docmauser1
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- Oct 8, 2010
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Hamas has been doing a lot in Gaza to increase food production and employment. Problems with importing and exporting are the major holdup.
Hamas has been doing a lot in Gaza to increase food production and employment. Problems with importing and exporting are the major holdup.
andIn another section of this vast empty expanse is the fruit garden: carefully landscaped donums of a variety of fruit trees, marked with signs by each row, such as mangoes, citrus, apples, and stone fruits.
Contradicting sentences side by side, an obvious drivel. Altogether, their "humanitarian crisis" is as bogus as calling palistanis "a people".Gaza now relies heavily on imported fruits from Israel, as tens of thousands of its own trees were razed to the ground during the second Intifada, and most recently during Cast Lead.
andIn another section of this vast empty expanse is the fruit garden: carefully landscaped donums of a variety of fruit trees, marked with signs by each row, such as mangoes, citrus, apples, and stone fruits.Contradicting sentences side by side, an obvious drivel. Altogether, their "humanitarian crisis" is as bogus as calling palistanis "a people".Gaza now relies heavily on imported fruits from Israel, as tens of thousands of its own trees were razed to the ground during the second Intifada, and most recently during Cast Lead.
Hamas has been doing a lot in Gaza to increase food production and employment. Problems with importing and exporting are the major holdup.
It was a follow-up to an interview colleague Maggie Schmitt and I did with the Minister of Agriculture, Mohammad Al-Agha. In consultation with dozens of international and local NGOs, the Gaza Ministry has drawn up an impressive ten-year plan aimed at reducing Gazas dependence on imported Israeli produce, incorporating organic farming on a wider scale, and generally helping Gaza help itself through a return to more sustainable agricultural practices (such as relying more on rain-fed crops rather than cash cropping for export which involves wasteful amounts of water and an abundance of pesticides, and is subject to the whim of Israeli authorities and their punitive border closure).
In the former settlement of Kfar Darom, where sniper towers once lined the landscape, there is a massive organic composting facility for seasonal plants (as well as a sewage water composting for trees) and pilot organic farm where workshops are conducted to teach local farmers organic practices. Those who choose to implement organic farming are rewarded with free compost and saplings.
In the former Gush Qatif bloc, further south, infinite rows of several varieties of date palms and young olive saplings, both rain-fed crops that do very well in Gaza, dot the horizon as far as the eye can see.
In another section of this vast empty expanse is the fruit garden: carefully landscaped donums of a variety of fruit trees, marked with signs by each row, such as mangoes, citrus, apples, and stone fruits. Gaza now relies heavily on imported fruits from Israel, as tens of thousands of its own trees were razed to the ground during the second Intifada, and most recently during Cast Lead.
Gaza Mom » Gaza; settlements; Israel; Hamas; agriculture
Two contradictory sentences. Altogether, "humanitarian crisis" is as bogus as calling palistanis "a people".In another section of this vast empty expanse is the fruit garden: carefully landscaped donums of a variety of fruit trees, marked with signs by each row, such as mangoes, citrus, apples, and stone fruits. Gaza now relies heavily on imported fruits from Israel, as tens of thousands of its own trees were razed to the ground during the second Intifada, and most recently during Cast Lead.
Hamas has been doing a lot in Gaza to increase food production and employment. Problems with importing and exporting are the major holdup.
It was a follow-up to an interview colleague Maggie Schmitt and I did with the Minister of Agriculture, Mohammad Al-Agha. In consultation with dozens of international and local NGOs, the Gaza Ministry has drawn up an impressive ten-year plan aimed at reducing Gazas dependence on imported Israeli produce, incorporating organic farming on a wider scale, and generally helping Gaza help itself through a return to more sustainable agricultural practices (such as relying more on rain-fed crops rather than cash cropping for export which involves wasteful amounts of water and an abundance of pesticides, and is subject to the whim of Israeli authorities and their punitive border closure).
In the former settlement of Kfar Darom, where sniper towers once lined the landscape, there is a massive organic composting facility for seasonal plants (as well as a sewage water composting for trees) and pilot organic farm where workshops are conducted to teach local farmers organic practices. Those who choose to implement organic farming are rewarded with free compost and saplings.
In the former Gush Qatif bloc, further south, infinite rows of several varieties of date palms and young olive saplings, both rain-fed crops that do very well in Gaza, dot the horizon as far as the eye can see.
In another section of this vast empty expanse is the fruit garden: carefully landscaped donums of a variety of fruit trees, marked with signs by each row, such as mangoes, citrus, apples, and stone fruits. Gaza now relies heavily on imported fruits from Israel, as tens of thousands of its own trees were razed to the ground during the second Intifada, and most recently during Cast Lead.
Gaza Mom » Gaza; settlements; Israel; Hamas; agriculture
There you go again quoting the media you say is not to be trusted. What gives ?
It's very, very cool when we show that the "flotilla" is simply an assorted human garbage about to float in the Med. Not very environmental either. Mental, though.That is not just the media. This is Laila El Haddad. Gaza is here home.
Nice trees though, and she looks like a nice lady.
Nice trees though, and she looks like a nice lady.
I like her. She is a straight shooter.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmPvLY5xAhE]YouTube - ‪Gazan author Laila El- Haddad discusses her latest book: Gaza Mom‬‏[/ame]
Nice trees though, and she looks like a nice lady.
I like her. She is a straight shooter.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmPvLY5xAhE]YouTube - ‪Gazan author Laila El- Haddad discusses her latest book: Gaza Mom‬‏[/ame]
But still uses media to push an agenda. She also makes NO bones about being biased.
She is pushing an angle. Its like quoting the RNC to prove Obama is a bad president. No one would take it seriously unless they were true believers. She is biased media, and does not hide that fact. That puts her on the opposite side of the Jews you hate. If her word is not biased would the word of an Israeli journalist carry the same weight with you ?