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

The newly-brokered ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, which went into effect on the morning of June 19, is quickly eroding. While the ceasefire was meant to have held for six months, five days into the calm, Israel carried out the assassination of two Palestinians in Nablus, eliciting a knee-jerk reaction by Islamic Jihad.

Iyad Khanfar, 24 and Tareq Abu Ghali 23, were killed in the early hours of June 23 when Israeli forces raided an apartment building used by university students at Nablus' Al Najah University. Abu Ghali was apparently wanted by Israel on account of being a top commander in the Quds Brigades, Islamic Jihad's military wing. Khanfar, on the other hand, was a fourth year arts student at the university.

Israeli forces stormed the building at approximately 1:30 am after surrounding it and firing shots and sound bombs in its vicinity. Soldiers then broke into the apartment where the two men lived and opened fire at them, riddling their bodies with bullet holes. The men were unarmed at the time. Pictures taken immediately after the assassination showed the apartment in shambles, obviously ransacked by the invading Israeli troops.

The killings sparked an angry reaction from Islamic Jihad, which then fired three rockets into Sderot in northern Israel, damaging one house and slightly injuring two women. The movement maintained however, that the rockets were an exceptional reaction to the killing of Abu Ghali and did not constitute a breach of the ceasefire agreement. On June 25 during a meeting between Hamas and Islamic Jihad officials in Gaza, Daoud Shihab, an Islamic Jihad spokesperson reiterated his movement's commitment to the calm and said the rockets were to send two messages: one, to warn Israel not to continue its military operations against the Palestinians and two, to clarify that the West Bank and Gaza are inseparable. "We are one people; our suffering is one," he said.

Since then, Gaza's border crossings have been closed after only five days of partial relief to the people of Gaza. Two mortar shells were also fired on June 27, hitting an open area in the Negev Desert. While initial reports claimed that Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades were responsible for the rockets, the Brigades later denied, saying they were committed to the ceasefire.

Israel, meanwhile, is threatening more military action if the ceasefire goes under, over and above the re-closing of the borders. Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Haim Ramon said on June 27 that Israel "is not surprised" at the Palestinians' violation of the ceasefire agreement, accusing them of trying to dictate a new status quo on Israel where rockets are fired in response to any Israeli military operations in the West Bank.

During Friday prayers, deposed Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh called on the Palestinian factions to halt rocket fire into Israel "for the sake of the Palestinian people."

"We expect everyone to respect the agreement so that the Palestinian people achieve what they are looking for, an end to this suffering and breaking the siege," Haniyeh told reporters outside a Gaza mosque after noon prayers.

Former interior minister Saeed Siyam also bid his people to halt the rockets albeit with a sterner warning, saying anyone who violates the ceasefire must be ready to pay the consequences. He said the Aqsa Brigades, which Hamas continues to hold responsible for the most recent mortar attacks, had "breached the consensus of the people" reminding them that President Mahmoud Abbas had given his blessing to the agreement.

Israel has yet to heed the Palestinian call to halt its military operations in the West Bank, killing Mohammed Allami 17 on June 27 in the Hebron-area town of Beit Ummar. Youths from the town clashed with invading Israeli troops, which also arrested nine people before withdrawing.

Israeli troops injured 11 people including two internationals during the weekly demonstration against the separation wall in the village of Bilin. Troops also entered a home and set part of it on fire.

While the ceasefire between Hamas and Israel seems to be heading south, a possible prisoner swap may be on the horizon. Negotiations over captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit began on June 23 in Egypt headed by Israeli Shabak commander Ofer Dekel and Egyptian intelligence officer Omar Suleiman. The deal is yet to be finalized, however media reports have hinted that Israel is willing to compromise on 100 prisoners it previously refused to discuss. According to Israeli media reports, the internal Israeli intelligence service, the Shabak has said it would release "some" Palestinians with "Jewish blood on their hands"- that is, Palestinians involved in military action against Israelis. Palestinians are talking about a reported 1,000 prisoners to be released in two phases – 450 in the first phase and 550 in the second. Israel has not officially agreed to these numbers although an agreement certainly seems to be closer than ever. On June 28, Israel radio announced that Hamas is demanding the release of Fateh West Bank Secretary Marwan Barghouti as part of the Shalit deal. Barghouti is currently serving five life sentences in an Israeli prison.

On that same day, families of Palestinian prisoners held a sit-in in Gaza calling on Hizbullah Secretary General Hasan Nasrallah to demand the inclusion of long-serving Palestinian prisoners in any prisoner swap with Israel.

Diplomatically, Palestinians are hoping the relatively positive vibes they received from French President Nicolas Sarkozy will help with the negotiations process with the Israelis. Sarkozy won the praise of the Palestinian leadership on June 23 when he addressed the Israeli Knesset, saying that no peace could prevail without the establishment of a Palestinian state. Sarkozy, who first expressed France's undivided support for Israel and its security, also said the refugee issue had to be solved, settlement activity halted and Jerusalem divided into two capitals for two states before there could be any real peace.

Sarkozy, whose country is to assume the presidency of the European Union at the beginning of next month, also said a prerequisite to peace is that Palestinians fight "terrorism." A day later in Bethlehem, Sarkozy reiterated his country's commitment to the establishment of a Palestinian state, saying it was one of France's "priorities." He also told President Abbas that he had conveyed to his "friends the Israelis" that the injustice done to the Jews could not be rectified by creating unjust circumstances for the Palestinians.

Sarkozy and Abbas also signed a joint Palestinian-French agreement to establish an industrial zone east of Bethlehem with French funding to the tune of 12 million euros.

Prime Minister Salam Fayyad also did his part during a visit to Prague on June 26 when he called on Israel to halt settlement activity and reopen the borders. "We have 1.5 million people who believe they have nothing to lose," he said. "This situation has to end."

 
 
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