Glyphosate
is just a popular farm chemical, designed by Monsanto to be used
with its seed for genetically modified crops around the world, right?
Under the guise of spraying Israeli crops, it happens to kill crops
of the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and they use it elsewhere, as
well.
The
United Nations has declared glyphosate, the principle ingredient of
Monsanto's RoundUp herbicide, to be a likely carcinogen, but that
hasn't stopped the spraying of it in close proximity to Gaza crop
fields. Wind drift has taken care of the rest, according to Haaretz,
an Israeli newspaper. The glyphosate killed crops.
The
UN warning about the chemical has not stopped it from being the most
popular herbicide in the U.S., whether it is used on farms or in
suburban landscaping. It's everywhere. Glyphosate, better known as
RoundUp, the trade name of the Monsanto chemical, was designed to be
used with genetically manipulated crops or GMOs, which are engineered
to be resistant to the killing properties of glyphosate, which kills
the weeds among the crops. It was supposed to be a boon to farmers
around the world who, with a spray tank, could wipe out the weeds
that choked out their crops. All you had to do was buy the GMO
seeds, raise the GMO crops and buy RoundUp for your sprayer. It was
easy, farmers were told.
What
they were not told is that glyphosate is rather persistent and, for
developing country farmers, quite expensive, as are the GMO seeds
that must be purchased from Monsanto that will resist the toxic
material that is sprayed on them. Farmers in India, for example,
already indebted to banks and other lenders, found the expense of
altered seeds and the herbicide to be too much debt to deal with. As
a result, farmer suicides were reported to be alarmingly higher than
ever in recent years. Inroads into the farm economies of other
developing countries had similar effects on farming communities. So
much for the character of glyphosate and Monsanto, which this year
has been purchased by Bayer, one of the world's largest chemical
companies, for a reported $60 billion. Thus, Monsanto's name will
all but disappear in time, but the effects of its toxic chemical will
live long afterward.
The use of glyphosate
in Israel is another matter and the way it is being used there is a
matter of undeclared warfare, according to Haaretz. While the Israel
Defense Force (IDF) has said that the spraying along the fence of the
Gaza Strip is for the benefit of Israeli farmers and for security
reasons, officials must know how the use of farm chemicals can affect
neighbors, as they do in the U.S., where there is some consideration
for neighboring farms when they are used. In Israel, the winds carry
the sprayed chemical far into Gaza, destroying crops as it drifts and
settles. It makes no distinction between crops and weeds, simply
destroying what it contacts.
The
Red Cross, which rarely comments on such matters, informed Haaretz of
the following: “Some of the crops located between 100 and 900
meters were completely destroyed, including in some of the areas
rehabilitated by the ICRC. [as part of a project to renew the earning
capacity of farmers on land damaged by IDF attacks – A.H.]
Irrigation pools located within one kilometer were also contaminated.
The chemicals used for spraying stay in the soil for months and even
years, and may have negative health consequences for people who
consume contaminated crops and/or inhale the herbicide.” The
paper noted: “The Red Cross message is clear. The damage goes
beyond the immediate economic damage caused by the loss of the crops;
the spraying has far-reaching health implications.”
Glyphosate
and similar chemicals have drifted as much as two kilometers into
Gaza, even into some areas that were being rehabilitated after some
of the destruction caused by the IDF. Gaza is a small enclave that
contains more than 1.8 million souls and is called by many “the
world's largest prison,” because Israel controls much of the
life of the Strip and its people. Whatever moves in or out of Gaza
is controlled by Israel, even to those seeking medical treatment
outside, including pregnant women, who are often forced to wait at
checkpoints for official permission, though birth might be imminent.
Agricultural
land is at a premium in Gaza and every square foot of land is
precious to them because, if they can't grow it, food must be
purchased from outside and, therefore, Israel determines what
foodstuffs can cross into the Strip. Palestinian farmers are forced
to put up with many barriers to their productive lives, including
being denied access to their farm fields and harassment while they
are working them, on those occasions when they are allowed access.
When
any land is lost, any progress toward self-sufficiency is slowed or
halted. This is in a living space that has been partially destroyed
by the IDF from time to time, so that electricity, potable water, and
sewage treatment are hard to come by and that deprivation has a
profound effect on the general health of Gazans. Destruction of food
crops is a violation of human rights when it is done deliberatly, so
the IDF has said that the spraying close to the border fence is
inadvertent, but they surely know the direction of the wind, the wind
speed and the strength of the spray, as anyone who uses such
chemicals would know. It appears to be a deliberate operation, with
a ready-made excuse that they are either spraying Israel crops or
clearing vegetation from the fence area for security purposes. They
know.
It
is an atrocity perpetrated against the Palestinians, who are seen as
lesser beings by many in Israel and, especially by Prime Minister
Netanyahu and other officials who determine the destiny of the
millions of Palestinians who live in the Strip, in Israel, and in the
West Bank. It may seem to be one of the minor offenses of Israel
against Palestinians, but it is an important one, as it affects the
health of all who live in Palestinian enclaves that are principally
controlled by Israel. There has been little, if any, compensation
paid to Palestinians for loss of crops by Israel.
According
to Haaretz, however, back in the 2000s, the same glyphosate and
similar chemicals were used to try to cleanse the desert of Bedouins,
who had crop fields in the Negev Desert. The Bedouins are
interlopers, according to the Israel Lands Administration, occupying
state lands. In their effort to remove them, their crops were
sprayed with lethal herbicides, including glyphosate. The aerial
spraying replaced the removal of crops by mechanical means, such as
tractors and bulldozers, because the latter methods required Israel
to have crews on the ground, where they were subject to rallies and
protests by the Bedouin.
The
use of dangerous chemicals in the manner that Israel has used them
and still uses them and, for the purposes they intend, is nothing
less than a human rights violation and a violation of international
law, but neither Israel, nor the U.S., its big brother in such
operations, pays much attention to such laws and conventions. It's
the results that count and they get results. While it is true that
such offenses are committed around the world every day, Israel's
treatment of Palestinians is a flash point that rightly has the
attention of nations and peoples around the world. It will take
action on the part of human rights advocates in all of those places
to see a change in Israel's unique offensive against Palestinian
farmers.
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