Palestine Solidarity – combined organisations’ letter to the Prime Minister
20 March 2020
Jacinda Ardern
Prime Minister
Parliament Buildings
Wellington
Kia ora Ms Ardern,Covid 19 and Gaza
The more than two million people living in the blockaded Gaza strip in Palestine are being left to face the Coronavirus
with hopelessly inadequate medical facilities and extreme overcrowding – conditions in which the virus will spread
rapidly and devastatingly unless action is taken now.
The usual medical and public policy advice to Palestinians cannot hope to deal with this terrifying scenario. Health officials warn that if the virus enters Gaza, containment and treatment under the Israeli blockade will be nearly
impossible.
Gaza’s hospitals are already unable to cope with “normal” medical situations. In March last year the United Nations
Humanitarian Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory, Mr. Jamie McGoldrick, reported on Gaza’s "chronic power
outages, gaps in critical services, including mental health and psychosocial support, and shortages of essential
medicines and supplies."
In similar vein the Israeli human rights organisation B’Tselem has reported that, even before coronavirus, Gaza’s barely
functioning hospitals are dealing with the fallout from thousands of injuries which have resulted from murderous Israeli
sniper fire on demonstrators in the ”Great March of Return” protests on the Gaza side of the security fence.
97% of all Gaza’s water is not fit to drink and Gazan hospitals don’t have enough clean water even for medical staff to
wash safely. Simply calling on people to wash their hands regularly and keep social distances is a recipe for an
unmitigated human catastrophe.
The situation is little better in the occupied Palestinian territories of the West Bank where, as a result of Israeli’s
brutal military occupation, medical facilities are also inadequate with serious shortages of basic medical equipment,
trained personnel and essential medical supplies.
The looming human catastrophe is clear. When medically well supplied countries like Italy and South Korea have struggled
to contain the virus there is no way the hospitals in Gaza or the occupied Palestinian territories will be able to cope.
Each year New Zealand votes at the United Nations for the end of Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank and
blockade of Gaza.
It’s now critical for the government to back up those votes with effective political action. We urge you to put the
welfare of Palestinians alongside concern for New Zealanders and speak out calling for Israel to end its blockade of
Gaza and military occupation of the Palestinian territories and allow Palestinians to access the medical supplies and
equipment they need to deal with this crisis.
Na,John Minto
National Chair
Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa