Hamas
Creates Humanitarian Crisis In Gaza, Blames Israel
An Israeli
woman in Sderot, Israel narrowly escaped death when a
Hamas rocket landed near the school for where she teaches.
By
Joel Leyden
Israel News Agency
Jerusalem, Israel ----- January 21, 2008 ....... As the world
suddenly awakes to a problem in Gaza, much of the media again
blames Israel. Newspapers around the world ink their headlines
with "Gaza Dark Amid Israel Blockade" and "Gaza
Plunged Into Darkness As Israel Fuel Blockade Takes Effect."
And
this headline just in from the Belfast Telegraph: "The
poor and the sick suffer as Israel cuts power to Gaza".
It
appears that Israel has nothing better to do than just make
the lives of innocent Palestinians in Gaza miserable.
What
much of the global media misses or chooses to ignore is that
Hamas cut off the electricity to Northern Gaza - not Israel.
Hamas did so even after inviting the media to watch it happen.
That most of Gaza has electricity. That humanitarian supplies
of fuel and medicine continue to flow into Gaza from Israel
even as the people in Gaza toss deadly rockets on Jewish children
in the Negev town of Sderot.
Israel
has threatened to cut off Gaza from the world. And why not?
What democratic nation would tolerate a city controlled by Hamas
terrorists who launch thousands of deadly rockets onto Israel
civilian towns and cities? One only needs to ask the traumatized
children of Sderot as they run crying into cold cement air raid
shelters. Or ask the citizens of Ashkelon, if they feel safe.
HonestReporting.com
in an article entitled: "Lights On, Nobody Home" illustrates
how Hamas is using professional public relations to place a
spin on Israel.
Quoting
misleading headlines in LA Times and The Guardian, HonestReporting
states that: "You could be forgiven for thinking that Israel
has cut off the entire electricity supply to the Gaza Strip."
HonestReporting.com states: "The mainstream media ultimately
assisted Hamas in creating the impression of a humanitarian
crisis in Gaza. The fact is Israel has restricted fuel supplies
in response to the terrorism emanating from Gaza but continues
to provide the Palestinians with electricity. The Times of London
omits this vital fact altogether in a story headlined "Darkness
falls on Gaza as Israel takes revenge for rocket attacks".
AFP,
while quoting Israel officials, also omitted the facts leaving
readers with the impression that Israel is simply denying responsibility."
In fact,
Israel Defense Minister Ehud Barak has announced that Israel
will continue to allow fuel for Gaza Strip's power plant as
well as medical supplies into the Hamas-controlled territory.
The
power plant, which depends on fuel funded by the European Union,
under the orders of Hamas shut down its two working turbines
on Sunday, plunging Northern Gaza City into darkness, after
Israel closed border crossings on Friday.
Captain
Shadi Yasin, spokesman for the Israel Coordination Liaison Administration
in Gaza, told the Israel News Agency: "Israel is
doing all that it can to prevent a humanitarian crisis in Gaza,
in contrast to Hamas which is doing all they can to create one."
Yasin states that tomorrow Israel will allow heavy duty diesel
fuel to enter the Gaza power plant and diesel for the generators.
In addition, Israel will allow international humanitarian organizations
to deliver medicine and medical equipment through the Keren
Shalom terminal on the border of Egypt."
Yasin
stated that over seventy percent of the electricity in Gaza
is supplied by Israel but it is Hamas which is disconnecting
this electricity from hospitals, schools and food stores in
Gaza and actually thrives on the suffering of the Palestinian
people in Gaza for their own public relations and propaganda
efforts."
Israel
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert briefed ministers at a Cabinet meeting
yesterday on his visit to Sderot, Israel and the area adjacent
to the Gaza Strip last week: Last Thursday evening, I
visited the area adjacent to the Gaza Strip, including Sderot.
My visit followed a day during which dozens of rockets were
fired at the communities adjacent to the Gaza Strip in response
to the operational successes of the Israel Defense Forces and
ISA and severe losses to both Islamic Jihad and Hamas."
Olmert
stated: "Our activity as a Government, in response to the
terror attacks from the Gaza Strip, rests on two foundations.
The first is continuous and intensive operations against terrorists
in the Gaza Strip and the second is concern for the population
under relentless and intolerable, Gaza Strip-based terrorist
attacks. Communities adjacent to the Gaza Strip are much better
reinforced today than they were a year ago. We will continue
to invest additional hundreds of millions in the area this year
in order to strengthen the residents fortitude."
"I
found people there who are suffering but who do not intend to
give in. I found people who are courageously dealing with daily
distress that is forced on them by the Kassams but who are determined
to continue living in the region. The Israel Defense Ministry,
via Israel Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai, who is responsible
for the matter, is doing outstanding work in assisting the conduct
of daily life in the area. There is a sense that there is a
guiding hand and there are activities that assure the continuation
of daily life. The education system is operating normally and
the achievements of area students on their matriculation exams
- in wake of a program that we enacted in the schools - are
among the highest in the country. Today, there is no unemployment
at all in the area adjacent to the Gaza Strip and I hope that
we will be able to cause additional factories and investors
to go there."
Olmert
continued: "The second foundation of our activity is operational.
There is no doubt that the terrorist organizations in the Gaza
Strip are trying to use indiscriminate terrorism in order to
force a war of attrition on us and to create an equation of
force in which they respond to with dozens of rockets for harsh
strikes against their personnel. Israel cannot live with such
an equation. The communities of the south will not be hostage
to the terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip. Israel will
continue to act with strength, sophistication, courage and determination.
The objective is to bring about the cessation of Kassam rocket
fire and not to agree to any balance of terror. The terrorist
organizations are starting to understand that Israel is determined.
Their leadership is perplexed over how to act in light of the
strikes against them. There are those among them who have begun
to understand that it would be better to refrain from further
firing. In any case, we will not slacken from our operations
until peace is assured for the residents of the south.
HonestReporting
states: "While Gazans are undoubtedly suffering, the dark
picture painted by the mainstream media is different from the
reality. As the Israel's Foreign Ministry notes, the supply
of electricity to Gaza from the Israel and the Egyptian power
grids (124 Megawatts and 17 Megawatts respectively) has continued
uninterrupted. These 141 Megawatts of power represents about
three quarters of Gaza's electricity needs."
Israel
Electric Company workers' committee chairman Miko Zarfati goes
further:
"This
is Palestinian spin. No one has stopped the supply of electricity
to the Strip," Zarfati told Ynet News. He claimed
that his employees worked day and night in a power plant in
Ashkelon, Israel while putting themselves in danger of being
hit by Hamas Qassam rockets falling in the area.
The
Gaza power plant only produces thirty percent of the electricity
consumed in the Strip while Israel supplies the rest.
"It
is simply offensive and arrogant for them to claim that there
is shortage," Zarfati said.
"The
situation is totally absurd. We're continuing to supply Gaza
with electricity despite the (demand) overload for electricity
in Israel and despite the fact that Israel residents and Electric
Company workers that are being sent to Gaza Vicinity communities
are under terror threat from Qassam (Kassam) rockets,"
Zarfati said.
Arabs
Blame Hamas For Crisis
Abdel
Rahman Rashed, a Saudi national serving as general manager of
the pan-Arab Arabiya News Channel, said Hamas was responsible
for the suffering of some 1.5 million Palestinians living in
the Gaza Strip.
"Hamas
committed a stupid act when it gave Israel an excuse to launch
attacks in retaliation for a few antique rockets," Rashed
wrote in the London-based daily Asharq Al- Awsat.
"Prior
to that, Hamas committed a big crime against the Palestinian
people by overthrowing the Palestinian Authority [in the Gaza
Strip]. The Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have suffered a lot
because of Hamas's actions. Hamas is bringing Israel back into
the Gaza Strip after it was liberated by the Palestinian groups."
Rashed
questioned the wisdom of firing rockets and mortars at Israel
which, he said, was only increasing the suffering of the Palestinians,
let alone that they were not causing much harm to Israel. He
pointed out that "only" 10 Israelis were wounded in
the recent attacks as opposed to the "huge disaster"
that has befallen the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
Rashed
is regarded by many Arab journalists as an unofficial spokesman
for the Saudi royal family. He previously served as editor-in-chief
of the Saudi-owned Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper and his
writings regularly reflect the views of the Saudi establishment.
PA
officials in Ramallah have joined the bandwagon by blaming Hamas
for the looming humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip. The charges
came only hours after the PA openly held Israel responsible
for the fuel shortage that has plunged large parts of the Gaza
Strip into darkness since Sunday night.
PA
Information Minister Riad al-Malki said the latest crisis was
the result of Hamas's "insistence on creating an Islamic
republic in the Gaza Strip." He also accused Hamas of seeking
to evade responsibility for the deteriorating situation in the
Gaza Strip by blaming the Ramallah-based government of PA Prime
Minister Salaam Fayad.
Both
Fayad and al-Malki left Ramallah Monday for a tour of a number
of EU countries aimed at solving the crisis in the Gaza Strip.
According to PA officials, the two are expected to visit Britain,
Germany and Spain.
A
top PA official in Ramallah told The Jerusalem Post that Hamas
was "holding more than 1.5 million Palestinians hostage"
in an attempt to rally the Arab and Muslim masses against the
PA and Israel.
"Of
course, we strongly condemn the Israeli measures against the
residents of the Gaza Strip, but Hamas is also responsible for
what's happening there," he said. "Unfortunately,
the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are paying a heavy price
for Hamas's irresponsible actions."
The
official also accused Hamas of ordering owners of bakeries to
keep their businesses closed for the second day running to create
a humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip. "Hamas is preventing
people from buying bread," he said. "They want to
deepen the crisis so as to serve their own interests."
The
official said that contrary to Hamas's claims, there is enough
fuel and flour to keep the bakeries in the Gaza Strip operating
for another two months. "Hamas members have stolen most
of the fuel in the Gaza Strip to fill their vehicles,"
he said.
Israel
and other objective global media outlets report that despite
the blackout in Gaza City, southern and central Gaza, which
receive electricity from Israel and Egypt directly, were not
affected by the shutdown.
Hamas
manipulation of the media is evident in an AP story that reported
"Children marched through dark streets holding candles,
an angry Hamas TV announcer shouted at the camera "We are
being killed, we are starving!"
"Once
again, the mainstream media has wittingly or unwittingly fallen
into the Hamas trap," states HonestReporting.com "By
plunging Gaza into darkness, the Hamas terrorist organization
has managed to shift the story away from its own responsibility
for the Qassams and terror on Sderot, Israel. Instead, Israel's
image is taking a beating for a perceived humanitarian crisis
of Hamas's own making."
The
people of the Gaza Strip have suffered from skyrocketing unemployment,
poverty, lack of medicine, fuel, electricity, food and other
essential commodities since Hamas took power in June 2007.
"We
think Hamas got the message. As we have seen in the past couple
of days, when they want to stop the rockets attacks on our children,
they can," said the Israel Foreign Ministry spokesman,
Arye Mekel.