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"Shocking" rate of malnutrition in donor-dependent Gaza

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ProgressiveMuslim Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-18-08 08:08 AM
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"Shocking" rate of malnutrition in donor-dependent Gaza

Report, PCHR, 15 February 2008


Ard al-Insan Child Nutrition Center in Gaza city treated almost 8,500 malnourished youngsters last year. (PCHR)


"We receive 20-25 new referrals every day, and we see approximately 350 children a week here at the centre. Last year we treated more than 8,400 children here in Gaza city, plus another 8,000 children at our centre in Khan Younis. All of them were under five years old, and all of them were malnourished."

Najah Zohod is the Nutritional Director of the Ard al-Insan Child Nutrition Center in Gaza City. The center works exclusively with malnourished under-five-year-olds. Children are regularly referred to Ard al-Insan from the Gaza-based UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) which supports some of the poorest communities in the Gaza Strip. But many mothers self-refer, by simply turning up at the center with their babies and young children. This morning Ard al-Insan is crowded with women and children queuing for assessments and treatment. Most of the children are quiet, and some look thin and listless.

"Our target group is children suffering second and third degree malnutrition" says Najah Zohod. "We weigh every child who comes here, and take blood and urine samples. Approximately half the children are mildly malnourished. But 32 percent are suffering second-degree malnutrition -- and the remaining 16 percent are third-degree malnourished." All those assessed as suffering second- or third-degree malnutrition are referred to the Nutrition Unit. "We give the children nutritious meals here at the center, and also train mothers to feed their children a healthy balanced diet," says Najah. "We usually serve the children fresh meat, fruit and vegetables. But this week we cannot serve the children any fruit at all, because of the closure."

Israel's ongoing siege and closure of the Gaza Strip is chronically affecting every aspect of life in Gaza, including access to fresh food and water. Fresh meat has been scarce for weeks, and now there are also shortages of fresh fruit. Meanwhile chronic power cuts across the Strip have left 50 percent of Gaza households (around 750,000 people) desperately short of fresh drinking water, because there isn't enough fuel to power their electric water pumps more than four to six hours per day. Despite the fact that collective punishment is illegal under international human rights and humanitarian law, the Israeli Occupying Forces (IOF) continue to collectively punish 1.5 million Gazan civilians. Many of the women who come to Ard al-Insan for help to feed their malnourished children are now dependent on food aid assistance from either UNWRA or the World Food Program (WFP). But WFP is currently unable to provide 84,000 of its poorest beneficiaries in Gaza their full aid rations, also because of the continued closure. Some of the poorest families in the Gaza Strip are struggling to obtain adequate food for their children.

http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9308.shtml
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Waya Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-18-08 10:18 AM
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1. And Israel can't figure out .................
......why those Quassams keep coming (not that I approve of it). But, ya know, cause and effect..........
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Tom Joad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-18-08 12:32 PM
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2. why is this shocking? Isn't this what Israel has intended to do?
This is the Israeli-imposed "diet".

Even if they are keeping people on the brink of survival, it is destroying the whole of Gaza, it is the intentional infliction of collective punishment so severe that a whole people will have the foundations of society refused them --for a society to survive, it needs more than the dozen commodities that Israel sometimes allows into Gaza. Many children will suffer life-long effects from this siege.

yes, virginia, it's called genocide.
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henank Donating Member (755 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-18-08 12:48 PM
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3. Yet the Gazans are shocked at Egyptian poverty
And the Egyptians were shocked at the non-level of starvation and poverty in Egypt.

Associated Press

Jihad Jaradeh, 24, a Gazan whose family owns a furniture shop, reached the Egyptian town of El Arish, some 25 miles from the border. Although shop owners doubled and tripled prices, Jaradeh paid up, saying he even gave extra "because they looked so poor."

Jaradeh is not typical; two-thirds of Gazans live on less than $2 a day. But many travelers remarked on the discrepancy between their more glamorous image of urban Egypt — derived mostly from movies — and the run-down border region of unpaved streets and small houses they encountered.

...snip...

After the border breach, Mohammed drove for days to dodge Egyptian security checkpoints, making money by renting his truck to Palestinians who wanted to ferry goods into Gaza.

"I've always wanted to see Palestine anyway," said a smiling Mohammed, a slight dark man with black eyes. Pointing to cars crowding a nearby street, he said: "I thought conditions here would be harder than this. I thought people would be starving."


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ProgressiveMuslim Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-18-08 12:50 PM
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4. Yes, Henank, Gaza is a veritable paradise. Israel is indeed a kind jailer! nt
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henank Donating Member (755 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-18-08 12:54 PM
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5. Selective shock - as an Indian Muslim writes
At the altar of Palestine

After he scored a goal in a recent match against Sudan in the African Nations Cup, Egyptian soccer star Abou Trika lifted his jersey to show an undershirt inscribed with the message "Sympathize with Gaza." His message earned him a yellow card for violating a no-politics rule, but promptly crowned him the latest hero for Palestine.

While the plight of Gazans does indeed deserve concern, it was telling that Abou Trika's t-shirt made no mention of sympathy for, say, Darfur, where some 200,000 have died in fighting between rebels and pro-government militias and 2.5 million driven from their homes. But it has been so for decades in the Arab world, where issue after issue is sacrificed at the altar of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

I must confess that when Hamas militants blasted holes into Egypt's border to end an Israeli blockade on Gaza, my first thought was how lucky those Gazans were. Landlocked and living on less than $2 a day—their plight rarely elicits envy, I know. But there are Egyptian slums that swim in more sewage and are submerged in even greater poverty. In those slums, chronic diseases go unchecked and uncured, and children grow up next to the dead in tombs turned into makeshift-housing.

Yet nobody rushes to blast holes into the imaginary border of poverty that suffocates those slums, nor are they sporting t-shirts urging us to sympathise. Why?

Because Israel cannot be blamed.
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ProgressiveMuslim Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-20-08 09:33 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. Huh? Who's the Indian Muslim? I don't think you read the piece.
While Egyptian writer Eltahawy takes a swipe at Hamas and at Egypt's corruption, she's hardly minizing the very real and serious plight of Gazans.

Of course corruption Egyptian leaders "use" the I/P conflict to divert their people's attention from their own plight. Makes one wonder why the US backs these dictators so strongly, doesn't it?

As for the actions of Egyptian soccer star Abu Treika, he was indeed a hero that day, written about in my own hometown rag!

Thanks for the link - it was the first pic I saw of the shirt!
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-20-08 10:46 AM
Response to Reply #5
7. And what about the Congo? There are 5 million dead in the Congo.
Nobody cares about them.
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