(Sahan Post) :— Germany’s decision to admit four donkeys from Gaza for treatment, while refusing entry to nearly all injured Palestinian children, has generated widespread backlash and raised questions about the country’s humanitarian priorities.
The donkeys arrived in the town of Oppenheim through Israeli animal welfare groups, a transfer praised by German media as an “animal rescue.” But critics say the story exposes a disturbing contradiction: Germany has taken in more donkeys from Gaza in 2024–2025 than human patients.
Since the war began, Germany has admitted almost no injured Gazan children, despite repeated offers from German cities to host them and despite other European countries receiving dozens for medical care. Meanwhile, NGOs face restrictive rules requiring guarantees that patients and their guardians will return to Gaza despite the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe.
The outrage intensified after reports that Israeli organizations had “rescued” over 50 donkeys from Gaza—transports that likely required coordination with the Israeli military. Rights advocates argue these animals were not abandoned but crucial tools for survival in a besieged territory where donkeys transport water, food, and the wounded amid fuel shortages and collapsed infrastructure.
Critics describe the transfer of Gaza’s donkeys as another layer of dispossession, calling it part of a broader pattern of “environmental warfare” and greenwashed narratives that obscure the human cost of the conflict. They say Germany, by accepting the animals while blocking children, reinforces a humanitarian hierarchy that devalues Palestinian life.
Human rights observers warn that the episode illustrates a deeper moral crisis. In the words of one activist: “Germany shows empathy for Gaza’s donkeys—but not for Gaza’s children.”
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