Gaza In Crisis Following Rafah, Tunnel Closures: Police Called In to Transport the Public
by Julie Webb-Pullman
The Gaza Strip is facing a humanitarian crisis, with such a critical shortage of gasoline that police have been ordered
to transport students and workers to schools, universities and workplaces, the Ministry of the Interior has reported.
Police authorities took the drastic measure on Tuesday to alleviate the crisis that has arisen in the fuel sector since
the closure of the tunnels that formed the only lifeline to bring basic necessities into the enclave in defiance of the
illegal – and crippling – Israeli siege of Gaza. Students and workers have faced waits of several hours for public
transport, or been completely unable to attend, bringing the region to a virtual standstill.
Students and workers are not the only ones affected. At its weekly meeting on Tuesday, the Gaza Council of Ministers
called for international action to avert the growing humanitarian crisis caused by the severe impact of the closures on
the health sector. Generators are unable to operate because of the fuel shortage, limiting the provision of critical
services in clinics and hospitals, while some 30% of essential medicines and supplies are completely unavailable, and
more than 500 patients cannot leave through Egypt to get urgent medical treatment.
While Egyptian authorities have agreed to open the Rafah Crossing on Wednesday and Thursday for four hours each day for
‘emergency cases only’ this will barely make a dent the 500+ medical cases, let alone the 5,000 humanitarian cases,
students, business people, and workers waiting to cross, some for several weeks, if not months.
Whilst the Egyptian closure of the Rafah Crossing and the tunnels has exacerbated the existing situation, the
fundamental issue to be tackled is the illegal Israeli siege of Gaza, strengthened to strangling point in 2006.
In its 2012 Annual Report released in March, The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) lamented the fact that the
Israeli siege of Gaza has become institutionalised, and risks becoming legitimised by the international community, even
if inadvertently.
“… [Israel’s] systematic policies have consistently violated the right to an adequate standard of living, the right to
adequate housing, education, and social security, and the right to the highest attainable standard of mental and
physical health,” PCHR said then.
“The crisis can be ended only with the immediate lifting of the closure, the removal of the restrictions on movement to
and from the Gaza Strip, and the reversal of the ban on exports.”
How much truer that is now, with Egypt’s closure of the Rafah Crossing, and the tunnels that provided the only relief.
The international community, particularly the High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, must heed the cries from Gaza, and exert effective pressure on Israel, as well as on Egypt, to prevent further
unnecessary, indefensible, and reprehensible Palestinian suffering and loss of lives.
ENDS