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For the anti-Israeli crowd

Hossfly

ZIONIST
Gold Supporting Member
Dec 5, 2008
49,275
32,918
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Ft Worth,TX
WHO report gives details of Israeli aid to Palestinians

A report published recently by the World Health Organization (WHO) details the extensive efforts Israel has gone to in order to facilitate the transfer of Palestinian patients to Israeli medical facilities, despite the ongoing rocket fire from terror groups in the Strip. The data shows that 16,553 Palestinians entered Israel from the Gaza Strip to receive medical treatment in hospitals situated both in Israel and in the West Bank in 2012. "We will continue to assist the Palestinian population to the extent required, in the transportation of the Palestinian patients for medical treatment in Israel, as well as holding workshops and practical and theoretical seminars in Israel, in order to provide the Palestinian doctors with better tools and improve the health system in the Judea and Samaria region and in the Gaza Strip," conclude COGAT officials.

Click here to read about aid Israel sent to Gaza despite incoming rocket fire (PDF) http://www.cogat.idf.il/Sip_Storage/FILES/4/3834.pdf
 
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God bless Israel for helping the Palestinians. Even though Israel's efforts to do so are all in vain.

Has everyone noticed how Israel's enemies on this board are also America's enemies? Why on earth do they stay here in the USA when they can go live in Jew free Gaza or some Islamic country?



WHO report gives details of Israeli aid to Palestinians

A report published recently by the World Health Organization (WHO) details the extensive efforts Israel has gone to in order to facilitate the transfer of Palestinian patients to Israeli medical facilities, despite the ongoing rocket fire from terror groups in the Strip. The data shows that 16,553 Palestinians entered Israel from the Gaza Strip to receive medical treatment in hospitals situated both in Israel and in the West Bank in 2012. "We will continue to assist the Palestinian population to the extent required, in the transportation of the Palestinian patients for medical treatment in Israel, as well as holding workshops and practical and theoretical seminars in Israel, in order to provide the Palestinian doctors with better tools and improve the health system in the Judea and Samaria region and in the Gaza Strip," conclude COGAT officials.

Click here to read about aid Israel sent to Gaza despite incoming rocket fire (PDF)
 
Better for Israel to gain some resepect from the Palestinians by treating them with the same Arab country love & justice they are so well accustomed to & so well deserve.
 
Maybe a lot of those people wouldn't need to go to the hospital, if Israel let them have clean water? Here's another report from the WHO...

Gaza has a water crisis. Most people in the international community do not know the details as to why it exists and the root causes of the resource deficiency.

For the more than 1.4 million Palestinians who live in Gaza water shortages and water deterioration affects their health. Moreover, the water crisis creates agricultural, economic, social, and political instabilities that have regional ramifications. Most of the existing problems are a direct and indirect result of Israeli policy.

If the resource inequalities are not rectified soon, the Middle East will be facing an irreversible human and environmental disaster.
In addition, the OP gives a false account of the reality regarding the checkpoints in the West Bank.

Overall, West Bank Palestinians have limited or no access to medical care, and residents of villages and outlying areas are most gravely affected. Then consider so-called “risk profile” people being denied passage through checkpoints. Another example is persons needing a permit for access to Jerusalem hospital treatment. To get one, patients must provide medical documents testifying to their illness and confirming their appointment at a specific hospital.

The situation is especially problematic for pregnant women when their time to deliver approaches and their hospital is in Jerusalem. Permits are valid only for one or two days, as it is for all ill persons, but the moment when it’s needed is uncertain. They must thus be continually renewed, and there are times when it’s impossible. It thus forces mothers to give birth at checkpoints because they’re denied passage through them.
According to Physician's for Human Rights...
In 1996, the Physicians for Human Rights petitioned the State Attorney’s office for relief and nominally got it – to allow passage through checkpoints without permits in cases of medical emergency so ill persons can be treated. All checkpoint locations are supposed to comply, but it turns out they don’t. Soldiers don’t treat Palestinians kindly, are unresponsive to their needs, and are untrained medically to recognize emergencies.

Patients encounter other obstacles as well. Their travel is slowed by having to use long, winding and worn roads; they’re sometimes blocked causing long delays; they have no access to ambulances or other transportation; must pass through checkpoints when they do or by foot; be up against closed ones; be forced to wait at open ones; and undergo searches.

These problems make people more dependent on first aid that can’t cope in emergency cases where special expertise is required. At times, long distances are involved, and when need is greatest, it means lives are endangered. This is what Palestinians endure daily.
And you wonder why they get rockets?
 
Maybe a lot of those people wouldn't need to go to the hospital, if Israel let them have clean water? Here's another report from the WHO...

Gaza has a water crisis. Most people in the international community do not know the details as to why it exists and the root causes of the resource deficiency.

For the more than 1.4 million Palestinians who live in Gaza water shortages and water deterioration affects their health. Moreover, the water crisis creates agricultural, economic, social, and political instabilities that have regional ramifications. Most of the existing problems are a direct and indirect result of Israeli policy.

If the resource inequalities are not rectified soon, the Middle East will be facing an irreversible human and environmental disaster.
In addition, the OP gives a false account of the reality regarding the checkpoints in the West Bank.

Overall, West Bank Palestinians have limited or no access to medical care, and residents of villages and outlying areas are most gravely affected. Then consider so-called “risk profile” people being denied passage through checkpoints. Another example is persons needing a permit for access to Jerusalem hospital treatment. To get one, patients must provide medical documents testifying to their illness and confirming their appointment at a specific hospital.

The situation is especially problematic for pregnant women when their time to deliver approaches and their hospital is in Jerusalem. Permits are valid only for one or two days, as it is for all ill persons, but the moment when it’s needed is uncertain. They must thus be continually renewed, and there are times when it’s impossible. It thus forces mothers to give birth at checkpoints because they’re denied passage through them.
According to Physician's for Human Rights...
In 1996, the Physicians for Human Rights petitioned the State Attorney’s office for relief and nominally got it – to allow passage through checkpoints without permits in cases of medical emergency so ill persons can be treated. All checkpoint locations are supposed to comply, but it turns out they don’t. Soldiers don’t treat Palestinians kindly, are unresponsive to their needs, and are untrained medically to recognize emergencies.

Patients encounter other obstacles as well. Their travel is slowed by having to use long, winding and worn roads; they’re sometimes blocked causing long delays; they have no access to ambulances or other transportation; must pass through checkpoints when they do or by foot; be up against closed ones; be forced to wait at open ones; and undergo searches.

These problems make people more dependent on first aid that can’t cope in emergency cases where special expertise is required. At times, long distances are involved, and when need is greatest, it means lives are endangered. This is what Palestinians endure daily.
And you wonder why they get rockets?
Why not tell us also about the water crisis in that part of the world? Surely you must have been pictures of many Muslim countries where there is a such a shortage of water. And, Loinboy, people have to go to hospitals for many, many reasons. I am sure that even you know that. Meanwhile, if you dislike Israel so much and don't want to be a hypocrite, should you ever need one of the medical advances coming out of that country, please turn it down.


Good news for knees | ISRAEL21c


Better brain surgery, with flight simulation tech | ISRAEL21c
 
Yea, the zionists are real humanitarians........:cuckoo:

I wonder how many of those Palestinians emergency trips to the Israeli hospitals were because of IDF targeted weapons fire and indiscriminate bombing of civilians??............ :cool:
 
Yea, the zionists are real humanitarians........:cuckoo:

I wonder how many of those Palestinians emergency trips to the Israeli hospitals were because of IDF targeted weapons fire and indiscriminate bombing of civilians??............ :cool:

0

Unlike your Muslim brothers, the IDF doesnt target civilians. People like you just say that to make Israel look bad, but you have no proof.

Dont think Israel contributes with humanitarian aid

Here ya go Sunni Fag !

Israeli aid worldwide

:cuckoo:
 
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Yea, the zionists are real humanitarians........:cuckoo:

I wonder how many of those Palestinians emergency trips to the Israeli hospitals were because of IDF targeted weapons fire and indiscriminate bombing of civilians??............ :cool:
Yes, Sunni Man, your Sunni brethren are such good humanitarians. Maybe Sunni Man can tell us about all the Sunni contributions which benefit mankind
besides murdering and wounding innocent people.

Suicide bomber slays 26 outside Hangu mosque | Newspaper | DAWN.COM
 
This is like having a robber (Israel) shoot you during the robbery.

And then be expected to be grateful to the robber.

Because he called 9/11 for an ambulance as he speed off in his get away car. :cuckoo:
 
Maybe a lot of those people wouldn't need to go to the hospital, if Israel let them have clean water? Here's another report from the WHO...

Gaza has a water crisis. Most people in the international community do not know the details as to why it exists and the root causes of the resource deficiency.

For the more than 1.4 million Palestinians who live in Gaza water shortages and water deterioration affects their health. Moreover, the water crisis creates agricultural, economic, social, and political instabilities that have regional ramifications. Most of the existing problems are a direct and indirect result of Israeli policy.

If the resource inequalities are not rectified soon, the Middle East will be facing an irreversible human and environmental disaster.
In addition, the OP gives a false account of the reality regarding the checkpoints in the West Bank.

Overall, West Bank Palestinians have limited or no access to medical care, and residents of villages and outlying areas are most gravely affected. Then consider so-called “risk profile” people being denied passage through checkpoints. Another example is persons needing a permit for access to Jerusalem hospital treatment. To get one, patients must provide medical documents testifying to their illness and confirming their appointment at a specific hospital.

The situation is especially problematic for pregnant women when their time to deliver approaches and their hospital is in Jerusalem. Permits are valid only for one or two days, as it is for all ill persons, but the moment when it’s needed is uncertain. They must thus be continually renewed, and there are times when it’s impossible. It thus forces mothers to give birth at checkpoints because they’re denied passage through them.
According to Physician's for Human Rights...
In 1996, the Physicians for Human Rights petitioned the State Attorney’s office for relief and nominally got it – to allow passage through checkpoints without permits in cases of medical emergency so ill persons can be treated. All checkpoint locations are supposed to comply, but it turns out they don’t. Soldiers don’t treat Palestinians kindly, are unresponsive to their needs, and are untrained medically to recognize emergencies.

Patients encounter other obstacles as well. Their travel is slowed by having to use long, winding and worn roads; they’re sometimes blocked causing long delays; they have no access to ambulances or other transportation; must pass through checkpoints when they do or by foot; be up against closed ones; be forced to wait at open ones; and undergo searches.

These problems make people more dependent on first aid that can’t cope in emergency cases where special expertise is required. At times, long distances are involved, and when need is greatest, it means lives are endangered. This is what Palestinians endure daily.
And you wonder why they get rockets?

Maybe a lot of those people wouldn't need to go to the hospital, if Israel let them have clean water?

Maybe your Gazans should spend their money on clean water, instead of rockets?
 
This is like having a robber (Israel) shoot you during the robbery.

And then be expected to be grateful to the robber.

Because he called 9/11 for an ambulance as he speed off in his get away car. :cuckoo:
Why not just tell us about all the contributions your Sunni Brethren have made and are still making besides killing innocent others in the name of their religion? Maybe you think their contribution is population control by murdering people.
 
Excellent point Princess. You have a very fine brain. Have those Israeli's forgotten how the Palestinians helped them to have clean water? Heh Heh.


Maybe a lot of those people wouldn't need to go to the hospital, if Israel let them have clean water? Here's another report from the WHO...

Gaza has a water crisis. Most people in the international community do not know the details as to why it exists and the root causes of the resource deficiency.

For the more than 1.4 million Palestinians who live in Gaza water shortages and water deterioration affects their health. Moreover, the water crisis creates agricultural, economic, social, and political instabilities that have regional ramifications. Most of the existing problems are a direct and indirect result of Israeli policy.

If the resource inequalities are not rectified soon, the Middle East will be facing an irreversible human and environmental disaster.
In addition, the OP gives a false account of the reality regarding the checkpoints in the West Bank.

Overall, West Bank Palestinians have limited or no access to medical care, and residents of villages and outlying areas are most gravely affected. Then consider so-called “risk profile” people being denied passage through checkpoints. Another example is persons needing a permit for access to Jerusalem hospital treatment. To get one, patients must provide medical documents testifying to their illness and confirming their appointment at a specific hospital.

The situation is especially problematic for pregnant women when their time to deliver approaches and their hospital is in Jerusalem. Permits are valid only for one or two days, as it is for all ill persons, but the moment when it’s needed is uncertain. They must thus be continually renewed, and there are times when it’s impossible. It thus forces mothers to give birth at checkpoints because they’re denied passage through them.
According to Physician's for Human Rights...
In 1996, the Physicians for Human Rights petitioned the State Attorney’s office for relief and nominally got it – to allow passage through checkpoints without permits in cases of medical emergency so ill persons can be treated. All checkpoint locations are supposed to comply, but it turns out they don’t. Soldiers don’t treat Palestinians kindly, are unresponsive to their needs, and are untrained medically to recognize emergencies.

Patients encounter other obstacles as well. Their travel is slowed by having to use long, winding and worn roads; they’re sometimes blocked causing long delays; they have no access to ambulances or other transportation; must pass through checkpoints when they do or by foot; be up against closed ones; be forced to wait at open ones; and undergo searches.

These problems make people more dependent on first aid that can’t cope in emergency cases where special expertise is required. At times, long distances are involved, and when need is greatest, it means lives are endangered. This is what Palestinians endure daily.
And you wonder why they get rockets?
 
the so called "palestinians" enjoy one of the BEST infant survival rates in the ENTIRE
MUSLIM WORLD The gazans were in DEEP SHIT pre 1967 they should go
back to the SHIT of egyptian loving care
 
the so called "palestinians" enjoy one of the BEST infant survival rates in the ENTIRE
MUSLIM WORLD The gazans were in DEEP SHIT pre 1967 they should go
back to the SHIT of egyptian loving care
I wonder where Loinboy thinks the pregnant women in so much of the Muslim world give birth. I doubt very much that it is in hospitals. And, I wouldn't be surprised if his own grandmother gave birth at home. Many years ago there was a story about Yemen. It told about a sick Yemeni man in his sixties and said that even if he could get a mile down a rutted road to the hospital, all he would find is a building with the sign hospital out front and nothing inside. I would imagine this would be the same condition for sick people in a lot of the Muslim world.
 
Unlike your Muslim brothers, the IDF doesnt target civilians. People like you just say that to make Israel look bad, but you have no proof. :
You want proof? I'll give you proof! I'll give you proof from the people doing the shooting!

Testimony 7 – Rules of Engagement

The commander stressed using “fire power” from the air and on the ground. “You see something and you’re not quite sure? You shoot….Fire power was insane. We went in and the booms were just mad. The minute we got to our starting line, we simply began to fire at suspect places….a house, a window….In urban warfare, anyone is your enemy. No innocents.”

Testimony 8 – Rules of Engagement & Use of White Phosphorous

Some of the younger soldiers “think it’s cool to wield such power with no one wanting to rein them in. They (were given) permission to open fire” even at most people who “definitely (are) not terrorists.” Free fire used all weapons against “everything (including) houses,” whether or not they looked suspect. “I know (that some) crews….even fired white phosphorous. Our battalion mortars (and tanks) were also using phosphorous.”

Testimony 9 – Rules of Engagement & House Demolitions

“From the onset….the brigade commander and other officers made it very clear to us that any movement must entail gunfire” with or without being shot at. Alerts were given about a suicide bomber or sniper in the area, but “none of (these) materialized as far as our company was concerned.”

“Houses were demolished everywhere.” They were fired at “with tremendous power. We didn’t see a single house that remained intact….The entire infrastructure, tracks, fields, roads (were) in total ruin.” D-9 bulldozers demolished everything “in our designated area. It looked awful, like in those World War II films where nothing remained. A totally destroyed city.”
Not targeting civilian's my ass!

Dont think Israel contributes with humanitarian aid

Here ya go Sunni Fag !

Israeli aid worldwide

:cuckoo:
This is what the IDF say's about humanitarian aid...
Testimony 10 – Briefings

Formal briefings covered “going off to war (and in war) no consideration of civilians was to be taken. Shoot anyone you see….this pretty much disgusted me. There was a clear feeling, and this was repeated whenever others spoke to us, that no humanitarian consideration played any role in the army at present.”
There is nothing humanitarian about a 45 year occupation and an economic blockade.
 
Why not tell us also about the water crisis in that part of the world? Surely you must have been pictures of many Muslim countries where there is a such a shortage of water.
I didn't want to go off-topic in a political thread.

Anyone that has a severe hate and cause for hate by spamming threads with comments like that, report them. They'll get banned for off topic posts.
 
I wonder where Loinboy thinks the pregnant women in so much of the Muslim world give birth. I doubt very much that it is in hospitals. And, I wouldn't be surprised if his own grandmother gave birth at home. Many years ago there was a story about Yemen. It told about a sick Yemeni man in his sixties and said that even if he could get a mile down a rutted road to the hospital, all he would find is a building with the sign hospital out front and nothing inside. I would imagine this would be the same condition for sick people in a lot of the Muslim world.
We ain't talkin' bout "muslim world", we're talkin' bout "Israeli world".

Try to stay focused in your own thread!
 

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