Gazans participate in "biggest jailbreak ever"
By Joyce Chediac
Feb 3, 2008
The whole world watched in wonder on Jan. 23 when the blockaded Palestinian
people of Gaza blew up the walls imprisoning them and walked en masse into
Egypt.
It was the biggest jailbreak ever.
In a bold challenge to Zionism, imperialism and reaction, hundreds of
thousands of men, women and children, many flashing victory signs, poured over,
around and through the demolished wall into Egypt to get the food, medicine and
other survival supplies they had been denied. There was no stopping them.
[According to BBC, by Jan. 26, 700,000 Palestinians had crossed into Egypt,
approximately half of Gaza’s 1.5 million people, and they were still
coming—ed.]
After getting what they needed to survive, the people turned around and went
back to Gaza, to defend Palestinian land and continue the struggle
Imperialism’s weaknesses exposed
The people of Gaza have exposed the fundamental weakness of imperialism,
Zionism and their local agents. The huge military colossus of the U.S. and
Israel can hurt but cannot defeat a people’s movement. The whip of
repression—the daily Israeli bombardments and supply, food and medicine
shortages—did not quell the people or consume their struggle.
On the contrary, the Palestinian population turned the terrible six-month
siege of Gaza into a fire forging the rebirth of the Palestinian struggle on a
new level. This remarkable development is testimony to the strength of a mass
movement and a bold leadership responsive to its needs.
Gaza’s mass defiance gives heart to all under the iron heel of
imperialism and capitalism. Surely those Palestinians on the West Bank will
never look at the apartheid wall that imprisons them in the same way.
U.S., Israel and the European imperialists hoped to pummel, starve, freeze
and sicken the Gaza population into turning against Hamas, which it elected.
This has badly backfired. Today, the prestige of Hamas is higher than ever. The
Jan. 23 New York Times interviewed all classes of Palestinians breaching the
wall and independent Fatah supporters. All said, “This was the best thing
that Hamas did.”
Further isolated are the forces of Mahmoud Abbas, which are seen as aligned
with the U.S. and Israel, and which attended imperialism’s so-called
peace conference at Annapolis where the siege of Gaza was not even on the
agenda. On Jan. 24 Hamas leaders called for unity and invited Abbas and the
Ramallah government to run the Rafah border crossing jointly with it. So far,
Abbas has refused this offer.
Israeli war crimes make Gaza a Warsaw ghetto
Israel’s blockade and siege of the 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza
began in June [2007], when Hamas took over the government there. This
punishment of the civilian population because Israel, the U.S. and the European
imperialists did not like Gaza’s government was a blatant violation of
the Geneva Conventions governing the treatment of an occupied people, and a war
crime.
Gaza became a Warsaw ghetto. Unable to get supplies or export goods, the
civilian economy collapsed, leaving the majority jobless and dependent on U.N.
food handouts for survival. Gazans died because their medicines were no longer
available. There was hunger, then starvation. And all this time, the small
strip of land was bombarded by Israel using high tech U.S. weapons.
Then, on Jan 17, Israel shut off fuel shipments, plunging Gaza in darkness
and rendering hospitals ineffective.
Hamas responded by organizing daily demonstrations at the closed Rafah
crossing into Egypt, demanding that the border be opened. On Jan. 22, a
demonstration of Palestinian women in traditional dress was beaten bloody by
Egyptian security as they sought to cross the border and buy food and medicine
for their families. (BBC, Jan 22). The people had had all that they would
take.
In the wee dark hours of Jan. 23, 17 explosions ripped through the concrete
and corrugated metal wall with Egypt. Most of the seven-mile wall blockading
Gaza came tumbling down. While Hamas did not take credit, the Jan. 24 London
Times, after interviewing Gaza residents, determined that this was not only a
Hamas action, but the moment had long been planned. For months, the Times said,
Hamas had been secretly slicing through the heavy metal portions of the wall
with oxyacetylene torches.
Residents were told to stay away from the wall the night the explosions went
off, the Times said.
The next day, a Hamas spokesperson would not take credit for exploding the
wall. “We are creating facts,” he said, adding, “We warned
the Egyptians yesterday that people are hungry and dying.” Hours later
the wall was demolished. (New York Times, Jan. 24)
People and leadership united
Blowing up the wall was not just an audacious action. It was a bold move
that spoke to the needs of the people. Gaza’s residents did not have to
coax people to cross. In fact, they couldn’t be held back. Some 350,000
crossed the first day, with Hamas forces acting as guides.
They crossed over on foot, by donkey cart, in beat-up pickup trucks. While
most came to purchase needed food and supplies, some came to see relatives on
the other side of Rafah they hadn’t seen in months. Some young people had
never been out of Gaza, and they came just to breathe the air and feel
free.
They returned carrying sacks of flour, jerry cans filled with olive oil and
gasoline, medicine, cigarettes and carts filled with cement. They walked farm
animals and camels into Gaza, giving the “V” for victory sign when
news cameras were spotted. When Egypt used water cannons and riot police to
close the two main border crossings on Jan 27, Palestinians bulldozed another
hole in the fence and used a crane to hoist needed goods over the barrier.
Egyptian security stood by, with many guards showing clear sympathy with the
Palestinians and others overwhelmed by the sheer numbers crossing over.
Just a few weeks ago, with much fanfare, the Bush administration held a
conference at Annapolis and claimed it wanted a resolution to the Palestinian
question. Washington’s response to events in Gaza makes it clear that
Washington is no friend of the Palestinians. On Jan. 23, the U.S. was the only
U.N. Security Council member opposing a statement condemning Israel for the
blockade of Gaza.
Why? Turning events on their head, Washington insisted that the criminal and
genocidal blockade of Gaza was an act of Israeli self-defense, because
Palestinians in Gaza continue to fire homemade rockets into Israel. Surely the
rocket firers would gladly trade these rockets for the cruise missiles the
Pentagon gives to Israel.
Speaking from Syria in Jan. 24, Khaled Meshaal, the head of Hamas’
political bureau, explained, “The siege was before and after the firing
of rockets. We stopped firing rockets many times, but the siege had not come to
an end; we ceased the resistance tactically for several months, but the
aggression and occupation continued.” (Palestine Information Center, Jan.
24).
The breaking of the blockade of Gaza is a continuation of other mass actions
in the Middle East.
For example, in 2000 Hezbollah and allied fighters liberated southern
Lebanon from a decade of Israeli occupation. Their success was due to their
deep roots in and support from the population.
In the summer of 2006, less than 3,000 Hezbollah people’s fighters
stopped the heavily armed Israeli army in its tracks, preventing it from
invading Lebanon.
Today in Iraq and Afghanistan all the might of the Pentagon cannot stop the
resistance, because these movements have the support of the people, and, in
fact, are the people.
The Bush administration, aided by the establishment media, has tried to hide
the mass character of these struggles. Nothing, however, could hide the fact
that the breaching of the wall between Gaza and Egypt was done by the
Palestinian people themselves.
These struggles need and deserve the support of all who value freedom and
justice.