MIFTAH
Wednesday, 24 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

August 2005 was supposed to have been one of the biggest celebrations in the history of the Palestinian people, especially Gazans. Israel was, for the first time ever, withdrawing its soldiers and settlers from Palestinian areas, allowing Gazans to reclaim almost a third of their land.

When Israel announced its plan to evacuate settlements in the Gaza Strip there was much local, regional and international hype about creating a new Gaza. In addition, promises came in from many countries to develop the impoverished and overpopulated strip of land and Gazans were filled with hope. Never mind that Israel destroyed the houses in their previous settlements and that only greenhouses were left intact after the Israelis were was paid to do so. Palestinians stood ready to construct a future.

But two years later, dreams of freedom and prosperity have turned to dust. First, Palestinians learned that in actual fact the Israeli "withdrawal" could more accurately be understood as no more than a redeployment of troops. The occupation of Gaza did not end. Rather, if before the pullout Israeli jailers lived in Gaza's midst, now the prison guards have left but not before locking the door and throwing away the key.

In the first flush of excitement, a special company was established to take charge of the abandoned Israeli greenhouses. Agricultural projects flourished. Thousands of farmers were employed to plant high-quality strawberries, beans, sweet peppers and other fruits and vegetables for export to European markets. But the door was closed. United States-brokered agreements on movement and access were broken by Israel with not even the tiniest shame. The luckiest Gazans turned out to be our animals, who have dined on some of the highest quality produce ever grown in Gaza. Animal rights organizations would do well to take notice.

There have been some tangible improvements to our lives here. In the central area of Gaza, specifically the area between Deir al-Balah and Khan Younes, there was once a notorious checkpoint - the so-called Abu Holi checkpoint - which divided the Gaza Strip into two parts and where Gazans used to wait for hours and sometimes days to cross from one side to the other. Many people lost their lives senselessly here, with twitchy Israeli soldiers opening fire randomly at people on both sides. Many houses were destroyed, because they were either near settlements there or because they obstructed the line of vision of the watching Israeli soldiers.

In the south, the people of Rafah and Khan Younes can now again freely enjoy their beaches, something they were prohibited from doing when the settlements were in place. Thousands of people now stream to the sea at all times of day. Meanwhile, the people of Al-Muwasi, an area that was sandwiched between the sea and some settlements, are now free to move again. Before, they were neither allowed into the rest of Gaza nor into the sea. Their hell, at least, has passed.

At the sites of the evacuated settlements, the rubble is a reminder of those bad old days, but also a reminder of agreements breached and opportunities lost. Israel was supposed to have removed the rubble to Egypt to make room for new projects, but the rubble remains as an obstacle to such development. Nevertheless, amid the rubble of the former Neve Dekalim settlement, a couple of nice new buildings have sprung up. These belong to the Aqsa University and more than 1,000 students from southern Gaza are now attending. The buildings were built after special efforts by the head of Aqsa University ensured the necessary donations from Arab countries.

These few bright spots notwithstanding, Gaza today is in worse shape than ever. The siege of Gaza is complete. Israel only allows humanitarian goods such as food and medicine to enter this little strip of land. Businesses are closing, factories are shutting down, construction is grinding to a halt, and even the United Nations cannot properly fulfill its mission here. More than 75 percent of Gazans are unemployed and 80 percent are now dependent on international aid just in order to eat.

The closure of Gaza, always draconian, reached its current peak after Hamas and the security services of the Palestinian Authority affiliated to President Mahmoud Abbas engaged in bloody clashes that resulted in the complete takeover of Gaza by the Islamist movement. This in turn provided Israel with all the excuse it needed to seal Gaza from the world. It has done so with the open acceptance of the international community.

The international community allowed itself to be trapped by the same logic that led it to boycott Hamas after the Islamist movement won parliamentary elections in January 2006 and formed a government in line with its parliamentary majority. These elections were encouraged and monitored by the international community, yet the results were never respected.

Hamas has refused to bow to international conditions for it to be allowed back in from the cold, but it did enter into a unity government with Fatah, which enjoys general international acceptance. This was not enough for the international community and what can only be described as collective punishment was imposed on Palestinians generally and Gazans in particular.

Two years from what should have been a day marking the beginning of liberation, Palestinians find themselves ever more dramatically imprisoned. Over these two years, they have exercised democracy and they have exercised restraint. They have only been answered with greater isolation, opprobrium and sanction. More than ever before, they suffer under occupation.

 
 
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