Monday Jan 28, 2008

Inside the Middle East: Gaza buried in flour

Posted by Martin Kramer
Comments: 17
Decrease text sizeDecrease text size
Increase text sizeIncrease text size

The Boston Globe has just run an op-ed under the headline "Ending the Stranglehold on Gaza." The authors are Eyad al-Sarraj, identified as founder of the Gaza Community Mental Health Program, and Sara Roy, identified as senior research scholar at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University. The bias of the op-ed speaks for itself, and I won't even dwell on it. But I do want to call attention to this sentence:
Although Gaza daily requires 680,000 tons of flour to feed its population, Israel had cut this to 90 tons per day by November 2007, a reduction of 99 percent.
You don't need to be a math genius to figure out that if Gaza has a population of 1.5 million, as the authors also note, then 680,000 tons of flour a day come out to almost half a ton of flour per Gazan, per day.

A typographical error at the Boston Globe? Hardly. The two authors used the same "statistic" in an earlier piece. They copied it from an article published in the Ahram Weekly last November, which reported that "the price of a bag of flour has risen 80 per cent, because of the 680,000 tonnes the Gaza Strip needs daily, only 90 tonnes are permitted to enter." Sarraj and Roy added the bit about this being "a reduction of 99 percent."

Note how an absurd and impossible "statistic" has made its way up the media feeding chain. It begins in an Egyptian newspaper, is cycled through a Palestinian activist, is submitted under the shared byline of a Harvard "research scholar," and finally appears in the Boston Globe, whose editors apparently can't do basic math. Now, in a viral contagion, this spreads across the Internet, where that "reduction of 99 percent" becomes a well-attested fact.

What's the truth? I see from a 2007 UN document that Gaza consumes 450 tons of flour daily. The Palestinian Ministry of Economy, according to another source, puts daily consumption at 350 tons. So the figure for total consumption retailed by Sarraj and Roy is off by more than three orders of magnitude, i.e. a factor of 1,000. No doubt, there's less flour shipped from Israel into Gaza--maybe it's those rocket barrages from Gaza into Israel?--but even if it's only the 90 tons claimed by Sarraj and Roy, it isn't anything near a "reduction of 99 percent." Unfortunately, if readers are going to remember one dramatic "statistic" from this op-ed, this one is it--and it's a lie.

Sarraj is a psychiatrist, but his co-author, Sara Roy, bills herself in her bio as a "political economist." Her research, the bio reports, is "primarily on the economic, social and political development of the Gaza Strip." You would think someone with this claim to expertise would know better than to copy some impossible pseudo-statistic on the consumption of the most basic foodstuff in Gaza. Indeed, in a piece she wrote a decade ago, she herself put Gaza's daily consumption of flour at 275 tons. Did she even read her own op-ed before she sent it off to Boston's leading paper? If she did, what we have here is a textbook example of the difference between a "political economist" and an economist.

BOOKMARK or SHARE: technorati digg del.icio.us reddit newsvine facebook What's this?
Print
Comments: Post your own comment
1  |  Dave, Tuesday Jan 29, 2008
I am going to give the Globe the benefit of the doubt. I don't think they did it on purpose, I think they are just plain stupid.
2  |  David Katcoff, Jericho, Vt, Tuesday Jan 29, 2008
Okay, let's assume the statistic is correct. Now all Israel needs to do is airdrop a few thousand tons of baking soda, wait for rain, and they'll have themselves a gigantic loaf of bread with 1.5 million Palestinians baked inside. Personally, I like raisins.
3  |  Morton Friedman Lanham, MD USA, Tuesday Jan 29, 2008
'Figures don't lie, but liars figure'. Newspaper editors claim that they don't review op-ed pieces for accuracy, but they are very selective in what they choose to publish. In that way their bias is less overt and blatant. It is but faint praise that they will often provide the author's 'credetials'.
4  |  Edward B., Tuesday Jan 29, 2008
Yes, they are stupid. And biased. I wonder whether they would print this article, as a response from Martin Kramer. Mr. Kramer, could you try to have them publish your article?
5  |  Chris, Texas, Tuesday Jan 29, 2008
I am not going to give the Globe the benefit of the doubt. Retarded people can't get jobs running major newspapers. Neither can uneducated people. The folks running the Globe are neither retarded, nor uneducated. Therefore, they are either incredibly lazy and lacking in all intellectual curiosity, OR, they are intentionally intellectually dishonest. Neither is excusable in the publishers of a major daily newspaper in this country. Therefore, they don't get a pass from me. They are journalistic cretins with an agenda.
6  |  uzi silber, nyc, Tuesday Jan 29, 2008
Dave, ignorance is no excuse, especially for a national newspaper like the (NYTimes owned) Boston Globe
7  |  Larry Atlanta, Wednesday Jan 30, 2008
Whether its the Globe or the New York Times or even CNN "News" from the Territories is not Vetted and hasn't been for years. It is sensational and grabs attention and that is the bottom line. We can also blame the Secular Jewish Left for being complacent for years and not saying boo.
8  |  Robert Nickisson Australia, Wednesday Jan 30, 2008
So simple with the internet to write an article on anything by just blueing and copying from many different articles. Without understanding it at all. Here's another example. Money for jam.
9  |  R.S. Lewis, Cadiz, KY USA, Wednesday Jan 30, 2008
Even if the figures in the Boston Globe story are wrong (and they obviously are) this article is still hiding a very real fact: Need 350 tons (or 450), Israel allows in only 90 tons = Slow STARVATION.
10  |  Moshe, NYC, Wednesday Jan 30, 2008
It requires energy to launch missiles into Sderot. A little starving will do them some good. They will have enough energy to do the more responsible mundane activities, not sending missiles into Israel
11  |  Edward B., Wednesday Jan 30, 2008
To #9 - So, why don't they stop shelling Sderot, etc., which will solve this issue? Is it because they have something far more reaching in mind?
12  |  Jeremias-kopenhagen, Wednesday Jan 30, 2008
to R.E.Lewis according to informations in the scandinavian media , as many as 30 million americans got to bed on an enpty stomach every night. I think that people are starving more in the US than in Gaza. you have 3 million people in your stupid jails, and it is much more safe to walk late at night in Tel-Aviv than in anyone of your cities. You have poor people , violent people and a world record of drug addicts .so you better focuse on your own stupid problems and leave Israel alone .
13  |  hyman peskin, Thursday Jan 31, 2008
Putting aside for a minute the accuracy of the article, we must note that this conflict pit Israel, with a gross national product comparable to a moderately wealthy European nation against the Palestinians,who are miserably poor even by third world standards.Is it any wonder that Israel is perceived as oppressors? And in this interdependant world this perception is very, very important.
14  |  Richard England, Durham NH, USA, Thursday Jan 31, 2008
Many thanks to David Catcoff (#2) for helping me to laugh at a deplorable situation. I used to read the Boston Globe daily but stopped doing so when I noticed a deepening anti-Israeli slant in its coverage of the Middle East. The Globe actually prints lots of stories about the "tragic Israeli-Palestinian conflict," but those dispatches usually suggest that Palestinians are the victims. Given this kind of editorial slant at the Globe, I have begun to read the JPost and Wall Street Journal, far better newspapers.
15  |  DJStahl USA, Thursday Jan 31, 2008
Is there any reduction at all in the food getting into Gaza? Any evidence for the 90-ton number? The first howler might distract from the second number also being false. Re #13, OECD rates PA as "lower middle-income," w/ Egypt, Jordan, and Iran. Ahead of India and Pakistan. Gaza Strip has v. high education levels, life expectancy of 72+ yrs, and infant mortality rate below Turkey, Iran, Egypt, Syria, Brazil, Bahamas... UN says Gaza’s GNP about 600% higher than GDP. Economy there not v transparent. It's doing well compared to its neighbor to west. Has ressentiment of course toward Israel.
16  |  joseph peterborough england, Thursday Jan 31, 2008
give them the flour they need. win thier hearts and minds,then maybe the rockets will stop
17  |  James lookretis USA, Sunday Jun 29, 2008
Declare and recognize unilaterally a Gaza state ,: cut all ties ie elctric,gas shipments food, banking and let it implode. Israel DON"T NEED GAZA Like the US DON"T Need MEXICO....NOTHING!!!!!! in gaza is worth one israeli soldier.Also please send my US soldiers home from Irag. Once Iraq implodes some one with a contract will appear to sell Irag oil as saddam did when he was PREVENTED from doing so.....ever hear of oil for food/medications program with its pure corruption outcomes So what if some in Gaza Don't like you Israel,,Goliath didn't. Close the gates,stop feeding your enemy.Get free
Add your comment remaining characters
Name and Location *

NOTE: Comments are moderated and will not appear on this blog, until they have been reviewed and deemed appropriate for posting.

For more information, please see our
Readers' Submission Policy.

E-mail * (will NOT be published)
--------------------------------
* All fields are required

About this blog

Inside the Middle East Shalem Center's Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies' scholar of Islam and the Arab world Martin Kramer on this turbulent region.

Search this blog

Archives
Combined feed for all JPost.com blogs

Most Popular Posts

  1. Why are Palestinian refugees different from all other refugees?
    Posted in In the Trenches by David Harris
    Wednesday Aug 06, 2008
  2. Blaming the Jews as a form of intimidation
    Posted in A Point of View by Abraham Foxman
    Sunday Aug 03, 2008
  3. Peace and the media
    Posted in The Warped Mirror by Petra Marquardt-Bigman
    Sunday Aug 03, 2008
  4. Everything in triplicate
    Posted in Israel Stories by Jeremy Cardash
    Monday Aug 04, 2008
  5. Knesset lobby group for Sderot?
    Posted in Living with Rockets by Anav Silverman
    Wednesday Aug 06, 2008

Recent Comments

Michael, Wisconsin, USA: Look at the deeper changes, the US seems to be doing well. al-Qa'ida and the radicals have lost credibility, al-Jazeera and the like provoke scorn, the Arab states are lining up behind the US and reconciling to Iraq, which itself will be doing better. Look back at the nightmare scenarios of three years ago, most now evaporated. Even Syria may be persuaded to conceive of its national interests differently. If so, Hizbullah will be in no position to challenge Israel. And Iran, we're back in '75, megalomaniacal leader, economy too rigid to process massive new oil revenues, utterly corrupt.
viet nam vet....america: most of the comments posted are from people who obviously consider their visionary powers to be greater than those of Martin Kramer. sorry, geniuses, Kramer is the greater visionary. i agree, altrernatives to petroleum, such as solar, and wind are beginning increase in significance. the significance of arab oil, hopefuly, will decline swiftly, and precipitously. all of you spoiled rotten western baby boomers who refuse to see the importance of being strong and projecting power, as america has done, don't deserve your good fortune. you are lucky that others serve as soldiers for you.
gregdn Los Angeles: Get rid of this mindless foreign policy that promotes democracy in places which have no use for it and go back to 'realpolitk'.