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

Arab League Secretary General Nabil Al Arabi arrived in Ramallah today December 29, to discuss pledged financial aid to the Palestinian Authority. Al-Arabi is travelling with Egyptian foreign minister Mohammad Kamel Amr by Jordanian helicopter. The Arab League chief will meet with President Mahmoud Abbas during the day. The two are slated to discuss the so-called Arab safety net to support the Palestinian Authority in economic crisis but which has yet to arrive.

Originally, Palestinians had said several other Arab foreign ministers would join the delegation but given Israeli restrictions on traveling into the Palestinian territories and what they called “prior commitments” the delegation was pared down to two.

As for the visit of Sheikh Hamad Ibn Khalifa al-Thani, the emir of Qatar to the West Bank, foreign affairs minister Riyad Al Malki said on December 27 it had been postponed until the end of January. Sheikh Hamad was expected to visit the West Bank in December.

In Gaza, the crisis over Fatah’s celebrations marking the 48th anniversary of its establishment on January 1 was solved at the last minute. On December 28, Fatah announced that celebrations would go ahead as planned, after Hamas officials approved the Saraya Square as a venue for the events the night before.

Fatah had earlier announced it would cancel the festivals celebrations in Gaza because of disputes over the venue and Hamas’ refusal to approve either the Katibeh or Sarayeh squares for the events.

According to Fatah, around 5,000 Fatah members in Gaza will participate in the celebrations.

Another positive development in Gaza is that on December 29, Egypt announced that Qatari construction materials for the reconstruction of Gaza would be allowed entry through the Rafah border crossing as opposed to the Israeli controlled Karem Abu Salem crossing. Egyptian authorities said they would allow 20 shipments a day from Qatari aid including cement and other construction materials.

In the West Bank, things were not as positive. On December 24 the Israeli Jerusalem District Planning Board approved 1,242 new housing units in the settlement of Gilo. A college in the northern West Bank settlement of Ariel was also upgraded by Israeli authorities to university status, thus creating the first university in a settlement. The Gilo settlement expansion comes after last week’s announcement that 3,000 housing units had been approved in various West Bank and east Jerusalem settlements.

Even Britain was not happy with the latest announcement. On December 26, British minister for the Middle East Alistair Burt condemned Israel's approval for the Gilo 1,200 housing units according to a statement.

“These are further profoundly provocative actions that run contrary to the Fourth Geneva Convention. By taking these steps, despite the international community repeatedly raising our profound concerns, the Israeli Government is damaging Israel’s international reputation," Burt said.

In reference to the upgrade to university of a college in Ariel, Burt said: "Ariel is beyond the Green Line in a settlement that is illegal according to international law. This decision will deepen the presence of the settlements in the Palestinian territories and will create another obstacle to peace," he added.

This obviously is exactly what Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants. During the launch event for the Likud-Israel Beytenu coalition campaign on December 25, Netanyahu vowed to continue building settlements in Jerusalem. “With God’s help we will continue to live and build in Jerusalem, which shall remain united under Israeli sovereignty,” Netanyahu said. “In recent years we did much to strengthen settlements [in the West Bank], and we will continue to act to strengthen the settlements.”

Israeli police and soldiers however, did clash with settlers on December 28 when they attempted to evacuate an illegal settlement outpost north of Ramallah. Israeli security forces, including the army, police and border police, took part in the evacuation of Oz Zion outpost, near the illegal settlement of Bet El, north of Al Bireh. According to Israeli media sources, some 150 settlers clashed with security forces and threw stones at them, injuring five Israeli border police. Settlers also punctured the tires of two border police cars.

Outright announcements to expand Israeli settlements were accompanied this week with additional measures to stymie Palestinian moves towards independence and sovereignty. On December 28, Israeli occupation authorities announced that 456 dunams of land would be confiscated in the village of Beit Iksa, northwest of Jerusalem. In Qusra near Nablus, settlers attacked farmers trying to plant olive trees after uprooting 40 olive trees from the village. This is the second time this week that settlers have attacked Qusra residents.

On December 25, Israeli authorities also issued 20 demolition orders in the village of Wadi Nis near Bethlehem and 21 orders in the Nablus-area village of Yitma.

More Palestinians were killed in Syria this week during the ongoing clashes. On December 27, four Palestinians were killed when Syrian forces shelled the Yarmouk refugee camp in Damascus. The four, Ahmad Salameh, Loai Salameh, Muhammad Awad Salameh and Ali Awad Salameh were from the same family. Furthermore, Muhammad Qunneita, 31 from Gaza was also killed on December 28 in the Syrian city of Idlib, his relatives said. Some Palestinian sources say up to eight Palestinians have been killed this week in Syria.

President Mahmoud Abbas attended midnight mass in Bethlehem on December 24, reiterating the leadership’s determination to create a Palestinian state with east Jerusalem as the capital. The President said the capital would be Palestinian but would remain open to all faiths. Palestinian Christians going by the western calendar celebrated Christmas on December 25.

Also on the 24th, two Israeli ultra-Orthodox Jewish youths attacked and injured a 15-year-old Palestinian boy in east Jerusalem. The boy sustained moderate injuries and was taken to Hadasseh Hospital for treatment. The boy's mother said the attack was unprovoked.

"My son said he and his friends were hanging out near the train station when two religious-looking guys showed up. One of them grabbed him and knocked him down and hit him repeatedly over the head," she said.

 
 
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