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News ID: 103655
Publish Date : 14 June 2022 - 21:26

Rights Group: Egypt ‘Exacerbating’ Gaza Blockade

CAIRO (MEMO) – Policies
implemented by the Egyptian government at the Rafah border crossing to Gaza have “exacerbated” human rights conditions for Palestinians, according to a new report by Human Rights Watch.
Omar Shakir, Israel and Palestine director at HRW, says that Egypt has helped the Zionist regime turn Gaza into “an open-air prison.”
Whilst many start travelling again after two years of the global coronavirus pandemic, Gaza’s population remains under a 15-year lockdown.
The Zionist regime’s authorities have blockaded Gaza since 2007, banning Palestinians from travelling through the Erez crossing, which is controlled by the occupying regime’s army, and from operating a seaport or airport in the strip.
Egypt has exacerbated the blockade by restricting and sometimes fully closing the Rafah Crossing into the Sinai Peninsula, which has become the only route for Palestinians in Gaza to travel in and out.
Following the 2013 toppling of the late President Mohamed Morsi, Egypt exerted control over the Rafah Crossing and kept it closed for five years.
In 2018 restrictions eased, but the crossing remains more tightly sealed.
According to the watchdog’s statistics, pre-2013 an average of 40,000 people crossed every month whilst in 2021 an average of 15,077 crossed.
If Palestinians are allowed to travel through the Rafah Crossing and onwards through Egypt, they must pay high fees and bribes to try and ease their passage.
Five Palestinians interviewed by Human Rights Watch said they suffered intrusive searches at the crossing and that Egyptian officers had confiscated their belongings.
The seven-hour journey from Rafah to Cairo airport can take up to three days due to the checkpoints and other delays and passengers are often prevented from using their phones.