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

This week has seen a lot of focus on the Gaza Strip, in particular on the worsening humanitarian situation in the region. A lot of coverage has also been afforded to the unrest in the Israeli government following allegations of corruption being leveled at Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. On the Palestinian political front, it has been a relatively quiet week, with the main focus being on an expected Cabinet reshuffle of the Palestinian government.

On May 25, Amos Gilad, a senior aide to Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, met Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, who has been mediating between Israel and Palestinian factions, including Hamas, which has ruled the impoverished Gaza Strip for nearly a year. The aim of the meeting was an attempt to find a way for a truce to be struck between Israel and Hamas.

Hamas has demanded the lifting of the crippling blockade on Gaza, which Israel says it imposed in a bid to force armed Palestinian factions to stop firing rockets and mortar rounds into Israeli territory.

Yuval Diskin, the head of Israel's internal security service Shin Bet, was quoted by a senior government official as casting doubt on the success of the Gaza truce efforts.

"Hamas is interested in a truce but is refusing to accept Israel's conditions. It is putting an emphasis on the removal of the blockade and wants to buy time in order to continue its power building," Diskin was quoted as saying in an Israeli cabinet meeting.

Meanwhile, the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip continues to rage on and has attracted commentary from two public figures on the subject. Former US President Jimmy Carter on Sunday described Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip as "one of the greatest human rights crimes now existing on earth."

In a speech at a literary festival in Hay-on-Wye, in Wales, United Kingdom, the 83-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner said: "There is no reason to treat these people this way".

On Tuesday, May 27, Nobel Peace laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu held talks with a senior Hamas leader in the Gaza Strip, where he led a UN fact-finding mission into the killing of 19 Palestinian civilians in a 2006 Israeli artillery attack. The Israeli raid on Beit Hanoun on November 8, 2006 was widely condemned by the international community for killing 19 civilians, including five women and eight children, in their homes. Tutu commented that the purpose of the visit was to gather information to write a report for the UN Human Rights Council.

Tutu said that what he had seen in the Gaza Strip was beyond human comprehension, and that "the siege on the Gaza Strip is illegal and must end immediately."

On Thursday, he went even further as to say "my message to the international community is that our silence and complicity, especially on the situation in Gaza, shames us all. Gaza needs the engagement of the outside world, especially its peacemakers".

Israel denied Tutu’s fact-finding commission access into the Gaza Strip forcing them to use the Rafah crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip.

Sunday also saw the new count of Palestinian deaths for the week. Israel returned the corpses of three Palestinians to the Gaza Strip on Sunday, including one who had been injured last Wednesday during an Israeli incursion in Al-Bureij refugee camp. All three Palestinians died at Ichilov General Hospital at Tel Aviv medical center, said Muawiya Hassanain, the director of ambulance and emergency services in the Palestinian Health Ministry.

Israeli tanks and warplanes killed two Palestinians and injured five during an incursion in the Rafah area of the southern Gaza Strip on May 28. The Izzedin Al Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, announced that two of their members were killed in an Israeli air strike east of the city of Rafah. Hamas fighters said they were engaging invading forces in the Al Omour area near the Sufa crossing point at the time of the bombing. Ambulances were unable to reach the dead, further highlighting the effects of the blockade on the area.

Continuing with the killings in Gaza, a Palestinian man died on the morning of May 29 due to major injuries he sustained in an Israeli incursion the day before in Al Omour area east of Khan Yunis and Rafah, Palestinian medical sources announced. He was identified as Ahmad Al Omour. The Israeli army also arrested dozens of civilians in the Al Farta area, east of Beit Hanoun when Israeli military vehicles raided the area under cover of intensive gunfire.

On May 29, the director of the statistics department in the Palestinian Ministry for Detainees' Affairs, Abdul Nasser Farawnah, announced that 56-year-old Palestinian prisoner Salim Al-Kayyal has been imprisoned for 25 years and on Friday, his 26th year in Israeli jails will begin. He is the Gaza Strip's longest serving prisoner.

Farwanah said in a report issued on Thursday that Al Kayyal brings the number of Arab and Palestinian detainees who have served a quarter century or more to 14. Eight of those long-term detainees are from the West Bank; three are Palestinian citizens of Israel; one is from Jerusalem; and Al Kayyal from the Gaza Strip.

A 60-year-old Palestinian woman also died on May 30 from wounds she sustained when gunshots were fired from an Israeli military position near her home in the Gaza Strip, medics and relatives said. Yusra Qdeih was seriously wounded on Thursday night by gunfire that came from an Israeli position, her family said, adding that she had been in her home in Khuzaa village, near the barrier that separates Gaza from Israel.

In terms of the fuel crisis in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian Authority officials asked Egypt to permit shipments of badly-needed fuel into the Gaza Strip during talks in Cairo on Sunday, while Israel allowed the first fuel shipment into the Strip in nearly a week. Representatives of the Palestinian Authority and the Egyptian ministers of power and petroleum met in Cairo on May 26 in an attempt to secure Egyptian help in resolving the energy crisis in the besieged Gaza Strip. The Interior Ministry of the Hamas-run de facto government in Gaza announced that it ordered its security officers not to refuel their cars. The Ministry said that its security forces are to keep order at gas stations, and are not to interfere with the distribution of extremely scarce gas.

Meanwhile, on May 28, a UN agency said that thousands of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank risk being displaced as the Israeli authorities threaten to tear down their homes and in some cases entire communities.

"To date, more than 3,000 Palestinian-owned structures in the West Bank have pending demolition orders, which can be immediately executed without prior warning," the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a report.

"At least 10 small communities throughout the West Bank are at risk of being almost entirely displaced due to the large number of pending demolition orders," OCHA said.

On May 30, it was confirmed that Prime Minister Olmert would meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas before flying to Washington for talks with US President George Bush next week. Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said the talks would include discussion of a permanent peace agreement and Egyptian attempts to broker a truce between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Casting a shadow over the any meetings with the Israelis is the ongoing and widening corruption probe that threatens Olmert's political survival. Defense Minister and Labor party leader Ehud Barak , joined calls for Olmert to step down over allegations he illegally received large sums of cash from a US financier.

"The prime minister should take decisions, his party needs to take decisions. If they don't, we will make those decisions for them," Barak said on Thursday, when he called for Olmert to step down or face early elections.

On May 27, a high-level coordination meeting took place between Israeli generals and Palestinian officials at the Palestinian Authority headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah. The meeting addressed the activities of the newly-deployed Palestinian security forces in Jenin and the northern West Bank. The two sides agreed to hold more coordination meetings in the future.

Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad is expected to reshuffle the cabinet of the Palestinian caretaker government soon.

Fayyad will meet with Azzam Al-Ahmad, head of Fateh in the Palestinian Legislative Council to discuss the changes.

Finally, one aspect of Israeli violence that receives little coverage is that of settler violence. This week, Israeli television aired footage showing a group of young Jewish settlers torturing and abusing two Palestinian youths from Shu'fat in northern Jerusalem on May 28.

The footage was recorded on Israel's Holocaust Memorial Day. It shows 20 Jewish youths armed with knives and clubs waiting in the Israeli settlement of Pisgat Ze'ev to attack Palestinians. When two Palestinian teenagers from Shu'fat appeared, they were attacked and beaten.

 
 
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