Tuesday, June 08, 2010

Cairo refuses to let aid into Gaza

KHALED ABU TOAMEH The Jerusalem Post 06/07/2010 06:15
www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=177687


The Egyptian authorities over the weekend turned down a request by Arab
physicians to bring aid into the Gaza Strip.

Hamas, meanwhile, announced that it won't allow the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit kidnapped IDF soldier Gilad Schalit as a condition for the lifting of the blockade on the Gaza Strip. Khalil al-Hayyah, a senior Hamas official in the Gaza Strip, said the proposal was designed to "distract attention for the crime that was perpetrated against the flotilla aid ships last week."

He said that the blockade on the Gaza Strip had been in effect before the
abduction of Schalit and added that the captors of the soldier have no
confidence in any party, including the Red Cross.

The Egyptian refusal came despite Egypt's decision to reopen the Rafah
border crossing in the aftermath of the aid convoy incident last week.

On Monday, a large group of Egyptian parliamentarians plans to "break" the
ban of aid by bringing humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip through the
border crossing, sources close to Hamas announced.

Hamas legislator and spokesman Mushir al-Masri welcomed the decision and
called on the Egyptian authorities to keep the Rafah terminal open on a
permanent basis.

Over the weekend, the Arab Physicians Union submitted a request to the
Egyptian government to send 400 tons of food and construction material,
including cement, into the Gaza Strip.

The request was turned down by the Egyptian authorities, which did not offer
any explanation, said Munir Albarsh, a representative of the union. He said
that although the Egyptians had reopened the Rafah terminal for travelers, they were continuing to ban humanitarian aid from entering the Gaza Strip.

The Hamas government said that about 2,000 Palestinians crossed the Rafah
terminal in both directions since it was reopened last week. It said that
the Egyptian authorities were continuing to ban aid to the Gaza Strip, especially food and construction material. Over the past week, the Egyptians allowed the delivery of more than 7,000 blankets, five electrical wheelchairs and 357 tents to the Gaza Strip.

Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh said he was optimistic that the blockade
was nearing its end. He also predicted that the "Zionist project on our
lands" was approaching its final stages.

"May 31 was and will be a turning point," he said, referring to the day of
the confrontation at sea between the Israel Navy and the flotilla activists.
"It marks the beginning of the delegitimization of the Zionist project in our country."

He said that Israel had suffered a series of blows over the past two years,
especially with regard to Operation Cast Lead and the UN fact-finding
mission into the war, headed by South African judge Richard Goldstone.

"The Gaza War, which was won by the resistance, embarrassed the Zionist
enemy," Haniyeh said during the Friday khutba (sermon) at the Omari Mosque
in Gaza City. "The Goldstone Report was a big scandal for the occupation,
whose leaders are now being chased by legal and popular institutions all
around the world."

He said the flotilla raid would have positive consequences for Hamas and the
Gaza Strip, as well as for the entire Palestinian people.

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IMRA - Independent Media Review and Analysis
Website: www.imra.org.il


Guest Comment: Here is another ploy: Egyptian doctors want to send humanitarian aid of medicine and cement. Are they planning to use to build a hospital? It is clear that the media ignores that Egypt blocks humanitarian aid, but if Israel blocks cement, there is an outcry of humanitarian suffering. This is our media. Aggie

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