An Open Letter to Gordon Brown


December 24, 2009
Richard Kuper
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mapMedical Aid for Palestinians is calling for signatories to this open letter

Please add your name to this call for an end to the blockade of Gaza (no later than 18 January 2010).



We, the undersigned, call on Prime Minister Gordon Brown to urgently use all available diplomatic means to bring an immediate and unconditional end to the blockade of the Gaza Strip. A year after the assault on Gaza, in which almost 1,400 Palestinians were killed and more than 5,300 injured, civilians continue to pay a devastating price.

Israel’s blockade of Gaza means the denial of a broad range of goods, which include food, industrial, educational and medical items, all deemed “nonessential”, for a population who, after decades of occupation and now in their third year under blockade, are struggling to rebuild their lives in the wake of the widespread destruction. With critical reconstruction materials are not entering Gaza, the urgently needed rebuilding of medical facilities, homes and schools is impossible. A recent Medical Aid for Palestinians survey of the most vulnerable families in Gaza showed that a mere 2% had been able to repair their homes from damage incurred during last winter’s bombardment.

Across the Gaza Strip, over 3,530 homes were completely destroyed and more than 2,850 severely damaged. Tens of thousands more homes suffered structural damage. Families now face the winter rains and cold surviving in tents or in the rubble of their destroyed homes. The blockade is directly compromising one of the people of Gaza’s most basic human rights; the right to health. Israeli authorities continue to routinely, and without explanation, block or delay the entry of medical supplies and equipment, leaving hospitals less able to cope. As hospitals falter, patients seeking care outside the Gaza Strip are routinely denied exit for life-saving medical treatment; in just one month this year four people died while waiting for permission to leave. [source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), September 2009]

Outside the hospitals, a public health disaster looms: with no spare parts for maintenance or repair, water and sewage treatment facilities cannot function. The World Health Organisation reports that over 80% of Gaza’s water is no longer safe to drink, while up to 80 million cubic litres of untreated or partially treated sewage is being dumped into the sea daily.

The British Government has stated that Israel’s blockade must end, recognising its profound impact on civilians. We welcome this statement, but it must be backed up by meaningful diplomatic action. We call upon the UK Government to make urgent representations to the Government of Israel and to redouble its efforts to bring about an immediate and unconditional end to the blockade of Gaza.

This letter has been signed by, amongst others:

Professor Ilan Pape

Professor Avi Shlaim

Ahdaf Soueif

Ben Elton

Alexi Sayle

Noam Chomsky

Jeremy Hardy

Baroness Helena Kennedy

Jeremy Corbyn MP

Esther Freud

David Morrissey

Richard Horton

Juliet Stevenson

Lord David Steel

Nadim Sawalha

John Williams

Jeff Mirza

David Calder

Sir Iain Chalmers

Chris Doyle

John Austin MP

Richard Burden MP

John McHugo

The Revd Stephen Griffith MBE

John Hemming MP

Imran Khan

Peter Kilfoyle MP

Clive Betts MP

Derek Wyatt MP

Michael Mansfield QC

Colin Breed MP

Pauline McNeill MSP

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