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Penniless
in Gaza
By Avi
Issacharoff
In the town
of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip there are still signs of the last
Israel Defence Forces operation in the area. More “exposed” agricultural areas,
the bombed bridge leading into the town and damaged homes. A visiting Israeli
examined the bullet holes in the windows in astonishment. “Why did the soldiers
fire at you?” he asked in shock. The owner of the house smiled in
embarrassment. “It’s not the Jews, it’s the Kafarana family that fired on us
during the war of hamulas (extended families),” he explained.
Military
operations in Gaza provide many Israelis and Palestinians with the ultimate
explanation for the deteriorating situation in the Gaza Strip: the occupation
is to blame. However, visits to Gaza and public statements by Palestinians,
like Hamas government spokesman Ghazi Hamad, who recently published an article
calling on the Palestinians to own up to their mistakes, reveal a more
complicated situation.
Many
Palestinians dare to admit that the economic and social deterioration in the
Strip is not the outcome of Israeli actions alone. The disintegration of
Palestinian society and its institutions has also played an important role.
Gazan society is returning to an era in which the government, headed by Prime
Minister Ismail Haniyeh or Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (Abu
Mazen), does not solve problems; the sheikhs and mukhtars are the important
mediators.
While the
economic situation in Gaza is bad, almost shocking, it was not born completely
in the Israeli and international economic boycott. As it turns out, there is
money - but only for Hamas members. A prime example of this is the huge budget
provided for Hamas-run schools in the strip. For Gaza residents, Hamas
membership can assuage economic distress. The organisation manages to assist
people and pay them allowances, while Fatah members are approaching bankruptcy.
This is how a partial economic revolution has taken place: Those who receive salaries
and can make it through the month are Hamas supporters, who traditionally came
from weaker sectors of the population. The new poor are Fatah members.
The streets
of Beit Hanoun are relatively clean. Municipal employees are not on strike
here, as opposed to Gaza City, and garbage collection has continued as usual.
There were also no strikes in Khan Yunis, Rafah and other cities. However,
there is a strong stench in Gaza City, for which people blame Israel; Israel
has been withholding money from the PA (and thus payment from the municipal
employees.) Gaza City’s mayor, Majed Abu Ramadan, is identified with Fatah,
and, as a result, the city received reduced budgets relative to other
Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip communities. Therefore, the municipality employees
in the city hastened to strike, while sanitation employees continued to work in
other cities. The strike ended in Gaza as well, not because the salaries were
paid, but because of agreements behind the scenes between the Gaza municipality
and the Ministry for Local Government, which is controlled by Hamas.
A kilo
of zaatar for 100 shekels
Gaza City’s
dire economic situation is more evident among Fatah members in other areas as
well. Hamas’ operational force, which numbers thousands of soldiers, receives
the best equipment, regular supplies of food and drink and, according to Fatah
members, a sizable monthly allowance. This fact has ignited the anger of
members of the other security services, who have not received wages for nearly
six months.
On September
12 they set out on a parade in the streets of Gaza. The thousands were led by a
motorcycle bearing two armed men with yellow Fatah ribbons tied to their heads.
The demonstrators fired into the air and sang loudly: “Go, go, ya Haniyeh, a
kilo of zaatar is worth a hundred shekels.” [Ed. Note: Zaatar is an
inexpensive mixture of thyme, sumac and sesame seeds generally eaten on bread.] This chant referred to Haniyeh’s
famous statement upon assuming the premiership, in which he said that “if the
siege continues, we’ll eat zaatar and salt.”
One of the
participants, an officer in the preventive security force, Arafat al-Arini,
explained that “the Haniyeh government must take responsibility. The government
is not providing political hope, is not conducting negotiations with anyone in
the world, and is making mistakes in its treatment of the security services.”
Meanwhile, the cries become more hostile: “Go, go Haniyeh, the government needs
real men.”
Arini says
that Hamas caused the international community to lose interest in the
Palestinian issue. “They aren’t even accepting the Arab initiative,” he says.
An ice cream wagon that was making its way among the demonstrators did not
manage to cool things down, and when the protesters arrived at the parliament
building, they vented their anger against it.
After
Shalit’s release
“Hamas
should fear the moment when [kidnapped Israeli solder Gilad] Shalit is
released,” says a senior officer in one of the Palestinian security services.
“Only then will its real problems begin. Everyone will expect a turning point,
but without a change in the organisation’s policies, Israel will not remove the
siege and the government will fall. The economic and security situation is only
becoming worse, and with it, the corruption. During the era of Fatah rule, a
special committee decided on appointments to government ministries. Now they
appointed 11,000 civil service employees without a committee - only those close
to the plate, relatives of ministers, friends and neighbours.”
Among other
things, Hamas ministers have appointed 67 new directors and deputy directors to
the government ministries, and another 300 assistants and advisers. “They are
smuggling millions via the crossings and paying their people salaries. They
have appointed 20-year-olds as deputy directors. There is great anger among the
residents of Gaza, not only at the occupation, but also at the government that
has destroyed Gaza,” said the officer.
The same
officer claims that a Palestinian unity government will not serve Fatah, but
will rescue Hamas. “They want a unity government because for them it’s the last
opportunity to remain in power. That’s why Fatah must not join such a
government.”
Abbas is
actually the one person who is enthusiastic about the idea of a national unity
government and is trying to convince Hamas to agree to it. “It’s not that he’s
interested in rescuing Hamas,” explains a Palestinian commentator in Gaza.
“Although Haniyeh has become somewhat weaker and his organisation is guilty of
many negative phenomena, Abu Mazen knows that there is no substitute at the
moment for a Hamas government except for the dismantling of the PA. Even if the
government resigns and there are new elections, Fatah is so divided and weak
that it will lose the elections again.”
Ramadan
celebrations
In early
September, 3,000 new visitors entered Gaza, young calves imported from
Australia for Ramadan. A few thousand more are making their way to the strip at
present, along with dozens of tons of hay that will serve them as food. The
operation is being run by the Israel Defence Forces Coordination and Liaison
Administration, which is located at the entrance to the Strip.
Its
director, Colonel Nir Peres, must have one of the least enviable jobs in the
Army. He has to manoeuvre between conflicting interests: the needs of the
Palestinian population, on the one hand, and the security demands of the IDF
and the Shin Bet security services. When the commercial crossings are closed,
the Palestinians and the human rights organisations complain. When the
crossings are open, the security officials complain about the dangers.
“At the
beginning of April, we opened the Karni Crossing to exports. A few days later,
a booby-trapped car that was supposed to carry out an attack at the crossing
exploded on the Palestinian side. A few days ago we discovered another tunnel
and only this week did we begin to renew exports. None of the human rights
organisations that come to us with complaints asks why the terror organisations
are doing that,” he explains.
Peres, who
is a naval officer, looks as though he is still not quite used to a job that
requires the skills of a politician. In early September an Israeli delegation
from Physicians for Human Rights visited Gaza. They returned with severe
complaints about the Israeli policy that prevents the sick from being treated
in Israel and makes it difficult to transfer medical equipment to the Strip.
“The
complaints are simply untrue,” he says. “In recent months there were 800
entries into Israel by the sick and those accompanying them. No medical
equipment was held back. But, of course, an Israeli doctor who is used to the
standards of Tel Aviv hospitals will come to the Strip and say that the
conditions there are terrible.”
In their
statement to the media, representatives of the Israeli organisation who met
with Palestinian Health Minister Bassam Naim did not mention the initial policy
of the Hamas government not to permit the exit of sick people to Israel because
of “budgetary problems.” Miraculously, the Palestinian Health Ministry managed
to find money to pay for the treatment of a few well-connected people in
Israel. The father of one of the children whose treatment in Israel Naim
initially rejected, said at the time that if Hamas were to draft 1,000 fewer soldiers
for the “operational force” and use the funds for the Health Ministry, there
would be no problem paying for his son’s treatment in Israel.
But, as
noted, the occupation must be to blame.
© Haaretz, all rights reserved, reprinted by permission. |
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Copyright
© AIJAC 2006 |