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Name: Jamaal Long
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Gaining Ground In Gaza

Will The Goldstone Report Give Palestinians The Justice They Call For?

By Jamaal Long

 

Tramadol is a drug used to reduce physical pain. Like any other drug, taking more than the recommended dose can lead to psychological and physical dependence. It was perhaps the psychological pain Abu Ahmed was hoping to alleviate when he began taking 800mg of the synthetic opioid, 500mg more than what the manufacturers recommend.

“You feel less frightened,” Ahmed told The Independent, a British newspaper. Ahmed is a 45-year-old unemployed Palestinian and a father of 10. He explained how taking Tramadol pills helped him get through Operation Cast Lead in daze.

For many Palestinians, including Ahmed, living in land in constant turmoil, dealing with internal conflict from feuding factions, Hamas, who controls the Gaza strip, and Fatah, who controls the West Bank; plus, economic siege and violent attacks on Hamas leaders by Israeli fighters, drug use has been the gateway out from reality.  

Tramadol is smuggled in through the tunnels from Egypt, and Gaza has seen an increase in supply of Tramadol and mental health professionals told the The Independent that this is way the people of Gaza cope with results of the latest attack from Israel last winter.

The bombs began raining down from planes over Gaza on Dec. 27, 2008, filling the skies with billowing smoke. The traumatic chaos and blood shed that ensued during the three-week campaign in Gaza left another grisly reminder of the constant and impending violence that surrounds the inhabitants of that small strip of land.

But now the billowing smoke has dissipated, the last mortar shell has dropped and tightly squeezed index fingers have eased their pressure from the triggers. Now the actions from the bloody conflict will call into question an inquiry that may never have been considered by passive observers of the Israel-Palestine conflict who get their information from the brief sound bites from their newscast. A question that the Goldstone report raised and the International Courts Justice in Hague would have to answer is: Was Israel guilty of war crimes?

Scrutiny of Israel by the international community is not a commonly discussed topic by reporters in the American press; however, this report marks another instance when the international community has chastised the Israeli government’s action.

One of the main focal points of controversy in Israel-Palestine conflict is in regards to the Israel-occupied territories. After the Six-Day War in 1967, Israel controlled and occupied Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Golan Heights, East Jerusalem, West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

The United Nations Security Council attempted to promote peace in the region and took diplomatic measures toward that aim after the war concluded. The council passed Resolution 242 that called for the withdrawal of Israeli forces and for both states to live peacefully within their boundaries.

Israel, however, tainted its image in the eyes of the international community when it established settlements in the territories it captured. That action officially brought to light the illegality reflected in the policies the Israeli government endorses, especially toward Palestine.     

In response to the settlements in Palestine, General Assembly of the United Nations in 1998 declared them illegal and further stated that it “deplored” Israel’s practices and policies toward the Palestinians and that it violated their human rights.

Even the officials from the European Union and the International Court of Justice are both in agreement and opposed the settlements in the Occupied Territories for its adverse effects to the Peace Process.

Jewish South African former Supreme Court Judge Richard Goldstone’s report brings damaging allegations of actions that took place during Operation Cast Lead that suggest that Israeli soldiers and Hamas should be prosecuted for war crimes.

The Independent reported that the Goldstone report showed that attack on Gaza reflected policies that were geared toward collective punishment. The Independent reported that the Goldstone investigation uncovered:

. . . an overall policy aimed at punishing the Gaza population for its resilience and for its apparent support for Hamas, and possibly with the intent of forcing a change in such support.”

Bloomberg reported that Goldstone’s panel investigation discovered “disproportionate force” in Gaza. Fred Abrahams, a senior Human Rights Watch researcher, said the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) even used white phosphorus over a densely populated area with no regard to making the distinction between civilians and combatants.

Dispute over how many combatants died versus noncombatants has been ongoing with Israeli officials asserting that their actions targeted combatants. To the Israeli officials’ much discontent, B'Tselem Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories investigation confirmed what the Palestinian human rights organizations said that majority of the Palestinians killed in Gaza were not militants, but in fact, civilians.

According to B’Tselem, of the 1,387 Palestinians that were killed, 773 were noncombatants and only 330 were combatants. Of the civilians killed, 320 were minors under the age of 18 and another 109 were women.

Israeli officials have balked at the entire investigation.  They denied such allegations of war crimes and said that IDF acted in accordance with international law.

Israeli officials stated that Operation Cast Lead, the official name for the December 27th attack, was in response to Qassam rockets from Palestinian groups, which, according to B'Tselem, killed 11 Israeli civilians.

The reason cited for the Qassam rockets that were launched from Palestinian groups was because of the blockade imposed by the Israeli government.

Israeli officials protest that the report lacks the valuable insight necessary to understand what Israel has to deal with when it comes to protecting their country. The officials see the report as undermining their response to attacks against their civilian population. 

The foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said the UN mission had “dealt a huge blow to governments seeking to defend their citizens from terror,” and that its conclusions were “so disconnected with realities on the ground that one cannot but wonder on which planet was the Gaza Strip they visited.”

“We are upset and angry,” Gabriela Shalev, Israel’s ambassador to the UN said. “We take all precautions to respect international law.”

Despite the assurance from Israeli officials that the soldiers acted in accordance with international law, the UN Human Rights Council backed the Goldstone report that accuses both Israeli soldiers and Palestinian combatants of war crimes. This means an investigation needs to be conducted by both parties, or they face prosecution.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in an adamant speech early October promised to never allow Israeli leaders or soldiers to stand trial on war crimes charges over their actions during Operation Cast Lead.

The ongoing conflict and the Israeli blockade have left Gaza de-developed according to a UN report. The delays in humanitarian aid have disrupted the livelihoods of the people of Gazaa reality Abu Ahmed knows all too well.


The blockade caused him, like 100,000 other Palestinians in Gaza, to lose his job. Before, Ahmed worked as a driver, but when he lost his job he became overwhelmed with depression and started having headaches. He began taking Tramadol, just one pill a day. But gradually his addiction grew and he began taking more. Before long, he was taking as many as four, and when he could afford it, eight pills a day.


“I tried to get away from it but I couldn’t,” Ahmed explained. “I had a headache, pain in every part of my body. I had to go the bathroom every 10 minutes. I was sweating. Then you take one pill and you feel better of course. When I took it, I felt very relaxed.”

 

“Before the war the situation was so hard. There was no work, plus I had to take care of 11 people, including my wife. All people could do was sit around in the street and drink tea or coffee.”

As time passed, Ahmed turned to Gaza Community Mental Health Program (GCMHP) and with counseling from the group's trained therapists, Ahmed has stopped taking Tramadol. He has even gained his weight back to 187 pounds; up from 128 pounds where he was previously at the height of his addiction.

Still, with high professional standards the psychologist at GCMHP set for themselves they are only able to help a few people in Gaza beat their drug addictions.

Hasan Shaban Zeyada, a senior psychologist for GCMHP believes the contributing factor to the drug addiction is their vulnerability.

“They don't have hope, they cannot do anything for the future. They are disappointed, depressed, helpless and powerless. They can't find a job, they can't plan for the future, or [afford to] get married.”

 

The culmination of the many problems that exist in Gaza and for the Palestinians stem from the same source according to Mr. Zeyada: “the siege, internal division and the war.”


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