"Dizzy With Success": Running Out of Graves in Gaza
by Chris Floyd
So many have died in such a short space of time that "there is not tomb
and continent enough for the slain": the Palestinians are running out
of graves.
AP reports:
One
family buried a slain son over his grandfather. Another bundled up the
tiny bodies of three young cousins and lowered them into the grave of a
long-dead aunt. A man was laid to rest with his brother.
More
than two weeks into the Israeli offensive that has killed more than 940
Palestinians, Gazans are struggling to find places to bury their dead.
Cemeteries throughout Gaza City that were closed for new burials have
now reopened.
"Gaza is all
a graveyard," gravedigger Salman Omar said Tuesday as he shoveled earth
in Gaza City's crammed Sheik Radwan cemetery, a cigarette dangling from
his lips.
Just six miles
wide and 25 miles long, Gaza has always suffered from a shortage of
burial space. But Gazans say Israel's shelling and ground offensive
have made it impossible for residents to reach Martyrs Cemetery — the
only graveyard in the area with space to dig fresh graves.
Palestinian
medical officials say roughly half the dead are civilians. Among them
are the Samouni cousins, 5-month-old Mohammed, 1-year-old Mutasim and
2-year-old Ahmed, whose family hurriedly dug up the grave of an aunt to
lay them to rest last week...
The
three boys were killed Jan. 5 in what the family and the United Nations
said was an Israeli shelling attack on a house in eastern Gaza where
they had evacuated on soldiers' orders to avoid nearby fighting. Many
members of the clan were wiped out. The exact number is unknown —
figures vary from 14 to 30 people. Medics believe there are still
bodies buried under the rubble that cannot be reached because of
fighting in the area.
An
embarrassing incident, to be sure, but of course it didn't stop both
houses of the U.S. Congress from declaring their nearly unanimous and
totally uncritical support for the massive Israeli military incursion
into densely packed cities and refugee camps in Gaza. Nor will the
latest reported atrocity -- the cold-blooded murder of Palestinians
waving a white flag -- cause even the slightest ripple of concern among
the American political elite, now busy picking out their glad rags for
the upcoming inauguration blowout. The Belfast Telegraph reports:
Israeli
forces said they had pushed deeper into Gaza City amid heavy fighting,
with some units within a mile of the densely populated urban centre.
Terrified residents were said to be fleeing from many homes which had
been set alight.
At least
three Palestinians in Gaza were shot dead yesterday after Israeli
soldiers fired on a group of residents leaving their homes on orders
from the military and waving white flags, according to testimony taken
by the Israeli human rights group B'Tselem. The testimony was rejected
by the military after what it said was a preliminary investigation.
The
thrust by Israeli ground forces into Tel Hawwa was the furthest the
Israelis had gone into Gaza City since military operations were
launched on 27 December. Meanwhile, Israel's Prime Minister, Ehud
Olmert, declared that he would press forward with an "iron fist"....
As
Palestinian hospital officials revealed that the death toll has risen
to at least 952, half of them women and children, John Ging, the UN
Relief and Works Agency's director of operations in Gaza, called on the
international community to protect civilians in Gaza; he also wants a
full investigation into allegations that Israeli military forces have used illegal weapons. [Link is mine, not in the original story.]
When
speaking of the death toll in Gaza -- and the hundreds of women and
children killed -- it should be remembered that many if not most of the
men being killed are also innocent civilians, with no connection
whatsoever to any military activity by Hamas. They are not "enemy
combatants," even under the morally perverse terms of an act of
military aggression. One possible gauge of the proportion of Hamas and
non-Hamas deaths can seen in reports on the Palestinians detained by
Israel in the course of the invasion. As the Guardian reports:
Of
the 200 Palestinians detained by Israeli troops, fewer than 30 were
found to have any link with militant groups in Gaza, a report said.
If
this is any guide, we may roughly estimate that only one in every seven
Palestinian adult males killed by Israel in the invasion had "any link
with militant groups in Gaza." The proportion might be somewhat higher,
given the fact that Hamas fighters engaged directly with Israeli forces
are more likely to be killed. Still, the number of non-combatant males
killed in the onslaught must certainly number in the hundreds. They too
must be counted among the innocent dead.
Many more will die in
the coming days, and not just from the American-supplied military
hardware and the chemical weaponry being unleashed on the imprisoned
Palestinians in Gaza. Death will also come in the form of disease and
deprivation. From the Guardian:
Around
two-thirds of the territory's 1.5m people have no electricity; the rest
have only an intermittent supply, the UN said. Hospitals are overloaded
with the injured, and 500,000 Gazans still have no access to running
water. "Israeli bombardment is causing extensive destruction to homes
and to public infrastructure throughout the Gaza Strip and is
jeopardising water, sanitation and medical services," the UN said.
The
first to suffer and die in these inhuman conditions will be the most
vulnerable: infants, children, the elderly, the sick. What else can
they do? Where can they go? Not to the medical centers being destroyed
in the attack. From The Independent:
Israeli
warplanes have attacked two fully equipped medical clinics in Gaza,
causing hundreds of thousands of dollars of damage, the Christian
organisations which fund them reported yesterday. The Catholic relief
group Caritas said its clinic in the al-Meghazi area of Gaza had been
"completely destroyed" by a missile on Friday, and that 20 nearby homes
had been damaged. Because local families had already fled their homes,
no one was hurt, Caritas said, but equipment worth $10,000 (£6,700) was
lost.
Twenty-fours later,
another clinic funded by Christian Aid was also demolished in an air
strike; it followed a telephone warning to the building's owners to
leave within 15 minutes. Janet Symes, Christian Aid's head of Middle
East Region, said the clinic had "standing room" only for mothers
bringing their children for check-ups when she visited it last year.
She added: "Now the whole clinic lies in ruins."
Were
these Christian-run clinics being used as hideouts and ammo dumps by
Hamas militants? This is the claim made by the atrocity apologists in
Israel and America every time a hospital or ambulance or school or
refugee center or mosque is destroyed. Or were they destroyed on the
principle used by American forces in the razing of Fallujah in 2004? As I wrote at the time:
One
of the first moves in this magnificent feat of arms was the destruction
and capture of medical centers. Twenty doctors – and their patients,
including women and children – were killed in an airstrike on one major
clinic, the UN Information Service and the BBC report, while the city's main hospital was seized
in the early hours of the ground assault. Why? Because these places of
healing could be used as "propaganda centers," the Pentagon's
"information warfare" specialists told the NY Times. Unlike the first
attack on Fallujah last spring, there was to be no unseemly footage of
gutted children bleeding to death on hospital beds.
The
vast atrocity wrought on the people of Fallujah has already been
forgotten. Along with its twin emblem of war's evil -- the tortured
prisoners of Abu Ghraib -- it has been superseded by the mythical
success of the "surge": the campaign of escalation and bribery that
ensconced admitted al Qaeda terrorists as American-paid warlords in
Sunni enclaves while tightening the grip of Shiite sectarian gangs on
the national government. The American-installed ethnic cleansers in
Baghdad have been loud in their denunciation of the Israeli attack on
Gaza -- protests that Palestinian refugees in Iraq find particularly
galling, as McClatchy reports:
Prime
Minister Nouri al Maliki's public denunciation of the "major crimes
against the Palestinian people in Gaza " evoked a bitter laugh from
Saleh as she riffled through pictures of Palestinians thought to have
been killed by Iraqi Shiite Muslim militias and National Police
commandoes during the height of sectarian violence.
"When
Maliki talks about Gaza , I ask, 'What are you doing to us?' " she
said. "When Iran talks about Gaza , I think, 'Who killed us? Wasn't it
your people?' " she asked, referring to Iraqi Shiite militias supported
by Iran who targeted them for their supposed allegiance to Saddam
Hussein and the Baath Party . "God created us to be beaten, and
wherever we go we're abused."
...Saleh
was born and raised in Iraq . Her family had fled a village near Haifa
in 1948, the year Israel was created. An Iraqi army unit invited some
5,000 families who'd been forced from their village to come to Iraq ,
taking them in until there was a "free Palestine." Sixty years later,
they're still waiting.
The
recent past has been especially bitter for them. During the worst of
Iraq's bloodshed in 2006 and 2007, more than 600 Palestinian men were
killed or disappeared...Iraqi Palestinians chafe at the discrimination.
They're still harassed or detained at checkpoints, and as of late last
year they must carry special documents: laminated Identification cards
that identify them as Palestinian refugees. ...Most Palestinians are
too frightened to head to Iraqi hospitals, and they can't leave the
country for treatment. Those who do change their accents to pass as
Iraqis. Four children have died in the last month after applying to
leave for medical help.
On
a recent visit to the camp it was Waleed, 9, whom a mother mourned. He
suffered from muscular dystrophy, and by the end of his life he was on
a feeding tube. "He died of neglect," said his mother, Harbiaa Shafiq
Ali. "Waleed is gone, but no one asks about the Palestinians, and other
mothers need help with their children."
No
doubt Israel is hoping to copy America's success in burying atrocities,
mass murder and oppression behind the PR illusions of a triumphant
"surge" in Gaza. Just like the bipartisan Terror War establishment in
Washington, the Israelis too hope to establish a "peace of the grave"
in their own military adventure. They have a long way to go to match
the million innocents slaughtered in the American war on Iraq, of
course -- just as their harsh sanctions seem like a pajama party
compared to the 500,000 children killed by the bipartisan, Clinton-Bush
sanctions regime imposed on pre-war Iraq: one of the greatest
deliberate non-military inflictions of death and suffering on a people
since the heyday of Hitler and Stalin. But the Israelis are certainly
doing their best to follow the master's example.
There's only one problem: how can you have a "peace of the grave" -- if you run out of graves?
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