The Press Screen office in Gaza, this morning.

Gisela Schmidt-Martin, who works for The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights in Gaza, writes:

Throughout the past five days the sound of explosions has reverberated across theGaza Strip. As I write this, the buzzing of drones is constantly overhead. People are cowering in their homes, as there is no predicting where a missile might hit next, and threats of an imminent ground invasion are bringing back awful memories of Operation Cast Lead less than four years ago, in which more than 1,100 civilians were killed.

The nights have been particularly bad. Each evening has seen at least 100 airstrikes and, last night, I lay awake listening to the booms of at least 40 shells from Israeli naval vessels being fired upon the shore. Indeed, it has been impossible to sleep so, by now, people are both terrorised and exhausted.

Far from the ‘surgical’ strikes that Israel claims to be making, these attacks have indiscriminately and disproportionately targeted civilians and civilian properties.

Of the 51 confirmed dead as of 10am today Irish time, 27 have been civilians, including 10 children and 5 women. Of the 535 wounded, 520 have been civilians, that is, 97 per cent. This number includes 140 children and 83 women. And the numbers are rapidly rising.

The sites that have been struck have included family homes, a water well, a mosque, a football pitch, numerous plots of open space and agricultural land, and Gaza International Airport, which had already been destroyed in a previous attack.

Two media office buildings were targeted in the early hours of this morning. At 1.35am, the office of Press Screen Media in the Shawa and Hussani building, Gaza City, was targeted by an Israeli Apache helicopter and hit with one shell.

Later in the morning, the building was hit by 3 additional shells in a second attack. 7 journalists and trainees were injured, including one teenager. A 20-year-old man lost a leg.

I attended a press conference outside the building, where journalists held up pieces of the shells and signs protesting the attack. As we climbed the stairs to view the destroyed office [above], we saw bloody footprints and broken glass on the steps. The scene was a surreal meeting of the mundane and the grotesque. Office chairs grey with dust, computers smashed to pieces, gaping holes in the roof and walls.

A second media office in the Al Shorouq building was also shelled this morning. Since then, international journalists have reportedly received messages from Israeli forces, telling them to leave the building. Under international humanitarian law, media personnel are given special protection in times of war. This means nothing to Israel.

As evening drew in, a number of family homes were eviscerated. The tiny bodies of four children of the Al Dalo family were pulled from the rubble and, at latest update, people were attempting to rescue others still alive but buried under the rubble.

Now, as the night deepens, people are gathered in their  homes, waiting for the next explosion. Parents cannot offer their children any protection. There are no air raid signals here, or bomb shelters. They can only hope that they will be among the lucky ones to make it through the night.

Pics by Gisela

Previously: Letter From Gaza

“My first year’s attempt halfway through. Not bad for a 19-year-old.” (Sean Kent)

“I cheated by a few days so I don’t know if it counts but hey, it’s still money to a good cause” (Rob Thompson)

Can a month-long moustache-growing competition ever be said to be ‘hotting up’?

YOU decide.

Sean and Robert win €30 worth of credit with Hailo, the Dublin taxi app people, who will also donate €30 to the gents’ Mo’ funds.

Moustcahe Grazias Thanks all

Christopher Tierney writes:

This video footage was recorded on the 17th of March 2012 as Galway’s small Indian Community took part in the St Patrick’s Day Celebrations, and later as Ireland mourned the death of Savita Halappanavar; an outstanding ambassador for her home country and someone who will be sorely missed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faZj8L5pqGw&feature=youtu.be

This , etc.

Independent TD Clare Daly at the Savita rally this evening.

All morning I’ve been contacted by people from France, from America and from towns and villages around this country to say that while they can’t be here with us physically they are here with us in spirit. 

This has got to be the worst and best of days for Ireland.  Who would have thought when two months ago we marched in this very spot to demand the right to choice, who would have thought then that we would be back here today, that so soon, the event we all hoped would never happen, actually tragically did. That a vibrant, healthy, wonderful young woman starting family life has needlessly died, and died because of the failure of successive governments to deal with this issue, in fact death by political cowardice and shame on them.

But similarly, who would have thought that so many people would turn out in such magnificent numbers to first and foremost stand and mourn and express solidarity with Savita and her family, but on the other hand, not just that, because she deserves more than that, to deliver a clear and unambiguous message – No More.

Twenty years ago, a social movement forced the Supreme Court to act; twenty years on, this is another social movement sparked by another tragic event, but this isn’t 20 years ago, and we’re not going back to wait for a third  tragedy, we’re not waiting twenty years, we’re not waiting 10 years and we’re not waiting one year, we want action on these issues now.

Earlier in the year when myself, Mick Wallace and Joan Collins moved legislation supported by the United Left Alliance to legislate for X, we were told that legislation wasn’t necessary, to wait for the Expert Group. 

Now clearly it was necessary, because Savita wasn’t even pregnant then, and now she’s dead. But also, we have the Expert Group.  And what is the response from our government – Enda says it’s not going to be rushed, this man has some definition of being rushed.

This political pygmy sat in the Dail for over 30 years, while one 150,000  Irish women were exported out of here, for many many reasons. They travelled for many different reasons, none of them easy, all of them valid, and the only reason they had to travel was to maintain the hypocrisy that there are no Irish abortions. Of course there are, they just don’t happen here, and that’s not good enough. 

Against a background of increased austerity and the less and less revenue that people have, there is no doubt that the option of the boat and the plane is not going to be available for many women.  Our lives and our health are being jeopardised by further waiting.  And I have to say that it’s bad enough that Fine Gael take this stand, but for the Labour party to stay in government while this issue is unresolved is unsustainable to my mind.  Governments have been brought down over VAT on children’s shoes, surely women’s lives are more important than that.

And the last couple of points I’ll make is that we’re here to let it be known, that if this government doesn’t act within the next week, we will move to reintroduce our bill as an interim measure to protect women’s lives and the first step to dealing with broader issues.  When we do this will you be there to demand that this time they act on it, because that’s what we need and, let’s be honest, it’s clear that that’s not enough, that the X case legislation is not enough, that women are dying before we get treatment, before they get assistance in their health, but to get to the next stage, we have to remove the 8th Amendment before all other issues can be addressed, and we will be going on to that challenge after this one.

The last point I want to make is that this morning I received an email from a 67-year-old man and he said that he had heard this story and debate so many times over the decades, the time has come to cut through the knots that we’ve been tied up in by people who are as slippery as eels as cold as stone.  He went on to say, these self-appointed guardians of the threshold have ruled the roost for so long they think they own the perch.  The time’s up, lads, get off your perch because people won’t stand for it any longer. 

You have done a wonderful thing here today, that out of this terrible tragedy, we may build a better future.  Don’t let them off the hook, don’t come back and wait until the next tragedy.  The pressure has to be kept up, only people power will deliver on this issue, so don’t just go home, come back again in the next week or two  for Savita, for my daughter, your sister, your mother, your wife, your friend, NEVER AGAIN.

Meanwhile, Via Blathnaid Healy, a six-year-old girl makes her voice heard:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6l_DMX4_aTI

Mmmf.

 

An estimated crowd of up to 10,000 people, according to the organisers (so expect the usual disputes), march for Savita through Dublin city within the past two hours

Via Parvenov, Fergal Laura Hutton (Photocall Ireland) Parvenov, Cormo, Sclarkey, Randomirish, Aaron McAllorum, Aoife Mulqueen, Choice Ireland.

Meanwhile, Independent TD Clare Daly’s rather incredible piece of oratory at Leinster House:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faZj8L5pqGw&feature=youtu.be

 

Meanwhile, outside the Irish Embassy, London, this afternoon:

Via Henri Williams

Broadsheet.ie