Showing posts with label Gaza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaza. Show all posts

Friday, June 19, 2009

Sameh Habeeb: A Voice from Gaza Speaks to the World


















By Sarah Price
July 2009 (The Independent Monitor)

It’s January 2009, and Israeli bombs have been devastating the besieged Gaza Strip for days. Hundreds are dead and injured; thousands are homeless; and the UN school in Gaza City, where civilians have been told to go for shelter, has just been bombed.

23-year-old journalist Sameh Habeeb is looking for a way to tell the world. But it is not easy: the power remains out in most of the strip, and as he searches Gaza City for somewhere to connect to the internet – often his only link to life outside Gaza – bombs fall around him.

When he finally manages to transmit his daily reports over a slow and unreliable dial-up internet connection, his words are picked up by friends and readers waiting to hear the updates, but more importantly, waiting to see if he has made it through the night. From his blog – Gaza Strip, the Untold Story – and his Facebook page, his words spread like wildfire throughout the internet:

“Day 9 of Israeli War On Gaza - Death toll 470, injured 2600, disastrous humanitarian situation. The operation started Saturday 8pm accompanied by heavy coverage from
artillery machine, naval gunboats and Air Force. Five key access witnessed the advancement of Israeli army. In the north, a group of tanks and soldiers advanced from Erez crossing and another group from Beit Lahia…”

His reporting began immediately after the bombing started on Saturday, December 28, 2008, as children were walking home from school.

“I was outside with my friends when the bombing started, and we went quickly to our houses and our families,” he recalls. “But it was very sad for the children that were killed that day, because the children were killed and no one knew about them. When they were going out from their schools, the schools were hit, because some of their schools were beside the police stations.”

At the Islamic University in Gaza City – one of the schools bombed during the war – he had studied English Language and Literature, but with the effects of the siege and what he perceived as an international blackout of news from Palestine, especially in English-language news outlets, he knew he needed to find a way to transmit word of Gaza’s suffering to the world. So, two years ago, he began to use his English skills to become a journalist. His experience, contacts, and growing readership helped support his efforts during the war, but it was still a challenge.

“It was very complicated. You had to write, you had to collect news and information about the war, and you had no power, no internet connection, and all these things you need for journalism were not available in the Gaza Strip - especially the power,” he explains. “So, when you are able to collect the news, you are not able to send the news. This is what happened to me.”

His family worked together and became a media unit, gathering news and calling hospitals and ministry departments, then translating the news into English and finding a way to transmit the details. Sameh also gave phone interviews around the clock to outside news agencies.

His family survived the onslaught, but some of his friends did not.

“Some friends of mine were killed, and I witnessed how they were killed,” he remembers. “I witnessed all the suffering. I witnessed how the people were scattered and their bodies were amputated. I saw the blood flowing in the streets near Shifa Hospital. I saw the children crying, fleeing to their houses when the bombing started that Saturday.”

His daily updates on the war brought him international attention, and when the war was over, those who had followed his reports wanted to meet him, and he accepted several European invitations to speak and give presentations about the war and on life in Gaza. Securing a visa to the UK was an ordeal in itself, but he finally made it out of Gaza through the Rafah border to Egypt in early March. He has spoken in more than 15 cities in England, and conducted meetings with parliament members, some of whom have responded very positively to his message. He has also toured Holland and France, and has more trips planned for Iceland, Sweden, Denmark, and Greece. He is also trying to obtain a student visa, so he can stay and earn his masters degree in England.

But where he really wants to make an impact is in the United States. He believes it is important to show the reality of this life to Americans who may only hear Israel’s side of the story.

“Imagine if Americans were living in the situation we are living in,” he says. “Imagine if you had in Florida, or in Texas, a separation wall in the neighborhoods. Imagine if you had in Washington, DC, 600 checkpoints. Imagine if you could not travel from Miami to Oregon. This is what the American people should be aware of - that we are suffering, we are under occupation, and we are being killed and massacred. We’re not trying to be victims. This is the truth. This is a fact being sent out by Desmond Tutu, by Jimmy Carter, by John Ging, the UNRWA field operations director, all these guys and many others. The American people should change the mentality. Not only listening to Ha’aretz, and not only listening to Fox News, and Israeli-controlled media.”

But, he says, he strives to keep his reports unbiased.


“I am a citizen journalist. I don’t want to be one-sided; I want to be fair in my points. I believe what I do is sacred, because I send out the suffering of the people. I am speaking on their behalf, and no one is doing this mission. I’m not being paid by the government, I’m not being paid by an organization. What I do is personal. I just narrate the stories and accounts from the ground, and let them judge.”

On President Obama’s recent assertions about Palestine, he said he gives him credit for talking about a Palestinian state when so few before him have done so, but he doesn’t want to get his hopes up.

“I want to be realistic about Obama. I don’t want my aspirations to reach the sky, out of nothing,” he says. “Obama is saying there should be a Palestinian state, but he is saying it in an abstract way. He won’t be able to stop the settlements, I’m sure of this. They have continued to build the settlements, despite the Oslo Agreement.

“In Netanyahu’s speech, he was talking about a Palestinian state in which we won’t have control of the borders, we don’t have an army, we don’t have control over the sea or the airspace, we have nothing. So, Obama is positive when he is talking about a Palestinian state, but he is negative when you go into the details about the meaning of the Palestinian state.”

Sameh hopes to make it to the U.S. in the next few months, and is currently accepting invitations from organizations here. He would also like to work in the U.S. as a journalist, translator or interpreter. But his mission remains one of education – the education of a world that has been told that Palestinians are terrorists and undeserving of a homeland of their own, and who will remain without one, if those who know better don’t continue to stand up and be heard.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009


Los Angeles Protests Gaza Massacre

By Sarah Price

The Independent Monitor, February 2009

Since the beginning of the Israeli offensive in Gaza on 27 December, there have been hundreds of protests, with hundreds of thousands of participants, staged worldwide. The first two in Los Angeles were held on 30 December.

The first was organized by LA Jews for Peace and was held at the Federal Building at Wilshire and Veteran in Westwood; the second, organized by the ANSWER Coalition, was staged in front of the Israeli consulate at Wilshire and San Vicente. Unlike demonstrations in protest of previous Israeli sieges on the Gaza Strip, these ones are garnering a lot of attention from local and national media, and many of them have been present for the protests that have been occurring since the start of the war.

There were many supportive car horns, but one protester at the Federal Building held a sign that read, “Honking is not enough” on one side, and “Stand with us” on the other.

The demonstration attracted protesters who were a mixture of Jews, Arabs, and other backgrounds. As well as standing together in protest, many of them found themselves in discussion with each other, until one man approached them to make his own message clear: he claimed the Palestinians could have shared in the prosperity, but chose not to, so they now have what they wanted.

“They just hate Jews and want to kill them all,” he shouted, “so they have to have a wall to keep them out. If they didn’t follow the Quran so much, they could live in harmony with them. But they don’t look at Jews as human beings – they look at them like a space alien would look at a human.”

One journalist, a young Muslim woman, asked for his name, but he refused to give it.

“You don’t want your name associated with your comments?” she asked.

He replied, “No, not really.”

Code Pink representatives were there collecting signatures for a petition they intend to deliver to Condoleeza Rice at the State Dept. At the time of the protest, they had collected more than 3000 names. They have been involved with protests all over the country, including one in front of California Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s house in San Francisco. But, says one organizer, it isn’t just about the current situation.

“Our call is bigger than this moment,” said Code Pink’s Jodi Evans. “Israel is unconscionable and we need to speak to that.”

She is just back from Iran and says that Palestine is the big issue there. “This started with the way we have treated human rights. Allowing people to be kept in a prison affects our relationships in the Middle East. The US leadership has corrupted the leadership in the Middle East with its ‘you’re with us or against us’ policies. Leaders in the Middle East who want a relationship with us are forced to turn a blind eye to what’s happening. That this can happen in the 21st century is unconscionable. They haven’t learned that the more you kill, the more you foster hate.”

Jerry Rubin, a Jewish protester, said that whenever he speaks out, he’s called a self-hating Jew. “As a Jew, it is incumbent on us to speak out for peace and that’s what I’ve been doing for decades. People say if we don’t live in Israel we shouldn’t have an opinion, but I don’t agree. The heartbreaking thing is that the closer we get to peace, there are always people there to ruin it. This is the time we should be doubling our efforts.”

He was planning a Bye-Bye Bush Fast for Peace and Positive Change, to last from New Year’s Eve until Inauguration Day.














An Arab protester who identified himself as Hamoud said, “the American media is very selective. In the international media you see more reason. The US government unconditionally supports Israel, right or wrong. All Americans, whatever their background, are for justice, but they are not well informed about the Palestinian people. Our government is always supposed to be for justice, human rights and respect for international law, including the UN resolution related to the Palestinian issue, number 338 [UN Security Council Resolution 338, passed in October 1973, for a ceasefire in the Ramadan War]. But there is no justice applied to them. Hamas elections were monitored and democratic. You have to deal with the whoever the people choose. You have to deal with your enemies, not just your friends. When you bomb and kill women and children and call it collateral damage, you dehumanize them.”

At the Israeli consulate, thousands of pro-Palestinian protesters were challenged by a few hundred pro-Israel demonstrators, kept separate, and on opposite sides of the street, by police in riot gear. Rush hour traffic was backed up for a mile, approaching the site. Crowds were loud and passionate, but peaceful and caused no problems. Despite a large police presence, there were few incidents. One man was arrested after a scuffle with an officer, reportedly because the officer had asked his wife to move back, putting his hand up and inadvertently touching her. The man was offended by this and reacted physically to him. The organizers saw the arrest, made an announcement about it to the crowd and got the crowd chanting, “Let him go!” He was later released and returned to the protest site, to the cheers of the crowd.

Carlos Alvarez, a 22-year-old legal assistant running for mayor of Los Angeles in March 2009, spoke to the crowd. He is very pro-Palestinian, and says Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa is absolutely not, and should be removed from office immediately for his blind support of Israel. Mayor Villaraigosa has recently defended his support of Israel, saying, “If someone was launching rockets at us, do you think we would wait for 6,000 rockets to respond? Of course not. We would respond almost immediately.”

At the time of the protests, the bombing campaign was entering its 5th day in Gaza, and the death toll had reached 400, with nearly 2000 injured. Due to the lack of medical equipment, supplies and medicine, and space and medical personnel in the hospitals, many of the injured were not expected to survive. An aid boat carrying needed medical donations, as well as doctors who planned to stay and help in the hospitals, was intercepted by the Israeli navy, rammed three times by one of the vessels, and forced to dock in Lebanon.

At the time of press, two weeks later, there were more than 900 dead and nearly 4500 injured. More than 1300 of the dead and injured were children.