesty International.
A 2009 Amnesty International report following Operation Cast Lead, Israels devastating
military assault on Gaza in the winter of 2008-9, stated:
The prolonged blockade of Gaza, which had already been in place for some 18
months before the current fighting began, amounts to collective punishment of its
entire population.
The Fourth Geneva Convention specifically prohibits collective punishment. Its
Article 33 provides: No protected person may be punished for an offence he or
she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all measures of
intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited. 1
In 2011, the UN released the so-called Palmer Report on Israels attack against the Freedom
Flotilla in May 2010 that killed nine Turkish activists (one of them a US citizen). The report
deemed Israels blockade legal, however it was widely considered a politicized whitewash,
containing the important caveat that its conclusions can not be considered definitive in either
fact or law." Shortly after the Palmer Report was released, an independent UN panel of experts
released a report concluding that Israels blockade of Gaza does violate international law, stating
that it amounts to collective punishment in "flagrant contravention of international human rights
and humanitarian law." 2 The International Committee of the Red Cross and a UN fact-finding
mission into Israels attack on the Freedom Flotilla reached the same conclusion in 2010.
Israeli officials have admitted that the siege is not motivated primarily by security concerns,
but is part of a strategy of "economic warfare" against the people of Gaza. In 2006, senior advisor
to then-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Dov Weisglass, said the goal of the Gaza siege was to put
the 1.6 million people of Gaza on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger.
Despite the fact that Israel loosened restrictions under international pressure following the
assault on the Freedom Flotilla in 2010, the siege and blockade continue to strangle Gaza
economically. According to a 2012 Human Rights Watch report:
Israels punitive closure of the Gaza Strip, tightened after Hamass takeover of Gaza
in June 2007, continued to have severe humanitarian and economic consequences
for the civilian population...Gazas economy grew rapidly, but the World Bank said
the growth depended on international assistance. The economy had not returned to
pre-closure levels; daily wages, for instance, had declined 23 percent since 2007.
Israels near-total restrictions on exports from Gaza hindered economic recovery.
Due to low per capita income, 51 percent of the population was unable to buy
sufficient food, according to UN aid agencies. 3
1 See
35
Palestinian fishing boat off the coast of Gaza. Photo by Max Blumenthal.
In the Interim Agreement signed by Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization as part
of the Oslo Accords during the 1990s, Israel agreed to allow fishing boats from Gaza to travel
some 20 nautical miles from shore, except for several buffer zones near the borders with Israel
and Egypt to which they were denied entry altogether. But according to a 2011 report from
BTselem: In practice, however, Israel did not issue permits to all the fishermen who requested
them, and allowed fishing up to a distance of 12 nautical miles.
Since Operation Cast Lead, Israels devastating military assault on Gaza in the winter of
2008-9, the Israeli navy has reduced that limit to three nautical miles.
According to the aforementioned 2011 BTselem report:
4 See
BTselem: http://www.btselem.org/gaza_strip/forbidden_zones
Chapter 8. Gaza
36
37
situation exists in Gaza" that "is totally intolerable and unacceptable in the twenty-first century.
It is amazing that anyone could characterize the condition of the people there as satisfying the
most basic standards."
Consider the following statistics:
54 percent of households face food insecurity, defined as inadequate physical, social or
economic access to food. An additional 12 percent are considered vulnerable to food
insecurity. Only 20 percent of Gazan households are food secure.
38 percent of the population lives below the poverty line.
Since the blockade began, the number of Palestinian refugees completely unable to secure
access to food and lacking the means to purchase even the most basic items, such as soap,
school stationery and safe drinking water (abject poverty) has tripled to 300,000.
75 percent of households polled by the World Food Programme in the Gaza Strip received
outside aid.
Gazas hospitals are at "zero stock levels" for 178 of 480 essential medications, with
another 69 at low stock. Of 700 essential medical supplies, 190 are at "zero stock levels"
and another 70 at low stock.
Due to lack of fuel, the Gaza Power Plant runs at 45 percent capacity, leading to daily
blackouts of eight to twelve hours. Given this fuel shortage, 90 percent of private cars
are no longer driven and of public services, only 15 percent are operational. (Palestinian
Centre for Human Rights, The Illegal Closure of the Gaza Strip: Collective Punishment of
the Civilian Population, December 10, 2010)
In the Gaza Strip, 95 percent of water sources are unfit for drinking. Water-borne diseases
cause 26 percent of illnesses in Gaza.
Because of lack of treatment capacity and electricity, Gaza authorities must release around
80,000 cubic meters of sewage into the Mediterranean Sea on a daily basis.
The construction of 86,000 houses is required to meet natural growth and recover from
previous Israeli invasions. 6
6 See