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Pressures on the Palestinian Territories Become Unbearable
By Gerry Foley /
May 2006 issue of Socialist Action newspaper
The combination of increased Israeli attacks on
Palestinian communities under the pretext of Hamas’s control of the
Palestinian Authority (PA), the imperialist countries cutting off their
funding of the PA on the same excuse, and the growing conflicts between the
Hamas and Fatah militias provoked by Fatah’s resentment at the loss of its
majority in the PA parliament is aggravating what was already a disastrous
situation in the Palestinian territories to the point of catastrophe.
Already at the end of March, three
Palestinians were killed and 25 wounded in a clash in Gaza that followed
what may have been an Israeli targeted assassination. Abu Yousef Abu Quka
was killed on March 31 when his car exploded in front of a mosque in Gaza
City. He was a leader of the Popular Resistance Committees (PRC).
The murder of militants by air-to-ground
missiles is a common Israeli practice. But in this case, the tensions
between Fatah, which dominated the PA from its founding until the recent
Hamas electoral victory, were so great that PRC militants suspected Fatah
of the murder. That prompted the clash, in which Palestinian militants
killed Palestinian militants.
In the Gaza strip in particular, since the
withdrawal of Israeli forces, a multiplicity of Palestinian armed groups
has been creating an atmosphere of insecurity. On April 20, the Hamas
government proposed forming a new PA armed force to establish order under
the command of Jamal Abu Samhadana, the commander of the PRC, whom the
Israeli military has been trying to kill. But the plan was vetoed by
Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), a leader of Fatah, who was elected president of
the PA in a previous election.
On April 26, apparently in response to the
Hamas proposal, Fatah leaders announced that they were forming a new
militia. Reuters reported: “Gunmen from Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas's Fatah movement announced on Wednesday a plan to form a new militia,
a move likely to raise tensions with the governing Hamas group over
security control in the Gaza Strip.
“‘The new force would aim to protect Fatah
men against the Israeli enemy and against any attempt by any party inside
the homeland to target them,’ Abu Saqer, a spokesman for Fatah's Yasser
Arafat Brigades, told Reuters. Some 30 people were wounded in Gaza in
clashes earlier in the week between Fatah and Hamas gunmen.
“The violence followed Abbas's veto of a
police force Hamas said it would set up through the Interior Ministry to
curb lawlessness in Gaza.”
On April 24, Abbas said in an interview
with anti-Syrian newspapers in Lebanon and Jordan and picked up by the
Turkish service of CNN that he thought he had the power to disband the
Hamas government if it continued to refuse to recognize Israel: “The constitution
gives me clear and definite authority to remove a government from power,
but I don't want to use this authority."
At the same time, he accused the Hamas
leader Khalid Meshal, based in Syria, of trying to incite a civil war in
Palestine. In its April 25 issue, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported on
Abbas’s statements, stressing: “Abbas added that ‘Hamas has to face the
facts and establish communication with Israel,’ or the Palestinian people
would be left to starve due to the party's policies that have led to a cut
of funding from the United States and European Union.”
The PA has been financed essentially by aid
from the European Union and the U.S. as well as taxes and duties collected
on its behalf by Israel. All of these parties have cut off the payments to
press demands that Hamas formally recognize Israel.
On April 19, the Pacifica Radio program
“Democracy Now” interviewed Colombia University Professor Rashid Khalidi
and asked him to describe the situation today in the Palestinian
territories. He said: “I think that what's happening is an intensification
of the situation that's existed really for the past six years.
“You have a population basically
imprisoned, which is now under sort of a lockdown almost, with almost no
movement and with very, very limited ability to engage in economic
activity, which is now being further punished by this removal of aid.”
Since normal economic activity is
restricted, the Palestinian population largely depends on international
aid. But in the same program, the presenter noted that the London Telegraph
has reported that aid officials are afraid to continue their work for fear
that Israel and its allies will consider them terrorists.
Moreover, a lot of the aid depends on the
infrastructure of the PA, which is now deprived of funds, as Adrienne Smith
of the aid agency Oxfam explained on “Democracy Now”: “Well, what happened
is that as the European Community decided that they wanted to cut off aid
to the territory, to the Palestinian Authority specifically, there was a
hope and a desire that NGOs, like an Oxfam or the Red Cross, would be able
to continue aid so that people were unaffected, so that one could both
simultaneously cut off the Palestinian Authority, but also not have people
affected. And we don't believe that that's possible.
“You know, Oxfam is providing the only
source of clean water to about 140,000 villages and to families who depend
on that, and so we certainly will do everything we can to help people, but
we do not feel that we can replace the Palestinian Authority in
infrastructure that existed, and the Red Cross has done a similar
assessment, as have other groups.”
Smith pointed out that about 80 percent of
Palestinians in the territories live on $2 or less a day and thus live day
to day without being able to accumulate reserves.
Shir Hever, an economist for the Israeli
Alternative Information Centre, pointed out that “Israel is obligated by
international law to provide money that was in the first place due to the
Palestinians. It's taxes from Palestinian workers that, according to the
agreements, must be transferred to the Palestinian Authority.
“It's customs that Israel is collecting on
behalf of the Palestinians and taking a very large percentage to itself.
Not only did the U.S. government stop its
aid to the PA, it prohibited all private individuals from dealing with
Palestinians.
The “Democracy Now” presenter pointed out:
“On Friday [April 14], the U.S. government barred Americans from doing most
business with the Palestinian Authority. The Treasury Department memo said
transactions with the PA by U.S. persons are prohibited unless licensed. It
said that the decision had been based on existing terrorism sanctions.”
In recent days, the Israeli military has
threatened to reoccupy the Gaza Strip, and it operates at will in the West
Bank, almost every day killing Palestinian militants. However, although the
Israeli government acts as if the Palestinian Authority did not exist, it
indicates no readiness to assume responsibility for the population of the
Palestinian territories.
The Hamas government of the Palestinian
Authority has appealed to Muslim and Arab states and donors to make up the
revenues denied by Israel and its allies. Large sums have been pledged, but
so far much less than the lost financing. However, even the oil-rich Middle
East states do not have the resources of the U.S. and the European Union.
Russia has pledged a relatively paltry sum of $10 million.
And there is the question of how the
outside donors can get the money to the Palestinian Authority, since the
territory over which it formally presides is totally cut off by Israel. As
of now, the Palestinian Authority is out of money and the salaries of its
employees have not been paid for weeks.
And the PA is the only major employer in
the territories. About a third of the population is dependent on the wages
of PA workers. Clearly, the situation of the Palestinian population is
desperate. So, it is hardly surprising that some persons resort to suicide
bombings.
Surely, the Israelis and their allies can
be forced to retreat. To assure that, it is essential to maintain the full
publicity possible on the basic realities in the territories and oppose all
attempts to obscure them by arguments about Hamas’s rhetoric or formal
political positions.
In the face of an threatened imminent
collapse of the Palestinian Authority, even the United States was forced to
relent to a certain extent. The British Guardian reported May 10:
"Washington signaled that, while not prepared to deal with Hamas
directly, it was content to let the EU, which has been the biggest donor to
the Palestinians, find a way of bailing out the Palestinian Authority to
prevent it from collapsing."
This is an indication that the imperialist
powers are worried about the scandal of an impending humanitarian
catastrophe and can be pressured to offer further concessions to the
Palestinian people.
In the long run, the conflict between Fatah
and Hamas is a problem that the Palestinians will have to solve by the creation
of a new leadership. But the tensions will be greatly reduced if the
material pressure on the Palestinian population is mitigated.
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