MIFTAH
Friday, 26 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
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The week started with an attack on Egyptian side of the Sinai-Gaza border which left 16 Egyptian soldiers dead and seven injured on August 5. Although the identity of the assailants is not known, Israeli and Egyptian officials have attributed the act to Islamist Jihadist militants in the Sinai while a statement from the Muslim Brotherhood has put some blame on Israel’s intelligence agency, the Mossad. Some evidence has pointed to extreme Islamist groups from Gaza who crossed the border and carried out the operation along with the Sinai groups, something which has caused serious tension between Egypt and Hamas. Ismail Haniya, Hamas Prime Minister in Gaza has put the blame squarely on Israel, saying that the attack was Israel’s attempt to “to embarrass Egypt's leadership and create new problems at the border in order to ruin efforts to end the [Israeli] siege of the Gaza Strip” and has assured Egypt saying that “Gaza could never be anything but a source of stability for Egypt”. Israel, through the spokesperson of its Foreign Ministry has refuted accusations of its involvement as “nonsense”.

As finger the pointing continues, Egypt launched missile strikes on August 9 for the first time since the 1972- on some Sinai villages it said were harboring the suspected militants. The air strike killed 20 suspects in the villages of al-Toumah, al-Shallaq, and al-Atayqa.

Meanwhile, Egypt has closed the Rafah crossing since the attack on its soldiers on August 5, only opening it for two days on August 10 and 11 during which 1,500 stranded Gazans crossed over to Gaza. The crossing over to Egypt from Gaza and some of the underground tunnels that connect the two, transporting food and construction materials to Gaza have been sealed off as well. Egyptian authorities have not given further details on when the Rafah border crossing will resume regular operation.

While life in Gaza was disrupted with the Sinai incidence, West Bank Palestinians were dealing with a court order for the removal of Palestinians villages, strengthening international support for statehood, local election registrations and further probe into the death of late President Yasser Arafat.

On August 9, the Israeli High Court rejected an appeal to halt the removal of eight Palestinian villages in the south Hebron Hills. The Court said that the villagers have until November 1 to appeal until which they can remain in their villages which the Israeli army says it wants to transform into a military training area, claiming the Palestinian villagers are not permanent residents of the village and should evacuate the area.

Taayush, an Arab-Jewish activist organization has reported on Tuesday 7 that Israeli soldiers landed with two helicopters in one of the villages - Khibet Janbah, in an effort to intimidate and terrorize the villagers and vandalize their property. Prime Minister Salam Fayyad visited these villages on August 8, denouncing the move to evict the Palestinian villagers as attempt to grab more Palestinian land for the expansion of Israeli settlements which he said are a hindrance to the peace process.

On August 9, Palestinian news touched on the investigations of the death of Yasser Arafat, as the investigative committee asked the Swiss Radiophysics Institute- the institute that found traces of lethal polonium isotope on Arafat’s clothing- to examine his remains as well. The Institute said it will only do so if “the independence, the credibility and the transparency” of its work is guaranteed.

On a happier note on August 9, the release of a former hunger striker Bilal Diab was celebrated as the 27-year old made it to the Jalama crossing to head out to his home in Kafr Rai village near Jenin. Bilal’s release came after an agreement with Israeli authorities to end his 77-day hunger strike in an Israeli jail earlier this year, after 2000 Palestinian prisoners joined the strike. Bilal started the strike after he was held for a second term under ‘administrative detention’, without any charge.

Earlier in the week, Palestine and Palestinians were all about strengthening statehood as registration for the next local elections as well as garnering international support for a status upgrade at the UN General Assembly.

On the matter of strengthening statehood at home, voter registration was conducted in the West Bank from August 5 until August 9 whereby eligible voters in the West Bank went to register at one of the 754 centers. The Central Elections Commission said that it had sent messages to Gaza but had not received any replies, after the Hamas-led government called off preparations for voter registration early last July.

In the bid for statehood, an upgrade to a non-member observer state requires a simple majority vote of the 193 UN member states which Palestine can confidently expect to get. Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki said on August 5th, that the PA expects 180 votes in support of its status upgrade though Israel has been relentlessly trying to play carrots and sticks to stop the PA from going ahead with the application.

Israel has barred four diplomatic envoys from the Palestinian Committee of the non-Aligned Movement from entering the West Bank to attend a conference in Ramallah which was due on August 5, to discuss the Palestinian plan for status upgrade. According to an Israeli official, the envoys from Cuba, Indonesia, Malaysia and Bangladesh were denied entry into the West Bank because their countries do not officially recognize Israel.

Extending carrots, Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu has offered to release 50 political prisoners detained before the Oslo Accords if Palestine would pull back its bid for a status upgrade in the upcoming UN summit. The premier was also reported to have offered on August 5 to go back to negotiations he had walked out on two years ago. Chief negotiator Saeb Erekat has however repudiated this news saying that he’s not aware of such offers. President Mahmoud Abbas has on the other hand reaffirmed his plan to apply for the status upgrade and said that the PA ”will not step back” despite “other parties' interests”.

Speaking of the United Nations and the peace process, it was reported on August 5, that a UN fact finding mission on the legality of Israeli settlements in the West Bank is due to commence its work this month with a mandate from the UN Human Rights Council. The Israeli Foreign Ministry has said that it will not cooperate with the mission and will deny entry of the experts to Israel and the West Bank, calling the mission “another blatant expression of the singling out of Israel in the UNHRC”. The team of experts is due to conduct its investigations and present a final report by March 2013. Israeli settlements in the West Bank (which are illegal from the point of view of international law) are one of the unresolved issues that have hindered the peace process. There are currently about 500,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, territories Israel has occupied since the 1967 war.

 
 
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