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3 Oct 2014

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Gaza in Crisis.
Report by Gordon Corera.
At the Erez border post between Israel and Palestinian Gaza there is a two hundred meter stretch of no-mans land. In recent weeks almost every night has seen the stretch echo to gunfire. Palestinian mortars have gone one way over the border and Israeli tanks the other, heightening the sense that the escalating violence is turning into a low intensity war. Families who have lived near the border for decades are packing up their belongings on to scrawny donkeys and moving into tiny half built blocks a few miles down the road to escape the threat of gunfire and shelling.

More than one million Palestinians live on the Gaza strip 70 % of them are either refugees or the descendants of refuges living in cramped and desperate conditions. With an economic blockade already in force, the Israelis can also at will divide the Gaza strip into 3 heightening the sense that Gaza is effectively one huge prison breeding more people will to martyr themselves for the Palestinian cause and support those like Hamas who carry out terrorist acts against Israel.

The response over recent days by the Palestinians has been to send an almost daily volley of mortars into Israeli territory, some into Israeli settlements in Gaza and some into Israeli proper. In turn this has been met with a forceful Israeli response as Israeli tanks moved for the first time into land given back as part of the peace process - a development significant enough to bring a tough warning against Israel by its traditional supporter the United States.

Secretary of State Colin Powell's use of the phrase 'disproportionate and excessive force' was diplomatic speak for 'get out now' and Israeli Prime Minister duly complied. He claimed that the withdrawal was scheduled but unfortunately he'd failed to communicate that to one of his senior Generals who'd said forces might remain in Gaza for months. Hours after he made that statement the tanks were out making the operation look chaotic and Sharon look like someone who had caved under pressure. It has also been evident that over the last few days mortar attacks have been met with more restraint by Israel than usual, another sign that American pressure may have helped de-escalate the conflict.

But in the longer term the problems of Gaza do not seem likely to go away. The more Israel fears it is simply a terrorist base for attacking Israel, the more Israel will try and shut the Gaza strip down. And that will only fuel the resentment of the local population who are no strangers to hardship. The Oslo peace process looks, for the moment, as if it is dead and buried and it's hard to see how the process can be resuscitated in the near future.





A member of the Palestinian organisation Hamas

Gaza in crisis



Israeli soldiers


A Palestinian demonstration



Palestinian youths in conflict with Israeli forces


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