MIFTAH
Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
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Patches of the Gaza Strip were plunged yet again into darkness after Israel renewed electricity cuts to the Strip on November 8. The move came after the Israel High Court approved the motion to allow power cuts, rejecting an earlier appeal by several human rights organizations, which declared the collective punishment was a violation of human rights.

Apparently, this most recent move entails cutting power from one of the ten existing electricity lines, which supplies five percent of the Strip’s needs. Israel, in a bid to curb the ongoing rockets being fired on Israeli territory, threatened to cut another five percent from Gaza if the attacks did not stop.

The rocket firing from Gazan territory has escalated over the past week, with Hamas and the Popular Resistance Committees announcing they had fired 30 rockets in a 24-hour period. According to Israeli sources, seven Israelis were injured in the attacks and several buildings damaged in the northern Israeli town of Sderot.

Following the High Court decision, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband expressed his country’s concern for the renewal of Israel’s sanctions on the Strip, urging the Jewish state to restore electricity to Gaza. “We believe that such action risks a further deterioration in the humanitarian situation in Gaza without improving the security situation.” In the same statement, however Miliband did not leave out Britain’s condemnation of Monday’s Palestinian operation in Dimona, which resulted in the death of one Israeli woman in addition to the two Palestinian bombers, saying Britain understood Israel’s need for security.

The electricity, however, was hardly the only punitive measure Israel has taken against the Palestinians of Gaza for the rocket firing. Over the past week, the Strip has been constantly pummeled with air and ground strikes, with seven Palestinians killed on February 7, one the night before and nine killed on February 5.

The continuous Israeli strikes and the most recent power cuts in the Strip have come in tandem with the border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt being closed off completely. Egyptian law enforcers have gradually sealed the border, closing it off completely on February 3 when the main passageway between the two countries, the Salah Eddin Gate, was shut.

Still, the reestablishment of a secure border did not come without violence between Egyptian security forces and armed Palestinians, self-defined “difficult meetings” between Hamas and Egyptian officials and stinging remarks from Egyptian politicians.

On February 2, Hamas officials returned to their respective homes in Gaza and Damascus after hard talks with Egyptian intelligence officers pertaining to the border. Egypt apparently reprimanded Hamas over the border breeches, saying it would not compromise Egypt’s security or sovereignty. The two sides agreed to work on reopening the Rafah Crossing in a legal and organized manner.

A day later, after the border was sealed, Egypt sent a letter to the Hamas leadership, saying they would not allow a repeat of the border breech in the future.

It did not take long for things to get ugly, however. On February 4, armed clashes broke out at the border and several Palestinians and Egyptian security personnel were injured as the Egyptians tried to stop any infiltrations into their territory.

Egypt did, however allow hundreds of Palestinians to return home to the Strip on February 6 although estimates put up to 9,000 Palestinians still on the other side of the border. Meanwhile, President Mahmoud Abbas reiterated his willingness to take control over Gaza’s crossings as part of an overall plan to bring calm to the Strip. In the same statement, Abbas also called for a halt to Palestinian rockets on Israel, rejected Israel’s measures of collective punishment and condemned the attacks on Egypt’s borders, ensuring that the Egyptians are “our brothers.”

Egypt was seemingly not reassured of the Palestinians’ promises to stop the border breeches and bring calm to the Gaza-Egypt crossing. On February 8, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmad Abu Gheith said the Egyptians would “break the legs” of any Palestinians who tried to break through the sealed border into Egypt. Hamas, of course, did not take the warning well, chiding their neighbors and urging them to “break the siege, not the legs of the besieged.”

Israel, unsurprisingly, has its own bone to pick regarding the 12-day border breech. Israeli officials claim that highly developed weaponry was smuggled into the Strip through the open borders, including long range land and air missiles. The Palestinians have so far not commented on this allegation.

Meanwhile, President Abbas also called for a ceasefire between the armed Palestinian groups and Israel. While Fateh’s armed wing, the Aqsa Martyrs Brigades announced on February 8 that its forces would abide by the ceasefire on condition that Israel does not continue with its attacks, other Palestinian forces were not as keen to jump on the bandwagon. Islamic Jihad leader Khaled Al Batsh criticized the move, saying “it was not time for a ceasefire” in light of the ongoing Israeli massacres, claiming Abbas’ call for one was “political blackmail”.

While Hamas originally rejected Abbas’ call for a ceasefire outright, its spokesperson Sami Abu Zuhri later softened his tone, merely saying that the “ball was in Israel’s court.” He also doubted any ceasefire would ever solidify because Israel has proven through its actions that it is not interested in any calm.

This would apparently seem to be the case given Israel’s most recent bombing on February 5. Nine people in all were killed that day, seven of whom were police officers in the deposed Hamas government. The air missile struck the men as they were performing afternoon prayers in the police stations’ mosque. The two others killed that day were during armed clashes in Rafah.

The ongoing Israeli strikes on Gaza were the supposed rationale behind the Dimona suicide bombing, which took place February 5. Two men originally believed to be from Gaza but who were later confirmed to be from Hebron, snuck into a shopping mall strapped with explosive belts. While the first one managed to detonate his explosives, killing himself and an Israeli woman, the second man was spotted by an Israeli policeman who shot him five times before his bomb could go off. The two men were reportedly operatives from Hamas’ Izzedin Al Qassam Brigades.

On a lighter note, the Ramallah Municipality launched a tree planting campaign on February 5 in honor of its 100th anniversary. According to municipality sources, 15,000 trees will be planted over a period of 40 days in the Ramallah district, partly, the municipality says, to counter Israel’s continuous policy of uprooting Palestinian trees.

 
 
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