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

The Palestinian territories heralded in 2008 under a barrage of Israeli attacks, mainly in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank city of Nablus. For the third day in a row, Israeli tanks, military vehicles and bulldozers entered Nablus to carry out a wide-scale incursion, ostensibly to crack down on Palestinian resistance groups. Thirty-eight people were injured on January 4 as the Israeli army carried out raids and arrests, mainly in Nablus’ old city. A tight siege was imposed around the city and its surrounding refugee camps and a curfew clamped down on its residents.

According to local sources, at least 70 army vehicles rolled into the city on January 4. Even hospitals were under siege, with Rafidiya hospital sources saying Israeli soldiers were checking all incoming and outgoing visitors and patients.

Prime Minister Salaam Fayyad strongly criticized the Nablus incursion, even canceling a trip to Cairo because of the new developments. He accused Israel of trying to sabotage the Palestinian Authority’s achievements in the city, namely the newly installed Palestinian police force, which has been operating in Nablus since November.

Since the incursion and subsequent curfew, 11 schools in the Nablus district have been closed down, with mid-term exams disrupted. Palestinian media sources also reported that the Israeli army has been dynamiting several shop doors on January 5, namely in the industrial zone of the city.

Even France has spoken out against Israel’s heavy-handed crackdown. On January 3, French Foreign Minister Spokesperson Pascal Andreani said Israel’s operations in Nablus were “threatening the Annapolis and Paris Donor Conference understandings.” She added that such military operations did not contribute to the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Still, the hardest hit territory since the start of the new year has indisputably been the Gaza Strip. In the past 24 hours alone, 11 people have been killed by Israeli air and ground raids in Khan Younis, Beit Hanoun and Gaza City. On January 4, two people were killed in an Israeli raid in Beit Hanoun and several others injured. It was, however, the day before, on January 3 that the largest death toll occurred, with nine people killed and 46 wounded in Khan Younis and Gaza City.

In one attack, five members of the same family all perished. When an Israeli missile hit the Fayyad family home in Khan Younis, a mother, her two sons and daughter in addition to another extended family member were killed. Of the 46 people wounded that day in Khan Younis and Gaza City, 12 were children, five of whom lost their arms or legs in the blasts.

A day earlier, on January 2, seven people were killed in Israeli air strikes on Gaza City, including several members of the Qassam, Nasser Eddin and Aqsa Martyrs Brigades.

Israel claims the operations are in response to the rockets that continue to fall on Israeli territory. On January 4, one Katusha rocket hit Ashkelon inside Israel for the first time, landing in an open field without causing any damages or injuries. Still, Israel’s reaction was fierce, given that this was the first time a Palestinian rocket was able to reach 16.5 kilometers into Israeli territory. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert called the rocket attack a “strategic threat” to Israel, which necessitates urgent measures. According to one Israeli government official, a possible scenario to halt these rockets is to re-occupy the northern Gaza Strip.

On December 31, Israeli army deputy minister Matan Vilnai said that if the situation calls for a full scale operation, Israel is prepared to remain the Gaza Strip for up to a year and a half. “We all know who will be the winner then,” Vilnai warned.

For the Palestinians, one such strategic threat is the ongoing internal violence. On January 1, seven people were killed in clashes that erupted between Hamas and Fateh, also in the Gaza Strip. While the Islamic Jihad and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine intervened to bring a halt to the violence, tensions are still running high between the two rival factions. While Hamas operatives raided Fateh offices in the Gaza Strip and arrested several Fateh cadres, Fateh-backed security forces proceeded to arrest Hamas members in the West Bank on January 5.

In his speech on January 1, on the occasion of Fateh’s founding anniversary, President Mahmoud Abbas called for “turning a new leaf” with Hamas while in the same breath accusing them of “spreading lies”. Abbas also proposed holding early elections in order to overcome the internal crisis with Hamas.

Hamas politburo chief Khaled Masha’al played the same game in his speech in Damascus on January 4 on the occasion of Hamas’ inception, where he also called for unconditional dialogue with Abbas, followed by a demand that Prime Minister Salaam Fayyad resign.

The two sides were apparently unimpressed by the other’s “outstretched hand”, with Fateh calling Meshaal’s speech “nothing new.”

Still, one positive development this week was the return of Gaza pilgrims to their homes on January 2. After being banned entry at the Rafah Crossing for five days, almost 2,000 pilgrims returning from the Haj in Mecca were given permission to cross over into the Strip by Egypt, which had previously closed the border crossing to them under Israeli pressure. Three elderly pilgrims died during the five-day wait.

On the ground, the Palestinians still have much on their plate. The Israeli government rang in the new year with an announcement for tenders to build 440 new housing units in a Talpiot neighborhood in Jerusalem. While Talpiot is officially in Israeli west Jerusalem, the majority of the land on which the new houses will be built is land confiscated in 1973 from the Palestinian neighborhoods of Sur Baher and Jabal Al Mukabber.

It goes without saying that the Palestinians will have a mouthful to offer US President George W. Bush in his upcoming visit to the region next week. According to PLO Executive Committee Secretary Yasser Abed Rabbo, Israel’s latest military invasions are a message to the US President as a show of strength in their conflict with the Palestinians.

Bush is scheduled to arrive on January 9 and meet with Israeli officials in Jerusalem first. It has not yet been announced whether he will travel to Jericho or Ramallah to meet with Abbas, but Bush has reiterated his commitment to backing peace in the region, telling King Abdullah of Jordan on January 4 that he believes it is possible to reach a final agreement by the end of the year.

One pressing issue that must definitely be resolved as part of this final resolution is the prisoner file. During his Damascus speech, Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal vowed that captive Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit would not be released until all Palestinian political prisoners are released from Israeli jails. While Israel and the Palestinians have discussed this issue time and again, they have failed to reach a formula agreeable to both sides, with Israel refusing to release any prisoner with “Israeli blood on their hands.”

Meanwhile, any future prisoner swap is too late for one prisoner, 21 year-old Fadi Abul Rub from the northern West Bank town of Qabatiya. Abul Rub, charged with membership in the Islamic Jihad, died on December 30 under “mysterious circumstances.” The young man’s family is holding Israeli authorities responsible for the death of their son, insisting that he was in perfect health the last time they visited him.

Abul Rub is the fifth Palestinian prisoner to die in Israeli prisons this year.

 
 
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