A Gaza Lad, and a Man in Full

7 Dec

It’s easy to lose touch – amid the cerebral thrill of the chase attendant on applying our powers of reason to uncover the drivers and drift of this sorry planet as a dying hence triply dangerous US empire thrashes out in ever more recklessly counterproductive defence of its doomed rule – with our emotional response to the human suffering of those caught up in its forever wars. 1

Especially for us blokes.

With that in mind, here’s the first of my two picks for the weekend. Brought to us by Drop Site News, I offer it without comment other than that its final paragraph points to something often overlooked because taken for granted. Extreme circumstances – a tsunami, a nuclear attack or indeed a genocide – do tend to terminate, in frighteningly short order, the rule of law. The boy whose day-in-the-life is told here has to weave a path, to the market and back, made perilous not just by the bullets of IDF child-killers but by the criminal gangs which blossom and flourish amid such conditions. It’s an ill wind, the saying goes, that blows no one any good.

Cash Crisis in Gaza: “I barter my belongings to eat”

Palestinians in Gaza barter staple goods to fight starvation
Abubaker Abed, Dec 06, 2024

DEIR AL-BALAH — Every morning, 14-year-old Abdullah al-Basoos leaves his dilapidated tent in Deir al-Balah and heads to the open market to try to find food for his mother and five siblings. As the eldest child, al-Basoos is responsible for making sure everyone gets something to eat. His father, who stayed behind after the rest of the family fled their home in the al-Shujaiya neighborhood in Gaza City at the outset of Israel’s genocidal assault, was killed in an Israeli airstrike. Al-Basoos now spends much of the day manning a makeshift stall selling staple items like sugar, salt, and rice to try and earn some money to buy food for his family. But with skyrocketing prices and a severe cash shortage across Gaza, like many Palestinians he now finds himself having to barter.

Last week, he couldn’t afford to purchase a small amount of white cheese, which at 12 shekels (approximately $4) was too overpriced. He ended up trading some halva for the cheese at a nearby stall. He had done these types of exchanges many times before, like bartering sugar for cooking oil—trading one staple item for another in a desperate bid to survive.

“I have to barter my belongings to eat. I sometimes have to give up some basic necessities to get food. It’s a matter of prioritizing things when all things are desperately needed,” al-Basoos told Drop Site News. “I work all day and only make about 20-40 shekels a day”—about $5 to $11. “But what does that actually get for me or my family? It is not at all sufficient as that would only buy me two cucumbers and two tomatoes. It takes two days of work to buy one kilo of rice.”

In a landmark report published this week, Amnesty International concluded Israel is committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and listed Israel’s “extreme and deliberate restrictions” on aid leading to widespread malnutrition, hunger and starvation among the causes. Last month, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes including the starvation of civilians. A UN-backed panel recently issued an alert warning of “an imminent and substantial likelihood of famine occurring, due to the rapidly deteriorating situation in the Gaza Strip.” Bakeries in central Gaza have been forced to shut down due to flour and fuel shortages, looting and extortion are rampant and commercial supplies have come to a near halt. This week, UNRWA announced it was pausing aid deliveries through Karam Abu Salem, the main border crossing for goods in the south, due to a lack of safety.

“I haven’t had any flour or bread for nearly a week. I lack many basic necessities, including food, water, protection, and many things. I lack everything. I live in a shabby tent where rain comes in on us. I shiver with fear and cold every day. The same for all my siblings. I never worked in my life. I was a happy school student, but I am now forced to work. We only have one meal per day from the nearby free food distribution centers. But this option is not always guaranteed,” al-Basoos said. “We barely eat and have to save our earnings to buy most of the most basic things.”

Food prices have soared. A kilo of sugar costs currently around $13 while a liter of cooking oil goes for $30. For a family to share a meal of rice and meat, the cost is over $200, an unattainable sum.

Compounding the crisis is the shortage of banknotes in Gaza or any access to hard currency, primarily Israeli shekels. Israel has bombed and destroyed nearly all the banks and ATMs in Gaza and has blocked imports of cash despite dwindling supplies. Banks have also been attacked and looted and inflation is skyrocketing.

“You’re starting to have these midway economies because merchants are willing to accept whatever, just because they want to sell, and vice versa, people want to buy goods and they don’t have money,” says Zayne Abudaqqa, a senior fellow at The Institute for Social and Economic Progress based in Ramallah. “So bartering has become a very big thing.”

Bartering groups are even being created on Facebook and other social media platforms, where participants agree to meet and exchange goods.

As the fiscal situation worsens, currency dealers and exchanges are now charging high commission rates for providing cash. Tareq Sabbah, a currency broker in Deir al-Balah, says commissions have risen to as much as 30% recently, up from 15% just a couple of months ago. Some sellers accept credit cards, or bank or smartphone wallet transfers, but those digital transactions also come with high commission rates that aggravate the already inflated prices.

Additionally, the physical quality of banknotes also affects their value. With no fresh notes being circulated in Gaza’s economy, shekels are ripping apart from wear and tear. “The Israeli army doesn’t permit cash into Gaza. Therefore, it’s the same banknotes and coins that move among people’s hands,” a senior official at the Consumer Protection Department at the Palestinian Ministry of National Economy told Drop Site on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

Torn banknotes are valued less than new ones, meaning a torn 20 shekel note might only be worth 15 shekels on the market. Even metal coins are becoming worn and rusty and losing value.

“The targeting of banks has exacerbated the situation in Gaza. Banks are closed due to the fear of being looted by criminal gangs, being targeted by Israeli forces, or going bankrupt,” Sabbah said. “The three functioning banks in Deir al-Balah can’t meet the needs of around one million people. A number of merchants also control much of the cash in Gaza, exploiting the situation and people’s needs. Consequently, we, as exchange offices, are forced to buy cash at inflated prices and sell it to people at the same rates. We really don’t profit at all.” Though he admitted that some brokers do take advantage of the situation and double their commission rates in order to profiteer as much as possible.

The fees or commission rates are based on the supply and demand of money, Abudaqqa said. “The exchanges don’t print money, they have a finite sum of cash. So it depends on how much cash is being asked from them versus how much new cash they are able to get a hold of,” Abudaqqa said. “But the rates are also varying all the time, which means people can be scammed.”

The economic crisis is made worse by merchants who hoard cash when they can, according to Sabbah, in addition to their having to pay high extortion or fees to companies that coordinate with the Israeli military to be able to get goods into Gaza. “It feels like it is a campaign spearheaded by the Israeli army and implemented by looters and deceitful merchants,” Sabbah told Drop Site News.

“It all hampers access to basic necessities for thousands of people who can’t afford to pay such excessive commission rates,” he said. “So today you can see that people tend to barter because there appears to be no solution to this problem. The only solution is to reopen the crossings, get products in, and resume bank operations. Cash will flow in as a result. But I don’t see this being feasible without an immediate end to the war.”

The barter economy has increasingly taken hold in Gaza over the past few months as humanitarian aid and commercial goods deliveries have been strangled and banknotes made scarce. Food items are what are most commonly exchanged as their prices fluctuate wildly with the restricted food supply. But people also barter clothes, household goods, phones and other electronic devices – sometimes combined with cash – in order to obtain basic supplies.

Alaa Al-Motawaq, a 32-year-old father of three who was displaced from his home in Jabaliya at the beginning of the war last year, runs a makeshift stall selling hygiene products outside the Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital in Deir al Balah.

“People don’t have cash because the commission rates are mad – no one is ready to pay nearly half of what they earn to get their cash. That’s why people opt to barter nowadays. ” Motawaq said. “Here in my makeshift stall, some people barter a pack of tissues for a bar of soap, others sell the hygiene materials they receive in aid boxes, or sell their own belongings, to get cash and buy food for their families, while others offer a low-quality product to barter and pay the remainder with cash.”

Motawaq says he doesn’t refuse anyone who comes to barter. “I understand what they’re going through as I am one of them,” he said. “I make around $7 to $15 a day, but this is not enough to buy one kilo of tomatoes, which costs over $15. As a result, I constantly feed my children macaroni because it is relatively inexpensive. There are no other options. They frequently ask me for other things, particularly bread, but I feel pained to tell them I cannot afford any of these items and must ration bread out to one loaf a day, if not less.”

The consumer protection department at the National Economy Ministry is tasked with protecting against price gouging and monitoring the quality of food and goods. “The economic situation is utterly catastrophic because Israel doesn’t allow the entry of goods, destroyed the economic infrastructure, and bulldozed and decimated the agricultural sector all across Gaza,” the ministry official said. “The aid is regularly looted and then sold in markets. Meanwhile, some humanitarian organizations work closely with the Israeli military to get goods in for insane fees to merchants, ranging from $20,000 to $100,000 for each shipment. These organizations take high commissions from the merchants, making for the overpricing of basic life necessities.”

He added, “We have been threatened and attacked by criminal gangs here in Deir al-Balah as they had ordered us to stop working…We would normally do our work with the protection of local security forces, but Israel has targeted us multiple times in the past. So there is no way to provide protection or organization against the backdrop of the presence of criminal gangs and Israeli occupation forces even though the Palestinian Monetary Authority has been pressing hard to reopen bank branches and enhance the situation. Israel has denied that and continues blocking aid and closing the crossings.”

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My second mission, should you choose to accept it, is to watch Tucker Carlson – he who to the predictable catcalls of the West’s leaders and so-called free press interviewed the president of the Russian Federation – doing the same with its foreign minister. Many of us hold views, weak opinions strongly held, of the Russian leadership closely aligned – can’t for the life of me think how or why! – with the interests of those who behind a veneer of democracy rule a dying West.

My italicised perplexity was sarcasm, a double-edged tool I occasionally stoop to using. It’s rare to meet a Westerner whose loathing of Mr Putin or Mr Lavrov is backed by hard fact – let alone a thing seriously thought through.

As discussed as recently as my last post but one in the context of Syria, it is not in the nature of our corporate media to pause, mid propaganda blitz, and offer non-curated access to the figures they demonise in the interests of the power those media ultimately serve. 2 I put it to you, however, that both Vladimir Putin and Sergey Lavrov display a maturity and gravitas, a dignity of bearing and outlook – and, yes, a degree of sanity –  no Western leader in living memory has shown.

Why not judge for yourself? Here’s Sergey Lavrov, a man in full, on the subject of the war I and others have proved beyond all reasonable doubt was forced upon his country with extreme malice aforethought and sociopathic disregard for the human consequences.

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  1. For why the Gazan nightmare has to be categorised not as a local genocide by a racist regime, but as sharing with Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria and Yemen – and those I miss you’ll surely pardon – the grim honour of being another of Washington’s forever wars, see US Neocons & Israel’s far Right: Parts one, two, three and four.
  2. On many matters our ‘quality’ media serve us passably well but this truth facilitates a greater lie. Corporate media must show themselves trustworthy even when this may embarrass those in high office. (Not only does their long term capacity to influence opinion and manufacture consent depend on this. So too, on pain of losing market share, do their business models.) But the trust so gained helps them mislead us, more by omission than commission, on matters critical – above all the vilifying of states and leaders in the way of empire designs – to the power they ultimately serve.

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