Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, March 15, 2019

Four Palestinians die by Israeli fire

Relatives of Muhammad Abd al-Fattah Shahin mourn during the 23-year-old’s funeral in Salfit on 13 March after he was shot and killed by Israeli forces the previous day.
 Shadi Jarar’ahAPA images

Maureen Clare Murphy -13 March 2019
Israel’s prime minister has admitted that the isolation of Gaza – under land, air and sea blockade since 2007 – is intended to undermine the establishment of a Palestinian state.
During a meeting of his Likud faction on Monday, Benjamin Netanyahu said that the transfer of Qatari funds to Gaza is “part of a broader strategy to keep Hamas and the Palestinian Authority separate,” as The Jerusalem Post stated.
Quoting a source paraphrasing Netanyahu, the Post added, “ ‘whoever is against a Palestinian state should be for’ transferring the funds to Gaza, because maintaining a separation between the PA in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza helps prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state.”

Around 200 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces during mass demonstrations against the siege on Gaza since the launch of the Great March of Return on 30 March last year.
Protesters are also demanding that Palestinian refugees – two-thirds of Gaza’s population of two million are registered refugees – be allowed to exercise their right to return to lands on the other side of the boundary with Israel.

Palestinians die from Gaza protest injuries

Since last Friday’s weekly Great March of Return protests, two Palestinians died from injuries sustained during demonstrations.
Bassam Sami Uthman Safi, 22, died on Sunday after being hit in the head with a tear gas canister on 22 February.
Safi is the fourth Palestinian in Gaza to be killed after being struck by a tear gas canister so far this year.
Musa Muhammad Musa, 23, died on Monday from injuries sustained during protests on 1 March.
“If someone thinks this blood was spilled in vain, then he is seriously mistaken,” an unnamed Hamas official recently told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
The paper added that Israeli officials said that measures to ease the dire situation in Gaza “would be interpreted as a capitulation, which could hurt Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s prospects in the upcoming election.”
Meanwhile, Israeli intelligence and military officials reportedly believe the Palestinian Authority could collapse in as few as two months after Israel withheld some $138 million in Palestinian tax revenue.
The Palestinian Authority has refused to accept the reduced tax transfer in protest, delaying payment of civil servants’ salaries.
An Israeli law passed last year allows the state to deduct payments made to Palestinian prisoners and their families from Palestinian Authority tax revenue, which Israel controls.
The timing of the sanctions, along with other increased repressive measures, is seen as motivated by electionsin the country in early April.
Withholding tax revenue “is tantamount to collective punishment prohibited under international law,” according to the Palestinian human rights group Al Mezan.
The tax revenue sanctions come after the US cut half a billion dollars in aid to Palestinians last year, and Congress enacted a law suspending funding to the PA until it terminates payments to the families of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel and those of slain alleged attackers.
“The US government has played a major role in developing the capacity of our hospitals,” Walid Nammour, director of the Augusta Victoria hospital in Jerusalem, where women living in Gaza are treated for cancer, told media.

“This was the case until our great man Trump came. They’re using sick children’s lives, human lives to put pressure on the Palestinian Authority, and this is inhumane, illegal and unacceptable,” he added.

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