A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 7, 2019
The violence of “relative calm”
Relatives mourn during the funeral of Muhammad Dar Adwan during his
funeral in Qalandiya refugee camp, 2 April. Dar Adwan was shot and
killed by Israeli occupation forces during a raid on the camp earlier in
the day.
Ayat ArqawyAPA images
Maureen Clare Murphy -5 April 2019
The first anniversary of Gaza’s Great March of Return has now passed and Israel is counting down the days to an election that will determine its next government. Egypt and the United Nations have scrambled to
head off a major armed confrontation between Israel and Hamas in Gaza,
and so cross-boundary projectile and warplane fire have gone silent.
Thus “relative calm” reigns over the West Bank and Gaza Strip as Israel’s military occupation approaches its 52nd year.
“Relative calm” – the meaninglessness is baked into the phrase – being
that Palestinians are still deprived of their basic rights, which are
treated as subject to negotiation even by the UN.
Israel fires on 10s of 1000s of unarmed demonstrators, killing 4 (3 kids). As reward for not agitating too much, it reopens crossings it sealed, illegal collective punishment. Unlawful closure remains. Good day? Only if we've become entirely desensitized to serious Israeli abuses
This morning Israel "re-opened" Erez & Kerem Shalom crossings, the only pedestrian/commercial passageways connecting Gaza to the West Bank and Israel. And by re-open, I mean resumed enforcement of the closure, which in and of itself is ongoing punishment of two million people.
This morning: Erez & Kerem Shalom Crossings returned to normal operations; prohibition on access to "fishing zone" removed. Reminder: Closing crossings & blocking access to the sea constitute collective punishment and are in violation of intl law. More: https://gisha.org/updates/9888
Those deprived rights include Palestinians’ very right to life.
A protester was fighting for his life Friday night after being critically injured by
an Israeli military sharpshooter during Great March of Return
demonstrations earlier in the day, Gaza’s health ministry said.
Nearly 60 were injured by live fire during the day’s protests, according to Al Mezan, a human rights group in Gaza, and more than 40 others were directly hit by tear gas canisters.
More than 200 Palestinians, including 43 children, have been killed
during Great March of Return protests since their launch 53 weeks ago.
The most recent fatality was 26-year-old Faris Abu Harjas, who died from his injuries on Tuesday after being shot in the stomach during protests the previous week.
“Killed in clashes”
In the West Bank this week, two Palestinians paid with their lives the
cost of maintaining Israel’s settlement colony regime, which has claimed
nearly 40 Palestinians in that territory and the Gaza Strip so far this
year.
Muhammad Ali Dar Adwan, 23, was shot and killed by soldiers who had raided Qalandiya refugee camp early Tuesday. Israeli media stated that
Adwan was “killed in clashes”; the man’s family said he was shot at
close range while “getting into a vehicle near his home,” as reported by Ma’an News Agency.
The following day, Muhammad Abd al-Fattah, 23, was shot and killed by an Israeli settler at Huwwara checkpoint near the northern West Bank city of Nablus.
Yehoshua Sherman, an Israeli settler, said that Abd al-Fattah was
holding a knife and tried to open his car door and attack his teenage
daughter.
“I went outside and with the help of a driver who was behind me we
neutralized the terrorist and thankfully we weren’t hurt,” Sherman told
Israeli media.
In a place where street executions have become commonplace,
there will be no investigation of Sherman and no state authority will
question whether Abd al-Fattah posed an imminent threat to life that
would justify the use of lethal force against him.
Instead, Israel’s defense ministry has authorized the
construction of a new road serving settlers in the area that will allow
Israelis to bypass Palestinian villages. Another Palestinian was killed
by an Israeli motorist driving through Huwwara village in 2017.
Israel claims to build such roads for security purposes but they are an
integral part of its settlement infrastructure in the West Bank, built
in violation of international law, which forbids an occupying power from
transferring its civilian population to the territory it occupies.
The human rights group B’Tselem has stated that Israel’s segregated road system in the West Bank “bears striking similarities to the racist apartheid regime that existed in South Africa until 1994.”
Gaza hospitals “on brink of collapse”
Death by direct fire is not the only way that Israel’s occupation deprived Palestinians of their right to life this week.
On Tuesday, Physicians for Human Rights-Israel stated that
a Gaza toddler died the previous night after Israel denied a travel
permit to his mother, and thus she was unable to take him to East
Jerusalem for medical treatment.
Palestinians in Gaza requiring treatment in the West Bank or Israel have
their cases referred to the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority,
which pays for the treatment, and then on to Israel, which has the final
say in whether an individual may travel.
Patients who require multiple procedures and follow-up care are
repeatedly subjected to bureaucratic delays and sometimes even
interrogation and arrest.
Gaza’s already overburdened healthcare system has been brought to the
“brink of collapse” due to the staggering number of casualties during
Great March of Return protests, UNRWA, the United Nations agency for
Palestine refugees, recently stated.
Chronic electricity shortages in Gaza, which has been under
Israeli-enforced land, sea and air blockade for 12 years, has come close
to seeing hospitals shut down altogether.
Most of the 11,000 healthcare employees working in government facilities
in the territory have not received regular payment since July 2014, and
receive less than half of their salaries every 40-50 days, according to the World Health Organization.
The Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, reeling from a financial
crisis after Israel withheld $138 million in Palestinian tax revenue, recently announced that
it would no longer refer patients in Gaza to Israeli hospitals, instead
routing them to facilities in the West Bank and other Arab countries.
A spokesperson for the PA’s health ministry told Al Mezan, a human
rights group in Gaza, that the move was intended to cut inflated health
costs.
Al Mezan welcomed the effort to nationalize healthcare but warned that
the measure could affect patients’ health, particularly those needing
life-saving treatment.
“This concern is underscored by the state of Gaza’s impoverished health
sector, which is characterized by a lack of medical equipment, medicines
and medical supplies, and lack of adequately-trained personnel, which
results in long waitlists and inability to provide care,” the group
stated.
“Patients’ rights to healthcare, physical integrity and life are
paramount and must be kept out of any political dispute. These rights
should be a priority on the national agenda,” Al Mezan added.