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One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege

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One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege Empty One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege

Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 11:18 am

Muhammad Abu Safiyya lost everything during Israel’s 51-day attack on Gaza during the summer of 2014.

Most of the thirty-six homes in his village, also called Abu Safiyya, were completely destroyed after Israeli forces invaded.

“We came back during ceasefires and each time we returned we found [the area] worse,” the 54-year-old father of six told The Electronic Intifada.

The signs of destruction still remain visible in the northern Gaza village. A pair of torched cars rest on their sides near the barn on Abu Safiyya’s farm and a large John Deere tractor is now an immense pile of contorted steel.

During the offensive, Israeli strikes killed 2,257 Palestinians, most of whom were civilians, according to the United Nations monitoring group OCHA.

“There aren’t any water wells left and [Israel] destroyed the mosque,” Abu Safiyya said.

Abu Safiyya is unable to calculate how much it will cost him to repair the damage. “It’s impossible to know exactly how much we lost,” he said, explaining that “much of our land was destroyed by tanks and we’ve had trouble getting the lentils to grow.”

Some fifty of his cows and a dozen sheep died because of the attack. As he walked down the dirt road from his home, patches of sheep skin could be seen on the ground. “Some were shot, others starved when we were gone,” he said.

He is just one of thousands of farmers and agricultural workers throughout Gaza whose land was damaged and whose livestock were killed.

According to statistics provided to The Electronic Intifada by the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), Gaza’s total livestock population decreased by 13 percent between 2010 and 2014.

Nearly 10,000 goats and sheep died in that four-year span, during which Gaza endured two major Israeli attacks.

Dependent on the animals for their income, the total number of herders pursuing their traditional livelihood also decreased by 22 percent, according to the FAO.
“Too dangerous”

Farmers in the nearby town of Beit Lahiya are undergoing the same struggle. Mahmoud Abu Afash, a 48-year-old father of ten, has farmed melons for more than a decade.

“We couldn’t even come back during the ceasefires,” he told The Electronic Intifada. “The area was too dangerous.”

Abu Afash, who used to sell his melons in present-day Israel, said that Israeli drones are constantly present in the sky above him. “The jeeps come up and down the border here also,” he said. “If we are close to the border, they fire their guns at us. People have been shot in this area.”

After Israeli authorities evacuated settlers from twenty-one Jewish-only colonies in Gaza during 2005, its military declared a “buffer zone” between Gaza and present-day Israel, on the Gaza side of the boundary.

An Egyptian-brokered ceasefire that ended a previous Israeli attack on Gaza in November 2012 was supposed to offer clarity about the precise size of the “buffer zone.” Israel declared in February 2013 that farmers would have access to land up to 100 meters from its boundary with Gaza.

Yet Israeli forces have since fired at farmers who are further away from the boundary.

“Here, I think they usually start shooting when we get closer than 300 meters,” Abu Afash said. “That includes a large portion of my land. I take a risk every time I farm on it.”

In the southern village of al-Faraheen, another farming community hugging the boundary line, Ahmed Abu Daqqa said that Israeli forces fire at farmers from varying distances. “Sometimes it is 500 meters, sometimes it is 300 meters,” the 20-year-old told The Electronic Intifada. “We never know how close we can get.”

Like tens of thousands of their compatriots, Abu Daqqa and his family fled to nearby UN-administered schools during Israel’s attack. “It was too dangerous to stay here,” he said, recounting that Israeli tanks entered the area when the ground invasion began.

But they have found little relief since returning to al-Faraheen. “The Israelis have shot at us a lot,” he noted.
Economic warfare

Down the dirt road, his aunt, Um Munther, loaded lentils onto her cart. “The [Israelis] shoot a lot in the morning and in the afternoon,” she said calmly as Israeli military jeeps drove up and down the perimeter of the nearby boundary line.

On 22 February, Israeli forces in military vehicles fired on Palestinian farmers on the outskirts of Rafah, the southernmost town in the strip, reported Ma’an News Agency. Just four days earlier, farmers in the Maghazi area in central Gaza fled Israeli gunfire.

And less than a week prior to that incident, Israeli forces opened fire on Palestinian homes and farmers in the Khan Younis area, also situated in central Gaza, Ma’an reported.

“We hear gunfire hear every day,” Um Munther said. “Sometimes it’s too frightening to work, but we have to survive.”

Alaa Tartir, a program director with al-Shabaka, a Palestinian research group, said Israel’s frequent attacks on farmers in Gaza are part of a campaign of economic warfare.

“Israel’s strategy is to keep the Palestinian economy paralyzed, dependent, de-developed and always on the edge of collapse,” he told The Electronic Intifada. “A similar systematic war on agriculture, farming and water is also happening in the occupied West Bank.”

The eight-year siege on Gaza has resulted in Palestinians, including agricultural workers, growing increasingly dependent on international aid for survival.

“More than 70 percent of the Palestinians in Gaza are dependent on different forms of international aid as a result of the Israeli siege,” Tartir said. “Israel is imposing the siege and donors are paying for it.”

Because international governments and institutions have failed to attach political conditions to their aid, Tartir argued that “donors are merely sustaining the status quo and refusing to take hard measures and therefore they seem to be determined to fail.”

“Israel does not need the donors’ silence to continue its violations of the Palestinian rights,” he said. “But certainly it is delighted that others are paying for all the destruction it causes.”

Back in al-Faraheen, Ahmed Abu Daqqa vowed to continue farming. “This is our only source of income, even though it keeps getting worse,” he said.

“Farming is a dangerous job here.”

http://electronicintifada.net/content/one-five-gazas-herders-ceases-farming-amid-israels-attacks-siege/14311

Shot for farming on their own land, shot for fishing in their own seas, their children kidnapped and tortured.

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One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege Empty Re: One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege

Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 11:44 am

Interesting article which fails to look at what started the last conflict.
Hamas organises kidnapping and murder of 3 Israeli's plus 100 rockets fired indiscriminately at civillians in Israel over 24 hour period, each and every rocket equating to 100 war crimes.
Then people look to blame Israel for striking back at those attacking them. If people want to blame why this continues to happen, look at whio continues to keep attacking Israel  and that is Hamas. Who again do so for one purpose. Knowing that Israel will retaliate to aggression like any nation and because Hamas places its military facilities within ciivillian areas, commanding people to stay in their homes even after being warned by Israel to ensure as many Palestinian deaths as possible. 
So I suggest their vent their anger at Hamas who started this aggression and seek compensation from Hamas.

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One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege Empty Re: One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege

Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 11:53 am

The article isn't about the last conflict. The article is about Israeli soldiers shooting Palestinian farmers on their own land, just about EVERY DAY to the point they have to give up farming or be shot.

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One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege Empty Re: One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege

Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:02 pm

risingsun wrote:The article isn't about the last conflict.  The article is about Israeli soldiers shooting Palestinian farmers on their own land, just about EVERY DAY to the point they have to give up farming or be shot.

The article again fails to factor on every occasion it is Hamas that fires rockets in to Israel a war crime and yet you wish to blame Israel for defending itself. That is like saying the allies were to blame for the devastation in Nazi Germany for fighting back where Germany was the aggresor starting the conflict.
You reasoning has no logic.
Its quite simple, Hamas needs to stop committing war crimes against Israel by attacking them. Then if Israel is committing crimes or wrongs against palestine you go to the UN and Israel then has little defence. If though Hamas is always the aggressor as they always are, then they have created the problem and the conflicts.

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Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:10 pm

Stop deflecting, the soldiers shoot Palestinian farmers for farming in their own fields every day. They change the measure of how close they can get to the fence so they can shoot them with impunity.

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Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:11 pm

This your lunch break then?

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Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:12 pm

Deflecting again from Sassy more interested in me than the debate.

What is the root cause problems here?

Hamas

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Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:13 pm

Oh I am going home shortly, half day today.

cheers

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Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:15 pm

What is the problem? You think it ok FOR PEOPLE TO BE SHOT FOR FARMING. Realised you were a monster, we seem to get more and more proof of it every day.

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One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege Empty Re: One in five of Gaza’s herders ceases farming amid Israel’s attacks, siege

Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:18 pm

risingsun wrote:What is the problem?  You think it ok FOR PEOPLE TO BE SHOT FOR FARMING.   Realised you were a monster, we seem to get more and more proof of it every day.

More deflection yet again with woeful assumptions.
Again I actually condemn any crimes Israel commits.
What is important here is the root cause of the problems here.
That is Hamas

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Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:19 pm

Stop deflecting, this is about farmers getting shot in their fields.

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Post by Guest Fri Mar 06, 2015 12:24 pm

I am afraid it is you that has deflected, I raised points, on both threads, you then spammed them as you always do and avoided the points raised.

Both debates over until you address them.

Laters love am going home now.

Laughing

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