Gaza situation "desperate" (1 Viewer)

Nebuchanezzar

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BBC said:
"People in Gaza are waiting in lines for almost everything, and that's if they're lucky enough to find something to wait for," says Bassam Nasser, 39.

An aid worker in Gaza City, he, like so many others there, including the UN relief agency, says living conditions are the worst he has ever seen in the strip.

"People queue for two or three hours for bread, but sometimes there's no cooking gas or flour, so no bread.

"People wait in line for UN food handouts, but sometimes there aren't any. The suffering is reaching every aspect of life."

As well as working for an American development agency, Mr Nasser is a Gazan, and a father.

"I've got three young children. It's difficult to explain to them that it's not my fault we don't have electricity and that it's not in my control."

'Severely stretched'

Since June 2007, Israel has allowed little more than basic humanitarian aid to enter the Gaza Strip.

Many there hoped that policy would change, five months ago, when Hamas and Israel agreed to a truce.

But while there were some increases in the amount of aid allowed in, Israel's strict restrictions on the movement of goods and people into and out of Gaza largely remained.

Two weeks ago, an already fragile humanitarian situation resulting from the mounting effects of months of shortages, saw a dramatic downturn.

The fighting resumed, with an Israeli army incursion into Gaza and a retaliatory barrage of militant rocket fire. With that, Israel all-but shut the Gaza Strip.

Although there are some goods being smuggled into Gaza through tunnels from Egypt, little else is reaching the territory.

Serious fuel shortages have led to widespread power cuts across Gaza City. That, in turn, has caused problems in pumping water to homes, and sewage to treatment plants.

Israel is preventing many aid workers, and all journalists from entering Gaza too, so our interviews have had to be conducted over the telephone.

"I never thought we would see days like this," says Monther Shublak, head of Gaza's water authority.

"The water system was severely stretched even before this crisis, but now, things are much worse.

"For the last four days, around 40% of people in Gaza City have had no access to running water in their homes at all."

"People ask me 'When will we get water?' I simply can't answer them," Mr Shublak says.

"But we are putting all of our resources into sewage pumping. The health consequences of that system totally failing are too worrying to think about, but it could happen unless things change."

Alongside attacks by its military, Israel's government says its Gaza closure strategy aims to deter Palestinian militants from firing rockets across the border at Israeli towns.

It also wants to choke Hamas, the Islamist faction in charge of Gaza, an enemy Israel sees as one of its most deadly.

But the rockets keep being launched and Hamas shows few signs of losing its grip on power.

Question of blame

There is much discussion among Palestinians as to why this sudden increase in pressure on Gaza is happening now.

Some say Israel is preparing for a big invasion; others feel there is an element of political posturing ahead of an Israeli general election in February.

Many will tell you that they feel a time of deep division in Palestinian society is being taken advantage of.

Few take Israel's explanation, that it is only protecting its citizens from the horror of rocket attacks, at face value.

"Isn't it enough that their army kills the people who fire rockets?" asks Mr Nasser.

"We are not responsible, so why are we all being punished? It makes no sense."

He talks of the long-term impact on children in Gaza, including his own, aged six, five and two.

"It's getting harder for us to answer our childrens' questions about the situation, without instilling hatred in their minds about the people responsible for our suffering," he says.

He does not just mean the Israeli government.

"People here see everyone as responsible for their miserable lives. They see Israel closing Gaza, but they also see people around the world doing nothing.

"They see Hamas making things worse by using the blockade as an excuse not to be accountable, and they do whatever they like.

"People see the silence of the PA, [the Fatah-dominated Palestinian government in the West Bank] and blame them too," he says.

"It's so hard to see where the hope is, and so hard to stop these conditions breeding more hatred."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7739063.stm

Israel has a problem with a supposed terror network, so they deprive thousands of innocent civilians, including children, of food and drinking water. What little water they do get goes towards pumping sewrage so a disease outbreak does not occur.

This is unacceptable, not to mention moronic. It shines a light on the logic of Israel. The IDF is more than capable of defending its citizens from rocket attacks without depriving thousands of innocent Palestinians of food, water and electricity. These civilians have nothing to do with the actions of "terror networks"

Hopefully Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hurries his efforts to build a nuclear warhead so that Israel can be threatened into stopping its starvation of innocent civilians. Either than or maybe Israel can launch another unwinnable war against one of the surrounding countries. :rofl:
 

jb_nc

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U see, I'm not in Gaza (isnt there a pyramid there.>???) so i don't care.
 

jb_nc

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*shoots rocket into house with 16 children and grandparents in search of terrorist who was getting bread at the time and lived two floors below*
 

sam04u

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Nebuchanezzar said:
Nebu, we should start a pro-Palestinian group, which aims to raise funds (to buy food and water) to send to the Palestinians via the sea.
What say you?
 

Nebuchanezzar

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Yes. Except my anti-Israeli group has thus far not demanded money.

I say we should perhaps dress up and visit some synagogues in Bellejew Hill, and demand money from the rich Jewish people there.
 

Scissors

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Nebuchanezzar said:
Yes. Except my anti-Israeli group has thus far not demanded money.

I say we should perhaps dress up and visit some synagogues in Bellejew Hill, and demand money from the rich Jewish people there.
I DEMAND MONIES!
 

Nebuchanezzar

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Does anyone want to dress up as Palestinians, covered with blood and holding anti-Israeli signs, and visit a synagogue in the East somewhere?
 

JaredR

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That is a disgusting abuse of a religious site. I hope you do, because security around such places is high and you'll quickly be shown out of the East and anywhere else where civilised well-respectable people live.
 

JaredR

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By the way, if they can get guns and rockets in through Egypt, why can't they get food and supplies? :)
 

Scissors

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Nebuchanezzar said:
Does anyone want to dress up as Palestinians, covered with blood and holding anti-Israeli signs, and visit a synagogue in the East somewhere?
i'm up for it. i've got the Palestinian scarf thingy.
 

Nebuchanezzar

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JaredR said:
That is a disgusting abuse of a religious site.
The state of Israel is a disgusting abuse of a religious, social and historical site. And yet you do not see a problem with this.

I hope you do, because security around such places is high and you'll quickly be shown out of the East and anywhere else where civilised well-respectable people live.
They'll probably shoot me or fire a rocket at me because I'm part of the PLO or something. I understand that the IDF's policy is to simply shoot anyone that dares oppose a single thing that the Israeli government says.

*takes a picture, gets fired at by a tank*

By the way, if they can get guns and rockets in through Egypt, why can't they get food and supplies?
They do, you stupid cunt.

Comrade Scissors said:
i'm up for it. i've got the Palestinian scarf thingy.
Man, it'd be pretty hilarious if we did.
 

rasengan90

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Nebuchanezzar said:
Does anyone want to dress up as Palestinians, covered with blood and holding anti-Israeli signs, and visit a synagogue in the East somewhere?
If you had any real balls you would go to the embassy, where people directly linked to the Israeli government are. However if you want to be a generally racist asshole and visit a place of worship attended by people not directly linked to the government whatever. You wouldn't have to worry about members of the IDF at a synagogue. I don't think you quite understand the concept of protesting a government's actions.
 

Nebuchanezzar

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It's not racism because it's against a government and a country, not against a race. I know two Jewish people and I get along with them reasonably well.

But yes, I'll visit the Israeli embassy too. Wonder if they'll launch a rocket at me - that's what the IDF does to innocents apparently.

As for visiting the synagogue, I imagine that the Jews there that aren't Zionists wouldn't be, nor would they need to be offended. The protest is obviously not against Jews, it is against Israel.
 

rasengan90

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Nebuchanezzar said:
It's not racism because it's against a government and a country, not against a race. I know two Jewish people and I get along with them reasonably well.

But yes, I'll visit the Israeli embassy too. Wonder if they'll launch a rocket at me - that's what the IDF does to innocents apparently.

As for visiting the synagogue, I imagine that the Jews there that aren't Zionists wouldn't be, nor would they need to be offended. The protest is obviously not against Jews, it is against Israel.
I bet your Jewish aquaintances hate you, that is if you have the nuts to say the same anti semitic things to their faces. You say that its against Israel but you don't direct it towards the country, you direct it towards Jews.
Nebuchanezzar said:
Jew r not nice
Nebuchanezzar said:
HOW WOULD YOU LIKE IT IF A JEW WALKED INTO YOUR HOUSE AND DECLARED IT THEIR OWN PROPERTY?
Nebuchanezzar said:
Damn Jews. Kill 'em all and let their "God" sort them out.
Nebuchanezzar said:
I dislike Jew.

I mean Jews.

I mean Israel.
Nebuchanezzar said:
The Jewish people have different morals to us.
Tell me how that doesn't make you come off as a complete anti-Semitic asshole. I am sure this site is a goldmine for your racism but 2 pages of threads was all I could be bothered to look through and I think I made my point. The only reason I prefer neo-Nazis to lefty wankers like you is that they don't bother covering their bigotry. If you go to a synagogue the protest is obviously against Jews. Again, I am all for you growing some nuts heading down to Canberra and facing the IDF boogie men instead of harmless religious folk, most of whom I assure you are not Israeli. Shalom buddy.
 

Nebuchanezzar

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Hahahahaha. I'm a pretty funny dude. :rofl:

Anyway, quotes 1, 3 and 4 were obviously not serious. Quotes 2 isn't racist at all and is quite close to what is actually happening in the West Bank right now, and quote 5 I probably should have said 'Israeli'

How long did it take you do look through every one of my posts and find those though? I mean, 2000 of my posts are probably anti-Israel related, and you found two decent ones. Lolz.
 

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