MIFTAH
Saturday, 20 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Despite optimistic statements made by Palestinians, Israelis and US officials about the “possibility” for peace, facts on the ground remain much stronger testimony than any promises or words of encouragement.

While the United States prepares to host the Middle East summit, slated to be held on November 26, Palestinians oscillate between encouraging hopes for the summit’s success and the daunting Israeli measures on the ground. On November 7, the Israeli peace movement Peace Now announced that there is ongoing construction in 88 settlements in the West Bank, including the expansion of already existing settlements and the creation of new settlement outposts. According to Peace Now, 8.1 percent of Israelis live in these illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Most of the construction, the organization said, is in the major settlement blocs Israel insists on annexing to Israel in any final agreement with the Palestinians, including Maaleh Adumim, Gush Etzion and Givat Zeev. Peace Now also said work on the E1 settlement project was continuing in east Jerusalem.

Meanwhile US Secretary of State Condeleezza Rice left the region on November 6 after talks with Palestinian and Israeli officials in preparation for the upcoming summit. Rice, who arrived in the region on November 4, is expected to return on November 15 to iron out any final details before the parties travel to Annapolis.

After meetings on November 5 with President Mahmoud Abbas, Prime Minister Salam Fayyad and chief negotiator Ahmad Qurei’, the parties agreed that a peace treaty should be reached before the end of US President George Bush’s term in office. “This is a historical time and a real opportunity,” Rice said.

Over the past week, the parties have reportedly been working on drafting a “document of principles” to present at the Annapolis summit. This is proving more difficult than originally envisioned however. So difficult, that on November 8, both the Palestinians and Israelis reportedly requested US intervention to solve disagreements over the joint document.

Palestinians claim the Israelis are reneging on their agreement reached with Rice, primarily on halting Israeli settlement activities and removing settlement outposts. The Israelis, on the other hand say the Palestinians must honor their commitments to the roadmap, namely, fighting “terrorism” before any agreement can be reached.

While the Palestinians reportedly first demanded that a timetable for reaching a final agreement be set, they are now leaning towards accepting an American proposal to issue a “statement of intentions.” Such a statement would obligate both sides to terms of references for the peace process, including the roadmap, the vision of two states, the Arab Peace Initiative, signed agreements, among other points. This, of course, is a more liquid and less binding commitment than the original Palestinian demands.

Still, Abbas reassured Palestinians on November 4 that no agreement with Israel would be passed unless it is given the thumbs-up by the Palestinian people. He said any final agreement would be put to a national referendum first or at least presented to the Palestine National Council for approval.

The leadership did, however, continue to make demands as ostensible conditions for their attendance. On November 3, Fayyad called on Israel to release 2,000 Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails, ease travel restrictions and remove checkpoints before the summit, as a means of showing Israel’s seriousness towards substantial peace negotiations.

Fayyad also said the Palestinian Authority would ask donor countries for $120 million a month in support of the national budget for a period of 2-3 months during the donor country meeting in Paris scheduled for December.

However, although both sides say they are committed to working towards a successful peace conference, Israeli measures on the ground point to the contrary. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said on November 7 that each day is bringing Israel closer to a major military operation in the Gaza Strip.

A major incursion into Gaza does seem likely given the current situation in the Strip. Four Palestinians were killed on November 4 in an Israeli air raid in Jabaliya, including Zaher Suleiman and his 18-year old son Ashraf.

On November 10, Israeli forces shot and killed two Palestinians they claim were trying to plant explosives along the Gaza-Israel border. Israel is stepping up its military operations in the Strip supposedly in response to the ongoing rocket attacks into Israel.

Internal tensions are also simmering in the Strip, especially with the recent fiery Hamas statements over the past few days. On November 9, while addressing a Hamas rally in Jabaliya, senior Hamas official Mahmoud Zahhar vowed that Hamas would take over the West Bank should Israel withdraw from its cities. Zahhar’s statements not only caused fury among Palestinian officials in the West Bank, but further showed the rift within the movement itself. Just days earlier, deposed Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh called for joint dialogue without preconditions with Fateh, saying Hamas had no intention of splitting the Gaza Strip from the West Bank.

Still, Hamas is doing little to actually bring the two leaderships back on the same page. In a move highly criticized by Fateh, Hamas parliamentarians held the first PLC session since its takeover of the Strip last June. The movement claimed it filled the legal quorum for holding a PLC session with the 29 members present in Gaza, three members in Ramallah, who attended by phone in addition to the Hamas members in Israeli detention centers. Fateh, unsurprisingly, boycotted the session, calling it illegal.

Meanwhile, while Israel has ostensibly allowed Palestinian police to patrol the streets of Nablus during the day, Israeli troops enter the city at night and also at any time they deem necessary. This was apparent on November 4 when Israeli troops stormed the Balata Refugee Camp, demolishing four houses and arresting 25 people, a move the Palestinians perceived as Israel’s undermining of Palestinian control over Nablus. Nonetheless, during a visit to the city on November 8 Prime Minister Fayyad said the Palestinian security plan was “achieving progress despite Israeli incursions.”

Israel also carried out several other arrest campaigns in the West Bank throughout the week in Nablus, Hebron, Qalqilya and Jenin, including the arrest of Hamas PLC member Hatem Qafeesha from Hebron.

Finally, Palestinians are preparing to mark the third anniversary of President Yasser Arafat’s passing on November 11. On November 10, the late president’s mausoleum was officially inaugurated at the presidential headquarters in Ramallah. Festivals and commemoration ceremonies are scheduled to take place tomorrow throughout the West Bank and Gaza in memory of President Arafat.

 
 
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