The coronavirus vaccine — one of the world’s most in-demand commodities — has become a new currency for international diplomacy.Is it not antisemitic to say that this is an illegitimate behaviour only for Israel, the Jewish state? On the other hand, perhaps Israel should offer a substantial supply of vaccinations to PA residents in exchange for them ceasing all terrorist activity against Israeli citizens? Would this meet world approval in the off chance that the PA would agree? In fact, the PA rejected Israel's overtures for help and even refused to accept humanitarian medical supplies sent by the UAE because it landed in Ben Gurion Airport; the PA has no airport of its own. They clearly stated that they would not accept the supplies because having it come through Israel implies normalization of relations with Israel. It thus appears that political considerations weigh far heavier than care for the health of the population. But The Guardian sees no reason to let readers know that and form their own opinions. The article also cynically claims that Israel may be to blame if the upcoming elections have to be cancelled:
The return of the pandemic also has significant political implications. Palestinian officials have already floated the idea that the elections scheduled for summer 2021, the first in more than a decade, may be delayed or even canceled if the rise in cases continues.It is interesting that Asi acknowledged that elections have not been held in over a decade but the way she puts it makes it seems as if holding elections after 14 years is something of a unique accomplishment that Israel is now endangering. Letting the statement above stand without also making it clear that the author of the article she cites above gives another reason for the potential election delay that has nothing to do with Israel:
Palestinian sources, on the other hand, said infighting in Abbas’s ruling Fatah faction may prompt the PA leadership to delay or postpone the elections.Asi makes much about the disparity in health between the PA and Israel:
These stark imbalances are almost entirely manmade. The entrenchment of the occupation and the length of the blockade affect every social determinant of health, including increased psychological trauma, environmental health risks, food and water insecurity, and insufficient access to quality health care facilities.I agree that this imbalance is manmade, just not made-by-Israel. When these kinds of articles refer to a blockade, they are referring to Gaza only since there is absolutely no blockade between Israel or Jordan and the so-called West Bank. They never mention that Egypt has a hermetic blockade of Gaza given their legitimate desire to keep terrorists out of the Sinai and other parts of Egypt. Seemingly such a desire is illegitimate when terrorism targets Jews in Israel. In any case, this is the nature of the blockade in Gaza:according to the most recent report by COGAT (Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories):
While I do not expect The Guardian to debunk academic articles such as that cited by Asi above, I do expect them to know the nature of the restrictions on deliveries to Gaza. There is no restriction of movement of essential goods, just a restriction of anything that can be used to build terrorist tunnels into Israel or to make weapons that will be fired upon Israeli civilian population centers.
Asi writes:
Global attention must remain on the core issues causing Palestinians to be less healthy than their Israeli counterparts. Asking Palestinians, nearly half of whom are children, to pay for political stagnation with shortened and less healthy lives has been tolerated for too long and should remain unacceptable when the pandemic is over.In the past, I have debunked academic articles that seek to blame the Israeli "occupation" for schizophrenia or heart attacks, for example. "The core issues" affecting the health of Palestinian Arabs under the PA have to do with the corrupt PA leadership that siphons off international aid donations for building palaces rather than improving medical education and infrastructure, for example. Mahmoud Abbas even prefers to forego American aid because accepting it makes him liable to be sued in American courts for the terror murders of American citizens under the 2018 American Anti-Terrorism Clarification Act. And just for a final example of how much the PA cares about the health of its population, let us see what they are doing with free vaccinations donated for the people:
Here is another misrepresentation:The Palestinian Authority is charging 20 Shekels for each vaccination certificate. pic.twitter.com/cMf3BLGcA7
— Khaled Abu Toameh (@KhaledAbuToameh) March 24, 2021
Israel faced further criticism when Israeli politicians delayed, and debated blocking completely, a small shipment of vaccines from Palestinians in the West Bank to Gaza, citing a desire to extract political concessions in exchange.First of all, remember that India's and China's vaccine diplomacy was not criticized, but only Israel's. Secondly, what are these political concessions? Reading the article cited by Asi shows that some members of the government wondered if perhaps they could be exchanged for the release of two Israelis believed held by Hamas in Gaza. That is not even accurate: Hamas is holding onto the bodies of two soldiers captured by Hamas and three living Israeli civilians with mental health issues who crossed the border into Gaza and are now being held for years without communication with their families or visits by the Red Cross. Surely the editors at The Guardian are aware of the fact that Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons have regular family visits, conjugal visits, cable TV, and more: https://youtu.be/OOzODE-81pc There is more that I could find fault with but this article is already too long. You see, one of the things that frustrates me is that it is so easy and takes fewer words to vilify Israel with lies and distortions than it does to give the correct context and a balanced view that would allow readers to make up their own minds.
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