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Thursday, 2 May. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Israel’s recent decision to build up to 6,000 more housing units in West Bank settlements, namely those in and around east Jerusalem has brought on international and Palestinian condemnation and increasing Israeli defiance.

On December 17 Israeli officials said they would press on with plans for the construction of the homes in spite of international displeasure. An Israeli interior ministry planning committee gave preliminary approval for 1,500 new homes in the Ramat Shlomo settlement and will begin discussing plans for another 4,500 homes in two other settlements, Givat Hamatos and Gilo, all in the Jerusalem area.

The Palestinians immediately slammed the decision. “Settlement activity is unilateral and is completely adverse to the continued viability of a two-state solution and the possibility for our people to continue to exist. It's an attack on our people's right to life, essentially," Prime Minister Salam Fayyad said on December 17.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton was also particularly verbal about the plans. On December 20, Ashton said in a statement:

"The approval of an additional 2610 housing units in the settlement of Givat Hamatos is extremely troubling, coming in addition to announcements made at the end of November and Monday’s approval of 1500 units in Ramat Shlomo.

"This plan for Givat Hamatos would cut the geographic continuity between Jerusalem and Bethlehem. I strongly oppose this unprecedented expansion of settlements around Jerusalem," Ashton said.

The US also said it was not happy with the plans. State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said on December 19 that the United States was "deeply disappointed" by the plan and said it put the goal of a two-state solution at risk."

Still, her words were not backed by action as apparent in the Security Council statements made on December 19. The US was the only one of the 15 members of the UN Security Council that did not make a statement opposing Israeli settlement plans around Jerusalem after the United States repeatedly blocked attempts to take stronger action.

Countries were forced to “go to plan B” according to India's UN ambassador, Hardeep Singh Puri. Instead of issuing a legally binding resolution on Israel’s settlements, which he said the US would clearly veto, the eight council members from the Non-Aligned Movement, the four European members, Russia and China all were forced to issue separate statements.

Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority is still waiting for partial salvation from its financial crisis in the form of the promised Arab safety net of $100 million a month, pledged by Arab League states in a meeting earlier this month. With the funds yet to arrive, the PA has been unable to pay civil servant salaries for November, putting tens of thousands of Palestinians in an economic bind. On December 19 and 20 employees in public sectors and teachers in public schools went on strike in protest of not receiving salaries, saying some employees did not even have the financial means to reach their workplaces. Government officials have promised that half-salaries would be paid at the beginning of the week.

PLO executive committee member Wasel Abu Yousef said on December 20 that the leadership suspected the US was pressuring Arab countries not to pay up, in an attempt to explain the reason for the delay. In related news, Arab League chief Nabil Al Arabi is scheduled to arrive in Palestine on December 29 to meet with President Mahmoud Abbas, according to the PA’s foreign minister on December 21.

Foreign minister Riyad al-Malki said Al Arabi would discuss the financial safety net that had been pledged but still not disbursed. Qatari Prince Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifeh is also scheduled to visit Ramallah sometime this week.

Palestinian refugees in the Yarmouk camp in Damascus will return ‘home’ after fleeing the violence in the camp over the past several days. According to the Palestinian ambassador to Syria on December 20, an agreement between Palestinian factions in Damascus would allow them to return.

The hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in Yarmouk in addition to thousands of Syrians living there have come under heavy aerial bombardment in recent days, resulting in dozens of deaths.

According to UNRWA on December 16, the agency was housing over 2,600 displaced persons in its facilities and Damascus-area schools with the number growing. Over 1,000 other Palestinian refugees from Yarmkouk had crossed the border into Lebanon.

In the Gaza Strip, Israeli occupation forces shot and injured five Palestinians on December 21 at the border with Israel in the northern Gaza Strip. According to officials in Gaza, Israeli troops have wounded around 30 people in similar incidents since the ceasefire took hold last month after Israel’s offensive on the Strip.

Also related, 19-year old Ahmad bin Saed died in an Egyptian hospital on December 19 from shrapnel wounds received on November 17 in an Israeli airstrike. The attack also killed Ahmad’s father.

Finally, Fatah is still at odds with Hamas over the venue for holding the festival marking Fatah’s 48th anniversary in Gaza. Hamas is not allowing Fatah to hold the festival at central location of Katiba square in Gaza City, maintaining it could pick anywhere else. Fatah however, said it insisted on that location in particular given its space and centrality and the fact that the PA allowed Hamas to hold its rallies in the West Bank without obstacles.

“If Hamas is really serious about maintaining the good reconciliation atmosphere in the Palestinian streets, let them allow Fatah to have its anniversary festival the way Fatah wants, rather than provoking more bickering,” Fatah Revolutionary Council Abdullah Abu Samhadana said on December 21.

 
 
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