UPDATES

Gaza’s shortages of medicines

July 4, 2011 | Allon Lee

Gaza’s shortages of medicines
news_item/medicines_nigms.nih.jpg

Last week Fresh AIR blogged on news reports and other sources (here, here and here) that show Gazans not only live longer than people in many other parts of the world but also rank well on the sliding scale of what ordinary people would consider living above the poverty line.

However it is often pointed out that there are shortages of medicines and medical supplies in Gaza, implying that this is the result of Israel’s blockade. But while there are such shortages, they actually have almost nothing to do with either Israel or the blockade. Rather, they are primarily the result of an internal Hamas-Fatah dispute.

This is rarely reported, but Reuters has just provided a useful exception in a recent story.

Mahmoud Daher, the Gaza office director of the World Health Organization (WHO), said shortages of medicine and medical equipment were at an “unprecedented” level, forcing the cancellation of some operations and evacuation of patients.
However, this problem cannot be blamed directly on Israel.
Daher said the two main reasons were a failure by the Palestinian authorities to pay suppliers on time and a lack of cooperation between health authorities in the West Bank and Gaza, which are governed by rival Palestinian movements.
The two feuding parties, Hamas and Fatah, announced a surprise reconciliation pact two months ago. Since then, attempts to enact the accord have foundered, to the intense disappointment of locals who want Palestinian unity.

The truth is, this should be obvious. Israel has never restricted the entry of medical supplies into Gaza, so how could it be responsible for the shortages?

Of course, don’t expect the flotilla types to give up this talking point, no matter how unfounded it is.

 

Tags:

RELATED ARTICLES

RECENT POSTS

Screenshot 2025 07 11 At 12.30.23 pm

‘Time’s up for talk’: Joel Burnie discusses Antisemitism Envoy’s report on Sky News

Screenshot from a video showing radical Israeli rioters torching Palestinian homes in the West Bank town of Huwara in 2023

Myths and Facts about Settler violence

National Antisemitism Envoy Jillian Segal’s Plan to Combat Antisemitism

AIJAC welcomes release of the Antisemitism Envoy’s Plan to Combat Antisemitism; Calls on Government to adopt and implement it “urgently and vigorously”

Anti-Israel protest in Melbourne in October 2024 (Image: Diana Zavaleta/ Shutterstock)

Melbourne’s night of shame

Screenshot 2025 07 08 At 5.15.51 pm

Israeli defence technology the rising star of Operation Rising Lion

SORT BY TOPICS