Top Issue 1-2024

2 July 2010

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Israeli aggression must be challenged

BY GERRY ADAMS

YOU may recall my meeting with Caoimhe Butterly of the Free Gaza Movement. On May 17th, I dedicated my blog to the story of the MV Rachel Corrie and the flotilla to the Gaza Strip. I’m glad I did.

But I never imagined what would happen to it.

I was on my way to an early-morning event in Tir Éoghan when the car radio broadcast the awful news of the death and destruction visited upon the mercy mission by the Israeli Government.

There is no justification for the military actions of the Israeli government against the humanitarian flotilla. The Gaza Freedom Flotilla was a humanitarian mission carrying 10,000 tonnes of aid to the besieged Gaza Strip.

For four years the Israeli Government has illegally imprisoned over one and a half million men, women, and children in the most horrendous of conditions.

These people have been denied many of the basic necessities of life, including the essential construction equipment and materials that would allow Gazans to rebuild their shattered infrastructure.

Last year’s devastating assault by the Israeli Army on the Gaza Strip caused enormous damage: 1,400 people were killed and many more grievously wounded; 3,500 homes were destroyed; 28,000 homes damaged; 800 industries were damaged or destroyed; 10 schools were destroyed and 204 were damaged; 57 kilometres of roads were destroyed.

In April 2009, I visited the Gaza Strip. I saw for myself the conditions there. I spoke to UN officials as well as representatives of political and community organisations and aid groups.

No amount of PR words by the Israeli Government can take away from the humanitarian crisis which its actions are directly responsible for.

The flotilla organisers had repeatedly declared their peaceful intent. In the full glare of the international media, the flotilla was engaged in bringing in humanitarian supplies. I believe it is this which the Israeli Government resented most because it exposed the lie that they were allowing sufficient aid into the region.

The images of armed commandos dropping from helicopters on to unarmed ships, and then opening fire and killing aid workers engaged in a humanitarian effort, has again exposed the aggressive and intransigence attitude of the Israeli Government.

The decision to storm the ships is par for the course for a government that feels itself immune from international law and sanction.

It also breaks international law by the blockade and siege of Gaza.

It breaks international law in building a Separation Wall that scars the landscape of Palestine and which denies Palestinian families access to each other, to jobs, to their land and to water.

It breaks international law in occupying Palestinian land.

It breaks international law by building illegal settlements on stolen Palestinian land.

It breaks international law by expelling families from their homes.

It has done all of this for many years and with little adequate response from the international community.

Israeli actions must be condemned by all governments and political leaders who believe in democracy, peace, security and the standing of international law.

The Irish Government also needs to use its influence to persuade the EU to discontinue its preferential trade agreement with Israel.

As evidence of the outrage felt by citizens, the Irish Government should also expel the Israeli Ambassador.

It is also vital that the Palestinian organisations now agree a government of national unity. Differences should be set aside in the national interest of the Palestinian people and a joint political position agreed between Fatah, Hamas and the many other political groups.

What the Israeli Army did to Gaza last year

1,400 people killed and many more grievously wounded

3,500 homes destroyed

28,000 homes damaged

800 industries damaged or destroyed

10 schools destroyed and 204 damaged

57 kilometres of roads destroyed

Israeli Ambassador should have been expelled

Sinn Féin’s Mary Lou McDonald and Aengus Ó Snodaigh deliver a clear message to the Israeli Embassy in Dublin

PHOOGRAPHS shown to the arrTested skipper of the MV Rachel Corrie by Mossad agents in Israel were taken in Ireland, a breach of Ireland’s neutrality and a further reason for the expulsion of the Israeli Ambassador rather than the expulsion of a “faceless” lower-ranking diplomat, Sinn Féin TD Aengus Ó Snodaigh has said.

“The expulsion of a faceless diplomat for the use of forged Irish pasports by a Mossad death squad does not go far enough and will not bother the Israeli Government too much.

“The Israeli Ambassador should have been expelled to send a firm message to the Israeli regime that Ireland will not stand such abuse of sovereign Irish documents.”

There is clear evidence now, the Sinn Féin TD said, that Mossad agents are at work on the ground in Ireland.

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