Turkey-Israel Deal Leaves Gaza Siege Intact
By Ali Abunimah
July 01, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Electronic
Intifada"-
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip expressed anger and
dismay on Monday about the deal normalizing
relations between Israel and Turkey that leaves them
under a suffocating siege.
An Israeli
human rights group that monitors the decade-old
Israeli blockade of Gaza has also confirmed that the
deal does not end Israel’s tight control over the
territory that has greatly exacerbated the
devastation to Gaza’s economy and society from three
major Israeli military assaults since 2008.
Turkey put
its once close military and political relations with
Israel in the deep freeze six years ago, after
Israel attacked the Turkish-owned
Mavi Marmara as it sailed in
international waters as part of a flotilla to Gaza
in May 2010, killing nine people and
fatally injuring a tenth.
Turkey
imposed unprecedented
military sanctions on Israel in 2011 over the
incident.
Efforts at
reconciliation had been stalemated by the conditions
demanded by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan:
an Israeli apology and compensation over the
Mavi Marmara attack and an end to the siege of
Gaza.
The
breakthrough apparently came when Turkey dropped the
third and biggest of these demands and accepted that
Israel would maintain its blockade.
In a
face-saving measure, Israel will allow Turkey to
increase its “humanitarian” role and infrastructure
projects in the besieged territory.
Positive spin
The Turkish
government has tried to spin the deal positively. A
senior official told The Electronic Intifada that
under the deal Turkey “will deliver humanitarian aid
and other non-military products to Gaza and make
infrastructure investments in the area.”
This would
include new residential buildings and a 200-bed
hospital.
The
official added that “concrete steps will be taken to
address the energy and water crisis in Gaza. The
amount of electricity and drinking water to Gaza
residents will increase and new power plants will be
constructed.”
At a press
conference in Ankara, Turkish Prime Minister Binali
Yildirim
asserted that the siege on Gaza had been
“largely lifted” as a result of the agreement.
Yildirim
confirmed that Israel would pay $20 million in
compensation to the families of the dead and to
injured survivors of the Mavi Marmara raid.
He said a first shipment of 10,000 tons of Turkish
aid would be delivered to Gaza later this week
through the Israeli port of Ashdod.
At a
simultaneous news conference in Rome, Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
hailed the agreement for its “strategic
importance” to Israel and affirmed that what he
called the “defensive maritime blockade” of the
occupied Gaza Strip would remain.
Netanyahu
also said that the deal gives Israeli soldiers
protection from prosecution.
Victims of
the Mavi Marmara attack have pursued
justice in
Turkish and
US courts as well as
in the International Criminal Court. The deal
leaves the status of these lawsuits unclear.
According
to the Turkish official, the agreement will also
“make it possible for Turkey to launch major
projects in the West Bank, including the Jenin
industrial zone.”
But as I
documented in my 2014 book,
The Battle for Justice in Palestine,
Palestinian analysts and rights groups say the Jenin
industrial zone and others like it, far from helping
them, may only make them more vulnerable to
environmental, labor and political damage and
exploitation.
“Scandal and
insult”
Gisha, an
Israeli human rights group that monitors Israel’s
blockade of Gaza, said the deal did nothing to
challenge Israel’s “shameful” control over the lives
of 1.9 million Palestinians in Gaza.
“What
Netanyahu has given Erdogan is not a change in
policy, but rather a circumscribed gesture, like
allowing him to put down plastic buildings in a game
of Monopoly,” Gisha’s director Tania Hary
wrote in a scathing op-ed in the Tel Aviv
newspaper Haaretz.
Palestinian
commentators from Gaza agreed.
“The
Turkish-Israeli deal is a scandal and an insult to
Palestine/Gaza and to the blood of Turkish
activists,”
Refaat Alareer, an educator and writer
tweeted.
Alareer
called the agreement a “deal of shame.”
“Lifting
Gaza siege means freedom of movement, not more food
and aid,” Gaza writer
Omar Ghraieb
tweeted. “Is that too hard to comprehend?”
“It’s not
acceptable to speak lightly of [the] Gaza siege
saying it’s largely lifted when it’s still affecting
[the] lives of two million people,” Ghraieb
added in rebuke to the Turkish prime minister.
Gaza-based
translator Jason Shawa
tweeted, “We want lift of the siege, not your
charity Erdogan, Keep it!”
“Turkey’s
interests first, ties with Gaza later,” was the
succinct reaction of Gaza journalist Nidal
al-Mughrabi.
Turkey has
been under
pressure for years, especially from the
administration of US President Barack Obama, to mend
its ties with Israel.
As a
consequence of the bloody civil war in Syria, in
which Ankara has supported forces seeking the
overthrow of the government of President Bashar
al-Assad, Turkey has faced a deteriorating regional
situation.
Bomb
attacks that have killed dozens of people in Turkish
cities in recent months have contributed to a
catastrophic
40 percent decline in tourism, a key sector of
the country’s economy.
Netanyahu
has also hinted that the rapprochement could pave
the way for lucrative deals over
Mediterranean gas reserves involving Turkey.
Turkey’s
Yildirim was more cautious,
saying that future cooperation would “be tied to
the efforts of the two countries.”
Shares in
Turkish energy firms that work in Israel rose
sharply on news of the agreement, as did Israeli
energy stocks in Tel Aviv.
Administering siege
The
Palestinian Authority in Ramallah
welcomed the Israel-Turkey rapprochement, but
there was no immediate reaction from Hamas.
In recent
days, Hamas, the Palestinian political and
resistance movement that rules the interior of the
Gaza Strip, has tried to limit the potential
negative fallout from the Turkey-Israel
negotiations.
Over the
weekend, the movement’s leader,
Khaled Meshaal, met with President Erdogan in
Ankara.
A
statement
from Hamas said that the group’s delegation
“confirmed to the Turkish leadership the demands of
our people, especially the lifting of the siege,
confident that Turkey will succeed in this matter.”
The senior
Turkish official informed The Electronic Intifada
that “there are absolutely no references to Hamas in
the agreement” with Israel, an apparent response to
Israeli demands that Erdogan shut down the
movement’s activities in Turkey.
But the
reality is that while Turkey is going to deliver
more aid to Gaza – assuming Israel keeps its side of
the bargain – it will only do so under the siege
conditions imposed by Israel.
It will be
difficult for many Palestinians to avoid the
conclusion that Turkey has joined other members of
the so-called international community, especially
the United Nations, in helping Israel administer the
siege rather than challenging its continuation.
The UN has
been complicit in administering the siege under the
so-called
Gaza Reconstruction Mechanism, which allows
building supplies to trickle in under tight Israeli
control.
The Gaza
Reconstruction Mechanism is illegal and violates the
very “right to life” of the Palestinian people,
according to a confidential legal opinion prepared
for a major aid agency that works closely with the
UN, as was
revealed by The Electronic Intifada in January.
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