MIFTAH
Friday, 26 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

September 5 marked the first Friday in Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting, when Palestinian Muslims look forward to conducting Friday prayers in Jerusalem's Al Aqsa Mosque. This year, similar to the several years prior, Israel continued to place strict restrictions on West Bank Palestinians who want to travel to Jerusalem to perform their religious duties. While Israeli police estimated that 90,000 Muslim worshippers reached Al Aqsa for noon prayers, restrictions were still tight as to who was allowed in. Israeli army directives instructed that only West Bank men over the age of 50 and women over 45 be allowed to enter Jerusalem without Israeli-issued permits to pray at Al Aqsa. Men under 45 were not allowed in at all – with or without a permit.

These restrictions, of course angered Palestinian Muslims who put special emphasis on praying at Al Aqsa during Ramadan on Fridays. The Islamic Waqf had previously called on Israel to allow Muslims to reach the mosque compound unrestricted and the people obviously were not deterred. Thousands of Palestinians waited for hours at the Israeli manned checkpoints entering Jerusalem in the hopes that they would pass. Clashes broke out at the Qalandiya checkpoint separating Jerusalem from Ramallah during which several people were injured. Hoards of people also flocked to the Gilo checkpoint on the Jerusalem-Bethlehem road in an attempt to cross but most were turned back by the army.

Jerusalem, already a final status issue between Palestinian and Israeli negotiators, was back in the spotlight this week after Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak floated the idea of allowing "some Arab neighborhoods" to become the future Palestinian capital. During an interview with Al Jazeera Satellite Channel on September 4, Barak said this idea would be something Israel would consider, especially in those areas with a high Palestinian population.

So far, the Palestinians will hear nothing of the sort. On September 5, President Mahmoud Abbas met his Israeli counterpart Shimon Peres during the 34th Annual European Ambrosetti Forum and told him any peace deal between them would have to be full and comprehensive. "It's all or nothing, really," Abbas said. Still, the two sides insisted that Israel and the Palestinian Authority were "closer than ever" to a peace deal even though Abbas did concede that the end of the year to reach such a deal may be unattainable.

During the meeting, which gathered together European and world business leaders and academics, Abbas encouraged Europe to invest in Palestine. He also warned that the siege on the Gaza Strip would lead to a humanitarian disaster reaching all sectors of Palestinians.

On September 4, Quartet Committee envoy Tony Blair also encouraged investment, saying a follow-up conference to last May's Palestinian economic conference could yield as much as $2 billion in investment funds for Palestine. Blair was speaking during a surprise visit to the West Bank city of Nablus, where he also said that Israeli checkpoints badly hinder the city's economy. Blair also praised the work of the Palestinian security forces there, saying his visit to Nablus was proof of their success.

Two days earlier on September 2, Blair also met with chief negotiator Ahmad Qrei' in Abu Dis. While the two discussed ways to forward the peace process, Qrei' made it clear to Blair that the Palestinians would never agree to any agreement that did not include east Jerusalem as its capital. He also said the Palestinians rejected the postponement of any final status issues, with Jerusalem being on the top of the list. Any political solution must be comprehensive and final, he said.

Blair's sister-in-law, Lauren Booth is meanwhile stranded in Gaza, having remained behind after the Free Gaza boat she arrived on sailed back to Cyprus on August 28. For the past week, Booth has been trying to leave Gaza, both via Israel and through Egypt but both countries have turned her back at their borders. Another boat is reportedly planning to set sail for the besieged Strip on September 22 although no details about whether Israel will allow it to dock or not have been revealed.

Government employees in the health and education sectors in the Gaza Strip have been on strike for two weeks in a row in protest of what they say were politically-motivated firings of employees by the de facto Hamas government. According to OCHA, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 48 percent of health personnel in eight Gaza Strip offices and 50 percent of teachers and staff are on strike. Accusations were rampant, with Hamas accusing the Fateh-run West Bank government for encouraging the strikers and saying employees who did not join the union strike would not receive their salaries.

On September 1, Palestinian foreign minister Riyad Al Malki discredited the rumors, confirming that August salaries had been paid in full with a NIS1,500 pay in back dues, including those workers who didn't join the strike in Gaza.

On September 3, the office of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said the government was planning to discuss compensation for Jewish settlers who voluntarily leave West Bank settlements to be relocated in Israel. The issue, which is to be discussed for the first time, will be brought up during the Israeli cabinet meeting on September 7.

Meanwhile the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics released its latest census findings on September 1. According to their data, there are 2, 350,583 people in the West Bank.

On August 31, hundreds of weary travellers were finally allowed to cross into Egypt after being stranded in Gaza for months. Egypt announced it would open the crossing for two days, mainly to Egyptians and Palestinians with permanent Egyptian residency. Approximately 15 buses with over 750 people crossed the Rafah Crossing into Egypt and 400 sick Gazans were finally allowed to leave the Strip to seek medical attention abroad.

Finally, the European Parliament is urging Israel to release Palestinian parliamentarians currently incarcerated in Israeli jails, including West Bank Fateh Secretary Marwan Barghouti. “A substantial release of Palestinian prisoners,” the parliament document read, “as well as the immediate release of the 48 imprisoned members of the Palestinian Legislative Council including Marwan Barghouti, could serve as a positive step to establish the climate of mutual trust needed to make progress in the peace negotiations."

 
 
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