MIFTAH
Tuesday, 23 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

It has been a week fraught with tensions, high emotions and violence in addition to continued setbacks in the preparation for the long anticipated Middle East summit, slated to be held sometime at the end of this month in Annapolis, Maryland.

The most jarring incident by far this week was the riots in Gaza City that resulted in the deaths of seven Palestinians and the injury of over 100. Members of the Hamas-affiliated Executive Force opened fire at a crowd of people out in the streets of Gaza City commemorating the third anniversary of President Arafat’s death on November 12. While narratives of the events invariably change according to who is telling the story, the hard facts remain consistent.

Apparently, tens of thousands of Fateh supporters including men, women and children, took to the streets of Gaza in a rally pre-approved by the Hamas-run interior ministry in Gaza. However, according to Hamas spokespeople and officials, the rallying masses began to pelt stones at the security forces, chant anti-Hamas slogans and even shoot in the air with silenced weapons.

At that point, the Executive Force moved in, beating the protesters and shooting into the crowd. Over 100 people were injured, many with bullet injuries to the upper parts of the body. The seven dead included a 12-year-old boy.

The violence came a day after the third anniversary of Yasser Arafat’s death on November 11, 2004. On that day, crowds of people flooded the presidential headquarters in Ramallah to celebrate the leader’s life and to also perhaps catch a glimpse of the new mausoleum inaugurated for him on the Muqata grounds. President Mahmoud Abbas along with other prominent Palestinian officials cut the red tape on the mausoleum that day below a blue sky and a flutter of Palestinian flags.

Unfortunately, the events of the following day overshadowed good memories of the anniversary. The Abbas-led government quickly and severely condemned Hamas’ actions in the Strip, calling them barbaric and criminal. The government also condemned the several arrests of Fateh supporters that ensued and the raiding of schools and homes across Gaza. The numbers, not surprisingly, of those arrested vary. According to an Executive Force spokesperson in Gaza, 50 Fateh members were taken in for questioning while a Fateh official put the number at 400. On November 14, as part of its arrest campaign, Al Zahra mayor Tareq Hajjo was also taken in by members of the EF.

The dire situation in Gaza is not however, the only concern burdening President Abbas. As the date for the Middle East peace summit in the United States draws closer, not much progress on the ground seems to be taking place. On the contrary, the Palestinians, along with Saudi Arabia, are expressing their skepticism towards Israel’s true intentions.

During a November 16 visit to Saudi Arabia, both Abbas and Saudi King Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz agreed that Israel was not making serious enough efforts towards the success of the conference. Saudi Arabia has yet to officially announce whether it will attend the Annapolis meeting or not.

Still, chief Palestinian negotiator, Saeb Erekat said there would be more intensive Palestinian-Israeli meetings over the next week as the date of the conference grows closer. The two parties will have to go it alone from here on, however given that on November 16 a White House official announced that US Secretary of State Condeleezza Rice would not make any more visits to the region before the summit.

This could leave the parties in a bind given that Rice has visited Palestine and Israel three times in the past two months to push forward efforts from both sides to formulate a joint document. Still, the White House spokesperson did say the Secretary would confer with the parties by phone.

The Palestinians are already up against some unexpected challenges. Israel pulled yet another rabbit out of the hat on November 14 when sources from Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s office announced that the premier could demand that the Palestinians recognize Israel as a state for the Jewish people as a precondition for Annapolis. The idea was originally hatched by Israeli right-wing Strategic Affairs Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who is pushing for the proposal to go to a vote in the Israeli cabinet.

This is not the only hitch the Palestinians could be up against. Also on November 14 a proposal was given initial approval in the Knesset banning any Israeli concessions in east Jerusalem. According to the draft proposal, any amendments on a 1980 law, passed following the unilateral annexation of east Jerusalem to Israel would now require a majority vote of 80 Knesset members instead of the customary 61.

Palestinians, of course, have rejected both proposals outright. Saeb Erekat blasted the request to recognize Israel as a state for the Jewish people, saying any acceptance of this by the Palestinians could help Olmert in refusing the right of return for refugees in any final settlement.

Prime Minister Salam Fayyad also rejected the proposals, saying the PA would never accept these conditions, reiterating the Palestinian demand of declaring east Jerusalem as the capital of the future Palestinian state.

Meanwhile, talk of a prisoner release is in the air. On November 14, media sources reported that Olmert was prepared to release 400 prisoners as a good-will gesture. According to Israeli media sources, the Israeli justice ministry has been given a list of the prisoners slated for release, which include primarily Fateh affiliated prisoners not involved in the deaths of Israelis.

Olmert has also reportedly said Israel, in addition to releasing these prisoners, was ready to impose a “partial” freeze on settlement activity and to lift “some” travel restrictions on Palestinians.

The Palestinians continue to demand that all prisoners be released, settlement activity must come to a complete halt and Palestinian institutions in Jerusalem be reopened, in accordance with Israel’s roadmap obligations.

The Palestinian government, however, is adamant in seeing Annapolis succeed. During a visit to the northern West Bank city of Nablus, Fayyad said one of the most important elements for the success of the peace summit was the Palestinian Authority’s success in enforcing security and order in Nablus and other Palestinian areas.

“We must succeed here in Nablus and there in Gaza,” he said during a ceremony in the city announcing a $1.3 million grant from the United States to boost the city’s economy. “Our responsibility is to eliminate the occupation and to lift the fear and oppression off our people.”

Fayyad reiterated these sentiments during a visit with European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana in Ramallah on November 13. While Fayyad said the Palestinians were committed to making the peace conference a success, Israel must also commit to its obligations, especially freezing settlement activities, releasing prisoners and reopening Jerusalem institutions.

Solana also expressed his hopes for a successful summit, saying Europe would not allow Annapolis to fail.

British Prime Minister Gordan Brown pitched in his vote for support for the summit on November 15, calling the Annapolis meeting a “unique opportunity” to push the Middle East peace process forward. He also said the UK would pledge $500 million in aid to the Palestinians to rebuild their economy if the summit was a success.

First and foremost, however, the Palestinians’ main concern is the Gaza Strip and the many deaths that continue to take place there. Barring the seven Palestinians killed by Hamas’ Executive Forces, this week six other Palestinians were killed by the Israeli army in the Strip.

On November 15, three Aqsa Martyrs Brigades members were killed in an Israeli air raid in Beit Hanoun. Apparently the group was trying to shoot rockets into Israeli territory when they were killed. Ten others were injured in the Israeli attack. One of the shells hit the power plant in the town, plunging it into darkness.

Over the week, the Aqsa Brigades have shot at least 10 rockets into Sderot, causing damage to one house and two cars in the Israeli town.

Then on November 10, two members of the Islamic Jihad’s Al Quds Brigades, Jalal and Bilal Nabaheen, were killed by an Israeli shell. On the same day another, unidentified Palestinian was shot and killed in an armed confrontation with Israeli forces on the border strip between Gaza and Israel.

Meanwhile, thousands of Hamas supporters have taken to the streets of Gaza on November 16 in solidarity with the Aqsa Mosque after a group of Israelis toured an underground tunnel in the vicinity of the Mosque. The tunnel, opened secretly by the Israeli archeology authority, is said to portray ruins from the Ommayed and Ottoman eras.

 
 
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