Saudi Arabia: Who is to blame for Gaza?
Written by: Global Voices
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As in the rest of the Arab world, Saudi Arabia's blogs have been full of commentary on the events in Gaza. However, there is no consensus as to who is politically responsible.Saudiwoman is pleased to see what her country is doing:
It makes my heart swell with pride to know that my country is trying to do something for the Palestinians in Gaza. A friend who works in the military hospital here in Riyadh told me that for the past two days the hospital has been discharging people left and right to accommodate the wounded from Gaza and today the first airlift arrived. Everyone here in Saudi feels helpless and frustrated when we see the photos of the Israeli air raids aftermath. The photos of bleeding children and leveled buildings are driving us crazy. We need to have something to do. Itâs so bad that many people went to government hospitals wanting to donate blood to the Palestinians. So many that the Health minister had to issue a statement saying that the Palestinians need supplies not blood.But Ahmed Ba-Aboud has a different perspective:
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All our scribblings will not change any anything, but I can only laugh
at the piecemeal efforts I see. There are those who want to open the borders to ambulances, and those who announce treatment of the injured. That means we have no connection to the healthy amongst the
besieged people of Gaza, just wait for the injured and dead to offer them a helping hand.
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My people, is it possible that we have reached this level of paralysis and impotence, by any measure? We
find, for example, an Arab president declaring that he will work to facilitate the procedures for the passage of humanitarian aid. And another speaks of his efforts in formulating a draft Arab
resolution to condemn what is going on, while a group of them plans to address the issue in the agenda of their meeting originally scheduled earlier. Talk, talk, talk, talk. [â¦] My
friends, we [Arabs] are a nation of which nothing remains but its name, and the people are no more than a voice shouting in every direction, until it has become a cacophony and gets on
oneâs nerves to the point of disgust.
Abdul Rahman Allahem thinks Egypt has been unfairly blamed:ÙÙØ£Ø³Ù Ø£Ù Ù
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Unfortunately, bloody events such as these are a golden
opportunity for merchants of blood and body parts to take advantage of the massacre, to achieve political gains from the remains of the martyrsâ corpses in Gaza. This is very evident
if we see and hear the unjustified pressure on Egypt and the attempt to charge it with everything that has happened in Gaza, in an attempt for others to abdicate responsibility.
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Abdullah Al-Shahri thinks there's no point blaming any Arab nation:ÙØ§
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No more blame for the Arab worldâ¦I beg youâ¦Believe me it is also sufferingâ¦and itâs embarrassing to ask one sick
person to treat another one!
Writing in another post, Yaser Al-Ghaslan has a very clear idea of who is to blame:ÙØ³Øª Ù
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I am not a supporter of Hamas, and at the same time, I
believe that Abbas and his [Fatah] movement are guilty of unforgivable negligence towards the people of Gaza. [â¦] Do not blame Israel for what it did today, for that is part of the
social and political structure of a brutal and barbaric state that is seeking to kill all Arabs and Palestinians, we all know that. The strongest blame should be for those Palestinian politicians, and
those whom I want to describe with words not worthy of respectable people, so out of respect for your ears and eyes I won't cross the limits of good manners. [â¦] The blood of the
children of Gaza is a shame on you, supporters of Fatah and Hamas and other nameless politicians, who do not even have a state and have appointed yourselves as heroic commanders. (Shame on the slaves
of authority, shame on the slaves of the dollar, shame on the sons of ….)
Hala, who currently lives in the USA, asks:Would wars and weapons be the only means â" as ever â" to reach resolutions and peace?Sabria Jawhar says:
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was on an Arabic news show last week in which he basically bragged that Israel is the biggest, baddest and most powerful country in the region and it wonât hesitate to use its might to protect itself. Well, my question is if Israel is indeed the biggest and most powerful country in the Middle East, why doesnât it take the high road and expend a lot of that negative energy into something positive, like sparing the lives of innocents and demanding the resumption of peace talks with Hamas. The sad fact is the Gaza Stripâs civilians are simply pawns in a power struggle that should have ended long ago. And the price will be more blood.And Ahmed Al-Omran reports on some demonstrations that have taken place:
On the 19th of December, a few hundred people demonstrated in Qatif, a predominantly Shiite area east of Saudi Arabia, to protest the Israeli siege on Gaza. The protesters lifted posters of Hizbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasarallah and chanted anti-Israeli and anti-US slogans. According to the website Rasid, the demonstration ended peacefully under the eyes of security forces who watched closely. However, tens of young men who demonstrated were arrested in the following week. After Israel started their barbarian attack on Gaza last Saturday, thousands of angry demonstrators took to the streets in Egypt, Jordan, Yemen and other countries. In Saudi Arabia, where the law does not give people the right to demonstrate publicly, more than 60 political and human rights activists signed a letter to the Ministry of Interior asking for permission to hold a peaceful demonstration in Riyadh. While activists in Riyadh were waiting for a reply from MOI, protesters in Qatif demonstrated again on Monday, but this time they were faced by the security forces and riot police who fired rubber bullets to break up the protest. Mansour al-Turki, spokesman of MOI, denied that such protest took place. âStreet protests are banned in the Kingdom and that the security forces will intervene to enforce the ban,â he added. His denial is not surprising, but everyone knows that people of Qatif have a long history in street protests with major demonstrations held in 1979, 2002 and 2006. [â¦] People should be allowed to protest, but it seems that the government is afraid that people will realize the power of public demonstration and later use it not just to protest against Israel but also to demand their rights. Giving permission to these demonstrations would set a precedent that the government clearly doesnât want to deal with its results and consequences. 2009 will be interesting.View original post.
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