MIFTAH
Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

As Palestinians prepare to ring in the new year, it looks as if they have little to celebrate. While the Palestinian and Israeli negotiating teams say they will push forward with bilateral talks in spite of core differences, movements on the ground indicate little optimism.

Throughout the week, Israel has been relentless in its so-called fight against Palestinian rockets being fired into Israeli territory from the Gaza Strip. In the past week, 20 Palestinian activists, primarily from the military wings of the Islamic Jihad and Hamas, have been killed by Israeli military operations. Two Israeli soldiers were also killed.

On December 28, two Al Quds Brigades activists were shot and killed after killing two Israeli soldiers near the Jewish settlement of Talam west of Hebron. According to media reports, four Palestinians carried out the attack but two escaped after being wounded. Apparently, three Israeli soldiers were hiking near the settlement of Kiryat Arba when the Palestinians shot at them while driving by in a jeep. The third soldier was unwounded.

Israeli forces later raided the area, reportedly also raiding a nearby hospital in search of the wounded Palestinian, who is still at large.

Also on December 28, Israeli special forces entered the Ramallah-area village of Beituniya and shot and killed Mutasem Sharif, 22. Sharif, a member of the presidential guard, was also the personal bodyguard of chief Palestinian negotiator Ahmad Qurei. He died after sustaining four gunshot wounds to the head.

The Islamic Jihad later released a statement claiming responsibility for the attack, saying it was in retaliation for Israel’s assaults in the Gaza Strip. A day earlier, on December 27, seven Palestinians were killed and 16 wounded in Gaza during three air strikes, including Al Quds Brigades commander, Mohammed Abu Murshed.

On December 24, two Izzedin Al Qassam Brigades activists were killed in the Breij Refugee Camp during an Israeli air raid and on December 22, the third day of Eid Al Adha, Israel struck down nine Palestinians and wounded 30 others. During the Israeli invasions that day into several areas of the Gaza Strip including Al Maghazi Refugee Camp and Al Masdar village, four Israeli soldiers were also wounded.

Israel’s measures in the Gaza Strip are not only restricted to callous military operations. The suffocating siege imposed on the Strip since the Hamas takeover last June has also resulted in 51 deaths due illnesses, according to Palestinian health sources. This week, five year-old Yousef Abu Maryam died after being denied permission to travel abroad for cancer treatment. Aysheh Abu Marda, another cancer patient, also succumbed to the disease after being banned from leaving the Strip to seek better medical treatment abroad.

Furthermore, 1,700 Gazans have been stranded for days on a ship at the Egyptian port of Nuweiba on the Red Sea, awaiting permission to return to their homes via the Rafah Crossing. The Gazans are on their way home from Mecca, after performing the Islamic pilgrimage of Al Haj, and have been denied re-entry by Egypt through Rafah under Israeli pressure to force them to cross at the Karem Shalom crossing under Israeli control.

The pilgrims, many of whom are said to be affiliated with Hamas, have refused, claiming Israel will arrest them on arrival at the crossing, and insist they will only return through Rafah. Negotiations are currently ongoing with the Jordanians as well, to find a way to get the pilgrims home.

Developments on the negotiating track do not seem more promising. President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert met on December 26 in Jerusalem, only to reach another impasse over Jewish settlements. Apparently, Olmert refused to renege on the recent plans to build over 300 additional housing unites in the east Jerusalem settlement of Har Homa, but said he would “not build any new settlements or expand on any of the older existing ones.”

This is hardly a comfort to the Palestinians, who insist that all settlement expansion, construction or additions be immediately halted in compliance with the roadmap. The east Jerusalem settlements in particular, are an extremely volatile issue for the Palestinians given that their construction will eventually create a settlement ring around the city, severing it completely from its West Bank neighbors in Bethlehem in particular.

Still, Olmert is apparently trying to keep any lukewarm American objections to his settlement activities at bay. On December 28, Israel Radio reported that Olmert gave US President George Bush new guarantees to freeze settlement activity in Maaleh Adumim and Ariel, a major settlement in the northern West Bank. Bush, who is expected to visit the region sometime in January, has expressed his dissatisfaction with Israel’s plans to expand settlements at a time when negotiations with the Palestinians were just getting started.

Still, even if Olmert pledges to halt any new expansions immediately, this will not halt old orders, says the Israeli Peace Now movement. An official in the movement clarified on December 28 that thousands of new housing units with “valid” permits could still be built over the next several years even if Olmert freezes new tenders today.

This hardly seems the case anyway, the same group espoused. On December 23, Peace Now also said that Israel would allocate $25 million from its 2008 budget for construction in Har Homa and Maaleh Adumim alone.

The December 27 meeting did, however, reap minor results. According to media reports, Israel agreed to settle the files of 7,000 Palestinians currently without residency cards. Olmert also said Israel would allow the return of 26 deportees from Gaza to the West Bank.

Egyptian President Husni Mubarak met on December 26 with Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak in Sharm Al Sheikh to discuss the Palestinian-Israeli peace process and also to defuse the recent tension between the two countries following Israeli Foreign Minister Tsipi Livni’s accusatory comments about Egypt’s complicity with Palestinian arms smuggling. Earlier in the week Livni charged Egypt with helping Palestinian factions with smuggling arms through underground tunnels between Gaza and Egypt.

Egypt took offense to the charges, saying it was doing no such thing. During the Mubarak-Barak meeting, the two talked about ways of moving the peace process forward, with Mubarak criticizing Israel’s settlement activities in Jerusalem.

On December 22, media reports also surfaced about possible talks between Hamas and Egypt over captive Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. While the reports also mentioned a possible long-term truce between Hamas and Israel under certain conditions including the release of Hamas prisoners, Hamas officials have denied any such deal.

Finally, the US Congress has approved only about half of the funds proposed by the US as assistance to the Palestinian people. During this month’s donor conference in Paris, the United States said it planned to offer $5 million in assistance but on December 26, Congress basically cut this number in half, approving only $218.5 million.

 
 
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