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Gaza: Diakonia warns of humanitarian disaster in Gaza

Diakonia and 37 other aid agencies - all members of AIDA - Association of International Development Agencies - warn of humanitarian disaster in Gaza if military confrontation is not stopped.

Juhor ad Dik, Gaza

A young boy in Juhor ad dik, Gaza, passes by his house that was destroyed by bombs. The photo was taken in 2009 after the war that killed 1 387 people in Gaza and nine in Israel, according to Diakonia's partner organization B'Tselem. Photo: Aida Burnett-Cargill

World leaders must take swift action

As the impact of days of violent escalation worsens for civilians in Gaza and in Israel, a group of 38 aid and development agencies today (Nov 19th 2012) urged world leaders to take swift action to enforce a ceasefire in order to protect civilian lives and infrastructure and prevent another widespread humanitarian disaster in Gaza brought on by a prolonged military confrontation.

A cease fire is urgent

The agencies said the international community must apply immediate pressure on the government of Israel to keep the crossings to Gaza open to allow in supplies of essential humanitarian aid and push all parties to the conflict to end violence and uphold their obligations under International Law.

“World leaders cannot sit by while civilian casualties in Gaza and Israel continue to mount,” said Nishant Pandey, Oxfam Country Director.

“We urgently need to enforce a cease fire. The present conflict threatens to perpetuate and worsen the humanitarian impact on Palestinian civilians in Gaza of over five years of Israeli blockade and the 2008-2009 Israeli military operation ‘Cast Lead’. It will only deepen despair, create more insecurity, and jeopardize chances for Israelis and Palestinians to reach a just and durable peace,” he said.

Hospitals are running out of supplies

The agencies call comes as local health care partners and hospitals in Gaza have announced they are running out of essential drugs and medical supplies. As the escalating violence makes it difficult for partner organizations and local staff in Gaza to move around on the ground, the agencies said there were growing concerns about getting help to injured people and food and other necessities to people in need.

“Thousands of innocent people, including women and children, are in danger of being caught in the crossfire in the escalating violence between Israel and Hamas. We are urgently appealing to all sides, as well as to world leaders, to seek a political resolution and avoid the loss of any more human lives. If global leaders do not intervene, Gaza stands on the brink of yet another humanitarian crisis,” said Aleksandar Milutinovic, Mercy Corps Country Director, West Bank/Gaza.

Civilians must be protected

Noting a number of civilian injuries and deaths over the past days, the agencies said that it was critical that the protection of civilians was prioritized by the parties to the conflict as outlined by International Humanitarian Law. They stressed that the protection of civilians extends to civilian infrastructure, as a number of homes have already been hit by strikes and shellings.

“Save the Children is deeply concerned by the recent escalation of violence in Gaza and Israel. Children are already among the dead – and as always, children bear the hardest burden during military conflict.  Save the Children urges all parties to end the violence immediately,” said Alex Schein Save the Children Country Director.

Implement the UN resolution 1860

In calling for an end to the violence, the organizations stressed the need for the international community to implement UN Security Council Resolution 1860, passed in March 2009, which outlined the conditions for a permanent ceasefire and a path to long term security for both sides.

“The failure to fully implement UN Security Council Resolution 1860 has only re-fuelled a cycle of violence that now needs to be put to a permanent end. The international community has an obligation to act to protect civilians and there needs to be immediate pressure on all parties to the conflict to stop the fighting and start working towards peace,” said David Viveash, The Carter Center Field Office Director.

"Civilians pay the greatest price"

With 1.6 million Palestinians in Gaza, around half of whom are children and around 50,000 of whom are elderly, still living under blockade, the organizations said another military operation would only increase the hardship faced by the people they work with.

“Civilians pay the greatest price when the international community fails to act. There are families that CARE and our Palestinian partners have worked with in Gaza who are still living amidst the rubble of their destroyed homes. It is critical that those with power to stop the conflict act now. The human costs of another military confrontation would be too high – the people of Gaza cannot afford to start rebuilding their lives all over again,” said David White, CARE Country Director.

Diakonia reports related to the oPt

Trading away peace:  The report, published in October 2012, found that the EU imports 15 times more from the illegal settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory than from the Palestinians themselves. Diakonia, along with a large group of human rights organizations, demand that the EU must stop its financial support to illegal Israeli settlements.

Restricting Aid: Report from Diakonia and other members of the AIDA network about the Costs of Delivering Assistance in the OPT - 2011

Dashed hopes: Report from Diakonia and other organizations in 2010 about the Gaza blockade

Report from Diakonia one year after the bombings of Gaza in 2008-2009: Failing Gaza

Aida logotype

 

Notes to editors

According to UN OCHA, 1,400 Palestinians were killed during the 2008-2009 military operation ‘Cast Lead,’ including 353 children, and 5,300 were injured. 13 Israelis were also killed during ‘Cast Lead’, 3 of whom were civilians.

Israel closed the Kerem Shalom crossing, the sole crossing for goods into Gaza on Wednesday 14 November 2012. It was re-opened on 18 November 2012 to allow in 124 trucks, which is 30 percent of the pre-blockade daily average of trucks.

The Association of International Development Agencies (AIDA) is a coordinating body of more than 80 aid and development agencies working in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel. The 38 agencies that have signed on to this press statement are all members of AIDA. Quotes from individual agencies reflect their own agency’s position and are not the official position of all AIDA members.

Contact person

Joakim Wohlfeil, policy advisor for Diakonia on conflict and justice. Based at our head office in Sweden:

Phone: +46 70 515 61 45

E-mail: joakim.wohlfeil@diakonia.se

Signatories

The following 38 organizations - all members of AIDA - Association of International Development Agencies - have signed the call for an end to the military confrontation:

  • American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
  • Action Against Hunger (ACF)
  • ACPP
  • ActionAid
  • Care International
  • Community Housing Fund (CHF)
  • CPT
  • DanChurchAid (DCA)
  • Diakonia
  • Emergency Water Sanitation and Hygiene Group (EWASH)
  • Fondazione Terre des Hommes Italia ONLUS
  • Gruppo di Volontariato Civile (GVC)
  • Handicap International
  • HelpAge International
  • Japan International Volunteer Center (JVC)
  • Kvinna til Kvinna
  • Life for Relief and Development
  • Medecins du Monde France
  • Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP)
  • Medico international
  • Mercy Corps
  • Movement for Peace
  • Norwegian Church Aid (NCA)
  • Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA)
  • Norweigian Refugee Council (NRC)
  • Oxfam
  • Polish Humanitarian Action (PAH)
  • Save the Children
  • Seba
  • Secours Islamique France
  • Solidaridad International
  • Terre des Hommes Switzerland
  • The Swedish Organization for Individual Relief
  • The Carter Center
  • The Lutheran World Federation (LWF)
  • The Overseas NGO
  • War Child Holland
  • World Vision Jerusalem-West Bank-Gaza
Revised
19/11/2012 Joakim Wohlfeil joakim.wolhfeli@diakonia.se
Diakonia P O Box 14038, SE-167 14 Bromma, SWEDEN
Bank Account 90 33 04-4 (Plusgiro)

Phone: +46 8 453 69 00
Fax: +46 8 453 69 29
diakonia@diakonia.se
Visiting address: Gustavslundsvägen 18, Alviks torg, Bromma, Sweden (head office)
Org. nr: 802017-3517

Diakonia is an international development organization with Christian values that works together with local partner organizations for sustainable change for the most vulnerable people in the world.

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