Siamo antifascisti e antirazzisti. Ed è esattamente per questo che siamo antisionisti. (Rete Italiana ISM)


mercoledì 13 luglio 2011

Oliva attaccata da navi da guerra israeliane

Oliva è una barca con equipaggio internazionale che naviga nella acque palestinesi al largo di Gaza allo scopo di monitorare, documentare e rendere pubbliche le frequenti violazioni dei diritti umani perpetrate dalle forze di occupazione israeliane nei confronti dei pescatori palestinesi. Essa è stata oggi attaccata con dei cannoni ad acqua dalle stesse navi da guerra sioniste che si proponeva di filmare.

Le limitazioni di movimento unilateralmente imposte dalle forze di occupazione nei confronti dei pescatori palestinesi li costringono a non allontanarsi da riva più di 3 miglia marine. Gli attacchi però vengono portati avanti anche all'interno di questo limite, infatti Ruqaya, presente su Oliva al momento dell'attacco, afferma: "Quando ci hanno attaccato ci trovavamo a meno di 2 miglia marine dalla costa di Gaza. Li abbiamo visti sparare acqua ad alcune barche di pescatori così ci siamo diretti verso quell'area. Quando ci siamo avvicinat*, la nave da guerra ha abbandonato le barche dei pescatori e si è rivolta verso di noi. Ci hanno attaccat* per circa 10 minuti, seguendoci mentre noi ci dirigevano verso la costa ed infine rallentando quando ci trovavamo a circa un miglio da essa"

È un fatto grave che dimostra ancora una volta come Israele non abbia scrupoli nemmeno nei confronti di attivisti totalmente nonviolenti, e di come il suo peggiore timore sia che vengano diffuse evidenze che confermano l'assoluta violenza ed impunità che caratterizzano lo stato che ha violato più risoluzioni ONU al mondo.

Per ora copio-incollo il comunicato di CPS Gaza, che lancia una conferenza stampa per questa sera. Seguiranno aggiornamenti. (quanto segue è preso da http://palsolidarity.org/2011/07/19447/)




13 July 2011 | Civil Peace Service Gaza
For Immediate Release
Israeli naval forces attacked the Civil Peace Service Gaza monitoring boat with water cannons earlier today.
Civil Peace Service Gaza is an international third party non-violent initiative to monitor potential human rights violations in Gazan territorial waters.
The initial attack happened at 12.05pm local time. There were four people aboard the Oliva boat at the time, two CPS Gaza crew members (from the UK and Sweden), the captain and a journalist.
British human rights worker Ruqaya Al-Samarrai stated: “We were fewer than two miles away from the Gaza coast when they fired at us. We saw them firing water at some fishing boats so we headed to the area. When we got close, the warships left the fishing boats, and turned on us. They attacked us for about ten minutes, following us as we tried to head to shore and eventually lagged when we reached about one mile off the Gaza coast.”
A fishing boat was also fired at and damaged with live rounds. Currently Israel claims to allow fishing boats to work within three miles off the coast of Gaza, but the limit is rarely respected and fishermen as close as 1.5 nautical miles are regularly targeted.

Civil Peace Service Gaza to hold press conference following attack from Israeli naval forces
Photos and video available upon request, email press@cpsgaza.org
  • When: 13 July 2011, 9pm local time
  • Where: Fishing port, Gaza
  • Who: Ruqaya Al-Samarrai, British human rights worker for Civil Peace Service Gaza
    Khalil Shaheen, Palestinian Center for Human Rights
    Mahfouz Kabiriti, President of Palestine Association for Fishing and Marine Sports
  • What: Key members of the Civil Peace Service initiative to monitor human rights violations in Gazan territorial waters will speak about today’s attack from Israeli armed naval forces.
Background
Restrictions on the fishing zone are of comparable significance to Palestinian livelihood. Initially 20 nautical miles, it is presently often enforced between 1.5 – 2 nautical miles (PCHR: 2010). The marine ‘buffer zone’ restricts Gazan fishermen from accessing 85% of Gaza’s fishing waters agreed to by Oslo.
During the Oslo Accords, specifically under the Gaza-Jericho Agreement of 1994, representatives of Palestine agreed to 20 nautical miles for fishing access. In 2002 the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan empowered Catherine Bertini to negotiate with Israel on key issues regarding the humanitarian crisis in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and a 12 nautical mile fishing limit was agreed upon. In June 2006, following the capture of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit near the crossing of Kerem Abu Salem (Kerem Shalom), the navy imposed a complete sea blockade for several months. When the complete blockade was finally lifted, Palestinian fishermen found that a 6 nautical mile limit was being enforced. When Hamas gained political control of the Gaza Strip, the limit was reduced to 3 nautical miles. During the massive assault on the Strip in 2008-2009, a complete blockade was again declared. After Operation Cast Lead, the Israeli army began imposing a 1.5 – 2 nautical miles (PCHR: 2010).
The fishing community is often similarly targeted as the farmers in the ‘buffer zone’ and the fishing limit is enforced with comparable aggression, with boats shot at or rammed as near as 2nm to the Gazan coast by Israeli gunboats.
The fishermen have been devastated, directly affecting an estimated 65,000 people and reducing the catch by 90%. The coastal areas are now grossly over-fished and 2/3 of fishermen have left the industry since 2000 (PCHR: 2009). Recent statistics of the General Union of Fishing Workers indicate that the direct losses since the second Intifada in September 2000 were estimated at a million dollars and the indirect losses were estimated at 13.25 million dollars during the same period. The 2009 fishing catch amounted to a total of 1,525 metric tones, only 53 percent of the amount during 2008 (2,845 metric tones) and 41 percent of the amount in 1999 (3,650 metric tones), when the fishermen of Gaza could still fish up to ten nautical miles from the coast. Current figures indicate that during 2010 the decline in the fishing catch continues. This has caused an absurd arrangement to become standard practice. The fisherman sail out not to fish, but to buy fish off of Egyptian boats and then sell this fish in Gaza. According to the Fishermen’s Union, a monthly average of 105 tons of fish has been entering Gaza through the tunnels since the beginning of 2010 (PCHR 2009).
Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR). “The Buffer Zone in the Gaza Strip.” Oct. 2010. http://www.pchrgaza.org/facts/factsheet-bufferzone-aug.pdf
Palestinian Centre for Human Rights. “A report on: Israeli Attacks on Palestinian Fishers in the Gaza Strip.” August 2009. http://www.pchrgaza.org/files/Reports/English/pdf_spec/fishermen3.pdf

1 commento:

  1. Ciao Silvia, dai e ridai sono riuscita a condividere il Blog, stasera problemi di connessione (Viva l'Egitto).
    Marna.

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