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

Palestinians around the world commemorated the 30th anniversary of the Sabra and Shatilla massacre, carried out by the Phalangist Lebanese army in collusion with the Israeli army, which was occupying West Beirut at the time. Some 2,000 refugees, all unarmed and mostly women and children, were slaughtered over the course of two days.

The commemoration eerily coincided with the killing of at least 18 Palestinians on September 20 in the Yarmuk refugee camp in Damascus.

The PLO office in Yarmouk said the Syrian regime "committed a massacre" against Palestinians in the camp. Bodies were found mutilated and charred. "We reject any justification or allegations invoked by the Syrian regime army about this massacre which includes torture, killing, and assassination," PLO secretary-general Yasser Abed Rabbo said.

"Moreover, such types of crimes need to be condemned internationally. Syria faces unprecedented massacres against Syrian people as well as Palestinians," he said. According to Palestinian officials, around 400 Palestinians have been killed so far in Syria since the start of the conflict there.

The economic situation in the Palestinian territories is hardly encouraging either. On September 20, the International Monetary Fund issued a report saying that the Palestinian economy is facing serious risks, citing a slowdown in growth and rise in unemployment in both Gaza and the West Bank. "The economic slowdown reflects continued fiscal retrenchment combined with severe financing difficulties, declining donor aid especially from regional donors, and slower easing of restrictions on movement and access," the report said.

A day earlier on September 19, The World Bank also issued a document on the Palestinian territories warning of a deepening fiscal crisis and urging donors to act immediately. The report stressed that sustainable growth can only be attained by investments in the private sector investment and access to Area C, something which is almost impossible given Israel’s restrictions.

"Donors do need to act urgently in the face of a serious fiscal crisis facing the PA in the short term," said Mariam Sherman, World Bank Country Director for the West Bank and Gaza. "But even with this financial support, sustainable economic growth cannot be achieved without a removal of the barriers preventing private sector development, particularly in Area C."

The reports come in the week after social protests swept the West Bank, demanding lower prices and a better economic policy. While the government introduced some changes in this regard, the situation remains precarious given the lack of donor commitment to the Palestinians.

On September 21, an appeal was made by a group of 30 international agencies calling on the Quartet Committee to take immediate action to stop 13 Palestinian villages from being destroyed and evacuated in south Hebron.

The appeal comes after several development agencies received demolition or stop work orders for aid projects in the area. Oxfam said it was given notice by Israeli authorities that it is not permitted to enter the villages to continue its development projects.

“The Quartet has issued 39 statements condemning the government of Israel’s violations of international law, yet the number of people displaced by unlawful demolition of Palestinian homes continues to increase at an unprecedented rate,” Country Director of Oxfam Nishant Pandey said.

And when Israel is not destroying, it is confiscating. On September 20 Israeli settlers took over six dunams of land south of Bethlehem located near the Israeli settlements Elazar and Etzion.

In nearby Wadi Fukin, occupation authorities issued orders to confiscate 60 dunams of land a day earlier also for the expansion of area settlements.

On September 19, two men were killed in Israeli shelling in eastern Gaza. According to local sources, Ashraf Salah, 38, and Anees Abu al-Aynaen, 22, both who were members of the Hamas-run security forces were killed when a shell hit their car.

Furthermore, at the Egypt-Israel border on September 21, Israeli troops killed three people in an exchange of fire after the group is said to have entered Israeli territory through a gap in the fence.

Hamas has had a rough week, with Egypt denying it was undermining the Palestinians’ representation by receiving Hamas officials. On September 20, Egyptian Foreign Minister Kamel Amr said Hamas officials were welcome in Cairo as “visitors”, not in an official capacity. He also denied reports the party had opened an office there. The Egyptian statements come after President Mahmoud Abbas and the leadership criticized Egypt’s welcoming of de facto Hamas PM Ismail Haniyeh in Cairo last week, who went in his so-called capacity as the head of government. The president has urged Egypt to take a clearer position towards Hamas, calling on them not to undermine the unity of Palestinian representation.

Hamas has also accused the PA of targeting its operatives in the West Bank and therefore undermining already faltering reconciliation efforts. Hamas says PA security services have arrested as many as 71 people. The Authority has denied the arrests were politically motivated, saying they were partly of people who were involved in acts of vandalism on police stations and municipalities during the recent social protests.

Meanwhile, Israeli Prison Services denied on September 20 that Samer Al Barq the longest standing hunger-striker yet would be deported to Egypt shortly. "It’s not happening today, and not tomorrow," a spokesperson for the services said. Al Barq, who was transferred to the intensive care unit of an Israeli hospital because of the sharp deterioration in his health, has agreed to be deported to Egypt in exchange for ending his strike. He has been on hunger strike for over 115 days.

Prisoner Society lawyer Jawad Bulus said the deal was still in place and only technical obstacles stood in the way of his immediate release. Another hunger striker, Hasan Safadi, also remains in custody in the intensive care unit of an Israeli hospital but an Israeli military court has ordered his administrative detention not to be renewed.

On September 19, Israeli authorities closed the Ras Khamees checkpoint at the Shufat camp, replacing it with a section of the separation wall. 65,000 residents of the camp will now have to pass through a single checkpoint, along with other Palestinians in the area.

Four Palestinians were convicted in a Gaza appeals court on September 17, in the killing of Italian peace activist Vittori Arrigoni in 2011. The court sentenced Mahmoud Salfiti, 23, and Tamer Hasasna, 25, to life imprisonment plus 10 years for kidnap and murder, while Khader Ajram, 26, was sentenced to 10 years for abduction.

 
 
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