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

As the world continued to reel from the impact of the quarter of a million leaked cables, released by the whistleblower web site Wikileaks on November 28, Israel found itself in a more local crisis. On December 2, a brushfire broke out in the Carmel mountains in Haifa, claiming the lives over 40 people. As press time, Israel was still trying to control the flames.

The fire, which is one of the biggest in Israel’s recorded history, has elicited international aid offers, even from the most unlikely candidates. Turkey, whose relations with Israel have been tense ever since the Mavi Marmara fiasco in May, was the first country to offer help to Israel in trying to extinguish the fire. On December 2, Turkish officials in Washington said that Turkey offered to send Israel two firefighting aircraft to help control the brushfire, an offer Israel has accepted.

As of December 3, 42 people had died, most of who were killed in a bus carrying members of a Prison Service guards' course travelling to the Damon jail to help evacuate inmates. Since then, approximately 17,000 people have evacuated their homes in the surrounding areas until authorities could contain the fires.

The Palestinians have also lent a helping hand. On December 3, Brigadier General Ahmad Ar-Riziq told Maan news agency that Palestinian firefighters were working to control fires that spread to the Palestinian villages of Al Tayba and Barta'a west of Jenin.

Meanwhile, the Ramallah International Solidarity Institute called on the Damoun women's prison administration to ensure the safety of the 15 Palestinian women detainees in the prison.

On November 28, Wikileaks released a torrent of cables that embarrassed world leaders such as the United States and supposedly uncovered diplomatic secrets. One cable revealed that Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak had contacted both Egypt and the Palestinian leadership prior to its invasion of Gaza in the winter of 2008. Israel apparently wanted the two to take over control of the Strip once Israel has sacked Hamas, an offer that both declined.

In the midst of these crises, it looks as if the United States could not secure a promise from Israel to extend its settlement freeze for an additional 90 days. Last week, the US reportedly offered Israel an incentives package including 20 fighter planes and a guarantee of an American veto of any anti-Israel resolutions in the UN. However, on December 2, reports emerged from Palestinian sources that the US informed the Palestinians they had failed in securing a settlement freeze extension. A day later, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said her country was working “intensively” to secure peace between the two sides, regardless of the reported setback.

"The United States is working intensively to create the conditions that will permit the parties to negotiate their way forward to a final resolution," Clinton said during a visit to Bahrain.

On the same day, President Mahmoud Abbas, obviously frustrated with the continued impasse, threatened to resign if settlement activities continued on Palestinian land, hinting to the possible dissolution of the Palestinian Authority. Abbas said he could not "afford to remain the president of a nonexistent Palestinian Authority" if Israel’s occupation of the West Bank continued along with settlement construction. “I say to the Israelis that they can continue as occupiers, but as for me, I will not accept the status quo.”

It doesn’t look as if Israel has any intentions of stymieing its settlement expansions in the least. On December 2, Israeli authorities in Jerusalem approved the expansion of two east Jerusalem settlements just as the US was trying to convince it otherwise. According to the plans, 625 housing units in Pisgat Zeev and 130 in Gilo settlements were approved.

Settlement expansion is not the only measure Israel is taking in east Jerusalem to secure its control over the city. On November 28, Israeli army and police forces evicted four families in Sheikh Jarrah to make way for Jewish settlers. As such 45 members of the Hamed family have been made homeless.

A day later, Israeli municipal forces also demolished a home and a print shop in Essawiyeh, two homes in Ras Khamis and one in Sheikh Jarrah, all in the eastern sector of the city. Residents say 20 other homes in Essawiyeh are threatened with demolition. Clashes between residents there and Israeli police have broken out intermittently since the demolitions.

On November 30, French engineering group Veolia pulled out of its five percent share in the Jerusalem tramway project, according to a spokesman for the group. Veolia denied they had pulled out because of pressure from pro-Palestinian groups to boycott the project, which is aimed at linking Jerusalem settlements to Israel.

"Like every business, the Veolia Israel group weighs its activities according to financial and business considerations," said the spokesman. "According to those considerations it makes its decisions."

Dan, the company overseeing the project however, is suing Veolia over what it says is a broken agreement, claiming it buckled because of boycott threats pro-Palestinian groups around the world.

In Gaza, three young men from the Lahham family in Rafah killed on December 3 when a smuggling tunnel collapsed. A fourth was injured.

The smuggling tunnels are a symptom of Gaza’s dire economy. On December 2, Maxwell Gaylard, UN deputy special coordinator for the Middle East peace process expressed as much when he said the Strip would need $575 million in 2011. He said the Palestinians there were living in “precarious conditions” and need help to survive. Gaylard attributed this to the "continued blockade of Gaza, the occupation itself and the settlements".

Finally, a show of solidarity came from Brazil on December 3 when it recognized a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva announced the decision Friday in a public letter addressed to Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas and published on the website of Brazil's foreign ministry.

“It is a day of joy and enthusiasm for the peoples of Palestine and Brazil” said Fateh leader Nabil Shaath. “Brazil is helping paving the road for justice, freedom and peace in the Middle East."

Not everyone was happy with the move, namely the United States. On December 4, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, from the House Foreign Affairs Committee condemned Brazil's "severely misguided" and "regrettable" decision to recognize a Palestinian state.

Ros-Lehtinen, a top Republican, said Brazil's decision "is regrettable and will only serve to undermine peace and security in the Middle East".

 
 
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