ROME, Jan 25 (IPS) -
Several Italian civil society groups will mark the World Social
Forum's global day of action Saturday by pledging support for
Palestinians and end the siege
in Gaza
"This decentralised World Social Forum (WSF) offers to
Palestinian democratic movements the chance of asking Europe to
intervene and stop what Nelson Mandela has defined 'the new
apartheid of our century'," said Mustafa Barghouthi, a
pro-democracy activist who was candidate for presidency of the
Palestinian National Authority in 2005. He spoke from Ramallah
during a WSF press conference in Rome Tuesday.
The Palestinian international campaign to end the Israeli siege
on Gaza has proclaimed Jan. 26 the international day of action
against the Gaza siege. In support, pacifist groups from Israel
and occupied Palestine, and their supporters all over the world,
will organise solidarity initiatives for people of Gaza.
Gaza, one of the three main Palestinian areas (besides Jerusalem
and the West Bank), is choked these days by the Israeli siege,
and by restrictions on supply of food and electricity. Gaza
elected Hamas, the Palestinian party that does not recognise
Israel, and Israeli reprisals have followed.
In desperation, militants set off bombs Wednesday to clear away
border guards on the crossing into Egypt around Rafah town.
According to United Nations estimates, 700,000 crossed through
to stock up on goods in short supply.
"In these last months the (Israeli) attacks have disastrously
increased," Barghouthi said. "Gaza is experiencing a heavy
humanitarian crisis; water, food, fuel and medicines are running
out due to the embargo ordered by Israel."
More than 60 percent of the population is unemployed, he said.
Incubators for the newborn are without energy, what could be
life-saving surgery cannot be carried out any more.
"An entire country is plunging into the Middle Ages," Barghouthi
said. "This is not revenge against Hamas but against 1.5 million
Palestinians."
Israeli and Palestinian organisations mean to use the WSF day of
action to raise international awareness of the Gaza situation.
On Saturday, the national committee for the commemoration of the
Nakba (the Palestinian way of marking the creation of Israel May
15, 1948) and the Palestinian campaign against the Israeli
building of a separation wall from Palestinian territories have
prepared symbolic protests along the wall.
On the other side, an Israeli alternative information centre
will also campaign against the occupation.
Israeli, Palestinian and international peace groups, in
coordination with the non-partisan End the Siege campaign, will
converge on both sides of the Erez crossing in Gaza. The
Israelis will attempt to send over a relief convoy to Gaza,
carrying goods gathered by Israelis.
People will gather simultaneously in Italy to demand an end to
the siege. Action for Peace, an organisation including women's
groups, other non-governmental organisations and trade unions
will hold a support public meeting titled 'The will to resist
and the courage to refuse'.
Attention to the Gaza crisis is still low. "Apart from
condemnation for the worsening humanitarian crisis and requests
to allow medicine and fuel, nobody has so far firmly demanded
reopening of the Strip's crossings to people and goods, and the
end of the embargo that is strangling Gaza," Luisa Morgantini,
vice-president of the European Parliament, wrote in the Italian
daily Liberazione Tuesday.
"Ending the siege also represents the only way to stop the
Qassam rocket launchings on Israeli civilians by Palestinians --
condemnable, counterproductive, and a sign of powerlessness and
anger, not of resistance."
Morgantini is among the promoters of the pro-Palestine
initiatives in Italy. "We need to break the silence and act:
Italy and Europe should respond to the appeal of Salam Fayyad
(Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority) to 'save
Gaza from pain', and support the many Israelis and the majority
of Palestinians who want peace and equal rights, and who still
find the courage to refuse, and the tenacity to resist in the
popular and non-violent fight."
Lama Hourani from the Gaza based International Women Commission,
is spending this week mobilising people for the WSF global
action day. On Saturday, she will join a demonstration in Rome.
"I'm here thanks to the commitment of some very active Italian
solidarity groups like Women in Black, and Action for Peace, and
other volunteers and human rights groups who come to Palestine
very often to support Palestinians even in the hardest
conditions," Hourani told IPS.
"Mobilising people, also outside Palestine, is key for our
cause," she said. What her group aims for, she said, is to
inform European people of the real situation in Gaza, why
Palestinians are suffering, and what could be done for them. A
rising awareness in Europe, she said, "could help pressure
governments."
Gaza is in a very difficult situation, she said, while
"Americans (are) refusing any U.N. Security Council resolution
regarding the situation." She said she had failed to reach her
friends and family in Gaza these last days. "I've sent them
emails, but nobody replies, I guess because they have no
electricity."
Hourani said the breach of the border is a normal reaction by
desperate people denied basic human rights. "What do we expect
from people submitted to such actions for such a long time.
Desperation, anger, and hate cannot give any positive results,
to anybody. So, it was absolutely predictable." (END/2008)
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