MIFTAH
Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Despite international attention on Jewish settlements this week following the United States’ veto of a draft resolution condemning them, Israeli authorities continued unabated to approve additional settlement construction in Jerusalem. On March 1, the west Jerusalem municipality’s licensing committee issued permits for the construction of 14 housing units in the Ras Al Amoud neighborhood in the eastern sector of the city. According to Israeli media reports, the second phase of the expansion will include the construction of 104 housing units for the settlement including a temple, kindergarten and a swimming pool.

In contrast to Jewish expansion in the city, throughout the week the municipality handed out 89 demolition orders to Palestinian residents of Jerusalem, including an apartment building with 22 homes in Bet Hanina.

Still, Jewish settlers are not happy. On March 3, right wing Israelis and settlers took to the streets in their own “day of rage” in protest of their government’s demolition of an illegal outpost near Nablus. The settlers blocked roads to Jerusalem and closed down train tracks to the airport

During the February 28 demolition of the Havat Gilad outpost, settlers and Israeli police clashed when settlers resisted the demolitions. Apparently, settlers threw stones at the soldiers and police who responded with rubber bullets. Over a dozen were injured and eight settlers arrested, which led to widespread protests and the closing of junctions in the West Bank and Jerusalem by the protesters.

While a recent Israeli government decision stipulated that some “illegal” outposts would be dismantled, it also stipulated that others would be legalized.

Then on March 4, settlers from the settlement of Shvut Rachel, also near Nablus, raided the Palestinian village of Qusra and cut down over 500 olive trees according to the PA settlement affairs department.

Right-wing Israelis have been active this week both within and across the Green Line. On March 2, dozens of Palestinians and left wing Israelis were injured during clashes with Israeli police and right wing demonstrators in Jaffa, who were protesting what they called the Islamic encroachment on Jaffa. “We heard the head of the Islamic Movement say Jaffa is Palestine," right wing activist Baruch Marzel said. "We tell them, go to Libya, to Gadhafi. It's time that Jews were not afraid to walk around Jaffa any time of the day or night. We want to drive out the enemies."

The right-wingers also said they were protesting the flying of the Palestinian flag at a demonstration a month ago and today calling for a “Jewish Jaffa.” Several Palestinians were wounded and others were arrested.

Meanwhile, pressure has been mounting on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to make an effort towards peace with the Palestinians. Netanyahu has reportedly told his ministers that a political move is necessary because the alternative would be a bi-national state, which he said, “would be disastrous for Israel.” A peace deal, he justified, would remove this threat.

According to reports from his office on March 1, Netanyahu is considering a plan for the establishment of a Palestinian state with temporary borders as part of an interim peace agreement that would be implemented immediately. According to an unnamed source, Netanyahu said an interim agreement was necessary because, “The Palestinians aren't ready to reach a final-status agreement to end the conflict, in light of the instability in the region."

A day later, PLO executive committee member Yasser Abed Rabbo said the Palestinians completely rejected any offer of a temporary settlement. He said the leadership would never sign on an interim or partial agreement with Israel, stressing on the need for a final settlement to the conflict.

In any case, the Palestinians need to deal with their internal issues first. On March 5, Hamas said it was preparing an initiative for national unity after it rejected the proposal put forth by Prime Minister-designate Salam Fayyad last week. The movement also said it was prepared to explain why it rejected Fayyad’s call to join a unity government earlier. Hamas official Yousef Rizqa said Fayyad’s plan was “stillborn” because it was the “stance of one person” and did not take into consideration a comprehensive political program.

"Even Fatah rejected it,” he said, “So there is not even a consensus between Fayyad, Fateh, or the Palestinian Authority."

On February 26, Fatah voiced its rejection of Fayyad’s plan to form a national unity government with Hamas while postponing reconciliation between the two parties. Ameen Maqboul, Fatah Revolutionary Council Secretary, said Fayyad’s plan was “a personal effort” and made no sense without reconciliation first. “This is a political issue and not an administrative matter.”

The tension with Fateh was even more pronounced this week when a letter reportedly sent on March 3 and signed by Fateh officials called for the replacement of Fayyad. The letter, which was published by Reuters, is said to have reached President Mahmoud Abbas who “did not take it seriously.”

“We suggest you reconsider re-appointing Dr. Fayyad and (instead) ask that a strong Fatah figure do the job," the letter which was reportedly backed by Fatah's Revolutionary Council, read.

Meanwhile, Israel continued to bomb Gaza, ostensibly to destroy arms warehouses. On February 28, two people were killed and two injured in Israeli artillery shelling. A day earlier, one Palestinian was also killed by Israeli shelling in the east of Gaza.

Finally, on February 28, the Palestinian delegation to the UN in Geneva walked out on US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s speech before the Human Rights Council in protest. Clinton, whose speech was supposedly to address the crisis in Libya and the United States’ support for its people, added that the Council’s standing agenda on Israel was “wrong”.

“The Council must apply a single standard to all countries based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It cannot continue to single out and devote disproportionate attention to any one country,” she said. Palestinian UN representative Ibrahim Khreisheh said he walked out because of what he said was the US’ “attempt to blindly protect Israel.”

 
 
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