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

While the settler violence of last week has relatively tapered off, incidents of settlers vandalizing Palestinian homes in Hebron are still being reported. On the eve of December 12, Hebronites in the city's heart were terrorized by rampaging settlers who slashed their tires and attacked their homes.

Furthermore, that same day, 13 year old Yaqoub Qasrawi was shot in the head by Israeli soldiers in Hebron. The boy was seriously wounded and evacuated by the army to Jerusalem's Hadasseh hospital for treatment. Palestinian sources and eyewitnesses say Qasrawi was standing in front of his house when he suddenly crumbled to the ground. Israeli army sources insist the boy was with a group of youths throwing stones at an Israeli army jeep when he was struck.

Rising tensions between Palestinians and settlers in Hebron may very well flair again after a Jerusalem court indicted Zeev Barouda on December 10 on charges of "malicious intent". Barouda and a fellow settler were caught on tape earlier in the week intentionally shooting at unarmed Palestinians Husni Matariyeh and Abed Al Haj during the evacuation of the Rajabi house, also known as the "house of contention", in Hebron. Barouda is now under town arrest in his Hebron-area settlement, Kiryat Arba.

The incident even embarrassed outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. On December 7, following the release of the footage, Olmert said the settler violence in Hebron was nothing less than a pogrom against the city's Palestinian residents, saying he felt "ashamed" at the site of settlers opening fire on innocent Palestinians.

The recent surge of violence against Palestinians coincides with the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which was honored in its birthplace, Geneva, this week. On the anniversary, the Commissioner General of UNRWA, Karen Abu Zayed, laid out some of the most flagrant human rights violations Israel carries out against Palestinians in the occupied territories. In a speech given on her behalf at the UN headquarters in Geneva, Abu Zayed said there had been 500 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces this year alone, 74 of them children. She also said there were over 10,000 Palestinians in Israeli prisons, 325 of whom were minors.

The United Nations headquarters in New York will also pose as an international forum to deal with the Palestinian problem on December 15 when the Quartet Committee meets there to discuss the faltering peace process. A day later, on December 16, the UN Security Council is scheduled to hold a special ministerial session to discuss the Palestinian-Israeli peace track, which US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is expected to attend. Rice said she would meet with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavarov, and the EU’s High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana the day before the Security Council meeting. "It is a year which I hope will bear fruit in the Middle East," Ban Ki-Moon said on December 12 in reference to the upcoming meetings.

If the political proposals on the table are any indication, there is not much to be optimistic about. On December 12, the head of the Palestinian negotiating team, Ahmad Qurei, said Israel was proposing to annex 6.8 percent of the West Bank in a final solution in return for a lesser amount of land inside Israel, in addition to the gradual absorption of 5,000 refugees as a solution to the refugee problem. Qurei, who said Jerusalem was not even on the table yet, added that Israel plans to keep four blocs of Jewish settlements - Ariel, Ma'aleh Adumim, Givat Ze'ev and Efrat-Gush Etzion. The chief negotiator said the Palestinian team rejected the offer.

Qurei had yet another bone to pick with Israel, this time with regards to Kadima leader Tzipi Livni and her earlier remarks about Palestinian residents of Israel. On December 11, Livni, speaking to high school students in Tel Aviv, said the creation of a Palestinian state would serve as a solution to national aspirations of Israel's Arab citizens. "Once a Palestinian state is established, I can come to the Palestinian citizens, whom we call Israeli Arabs, and say to them 'you are citizens with equal rights, but the national solution for you is elsewhere.’"

Qurei denounced the statements, interpreting them as Livni's call for the transfer of Palestinians from their homes. Livni later denied that this was her intent but has come under fire from both Palestinians in the West Bank and those residing inside Israel.

As for the Gaza Strip, the situation remained tense both internally and with Israel. On December 7, Olmert told the Israeli cabinet in its weekly meeting that there had been a total breakdown in the ceasefire in Gaza because of the continuous rocket attacks into Israeli territory. He threatened to take "effective measures" that would be decided on this week. "We will not accept limited action in Gaza when there are rockets being fired on us every day."

Meanwhile, tensions rose between Hamas and Fateh this week over the latter's refusal to allow 3,500 Gazans to travel to Mecca in order to perform the Haj. President Mahmoud Abbas accused Hamas of politicizing the pilgrimage while Hamas claims there was a "misdistribution" of people allowed permission travel to Mecca coupled with an insufficient number of visas, which the PA says is untrue.

Hamas spokespeople have said that all will be clarified with regards to the ceasefire and conciliation talks on December 14 during the anniversary of the movement's inception. The de facto government in Gaza is planning on a huge festival to mark the occasion, during which Hamas officials will clarify the movement's position on the ceasefire with Israel and also the stalled conciliation talks with Fateh.

Gazans did have one thing to look forward to this week - their paychecks. On December 12, the Palestinian Monetary Fund announced that NIS100 million ($52 million) had been transferred to Gaza banks after Israel agreed to lift the ban on cash fund transfers into the Strip, in place since November.

The financial release came just days after the Eid Al Adha, the Muslim holiday that fell this year on December 8. Gazans this year had little to celebrate with the ongoing economic embargo on the Strip, even with the semi-opened border crossings allowing humanitarian aid and fuel into the area. Furthermore, families who were looking forward to their relatives' homecoming as part of the expected 250 prisoner release were disappointed when the release date was postponed. While Israel says President Abbas requested the delay until he returned home, Abbas denies the claim, saying Israel postponed the release of prisoners for no apparent reason. In addition, the number has dropped to 230, with Israel striking 20 names of Gaza prisoners off the list.

Some media reports are saying the release will take place on December 15 although this has yet to be confirmed by Israel.

Throughout the Eid holiday, Israeli authorities did ease some of the travel restrictions on Palestinians, allowing drivers over 50 to enter Nablus by car, which has been banned for years. Palestinians living inside Israel were also allowed to enter Palestinian territories unhindered, which under Israel law is prohibited. It is unclear whether the easing of restrictions will continue or not now that the customary four days of the Eid are over.

 
 
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