Ik vind het niet gerechtvaardigd om de hele bevolking van de Gazastrook onder druk te zetten door de levering van etenswaren, kleding en allerlei gebruiksvoorwerpen te beperken vanwege de gijzeling van één soldaat. Anderzijds IS Gaza een vijandig gebied waarmee Israel op voet van oorlog verkeerd en wiens regime haar vernietiging nastreeft. Juist de apologeten die beweren dat Hamas de legitieme, gekozen regering van deze Palestijnen is, hebben geen recht van klagen: deze democratische regering hoeft alleen één soldaat vrij te laten -in ruil voor vele Palestijnse gevangenen- om het lijden van haar onderdanen aanzienlijk te verzachten.
Wouter
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Last update - 08:03 04/07/2009
Report: Israel mulling easing Gaza siege
By The Associated Press
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1097645.html
The Defense Ministry has recommended a partial lifting of the embargo on the Gaza Strip as a goodwill gesture toward the Palestinians to spur talks to free a long-held captive soldier, Israeli media reported Friday.
Israel has been linking the opening of Gaza's borders to the release of abducted Israel Defense Forces soldier Gilad Shalit, who has been held by Hamas militants for more than three years. Hamas has been pushing for a deal to trade him for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners currently held in Israeli jails.
Israel imposed a near-total embargo of the Gaza Strip in 2007 after Hamas militants violently took control of the territory.
According to the new plan, reported by the news Web site Ynet, Israel would increase supplies of coffee, tea, soup, meat, fish and canned goods into Gaza ahead of the holy Muslim month of Ramadan, which begins in August, to promote a deal for Shalit.
Israel would also renew shipments of fuel, clothing, kitchenware and egg-laying chickens as part of the package.
Ynet reported that the proposal had been drafted by defense officials and awaits the approval of Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
The Defense Ministry would not officially comment on the report.
Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said Friday that if there was any truth to the report, it would represent a righting of a previous wrong.
"The Palestinian people have one single, clear demand - the siege must be lifted and all the crossings have to be open and life to get back to normal in the Gaza Strip," he told reporters outside a Gaza mosque after Friday prayers.
The idea behind the plan, according to Ynet, was to lift the embargo gradually and link it to progress on Egyptian-mediated talks aimed at releasing Shalit from captivity. The plan does not include transferring products such as steel and concrete, which are needed to rebuild the battered territory but could also help Hamas improve its military capabilities.
Hamas and other militants have fired thousands of missiles at Israeli border towns and communities in recent years.
Israel has come under heavy pressure from the international community - including the Obama administration - to lift its embargo, which has crippled the Gaza economy. Gaza has survived largely thanks to a booming underground smuggling trade between Gaza and Egypt.
Report: Israel mulling easing Gaza siege
By The Associated Press
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1097645.html
The Defense Ministry has recommended a partial lifting of the embargo on the Gaza Strip as a goodwill gesture toward the Palestinians to spur talks to free a long-held captive soldier, Israeli media reported Friday.
Israel has been linking the opening of Gaza's borders to the release of abducted Israel Defense Forces soldier Gilad Shalit, who has been held by Hamas militants for more than three years. Hamas has been pushing for a deal to trade him for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners currently held in Israeli jails.
Israel imposed a near-total embargo of the Gaza Strip in 2007 after Hamas militants violently took control of the territory.
According to the new plan, reported by the news Web site Ynet, Israel would increase supplies of coffee, tea, soup, meat, fish and canned goods into Gaza ahead of the holy Muslim month of Ramadan, which begins in August, to promote a deal for Shalit.
Israel would also renew shipments of fuel, clothing, kitchenware and egg-laying chickens as part of the package.
Ynet reported that the proposal had been drafted by defense officials and awaits the approval of Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
The Defense Ministry would not officially comment on the report.
Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said Friday that if there was any truth to the report, it would represent a righting of a previous wrong.
"The Palestinian people have one single, clear demand - the siege must be lifted and all the crossings have to be open and life to get back to normal in the Gaza Strip," he told reporters outside a Gaza mosque after Friday prayers.
The idea behind the plan, according to Ynet, was to lift the embargo gradually and link it to progress on Egyptian-mediated talks aimed at releasing Shalit from captivity. The plan does not include transferring products such as steel and concrete, which are needed to rebuild the battered territory but could also help Hamas improve its military capabilities.
Hamas and other militants have fired thousands of missiles at Israeli border towns and communities in recent years.
Israel has come under heavy pressure from the international community - including the Obama administration - to lift its embargo, which has crippled the Gaza economy. Gaza has survived largely thanks to a booming underground smuggling trade between Gaza and Egypt.
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