Humanitarian Aid and the Politics of the Israeli
Annihilation of the Palestinian People
By Ramona Wadi
Palestine Information
Center, October 19, 2023
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Destruction and death from
Israeli missiles on Gaza homes, October 19, 2023 |
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Humanitarian aid and the politics of annihilation
The United Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA)
briefing on the ramifications of Israel’s atrocious bombing of Gaza
reveals one prominent detail. “The number of killed is increasing. There
are not enough body-bags for the dead in Gaza.” Coupled with the news
that Palestinians have been forced to dig mass graves, which is
reminiscent of the 1948 Nakba, the observation illustrates a prevailing
discrepancy: Gaza cannot keep up with Israel’s colonial violence.
In other news, the UN Security Council rejected a draft resolution
by Russia seeking a ceasefire for humanitarian reasons, with five votes
in favor, four against, and six abstentions. The representatives of
countries voting against and abstaining from the resolution (some of
these countries are donors to UNRWA) have given unanimous approval to
Israel’s dehumanization of Palestinian civilians in Gaza. Noting that
the ceasefire was requested for humanitarian, not political reasons, the
politics that plays out in humanitarian aid could not be clearer.
There are not enough body bags for the dead in Gaza. According to a
Reuters report from yesterday, 2,750 Palestinians were killed in Gaza
since 7 October. Israel’s large-scale aggression has been flaunted to
the world, packaged by its security narrative. However, it is the
tangible details that stand out, despite how insignificant they may
seem. There are not enough humanitarian basics in Gaza to cater for the
Palestinian people’s daily lives, and this has become normalized even by
humanitarian aid standards. Now, the international community is
normalizing another depth to the colonial violence narrative: the
Palestinians murdered by Israel are not deserving of any dignity. Just
as in life, Palestinians in Gaza have had to live in deprivation of
access to clean water, medical supplies and interventions, to mention
two examples; their demise is also steeped in deprivation of a proper
burial.
Let us not forget that the UNSC resolution was rejected
yesterday, because the opposing and abstaining countries have not only
ostracized Russia politically, but also decided that their ties with
Israel take precedence. At a time of dire need, such political actors
have exposed the discrepancy between humanitarian aid and Israel’s
colonial violence, between marginally supporting Palestine and
unequivocally holding up Israel’s political pedestal and impunity.
In times of normalized Israeli colonial violence, UNRWA repeatedly
warned of a funding deficit that would impact services offered to
Palestinians. According to UNRWA, “neutrality helps to create what is
termed humanitarian space”. The Agency also deems the concept of
neutrality essential for its operations. Yet, UNRWA operates from a
political space and a political agenda. Funding is determined by donor
countries, many of which are politically aligned with Israel. The Agency
knows that even if funding increases, it will never exceed what Israel
inflicts on Palestinians even in times when there is no ongoing
bombardment of Gaza, let alone in this instance, where Israel’s military
might is still lauded by UNRWA’s donors as defense.
Israel’s
colonial violence and its international accomplices are defining
humanitarian aid. Such a parameter is not a measure of neutrality. Gaza
does not have enough body bags because of Israel’s colonial violence,
and humanitarian aid is so enmeshed with Israel that there is no shame
in exposing such indignity. This should serve as a reflection on the
entire humanitarian agenda when it comes to Palestinians, and a reminder
of how politically depraved it is that the international community
intends Israel’s annihilation for Gaza.
- Ramona Wadi is an
independent researcher, freelance journalist, book reviewer and blogger.
Her writing covers a range of themes in relation to Palestine, Chile and
Latin America. Her article appeared in MEMO.
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