Sunday
11 , January 2009
Notes from Gaza
We travelled up from Cairo through the Sinai in a coach with an
Egyptian police escort. Assembling our team of 8 MEPs took a long
time at the airport, and what with confusion about where to stay
we didn´t put our heads down till past 3am. More confusion
in the morning delayed us getting to the Rafah crossing till just
before noon. It didn´t seem to matter;UNRWA had already called
to tell us that the Israeli Defence Ministry was not prepared to
let their vehicles meet us. A series of telephone calls had produced
conflicting stories but the result was the same: ¨No way are
you getting in!¨ This fact-finding trip was going to prove nothing
more than a gesture.
I´ve been to the Rafah crossing before but last time approached
it from within Gaza. It´s a modern border control complex,
a smaller version of the Channel Tunnel vehicle entrance all paid
for with EU money. There are passport control offices, a cafeteria,
even a duty free shop but it´s a fiction, they are
all empty and covered in dust. The Israeli siege of Gaza
has kept the flow of goods and people to Egypt to a minimum.
Escorted by the mayor of the Egyptian town of Rafah we climbed
onto a rooftop platform to look across at Gaza City. All was quiet;
¨bombing is at night,¨ we were told. Returning to the ground
we talked with Egyptian ambulance drivers, waiting to take the injured
coming out of Gaza. They were all lined up with nothing to do it
seemed. We chatted to various
journalists, all of them frustrated at not being able to cross into
the Gaza Strip.
Then a flurry. ¨Get into the minibus, GET IN, GET IN!¨
For unknown reasons a window of opportunity had opened. It was 2.20pm
and the ´ceasefire´lasted till 4pm. We passed through
the gate to be met by UNWRA´s director of operations John
Ging and three bullet proof (really heavy doors) UN Range Rovers.
We transferred and drove into the Palestinian town of Rafah (yes,
there are two Rafahs), passing a few bombed buildings on the way,
probably ones that had cloaked entrance/exit routes to tunnels across
the border. In so doing we may have become the first ´observers´
to cross
since the assault began 16 days ago.
It´s a funny thing about a bombed building but I always find
that, even though they may have been destroyed by a devastating
explosion just yesterday, they look as though the incident took
place a year or two ago. And maybe, their appearance suggests, it
wasn´t a bombing at all but a demolition job by a firm that
went into liquidation just after the work
commenced. So long as it is not your own building it somehow diminishes
the impact.
The journey was short, just a mile or so. There were lots of people
on the streets taking advantage of the ceasefire - ¨The streets
are deserted except during these periods,¨ explained our UN
security guide - but very few vehicles except the occasional cart
pulled by a donkey. We turned into the compound of a UN distribution
centre. There was time only to look at the devastation of a former
police station opposite, and exchange a few words both about the
damage to the UN buildings and the distribution operation with John
Ging. I asked him about the Israeli defence for civilian casualties
being that Hamas uses human shields to cover its operations. His
response was dismissive, and when you looked around at the
context of a war in the midst of a living community you could see
why.
Suddenly there was a huge bang; the ground shook and so did my
stomach. An Israeli blast during ceasefire. It may have been 6-700
metres away but it felt bloody close! What must this be like for
people who really are close? Allegedly, we learnt later, it was
a response to Hamas rocket attacks.
Back in the vehicles we drive a short distance through back streets
to a primary school being used as a shelter. ¨The UN has 71
´shelters´ across Gaza and we have 30,000 people in
them whose homes have been bombed or are at risk, said John.
¨Some of them, just like this, have been hit nonetheless as
you will know.¨ It seemed to me that most of the residents were
children, and they were hugely enthusiastic to see us. (At least
our presence changed the routine a bit).
Another Israeli blast, and again the ground and my stomach shook.
Smoke arose between buildings a few hundred metres away. The kids
weren´t phased, ¨Too far off¨ I imagine they were
thinking.
Pushing through their numbers, shaking lots of hands and smiling
hard, (some of our team shed tears as soon as they had privacy),
we met in a side room to hear about the distribution arrangements
(¨We need more than just food and medicines, it´s all
the essentials of family life, like bedding for displaced families,
and nappies¨).
It was 3.15pm. ¨We need you to go NOW,¨ said John Ging.
¨I am so pleased you have been here to see this for yourselves.
Just take back the message that the people here need protection.
The violence has got to stop. The UN has got to back up its words
about a ceasefire with some real action and pressure.
We walked out of the building into the throng of excited kids,
mostly 7-11 year olds. I was struck by how many made ´V for
Victory´ gestures with their fingers. Do the Israelis really
believe that bombing urban communities and terrorising their populations
is going to bring them security? What about the next generation
that even now starts to merge with the existing one?
The streets were still busy but very few people had anything in
their hands. Not much to buy I suppose.
I asked the UN driver about casualties at the hospitals. ¨We´re
approaching 900 dead and more than 3,000 injured,¨ he said.
¨From what we hear it is mainly ordinary people. Amongst the
numbers there do not seem to be that many young fit men of fighting
age that would fit the ´combatant´ category.¨
We get back to the crossing and leave the UN vehicles. Back in
the Rafah compound it´s interview time, and we watch also
as a succession of Israeli F16s cross the sky dropping white flares
of some kind. Donkeys pulling carts in the streets and 21st century
killing machines in the air.
Then the explosions start. One of them close enough so that journalists
and ourselves start to move quickly away.
Twenty or 30 minutes later the crossing complex starts to get really
busy. Ambulance after ambulance arrives from Gaza, and their occupants
are transferred to Egyptian ambulances.
Our coach sets off in the direction of Cairo just before sunset.
Ambulances race past on the road south.
Chris Davies MEP
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