http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/world/04-palestinians-fake-cancer-to-flee-blockaded-gaza-qs-04


Palestinians fake cancer to flee blockaded Gaza 

Thursday, 10 Dec, 2009 

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip: A healthy man in blockaded Gaza faked cancer, hoping the 
deadly disease would be his ticket out of the territory that has become an 
open-air prison for its 1.4 million residents.

His ploy failed, but several thousand others succeeded in fleeing this shabby 
sliver of land this year using bribes and fake medical reports, a sign of 
Gazans' desperation over growing poverty and misery under the strict border 
closure enforced by Egypt and Israel since Hamas militants overran Gaza in June 
2007.

The blockade has few loopholes. Israel allows passage to top business people 
and a limited number of Gazans seeking treatment for serious illnesses. Egypt 
sporadically opens its border for university students and those with residency 
abroad.

Everyone else is stuck, even as Palestinian polls suggest nearly half the 
population would like to leave if they could. Deepening the Gazans' sense of 
imprisonment, they must now also obtain permission from the Hamas government 
before attempting to leave, further complicating an obstacle-ridden path to 
freedom.

Those trying to bribe their way out usually approach middlemen who put them in 
touch with local doctors, Palestinian health officials or Egyptian bureaucrats 
and military officials.

Akram Ghneim, 31, an unemployed father of six living off food handouts, told 
The Associated Press he promised $260 to a Palestinian middleman, who obtained 
for him a bogus medical report saying he had cancer. 

Ghneim said he hoped he'd get a rare spot on the list of Gaza patients with 
life-threatening illnesses who are allowed to enter Israel for treatment.

Once in Israel, he planned to disappear and work illegally. But Israeli 
intelligence officials, who review applications, rejected him last summer, 
saying his cancer report was forged.

'This is what the blockade does,' said Ran Yaron, of the Israeli group 
Physicians for Human Rights, which helps bring Gazans into Israel for treatment 
by lobbing Israeli defence officials.

'Most are frustrated and devastated people.'

Yaron said fakers are a minority, but clog up the system for real patients who 
have to go through longer checks as a result.

Of more than 7,000 Gazans who crossed into Israel this year to seek medical 
treatment, some 500 haven't returned, said Col. Moshe Levi, an Israeli defence 
official.

Some stay in Israel, while others move to the West Bank, a territory controlled 
by Israel but partly administered by Palestinians loyal to Fatah, bitter rivals 
of Hamas.

One Fatah loyalist, a healthy 30-year-old woman, said she was desperate to 
leave Gaza after being harassed by Hamas officials.

She bribed a Gaza doctor with $100 to certify she had 'whatever cancer could 
only be treated in Israel.' The doctor then paid off a physician serving on a 
Palestinian committee that certifies medical reports for Israeli military 
officials, the woman said. She eventually succeed in reaching the West Bank and 
spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of being sent back to Gaza by the 
Israeli authorities.

Israeli intelligence officials investigate Gazans applying to enter Israel to 
ensure they are not militants and to check whether medical certificates are 
genuine, but tend to rely on the Palestinian committee to confirm that the 
patient is actually sick.

The head of the Palestinian committee, Bassam Badri, denied members accept 
bribes. Omar Masri of the Palestinian Health Ministry in the West Bank said the 
issue was 'too stupid for a response.'

But Palestinians who have successfully used bogus transfers said some health 
officials accept payments, anything from $100 to $500. They spoke on condition 
of anonymity because of the illicit system.

Others pay bribes to get out through the Rafah border crossing into Egypt, said 
a senior Hamas official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he did not 
want to alienate Egyptian authorities.

Payments range from $400 to $5,000, according to Rafah residents familiar with 
the system, known among Gazans as 'Egyptian coordination.'

An Egyptian security official at the border denied Egyptian officers take 
bribes to allow crossings. He said that three months ago, two Palestinian 
officials posted on the Egyptian side were removed on suspicion of taking 
bribes. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not 
authorised to talk to the press.

Depending on the sum, the middleman's talents and luck, bribe-paying Gazans can 
sometimes leave immediately through the crossing, with Egyptian officials 
stamping them through, even when it's closed, Rafah residents said. Otherwise, 
bribe-payers wait for one of the official border openings by Egypt, usually 
lasting for around three days every month or two.

About 2,000 Gazans get through each time the border opens. Only half are on the 
official list and the rest are handled directly by the Egyptian authorities, 
said Ehab Ghussein, the Interior Ministry spokesman in Gaza.

Thousands more have applied to leave but don't make the list, he said.

Numerous tunnels run under the Gaza-Egypt borders in a thriving smuggling trade 
bringing goods into the territory. But few Gazans use them to sneak into Egypt, 
because once on the other side they would have no official status and be more 
vulnerable to Egyptian police.

But even paying bribes isn't a guaranteed exit strategy.

Hazem Riyashi, 27, says he paid a middleman $1,000 in July to cross through 
Egypt, hoping to reach the Gulf emirate of Dubai, where his family lives. But 
the middleman disappeared and has not returned his calls. Riyashi hasn't given 
up, and is looking for someone else to pay off.

'I think everybody should leave Gaza,' he said. 'Even the air smells cleaner 
abroad.'



Tags: Gaza,siege of Gaza,Hamas Gaza,Gazans 

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