From the news desk

Gazan crossing briefly opens, but patients remain caged

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With her papers tied loosely in her hands, Wafa Abunukira sits quietly at the crossing point with her husband. For the past 85 days, the 50-year-old mother has been waiting for a miracle, or for the gates to open.

“I have applied to leave via Israel, but was never granted a permission,” Abunukira, a cancer patient whose life depends on medical treatment unavailable in the poorly equipped hospitals of the blockaded Palestinian enclave, told Middle East Eye.

Now her only option is to leave Gaza via the Rafah border crossing with Egypt. When Egyptian authorities announced the crossing would be opened on Wednesday and Thursday, Abunukira was among those waiting patiently at dawn behind the closed gates.

But she is not the only one who wishes to leave and only limited numbers – usually a few hundred people – are permitted to cross into Egypt daily even during the rare periods when the border is open. As a cancer patient, one would think she would be a priority, but that is not the case.

Abunukira is one of more than 30,000 Palestinians who are registered with the interior ministry for travel, most of whom have medical conditions or are students or holders of residence permits in other countries, according to Iyad Al Buzum, Gaza’s de facto interior ministry spokesman.

“I have got a hospital appointment in Israel three times and each time I waited for the exit permit, but then nothing happened,” she said, holding a document showing an appointment for cancer radiotherapy treatment at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in occupied East Jerusalem.

On Wednesday, thousands of people descended on Rafah with the intention of leaving Gaza as the gates swung open for the first time in 85 days, the longest period of continuous closure since 2007 according to OCHA, the UN’s humanitarian affairs office.

More than 30,000 Palestinians are registered to travel from Gaza but only a few hundred can leave even on days with the border is open (Mohammed Asad/MEE)

“One would think that all nations would recognise the need to fight cancer, but not for those from Gaza,” said Abunukira’s husband, Usama.

“It is catastrophic that Israel has closed the border for humanitarian cases, but it’s a greater catastrophe when Egypt does it,” he added, surveying the scene of human misery through glasses-coated with dust scuffed up by thousands of feet.

He has neither the strength nor the connections to secure a place for his wife in the terminal where those fortunate enough to get inside wait to continue their journeys.

“Everyone is a priority here!” a policeman told him as he tried to explain the urgency of his wife’s case.

Here everyone also has a story to tell of lives disrupted by the blockade. Nadine Mohsen, 24, told MEE she was engaged to a Palestinian living in Qatar, but had been waiting for over a year to get married and settle in Doha.

“Why do they treat us this way? We are neither Hamas nor Fatah,” she said, accompanied by her mother, whom even if Mohsen was able to get through, had no visa to get into Egypt.

“Is there anywhere in the world where you get stuck and can’t leave?” she asked.

Then another 62-year-old mother replied in an Egyptian accent: “Yes, here and my Egyptian government is the one enforcing the blockade.”

The woman refused to give her name, but confirmed she was Egyptian. She said she was married to a Palestinian man and had to commute regularly to take care of family on both sides of the border.

While the car journey takes only about 40 minutes, she can sometimes spend months trapped on either side of the border.

“I appeal to my President Sisi not to allow this mistreatment and humiliation. Open the gates of Rafah now, as we share blood and bread with Palestinians,” she said.

As she spoke, the first ambulance was given the signal to be allowed through the first gate. Clearly, the condition of those inside was more critical than cancer.

There are still more gates to go and three buses stand ahead of the ambulance, still waiting 85 days since they were supposed to cross, but failed to make it before the gates were closed.

In a statement on Tuesday, Egyptian authorities said the decision to open the border had been taken following a meeting on Monday between Sisi and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

But Ashraf al-Qudra, a health ministry official in Gaza, urged the Egyptian authorities to extend the opening of the crossing, adding that two days was hardly enough time to help Gazans needing to travel after such a long period of closure.

Meanwhile, Abunukira stood handing copies of her papers through the barbed-wire fence. But it quickly became clear that even being a cancer patient going for radiotherapy would not be enough to secure her passage.

Thursday could be her last chance to leave as it may be months before the crossing – which was closed for 344 days in 2015 and has been open for just 42 days since October 2014 – opens again.

Yet the Rafah gate is also a place of contradictions. As well as those trying to force their way out, there are also some who are eager to come back into Gaza, and thousands waiting to welcome them back home.

Abu Yousef told MEE he had spent eight months abroad after leaving to receive treatment for kidney failure when he had expected to be away for three weeks.

“We are neither comfortable at home, nor abroad. But that is the definition of statelessness and meaning of being a Palestinian,” said the 52-year-old as he was hugged by relatives.

In the early hours before dawn, Abunikra has also hugged her daughters in the hope that this would be the day that she departed, but more than likely she will hug them again this evening.

“The tax of being a Palestinian, that’s what my wife is paying,” her husband said, biting his lower lip as his glasses continue to collect dust.

[Source: Middle East Eye]
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