New report from Physicians for Human Rights and Gisha
New report from Physicians for Human Rights and Gisha: "Realizing Potential" Transitioning from preventing humanitarian crises to developing the Gaza Strip
13.06.2012
Physicians for Human Rights-Israel is
pleased to present a new report, "Realizing Potential:
Prospects for the Development of the Palestinian Health
System and Economy in the Gaza Strip," written jointly with
Gisha - Legal Center for Freedom of Movement.
Our new
report, whose release marks five years into the closure of
the Gaza Strip, since the 14th of June 2007, recommends
necessary steps to rehabilitate the health system in the
Gaza Strip, promote an independent and progressive health
care system, and allow for long-term economic development.
This report suggests that stakeholders engaged in
addressing the political, social and economic challenges
facing Palestinians in the Gaza Strip utilize a discourse
focused on the critical need for development in various
sectors of the Palestinian economy, rather than the current
discourse, which emphasizes preventing humanitarian crisis
and individual humanitarian gestures. The report also
illustrates how current use of the language of
"humanitarianism" directs public attention to rescue
missions and limited acts of compassion, enabling the
ongoing postponement of the development of civil
infrastructure within the Gaza Strip.
In addition, the
report examines changes in the economy and the health care
system of the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT),
specifically that of the Gaza Strip, over the course of the
Occupation. In particular, it explains changes in
limitations on movement to and from Gaza, reviews the
influence of movement and access policies on the economy of
Gaza during this period, and explores the potential for
economic development in the Gaza Strip, which might be
accrued by the free movement of people and goods. In
addition, the report addresses the Palestinian health care
system and the obstacles which prevent this system from
developing, as well as the potential to turn the Palestinian
health care system into one which adequately fulfills the
needs of the population.
The central recommendations
presented in this report touch on the responsibility of
Israel for the state of affairs in Gaza, but also on
initiatives and actions the Palestinian Authority must take
in order to advance the civil systems under its control. The
recommendations are based on the opinions of various health
and economic experts written especially for this
report.
Efraim Kleiman – Professor of Economics,
Hebrew University: "The first thing that governments can do
for development is to allow business interests access to the
markets. If Israel is interested in development of the
[Gaza] Strip, it must remove all limitations, since people
will not invest in the [Gaza] Strip if they are not assured
that their goods will reach the markets on time, that raw
materials will reach the factories, and that workers will
arrive to work on time. Removing the barriers that prevent
investment means, first and foremost, allowing the free
movement of people and goods into and out of the area."
Dr. Angelo Stefanini, former World Health
Organization Coordinator for the OPT: "International
interests must set the development of an improved
Palestinian health system as a goal, and dedicate themselves
to its achievement, insisting on the one hand that Israel
act in accordance with international humanitarian law and on
the other hand emphasizing that they will not accord aid
which only preserves the situation created by the
Occupation."
Dr. Tomer Brody, senior lecturer in the
Faculty of Law and the Department of International
Relations, Hebrew University: "In order to achieve good
economic integration between the Israeli and Palestinian
economies, one must enforce an equal standard of public
health, environmental quality, etc., on both sides. One of
the ways to encourage Israeli-Palestinian cooperation is to
procure lower tariffs in external markets, such as the
United States and the European Union, for products
manufactured cooperatively."
Professor Dani Filc,
senior lecturer and Director of the Department of Politics
and Government, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, member
of the Board of Directors of Physicians for Human
Rights-Israel, and Member of the Board of Directors of the
Adva Center, recommends acting according to two principles.
The first – promotion of the underlying determinants of
health: freedom of employment, adequate supply and quality
of running water, nutrition and housing. The second – a
good health care system must have vertical integration
(preventative care, primary care, hospitals) and horizontal
integration (among hospitals with different specializations,
between community care and hospital care). It is impossible
to build a system of this nature without controlling the
physical area, without the ability to plan for the future
and without freedom of movement and access. The inability of
Palestinian stakeholders to engage in planning for the
future due to the possibility that Israel will enact new
policies that impede development (curtailing funds, for
instance) is a central point. Professor Filc emphasizes that
a better, more efficient, and more just system, would be one
that relies on comprehensive health insurance for the entire
population, with strong emphasis on primary care, followed
by hospital care. For such a system to exist, the
Palestinian Authority must have real autonomy. In addition,
universal health insurance requires sources of employment
for the majority of the population, since the system is
based on taxation of workers. The present conditions of
occupation do not allow this. Along with these changes,
there is also a need for the development and training of a
suitable and sufficient work force, and the development of
independent medical specialists in the areas where today the
Palestinian Authority is almost entirely dependent on Israel
and Jordan, such as oncology, neurosurgery and vascular
surgery.
Recommendations of Physicians for Human
Rights-Israel and Gisha:
• Israel must remove the
limitations on free movement of people and goods in and out
of the Gaza Strip in order to enable civil rehabilitation,
with emphasis on the underlying determinants of health such
as sewage, quality drinking water, nutrition, housing and
employment.
• Israel, the Palestinian Authority,
Egypt, and international agencies must regulate and
coordinate movement through the border passages. All
arrangements must assure the residents' right of freedom of
movement both between Gaza and the West Bank in both
directions and within the Gaza Strip, and must assure
security checks in accordance with international
law.
• The Palestinian Authority and the Hamas
government must make the guarantee of human rights for the
residents of Gaza their top priority, and must act
responsibility and accountably to further Palestinian civil
infrastructure and long-term economic development in
Gaza.
• International organizations working within
the Gaza Strip must act not only within the humanitarian
sphere but also to promote sustainable civil development
which can function independently from international
intervention.
ends