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Al-Ahed Telegram

The pasta, paper and hearing aids that could threaten "Israeli" security

The pasta, paper and hearing aids that could threaten
folder_openZionist Entity access_time15 years ago
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Source: The Independent, 02-03-2009
By: Anne Penketh, Diplomatic Editor

Members of the highest-ranking American delegation to tour Gaza were shocked to discover that the ‘Israeli' blockade against the Hamas-ruled territory included such food staples as lentils, macaroni and tomato paste.

"When have lentil bombs been going off lately? Is someone going to kill you with a piece of macaroni?" asked Congressman Brian Laird. It was only after Senator John Kerry, the head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, raised the issue with war Minister Ehud Barak after their trip last month that ‘Israel' allowed the pasta in. Macaroni was considered a luxury item, not a humanitarian necessity, they were told. The total number of products blacklisted by ‘Israel' remains a mystery for UN officials and the relief agencies which face long delays in bringing in supplies. For security reasons such items as cement and steel rods are banned as they could be used by Hamas to build bunkers or the rockets used to target ‘Israeli' civilians. Hearing aids have been banned in case the mercury in their batteries could be used to produce chemical weapons.

Yet since the end of the war in January, according to non-government organizations, five truckloads of school notebooks were turned back at the crossing at Karm abu Salem where goods are subject to a $1,000 (£700) per truck "handling fee".

Paper to print new textbooks for Palestinian schools was stopped, as were freezer appliances, generators and water pumps, cooking gas and chickpeas. And the French government was incensed when an entire water purification system was denied entry. Christopher Gunness, the spokesman for the UN agency UNRWA responsible for Palestinian refugees, said: "One of the big problems is that the 'banned list' is a moving target so we discover things are banned on a 'case by case', 'day by day' basis."

Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth said: "Israel's blockade policy can be summed up in one word and it is "punishment", not security."


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